Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the American Express Q3 2022 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. If you wish to ask a question, please press star and then one on your touchtone phone. You will hear a tone indicating you have been placed in queue. You may remove yourself from the queue at any time by pressing star then two. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up the handset before pressing the numbers. Should you require assistance during the call, please press star then zero. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to our host, Head of Investor Relations, Ms. Kerri Bernstein. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Daryl, and thank you all for joining today's call. As a reminder, before we begin, today's discussion contains forward-looking statements about the company's future business and financial performance. These are based on management's current expectations and are subject to risks and uncertainties. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these statements are included in today's presentation slides and in our reports on file with the SEC. The discussion today also contains non-GAAP financial measures. The comparable GAAP financial measures are included in this quarter's earnings materials, as well as the earnings materials for the prior periods we discuss. All of these are posted on our website at ir.americanexpress.com. We'll begin today with Steve Squeri, Chairman and CEO, who will start with some remarks about the company's progress and results.
Jeff Campbell, Chief Financial Officer, will provide a more detailed review of our financial performance. After that, we'll move to a Q&A session on the results with both Steve and Jeff. With that, let me turn it over to Steve.
Thanks, Kerri, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us for our third quarter earnings call. As you saw in our release this morning, we had another strong quarter. Revenues grew 27% on an FX-adjusted basis, and earnings per share was $2.47, up 9% over last year. Our investments to drive customer engagement, acquisitions, and retention once again generated great results, and our credit quality remained strong. Card member spending remained at near record levels in the quarter. Billed business was up 24% on an FX-adjusted basis over the record growth we delivered a year earlier, led by the continued strength in goods and services spending and the ongoing strong rebound in travel and entertainment.
As we said earlier this year, we expected the recovery in travel spending to be a tailwind for us, but the strength of the rebound has exceeded our expectations throughout the year. In the quarter, total T&E spending was up 57% from a year earlier on an FX-adjusted basis, driven by the continued strong demand from consumers and small business customers. Particularly noteworthy is the strength we're seeing in T&E spending in our international markets, which exceeded pre-pandemic levels for the first time this quarter on an FX-adjusted basis. Business travel also continued to recover, and overall activity remained strong through September. Importantly, we're seeing increased customer engagement with the wide range of travel and dining benefits and services we offer as part of our membership model. For example, bookings through our consumer travel business reached their highest level since before the pandemic in the third quarter.
In dining, our Resy reservation platform continues to see strong growth. Since we acquired the platform in 2019, Resy users have tripled to reach 35 million, and we quadrupled the number of restaurants available around the world on Resy. Goods and services spending grew 16% year-over-year. The continued growth in goods and services is supported by the structural shift to online commerce that was accelerated by the pandemic and has been sustained since then, helped by the new online and mobile-oriented benefits we added to our value propositions. These benefits are particularly attractive to our Millennial and Gen Z customer base, which is our fastest-growing customer cohort. The investments we've made in our value propositions also continue to drive momentum in new card acquisitions.
We added 3.3 million new proprietary cards during the quarter, our highest quarterly level of acquisition since the pandemic began. We continue to see strong uptake of our premium fee-based products with acquisitions of U.S. Consumer Platinum and Gold Cards, as well as U.S. Business Platinum Cards, reaching record quarterly highs. Millennial and Gen Z customers are powering this growth, comprising more than 60% of our proprietary consumer card acquisitions in the quarter. As we sit here today, we see no changes in the spending behaviors of our customers, and our credit metrics continue to be strong, with delinquencies and write-offs remaining at low levels, even as loan balances are steadily rebuilding. Of course, we are mindful of the mixed signals in the broader economy.
As always, we have plans in place to pivot should the operating environment change dramatically, and we've been taking thoughtful risk management actions to be prepared in the event of a downturn. As I've emphasized many times before, we run the company for the long term and make through-the-cycle investment decisions. Our strong third quarter results show that our strategy investing in our brand, value propositions, customers, colleagues, technology, and coverage continues to pay off, and our performance is consistent with our long-term growth aspirations.
Looking ahead, we continue to see many great growth opportunities, and we will continue to take actions to best position our business for the long term. As you all recall, our international businesses were among the fastest-growing prior to the pandemic.
As more countries relax their cross-border travel policies and life returns to normal, we see tremendous opportunities for growth in key regions despite ongoing macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainties. To that point, we made an organizational change a few months ago to help seize on these opportunities. We brought together our international consumer, small business, and large corporate management teams under one leader, which will increase our speed, agility, scale, and efficiency in our operations outside the U.S.
As a result, you'll see this quarter we've introduced a new International Card Services reporting segment. Looking ahead, we remain confident that the successful execution of our strategy, driven by our outstanding leadership team and the talented colleagues throughout the company, positions us well as we seek to achieve our long-term growth plan aspirations of revenue growth in excess of 10% and mid-teens EPS growth in 2024 and beyond.
Based on our performance through the third quarter, we also remain confident in our full-year revenue growth guidance of 23%-25%, and we expect to be above our original full-year EPS guidance range of $9.25-$9.65. With that, I'll turn it over to Jeff to provide a detailed overview of our Q3 results.
Well, thanks Steve, and good morning, everyone. It's good to be here to talk about our third quarter results, which reflect another strong quarter and great progress against our multi-year growth plan. Starting with our summary financials on slide two, most importantly, our third quarter revenues were $13.6 billion, reaching a record high for the second quarter in a row, up 27% on an FX-adjusted basis. Now, I would point out that we continue to see a much stronger U.S. dollar relative to most of the major currencies in which we operate. You do see a 300 basis point spread between our FX-adjusted revenue growth of 27% and our reported revenue growth of 24% as we absorb some significant foreign exchange headwinds.
Of course, the overall impact on our earnings, while still a headwind, is less significant because we do have some offsetting positive impacts on the expense side. Our revenue performance in the third quarter drove reported net income of $1.9 billion in earnings per share of $2.47, representing EPS growth of 9% year-over-year. A great result considering the sizable credit reserve releases we had in the third quarter last year. Because of these prior year reserve releases, we have also included pre-tax provision income as a supplemental disclosure again this quarter. On this basis, pre-tax provision income was $3.2 billion, up 43% versus the same time period last year, reflecting the growth momentum in our underlying earnings.
Before getting into a more detailed look at results, let me spend just a minute briefly explaining how we've evolved our financial reporting for the organizational changes that Steve discussed earlier. You will see in the disclosures that accompany our earnings release that beginning this quarter we have moved from three to four reportable operating segments. We first took Global Consumer Services and split the U.S. into its own segment, creating U.S. Consumer Services. We then combined the international consumer business with the international portion of small and medium-sized enterprises and large corporate, creating the new International Card Services segment. Commercial Services that include U.S. SME, U.S. large corporate, and select global corporate clients. Lastly, our Global Merchant and Network Services segment remains largely unchanged and as always, includes our global payments network and network partnerships.
You will see in the appendix of our disclosures that we have recast prior periods to conform to these new operating segments. The new segments will also be reflected in our third quarter Form 10-Q. Now let's get into our results, beginning with overall volumes. Looking at slides three and four, you can see the continued strength in our card member spending behaviors that Steve noted earlier. Total network volumes and billed business were each up year over year at 23% and 24% respectively on an FX-adjusted basis in the third quarter. If you were to compare to 2019, third quarter billed business grew 30%, accelerating above last quarter's growth rate of 28% relative to 2019. Importantly, despite the uncertainties in the current economic environment, our spending trends with performance relative to 2019 strengthened as we went through the quarter.
We are really pleased with this growth and the fact you see strong growth across all customer types and geographies driven by both sustained growth in goods and services spending and continued T&E momentum. On slides five through eight , we've given you a variety of views of this strong growth across our U.S. Consumer Services, Commercial Services, and International Card Services segments, and the various customer types within each. Starting with our largest segment, billings from our U.S. Consumer customers grew at 22% in the third quarter, reflecting the continued strength in spending trends from our Premium U.S. Consumers. Millennial and Gen Z customers again drove our highest small business growth within this segment, with their spending growing 39% year-over-year this quarter.
Turning to Commercial Services, you see that spending from our U.S. SME customers represents the majority of our billings in the segment and that spending from these customers continued its strong growth up 17% in the third quarter. Our U.S. large and global corporate customers, though a smaller part of billings in the segment, remain an important foundation for the entire company, and these customers continued their steady travel recovery this quarter, though overall billings are still 13% below pre-pandemic levels. We do continue to expect, though, that this group will fully recover over time. Lastly, international consumer and international SME large corporate customers within the new International Card Services segment were among our fastest-growing pre-pandemic, as Steve said, and are now in a steep recovery mode. You can see our high levels of growth in Q3 at 34% and 43% year-over-year, respectively.
If you were also to look at international consumer growth by age cohort, you would see, similar to the U.S., that the highest growth levels are from our Millennial and Gen Z customers, who make up an even larger portion of overall billings than they do in the U.S. One other note on overall billings. The majority of our high level of growth this quarter was again driven by the number of transactions flowing through our network with some modest impact from inflation. Overall then, we are pleased with the momentum we see across the board in our spending volumes, which is tracking in line with our expectations for both the year and for our long-term aspirations. Now moving to loan balances on slide nine, we saw year-over-year growth accelerate to 31% in our loan balances, as well as good sequential growth.
The interest-bearing portion of our loan balances also continues to consistently increase quarter-over-quarter, surpassing 2019 levels in the third quarter as customers steadily rebuild balances. As you then turn to credit and provisions on slides 10 through 12, the high credit quality of our customer base continues to show through in our strong credit performance. Write-off rates for card member loans remain well below pre-pandemic levels, flat to where they have been for the last few quarters, as you can see on slide 10. As expected, you do now see that delinquency rates for loans have started to modestly tick up but also remain well below pre-pandemic levels. Turning now to the accounting for this credit performance on slide 11. As you know, there are two components to our provision expense. Our actual write-off performance in the quarter, which as we just discussed, remains strong.
Second, changes in our credit reserves, where there are a few key drivers. Our loan balances, especially our revolving loan balances, grew strongly quarter-over-quarter, and the macroeconomic outlook that we flowed through our models, which was informed by third-party macroeconomic forecasts as well as the latest Fed outlook, was slightly worse this quarter relative to last quarter. The combination of our strong loan growth, excuse me, and the updated macroeconomic assumptions resulted in a $387 million reserve build. This reserve build, combined with low net write-offs, drove $778 million of provision expense for the third quarter. As you see on slide 12, we ended the third quarter with $3.5 billion of reserves, with reserves for loans representing 3.2% of our balances.
I would point out, even with this quarter's reserve build, this remains well below the reserve levels we had pre-pandemic, driven by our improved portfolio quality today compared to that prior time period. Going forward, we continue to expect delinquency and loss rates to move up slowly over time, but to remain below pre-pandemic levels this year. I do expect to end the year with a higher level of reserves on our balance sheets than where we ended this quarter, given our expected loan growth. The overall level of reserve adjustments will again be influenced by how the macroeconomic outlook evolves in the fourth quarter. Moving next to revenue on slide 13. Total revenues were up 24% year-over-year in the third quarter, or 27% on an FX-adjusted basis.
Before I get into more details about our largest revenue drivers in the next few slides, I would note that service fees and other revenue was up 39% year-over-year. Similar to last quarter, this strong growth was largely driven by a recovery in travel-related revenues. Our largest revenue line, discount revenue, grew 26% year-over-year in Q3 on an FX-adjusted basis, as you can see on slide 14, driven by both our sustained growth in goods and services spending and the continued momentum in T&E spending that you saw in our spending trends.
Net card fee revenues were up 23% year-over-year in the third quarter on an FX- adjusted basis, with growth continuing to accelerate, as you can see on slide 15, largely driven by the continued attractiveness to both prospects and existing customers of our fee-paying products through the investments we've made in our premium value propositions. This quarter, we acquired 3.3 million new cards, with acquisitions of U.S. Consumer Platinum and Gold Card members and U.S. Business Platinum Card members all reaching record highs in the quarter and now each more than two times higher than pre-pandemic levels, demonstrating the great demand we're seeing, especially for our premium fee-based products. Moving on to slide 16, you can see that net interest income was up 30% year-over-year on an FX- adjusted basis due to the recovery of our revolving loan balances.
While generally speaking, a rising rate environment would be a modest headwind for us due to our sizable non-interest-bearing charge balances. In actual fact, it has been fairly neutral in terms of impact for us year to date. Over time, though, I would expect rising rates to represent a modest headwind. To sum up on revenues, we're seeing strong results across the board and really good momentum. When looking at slide 17, I would point out that we have now seen six consecutive quarters of revenue growth above 24% on an FX- adjusted basis, as we are now showing strong growth even on top of the strong recovery-led growth in the prior year quarter. I would also point out that we have a couple hundred basis points of difference when looking at revenue growth on an FX- adjusted basis versus our reported results.
While we are leaving our full year reported revenue guidance at 23%-25% for 2022, I would expect to be above that growth rate range on an FX- adjusted basis. Now, all this revenue momentum we just discussed has been driven by the investments we've made in our brand, value propositions, customers, colleagues, technology and coverage. Those investments show up across the expense lines you see on slide 18. Starting with variable customer engagement costs, these costs, as you see on slide 18, came in at 41% total revenues for the third quarter, roughly in line with what I still expect variable customer engagement costs to run for the full year, at around 42% total revenues.
On the marketing line, we invested $1.5 billion in the third quarter, on track with our expectation to spend over $5 billion in 2022. We feel really good about the strong demand card acquisitions, especially premium card acquisitions, as we showed on slide 15. More importantly, we feel good about the spend, credit, and revenue profiles of the customers we are bringing into American Express membership, which continue to look strong relative to what we saw pre-pandemic. Moving to the bottom of slide 18 brings us to operating expenses, which were $3.3 billion in the third quarter, essentially flat to last quarter. As Steve and I have both discussed all year, these results reflect the impact inflation has had on our operating expenses, in addition to our investments in other key growth underpinnings to support our tremendous revenue growth.
You can see, based off our third quarter results, that we are tracking with our expectation for operating expenses to be around $13 billion for the full year. In looking at the year-over-year OpEx growth of 22% this quarter, it is also important to note that we see an impact from the prior year, including a sizable benefit from net mark-to-market gains in our Amex Ventures strategic investment portfolio. While this year we saw a modest impairment charge. More generally, we continue to see operating expenses as a key source of leverage moving forward, and we'd expect to have far less growth in OpEx than revenues in our ambitious growth plan.
Turning next to capital on slide 19, we returned $1 billion of capital to our shareholders in the third quarter, including common stock repurchases of $600 million and $391 million in common stock dividends on the back of strong earnings generation. Our CET1 ratio was 10.6% at the end of the third quarter, within our target range of 10%-11%. We plan to continue to return to shareholders the excess capital we generate while supporting our balance sheet growth. That then brings me to our growth plan and 2022 guidance on slide 20. With each quarter of this year, we have demonstrated consistent progress against our 2022 guidance and our long-term growth aspirations of delivering sustainable high levels of revenue and EPS growth.
For the full year 2022, we are reaffirming our reported revenue growth guidance of 23%-25%. Although I would point out, as I said earlier, that I would expect our FX-adjusted revenue growth to be above that range. We now expect to be above our original EPS guidance range of $9.25-$9.65. An uncertainty in the level of our final EPS for the year remains the possible impact on credit reserves of how the macroeconomic outlook evolves in the fourth quarter. While I expect our actual credit performance and metrics to remain healthy, it's harder to predict exactly how the macroeconomic outlook might evolve. In addition, we are working towards our 2023 plan and expect revenue growth to remain above our long-term aspirational targets, which should create a platform for producing strong EPS growth.
Of course, we'll have to see how the economic environment evolves versus where we are today. In any environment, though, we remain committed to executing against our growth plan and running the company with a focus on achieving our aspiration of delivering revenue growth in excess of 10% and mid-teen EPS growth on a sustainable basis in 2024 and beyond. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Kerri to open up the call for your questions.
Thank you, Jeff. Before we open up the lines for Q&A, I will ask those in the queue to please limit yourself to just one question. Thank you for your cooperation. With that, the operator will now open up the line for questions. Operator?
Ladies and gentlemen, if you wish to ask a question, please press star then one on your touch-tone phone. You'll hear a tone indicating that you've been placed in queue. You may remove yourself from the queue at any time by pressing star then two. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up the handset before pressing the numbers. One moment please for the first question. Our first question comes from the line of Ryan Nash with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, hey, good morning, guys.
Morning, Ryan.
Maybe just start on the top line, Steve. You know, solid results once again, although clearly as you and Jeff articulated, FX was a headwind in the quarter. I know you mentioned you're not seeing any changes. Jeff mentioned the strength over the quarter. Can you maybe just talk about, you know, what you're seeing from a spend perspective, maybe relative to what you saw 90 days ago, any changes under the surface? Then maybe just flesh out a little bit further your confidence in the ability to generate, you know, mid-teens, you know, top and bottom line growth into 2023. Thank you.
We're confident. Look, the spending speaks for itself. You know, I mean, just look at some of these numbers. You've got, you know, goods and services up 16%. Our U.S. Consumer is up 22%. Millennial spending is up 39%. You know, our T&E spending is up 57%. International spending is 37%. We haven't seen any change. You can look at this quarter-over-quarter and, you know, the reality is that, you know, last quarter was a record level quarter in terms of spending. This is like, I don't know, $1 billion behind or something like that. You know, if you look at year-over-year growth, we're not seeing any changes in consumer spending behavior at all.
Look, that's not to say that things may not change, but I can only look at what I'm seeing right now. If I look from a forward perspective, you know, the question that we get is, you know, what about T&E? Can T&E spending hold, so forth and so on. Look, I think, you know, you heard Ed Bastian last week, and he talked about, you know, not only what's been going on at Delta, but what they see going on through the holiday season. I think you've heard Chris Nassetta as well say the same kinds of things and what's happening with Hilton and the two of our biggest partners. You know, when we look at our consumer travel booking, we see, you know, higher bookings than we've seen, you know, in a long time.
I mean, that goes pre-pandemic. If I look three out, because the next question that people ask is, what does the holiday season look like? Well, the holiday season from a travel perspective looks really, really strong because people are booking three months out. If you're gonna be traveling, you're probably gonna be going to restaurants. If you're traveling someplace, you're probably bringing presents with you as well. You know, we don't see anything really changing over the next three months. You know, as we go into next year, we still feel really good about, you know, what our growth plan is. You know, the only thing I would say is, because I think I need to say this, is that if things change, we will be prepared to pivot.
You know, I think people saw that during the pandemic. You know, we've got our recession playbook. You know, you have a credit cycle playbook, and we'll pull that playbook lever if we need to pull it. To pull it at this particular point in time doesn't make any sense. We're seeing strong growth, and we're seeing strong credit results overall. Right now, nothing new. The way I would headline this is that, you know, this quarter looks like the first quarter, which looked like the second quarter, and it's the third quarter. It's another strong quarter for us.
The only thing that I would say is, you know, I mean, you know, when you look at our model, I think not only this quarter, but this year, it really shows the strength of our differentiated business model. We have a different model than other people out there in the market. I think that's coming through on our statistics. Year-over-year earnings growth and, you know, the top-line revenue growth is, you know, not something you're used to seeing from us, unless you've been looking at the last six quarters.
Ryan, let me just add maybe a few other comments to try to mention when Steve and I use a term like, well, we know how to pivot if we need to. You know, I would remind everyone that GDP in the U.S. shrank in the first two quarters of this year, and we've been putting up revenue growth in the 24%-30% range steadily right through that. I'd remind you that I talked about our credit reserve is influenced by macroeconomic forecasts, and so you can go look at what the Fed said in September. You can go look at what Moody's is saying, and they are predicting modest upticks in unemployment. That's contemplated in everything Steve and I have said and in the guidance that we've provided.
If you look at October is just a continuation of all that Steve just talked about thus far. You know, we feel good about the guidance we've given. We are acknowledging the environment we're in, but I don't want people to overplay our reaction to the fact that growth has been pretty slow in the U.S. because we're, with our differentiated business model, as Steve just pointed out, performing very strongly in this environment.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Sanjay Sakhrani with KBW. Please proceed with your question.
Thanks. Good morning. Just want to follow up on that previous question.
Good morning, Sanjay.
Steve, you talked about the recession playbook. Maybe we could just talk about, you know, your comments about operating the business for the long term, and if we were to see a slowdown, how we should think about managing expenses. Marketing has been boosted quite a bit. You wouldn't want to grow as fast as you are right now in a backdrop. Maybe just talk about the flex there, how we should think about the aspirational targets in the backdrop.
Recession or, you know, mild one even. Then Jeff, could you just hit the reserve rate? I know people tend to think about that reserve rate as it relates to CECL day one. Do you see yourself getting back to that level given how low losses are right now? Thanks.
If you think about operating, you know, sort of in a recession, operating in the playbook, I think the first thing you have to realize is that, you know, when you look at sort of credit, and you look at how you acquire customers and how you underwrite customers, those are things that we do on an ongoing basis, right? We make adjustments, you know, daily, weekly. I mean, the models are constantly being updated and changing, and our return thresholds are changing. You know, as we say, we manage through the cycle. When we look at a basket of card members, we manage that, so that coming through that there is profitability, okay. We will continue to do that.
I'll point you back to the pandemic and what we did during the pandemic because I think that's a really good model for us. What did we do? Well, you pulled back on your card member acquisition because, number one, we didn't have enough transparency at that particular point in time. And number two, maybe we weren't feeling good about, you know, sort of, you know, the card members that we could acquire at that point. But we never shut it down. We still acquired card members. You would see that. The only thing I would point out is, you know, we've been trending from a marketing perspective to spend well in excess of $5 billion.
If you go back, you know, pre-pandemic, that number was between $3.5 billion and $3.9 billion. It gives us a lot of flexibility in terms of delevering our marketing expenditure. The other thing you have to realize is that a lot of our cost of card member services are variable in terms of spending, and rewards as well go up and down as spending increases. I have a lot of confidence in our ability to flex our marketing numbers down. I have tremendous confidence in our ability to flex our operating expenses because operating expenses in a lot of ways go along with a lot of our volumes. We've proven we can do that.
I think our underwriting, you would continue to tighten that up, but that's something that we look at on an ongoing basis. That's not something that you sort of just up when you get into it. You're tightening that up as you go along and as you see any signals. The last thing I would say is, you know, you get into credit and collections and your ability to help out card members in a thoughtful way, and your ability to collect money. I think that, you know, a lot of the programs that we introduced, you know, during the pandemic were programs that we would be taking off the playbook.
The last point I would say is, you know, our card base is not representative of the U.S. economy. You know, when you look at the share of cards that we have in this marketplace and the number of card members, it's obviously, you know, well below double digits. They're not necessarily representative of what's going on in the broader economy. The last point that I would make is a lot of people try and equate what's going on with the stock market and going on in spending. There is no correlation in our history of that. The thing that you do worry about is unemployment and in particular, white-collar unemployment.
As we think about, you know, professionals that could potentially be laid off, you know, that's something that you look at. Again, our models take all that into account and, you know, we've been through this. We've been through that kind of stuff before, and I think we're very well prepared for it.
Before I get to credit reserves, Sanjay, I can't resist just adding, though. You said, "Well, what would you do in a mild recession?" I don't want to get into the debate here about semantics, but some could argue that from a growth perspective, we're in a mild recession, and we just grew revenues 27%. To turn it to our credit reserves, our credit reserve adjustments do include the latest economic forecasts, which have unemployment ticking up a little bit next year, and that's included in all of our forward-looking comments. As you point out, and maybe to help everyone, Sanjay, I think it's on slide 12 in our deck today. Our day one credit reserve percentages of total loans were 4.6%. This quarter, they were all the way down at 3.2%.
I will point out that if you look across the industry, that is by far the lowest percentage. It's also the lowest percentage relative to day one. You know, there's differential timing that all the different financial institutions have had over the last, couple of years just due to the vagaries of the way the accounting works here. As you sit here today, our reserve balance, both on an absolute basis and relative to that day one basis, is below the industry. That makes sense, Sanjay, because we have by far the most premium book in the industry. We have by far the strongest credit metrics. Relative to pre-pandemic in that day one number, our credit profile is stronger today.
All the talk you hear from Steve and I and Doug and others about our record success bringing more premium consumers into the franchise over the last couple of years has an impact on credit profile as well. All else being equal, you would not expect our reserve percentage of loans to get back to where it was day one CECL because the average credit profile is stronger than it was day one CECL.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mark DeVries with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.
Yeah, thanks. Could you discuss what's driving, you know, the accelerating new account growth off of already higher numbers and how sustainable, you know, you view account growth anywhere near these levels to be? Any color you can provide on kind of the ramp and spend you would normally observe from new accounts as they age? Then, finally, did you see a surge in new account applications from Gen Z around your Jack Harlow concert?
I can't comment on the Jack Harlow concert. Not that I can't comment on it. I'm not aware of the surge in account acquisition. I'm sure it didn't hurt us. You know, look, I think that what you've seen here is we're not going out and just trying to grab lots and lots of cards.
I mean, you know, we're out there grabbing high-value cards and, you know, the value proposition is really strong. The value propositions are really playing well with Millennials and Gen Z. It's 60% of our card acquisition. While I don't have the numbers handy with me in terms of how the ramping goes in, you know, in sort of year one spending here.
What I would point out is, you know, we're acquiring, you know, 60% of the cards that we're acquiring are Millennial and Gen Z, and that cohort was up 39%, you know, this quarter. I think this whole concept of generational relevance and bringing people into the franchise early, and bringing them in on a premium product that they can really embed their lives into, has really helped us out tremendously, as opposed to bringing them in on a fee-free product and then trying to upgrade them along. I think, you know, a lot of Millennials and Gen Zs are using this product. Again, as we've always said, we're not just a payment product. I mean, we view ourselves as a lifestyle brand and as a lifestyle product.
You know, the Jack Harlow concert is a good example of kinda the things that we do to embed ourselves in people's lives. You know, we talked about Resy, and we talked about travel. You know, those services and those bookings are going up and people are using that. It's just more than just a payment product. Again, you know, I don't, Mark, I don't have the, you know, sort of, you know, first-year ramp-up spending, but you know, 39% is a pretty good indication. As far as, you know, are we gonna acquire 3.3 million cards next quarter? I don't really have any idea.
I mean, you know, we'll acquire those cards that as we underwrite them, they make sense for us to go. They will be profitable through the cycle. Could that be 3.3 million? Yeah, it could be 3.3 million, it could be 2.9 million, it could be 3.5 million. We're not doing card acquisition targets. What we're looking at is acquiring those card members that meet our criteria, and it just so happened that it was 3.3 million this particular quarter.
The only two comments I would add, Mark, are amongst the modest risk management adjustments we've made across the course of this year is we have significantly actually raised our financial hurdles required for some of the new card members that we're bringing in, and still just brought in a record level, which tells you something about the level of demand that we see right now due to all of the trends that Steve just talked about.
I'd also point out, as I said in my earlier remarks, that average customer whose behaviors we track every single month is coming in with much higher spend patterns, much better average credit quality, and a much greater average fee component.
Right
than what we were seeing pre-pandemic.
You know, it's harder to qualify to get a card. We're getting more. I mean, just to cut to the chase.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Betsy Graseck with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.
Hi. Good morning. Thanks so much for the time.
Hi, Betsy.
Hi. I just wanted to understand a little bit about, you know, how you thought the FX impacted yourself in the quarter. I mean, I know we can see a variety of ways that you present, but just want to understand from your perspective what the, you know, what the impact was on the revs and on the expense side, in particular the reward side. Give us a sense as to how you think about the revenue guidance range, if it was FX- adjusted, you know, for the year and for what you're expecting in the fourth quarter. Thanks.
Thank you for the question, Betsy. I will say, I think foreign exchange movements are very dramatic right now and more dramatic than they've been in many years. I think we're a little difficult to communicate and hard for a lot of people to fully understand. You've seen dramatic moves in many of the currencies that are most important to us, from the yen to the euro to the pound. When you look at our revenue growth this quarter, that's why you saw a 300 basis points difference between the FX-adjusted revenue growth and the reported revenue growth. 24%. Now, on the bottom line, it is a much more muted impact, Betsy, because of course, we also have a very large proportion of our colleagues outside the U.S. to go with all that business that we do around the globe.
The cost of rewards in all those countries is in the local currencies. The impact on our earnings per share is pretty de minimis. I think we have a 10-K disclosure where we talk about over the course of a full year movement, maybe costing you know, $0.10. That's pennies a quarter. That's why I don't really call it out when I think about EPS. When you convert all that into our guidance, it's why we're very comfortable saying we're going to be above our EPS guidance range. We left our reported revenue growth number the same as it was previously. I would expect to be 200 basis points above that reported revenue guidance on an FX-adjusted basis.
You know, I'll conclude by saying, in some ways what we're saying is our revenue performance has exceeded our expectations of 90 days ago. That has sort of offset the foreign exchange headwinds, which are a little bit greater on the revenue side than what I would have expected 90 days ago. At the bottom line, you don't really need to factor it in that much.
Thank you. Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Bob Napoli with William Blair. Please proceed with your question.
Thank you, and good morning. Love to get a little update on SMB and online spending. I mean, the SMB obviously is a critical business for you and just, you know, obviously growing strongly, but any color you can give on SMB, any changes. Online spend has actually been pretty steady. I mean, a lot of, I guess, discussion around what is the right growth rate for online spend versus offline over the long run. I think there's a little bit of a decel and maybe an offline, but steady and online. Just any color on SMB and your thoughts on the long-term growth of online spending.
Well, I mean, let's just talk. We'll talk a little about goods and services spending, which, you know, I mean, which is really when you start to talk about online and offline. Look, our goods and services spending is 16%, and it's, you know, the growth rate is split pretty evenly. In fact, offline may be growing slightly more than online, but both in that, you know, 15%-17% range. I think that's sustainable. I think that, you know, obviously online spending popped up, but offline spending is back above pre-pandemic levels. We feel really good about both. I think, you know, consumers are, you know, I mean, drive past the mall.
I mean, consumers are out there shopping and, you know, and spending, and they're also, you know, ordering online. I think it's a sort of a, you know, a double hit for us in a very positive way. We're very comfortable with the 16% goods and services spending, and that's, you know, approximately 70% of all of our spending. As far as small business, small business continues to perform very well. You know, we've had, you know, in this quarter, we had 17% growth, and that's a large piece of our business. We're doing, you know, more and more things, you know, with our checking account, with Kabbage and small business loans, and so forth. We feel good about small business, and it continues to perform really well for us.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Rick Shane with JP Morgan. Please proceed with your question.
Guys, thanks for taking my question. I want to revisit the topic we raised last quarter. Historically, your product offerings basically positively cause a customer base that's positively selected for spend and pay, and the product offering essentially habituated them to the pattern. Now you're offering a product that offers revolving on day one.
As you move into a younger demographic, do you think over time, despite the upward move in terms of credit profile, that will change credit performance, that you will actually increase your beta to the credit cycle because you've changed the way you've habituated your customer and how you've selected them?
Yeah. I think, Rick, it's a good question because you are good to point out that there's been a significant change as we have, from our perspective, added more functionality for all of our customers on what are traditional charge products. Many to most of those customers still use them as traditional charge products and leave it paying off every 30 days.
Some occasionally take advantage of their new functionality and being able to carry a balance if they want for a little bit. When you think about the impact on the company, Steve used the term a couple of times today, our differentiated business model. You know, if you look over time, our net interest income is about 19%-20% of our overall revenues. That's where it was many years ago.
Frankly, that's where we'd expect it to be many years from now. Because as much as we see an opportunity to get a little bigger share of our both consumer and small business customers lending wallet, we grew fees 23% this quarter, and we are seeing tremendous growth in discount revenue. We do get great growth and expect to continue to get great growth on the lending side. I don't actually expect it to make a big difference in the overall mix of revenues that we have as a company or in the business model we have.
No, I don't think it's going to make a difference in the mix, as Jeff said, in the mix of our overall, you know, breakup of revenue. I think what it also gives us an opportunity is to actually acquire more spending. You know, when we did not have that feature, you know, that group may have started off with a competitive lending card. Or, you know, we may have put them on a Blue Cash, what have you card. What's happening is, I think this bears this out in the spending numbers of 39% growth, that cohort is consolidating their spending.
They're consolidating their spending with our product, and it's giving them an opportunity to earn more rewards. I don't really think it changes the credit profile. I think it gives us an opportunity to actually capture more spend and to ultimately capture more revenue.
The more important part is, I think the lifetime value of these customers is going to be a lot more than the lifetime value of where we acquired previously because we're going to run these consumers right through the cycle, and they're going to be with us from day one. I think that's really important. I don't think it changes the profile of our revenue.
I don't think it changes the profile of, you know, sort of the riskiness of our company. I do think it gives us an opportunity to grow more spending and obviously to capture more revenue from this segment.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Dominick Gabriele with Oppenheimer. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, good morning. Thanks so much for taking my question. You know, the loan growth was up, as you just mentioned, about 31%. That's really industry leading levels of loan growth. I know you've talked about in the past that you're trying to penetrate your existing customer base, and so you've, you know, effectively underwritten these people through their spending habits over time. But a while ago, I think you provided, you know, how much of the loan growth was coming from an existing customer base spending cohort and not. Could you just provide some of the breakdowns that are giving you this supercharged loan growth versus the industry again? Thanks so much.
Let me just start, Dominick, with a few stats that I think are important, and then Stephen may want to add. I mean, the biggest thing driving, of course, the 31% growth in loans, tremendous growth in spending, right? We are in a recovery mode of spending and seeing tremendous progress there.
Customers are also beginning to rebuild balances a little bit. I think it's very natural. Yes, I think when you look at those who have reported thus far, you're seeing industry-leading growth in loans, but you're also seeing industry-leading growth in spending. I think that's very, very important to put those two together. I think we feel good about the trends and expect them to continue. I would expect long term, just as we were before the pandemic, to grow a little faster than the industry on lending.
To do it while still maintaining best-in-class credit.
Yeah.
I think what's also important to realize is that this loan growth is not all revolving balances here, right? I mean, that's an important point. You know, spending growth like we've had will drive overall loan growth. Yes, you know, we've had a large year-to-date sort of spending and growth. If you just look at it sort of sequentially quarter-to-quarter, because we had pretty much the same card growth, you only have about $4 billion in overall loan growth on a sequential basis. You do have quite a bit year-over-year. It's not like all of a sudden this thing just jumped up. Spending continues. Spending has continued on a, you know, on a quarter-to-quarter basis, and that drives up lending. Loan growth, excuse me.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Moshe Orenbuch with Credit Suisse. Please proceed with your question.
Great, thanks. Maybe as a follow-up, I think, Jeff, you had mentioned that the interest-bearing portion, you know, had continued to grow faster, kind of helping net interest income. Could you just talk about when that levels off? How does that, you know, and, I guess, you know, Steve had sort of mentioned just in the answer to the last question a little bit about, you know, kind of a fair amount of that growth in lending not being, you know, kind of interest-bearing balances. So as you look at that, you know, going forward, how do you think that develops?
I would expect, Moshe, for the next couple of quarters to see the revolving or interest-bearing portion of those balances grow a little bit faster than the overall loan growth because we're not quite back to pre-pandemic levels of behavior. I think our expectation is over time, and I think it may take a while still, you will eventually get back to pre-pandemic types of behavior.
The other factor I would point to goes a little bit to Rick Shane's earlier question, which is you do have this evolution going on as we've added a little bit more functionality to some of our charge products. Those customers who have the traditional charge products, but have that pay over time feature, tend to use it less than your traditional credit card or revolving customer. That's putting a little bit of
Complexity in tracking our numbers here. I think in terms of watching the macro trend, I would expect loan balances to grow a little bit faster than the industry. I would expect for the next couple of quarters, the revolving portion to grow a little bit faster than the loan growth. I would expect all of those things to really settle down into steady-state levels about where they were pre-pandemic.
Thank you. Our next question will come from the line of Donald Fandetti with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question.
Yes. On the international org change, does that signal maybe a faster pace of investment? I know it's always been a kind of a balancing act in international markets. Is there anything new on the tech investment strategy? I saw you were sort of ramping up hiring. Seems a little late in the game for that.
No, I think you know the tech investment strategy remains the same and you know I mean there was an article on us ramping up hiring. You know that's there's a lot of contract to conversion that we're doing. I mean anybody that's you know in financial services has their own employee base and has a large contractor base. It it's not necessarily an indication of increased headcount in technology nor is it an indication of being late in the game.
What it is an indication of is a balancing act between our contracted population and our overall colleague population, you know, we've been pretty steady with our tech investment over the last couple of years, and we'll continue that same level of, you know, of tech investment, you know, this year. What was your first question, Don?
Yes. Yes.
Oh, the international piece of this. No, I think you know from an international perspective I just think that there is you know when you run a global company it is really important to make sure that you bring the best and the brightest to bear on all the problems and issues that you have.
When you think about acquiring card members, engaging card members, and retaining card members, you know, having a sort of a dual or a tri market structure sometimes can slow down your speed and your agility versus having a single market leader looking at making what are the right investment decisions for that market. You know how many small business cards we could acquire? How many consumer cards we acquire?
How do you adjudicate what customers should get a small business and or a consumer card? I think this will allow us not only to get products to market faster, but to also make sure that we're putting the right investment in the right channels as we move across. As far as extra money being invested in international, we have an enterprise investment strategy, and we will put the money where the best returns are.
If we can get more returns out of investing in market A or market B versus the U.S. or vice versa, we will do that. The other thing that I would say, look, I've been around for a long, long time, and organizational constructs change for the times that you're in and for the technology that's available, for the value propositions that are available.
I mean, you know, this is in some ways a little bit back to the future. You know, we did globalize all these things, but now we feel it's better to, you know, take these global capabilities that we have and deploy them on a much more local level with more local decision-making and more adjudication between sort of the various business units. We just think that will be a more effective and faster way. You know, coming out of the pandemic, I think speed of decision-making and agility will be really important.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Bill Carcache with Wolfe Research. Please proceed with your question.
Thanks. Good morning, Steve and Jeff.
Good morning, Bill.
Your PPNR beat and the strength of the underlying trends certainly highlight the earnings power in the model. I was hoping that you could address you know investor concerns that thinking back to the 2007 time frame, your models back then were saying that customers with multiple mortgages were good credits, and you guys essentially grew into that recession.
While today's environment is very different, some investors are looking somewhat by analogy to that time frame and have expressed concern that you may once again be growing into the next recession. The strong spending trends that you're seeing are a reflection of the inflation problem that the Fed is trying to fight. Would love to hear your thoughts around that dynamic.
I'll give you my thoughts, and Jeff can kind of jump in. You know, we've learned a lot since 2007. We've changed quite a bit. To think that, you know, 2007 is indicative of how we handle 2022, I think would be foolish or 2023. Again, I'll just point you to the pandemic where I think, you know, one of the things that went unnoticed during this pandemic was how we handled people in distress. I think we handled them very well from both a short-term perspective and a long-term perspective. If you remember when Jeff used to present these slides during the pandemic, we talked about AR in distress at times. We managed that quite carefully.
I can also say that our ability to collect is completely different than it was back then. Our models are different back then. You know, yeah, I think, you know, people can think what they want, but would be foolish to think that we haven't changed or learned a lot. In terms of growing into the recession, what I would say is this.
80% of our growth is driven by transactions right now. If you look at that spending number, this is not inflation. This is transactions. This is higher levels of engagement. You know, the notion of us, we're growing because we have some tailwind of inflation is also a silly notion because, you know, we're engaging our card members more, we have more transactions, we have more card members.
The last point, just going back to your first question. Our card base is so much different than it was in 2007 from an economic perspective. You know, it's a much more robust, resilient card base than it was back in 2007. Also the way we grew our balances was not necessarily just through spending back then. There was a lot of balance transfer activity. I think, you know, this company is a very different company than it was in 2007, you know, going into the recession. The card base is different. The way we were growing is different. We've really become much more of a spend growth company. We have a lot more premium cardholders.
We have a lot more fee-paying cardholders than we did. Our growth is coming from very different sources. At the end of the day, you know, when and if, you know, you have a big downturn, we'll see what happens. We feel pretty good about capabilities, and we feel pretty good about our models, and we feel really good about how our spending is being acquired right now. We're not just riding a tailwind here. We are riding real growth through customer acquisition and increased spending from existing customers because the value propositions are driving that growth.
The only thing I would add is that just like that spend is coming from existing customers, the loan growth is predominantly coming from existing customers that we know well, who have a better average credit profile. We feel good about our winning through the cycle models that tell us these are customers who we should have in any environment. I think I'll come back to my earlier comments about our credit reserve levels are still below everyone else in the industry. They're below relative to day one CECL where others are, and that's appropriate given our strong credit file. We feel good about where we are.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Lisa Ellis with MoffettNathanson. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for squeezing me in. Just a follow-up-
Hey, Lisa. Good morning.
On that point, given the continued strength in your business and the fact that you're still benefiting from a lot of these sort of lagging-type, you know, recovery tailwinds from the pandemic, can you just update us on your thoughts on taking advantage of the current valuation environment to pursue some tuck-in M&A or other more like chunkier organic investments, for example, things that you're perhaps looking at or leaning in on in terms of, you know, accelerating areas of your business? Thanks.
I mean, chunky organic investments. I mean, you've seen how we've driven our marketing spending and, you know, to acquire card members, while, as Jeff said, making it harder to get a card. I think we've leaned in on our marketing investments. We feel really good about, you know, our technology investments. You know, look, we're always looking at opportunities to tuck things in that makes sense for us. I mean, you know, whether it was Kabbage or Resy or LoungeBuddy or Accertify and so forth, we're always looking at those things that will, you know, add, you know, will be adjacent and add to our organic core. What we're not looking for are things that are sort of outside of our universe.
I think we've proven that, you know, we can expand, you know, with our customer base, we can expand the services that we're offering and looking at additional services that lead them to more spending or lead to more acquisition opportunities, which, you know, when you look at Resy, people look at Resy as a restaurant reservation system.
We look at that as a way to engage our card members. We look at that as a way to engage with our restaurants. We look at it as a way to acquire new card members. You know, Accertify is another one where it's an ability to pick up more B2B spending. You know, we're always on the lookout for you know, capabilities.
You know, if the right valuation comes along with the right, you know, with the right set of capabilities, yeah, we'll take advantage of it. But as far as leaning in sort of on organic investments, I think we've leaned in. I think we've invested in marketing, we've invested in card member services, we've invested in our value proposition, and we've invested in our colleagues and continued to keep our investment levels up in technology.
Thank you. Our final question will come from the line of Mihir Bhatia with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question.
Good morning, and thank you for squeezing me in here. I just wanted to really quickly touch on the regulatory backdrop. See if there's anything worth highlighting there from your perspective. Specifically, I'm thinking of the Durbin proposal, and if that's interesting to you, but is there anything else also on regulatory that we should be thinking about? Thank you.
I'm sorry, Mihir, it was really hard. I don't know if you're on a speakerphone. It was really hard to hear you. Durbin, is that the question?
Sorry. Yeah, I was just asking about the Durbin proposal and the regulatory backdrop.
Okay.
Very clear now.
That's very clear now. Look, you know, in terms of the Durbin proposal, it's a proposal. I, you know, I can't speculate how this is gonna come out and, you know, whether it obviously is not gonna impact us because we're a three-party system, so we don't really see that impacting us negatively. Will it impact us positively or will it actually happen? We continue to look at it and, you know, we'll see, we'll see what happens there. Look, as far as the regulatory environment, it's a tough regulatory environment and I think, you know, in a lot of ways, you know, it, you know, the objective is to protect consumers and to be transparent with consumers, and we applaud all of that.
I think, you know, the CFPB is talking about, you know, late fees and things like that and these are not material parts of our revenue streams. You know, I think, you know, transparency with consumers is really, really important and, you know, we obviously want to do all that. I don't think the regulatory environment is any tougher than it's been over the last few years, and we'll continue to operate in that environment. You know, obviously it adds, sometimes it adds a little bit of cost to comply with certain things, whether that means technological changes or what have you. You know, it's just like competition.
It really is always there, and you have to make sure that you're, you know, investing to meet the regulatory guidelines, and we'll continue to do that. I don't see it as a big headwind for us or a headwind at all for us, you know, as we move forward.
With that, we will bring the call to an end. Thank you again for joining today's call and for your continued interest in American Express. The IR team will be available for any follow-up questions. Operator, back to you.
Ladies and gentlemen, the webcast replay will be available on our investor relations website at ir.americanexpress.com shortly after the call. You can also access a digital replay of the call at 877-660-6853 or 201-612-7415, access code 13732309, after 1:00 P.M. Eastern Standard Time on October 21 through October 28. That will conclude our conference call for today. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.