Skip to main content

Apple and Google poised to invigorate NFC market

The market for contactless payment is growing, explained Pierre Metivier from the Forum Services Mobiles Sans Contact, at the official launch of CARTES SECURE CONNEXIONS 2014 in Paris. “Smart secure devices are on the rise,” he said. “The majority of these are smartphones and payment cards, but – if you add in to the mix products such as smartcars and even smart utility meters - there will be 200 billion connected devices by 2020,” adding up to a projected global internet of things (IoT) market by that time
July 9, 2014 Read time: 2 mins

Telecoms, IT, security industries

The market for contactless payment is growing, explained Pierre Metivier from the "Forum des Services Mobiles Sans Contact", at the official launch of CARTES SECURE CONNEXIONS 2014 in Paris. “Smart secure devices are on the rise,” he said. “The majority of these are smartphones and payment cards, but – if you add in to the mix products such as smartcars and even smart utility meters - there will be 200 billion connected devices by 2020,” adding up to a projected global internet of things (IoT) market by that time of $8.9 trillion. But there are challenges ahead, warned Metivier. “The Near Field Communication (NFC) eco-system is maturing and it is also quite complex,” he explained. “You need the right mobile, the right applications, the right SIM – and you need the telecoms companies to agree. It’s complicated and it’s costly.” The rise of Host Card Emulation (HCE) may be about to change that. It is both a threat to, and opportunity for, NFC, he went on. “For a start it’s an opportunity to get more players into the market, such as 493 Apple and 1691 Google, which in the long-term could be good news for the global NFC system. Maybe demand from China will push Apple, for instance, towards NFC. NFC is about proximity and that proximity perhaps gives people a greater sense of security. But it’s still complex: we have to work on simplifying it.” There are also experiments underway with prepaid cards which could yet tempt more consumers towards contactless payments, perhaps because just having 20 euros on a card at a time will feel more secure for people. There will be much more information on all these intriguing issues at CARTES SECURE CONNEXIONS 2014 in November.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Five ways data can reshape transit
    April 8, 2024
    Mass transit ridership is getting back onto its feet after the dent which Covid put into the use of public transport. Now we need to continue that momentum, says Miki Szikszai of Snapper Services – and the UK can learn from examples in the rest of the world
  • Peter Norton: “My fear is that the technology itself is mistaken for the answer”
    August 5, 2022
    Peter Norton, author of Autonorama, tells Adam Hill why automakers kept the consumer dissatisfied, why Futurama got such a hold on the public imagination – and about how active travel can be promoted
  • Contactless tickets forecast to reach 1.7 billion in 2018
    February 6, 2014
    ABI Research has forecast that a combination of memory and microcontroller smart cards alongside disposable ticketing solutions will reach shipments totalling 1.7 billion units in 2018. The primary drivers include the increasing move to national standards and the enablement of near field communications (NFC) and open-loop payments. This trend is a consistent feature across all continents with particular progress within the UK, US, Australia, Germany, Turkey, and the BRIC countries forming a growth engine
  • New model generation with PTV’s Model2Go
    August 8, 2022
    PTV Group has launched a product which automates much of the painstaking business of building transport models. Adam Hill talks to the company’s Udo Heidl and Ben Stabler to find out more