UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-K

/X/ ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995

OR

/ / TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from to

Commission File No. 1-7657

AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

                  New York                     13-4922250
         (State or other jurisdiction       (I.R.S. employer
     of incorporation or organization)     identification no.)

         World Financial Center
            200 Vesey Street
           New York, New York                     10285
(Address of principal executive offices)       (Zip code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (212) 640-2000

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

                                              Name of each exchange
                Title of each class           on which registered
                -------------------           ---------------------
Common Shares (par value $.60 per Share)      New York Stock Exchange
                                              Boston Stock Exchange
                                              Chicago Stock Exchange
                                              Pacific Stock Exchange

6 1/4% Exchangeable Notes Due October 15, 1996 New York Stock Exchange

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports) and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes /X/ No / /

Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K is not contained herein and will not be contained, to the best of the registrant's knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K / /.


Common shares of the registrant outstanding at March 4, 1996 were 479,695,263.

The aggregate market value, as of March 4, 1996, of such common shares held by non-affiliates of the registrant was approximately $22.4 billion. (Aggregate market value estimated solely for the purposes of this report. This shall not be construed as an admission for the purposes of determining affiliate status.)

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

Parts I, II and IV: Portions of Registrant's 1995 Annual Report to Shareholders.

Part III: Portions of Registrant's Proxy Statement dated March 11, 1996.


                        TABLE OF CONTENTS

Form 10-K
Item Number

     Part I                                                  Page

1.   Business
        Travel Related Services  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  1
        American Express Financial Advisors. . . . . . . . . .  8
        American Express Bank. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   13
        Corporate. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   20
        Foreign Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   20
        Industry Segment Information and
          Classes of Similar Services. . . . . . . . . . . .   21
        Executive Officers of the Registrant . . . . . . . .   21
        Employees. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   25
 2.  Properties. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   25
 3.  Legal Proceedings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   25
 4.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders . .   26

     Part II

 5.  Market for Registrant's Common Equity and
       Related Stockholder Matters . . . . . . . . . . . . .   26
 6.  Selected Financial Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   27
 7.  Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
       Condition and Results of Operations . . . . . . . . . . 27
 8.  Financial Statements and Supplementary Data . . . . . .   27
 9.  Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on
       Accounting and Financial Disclosure . . . . . . . . .   27

     Part III

10.  Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant. . .   27
11.  Executive Compensation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   27
12.  Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners
       and Management. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   27
13.  Certain Relationships and Related Transactions. . . . .   27

     Part IV

14.  Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules and Reports
       on Form 8-K . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   28
     Signatures. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   29

Index to Financial Statements . . . . . . . . . . . . .  F-1
Consent of Independent Auditors . . . . . . . . . . . .  F-2
Exhibit Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  E-1


PART I

ITEM 1. BUSINESS

American Express Company (the "registrant") was founded in 1850 as a joint stock association and was incorporated under the laws of the State of New York in 1965. The registrant and its subsidiaries are primarily engaged in the business of providing travel related services, financial advisory services and international banking services throughout the world.

TRAVEL RELATED SERVICES

American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. (including its subsidiaries, where appropriate, "TRS") provides a variety of products and services, including the American Express-R Card (the "Card"), consumer lending, the American Express-R Travelers Cheque (the "Travelers Cheque" or the "Cheque") and other stored value products, corporate and consumer travel products and services, magazine publishing, database marketing and management and Card-related insurance products. TRS offers products and services in over 160 countries. In certain countries, partly owned affiliates and independent operators offer some of these products and services under licenses from TRS.

TRS' business as a whole has not experienced significant seasonal fluctuation, although Travelers Cheque sales and Travelers Cheques outstanding tend to be greatest each year in the summer months, peaking in the third quarter, and Card billed business tends to be moderately higher in the fourth quarter than in other calendar quarters.

TRS places significant importance on its trademarks and service marks. TRS diligently protects its intellectual property rights around the world.

CONSUMER CARD SERVICES GROUP

TRS offers various Card products to individual consumers, including charge cards such as the American Express Personal Card, the American Express-R Gold Card and the Platinum Card-R; and the Optima-R Card, a revolving credit card. Cards are currently issued in 35 currencies and permit Cardmembers to charge purchases of goods and services in the U.S. and in most countries around the world at establishments that have agreed to accept the Card.

The Card issuer accepts from each participating establishment the charges arising from Cardmember purchases at a discount that varies with the type of participating establishment, the charge volume, the timing and method of payment to the establishment, the method of submission of charges and, in certain instances, the average charge amount and the amount of information provided.

Charge Cards are primarily designed for use as a method of payment and not as a means of financing purchases of goods and services and carry no pre-set spending limit. Charges are approved based on a Cardmember's past spending and payment patterns, credit history and personal resources. Except in the case of extended payment plans (such as Sign & Travel-R accounts), charge Cards require payment by the Cardmember of the full amount billed each month, and no finance charges are assessed; Card accounts that are past due by a given number of days are subject, in most cases, to a delinquency assessment and, if not brought to current status, subject to cancellation.


The Optima Card comprises a family of revolving credit cards marketed to individuals in the U.S. and several other countries. The Optima Card was initially issued only to existing Cardmembers. In 1994, the Optima True Grace-SM Card was issued in the U.S. on a stand-alone basis. Since then, a variety of other Optima Cards with different payment terms, grace periods and rate structures have been made available to customers. American Express revolving credit cards which do not carry the Optima brand are also issued outside the U.S.

American Express Centurion Bank ("Centurion Bank") issues the Optima Card in the U.S. and owns substantially all receivables arising from the use of Optima Cards issued in the U.S. In addition, Centurion Bank extends lines of credit in association with certain American Express Cards and offers unsecured loans to Cardmembers in connection with their Sign & Travel accounts. The Sign & Travel account allows qualified U.S. Cardmembers the option of extended payments for airline, cruise and certain prepaid travel charges that are purchased with the charge Card. Outside the U.S., consumer lending activities are engaged in by other subsidiaries of the registrant where local regulations permit.

Cardmembers generally are charged an annual fee, which varies based on the type of Card, the number of Cards for each account, the currency in which the Card is denominated and the country of residence of the Cardmember. Certain Optima Cards are offered with no annual fee.

Cardmembers generally have access to a variety of special services, depending on the type of Card, including: the Membership Rewards-SM Program, Global Assist-R Hotline, Buyer's Assurance-SM Protection Plan, Car Rental Loss and Damage Insurance Plan, Travel Accident Insurance Plan and Purchase Protection-SM Plan. A Cardmember participating in the Gold Card program in the U.S. has access to certain additional services, including a Year End Summary of Charges Report; in many instances, the ability to draw on a line of credit; and a lowest price guarantee on most retail purchases. The Platinum Card, offered to certain Cardmembers in the U.S. and certain other countries, provides access to additional and enhanced travel, financial, insurance, personal assistance and other services. Under the Express Cash program, enrolled Cardmembers can obtain cash or American Express Travelers Cheques 24 hours a day from automated teller machines of participating financial institutions worldwide.

American Express Credit Corporation ("Credco") purchases most Cardmember receivables arising from the use of Cards (other than Optima Cards) issued in the U.S. and Cardmember receivables in designated currencies arising from the use of Cards outside the U.S. Credco finances the purchase of receivables principally through the issuance of commercial paper and the sale of medium- and long-term notes. TRS also funds Cardmember receivables through an asset securitization program. The cost of funding Cardmember receivables is a major expense of Card operations.

In 1995, TRS introduced a number of new revolving credit and charge Card products and features pursuant to its strategy of developing a larger selection of products targeted to the needs of specific customer segments and of growing loans outstanding in its consumer lending portfolio. During the year, TRS announced two co-branded Optima Card products, the Hilton-R Optima Card and the Delta-R SkyMiles-TM Credit Card from American Express, which offer


rewards provided by the co-branded partners. TRS also introduced other Card products such as the Gold Optima Card and Optima Card for students. TRS plans to continue its strategy and offer additional co-branded and other Card products in the future, and is making a significant investment in a new card processing system to allow the introduction of products in a much shorter time frame.

The American Express Card and consumer lending businesses are subject to extensive regulation in the U.S. under a number of federal laws and regulations, including the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, which generally prohibits discrimination in the granting and handling of credit; the Fair Credit Reporting Act, which, among other things, regulates credit prescreening practices and requires certain disclosures when an application for credit is rejected; the Truth in Lending Act, which, among other things, requires extensive disclosure of the terms upon which credit is granted; the Fair Credit Billing Act, which, among other things, regulates the manner in which billing inquiries are handled and specifies certain billing requirements; and the Fair Credit and Charge Card Disclosure Act, which mandates certain disclosures on credit and charge card applications. Federal legislation also regulates abusive debt collection practices. In addition, a number of states and foreign countries have similar consumer credit protection and disclosure laws. These laws and regulations have not had, and are not expected to have, a material adverse effect on the Card and consumer lending businesses either in the U.S. or on a worldwide basis.

Centurion Bank is a member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC") and is regulated, supervised and regularly examined by the Delaware State Banking Commissioner and the FDIC. Another subsidiary of TRS, American Express Deposit Corporation ("AEDC"), is a Utah-chartered, FDIC-insured industrial loan corporation. In the second quarter of 1996, TRS expects to merge Centurion Bank into AEDC. AEDC would thereafter be the issuer of the Optima Card in the U.S. and conduct the activities currently being performed by Centurion Bank.

TRS encounters substantial and increasingly intense competition worldwide with respect to the Card and consumer lending businesses from general purpose cards issued under revolving credit plans, particularly VISA-R cards issued by members of VISA International Service Association, Inc. or VISA USA, Inc. (collectively, "VISA"), and MasterCard-R cards issued by members of MasterCard International, Incorporated ("MasterCard"), including cards sponsored by AT&T, General Electric Company, General Motors Corporation and Ford Motor Company. This competition exists among issuers of general purpose charge and credit cards (intrasystem competition) as well as among card systems like VISA, MasterCard and to a lesser extent, Diners Club-R, Dean Witter's NOVUS-SM Network and JCB (intersystem competition). TRS also encounters competition, to a much lesser extent, from businesses that issue their own cards or otherwise extend credit to their customers, such as retailers and airline associations. These products are not generally substitutes for TRS' Card products due to their limited acceptance. Many U.S. banks issuing credit cards under revolving credit plans charge annual fees in addition to interest charges where permitted by state law. The issuer of the Discover Card, as well as some issuers of VISA cards and MasterCard cards, charge no annual fees. Certain competing issuers offer premium cards with enhanced services or lines of credit.

Certain issuers also offer mileage credit to card holders under airline frequent flyer programs or other types of reward programs or rebates. In 1995, TRS expanded its Membership Miles-R travel rewards program in the U.S. to


include retail merchandise and gourmet gifts and renamed the program Membership Rewards. The program is also offered outside the U.S. Membership Rewards is an important part of TRS' strategy to increase Cardmember spending and loyalty. More than five million Cardmembers in 27 countries participate in the Membership Rewards program. Due to the success of the program, enrollees now represent a significant portion of Cardmember spending.

TRS generally charges higher discount rates to service establishments than its competitors. As a result, TRS has encountered complaints from some establishments, as well as suppression of the Card's use. TRS has adjusted its discount structure in certain industries and locations. TRS has also focused on understanding and addressing key factors that influence service establishment satisfaction and has expanded its efforts in successfully handling and resolving suppression problems. TRS' objective is to achieve merchant coverage that is at virtual parity with bankcard networks. TRS has expanded its efforts to increase the number of merchants accepting the Card by utilizing independent sales agents in addition to its own sales force.

In 1995, TRS expanded the on-line services it provides to Cardmembers, and plans to add more services in the future. Through ExpressNet-SM, Cardmembers may now access account information, pay their American Express Card bills and apply for Cards directly from their computers through America Online, among other available services. TRS also anticipates further developments in payment products and systems. Such changes may include increasing use of debit cards, Card acceptance and other payment vehicles on the Internet, stored value cards, "smart cards" or other card-based or electronic forms of payment.

The principal competitive factors that affect the Card business are (i) the quality of the service and services, including rewards programs provided to Cardmembers and participating establishments; (ii) the number and spending characteristics of Cardmembers; (iii) the quantity and quality of the establishments that will accept a Card; (iv) the cost of Cards to Cardmembers and of Card acceptance to participating establishments; (v) the terms of payment available to Cardmembers and participating establishments; (vi) the nature and quality of expense management data capture and reporting capability; (vii) the number and quality of other payment instruments available to Cardmembers and participating establishments; and (viii) the success of marketing and promotion campaigns.

STORED VALUE GROUP

In light of changing technologies and customer needs, in 1995 the Travelers Cheque Group expanded its product offerings to other "stored value" products and was renamed the Stored Value Group. The mission of the Stored Value Group is to replace cash with safe, convenient stored value payment systems that satisfy specific customer needs. To support that mission, in 1995 TRS acquired Special Teams, Inc., a company that specializes in delivering stored value university card systems that centralize numerous administrative and financial functions. TRS is also testing the FirstClass-SM PhoneCard, a prepaid telephone card, with the U.S. Postal Service.


The core of the Stored Value Group's business, however, continues to be Travelers Cheques. American Express Travelers Cheques are sold as a safe and convenient alternative to currency. The Cheque, a negotiable instrument, has no expiration date and is payable by the issuer in the currency of issuance when presented for the purchase of goods and services or for redemption. The success of the Travelers Cheque operation is in large part related to the worldwide acceptability of the Cheque as a means of payment for goods and services and the worldwide refundability of Cheques that are lost or stolen. American Express Travelers Cheques are issued directly by TRS in U.S. dollars, Canadian dollars, Dutch guilders, Australian dollars, German marks and Japanese yen. French franc and British pound Cheques are primarily issued by joint venture companies in which TRS holds an equity interest and for which TRS provides sales, operations, marketing and refund servicing arrangements. Swiss franc cheques are being issued by a Swiss partnership in which TRS has a partnership interest. In 1995, Spanish Peseta Travelers Cheques, issued by Banco Central Hispano ("BCH"), were made available to American Express Travelers Cheque customers under a joint promotional agreement between TRS and BCH.

American Express Travelers Cheques are sold through a broad network of outlets worldwide, including offices of TRS, its affiliates and representatives, travel agents, commercial banks, savings banks, savings and loan associations, credit unions and other financial, travel and commercial businesses. TRS generally pays compensation to selling agents for their sale of Travelers Cheques.

The proceeds from sales of Cheques issued by TRS are remitted to TRS and are invested predominantly in highly-rated debt securities consisting primarily of intermediate- and long-term state and municipal obligations. The investment of these proceeds is regulated by various state laws.

TRS also issues the Corporate Travelers Cheque, a cash access product for business travelers, Cheques for Two-R, a Cheque product with two signature lines designed for people who are traveling together, and the American Express-R Gift Cheque. All of these Cheque products operate with the same signature-counter- signature negotiation procedure as Travelers Cheques and are refundable to the purchaser in the event of loss or theft.

Although the registrant believes that TRS is the leading issuer of travelers checks, consumers have a choice of many forms of payment instruments, including other brands of travelers checks, charge and debit cards and national and international automated teller machine networks. TRS expects increasing developments in stored value cards, smart cards and other electronic forms of payment, and plans to offer a range of new stored value and other products in the future to compete in this area. The principal competitive factors affecting the travelers check industry are (i) the acceptability of the checks throughout the world as an alternative to currency; (ii) the ability to service satisfactorily the check purchaser if the checks are lost or stolen; (iii) the compensation paid to, and frequency of settlement by, selling agents; (iv) the availability to the consumer of other forms of payment; (v) the accessibility of travelers check sales and refunds; (vi) the success of marketing and promotion campaigns; and (vii) the amount of the fee charged to the consumer.


CORPORATE CARD AND TRAVEL BUSINESSES

The American Express Corporate Card is a charge card issued to individuals through a corporate account established by their employer for business purposes. TRS, through its Corporate Card program, is the leading provider to large and small businesses of travel and expense management systems, and services such as the Business Travel Accident Insurance Plan offered to large businesses and the Accident Disability Plan provided to small businesses. In 1995, TRS enhanced its expense management system for large Corporate accounts and expanded the range of products for small businesses with the launch of the Corporate Platinum Card. TRS achieved substantial growth in the Corporate Card businesses in 1995.

TRS also provides American Express Government Card charge card services to federal employees who travel on official government business. In addition, the American Express Corporate Card is the business expense management system used by 36 of the 50 states.

In recent years, there has been increased focus by competitors on the Corporate Card business. For a discussion of competition relating to the Card business, see pages 3 and 4 above.

In 1994, TRS launched the American Express Corporate Purchasing Card. This charge Card is intended to provide an efficient, low-cost system for managing purchases of supplies, equipment and services by companies. Employees of the company to whom Corporate Purchasing Cards are issued can use the Cards to order directly from suppliers, rather than using the traditional system of requisitions, purchase orders and invoices and retail store purchasing. TRS pays the suppliers and submits a single monthly billing statement to the company. Due to the needs of companies in implementing the Purchasing Card, growth in this product has been much slower than originally planned.

TRS provides a wide variety of travel services to customers traveling for business and personal purposes and is the leading business travel provider worldwide. Travel services include trip planning, reservations, ticketing, and other incidental services. In addition, for business travel accounts, TRS provides corporate travel policy consultation and management information systems and group and incentive travel services. TRS receives commissions and fees for travel bookings and arrangements from airlines, hotels, car rental companies and other travel suppliers. In 1995, TRS introduced a new structure of service fees for certain transactions such as re-ticketing, courier services and complex itineraries. TRS also receives management fees from certain business travel accounts.

To meet the competition for the business traveler and to provide client companies with a customized approach to managing their travel and entertainment needs, the Travel Management Services unit ("TMS") integrates the Corporate Card and business travel services in the U.S. and certain foreign countries. TMS offers to its client companies services to manage their travel and entertainment budgets. In addition, this service provides clients with an information package to plan, account for and control travel and entertainment expenses. TMS provides a state-of-the-art expense management system, which captures and reconciles expense report data with Corporate Card charge data. New software was introduced during 1995 for large Corporate accounts which allows Corporate cardholders to access current account data via E-mail to create their own expense reports in a short period of time.


Vigorous competition is encountered in the travel business from more than 30,000 travel agents and direct sales by airlines and travel suppliers in the U.S. and abroad. This competition is mainly based on service, convenience and proximity to the customer and has increased due to several factors in recent years, including the fact that a number of independent agencies have been acquired by larger travel companies. Travel agency groups also have increased in size, enabling independent agencies to be more competitive in providing travel services to regional and national business travel clients and in other activities. In addition, many companies have established in-house business travel departments.

More recently, changes in the travel agent compensation structure (i.e., the limits on airfare commissions) have been imposed by airlines in an environment of heightened competition, which has caused some independent agencies to go out of business. It is also possible that customers may increasingly seek alternative channels to make travel arrangements, such as on-line vendors or in some cases "ticketless" airline services that require booking directly with the airlines. It is anticipated that travel agents will continue to provide value by making available fare and ticketing information for competing airlines on a timely basis. It is also expected that travel agencies will continue to look for expense reduction opportunities. Consolidation of travel agencies is likely to continue as agencies seek to better serve national and multinational business travel clients and negotiate more effectively with the airlines with respect to computer reservation systems and compensation and pricing arrangements.

In 1995, TRS launched Express Reservations on ExpressNet, which allows customers to make airline reservations and order tickets on-line. TRS plans to offer other new services in the future in response to changes in the traditional travel agent distribution channel.

TRS INTERNATIONAL

In 1995, TRS took several steps to enhance its international businesses in recognition of the importance of markets outside the U.S. to the registrant's long-term growth strategy.

In the past, TRS generally has issued its own Cards and processed service establishment charges internally. However, in selected countries outside the U.S. where TRS has not established operations or issued Cards denominated in local currencies (including Croatia, South Africa and Venezeula), TRS has, since the early 1970's, appointed banks or other third parties to be Independent Operators handling the domestic aspects of all Card service functions in such countries, including issuing the Card. In 1995, TRS signed Independent Operator Agreements with Banco Commercial Portugues in Portugal, Bank Hapoalim in Israel, Alpha Credit Bank in Greece and Tong Yang Group in Korea, establishing such parties as charge Card issuers in their respective markets. TRS expects to establish additional types of arrangements with banks outside the U.S. in selected markets where it believes that such arrangements will enhance Card distribution and expand the merchant base. In January 1996, TRS filed a complaint with the European Commission against the contemplated adoption by Visa International Service Association, Inc. of a by-law that would result in the automatic termination of Association membership of any member bank issuing the Card.


In 1995, TRS also launched a credit card in the United Kingdom, its first stand-alone revolving credit card issued outside the U.S. Similar revolving credit cards are now also being tested in other countries. In addition, during 1995, TRS expanded programs outside the U.S., such as Membership Rewards and Relationship Statementing, which links rewards directly to Cardmembers' spending patterns.

TRS also continued to implement its strategy of acquiring business travel agencies on a worldwide basis to meet the needs of its multinational business travel and Corporate Card customers. In 1995, TRS' French travel subsidiary and Havas Voyages, the largest French travel agency, agreed to combine their business travel operations in France in a jointly owned company. TRS also acquired Bel Air Viagens, the largest business travel agency in Brazil.

OTHER PRODUCTS AND SERVICES

TRS publishes Travel & Leisure-R, Food & Wine-R, Departures-TM and Your Company-TM magazines.

American Express Relationship Services ("AERS") was created in 1994 to deliver nontraditional American Express products and services which address the information, access, security and telecommunications needs of new and existing customers. AERS includes TRS' existing Merchandise Services and Fee Services units as well as new telecommunications and business development units. Through AERS, TRS offers merchandise directly to Cardmembers, who may elect to pay for the products they purchase in installments with no finance charges. Products can now also be purchased through computer via America Online.

TRS also provides through its subsidiary, Epsilon Data Management, Inc., proprietary database marketing and management.

In 1995, TRS sold AMEX Life Assurance Company ("Amex Life") to General Electric Capital Corporation ("GE Capital"). GE Capital acquired Amex Life's long-term care insurance business, as well as its long-term disability, corporate owned life insurance and other group insurance (primarily accidental death insurance) businesses. The transaction did not include American Express Card- related insurance products, including Automatic Air Flight insurance and a deferred annuity marketed under the name Privileged AssetsR. These products are marketed to Cardmembers through direct response methods.

AMERICAN EXPRESS FINANCIAL ADVISORS

American Express Financial Corporation ("AEFC") is engaged in providing a variety of financial products and services to help individuals, businesses and institutions establish and achieve their financial goals. AEFC's products and services include financial planning and advice, insurance and annuities, a variety of investment products, including investment certificates, mutual funds and limited partnerships, investment advisory services, trust and employee plan administration services, tax preparation and bookkeeping services, personal auto and homeowner's insurance and retail securities brokerage services. At December 31, 1995, American Express Financial Advisors Inc. ("AXP Advisors"), AEFC's principal marketing subsidiary, maintained a nationwide financial planning field force of 7,945 persons. AEFC's marketing system consists primarily of AXP Advisors field force operating in 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, organized in five regions and 45 market areas.


DISTRIBUTION OF PRODUCTS AND SERVICES

AXP Advisors offers financial planning and investment advisory services to individuals for which it charges a fee. AXP Advisors financial planning services provide financial analyses addressing six basic areas of financial planning: financial position, protection, investment, income tax, retirement and estate planning, as well as asset allocation. To complete their financial plans, AXP Advisors' financial advisors provide clients with recommendations of products from the more than 100 products distributed by subsidiaries and affiliates of AEFC as well as products of approved third parties.

First-year financial advisors are compensated primarily by salary, while veteran financial advisors receive compensation based largely on sales. AXP Advisors' field force compensation is structured to encourage advisor retention and product persistency, while adding stability to the financial advisor's income. In attracting and retaining members of the field force, AXP Advisors competes with financial planning firms, insurance companies, securities broker-dealers and other financial institutions. AXP Advisors has undertaken a major initiative called "IDS 1994" to make changes in its business processes, field organization and compensation arrangements to improve advisor retention and client satisfaction. Pursuant to this initiative, in 1995, AEFA tested certain computer-based tools for advisors, including a new desktop financial planning system, and plans to commence implementation of such tools nationwide in 1996. AEFA also implemented new training programs in 1995 to help advisors enhance client service and increase productivity.

Although the use of a dedicated field force may entail higher initial costs than other forms of marketing, such as direct-response marketing or independent agency distribution, AXP Advisors believes that its ability to provide broad-based integrated services on a relationship basis is a competitive advantage.

In addition to marketing through a dedicated sales force, AXP Advisors is actively pursuing alternative approaches for the distribution of its financial planning services, and investment, insurance and annuity products, including networking arrangements with community banks, credit unions and lending entities in the Farm Credit System. AXP Advisors believes that it is important to provide these alternatives to enhance its competitiveness in the marketplace.

AXP Advisors does business as a broker-dealer and investment advisor in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. AEFC and AXP Advisors are registered as broker-dealers and investment advisors regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"), and are members of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD"). AXP Advisors' financial advisors must obtain state and NASD licenses required for the businesses.

AXP Advisors anticipates regulatory oversight of the securities and commodities industries to increase at all levels. The SEC, self-regulatory organizations and state securities commissions may conduct administrative proceedings, which may result in censure, fine, the issuance of cease-and-desist orders or suspension or expulsion of a broker-dealer or an investment advisor and its officers or employees.

The financial services industry responds to consumer needs for money management, risk management and investments. Industry competition focuses primarily on cost, investment performance, yield, convenience, service,


reliability, safety and distribution system. Competition in the financial services market is very intense and AEFC competes with a variety of financial institutions such as banks, securities brokers, mutual funds and insurance companies, whose products and services increasingly cross over the traditional lines that previously differentiated one type of institution from another. Competition has also extended to individuals working in the financial services industry and certain financial institutions have recently shown increased interest in seeking to hire AXP Advisors' financial advisors.

AEFC's business does not as a whole experience significant seasonal fluctuations.

INSURANCE AND ANNUITIES

AEFC's insurance business is carried on primarily by IDS Life Insurance Company ("IDS Life"), a stock life insurance company organized under the laws of the State of Minnesota. IDS Life is a wholly-owned subsidiary of AEFC and serves all states except New York. IDS Life Insurance Company of New York is a wholly-owned subsidiary of IDS Life and serves New York State residents. IDS Life also owns American Enterprise Life Insurance Company ("American Enterprise Life"), which issues fixed and variable dollar annuity contracts to banks, thrift institutions and stock brokerages. American Centurion Life Assurance Company ("American Centurion Life") is another IDS Life subsidiary that offers fixed and variable annuities to American Express Cardmembers in New York, as well as fixed and variable annuities to banks, thrift institutions and stock brokerages in New York. IDS Life also owns American Partners Life Insurance Company ("American Partners Life"), which offers fixed and variable annuity contracts to American Express Cardmembers who reside in states other than New York.

IDS Life's products include whole life, universal life (fixed and variable), single premium life and term products (including waiver of premium and accidental death benefits). IDS Life also offers disability income and long-term care insurance. IDS Life is one of the nation's largest issuers of single premium and flexible premium deferred annuities on both a fixed and variable dollar basis. Immediate annuities are offered as well. IDS Life markets variable annuity contracts designed for retirement plans.

IDS Life's principal annuity products are fixed deferred annuities. These annuities guarantee a relatively low annual interest rate during the accumulation period (the time before annuity payments begin) although the company may pay a higher rate reflective of current market rates. IDS Life also offers a fixed/variable annuity, or "Flexible Annuity," in which the purchaser may choose between mutual funds, with portfolios of common stocks, bonds, managed assets and/or short-term securities, and IDS Life's "general account" as the underlying investment vehicle.

IDS Life, American Enterprise Life and American Partners Life are subject to comprehensive regulation by the Minnesota Department of Commerce (Insurance Division), the Indiana Department of Insurance, and the Arizona Department of Insurance, respectively. American Centurion Life and IDS Life Insurance Company of New York are regulated by the New York Department of Insurance. The laws of the other states in which these companies do business also regulate such matters as the licensing of sales personnel and, in some cases, the contents of insurance policies. The purpose of such regulation and supervision is primarily to protect the interests of policyholders. Virtually


all states also mandate participation in insurance guaranty associations, which assess insurance companies in order to fund claims of policyholders of insolvent insurance companies. On the federal level, there is periodic interest in enacting new regulations relating to various aspects of the insurance industry including taxation and accounting procedures, as well as the treatment of persons differently because of sex, with respect to terms, conditions, rates or benefits of an insurance contract. New federal regulation in any of these areas could potentially have an adverse effect upon AEFC's insurance subsidiaries.

As a distributor of variable annuity and life insurance contracts, IDS Life is registered as a broker-dealer and is a member of the NASD. As investment manager of various investment companies, IDS Life is registered as an investment advisor under applicable federal requirements.

IDS Property Casualty Insurance Company ("IDS Property Casualty") provides personal auto and homeowner's coverage to clients in 19 states. This insurance is underwritten to some extent by AMEX Assurance Company, a subsidiary of the registrant, in 17 of these states and reinsured by IDS Property Casualty. IDS Property Casualty is regulated by the Commissioner of Insurance for Wisconsin. AMEX Assurance Company, which also provides certain American Express Card related insurance products, is regulated by the Commissioner of Insurance for Illinois.

The insurance and annuity business is highly competitive, and IDS Life's competitors consist of both stock and mutual insurance companies. Competitive factors applicable to the insurance business include the interest rates credited to its products, the charges deducted from the cash values of such products, the financial strength of the organization and the services provided to policyholders.

INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES

IDS Certificate Company ("IDSC"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of AEFC, issues face-amount investment certificates. IDSC is registered as an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Owners of IDSC certificates are entitled to receive, at maturity, a stated amount of money equal to the aggregate investments in the certificate plus interest at rates declared from time to time by IDSC. In addition, persons owning one type of certificate may have their interest calculated in whole or in part based on any upward movement in a broad-based stock market index. The certificates issued by IDSC are not insured by any government agency. AEFC acts as investment manager for IDSC. IDSC's certificates are sold primarily by AXP Advisors' field force. Certificates are also marketed by American Express Bank Ltd. to its foreign customers.

IDSC currently offers eight types of face-amount certificates. The specified maturities of the certificates range from four to twenty years. Within their specified maturity, most certificates have interest rate periods ranging from one to thirty-six months. Certificate owners can withdraw their certificate investments at the end of an interest rate period.

IDSC is the largest issuer of face-amount certificates in the U.S. Such certificates compete, however, with many other investments offered by banks, savings and loan associations, credit unions, mutual funds, insurance companies and similar financial institutions, which may be viewed by potential customers as offering a comparable or superior combination of safety and return on investment.


MUTUAL FUNDS

AXP Advisors offers a variety of mutual funds, for which it acts as principal underwriter (distributor of shares). AEFC acts as investment manager and performs various administrative services. The "IDS MUTUAL FUND GROUP" consists of 32 publicly-offered mutual funds, with varied investment objectives, and includes, for example, money market, tax-exempt, bond and stock funds. AEFC believes that the IDS MUTUAL FUND GROUP, with combined net assets at December 31, 1995 of $48.1 billion, was the eleventh largest mutual fund organization in the U.S. and, excluding money market funds, was the seventh largest. AXP Advisors, as principal underwriter, maintains a continuous public offering of shares of each fund. For most funds, shares are sold in three classes. Class A shares are sold at net asset value plus any applicable sales charge. The maximum sales charge is five percent of the offering price with reduced sales charges for larger purchases. Class B shares are sold with a rear load. The maximum sales charge is five percent declining to no charge for shares held over six years. Class Y shares are sold to institutional clients with no load.

The competitive factors affecting the sale of mutual funds include sales charges ("loads") paid, administrative expenses, services received, investment performance, the variety of products and services offered and the convenience to the investor. The funds compete with other investment products, including funds that have no sales charge (known as "no load" funds), and with funds distributed through independent brokerage firms, as well as with those distributed by other "exclusive" sales forces.

OTHER PRODUCTS AND SERVICES

IDS Advisory Group Inc. ("IDSA"), a subsidiary of AEFC, provides investment management services for pension, profit sharing, employee savings and endowment funds of large- and medium-sized businesses and other institutions ("institutional clients"). At December 31, 1995, IDSA managed securities portfolios totaling $12.1 billion for 187 accounts. International or global investment management is offered to U.S.-based institutional clients by IDS International, Inc., a U.S. company with offices in London, and to non-U.S. based institutional clients by IDS Fund Management Ltd., an English company, with offices in Hong Kong, Singapore and London. At December 31, 1995, IDS International, Inc. managed securities portfolios totaling $5.1 billion for 32 accounts; and IDS Fund Management Ltd. managed securities portfolios totaling $1.2 billion for 22 accounts. IDS International, Inc. and IDS Fund Management Ltd. are wholly-owned subsidiaries of AEFC.

AXP Advisors also offers investment management services for wealthy individuals and small institutions. IDS Wealth Management Service offers a wrap program marketed to wealthy individuals through AXP Advisors' financial advisors and marketing employees and third-party referrals. American Express Strategic Portfolio Services offers a mutual fund wrap program to wealthy individuals. Portfolio Management Group ("PMG") offers discretionary investment management services to the above types of clients with account sizes between $1 million and $10 million. As of December 31, 1995, PMG managed securities portfolios totaling $700 million for 132 accounts. IDS Wealth Management Service, American Express Strategic Portfolio Services and PMG are operating divisions of AXP Advisors.


American Express Trust Company ("AETC") provides trustee, custodial, recordkeeping and investment management services for pension, profit sharing, 401(k) and other qualified and non-qualified employee benefit plans. AETC, through its personal trust division, offers trust services to individuals and organizations. AETC is trustee of over 800 benefit plans which represent approximately $11 billion in assets and 550,000 participants. AETC has assets under custody in excess of $71 billion and provides non-trusteed, investment management of assets in excess of $5 billion. AETC is regulated by the Minnesota Department of Commerce (Banking Division).

AXP Advisors distributes a variety of real estate limited partnership investments issued by other companies. AXP Advisors also distributes from time to time managed futures limited partnerships in which an AEFC subsidiary is a co- general partner.

American Express Tax and Business Services Inc., a subsidiary of AEFC, offers tax planning, tax preparation and small business consulting services to clients in 55 locations in 20 states, and expects to expand this business through acquisitions in the future.

In 1995, AEFC continued to expand its securities brokerage services. American Express Securities Services, a division of AXP Advisors, holds $2.3 billion in assets for clients. American Enterprise Investment Services Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of AEFC, provides securities execution and clearance services for 80,000 retail and institutional clients of American Express Securities Services. American Enterprise Investment Services Inc. is registered as a broker-dealer with the SEC, is a member of the NASD and the Chicago Stock Exchange and is registered with appropriate states.

The registrant and AXP Advisors are continuing to develop a separate distribution system which is complementary to the existing system of AXP Advisors operating under the name American Express Financial Services Direct. It will include not only products from AXP Advisors, but also from other businesses of the registrant and selected outside vendors. Payment, credit, insurance and investment products will be offered. American Express Financial Services Direct intends to use direct marketing, financial consultants and on-line services to help prospects and clients select appropriate products and services.

In 1995, the registrant and AXP Advisors also developed a number of strategies to pursue several different opportunities to provide financial products and services to employees at their places of work. These opportunities include expanding a number of existing businesses, including 401(k) retirement and other benefits services, tax and business services, securities brokerage and financial education services.

AMERICAN EXPRESS BANK

The registrant's wholly-owned subsidiary, American Express Bank Ltd. (together with its subsidiaries, where appropriate, "AEB"), offers products that meet the financial service needs of three client groups: wealthy entrepreneurs and their companies, financial institutions and retail customers. AEB does not directly or indirectly do business in the U.S. except as an incident to its activities outside the U.S. Accordingly, the following discussion relating to AEB generally does not distinguish between U.S. and non-U.S. based activities.


Historically managed on a geographic basis, AEB is implementing a global line-of-business organizational structure begun in 1995. AEB's four business lines are correspondent, commercial and private banking, and consumer financial services. Correspondent banking serves leading local banks primarily in emerging markets and includes transaction payments and a wide range of trade finance products such as letters of credit and payment guarantees, collections, check clearing and bankers acceptances. Commercial banking is provided to businesses, most of which are owned by wealthy entrepreneurs, and includes trade finance, working capital loans and equipment finance. Private banking focuses on wealthy entrepreneurs by providing such customers with investment management, trust and estate planning, deposit instruments and secured lending. Consumer financial services is primarily a direct response business. Products include interest- bearing deposits, unsecured lines of credit, installment loans and money market funds. AEB also provides treasury services to all segments of its customer base which include spot and forward foreign exchange, interest rate and currency swaps and various other derivative instruments.

In certain countries outside the U.S. and Canada, in some cases by arrangement with TRS, AEB provides travel related services consisting of Card, travel and Travelers Cheque products. In the future, AEB expects to more fully integrate its business with other parts of the registrant, including serving a greater role as an international platform to support TRS' business globally.

AEB has a global network with offices in 36 countries. Its international headquarters is located in New York City. It maintains international banking agencies in New York City and Miami, Florida. Its wholly-owned Edge Act subsidiary, American Express Bank International ("AEBI"), is also headquartered in New York City and has branches in New York City and Miami.

In part because of a structure that lacks scale in many markets, AEB continues to focus on initiatives to reduce and control its expense base worldwide. In 1994, AEB entered into a 10-year contract with Electronic Data Systems Corporation for the outsourcing of AEB's global systems support and development and data processing functions.

SELECTED FINANCIAL INFORMATION

AEB's prior years' financial information has been restated to reflect the transfer in 1994 of certain international consumer financial services businesses from TRS.

AEB provides banking services to the registrant and its subsidiaries. AEB is only one of many international and local banks used by the registrant and its other subsidiaries, which constitute only a few of AEB's many customers.

AEB's total assets were $12.3 billion at December 31, 1995, compared with $13.3 billion at December 31, 1994. Liquid assets, consisting of cash and deposits with banks, trading account assets and investments, were $4.5 billion at December 31, 1995, compared with $5.6 billion at December 31, 1994.


The following table sets forth a summary of financial data for AEB at and for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 1995 (dollars in millions):

                                         1995      1994    1993
                                         ----      ----    ----
Net financial revenues                   $643      $652    $677
Noninterest expenses                      521       525     499
Net income                                 77        80      92
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash and deposits with banks            1,992     2,605   2,668
Investments                             2,537     2,765   2,819
Loans, net                              5,317     4,881   5,488
Total assets                           12,324    13,291  14,137
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Customers' deposits and credit
  balances                              8,480     9,103  10,178
Shareholder's equity (a)                  837       758     755
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Return on average assets                0.59%     0.54%   0.65%
Return on average common equity (b)     9.99%    10.89%  13.67%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total loans/deposits and credit
  balances from customers              64.00%    54.81%  55.16%
Average common equity/average
  assets (b)                            5.57%     4.71%   4.57%
Risk-based capital ratios:
  Tier 1                                 8.9%      7.5%    6.3%
  Total                                 13.0%     14.7%   10.2%
Leverage ratio                           5.8%      4.8%    4.4%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average interest rates earned: (c)
  Loans (d)                             8.68%     7.58%   7.06%
  Investments (e)                       8.71%     9.54%   9.21%
  Deposits with banks                   6.65%     5.73%   5.67%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total interest-earning assets (e)       8.15%     7.62%   7.17%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average interest rates paid: (c)
  Deposits and credit balances from
    customers                           6.10%     5.41%   5.73%
  Borrowed funds, including long-term
    debt                                5.55%     4.99%   4.18%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total interest-bearing liabilities      6.00%     5.35%   5.46%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net interest income/total average
  interest-earning assets (e)           2.88%     2.85%   2.92%
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a)    AEB declared and paid a special dividend of $75 million to the
       registrant on January 31, 1996.

(b) ROE is calculated excluding the effect of SFAS No. 115 in 1995 and 1994.
(c) Based upon average balances and related interest income and expense, including the effect in 1995 and 1994 of interest rate products where appropriate and transactions with related parties.
(d) Interest rates have been calculated based upon average total loans, including those on nonperforming status.
(e) On a tax equivalent basis.


  The following tables set forth the composition of AEB's loan portfolio at
   year end for each of the five years in the period ended December 31, 1995
    (millions):

By Geographical Region (a)      1995    1994  1993   1992   1991
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Asia/Pacific                  $2,151 $2,144 $2,186 $1,792 $1,891
Europe                           876    903  1,091  1,177  1,498
Indian Subcontinent              970    721    850    908    624
Latin America                    617    589    749    675    546
North America                     76     81    283    382    468
Middle East                      614    345    368    357    365
Africa                           124    207     87     65     61
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total                         $5,428 $4,990 $5,614 $5,356 $5,453
==============================================================================
                           1995
              ---------------------------------
                          Due After
                          1 Year
                   Due    Through Due
By Type            Within   5    After 5
and Maturity       1 Year Years(b)Years(b) 1995    1994    1993    1992    1991
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Loans to           $2,344  $258    $12   $2,614  $2,328  $2,652  $2,628  $2,355
 businesses(c)
Real estate
 loans                342   153      6      501     592     708     665     751
Loans to banks and
 other financial
 institutions       1,207    32      1    1,240     915   1,083     666     731
Equipment
 financing(d)          15    27      1       43      79     105     386     501
Consumer loans        829    84      4      917     941     912     850     945
Loans to governments
 and official          56     -      4       60      81      89      96      96
 institutions
All other loans        53     -      -       53      54      65      65      74
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total              $4,846  $554    $28   $5,428  $4,990  $5,614  $5,356  $5,453
===============================================================================

(a) Based primarily on the domicile of the borrower.

(b) Loans due after 1 year at fixed (predetermined) interest rates totaled $131 million, while those at floating (adjustable) interest rates totaled $451 million.

(c) Business loans, which accounted for approximately 48 percent of the portfolio as of December 31, 1995, were distributed over 26 commercial and industrial categories.

(d) The decrease from December 31, 1992 to December 31, 1993 reflects $163 million of equipment finance (aircraft) loans transferred to other performing assets upon foreclosure (as aircraft assets leased to others). The total value of aircraft assets leased to others at December 31, 1995 was approximately $361 million. In January of 1996, AEB transferred to the registrant its aircraft assets leased to others which consisted of aircraft on operating leases as well as loans secured by commercial aircraft. The transfer price of $286 million, which is net of assumed liabilities, was partially financed through a $120 million, three-year note. The remainder was paid in cash.


The following table sets forth AEB's nonperforming loans at year end for each of the five years in the period ended December 31, 1995 (millions):

                               1995   1994    1993  1992   1991
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Loans to businesses            $ 20   $ 12    $ 24  $ 22   $ 21
Real estate loans                 1      4      19    69      5
Equipment financing               1      3       -     6      5
Loans to banks and other
  financial institutions          8      -       -     4      4
Loans to governments
  and official institutions       1      1       -     1      3
Consumer loans                    3      -       -     -      -
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total (a) (b)                  $ 34   $ 20    $ 43  $102   $ 38
========================================================================

(a) AEB's real estate owned totaled $44 million at December 31, 1995, $56 million at December 31, 1994 and $89 million at December 31, 1993, and represent balances transferred from nonperforming loans as a result of foreclosures. The 1995 decrease as well as the decrease from 1993 to 1994 primarily reflected the sale of foreclosed properties.
(b) Reduced rate loans were immaterial in amount.


The following table sets forth a summary of the credit loss experience of AEB at and for each of the five years in the period ended December 31, 1995 (dollars in millions):

                              1995   1994   1993   1992   1991
                              ----   ----   ----   ----   ----
Total loans at year end     $5,428 $4,990 $5,614 $5,356 $5,453
                            ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Reserve for credit losses-
  January 1,                $  109 $  126 $  153 $  116 $  326
Provision for credit losses      7      8     44    121     44
Translation and other (a)        -     -     (21)    (1)     3
                           ------- ---------------------------
  Subtotal                     116    134    176    236    373
                           ------- ---------------------------

Write-offs:
  Real estate loans              -      1     16     30      7
  Loans to businesses            3     21     19     21     88
  Loans to banks and other
    financial institutions       1      3      -      4     18
  Equipment financing            1      -      -      -      -
  Loans to governments and
    official institutions        1      -      -      2    149
  Consumer loans                19     19     20     40      4
  All other loans                -      -      6      1      -
Recoveries:
  Loans to businesses          (5)     (4)    (4)    (8)    (6)
  Loans to banks and other
    financial institutions     (3)     (3)    (1)    (1)    (1)
  Real estate loans             -       -      -      -     (1)
  Equipment financing          (1)     (2)     -      -      -
  Consumer loans              (11)    (10)    (6)    (5)    (1)
  All other loans               -       -      -     (1)     -
                            ------  ------------------- ------
    Net write-offs              5      25     50     83    257
                            ------ ------  ------------ ------
Reserve for credit losses-

December 31, $ 111 $ 109 $ 126$ 153 $ 116

Reserve for credit losses/
total loans 2.04% 2.19% 2.24% 2.85% 2.13%

(a) The decline in 1993 was primarily due to the transfer of reserves relating to loans reclassified to other performing assets upon foreclosure.

Interest income is recognized on the accrual basis. Loans, other than certain consumer loans, are placed on nonperforming status when payments of principal or interest are 90 days past due, or if in the opinion of management the borrower is unlikely to meet its contractual commitments. When loans are placed on nonperforming status, all previously accrued interest not yet received is reversed against current interest income. Cash receipts of


interest on nonperforming loans are recognized either as income or as a reduction of principal, based upon management's judgment as to the ultimate collectibility of principal. Consumer loans principally consist of lines of credit. These loans are written off against the reserve for credit losses generally on a formula basis upon reaching specified contractual delinquency stages or earlier if the loan is otherwise deemed uncollectible. Interest income assessed on customers generally accrues until such time a loan is written off.

A reserve for credit losses is maintained to absorb losses inherent in the loan portfolio and in other credit-related on- and off- balance sheet financial instruments. The reserve is established by charging a provision for credit losses against income. The amount charged to income is based upon several factors, which include the historical credit loss experience in relation to outstanding credits, a continuous determination as to the collectibility of each credit, and management's evaluation of exposures in each applicable country as related to current and anticipated economic and political conditions. Management's assessment of the adequacy of the reserve is inherently subjective, as significant estimates are required. Loans determined to be uncollectible, as well as other credit losses, are charged against the reserve, with any subsequent recoveries credited to the reserve.

RISKS

The global nature of AEB's business activities are such that concentrations of credit to particular industries and geographic regions are not unusual. At December 31, 1995, AEB had significant investments in certain on- and off- balance sheet financial instruments, which were primarily represented by deposits with banks, securities, loans, contractual amounts of letters of credit (standby and commercial) and guarantees. The counterparties to these financial instruments were primarily unrelated to AEB, and principally consisted of banks and other financial institutions and various commercial and industrial enterprises operating geographically within the Asia/Pacific region, the Indian Subcontinent, Europe and North America. AEB continuously monitors its credit concentrations and actively manages to reduce the associated risk. AEB does not anticipate any material losses as a result of these concentrations.

AEB's earnings are sensitive to fluctuations in interest rates, as it is not always possible to match precisely the maturities of interest-related assets and liabilities. However, strict limits have been established for both country and total bank mismatching. On occasion, AEB may decide to mismatch in anticipation of a change in future interest rates in accordance with these guidelines. Term loans extended by AEB include both floating interest rate and fixed interest rate loans.

For a discussion relating to AEB's use of derivative financial instruments, see pages 27 and 28 under the caption "Risk Management," and Note 11 on pages 42 through 45, of the registrant's 1995 Annual Report to Shareholders, which portions of such report are incorporated herein by reference.


COMPETITION

The banking services of AEB are subject to vigorous competition in all markets in which AEB operates. Competitors include local and international banks whose assets often exceed those of AEB, other financial institutions (including certain other subsidiaries of the registrant) and, in certain cases, governmental agencies. In some countries, AEB may be one of the more substantial financial institutions offering banking services; in no country, however, has AEB been a major factor.

REGULATION

AEB's branches, representative offices and subsidiaries are licensed and regulated in the jurisdictions in which they do business and are subject to the same local requirements as other competitors. AEB's New York Agency is supervised and regularly examined by the Superintendent of Banks of the State of New York. At the request of management, the New York State Banking Department has extended its supervision and examination of the New York Agency to cover AEB's global network of branches and subsidiaries. The Florida Department of Banking and Finance supervises and examines the Miami Agency.

In addition, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (the "Federal Reserve Board") regulates, supervises and examines AEBI. AEBI is subject to a 1993 agreement with the Federal Reserve Board pursuant to which AEBI agreed to correct two alleged violations of regulations of the Federal Reserve Board and amend certain internal policies and procedures.

Since AEB does not do business in the U.S. except as an incident to its activities outside the U.S., the registrant's affiliation with AEB neither causes the registrant to be subject to the provisions of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, nor requires it to register as a bank holding company under the Federal Reserve Board's Regulation Y. AEB is not a member of the Federal Reserve System, is not subject to supervision by the FDIC, and is not subject to any of the restrictions imposed on grandfathered nonbank banks by the Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1987 other than anti-tie-in rules with respect to transactions involving products and services of certain of its affiliates.

As a matter of policy, AEB actively monitors compliance with regulatory capital requirements. These requirements are essentially represented by the Federal Reserve Board's risk-based capital guidelines and complementary leverage constraint. Pursuant to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991, the Federal Reserve Board, among other federal banking agencies, adopted regulations defining levels of capital adequacy. Under these regulations, a bank is deemed to be well capitalized if it maintains a Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of at least 6.0 percent, a total risk-based capital ratio of at least 10.0 percent, and a leverage ratio of at least 5.0 percent. Based on AEB's total risk-based capital and leverage ratios, which are set forth on page 15, AEB is considered to be well capitalized at December 31, 1995.

-20-

CORPORATE

The Balcor Company Holdings, Inc. and its subsidiaries (collectively, "Balcor"), formerly operating as a diversified real estate investment and management company, discontinued new commercial real estate activities in 1990 and began to liquidate its portfolio of real estate loans and properties. The liquidation is expected to be substantially completed in 1996. In 1994, Balcor sold its property management business. At December 31, 1995, Balcor's assets, excluding cash and cash equivalents, totaled $382 million with related reserves of $109 million. Balcor's assets at December 31, 1995 included investments in real estate, interests in partnerships, real estate loans and advances to limited partnerships originated by Balcor.

FOREIGN OPERATIONS

TRS derives a significant portion of its revenues from the use of the Card, Travelers Cheques and travel services in countries outside the U.S. and continues to broaden the use of these products and services outside the U.S. Political and economic conditions in these countries, including the availability of foreign exchange for the payment by the local Card issuer of obligations arising out of local Cardmembers' spending outside such country, for the payment of Card bills by Cardmembers who are billed in other than their local currency and for the remittance of the proceeds of Travelers Cheque sales, can have an effect on TRS' revenues. Substantial and sudden devaluation of local Cardmembers' currency can also affect their ability to make payments to the local issuer of the Card on account of spending outside the local country.

The major portion of AEB's banking revenues is from business conducted in countries outside the U.S. Some of the risks attendant to those operations include currency fluctuations and changes in political, economic and legal environments in each such country.

As a result of its foreign operations, the registrant is exposed to the possibility that, because of foreign exchange rate fluctuations, assets and liabilities denominated in currencies other than the U.S. dollar may be realized in amounts greater or lesser than the U.S. dollar amounts at which they are currently recorded in the registrant's Consolidated Financial Statements. Examples of transactions in which this may occur include the purchase by Cardmembers of goods and services in a currency other than the currency in which they are billed; the sale in one currency of a Travelers Cheque denominated in a second currency; foreign exchange positions held by AEB as a consequence of its client-related foreign exchange trading operations; and, in most instances, investments in foreign operations. These risks, unless properly monitored and managed, could have an adverse effect on the registrant's operations.

The registrant's policy in this area is generally to monitor closely all foreign exchange positions and to minimize foreign exchange gains and losses, for example, by offsetting foreign currency assets with foreign currency liabilities, as in the case of foreign currency loans and receivables, which are financed in the same currency. An additional technique used to manage exposures is the spot and forward purchase or sale of foreign currencies as a hedge of net exposures in those currencies as, for example, in the case of the Cardmember and Travelers Cheque transactions described above. Additionally, Cardmembers may be charged in U.S. dollars for their spending outside their local country. The registrant's investments in foreign operations are hedged by forward exchange contracts or by identifiable transactions, where appropriate.


INDUSTRY SEGMENT INFORMATION AND CLASSES OF SIMILAR SERVICES

Information with respect to the registrant's industry segments, geographical operations and classes of similar services is set forth in Note 15 to the Consolidated Financial Statements of the registrant, which appears on pages 48 through 50 of the registrant's 1995 Annual Report to Shareholders, which note is incorporated herein by reference.

EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT

All of the executive officers of the registrant as of March 29, 1996, none of whom has any family relationship with any other and none of whom became an officer pursuant to any arrangement or understanding with any other person, are listed below. Each of such officers was elected to serve until the next annual election of officers or until his or her successor is elected and qualified. Each officer's age is indicated by the number in parentheses next to his or her name.

HARVEY GOLUB - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, TRS

Mr. Golub (57) has been Chief Executive Officer of the registrant since February 1993, Chairman of the registrant since August 1993 and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of TRS since November 1991. Prior to August 1993, he had been President of the registrant since July 1991. Prior to January 1992, he was also Chairman of American Express Financial Corporation. Prior to July 1991, he had been Vice Chairman of the registrant and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of American Express Financial Corporation.

KENNETH I. CHENAULT - Vice Chairman

Mr. Chenault (44) has been Vice Chairman of the registrant since January 1995. Prior to May 1995, he had also been President, U.S.A. of TRS since August 1993. Prior thereto, he had been President, Consumer Card Group, TRS.

GEORGE L. FARR - Vice Chairman

Mr. Farr (56) has been Vice Chairman of the registrant since May 1995. Prior thereto, he had been a director of McKinsey & Company.

JONATHAN S. LINEN - Vice Chairman

Mr. Linen (52) has been Vice Chairman of the registrant since August 1993.

Prior thereto, he had been President and Chief Operating Officer of TRS since March 1992. Prior thereto, he had been President and Chief Executive Officer of the Shearson Lehman Brothers Division of Shearson Lehman Brothers Inc.

STEVEN W. ALESIO - President, Travel Services Group, TRS

Mr. Alesio (41) has been President, Travel Services Group, TRS since February 1996. Prior thereto, he had been Executive Vice President, Travel Services Group, TRS since June 1995. Prior thereto, he had been Executive Vice President, Corporate Card, TRS since November 1993. Prior thereto, he had been Senior Vice President of the Consumer Travel Network, TRS.


ANNE M. BUSQUET - President, American Express Relationship Services,
TRS

Mrs. Busquet (45) has been President, American Express Relationship Services, TRS since October 1995. Prior thereto, she had been Executive Vice President, Consumer Card Group since November 1993. Prior thereto, she had been Senior Vice President and General Manager, Merchandise Services.

EDWARD P. GILLIGAN - President, Corporate Services, TRS

Mr. Gilligan (36) has been President, Corporate Services, TRS since February 1996. Prior thereto, he had been Executive Vice President, Travel Management Services, TRS since June 1995. Prior thereto, he had been Senior Vice President and General Manager Eastern Region of Travel Management Services, TRS since June 1992. Prior thereto, he had been Vice President, Corporate Client Services, TRS.

JOHN D. HAYES - Executive Vice President, Global Advertising

Mr. Hayes (41) has been Executive Vice President, Global Advertising since May 1995. Prior thereto, he had been President of Lowe & Partners/SMS since January 1991. Prior thereto, he had been President and Chief Executive Officer of Greer Du Bois.

WILLIAM J. HERON, JR. - President, American Express Financial Services Direct

Mr. Heron (54) has been President of American Express Financial Services Direct since July 1995. Prior thereto, he had been Chief Executive Officer of The Swig Investment Company since April 1993. Prior thereto, he had been Group Executive, U.S. Consumer Business, Citicorp and Division Executive, New York Business, Citibank.

DAVID C. HOUSE - President, Establishment Services Worldwide, TRS

Mr. House (46) has been President, Establishment Services Worldwide, TRS since October 1995. Prior thereto, he had been Senior Vice President of Sales and Field Marketing for the U.S. Establishment Services Group since January 1993. Prior thereto, he had been Senior Vice President of Reebok International, Inc.

DAVID R. HUBERS - President and Chief Executive Officer, American Express Financial Corporation

Mr. Hubers (53) has been President and Chief Executive Officer of American Express Financial Corporation since August 1993. Prior thereto, he had been a Senior Vice President of American Express Financial Corporation.


JOSEPH W. KEILTY - Executive Vice President, Quality & Human Resources, Chief Quality Officer

Mr. Keilty (58) has been Executive Vice President since November 1991. Prior thereto, he had been Managing Director of Keilty, Goldsmith & Company, a consulting company.

CARL B. LEHMANN, III - President, Stored Value Group, TRS

Mr. Lehmann (42) has been President, Stored Value Group, TRS since October 1993. Prior thereto, he had been Senior Vice President, Cheque Products, TRS.

ALLAN Z. LOREN - Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer

Mr. Loren (57) has been Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer since May 1994. Prior thereto, he had been President and Chief Executive Officer of Galileo International since January 1991. Prior thereto, he had been President of Apple U.S.A., a division of Apple Computer Corp.

MICHAEL P. MONACO - Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Mr. Monaco (48) has been Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer since September 1990. Prior to July 1995, he had also been Treasurer since April 1992.

LOUISE M. PARENT - Executive Vice President and General Counsel

Ms. Parent (45) has been Executive Vice President and General Counsel of the registrant since May 1993. Prior thereto, she had been Deputy General Counsel of the registrant since January 1992. Prior thereto, she had been General Counsel of First Data Corporation.

PHILLIP J. RIESE -      President, Consumer Card Services Group, TRS;
                        Chairman of the Board of American Express
                        Centurion Bank

Mr. Riese (46) has been President, Consumer Card Services Group, TRS since September 1995. Prior thereto, he had been President, Cardmember Financial Services Group, TRS since September 1993. He has been Chairman of the Board of American Express Centurion Bank since August 1993. Prior to September 1993, he had been Executive Vice President and General Manager of the Charge Card Group.

THOMAS O. RYDER - President, TRS International

Mr. Ryder (51) has been President, TRS International since October 1995. Prior thereto, he had been President, Establishment Services Worldwide, TRS since 1993. Prior thereto, he had been Executive Vice President and General Manager of the Establishment Services Division, TRS.


THOMAS SCHICK - Executive Vice President, Corporate Affairs and Communications

Mr. Schick (49) has been Executive Vice President since March 1993. Prior thereto, he had been Executive Vice President of TRS since October 1992. Prior thereto, he had been Senior Executive Vice President of Shearson Lehman Brothers Inc.

JOHN A. WARD, III - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, American Express Bank Ltd.

Mr. Ward (49) has been Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, American Express Bank Ltd. since January 1996. Prior thereto, he had been Executive Vice President of Chase Manhattan Bank since September 1993 and Chief Executive Officer of Chase BankCard Services since July 1993. Prior thereto, he had been President of Chase Personal Financial Services.

EMPLOYEES

The registrant had 70,347 employees on December 31, 1995.

ITEM 2. PROPERTIES

The registrant's headquarters are in a 51-story, 2.2 million square foot building located in lower Manhattan, known as American Express Tower, which also serves as the headquarters for TRS and AEB. This building, which is on land leased from the Battery Park City Authority for a term expiring in 2069, is one of four office buildings in a complex known as the World Financial Center. Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. ("Lehman") is also headquartered at the building and is a co-owner.

Other principal locations of TRS include: the American Express Service Centers in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Phoenix, Arizona, Greensboro, North Carolina and Salt Lake City, Utah, and American Express Canada, Inc. headquarters, Markham, Ontario, Canada, all of which are owned by the registrant or its subsidiaries.

AEFC's principal locations are its headquarters, the IDS Tower, a portion of which the company leases until 2002, and its Operations Center, which the company owns; both are in Minneapolis, Minnesota. AEFC also owns Oak Ridge Conference Center, a training facility and conference center, in Chaska, Minnesota.

Generally, the registrant and its subsidiaries lease the premises they occupy in other locations. Facilities owned or occupied by the registrant and its subsidiaries are believed to be adequate for the purposes for which they are used and are well maintained.


ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

The registrant and its subsidiaries are involved in a number of legal and arbitration proceedings concerning matters arising in connection with the conduct of their respective business activities. The registrant believes it has meritorious defenses to each of these actions and intends to defend them vigorously. The registrant believes that it is not a party to, nor are any of its properties the subject of, any pending legal proceedings which would have a material adverse effect on the registrant's consolidated financial condition.

SAFRA-RELATED ACTIONS

Two purported shareholder derivative actions, now consolidated, were brought in October 1990 in New York State Supreme Court and three purported derivative actions, also consolidated, were brought in early 1991 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York against all of the then current directors, certain former directors and certain former officers and employees of the registrant. The consolidated state court complaint alleges that defendants breached their duty of care in managing the registrant, purportedly resulting in losses and in the registrant's payment of $8 million in July 1989 to certain charities agreed to by the registrant and Edmond J. Safra. The federal complaints also alleged breach of duty in connection with a severance arrangement of a former executive officer of the registrant and that certain proxy statements of the registrant were misleading in failing to disclose such alleged breaches. Plaintiffs in the state court action seek a declaratory judgment, unspecified money damages and an accounting. The federal actions were dismissed in December 1993, and the dismissal was upheld by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in November 1994. One of the plaintiffs in the federal action subsequently commenced another state court action raising the same allegations as the consolidated state court complaint.

FCH-RELATED ACTION

A purported shareholder derivative action was brought in June 1991 in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York against the then current directors of the registrant. In January 1992, this action was transferred to the United State District Court for the Central District of California for coordinated or consolidated proceedings with all other federal actions related to First Capital Holdings Corp. ("FCH"). The complaint alleges that the Board of Directors should have required Lehman to divest its investment in FCH and to write down its investment sooner. In addition, the complaint alleges that the failure to act constituted a waste of corporate assets and caused damage to the registrant's reputation. The complaint seeks a judgment declaring that the directors named as defendants breached their fiduciary duties and duties of loyalty and requiring the defendants to pay money damages to the registrant and remit their compensation for the periods in which the duties were breached, attorneys' fees and costs and other relief. Lehman has agreed to indemnify the registrant for any losses incurred in connection with this and other actions that arose related to FCH.

ITEM 4. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS

No matters were submitted to a vote of the registrant's security holders during the last quarter of its fiscal year ended December 31, 1995.


PART II

ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS

The principal market for the registrant's Common Shares is The New York Stock Exchange. Its Common Shares are also listed on the Boston, Chicago, Pacific, London, Zurich, Geneva, Basle, Dusseldorf, Frankfurt, Paris, Amsterdam and Brussels Stock Exchanges. The registrant had 57,010 common shareholders of record at December 31, 1995. For price and dividend information with respect to such Common Shares, see Note 18 to the Consolidated Financial Statements on page 51 of the registrant's 1995 Annual Report to Shareholders, which note is incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 6. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

The "Consolidated Five-Year Summary of Selected Financial Data" appearing on page 53 of the registrant's 1995 Annual Report to Shareholders is incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

The information set forth under the heading "Financial Review" appearing on pages 21 through 28 of the registrant's 1995 Annual Report to Shareholders is incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

The "Consolidated Financial Statements", the "Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements" and the "Report of Ernst & Young LLP Independent Auditors" appearing on pages 29 through 52 of the registrant's 1995 Annual Report to Shareholders are incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 9. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

None.

PART III

ITEMS 10, 11, 12 and 13. DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE
REGISTRANT; EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION; SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT; CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

The registrant filed with the SEC, within 120 days after the close of its last fiscal year, a definitive proxy statement dated March 11, 1996 pursuant to Regulation 14A, which involves the election of directors. The following portions of such proxy statement are incorporated herein by reference: pages 3 and 4 under the heading "The Shares Voting," pages 5 through 7 under the headings "Security Ownership of Directors and Executive Officers," and "Security Ownership of Named Executives," pages 10 through 12 under the heading "Directors' Fees and Other Compensation," pages 12, beginning at "Election of Directors" through 34, ending at "Selection of Auditors" (excluding the portions under the headings, "Board Compensation Committee


Report on Executive Compensation" appearing on pages 15 through 20 and "Performance Graph" appearing on pages 26 and 27), and page 44 under the heading "Certain Filings." In addition, the registrant has provided, under the caption "Executive Officers of the Registrant" at pages 22 through 25 above, the information regarding executive officers called for by Item 401(b) of Regulation S-K.

PART IV

ITEM 14. EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K

(a) 1. Financial Statements:

See Index to Financial Statements on page F-1 hereof.

2. Financial Statement Schedules:

See Index to Financial Statements on page F-1 hereof.

3. Exhibits:

See Exhibit Index on pages E-1 through E-5 hereof.

(b) Reports on Form 8-K:

1. Form 8-K, dated October 16, 1995, Item 5, announcing the end of discussions of a possible sale of American Express Bank.

2. Form 8-K, dated October 23, 1995, Item 5, reporting the registrants's earnings for the quarter ended September 30, 1995.

3. Form 8-K, dated January 9, 1996, Item 5, reporting the appointment of John A. Ward as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of American Express Bank.

4. Form 8-K, dated January 22, 1996, Item 5, reporting the registrant's earnings for the quarter and year ended December 31, 1995.


SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this Annual Report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY

March 29, 1996                        By  /s/ Michael P. Monaco
                                         Michael P. Monaco
                                         Executive Vice President and
                                         Chief Financial Officer

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

By /s/ Harvey Golub                   By /s/ Beverly Sills Greenough
   Harvey Golub                          Beverly Sills Greenough
   Chairman, Chief Executive             Director
   Officer and Director


By /s/ Michael P. Monaco              By /s/ F. Ross Johnson
   Michael P. Monaco                    F. Ross Johnson
   Executive Vice President and         Director
   Chief Financial Officer


By /s/ Daniel T. Henry                By /s/ Vernon E. Jordan Jr.
   Daniel T. Henry                       Vernon E. Jordan Jr.
   Senior Vice President                 Director
   and Comptroller


By /s/ Daniel F. Akerson              By/s/ Henry A. Kissinger
   Daniel F. Akerson                     Henry A. Kissinger
   Director                              Director


By /s/ Anne L. Armstrong              By /s/ Drew Lewis
   Anne L. Armstrong                     Drew Lewis
   Director                              Director


By /s/ Edwin L. Artzt                 By /s/ Aldo Papone
   Edwin L. Artzt                        Aldo Papone
   Director                              Director


By /s/ William G. Bowen               By/s/ Frank P. Popoff
   William G. Bowen                      Frank P. Popoff
   Director                              Director


By /s/ David M. Culver
   David M. Culver
   Director


By /s/ Charles W. Duncan Jr.
   Charles W. Duncan Jr.
   Director

March 29, 1996


AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY

INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

COVERED BY REPORT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

(Item 14(a))

                                                                   Annual
                                                                 Report to
                                                                Shareholders
                                                     Form 10-K     (Page)
                                                     ---------  ------------
American Express Company and Subsidiaries:
 Data incorporated by reference from attached
    1995 Annual Report to Shareholders:
    Report of independent auditors ..........                       52
    Consolidated statement of income for the
      three years ended December 31, 1995 .....                     29
    Consolidated balance sheet at December 31,
      1995 and 1994 ...........................                     30
    Consolidated statement of cash flows for
      the three years ended December 31, 1995 .                     31
    Consolidated statement of shareholders' equity
      for the three years ended December 31, 1995                   32
    Notes to consolidated financial statements                     33-51
 Consent of independent auditors ..............        F-2
 Schedules:
   I--Condensed financial information of               F-3-6
      registrant
  II--Valuation and qualifying accounts for the
      three years ended December 31, 1995              F-7

All other schedules for American Express Company and subsidiaries have been omitted since the required information is not present or not present in amounts sufficient to require submission of the schedule, or because the information required is included in the respective financial statements or notes thereto.

The consolidated financial statements of American Express Company (including the report of independent auditors) listed in the above index, which are included in the Annual Report for the year ended December 31, 1995, are hereby incorporated by reference. With the exception of the pages listed in the above index, unless otherwise incorporated by reference elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, the 1995 Annual Report is not to be deemed filed as part of this report.


EXHIBIT 23

CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

We consent to the incorporation by reference in this Annual Report on Form 10-K of American Express Company of our report dated February 8, 1996 (hereinafter referred to as our Report), included in the 1995 Annual Report to Shareholders of American Express Company.

Our audits included the financial statement schedules of American Express Company listed in Item 14(a). These schedules are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion based on our audits. In our opinion, the financial statement schedules referred to above, when considered in relation to the basic financial statements taken as a whole, present fairly in all material respects the information set forth therein.

We also consent to the incorporation by reference in Registration Statements (Form S-8 No. 2-46918, No. 2-59230, No. 2-64285, No. 2-73954, No. 2-89680, No. 33-01771, No. 33-02980, No. 33-28721, No. 33-33552, No. 33-36422, No. 33-38777, No. 33-48629, No. 33-62124, No. 33-65008 and No. 33-53801; Form S-3 No. 2-89469, No. 33-17706, No. 33-43268, No. 33-66654 and No. 33-50997) and in the related Prospecti of our Report with respect to the consolidated financial statements and schedules of American Express Company included and incorporated by reference in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1995.

/s/ Ernst & Young LLP
New York, New York
March 29, 1996


AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES

SCHEDULE I--CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION OF REGISTRANT

CONDENSED STATEMENT OF INCOME

(Parent Company Only)

(millions)

                                                         Years Ended
                                                         December 31,
                                                ---------------------------
                                                  1995      1994      1993
                                                  ----      ----      ----

Revenues                                         $ 254     $ 187     $ 123
                                                 -----     -----     -----
Expenses:
  Interest                                         245       216       181
  Human resources                                   85        84        82
  Other (A)                                        218       164      (659)
                                                 -----     -----     -----

     Total                                         548       464      (396)
                                                 -----     -----     -----

Pretax (loss) income from continuing operations   (294)     (277)      519
Income tax provision (benefit)                    (132)     (110)      271
                                                 -----     -----     -----
Net (loss) income before equity in net income
  of subsidiaries and affiliates                  (162)     (167)      248
Equity in net income of subsidiaries
  and affiliates                                 1,726     1,547     1,357
                                                 -----     -----     -----

Income from continuing operations                1,564     1,380     1,605

Equity in income (loss) of discontinued
  operations                                         -        33      (127)
                                                  -----     -----    -----

Net income                                       $1,564    $1,413   $1,478
                                                  =====     =====    =====

(A) Includes pretax gain on the sale of First Data Corporation of $779 million ($433 million after-tax) in 1993.

See Notes to Condensed Financial Information of Registrant


AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES

SCHEDULE I--CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION OF REGISTRANT
CONDENSED BALANCE SHEET

(Parent Company Only)

(millions, except share amounts)

ASSETS

                                                               December 31,
                                                             ---------------
                                                              1995      1994
                                                             -----     -----
Cash and cash equivalents                                 $     19  $    164
Investments                                                    661       246
Securities purchased under agreement to resell                 319         -
Equity in net assets of subsidiaries and affiliates          9,451     7,415
Accounts receivable and accrued interest, less reserves         44        13
Land, buildings and equipment--at cost, less
  accumulated depreciation: 1995, $69; 1994, $64                74        91
Due from subsidiaries (net)                                    988     1,863
Other assets                                                   418       630
                                                            ------    ------
    Total assets                                          $ 11,974  $ 10,422
                                                            ======    ======

LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY

Accounts payable and other liabilities                    $  1,314  $  1,116
Long-term debt                                               2,340     2,773
Short-term debt                                                100       100
                                                            ------    ------
    Total liabilities                                        3,754     3,989

Shareholders' equity:
  Preferred shares, $1.66 2/3 par value, authorized
    20 million shares
    Convertible Exchangeable Preferred shares, issued and
    outstanding 4 million shares, stated
    at liquidation value                                       200       200
  Common shares, $.60 par value, authorized
    1.2 billion shares; issued and outstanding
    483.1 million shares in 1995 and 495.9 million
     shares in 1994                                            290       298
  Capital surplus                                            3,781     3,651
  Net unrealized securities gains (losses)                     875      (389)
  Foreign currency translation adjustment                      (85)      (77)
  Retained earnings                                          3,159     2,750
                                                            ------    ------
    Total shareholders' equity                               8,220     6,433
                                                            ------    ------
  Total liabilities and shareholders' equity              $ 11,974  $ 10,422
                                                            ======    ======

See Notes to Condensed Financial Information of Registrant


AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES

SCHEDULE I--CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION OF REGISTRANT

STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS

(Parent Company Only)

(millions)

                                                   Years Ended December 31,
                                                  -------------------------
                                                  1995      1994      1993
                                                  ----      ----      ----
Cash flows from operating activities:
Net income                                     $ 1,564   $ 1,413   $ 1,478

Adjustments to reconcile net income to cash
 provided by operating activities:
 Equity in net income of subsidiaries
  and affiliates                                (1,726)   (1,547)   (1,357)
 Equity in (income) loss of discontinued
  operations                                         -       (33)      127
 Dividends received from subsidiaries
  and affiliates                                   941       877       868
 Gain on sale of First Data Corporation              -         -      (779)
                                                 -----     -----     -----
Net cash provided by operating activities          779       710       337
                                                 -----     -----     -----

Net cash (used) provided by investing
 activities                                        (32)    1,536      (655)
                                                 -----     -----     -----

Cash flows from financing activities:
 Issuance of American Express common shares        286       179       259
 Repurchase of American Express common shares     (891)     (555)        -
 Dividends paid                                   (458)     (504)     (526)
 Cash infusion to Lehman Brothers                    -      (904)        -
 Net (decrease) increase in debt                  (864)     (331)      524
 Other (primarily Due from subsidiaries)         1,035        25        42
                                                 -----     -----     -----
Net cash (used) provided by financing
 activities                                       (892)   (2,090)      299
                                                 -----     -----     -----
Net (decrease) increase in cash and cash
equivalents                                       (145)      156       (19)
                                                 -----     -----     -----
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning
 of year                                           164         8        27
                                                 -----     -----     -----
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year       $    19   $   164   $     8
                                                 =====     =====     =====

SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION:
Cash paid for interest (net of amounts capitalized) in 1995, 1994, and 1993 was $190 million, $169 million and $105 million, respectively. Net cash received for income taxes was $127 and $185 for 1995 and 1994 respectively; net cash paid for income taxes was $256 for 1993.


AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES

SCHEDULE I--CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION OF REGISTRANT

NOTES TO CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION OF REGISTRANT

1. Principles of Consolidation

The accompanying financial statements include the accounts of American Express Company and on an equity basis its subsidiaries and affiliates. Lehman Brothers is reported as a discontinued operation in 1994 and 1993. These financial statements should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements of the Company. Certain prior year's amounts have been reclassified to conform to the current year's presentation.

2. Long-term debt consists of (millions):
                                                               December 31,
                                                              -------------
                                                              1995     1994
                                                              ----     ----
6 1/4% DECS due October 15, 1996                             1,294      868
8 1/2% Notes due August 15, 2001                               298      298
Floating Medium-Term Note due December 31, 2000                208      945
8 3/4% Notes due June 15, 1996                                 200      200
8 5/8% Senior Debentures due 2022                              198      198
Senior Floating Rate Note due September 30, 1996                55        -
Employee Stock Ownership Plan                                    -       63
11.95% Private Placement Notes due 1995                          -      102
WFC Series C 12 1/5% Guaranteed Notes due December 12, 1997      -       15
WFC Series D 11 5/8% Guaranteed Notes due December 12, 2000     22       22
WFC Series Z Zero Coupon Notes due December 12, 2000            37       33
WFC $60 million 8.15% Japanese Yen PPN due July 1996             9        9
WFC $80 million 7.86% Japanese Yen PPN due August 1996          11       11
7 1/2% Debentures due February 27, 1999                          3        4
12 3/4% Industrial Revenue Bonds due October 31, 2001            5        5
                                                             -----    -----
                                                            $2,340   $2,773
                                                             =====    =====

Aggregate annual maturities of long-term debt for the five years ending December 31, 2000 are as follows (millions): 1996, $1,626; 1997, $0; 1998, $25; 1999, $31, 2000, $184.


AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES

SCHEDULE II--VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS

THREE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
(millions)

                         Reserve for credit losses,     Reserve for doubtful
                            loans and discounts          accounts receivable
                         --------------------------    -----------------------
                          1995     1994     1993       1995     1994     1993
                          ----     ----     ----       ----     ----     ----
Balance at beginning
 of period               $ 545    $ 655    $ 911      $ 807    $ 796    $1,124

Additions:

 Charges to income         529      362      535      1,327(a) 1,104(a)  1,020(a)
 Recoveries of amounts
   previously written-
   off                     134      150       26          -        -         -
 Other                       -      (19)     (85)         -        -         -

Deductions:

 Charges for which
  reserves were
  provided                (606)    (603)    (732)    (1,305)  (1,093)   (1,348)
                         -----    -----    -----      -----    -----     -----

Balance at end of
  period                 $ 602    $ 545    $ 655     $  829   $  807    $  796
                         =====    =====    =====      =====    =====     =====

(a) Before recoveries on accounts previously written-off, which are credited to income: 1995--$333, 1994--$332 and 1993--$333.


EXHIBIT INDEX

The following exhibits are filed as part of this Annual Report or, where indicated, were heretofore filed and are hereby incorporated by reference (* indicates exhibits electronically filed herewith.) Exhibits numbered 10.1 through 10.21 and 10.31 through 10.42 are management contracts or compensatory plans or arrangements.

3.1    Registrant's Restated Certificate of Incorporation (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 4.1 of the registrant's Registration Statement on
       Form S-8, dated October 31, 1991 (File No. 33-43671)).

3.2    Registrant's By-Laws, as amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       3.2 of the registrant's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter
       ended June 30, 1994.)

4      The instruments defining the rights of holders of long-term debt
       securities of the registrant and its subsidiaries are omitted pursuant
       to Section (b)(4)(iii)(A) of Item 601 of Regulation S-K.  The
       registrant hereby agrees to furnish copies of these instruments to the
       SEC upon request.

10.1   American Express Company 1979 Long-Term Incentive Plan, as amended
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1987).

10.2   American Express Company 1989 Long-Term Incentive Plan, as amended
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 28.1 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 1993).

10.3   American Express Company Deferred Compensation Plan for Directors, as
       amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 of the registrant's
       Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
       1992).

10.4   American Express Company Executives' Incentive Compensation Plan
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1988).

10.5   Description of American Express Pay for Performance Deferral Program
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1994).

10.6   American Express Company Supplementary Pension Plan, as amended
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1988).

10.7   American Express Company 1983 Stock Purchase Assistance Plan, as
       amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 of the registrant's
       Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
       1988).

10.8   Consulting Agreement dated March 3, 1994 between the registrant and
       Aldo Papone Consulting (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.8 of
       the registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
       December 31, 1993).


10.9   Written description of consulting agreement between the registrant and
       Kissinger Associates, Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.20
       of the registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
       ended December 31, 1984).

10.10  American Express Company Retirement Plan for Non-Employee Directors, as
       amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.12 of the registrant's
       Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
       1988).

*10.11 Certificate of Amendment of the American Express Company Retirement Plan for Non-Employee Directors dated March 21, 1996.

10.12  American Express Company Directors' Stock Option Plan (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 10.16 of the registrant's Annual Report on Form
       10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1987).

10.13  American Express Key Executive Life Insurance Plan, as amended
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.12 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1991).

10.14  American Express Key Employee Charitable Award Program for Education
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.13 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1990).

10.15  American Express Directors' Charitable Award Program (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 10.14 of the registrant's Annual Report on Form
       10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1990).

10.16  Description of separate pension arrangement and loan agreement between
       the registrant and Harvey Golub (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       10.17 of registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
       ended December 31, 1988).

10.17  Shearson Lehman Brothers Capital Partners I Amended and Restated
       Agreement of Limited Partnership (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       10.18 of registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
       ended December 31, 1988).

10.18  Shearson Lehman Hutton Capital Partners II, L.P. Amended and Restated
       Agreement of Limited Partnership (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       10.19 of registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
       ended December 31, 1988).

10.19  American Express Company Salary/Bonus Deferral Plan (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 10.20 of registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K
       for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1988).

10.20  Written description of certain pension arrangements with Jonathan S.
       Linen (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.14 of the registrant's
       Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
       1991).

10.21  Consulting Agreement dated March 3, 1994 between American Express
       Travel Related Services Company, Inc. and Aldo Papone Consulting
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.23 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1993).

10.22  Restated and Amended Agreement of Tenants-In-Common, dated May 27,
       1994, by and among the registrant, American Express Bank Ltd., American
       Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc., Lehman Brothers Inc.,
       Lehman Government Securities, Inc. and Lehman Commercial Paper
       Incorporated (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 of Lehman
       Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Transition Report on Form 10-K for the
       transition period from January 1, 1994 to November 30, 1994 (File No.
       1-9466)).

10.23  Tax Allocation Agreement, dated May 27, 1994, between Lehman Brothers
       Holdings Inc. and the registrant (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       10.2 of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Transition Report on Form 10-K
       for the transition period from January 1, 1994 to November 30, 1994
       (File No. 1-9466)).

10.24  Intercompany Agreement, dated May 27, 1994, between the registrant and
       Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       10.3 of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Transition Report on Form 10-K
       for the transition period from January 1, 1994 to November 30, 1994
       (File No. 1-9466)).

10.25  Purchase and Exchange Agreement, dated April 28, 1994, between Lehman
       Brothers Holdings Inc. and the registrant (incorporated by reference to
       Exhibit 10.29 of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Transition Report on
       Form 10-K for the transition period from January 1, 1994 to November
       30, 1994 (File No. 1-9466)).

10.26  Registration Rights Agreement, dated as of May 27, 1994, between the
       registrant and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (incorporated by reference
       to Exhibit 10.30 of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Transition Report
       on Form 10-K for the transition period from January 1, 1994 to November
       30, 1994 (File No. 1-9466)).

10.27  Option Agreement, dated May 27, 1994, by and among the registrant,
       American Express Bank Ltd., American Express Travel Related Services
       Company, Inc., Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., Lehman Brothers Inc.,
       Lehman Government Securities, Inc. and Lehman Commercial Paper
       Incorporated (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.31 of Lehman
       Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Transition Report on Form 10-K for the
       transition period from January 1, 1994 to November 30, 1994 (File No.
       1-9466)).

10.28  1994 Agreement, dated April 28, 1994, between the registrant, Lehman
       Brothers Holdings Inc. and Nippon Life Insurance Company (incorporated
       by reference to Exhibit 10.32 of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s
       Transition Report on Form 10-K for the transition period from January
       1, 1994 to November 30, 1994 (File No. 1-9466)).

10.29  1990 Agreement, dated as of June 12, 1990, by and between the
       registrant and Nippon Life Insurance Company (incorporated by reference
       to Exhibit 10.25 of Shearson Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1990).

10.30  Asset Purchase Agreement dated as of March 12, 1993 between Smith
       Barney, Harris Upham & Co. Incorporated, Primerica Corporation and
       Shearson Lehman Brothers Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       10.16 of Shearson Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Annual Report on Form
       10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1992).


*10.31 Advisor Agreement between the registrant and Dr. Henry Kissinger dated February 2, 1996.

10.32  American Express Company 1993 Directors' Stock Option Plan
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 28.2 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 1993).

*10.33 Description of separate pension arrangement between the registrant and George L. Farr.

10.34  American Express Senior Executive Severance Plan (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 10.1 of the registrant's Quarterly Report on Form
       10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 1994).

10.35  Amendment of American Express Senior Executive Severance Plan.
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30,
       1994).

10.36  Amendment of American Express Company Executives' Incentive
       Compensation Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 of the
       registrant's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended
       September 30, 1994).

10.37  Amendment of American Express Company Key Executive Life Insurance Plan
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30,
       1994).

10.38  Amendment of American Express Company Salary/Bonus Deferral Plan
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30,
       1994).

10.39  Amendment of American Express Company Supplementary Pension Plan
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30,
       1994).

10.40  Amendment of Long-Term Incentive Awards under the American Express
       Company 1979 and 1989 Long-Term Incentive Plans (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 10.6 of the registrant's Quarterly Report on Form
       10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 1994).

10.41  IDS Current Service Deferred Compensation Plan (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 10.42 of the registrant's Annual Report on Form
       10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1994).

10.42  Amended and Restated American Express Supplemental Retirement Plan
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 1995).

10.43  Agreement dated February 27, 1995 between the registrant and Berkshire
       Hathaway Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.43 of the
       registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
       December 31, 1994).


10.44  Agreement dated July 20, 1995 between the registrant and Berkshire
       Hathaway Inc. and its subsidiaries (incorporated by reference to
       Exhibit 10.1 of the registrant's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the
       quarter ended September 30, 1995).

*11    Computation of Earnings Per Share.

*12.1  Computation in Support of Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges.

*12.2  Computation in Support of Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges and
       Preferred Share Dividends.

*13    Portions of the registrant's 1995 Annual Report to Shareholders that
       are incorporated herein by reference.

*21    Subsidiaries of the registrant.

*23    Consent of Ernst & Young LLP (contained on page F-2 of this Annual
       Report on Form 10-K).

*27    Financial Data Schedule



UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549


FORM 10-K

ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995 Commission File No. 1-7657


American Express Company
(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

E X H I B I T S



EXHIBIT INDEX

The following exhibits are filed as part of this Annual Report or, where indicated, were heretofore filed and are hereby incorporated by reference (* indicates exhibits electronically filed herewith.) Exhibits numbered 10.1 through 10.21 and 10.31 through 10.42 are management contracts or compensatory plans or arrangements.

3.1    Registrant's Restated Certificate of Incorporation (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 4.1 of the registrant's Registration Statement on
       Form S-8, dated October 31, 1991 (File No. 33-43671)).

3.2    Registrant's By-Laws, as amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       3.2 of the registrant's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter
       ended June 30, 1994.)

4      The instruments defining the rights of holders of long-term debt
       securities of the registrant and its subsidiaries are omitted pursuant
       to Section (b)(4)(iii)(A) of Item 601 of Regulation S-K.  The
       registrant hereby agrees to furnish copies of these instruments to the
       SEC upon request.

10.1   American Express Company 1979 Long-Term Incentive Plan, as amended
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1987).

10.2   American Express Company 1989 Long-Term Incentive Plan, as amended
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 28.1 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 1993).

10.3   American Express Company Deferred Compensation Plan for Directors, as
       amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 of the registrant's
       Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
       1992).

10.4   American Express Company Executives' Incentive Compensation Plan
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1988).

10.5   Description of American Express Pay for Performance Deferral Program
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1994).

10.6   American Express Company Supplementary Pension Plan, as amended
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1988).

10.7   American Express Company 1983 Stock Purchase Assistance Plan, as
       amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 of the registrant's
       Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
       1988).

10.8   Consulting Agreement dated March 3, 1994 between the registrant and
       Aldo Papone Consulting (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.8 of
       the registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
       December 31, 1993).


10.9   Written description of consulting agreement between the registrant and
       Kissinger Associates, Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.20
       of the registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
       ended December 31, 1984).

10.10  American Express Company Retirement Plan for Non-Employee Directors, as
       amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.12 of the registrant's
       Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
       1988).

*10.11 Certificate of Amendment of the American Express Company Retirement Plan for Non-Employee Directors dated March 21, 1996.

10.12  American Express Company Directors' Stock Option Plan (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 10.16 of the registrant's Annual Report on Form
       10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1987).

10.13  American Express Key Executive Life Insurance Plan, as amended
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.12 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1991).

10.14  American Express Key Employee Charitable Award Program for Education
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.13 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1990).

10.15  American Express Directors' Charitable Award Program (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 10.14 of the registrant's Annual Report on Form
       10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1990).

10.16  Description of separate pension arrangement and loan agreement between
       the registrant and Harvey Golub (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       10.17 of registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
       ended December 31, 1988).

10.17  Shearson Lehman Brothers Capital Partners I Amended and Restated
       Agreement of Limited Partnership (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       10.18 of registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
       ended December 31, 1988).

10.18  Shearson Lehman Hutton Capital Partners II, L.P. Amended and Restated
       Agreement of Limited Partnership (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       10.19 of registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
       ended December 31, 1988).

10.19  American Express Company Salary/Bonus Deferral Plan (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 10.20 of registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K
       for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1988).

10.20  Written description of certain pension arrangements with Jonathan S.
       Linen (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.14 of the registrant's
       Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
       1991).

10.21  Consulting Agreement dated March 3, 1994 between American Express
       Travel Related Services Company, Inc. and Aldo Papone Consulting
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.23 of the registrant's Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1993).

10.22  Restated and Amended Agreement of Tenants-In-Common, dated May 27,
       1994, by and among the registrant, American Express Bank Ltd., American
       Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc., Lehman Brothers Inc.,
       Lehman Government Securities, Inc. and Lehman Commercial Paper
       Incorporated (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 of Lehman
       Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Transition Report on Form 10-K for the
       transition period from January 1, 1994 to November 30, 1994 (File No.
       1-9466)).

10.23  Tax Allocation Agreement, dated May 27, 1994, between Lehman Brothers
       Holdings Inc. and the registrant (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       10.2 of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Transition Report on Form 10-K
       for the transition period from January 1, 1994 to November 30, 1994
       (File No. 1-9466)).

10.24  Intercompany Agreement, dated May 27, 1994, between the registrant and
       Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       10.3 of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Transition Report on Form 10-K
       for the transition period from January 1, 1994 to November 30, 1994
       (File No. 1-9466)).

10.25  Purchase and Exchange Agreement, dated April 28, 1994, between Lehman
       Brothers Holdings Inc. and the registrant (incorporated by reference to
       Exhibit 10.29 of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Transition Report on
       Form 10-K for the transition period from January 1, 1994 to November
       30, 1994 (File No. 1-9466)).

10.26  Registration Rights Agreement, dated as of May 27, 1994, between the
       registrant and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (incorporated by reference
       to Exhibit 10.30 of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Transition Report
       on Form 10-K for the transition period from January 1, 1994 to November
       30, 1994 (File No. 1-9466)).

10.27  Option Agreement, dated May 27, 1994, by and among the registrant,
       American Express Bank Ltd., American Express Travel Related Services
       Company, Inc., Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., Lehman Brothers Inc.,
       Lehman Government Securities, Inc. and Lehman Commercial Paper
       Incorporated (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.31 of Lehman
       Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Transition Report on Form 10-K for the
       transition period from January 1, 1994 to November 30, 1994 (File No.
       1-9466)).

10.28  1994 Agreement, dated April 28, 1994, between the registrant, Lehman
       Brothers Holdings Inc. and Nippon Life Insurance Company (incorporated
       by reference to Exhibit 10.32 of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s
       Transition Report on Form 10-K for the transition period from January
       1, 1994 to November 30, 1994 (File No. 1-9466)).

10.29  1990 Agreement, dated as of June 12, 1990, by and between the
       registrant and Nippon Life Insurance Company (incorporated by reference
       to Exhibit 10.25 of Shearson Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Annual
       Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1990).

10.30  Asset Purchase Agreement dated as of March 12, 1993 between Smith
       Barney, Harris Upham & Co. Incorporated, Primerica Corporation and
       Shearson Lehman Brothers Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
       10.16 of Shearson Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s Annual Report on Form
       10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1992).


*10.31 Advisor Agreement between the registrant and Dr. Henry Kissinger dated February 2, 1996.

10.32  American Express Company 1993 Directors' Stock Option Plan
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 28.2 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 1993).

*10.33 Description of separate pension arrangement between the registrant and George L. Farr.

10.34  American Express Senior Executive Severance Plan (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 10.1 of the registrant's Quarterly Report on Form
       10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 1994).

10.35  Amendment of American Express Senior Executive Severance Plan.
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30,
       1994).

10.36  Amendment of American Express Company Executives' Incentive
       Compensation Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 of the
       registrant's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended
       September 30, 1994).

10.37  Amendment of American Express Company Key Executive Life Insurance Plan
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30,
       1994).

10.38  Amendment of American Express Company Salary/Bonus Deferral Plan
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30,
       1994).

10.39  Amendment of American Express Company Supplementary Pension Plan
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30,
       1994).

10.40  Amendment of Long-Term Incentive Awards under the American Express
       Company 1979 and 1989 Long-Term Incentive Plans (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 10.6 of the registrant's Quarterly Report on Form
       10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 1994).

10.41  IDS Current Service Deferred Compensation Plan (incorporated by
       reference to Exhibit 10.42 of the registrant's Annual Report on Form
       10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1994).

10.42  Amended and Restated American Express Supplemental Retirement Plan
       (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 of the registrant's
       Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 1995).

10.43  Agreement dated February 27, 1995 between the registrant and Berkshire
       Hathaway Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.43 of the
       registrant's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
       December 31, 1994).


10.44  Agreement dated July 20, 1995 between the registrant and Berkshire
       Hathaway Inc. and its subsidiaries (incorporated by reference to
       Exhibit 10.1 of the registrant's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the
       quarter ended September 30, 1995).

*11    Computation of Earnings Per Share.

*12.1  Computation in Support of Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges.

*12.2  Computation in Support of Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges and
       Preferred Share Dividends.

*13    Portions of the registrant's 1995 Annual Report to Shareholders that
       are incorporated herein by reference.

*21    Subsidiaries of the registrant.

*23    Consent of Ernst & Young LLP (contained on page F-2 of this Annual
       Report on Form 10-K).

*27    Financial Data Schedule


Exhibit 10.11

CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT OF THE AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY
RETIREMENT PLAN FOR NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS

WHEREAS, the Board of Directors of American Express Company (the "Company") at its meeting of February 25, 1996 directed that the American Express Company Retirement Plan for Non-Employee Directors (the "Plan") be amended to provide that persons elected to serve as directors of the Company after March 31, 1996, will not be eligible to participate in the Plan.

NOW THEREFORE, pursuant to such direction, the Plan is hereby amended as follows:

A new article, Article IX, is hereby added to the Plan to read in its entirety as follows:

"IX. DIRECTORS ELECTED AFTER MARCH 31, 1996

Persons elected after March 31, 1996 to initiate service as a director of the Company shall not be eligible to participate in the Plan."

The foregoing amendment shall be effective as of March 31, 1996.

AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY

                                             By:  /s/ Stephen P. Norman
                                                 ________________________
                                                  Stephen P. Norman
                                             Its: Secretary




Dated:  March 21, 1996


Exhibit 10.31

AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY
American Express Tower, New York, N.Y. 10285-5100

February 2, 1996

Harvey Golub
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Dear Henry:

I'm delighted that you have agreed to serve as an Advisor to the Board of Directors of American Express Company and the Board is delighted as well. We are all pleased that we'll continue to have access to your unique knowledge and experience and we look forward to the continuing benefit of our association with you. The following information is offered to set forth your role as Advisor:

Duties

As Advisor to the Board of Directors you are invited to share your advice and views from time to time with me and with the Board of Directors on matters of interest to American Express Company. These matters may include international economic and political developments, financial market conditions, competitive developments, and other information of relevance to the Company's businesses or plans.

Attendance at Meetings

As an Advisor to the Board you are invited to attend all meetings of the Board whenever it is convenient for you to do so. We propose to continue our pattern of 9 scheduled meetings per year (no meetings scheduled in June, August and December) and would hope that your schedule would permit you to attend 6 or 7 meetings per year.

Fee and Expenses

As compensation for your services as Advisor, the Company proposes to pay you an annual fee of $100,000. The fee will be paid in quarterly installments of $25,000 at the end of each quarter. In addition, the Company will reimburse you for the expenses you incur in traveling to and from meetings of the Board or in connection with American Express Company business, including hotels, meals and incidental expenses.


Dr. H. A. Kissinger
February 2, 1996

Page 2

If the Company were to ask you to perform duties outside of your Advisory role, such as speaking engagements or attendance at functions not connected to Board meetings, we agree to compensate you additionally for such events on terms that we may agree to at the time.

Receipt of Information

In order to keep you informed of the major developments involving American Express, we will furnish you on a monthly basis with the same information that we furnish to directors. This material includes monthly earnings statements, major press releases, analyst reports and other materials relating to significant developments within the Company.

Terms

Your services as Advisor to the Board shall commence on May 1, 1996 and shall continue through April 1997, provided, however, that the relationship will automatically renew itself for successive one-year periods unless either of us gives notice of intention not to renew no later than 60 days prior to the April 30 expiration date of the initial term or any renewal thereof.

This advisory relationship will supersede the year-to-year consulting arrangement that the Company has maintained with you since May 1, 1984, and the consulting arrangement will cease on April 30, 1996.

The Company's Secretary's Office will continue to serve as your contact point for communications, including the distribution of material, providing information about meetings, payment of fees, and reimbursement of expenses.


Dr. H. A. Kissinger
February 2, 1996

Page 3

Please indicate your agreement with these terms by signing and returning the attached copy of this letter.

Best regards,

                                  /s/ Harvey


Dr. Henry A. Kissinger
Kissinger Associates
350 Park Avenue, 26th Floor
New York, NY 10022




                                  Agreed: /s/ Henry A. Kissinger
                                                           (Date)
                                                           2/22/96


Exhibit 10.33

The Compensation and Benefits Committee of the Board of Directors (the "Committee") of American Express Company (the "Company") approved an unfunded, nonqualified benefit arrangement for Mr. Farr to replace benefit opportunities lost upon the termination of employment with his prior employer. The arrangement provides for an additional service credit applied to the American Express Retirement Plan (the "Plan") upon the completion of five years of actual service with the Company. At the end of five years of service, Mr. Farr's eligibility for Plan benefits and Plan benefit value will be determined using a hire date five years prior to his actual hire date. The Company will pay to Mr. Farr on an unfunded basis to the extent of any difference between such calculation and the amounts he is eligible to receive under the Plan and the Company's Supplemental Retirement Plan based on his actual years of service under these plans.


                                                            EXHIBIT 11

                AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
                          COMPUTATION OF EARNINGS PER SHARE
                          Five Years Ended December 31, 1995

                                 1995          1994          1993          1992          1991
                                ------        ------        ------        ------        ------
1. Weighted average number
    of common shares issued
    and outstanding           489,692,167   497,281,258   484,754,771   476,047,601   468,950,425
2. Weighted average number
    of shares In-Lieu/LOI         504,044       510,109       414,904       463,128       465,383
3. Common shares assuming
    exercise of stock options   7,756,607     3,084,114     2,777,899       255,139       331,756
4. Common share equivalents
    for Variable Rate
    Convertible Notes                   -             -             -             -         6,117
5. Berkshire Hathaway                   -     7,939,686    12,190,155             -             -
                               ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------
6. Primary common shares and
    common share equivalents  497,952,818   508,815,167   500,137,729   476,765,868   469,753,681
7. Additional common shares
    assuming exercise of
    stock options based on
    year-end market price       1,619,795       312,691       474,233             -             -
8. Common shares reserved
    for conversion of 9%
    Convertible Debentures              -       538,409     3,519,727             -     3,865,733
9. Common shares reserved
    for conversion of 7 1/2%
    Convertible Debentures        126,337       142,984       195,406             -       198,582
10.Preferred shares to
    Nippon - 5% Dividend        6,239,872     6,239,872             -             -             -
                               ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------
11.Fully diluted common
    shares and common
    share equivalents         505,938,822   516,049,123   504,327,095   476,765,868   473,817,996
                              ===========   ===========   ===========   ===========   ===========
12.Income from continuing
    operations before
    accounting changes
    ($ millions)                $   1,564     $   1,380     $   1,605     $     578    $      607
13.Less:
    Dividends on Money
     Market Preferred Shares            -             -             -             -           (14)
    Dividends on Convertible
     Exchangeable Preferred
     Shares                           (16)          (16)          (16)          (16)          (16)
    Dividends on $216.75
     CAP Preferred Shares               -             -             -           (27)          (10)

14.Income from continuing
    operations before accounting
    change applicable to primary
    common shares and common
    share equivalents               1,548         1,364         1,589           535           567
15.Discontinued operations,
    net of income taxes                 -            33          (127)         (149)          182
16.Cumulative effect of
    changes in accounting
    principles, net of
    income taxes                        -             -             -            32             -
                               ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------
17.Net income applicable to
    primary common shares and
    common share equivalents        1,548         1,397         1,462           418           749
18.Add back:
    Interest on convertible debt,
    net of income tax benefit           -             1             4             -             4
                               ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------
19.Net income applicable to
    fully diluted common
    shares and common
    share equivalents           $   1,548     $   1,398      $  1,466     $     418    $      753
                              ===========   ===========   ===========   ===========   ===========
20.Income from continuing
    operations before accounting
    change applicable to fully
    diluted common shares and
    common share equivalents
    (19 - (15+16))              $   1,548     $   1,365      $  1,593     $     535    $      571
                              ===========   ===========   ===========   ===========   ===========
21.Income from continuing
    operations before accounting
    changes per share:
     Primary (14/6)             $    3.11     $    2.68      $   3.17     $    1.12    $     1.21
     Fully diluted (20/11)      $    3.06     $    2.65      $   3.16     $    1.12    $     1.21

22.Income (loss) from discontinued
    operations per share:
     Primary (15/6)             $       -     $     .07      $   (.25)    $    (.31)   $      .38
     Fully diluted (15/11)      $       -     $     .06      $   (.25)    $    (.31)   $      .38

23.Cumulative effect of
    accounting changes per
    share:
     Primary (16/6)             $       -     $       -      $      -     $     .07    $        -
     Fully diluted (16/11)      $       -     $       -      $      -     $     .07    $        -

24.Net income per share:
     Primary (17/6)             $    3.11     $    2.75      $   2.92     $     .88    $     1.59
     Fully diluted (19/11)      $    3.06     $    2.71      $   2.91     $     .88    $     1.59

Note: The above amounts reflect changes in accounting principles relating to income taxes and post- retirement benefits other than pensions in 1992.


EXHIBIT 12.1
AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY
COMPUTATION IN SUPPORT OF RATIO OF EARNINGS TO FIXED CHARGES
(Dollars in millions)

                                       Years Ended December 31,
                            --------------------------------------------
                            1995      1994      1993      1992      1991
                            ----      ----      ----      ----      ----
Earnings:
 Pretax income from
   continuing operations  $2,183    $1,891    $2,326    $  896    $  622
 Interest expense          2,343     1,925     1,776     2,171     2,761
 Other adjustments            95       103        88       196       142
                           -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
Total earnings (a)        $4,621    $3,919    $4,190    $3,263    $3,525
                           -----     -----     -----     -----     -----

Fixed charges:
 Interest expense         $2,343    $1,925    $1,776    $2,171    $2,761
 Other adjustments           135       142       130       154       147
                           -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
Total fixed charges (b)   $2,478    $2,067    $1,906    $2,325    $2,908
                           -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
Ratio of earnings to
 fixed charges (a/b)        1.86      1.90      2.20      1.40      1.21

Included in interest expense in the above computation is interest expense related to the international banking operations of American Express Company (the "Company") and Travel Related Services' Cardmember lending activities, which is netted against interest and dividends and Cardmember lending net finance charge revenue, respectively, in the Consolidated Statement of Income.

For purposes of the "earnings" computation, other adjustments include adding the amortization of capitalized interest, the net loss of affiliates accounted for at equity whose debt is not guaranteed by the Company, the minority interest in the earnings of majority-owned subsidiaries with fixed charges, and the interest component of rental expense and subtracting undistributed net income of affiliates accounted for at equity.

For purposes of the "fixed charges" computation, other adjustments include capitalized interest costs and the interest component of rental expense.

On May 31, 1994, the Company completed the spin-off of Lehman Brothers through a dividend to American Express common shareholders. Accordingly, Lehman Brothers' results are reported as a discontinued operation and are excluded from the above computation for all periods presented. In March 1993, the Company reduced its ownership in First Data Corporation to


approximately 22 percent through a public offering. As a result, beginning in 1993, FDC was reported as an equity investment in the above computation. In the fourth quarter of 1995, the Company's ownership was further reduced to approximately 10 percent as a result of shares issued by FDC in connection with a merger transaction. Accordingly, as of December 31, 1995, the Company's investment in FDC is accounted for as Investments - Available for Sale.


EXHIBIT 12.2
AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY
COMPUTATION IN SUPPORT OF RATIO OF EARNINGS TO FIXED CHARGES AND
PREFERRED SHARE DIVIDENDS
(Dollars in millions)

                                       Years Ended December 31,
                            --------------------------------------------
                            1995      1994      1993      1992      1991
                            ----      ----      ----      ----      ----
Earnings:
 Pretax income from
   continuing operations  $2,183    $1,891    $2,326    $  896    $  622
 Interest expense          2,343     1,925     1,776     2,171     2,761
 Other adjustments            95       103        88       196       142
                           -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
Total earnings (a)        $4,621    $3,919    $4,190    $3,263    $3,525
                           -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
Fixed charges and
 preferred share
 dividends:
 Interest expense         $2,343    $1,925    $1,776    $2,171    $2,761
 Dividends on preferred
   shares                     24        50        66        65        61
 Other adjustments           135       142       130       154       147
                           -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
Total fixed charges and
 preferred share
 dividends (b)            $2,502    $2,117    $1,972    $2,390    $2,969
                           -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
Ratio of earnings to
 fixed charges and
 preferred share
 dividends (a/b)            1.85      1.85      2.12      1.37      1.19

Included in interest expense in the above computation is interest expense related to the international banking operations of American Express Company (the "Company") and Travel Related Services' Cardmember lending activities, which is netted against interest and dividends and Cardmember lending net finance charge revenue, respectively, in the Consolidated Statement of Income.

For purposes of the "earnings" computation, other adjustments include adding the amortization of capitalized interest, the net loss of affiliates accounted for at equity whose debt is not guaranteed by the Company, the minority interest in the earnings of majority-owned subsidiaries with fixed charges, and the interest component of rental expense and subtracting undistributed net income of affiliates accounted for at equity.

For purposes of the "fixed charges and preferred share dividends" computation, dividends on outstanding preferred shares have been increased to an amount representing the pretax earnings required to cover such dividend requirements. Other adjustments include capitalized interest costs and the interest component of rental expense.


On May 31, 1994, the Company completed the spin-off of Lehman Brothers through a dividend to American Express common shareholders. Accordingly, Lehman Brothers' results are reported as a discontinued operation and are excluded from the above computation for all periods presented. In March 1993, the Company reduced its ownership in First Data Corporation to approximately 22 percent through a public offering. As a result, beginning in 1993, FDC was reported as an equity investment in the above computation. In the fourth quarter of 1995, the Company's ownership was further reduced to approximately 10 percent as a result of shares issued by FDC in connection with a merger transaction. Accordingly, as of December 31, 1995, the Company's investment in FDC is accounted for as Investments - Available for Sale.


EXHIBIT 13

FINANCIAL REVIEW
AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY

CONSOLIDATED RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

American Express Company's (the Company) consolidated net income increased 13 percent to $1.6 billion in 1995, compared with income from continuing operations of $1.4 billion in 1994 and $1.2 billion in 1993 before a $433 million gain on the sale of First Data Corporation (FDC) stock. Consolidated net income increased 11 percent to $1.6 billion in 1995, compared with $1.4 billion in 1994 and $1.5 billion in 1993.

Net income per share for 1995 increased 16 percent to $3.11, compared with per share income from continuing operations of $2.68 in 1994 and $2.30 in 1993 before the FDC gain. The 1995 growth in earnings per share was primarily driven by revenue growth, as well as a reduction in average shares outstanding. The 1994 growth in earnings per share resulted from revenue growth and improving margins. Net income per share was $2.75 in 1994 and $2.92 in 1993.

On May 31, 1994, the Company completed the spin-off of its subsidiary, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Accordingly, the results of Lehman Brothers (Lehman) are reported as a discontinued operation in the Consolidated Financial Statements through the spin-off date.

Consolidated net revenues increased 11 percent to $15.8 billion in 1995, compared with $14.3 billion in 1994 and $13.3 billion in 1993. The 1995 increase in revenues was driven by growth in several Travel Related Services' businesses, including the Consumer Card businesses and Corporate Card and travel businesses, and at American Express Financial Advisors. The Company's goal is to achieve at least two-thirds of its earnings per share growth by increasing revenues and the remainder by reducing costs and shares outstanding.

In October 1994, the Company announced a series of decisions that represented a continuation of a reengineering program launched in 1992 to provide better customer value at significantly lower costs. These decisions have resulted in significant staff reductions throughout the Company. Costs related to these initiatives are not expected to have a material impact on current or future earnings. Savings generated by these actions have been, and will continue to be, reinvested in the business and help facilitate the achievement of the Company's business objectives.

Consolidated Liquidity and Capital Resources

During 1995, the Company continued to focus on building shareholder value by maintaining a strong capital position and funding profitable growth opportunities in its core businesses. The Company believes capital allocation to businesses with a return on risk-adjusted equity in excess of its cost of equity and sustained earnings growth in its core businesses will continue to

-1- (1995 Annual Report p. 21)


build shareholder value. Investments are made in programs that are expected to offer superior value to customers, achieve best-in-class economics and enhance the American Express brand. The Company's objective is to perform in such a way that it will be recognized as a growth company. Consistent with its capital allocation policy, the Company completed the tax-free spin-off of Lehman to shareholders in 1994. In 1995, the Company also sold AMEX Life Assurance Company.

The Company's dividend philosophy is to retain enough earnings to sustain earnings per share growth in the 12 percent to 15 percent range. The Company does not anticipate an increase in its dividend. To the extent retained earnings exceed investment opportunities, the Company will return excess capital to shareholders in the form of share repurchases. The Company believes this is more tax-efficient to its shareholders and provides greater financial flexibility. Since the Company began its repurchase programs in 1994, it has returned approximately $1.3 billion in capital to shareholders, in excess of dividends.

Share Repurchase Program

Beginning in 1994, the Company put in place two share repurchase programs authorized by the Board of Directors, which permit the repurchase of up to 60 million common shares over the next several years as market conditions allow. The share repurchases are intended to reduce the number of outstanding common shares and common share equivalents to less than 500 million. The average number of outstanding common shares and common share equivalents was 498 million for the year ended December 31, 1995 and 493 million for the fourth quarter of 1995. Since inception of the initial repurchase plan in 1994, the Company has repurchased and cancelled 38.3 million shares under the repurchase programs at an average price of $34.56 per share. In both 1995 and 1994, the Company sold put options as a means of reducing the cost of the repurchase programs.

See Note 7 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

Risk Management

The Company manages substantial daily cash flows, investment portfolios, receivables and loans and related financing requirements, as well as the related market, credit and operational risks. Management controls the risk profile of the Company through ongoing assessments of risk exposures and by retaining, hedging or transferring risk to third parties. In addition to management of the Company's aggregate risk exposures, management establishes and oversees implementation of Board-approved policies covering the Company's funding, investments and use of derivative financial instruments. The Company's objective is to manage risk in order to assure that the Company's returns are appropriate for the level of risk assumed while achieving consistent earnings growth. See the Financial Review of each business segment for a discussion of their respective Risk Management activities. See Note 11 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for a discussion of the Company's use of derivatives.

Financing Activities

The Company monitors liquidity and has implemented procedures to effect the immediate transfer of short-term funds within the Company if necessary to meet liquidity needs. These internal transfer mechanisms are subject to and comply with various contractual and regulatory constraints. -2- (1995 Annual Report pp. 21-22)


The parent company generally meets its short-term funding needs through an intercompany dividend policy, whereby each business unit remits approximately 50 percent of its earnings, and the issuance of commercial paper. The Board of Directors has authorized a parent company commercial paper program that is supported by a $1.2 billion multi-purpose credit facility. In 1995, the parent company restructured this facility, reducing its cost and extending the multi- year portion from three years to five years under more favorable terms. No borrowings have been made under this facility. Average commercial paper outstanding was $177 million during 1995 and $100 million during 1994. Commercial paper outstanding was $100 million at both December 31, 1995 and 1994.

Total parent company long-term debt outstanding was $2.3 billion at December 31, 1995 and $2.8 billion at December 31, 1994. During 1995, the parent company paid down $700 million of a $945 million Floating Medium-Term Senior Note due 1996 in exchange for an extension and modification of terms on the remaining balance through the year 2000. At December 31, 1995, the parent company had $1.1 billion of debt or equity securities available for issuance under a shelf registration filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. See the Financial Review of each business segment for a discussion of 1995 financing activities of subsidiaries.

Accounting Developments

The Financial Accounting Standards Board's Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 121, "Accounting for the Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to Be Disposed Of," and SFAS No. 123, "Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation," are effective January 1, 1996. SFAS No. 121 is not expected to have a material impact on the Company's results of operations or financial condition. SFAS No. 123 encourages but does not require expense recognition for certain stock-based compensation awards. The Company does not expect to adopt the expense recognition accounting provision of this Statement.

-3- (1995 Annual Report p. 22)


TRAVEL RELATED SERVICES

Results of Operations
                                     Statement of Income
(Amounts in millions)                                       Year Ended December 31,
                                               1995                  1994                    1993
                                             ------                ------                  ------
Net Revenues:
  Discount Revenue                           $4,457                $3,984                  $3,621
  Net Card Fees                               1,742                 1,727                   1,727
  Travel Commissions and Fees                 1,288                   948                     710
  Interest and Dividends                        969                   776                     724
  Other Revenues                              2,054                 1,873                   1,722

Lending:
  Finance Charge Revenue                      1,529                 1,258                   1,185
  Interest Expense                              497                   310                     257
                                             ------                ------                  ------
    Net Finance Charge Revenue                1,032                   948                     928
                                             ------                ------                  ------
    Total Net Revenues                       11,542                10,256                   9,432
                                             ------                ------                  ------
Expenses:
  Marketing and Promotion                       950                 1,036                   1,068
  Provision for Losses
   and Claims:
    Charge Card                                 835                   633                     702
    Lending                                     522                   378                     417
    Other                                       416                   471                     429
                                             ------                ------                  ------
    Total                                     1,773                 1,482                   1,548
                                             ------                ------                  ------
Interest Expense:
  Charge Card                                   673                   535                     534
  Other                                         453                   296                     265
                                             ------                ------                  ------
  Total                                       1,126                   831                     799
Net Discount Expense                            414                   326                     219
Human Resources                               2,829                 2,583                   2,227
Other Operating Expenses                      2,871                 2,602                   2,398
                                             ------                ------                  ------
  Total Expenses                              9,963                 8,860                   8,259
                                             ------                ------                  ------
Pretax Income                                 1,579                 1,396                   1,173
Income Tax Provision                            454                   398                     289
                                             ------                ------                  ------
Net Income                                   $1,125                  $998                    $884
                                             ======                ======                  ======

Travel Related Services' (TRS) net revenues increased in both 1995 and 1994 reflecting an increase in worldwide business billed on American Express Cards and higher business travel sales. The increase in billed business in both years resulted from higher spending per Cardmember, due in part to increased merchant coverage and the benefits of rewards programs, as well as an increase in the number of Cards outstanding. The 1995 and 1994 increase in billed

-4- (1995 Annual Report p. 23)


business also reflected strong growth in Corporate Card billed business. Worldwide Cards in force increased in 1995 and 1994 reflecting, in part, the introduction of new products, including the Optima True Grace Card which was introduced late in 1994. Higher business travel sales in both years resulted from acquisitions and growth. Discount revenue increased in 1995 and 1994 primarily reflecting an increase in Card billed business, marginally offset by a lower average discount rate. The lower discount rate in both years reflects a change in the mix of Cardmember spending, as well as increasing electronic merchant data capture in selected international markets. Lending net finance charge revenue increased in 1995 and 1994 reflecting higher average receivables, which were partially offset by lower net interest spreads.

                       Selected Statistical Information
(Amounts in millions, except where indicated)                        Year Ended December 31,
                                                                1995           1994          1993
                                                              ------         ------        ------
Total Cards in Force:
  United States                                                 26.7           25.3          24.7
  Outside the United States                                     11.1           11.0          10.7
                                                              ------         ------        ------
     Total                                                      37.8           36.3          35.4
                                                              ======         ======        ======
Basic Cards in Force:
  United States                                                 20.0           18.6          18.0
  Outside the United States                                      8.7            8.1           8.0
                                                              ------         ------        ------
     Total                                                      28.7           26.7          26.0
                                                              ======         ======        ======
Card Billed Business (billions):
  United States                                               $115.2         $101.2         $89.8
  Outside the United States                                     46.4           39.7          34.3
                                                              ------         ------        ------
     Total                                                    $161.6         $140.9        $124.1
                                                              ======         ======        ======
Travelers Cheque Sales (billions)                              $25.6          $24.9         $23.6
Average Travelers Cheques
  Outstanding (billions)                                        $6.0           $5.3          $5.0
Travel Sales (billions)                                        $15.1          $10.7          $8.0

Marketing and promotion expense decreased in both 1995 and 1994 primarily reflecting reengineering saves. The worldwide Charge Card provision increased in 1995 reflecting volume growth, as well as higher loss rates particularly in Latin America and, more recently, in the small business Corporate Card portfolio. The worldwide Charge Card provision declined in 1994 reflecting improvement in Card credit experience and a higher level of securitized receivables, partly offset by an increase in billed business. The worldwide lending provision increased in 1995 due to higher loss rates, as well as portfolio growth since TRS establishes reserves for future losses at the time loans are recorded. The worldwide lending provision declined in 1994 reflecting continued improvement in the credit quality of the worldwide lending portfolio. Charge Card interest expense increased in 1995 reflecting higher borrowing rates and increased volume, while in 1994 increased volume was offset by lower borrowing rates compared with 1993. The increase in human -5- (1995 Annual Report p. 23)


resources expense in both years reflected the impact of business travel acquisitions and growth to support increased business volumes. Other operating expenses in 1995 and 1994 increased reflecting a number of factors, including:
business travel acquisitions and growth; ongoing spending for new business initiatives and technology enhancements; and funding new Card products and loyalty initiatives. The increase in 1995 also reflected up-front costs related to reengineering activities.

TRS' asset securitization program resulted in net discount expense of $414 million, $326 million and $219 million and fee revenue of $84 million, $80 million and $54 million in 1995, 1994 and 1993, respectively. The program reduced the Charge Card provision by $167 million, $127 million and $89 million in 1995, 1994 and 1993, respectively, and reduced Charge Card interest expense. There was no impact on net income for 1995, 1994 or 1993.

In October 1995, TRS completed the sale of AMEX Life Assurance Company (AMEX Life), which did not materially impact net income. Excluding AMEX Life from both years, TRS' net revenues and expenses would have increased approximately 14 percent in 1995.

Risk Management

TRS employs a variety of interest rate and foreign exchange hedging strategies to protect its balance sheet and statement of income from interest rate and foreign currency risk. TRS' hedging policies are established, maintained and monitored by a central treasury function. TRS generally hedges its exposures along product lines.

For its Charge Card product, TRS funds its Cardmember receivables using both on-and off-balance-sheet sources such as long-term debt, medium-term notes, commercial paper and other debt, as well as an off-balance-sheet asset securitization program. Such funding is predominantly provided by American Express Credit Corporation (Credco). Interest rate exposure is managed through the issuance of long-term and short-term debt and the use of interest rate swaps to achieve a targeted 30 percent to 40 percent fixed and 60 percent to 70 percent floating mix. From time to time, TRS may review and change this ratio. Foreign exchange risk arising from cross-currency charges and balance sheet exposures are managed primarily by entering into agreements to buy and sell currencies on a spot or forward basis.

For its lending products, TRS funds its Cardmember loans using a mixture of short- and long-term debt, primarily through American Express Centurion Bank (Centurion Bank). TRS' lending products are linked to a floating rate base and generally reprice each month. TRS enters into interest rate swaps to convert fixed and floating rate debt to floating rate debt which matches the terms of Cardmember loans. Foreign exchange risk arising from cross-currency charges and balance sheet exposures are managed primarily by entering into agreements to buy and sell currencies on a spot or forward basis.

For its Stored Value Group, travel and other businesses, which are predominantly self-funding, foreign exchange risk is hedged using a combination of spot foreign exchange transactions and forward foreign exchange contracts.

-6- (1995 Annual Report pp. 23-24)


Liquidity and Capital Resources
                                    Selected Balance Sheet Information
(Amounts in billions, except percentages)
                                                                  December 31,

                                                            1995                 1994
                                                          ------               ------
Accounts Receivable, net                                   $18.9                $16.8
Investments                                                 $9.2                $10.7
U.S. Cardmember Lending Balances                           $10.0                 $8.1
Total Assets                                               $45.2                $42.5
Travelers Cheques Outstanding                               $5.7                 $5.3
Short-term Debt                                            $17.9                $15.1
Long-term Debt                                              $4.4                 $3.4
Total Liabilities                                          $40.3                $38.2
Total Shareholder's Equity                                  $4.9                 $4.3
Return on Average Equity                                   24.6%                23.9%

At December 31, 1995 and 1994, TRS had securitized $2.5 billion of receivables that are not reflected in the Consolidated Balance Sheet. TRS intends to fund up to 25 percent of its receivables and loans through off-balance-sheet asset securitization programs over time.

Through Credco and Centurion Bank, TRS issued in 1995 approximately $1.0 billion of medium- and long-term debt at various rates and maturities. The proceeds were used to fund Cardmember receivables and Cardmember loans. At December 31, 1995, Credco had approximately $1.0 billion of medium- and long- term debt available for issuance under shelf registrations filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

TRS, primarily through Credco, maintained commercial paper outstanding of approximately $12.7 billion at an average interest rate of 5.6 percent and approximately $10.2 billion at an average interest rate of 5.8 percent at December 31, 1995 and 1994, respectively. Unused lines of credit of approximately $5.8 billion were available at December 31, 1995 to support a portion of TRS' commercial paper borrowings. Borrowings under bank lines of credit totaled $1.5 billion at December 31, 1995 and $1.4 billion at December 31, 1994.

U.S. Cardmember lending balances increased primarily reflecting growth in traditional products and the introduction of new products. The decline in investments reflects the sale of AMEX Life.

-7- (1995 Annual Report p. 24)


AMERICAN EXPRESS FINANCIAL ADVISORS
Results of Operations
                                 Statement of Income
(Amounts in millions)                                              Year Ended December 31,
                                                            1995            1994          1993
                                                          ------          ------        ------
Revenues:
  Investment Income                                       $2,209          $1,994        $2,049
  Management and
    Distribution Fees                                        935             806           727
  Other Income                                               547             470           380
                                                          ------          ------        ------
     Total Revenues                                        3,691           3,270         3,156
                                                          ------          ------        ------
Expenses:
  Provision for Losses
    and Benefits:
    Annuities                                              1,156           1,028         1,065
    Insurance                                                401             370           321
    Investment Certificates                                  205             107           124
                                                          ------          ------        ------
     Total                                                 1,762           1,505         1,510
  Human Resources                                            877             823           757
  Other Operating Expenses                                   297             311           371
                                                          ------          ------        ------
     Total Expenses                                        2,936           2,639         2,638
                                                          ------          ------        ------
Pretax Income                                                755             631           518
Income Tax Provision                                         252             203           160
                                                          ------          ------        ------
Net Income                                                  $503            $428          $358
                                                          ======          ======        ======

American Express Financial Advisors' revenue and earnings growth in both 1995 and 1994 benefited primarily from higher fee revenues due to an increase in managed assets, as well as an increase in life insurance in force. These increases were partially offset by the impact of lower investment margins in 1995.

The change in investment income in both 1995 and 1994 reflected higher asset levels, offset in 1994 by the impact of lower investment yields compared with 1993. Management and distribution fees in both years increased reflecting increased management fee revenue due to a higher asset base. The increase in management fees in 1995 was partly offset by a decline in distribution fees due to the availability, beginning in 1995's second quarter, of a broader range of rear-load funds. The growth in managed assets in 1995 reflects strong market appreciation and positive net sales. Managed assets increased in 1994 reflecting strong net sales, partly offset by market depreciation. Other income increased in both years primarily due to higher life insurance contract charges and premiums.

Provisions for losses and benefits increased in 1995 reflecting increased business in force and higher accrual rates for all products. The provision for annuity benefits declined in 1994 reflecting lower accrual rates, partly offset by higher annuities in force. The 1994 increase in the provision for -8- (1995 Annual Report p. 25)


insurance benefits reflected increased life insurance in force. The 1994 decline in the provision for investment certificates reflected lower investment certificates in force and lower accrual rates in the first half of 1994. Human resources expense increased in 1995 reflecting higher financial advisors' compensation and, to a lesser extent, an increase in the number of employees. The 1994 increase in human resources expense reflected an increase in the number of employees and financial advisors and increased commissionable sales. Other operating expenses declined slightly in 1995 from 1994, which included accelerated amortization of deferred acquisition costs due to surrenders as a result of an annuity exchange plan. The decline in 1994 compared with 1993 primarily reflected a lower provision for insurance industry guarantee association assessments.

                      Selected Statistical Information

(Amounts in millions, except percentages and where indicated)
                                                                  Year Ended December 31,
                                                            1995           1994          1993
                                                          ------         ------        ------
Life Insurance
    in Force (billions)                                    $59.4          $52.7         $46.1
  Deferred Annuities
    in Force (billions)                                    $32.9          $28.2         $25.8
  Assets Owned and/or
  Managed (billions):
  Assets managed
    for institutions                                       $32.0          $27.4         $25.0
  Assets owned and managed
    for individuals:
    Owned Assets                                            48.3           40.2          37.4
    Managed Assets                                          49.2           37.9          37.3
                                                          ------         ------        ------
     Total                                                $129.5         $105.5         $99.7
                                                          ======         ======        ======
Sales of Selected Products:
  Mutual Funds                                           $10,202         $8,940        $8,583
  Annuities                                               $3,520         $4,360        $4,105
  Investment Certificates                                 $1,467         $1,068          $575
  Life and Other
    Insurance Sales                                         $383           $324          $309
Number of Financial Advisors                               7,945          8,054         7,655
Fees from Financial
  Plans (thousands)                                      $40,828        $39,651       $37,382
Product Sales Generated
  from Financial Plans as a
  Percentage of Total Sales                                64.1%          61.7%         57.5%

Risk Management

American Express Financial Advisors' owned investment securities are, for the most part, held by its life insurance and investment certificate subsidiaries. These subsidiaries primarily invest in long-term and intermediate-term fixed income securities for the purpose of providing their fixed annuity and investment certificate clients with a competitive rate of return on their investments while minimizing risk. In addition, investment in fixed income

-9- (1995 Annual Report pp. 25-26)


securities provides American Express Financial Advisors with a dependable and targeted margin between the interest rate earned on investments and the interest rate credited to clients' accounts. American Express Financial Advisors does not invest in securities to generate trading profits for its own account.

The life insurance and investment certificate subsidiaries have investment committees that hold regularly scheduled meetings and, when necessary, special meetings. At these meetings, the committees review models projecting different interest rate scenarios and their impact on the profitability of each subsidiary. The objective of the committees is to structure their investment security portfolios based upon the type and behavior of products in their liability portfolios so as to achieve targeted levels of profitability and meet contractual obligations.

Rates credited to customers; accounts are generally reset at shorter intervals than the maturity of underlying investments. Therefore, American Express Financial Advisors' margins may be negatively impacted by increases in the general level of interest rates. Part of the committees' strategies include the purchase of some types of derivatives, such as interest rate caps and corridors, for hedging purposes. These derivatives protect margins by increasing investment returns if there is a sudden and severe rise in interest rates, thereby mitigating the impact of an increase in rates credited to clients' accounts.

Liquidity and Capital Resources
                          Selected Balance Sheet Information
(Amounts in billions, except percentages)
                                                                             December 31,
                                                                        1995             1994
                                                                      ------           ------
Investments                                                            $28.8            $25.2
Assets Held in Segregated
  Asset Accounts                                                       $15.0            $10.9
Total Assets                                                           $48.3            $40.2
Reserves for Losses and Benefits                                       $28.6            $25.6
Total Liabilities                                                      $45.2            $38.0
Total Shareholder's Equity                                              $3.1             $2.1
Return on Average Equity                                               19.4%            18.6%

American Express Financial Advisors' total assets increased primarily reflecting increases in assets held in segregated asset accounts and investments. These increases reflected strong market appreciation and positive net sales. American Express Financial Advisors' investments are comprised primarily of corporate bonds and obligations and mortgage-backed securities, including below investment grade debt securities of $2.3 billion in 1995 and $2.1 billion in 1994. Investments also include mortgage loans of $3.2 billion in 1995 and $2.7 billion in 1994. Investments are principally funded by sales of insurance and annuities, and by reinvested income. Maturities of these investments are matched, for the most part, with the expected future payments of insurance and annuity obligations. Assets held in segregated asset accounts, primarily investments carried at market value, are held for the exclusive benefit of variable annuity and variable life insurance contract holders. American Express Financial Advisors earns investment management and administration fees from the related funds. -10- (1995 Annual Report p. 26)


AMERICAN EXPRESS BANK
Results of Operations
                                     Statement of Income
(Amounts in millions)
                                                                    Year Ended December 31,
                                                                1995        1994          1993
                                                              ------      ------        ------
Net Revenues:
  Interest Income                                               $925        $952          $960
  Interest Expense                                               604         604           595
                                                              ------      ------        ------
    Net Interest Income                                          321         348           365
  Commissions, Fees and
    Other Revenues                                               243         232           236
  Foreign Exchange Income                                         79          72            76
                                                              ------      ------        ------
    Total Net Revenues                                           643         652           677
                                                              ------      ------        ------
Provision for Credit Losses                                        7           8            44
                                                              ------      ------        ------
Expenses:
  Human Resources                                                248         250           236
  Other Operating Expenses                                       273         275           263
                                                              ------      ------        ------
    Total Expenses                                               521         525           499
                                                              ------      ------        ------
Pretax Income                                                    115         119           134
Income Tax Provision                                              38          39            42
                                                              ------      ------        ------
Net Income                                                       $77         $80           $92
                                                              ======      ======        ======

American Express Bank's (the Bank) results for 1995 reflected lower net interest income, partially offset by growth in foreign exchange and correspondent banking revenues and lower operating expenses. Results for 1994 reflected lower net revenues and higher operating expenses. The decline in 1994 results was partially offset by a reduction in the provision for credit losses. Effective January 1, 1993, the U.S. federal income tax rate was increased from 34 percent to 35 percent. The Bank's results for 1993 included a $5 million benefit from the impact of the tax rate change on its net deferred tax assets as of January 1, 1993.

Net interest income in both years declined reflecting narrower spreads on the investment portfolio. The net yield on interest-earning assets (net interest income on a tax equivalent basis as a percentage of total average interest- earning assets) was 2.88 percent in 1995, compared with 2.85 percent and 2.92 percent in 1994 and 1993, respectively. The higher net yield in 1995 reflects a reduction in low-yielding placements with banks and a corresponding decrease in customers' deposits. Commissions, fees and other revenues increased in 1995 primarily reflecting growth in correspondent banking fee income. Foreign exchange income increased in 1995 reflecting higher trading volumes. The 1994 decline in noninterest income reflected a lower level of revenues from the Bank's trading portfolio.

-11- (1995 Annual Report p. 27)


Operating expenses decreased slightly in 1995 as a result of a focused cost reduction program. The 1994 increase in operating expenses primarily reflected spending related to systems technology and higher human resources expense. The provision for credit losses declined in 1994 reflecting a lower level of nonperforming loans and overall lower loan balances.

Risk Management

The Bank employs a variety of on-balance-sheet and derivative financial instruments in managing its exposure to fluctuations in interest and currency rates. The derivative instruments consist principally of foreign exchange spot and forward contracts, interest rate swaps, foreign currency options and forward rate agreements. Generally, these derivative instruments are used to manage specific on-balance-sheet interest rate and foreign exchange exposures related to deposits, long-term debt, equity, loans and securities holdings.

The Bank utilizes foreign exchange and interest rate products to meet the needs of its customers. Typically, a Bank customer desires to enter into a foreign exchange or other derivatives contract and contacts the Bank. If the pricing is acceptable to both the Bank and the customer, the Bank would enter into two transactions: the contract desired by the customer and an offsetting contract with a third party dealer; therefore, the Bank would have no market risk. Customer positions are not always offset. They are evaluated in terms of the Bank's overall interest rate or foreign exchange exposure. If they naturally offset an exposure, an offsetting contract with a dealer will not be executed. Furthermore, the Bank will take limited proprietary positions.

Asset/liability management is supervised by the Bank's Asset and Liability Committee (ALCO) which is comprised of senior business managers. ALCO meets monthly and monitors (a) interest rate and foreign exchange exposures, (b) liquidity, (c) capital levels, and (d) investment portfolios. ALCO evaluates current market conditions and determines the Bank's strategy within monetary and maturity risk limits approved by the Bank's Board of Directors. The Bank's treasury and global trading management issues policies and control procedures and delegates risk limits throughout the Bank's country trading operations.

The Bank's overall credit policies are approved by the Finance and Credit Policy Committee of the Bank's Board of Directors. Credit lines are approved using a tiered approval ladder with levels of authority delegated to each country, geographic area, the Bank's Credit Approval Committee, and Board of Directors. Approval authorities are based on characteristics such as type of borrower, nature of transaction, nature of collateral, and overall risk rating. The Loan Quality Control department reviews all significant exposures periodically. The Bank controls the credit risk arising from derivative transactions through the same credit procedures as it uses for traditional lending products. Risk amount factors for all foreign exchange and derivative transactions are reviewed by the Bank on a regular basis.

-12- (1995 Annual Report pp. 27-28)


Liquidity and Capital Resources
Selected Balance Sheet Information

(Amounts in billions, except percentages and where indicated)
                                                                          December 31,
                                                                    1995                1994
                                                                  ------              ------
Investments                                                         $2.5                $2.8
Total Loans                                                         $5.4                $5.0
  Reserve for Credit Losses (millions)                              $111                $109
  Reserves as a Percentage of Total Loans                           2.0%                2.2%
  Total Nonperforming Loans (millions)                               $34                 $20
  Other Real Estate Owned (millions)                                 $44                 $56
Total Assets                                                       $12.3               $13.3
Deposits                                                            $8.5                $9.1
Total Liabilities                                                  $11.5               $12.5
Total Shareholder's Equity (millions)                               $837                $758
Risk-Based Capital Ratios:
  Tier 1                                                            8.9%                7.5%
  Total                                                            13.0%               14.7%
Leverage Ratio                                                      5.8%                4.8%
Return on Average Assets                                            .59%                .54%
Return on Average Common Equity                                    9.99%              10.89%

The Bank's total assets declined as modest loan growth was more than offset by declines in cash and cash equivalents and investments reflecting a lower level of client deposits. Total loan write-offs, net of recoveries, were $4.8 million in 1995 and $25 million in 1994. The increase in nonperforming loans primarily reflects newly classified exposures, partly offset by repayments. The decline in other real estate owned primarily reflects the sale of foreclosed assets. The increase in the Bank's Tier 1 Capital ratio primarily relates to an increase in retained earnings, general balance sheet reductions and a decrease in deferred tax assets. The decline in the Total Capital ratio reflects the revocation of the convertible feature of certain subordinated debt and the repurchase of subordinated debt. The increase in the Leverage ratio is due to an increase in retained earnings and decreases in average assets and deferred tax assets.

CORPORATE AND OTHER

Corporate and Other reported net expenses of $141 million in 1995, compared with net expenses of $126 million in 1994 and net income of $271 million in 1993.

Results for both 1995 and 1994 included the Company's share of the Travelers Inc. (Travelers) revenue participation in accordance with an agreement related to the 1993 sale of the Shearson Lehman Brothers Division (the 1993 sale). Results for 1995 also included a gain from the sale of common stock and warrants of Mellon Bank Corporation. Results for 1994 also included a capital gain on the sale of Travelers preferred stock and warrants which were acquired as part of the 1993 sale. In both years, these gains were offset by the Company's costs associated with certain business building initiatives and, in 1994, costs related to the Lehman spin-off. Net income in 1993 reflected a gain of $433 million on the Company's sale of FDC shares.

-13- (1995 Annual Report p. 28)


                           CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF INCOME
                              American Express Company

Years Ended December 31, (millions, except per share amounts)                 1995        1994       1993
                                                                            ------      ------     ------
Net Revenues
  Discount revenue                                                         $ 4,457     $ 3,984    $ 3,621
  Interest and dividends, net                                                3,499       3,172      3,067
  Net card fees                                                              1,742       1,727      1,727
  Travel commissions and fees                                                1,288         948        710
  Other commissions and fees                                                 1,254       1,126      1,033
  Cardmember lending net finance charge revenue                              1,032         948        928
  Management and distribution fees                                             935         806        727
  Life insurance premiums                                                      735         783        702
  Other                                                                        899         788        739
                                                                            ------      ------     ------
    Total                                                                   15,841      14,282     13,254
                                                                            ------      ------     ------
Expenses
  Human resources                                                            4,039       3,769      3,380
  Provisions for losses and benefits:
    Annuities and investment certificates                                    1,392       1,173      1,259
    Life insurance                                                             727         757        610
    Charge card                                                                835         633        702
    Cardmember lending                                                         522         378        417
    Other                                                                       66          55        119
  Interest:
    Charge card                                                                673         535        534
    Other                                                                      569         476        390
  Occupancy and equipment                                                    1,094       1,058        965
  Marketing and promotion                                                      977       1,063      1,091
  Professional services                                                        834         687        598
  Communications                                                               407         376        357
  Other                                                                      1,523       1,431      1,285
  Gain on sale of FDC                                                            -           -       (779)
                                                                            ------      ------     ------
    Total                                                                   13,658      12,391     10,928
                                                                            ------      ------     ------
  Pretax income from continuing operations                                   2,183       1,891      2,326
  Income tax provision                                                         619         511        721
                                                                            ------      ------     ------
  Income from continuing operations                                          1,564       1,380      1,605
  Discontinued operations, net of income taxes                                   -          33       (127)
                                                                            ------      ------     ------
  Net income                                                                $1,564      $1,413     $1,478
                                                                            ======      ======     ======
Earnings Per Common Share
 Income from continuing operations                                           $3.11       $2.68       $3.17
Discontinued operations                                                          -         .07       (.25)
                                                                            ------      ------      ------
Net income                                                                   $3.11       $2.75       $2.92
                                                                            ======      ======      ======
Average common and common equivalent shares outstanding                      498.0       508.8       500.1
                                                                            ======      ======      ======

See notes to consolidated financial statements. -14- (1995 Annual Report p. 29)


                             CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
                              American Express Company
December 31, (millions)                                                                   1995         1994
                                                                                      --------     --------
Assets
  Cash and cash equivalents                                                           $  3,200      $ 3,433
  Accounts receivable and accrued interest:
   Cardmember receivables, less reserves: 1995, $753; 1994, $691                        17,154       14,506
   Other receivables, less reserves: 1995, $76; 1994, $116                               2,760        2,641
  Investments                                                                           42,561       40,108
  Loans:
    Cardmember lending, less reserves: 1995, $489; 1994, $407                           10,268        8,834
    International banking, less reserves: 1995, $111; 1994, $109                         5,317        4,881
    Other, net                                                                             506        1,007
  Assets held in segregated asset accounts                                              14,974       10,881
  Deferred acquisition costs                                                             2,262        2,280
  Land, buildings and equipment-at cost,
    less accumulated depreciation: 1995, $1,763; 1994, $1,563                            1,783        1,840
  Other assets                                                                           6,620        6,595
                                                                                       -------     --------
Total assets                                                                          $107,405      $97,006
                                                                                      ========     ========
Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity
  Customers' deposits and credit balances                                               $9,889      $10,013
  Travelers Cheques outstanding                                                          5,697        5,271
  Accounts payable                                                                       4,686        4,228
  Insurance and annuity reserves:
    Fixed annuities                                                                     21,405       20,163
    Life and disability policies                                                         3,752        4,686
  Investment certificate reserves                                                        3,606        2,866
  Short-term debt                                                                       17,654       14,810
  Long-term debt                                                                         7,570        7,162
  Liabilities related to segregated asset accounts                                      14,974       10,881
  Other liabilities                                                                      9,952       10,493
                                                                                      --------     --------
    Total liabilities                                                                   99,185       90,573
                                                                                      --------     --------
Shareholders' Equity
  Preferred shares, $1.66 2/3 par value, authorized
    20 million shares Convertible Exchangeable
    Preferred shares, issued and outstanding
    4 million shares, stated at liquidation value                                          200          200
  Common shares, $.60 par value, authorized 1.2 billion
    shares; issued and outstanding 483.1 million
    shares in 1995 and 495.9 million shares in 1994                                        290          298
  Capital surplus                                                                        3,781        3,651
  Net unrealized securities gains (losses)                                                 875         (389)
  Foreign currency translation adjustment                                                  (85)         (77)
  Retained earnings                                                                      3,159        2,750
                                                                                      --------     --------
    Total shareholders' equity                                                           8,220        6,433
                                                                                      --------     --------
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity                                            $107,405      $97,006
                                                                                      ========     ========

See notes to consolidated financial statements. -15- (1995 Annual Report p. 30)


                           CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
                                  American Express Company

Years Ended December 31, (millions)                                          1995         1994         1993
                                                                         --------     --------     --------
Cash Flows from Operating Activities

  Income from continuing operations                                        $1,564       $1,380       $1,605
  Adjustments to reconcile income from continuing
    operations to net cash provided (used) by
    operating activities:
      Provisions for losses and benefits                                    2,086        1,456       1,627
      Depreciation, amortization, deferred taxes and other                    367          378         411
      Changes in operating assets and liabilities, net
        of effects of acquisitions and dispositions:
        Accounts receivable and accrued interest                             (353)        (180)       (982)
        Other assets                                                       (1,236)         525        (987)
        Accounts payable and other liabilities                               (241)         969         355
  Increase in Travelers Cheques outstanding                                   427          471          72
  Increase in insurance reserves                                              440          471         452
  Gain on sale of FDC                                                           -            -        (779)
  Net cash flows used by operating
    activities of discontinued operations                                       -       (3,656)     (1,361)
                                                                         --------     --------    --------
  Net cash provided by operating activities                                 3,054        1,814         413
                                                                         --------     --------    --------
Cash Flows from Investing Activities

  Proceeds from FDC public offering, net of cash sold                           -           -          871
  Sale of investments                                                       2,236        4,757       2,296
  Maturity and redemption of investments                                    8,274        6,794       8,308
  Purchase of investments                                                 (11,242)     (13,224)    (13,802)
  Net increase in Cardmember receivables                                   (4,140)      (3,189)     (2,524)
  Cardmember receivables sold to Trust                                          -          900         600
  Proceeds from repayment of loans                                         21,603       21,282      18,817
  Issuance of loans                                                       (23,574)     (21,037)    (19,465)
  Purchase of land, buildings and equipment                                  (347)        (333)       (286)
  Sale of land, buildings and equipment                                        91          122         120
  (Acquisitions) dispositions, net of
    cash acquired/sold                                                        357         (310)        121
  Net cash flows (used) provided by investing
    activities of discontinued operations                                       -          (36)      2,467
                                                                         --------     --------    --------
  Net cash used by investing activities                                    (6,742)      (4,274)     (2,477)
                                                                         --------     --------    --------










-16-        (1995 Annual Report p. 31)

Cash Flows from Financing Activities

  Net (decrease) increase in customers' deposits
    and credit balances                                                      (125)      (1,089)         29
  Sale of annuities and investment certificates                             5,729        5,994       5,217
  Redemption of annuities and investment certificates                      (3,957)      (5,004)     (3,748)
  Net (decrease) increase in debt with
    maturities of 3 months or less                                         (4,700)       5,494        (253)
  Issuance of debt                                                         23,012        3,921      13,561
  Principal payments on debt                                              (15,454)      (8,729)    (11,397)
  Issuance of American Express common shares                                  286          179         259
  Repurchase of American Express common shares                               (891)        (555)          -
  Cash infusion to Lehman Brothers                                              -         (904)          -
  Dividends paid                                                             (458)        (504)       (526)
  Net cash flows provided (used) by financing
    activities of discontinued operations                                       -        3,737        (372)
                                                                         --------     --------    --------
  Net cash provided by financing activities                                 3,442        2,540       2,770
  Net change in cash and cash equivalents of
    discontinued  operations                                                    -           45         734
  Effect of exchange rate changes on cash                                      13           86         (68)
                                                                         --------     --------    --------
  Net (decrease) increase in cash and cash equivalents                       (233)         121         (96)
  Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year                            3,433        3,312       3,408
                                                                         --------     --------    --------
  Cash and cash equivalents at end of year                                 $3,200       $3,433      $3,312
                                                                         ========     ========    ========

See notes to consolidated financial statements.

-17- (1995 Annual Report p. 31)


CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
American Express Company

                                                                                         Net
                                                                                  Unrealized
                                                                                  Securities
Three Years Ended December 31, 1995                   Preferred   Common   Capital     Gains        Retained
(millions)                                    Total      Shares   Shares   Surplus  (Losses)  Other Earnings
                                           --------    --------  -------  --------  -------- ------ --------
Balances at December 31, 1992                $7,499        $201     $288   $3,397       $(1)   $(83) $3,697
                                           --------    --------  -------  --------  -------- ------ --------

Net income                                    1,478                                                   1,478
Change in net unrealized securities
  gains (losses)                                  8                                       8
Foreign currency translation adjustments         10                                              10

Other changes, primarily employee plans         268                   6        259                        3
Cash dividends declared:
  Preferred                                     (42)                                                    (42)
  Common, $1.00 per share                      (487)                                                   (487)
                                           --------    --------  -------  --------  -------- ------ --------
Balances at December 31, 1993                 8,734         201     294      3,656        7     (73)  4,649
                                           --------    --------  -------  --------  -------- ------ --------
Net income                                    1,413                                                   1,413
Repurchase of common shares                    (555)                (11)     (144)                     (400)
Net put options activity                       (104)                         (104)
Impact of Lehman spin-off                    (2,410)                           (4)               11  (2,417)
Conversion of 9% Notes                           58                   2        56
Change in net unrealized securities
  gains (losses)                               (396)                                   (396)
Foreign currency translation adjustments        (15)                                           (15)
Other changes, primarily employee plans         202          (1)     13       191                        (1)
Cash dividends declared:
  Preferred                                     (32)                                                    (32)
  Common, $.925 per share                      (462)                                                   (462)
                                           --------    --------  -------  --------  -------- ------ --------
Balances at December 31, 1994                 6,433         200     298     3,651      (389)   (77)   2,750
                                           --------    --------  -------  --------  -------- ------ --------
Net income                                    1,564                                                   1,564
Repurchase of common shares                    (891)                (14)     (180)                     (697)
Net put options activity                         (1)                           (1)
Change in net unrealized securities
  gains (losses)                              1,264                                   1,264
Foreign currency translation adjustments         (8)                                            (8)
Other changes, primarily employee plans         313                   6       311                        (4)
Cash dividends declared:
  Preferred                                     (15)                                                    (15)
  Common, $.90 per share                       (439)                                                   (439)
                                           --------    --------  -------  -------  --------  ------ --------
Balances at December 31, 1995                $8,220        $200    $290    $3,781      $875   $(85)  $3,159
                                           ========    ========  =======  =======  ========  ====== ========

See notes to consolidated financial statements.

-18- (1995 Annual Report p. 32)


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
American Express Company

NOTE 1

SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

The accompanying Consolidated Financial Statements include the accounts of American Express Company and its subsidiaries (the Company). All significant intercompany transactions are eliminated. As discussed in Note 2, the Company completed the spin-off of Lehman Brothers (Lehman) on May 31, 1994. Accordingly, Lehman's results are reported as a discontinued operation through the spin-off date and for all prior years.

The Company's financial statements include amounts determined using estimates and assumptions. For example, estimates and assumptions are used in determining the reserves related to Accounts Receivable and Accrued Interest and Loans; Deferred Acquisition Costs; and Insurance and Annuity Reserves. While these estimates are based on the best judgment of management, actual results could differ from these estimates.

Certain prior years' amounts have been reclassified to conform to the current year's presentation.

Assets and Liabilities Related to Segregated Accounts
Assets and liabilities related to segregated accounts represent funds held for the exclusive benefit of variable annuity and variable life insurance contract holders. The Company receives investment management fees, mortality and expense assurance fees, minimum death benefit guarantee fees and cost of insurance charges from the related accounts.

Net Revenues

Cardmember Lending Net Finance Charge Revenue is presented net of interest expense of $497 million, $310 million and $257 million for the years ended December 31, 1995, 1994 and 1993, respectively. Interest and Dividends is presented net of interest expense of $604 million for the years ended December 31, 1995 and 1994 and $595 million for the year ended December 31, 1993 related to the Company's international banking operations.

Marketing and Promotion

The Company expenses advertising costs in the year in which the advertising first takes place.

Cash and Cash Equivalents

The Company has defined cash and cash equivalents as cash and time deposits with original maturities of 90 days or less, excluding those that are restricted by law or regulation.

-19- (1995 Annual Report p. 33)


NOTE 2

LEHMAN BROTHERS SPIN-OFF

On May 31, 1994, the Company distributed to its common shareholders a dividend of all of the Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. common stock held by the Company (approximately 98.2 million shares). At that date, the Company's investment in Lehman was $2.4 billion. Shareholders of the Company received one share of Lehman common stock for each five common shares of the Company that they owned. Prior to the distribution, the Company added approximately $1.1 billion of additional equity capital to Lehman representing the Company's purchase of approximately $904 million of Lehman common stock, which was included in the dividend to the Company's common shareholders, and $200 million of Lehman cumulative voting preferred stock (such preferred stock was purchased by Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. on February 15, 1996).

In connection with the spin-off, the Company also acquired 928 shares and Nippon Life Insurance Company (Nippon Life) acquired 72 shares of Lehman redeemable voting preferred stock for a nominal dollar amount. The redeemable voting preferred stock entitles its holders to receive an aggregate annual dividend of 50 percent of Lehman net income in excess of $400 million for each of eight years ending in May 2002, with a maximum of $50 million in any one year. In addition, the Company and Nippon Life will be entitled to receive 92.8 percent and 7.2 percent, respectively, of certain contingent revenue and earnings-related payouts from Travelers Inc. (Travelers), which were assigned by Lehman to the Company and Nippon Life in connection with the spin-off transaction. The Travelers participations will yield a maximum of $50 million pretax annually for three years, depending on the revenues of Smith Barney ($46 million was received by the Company in both 1995 and 1994), plus 10 percent of after-tax profits of Smith Barney in excess of $250 million per year over a five-year period ($24 million and $18 million was received by the Company in 1995 and 1994, respectively).

Discontinued Operations

Discontinued operations represents the results of Lehman through May 31, 1994, the spin-off date. Discontinued operations are summarized as follows:

                                                        Period ending          Year ended
                                                              May 31,        December 31,
(millions)                                                       1994                1993
                                                          ------------        ------------
Net revenues                                                   $1,311              $5,431
                                                               ======              ======
Income (loss) before accounting changes                           $57               $(102)
  Accounting changes                                              (13)                  -
                                                               ------              ------
                                                                   44                (102)
  Preferred dividends                                             (11)                (25)
                                                               ------              ------
Discontinued operations                                           $33               $(127)
                                                               ======              ======

-20- (1995 Annual Report pp. 33-34)


NOTE 3

FIRST DATA CORPORATION

In March 1993, the Company reduced its 54 percent ownership interest in First Data Corporation (FDC) to approximately 22 percent through a public offering of 34.6 million shares of FDC common stock at $32 per share. The Company recognized a $779 million pretax gain from the sale ($433 million after-tax). As a result of the Company's reduced ownership, effective January 1, 1993, FDC was reported under the equity method of accounting. The Company's investment in FDC at December 31, 1994 had a book value of $240 million and is included in Other Assets in the 1994 Consolidated Balance Sheet.

In the fourth quarter of 1995, the Company's ownership was further reduced to approximately 10 percent as a result of shares issued by FDC in connection with a merger transaction. Accordingly, as of December 31, 1995, the Company's investment in FDC is accounted for as Investments-Available for Sale.

In October 1993, the Company sold Debt Exchangeable for Common Stock of FDC. See Note 12.

NOTE 4

INVESTMENTS

The following is a summary of investments included in the Consolidated Balance
Sheet at December 31:

(millions)                                                        1995                1994
                                                               -------             -------
Held to Maturity, at amortized cost                            $16,790             $21,909
Available for Sale, at fair value                               22,435              15,293
Investment mortgage loans (fair
value: 1995, $3,434; 1994, $2,615)                               3,180               2,681
Trading                                                            156                 225
                                                               -------             -------
                                                               $42,561             $40,108
                                                               =======             =======

-21- (1995 Annual Report p. 34)


Investments classified as Held to Maturity and Available for Sale at December 31 are distributed by type and maturity as presented below:

                                                                      Held to Maturity
                                                      1995                                    1994
                               -----------------------------------------------   ---------------------------
                                                     Gross       Gross                       Gross     Gross
                                           Fair Unrealized  Unrealized            Fair Unrealized Unrealized
(millions)                        Cost    Value      Gains      Losses    Cost   Value      Gains     Losses
                               -------  -------    -------     ------- -------  -------   -------    -------
U.S. Government and
  agencies obligations          $2,695   $2,698         $3           -  $3,450   $3,445          -        $5
State and municipal obligations  1,560    1,638         78           -   4,816    4,841       $115        90
Corporate debt securities       10,019   10,655        672         $36  10,627   10,294        172       505
Foreign government bonds
  and obligations                   63       69          6           -     104      105          3         2
Mortgage-backed securities       2,324    2,360         46          10   2,596    2,386         13       223
Other                              129      129          -           -     316      316          -         -
                               -------  -------    -------     ------- -------  -------    -------   -------
Total                          $16,790  $17,549       $805         $46 $21,909  $21,387       $303      $825
                               =======  =======    =======     ======= =======  =======    =======   =======

                                                                    Available for Sale
                                                      1995                                   1994
                               -----------------------------------------------   ---------------------------
                                                     Gross       Gross                      Gross      Gross
                                           Fair Unrealized  Unrealized            Fair Unrealized Unrealized
 (millions)                       Cost    Value      Gains      Losses    Cost   Value      Gains     Losses
                               -------  -------    -------     ------- -------  -------   -------    -------

U.S. Government and
  agencies obligations            $370     $377         $8          $1    $355     $344         -        $11
State and municipal
  obligations                    3,749    4,027        278           -     312      321       $10          1
Corporate debt securities        4,200    4,410        217           7   3,014    3,007        31         38
Foreign government bonds
  and obligations                1,655    1,664         25          16   1,618    1,592        11         37
Mortgage-backed securities       8,731    8,932        227          26   8,515    7,977        12        550
Equity securities                  863    2,140      1,278           1     732      691        15         56
Other                              884      885          1           -   1,366    1,361         8         13
                               -------  -------    -------     ------- -------  -------   -------    -------
  Total                        $20,452  $22,435     $2,034         $51 $15,912  $15,293       $87       $706
                               =======  =======    =======     ======= =======  =======   =======    =======

-22- (1995 Annual Report p. 35)


                                                      Held to Maturity                    Available for Sale
                                                                  Fair                                  Fair
December 31, 1995 (millions)                          Cost       Value                        Cost     Value
                                                   -------     -------                    --------  --------
Due within 1 year                                  $ 3,285     $ 3,293                     $ 2,197  $ 2,204
Due after 1 year through 5 years                     2,781       2,928                       3,044    3,180
Due after 5 years through 10 years                   6,063       6,464                       3,207    3,413
Due after 10 years                                   2,337       2,504                       2,410    2,566
                                                   -------     -------                    --------  -------
                                                    14,466      15,189                      10,858   11,363
Mortgage-backed securities                           2,324       2,360                       8,731    8,932
Equity securities                                        -           -                         863    2,140
                                                   -------     -------                    --------  -------
  Total                                            $16,790     $17,549                     $20,452  $22,435
                                                   =======     =======                    ========  =======

Mortgage-backed securities primarily include GNMA, FNMA and FHLMC securities at December 31, 1995 and 1994.

The table below includes purchases, sales and maturities of investments classified as Held to Maturity and Available for Sale for the year ended December 31:

(millions)                                           1995                              1994
                                            Held to        Available          Held to        Available
                                           Maturity         for Sale         Maturity         for Sale
                                           --------         --------         --------         --------
Purchases                                   $16,460           $6,895          $14,344          $10,498
Sales                                          $372           $1,863              $73          $ 3,833
Maturities                                  $17,256           $3,641          $15,866           $3,945

Investments classified as Held to Maturity were sold during 1995 and 1994 due to credit deterioration, resulting in gross realized gains and losses on sales that were negligible.

To reflect the adoption of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 115, "Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities," the 1994 opening balance of Shareholders' Equity was increased by $325 million (net of deferred taxes) representing the net unrealized gains on securities classified as Available for Sale.

-23- (1995 Annual Report pp. 35-36)


The change in the Net Unrealized Securities Gains (Losses) component of Shareholders' Equity was an increase of $1.3 billion and a decrease of $721 million for the years ended December 31, 1995 and 1994, respectively. The changes in market value during 1995 and 1994 reflect fluctuations in the general level of interest rates and the reclassification of the Company's investment in FDC in 1995 to Investments-Available for Sale. This reclassification resulted in a $400 million unrealized gain, net of the change in the market value of the Company's DECS liability. See Note 12.

Gross realized gains and losses on sales of securities classified as Available for Sale were $46 million and $12 million and $28 million and $30 million for the years ended December 31, 1995 and 1994, respectively. The specific identification method was used to determine the realized gain or loss. The Available for Sale classification does not mean that the Company expects to sell these securities, but that these securities are available to meet possible liquidity needs should there be significant changes in market interest rates, customer demand, funding sources and terms, or foreign currency risk. As a result of adopting the Financial Accounting Standards Board Special Report, "Guide to Implementation of Statement 115 on Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities," in December 1995, the Company reclassified securities with a book value of approximately $3.6 billion and a market value of $3.8 billion from Held to Maturity to Available for Sale. Net unrealized gains on Trading securities included in income were $12 million (pretax) and $10 million (pretax) for the years ended December 31, 1995 and 1994, respectively.

NOTE 5

LOANS

Loans at December 31 consisted of:
(millions)                                                      1995                              1994
                                                             -------                           -------
Consumer Loans                                               $11,677                           $10,183
Commercial Loans:
  Commercial and industrial                                    2,657                             2,407
  Mortgage and real estate                                       514                               693
  Loans to banks and other institutions                        1,300                               996
Other, principally policyholders' loans                          545                               988
                                                             -------                           -------
                                                              16,693                            15,267
Less: Reserves for credit losses                                 602                               545
                                                             -------                           -------
  Total                                                      $16,091                           $14,722
                                                             =======                           =======

Note: American Express Financial Advisors' mortgage loans of $3.2 billion and $2.7 billion in 1995 and 1994, respectively, are included in Investment Mortgage Loans and are reflected in Note 4.

-24- (1995 Annual Report p. 36)


The following table presents changes in Reserves for Credit Losses related to loans:

(millions)                                                             1995
                                                                      ______
Balance, January 1                                                     $545
Provision for credit losses                                             529
Recoveries of amounts previously written-off                            134
Write-offs                                                             (606)
                                                                      ------
Balance, December 31                                                   $602
                                                                      ======

As of January 1, 1995, the Company adopted SFAS No. 114, "Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan," as amended by SFAS No. 118, "Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan-Income Recognition and Disclosures." The adoption of the new rules did not have a material impact on the Company's results of operations or financial condition.

NOTE 6

PREFERRED SHARES

In January 1990, the Company sold to Nippon Life for $200 million, four million of the Company's $3.875 Convertible Exchangeable Preferred shares (Convertible Preferred shares) having a liquidation preference of $50 per share and paying dividends at an annual rate of 7.75 percent. The shares are convertible at the option of the holder into the Company's common shares at an initial conversion price of $42.50 per share. The Convertible Preferred shares are redeemable in whole at the option of the Company, for the Company's 7.75% Convertible Subordinated Debentures due 2015 at $1,000 principal amount of Debentures for each $1,000 liquidation preference of Convertible Preferred shares. The Company also has the option of redeeming the Convertible Preferred shares for cash at $51.94 as of December 31, 1995 and at prices declining to $50 per share on and after January 2000.

The Board of Directors is authorized to permit the Company to issue up to 16 million additional preferred shares without further shareholder approval.

NOTE 7

COMMON SHARES

In March 1995, the Company's Board of Directors authorized the Company to repurchase up to 40 million common shares, subject to market conditions. This authorization is in addition to a plan announced in September 1994, whereby the Company was authorized to repurchase up to 20 million common shares. In connection with these plans, the Company intends to fund contributions to various employee benefit plans with cash, and offset the issuance of new shares as part of employee compensation plans by repurchasing an equivalent number of shares in the open market. Since inception of the initial repurchase plan in 1994, the Company has repurchased and cancelled 38,345,990 shares under the repurchase programs at an average price of $34.56 per share. In the fourth quarter of 1995, 12,313,500 common shares were cancelled, reducing stated capital by $7.4 million.

-25- (1995 Annual Report p. 37)


In connection with the share repurchase programs, the Company sold 5.3 million and 4.0 million put options in 1995 and 1994, respectively, with maturities ranging from one to twelve months. The weighted average strike price for the put options was $38.64 and $30.81 per share in 1995 and 1994, respectively. Upon issuing these put options, the Company received a weighted average premium of $2.05 per share, or $10.9 million, in 1995 and $1.83 per share, or $7.3 million, in 1994, which amounts are included in Shareholders' Equity. The average effective strike price was $36.59 and $28.98 per share in 1995 and 1994, respectively. Through December 31, 1995, 4.1 million put options expired unexercised. Put options outstanding at December 31, 1995 and 1994 were 3.3 million and 3.6 million, respectively. The aggregate strike prices relating to the outstanding put options at December 31, 1995 and 1994 of $123 million and $111 million, respectively, are included as temporary equity in Other Liabilities in the Consolidated Balance Sheet.

In addition to the above repurchase programs, in 1994 the Company repurchased and cancelled four million shares of its common stock at an average price of $27.67, primarily to offset the issuance of new shares resulting from the conversion of American Express Company 9% Convertible Notes Series A-G due April 1, 1994.

Of the common shares authorized but unissued at December 31, 1995, 74,455,059 shares were reserved for issuance with respect to employee stock plans, employee benefit plans, convertible preferred stock and debentures and the dividend reinvestment plan.

Common shares activity for each of the years ended December 31 is as follows:

                                                              1995                 1994                 1993
                                                       -----------          -----------          -----------
Shares outstanding at beginning
  of year                                              495,865,678          489,827,852          479,976,358
Repurchase of common shares                            (23,744,935)         (18,601,055)                   -
Conversion of CAP Preferred shares                               -           13,998,141                    -
Conversion of 9% Notes                                           -            3,273,062                    -
Employee compensation plans,
  benefit plans and other                               10,987,346            7,368,678            9,851,494
                                                       -----------          -----------          -----------
Shares outstanding at end of year                      483,108,089          495,865,678          489,827,852
                                                       ===========          ===========          ===========

In 1987, Nippon Life purchased 13 million shares of Lehman 5% Series A Preferred Stock for $508 million. The preferred shares are convertible at the option of Nippon Life into shares of Lehman common stock at a conversion price of $122.94, or an aggregate of 4.1 million Lehman shares. The preferred shares are also exchangeable at the option of Nippon Life for the Company's common shares at an exchange price of $81.46, or an aggregate of approximately 6.2 million common shares. The exchange right terminates in December 1999.

-26- (1995 Annual Report pp. 37-38)


NOTE 8

STOCK PLANS

Under the 1989 Long-Term Incentive Plan (the 1989 Plan), awards may be granted to officers, key employees and other key individuals who perform services for the Company and its participating subsidiaries. These awards may be in the form of stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock, performance grants and other awards deemed by the Compensation and Benefits Committee of the Board of Directors to be consistent with the purposes of the 1989 Plan. The Company also has options outstanding pursuant to the Directors' Stock Option Plans. Stock options are granted at a price not less than the fair market value of the common shares at the date of grant.

In 1994, the Company adjusted its outstanding restricted stock and stock options by 799,027 shares and 4,027,120 shares, respectively, to reflect the Lehman spin-off discussed in Note 2. The respective stock options had exercise prices ranging from $10.30 to $67.09, which were adjusted to $9.03 to $58.83. In addition, all outstanding restricted stock and stock options held by Lehman employees were cancelled.

There were 14,061,595; 19,833,442; and 23,528,235 common shares available for grant at December 31, 1995, 1994 and 1993, respectively, under various employee and director stock plans.

At December 31, 1995, options outstanding had an average exercise price of $27.41 per share and expiration dates ranging from March 31, 1996 to November 30, 2005.

The details of transactions provided in the following
table include the plans described above.

                                                        1995                   1994                     1993
                                             ---------------       ----------------         ----------------
Restricted stock awarded                           1,742,850              1,349,400                1,584,052
Options outstanding at
  beginning of year                               28,998,235             25,733,675               28,690,159
  Option price                               $9.03 to $58.83       $10.30 to $67.09         $10.00 to $67.09
Options granted                                    6,045,455              5,175,049                4,818,473
  Option price                              $29.55 to $43.31       $26.13 to $30.94         $22.59 to $35.63
Options exercised                                 10,397,398              3,326,731                4,526,835
  Exercise price                             $9.03 to $41.45        $9.82 to $31.64         $10.00 to $34.81
Options expired or cancelled                       1,167,621              2,610,878                3,248,122
Option adjustment pursuant to
  Lehman spin-off                                          -              4,027,120                        -
Options outstanding at
  end of year                                     23,478,671             28,998,235               25,733,675
  Option price                               $9.03 to $58.83        $9.03 to $58.83         $10.30 to $67.09
Options exercisable at
  end of year                                     12,591,312             18,331,687               16,774,856

-27- (1995 Annual Report pp. 38-39)


The Company also sponsors the American Express Incentive Savings Plan under which purchases of the Company's common shares are made by or for participating employees.

NOTE 9

RETIREMENT PLANS

Pension Plans

The Company has noncontributory defined benefit plans under which the cost of retirement benefits for eligible employees in the United States, measured by length of service, compensation and other factors, is currently being funded through trusts established under these plans. In addition, the Company sponsors certain unfunded, unqualified supplemental plans for which the aggregate accrued liability is not material. Funding of retirement costs for these plans complies with the applicable minimum funding requirements specified by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended. In 1994, the Company's Board of Directors approved an amendment of the American Express Retirement Plan (the Plan) which covers U.S. employees. The amendment, which became effective July 1, 1995, converted the discounted accrued benefits to lump sum individual account balances. Employees' accounts are credited with additions equal to a percentage, based on age plus service, of base pay plus annual incentives. Employees' accounts are also credited with interest based on published five-year Treasury rates. Lump sum payout at termination or retirement is available. The initial impact of the changes was to significantly decrease the Plan's projected benefit obligation and annual pension cost. This decrease is largely offset by higher expense associated with amendments to the American Express Incentive Savings Plan, which includes a profit-sharing component as of July 1, 1994.

Most employees outside the United States are covered by local retirement plans, some of which are funded, or receive payments at the time of retirement or termination under applicable labor laws or agreements. Benefits under labor laws are generally not funded.

Plan assets consist principally of equities and fixed income securities.

Net pension cost consisted of the following components:

(millions)                                              1995             1994             1993
                                                      ------           ------           ------
Service cost                                            $66              $71              $59
Interest cost                                            76               71               65
Actual return on plan assets                           (153)             (22)            (116)
Net amortization and deferral                            78              (31)              67
                                                     ------            ------           ------
Net periodic pension cost                               $67              $89              $75
                                                     ======            ======           ======

-28- (1995 Annual Report p. 39)


The following table sets forth the funded status and amounts recognized in the Consolidated Balance Sheet for the Company's defined benefit plans, including certain unfunded, nonqualified supplemental plans. The underfunded plans relate to foreign and supplemental executive plans.

December 31,                                       1995                                   1994
                                     ---------------------------------       -------------------------------
                                     Assets Exceed         Accumulated       Assets Exceed       Accumulated
                                       Accumulated            Benefits         Accumulated          Benefits
(millions)                                Benefits       Exceed Assets            Benefits     Exceed Assets
                                     -------------       -------------       -------------     -------------
Actuarial present value of benefit obligations:

  Vested benefit obligation                 $(686)              $(121)              $(453)            $(106)
                                     -------------       -------------       -------------     -------------
  Accumulated benefit
    obligation                              $(722)              $(150)              $(490)            $(123)
                                     -------------       -------------       -------------     -------------
  Projected benefit
    obligation                              $(795)             $ (210)              $(724)            $(213)
Plan assets at fair value                     950                   6                 774                16
                                     -------------       -------------       -------------     -------------
Projected benefit obligation
   (in excess of) or less
   than plan assets                           155                (204)                 50              (197)
Unrecognized net (gain) loss                  (58)                  9                 (54)               (7)
Unrecognized prior service
  cost                                        (95)                 (5)                  3                19
Unrecognized net (asset)
  obligation at transition                     (5)                 20                  (7)               20
Adjustment required to
  recognize minimum liability                    -                (11)                   -               (5)

                                     -------------       -------------        ------------     -------------
Pension liability included
  in the Consolidated
  Balance Sheet                               $(3)              $(191)                $(8)            $(170)
                                     =============       =============        ============     =============

The range of assumptions used in the majority of the Company's plans at December 31 was:

                                                           1995            1994
                                                  -------------   -------------
Weighted average discount rates                   6.5% to  8.5%   7.5% to  9.0%
Rates of increase in compensation levels          4.5% to  7.0%   4.5% to  7.0%
Expected long-term rates of return
  on assets                                       7.5% to 11.0%   7.5% to 12.0%

-29- (1995 Annual Report p. 40)


Other Postretirement Benefits

The Company sponsors postretirement benefit plans that provide health care, life insurance and other postretirement benefits to retired U.S. employees.

Net periodic postretirement benefit expense was $19 million in 1995 and 1994 and $18 million in 1993.

The liabilities recognized in the Consolidated Balance Sheet for the Company's defined postretirement benefit plans (other than pension plans) at December 31, 1995 and 1994 were $202 million and $195 million, respectively.

NOTE 10

INCOME TAXES

The provision for income taxes consisted of the following:

(millions)                                                      1995             1994             1993
                                                               -----            -----            -----
Federal                                                         $416             $316             $551
State and local                                                   18               42               72
Foreign                                                          185              153               98
                                                               -----            -----            -----
  Total                                                         $619             $511             $721
                                                               =====            =====            =====

Accumulated net earnings of certain foreign subsidiaries, which totaled $534 million at December 31, 1995, are intended to be permanently reinvested outside the United States. Accordingly, federal taxes, which would have aggregated $149 million, have not been provided.

The current and deferred components of the provision for income taxes consisted of the following:

(millions)                                                      1995             1994             1993
                                                              ------           ------           ------
Current                                                         $654             $596             $677
Deferred                                                        (35)             (85)               44
                                                              ------           ------           ------
  Total                                                         $619             $511             $721
                                                              ======           ======           ======
The Company's net deferred tax assets at December 31
consisted of the following:

(millions)                                                      1995             1994
                                                              ------           ------
Deferred tax assets                                           $2,348           $2,576
Deferred tax liabilities                                       1,638            1,162
                                                              ------           ------
Net deferred tax assets                                         $710           $1,414
                                                              ======           ======

-30- (1995 Annual Report pp. 40-41)


Deferred tax assets for 1995 and 1994 consisted primarily of: reserves not yet deducted for tax purposes of $1.5 billion and $1.6 billion, respectively, and deferred Cardmember fees of $239 million and $184 million, respectively. Deferred tax assets for 1994 also included $209 million related to SFAS No.
115. Deferred tax assets are presented net of a $45 million valuation allowance that relates to certain deferred tax assets for which realization requires taxable income in the subsidiary that gave rise to the deferred tax asset. Deferred tax liabilities for 1995 and 1994 consisted primarily of:
deferred acquisition costs of $654 million and $688 million, respectively, and accelerated depreciation of $157 million and $159 million, respectively. Deferred tax liabilities for 1995 also included $514 million related to SFAS No. 115.

The aggregate income tax provision is different from that computed by using the U.S. statutory rate of 35 percent. The principal causes of the difference in each year are shown below:

(millions)                                                      1995             1994              1993
                                                               -----            -----             -----
Combined tax at U.S. statutory rate                             $764             $662              $814
Changes in taxes resulting from:
  Tax-exempt interest income                                    (157)            (150)             (148)
  Tax-exempt element of dividend income                          (29)             (33)              (37)
  FDC public offering                                               -                -               74
  Foreign income taxed at rates other
    than U.S. statutory rate                                       1              (13)              (25)
  State and local income taxes                                    11               26                25
  Impact of rate change on opening net
    deferred tax assets                                            -                -               (30)
All other                                                         29               19                48
                                                               -----            -----             -----
Income tax provision                                            $619             $511              $721
                                                               =====            =====             =====

Net income taxes paid by the Company during 1995, 1994 and 1993 were $595 million, $289 million and $639 million, respectively, and include estimated tax payments, as well as cash settlements relating to prior tax years.

NOTE 11

DERIVATIVE AND OTHER OFF-BALANCE SHEET FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

The Company enters into transactions involving derivative financial instruments as an end user, as well as for trading purposes at American Express Bank (the Bank). The Company uses derivatives for end user (nontrading) purposes to manage its exposure to interest and foreign exchange rate risks and to manage its funding costs. These instruments are used when they provide a more efficient means for the Company to manage its risk exposure than if the Company entered into the cash marketplace. For trading purposes, the Bank enters into derivative contracts to meet the needs of its clients. To a limited extent, the Bank takes proprietary positions. The Company manages risks associated with derivatives as described below.

-31- (1995 Annual Report pp. 41-42)


Market risk is the possibility that the value of the derivative financial instrument will change due to fluctuations in a factor from which the instrument derives its value. The Company is not impacted by market risk related to derivatives held for nontrading purposes beyond that inherent in cash market transactions. Foreign currency and certain interest rate products that manage related risks have cash flow and income effects that are inverse to the effects of the underlying transactions. The Bank is generally not subject to market risk when it enters into a contract with a client as it usually enters into an offsetting contract or uses the position to offset an existing exposure. The Bank takes proprietary positions within approved limits. These positions are monitored daily at the local level and reviewed for compliance centrally. The Company does not enter into derivative contracts with embedded options or other features that would leverage or multiply its market risk.

Credit exposure is the possibility that the counterparty will not fulfill the terms of the contract. The Company monitors credit exposure related to derivative financial instruments through established approval procedures, including setting concentration limits by counterparty and country, reviewing credit ratings and requiring collateral where appropriate. For its trading activities, the Bank requires collateral when it is not willing to assume credit exposure to counterparties for either contract mark-to-market risk or delivery risk. A significant portion of the Company's credit risk is with counterparties rated A or better by nationally recognized credit rating agencies. Wherever possible, the Company's credit exposure is further reduced through the use of master netting agreements, which allow the Company to settle multiple contracts with a single counterparty in one net receipt or payment in the event of counterparty default.

The notional or contract amount of a derivative financial instrument is generally used to calculate the cash flows that are received or paid over the life of the agreement. Notional amounts do not represent market risk or credit exposure. At December 31, 1995 and 1994, the aggregate notional amount of the Company's derivative instruments was $40 billion and $57 billion, respectively. The related credit exposure approximates the fair value of contracts in a gain position (asset) totaling $381 million at December 31, 1995 and $375 million at December 31, 1994. Including contracts in a loss position, the Company was in a net liability position of $11 million at December 31, 1995, compared with a net exposure of $16 million at December 31, 1994. The fair value represents the replacement cost and is determined by market values, dealer quotes or pricing models.

-32- (1995 Annual Report p. 42)


The following tables detail information regarding the Company's derivatives at
December 31:


NONTRADING                                                                          1995
                                                       -----------------------------------------------------
                                                       Notional        Carrying Value          Fair Value
(millions)                                               Amount        Asset  Liability      Asset Liability
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
Interest Rate Products:
Interest rate swaps                                      $7,709          $83       $105       $126     $220
Interest rate caps and corridors
  purchased                                               6,070            -         30          -       10
Forward rate agreements                                     686            -          -          -        -
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
  Total Interest Rate Products                           14,465          113        105        136       220
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
Foreign Currency Products:
Forward and spot contracts                                7,110           40         21         57        35

Other Products                                              369           32          9         29        10
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
  Total                                                 $21,944         $185       $135       $222      $265
                                                       ========     ========   ========   ========  ========


                                                                                   1994
                                                       ----------------------------------------------------
                                                       Notional        Carrying Value          Fair Value
(millions)                                               Amount        Asset  Liability      Asset Liability
                                                       --------     --------   --------   -------- ---------
Interest Rate Products:
Interest rate swaps                                     $17,374         $57         $62      $131       $249
Interest rate caps and corridors
  purchased                                               5,420           44          -         67         -
Interest rate options                                       706            3          2          5         -
Forward rate agreements                                     675            -          -          -         2
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
  Total Interest Rate Products                           24,175          104         64        203       251
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
Foreign Currency Products:
Forward and spot contracts                                8,030           39         12         59        27
Foreign currency options purchased                          128            2          -          2         -
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
  Total Foreign Currency Products                         8,158           41         12         61        27
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
Other Products                                              533           16          2         19         -
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
  Total                                                 $32,866         $161        $78       $283      $278
                                                       ========     ========   ========   ========  ========

-33- (1995 Annual Report pp. 42-43)


TRADING                                                                               1995
                                                       -----------------------------------------------------
                                                       Notional     Carrying/Fair Value   Average Fair Value
(millions)                                               Amount        Asset  Liability      Asset Liability
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
Interest Rate Products:
Interest rate swaps                                      $1,621          $25        $26        $19      $16
Forward rate agreements                                     785            1          1          3        2
Other                                                       267            -          -          -        -
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
  Total Interest Rate Products                            2,673           26         27         22       18
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------

Foreign Currency Products*:
Forward and spot contracts                               13,073          115         80        175      168
Foreign currency options written                          1,103           -          20          -       28
Foreign currency options purchased                        1,099           18          -         27        -
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
  Total Foreign Currency Products                        15,275          133        100        202      196
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
  Total                                                 $17,948         $159       $127       $224     $214
                                                       ========     ========   ========   ========  ========

                                                                                   1994
                                                       -----------------------------------------------------

                                                       Notional     Carrying/Fair Value   Average Fair Value
(millions)                                               Amount        Asset  Liability      Asset Liability
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
Interest Rate Products:
Interest rate swaps                                        $722          $11         $8         $8        $6
Forward rate agreements                                     359            1          1          1         -
Other                                                        94            -          -          -         -
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
  Total Interest Rate Products                            1,175           12          9          9         6
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
Foreign Currency Products*:
Forward and spot contracts                               20,574           71         63         77        72
Foreign currency options written                          1,114            -          9          -        11
Foreign currency options purchased                        1,062            9          -         11         -
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
  Total Foreign Currency Products                        22,750           80         72         88        83
                                                       --------     --------   --------   --------  --------
  Total                                                 $23,925          $92        $81        $97       $89
                                                       ========     ========   ========   ========  ========

*These are predominantly contracts with clients and the related hedges of those client contracts. The Company's net trading foreign currency exposure was approximately $62 million and $7 million at December 31, 1995 and 1994, respectively.

The average aggregate fair values of derivative financial instruments held for trading purposes were computed based on monthly information in 1995 and quarterly information in 1994. Net derivative trading gains of $79 million for 1995 and $66 million for 1994 were primarily due to trading in foreign currency forward and spot contracts and are included in Other Commissions and Fees. -34- (1995 Annual Report p. 43)


Interest Rate Products

The Company uses interest rate products, for the most part, to manage funding costs related to TRS' Charge Card and Cardmember lending businesses. The principal products used are interest rate swaps, which involve the exchange for a specified period of time of fixed or floating rate interest payments based on a notional or contractual amount.

TRS uses interest rate swaps to obtain a cost effective and flexible funding structure to fund its Cardmember receivables and Cardmember loans, as well as to match Cardmember loans with funding of the same repricing terms. TRS uses interest rate swaps to achieve a targeted, predetermined mix of fixed and floating rate funding of its Cardmember receivables.

Interest rates charged on TRS' Cardmember loans are linked to a floating rate base and generally reprice each month. TRS generally enters into interest rate swaps paying rates that reprice when the base rate of the underlying loans changes. The decline in the notional amount of interest rate swaps at December 31, 1995 is primarily due to the change in the terms of Cardmember loans from semi-annual to monthly repricing in 1995. At December 31, 1994, the notional amount for interest rate swaps in the nontrading table above included $5.7 billion of swaps that went into effect in January and February of 1995. These swaps replaced swaps that matured at that time and, accordingly, are not reflected in the notional amount of swaps at December 31, 1994 disclosed in Note 12. In addition, the Bank uses interest rate swaps to manage the interest characteristics of loans, deposits and, to a lesser extent, securities holdings. The termination dates of these swaps are generally matched with the maturity dates of the underlying assets and liabilities.

For interest rate swaps that are used for nontrading purposes and meet the criteria for hedge accounting, interest is accrued and reported in Other Receivables and Interest and Dividends or Accounts Payable and Interest Expense, as appropriate. Products used for trading purposes are reported at fair value in Other Assets or Other Liabilities, as appropriate, with unrealized gains and losses recognized currently in Other Revenues.

Interest rate caps and corridors limit the Company's exposure to rising interest rates. These instruments are used primarily by American Express Financial Advisors to protect the margin between the interest rates earned on investments and the interest rates accrued to related investment certificate and fixed annuity holders. Interest rate caps and corridors generally mature within five years. The costs of interest rate caps and corridors are reported in Other Assets and amortized into Interest and Dividends on a straight line basis over the term of the contract; benefits are recognized in income when earned.

See Note 12 for further information related to the Company's use of interest rate products to modify its short- and long-term debt.

-35- (1995 Annual Report p. 44)


Foreign Currency Products

As an end user, the Company uses foreign currency products to hedge primarily net investments in foreign operations and to manage transactions denominated in foreign currencies. For trading purposes, the Bank enters into contracts to meet the needs of its clients, and to a limited extent, takes proprietary positions. The decrease in the aggregate notional amount of all forward and spot contracts in 1995 was caused primarily by client-related contracts.

Foreign currency exposures are hedged, where practicable, through foreign currency forward and spot contracts. Foreign currency forward and spot contracts involve the purchase and sale of a designated currency at an agreed upon rate for settlement on a specified date. Foreign currency forward contracts generally mature within one year, whereas foreign currency spot contracts generally settle within two days. At both December 31, 1995 and 1994, the Company had no significant unhedged foreign currency exposures; the Company's largest unhedged foreign currency exposure in 1995 and 1994 was a net investment of $82 million and $96 million, respectively, in India.

For foreign currency products used to hedge net investments in foreign operations, unrealized gains and losses as well as related premiums and discounts are reported in Shareholders' Equity. For foreign currency contracts that manage transactions denominated in foreign currencies, unrealized gains and losses are reported in Other Assets and Other Commissions and Fees or Other Liabilities and Other Expenses, as appropriate. Related premiums and discounts are reported in Other Assets or Other Liabilities, as appropriate, and amortized into Interest Expense and Other Expenses over the term of the contract. Foreign currency products used for trading purposes are reported at fair value in Other Assets or Other Liabilities, as appropriate, with unrealized gains and losses recognized currently in Other Commissions and Fees.

To a limited extent, the Company uses foreign currency forward contracts to hedge its firm commitments primarily related to its travel programs. In addition, for selected major overseas markets, the Company uses foreign currency forward contracts to hedge future income generally for periods not exceeding one year; related unrealized gains and losses are recognized currently in income. The impact of these activities was not material.

Other Off-Balance Sheet Financial Instruments

The Company primarily enters into other off-balance-sheet financial instruments to extend credit to satisfy the needs of its clients. The contractual amount of these instruments represents the maximum accounting loss the Company would record assuming the contract amount is fully utilized, the counterparty defaults and collateral held is worthless. Management does not expect any material adverse impact to the Company's financial position to result from these contracts.

December 31, (millions)                                     1995          1994
                                                         _______       _______

Unused Credit Available to Cardmembers                   $21,694       $19,018
Loan Commitments and Other Lines of Credit                  $521          $354
Standby Letters of Credit and Guarantees                  $1,609        $1,668
Commercial and Other Letters of Credit                      $936          $969

-36- (1995 Annual Report pp. 44-45)


The Company is committed to extend credit to certain Cardmembers as part of established Cardmember lending product agreements. Since many of the commitments extended to Cardmembers are not expected to be drawn upon, unused credit available to Cardmembers does not represent future cash requirements. The Company's Charge Card products have no preset spending limit, and are not reflected in unused credit available to Cardmembers.

The Company may require collateral in support of its loan commitments based on the creditworthiness of the borrower.

Standby letters of credit and guarantees primarily represent conditional commitments to insure the performance of the Company's customers to third parties. These commitments generally expire within one year.

The Company primarily issues commercial and other letters of credit to facilitate the short-term trade-related needs of its clients. These letters of credit typically mature within six months. At December 31, 1995 and 1994, the Company held $1.0 billion and $852 million, respectively, of collateral supporting standby letters of credit and guarantees and $515 million and $447 million, respectively, of collateral supporting commercial and other letters of credit.

Other financial institutions have committed to extend lines of credit to the Company of $8.6 billion and $7.7 billion at December 31, 1995 and 1994, respectively.

NOTE 12

SHORT- AND LONG-TERM DEBT AND BORROWING AGREEMENTS

The Company has various borrowing agreements, both fixed and floating rate and short- and long-term. The Company manages interest rate risk associated with these borrowings, in part, through the use of interest rate products, principally interest rate swaps. In addition, TRS uses interest rate swaps to achieve a targeted, predetermined mix of fixed and floating rate funding of its Cardmember receivables. See Note 11 for a further description of the Company's use of interest rate products.

Short-Term Debt

The Company has various facilities to obtain short-term credit, including borrowing agreements with banks and the issuance of commercial paper. At December 31, 1995 and 1994, the Company's total short-term debt outstanding was $17.7 billion and $14.8 billion, respectively, with weighted average interest rates of 6.14% and 6.13%, respectively. At December 31, 1995 and 1994, $1.0 billion and $7.6 billion, respectively, of short-term debt outstanding was modified by interest rate swaps, resulting in a year-end weighted average effective interest rate of 6.12% and 5.93%, respectively. The Company generally pays floating rates of interest under the terms of interest rate swaps which are primarily used to achieve a targeted, predetermined fixed to floating funding mix on Cardmember receivables and to match Cardmember loans with funding of the same repricing terms. In 1994, the Company paid fixed rates of interest under the terms of interest rate swaps used to match the terms of Cardmember loans. Unused lines of credit in support of commercial paper borrowing arrangements were approximately $5.9 billion at December 31, 1995.

-37- (1995 Annual Report p. 45)


Long-Term Debt

December 31, (dollars in millions)
                                                                        1995
                                    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                    Year-End
                                                                    Year-End       Effective
                                                     Notional         Stated        Interest
                                    Outstanding     Amount of        Rate on       Rate with    Maturity of
                                        Balance         Swaps     Debt (a,b)     Swaps (a,b)          Swaps
                                      ---------     ---------      ---------       ---------      ---------
DECS due October 15, 1996                $1,294             -          6.25%               -              -
Swiss franc Bonds due
  October 14, 1996 to
  December 16, 1996 (c)                     309          $292          5.00%           3.34%            1996
Notes due June 15, 2000                     299           299         6.125%           6.80%            2000
Notes due November 15, 2001                 299           299         6.125%           4.93%            2001
Notes due August 15, 2001                   298             -          8.50%               -               -
Floating Medium-Term Senior
  Note due December 31, 2000                208             -          5.83%               -               -
Fixed Medium-Term Senior
  Notes due 1995-1997                        61             -          7.34%               -               -
Other Fixed Senior Notes
  due 1995-2022                           2,766         1,410          7.89%           7.55%       1996-2005
Other Floating Senior Notes
  due 1995-1998                           1,223           524          5.98%           6.14%       1996-1998
Other floating rate notes
  due 1995-2004                             413           150          6.40%           6.62%            2004
Other fixed rate notes
  due 1995-2006                             400             -          5.64%               -               -
                                       --------     ---------
    Total                                $7,570        $2,974
                                       ========     =========

-38- (1995 Annual Report p. 46)


Long-Term Debt
December 31, (dollars in millions)
                                                                        1994
                                   -------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                    Year-End
                                                                    Year-End       Effective
                                                     Notional         Stated        Interest
                                    Outstanding     Amount of        Rate on       Rate with     Maturity of
                                        Balance         Swaps     Debt (a,b)     Swaps (a,b)           Swaps
                                      ---------     ---------      ---------       ---------       ---------
DECS due October 15, 1996                  $868             -          6.25%               -              -
Swiss franc Bonds due
  October 14, 1996 to
  December 16, 1996 (c)                     272          $263          5.00%           3.65%            1996
Notes due June 15, 2000                     299           299         6.125%           7.11%            2000
Notes due November 15, 2001                   -             -              -               -               -
Notes due August 15, 2001                   298             -          8.50%               -               -
Floating Medium-Term Senior
  Note due December 31, 2000                945             -          6.63%               -               -
Fixed Medium-Term Senior
  Notes due 1995-1997                       270             -          5.40%               -               -
Other Fixed Senior Notes
  due 1995-2022                           2,555         1,078          8.20%           8.29%       1995-2000
Other Floating Senior Notes
  due 1995-1998                             569           424          6.00%           6.04%       1995-1998
Other floating rate notes
  due 1995-2004                             731           250          5.99%           6.03%            2004
Other fixed rate notes
  due 1995-2006                             355             -          6.75%               -               -
                                      ---------     ---------
    Total                                $7,162        $2,314
                                      =========     =========

(a) For floating rate debt issuances, the stated and effective interest rates were based on the respective rates at December 31, 1995 and 1994; these rates are not an indication of future interest rates.

(b) Weighted average rates were determined where appropriate.

(c) Debt hedged through Swiss franc to U.S. dollar cross-currency interest rate swaps.

The above interest rate swaps generally require the Company to pay a floating rate, with a predominant index of LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate).

Aggregate annual maturities of long-term debt for the five years ending December 31, 2000 are as follows (millions): 1996, $3,112; 1997, $1,048; 1998, $359; 1999, $705; and 2000, $1,007.

The Company paid interest (net of amounts capitalized) of $2.6 billion in 1995, $1.7 billion in 1994 and $1.9 billion in 1993.

Approximately $217 million of the long-term financing for the Company's headquarters building is secured by certain mortgages on the interests of the Company in the building. -39- (1995 Annual Report p. 46)


In 1993, the Company issued 23,618,500 DECS (Debt Exchangeable for Common Stock), in the form of 6 1/4% Exchangeable Notes due October 15, 1996. The DECS were issued at a principal amount of $36.75 per DECS, resulting in net proceeds of approximately $842 million. At maturity, holders of DECS will receive, in exchange for the principal amount thereof, shares of FDC common stock, or at the Company's option, an equivalent amount of cash in lieu of such shares. The number of such shares or the amount of such cash will be based on the average market price of FDC common stock calculated during a period shortly before the maturity of the DECS. If the Company elects to deliver shares of FDC at maturity, the Company's holdings of FDC will be reduced to between zero (if the average market price of FDC shares is at or below $36.75) and approximately 3.3 million shares (if the average market price of FDC shares is at or above $44.875). In January 1996, the Company entered into a derivative transaction to lock in its gain on approximately 2.5 million of the residual FDC shares, at a minimum FDC share price of approximately $66. The value of the DECS is linked to the Company's investment in FDC. As stated in Note 3, the Company now carries its investment in FDC at market value rather than under the equity method of accounting; therefore, the Company is also carrying the DECS liability at market value. Changes in the DECS market value, net of income taxes, are recorded in the Net Unrealized Securities Gains (Losses) component of Shareholders' Equity.

NOTE 13

FAIR VALUES OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

The Company is required to disclose fair value information for most on- and off-balance-sheet financial instruments for which it is practicable to estimate that value. Certain financial instruments, such as life insurance obligations, employee benefit obligations, investments accounted for under the equity method and all non-financial instruments, such as land, buildings and equipment, deferred acquisition costs and goodwill, are excluded from required disclosure. The Company's off-balance-sheet intangible assets, such as the American Express Company name and the future earnings of core businesses, are also excluded. The Company's management believes the value of these excluded assets is significant. The fair value of the Company, therefore, cannot be estimated by aggregating the amounts presented below.

The fair values of financial instruments are estimates based upon market conditions and perceived risks at December 31, 1995 and 1994 and require varying degrees of management judgment. The fair values of the financial instruments presented may not be indicative of their future fair values.

-40- (1995 Annual Report pp. 46-47)


                                                                        1995                      1994
                                                            -----------------------     --------------------
                                                            Carrying           Fair     Carrying        Fair
December 31, (millions)                                        Value          Value        Value       Value
                                                             -------        -------      -------     -------
Financial Assets
Assets for which carrying values
  approximate fair values                                    $38,640        $38,640      $31,078     $31,078
Investments                                                  $42,561        $43,574      $40,108     $39,520
Loans                                                        $16,223        $16,194      $14,282     $14,370
Other assets                                                 $ 3,458        $ 3,458      $ 2,122     $ 2,122
Derivative financial instruments, net                        $    82        $  (11)      $    94     $    16
                                                             -------        -------      -------     -------
Financial Liabilities
Liabilities for which carrying values
  approximate fair values                                    $37,716        $37,716      $34,105     $34,105
Fixed annuity reserves                                       $20,334        $19,603      $19,189     $18,451
Investment certificate reserves                              $ 3,555        $ 3,592      $ 2,808     $ 2,800
Long-term debt                                               $ 7,570        $ 7,740      $ 7,112     $ 7,025
Liabilities related to segregated
  asset accounts                                             $14,209        $13,666      $10,399     $ 9,944
Other liabilities                                            $ 5,854        $ 5,854      $ 5,330     $ 5,330
                                                             -------        -------      -------     -------

The carrying and fair values of other off-balance-sheet financial instruments are not material as of December 31, 1995 and 1994. See Notes 4 and 11 for carrying and fair value information regarding investments and derivative financial instruments, respectively. The following methods were used to estimate the fair values of financial assets and financial liabilities:

Financial Assets

Assets For Which Carrying Values Approximate Fair Values: The carrying values of Cash and Cash Equivalents, Accounts Receivable and Accrued Interest, and Assets Held in Segregated Asset Accounts approximate their fair values.

Loans: For variable rate loans that reprice within a year where there has been no significant change in counterparties' creditworthiness, fair values are based on carrying values. The fair values of all other loans, except for loans with significant credit deterioration, are estimated using discounted cash flow analysis, based on current interest rates for loans with similar terms to borrowers of similar credit quality. For loans with significant credit deterioration, fair values are based on revised estimates of future cash flows discounted at rates commensurate with the risk inherent in the revised cash flow projections, or for collateral dependent loans, on collateral values.

Other Assets: The carrying values of applicable Other Assets, which primarily include securities purchased under agreements to resell and customers' acceptance liabilities, approximate their fair values.

-41- (1995 Annual Report p. 47)


Financial Liabilities

Liabilities For Which Carrying Values Approximate Fair Values: The carrying values of Customers' Deposits and Credit Balances, Travelers Cheques Outstanding, Accounts Payable and Short-Term Debt approximate their fair values.

Fixed Annuity Reserves: Fair values of annuities in deferral status are estimated as the accumulated value less applicable surrender charges and loans. For annuities in payout status, fair value is estimated using discounted cash flow analysis, based on current interest rates. The fair value of these reserves excludes life insurance-related elements of $1.1 billion in 1995 and $1.0 billion in 1994.

Investment Certificate Reserves: For variable rate investment certificates that reprice within a year, fair values approximate carrying values. For other investment certificates, fair value is estimated using discounted cash flow analysis, based on current interest rates. The valuations are reduced by the amount of applicable surrender charges and related loans.

Long-Term Debt: For variable rate long-term debt that reprices within a year, fair values approximate carrying values. For other long-term debt, fair value is estimated using either quoted market prices or discounted cash flow analysis based on the Company's current borrowing rates for similar types of borrowing arrangements.

Liabilities Related To Segregated Asset Accounts: Fair values of these liabilities, after excluding life insurance-related elements of $765 million in 1995 and $482 million in 1994, are estimated as the accumulated value less applicable surrender charges.

Other Liabilities: The carrying values of applicable Other Liabilities, which primarily include securities sold under agreements to repurchase, acceptances outstanding and income taxes payable, approximate their fair values.

-42- (1995 Annual Report pp. 47-48)


NOTE 14

SIGNIFICANT CREDIT CONCENTRATIONS

A credit concentration exists if the Company's customers are involved in similar industries. The Company's businesses generate significant investments in both on-and off-balance-sheet financial instruments. The counterparties in these investments operate in diverse economic sectors. Therefore, management does not expect any material adverse impact to the Company's financial position to result from credit concentrations. Certain distinctions between categories required management judgment.

December 31, (dollars in millions)                              1995           1994
                                                            --------        -------
Financial institutions (a)                                   $11,696        $11,591
Individuals (b)                                               54,280         45,165
U.S. Government and agencies (c)                              13,994         18,491
All other                                                     29,484         23,918
                                                            --------        -------
  Total                                                     $109,454        $99,165
                                                            ========        =======
Composition:
On-balance-sheet                                                 77%            78%
Off-balance-sheet                                                23             22
                                                            --------        -------
  Total                                                         100%           100%
                                                            ========        =======

(a) Financial institutions primarily include banks, broker-dealers, insurance companies and savings and loan associations.

(b) Charge Card products have no preset spending limit; therefore, the quantified credit amount includes only Cardmember receivables recorded in the Consolidated Balance Sheet.

(c) U.S. Government and agencies represent the U.S. Government and its agencies, states and municipalities, and quasi-government agencies.

NOTE 15

INDUSTRY SEGMENTS AND GEOGRAPHIC OPERATIONS

Industry Segments

The Company is principally in the business of providing travel related, financial advisory and international banking services throughout the world. TRS' products include Charge Cards, revolving credit products and Travelers Cheques, as well as travel services, including trip planning, reservations, ticketing and management information. American Express Financial Advisors' services and products include financial planning, insurance and annuities, investment certificates and mutual funds. The Bank serves the financial needs of wealthy entrepreneurs and financial service institutions by providing

-43- (1995 Annual Report p. 48)


correspondent, commercial and private banking and consumer financial services. The predominant market for the travel related and financial advisory services is the United States, while the principal markets for international banking services are Europe and Asia/Pacific.

The following table presents certain information regarding these industry segments at December 31, 1995, 1994 and 1993 and for each of the years then ended.

                                                      American
                                              Travel   Express American Corporate   Adjustments
                                             Related Financial  Express       and           and
(millions)                                  Services  Advisors     Bank     Other  Eliminations Consolidated
                                            --------  --------  -------- --------  ------------ ------------
1995
Net revenues                                 $11,542    $3,691     $643    $ 139       $(174)      $15,841
Pretax income from
  continuing operations before
  general corporate expenses                  $1,579      $755     $115        -          -         $2,449
General corporate expenses                         -         -        -    $(266)         -           (266)
                                            --------  --------  -------- --------   ---------    ---------
Pretax income (loss) from
  continuing operations                       $1,579      $755     $115    $(266)         -         $2,183
Income (loss) from continuing
  operations                                  $1,125      $503      $77    $(141)         -         $1,564
Assets                                       $45,188   $48,250  $12,324   $4,358    $(2,715)      $107,405

1994
Net revenues                                 $10,256    $3,270     $652     $188       $(84)       $14,282
Pretax income from
  continuing operations before
  general corporate expenses                  $1,396      $631     $119        -          -         $2,146
General corporate expenses                         -         -        -    $(255)         -           (255)
Pretax income (loss) from                   --------  --------  -------- --------   ---------    ---------
  continuing operations                       $1,396      $631     $119    $(255)         -         $1,891
Income (loss) from continuing
  operations                                    $998     $ 428      $80    $(126)         -         $1,380
Assets                                       $42,483   $40,155  $13,281   $4,467    $(3,380)       $97,006

1993
Net revenues                                  $9,432    $3,156      $67     $163      $(174)       $13,254
Pretax income from
  continuing operations before
  general corporate expenses                  $1,173      $518     $134        -          -         $1,825
General corporate expenses                         -         -        -     $501          -            501
                                            --------  --------  -------- --------   ---------    ---------
Pretax income from
  continuing operations                       $1,173      $518     $134     $501          -         $2,326
Income from continuing operation                $884      $358      $92     $271          -         $1,605
Assets                                       $38,804   $37,351  $14,137   $6,555    $(2,715)       $94,132

-44- (1995 Annual Report pp. 48-49)


Net revenues includes interest earned on the investment of funds attributable to each industry segment. Pretax income (loss) from continuing operations before general corporate expenses is net revenues less operating expenses, including interest, related to each industry segment's revenues.

Income (loss) from continuing operations includes a provision for income taxes calculated on a separate return basis; however, additional benefits from operating losses, loss carrybacks and tax credits (principally foreign tax credits) recognizable for the Company's consolidated reporting purposes are allocated based upon the tax sharing agreement among members of the American Express Company consolidated U.S. tax group.

Assets are those that are used or generated exclusively by each industry segment. The adjustments and eliminations required to arrive at the consolidated amounts shown above consist principally of the elimination of intersegment revenues and assets.

-45- (1995 Annual Report p. 49)


Geographic Operations

The following table presents certain information regarding the Company's
operations in different geographic regions at December 31 and for each of the
years then ended.
                                                                                Adjustments
                                   United                  Asia/       All              and
(millions)                         States    Europe      Pacific     Other     Eliminations    Consolidated
                                  -------- --------     --------  --------     ------------    ------------
1995
Net revenues                      $11,916    $2,098       $1,294    $1,487           $(954)        $15,841
Pretax income from
 continuing operations
 before general
 corporate expenses                $1,762      $359         $239       $89               -          $2,449
General corporate expenses           (266)        -            -         -               -            (266)
                                  --------  --------    --------  --------     ------------    ------------
Pretax income from
 continuing operations             $1,496       $359        $239       $89               -          $2,183
Assets                            $83,216     $8,900      $7,026    $4,169           $(264)       $103,047
Corporate Assets                                                                                     4,358
                                  --------  --------    --------  --------     ------------    ------------
Total Assets                                                                                      $107,405

1994
Net revenues                      $10,801     $1,858      $1,220    $1,028           $(625)        $14,282
Pretax income from
 continuing opera-
 tions before general
 corporate expenses                $1,405       $364        $225      $152               -          $2,146
General corporate
 expenses                            (255)         -           -         -               -            (255)
                                  --------  --------    --------  --------     ------------    ------------
Pretax income from
 continuing operations             $1,150       $364        $225      $152               -          $1,891
Assets                            $72,447     $9,361      $7,119    $3,669            $(57)        $92,539
Corporate Assets                                                                                     4,467
                                  --------  --------    --------  --------     ------------    ------------
Total Assets                                                                                       $97,006

1993
Net revenues                      $10,163     $1,562      $1,087      $939           $(497)        $13,254
Pretax income from
 continuing operations
 before general
 corporate expenses                $1,262       $221        $202      $140               -          $1,825
General corporate
 expenses                             501          -           -         -               -             501
                                  --------  --------    --------  --------     ------------    ------------
Pretax income from
 continuing operations             $1,763       $221        $202      $140               -          $2,326
Assets                            $68,399     $8,221      $7,188    $3,715             $54         $87,577
Corporate Assets                                                                                     6,555
                                  --------  --------    --------  --------     ------------    ------------
Total Assets                                                                                       $94,132

-46- (1995 Annual Report p. 50)


Most services of the Company are provided on an integrated worldwide basis. Because of the integration of U.S. and non-U.S. services, it is not practical to separate precisely the U.S. oriented services from services resulting from operations outside the United States and performed for customers outside the United States; accordingly, the separation set forth in the above table is based upon internal allocations, which necessarily involve certain management judgments.

NOTE 16
LEASE COMMITMENTS AND OTHER CONTINGENT LIABILITIES

The Company leases certain office facilities and operating equipment under noncancellable and cancellable agreements. Total rental expense amounted to $415 million in 1995, $425 million in 1994 and $391 million in 1993. At December 31, 1995, the minimum aggregate rental commitment under all noncancellable leases (net of subleases) was (millions): 1996, $300; 1997, $248; 1998, $162; 1999, $111; 2000, $88; and $379 for years thereafter. Many of these leases provide for additional rentals based on increases in property taxes or the general cost of living index, or for payment of property taxes or other operating expenses by the lessee; in addition, many leases contain renewal clauses.

The Company is not a party to any pending legal proceedings that, in the opinion of management, would have a material adverse effect on the Company's financial position.

NOTE 17
TRANSFER OF FUNDS FROM SUBSIDIARIES

The Securities and Exchange Commission requires the disclosure of certain restrictions on the flow of funds to a parent company from its subsidiaries in the form of loans, advances or dividends.

Principal restrictions exist under debt agreements and regulatory requirements of certain of the Company's subsidiaries. In addition, the Bank is prohibited from making loans, the proceeds of which are to be used for a U.S. domestic purpose. These restrictions have not had any effect on the Company's shareholder dividend policy and management does not anticipate any effect in the future.

At December 31, 1995, the aggregate amount of net assets of subsidiaries that may be transferred to the parent company was approximately $6.5 billion. Should specific additional needs arise, procedures exist to permit immediate transfer of short-term funds between the Company and its subsidiaries, while complying with the various contractual and regulatory constraints on the internal transfer of funds.

-47- (1995 Annual Report pp. 50-51)


NOTE 18
QUARTERLY FINANCIAL DATA (UNAUDITED)

Summarized quarterly financial data is as follows:
(millions, except per share amounts)
                                                     1995                                  1994
                                   ------------------------------------    ---------------------------------

Quarter Ended                       12/31      9/30      6/30      3/31     12/31     9/30      6/30    3/31
                                   ------    ------    ------    ------    ------   ------    ------  ------
Net revenues                       $4,048    $4,054    $3,967    $3,771    $3,802   $3,604    $3,506  $3,370
Pretax income from
 continuing operations                541       571       572       498       475      498       478     440
Income from continuing
 operations                           384       416       410       353       335      369       359     317
Net income                            384       416       410       353       335      369       357     353
Income from continuing
  operations per
  common share                        .77       .83       .81       .70       .65      .71       .70     .62
Net income per
  common share                        .77       .83       .81       .70       .65      .71       .69     .69
Cash dividends declared per
  common share                       .225      .225      .225      .225      .225     .225      .225     .25
Common share prices:
  High                              45.13     45.13     37.00     36.00     31.63    32.00     28.88   29.23
  Low                               38.50     34.75     34.13     29.00     28.13    25.25     23.17   23.28

Note: Historical common share prices have been adjusted to reflect the Lehman spin-off in 1994 at a ratio based on the trading prices of the Company's common shares and shares of Lehman common stock on May 31, 1994.

-48- (1995 Annual Report p. 51)


REPORT OF MANAGEMENT

Responsibility for Preparation of Financial Statements

The management of American Express Company is responsible for the preparation and fair presentation of its financial statements. The financial statements have been prepared in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles appropriate in the circumstances, and include amounts based on the best judgment of management. The Company's management is also responsible for the accuracy and consistency of other financial information included in this annual report.

In recognition of its responsibility for the integrity and objectivity of data in the financial statements, the Company maintains a system of internal control over financial reporting. The system is designed to provide reasonable, but not absolute, assurance with respect to the reliability of the Company's financial statements. The concept of reasonable assurance is based on the notion that the cost of the internal control system should not exceed the benefits derived.

The internal control system is founded on an ethical climate and includes an organizational structure with clearly defined lines of responsibility, policies and procedures, a Code of Conduct, and the careful selection and training of employees. Internal auditors monitor and assess the effectiveness of the internal control system and report their findings to management and the Board of Directors throughout the year. The Company's independent auditors are engaged to express an opinion on the year-end financial statements and, with the coordinated support of the internal auditors, review the financial records and related data and test the internal control system over financial reporting.

The Audit Committee of the Board of Directors, composed solely of outside directors, meets regularly with the internal auditors, management and independent auditors to review their work and discuss the Company's financial controls and audit and reporting practices. The independent auditors and the internal auditors independently have full and free access to the Committee, without the presence of management, to discuss any matters which they feel require attention.

-49- (1995 Annual Report p. 52)


Report of ERNST & YOUNG LLP INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

The Shareholders and Board of Directors
of American Express Company

We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of American Express Company as of December 31, 1995 and 1994, and the related consolidated statements of income, shareholders' equity, and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 1995. These financial statements are the responsibility of the management of American Express Company. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the consolidated financial position of American Express Company at December 31, 1995 and 1994, and the consolidated results of its operations and its cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 1995, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.

As discussed in Note 4 to the financial statements, the Company changed its method of accounting for certain investments in debt and equity securities in 1994.

/s/ Ernst & Young LLP
New York, New York
February 8, 1996

-50- (1995 Annual Report p. 52)


               CONSOLIDATED FIVE-YEAR SUMMARY OF SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
                                 American Express Company

(millions, except per share amounts and where italicized)

                                                         1995       1994        1993        1992       1991
                                                      -------    -------     -------     -------    -------
OPERATING RESULTS
Net revenues                                          $15,841    $14,282     $13,254     $14,255    $13,244
Percent increase (decrease)                               11%         8%        (7%)          8%         5%
Expenses                                               13,658     12,391      10,928      13,359     12,622
Income from continuing operations before
  accounting changes:
  As reported                                           1,564      1,380       1,605         578        607
  Adjusted*                                             1,564      1,380       1,172         153        607
Net income                                              1,564      1,413       1,478         461        789
Return on average shareholders'
  equity**                                              22.0%      20.3%       20.9%        3.1%      13.2%
                                                      -------    -------     -------     -------    -------
ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
Cash and cash equivalents                              $3,200     $3,433      $3,312      $3,408     $3,391
Accounts receivable and accrued
  interest, net                                        19,914     17,147      16,142      15,293     16,866
Investments                                            42,561     40,108      39,308      37,629     32,634
Loans, net                                             16,091     14,722      14,796      14,750     15,670
Total assets                                          107,405     97,006      94,132      90,112     84,541
Customers' deposits and credit
  balances                                              9,889     10,013      11,131      11,637     12,693
Travelers Cheques outstanding                           5,697      5,271       4,800       4,729      4,375
Insurance and annuity reserves                         25,157     24,849      23,406      20,893     17,741
Short-term debt                                        17,654     14,810      12,489      11,163     12,396
Long-term debt                                          7,570      7,162       8,561       8,614      8,734
Shareholders' equity                                    8,220      6,433       8,734       7,499      7,465
                                                      -------    -------     -------     -------    -------
COMMON SHARE STATISTICS
Income per share from continuing operations
  before accounting changes:
  As reported                                           $3.11      $2.68       $3.17      $ 1.12      $1.21
  Adjusted*                                             $3.11      $2.68       $2.30        $.23      $1.21
  Percent increase (decrease):
  As reported                                             16%      (15%)        183%        (7%)      (52%)
  Adjusted*                                               16%        17%        900%       (81%)      (52%)
Net income per share                                    $3.11      $2.75       $2.92       $ .88      $1.59
Cash dividends declared per share:
  Actual                                                 $.90      $.925       $1.00       $1.00      $ .96
  Proforma                                               $.90       $.90        $.90        $.90      $ .86
Book value per share:
  Actual                                               $16.60     $12.57      $16.81      $14.58     $14.43
  Pro forma**                                          $14.79     $13.35      $11.81       $8.84      $8.62
Market price per share:
  High                                                 $45.13     $32.00      $32.32      $22.39     $26.81
  Low                                                  $29.00     $23.17      $19.75      $17.65     $15.89
  Close                                                $41.38     $29.50      $27.25      $21.95     $18.09

-51-        (1995 Annual Report p. 53)

Average common shares outstanding
  for income per share                                    498        509         500         477         470
Shares outstanding at year end                            483        496         490         480         472
Number of shareholders of record                       57,010     60,520      58,179      54,526      54,960

OTHER STATISTICS
Number of employees at year end:
  United States                                        41,700     43,421      40,342      38,266      37,018
  Outside United States                                28,647     28,991      24,151      24,388      24,090
                                                      -------    -------     -------     -------     -------
  Total                                                70,347     72,412      64,493      62,654      61,108
                                                      =======    =======     =======     =======     =======

Note: Historical common share prices have been adjusted to reflect the Lehman spin-off at a ratio based on the trading prices of the Company's common shares and shares of Lehman common stock on May 31, 1994. Pro forma cash dividends declared and book value per share have also been adjusted to reflect the Lehman spin-off. For purposes of the pro forma book value per share calculation, it is assumed that the spin-off includes the book value of the Company's investment in Lehman at the balance sheet date plus the capital infusion of approximately $904 million that was made immediately prior to the spin-off. Excluding FDC from 1992 and 1991, net revenues were $13.1 billion and $12.3 billion, respectively, and expenses were $12.4 billion and $11.8 billion, respectively.

*Adjusted to exclude the gains on the sale of FDC in 1993 and 1992 of $433 million and $425 million, respectively.

**Return on average shareholders' equity is based on adjusted income from continuing operations before accounting changes and excludes the effect of SFAS No. 115 in 1995 and 1994. In addition, book value per share excludes the effect of SFAS No. 115 in 1995 and 1994.

-52- (1995 Annual Report p. 53)


Exhibit 21

SUBSIDIARIES OF THE REGISTRANT

Unless otherwise indicated, all of the voting securities of these subsidiaries are directly or indirectly owned by the registrant. Where the name of the subsidiary is indented, the voting securities of such subsidiary are owned directly by the company under which its name is indented. Certain subsidiaries have been omitted which, if considered in the aggregate as a single subsidiary, would not constitute a significant subsidiary as defined in Rule 1-02(v) of Regulation S-X.

                                                             Jurisdiction
Name of Subsidiary                                           of Incorporation

I.  American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc.
     and its Subsidiaries

    American Express Travel Related                          New York
        Services Company, Inc.
      Amex Canada, Inc.                                      Canada
         1001674 Ontario, Inc.                               Canada
         1001675 Ontario, Inc.                               Canada
      Amex Bank of Canada                                    Canada
      American Express Deposit Corporation                   Utah
      American Express Company (Mexico) S.A. de C.V.         Mexico
      American Express Centurion Bank                        Delaware
         American Express Centurion Services Corporation     Delaware
      American Express Credit Corporation                    Delaware
         American Express Overseas Credit                    Jersey, Channel
           Corporation Limited                                Islands
            AEOCC Management Company, Ltd.                   Jersey, Channel
                                                              Islands
            American Express Overseas Finance                Netherlands
              Company N.V.                                    Antilles
              American Express Overseas Credit               Netherlands
                Corporation N.V.                              Antilles
         Credco Receivables Corp.                            Delaware
      American Express Financial Services Ltd.(50% owned)    England & Wales
      American Express Receivables Financing Corp.           Delaware
      American Express Receivables Financing Corp. II        Delaware
      American Express do Brasil Tempo & Cia, Inc.           Delaware
      American Express do Brasil Servicos                    Brazil
        Internacionais, Ltda. (90% owned)
         American Express do Brazil                          Brazil
          Tempo & Cia
      American Express do Brasil S.A.                        Brazil
           Turismo
      American Express Limited                               Delaware
         American Express Argentina, S.A.                    Argentina
         American Express (Malaysia) Sdn. Bhd.               Malaysia
         American Express (Thai) Co. Ltd. (77.5% owned)      Thailand
         TRS Card International Inc.                         Delaware
            (75% owned, 25% by CFS, Ltd.)


   American Express de Espana, S.A.                    Spain
      American Express Viajes, S.A.                    Spain
      Amex Asesores de Seguros, SA                     Spain
   American Express International (B) SDN.BHD (Brunei) Brunei
   (50% owned by American Express International, Inc.)
Centurion Finance, Ltd.                                New Zealand
American Express International, Inc.                   Delaware
   American Express Hungary KFT                        Hungary
   American Express Company A/S                        Norway
      American Express Reisebyra A/S                   Norway
   AMEX Services, Inc.                                 Delaware
   American Express Company, S.p.A.                    Italy
      American Express Locazioni                       Italy
        Finanziarie, Sr1.
      Amex Broker Assicurativo Srl. (2.5% owned)       Italy
   American Express Int'l A.E. (Greece)                Greece
   American Express Int'l (Taiwan), Inc.               Taiwan
   American Express of Egypt, Ltd.                     Delaware
   American Express Carte France, S.A.                 France
   AllCard Service GmbH                                Germany
      Schenker Rhenus Reisen (51% owned)               Germany
   American Express Bureau de Change S.A.              Greece
   Amex (Middle East) E.C. (50% owned)                 Bahrain
   American Express Exposure Management, Ltd.          Jersey, Channel
                                                        Islands
   American Express Travel Poland Sp.Zo.O              Poland
   American Express Czechoslovakia, Spol.SRO.          Czechoslovakia
   American Express Company A/B                        Sweden
      American Express Resebyra A/B                    Sweden
      Amex Services Sweden A/B                         Sweden
   American Express Services Finland OY                Finland
   Sociedad Internacional de Servicios                 Panama
     de Panama, S.A.
   American Express Voyages Tourisme                   France
      Havas Voyages American Express (20% owned)       France
   Amex Sumigin Service Company, Ltd. (40% owned)      Japan
   American Express International Services Limited     Russia
   Amex Marketing Japan Ltd.                           Delaware
   American Express Holdings AB                        Sweden
      Nyman & Schultz Resebyraer AB                    Sweden
      Nyman & Schultz AB (95% owned 5% TMG             Sweden
       Intressenter AB)
         Nyman & Schultz Grupp och Konferens AB        Sweden
         Resespecialisterna Syd AB (84% owned)         Sweden
            Resespecialisterna Helsingborg AB          Sweden
               (84% owned)
      Nyman & Schultz Group AB                         Sweden
      Book Hotel AB                                    Sweden
      Forsakringsaktiebolaget Viator                   Sweden
      First Card AB                                    Sweden
      Profil Rejser A/S (30% owned 20%                 Denmark
        Resespecialisterna Syd AB)
      Resespecialisterna Enkoping AB (26% owned)       Sweden
      Resepecialisterne ApS                            Sweden
      Scandinavian Express AB                          Sweden
         Oy Scandinavian Express Finland AB            Sweden


      Central Hotel AB                                 Sweden
      Nyman & Schultz Forretningsreiser A/S            Norway
American Express Insurance Marketing, Inc.             Taiwan
American Express Publishing Corp.                      New York
   Southwest Media Corporation                         Texas
Societe Francaise du Cheque de Voyage, S.A.            France
   (34% owned)
Repertoire International, Inc.                         Delaware
Travellers Cheque Associates, Ltd. (54% owned)         England & Wales
American Express Service Corporation                   Delaware
Bansamex S.A. (50% owned, 50% owned by Banco           Spain
   Santander)
American Express Europe, Ltd.                          Delaware
   Travel Places (City) Ltd.                           England & Wales
      Travel Places (Incentives) Ltd.                  England & Wales
American Express Services Europe Limited               England & Wales
                                                        & Delaware
American Express Ireland, Ltd.                         Ireland
American Express Insurance Services, Ltd.              England & Wales
Amex Services Europe Limited                           England & Wales
American Express Group and Incentive                   Michigan
  Services, Inc. (90% owned)
American Express TRS, Inc.                             Florida
Cardmember Financial Services, Ltd.                    Jersey, Channel
                                                        Islands
Holdinsco, Inc.                                        Delaware
Integrated Travel Systems, Inc.                        Texas
Epsilon Data Management, Inc.                          Delaware
   Epsilon Master Software Corporation                 Delaware
Controlled Airspace Corporation                        Texas
Tour and Incentive Management Corporation              Delaware
Lifeco Travel Management, Ltd.                         England & Wales
Mark Allan Travel Inc.                                 California
American Express (China) Ltd.                          Utah
American Express Special Teams, Inc.                   South Dakota
American Express General Insurance Agency              Taiwan
American Express Telecom, Inc.                         Delaware
American Express Bank (Mexico), S.A.                   Mexico

II. American Express Financial Corporation and its Subsidiaries

American Express Financial Corporation                   Delaware
  American Express Financial Advisors Inc.               Delaware
  IDS Real Estate Services, Inc.                         Delaware
  IDS Securities Corporation                             Delaware
  American Express Trust Company                         Minnesota
  American Express Tax and Business Services, Inc.       Minnesota
  IDS International, Inc.                                Delaware
  IDS Life Insurance Company                             Minnesota
     American Partners Life Insurance Company            Arizona
     IDS Life Insurance Company of New York              New York
     American Enterprise Life Insurance Company          Indiana
     American Centurion Life Assurance Company           New York


      IDS Certificate Company                                Delaware
         Investors Syndicate Development Corp.               Nevada
      IDS Fund Management Limited                            England & Wales
      IDS Insurance Agency of North Carolina Inc.            North Carolina
      IDS Insurance Agency of Arkansas Inc.                  Arkansas
      IDS Insurance Agency of Alabama Inc.                   Alabama
      IDS Insurance Agency of New Mexico Inc.                New Mexico
      IDS Insurance Agency of Utah Inc.                      Utah
      IDS Insurance Agency of Wyoming Inc.                   Wyoming
      American Express Insurance Agency of Nevada Inc.       Nevada
      IDS Insurance Agency of Massachusetts Inc.             Massachusetts
      IDS Advisory Group Inc.                                Minnesota
         IDS Capital Holdings Inc.                           Minnesota
      IDS Management Corporation                             Minnesota
         IDS Partnership Services Corporation                Minnesota
         IDS Cable Corporation                               Minnesota
         IDS Futures Corporation                             Minnesota
         IDS Realty Corporation                              Minnesota
         IDS Futures III Corporation                         Minnesota
         IDS Cable II Corporation                            Minnesota
      IDS Property Casualty Insurance Company                Wisconsin
      American Express Minnesota Foundation                  Minnesota
      IDS Deposit Corp.                                      Utah
      IDS Sales Support Inc.                                 Minnesota
      IDS Plan Services of California, Inc.                  Minnesota
      American Enterprise Investment Services Inc.           Minnesota
      IDS Aircraft Services Corporation                      Minnesota

III.  American Express Bank Ltd. and its Subsidiaries

    American Express Bank Ltd.                               Connecticut
      American Express International                         Netherlands
        Finance Corporation B.V.                              Antilles
      American Express International Finance                 Netherlands
        Corporation N.V.                                      Antilles
      American Express Management Services Inc.              Delaware
         Amex Human Resources (Japan) Inc.                   Delaware
      Amex Holdings, Inc.                                    Delaware
         American Express Bank GmbH                          Germany
            Amex Grundstuecksverwaltung GmbH                 Germany
            AEB - International Portfolios
              Management Company                             Luxembourg
         American Express International Development          Cayman Islands
           Company (Cayman) Limited
         Egyptian American Bank (49% owned)                  Egypt
         Guaramex, Inc.                                      Delaware
         Paramex, Inc.                                       Delaware
         Amtrade Holdings, Inc.                              Delaware
            American Express Bank (Switzerland) S.A.         Switzerland
               Cristal Trust Services S.A.-Geneva            Switzerland
         International Trade Services Pte Ltd.               Singapore
         Amex International Trust (Guernsey) Limited         Guernsey
         January Real Estate                                 Cayman Islands
         Etoral Finance, Inc.                                Panama


            Sociedad Del Desarrollo Mercantil                Chile
                Ltda. (50% owned by each of Amex
                Holdings, Inc. and Etoral Finance, Inc.)
         Remor and Associates Inc.                           Panama
         American Express Bank Asset Management              Jersey, Channel
            (Jersey) Ltd.                                     Islands
         Priory Centre Investments Limited (35.7% owned)     Guernsey
         American Express Bank (Luxembourg) S.A.             Luxembourg
            AEB WorldFolio Capital Preservation
               Management Co. S.A.                           Luxembourg
         American Express Bank (Uruguay) S.A.                Uruguay
         Amex International Trust (Cayman) Ltd.              Cayman Islands
         OLP Investments Ltd.                                Cayman Islands
         American Express Leasing Corporation                Delaware
            Aires Aircraft Leasing (US), Inc.                New York
      AEB Worldfolio Management Company                      Luxembourg
      American Express Bank (France) S.A.                    France
         Amex Gestion S.A.                                   France
      American Express Bank International                    United States
      American Express Leasing (UK) Limited                  England & Wales
      Bexim International S.A. (45% owned)                   Panama
      American Express Nominees Private Limited              India
      The American Express Nominees Limited                  England & Wales
      Argentamex S.A.                                        Argentina
      Amex do Brasil Empreendimentos e Participacoes Ltda.   Brazil
       (57.84% owned, 42.15% AHI, 0.01% Amex
          International Inc.)
      Amex Capital Investments (UK) Ltd.                     England & Wales
         Logicfull Limited                                   England & Wales
      Amexnet Limited                                        England & Wales
      AEB (UK) PLC                                           England & Wales
      Amex Nominees (S) Pte Ltd.                             Singapore
      Amex Bank Nominee Hong Kong Limited                    Hong Kong
      First International Investment Bank Ltd.               Pakistan
         (20% owned)
      American Express (Poland) Ltd.                         Delaware
      Geneva Nominees Limited                                England & Wales
      Tata Finance Ltd. (3.2% owned)                         India
      Purbeck Petroleum Limited (25.1% owned)                England & Wales
      American Express Bank Asset Management (Cayman) Ltd.   Cayman Islands
      Columbus Real Estate Corp.                             New York
      American Express Bank S.A.                             Argentina
        (56,810,000 shares owned by American Express Bank
         Ltd., 1 share owned by American Express Limited)


IV.   Other Subsidiaries of the Registrant

    Acuma Financial Services Ltd.                            Delaware
    Ainwick Corporation                                      Texas
    Alair Holdings, Incorporated                             Delaware
    American Express Asset Management Holdings, Inc.         Delaware
    American Express Corporation                             Delaware
    Amexco Insurance Company                                 Vermont
    Amexco Risk Financing Holding Company                    Delaware
    AMEX Assurance Company                                   Illinois


Union Bancaire Privee CBI-TDB (20% owned)                Switzerland
National Express Company, Inc.                           New York
  The Balcor Company Holdings, Inc.                      Delaware
     Balcor Real Estate Holdings, Inc.                   Delaware
     The Balcor Company                                  Delaware
        Balcor Securities Company                        Illinois
        Balcor Development Company                       Illinois
        Balcor Institutional Realty Advisors, Inc.       Illinois
        Balcor Financial Resources, Inc.                 Delaware
        Balcor Capital Markets, Inc.                     Illinois
        Balcor Consulting Group                          Illinois
        Balcor Realty Company                            Illinois
        Balcor Management Services, Inc.                 Illinois
International Capital Corporation                        Delaware
  Intercapital Comercio e Participacoes Ltda.            Brazil
     Conepar Compania Nordestina de                      Brazil
       Participacoes S.A. (31.92% owned)
  Convertible Holding Ltd.                               Cayman Islands
     CTH Common Holdings Ltd.                            Cayman Islands
     CTH Preferred Holdings Ltd.                         Cayman Islands
        Complejos Turisticos Huatulco,                   Mexico
          S.A. de C.V. (84% of preferred stock)
  Acamex Holdings Ltd.                                   Cayman Islands
     Etisa Holdings Ltd.                                 Cayman Islands
        Empresas Turisticas Integradas,                  Mexico
          S.A. de C.V. (92.35% owned)
  Asesoria Empresarial ICC, S.A. de C.V.                 Mexico
  Floriano Representacoes Ltda.                          Brazil
Rexport, Inc.                                            Delaware
  Drillamex, Inc.                                        Delaware
UMPAWAUG I Corporation                                   Delaware
UMPAWAUG II Corporation                                  Delaware
UMPAWAUG III Corporation                                 Delaware
UMPAWAUG IV Corporation                                  Delaware
WGT Leasing Corporation                                  Delaware
Daedalus Leasing Corp.                                   New York
  Dash 200 + Ltd. (50% owned)                            Cayman Islands
  Carter Leasing Inc.                                    Delaware
  Aries Aircraft Leasing Limited                         Cayman Islands
  Nora Leasing, Inc.                                     New York
  Nora 737 Leasing, Inc.                                 New York
  Gemini Leasing Ltd.                                    Cayman Islands
  Wings Aircraft Leasing Corp.                           Belgium
  AKW Aircraft Leasing Corporation Limited               England & Wales
  Jesem Aviation Corp.                                   New York
  MME Leasing Corp.                                      New York
  C Power, Inc.                                          New York
  Exatco Limited (50% owned)                             Bermuda
  Far East Leasing Ltd.                                  Cayman Islands
  747-2, Inc.                                            New York


ARTICLE 5
This schedule contains summary financial information extracted from the Company's Consolidated Balance Sheet at December 31, 1995 and Consolidated Statement of Income for the year ended December 31, 1995 and is qualified in its entirety by reference to such financial statements.
MULTIPLIER: 1,000,000


PERIOD TYPE 12 MOS
FISCAL YEAR END DEC 31 1995
PERIOD END DEC 31 1995
CASH 3,200
SECURITIES 42,561
RECEIVABLES 20,743
ALLOWANCES 829
INVENTORY 0
CURRENT ASSETS 0
PP&E 3,546
DEPRECIATION 1,763
TOTAL ASSETS 107,405
CURRENT LIABILITIES 0
BONDS 25,224
PREFERRED MANDATORY 0
PREFERRED 200
COMMON 290
OTHER SE 7,730
TOTAL LIABILITY AND EQUITY 107,405
SALES 0
TOTAL REVENUES 15,841
CGS 0
TOTAL COSTS 7,351
OTHER EXPENSES 1,523
LOSS PROVISION 3,542
INTEREST EXPENSE 1,242
INCOME PRETAX 2,183
INCOME TAX 619
INCOME CONTINUING 1,564
DISCONTINUED 0
EXTRAORDINARY 0
CHANGES 0
NET INCOME 1,564
EPS PRIMARY 3.11
EPS DILUTED 0