Showing posts with label Discover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Discover. Show all posts

Monday, April 26, 2010

Discover® Small Business WatchSM: Economic Confidence Bounces Back from Brief Tumbl






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Small Business Owners See Conditions for Their Businesses Improving, Rate the Overall Economy Better

NETWORKING: Small Business Owners Continue Slow Crawl onto Web: Social Networking Increases Over Last Year, 21% More Small Businesses Have Web Sites
RIVERWOODS, Ill.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Small business confidence jumped 9.4 points from March to April, bringing the measure of small business confidence back to where it was at the start of the year, according to the Discover® Small Business WatchSM. The index rose to 85.1, up from 75.7. A similar jump occurred last year when the index gained 10.3 points from March to April.
“The percentage of owners who rate the economy good or excellent is the highest it has been since August 2008 – just weeks before the collapse of the financial markets.”
“Small business owners are more positive this month about where the current economy stands and where it appears to be heading,” said Ryan Scully, director of Discover's business credit card, who commissions the monthly survey. “The percentage of owners who rate the economy good or excellent is the highest it has been since August 2008 – just weeks before the collapse of the financial markets.”
April results show a surge in the number of small business owners who say economic conditions for their own businesses are getting better: 30 percent of them say the climate will improve in the next six months, compared to only 20 percent in March. Of the remaining respondents; 48 percent say the climate is getting worse, but that number is down from 53 percent in March.
When asked about their intentions to invest in their businesses, 23 percent say they would increase spending, up from 18 percent in March, while 43 percent still plan to decrease spending, which is down from 52 percent in March; 31 percent say they will make no changes.
Other April Confidence Indicators:
  • Small business owners who say the current economy is good or excellent was 13 percent in April, up from 7 percent in March and the highest it has been in 20 months; 29 percent rate the economy as fair, and 57 percent think it’s poor.

  • The outlook for the direction of the economy improved: 31 percent say it is getting better, up from 22 percent in March; while 52 percent say it’s getting worse, down from 58 percent the prior month; and 14 percent aren’t sure.

  • Cash flow issues eased slightly: Fewer owners said their businesses encountered temporary cash flow issues in the past 90 days that caused them to hold off on paying some bills: 51 percent said they did not experience cash flow issues in April, compared with 47 percent in March. Those owners who had cash flow issues dropped from 46 percent in March to 45 percent in April.

POLL: Social Networking Continues to Grow
Small Business Watch surveys since 2007 have shown an increasing number of small businesses using the Internet to sustain and grow their businesses.
“Social networking for business purposes is growing,” Scully said. “With such small operations, small business owners don’t need a long time to tell whether something is good or bad for business, so the social networking numbers will be the ones to watch.”
In 2007, 22 percent of small business owners told the Watch that they were members of an online social networking community such as Facebook, Linked-In, My Space or Twitter. Three years later, that number has more than doubled to 48 percent as of this month. Of those who are social networking, 55 percent say they have used it to promote their businesses, which is up from 45 percent in 2009.
In addition, 35 percent of small business owners who told the Watch that they promote their operations through social networking use four or five sites; 43 percent use two or three sites; 20 percent use one site; and 2 percent use more than five sites.
In terms of which networking opportunities they seek most, online sites moved into second place at 14 percent, a jump from 8 percent last year. Other networking avenues include:
  • Local, in-person networking groups – 26 percent

  • In person at conferences and organized events – 10 percent

  • Chambers of Commerce or trade associations – 9 percent

  • E-mail – 6 percent

  • Other forms of networking – 15 percent

  • Not sure – 21 percent

While the number of small business owners who have Web sites increased from 37 percent in 2009 to 45 percent in 2010, there are still many who say they don’t need one. Of the 55 percent of small business owners who don’t have a Web site, 57 percent say their businesses will never have one; 29 percent say they will; and 14 percent are not sure.
Other Networking Poll Highlights:
  • The biggest benefit cited by members of social networking sites is getting new business leads: 32 percent of owners cited new leads as the top benefit, followed by getting business tips, 12 percent; getting new suppliers, 2 percent; getting new employees, 0 percent; benefiting in other ways, 29 percent; not benefiting at all, 22 percent; and not sure, 3 percent.

  • 78 percent of small business owners are not members of their local chambers of commerce.

  • 72 percent are not members of an online community specific to their industries, down from 78 percent last year.

  • 44 percent have used e-mail to promote their businesses, up from 40 percent in 2009.

The views and opinions expressed by small business owners and consumers who participate in the Small Business Watch survey are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of Discover Financial Services or its affiliates.
About the Small Business Watch
The Discover Small Business Watch is a monthly index measuring the relative economic confidence of U.S. small business owners who have less than five employees, a segment that consists of 22 million businesses producing more than a trillion dollars in annual receipts. The Watch is based on a national random survey of 750 small business owners. It is commissioned by Discover Business card, which strives to offer the best business credit card for American small businesses, and is conducted by Rasmussen Reports, LLC (www.rasmussenreports.com), an independent survey research firm. The numeric index is calculated by assigning values to responses to a set of six consistent questions. The base value of the Watch was established at 100.0 based on surveys conducted in August 2006. In addition to generating the index, the Small Business Watch surveys small business owners every month on key issues, and polls 3,000 consumers four times per year to gauge purchasing behavior and attitudes towards small businesses. For past results and survey data, visit www.discovercard.com/business/watch. For information on Discover Business card, visit www.discovercard.com/business.
About Discover
Discover Financial Services (NYSE: DFS) is a direct banking and payment services company with one of the most recognized brands in U.S. financial services. Since its inception in 1986, the company has become one of the largest card issuers in the United States. The company operates the Discover card, America's cash rewards pioneer, and offers personal and student loans, online savings accounts, certificates of deposit and money market accounts through its Discover Bank subsidiary. Its payment businesses consist of Discover Network, with millions of merchant and cash access locations; PULSE, one of the nation's leading ATM/debit networks; and Diners Club International, a global payments network with acceptance in more than 185 countries and territories. For more information, visit www.discoverfinancial.com.

Discover® Small Business WatchSM: Economic Confidence Bounces Back from Brief Tumbl






Click to Enlarge


Small Business Owners See Conditions for Their Businesses Improving, Rate the Overall Economy Better

NETWORKING: Small Business Owners Continue Slow Crawl onto Web: Social Networking Increases Over Last Year, 21% More Small Businesses Have Web Sites
RIVERWOODS, Ill.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Small business confidence jumped 9.4 points from March to April, bringing the measure of small business confidence back to where it was at the start of the year, according to the Discover® Small Business WatchSM. The index rose to 85.1, up from 75.7. A similar jump occurred last year when the index gained 10.3 points from March to April.
“The percentage of owners who rate the economy good or excellent is the highest it has been since August 2008 – just weeks before the collapse of the financial markets.”
“Small business owners are more positive this month about where the current economy stands and where it appears to be heading,” said Ryan Scully, director of Discover's business credit card, who commissions the monthly survey. “The percentage of owners who rate the economy good or excellent is the highest it has been since August 2008 – just weeks before the collapse of the financial markets.”
April results show a surge in the number of small business owners who say economic conditions for their own businesses are getting better: 30 percent of them say the climate will improve in the next six months, compared to only 20 percent in March. Of the remaining respondents; 48 percent say the climate is getting worse, but that number is down from 53 percent in March.
When asked about their intentions to invest in their businesses, 23 percent say they would increase spending, up from 18 percent in March, while 43 percent still plan to decrease spending, which is down from 52 percent in March; 31 percent say they will make no changes.
Other April Confidence Indicators:
  • Small business owners who say the current economy is good or excellent was 13 percent in April, up from 7 percent in March and the highest it has been in 20 months; 29 percent rate the economy as fair, and 57 percent think it’s poor.

  • The outlook for the direction of the economy improved: 31 percent say it is getting better, up from 22 percent in March; while 52 percent say it’s getting worse, down from 58 percent the prior month; and 14 percent aren’t sure.

  • Cash flow issues eased slightly: Fewer owners said their businesses encountered temporary cash flow issues in the past 90 days that caused them to hold off on paying some bills: 51 percent said they did not experience cash flow issues in April, compared with 47 percent in March. Those owners who had cash flow issues dropped from 46 percent in March to 45 percent in April.

POLL: Social Networking Continues to Grow
Small Business Watch surveys since 2007 have shown an increasing number of small businesses using the Internet to sustain and grow their businesses.
“Social networking for business purposes is growing,” Scully said. “With such small operations, small business owners don’t need a long time to tell whether something is good or bad for business, so the social networking numbers will be the ones to watch.”
In 2007, 22 percent of small business owners told the Watch that they were members of an online social networking community such as Facebook, Linked-In, My Space or Twitter. Three years later, that number has more than doubled to 48 percent as of this month. Of those who are social networking, 55 percent say they have used it to promote their businesses, which is up from 45 percent in 2009.
In addition, 35 percent of small business owners who told the Watch that they promote their operations through social networking use four or five sites; 43 percent use two or three sites; 20 percent use one site; and 2 percent use more than five sites.
In terms of which networking opportunities they seek most, online sites moved into second place at 14 percent, a jump from 8 percent last year. Other networking avenues include:
  • Local, in-person networking groups – 26 percent

  • In person at conferences and organized events – 10 percent

  • Chambers of Commerce or trade associations – 9 percent

  • E-mail – 6 percent

  • Other forms of networking – 15 percent

  • Not sure – 21 percent

While the number of small business owners who have Web sites increased from 37 percent in 2009 to 45 percent in 2010, there are still many who say they don’t need one. Of the 55 percent of small business owners who don’t have a Web site, 57 percent say their businesses will never have one; 29 percent say they will; and 14 percent are not sure.
Other Networking Poll Highlights:
  • The biggest benefit cited by members of social networking sites is getting new business leads: 32 percent of owners cited new leads as the top benefit, followed by getting business tips, 12 percent; getting new suppliers, 2 percent; getting new employees, 0 percent; benefiting in other ways, 29 percent; not benefiting at all, 22 percent; and not sure, 3 percent.

  • 78 percent of small business owners are not members of their local chambers of commerce.

  • 72 percent are not members of an online community specific to their industries, down from 78 percent last year.

  • 44 percent have used e-mail to promote their businesses, up from 40 percent in 2009.

The views and opinions expressed by small business owners and consumers who participate in the Small Business Watch survey are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of Discover Financial Services or its affiliates.
About the Small Business Watch
The Discover Small Business Watch is a monthly index measuring the relative economic confidence of U.S. small business owners who have less than five employees, a segment that consists of 22 million businesses producing more than a trillion dollars in annual receipts. The Watch is based on a national random survey of 750 small business owners. It is commissioned by Discover Business card, which strives to offer the best business credit card for American small businesses, and is conducted by Rasmussen Reports, LLC (www.rasmussenreports.com), an independent survey research firm. The numeric index is calculated by assigning values to responses to a set of six consistent questions. The base value of the Watch was established at 100.0 based on surveys conducted in August 2006. In addition to generating the index, the Small Business Watch surveys small business owners every month on key issues, and polls 3,000 consumers four times per year to gauge purchasing behavior and attitudes towards small businesses. For past results and survey data, visit www.discovercard.com/business/watch. For information on Discover Business card, visit www.discovercard.com/business.
About Discover
Discover Financial Services (NYSE: DFS) is a direct banking and payment services company with one of the most recognized brands in U.S. financial services. Since its inception in 1986, the company has become one of the largest card issuers in the United States. The company operates the Discover card, America's cash rewards pioneer, and offers personal and student loans, online savings accounts, certificates of deposit and money market accounts through its Discover Bank subsidiary. Its payment businesses consist of Discover Network, with millions of merchant and cash access locations; PULSE, one of the nation's leading ATM/debit networks; and Diners Club International, a global payments network with acceptance in more than 185 countries and territories. For more information, visit www.discoverfinancial.com.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Discover Card Announces Winners of Student Card Design Contest

Discover Facebook Fans Submit Thousands of User-Generated Designs


RIVERWOODS, Ill.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Discover card today announced the winners of the company’s first social media Discover® Student card design contest. Grand prize winner, Rainna Langley, was awarded $1,000 for her cassette tape-themed artwork. Lauren Snyder received $500 for her space-themed card design, and third place recipient, John Bell, was awarded $250 for his dollar bill card design.





“The contest enabled Discover fans and visitors to share in the creation of a new student card design in an easy, fun and interactive way”



The online contest, which launched in mid-December, provided two ways for Discover fans to participate in the card design creative process. First, users created and shared original artwork through the Discover Facebook page. The highly interactive application enabled Discover fans and visitors to easily draw their designs on a widget with a Discover card graphic overlay that resembled a real credit card.



Second, Discover fans and visitors voted on their favorite designs. The social media contest received approximately 6,700 card design entries and over 200,000 votes. The grand prize winning design will be featured on the next Discover Student card, which is slated to debut in April.



“The contest enabled Discover fans and visitors to share in the creation of a new student card design in an easy, fun and interactive way,” said Anas Osman, vice president of acquisition at Discover. “Not only did we receive great artwork with tremendous voter participation, we also saw greater awareness of our Discover Student card and a 25 percent increase of Discover card Facebook fans since the contest launched.”



Honorable mentions included card designs by Aoki Duank, Glen Donaldson, John Quinton, and Omnia Mostafa Tawakol. They each received a $50 Discover gift card.



About Discover



Discover Financial Services (NYSE: DFS) is a direct banking and payment services company with one of the most recognized brands in U.S. financial services. Since its inception in 1986, the company has become one of the largest card issuers in the United States. The company operates the Discover card, America's cash rewards pioneer, and offers personal and student loans, online savings accounts, certificates of deposit and money market accounts through its Discover Bank subsidiary. Its payment businesses consist of Discover Network, with millions of merchant and cash access locations; PULSE, one of the nation's leading ATM/debit networks; and Diners Club International, a global payments network with acceptance in more than 185 countries and territories. For more information, visit www.discoverfinancial.com.



Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=6190968&lang=en

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Discover Seeks $6 Billion in Damages from V/MC


June 9 (Bloomberg) -- Discover Financial Services is seeking $6 billion in damages from Visa Inc. and MasterCard Inc. in an antitrust lawsuit accusing the bigger credit-card rivals of squashing competition.

The damages, which may be tripled, were included in confidential filings unsealed today in federal court in the Southern District of New York. Visa said today the amount was ``dramatically overstated'' and MasterCard called the suit ``baseless.'' Both companies fell in New York trading.

"The numbers on potential damages Discover is seeking are large,'' Sanjay Sakhrani, an analyst at KBW Inc. in New York, said in an interview. ``However we think a settlement for a meaningfully smaller amount still remains a likely scenario.''

Discover, the fourth-largest credit-card network, filed a lawsuit in October 2004 against Visa and MasterCard, claiming the two largest networks broke the law by barring member banks from offering rival cards. Visa agreed last year to pay $2.25 billion to American Express Co. in a settlement of a parallel suit, an amount Discover Chief Executive Officer David Nelms called ``cheap.'' MasterCard dropped $1.42 to $294.31 at 4 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange trading and Visa fell $1.51, or 1.8 percent, to $82.14. Discover fell 37 cents to $15.33. No Improvement Visa and MasterCard issued separate statements saying Discover's credit and debit businesses haven't benefited much since the ban was lifted, letting banks issue Discover cards along with Visa or MasterCard cards.

"Discover has not seen any increase in its overall percentage of the credit-card volume share'' after the policies were changed, Sharon Gamsin, spokeswoman for Purchase, New York- based MasterCard, said in the statement.

Visa, based in San Francisco, set aside $650 million for a possible Discover settlement from the $3 billion fund established after its record March initial public offering. The funds come from IPO proceeds of banks that owned the network, and the companies are obliged to pay for a larger Discover settlement if needed.

MasterCard didn't set up a similar system when it went public, which means shareholders may be affected by future settlements, Sakhrani said. He rates Visa and MasterCard ``outperform'' and Discover ``market perform.''


`Appropriate Settlement'

The documents had been filed under protective order since the case began. The lawsuits by Discover and American Express follow a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that Visa and MasterCard violated antitrust laws in competing against smaller companies.

I was a little surprised that AmEx settled as early or as cheap as they did,'' Nelms said in a Jan. 29 conference call with analysts. ``If we had an appropriate settlement at an appropriate time, we would consider that.''

Like New York-based American Express, Discover extends credit and runs a network that processes transactions for other lenders. Visa and MasterCard only operate networks and don't make loans to consumers.

Discover shares have declined 47 percent since the company was spun off a year ago by Morgan Stanley as the U.S. housing slump hurts consumers' ability to repay debt of all kinds. The company's market valuation is about $7.6 billion, according to Bloomberg data.

MasterCard shares have almost doubled in the past year and Visa shares have surged 84 percent since its IPO. The companies, which sidestep the rising customer defaults of lenders, capitalize on consumers' increasing preference for using credit and debit cards over cash and checks.

Visa's IPO raised $17.9 billion on March 18, the most for a U.S. company, and the tally passed $19 billion after more shares were sold to satisfy demand. It was the world's second-largest public offering after Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd.'s $22 billion debut in 2006.

The case is Discover Financial Services, Inc. v. Visa U.S.A., Inc. et al, 04-CV-7844, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).

To contact the reporter on this story: Hugh Son in New York at hson1@bloomberg.net

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