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Italy’s Nexi signs digital payments deal with TIM’s Olivetti By Reuters


© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: The logo of Italian payments group Nexi is pictured outside its headquarters in Milan, Italy, March 28, 2019. REUTERS/Alessandro Garofalo

MILAN (Reuters) – Nexi (BIT:) and Telecom Italia (BIT:)’s Olivetti have teamed up to provide advanced electronic payment solutions to businesses, the companies said on Tuesday.

Under the accord, Nexi’s payment systems will be built into Olivetti’s cash registers, they said in a joint statement, with the companies also planning to develop and sell integrated tax and payment solutions for retailers.

Nexi, Europe’s biggest payments group by volumes, will be able to offer its services through Olivetti’s commercial network, which comprises more than 300 dealers and distributors, they said.

No financial details of the partnership were disclosed.

“The partnership between Olivetti and Nexi … aims to boost electronic payments. Merchants will be able to subscribe to a single offer to receive a smart cash register and payment services,” they said.

“Olivetti owns a significant share of the Italian market for cash registers and … thanks to accords with leading fintech companies, has been strengthening its role as TIM’s digital payments provider.”

Italy lags behind the European average in terms of digital payments, which account for a third of the total, Nexi data shows, compared with nearly half in Europe as a whole.

However, the pace of growth in digital payments has been faster than in the rest of Europe in recent years, the European Central Bank says.

In a break with previous governments that sought to promote electronic payments, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s right-wing executive had proposed scrapping fines for retailers refusing card payments for small sums.

Criticised by both the Bank of Italy and the European Commission for a move they said could aid tax evasion, the government dropped the measure and requested payments firms and banks consult businesses over axing fees on small payments.

In the absence of a deal by March 31, the government said it would tax half of the proceeds on small transactions and return the money to shopkeepers.

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