Amazon Wants to Dominate Office Supplies With Its Credit Card Amazon is planning to offer a credit card to U.S. small-business customers, furthering its push to supply companies with everything from reams of paper to factory parts, according to people with knowledge of the matter. The e-commerce giant has been in talks with banks including

LowCards.com Weekly Credit Card Update–March 16, 2018
March 16, 2018
Walmart
, credit card fees
, credit cards
, American Express
, Capital One
, Citigroup
, JP Morgan Chase
, MasterCard
, debit cards
, interchange fees
, swipe fees
, Chase
, UnionPay
, credit card interest rate
, Diners Club
, credit card APR
, unbanked
, online security
, online shopping
, data breach
, mobile banking
, Amazon
, merchant fees
, business credit cards
, bitcoin
, online fraud
, Amex
, cobranded credit cards
, cash transactions
, credit card news
, cryptocurrency
, hack attack
, cashless payments
, digital security
, small business credit card
, mobile banking adoption
, Defense Department
, American Express fees
, Amex fees
, co-branded credit cards
, Amazon credit card
, Amtrak
, Amtrak credit cards
, online ordering
, virtual assistant
, digital shopping
, cash
, IBM
, Eno
, Capital One Eno
, GDPR
, cashless transaction
, Amazon card
, Amazon debit card
, mobile adoption
, digital assistant
, Amazon business card
, grocery delivery
, American Express merchant
, malicious actor
, hack attempt
, Defense Department hack
, Defense Department breach
, Amazon Mexico
, no bank account
, Mexico debit card
, Eno assistant
, online grocery
, online grocery service
, Wirex
, Bitcoin spending
, debit card Bitcoin
, Europe data rules
, European data rules
, UCB
, train credit cards
, Truata
, Amazon Rechargeable
Bill Hardekopf