You've been redirected from MobilePaymentsToday.com to PaymentsDive.com. In March 2021, Mobile Payments Today became a part of Payments Dive. For the latest payments news, sign up for the daily newsletter.

Expect 47% of US terminals to be EMV-enabled by 2016

The estimates are based on forecasts provided by acquirers representing approximately 80 percent of U.S. purchase volume.

The Payments Security Task Force today announced a forecast of participating acquirers who estimated that at least 47 percent of U.S. merchant terminals will be enabled for EMV chip technology by the end of 2015, according to a press release. The estimates are based on forecasts provided by acquirers representing approximately 80 percent of U.S. purchase volume.

Organizations participating in the forecast include First Data, Bank of America Merchant Services, Citi, Chase Paymentech, Vantiv, Elavon, Wells Fargo and Global Payments.

Today's announcement complements a similar forecast from card issuers in August, where nine of the country's largest payment card issuers estimated they would issue more than 575 million chip-enabled payment cards by the end of 2015. The PST plans to update both card and terminal forecasts on a quarterly basis, according to the announcement.

"This forecast reflects efforts across the industry over the past two years," said Chris McWilton, president, North American markets, MasterCard. "Retailers, issuers, acquirers and others have addressed consumer concerns head-on and have begun to make the investments to further enhance the security of their payments. We will continue to work to deliver the same levels of security both in-store and online."

Formed in March 2014, the task force, which represents a diverse group of U.S. electronic payment industry players, is a collective effort that is initially focused on continuing the momentum of EMV chip implementation in the United States.

"The key to reducing fraud is close coordination and cooperation among card issuers, acquirers, merchants, device manufacturers and networks in the deployment of chip technology," said Ryan McInerney, president of Visa Inc. "That's one of the reasons Visa and MasterCard established the Payments Security Task Force. These numbers suggest that the industry is making substantial progress toward our goal of enhancing security at the checkout."