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NPN April 2011

National Petroleum News (NPN) has been the independent voice of the petroleum industry since 1909 as the opposition to Rockefeller’s Standard Oil. So, motor fuels marketing and retail is not just a sideline for us, it’s our core competency.

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TOP OF THE NEWS NACS: Senate bill to delay Durbin amendment Swipe fee reform challenges amendment “is a slap in the face to small business owners and consumers across the country,”said Hank Armour, president and chief executive officer of National Association of Convenience Stores (NACS). The legislation, S. 575, introduced on March 15 seeks to A delay for two years critical reforms aimed at providing relief to small business owners. The reforms, scheduled to take effect this summer, would limit the price-fixing engaged in by the nation’s largest banks so that they would be required either to compete on their debit card swipe fees or charge an amount that is “reasonable and proportional” to their costs. “This bill is just another Wall Street bailout,” said NACS vice chairman of technology Pat Lewis, who operates 13 Oasis Stop N Go convenience stores in Idaho.“The Tester bill is TARP 2, when the last thing we need is another handout to the big banks.” “Congress should be standing by Main Street and not kowtowing to Visa,MasterCard and the big TARP banks that three years ago brought our economy to its knees and whose executives last year in just 9 months were paid more than $130 billion,” said NACS senior vice president of govern- ment relations Lyle Beckwith. “Interfering with the process even before the final rule is written is nothing more than pandering to the giant banks,” added Jennifer Hatcher, senior vice president of government and public affairs for the Food Marketing Institute. “Delaying swipe fee reform has consequences that will cost merchants and their customers $1 billion each month, and will cost our economy up to 95,000 much-needed jobs each year.Killing jobs isn’t what we were promised in November.” On Dec. 16, 2010, the Federal Reserve issued a proposed rule, as directed by Congress in the financial services reform bill, to issue rules to ensure that debit swipe fees are reason- able and proportional to the processing costs incurred. The Federal Reserve also asked for public comments to the rule, which are expected to be finalized on April 21 and implement- ed by July 21.  Report: Food retailers cope with more inflation than shoppers “For the past 17 months food retailers have been feeling the pinch of higher food prices more than consumers, and it looks like that will continue even longer,” said Brian Todd, president and chief executive officer of The Food 6 APRIL 2011 bill introduced by Senator Jon Tester (D-Mont.) that would delay implementation of the Durbin The Fed’s proposed rules would still allow banks to make a reasonable, if not sizable, profit on debit transactions. The Federal Reserve did not seek to eliminate debit swipe fees, but to define a rate that was fair and equitable, with per-transac- tion rates of 7 or 12 cents both proposed.A survey of banks by the Fed found that debit swipe costs averaged around 4 cents per transaction, providing the banks with a profit margin of either 75 or 300 percent based on the proposed rulemaking. Senator Tester has said that he is concerned about small banks being hurt by the rules. However, Senator Durbin took care of that concern last year as part of the Durbin amend- ment that was approved by Congress. The legislation states explicitly that banks with under $10 billion in assets will be exempted from the rates. Further, Visa, Star and five other networks have indicated they will support two-tiered pricing so that small banks get to charge more than big banks. Because of honor-all-cards rules in debit and credit card contracts, retailers are prohibited from treating one debit card differently than another debit card “Congress voted last summer to fix a clearly broken sys- tem, and the Federal Reserve made significant, thoughtful proposals to do so,” said Armour. “This bill seeks to preserve the anti-competitive behavior of the banks and credit card companies and is not what 5.4 million of our customers had in mind when they signed their names to petitions demand- ing reform.” Swipe fee reform would add jobs and transfer funds directly from banks to consumers according to “The Costs of Charging It in America: Assessing the Economic Impact of Interchange Fees for Credit Card and Debit Card Transactions,” a report released last month by Robert Shapiro, former Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development. Extrapolating the findings for debit swipe fees alone, swipe fee reform would add 90,000 new jobs and provide $10 billion in relief to consumers. “While Congress talks about the importance of revitaliz- ing the economy and growing badly needed jobs, those sup- porting today’s bill are instead siphoning consumers’ hard- earned wages to the banking industry,” said Armour. Institute, a trade association that deliv- ers food industry information, head- quartered in Upper Saddle River, N.J. That said, February marked the tenth straight month in which retail food prices increased over prior year levels, with the February Consumer Price Index for food-at-home up 2.8 percent from 2010. This is a contrast to the nine months of food price deflation experienced in 2009, the Institute noted. But wholesale food prices jumped 3.9 percent in February alone, bringing the Producer Price Index for finished con- sumer foods 7.3 percent above last February. That was the largest year-over- year gain in that index since late 1974. NPN Magazine  www.npnweb.com

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