Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Walmart And Visa Declare Truce In Half-year Battle Over Credit Card Fees

IANS, 06 Jan, 2017 01:08 PM
    TORONTO — Corporate behemoths Walmart Canada and Visa have declared a truce in their dispute over merchant fees, allowing Walmart customers in Manitoba and Thunder Bay, Ont., to resume using the credit card beginning Friday.
     
    Both companies said they came to an agreement but did not provide details, calling the arrangement confidential.
     
    Walmart began refusing Visa credit cards at its three stores in Thunder Bay in mid-July. It said it pays more than $100 million in fees every year for customers to use various brands of credit cards, and that the fees charged by Visa were excessive.
     
    That set off a widely watched battle within the retail sector that intensified in October, when Walmart expanded its policy of rejecting Visas to its 16 stores in Manitoba. The retail giant had said it was planning to expand its phase-out of Visa to all of its 400 stores in Canada.
     
     
    The months-long dispute became so heated that at one point Visa offered its cardholders in Manitoba a reward for buying their groceries somewhere other than Walmart. It launched an advertising campaign in November offering Manitoba Visa cardholders a $10 credit if they spent $50 or more at grocery stores.
     
    The campaign didn't explicitly mention Walmart or the fee dispute, but a Visa spokeswoman said at the time that the company was hoping to ease any inconvenience for Visa cardholders who can't use their cards everywhere that they want to.
     
    Visa ran a similar ad in Thunder Bay, promising cardholders there with a $25 credit for every grocery purchase of $75 or more.
     
    Visa previously said it had offered Walmart one of the lowest rates for any merchant in the country, and that if it gave in to the retailer's demands then other merchants would want a reduction in their fees, as well.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Look At This Threat: P.E.I. Police Vow To Play Nickelback Album For Drunk Drivers

    Look At This Threat: P.E.I. Police Vow To Play Nickelback Album For Drunk Drivers
    KENSINGTON, P.E.I. — A Prince Edward Island police department is threatening to impose the Nickelback treatment on anyone who drinks and drives.

    Look At This Threat: P.E.I. Police Vow To Play Nickelback Album For Drunk Drivers

    Study To Test Oral Cannabis Treatment In Kids With Severe Epilepsy

    Study To Test Oral Cannabis Treatment In Kids With Severe Epilepsy
    TORONTO — Researchers at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children are poised to begin a clinical trial using cannabis extracts to treat children with severe epilepsy whose seizures can't be controlled with existing medications.

    Study To Test Oral Cannabis Treatment In Kids With Severe Epilepsy

    Ottawa Man, 22, Charged With First-Degree Murder In Death Of His Parents

    Ottawa Man, 22, Charged With First-Degree Murder In Death Of His Parents
    Ottawa police say Cameron Rogers is charged in the deaths of Dave Rogers, 69, and Merrill Rogers, 63.

    Ottawa Man, 22, Charged With First-Degree Murder In Death Of His Parents

    Federal Bill To Expand CPP Won't Hurt Women In Retirement, Minister Says

    Federal Bill To Expand CPP Won't Hurt Women In Retirement, Minister Says
    OTTAWA — The federal minister in charge of the country's social safety net says new parents, particularly women, won't lose out on increased Canada Pension Plan benefits if they leave the workforce to care for young children.

    Federal Bill To Expand CPP Won't Hurt Women In Retirement, Minister Says

    Alberta RCMP Nab Suspect In Bank Robbery Attempt Using Tanker Truck

    Alberta RCMP Nab Suspect In Bank Robbery Attempt Using Tanker Truck
    Mounties from the Airdrie rural detachment were called to Crossfield, north of Calgary, about an attempted robbery.

    Alberta RCMP Nab Suspect In Bank Robbery Attempt Using Tanker Truck

    Sponsorship Scandal: Jacques Corriveau's Defence Asks For No Jail Time

    Sponsorship Scandal: Jacques Corriveau's Defence Asks For No Jail Time
    MONTREAL — Ex-Liberal party organizer Jacques Corriveau should spend up to five years in prison following his conviction on fraud-related charges in connection with the sponsorship program, the Crown suggested on Monday.

    Sponsorship Scandal: Jacques Corriveau's Defence Asks For No Jail Time