Credit Card Offers HSBC Star Alliance Credit Card: Fast-Track to Star Alliance Gold Status

Fast track to Star Alliance Gold status with the HSBC Star Alliance credit card!

Learn more and apply for this card:



What are the main benefits of this card?
  1. Signup bonus: Fast Track to Star Alliance Gold Status, when you spend $4,000 or more on eligible purchases in the first 90 days from account opening
  2. Keep your Star Alliance Gold status each subsequent year that you spend at least $60,000 on your card
  3. Earn 1 Star Alliance Point per $1 on eligible purchases, up to $3,000 per statement period and 0.5 Star Alliance Points per $1 spent on eligible purchases thereafter, uncapped
  4. No annual fee in the first year and $450 p.a. thereafter

hsbc-star-alliance-card-art.pngWhy we like the HSBC Star Alliance credit card

Launched in 2022, the HSBC Star Alliance credit card is the first of its kind anywhere in the world. You'll earn Star Alliance Points which are transferable to a choice of seven Star Alliance member airlines at a time of your choosing. You can also earn Star Alliance Silver or Gold status just by spending on the card, with no flying required!

Once you qualify for the welcome offer and are fast tracked to Star Alliance Gold status with any of the seven participating carriers, you’ll soon be enjoying perks like airport priority lanes and lounge access when flying across the whole Star Alliance network. It is the largest airline alliance in the world with 25 member airlines, including Air New Zealand, Singapore Airlines, United and Turkish Airlines.

Please note that the welcome offer is not available to existing HSBC customers transferring from another HSBC credit card, or if you have previously held a HSBC Star Alliance credit card within the last 18 months. Refer to the full T&C’s for more information:


AFF members are welcome to discuss this card in this thread.
 
The card issuer bears the loss. The card issuer may then try a chargeback to the retailer and may win, but if the retailer challenges then they have a fair probability of winning, leaving the card issuer bearing the loss. Either way, it’s hard to see why the OP would be angry with the card issuer. Maybe he/she is just a naturally choleric person.
 
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It's quite possible that there's no breach or mistake been made anywhere and that this is the result of a BIN attack.

Ultimately the retailers, networks and banks could work together to make the system that they've designed more secure, mandating things like 3D Secure for online transactions. But that would make using the cards less convenient and they've obviously made a calculation that the profit from the convenience out weighs the losses from additional fraud. That's a choice they've made though, so it's entirely appropriate that when it occurs, the consumer shouldn't be inconvenienced by it.
 
I've had this card for a few years and always selected SQ as my status airline. This year I went with UA as I have a few long haul UA flights so I wanted the comp economy plus benefit.

My status has come up as a "Trial" status on my milage plus membership card, similar to if I requested a status match, has anyone else had this happen or does anyone foresee any issues with the benefits on partner airlines?
 
The card issuer bears the loss.
No, that's not how chargebacks work.

The card issuer (HSBC) doesn't bear a loss if the charge is deemed valid. The customer pays. If the charge is deemed invalid, the issuer claims the charge back (and costs) from the accepter - the account that made the charge. The card accepter's bank bears the cost if they can't recover from the accepter account.

There is no scenario where the issuer bears the costs.

You clearly have no idea how this works.
 
I absolutely understand how it works. The card issuer beats the cost of a fraudulent transaction unless they find a way to pass the cost on to someone else (the merchant).

And none of this explains why the card holder - who may or may not have been negligent - should feel angry with the card issuer, which was my fundamental point before people started obfuscating.
 
I absolutely understand how it works. The card issuer beats the cost of a fraudulent transaction unless they find a way to pass the cost on to someone else (the merchant).

And the thing is that a fraudulent transaction is the easiest chargeback of all to prove, and so it is passed back to the merchant, or if the merchant can't be made accountable, the merchants bank.

The OP was annoyed with the card issuer for two reasons: One - it took 3/4 of an hour to get through to customer service, and Two, they let through 3 high value transactions, but now require him to authenticate low value transactions. I found that pretty clear. You, presumably as a shill for HSBC, found that harder to understand. If you're not an HSBC employee moonlighting, then you're just being contrary for the sake of it.

Read the rules: https://www.visa.com.au/content/dam/VCOM/download/about-visa/visa-rules-public.pdf

4.1.13.1: In the AP Region, Canada Region, CEMEA Region, LAC Region, US Region: An Issuer must provide provisional credit for the amount of a dispute or an unauthorized Transaction (as applicable) to a Cardholder’s account, as follows:

1738470971988.png

That means the OP should get their provisional credit within 5 business days.

11.7.3.5 Dispute Condition 10.2: EMV Liability Shift Non-Counterfeit Fraud – Dispute Processing Requirements

1738472125713.png

Or

11.7.5.1 Dispute Condition 10.4: Other Fraud – Card-Absent Environment – Dispute Reasons

1738472160899.png

All HSBC has to do is provide the customer's certification that they didn't authorise the charge. This fraud was clearly either card not present, or someone is using saved credentials.

Please read the rules and explain how HSBC will end out of pocket?
 
However, I can't essentially use the card as all my credit limit is exhausted. 2 days after all 3 transactions have been posted on the statement. According to the fraud department, the investigation can take up to 60 days!

You should get the money back in your account, reducing your balance (albeit held, until the dispute is resolved) within 5 days:

4.1.13.1: In the AP Region, Canada Region, CEMEA Region, LAC Region, US Region: An Issuer must provide provisional credit for the amount of a dispute or an unauthorized Transaction (as applicable) to a Cardholder’s account, as follows:

1738470971988.png


@mpogr If they haven't credited the money / reduced the balance in five business days - call them and point them to the Visa Rules
 
Agree with BJReplay.

It’s perfectly open for a customer to be cross with the bank, for the reasons outlined. Length of time it takes to get through, allowing the transaction to go through, etc.

It’s pretty much a given that unauthorised transactions get refunded to the customer. Nothing to be ‘thankful’ to the bank about for that. It’s the risk they accept in offering these very profitable products. And they have the power to stop them. Which they don’t want to do for fear of offending their customers.
 
You should get the money back in your account, reducing your balance (albeit held, until the dispute is resolved) within 5 days:

4.1.13.1: In the AP Region, Canada Region, CEMEA Region, LAC Region, US Region: An Issuer must provide provisional credit for the amount of a dispute or an unauthorized Transaction (as applicable) to a Cardholder’s account, as follows:

1738470971988.png


@mpogr If they haven't credited the money / reduced the balance in five business days - call them and point them to the Visa Rules
Thanks for this valuable info, I will definitely do this. It's already 5 calendar days since I reported the fruadulent transactions. 5 business days will be on Tue.
 

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