Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Synchrony Financial

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Type
  
Public

Founded
  
12 September 2003

Industry
  
Financial services

Number of employees
  
12,000 (2016)

Synchrony Financial newsroomsynchronyfinancialcomsitessynchronyne

Traded as
  
NYSE: SYF S&P 500 Component

Key people
  
Margaret M. Keane President and CEO

Products
  
Credit cards Payment systems

Revenue
  
Stock price
  
SYF (NYSE) US$ 33.63 -0.67 (-1.95%)3 Apr, 1:03 PM GMT-4 - Disclaimer

Headquarters
  
Stamford, Connecticut, United States

CEO
  
Margaret M. Keane (Feb 2014–)

Profiles

Synchrony Financial is a consumer financial services company headquartered in Stamford, Connecticut, United States. Prior to its 2014 initial public offering, Synchrony operated as GE Capital Retail Finance Corporation and was a division of General Electric. The company offers consumer financing products, including credit, promotional financing and loyalty programs, and installment lending, and FDIC insured savings products through Synchrony Bank, its wholly owned subsidiary. Synchrony raised $2.88 billion in its initial public offering, making it the third largest IPO of 2014. It is publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange.

Synchrony is the largest provider of private label credit cards in the U.S. In 2014, the company comprised 42 percent of the private label credit card market. The company provides private label credit cards for such brands as Amazon, Cathay Pacific, CheapOAir, OneTravel, Walmart, Lowe’s, Guitar Center, Gap, BP, Ashley HomeStores, Discount Tire and P. C. Richard & Son. The CareCredit credit card, also through Synchrony Bank, is for elective healthcare procedures or services, such as dental, veterinary, cosmetic, vision and audiology.

On 03.20.17, Synchrony Financial has acquired GPShopper.

In June 2014, Synchrony agreed to pay $225 million after entering into a consent decree with the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The CFPB alleged "deceptive and discriminatory practices" regarding Synchrony's consumer credit cards. With regards to the practices that the CFPB called "deceptive," it was alleged that, while operating as GE Capital, Synchrony telemarketers had sold numerous credit card add-on services, such as debt cancellation agreements, to consumers without notifying the buyer in an upfront manner of the terms of the agreements. According to the CFPB, in many cases, consumers were unaware that they would be charged for these services.

With regards to the practices the CFPB called "discriminatory," it was found that Synchrony had discriminated against Latino Americans by excluding from two different promotional statement credit deals customers who had elected to receive communications in Spanish and customers with mailing addresses in Puerto Rico. The promotional deals were offered from 2009 until 2012 to customers with delinquent accounts and allowed them to settle their balance with Synchrony Financial by paying some amount which was less than the outstanding balance, under certain conditions. It is not known why Synchrony chose not to offer this promotion to its Hispanic customers, but the CFPB found that this practice constituted "discriminat[ion]... on the basis of... race and national origin."

References

Synchrony Financial Wikipedia


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