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Credit card companies Visa and Mastercard and major US banks have agreed to a $7.25bn (£4.65bn) settlement to retailers over card fees.
The case, which has been going on for seven years, is over firms colluding to fix the fees that stores pay to process credit and debt card payments.
The settlement is thought to be the largest of its kind in US history.
It involves a $6bn payment to stores and an agreement to reduce swipe fees for eight months, valued at $1.2bn.
An additional $525 million has been set aside to pay to the stores which sued individually, including grocery chains Kroger and Safeway and the Rite Aid pharmacy chain. Previous settlements
The settlement involves credit card giants Visa and Mastercard, as well as major US banks which issue their cards including JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Citibank.
Craig Wildfang, the lead lawyer representing the merchants, told AFP: "Over time, the reforms induced by this case and in this settlement should help reduce card-acceptance costs to merchants, which in turn, will result in lower prices for all consumers."
Visa and Mastercard already paid a combined $3bn to settle a lawsuit over their "honour all cards" policies, which tied acceptance of credit to debit cards.
The US Department of Justice also brought and settled a civil suit against the two firms in 2010 over policies that prevented stores from offering their customers cheaper forms of payments.
..... yet another price fixing story... I'm so shocked!
(verberg) Wanneer u een partij wilt spelen tegen iemand van vergelijkbaar niveau dan kunt u bij het opzetten van een nieuwe uitnodiging een minimum en een maximum BKR voor een eventuele tegenstander opgeven. Hierdoor kunnen spelers met een BKR die buiten het opgegeven bereik valt de uitnodiging niet zien en er dus ook niet op reageren. (Katechka) (laat alle tips zien)