Steve Franklin
Junior Member
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2009
- Posts
- 12
Hi there.
As seen in the smh. Qantas denies that their CCSF (credit card service fee) is unjust because they are charged more in merchant fees than they charge passengers. seems fair right?
Let me tell you why this is NOT what it seems.
1. The CCSF is supposed to be representative of the merchant fees Qantas themselves get charged. But the nice people at Qantas do better than that. Because as they state, they are getting charged more than they pass on. But we all know that could be a cent under breakeven and that's what we'll assume.
2. Visa/MC make up 83% of the CC market in Australia. Amex and Diners make up 17%. If you apply the merchant fee rates provided by the RBA (google merchant fee rba) in that ratio, you come up with an average of 1.03%
3. Now we know the rate, we can work out what the average flight cost is, because that is what the CCSF is based on, the cost of the flight which in turn is the driver for the cost of the merchant fee that Qantas get charged.
Cost of the Average flight
Domestic $7.70/1.03% =$747.57
International $25/1.03 = $2427.18
4. Using Qantas own 2008 report, we take the total number of passenger flights for both international and domestic and divide them by 2 (on the assumption that almost all journeys are return, and then multiply it by the average cost of the flight. This should give us a good gauge of whether the total revenue from all these average flights adds up to what Qantas says it does.
Total domestic flights in 2008= ( 28,905,000/2) * $747.57 = $10.804 billion.
Total International flights in 2008 = ( 9,716,000/2)*$2427.18 = 17.912 Billion
Total revenue for national and international flights in 2008 = $28.72 Billion
Total revenue from ALL streams reported by Qantas in 2008 (including all freight revenue)? $16.2 billion.
Why the gigantic descrepancy? It's because the CCSF is not remotely representative of the actual costs to Qantas which is why when you reverse engineer it - it doesn't work.
There is only one scenario where I can make it work so that they are exactly at break-even.
As discussed, by market, the Amex/Diners cards have by far the smallest
market penetration at a mere 13%. To make the numbers work to the point where Qantas can technically be able to say you are not recovering all costs, I'd need to more than reverse the ratio:
88.5% value for Amex/Diners (@1.80%)
11.5% Visa/MC (@.01%) which we know is not remotely supported by the statistics.
Think about it.
If Qantas' objective was the simply pass the merchant fees on to you, they would charge you an average percentage of the total cost of the transaction and not some fixed fee that has no bearing on the total purchase price.
So knowing all the above, how can they state categorically that they get charged more merchant fees than they collect?
Qantas can only charge the CCSF in Australia, they were one of the first to take advantage of the deregulation in 2003. BUT they can not charge it to people purchasing their tickets from the U.S, UK etc
So that leaves me with only one conclusion. They are using their Australian clients to subsidise the merchant fees they are unable to claw back for all flights purchased outside of Australia. WE ARE PAYING FOR OTHER PEOPLE!
And this is why despite us paying such outrageous charges that they can state with complete honesty that they do not recover all the merchant fees they are charged.
Personally...I think it's disgusting, that an Australian airline, our national carrier would gouge their own customer base like this and I for one will never fly them again.
For the rest that enjoy Qantas, I urge you to take it up with them. Ask them if what I state is true.
If anyone would like to do the numbers themselves you only need two pieces of info.
The RBA rates and the 2008 Qantas annual report, both available in the public domain.
I can't link to them as I don't have posts under my belt, but please take a look.
(Ps. The RBA rates take into consideration all aspects of fees including card holder not present transactions)
As seen in the smh. Qantas denies that their CCSF (credit card service fee) is unjust because they are charged more in merchant fees than they charge passengers. seems fair right?
Let me tell you why this is NOT what it seems.
1. The CCSF is supposed to be representative of the merchant fees Qantas themselves get charged. But the nice people at Qantas do better than that. Because as they state, they are getting charged more than they pass on. But we all know that could be a cent under breakeven and that's what we'll assume.
2. Visa/MC make up 83% of the CC market in Australia. Amex and Diners make up 17%. If you apply the merchant fee rates provided by the RBA (google merchant fee rba) in that ratio, you come up with an average of 1.03%
3. Now we know the rate, we can work out what the average flight cost is, because that is what the CCSF is based on, the cost of the flight which in turn is the driver for the cost of the merchant fee that Qantas get charged.
Cost of the Average flight
Domestic $7.70/1.03% =$747.57
International $25/1.03 = $2427.18
4. Using Qantas own 2008 report, we take the total number of passenger flights for both international and domestic and divide them by 2 (on the assumption that almost all journeys are return, and then multiply it by the average cost of the flight. This should give us a good gauge of whether the total revenue from all these average flights adds up to what Qantas says it does.
Total domestic flights in 2008= ( 28,905,000/2) * $747.57 = $10.804 billion.
Total International flights in 2008 = ( 9,716,000/2)*$2427.18 = 17.912 Billion
Total revenue for national and international flights in 2008 = $28.72 Billion
Total revenue from ALL streams reported by Qantas in 2008 (including all freight revenue)? $16.2 billion.
Why the gigantic descrepancy? It's because the CCSF is not remotely representative of the actual costs to Qantas which is why when you reverse engineer it - it doesn't work.
There is only one scenario where I can make it work so that they are exactly at break-even.
As discussed, by market, the Amex/Diners cards have by far the smallest
market penetration at a mere 13%. To make the numbers work to the point where Qantas can technically be able to say you are not recovering all costs, I'd need to more than reverse the ratio:
88.5% value for Amex/Diners (@1.80%)
11.5% Visa/MC (@.01%) which we know is not remotely supported by the statistics.
Think about it.
If Qantas' objective was the simply pass the merchant fees on to you, they would charge you an average percentage of the total cost of the transaction and not some fixed fee that has no bearing on the total purchase price.
So knowing all the above, how can they state categorically that they get charged more merchant fees than they collect?
Qantas can only charge the CCSF in Australia, they were one of the first to take advantage of the deregulation in 2003. BUT they can not charge it to people purchasing their tickets from the U.S, UK etc
So that leaves me with only one conclusion. They are using their Australian clients to subsidise the merchant fees they are unable to claw back for all flights purchased outside of Australia. WE ARE PAYING FOR OTHER PEOPLE!
And this is why despite us paying such outrageous charges that they can state with complete honesty that they do not recover all the merchant fees they are charged.
Personally...I think it's disgusting, that an Australian airline, our national carrier would gouge their own customer base like this and I for one will never fly them again.
For the rest that enjoy Qantas, I urge you to take it up with them. Ask them if what I state is true.
If anyone would like to do the numbers themselves you only need two pieces of info.
The RBA rates and the 2008 Qantas annual report, both available in the public domain.
I can't link to them as I don't have posts under my belt, but please take a look.
(Ps. The RBA rates take into consideration all aspects of fees including card holder not present transactions)