Visa cards are accepted at about 90 automatic teller machines
operated by Co-operative Bank and Kanbawza Bank throughout the country,
Visa Inc announced last week.
But while KBZ reports that
operations with Visa are running smoothly, CB is waiting for Visa to
repair technical problems that come amid a heavy volume of customer
complaints.
From December 26, Visa cardholders could access cash
in Yangon and at other major tourist destinations, covered by CB and KBZ
banks’ combined Visa ATM network, Visa said.
For all Visa
withdrawals in Myanmar, the transaction fee is set at K5000. A
cardholder can withdraw up to K240,000 (US$200) per transaction.
By joining the Visa network, CB and KBZ have agreed to adopt Visa’s global security standards for electronic payment, Visa said.
Visa’s
services in Myanmar have come earlier than it expected. Peter Maher,
Visa’s group country manager for Southeast Asia and Australasia, had
initially outlined plans for services in early 2013, telling The Wall Street Journal that there might be delays in readying banks for the technology necessary to process electronic payments.
“In
all my meetings in Yangon, the lights were going on and off and the
air-conditioning was going on and off,” Mr Maher told The Wall Street
Journal on November 3. “This is Myanmar; everyone is doing things for
the first time.”
CB has 45 ATMs that accept Visa nationwide,
nearly 40 of which are in Yangon, said U Pe Myint, managing director of
CB on December 27 during an interview with The Myanmar Times. Other ATMs
that accept Visa are in Mandalay, Nay Pyi Taw, Bago and Taunggyi, he
said.
He added that in Yangon, CB has three ATMs that accept Visa
at Yangon International Airport; there are also CB ATMs that accept
Visa at major retail outlets such as Junction Square, Junction Centre,
Taw Win Centre, Yankin Centre and Bogyoke Market.
At hotels, CB
has ATMs that accept Visa at Chatrium Hotel, Parami Hotel, Inle Hotel,
and Governor’s Residence in Yangon. While CB has plans to install ATMs
at Yangon’s Traders and Parkroyal hotels, “It is taking a long time
because of IT problems,” U Pe Myint said.
U Pe Myint told The
Myanmar Times CB has been slammed with customer complaints over faulty
withdrawals, as “cardholders cannot get their money due to limitations
on the machines”.
He explained that CB cannot tell the cardholder what their current balance is.
“On our side, we cannot see the [account holder’s] balance on the screen of the ATM,” U Pe Myint said.
“We’ve contacted Visa to make repairs. With MasterCard, we are 90 percent okay, but with Visa we are not,” U Pe Myint said.
“There have been a lot of complaints from the customers that they cannot withdraw money from the ATM.
“We’ve explained the consequences and we have a call centre for customers with questions.”
Meanwhile,
KBZ’s general manager U Zaw Lin Htut told The Myanmar Times on the same
day that they have not experienced any customer complaints or technical
problems since they launched their ATMs that accept Visa on December
21.
KBZ has 37 ATMs that accept Visa nationwide, 26 of which are in Yangon, according to U Zaw Lin Htut.
Although
KBZ is still waiting to install ATMs that accept Visa in Yangon
International Airport and at hotels, they are currently available in
Yangon at Junction Square, Taw Win Centre, City Mart supermarkets.
“We
are waiting to install an ATM that accepts Visa at Yangon International
Airport, but it could be as early as next week,” U Zaw Lin Htut said.
“We
don’t have any [ATMs that accept Visa] at hotels right now because we
need approval from the Ministry of Tourism first, but we will install
them soon and we are currently in a dialogue,” he said.
Outside
of Yangon, KBZ has ATMs that accept Visa in Mandalay and Taunggyi. The
bank plans to install 50 to 60 more Visa-ready ATMs nation-wide, U Zaw
Lin Htut said.
To manage cross border ATM processing, Visa has partnered with Planet Payment to connect CB and KBZ ATMs to VisaNet.
Philip Beck, chairman and chief executive officer of Planet Payment, told Thai newspaper The Nation that the company’s processing system enables payments to meet the needs of particular markets.
“Visa
and Planet Payment share the vision that payments have the power to
improve the way business is done and we are very excited to be working
together to deliver innovative payment solutions to banks, merchants and
consumers in developing economies around the world,” The Nation quoted
him as saying on December 26.
Visa is the second such financial
service to enter Myanmar, after MasterCard made the country’s first
multinational card ATM transaction at CB bank’s headquarters at the
corner of 23rd Street and Strand Road in Yangon on November 15.
Visa,
the world’s largest payment network, signed its first licensing
agreements in Myanmar with CB, KBZ and Myanmar Oriental banks at Sedona
Hotel in Yangon on November 3.
source: The Myanmar Times
http://mmtimes.com/index.php/business/3671-visa-s-service-moves-too-fast-for-partner.html
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