Discover Card Execution Note Trust Class A(2017-6)

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Presale: Discover Card Execution Note Trust Class A(2017-6) This presale report is based on information as of Aug. 4, 2017. The ratings shown are preliminary. This report does not constitute a recommendation to buy, hold, or sell securities. Subsequent information may result in the assignment of final ratings that differ from the preliminary ratings. Preliminary Rating Class Preliminary rating(i) Preliminary amount (mil. $) Credit support (%) A(2017-6) AAA (sf) 500 21.0 (i)the rating is preliminary and subject to change at any time. Profile Expected closing date Aug. 14, 2017. Expected maturity date Aug. 17, 2020. Legal maturity date Feb. 15, 2023. Distribution date Issuer trust collateral The 15th of each month (or the following business day), beginning September 2017. Undivided investor interest in Discover Card Master Trust I's series 2007-CC collateral certificate, which is then collateralized by receivables generated from designated Discover Card accounts. Master trust Discover Card Master Trust I. Master trust collateral Originator, seller, and servicer Depositor and transferor Indenture and master trust trustee Receivables generated from credit card accounts owned by Discover Bank. The master trust's assets may include receivables generated from credit card accounts owned by a Discover Bank affiliate. Discover Bank (BBB/Stable/--), a limited-purpose bank and operating subsidiary of Discover Financial Services Inc. (BBB-/Stable/--). Discover Funding LLC. U.S. Bank N.A. Primary Credit Analyst: Romil Chouhan, New York 212.438.3512; romil.chouhan@spglobal.com Secondary Contact: Trang Luu, Dallas (214) 765-5887; trang.luu@spglobal.com See complete contact list on last page(s) WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 1

Profile (cont.) Underwriters Barclays Capital Inc. and MUFG Securities Americas Inc. Rationale The preliminary 'AAA (sf)' rating assigned to Discover Card Execution Note Trust's $500 million class A(2017-6) fixed-rate DiscoverSeries notes reflects: Our view of the 21.0% credit support provided by the subordinated class B, C, and D notes, which we believe is sufficient to withstand the simultaneous stresses we apply to our 5.0% base-case loss rate, 18.0% base-case payment rate, 16.0% base-case yield, and 2.0% purchase-rate assumptions for the notes. In addition, we used stressed excess spread and note interest rate assumptions to assess whether, in our opinion, sufficient credit support is available for the notes. All of the stress assumptions outlined above are based on our current criteria and assumptions (for more information, see "General Methodology And Assumptions For Rating U.S. ABS Credit Card Securitizations," published April 19, 2010, and "Revised Purchase And Payment Rate Assumptions For U.S. Credit Card ABS," published Sept. 14, 2011). Our view that the 7% minimum seller's interest is sufficient in our stress scenarios to absorb dilutions or noncash reductions in the receivables. Our expectation that under a moderate ('BBB') stress scenario, all else being equal, the preliminary rating on the class A(2017-6) notes will remain within one rating category of the assigned preliminary 'AAA (sf)' rating in the next 12 months, based on our credit stability criteria (see "Methodology: Credit Stability Criteria," published May 3, 2010). Our view of the inherent credit risk in the collateral loan pool based on our economic forecast, the master trust portfolio's historical performance, the collateral characteristics, and vintage performance data. Our view of Discover Bank's ('BBB/Stable/--') servicing experience and our opinion of its account origination, underwriting, account management, collections, and general operational practices. Our expectation of timely periodic interest and principal payments by the final maturity date according to the transaction documents, based on stressed cash flow modeling scenarios using assumptions commensurate with the assigned preliminary rating. Our view of the notes' underlying payment structure, cash flow mechanics, and legal structure. Changes From The Class A(2017-5) DiscoverSeries Notes Based on preliminary information, the class A(2017-6) note structure will not change from that of the class A(2017-5) notes issued out of this trust, including the issuing entity, eligible accounts and receivables, payment priority, collections and allocation mechanics, credit support and usage mechanics, early redemption events, and events of default. There is no material change in the collateral performance, and our assumptions for this pool's performance variables remain within our expectations. Our base-case and stress assumptions have not changed since November 2016 when we completed our shelf review for all of the U.S. bank credit card trusts that we rate (see "November 2016 Shelf Review: U.S. And Canadian Bank Credit Card ABS," published Nov. 14, 2016) WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 2

Class A(2017-6) Terms Summary The following are key features of the class A(2017-6) issuance: The notes pay interest monthly at a fixed rate to be determined. Our preliminary rating on the notes addresses the full principal payment by the legal maturity date rather than the expected maturity date. The notes' credit support will be provided by all outstanding class B, C, and D DiscoverSeries notes. Based on the transaction documents, the note issuance trust may issue additional tranches of class A notes as long as the minimum required amount of class B, C, and D notes is outstanding to support them. The minimum subordination percentages of the class B, C, and D notes that provide credit enhancement for the class A(2017-6) notes based on the transaction documents are 6.96%, 8.86%, and 10.76% of the class A notes' outstanding principal balance, respectively. This equals 26.58% total credit support when expressed as a percentage of the class A notes, or 21.0% total credit support when expressed as a percentage of the entire capital structure. Collateral Overview We believe that the receivables designated to the master trust reflect a geographically diversified portfolio of well-seasoned prime accounts. Despite the gradual increase in credit lines that the company has granted to seasoning accounts, balances have remained relatively stable in this trust, which is a credit positive, in our view. We attribute the increase in credit limits to the high concentration of highly seasoned accounts, which have longer payment histories and are generally more predictable than newly originated accounts. On July 1, 2016, Discover Bank added approximately $3.6 billion in new receivables to the trust. As of June 30, 2017, 94.6% of the total receivables were generated by accounts aged more than 60 months. Receivables with FICO scores greater than 720 accounted for about 56.4% of the total trust, and receivables with FICO scores below 660 represented 13.8% of the trust. Assuming this pool's collateral composition does not change, we believe strong receivables performance will continue over the next 12 months (see charts 1-3). WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 3

Chart 1 WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 4

Chart 2 WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 5

Chart 3 S&P Global Ratings' Credit Rating Assumptions Our base-case and stress assumptions have not changed since the previous transaction. Generally, our base-case assumptions reflect our view of the trust's expected performance through multiple economic cycles, including the next 18-24 months based on trust-specific performance trends (i.e., delinquency, delinquency roll rates, quality and consistency of pool stratification, underwriting, and account management); trust performance relative to peers; and trust sensitivity to our forecast economic variables, such as unemployment and bankruptcy rates. (For more information on our economic forecast, see "Global Structured Finance Outlook 2017," published Jan. 4, 2017, and for a more detailed description of credit card receivables performance and collateral data for this trust compared with our credit card quality index (CCQI) and other trusts we monitor, see "Quarterly U.S. Credit Card Quality Index: Trusts' Receivables Performance Is Sheltered From Managed Receivables Volatility--For Now," published June 14, 2017). Our stress assumptions reflect our view of how performance variables could deteriorate in an early amortization scenario (see table 1). The stresses we use are commensurate with 'AAA' level rating scenarios and are based on our criteria. (For more information on our criteria, see "Purchase And Payment Rate Assumptions For U.S. Credit Card ABS" Revised Purchase And Payment Rate Assumptions For U.S. Credit Card ABS," published Sept. 14, 2011, and WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 6

"General Methodology And Assumptions For Rating U.S. ABS Credit Card Securitizations," published April 19, 2010.) Table 1 S&P Global Ratings' Rating Scenarios S&P Global Ratings' base-case assumption S&P Global Ratings' 'AAA' rating stresses Net losses(i) Total payment rate(ii) Yield(ii) Purchase rate(ii) 31.0% (6.2x our base case) 5.0% 18.0% 16.0% N/A 8.75% (48.61% of our base case) 11.0% (68.75% of our base case) 2.00% (i)in the 'AAA' rating scenario, losses rise to the stressed multiple in 12 months. (ii)the total payment, yield, and purchase rates start at the stressed levels in the first month of our cash flow runs. N/A--Not applicable. Loss Rate Our base-case loss assumption for this trust is 5.0%. We expect Discover Bank's master trust loss rates to remain stable for the remainder of 2017 based on low delinquencies, the current pool composition, and our forward looking assumptions, which incorporate economic variables, such as our 4.5% U.S. unemployment rate forecast for 2017 under our baseline economic scenario. Our base-case assumption is well above the current rate because we believe that revolving pools could change over time and performance could weaken if unseasoned accounts with lower credit quality are included in the trust. The 31.0% stressed annualized peak loss assumption we use in our cash flow model for this pool is lower than the 33.0% floor we established for a benchmark pool in an extreme recession scenario for a 'AAA (sf)' rating because we believe that this pool's losses outperformed the U.S. CCQI during the most recent recession. Specifically, the pool's loss rates remained lower and improved earlier than our CCQI. The loss rate for the master trust's pool also dipped below the unemployment rate earlier than what the aggregate bank card data indicated. Net losses on the principal receivables in Discover Card Master Trust I doubled to a peak of 9.16% in August 2009 from a low of 4.62% in December 2007. By the end of summer 2010, loss rates declined below 8.0% and continued to fall steadily thereafter. Comparatively, CCQI losses increased by 117.0% to 10.5% in August 2009 from 4.90% in December 2007, and remained in the 9.0%-10.0% range until the summer of 2010. For more than five years, net losses for Discover Card Master Trust I trust have remained lower than those of the industry average (as calculated in the CCQI) and at least 2.0% lower than the unemployment rate (see chart 4). WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 7

Chart 4 Payment Rate Our base-case total payment rate assumption for the pool is 18.0%. We view the pool's payment rate performance as strong and consistent, most likely because of Discover Card's well-known cash-back rewards program. Cash-back rewards programs usually attract convenience users who tend to pay down their balances in full each month. As of June 30, 2017, about 23.5% of obligors made full payments, and 7.7% made minimum payments (see chart 5). In our stress scenarios, we assume that the number of convenience users in the pool declines before an amortization scenario and that the portion of revolvers increases, significantly decreasing payment rates. Therefore, our base-case and stress assumptions are well-below the actual payment rates. During the recession, the trust's payment rate generally remained higher than the U.S. bank card average as calculated in the CCQI (see chart 6). WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 8

Chart 5 WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 9

Chart 6 Yield Our base-case yield assumption is 16.0%. The pool's yield decreased during 2012 because the effect from the discounting feature (using principal collections as yield) diminished after the series 2009-SD certificates matured in January 2012. Yield continues to benefit from the addition of interchange fees in 2006 to finance charge receivables. Consistent with our criteria, in cash flows at the 'AAA' rating level for bank credit card pools, we generally assume yield to be compressed at 10.0%-13.0% by the time a trust enters rapid amortization. For this trust, our stress assumption of 11.0% at the 'AAA' rating level is 68.75% of our base-case assumption of 16.0%. Yield for this trust is relatively low because of the high credit quality of the obligors. The smaller haircut for this trust (relative to our example of haircut ranges listed in our criteria) reflects our assumption that with high credit quality, seasoned cardholders are likely to experience smaller increases in delinquencies than non-prime accounts in a downturn, resulting in less volatility in stressed yield compared with pools that include a high portion of non-prime accounts. In addition, we also consider the effect that legislation or regulatory actions could have on interest rates and fees and that competitive pressures could also bring yield to the 10.0%-13.0% range (see chart 7). WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 10

Chart 7 Purchase Rate We assume an approximate 2.0% purchase rate for the preliminary 'AAA (sf)' rated notes in the pool. Our purchase rate assumption accounts for our credit rating on the originator relative to the preliminary rating assigned to the notes, the originator's ability to continue generating and transferring receivables to the master trust, and the originated receivables' credit characteristics. In our view, Discover Bank's performance as both the originator and servicer of the Discover Card Master Trust I credit card accounts and receivables is strong. We believe Discover Bank has a proven ability to consistently originate, manage, and service accounts and receivables throughout economic and business cycles. If we lower our unsecured credit rating on Discover Bank (BBB/Stable/--), we will likely revise our purchase rate credit assumption for the master trust (see the Sensitivity Analysis section below for more information). For further information on Discover, see "Full Analysis: Discover Financial Services Inc.," published Feb. 10, 2017. WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 11

Sensitivity Analysis Our rating incorporates credit stability as one of several factors that we use to determine an issuer's or an issue's creditworthiness (see "Methodology: Credit Stability Criteria," published May 3, 2010). Accordingly, we ran several sensitivity analyses to determine the notes' credit stability during periods of moderate economic stress. Based on our rating stability definition, a 'AAA' rating that we assign to a new class of credit card receivables-backed notes signifies that we do not expect the rating on the notes to fall more than one rating category within 12 months of the rating assignment under moderate stress conditions. To test whether the preliminary 'AAA (sf)' rating we assigned to the class A(2017-6) notes would be vulnerable to a downgrade of more than one category in a moderate ('BBB') stress scenario, we ran sensitivity analyses assuming that the pool's base-case loss rate would increase to 235% of the current base-case loss rate. In this scenario, we believe that our preliminary 'AAA (sf)' rating on the notes wouldn't become vulnerable to a downgrade by more than one rating category based on the 21.0% credit support available to the class A(2017-6) notes. Structural Overview The notes are part of the DiscoverSeries, in which delinked tranches can be issued as long as certain issuance conditions are met, including sufficient subordination to provide the required credit support. The note issuance trust's collateral is an undivided investor interest in Discover Card Master Trust I's series 2007-CC collateral certificate, which is then collateralized by receivables generated by revolving credit card accounts that Discover Bank originates and services. Payment Priority The available finance charge collections are allocated to the DiscoverSeries notes on each distribution date (see table 2). Table 2 Finance Charge Waterfall Priority Payment 1 The class A notes' monthly interest, swap payments (if any), or accreted discount. 2 The class B notes' monthly interest, swap payments (if any), or accreted discount. 3 The class C notes' monthly interest, swap payments (if any), or accreted discount. 4 The series 2007-CC collateral certificate's servicing fees. 5 The class D notes' monthly interest, swap payments (if any), or accreted discount. 6 Reimburse the current charged-off receivables. 7 Reimburse the class A notes' nominal liquidation amount deficits. 8 Reimburse the class B notes' nominal liquidation amount deficits. 9 Reimburse the class C notes' nominal liquidation amount deficits. 10 Reimburse the class D notes' nominal liquidation amount deficits. WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 12

Table 2 Finance Charge Waterfall (cont.) Priority Payment 11 Make targeted deposits into the accumulation reserve subaccounts in case the tranches of notes mature. 12 To the class C notes' reserve subaccounts if the excess spread funding triggers have been breached. 13 To the class D notes' reserve subaccounts if the excess spread funding triggers have been breached. 14 To the master trust's finance charge collections reallocation account for reallocation to other master trust certificate series and other note series. 15 To Discover Bank. If an early redemption event occurs, all of the principal collections that are allocated to the DiscoverSeries notes, in addition to the series' finance charge amounts that are available to reimburse charged-off receivables and the subordinated notes' nominal liquidation amount deficits, will be available to make payments subject to the indenture supplement's cash flow provisions (see table 3). Table 3 Principal Waterfall Priority Payment(i) 1 Deposit shortfalls in the class A notes' monthly interest, swap payments, or accreted discount to the extent of the series' principal amounts allocable to the class B, C, and D notes. 2 Deposit shortfalls in the class B notes' monthly interest, swap payments, or accreted discount to the extent of the series' principal amounts allocable to the class C and D notes. 3 Deposit shortfalls in the class C notes' monthly interest, swap payments, or accreted discount to the extent of the series' principal amounts allocable to the class D notes. 4 Shortfalls in the series 2007-CC collateral certificate servicing fees to the extent of the series' principal amount allocable to the class B, C, and D notes. 5 Make any targeted deposit to pay principal on the class A notes. 6 Make any targeted deposit to prefund the class A notes. 7 Make any targeted deposit to pay principal on the class B notes. 8 Make any targeted deposit to prefund the class B notes. 9 Make any targeted deposit to pay principal on the class C notes. 10 Make any targeted deposit to prefund the class C notes. 11 Make any targeted deposit to pay principal on the class D notes. 12 Make deposits into the master trust's principal collections reallocation account for reallocation to other master trust certificate series and note series. 13 Make deposits into the master trust's collections account for reinvestment in new receivables. (i)swap payments are not applicable for these notes. The early redemption events include the following: The notes are not paid in full on their expected maturity date. The note issuance trust becomes an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as amended. Certain insolvency or receivership events regarding Discover Bank occur. An amortization event occurs regarding the collateral certificate, including Discover fails to maintain sufficient principal receivables to collateralize the certificates and the notes issued by the master trust and the note issuance trust, respectively; Discover fails to make any payment or deposit within five business days after the required date; the master servicer or servicer is terminated because of insolvency or certain covenants are breached; or the master WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 13

trust becomes an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as amended. Both the three-month average excess spread amount and the three-month average group excess spread amount for the DiscoverSeries notes and the master trust certificate group, respectively, are less than zero. There is no first-priority perfected security interest in any receivable that has been transferred to the master trust, or any of the related representations and warranties are deemed inaccurate. Related Criteria Criteria - Structured Finance - General: Ratings Above The Sovereign - Structured Finance: Methodology And Assumptions, Aug. 8, 2016 Criteria - Structured Finance - General: Methodology: Criteria For Global Structured Finance Transactions Subject To A Change In Payment Priorities Or Sale Of Collateral Upon A Nonmonetary EOD, March 2, 2015 Criteria - Structured Finance - General: Criteria Methodology Applied To Fees, Expenses, And Indemnifications, July 12, 2012 General Criteria: Global Investment Criteria For Temporary Investments In Transaction Accounts, May 31, 2012 Criteria - Structured Finance - ABS: Revised Purchase And Payment Rate Assumptions For U.S. Credit Card ABS, Sept. 14, 2011 Criteria - Structured Finance - ABS: General Methodology And Assumptions For Rating U.S. ABS Credit Card Securitizations, April 19, 2010 Criteria - Structured Finance - General: Standard & Poor's Revises Criteria Methodology For Servicer Risk Assessment, May 28, 2009 Legal Criteria: Legal Criteria For U.S. Structured Finance Transactions: Appendix III: Revised UCC Article 9 Criteria, Oct. 1, 2006 Legal Criteria: Legal Criteria For U.S. Structured Finance Transactions: Criteria Related To Asset-Backed Securities, Oct. 1, 2006 Legal Criteria: Legal Criteria For U.S. Structured Finance Transactions: Securitizations By SPE Transferors And Non-Code Transferors, Oct. 1, 2006 Legal Criteria: Legal Criteria For U.S. Structured Finance Transactions: Select Issues Criteria, Oct. 1, 2006 Legal Criteria: Legal Criteria For U.S. Structured Finance Transactions: Special-Purpose Entities, Oct. 1, 2006 Related Research Quarterly U.S. Credit Card Quality Index: Trusts' Receivables Performance Is Sheltered From Managed Receivables Volatility--For Now, June 14, 2017 U.S. Credit Card Quality Index: Monthly Performance May 2017, June 28, 2017 Discover Financial Services Inc., Feb. 10, 2017 Global Structured Finance Outlook 2017, Jan. 4, 2017 Global Structured Finance Scenario And Sensitivity Analysis 2016: The Effects Of The Top Five Macroeconomic Factors, Dec. 16, 2016 November 2016 Shelf Review: U.S. And Canadian Bank Credit Card ABS, Nov. 14, 2016 U.S. Credit Card Charge-offs Will Likely Face An Uphill Climb, Sept. 6, 2016 In addition to the criteria specific to this type of security (listed above), the following criteria articles, which are generally applicable to all ratings, may have affected this rating action: "Post-Default Ratings Methodology: When WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 14

Does Standard & Poor's Raise A Rating From 'D' Or 'SD'?," March 23, 2015; "Global Framework For Assessing Operational Risk In Structured Finance Transactions," Oct. 9, 2014; "Methodology: Timeliness of Payments: Grace Periods, Guarantees, And Use of 'D' And 'SD' Ratings," Oct. 24, 2013; "Counterparty Risk Framework Methodology And Assumptions," June 25, 2013; "Criteria For Assigning 'CCC+', 'CCC', 'CCC-', And 'CC' Ratings," Oct. 1, 2012; "Methodology: Credit Stability Criteria," May 3, 2010; and "Use of CreditWatch And Outlooks," Sept. 14, 2009. Analytical Team Primary Credit Analyst: Romil Chouhan, New York 212.438.3512; romil.chouhan@spglobal.com Secondary Contact: Trang Luu, Dallas (214) 765-5887; trang.luu@spglobal.com WWW.STANDARDANDPOORS.COM/RATINGSDIRECT AUGUST 4, 2017 15

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