Have been liking the Capital One Quicksilver MasterCard. Decent cash back or airline miles. Of course it's setup for monthly auto payments. A trend I've noticed that I don't like is businesses passing on the processing fee, although I'm a fan of businesses that give a discount for cash...my mechanic for one, HVAC outfit that replaced our HVAC in our beach house...10% discount for cash.
Capital One is kind of a weird bank. It's all computerized. They give me credit cards with huge spending limits and then when I try to open a bank account there, they say they have no proof I exist. So I ask them "So you have no proof that I exist but you're fine with extending $60,000 in credit card limits to me and you want me to get a car loan?"
They said talk to Early Warning Systems. I have no trouble opening up bank accounts anywhere else. There's also no reconsideration of anything their computer has decided.
They offered my spouse a $300 welcome bonus on a Quicksilver card and did a triple pull and said "too many open credit cards", and that's with a FICO score just 11 points lower than mine (802 and 791).
Really what's going on here with my spouse is they looked at that and they said "This person pays their bills, and they never revolve and we're not going to make interest, and they're clearly using each card for its top reward category and so we're just not going to compete with all that."
Those banks are getting wise to churners. And Capital One is also paying attention to dormant credit cards or people who have all these high credit limits and aren't using them and they send letters out sometimes. I've never gotten one. But they say basically "We're going to review your account and cut your limit. To opt out of this review, here's a number."
And you can call it and say "I'm planning to spend more in the next year." it's all automated and they skip you for another year.
But credit card limits can go up or down. They all keep an eye on you and see if you're making late payments or starting to revolve more and more on other cards, or the economy can get better or worse causing charge-offs to go up or down in general. Right now they go up pretty much every quarter.
So we're starting to see more banks balance chase people who they consider risky. And people can be so entitled and it's always funny to see a bank like Citi or Synchrony balance chase someone who is obviously not paying their bill off like a person who had any money would do.
Businesses that charge more to credit card users generally just don't get my business because I hate carrying cash. It's stupid.
And if you get mugged or lose your wallet or something, nobody replaces your cash.
Illinois just passed a landmark law that says credit card companies can't charge interchange, beginning in July, on taxes and tips. So they're suing us in federal court because they don't want their interchange fees to go down.
The State also repealed a law that just gave retailers a ridiculous open-ended 1.35% for collecting sales tax, which is now capped at $10,000 worth per month. So the State raises revenues, but makes the business break-even by cutting the interchange fee they have to pay to the bank, so it's a two-step and a new tax on banks, which I think is hilarious. The banks lost their bid for an injunction on the law, so we'll see.
Discover has already gotten worse in anticipation of being acquired by Capital One.
They ditched pretty much all their network-level perks ages ago and have not innovated on the rewards structure in years. A 5% category revolver was cool 20 years ago but most banks have better gimmicks. They also offloaded their student loan division and have laid off a bunch of people in Illinois.
Capital One probably has no intention of honoring their Community Benefits Agreement. Lord knows the people in charge of the nation these days won't hold them to it.
It'll be T-Mobile/Sprint all over again. (They promised lower bills and more jobs, then sacked 25,000 people and doubled bills.)
Whatever they promise to get the merger through, they tend to lie. Companies in general do. Capital One will be a very dangerous bank when it takes on Discover's depositors and credit card accounts and an entire network.
They'll have to do a lot of work to expand the Discover network. It's generally well accepted in North America and spotty anywhere else. They say there's merchants and banks and then nobody knows what the hell a Discover card is.