Should Credit Card Companies Cut Lucrative Sign-Up Bonuses?
woman smiling and holding a large pile of cash
woman smiling and holding a large pile of cash

Image Credit: Getty Images

If someone gave you $500 to sign up for a credit card, would you do it?

There are plenty of offers like this out there already in the form of big sign-up bonuses. When it comes to travel credit cards, you typically receive a generous amount of points for opening the card and spending a certain amount of money in the first few months. And yes, plenty of these offers are worth $500, sometimes even more.

It’s not too good to be true for the consumers, but it might be a problem for the credit card companies. What happens when the benefits they give outweigh the profit they bring in?

Losses and gains from big sign-up bonuses

The purpose of sign-up bonuses has always been customer acquisition. Credit card companies started offering them after the recession as a way to compete for new customers. There’s no question as to whether or not they’ve been successful to that end -- a wildly popular sign-up bonus from Chase for one of their premium travel credit cards caused them to run out of physical cards.

However, as more people take advantage of these offers, credit card companies are experiencing bigger losses. Chase ended up losing $200 million to $300 million on that popular sign-up bonus.

Chase CEO Jamie Dimon wishes they would have lost $400 million.

Sign-up bonuses are just marketing costs, he explains, and he expects to see returns on their spending eventually. Whether or not the offer will pan out as he hopes remains to be seen, as it will take seven years to get a clear picture of the profits from the card.

That’s because credit card companies make a huge portion of their profit off interest, which accumulates over time. And these rewards credit cards come with extremely high interest rates. The national average APR for rewards credit cards, as of October 2018, is 17.03%. In theory, customers jump at the temptation of a big sign-up bonus and spend the $4,000 required to qualify for the bonus, but then a good number can’t pay off their balance in full. Some end up spending even more, and the bank recoups their losses with ease.

Consider the fact that the limited-time sign-up bonus offered by Chase was worth $1,500. They’ll need to keep the customer long enough and get them spending enough to recoup that. The annual fee on their premium credit card is $450. Now let’s say one customer goes a little over the minimum spending requirement for the sign-up bonus and racks up a $5,000 balance, and then pays it off making only the minimum monthly payment. At a 20% APR, that person will end up paying $5,602 in interest alone.