By Andrew R. Johnson 
 

Visa Inc. (V) is ramping up technology in countries where consumers are more likely to send money and pay for purchases by sending a text message rather than swiping a plastic card.

The Foster City, Calif.-based company, seeking to expand further overseas, said Wednesday it is offering a platform that can speed up the development of so-called mobile-money programs that are commonly offered in developing markets by telecommunications firms and financial institutions.

Such programs are typically targeted at consumers underserved by traditional banking products and allow customers to transfer money, load and withdraw cash, pay bills and perform other transactions through basic cellphones.

The first clients using Visa's platform, through which the company will host and manage programs on its own data centers, are telco Aircel Ltd., Bank of Kigali Ltd. (BOK.RW) and Urwego Opportunity Bank. Aircel is offering its mobile subscribers in India a virtual account that is tied to their mobile-phone number, while Bank of Kigali and Urwego is doing the same to customers in Rwanda, where Visa struck a partnership with the government in 2011 to build out the country's electronic-payments system.

By hosting the programs through its data centers, Visa can reduce the time it takes companies to independently roll out such services to customers, said Ashwin Raj, head of mobile products in emerging markets for Visa.

"We are using mobile networks and the mobile infrastructure to be able to reach the unbanked and underbanked consumers who our traditional clients--the banks--are unable to reach today," Mr. Raj said in an interview.

The new platform is built on technology Visa gained through the 2011 acquisition of Fundamo, a South African company that helps operate mobile money programs. Fundamo, which Visa acquired for $110 million, already has 51 programs that are live on its platform in 33 countries, according to a Visa spokeswoman. Visa will work to move some of those programs over to its new hosted platform, Mr. Raj said.

Visa has set its sights on generating more than half of its revenue from international markets by 2015 as the U.S. card-payments market matures and foreign-government interest in providing citizens alternatives to cash and checks rises.

Currently about 44% of Visa's revenue comes from countries outside the U.S.

"We love our position in the United States...but it's hard not to look at what the opportunity is outside the U.S.," Charles Scharf, Visa's new chief executive officer, said during an earnings conference call last week in which he stressed international expansion continues to be a top goal for the company. Visa is aiming to displace the "astonishing" amount of cash and checks that remain in the global market, Mr. Scharf said.

Visa credit and debit accounts were used to make $2.74 trillion in purchases worldwide during the first half of last year, representing more than 46% of total card purchase volume, according to the Nilson Report, a payments-industry newsletter.

MasterCard Inc. (MA), Visa's biggest U.S. rival, is also targeting developing countries where cash and checks reign supreme and technology like merchant credit-card terminals and ATMs are lacking. The Purchase, N.Y.-based company generates more than 60% of its revenue from international markets.

With its new platform, Visa will be able to manage the customer-enrollment process for program providers, monitor regulatory compliance requirements and perform other functions.

"Our goal is by making the system more robust...we increase the number of participants and the number of transactions happening in the system, which results in" an increase in revenue that Visa generates by processing transactions, Mr. Raj said.

 
 
 

Write to Andrew R. Johnson at andrew.r.johnson@dowjones.com

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