U.S. banks, including JPMorgan NYSE:JPM and Bank of America NYSE:BAC, have in recent months held early talks about a deal to buy a network owned by the payments firm Fiserv NASDAQ:FISV that could allow them to bypass federal debit-card fee caps, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday, citing sources.
• The cap banks are reported to be looking to sidestep traces back to the 2010 Durbin Amendment, which limits the fees large banks can collect from merchants on debit-card transactions when routed through an outside network. However, banks would be exempt from that cap if they also own the network, the WSJ report said.
• Other banks that have held preliminary and tentative discussions include Wells Fargo NYSE:WFC and PNC Financial Services Group NYSE:PNC, the report added.
• The report sent Fiserv's shares up 4.3% in after-hours trading.
• Several of the companies that looked at the Fiserv network have already decided it would be unlikely for them to move forward, as they expressed concern that such a deal could prompt backlash from lawmakers, regulators and merchants, the report added.
• JPMorgan declined to comment, while Fiserv, BofA, Wells Fargo and PNC Financial did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment outside regular business hours.