Adinnieken said:
There is always an exchange rate penalty. Do you think banks on any level just provide services for free? NO. There is a fee for every financial transaction that involves an exchange of foreign currency. Microsoft is a US company. Regardless of whether it does business in the UK or Canada, the company has to at some point perform an exchange of currency, for which it incurs a fee. This is one of the reasons why US companies refuse to do business with consumers outside of the US. Not to mention the shipping expense, as well as import fees. Nevertheless, once you get over those two shockers, the retailer then finds out the bank took a cut. |
Explain how the transactions are different now, instead of using vague overarcing scenarios.
Previously, to my understanding, what a customer would do, is go to xboxlive or go to game store and buy a card using a credit card or cash.
For the xboxlive direct point purchase, MS pays a CC fee. For the store, MS sold to a distributor, and then that distributor sold them to the store, and then the store pays a CC transaction fee when someone comes in and buys the card with a CC.
What has changed in terms of costs to MS?
It cost more to buy an ms points card in UK than it did in the US, because of the currency. What's so different now?









