Its Not Easy Being Green in Credit Cards

Business person analyzing financial statistics displayed on the tablet screen

As Ken Chenault prepares for his well-deserved retirement from American Express, his successor has a tough road ahead to return the credit card and charge card company to its original glory.  Chenault has been a rock star in credit cards, and although American Express hit some bumps along the way, the business is still solid.  A challenge is that many former executives from Amex are now working at competing card companies.  The secret sauce of Amex, the cache from its “don’t leave home without it” has been displaced by new card products such as the Chase Sapphire Reserve.

When I was at Citi back in 1990, I almost left to go to work at Amex, a common strategy for New York bankers looking for a career advancement.  The position was for the American Express Optima card, an early test by Amex to shift from a charge business to a credit card business.  Chase was more nimble and hired me before I got an Amex offer but the Amex position was interesting because it was an early example of broadening their reach.  There have been several successes and a few notable failures (Blue Bird/Wal-Mart Prepaid, Sub-700 FICO score lending, Revolution card), but the company has typically known when to cut their losses and move on.

There is a huge void, however.  Consider this:

Now, we’re talking about trillions of volume, not billions as in the old days.

Good luck to Amex and Mr. Squeri.  Competition drives payments and forces efficiencies.  There is plenty of room for expansion across the globe.

Overview by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

Read the full story here

Exit mobile version