The Justice Department (DOJ) on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against Visa, alleging that the company maintained an illegal monopoly over the U.S. debit card market.
According to the DOJ's complaint, more than 60% of debit card transactions in the U.S. run on Visa's debit network, which allows the company to charge over $7 billion in fees each year for processing those transactions.
It also accuses Visa of illegally maintaining its monopoly power by insulating itself from competition. As an example, the DOJ said Visa uses exclusionary agreements on merchants and banks using its debit card services, which allows it to lock up debit card transaction volumes while it "insulates itself from competition, and smothers smaller, lower-priced competitors."
"We allege that Visa has unlawfully amassed the power to extract fees that far exceed what it could charge in a competitive market," Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement. "Merchants and banks pass along those costs to consumers, either by raising prices or reducing quality or service. As a result, Visa's unlawful conduct affects not just the price of one thing – but the price of nearly everything."
CREDIT CARD DELINQUENCY RATES HIT WORST LEVEL SINCE 2012 IN NEW FED STUDY
The DOJ's lawsuit also said that Visa "induces would-be competitors to become partners instead of entering the market as competitors by offering generous monetary incentives and threatening punitive additional fees."
It accuses Visa of engaging in a "deliberate and reinforcing course of conduct to cut off competition and prevent rivals from gaining the scale, share, and data necessary to compete for customers' business." The DOJ also noted that Visa uses its scale to leverage both merchants and consumers to build what it refers to as an "enormous moat" around its business.
FOX Business reached out to Visa for comment on the suit.
VISA, MASTERCARD CAN LIKELY HANDLE SWIPE-FEE SETTLEMENT BIGGER THAN $30 BILLION: JUDGE
Visa and rival Mastercard have faced legal scrutiny in recent months. This summer, a federal judge rejected a $30 billion settlement in a lawsuit related to the swipe fees, also known as interchange fees, that the card issuers charge merchants to handle their transactions.
The settlement would have lowered and capped swipe fees, resulting in an estimated savings of $6 billion a year for merchants.
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The judge called that amount "paltry" in comparison to the roughly $100 billion in fees they paid to Visa and Mastercard in 2023, and said that the "evidence strongly suggests" that Visa and Mastercard "could withstand a substantially greater judgment."
Visa's stock price slid by more than 4.3% on Tuesday amid reports that the DOJ was preparing to file its lawsuit against the financial services giant.