Recieved an “interesting” credit card offer from Visa (or some supplier there of), for the “Black Visa Card”.
Carbon-fiber, conceirge services, and high credit limits available to the just %1 of the U.S. population eligible to have the card.
The fine print: $495 annual feed.
Just like all of the other credit card offers I receive, this one quickly found the trash.
Yes, but not nearly as much as the report $4.5 billion would led you to believe. Here are their one-time earnings used to make that number:
- $1.9 billion pretax gain on the sale of shares in China Construction Bank
- $2.2 billion from an adjustment to the value of structured notes at Merrill
Things not mentioned in the headlines:
- Credit card division lost $1.8 billion
- Mortgage division lost $500 million
- $6.4 billion added to reserves to cover future losses
Who’s next up in this game? From this morning’s performance in the stock market, investors aren’t happy playing…
According to the headline of this New York Times article, they did.
But on closer inspection, their $1.6 billion profit came from a 1-time charge of $2.7 billion. So in reality, the company actually had $1.1 billion in less cash (i.e., money out the door) than they had at the start of the quarter.
It’s these types of games that need to stop.