In This Article:
Apple (AAPL) CEO Tim Cook revealed on Tuesday that it’s rolling out the Apple Card in August, and it might finally get more people to use Apple Pay.
Apple Pay was announced all the way back at the iPhone 6 event in September 2014. At the time, Cook bashed the lax security of the plastic credit card and unveiled the phone-based tap-to-pay payment service.
In the nearly five years since, only a small proportion of people have used the service at the cash register, despite the advantages of the system and ubiquity of contactless NFC terminals.
But Apple’s new venture into the world of credit cards has the potential to change the American payment landscape significantly and give a long awaited boost to tap-your-phone to pay payments, or “proximity mobile-based payments.”
“Apple and [Goldman Sachs] represent strong brands and many merchants can now accept Apple Pay due to EMV point of sale terminal upgrades,” Wells Fargo Securities analysts wrote in a note. “This card will likely increase use of Apple Pay.”
The news that Apple Cards would roll out in August came during its third-quarter earnings call on Tuesday. The tech giant beat analysts’ expectations on both the top and bottom lines, and its stock reached 2019 highs after the announcement.
Apple Pay just isn’t that popular
Adoption of Apple Pay has been far behind what Apple and many others had hoped as the American — and to some extent, worldwide — preference for plastic (and metal) cards has been hard to change. According to an eMarketer report from December, only 27.4% of U.S. smartphone users said they had used contactless payments at least once in the past six months. In terms of the population, this is about 61.6 million in 2019 — a lot, but far less than the 7 out of 10 Americans with at least one credit card, not to mention debit cards.
Even companies like Paypal’s (PYPL) Venmo, which is a digital-first payment provider, stepped backwards in time to launch a plastic card, because of some resistance to mobile payments at the checkout counter.
Apple is not a magical, failure-proof company, but it does have an almost singular ability to make things catch on that otherwise are unpopular or undesired. In recent years, the company pushed the Apple Watch through to a respectable level of success, forced people to accept the headphone jack’s demise, and turned the AirPod from a Q-tip joke to a popular product.
Though the company failed to fundamentally change the payments industry, its second attempt has some things behind it that could make a difference.
A premium product within reach
On a fundamental level, Apple is releasing a hardware product with it, for the first time, which makes a difference. The physical card is pretty and very Apple-y, made of laser-etched titanium and sure to make an ostentatious noise when dropped. It’s something people are likely to covet given the Chase Sapphire Reserve’s hubbub when it ran out of metal and had to give people plastic. (Let’s not forget the Fyre Festival perpetrator Billy McFarland made a company almost chiefly on the premise of a metal payments card, something that is already inviting comparisons.)