American Express Company - Earnings Call - Q1 2012
April 18, 2012
Transcript
Speaker 5
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the American Express first quarter 2012 earnings release. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session. Instructions will be given at that time. If you should require assistance during the call, please press star followed by zero, and an operator will assist you offline. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Rick Petrino. Please go ahead.
Speaker 6
Thank you. Welcome, and thanks everyone for joining today's call. Before I turn it over to Dan Henry, I want to remind you that the discussion today contains certain forward-looking statements about the company's future financial performance and business prospects, which are subject to risks and uncertainties and speak only as of today. The words believe, expect, anticipate, estimate, optimistic, intend, plan, aim, will, should, could, likely, and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those forward-looking statements, including the company's financial and other goals, are set forth within today's earnings press release and earnings supplement, which were filed in an 8-K report and in the company 2010 10-K report already on file with the SEC.
In the first quarter 2012 earnings release and earnings supplement, as well as the presentation slides, all of which are now posted on our website at ir.americanexpress.com, we have provided information that describes certain non-GAAP financial measures used by the company and the comparable GAAP financial information. We encourage you to review that information in conjunction with today's discussion. Today's discussion will begin with Dan Henry, Executive Vice President and CFO, who will review some key points related to the quarter's earnings through the series of slides included with the earnings documents distributed and provide some brief summary comments. Once Dan completes his remarks, we will move to Q&A. With that, let me turn the discussion over to Dan.
Speaker 0
Okay, thanks, Rick. I will start on slide two. Revenue net of interest expense for the quarter was $7.6 billion. That's 8% higher than the first quarter of last year. On an FX-adjusted basis, revenue increased 9%. Net income came in at $1.256 billion. Diluted EPS is $1.07. That's up 10% from last year. Our return on average equity is at 27%. The decrease in shares outstanding that you see is a reflection of our share buyback program. Moving to slide three, which are our metric performance, billed business came in at $211 billion. That's an increase of 12% year over year and 13% on an FX-adjusted basis. This year, actually, we have a benefit, we think, from leap year, an extra day. I would characterize our growth as generally in line with the fourth quarter of 2011, which had growth of about 11%.
Cards in force is up to 98 million. That's a 7% increase from last year. Cards issued by GNS Partners grew 16%. Proprietary cards grew 2%. We're up about 1.3 million cards compared to the fourth quarter of 2011. Average basic card member spending is up 10%. That's continued high engagement by our customers. Loans came in at $60 billion. That's up 4% as it's growing gradually, although I note that spending on lending products is growing faster. Travel sales are up modestly. If we move to slide four, this is billed business growth by region. Each region is up modestly, reflecting, I think, again, the fact that we had a leap year this year. Excluding that, the growth rates by region are reasonably stable with the fourth quarter. Europe had a growth rate of 6% in this first quarter. In Northern Europe, the growth rates were higher.
Germany, for instance, grew at 8%. The UK also grew at 8%. Southern Europe was somewhat weaker, low single-digit growth. Spain, for instance, grew at 2%. Growth in each region is similar to what we saw in the fourth quarter of last year. Moving to slide five, this is billed business growth by segment. The red line is the total company, and that's at 12%. GNS is the yellow line and continues to be somewhat above the average for the company, and it grew at 17%. International consumer is the light blue square line, and it's slightly less than the company average, coming in at 9% FX-adjusted. That was influenced by the lower growth rate in Europe. U.S. consumer is the dark blue diamond line, and global corporate services is the green triangle. Here, growth rates are similar to the total company.
Moving over to slide six, this is lending billed business compared to managed loan growth. The solid line is the growth rate for spending on lending products. The growth in spending on lending products is in line with the overall growth rate in billed business. The dotted line is the growth rate in loans. We continue to see a difference in the growth rate on lending spending and ending loans, though this gap is narrowing. The relative ratios of growth rates going forward will be a function of lending customers' behavior in the future. I would note, and this is not on the slide, but I note that the net interest yield on loans was 9.2% this quarter, and that's the same as the first quarter of 2011. Slide seven is revenue performance. Discount revenue increased 9%, and that reflects 12% growth in billed business.
We had a two basis point decrease in the discount rate from 2.55% in the first quarter of 2011 to 2.35% this quarter. This is driven by our strategy to increase penetration into everyday spend categories, as well as the mix of spending. It was also impacted by the relatively faster growth in GNS. As you know, GNS, a portion of that discount rate we share with our GNS partners. It's also impacted by higher contra revenues, including volume-related incentives to corporate customers and higher cashback rewards. Card fees grew in line with the growth in proprietary cards in force. Travel commissions and fees reflect slightly higher sales and slightly lower commissions and supplier revenues. Other commission fees are 10% higher, primarily reflecting the full quarter of loyalty partner. We have three months in this quarter. Last year, we just had one month.
That's partially offset by lower foreign exchange conversion revenue. Other revenue increased 22%. This reflects higher royalty revenues from GNS partner and also reflects the benefit in a revision of our estimate for uncashed TCs in international markets. Net interest income is up 6%, and this is driven by a 4% increase in card member loans. Total revenues grew at 8%. This is a reflection of our spend-centric model that enables our growth rate to be faster than our issuing competitors. Slide eight is provision for losses. We can see that the charge card provision is $178,000,000, 10% lower than last year. The write-off rate is up slightly as we are growing our business, but still at very low levels compared to historic numbers. The write-off dollars in the first quarter of 2012 are higher than what we had in 2011.
That is offset by lower fraud and the fact that we had a $14 million reserve release in the first quarter of 2012 compared to a reserve build of $35 million in the first quarter of 2011. Turning to the lending provision, that came in at $212 million, which compares to a credit of $120 million in the first quarter of 2011. The write-off rate is lower in the first quarter of this year compared to last year, and you'll see that in a couple of slides. We have lower write-off dollars in the quarter. As you can see on the slide, reserve releases this quarter were $194 million, and that compares to $725 million in the first quarter of 2011. That difference is really driving the higher provision year over year.
Improvement in the delinquency rate, again, this quarter, and improvements in the migration rate is what drove the reserve release this quarter. Moving to slide nine, this is charge card credit performance. The write-off rate in the charge card portfolio has increased slightly, both sequentially and compared to last year, but again, remains at near historic low levels. Despite the higher write-off rate in USCS, the delinquency rate remains stable, and our reserve coverage of delinquencies also remains stable. International consumer and global corporate services is up slightly, but again, here at near historic lows. Moving to slide 10, this is lending credit performance. The lending write-off rate is at 2.3% this quarter, the same as in the fourth quarter of 2011, and notably better than the first quarter of last year.
The lending 30-day past due improved slightly sequentially to 1.4% and compares favorably to the 1.9% in the first quarter of 2011. These are both at historical low levels and represent the best credit metrics in the industry. Moving to slide 11, this is a chart related to lending reserve coverage. U.S. card services and worldwide reserves as a percentage of loans and reserves as a percentage of past due were less than we had in the first quarter of 2011, and that's driven by improved credit performance and are both approximately the same or slightly lower than what we had in the fourth quarter of 2011. Now, principal months coverage was 15.9% in the U.S. and 15.8% worldwide in the fourth quarter of 2011, and they have both moved to 14 months coverage in the first quarter of this year.
This calculation, as you take write-offs in the quarter, you divide by three to get a monthly average, and you divide it into the reserve balance. Write-offs in the first quarter of this year and the fourth quarter of 2011 are about the same, but reserves in the first quarter of this year are lower, driven by the improvement in delinquency rates and improved migration rates that I discussed before. We move to slide 12. This is our expense performance. Total expenses increased 4%, or adjusted for the Visa MasterCard settlement, were flat in the first quarter of this year compared to the first quarter of 2011. Marketing and promotion decreased 11% from last year. In the quarter, marketing and promotion as a percentage of revenues was about 8.3%, and this is below the historical level of 9%.
Our plan for the full year is for marketing and promotion to be approximately 9% of revenues. However, as we've said in the past, we will adjust marketing spend depending on economic conditions. Membership rewards expense decreased 7% compared to the first quarter of 2011, reflecting greater membership rewards and co-brand card-related expense on spending volume in the quarter, but was more than offset by lower increases in the membership reward ultimate redemption rate in the first quarter of 2012 compared to the first quarter of 2011. I'll discuss this in more detail on the next slide. Card member services increased 35%, reflecting increased costs associated with benefits recently provided to U.S. card members, including statement credits for travel fees for Platinum and Centurion card members, the Delta companion program, and lounge access. I'll discuss operating expense on slide 14.
The effective tax rate of 29% compares to 32% in the first quarter of last year, and this lower rate reflects a tax benefit related to the realization of certain tax credits. Now we'll look at slide 13, which is comparing card member rewards expense in the first quarter of this year to the first quarter of 2011. As you saw on slide 12, rewards expense is 7% lower in the first quarter of 2012, and you can see that on this slide as well. Card member rewards expense includes the cost of co-brand products and membership rewards. I'd like to remind you for co-brand products, the co-brand partner has the obligation to deliver the reward. We pay the co-brand partner each month the amount we expense and have no balance sheet liability.
On the other hand, we are responsible for delivering the rewards earned under the Membership Rewards program and have a balance sheet reserve for that. At year end, that was approximately $5 billion. Membership Rewards expense is a function of two elements: the cost of points earned in the quarter and expense for points earned in previous periods if the estimate for the ultimate redemption rate changes. In this chart, the blue section includes the co-brand product expense and the Membership Rewards expense for points earned in the quarter. The green section represents Membership Rewards expense related to points earned in previous periods due to the increase in the estimate of the ultimate redemption rate. You can see that the green section of the bar in the first quarter of 2012 is significantly smaller than in the first quarter of 2011.
The more moderate increase in the ultimate redemption rate is resulting in lower total rewards expense in the first quarter of 2012 compared to 2011. In 2012, we continue to see increased customer engagement in the Membership Rewards program, resulting in a higher ultimate redemption rate estimate, but at a rate of change more in line with historic levels prior to 2011. I'll move to operating expense on slide 14. Total operating expense grew 13%. Excluding the impact of the Visa MasterCard settlement, which was a credit in last year, adjusted operating expense increased 5%. Salaries and benefits grew 7%, reflecting merit increases, higher incentive-related compensation, and higher benefits-related costs. Professional services increased 4%. This is due to higher technology costs and higher third-party agent commissions, which relate to signing smaller merchants, offset by lower collection costs.
Occupancy and equipment increased 11%, and this includes costs associated with loyalty partner and higher data processing costs. Adjusted other net decreased 16% primarily due to a reclass, and we're reclassing a benefit related to cross-currency funding hedges in the period. I'll move to slide 15, again talking to operating expense. This slide provides eight quarters of history on operating expense. At $3.1 billion in this quarter, we believe this is a level of operating expense that will enable us to drive business growth. Going forward, we will continue to implement our plan to contain operating expenditures. When we think about 2012, you should also be mindful that the first quarter of 2011 was the low point for operating expenses in 2011, as you can see on this chart.
You can also see that operating expenses were similar in the first quarter of 2012 compared to the fourth quarter of 2011. Now, I'm not making a forecast here, but if operating expenses stay at the current level, the growth rate for the full year adjusted for the Visa MasterCard settlement proceeds would be in the low single digits. Our objective over the next two or three years will be to grow operating expenses more slowly than the growth in revenues. Moving to slide 16, this is regarding expense flexibility over time. This slide shows adjusted expense as a percentage of revenue. Adjusted expense excludes credit provision. On the left side of the slide, you can see five years of history, and on the right side, the past five quarters.
Adjusted expense as a percentage of revenue in the first quarter of this year continues to come down from the historically high levels that we saw in 2010 and 2011. Over time, we expect this ratio to migrate back towards historical levels in two ways. First, through top-line revenue growth, and second, through expense flexibility, which includes our plan to contain operating expense growth. I'll now move to slide 17, which are our capital ratios. You can see that Tier 1 common ratio increased to 13.4% from 12.3% at year end. We generated additional capital through net income and employee plans, and at the same time, risk-weighted assets decreased, mostly due to lower loan levels. Share repurchases did not start until mid-March after the Fed completed their review of our capital distribution plan.
As we continue to execute against our plan to return capital to shareholders and potentially pursue acquisition opportunities, we would expect that the Tier 1 common ratio would move down in subsequent quarters. Slide 18, our payout ratio. This is the total payout ratio, and the bars represent the percentage of capital generated that we return to shareholders. On the left side is the last five years, and on the right side is the past four quarters. In 2011, which is the middle of the chart, we returned 56% of capital to shareholders, and this is in line with our stated objective of returning approximately 50% of capital generated to shareholders. The Fed has reviewed our 2012 capital distribution plan, along with 18 other large bank holding companies, including the operating performance of all 19 banks under stressed economic conditions.
We believe the results demonstrate the strength and flexibility of our business model and our balance sheet. For example, our minimum Tier 1 common equity ratio, a measure of balance sheet strength, was the third highest among all 19 banks. While looking at measures of operating performance under these stress scenarios, we were best in class among the 19 participants. Our capital plan is to return capital to shareholders. Our capital plan of returning capital to shareholders is both through our dividend, which we increased to $0.20 per share per quarter from $0.18, and we'll also use share repurchases in an amount up to $4 billion in 2012 and $1 billion in the first quarter of 2013. Next to slide 19, a liquidity snapshot. We continue to hold excess cash and multiple securities to meet 12 months of funding maturities. We have $20 billion of excess cash and securities.
The next 12 months of maturities is $13 billion. This is larger than our normal excess, and it's been driven by the seasonal decline in loans in the first quarter, continued strong growth in our direct deposits, which you'll see on the next slide, and an unsecured debt issuance at the end of March under favorable capital market conditions. Slide 20 is our U.S. retail deposits by type. As we had limited cash needs in the first quarter, total retail deposits increased only $20 million. You can see that on the right-hand side of the chart. We did increase direct deposits by $1.2 billion. You can see that on the left side of the chart, while third-party CDs decreased by $1.1 billion. With that, let me conclude with a few final comments.
Results for the quarter reflect a continuation of the positive business trends evident during the last several quarters, as well as continued execution against our plan to migrate towards historic expense-to-revenue ratios. Spending growth remains strong, and we continue to grow above the average rate of our large issuing competitors, despite difficult prior year comparisons. Given the challenging global economic environment, we are pleased with the strength of international billings growth, including in Europe, where we saw a modest increase in the growth rate. We also saw average loans continue to grow modestly year over year, with net yield comparable to the prior year and lending growth and a growth in net interest income of 6%. At the same time, lending loss rate remains stable near all-time lows.
Despite very strong credit performance, provision expense did increase as lending reserve releases were significantly lower this year compared to the prior year. Our strong billings growth, the growth in net interest income, and higher other non-interest revenues drove revenue growth in line with our on-average and over time target of 8%. Our revenue growth, which reflects the benefit of our spend-centric model, stands in contrast to many other issuers who still face year-over-year revenue declines. In the first quarter, strong revenue growth was paired with well-contained total expense growth to generate strong earnings. We are still investing in the business, and these investments are driving higher average spending and growth in our card base, while enabling us to build capabilities for the future. In addition, we are continuing to implement our plan to grow operating expense more slowly than revenues over the next two to three years.
Looking ahead, we recognize that the year-over-year comparisons will continue to be difficult and that we will not have the benefit of the Visa MasterCard settlement proceeds or significant credit reserve releases. We continue to believe that our business model is well-positioned for the challenges ahead. In fact, the results of the recent Fed stress test further demonstrate the unique aspects of our model and highlight its inherent flexibility and the ability to generate capital even under severe stress assumptions. We have started our share buyback program, increased our dividend, and maintained flexibilities as we consider balancing acquisitions and share buybacks. Thanks for listening, and we are now ready to take questions.
Speaker 5
Ladies and gentlemen, if you wish to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your touch-tone phone. Once again, for any questions, please press star one at this time. One moment, please. We'll go to the first line of Nomura. Please go ahead.
Speaker 4
Hi, it's Brian Parent. I wonder if you could, maybe just given how things are evolving in Europe, any color or thoughts you have on more recent customer behavior there. Are you still seeing the improvement you saw hold up, or are you seeing things starting to weaken again?
Speaker 0
In the fourth quarter, we had billed business growth that was kind of in the mid-single digits. What we were seeing then is we had stronger growth in the northern part of Europe. We had somewhat slower growth in the southern part of Europe. The UK was performing more in line with what we saw in northern Europe. Actually, that trend has continued into the first quarter. We had overall growth in Europe of 6%, stronger in northern Europe and in the UK, a little less so in the south. I would say the trend in the first quarter was very comparable to what we saw in the fourth quarter of last year. Some stabilization.
Speaker 4
I guess I don't know if it's something you can comment on, but do all those comments carry through to April as well, or if things evolved since then?
Speaker 0
Yes, that's only the last couple of weeks, so we're not going to comment on April at this time.
Speaker 4
Okay, fair enough. The follow-up I had was, I realize charge card performance is very strong in a historical context, but just any more color on why loss rates are trending up over the past four quarters, anything you're observing in the data?
Speaker 0
Yeah. The overall growth rate is 12%. You actually have very similar growth rates in lending and charge. You both are seeing very strong growth. The tick up that we saw, up to 2.3% in the first quarter of this year, is really a pretty minor tick up, and at 2.3% represents very low levels compared to what we've historically seen. We did notice that, and we took a close look at delinquencies. Delinquencies this quarter stand at 1.9%, and that's exactly the same delinquency rate that we had in the fourth quarter and very comparable to what we had last year. We don't have a concern about where write-offs are. In fact, it's our expectation as we grow the business that we would expect to see some tick up over time in the write-off rates, both potentially in charge and in lending.
When that will happen will be dependent on the growth in the business and customer behavior. Your bottom line is that tick up is not a concern to me.
Speaker 4
Thanks so much for taking my questions.
Speaker 0
Okay.
Speaker 5
We will go to the line of Citigroup. Please go ahead.
Speaker 3
Thanks, Dan, for the detail. Moving on to the regulatory environment, I mean, clearly your fundamentals are great. If you could just talk a little bit about maybe the CFPB and what kind of interactions you've had with them and what they might, where, if any, concerns you might have from the regulatory side.
Speaker 0
We have started to engage with the CFPB. They are, I think, on site at this juncture. They're just starting their work, so I think it'll be some time before we have findings from them or reports from them. The findings that the FDIC has had, which we disclosed in the 10-K, they have shared those with the CFPB. We have not heard back from them on any reaction to that. They're a new regulator. Like everyone else, we're going to have to wait and see exactly what their observations are. We have started to engage with them. We have a number of new regulators. When we became a bank holding company, the Fed was a new regulator for us. We have worked very hard with the Fed to establish good relations, and we think we've been successful at doing that.
Our plan would be to do the same exact thing with the CFPB, to be open with them and listen to any observations that they have.
Speaker 3
Okay, just real quickly, it looks like there was a reclassification of card fees out of net interest income. Can you talk a little bit about that?
Speaker 0
Okay, I was getting a little help there. I picture I'm mute. There were some card fees that, when we became a bank holding company, we decided should be included in interest income. Upon further review, we decided that we should put it back into card fees. There's no change in revenues at all, or the economics, or the bottom line. It's just a classification of what revenue line that it's on.
Speaker 3
What kind of card fees were those?
Speaker 0
It's just the annual fee that we get on lending products. There was an interpretation of a certain accounting rule that we thought would cause us to move to split the card fees and put a portion up in interest income. I have decided that that's not where we should put it, and so we've really just reclassed it back. Simply, there's no economics, there's no impact on the total revenue line or on the bottom line.
Speaker 3
Got it. Thank you.
Speaker 0
We restated the prior year.
Speaker 5
Next, we'll go to the line of David Hochstim with Buckingham Research. Please go ahead.
Speaker 2
Hi, just two things. Could you tell us, is there any effect on expenses because of the extra day for leap year, or is it really just a revenue effect?
Speaker 0
I would have answered that question, no, but there's more minutiae than we should really get into here. We actually do accrue some salaries kind of on a day basis, so there might have been a slight impact on salaries and benefits as a result of that. I don't think there's any large impact at all here.
Speaker 2
Rewards?
Speaker 0
To the extent you have another day of spending, you get it on the revenue level. Rewards would be an example. To the extent you have more billed business, you'd have some more rewards.
Speaker 2
Okay. Can you just clarify what the adjustment for the travelers' check liability was and how much that could be? You note it in the supplement expenses for enterprise growth. Can you give us a sense of how much that is in the quarter?
Speaker 0
Okay. Travelers' checks, to the extent there are travelers' checks that are sold in the U.S., if customers do not redeem them, we issue those to the states. There is no income related to that. However, for travelers' checks that are sold outside the United States, other countries do not have escheatment laws. We estimate how much of those travelers' checks will not be redeemed. We actually take up an estimate of that at the time we sell the travelers' check. We then step back and look at history to see whether things are performing the way they have historically done. In a recent review this quarter, we realized that, in fact, fewer of those checks were being encashed if they were older. We simply revised our estimate of the amount that will not be encashed. There was a credit in this quarter related to that.
Speaker 2
How much was it?
Speaker 0
It's a big enough number that we should mention, but not a large enough number that we give the dollar amount.
Speaker 2
That means less than $0.01 a share?
Speaker 0
Less than $0.01 a share.
Speaker 2
Less than $0.05 a share?
Speaker 0
We wanted to note it because it's not inconsequential, but it's not significant.
Speaker 2
Okay.
Speaker 0
In terms of enterprise growth, we haven't disclosed the exact amount we're spending there. We do think that it represents a very good and important opportunity for us, and we are investing against those initiatives. At this point, they are investments. They're not generating large amounts of revenue. Anytime you start a new business, you need to continue to calibrate. Some things work less well than you thought, others better than you thought, and we reshift our investments accordingly. We are making notable investments in enterprise growth because it's a terrific opportunity, but again, it's not a number that we've disclosed.
Speaker 2
Right. No, I figured I might as well ask because you have it in the supplement. Could you just give a sense of what we should expect for the tax rate for the balance of the year? You know.
Speaker 0
I think the tax rate, you know, absent any specific credits in the period that occur, is generally in the low 30s, you know, 31%, 32%. To the extent there's a credit like we've had this quarter, that benefit will be reflected in the rate. Without any item like that, it would be in the 31%, 32% range.
Speaker 2
Okay, thanks a lot.
Speaker 5
We'll go to the line of John Stilmar with SunTrust. Please go ahead.
Speaker 1
Yeah, good evening, Dan. Just real quickly, enterprise growth seems to be certainly the buzzword around American Express. Can you talk to us about a little bit of advancements that you've made in the quarter and what sort of roadmaps and things we should be thinking about in terms of announcements or progress or really frankly numbers starting to come up to the surface in terms of progress that you've made on enterprise growth? Thank you.
Speaker 0
I think our whole business is kind of a buzzword, right? Our core business is performing exceptionally well, as you can see by strong billed business, very good revenue growth, excellent credit performance. You know, the digital space, which is where enterprise growth is, is also a big factor in our core business. We are doing a significant number of things in the core business. I think you can see the things that we've done with small businesses. I think we've done a number of initiatives with Facebook and with Twitter in Serve, but also in our core business. You know, we're also enabling our customers that want to interact with us from a servicing perspective online to do that. We're also enabling people who want to acquire cards to do it online. Digital at American Express is a buzzword.
We think it's important that we think about transforming the company because digital will be a big part of the future. As we've said, it's actually a big part of today. You know, our digital spending last year was $130 billion of our $800 billion, so it's an important part of things that we're thinking about and investing in. Within Serve and enterprise growth, we are also investing there, as I said. Some of the progress we're making, as we said, is we were very focused last year on signing distribution deals, and this year, it's all about executing against those distribution deals so that we can bring customers onto the Serve platform, where we're very focused on that. We haven't at this juncture decided on sharing metrics. At some point in the future, we will. You know, really, you mentioned revenues.
Again, I think this is an area of investment, revenues will flow more in the future. To your point, we're not just investing without monitoring and assessing how we're doing. We do have guideposts out there that we're very focused on in terms of what we're achieving and what parts are being successful and which ones aren't. As I said before, we will calibrate our investments accordingly. We do think we're accomplishing very positive things.
Speaker 3
Great. Thank you.
Speaker 5
Next, we'll go to the line of Brad Ball with Evercore. Please go ahead.
Speaker 1
Hey, Dan. Yeah, as a quick follow-up to that, can you give us a sense as to what portion of billed business growth came from online and mobile?
Speaker 0
We don't do that by quarter, but as I said, $130 million of the $800 million last year was digital, online. Last year we saw the digital growth at 22% of billing, so billings on the internet were up 22%. I don't know the exact number for this quarter, but I strongly suspect it's more likely to be growing at a faster rate than the average.
Speaker 1
Faster than the 12%, or 11% adjusted for the leap day?
Speaker 0
I haven't actually seen the number, Brad, but you know, I would think that it probably is.
Speaker 1
Okay. Then.
Speaker 0
Strongly.
Speaker 1
Just as a follow-up, a point of clarification. You have board authorization and approval from the Fed for a buyback of up to $4 billion this year and up to $1 billion next year. You talk about returning 50% of your capital to shareholders. Those amounts would exceed that 50%. Are those numbers just out there as sort of upside ranges? If you don't exhaust the full $4 billion this year, is there any to carry over into next year? How does that work?
Speaker 0
Our overall philosophy here is to retain 50% of capital generated to grow the business, either supporting growth in the balance sheet because you need capital to do that, or for acquisitions. We return the other 50% in the form of either dividends or share buybacks. To the extent we do fewer acquisitions, we want to have the flexibility to do share buybacks. In 2011, we requested $2.3 billion of buybacks on the basis that we do about $2 billion in acquisitions. At the end of the day, based on the opportunities we saw, we did $900 million in acquisitions. As a result, we built over $1 billion of capital that we had not planned on.
When we made the submission this year, we did it on the basis that we would have the flexibility to do acquisitions if we identified the right opportunities, but also asked for a buyback amount of $4 billion in the event that we did not do the planned level of acquisitions. You are right, if we actually do $4 billion of share buybacks, we will be returning a significantly higher percentage of capital generated to shareholders. It is really a trade-off between acquisition spending and buybacks. The less we do in acquisitions, the more we will do in buybacks. The more we do in acquisitions, the less we will do in buybacks.
Speaker 1
If you don't exhaust the $4 billion, would it carry over into next year, or are you back into the submission process in January of next year? You have to see what the Fed will approve?
Speaker 0
I have not asked them that question, but I would assume that if we do less than $4 billion, there's not a carryover. We would do a submission next January, and then that'll become effective. Whatever that plan is, it would become effective after the approval, which would be mid-March, I assume. What you're allowed to do in 2013 will be based on the plan you submit and whether the Fed does not object to that plan. I don't think there's a carryover, except if you didn't do it, you may wind up with higher capital going in, which might give you greater flexibility in your submission.
Speaker 1
Got it. Thanks.
Speaker 5
Next question comes from Bob Napoli with William Blair. Please go ahead.
Speaker 1
Thank you. Good afternoon. Question on expenses, on clarity, and then tie that to growth. Because over the last several years, as American Express laid out very well, you were investing very heavily, the benefits from lower falling credit losses and the Visa MasterCard payments. You talked about the $3.1 billion of expenses in the quarter, Dan, in pages 15 and 16. I think, while it's clear you're going to grow expenses slower than revenue, it sounded like that $3 billion was, as you were suggesting, going to be kind of a steady run rate for the year. Just as that ties to growth, you grew 8%. Historically, you've said at least 8% revenue growth is what American Express had targeted prior to the downturn. Can you still get this? Can you still drive the revenue growth with pulling back on the investment spend?
Speaker 0
All right.
Speaker 1
have two questions.
Speaker 0
Yeah. Okay. We knew all along that, as you said, we were spending at higher levels in 2010 and 2011, and that was helping to drive growth. At the operating expense level that we have, which is higher than we had in the beginning of 2010 or in the first quarter of 2011, at this level, we think we have sufficient resources to drive growth going forward. It's higher than it was back in those periods, but we think it's a level that is appropriate and would enable us to drive revenue to achieve our on-average and over time targets. That's our perspective. We're going to control them well, but we think we have the resources.
Speaker 1
The $3.1 billion this quarter through the year is, I mean, were you suggesting on page 15 that, I mean, I wasn't totally clear, and you pointed out last year was lower in the first quarter then grew? I think it sounded like you might be suggesting that the $3 billion was going to be kind of a run rate for this year before you grow next year. Was that, or did I misread?
Speaker 0
I was trying to be, not give a forecast, right? I don't want to do that. As you know, we don't do that. I was simply making the observation that if operating expense continued at the current level and you adjusted for the Visa MasterCard proceeds, and then you took that number and compared it to last year, you would have low single-digit growth, right? I wasn't saying exactly what it was going to be, but I was trying to illustrate if it was at that level, what the growth rate would be, which is in line with, you know, we've talked about, you know, containing operating expense growth. We do believe that at that level, we have the resources necessary to continue to grow the business and achieve our on-average and over time financial targets.
Speaker 1
Thanks. Just one follow-up on the one, I mean, quarter overall looked very impressive, but the one number that surprised me that was weaker was the travel number, travel growth. It seems like all the data, market data we look at on travel spend looked like very strong growth. MasterCard and Visa had given out some very strong cross-border spend numbers. Is there a, within GSS, the commercial business, was there a significant client loss, or, you know, what happened to your travel business that doesn't match with the market data and the competitive data we've heard?
Speaker 0
Yeah, I think sales were actually up slightly, but commissions were down a bit. Supplier revenues, which are an important part of the economics, sometimes are lumpy, and they were down a little year over year. Sales, again, I guess are the key thing in this discussion about just volumes. They were off low single digits. That's the travel experience. I don't think we had major losses that I'm aware of. Those are the volumes that we were.
Speaker 1
It does look like you lost some share, but you're not sure why.
Speaker 0
I wouldn't comment on share. It's more of kind of a client-by-client is what you're doing when you're dealing with corporate clients. Certainly, sales for business travel were lower than what we experienced in billed business in our card business. That's a fair comparison.
Speaker 1
Thank you.
Speaker 5
We have a question from the line of Craig Maurer with CLSA. Please go ahead.
Speaker 3
Yeah, good evening. I wanted to ask you about the Membership Rewards costs. In the fourth quarter, you made a comment discussing roughly 78 basis points as a % of billed business ex-GNS to think of for that cost, and that we could think of that for 12. In the first quarter, it was up around 81, and I was curious if you're still thinking about that level for the fourth quarter, I'm sorry, for the year to average out, or should we be thinking about that a little differently? Additionally, can we expect going forward dividends to grow at a rate similar to earnings, which I believe had been your history prior to the recession? Thanks.
Speaker 0
Let me answer the second question first. That's exactly right. We think about that we want to have dividends at a certain relationship to income, and we kind of keep it in the 17% or 18% range. If net income increases, then we would stay with the same philosophy and increase dividends to be in line with that percentage that I talked about, you know, 16%, 17%, 18%. That's exactly right. As you point out, I mean, you can calculate the numbers. It was 78 bps in the last quarter and 81 bps in this first quarter. It's really, you know, somewhat dependent on, you know, what's happening with the ultimate redemption rate. If you look over time, if you had a schedule that looked back to, say, the second quarter of 2010, many of the quarters are between this 78 bps range and 81 bps.
The only time it's really gone above that were in the quarters of 2011, where we had higher growth in the ultimate redemption rate in each quarter than we had seen historically. In this quarter, the ultimate redemption rate growth was more similar to the historical levels that we saw prior to 2011. Where it goes is going to be, you know, totally dependent on customer behavior. As we've said, you know, the ultimate redemption rate goes up when we see redemption levels go up. If we see redemption levels go up, that's greater engagement. For the long-term health of the franchise, that's a very good thing. It puts some expense in the corner, but it's very good for the long-term health of the franchise.
Speaker 3
It sounds like we should think about a range, you know, similar to what you said, 78 to 82 basis points or so, at least for this year.
Speaker 0
I didn't say exactly what you said, but I did give you those data points.
Speaker 3
Okay. Thanks, Dan.
Speaker 0
All right.
Speaker 5
Your next question will come from the line of Sanjay Sakhrani with KBW. Please go ahead.
Speaker 4
Thank you. First off, thank you for reporting today and not tomorrow. Question on the share repurchase. I was just wondering, as far as timing and the M&A pipeline, I was wondering, could you just talk about that pipeline and how we should model in the share repurchase to the extent that there are opportunities available and you guys may not kind of push the lever too hard on share repurchase? Secondarily, on top line growth, I was wondering if you could just talk about billed business growth going forward. It seemed like you guys had some decent momentum in the first quarter relative to the fourth quarter, but the comps obviously get tougher as the year progresses. How confident are you that you keep that momentum going? Finally, on the top line growth, could you just talk about the contra revenue items as well?
Are there any big kind of contra revenue items that we should think about and how they trend over the course of the year? Thanks.
Speaker 0
Okay. Starting with share buybacks and acquisitions. As you know, we have not relied on acquisitions to drive our growth. It's been primarily driven by organic growth and our investments in our business. Our philosophy is to do what I refer to as bolt-on type acquisitions, where we either acquire a capability that we can leverage within our existing business or acquire near-in adjacencies that are fee-based in nature. Loyalty Partner would be a good example of that. Our philosophy is that we want to take a look at acquisitions that fall within those parameters. If we see good acquisitions with good economics, then we're going to make those acquisitions. If we don't identify acquisitions that meet our criteria, we're not going to do them for the sake of doing acquisitions.
What we actually do in 2012 will be calibrated by the opportunities we see and the assessments we make of the economics. If we see good acquisitions, we'll do them. If not, we'll use the capital to do share buybacks. In terms of billed business, we think we have had excellent billed business over the past two years, certainly excellent compared to the industry. We've had nine quarters in a row where we've had double-digit growth in billed business, certainly really excellent compared to the industry. We continue to believe that we have sufficient resources to continue to drive strong growth and have business momentum going forward. Where we're constructing our plan is to continue to drive spend, focus on our spend-centric model, and to be successful in the future in terms of taking share as we have been over the last decade.
In terms of contra revenues, contra revenues include cash rewards. As I mentioned, those are up this quarter. We issued recently a new product that was a cashback product that had a higher reward level, which would indicate it's being successful in the marketplace. We do give volume incentives to certain corporate customers. To the extent they're hitting higher levels of spend, that's a good thing economically, but it is a contra revenue. We also have sometimes signing bonuses that go in this line. This quarter, that wasn't at a higher level than we've seen historically. The other impact on the relationship between billed business and discount rate is GNS, right? GNS is a terrific success story. We share part of the revenue with our partners. We keep some of it ourselves. That has the impact of bringing down, creating a gap in that relationship.
Those are the largest items that are impacting the difference between billed business and discount revenue within our P&L.
Speaker 4
Yeah, great. Thank you.
Speaker 5
We do have a question from the line of Rick Shane with JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Speaker 1
Thanks, guys, for taking my question. I'll be quick. The one item in the expenses that was a little bit surprising directionally was the occupancy and equipment. The reason I say that is it's my recollection that this is the quarter where the Greensboro shutdown actually goes into effect. Was there any lingering expense associated with Greensboro, or is this net of that shutdown and the other facilities that you added actually more than offset it?
Speaker 0
It really doesn't have anything to do with Greensboro. The costs we were going to incur related to that, that were people-related, we accrued upfront. There are no notable Greensboro expenses in here. We have largely wound that down at this juncture. That is not a factor in this quarter.
Speaker 4
Got lower because.
Speaker 1
Hey, Dan, you got muted out. I apologize.
Speaker 0
Is that lower because we don't have GNS? Is that the question?
Speaker 1
I'm sorry, you got muted out in the middle of that, but my question is, I'm surprised that occupancy went up this quarter on a year-over-year basis. It was the only expense where you didn't really show a degree of operating leverage. I'm curious with that coming out, what the incremental expense was.
Speaker 0
I got you. Okay. Greensboro is not a large factor here in the year-over-year comparison, just from an occupancy cost perspective. The reason it's up is Loyalty Partner is part of it. We have, again, three months in here for their occupancy as opposed to only one month last year. We do have some, this is occupancy and equipment. The equipment part is we do have some higher data processing costs, which are just related to the higher volumes that we're experiencing and the fact that we continue to invest in capabilities. Those are the things that are the main drivers of the increase of 11%.
Speaker 1
Thank you. I'll follow up offline.
Speaker 0
Okay.
Speaker 5
You do have a question from Mark DeVries with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Speaker 3
Yeah, thanks. I've got a follow-up question on your capital plans. By our estimate, under the plan, you have the ability to pay back up to about 100% of earnings. Given that you're already sitting on a pretty large capital cushion of, in excess of $2 billion, and loan growth has been moderate and M&A has not been that big of a part of your business recently, was there any thought of asking for a payout in excess of 100% so you could start to draw down some of that cushion?
Speaker 0
I think if you look at schedules that different investment banks have put together, we probably are at the high end in terms of what we requested in terms of buybacks. We were sitting at 12.3% at the end of last year in terms of Tier 1 common. For the moment, that's a comfortable place to be. We don't know what all of the final rules will be as it relates to what capital we'll be required to hold. In addition to that, we are still in the process of looking at Basel II. We don't know completely what impacts that could potentially have on us. When we simply go from Basel I to Basel III, there's not a big impact there. We've disclosed those numbers. We're yet to complete our work on Basel II.
Once the rules are completed and we have a full assessment of the impact of Basel and the ultimate rules that are out there, we'll think about exactly where we want to settle. We didn't contemplate asking for higher buybacks to actually take the ratio down beyond.
Speaker 5
Our plan that we submitted was.
Speaker 6
Okay. If M&A was a meaningful part of your plans for this year, would you still contemplate potentially using the full authorization and bring your ratio down in that course?
Speaker 5
If we did a modest level of acquisitions, we would probably tend towards the higher end of the $4 billion range. If we do higher levels of acquisitions, then we would bring the $4 billion down, correspondingly.
Speaker 6
Okay. Thanks, Dan.
Speaker 0
Next question will come from the line of Ken Bruce with Merrill Lynch. Please go ahead.
Speaker 4
Thank you. Good evening. My question relates to several that have been asked, but I would like to maybe get you to step back for a second and, you know, give us a sense around the expense management. You know, how long do you think it will take for your adjusted expenses to get back to the historical norm? Obviously, there's a couple of different things that can, you know, ultimately drive those down, but I'm wondering how long you think they're going to remain elevated before you get down to that 67% level.
Speaker 5
Yeah. Okay. We've said we're going to head back towards those levels, right? In that calculation, provision is not an element, right? To the extent, going forward, provision is a lower percentage of revenues than it was historically, if that were the case. Really, to kind of achieve the kind of margins we want, you wouldn't have to get all the way back to 67%. We'll calibrate things based on both of those factors. I think we've made very good progress to date. We've gotten back to, I think, what, 71% in this quarter. I think we're making very good progress. I would not forecast exactly what the ratios will be, going forward. As you intimated in your question, we can really get there one of two ways, right? We can get there through very good containment of expenses, and we can also get there by good revenue growth.
To the extent we get good revenue growth, then we actually have more flexibility in terms of the level of operating expenses that we have. We want to calibrate all these pieces together so that we have strong growth with the right margins and the right returns for shareholders. I think you consider all those things as we move forward. We think the progress that we've made is good, and we think we have thoughtful plans in place as we go forward.
Speaker 4
Okay. Just as a follow-up to that, when you look at the new businesses that you're investing in, I think you've made some comments in the past that those are very decent margin businesses. They may look different than your historical business. Your margins in the quarter were down 23% and change, I think, from 24%. Do you think that at some point your pre-tax operating margin begins to drift higher, or what would you kind of say is the stable level when you look at your new business investments beginning to actually kind of kick in?
Speaker 5
That's a little hard to assess since we have to actually see exactly what the structure is for revenues. We've run scenarios, and in those scenarios, we have good economics associated with those. Exactly how that whole space will play out will take, honestly, a couple of years to do, and we'll see what margins we have. We think about financial returns, we think about growth, we think about margins, we think about return on equity. The total economics, of course, all those metrics could be somewhat different or similar to what we have today, and we'll have to wait and see exactly how they play out. We think it's a sector that will have high growth in the future. We think we have the capabilities to be successful in that space, and we think the returns will be good.
Considering all those things are the reason that we're making the investments in that space.
Speaker 4
Okay. Thank you for your comments.
Speaker 5
Okay, I'll take one final question.
Speaker 0
Thank you. That will come from the line of Moshe Orenbuch with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.
Speaker 3
Great, thanks. Dan, I was looking at the slide, I think it's slide 12 that had, 13, actually, that had the rewards expense and the green part of the bar that represented the increase for points previously earned. You had mentioned that that was $188 million in 2011. If you were to subtract that, the total amount for the first quarter of this year is only less than 6% higher. I guess, how do we kind of square those numbers given that you've got, you know, 12% growth in charge volume, and you're saying that there is some increase in the liability on top of that?
Speaker 5
I think the green bar for the first quarter of 2011 actually has two pieces in it. One, we revised the estimation process, under which we actually did the ultimate redemption calculation. That was $188 million. Also, in that quarter, just in the normal course, based on the behavior of the customers, the ultimate redemption rate increased for that as well. The green bar includes both of those pieces, not just the $188 million.
Speaker 3
Okay. Also, on the slide 11 on credit, you've gone from 16 months' coverage of principal down to 14. That's kind of a concurrent measure, not a prospective one. I would assume that you're not going to take that all the way down to 12 if receivables are growing and there's the potential for dollars of losses to go up at some point in the not-too-distant future. How much room do you have to take that 14 down or, from the standpoint of the reserve at this point?
Speaker 5
Yeah. For us, this calculation is really just an outcome of how we set reserves. We do not target a particular level of coverage. When we set reserves, we have a migration model that we look at using history. If there is a need for specific reserves, something that's not captured there, we include that. We have some higher reserves for TDRs. That is what drives where we set reserves, not this metric. This is simply an outcome. It's one that people follow, so we provide it, but it's not a driver of how we set reserves. Reserves are going to be driven by the behavior of our customer, you know, what delinquencies are, what the migration rates are. That's what's driving our reserves.
Speaker 3
Right. Does that essentially mean your migration says that dollar losses are coming down in the future?
Speaker 5
If you look at this quarter, you know, the migration rates were better in this quarter than they were in the fourth quarter of 2011. We're using history, right? We're using a certain period of history to help guide us there.
Speaker 3
Okay. Thanks.
Speaker 5
Thank you, everybody, for joining the call, and good evening.
Speaker 0
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. That does conclude our conference for today. Thank you for your participation and for using AT&T Executive Teleconference Service. You may now disconnect.