Oaktree Capital investing $250M in parallel-economy credit card Coign

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Investment giant Oaktree Capital has struck a $250 million deal with Coign, a conservative-focused credit card company, marking one of the largest institutional investments in the so-called parallel economy, NYNext has learned.

The parallel economy has gained traction in recent years as conservatives seek products aligned with their values. While companies like Coign have built a foothold, they’ve largely lacked recognition from major financial institutions. Oaktree Capital, founded by billionaire Howard Marks, signals that this movement is increasingly attracting even typically apolitical investors.

In a statement to investors reviewed by NYNext, Coign announced, “The $250 million partnership with Oaktree provides a debt facility to scale our super-prime credit card portfolio and launch non-prime cards.”

Howard Marks and Nancy Marks at the Lincoln Center's David Geffen Hall renaming ceremony, NYC, September 24, 2015, photo by Clint SpauldingHoward Marks, pictured with wife Nancy, started Oaktree Capital — which manages more than $200 billion worth of assets. Clint Spaulding / PatrickMcMulla

Chris Gray, Managing Director at Oaktree Capital, added that Coign is “well positioned to be a significant growth story in fintech.”

I called up Coign’s founder and CEO Rob Collins to ask about the deal and he said Oaktree’s involvement underscores just how significant the American market of 120 million conservatives is.

According to Coign’s materials, conservatives are both the largest and wealthiest affinity groups in the US and thus far they’ve only been given the option of using credit cards that donate overwhelmingly to liberal causes (the top credit card companies have given more than $2 billion to Democratic causes, according to a report in the Washington Times).

“More and more people are recognizing how well conservative movies and media are doing … that extends to our industry,” Collins said.

Conservative products particularly have a strong word-of-mouth element and engender serious loyalty from customers. That is all to Coign’s benefit — the card already has tens of thousands of members in every state and a waitlist over 110,000 more as the company builds up capacity.

Coign card from the Conservative range shown on websiteCoign, which uses Visa’s payment infrastructure, reportedly donates a small amount to conservative causes on every transaction.

And perhaps most interestingly, the churn for this credit card is just 2.5% — far lower than the usual 10% companies experience, according to a 2025 CardRatings.com survey.

Coign, which uses Visa’s payment infrastructure, reportedly donates a small amount to conservative causes on every transaction.

“Every purchase benefits conservative causes chosen by cardholders,” according to a company statement. “Spending Right with Coign funds organizations like Rescue 22, which rescues dogs and trains them as service animals for veterans. With Coign, conservatives are taking back our economy and our country — one dollar at a time.”


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Collins also said this is recognition of a broader trend: The growing bifurcation of consumer markets.

“All Americans are looking for products that reflect their values,” he adds.

Whether it is liberals ridding themselves of their Teslas or conservatives very loudly boycotting beer from Bud Light, the politicization of products is here to stay.

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