American Express and its rivals are stocking up on tech talent

At a time when many companies are cutting back, American Express is expanding its technology operation, while Visa, Mastercard and Discover are also hiring sizable tech teams.

The card network plans to hire about 1,000 people, mostly in data science, software and other technology roles, during the last three months of 2022, on top of the 3,600 technology workers it already added this year. This runs counter to the trend of technology firms having fired more than 92,000 people in 2022, according to layoffs.fyi

"We want to lean into any downturn and emerge stronger," said Luke Gebb, executive vice president of Amex Digital Labs.  "Our earnings are good so that allows us to be aggressive at this moment." 

The new hires come as Amex is in the middle of its Enterprise Innovation Partners initiative. Amex is having its Enterprise Strategic Partnerships, Corporate Development (which includes its venture capital group) and Digital Labs business units work more closely together." Other networks including Visa and Mastercard are also hiring thousands of experts in areas such as data management, security and cryptocurrency. 

By working across departments, Amex's Enterprise Innovation Partners hopes to improve the company's ability to anticipate consumer and merchant trends in dining and travel — two of Amex's largest business lines. The group is also examining how digital identity will be used in the future to expedite payment transactions, and tracking new developments in artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency. 

American Express Amex app
American Express is combining several technology units to expedite industry partnerships, investments, development and testing.
Chona Kasinger/Bloomberg

Amex Ventures, which is part of the corporate development business unit, will invest in companies as part of the initiative and will also work with those companies on product development with existing Amex teams. Part of the goal is to spot opportunities for future merger and and acquisition deals, and add new product that can embed with existing acquired fintechs such as Kabbage, Accertify and Resy.

"It's become increasingly important to do this now," Gebb said. "Whether the future of the payment business involves a direction that Apple or Amazon or Google takes, or something else, the project will allow us to see how digital technology impacts evolution." Amex Digital Labs is a testing zone that creates about two dozen initiatives each year, and pilots those products in the market to get a barometer of consumer and business needs. 

"You can study things all you want with surveys and other methods. But until you get customer feedback you can't know for sure," Gebb said. As part of the initiative's work, Amex recently began testing Amex Round-Up, which allows consumers to round up transactions to the nearest $1, $5 or $10 and direct the funds to a charitable organization. Amex's Lab worked with Philanthropi, a tech startup that democratizes nonprofit donations, to build the technology behind Round-Up. Amex Ventures has also taken a stake in Philanthropi. 

"There's no shortage of interesting companies," said Lisa Marchese, head of corporate development for Amex. "Even in down times like in 2008 and 2009, there were a lot of new companies and ideas. Innovation doesn't stop in a downturn." 

Other recent projects include collaboration with Google to support virtual cards to support "autofill," which removes the need to type a four-digit security code from that back of a plastic card at checkout. Amex Digital Labs worked with the enterprise partnership group to execute the Google project.

Another product, Send and Split, is a partnership with PayPal that was recently updated to allow users to split multiple payments via via PayPal or Venmo. 

"As people go about their day to day work, they can make connections with other departments," said Glenda McNeal, president of enterprise strategic partnerships at Amex. "Putting all of this at the enterprise level allows us to see across all of our businesses." Amex last week reported earnings that beat analysts expectations, and projected full year and 2023 earrings that are largely in line with or just above analysts expectations.

During the earnings call,  Chairman and CEO Steve Squeri said there's no sign that inflation or a potential recession are negatively impacting payments volume.  "We've been steady with tech investment over the past several years and we'll continue that same level of tech investment this year," Squeri said during the earnings call.  

Amex is expanding to find sources of revenue that aren't directly tied to payment processing, which has led all three firms to add services to provide security, or help customers use new technology such as blockchain or crypto. Stock market volatility would not impact that strategy at Amex, Gebb said. 

"Our goals are set around the medium to long-term," Gebb said. "We're not changing what we do based on short-term swings in the market. Of course if these swings impact medium term trends we can adjust. But we're not thinking about any sort of downturn changes or strategy shifts right now. 

Visa and Mastercard are also expanding revenue sources beyond payment processing. Visa did not return requests for comment on how the hiring slowdown in fintech hiring would impact hiring plans. Visa's current job openings include 57 positions in business development, 51 in consulting, 50 in information technology and 31 in data science, though LinkedIn listed more than 3,800 new positions across the company. 

Discover's careers page lists more 340 IT job openings, with a heavy focus on data management and digital development. Discover also recently launched a data and analytics program. LinkedIn listed more than 2,700 job openings for Discover. Discover recently entered a partnership with IBM to find new payment and financial services use cases for the cloud computing. Discover, Visa and Mastercard also reported strong earnings in the most recent quarter. 

In an email, Mastercard's public relations team said the card network has 1,300 global openings, including 500 in the U.S. across software engineering, product and design, and technology infrastructure. Mastercard earlier this year reported it would aggressively add staff in the next year and referred to the market for technology talent as "hot." 

Mastercard is also expanding its New York development hub,  and is in the midst of hiring 500 staffers with expertise in open banking and cryptocurrency. 

The slowdown in fintech hiring will result in code developers finding opportunities with established financial firms, which must keep developing to maintain their business position, according to Brian Riley, co-head of payments for Mercator Advisory Group. "For some it may seem that working in a traditional financial environment might lack the coolness of working for a startup. Still, when they end up at a top financial institution, IT staffers will likely enjoy the security and opportunity of a global institution." 

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