Kenneth Chenault to step down as AmEx CEO after nearly
17 years
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[October 19, 2017] By
Pallavi Dewan
(Reuters) - American Express Co said its
chairman and chief executive Kenneth Chenault would step down early next
year, ending a nearly 17-year tenure at the helm of the No. 1 U.S. card
issuer by spending.
Chenault, 66, will be succeeded by Vice Chairman Stephen Squeri, 58,
effective Feb. 1, the company said on Wednesday.
Squeri, a 32-year company veteran, served as group president of global
corporate services before taking over as vice chairman in July 2015.
American Express shares were barely down at $91.70 in after-hours
trading.
Chenault, who was widely expected to retire, spent the last two years
firefighting after the company lost a lucrative partnership with
warehouse club retailer Costco Wholesale Corp, which accounted for about
8 percent of the spending on its cards.
The stock lost roughly a fifth of its value in 2015, after the deal
ended. The breakup shook up the credit card industry, driving business
from millions of customers to other card companies.
"He probably would have hung it up about two years ago and then he
decided to stick through (after) all the bad news ... just to help them
ride out that rough period," Kyle Sanders analyst Edward Jones said.
"I think Steve carries on with the strategies that Ken has already had
in place; I wouldn't expect a major shift in how AmEx operates."
AmEx is also battling competition from U.S. banks targeting its affluent
clientele. Bank of America last month launched its Premium Rewards
credit card, joining rivals JPMorgan Chase & Co and Citigroup.
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American Express Chairman and CEO Kenneth Chenault gestures during
the White House summit on cybersecurity and consumer protection in
Palo Alto, California February 13, 2015. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith
Chenault, one of the few African American CEOs in Wall Street, has allayed some
investor concerns. The stock is up about 22 percent this year.
Chenault joined the company in 1981.
"Ken's been the gold standard for corporate leadership and the benchmark that I
measure others against. He led the company through 9/11, the financial crisis
and the challenges of the last couple of years," said billionaire Warren Buffett.
Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc is American Express' largest shareholder.
Separately, AmEx also reported a 19 percent rise in quarterly profit, helped by
loan growth and higher card member spending. The company raised its full-year
2017 earnings per share expectations to $5.80 to $5.90, from $5.60 to $5.80.
This is the first quarter without the impact of the loss of the Costco
partnership.
(Reporting by Pallavi Dewan; Additional reporting by Nikhil Subba; Writing by
Sayantani Ghosh in New York; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)
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