Revolut & Visa challenge UK regulator’s plan to cap interchange fees as anti-competitive.
The companies argue the cap would harm fintech innovation and market dynamics.
Meanwhile, Revolut may be expanding into South Africa, adding to its global ambitions.
Revolut believes that the PSR has overstepped in capping fees.
Revolut and Visa take on the UK Payment Systems Regulator
over proposed caps on interchange fees, arguing that innovation and competition
are at stake.
Revolut and Visa Take a Swing at the UK Regulator
When it comes to shaking up the financial sector, Revolut has never
been one to shy away from a fight. Now, the digital banking giant has teamed up
with Visa to challenge the UK Payment Systems Regulator’s (PSR) plan to cap interchange fees on
cross-border payments. Their argument? The proposed cap would
stifle competition and hinder fintech innovation—two things Revolut holds
dear.
Revolut and Visa filed legal challenges against the UK payments regulator, PSR, arguing that it has overstepped its powers with a proposed cap on international transaction fees. They asked the court to review and ultimately overturn the PSR’s decision.https://t.co/1WaTpKWxTj
As reported by the Financial times, Revolut released the following
statement: “We disagree with the PSR’s assessment and believe it has acted
beyond its statutory powers in imposing these caps. We have therefore requested
the court to review, and ultimately overturn the PSR’s decision,” says the
fintech giant.
In the same article, the FT quotes a statement from Visa saying, “We respect
the PSR’s role as an economic regulator. This narrow legal action is focused
only on the PSR’s legal authorisation and process related to price setting to
ensure a fair and thorough process, and give clarity to the industry. This is
critical to future growth and investment in the UK.”
What’s the Big Deal with Interchange Fees?
Interchange fees might not sound exciting, but they’re the lifeblood of
many card payment networks. Every time a customer makes a purchase using a
credit or debit card, the merchant’s bank (acquirer) pays a small fee to the
customer’s bank (issuer). These fees help fund rewards programs, fraud
prevention, and overall service improvements.
The UK PSR argues that these fees—especially on cross-border
transactions—are too high and unfairly burden businesses. Their proposed cap
aims to bring down costs for merchants, who would theoretically pass on the
savings to consumers.
When the PSR announced its proposal to cap interchange fees it
stated that both Visa and Mastercard raised interchange fees for
online transactions between the EU and the U.K. to 1.15% for debit cards and
1.5% for credit cards, the hike was justified as a means to cover fraud
prevention costs and the costs of increased competition.
Revolut argues that capping interchange fees could have the opposite
effect of what the regulator intends. Lower fees might help merchants in the
short term, but they could also force banks and payment providers to scrap
rewards programs and introduce new fees elsewhere to compensate. In essence,
consumers might end up paying the price.
Visa, on the other hand, is defending its turf. The payments giant
warns that the proposed cap could distort the market, making it harder for new
players to compete. By limiting revenue from interchange fees, fintech firms
like Revolut may struggle to reinvest in innovation and expansion.
Revolut and Visa argue that the PSR’s decision is rushed, not backed by
sufficient evidence, and could ultimately hurt the very consumers it claims to
protect.
Revolut Targeting South Africa?
While Revolut is busy fighting the UK regulator, it seems to have its
eyes on new frontiers. According to recent reports, the fintech firm may be
setting up shop in South Africa. If true, this would mark a significant step in
Revolut’s global expansion strategy.
Tom Morrison, Head of Strategy & Operations, Revolut, South Africa (LinkedIn).
Revolut also hired Tom Morrison as Head of Strategy &
Operations in South Africa three months ago.
South Africa, with its growing digital banking ecosystem and increasing
demand for fintech solutions, presents a lucrative market. If Revolut does make
the move, it would be entering a competitive space dominated by both local
banks and emerging digital challengers. According
to South African consultancy firm KLA, 42.31% of South Africans use their phones
for digital banking and mobile phone penetration rates have reached 92%.
NEWS: Revolut is setting up operations in South Africa - applying for a full banking license, advisors include Standard Bank according to the source. pic.twitter.com/opzPNwqEUW
According to KLA, there is a significant move toward mobile payment
apps, as explimfied by offerings from FNB and Standard Bank and financial
insitutions are increasingly leveraging the blockchain and AI to drive decentralised
finance (DeFi) models and enhanced customer service.
So, while Revolut takes on regulators in one market, it’s quietly
plotting its next big move in another. The question is: will it be able to
fight battles on multiple fronts, or will regulatory pressure at home slow down
its global ambitions?
Fees and Fintech
Revolut’s legal challenge against the UK’s interchange fee cap is more
than just a financial dispute—it’s a showdown over the future of digital
banking. If Revolut and Visa succeed, they could preserve the current revenue
model for fintech firms and payment providers. If they fail, the PSR’s ruling
could reshape the payments landscape in the UK.
Either way, one thing is clear: Revolut isn’t backing down. Whether
it’s regulators or market expansion, the fintech powerhouse is determined to
keep pushing boundaries. And if its rumored South Africa move comes to
fruition, Revolut’s ambitions could extend far beyond the UK, no matter what
the regulators decide.
For more stories of fintech and innovation, visit our dedicated archives.
Revolut and Visa take on the UK Payment Systems Regulator
over proposed caps on interchange fees, arguing that innovation and competition
are at stake.
Revolut and Visa Take a Swing at the UK Regulator
When it comes to shaking up the financial sector, Revolut has never
been one to shy away from a fight. Now, the digital banking giant has teamed up
with Visa to challenge the UK Payment Systems Regulator’s (PSR) plan to cap interchange fees on
cross-border payments. Their argument? The proposed cap would
stifle competition and hinder fintech innovation—two things Revolut holds
dear.
Revolut and Visa filed legal challenges against the UK payments regulator, PSR, arguing that it has overstepped its powers with a proposed cap on international transaction fees. They asked the court to review and ultimately overturn the PSR’s decision.https://t.co/1WaTpKWxTj
As reported by the Financial times, Revolut released the following
statement: “We disagree with the PSR’s assessment and believe it has acted
beyond its statutory powers in imposing these caps. We have therefore requested
the court to review, and ultimately overturn the PSR’s decision,” says the
fintech giant.
In the same article, the FT quotes a statement from Visa saying, “We respect
the PSR’s role as an economic regulator. This narrow legal action is focused
only on the PSR’s legal authorisation and process related to price setting to
ensure a fair and thorough process, and give clarity to the industry. This is
critical to future growth and investment in the UK.”
What’s the Big Deal with Interchange Fees?
Interchange fees might not sound exciting, but they’re the lifeblood of
many card payment networks. Every time a customer makes a purchase using a
credit or debit card, the merchant’s bank (acquirer) pays a small fee to the
customer’s bank (issuer). These fees help fund rewards programs, fraud
prevention, and overall service improvements.
The UK PSR argues that these fees—especially on cross-border
transactions—are too high and unfairly burden businesses. Their proposed cap
aims to bring down costs for merchants, who would theoretically pass on the
savings to consumers.
When the PSR announced its proposal to cap interchange fees it
stated that both Visa and Mastercard raised interchange fees for
online transactions between the EU and the U.K. to 1.15% for debit cards and
1.5% for credit cards, the hike was justified as a means to cover fraud
prevention costs and the costs of increased competition.
Revolut argues that capping interchange fees could have the opposite
effect of what the regulator intends. Lower fees might help merchants in the
short term, but they could also force banks and payment providers to scrap
rewards programs and introduce new fees elsewhere to compensate. In essence,
consumers might end up paying the price.
Visa, on the other hand, is defending its turf. The payments giant
warns that the proposed cap could distort the market, making it harder for new
players to compete. By limiting revenue from interchange fees, fintech firms
like Revolut may struggle to reinvest in innovation and expansion.
Revolut and Visa argue that the PSR’s decision is rushed, not backed by
sufficient evidence, and could ultimately hurt the very consumers it claims to
protect.
Revolut Targeting South Africa?
While Revolut is busy fighting the UK regulator, it seems to have its
eyes on new frontiers. According to recent reports, the fintech firm may be
setting up shop in South Africa. If true, this would mark a significant step in
Revolut’s global expansion strategy.
Tom Morrison, Head of Strategy & Operations, Revolut, South Africa (LinkedIn).
Revolut also hired Tom Morrison as Head of Strategy &
Operations in South Africa three months ago.
South Africa, with its growing digital banking ecosystem and increasing
demand for fintech solutions, presents a lucrative market. If Revolut does make
the move, it would be entering a competitive space dominated by both local
banks and emerging digital challengers. According
to South African consultancy firm KLA, 42.31% of South Africans use their phones
for digital banking and mobile phone penetration rates have reached 92%.
NEWS: Revolut is setting up operations in South Africa - applying for a full banking license, advisors include Standard Bank according to the source. pic.twitter.com/opzPNwqEUW
According to KLA, there is a significant move toward mobile payment
apps, as explimfied by offerings from FNB and Standard Bank and financial
insitutions are increasingly leveraging the blockchain and AI to drive decentralised
finance (DeFi) models and enhanced customer service.
So, while Revolut takes on regulators in one market, it’s quietly
plotting its next big move in another. The question is: will it be able to
fight battles on multiple fronts, or will regulatory pressure at home slow down
its global ambitions?
Fees and Fintech
Revolut’s legal challenge against the UK’s interchange fee cap is more
than just a financial dispute—it’s a showdown over the future of digital
banking. If Revolut and Visa succeed, they could preserve the current revenue
model for fintech firms and payment providers. If they fail, the PSR’s ruling
could reshape the payments landscape in the UK.
Either way, one thing is clear: Revolut isn’t backing down. Whether
it’s regulators or market expansion, the fintech powerhouse is determined to
keep pushing boundaries. And if its rumored South Africa move comes to
fruition, Revolut’s ambitions could extend far beyond the UK, no matter what
the regulators decide.
For more stories of fintech and innovation, visit our dedicated archives.
Louis Parks has lived and worked in and around the Middle East for much of his professional career. He writes about the meeting of the tech and finance worlds.
Finseta Swings to Full-Year Loss as Expansion Costs Outrun Revenue Growth
Featured Videos
FM Daily Brief – 11 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 11 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 11 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 11 June 2026
Today’s Thursday, the 11th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Spain moves to classify certain futures products as CFDs for retail investors, IUX reports more than $1.5 trillion in monthly trading volume, and a closer look at why crypto still struggles to reach the mainstream.
Today’s Thursday, the 11th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Spain moves to classify certain futures products as CFDs for retail investors, IUX reports more than $1.5 trillion in monthly trading volume, and a closer look at why crypto still struggles to reach the mainstream.
Today’s Thursday, the 11th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Spain moves to classify certain futures products as CFDs for retail investors, IUX reports more than $1.5 trillion in monthly trading volume, and a closer look at why crypto still struggles to reach the mainstream.
Today’s Thursday, the 11th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Spain moves to classify certain futures products as CFDs for retail investors, IUX reports more than $1.5 trillion in monthly trading volume, and a closer look at why crypto still struggles to reach the mainstream.
In this video, we review @AxiOfficialChannel , a multi-asset broker offering access to forex and CFD markets through MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, the Axi Trading App, and copy trading solutions.
We examine the broker’s regulatory framework, platform offering, market coverage, and customer support structure. We also explore key features such as available trading instruments, swap-free account options, funding considerations, and multilingual support.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of Axi’s products, trading tools, and overall broker offering.
#Axi #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #FinanceMagnates #Trading #BrokerReview #OnlineTrading
In this video, we review @AxiOfficialChannel , a multi-asset broker offering access to forex and CFD markets through MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, the Axi Trading App, and copy trading solutions.
We examine the broker’s regulatory framework, platform offering, market coverage, and customer support structure. We also explore key features such as available trading instruments, swap-free account options, funding considerations, and multilingual support.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of Axi’s products, trading tools, and overall broker offering.
#Axi #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #FinanceMagnates #Trading #BrokerReview #OnlineTrading
In this video, we review @AxiOfficialChannel , a multi-asset broker offering access to forex and CFD markets through MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, the Axi Trading App, and copy trading solutions.
We examine the broker’s regulatory framework, platform offering, market coverage, and customer support structure. We also explore key features such as available trading instruments, swap-free account options, funding considerations, and multilingual support.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of Axi’s products, trading tools, and overall broker offering.
#Axi #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #FinanceMagnates #Trading #BrokerReview #OnlineTrading
In this video, we review @AxiOfficialChannel , a multi-asset broker offering access to forex and CFD markets through MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, the Axi Trading App, and copy trading solutions.
We examine the broker’s regulatory framework, platform offering, market coverage, and customer support structure. We also explore key features such as available trading instruments, swap-free account options, funding considerations, and multilingual support.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of Axi’s products, trading tools, and overall broker offering.
#Axi #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #FinanceMagnates #Trading #BrokerReview #OnlineTrading
In this video, we review @AxiOfficialChannel , a multi-asset broker offering access to forex and CFD markets through MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, the Axi Trading App, and copy trading solutions.
We examine the broker’s regulatory framework, platform offering, market coverage, and customer support structure. We also explore key features such as available trading instruments, swap-free account options, funding considerations, and multilingual support.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of Axi’s products, trading tools, and overall broker offering.
#Axi #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #FinanceMagnates #Trading #BrokerReview #OnlineTrading
In this video, we review @AxiOfficialChannel , a multi-asset broker offering access to forex and CFD markets through MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, the Axi Trading App, and copy trading solutions.
We examine the broker’s regulatory framework, platform offering, market coverage, and customer support structure. We also explore key features such as available trading instruments, swap-free account options, funding considerations, and multilingual support.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of Axi’s products, trading tools, and overall broker offering.
#Axi #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #FinanceMagnates #Trading #BrokerReview #OnlineTrading
Multi-Asset or Die: The New Brokerage Playbook
Multi-Asset or Die: The New Brokerage Playbook
Multi-Asset or Die: The New Brokerage Playbook
Multi-Asset or Die: The New Brokerage Playbook
Multi-Asset or Die: The New Brokerage Playbook
Multi-Asset or Die: The New Brokerage Playbook
This panel will explore how firms are moving beyond CFDs into crypto, perpetuals, equities, and multi‑asset offerings, and the challenges they face across regulation, technology, liquidity, and risk management. It examines what is driving the shift, what it takes to execute it successfully, and how brokers can position themselves for the next phase of growth.
This panel will explore how firms are moving beyond CFDs into crypto, perpetuals, equities, and multi‑asset offerings, and the challenges they face across regulation, technology, liquidity, and risk management. It examines what is driving the shift, what it takes to execute it successfully, and how brokers can position themselves for the next phase of growth.
This panel will explore how firms are moving beyond CFDs into crypto, perpetuals, equities, and multi‑asset offerings, and the challenges they face across regulation, technology, liquidity, and risk management. It examines what is driving the shift, what it takes to execute it successfully, and how brokers can position themselves for the next phase of growth.
This panel will explore how firms are moving beyond CFDs into crypto, perpetuals, equities, and multi‑asset offerings, and the challenges they face across regulation, technology, liquidity, and risk management. It examines what is driving the shift, what it takes to execute it successfully, and how brokers can position themselves for the next phase of growth.
This panel will explore how firms are moving beyond CFDs into crypto, perpetuals, equities, and multi‑asset offerings, and the challenges they face across regulation, technology, liquidity, and risk management. It examines what is driving the shift, what it takes to execute it successfully, and how brokers can position themselves for the next phase of growth.
This panel will explore how firms are moving beyond CFDs into crypto, perpetuals, equities, and multi‑asset offerings, and the challenges they face across regulation, technology, liquidity, and risk management. It examines what is driving the shift, what it takes to execute it successfully, and how brokers can position themselves for the next phase of growth.
Beyond Reach? Retail Investor Acquisition Across APAC
Beyond Reach? Retail Investor Acquisition Across APAC
Beyond Reach? Retail Investor Acquisition Across APAC
Beyond Reach? Retail Investor Acquisition Across APAC
Beyond Reach? Retail Investor Acquisition Across APAC
Beyond Reach? Retail Investor Acquisition Across APAC
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms