American Express will cut 5,400 jobs, the company says.(Photo: Wilfredo Lee, AP file)
LOS ANGELES -- American Express said Thursday that it will slash
about 5,400 jobs, mainly in its travel business, as it seeks to cut
costs and transform its operations as more of its customers shift to
online portals for booking travel plans and other needs.
The job cuts will be partly offset by jobs that the company expects to add this year.
American Express (AXP)
said the jobs eliminated will span employee seniority levels and
divisions worldwide, but will primarily involve positions that do not
directly generate revenue for the company.
All told, the company
anticipates that staffing levels will end up between 4 and 6 percent
lower this year than in 2012. The company currently has 63,500
employees.
"Against the backdrop of an uneven economic recovery,
these restructuring initiatives are designed to make American Express
more nimble, more efficient and more effective in using our resources to
drive growth," said CEO Kenneth Chenault.
Shares slipped 29 cents to $60.50 in after-hours trading. They ended regular trading up 53 cents at $60.79.
American
Express said it will book an after-tax charge of $287 million due to
the restructuring. It's also recording $212 million in expenses related
to reward points for its cardholders and roughly $95 million in customer
reimbursements and other costs.
The combined charges will reduce American Express' fourth-quarter net income by 46% from a year earlier.
The
company projects net income of $637 million, or 56 cents per share,
compared with net income of $1.2 billion, or $1.01 per share, in the
same quarter of 2011.
Excluding one-time items, fourth-quarter
2012 earnings amount to $1.2 billion, or $1.09 per share, ahead of
analysts' consensus forecast of $1.06 per share, according to FactSet.
Revenue rose 5% to $8.1 billion. Analysts expected $8.01 billion.
The company is scheduled to report full results next Thursday.
Overall
American Express has done well after the recession, as upscale shoppers
have spent freely. That's because Amex cardholders are in general about
a third more affluent than other credit card holders.
Through the first nine months of 2012, revenue grew 5 percent, while net income rose 3%.
Spending
by cardholders jumped 8 percent in the fourth quarter, despite some
softening early in the period due to Superstorm Sandy, the company said.
Chenault noted that, since the recession, American Express has been consistently gaining market share.
Despite
that success, he said the company must embrace new technologies, become
more efficient and position itself to invest in growth opportunities in
a marketplace that's increasingly becoming defined by consumers' use of
the Internet and mobile technology.
To that end, American
Express' restructuring plan calls for overhauling its travel business to
cut costs and invest in ways to cater to a growing volume of customers
turning to online and automated tools to make their travel arrangements.
"One
outcome of this ongoing shift to online is that we can serve a growing
customer base with lower staffing levels," Chenault said during a call
with analysts.
The company also will reconfigure its cardholder
servicing and collections operations to focus more on online and mobile,
rather than telephone and mail.
"The overall restructuring
program will put us in a better position as we seek to deliver strong
results for shareholders and to maintain marketing and promotion
investments at about 9 percent of revenues," Chenault said.
Associated Press