While last year Federal Reserve rate hikes intended to dampen inflation had a negative impact on consumer demand, this year inflation has largely been reined in. Nevertheless, at least one more rate hike is expected by the Fed, which is curtailing demand. The current inflation rate, which reached 3.7 percent in September, is still above the target rate of 2 percent, but much lower than the 6.4 percent inflation rate at the beginning of the year. This will alleviate the pressure consumers feel from what was dubbed a cost of living crisis in most Western economies. In fact, Adobe’s Digital Price Index shows prices online have fallen consecutively for 12 months, decreasing 3.2 percent as of August 2023.
However, in the U.S., consumer credit card use continues to climb, with total credit card debt exceeding $1.08 trillion already in the third quarter of 2023, according to the New York Fed. Increased consumer debt makes it likely that holiday shoppers will experience buyer’s remorse in the aftermath of the holidays, leading to more opportunistic friendly fraud chargebacks and other forms of first party misuse. A senior Visa employee previously told Axios that friendly fraud increased in most markets by 20 to 30 percent in 2022. In addition, a majority of North American merchants with over $50 million a year in revenue surveyed by Justt this summer reported that they were seeing increased chargebacks in 2023. Thus, it seems likely that the trend of rising friendly fraud chargebacks year over year will continue in the 2023 holiday shopping season. The question is not whether friendly fraud will increase, but what is the overall size of the increase to be expected.
Similarly, return fraud and refund abuse are experiencing growth in general in the U.S. and Europe, according to anecdotal reports from major retail brands at industry conferences. Therefore, it seems like that such first party misuse and policy abuse will register an increase during the 2023 holiday season and its immediate aftermath. Unlike with friendly fraud chargebacks, there is little data to quantify the expected size of the impact on sales revenue in 2023 as compared with previous years. However, based on a National Retail Federation report from 2022, return fraud alone last year reached 11 percent of total eCommerce returns in the U.S. or $22.8 billion. Assuming a similar percentage of returns are fraudulent during the 2023 shopping season seems to be a fair and conservative estimate.