Arab Times

Streaming services, new credit card rewards binge

Issuers forging early connection­s with consumers

- By Sara Rathner

When it comes to credit card rewards, it’s not all about gas, groceries and restaurant­s anymore. Issuers are moving beyond suburban staples to include millennial­friendly categories such as transit and streaming subscripti­ons.

The trend toward streaming rewards, in particular, is hard to miss, with cards from American Express, Chase and Wells Fargo now featuring streaming as a bonus category. But what’s behind this explosion?

For starters, streaming is wildly popular. As of 2017, more than half of US households subscribed to paid video-streaming services, according to Deloitte’s digital media trends survey . But experts say it’s also about issuers forging early connection­s with younger consumers and ensuring that they remain customers.

“The strategy is simple: If a consumer opens a credit card when young, the (issuer) can build a longterm relationsh­ip with the consumer,” says Logan Allec, a CPA and founder of the financial blog Money Done Right .

Meeting People Where They’re Spending

The Deloitte study notes the percentage of US households subscribin­g to a paid streaming video

service grew from 10% in 2009 to 55% in 2017 – a 450% increase. Consumers subscribe to an average of three such services.

Issuers have taken notice. Wells Fargo made a splash last summer, revamping the Wells Fargo Propel American Express, which now earns triple points back per dollar spent on eligible streaming services. In May 2019, the Blue Cash Preferred Card from American Express underwent a makeover, adding select US streaming services as a 6% cash-back category.

The following month, the Chase Freedom entered the streaming fray. The card earns 5% cash back in bonus categories that rotate each quarter, on up to $1,500 in spending per quarter. (You must opt in to the bonus categories each quarter; all other purchases earn 1% back.) From July 1 to Sept 30, 2019, one of those bonus categories is select streaming services.

Kunal Madhok , vice-president of US consumer lending and acquisitio­n at American Express, noted via email that AmEx research found that a segment of millennial­s were spending more on “day-to-day” costs like commuting and streaming compared with five years ago. So the Blue Cash Preferred was reworked to reward cardholder­s more heavily for these types of costs.

“The card is designed to give people the most cash back on the things they value and spend frequently on, now including quality time at home streaming their favorite show,” Madhok said.

Of course, your monthly Netflix bill likely represents only a fraction of your household budget , so don’t expect a boatload of rewards from this category alone. Say your family spends $15.99 per month on Netflix Premium, $14.99 per month on a Spotify Family plan and $5.99 per month on Hulu, for a total of $443.64 per year. If you earn 6% cash back on these services by paying for them with the Blue Cash Preferred Card from American Express, that’s just $26.62 in rewards per year.

And that doesn’t take into account the card’s $95 annual fee. When choosing any rewards card, look for categories that match your spending enough to offset that cost.

Building Relationsh­ips With Younger Spenders

Per the Deloitte survey, 70% of Gen Z households (ages 14 to 20) had a streaming subscripti­on in 2017, as did 68% of millennial households (ages 21 to 34).

Experts say credit card issuers see an opportunit­y here to lure customers while they’re young, rewarding them for the spending they’re doing anyway while also converting them into long-term cardholder­s. (AP)

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