Lina Khan is a breath of fresh air and she seems to get the pro-big business people really worked up, so she must be doing something right! I wish the Overton Window was in a better location so she could do her thing.
Discover has always done right by me. I get solid cash back instead of points. They used to have some great card benefits like free extended warranties that saved me money over the years. They were immediately helpful when I have lost a card or when I discovered fraudulent purchases. Customer service has been quick and helpful whenever I've needed it. They've been more than fair in extending my limits over the years. They don't push me to do any add on services.
After more than 20 years of being a customer, I don't see how anyone could do much better to someone who hasn't paid a dollar of interest in probably at least 15 of those years.
Getting a Discover card was probably the first adult financial step I took, and I really hope they don't get messed up by this. They've helped me grow the life I have now, and while I wouldn't necessarily say I'd be brand loyal no matter what, I'd be upset if after all this time something happened that would make me want to switch my primary card to something else.
Well I'm certainly glad it's been helpful to you, but there seem to be so few places where it is accepted vs. Visa or Mastercard. Do you have to have both a Discover card and either one of those as well?
Because it's all in-house. There is no Visa bank, so when you have a Visa card, your agreement is between you, Visa, and the lending bank. That's why you have a Chase Visa, or Bank of America Visa.
Discover, however, is an actual financial institution, so their credit terms don't stipulate or involve other institutions. And that may seem like nothing, until something goes wrong. I was a Bank of America banker for a decade (it was a different lifetime, I swear) and I can tell you my personal first-hand experience with problem-solving between the two companies is no comparison. The autonomy of Discover controlling both the assets and transactions affords them much greater and simpler power in cases of dispute or problems.
As somebody formerly in the industry, Discover is actually the only credit card company I ever recommend to anyone.
I've asked others, but since you're definitely in the know about this stuff... it seems to me like it's not accepted in very many places. So if that's your only credit card, do you just have to hope a place accepts it or pay debit?
Discover Card used to be owned by Sears Roebuck Co.. Back in the olden days, Discover Card was a product for consumers looking to continue building their credit history.
It was relatively easy to get a low-limit Sears store credit card with no credit history whatsoever. After using the Sears store card for 6 months to a year, Sears would offer the Discover Card as a general-purpose credit card. Discover was an attractive financial vehicle as it offered path of least resistance to establish a credit history.
Sears was as ubiquitous a retailer as Amazon is today. Sears credit and Discover offered an unmatched level of purchasing power for the new consumer.
Sears sold off Discover to a third party shortly before they sold themselves to the same company that bought K-Mart. Sears c-suite leadership did not pivot into online sales fast enough and Amazon crowded them out of the future.
Source: I worked for Sears back when most of you were itching your daddy’s pants. I signed up many, many folks for Sears cards and I got $5 each time. Now get off my lawn, my knees hurt.
Because despite credit companies being a complete garbage heap of a way to shift money from the poor to the ultra rich, they can provide financial flexibility in the short term. Opening a new Discover card with 0% APR for 12 months to pay for a $1800 fridge when my old one's conpressor is shot is more responsible than blowing my $2000 in savings.
That certainly sounds like it. I guess my only question is about how few places accept it (or that's how I perceive it anyway). Or do you just hope you can do stuff like that if they do accept it and otherwise you pay with another means?
And btw for the record American Express is also their own financial institution just like Discover, but I don't recommend them for most people for a few reasons: they tend to have higher credit standards, more of their cards have complicated or confusing terms, and many people don't realize that a number of their cards are still true legitimate charge cards rather than credit cards, meaning they require repayment in full every month rather than allowing a running line of credit. And yes that last one should be avoidable by simply reading terms, but I've seen more than one person get bit by not understanding what they're getting into with Amex.
That said, Amex also has some unique advantages, and if you're a frequent international traveler those advantages may be enough to make them the superior choice.
Honestly, American Express sounds perfect for me since I already treat my cards exactly like that (and as you can guess, that helps my credit rating too). I should look into this
Discover has a 5% cash back calendar where you get up $75 back for purchases in that category. Others have them too not usually that high and it's hard to know if you reached the limit for the promotion. Their website site and customer service is great. Yes I have other cards and I use whichever will get me the most cash back. It's unusual for someone not to take discover where I go but that's the reason for the other cards.
I loved it when they had the "digital wallets" category last year. 5% on all mobile payments. It didn't count PayPal payments but I still maxed out the $75 cash back with my normal spending. Easiest $75 of my life
Visa systems were down one day for me when I needed gas, and I decided then to always have at least two different types just in case (it also helps with other issues as I tend of get chip malfunction errors and stuff)
It is usually my first choice card for things. I think they have the best customer relations, web site, and terms of the major card companies. I really hope Capital One fails to acquire them.
They used to have great cash back deals. Lately not as much. But you’d get 5% back on rotating categories, and then could spend that money for 10% off a variety of gift cards. They still have the 5% categories, but the gift cards rarely go on sale anymore.
Health insurance. UnitedHealth has a blatant vertical monopoly that needs to be dealt with.
To add info, Optum is owned by United. So, you could see your provider at an Optum Clinic, get a prescription from OptumRx, pay your co-pays with your OptumBank HSA, and, of course, your insurance is from United Health. So, literally no part of that interaction left the UnitedHealth ecosystem. And they claimed a profit from every single one of those interactions.
It's why I laugh at grocery stores trying the propaganda of, "Well we need to pay this much to that and this and that" as if they don't own a huge chunk of that vertical chain