Citigroup wins deal to offer credit cards for Wayfair, edging out rival Alliance Data Systems

Finance

Niraj Shah, Wayfair CEO

Ashlee Espinal | CNBC

Citigroup won the rights to offer a pair of new credit cards with online furniture seller Wayfair, edging out Alliance Data Systems, CNBC has learned.

The deal happened amid surging demand for home goods as millions of Americans were forced to work remotely from their residences during the coronavirus pandemic. Wayfair saw an 84% jump in second-quarter sales and turned a profit for the first time since going public in 2014. The online retailer’s stock has climbed 192% this year. 

Credit-card issuers have been fiercely jockeying over multi-year co-brand deals as they offer banks a way to quickly tap into consumer spending at popular retailers. For instance, last year Goldman Sachs won the rights to offer the Apple Card, helping it immediately ramp up its nascent consumer finance business.

Citigroup, which wrested the Costco card from American Express in 2016, similarly displaced Columbus, Ohio-based Alliance Data, a major provider of private-label cards that had previously offered a Wayfair card, according to a person with knowledge of the deal.

E-commerce businesses in particular have seen robust sales as the pandemic makes it harder to shop in physical stores. Online spending by users of Citigroup retail cards jumped almost 30% this year versus 2019, said Citigroup spokeswoman Jennifer Bombardier.

“As retail continues to move online, we are thrilled to partner with Wayfair to provide customers with seamless, convenient financing,” said Craig Vallorano, head of Citigroup’s retail services business.

The Citigroup products include a store card that works only at Wayfair and its affiliated brands, and a co-branded card that works anywhere Mastercard is accepted, according to Bombardier. They both offer 5% in rewards on eligible Wayfair purchases and have a variable APR of 26.99%.

The co-branded card also earns 3% at grocery stores, 2% on online purchases and 1% on all other transactions. Customers can use the cards to defer payments on larger purchases for 6 to 24 months, or finance payments for 24 to 60 months at a 9.99% rate.

Wayfair co-chairman and co-founders Steve Conine (C) and Niraj Shah applaud as they ring the opening bell above the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on the day of the company's IPO October 2, 2014.

How Wayfair is becoming the Amazon of the home goods market

Articles You May Like

Citadel’s Ken Griffin says Trump’s tariffs could lead to crony capitalism
Student loan legal battles delay SAVE borrowers’ path to forgiveness
AMC is poised to ride the box-office rebound, as long as its debt doesn’t get in the way
Crypto investor pays $6 million for a banana — and plans to eat it
Lowe’s beats on earnings and hikes guidance, but still expects sales to fall this year

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *