SummaryCompanies Deal would allow Italy to drop threat of levyFinancial firms demanded Antitrust assurancesTerms agreed not expected to alter status quoROME, July 20 (Reuters) - Italian Antitrust body has given a green light to a deal negotiated by retailers, banks and payment firms to soften fees on small card transactions as demanded by the government, according to sources and documents seen by Reuters.
People familiar with the matter said the parties had finalised the terms of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) last month, but financial firms were worried about the risk of future fines for competition law infringements.
As a result, the Treasury sought an opinion from the Antitrust authority.
The MOU, seen by Reuters, encourages financial companies to launch competitive commercial initiatives on payments not exceeding 30 euros but stops short of demanding firm promises.
The Treasury could summon the parties on July 27 to try to formalise the deal, a source said.
Persons:
Giorgia Meloni, Rome, Mario Draghi, Keith Weir
Organizations:
Reuters, Mastercard, Visa, Treasury, Thomson
Locations:
Italy