The Commission ruled, on 17 October, that the French bank card operator Cartes Bancaires had infringed EU competition rules by hindering the issuing of cards in France by certain member banks.
The European competition authority argued that consumers were the victims of this illegal practice, which "deprives them of cheaper cards and a more diversified product offering".
However, the Commission did not impose any fines on the CB group, as the measures had been earlier notified and practices have been suspended since 2004. Nevertheless, the decision orders the annulment of the measures in question, which have kept other competitors at bay, such as online banks and supermarket chains including Carrefour or Auchan, and resulted in heavy price increases for consumers.
"To ensure the greatest possible benefit to consumers, the single euro payments area must be an area of competition. The Commission cannot tolerate behaviour that goes against the objectives of SEPA by seeking to partition a national market," Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said.
The CB groupement said that it "does not agree with either the legal arguments or the economic analysis on which the Commission's decision is based" and announced that it will bring the matter before the European courts.
CB currently handles 70% of card payments in France. It has 150 members, but is largely managed by the biggest French banks, such as Crédit Agricole, Crédit Lyonnais, Société Générale and BNP-Paribas.
Some of the key measures under fire include:
- A fee of €11 imposed by CB on each card issued by a member bank that is not "sufficiently" active in terms of acquisition of merchants or installing ATMs, and;
- A €12 membership fee per card that has to be paid to CB and additional "sleeping" membership fees for certain member banks issuing more cards than stipulated by the group.
The Commission argues that "by putting certain members at a competitive disadvantage, the measures in themselves restrict competition."




