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Slashing of jobs has begun (Full Text version)

JohorRookie

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American Express to cut more than 4,000 jobs over this year
Everett Rosenfeld | @Ev_Rosenfeld

American Express said it plans to cut more than 4,000 jobs over the next year.

A representative for the company told CNBC that it is planning to cut the jobs but that this is only a gross figure, and that the firm will also continue to hire selectively in parts of the organization. Additionally, American Express reported quarterly earnings that slightly beat analysts' expectations on Wednesday, and CEO Ken Chenault said in a release that "tight controls on the cost side of the ledger" had benefited the company.

The company posted fourth-quarter earnings per share of $1.39 per share, compared with $1.21 a share in the year-earlier period.

Revenue for the quarter came in at $9.1 billion, against the comparable year-ago figure of $8.5 billion.

Analysts had expected American Express to report earnings of about $1.38 a share on $8.53 billion in revenue, according to a consensus estimate from Thomson Reuters.

After an initial post-earnings positive jump, the company's stock fell about 2 percent in after-hours trading.

"Solid results this quarter reflected the underlying themes that have characterized our performance throughout 2014: higher Card Member spending, increased loan balances, tight control of operating expenses and a substantial return of capital to shareholders through share repurchases," Chenault said in a release.

The company said fourth-quarter card member spending rose 6 percent, 8 percent if adjusted for foreign exchange. American Express also revealed that volumes for the year crossed the trillion-dollar mark for the first time.

The credit card issuer's revenue was also helped by a $453 million post-tax gain from the sale of its investment in Concur Technologies.

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All told, the company had a 2014 with a "healthy balance sheet that enabled us to return a substantial amount of capital to shareholders in the form of repurchases over the past year," CFO Jeffrey Campbell said on the Wednesday earnings call.

Still, Campbell said that "there was some complexity" to the quarter and year, including "incremental initiatives" like a restructuring and investments in growth.

In the release, Chenault highlighted the company's control of expenses.

"Tight controls on the cost side of the ledger continued to give us the flexibility to invest in growth opportunities. And, as in the second quarter, a substantial gain allowed us to accelerate some critical initiatives: re-engineering to make American Express more efficient; renewing a key partner relationship; and making additional investments to grow our business and drive innovation in the world of payments and commerce.

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Chenault allowed that American Express still faces "competitive and regulatory challenges."

Competition may be heating up in the payments sector, but Chenault said in November that the company was welcoming the marketplace's rapid innovation.

"You have to have this spirit of reinvention, and that is what we have in the DNA of the company," Chenault said at a November conference. "If you don't innovate, you die. You have to constantly innovate, you have to constantly challenge the status quo."
The company's third-quarter profits beat Wall Street estimates, but its revenue was in line with expectations.

—CNBC's Ryan Ruggiero contributed to this report.
 

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eBay to slash 2,400 jobs in bid to 'compete and win'

Online retail giant eBay will slash 2,400 jobs -- seven percent of its workforce -- in the current quarter as it restructures and prepares to spin off its PayPal finance unit, it said Wednesday.

California-based eBay unveiled the move as it announced its profit in the fourth quarter rose to $936 million on $4.9 billion in revenue. The job cuts will be across eBay's three divisions: Marketplaces, Enterprise and PayPal.

The reorganization will return eBay to its roots with the "Marketplaces" division, which includes its auctions and online retail sales and accounted for nearly half its 2014 revenues.

"We will be simplifying organizational structures to focus the businesses and ensure that we are set up to compete and win," said eBay, which also plans to explore options to separate the Enterprise division, which creates online sites for traditional retailers.

eBay announced plans last year to spin off PayPal amid pressure from activist shareholder Carl Icahn, and said the move would help the unit compete better in the fast-moving online payments segment.

In a further move to refocus, eBay said it would likely also shed its Enterprise division in a sale or public offering which creates an independent company.

"Enterprise is a strong business and a leading partner for large retailers, managing mission-critical components of their e-commerce initiatives," a statement said.

"However, it has become clear that it has limited synergies with either business and a separation will allow both to focus exclusively on their core markets, as we create two independent world-class companies."

eBay said it reached a "standstill agreement" with Icahn that calls for Icahn Capital executive Jonathan Christodoro to be named to eBay's board.

Icahn said in a separate statement that Christodoro would "have the ability to transition to PayPal's board once the spinoff occurs."

The deal also includes limits on any "poison pill" for PayPal that could block a proposed buyout.

View galleryeBay CEO John Donahoe speaks on October 17, 2011 in …
eBay CEO John Donahoe speaks on October 17, 2011 in San Francisco, California (AFP Photo/Justin Sull …
"PayPal's charter documents will contain a number of corporate governance provisions that we suggested and which we believe will greatly enhance shareholder value at PayPal," Icahn said.

- Strong finish -

Chief executive of eBay, John Donahoe, said the overall company is in good shape ahead of the reorganization, which will spin off PayPal in the second half of the year.

"In a year of unexpected events and distractions, we ended 2014 with double-digit revenue growth, solid earnings growth and strong cash flow, reflecting the fundamental strengths of our company," he said in the statement.

"PayPal had another strong quarter, finishing an excellent year. eBay, while facing challenges, continues to be a great business and is focused on stabilizing performance and engaging its core customers."

PayPal accounted for 44 percent of eBay revenue in 2014, but it is facing new challenges amid a shift to mobile payments and new entrants to the market, such as Apple and Google.

Icahn has said that the payments sector needs "consolidation" -- either through acquisitions by PayPal or by merging it with "another strong player in the industry."

eBay said it had made progress in boosting sales to customers using mobile devices. Mobile payment volume grew to $45.6 billion for the full year, representing 20 percent of total sales volume.
 
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