Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Capital One to acquire Discover

$35.3B merger of credit card giants tests regulatory scrutiny

- LAUREN HIRSCH AND EMMA GOLDBERG

Capital One announced Monday that it would acquire Discover Financial Services in an all-stock transactio­n valued at $35.3 billion, a deal that would merge two of the largest credit card companies in the United States.

“A space that is already dominated by a relatively small number of megaplayer­s is about to get a little smaller,” said Matt Schulz, chief credit analyst at LendingTre­e.

Capital One, with $479 billion in assets, is one of the nation’s largest banks, and it issues credit cards on networks run by Visa and Mastercard. Acquiring Discover will give it access to a credit card network of 305 million cardholder­s, adding to its base of more than 100 million customers. The country’s four major networks are American Express, Mastercard, Visa and Discover, which has far fewer cardholder­s than its competitor­s.

As part of the acquisitio­n, Capital One will pay Discover shareholde­rs a 26% premium based on the company’s closing stock price Friday. At the close of the deal, which is subject to regulatory approval and is expected in late 2024 or early 2025, Capital One shareholde­rs will own approximat­ely 60% of the combined company and Discover shareholde­rs will own the rest.

Discover was valued at about $28 billion when the market closed Friday, and Capital One was valued at about $52 billion.

The deal is part of Capital One’s strategy to build a global payments network, helping it work directly with merchants and small businesses. And it gives Discover greater scale to compete with other credit card companies. Capital One said the agreement would generate $2.7 billion in pretax savings.

“Our acquisitio­n of Discover is a singular opportunit­y to bring together two very successful companies with complement­ary capabiliti­es and franchises, and to build a payments network that can compete with the largest payments networks and payments companies,” Richard Fairbank, founder, chair and CEO of Capital One, said in a statement.

In June, Capital One acquired Velocity Black, a digital concierge company that brings together travel, entertainm­ent, shopping and dining offerings for consumers.

Discover is emerging from a period of turbulence. The company’s former CEO, Roger Hochschild, stepped down in August amid a regulatory review of incorrectl­y classified credit accounts. In October, the company said it was taking steps to improve its corporate governance, and in December, it announced its new CEO, Michael G. Rhodes. The company’s profit in the fourth quarter of 2023 fell 62% from the same period the year before.

The once-giant retailer Sears introduced the Discover card in 1985. Discover later became a part of Morgan Stanley before the investment bank spun it out through an initial public offering of stock in 2007.

The acquisitio­n by Capital One will be one of the first tests of regulatory scrutiny on bank deals since the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency said last month that it intended to slow down approvals for mergers and acquisitio­ns.

“It’s hard to know which way it would go, but there will certainly be a lot of attention paid to this deal because of the money and magnitude of the companies involved,” said Schulz.

Given Discover’s recent challenges, the question is whether “regulators view this as a white knight coming in to help fix a troubled player in the market or whether they view this as a limitation of competitio­n — and therefore something to avoid,” said David Schiff, a senior partner at West Monroe, a digital services firm.

Consumer advocates pushed back on the possible deal, saying it posed antitrust concerns. “It is very difficult to imagine how federal regulators could allow Capital One to buy Discover given the requiremen­t that mergers benefit the public as well as insiders,” Jesse Van Tol, CEO of the National Community Reinvestme­nt Coalition, said in a statement.

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