New Research: Secured Credit Cards: An Alternative Path to Mainstream Card Products

Unbanked and underbanked consumers, many of whom have modest incomes, face numerous financial challenges. In recent years, product development designed to serve these individuals has almost exclusively leveraged prepaid accounts. Meanwhile, consumers have become much more aware of the importance of building and maintaining a good credit score—a goal not typically achieved with prepaid products. Regulatory and profitability challenges have caused some providers of secured credit cards to leave the market, although a few national financial institutions as well as several smaller ones are finding ways to make their products successful. Opportunity awaits issuers that are willing to reevaluate this underdeveloped product. Millions of consumers—young adults, recent immigrants, and consumers with past financial difficulties—are in need of credit building tools.

Mercator Advisory Group’s most recent research report,

Secured Credit Cards: An Alternative Path to Mainstream Card Products, examines the competitive landscape for secured credit cards, reviewing emerging products’ features and positioning.

“Secured credit cards are a valuable tool for consumers to build or rebuilt credit,” comments

Michael Misasi, senior analyst at Mercator Advisory Group and one of the report’s authors. “Financial institutions should not overlook the opportunity to establish long-term relationships with secured credit products.”


This report contains 19 pages and 5 exhibits.

Companies mentioned in this report include: Bank of America, Capital Bank, Capital One, Digital Credit Union, First National Bank of Omaha, Fifth Third Bank, Merrick Bank, Navy Federal Credit Union, Suntrust, Synovus Bank, U.S. Bank, USAA, Wells Fargo

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