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SPECIAL REPORT

AmEx: We're getting TARP, too

More than a month after becoming a bank, credit card issuer gets preliminary OK for $3.9B in bailout funds. CIT gets $2.3B.

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By David Goldman, CNNMoney.com staff writer

Tracking the bailout
Who's getting the bank bailout money
The government is engaged in an unprecedented - and expensive - effort to rescue the economy. Here are all the elements of the bailouts.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- American Express Co. announced Tuesday that it had received preliminary approval for a $3.9 billion government bailout investment.

The capital injection will come from the Treasury Department's $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, which in part provides capital to banks in exchange for preferred shares and high-paying dividends. If approved, American Express would be the ninth biggest capital investment of the more than 100 Treasury has made in banks so far.

"Treasury's investment will help bolster our capital position in an uncertain economic environment," said a spokeswoman for American Express. "The added flexibility will help the company, in the near term, to stay profitable and continue to invest selectively for growth."

The news comes more than a month after the Federal Reserve approved AmEx's request to become a bank holding company. The move, which was announced on Nov. 10, provided the company greater access to federal funding and government rescue programs mainly available exclusively to banks.

AmEx (AXP, Fortune 500) said in October that it began to issue short-term debt through the Fed's Commercial Paper Funding Facility, which provides company with financing for its day-to-day operations.

Earlier in December, the company issued $5.5 billion in corporate bonds backed by the FDIC's Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program.

In a separate announcement, commercial finance company CIT (CIT, Fortune 500) also said it has been approved for TARP funds. CIT, which said Monday it had been granted bank holding company status, said Treasury gave the company preliminary approval for a preferred share investment of $2.33 billion.

CIT's would be Treasury's 15th most expensive capital investment. To top of page

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