Showing posts with label paypal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paypal. Show all posts

Friday, June 24, 2011

PayPal Is Processing $3 Billion In Mobile Payments This Year (EBAY)


john donahoe ebay

PayPal has announced that they expect to process $3 billion in mobile payments this year, double their previous projections.

This is pretty impressive. Mobile payments are for real. They are processing $10 million in payments per day. 

It's also striking that Square is now processing over $3 million per day despite having started much later than PayPal mobile. 

A couple of caveats: the PayPal number is "Total Payments Volume", i.e. the amount of payments processed by PayPal; their revenue is a fraction of that. And as we understand it "mobile payments" include buying stuff online through your phone, and not just buying stuff offline with your phone, which is the big next opportunity. 

It's still big numbers, though.

Don't Miss: The Truth About Square →

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

See Also:







PayPal Is Processing $3 Billion In Mobile Payments This Year (EBAY)


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider/~3/Wq1Nd_Xi9Us/paypal-is-processing-3-billion-in-mobile-payments-this-year-2011-6

Monday, March 21, 2011

Watch Out PayPal, Facebook Is Getting Serious About Payments (EBAY)

Facebook credits

How committed is Facebook about broadening its revenue streams beyond advertising?

So serious that it’s formed a subsidiary, Facebook Payments, Inc., and is registering it in a host of states.

The move could signal an intent by the world’s largest social network to get more broadly involved in the payments business, while also making its business operations more efficient. Right now, it appears unlikely that Facebook will roll out any kind of consumer-facing payments service analogous to eBay’s PayPal — but it could set the stage for such a move down the line.

The subsidiary was formed in Florida in December 2010. Facebook CFO David Ebersman, general counsel Ted Ullyot, and vice president of business development Dan Rose form the entity’s board. Facebook is hiring a controller for the business, which it describes as a “rapid growth, very dynamic subsidiary.” (Facebook did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Facebook Payments.)

Facebook is already in the payments business in a big way. While most consumers use the site for free, it processes hundreds of millions of dollars a year in payments from advertisers. As well, it has a modest but fast-growing business in Facebook Credits, a Facebook-only currency it sells to consumers to let them buy virtual goods in games like Zynga’s FarmVille and Crowdstar’s Happy Island. Facebook splits revenue from Facebook Credits with app developers, meaning it has to disburse funds as well as collecting them.

When you handle that kind of money, credit-card processing fees add up fast. Facebook Payments could form direct ties to Visa and MasterCard’s payment networks, cutting out a merchant-bank middleman and saving on costs.

Also, state and federal regulators tend to take an interest in sizeable money flows. Facebook’s move to register Facebook Payments in multiple states suggests that its subsidiary will take on the prodigious task of complying with a host of local regulations. Early on, PayPal struggled with a similar regulatory burden — but doing so gave it an advantage competitors which hadn’t done so. Facebook board member Peter Thiel, a cofounder and former CEO of PayPal, is certainly familiar with this history.

One other reason why Facebook might need a Facebook Payments subsidiary: the possibility, long rumored in the industry, that Facebook could start its own ad network in competition with Google’s AdSense, which places ads on third-party websites and shares revenues with their publishers. Facebook already has planted a presence across hundreds of thousands of websites with its “Like” and “Share” buttons, comment functions, and other social plugins. It would be easy for Facebook to sign those publishers up for an advertising network powered by Facebook’s detailed demographic information. But then it would have to start cutting checks on a massive scale — something that would be eased by a dedicated payments-processing operation.

Facebook must also be preparing for a future in which mobile payments become big. Facebook mobile chief Erick Tseng said at last year’s MobileBeat 2010 conference that it wants its mobile platform to offer the same features as its Web platform. That presumably includes Credits and other payments functionality.

Finally, we’ve heard murmurs from inside Facebook’s developer community that the social network really wants to push e-commerce on its platform. While Facebook has abandoned past attempts at selling directly to consumers, including a virtual gifts business and a classifieds-ads offering, it makes sense that it would want to run the payments part of any commerce happening on its platform.

And there’s something powerful about the idea of transactions between people with verified, real identities; one has to think Facebook would have an advantage in controlling fraud over rivals like eBay and Amazon.com.

Facebook’s formation of a subsidiary doesn’t make any of these possibilities a guaranteed outcome, of course. But it certainly lays the groundwork for moves that could rattle PayPal, Amazon.com, and the banking industry.

This post originally appeared at VentureBeat.

Join the conversation about this story »

See Also:






Watch Out PayPal, Facebook Is Getting Serious About Payments (EBAY)


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider/~3/Xpx7dEaIj3I/watch-out-paypal-facebook-is-getting-serious-about-payments-2011-3

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

PayPal Will Open A Huge Center In China (EBAY)

ebay bulldozer

PayPal, which belongs to eBay, is going to set up "a global e-commerce hub" in Chongqing, China, Bloomberg reports. The center, which is set up in partnership with the local government, will offer services like foreign exchange settlement, telesales, training and verification for PayPal's global customer -- and perhaps give it a shot at the huge Chinese market.

Of course, China hasn't always been kind to eBay. The company entered China in 2002, bombastically vowing to dominate the market, and was instead thoroughly beaten by local juggernaut Taobao, and shut down its Chinese site in 2006. US tech companies are often confounded by local markets in Asia, especially China, and often end up disappointed.

This seems like a smarter play for the market. The company is partnering with the local government, offering jobs and investment, and perhaps get more merchants. Its foreign exchange offering solves a real problem because of foreign exchange controls in China.

Smart stuff. A story to watch.

Now Read: 10 Asian Tech Companies That Are Putting American Ones To Shame

Join the conversation about this story »




PayPal Will Open A Huge Center In China (EBAY)


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider/~3/zMl7Y2rlzWY/paypal-will-open-a-huge-center-in-china-2010-12

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Cashie Rings Up PayPal API To Offer Checkout Platform For Publishers

There are plenty of checkout and shopping cart solutions on the web; including Payvment, BigCommerce and others. Cashie is launching today as a cloud-based e-commerce platform that can be easily installed on a website or blog. Cashie is designed for publishers using content management platforms such as Wordpress, and can be integrated into a site by copying and pasting a few lines of code. The technology leverages PayPal's X Developer Platform to allow users (who need to have a PayPal Website Payments Pro merchant account) to offer a PayPal and standard credit card checkout experience.

Post originale: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/O7kAkGRfadA/

Tuesday, October 19, 2010