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I recently opened the Fidelity Amex card. It looks like the card is issued by a company called FIA which I assumed was associated to Fidelity but turns out to be some subsidiary of BOA. I'm a little confused and would appreciate anyone who can clearly explain.
I thought there were two entities involved in each credit card.
The lender who are lending you the money (usually banks or CUs such as Chase, Citi, BOA, and PenFed)
Card issuers through whose network payments are processed (VISA, Mastercard)
In this case, Discover and Amex are both the lender and the card issuer for their own cards.
So what's with Fidelity Amex and other BOA cards. I've read threads here of people successfully calling FIA to recon a BOA card and vice versa.
1. Is it correct to think FIA and BOA are really the same company? Can I call BOA to request CLI for my Fidelity Amex? Is BOA lending me the money each month?
2. Can I access my Fidelity Amex card from BOA website? (FIA card services website sucks..)
3. I've read somewhere that it is similar to how Amex Centurion bank and Amex savings bank(?) are somehow different. What does that mean?
4. Since Amex is only the card issuer and not the lender, does none of the Amex perks or purchase protection, etc. apply to Fidelity Amex? Amex has as little do with the card as Visa has to do with Chase Freedom visa card?
5. Somewhat unrelated question. On Visa signature cards, who is the provider of all the perks like 24 hr concierge service, etc.? Visa or the lender?
@kkapdolee wrote:I recently opened the Fidelity Amex card. It looks like the card is issued by a company called FIA which I assumed was associated to Fidelity but turns out to be some subsidiary of BOA. I'm a little confused and would appreciate anyone who can clearly explain.
I thought there were two entities involved in each credit card.
The lender who are lending you the money (usually banks or CUs such as Chase, Citi, BOA, and PenFed)
Card issuers through whose network payments are processed (VISA, Mastercard)
In this case, Discover and Amex are both the lender and the card issuer for their own cards.
So what's with Fidelity Amex and other BOA cards. I've read threads here of people successfully calling FIA to recon a BOA card and vice versa.
1. Is it correct to think FIA and BOA are really the same company? BOA is the parent entity which absorbed/acquired the MBNA/FIA (US) lending & CC portfolio. FIA Card Services is the wholly-owned subsidirary of BOA. Can I call BOA to request CLI for my Fidelity Amex? You can. Is BOA lending me the money each month? BOA is the parent lending entity though its subsidiary.
2. Can I access my Fidelity Amex card from BOA website? No. (FIA card services website sucks..)
3. I've read somewhere that it is similar to how Amex Centurion bank and Amex savings bank(?) are somehow different. What does that mean? No, totally different structures. Regulatory oversight detemines the appropriate bank charters.
4. Since Amex is only the card issuer and not the lender, does none of the Amex perks or purchase protection, etc. apply to Fidelity Amex? AMEX Centurion Bank is not the card issuer, FIA Card Services is. AMEX is simply the payment network and the Fidelity brand/product is issued by FIA, not AMEX Centurion Bank. Amex has as little do with the card as Visa has to do with Chase Freedom visa card? Only from a payment network perspective.
5. Somewhat unrelated question. On Visa signature cards, who is the provider of all the perks like 24 hr concierge service, etc.? Visa or the lender? Both. Each issuer has their own specific agreements with Visa for the Signature level of benefits and each can offer additional perks (inclduing their own in-house concierge staff) based on its loyalty/program base.
@Creditaddict wrote:
Yes, so far have found the online for fidelity Amex terrible!
Oh, it looks very old-fashioned and probably too many clicks to get to information (have to click to go to account details etc) but it seems to have the information I need. Much better than Penfed and US Bank (I still only get the old interface for that) which don't show any pending charges or payments.