American Express Company (NYSE: AXP) ended Tuesday, December 23, 2025 in positive territory—and then ticked higher in extended trading as investors sized up a holiday-shortened week and a macro-heavy backdrop.
After the closing bell, AXP traded around $384.55 in after-hours action (as of 7:54 p.m. ET), up about $2.36 (+0.62%) from the regular-session close. [1]
That after-hours move matters heading into Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2025 (Christmas Eve)—a session that is open but ends early at 1:00 p.m. ET for U.S. equities. [2]
Below is what investors and traders should know before the market opens.
AXP after-hours snapshot: where the stock stands going into Dec. 24
American Express shares finished the regular session on Dec. 23 at $382.19, up 0.35% on the day. The stock traded between $380.10 and $384.55, and logged roughly 1.77 million shares in volume. [3]
In the after-hours market, AXP pushed toward the top of that daily range—often a sign of light holiday liquidity as much as fresh conviction—because extended-hours trading can be thinner and more jumpy than the main session. [4]
One key technical reference investors are watching: AXP’s 52-week high is $387.49 (set Dec. 12, 2025), leaving the stock within striking distance of a fresh high if momentum holds. [5]
Why AXP is moving with the tape: record highs, big macro signals, and holiday trading dynamics
American Express is a Dow component and a bellwether “premium consumer” name—so it tends to react to the same forces lifting (or pressuring) financials and consumer-adjacent stocks.
On Dec. 23, U.S. stocks were buoyed by a strong growth narrative: the S&P 500 closed at a record, supported by a stronger-than-expected GDP reading. [6]
At the macro level, reporting around the day highlighted that U.S. economic growth in Q3 2025 ran at 4.3%, with consumer spending a major driver. [7]
But the bullish growth headline came with a caution flag: consumer confidence slid in December, a reminder that sentiment can weaken even when top-line growth prints strong—especially in a high-price environment. [8]
For AXP investors, that push-pull is central:
- Bullish angle: AmEx’s customer base skews more affluent, which can help spending hold up even when broader sentiment softens. [9]
- Bearish angle: If confidence erosion eventually hits travel and discretionary categories, premium spend resilience becomes the key debate again. [10]
The most relevant AXP headlines and analysis circulating today (Dec. 23)
1) Fresh earnings-preview focus: Jan. 30 is the next major catalyst
A widely circulated earnings preview published today put attention back on the next big scheduled event: American Express’ fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results on Friday, Jan. 30, 2026. [11]
Key forecast points highlighted today:
- Q4 EPS estimate: about $3.56, up from $3.04 a year earlier [12]
- FY2025 EPS estimate: about $15.41 [13]
- Street stance: “Moderate Buy” overall (per that roundup), with the stock trading above the cited average price target (a reminder that expectations are not low). [14]
Separately, American Express has already published its conference call schedule, stating results and materials are typically posted around 7:00 a.m. ET ahead of the 8:30 a.m. ET call time. [15]
Why this matters for tomorrow’s open: Even though earnings are weeks away, holiday-week flows often pull forward positioning in liquid mega-caps—especially names near highs.
2) Dividend watch: $0.82 quarterly payout
American Express recently declared a $0.82 per share quarterly dividend, payable Feb. 10, 2026, to shareholders of record on Jan. 2, 2026. [16]
Several market calendars list the ex-dividend date as Jan. 2, 2026. [17]
Why this matters for tomorrow: The dividend isn’t an overnight catalyst, but it can influence late-December positioning for income strategies—especially when combined with a short trading week and thinner liquidity.
3) Institutional/filing chatter: incremental, not usually price-moving
A MarketBeat filing-focused item published today noted one manager trimming holdings modestly in the third quarter (based on SEC filings). [18]
Translation for investors: This kind of headline is usually context, not a driver—unless it signals a broader trend across multiple large holders (which today’s single-item note does not establish on its own). [19]
4) Analyst tone: targets still in play—but expectations are visible
A MarketWatch feed showed a notable recent data point: Truist Securities raised its price target on AXP to $420 (reported Dec. 22). [20]
Meanwhile, Investing.com’s compiled analyst snapshot shows an average target in the mid-$360s with a “Neutral” style consensus, underscoring a key tension: AXP is already priced for a lot of good news relative to many published 12‑month targets. [21]
What to know before the Dec. 24 market open: the checklist
1) Tomorrow is a shortened trading day
U.S. equity markets are scheduled to close early at 1:00 p.m. ET on Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2025. [22]
Bond markets are also expected to observe an early close (2:00 p.m. ET) per SIFMA’s holiday recommendations. [23]
Why it matters for AXP: Short sessions often mean:
- thinner order books,
- wider spreads at times,
- outsized moves on relatively small bursts of volume,
- and faster “mean reversion” after the open.
2) The key economic release hits before the opening bell
The main calendar item flagged for Dec. 24 is initial jobless claims at 8:30 a.m. ET. [24]
Why AXP traders care: Jobless claims can move Treasury yields and risk sentiment quickly. For a large financial like AmEx—where credit quality, consumer capacity, and funding expectations are always in the background—that macro pulse can matter even without company-specific news.
3) Watch the “near-high” setup: $387.49 is the level the market sees
AXP is hovering close to its recent peak ($387.49 52-week high), which is the kind of obvious level that can attract both breakout buyers and profit-takers. [25]
A practical way investors frame the open (without overcomplicating it):
- If AXP holds above ~$382–$384 early: the market may treat Tuesday’s after-hours strength as real demand. [26]
- If it fades below ~$380: that can signal holiday-week profit-taking and “sell-the-rip” behavior in extended winners. [27]
The bigger picture for American Express: what bulls and bears are debating right now
Even on a quiet headline day, AXP tends to trade on a few durable narratives:
Bull case themes
- Affluent spend resilience (AmEx has recently pointed to strong holiday-related spending trends on its network). [28]
- Momentum into earnings, with the next major catalyst set for Jan. 30. [29]
- Shareholder returns, including the $0.82 quarterly dividend cadence. [30]
Bear/risk themes
- Macro cross-currents: growth prints strong, but sentiment softens—consumer confidence just fell again. [31]
- Expectation risk: the stock is near highs and (in some roundups) above average published targets, so disappointments can hit harder. [32]
- Regulatory/reputation noise: France’s CNIL recently fined an American Express entity €1.5 million over cookie practices—unlikely to move the stock day-to-day, but part of the broader compliance backdrop for global brands. [33]
Bottom line: what matters most heading into the Dec. 24 open
American Express stock goes into the Christmas Eve session with three clear, practical drivers:
- Price action is constructive (close up on Dec. 23; after-hours higher). [34]
- The calendar is unusual (early close at 1 p.m. ET), which can magnify small moves. [35]
- Macro is still in the driver’s seat, with jobless claims the key pre-open data point to watch. [36]
If you’re scanning AXP specifically, the cleanest “before the bell” approach is to watch whether the stock holds near Tuesday’s highs—and whether jobless claims nudges rates and risk appetite enough to change the tone of the open.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
References
1. www.marketwatch.com, 2. www.nyse.com, 3. www.investing.com, 4. www.marketwatch.com, 5. www.investing.com, 6. www.wsj.com, 7. apnews.com, 8. apnews.com, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. apnews.com, 11. www.barchart.com, 12. www.barchart.com, 13. www.barchart.com, 14. www.barchart.com, 15. ir.americanexpress.com, 16. www.businesswire.com, 17. www.investing.com, 18. www.marketbeat.com, 19. www.marketbeat.com, 20. www.marketwatch.com, 21. www.investing.com, 22. www.nyse.com, 23. www.sifma.org, 24. www.marketwatch.com, 25. www.investing.com, 26. www.marketwatch.com, 27. www.investing.com, 28. www.reuters.com, 29. ir.americanexpress.com, 30. www.businesswire.com, 31. apnews.com, 32. www.barchart.com, 33. www.cnil.fr, 34. www.investing.com, 35. www.nyse.com, 36. www.marketwatch.com


