The Palm Beach Post

Tax law helps AmEx profits rise 31% in 1Q

- By Ken Sweet

NEW YORK — Credit card giant American Express recorded its second-highest quarterly profit in its history Wednesday, driven by strong customer spending on its namesake credit cards and a much lower tax bill.

New York-based American Express earned a profit of $1.63 billion, or $1.86 a share, compared with a profit of $1.25 billion, or $1.36 a share, a year earlier. The results beat expectatio­ns of analysts, who were looking for AmEx to report a profit of $1.70 a share.

Like other financial companies, American Express benefited greatly from the new tax law.

The company’s effective tax rate dropped from 32 percent to 21.5 percent.

While pretax profits rose 13 percent from a year earlier, the amount of money AmEx paid in taxes fell by 24 percent.

It’s a similar drop that other financial companies such as JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup also reported this month when they announced their results.

American Express, founded in 1850, has only made more money in 90 days during the second quarter of 2016, which was when AmEx sold its Costco portfolio of credit cards to Citigroup.

AmEx’s results were boosted by a 10 percent increase in U.S. card member spending last quarter compared with a year ago. American Express earns a fee for every transactio­n that crosses its network, which has been at the center of the company’s business model for decades. But increased competitio­n has forced AmEx to charge merchants less to take its cards. AmEx’s

average discount rate, the fee it takes for every transactio­n, was 2.37 percent in the quarter, down from 2.43 percent a year earlier.

To boost profits, American Express has been encouragin­g card members to carry a balance and have started marketing loans, a change in the company’s business model, which used to rely heavily on charge cards that have to be paid off entirely at the end of the each month.

Interest income from loans was $2.33 billion in the quarter, up $1.86 billion from a year earlier. But that increase in lending has come with an increase in the number of customers who have been unable to repay their balances. AmEx wrote off 2 percent of all loans in the first quarter, up from 1.7 percent a year earlier.

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