Lauren Liss, Vice President of U.S. Card at Capital One, discusses the company's latest partnership with Hotels.com. The goal of this partnership is to give consumers more flexibility to earn valuable travel rewards.
Liss discusses perks of the partnership that will allow Venture customers to earn 10x miles on hundreds of thousands of hotels, just by paying with their Venture or VentureOne cards on Hotels.com/Venture. The offer works with the Hotels.com® Rewards loyalty program, which allows members to stay 10 nights and get one free. It is also on top of the unlimited miles Venture cardholders earn on all other purchases, which can be redeemed on any airline, flight, rideshare or hotel with zero blackout dates ever.
We also dig into the Capital One Travel Survey and hear about what matters most to millennials when it comes to earning hotel rewards
Eddie Ghabour, co-founder and owner of KEY Advisors Wealth Management, explains why he’s investing in India, what could happen if inflation rises again, and the long-term ‘debt bubble’ looming.
The company behind Squishmallows says Build-A-Bear's new Skoosherz toys are a copy of their own plushies. Build-A-Bear filed their own suit basically responding, "No they're not!"
While tech employees worry about artificial intelligence taking over their jobs, Microsoft says Iran, North Korea, and more U.S. adversaries are beginning to use AI in cyber spying.
The self-proclaimed "only Post who worked at Kellogg" was a military veteran who fought in World War II before inventing everyone’s favorite fruit-filled breakfast ravioli.
Kevin Gordon, Senior Investment Research Manager at Charles Schwab, shares his thoughts on how investors can take advantage of the current bull market while keeping in mind the impacts of Fed policy and inflation.
Lab-created diamonds come with sparkling claims: that they are ethically made by machines running on renewable energy. But many don't live up to these claims or don't respond to questions about their electricity sources, and lab diamonds require a lot of electricity.
Geoff Freeman, president and CEO of the U.S. Travel association, explains why other nations are outcompeting the U.S., and the innovations that would put American back on top.