Update include more lawsuit details.
MasterCard (MA Quote) plans to pay $335 million by the end of the third quarter to pay off the rest of its settlement of a class action suit alleging the electronic payments company violated federal antitrust regulations. The Purchase, N.Y.-based company settled the suit in June 2003 with a number of U.S. merchants that took issue with certain antitrust aspects of the payment card industry. Under the settlement, MasterCard was required to pay $125 million in 2003 and $100 million annually each December from 2004 through 2012. Retailers, including Wal-Mart Stores (WMT Quote), brought an antitrust suit against MasterCard and Visa (V Quote) in 1996. They claimed that the associations violated antitrust laws by "tying acceptance of debit to [the] acceptance of credit [cards]," MasterCard said in an old release. "As a remedy the merchants sought billions of dollars in damages as well as the right to elect not to accept MasterCard branded debit cards while accepting MasterCard credit or charge cards," the release said. MasterCard said in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing on Thursday that it had entered into an agreement the prior day that would allow the company to prepay its obligations of the remaining $400 million at a discounted amount of $335 million on Sept. 30. The agreement is subject to court approval, MasterCard said in the filing. Separately, in 1998, the Justice Department sued Visa and MasterCard for limiting competition in the U.S. credit card market. Four years later, a U.S. District Court judge ruled that the two electronic processors could no longer bar member banks from issuing cards on rival networks like American Express (AXP Quote) and Discover Financial (DFS Quote). Visa and MasterCard had tried to appeal the ruling many times, but was finally rejected by the Supreme Court in 2004.- Loading Comments...
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