Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

AmEx debuts 1st debit card Move made in free-for-all for small business customers

- JENNY SURANE

American Express on Thursday unveiled its firstever debit card as competitio­n for small-business customers heats up.

The card will be part of a new digital business checking account, New York-based AmEx said in a statement. While other banks have long used AmEx’s network for debit cards of their own, this marks the first time the payments giant is issuing a debit card itself.

“Our small-business customers have come out of the pandemic strong,” Anna Marrs, AmEx’s group president of global commercial services, said in an interview. “The debit card is also an opportunit­y for us to deepen our relationsh­ip with customers and get another product in their wallet.”

The checking account is slated to come with a $300 cash bonus for new users of the account and an annual percentage yield of 1.1%. Starting next year, customers of the product will also be able to earn AmEx’s membership rewards points and redeem them for deposits into their accounts.

Throughout the pandemic, spending by small and medium-size businesses — or those with less than $300 million in annual revenue — has been a surprising bright spot for AmEx, which has seen overall volumes on its network suffer amid travel restrictio­ns during the pandemic. That’s because such business customers are mostly in industries that have thrived during the pandemic, such as constructi­on, profession­al services and health care, AmEx has said.

The company is already the largest provider of smallbusin­ess credit cards in the United States. AmEx has been looking to capture a greater share of those customers’ business in the hopes of becoming a one-stop shop for all their financial needs.

As part of that push, the company debuted its firstever checking account in June and said it would begin offering as much as $150,000 in lines of credit to existing small- business customers. The card giant followed it up with another announceme­nt earlier this month that it would add new rewards to its Platinum card for business owners, including extra points for spending on items such as cloud services, constructi­on materials and shipping.

“Given the strength of our brand and our customers’ affinity with AmEx, they’ve told us over the years that we have permission to do more,” Marrs said. “Small businesses were very clear about what they wanted from their existing checking accounts. They wanted more.”

A bevy of startups with names like Ramp, Brex and Divvy have been looking to capture a great share of small enterprise­s’ banking business in recent years, raising vast sums from venture-capital firms and nabbing high valuations. AmEx itself got in on the financial-technology frenzy when it bought the online small-business lender Kabbage late last year.

“I’m not going to discount any of those — Ramp or Brex or Divvy. We never discount anybody,” AmEx Chief Executive Officer Steve Squeri said on a conference call with analysts last week. But with AmEx’s balance sheet and some of its new capabiliti­es, he said, the firm believes it’s in a “very good position to continue to compete in this space and continue to grow and continue to win.”

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