Credit cards
Credit cards
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Eight months after its debut, more than 10,000 customers have signed up for the service, which allows transgender and nonbinary consumers to use their chosen name.
June 15 -
Brian Doubles, who became the card issuer’s chief executive in April, also expressed optimism that pent-up consumer demand will spur renewed spending this year.
June 10 -
The bank has its eye on younger cardholders who are ready to spend more heavily now that pandemic restrictions have eased.
June 10 -
Amazon.com is fielding bids to replace JPMorgan Chase as the issuer on its popular co-brand credit card as a fresh wave of competition for new card customers emerges.
June 9 -
Global Payments' TSYS subsidiary and BM Technologies will offer the program, which allows transgender and nonbinary consumers to use their preferred name on payment cards.
June 9 -
The product, which will compete against Citi’s Double Cash card, is the first step in CEO Charlie Scharf’s revamp of a business segment that has long trailed top competitors.
June 8 -
The card brand now offers tuition to Paul Quinn College, one of 107 historically Black colleges and universities in the U.S.
June 4 -
Users of the Goldman Sachs-issued card found themselves unable to make payments or view account details.
June 2 -
The store-branded credit card issuer is expanding from three sales divisions to five, a move that CEO Brian Doubles says will help by “aligning our organization for faster growth and execution.”
June 1 -
The private-label card issuer says that, as merchants reopen, now is the time to realize the benefits of its 2020 acquisition of the buy now/pay later company Bread.
May 26