FCA Probe Puts Digital Wallet Competition Risk in Focus
公開日: May 6, 2026 at 06:11 PM
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The Financial Conduct Authority has confirmed it is investigating Mastercard, PayPal, and Visa under Chapter I of the Competition Act 1998, and Mastercard and Visa under Chapter II, over suspected anti-competitive conduct linked to the funding and usage of PayPal’s digital wallet.
The regulator has identified the companies involved and the legal framework being used, but it has not disclosed the specific conduct, agreements, market definition, time period, or commercial mechanisms under review. The FCA emphasized that it has reached no conclusions and made no findings that competition law has been broken, noting this is an investigation rather than a judgment.
For banks, payment firms, card schemes, and fintech partners, the practical implication is a need to explain why wallet funding options, routing rules, incentives, and payment restrictions are designed the way they are. If these answers are unclear, the issue shifts from simple product design to a governance problem involving potential breaches of competition law.
Digital wallets sit between consumers, banks, merchants, and payment platforms, giving them significant commercial power. A small change in default funding sources, fee arrangements, or preferred payment routes can alter transaction volume distribution and customer choice. Consequently, any arrangement affecting access, pricing, usage, or routing requires competition-law scrutiny before approval.
Payment firms are advised to map wallet-related arrangements and review whether legal, compliance, product, and commercial teams assessed them before implementation. Board papers and risk registers should record the commercial rationale and competition-law review to avoid documentation gaps that could hinder future defenses.