Weve abandons mobile NFC payments plans

UK mobile commerce joint venture Weve is abandoning plans to launch an NFC payments service because its telco owners failed to agree on an approach, according to the Telegraph.

6 comments

Weve abandons mobile NFC payments plans

Editorial

This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community.

First unveiled back in 2012 under the name Project Oscar, Weve saw EE, Telefonica and Vodafone band together to fight for a slice of the fast growing mobile commerce pie.

Originally pitched as a SIM-based platform for mobile NFC payments, the platform was later recalibrated to initially concentrate on building a clearing house for business-to-consumer mobile marketing.

However, in February a deal was struck with MasterCard to push ahead with the payments plan. Weve promised to clean up the "mess" of mobile commerce and bring NFC-based m-payments to the masses by tapping into the relationships that MasterCard has with banks to let customers link their card accounts to their handsets through their bank apps.

The service was supposed to go live in the first half of next year but, according to the Telegraph, has now been abandoned amid conflict between the operators on how to run it.

News of the U-turn comes in the wake of Apple Pay's launch, which would have effectively killed off the chances of Weve making any inroads with iPhone owners.

The three telcos - which have invested tens of millions of pounds in Weve - are all working on their own mobile contactless payments services. EE has its Cash on Tap app, Telefonica is working with Monitise while Vodafone will launch its own offering in the next few weeks.

In a statement to Finextra, Weve says: "We continue to believe there is a great deal of potential in mobile contactless payments and we are currently working on developments where Weve can help streamline the mobile payments process."

Meanwhile, the venture - which lost CEO David Sear to Skrill over the summer - will continue to concentrate on its loyalty and marketing services.

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Comments: (6)

A Finextra member 

It would seem that while the west is trying to overcomplicate the offering with too many fingers in the pie.......Africa is just getting on with finding simple solutions to mobile transactions, maybe there is something to be learned from this continent. 

M-Pesa may not be as sophisticated but does what most want from a mobile transaction, a transaction. Still Apple Pay will be an interesting mix to the likes of telco-complex offerings and maybe even HCE.

Ketharaman Swaminathan Founder and CEO at GTM360 Marketing Solutions

Time to "Weve goodbye"?!

@PaulV: M-PESA is a fiasco even in India (https://www.finextra.com/blogs/Fullblog.aspx?blogid=9273). IMHO, it will work only where banks are not interested in the market it caters to.

Sreeram Yegappan Director at Cognizant

Each of the Telcos will have their own agenda or requirements and this will form a significant portion of their revenues in the future and will be a differentiator and hence 'a collaborative effort' will not work in such a scenario..

Gabriel Hopkins Chief Product Officer at Ripjar

I remember being really excited when people started whispering about Project Oscar and the forecast of a 18-24 month build out ;-)

Ketharaman Swaminathan Founder and CEO at GTM360 Marketing Solutions

@GabrielHopkins: Keen to know how you stumbled upon this 2014 post in 2021! According to the quick-and-dirty study done by my company, many blogs are receiving traffic for some their posts 3-4 years after they were published and I'm keen to know the source of traffic after so many years - in this case 7 years. 

Gabriel Hopkins Chief Product Officer at Ripjar

OIC. I should have checked the date. I think it may have been the Finextra algorithm

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