3 Big Takeaways From American Express' 4th Quarter

When the American Express Company (NYSE: AXP) reported its fourth-quarter earnings earlier this month, the credit card issuer proved its stellar 2017 was no fluke. Excluding the immediate and expected impact of the Tax Cuts and Job Act (more on that below), quarterly revenue rose to $8.84 billion, a 10% year-over-year increase, and earnings per share grew to $1.58, a 73% increase over 2016's Q4 adjusted figure.

The rise in revenue and earnings was driven by growth in Amex's loan portfolio: Total loans jumped 14% year over year to $76.1 billion. Its net write-off rate -- the percentage of loans that American Express does not expect to collect -- remained an industry-best 1.8%, though its provision for loan losses rose a sharp 33% to $833 million.

Metrics

Q4 2017

Q4 2016

Change

Total revenue

$8.84 billion

$8.02 billion

10%

Diluted EPS

$1.58*

$0.88

80%

Total loans

$76.1 billion

$66.7 billion

14%

Loan-loss provisions

$833 million

$625 million

33%

Data source: American Express Company. *Adjusted for impacts of the recently enacted Tax Cuts and Job Act. EPS = earnings per share.

After reading through the conference call, as transcribed by S&P Global Market Intelligence, here are what I believe to be the three biggest takeaways from Amex's fourth quarter.

1. Short-term pain, long-term gain

Despite all the good news, American Express shares traded down the day after the company's earnings report revealed the suspension of its buyback program through the first half of 2018. Amex made the decision to free up funds to prepare for next year's Federal Reserve stress test. Those funds are needed because tax reform was passed in late 2017, and American Express recognized about $2.6 billion in charges on repatriated earnings and a remeasurement of tax-deferred assets.

Close-up of credit card numbers on a credit card.
Close-up of credit card numbers on a credit card.

American Express believes the recently enacted Tax Cut and Jobs Act will be a long-term catalyst for the company. Image source: Getty Images.

While this is understandably not great news for shareholders -- no one wants to see share buybacks suspended for half a year -- it is decidedly short-term in nature. Yet shares traded down despite CFO Jeffrey Campbell's repeated insistence that tax reform would be a positive catalyst for the company moving forward:

Of course, most importantly for the long term, the new tax law does significantly lower our tax rate going forward, which increases the capital-generating power of the business. Given the lower tax rate, we expect that, over time, we will more than make up for any reductions in the buyback in 2018 and generate more earnings and return more capital than we would have without tax reform.