Business
What does the Capital One-Discover deal mean for you?
Capital One Financial Corp. announced Monday that it had reached an agreement to acquire Discover Financial Services for $35.3 billion, instantly creating a financial behemoth should the deal be approved by regulators.
The merger would combine one of the largest issuers of Visa and Mastercards with Discovery’s network of cardholders. However, such a mega-merger immediately raised antitrust concerns, as well as questions over how it might affect customers.
Here are some early answers to key questions.
Will I still be able to use my Discover card?
The proposed merger could take a year or more to gain regulatory approval, so in the immediate term don’t expect any changes as it’s reviewed. The companies have not yet disclosed how they might change their product mix. It’s possible Capital One might issue new Discover cards highlighting its name instead of Discover’s bright orange “O” logo — similar to how it issues its Visa and Mastercard credit cards.
However, don’t expect your card to go away. Capital One is buying a valuable asset.
What if I use a Capital One Visa or Mastercard?
Capital One is one of the largest issuers of Visa and Mastercard credit cards in the nation and that is not expected to change, at least for some time. Michael Rhodes, chief executive of Discover, said the deal “brings together two strong brands with enhanced ability to accelerate growth.”
If I can keep my existing credit cards, what is the thinking behind the deal?
Capital One has grown rapidly since it was founded in 1994 and is now one of the nation’s largest banks. A big part of that growth has been its issuance of credit cards by the nation’s two leading card networks, Visa and Mastercard, with a focus on subprime customers who carry balances. Now, with Discover, it would also own its own network, similar to how American Express issues its cards.
What is the advantage for Capital One of owning a credit card network?
Discover, originated by Sears in the mid-1980s to get into the financial services business, has a network of 70 million merchant acceptance points in more than 200 countries and territories, according to the deal announcement. Capital One said the deal is a “key foundation” in its “quest to build a global payments company.”
Still, Discover is the smallest of the four U.S. global payments networks, also trailing American Express. The merger could allow it to expand rapidly and contribute significant profits to Capital One.
What are some of the downsides to the deal?
Consumer advocates are wary of large mergers, especially in the financial services industry, contending it can lead to higher costs for consumers in the form of interest rates and fees, whether in the insurance, mortgage or credit card markets. Also, critics say, larger financial institutions tend to have inferior customer service. Discover, which has focused on prime customers with better credit ratings, has a reputation for superior customer service.
Is anyone opposing the merger?
The National Community Reinvestment Coalition immediately came out against the deal, noting that a report last week by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau found that small banks and credit unions offered credit cards with significantly lower interest rates than large banks in the first half of 2023.
“This deal is not likely to create public benefits that outweigh its adverse effects. On that basis, we’re opposing it and would encourage regulators to block it,” NCRC Chief Executive Jesse Van Tol said.
How will shareholders make out?
The merger is structured as an all-stock deal, with Discover shareholders receiving 1.0192 Capital One shares for each of their Discover shares. That would give Discover shareholders a 26.6% premium, based on Discover’s closing price of $110.49 on Friday. When the merger closes, Capital One shareholders would own about 60% of the combined company, and Discover shareholders the rest.
What is the chance that such a large merger will be approved by regulators?
The deal could come under increased scrutiny by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) under a proposal last month by the regulator to give it more time and expand its criteria for reviewing mergers. That follows an announcement last summer by the Federal Reserve that indicated it also may strengthen merger oversight following the crisis last year that saw the failures of Silicon Valley Bank and other regional lenders.
Does Capital One have anything to worry about?
Capital One was fined $80 million by the OCC in 2020 for lapses in its failure to establish what it called “effective risk assessment processes” prior to moving information technology operations to the cloud — and then failing to correct the deficiencies in a timely manner. It was previously fined $100 million in 2018 by the regulator for deficiencies in the bank’s anti-money-laundering program.
What about Discover?
The company has just gone through management turmoil. Chief Executive Roger Hochschild resigned in August after the company said that it misclassified some credit card accounts into its highest pricing tier as far back 2007, which resulted in merchants being charged more for accepting the cards for payment. The board vowed to improve the company’s governance.
Business
Oil Prices Rise as Investors Weigh Cease-Fire Extension
Oil prices rose and stocks moved slightly higher on Wednesday as investors tried to make sense of President Trump’s decision to extend the cease-fire with Iran despite doubts about the status of another round of peace talks.
An adviser to Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the influential speaker of the Iranian Parliament, dismissed the cease-fire announcement, saying that it had “no meaning.” He equated the U.S. naval blockade with bombings, with commercial vessels coming under attack near the Strait of Hormuz, the crucial shipping lane that has been at the center of a growing energy crisis.
Business
Contributor: ICE raids and migrant pay cuts are devastating California economies
Along the southern stretch of California’s Central Coast, President Trump’s crusade against immigrants has left a visceral mark. It seems these days that almost everyone there has seen or felt the aftermath of an immigration raid: cars with shattered windows left idling and businesses emptied of their usual employees and patrons. The human toll is stark. Raids around Christmas removed at least 100 people from our communities, leaving children without parents and families without primary earners — creating crises that cascade far beyond the moment of enforcement.
The economic consequences of Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids are equally severe. Recent farmer surveys have shown that immigration raids and the fear they generate have caused farmworker shortages, particularly in labor-intensive crops such as strawberries — the region’s most valuable agricultural commodity — where fruit rots on the plant without the immigrant workers who pick it.
Early research quantifying the economic impact of ICE raids in Oxnard estimates direct crop losses of $3 billion to $7 billion with significant spillover into other sectors of the economy. As families lose income to raids — whether through the direct loss of a working family member or in the form of lost business production or sales — they spend less in the local economy. The ripple effect means that the total economic impact of ICE raids is much greater than unpicked crops, with harm most concentrated among the most vulnerable: farmworkers.
Recent changes to a foreign worker program threaten to deepen the wound. The federal program, known as H-2A, allows growers and farm labor contractors to recruit temporary foreign workers to meet seasonal labor demand. It has become the fastest-growing work visa system in U.S. agriculture. It carries with it a well–documented history of wage theft, abuse and trafficking enabled, in part, by H-2A workers’ relative isolation and inability to seek other employment while in the United States.
Until October 2025, the wages paid to H-2A workers were, although low, not so low as to distort the labor market and drag down the wages paid to domestic farmworkers. In October, the Trump administration delivered a huge pay cut to H-2A workers and, in doing so, undercut wages for farmworkers across America regardless of visa status. Trump’s changes include both a direct wage cut as well as new provisions allowing employers to charge housing fees of up to $3 per hour worked.
Estimates of the pay that farmworkers will lose because of these changes range from $4.4 billion to $5.4 billion, or 10% to 12% of farmworkers’ annual wages. Given these figures, the losses suffered by farmworkers in Santa Barbara County alone — where I conduct research — could range from $126 million to $152 million annually, with subsequent decreases in spending and tax revenue reverberating through the region.
With H-2A labor now cheaper relative to domestic farmworkers, visa holders are likely to fill at least one-fifth of all agricultural jobs in Santa Barbara County. This exceeds the program’s 2023 peak in the county, when 18.1% of all agriculture jobs were filled by H-2A, before wage increases caused many growers to drop out of the program in 2024 and 2025. Including housing deductions, employers can now pay H-2A workers $13.90 an hour, significantly below California’s minimum wage of $16.90 an hour. Growers have a strong incentive to substitute resident workers for lower-cost H-2A labor, resulting in local farmworkers losing jobs and income. In addition, because of decreased income and employment, more farmworker families will be forced to rely on benefit programs such as CalFresh, increasing government expenditures.
The tax and budget consequences of expanded H-2A use should be a serious concern for local and state governments. Not only have Trump’s changes significantly reduced farmworkers’ taxable income, but H-2A workers themselves generate less local tax revenue and economic activity than resident workers would.
H-2A employers and employees are exempt from key payroll taxes, including Social Security, Medicare and unemployment insurance. At the same time, the program’s temporary structure — averaging about six months — means workers remit a larger share of their earnings abroad to support families they cannot bring with them, further limiting local spending and the sales tax base.
Elected officials are not powerless in the face of these changes. A range of policy levers could help stabilize a labor market under mounting strain, particularly those that reinforce a meaningful wage floor and limit further downward pressure on earnings. This could include raising the agricultural minimum wage, increasing the California Employment Development Department’s program oversight capacity, and bolstering legal protections for undocumented farmworkers organizing for better working conditions.
The United Farm Workers are currently challenging the Trump administration’s pay rate and housing deduction in court, arguing they constitute one of the largest wealth transfers from workers to employers in the history of American agriculture. Meanwhile, Assemblymember Maggy Krell (D–Sacramento) has introduced legislation to raise the minimum hourly wage for certain agricultural workers to $19.75 — effectively restoring the previous H-2A rate. But that fix, while essential, would not take effect until 2027 and still needs to be passed. In the interim, the state and local governments must act decisively to enforce the existing wage floor, ensuring employers cannot use expanded housing deductions to push workers’ pay below the legal minimum.
These are not radical steps; they are basic protections. The alternative is to accept a race to the bottom — on wages, on working conditions and on the economic stability of the region itself.
Matt Kinsella-Walsh is a graduate researcher with the UC Santa Barbara Community Labor Center and the Organizing Knowledges Project. He researches agricultural economics and labor in the North American strawberry industry.
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Ideas expressed in the piece
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The article argues that federal immigration enforcement has inflicted severe economic damage across California communities[1, 3, 7]
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ICE raids created critical farmworker shortages in labor-intensive crops such as strawberries, with early research estimating direct crop losses of $3 billion to $7 billion in the Oxnard region[1, 14]
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Immigration enforcement has generated widespread economic ripple effects, as families losing income have curtailed consumer spending, thereby harming local businesses and reducing municipal tax revenues[1, 3, 7]
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Trump administration modifications to the H-2A visa program, including wage reductions and housing deduction provisions, will compound economic harms, with farmworkers losing an estimated $4.4 billion to $5.4 billion annually, or 10-12% of their yearly wages[1, 4]
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These wage cuts will suppress domestic farmworker wages across all visa statuses[4, 8], decrease local tax revenue, and contract economic activity in agricultural communities
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State and local governments should strengthen wage protections by raising agricultural minimum wages, increasing regulatory enforcement capacity, and bolstering legal protections for farmworkers to avert further economic deterioration
Different views on the topic
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Agricultural industry representatives argue that labor costs have risen substantially over decades, placing significant financial strain on farm operations[2, 6]
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Growers contend that without policy changes facilitating lower labor costs, some farms may face serious economic viability challenges[2, 6]
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Industry representatives emphasize that farms operate on narrow profit margins[1], suggesting cost reductions are necessary for agricultural sector sustainability
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Agricultural representatives highlight persistent labor shortages in the sector, pointing to historical difficulties attracting sufficient domestic workers to meet production demands, particularly in labor-intensive crops[2, 6, 8]
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The industry maintains that access to temporary foreign workers through programs like H-2A remains essential to address longstanding workforce gaps and maintain agricultural production[2, 6, 8]
Business
Devin Nunes Departs Trump Media After 4 Years as C.E.O.
President Trump’s social media company, which has consistently lost money and struggled with a flagging share price, announced Tuesday that it was replacing Devin Nunes as its chief executive officer.
The announcement offered no reason for the sudden departure of Mr. Nunes, a former Republican congressman from California. Mr. Trump had tapped him to run the company, Trump Media & Technology, in late 2021.
The announcement was made in a news release by the president’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., who is a company board member and oversees a trust that controls his father’s 115-million-share stake in Trump Media. President Trump is not an officer or director of the company.
Mr. Nunes said in a statement on Truth Social, which is Trump Media’s flagship product, that it was an “appropriate time” for a new leader with experience in media and mergers to “steer Trump Media through its current transition phase.”
Trump Media has incurred hundreds of millions in losses, and its shares have performed poorly since the company went public by completing a merger with a cash-rich special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, in March 2024. The stock, which ended its first day of trading around $58 a share, closed Tuesday at $9.82.
Shares of Trump Media trade under the symbol DJT, which are President Trump’s initials. Truth Social has emerged as the main social media platform for Mr. Trump to communicate his policy decisions and opinions to the world.
Last year, Trump Media took in $3.7 million in revenue and recorded a $712 million net loss.
In December, Trump Media announced a plan to merge with TAE Technologies, a fusion power company. The all-stock deal, which was valued at $6 billion at the time, would create one of the first publicly traded nuclear fusion companies.
Trump Media said in February that it was considering spinning off its Truth Social platform in a merger with another cash-rich SPAC, Texas Ventures Acquisition III Corp.
Mr. Nunes is being replaced on an interim basis by Kevin McGurn, who has been an adviser to Trump Media since the end of 2024. Mr. McGurn, a former executive at Hulu, the streaming service, was listed in a recent regulatory filing as the chief executive of Texas Ventures.
The Trump Media release announcing the management change provided no update on the merger with TAE Technologies or the proposed SPAC deal for Truth Social.
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