illusion said:
I always wondered how can banks give huge discounts like 5-10 percent on stuff bought via cards be it debit or
credit cards, how and why do they do that sometimes the scheme runs for weeks like on
Flipkart and discounts are also heavy on a 20k phone 10% is 2k, I mean it's sort of huge.
How does that work out for banks and Cc company?
Well there are couple of things to understand first,
[*]Nobody wants any LOSSES no matter how big you are
[*]Banks in particular can not afford to have any LOSE
[/list]Now coming to real question,
When Flipkart advertises about any cashback, as @chromaniac explained it involves both Retailer and Bank but there are two more entities involved Customer and Manufacturer. Companies like Flipkart receives huge discounts as being wholesaler and passive promoter of the brand.
Taking an example of a Mobile phone worth of Rs.20,000
MRP flipkart would give 10% discount (cash back) which will be worth of Rs.2,000 so for flipkart
Net Selling Price becomes Rs.18,000 (one that will be reported in their annual finance report).
Retailer (Flipkart): It is very important to consider here for what price flipkart get these products from manufacturer; in electronics its usually 25-30% margin over MRP (as for any BIG distributor of the product) plus they will get additional 5-10% of discount being Promoter (online & offline). So overall cost of procurement for flipkart would be around Rs.13-15k.
Bank: Only an entity to facilitate the transaction between Consume & Seller. They only understand Credits & Debits so no Cashback, Discounts etc here. Flipkart would either raise a Credit request for Rs.18,000
or Credit request for Rs.20,000 + Debit request for Rs.2,000. What bank does is a deal with Flipkart which is a barter system where Flipkart will promote a specific Bank's Card and Bank won't charge them for the transactions made on it. So no FINANCIAL profit or loss on paper for Bank. Internally Bank would show Debit of foregone amount in favour of CC Txn and Credit of same amount for Marketing of product hence No-Profile-No-Loss for Bank.
Consumer: PAYS actual Money, Bank maintains only Numbers. We are easily fooled by discount schemes by forgetting the fact that physical cost of a product is not more than 25-30% of what they pay rest all is for Khans, Ambanis, Tatas and plethora of other flesh eaters. We are always in LOSS comparing material we purchase against its cost, leaving apart the usage and future benefits from it.
Manufacturer: Deals with Seller who does some marketing/promotion for them (flipkart would get some discount for featuring them on Frontpage/Mailers).
The ultimate cycle looks something like,
Manufacturer --- [15000 Cr] ---> Retailer ---> [18000 Cr or 20000 Cr + 2000 Dr] ---> Consumer
|-------------------------> [Bank]