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BCS Barclays PLC

10.17
-0.08 (-0.78%)
04 May 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Name Symbol Market Type
Barclays PLC NYSE:BCS NYSE Depository Receipt
  Price Change % Change Price High Price Low Price Open Price Traded Last Trade
  -0.08 -0.78% 10.17 10.295 10.155 10.19 21,807,125 01:00:00

American Airlines to Renew Credit-Card Deals With Citigroup, Barclays Unit

12/07/2016 7:56pm

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By Robin Sidel and Susan Carey 

American Airlines Group Inc. said it is renewing credit-card relationships with Citigroup Inc. and Barclaycard US, taking the unusual step of sticking with two card issuers following a big merger.

The deal calls for Citi, which is American's longtime card partner, to offer its co-branded airline cards to new customers through mobile channels like American's website, direct mail and airport lounges. Citi also recently became the co-brand partner for Costco Wholesale Corp., which ended a 16-year relationship with American Express Co.

Barclaycard, meanwhile, will offer its cards to new customers in airports and on American flights starting in January. Barclaycard, a unit of British bank Barclays, was the co-brand card issuer for US Airways Group Inc., which merged with American in 2013.

The move is part of the intense competition among financial institutions to win such "co-brand" card arrangements, which are often highly profitable and aimed at creditworthy high-spending consumers.

American also said Tuesday that it is renewing its longtime arrangement with card-processing network MasterCard Inc.

In a securities filing Tuesday, American estimated that the new card deals would add $1.55 billion to its pretax income over the next 2 1/2 years, compared with what would have been the case under the prior credit-card arrangements.

Companies that go through big mergers typically choose one credit-card partner. That was the case in 2008 when Delta Air Lines Inc. acquired Northwest Airlines Corp. and retained its longtime partner American Express Co. over U.S. Bancorp, which had issued Northwest's cards.

The American credit-card deal, which has been months in the making, is designed to promote "higher growth" than in traditional single-issuer relationships, said Fort Worth, Texas-based American, the largest U.S. carrier by traffic. Neither of the previous arrangements was about to expire, but the airline moved ahead with negotiating the new deals anyway.

"These long-term relationships.... provide our customers with the best ways to enhance their travel experience," said Andrew Nocella, chief marketing officer for American Airlines, whose loyalty program, called AAdvantage, has about 100 million members.

The deal is especially meaningful to Barclaycard, which had kept its US Airways customers after the merger, but had been prevented from soliciting new ones. Both Citi and Barclaycard are expected to retain the portfolios of the new cards that they each originate.

Barclaycard last year also wrested the JetBlue Airways Corp co-brand card program from AmEx.

The American deal "gives us access to great customers who are traveling and thinking about their next vacation and their next destination," Matt Massaua, managing director of Barclaycard's airline partnerships, said in an interview.

Write to Robin Sidel at robin.sidel@wsj.com and Susan Carey at susan.carey@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

July 12, 2016 14:41 ET (18:41 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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