Consumers in Indonesia will have to use chip-enabled credit cards starting on Jan. 1, a spokesperson for Bank Indonesia, the country’s central bank, tells PaymentsSource. “The domestic system will only process payments made by chip-enabled credit cards,” the spokesperson says. “However, tourists and foreigners will still be able to use magnetic stripe cards, provided they are issued overseas.” The directive does not apply to debit cards, though some Indonesian banks issue chip-enabled debit cards. The move to chip credit cards originally was supposed to occur in 2008, the spokesperson adds, noting officials pushed back the deadline because not enough banks and merchants were ready for the switch.
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Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell told reporters Wednesday that he would remain on the Fed board after his term as chair expires next month, resolving the last and most significant open question about his departure and the onset of Kevin Warsh's leadership at the central bank.
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The Beaver State measure gives de novo banks up to $1 million per year in tax credits. Oregon lawmakers modeled their legislation on a 5-year-old Ohio law.
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The Spanish banking giant is seeing improvement in its U.S. business, which is set to expand significantly if its pending acquisition of Webster Financial gets approved.
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Expenses and foreign exchange pressured Western Union; while Visa added more blockchains to its stablecoin settlement pilot. That and more in American Banker's global payments and fintech roundup.
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Tipalti has developed a set of agentic artificial intelligence agents designed to help businesses navigate transactions and apply for refunds.
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The digital bank and lender did not increase its full-year outlook in anticipation of an interest rate freeze.
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