7-Eleven Decision on ATMs Could Affect Credit Unions

DALLAS–7-Eleven Inc. said that it will be making a change in its huge ATM business, moving away from Cardtronics, which operates the Allpoint Network, in favor of a network owned by its Japanese parent company. The announcement caused Cardtronics’ stock price to initially decline 15%.

The change is not to take place until 2017, but it could affect relationships involving credit unions, including with CU24 and with a number of state leagues. The move does not effect CO-OP Financial Services, which operates close to 2,000 shared branching kiosks in 7-Eleven stores in the U.S.

Cardtronics operates 7,500 ATMs inside 7-Eleven stores in the United States, which is the company’s biggest customer, representing 17% of its annual revenue.

7-Eleven is shifting the business to Financial Consulting and Trading International, which is owned by Seven Bank, which in turn is also owned by 7-Eleven’s parent company, Saven & I Holdings. 7-Eleven already uses FCTI as its ATM provider in Japan.

The news is not a complete surprise. Cardtronics’ executives had indicated in the past that the change might occur.

Section: Standard
Word Count: 200
Copyright Holder: CUToday.info
Copyright Year: 2026
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