NYC pensions press Mastercard, Amex to track gun sales

Three New York City pensions filed shareholder proposals with Mastercard and American Express urging the credit card companies to improve tracking of gun sales.

The proposals, by the city pensions for teachers, civil servants and school administrators, asked the boards of both companies to assess and publicly report their decision-making related to the creation of merchant codes for stand-alone gun and ammunition stores, according to a news release from the city comptroller's office.  

Las Vegas shooting
A makeshift memorial for the victims of the Las Vegas mass shooting on the south end of the Las Vegas Strip, October 2017.
Drew Angerer/Photographer: Drew Angerer/Getty

A merchant category code, known as an MCC, is used by credit card companies to classify businesses by the types of goods and services sold. Clothing, sporting goods stores and transpiration providers have specific MCCs, but stand-alone gun and ammunition stores don't. MCCs are created by an industry panel called the International Organization for Standardization. 

Creating a new code would be a first step to enable financial institutions to flag unusually large purchases at stores over a short period of time or multiple purchases at different retailers. 

Establishing such a merchant category code would be a step toward "preventing gun crimes and saving lives," Comptroller Brad Lander said in a news release. "Unfortunately, the credit card companies have failed to support this simple, practical, potentially lifesaving tool."

Seth Eisen, a Mastercard spokesperson, said the ISO is considering a separate MCC code for gun and ammunition stores. "We are reviewing how it could be implemented and managed by the banks that connect merchants to our network," Eisen said. "This will help us continue to deliver a payments system that supports all legal purchases while protecting the privacy and decisions of individual cardholders." 

Randi Friedman, an American Express spokesperson, didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. 

The gunman who killed 59 people at a Las Vegas country music festival in 2017 charged almost $95,000 to a credit card for guns and ammunition in the year before the attack, according to a CBS News report. A man who opened fire at a nightclub in Orlando, Florida, put almost $26,000 on credit cards in 12 days, according to CBS. 

The shareholder proposal asks Mastercard and American Express for reports on governance of MCC standards and the disclosure and justification for their position on any application to create an MCC code for gun and ammunition stores. Ignoring or failing to mitigate risks could threaten shareholder value, Lander said. 

New York City pension funds for police officers and firefighters didn't file resolutions. The city's five pensions oversee about $240 billion of assets.

The city pensions aren't among the top stockholders in the companies. But the three pension funds own 667,200 shares in American Express valued at approximately $92.49 million; 1.1 million shares in Mastercard worth approximately $347.59 million; and 1.85 million shares in Visa valued at about $363.86 million.

The pensions didn't file a shareholder proposal with Visa because the deadline for resolutions passed, according to a spokeswoman for the comptroller.

California's Teachers' Retirement System filed similar resolutions with Mastercard, American Express and Visa.

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