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Global
financial services giant, the US-based American Express
issued a profit warning. It has also said that that it
would take charges of about $1.2 billion as a result of
poor operations and the nearly 5,000 jobs it is retrenching,
and faces a dismal outlook for the rest of the year and
into 2002. These redundancies, costing the company $370
million, come on top of the 1,600 redundancies already
affected by the company.
These
actions, according to Kenneth Chenault, the new chairman
of the financial services giant, are being taken to put
the bank in a strong position that would enable it to
navigate through a long period of economic weakness. Kenneth
Chenault, chairman and chief executive, said, "The
actions we announced...are being taken to ensure that
we're in a strong position to navigate through what we
expect to be a longer period of economic weakness."
A
further charge of $826 million will be taken to cover
write-downs in the high-yield portfolio of American Express
Financial Advisors and losses associated with rebalancing
the portfolio toward lower-risk securities.
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