NYSE:OMF OneMain Q1 2024 Earnings Report $57.83 +0.30 (+0.52%) Closing price 07/18/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$57.52 -0.31 (-0.53%) As of 07/18/2025 06:50 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast OneMain EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.45Consensus EPS $1.38Beat/MissBeat by +$0.07One Year Ago EPS$1.46OneMain Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.17 billionExpected Revenue$907.93 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$265.07 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AOneMain Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date4/30/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, April 30, 2024Conference Call Time9:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsOneMain's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Friday, July 25, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 9:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q2 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by OneMain Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrApril 30, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways OneMain saw 30–89 day delinquencies fall to 2.72% (down 56 bps QoQ) and loan net charge-offs held at 8.6%, reflecting that its credit tightening actions are driving portfolio losses toward a peak in H1 2024. Receivables grew 6% YoY to $22 billion and Q1 capital generation was $155 million, while originations of $2.5 billion were down 10% YoY as the company maintained its disciplined underwriting and pricing. The acquisition of Foresight Capital closed April 1, 2024, expanding auto finance receivables to $843 million and adding a national franchise dealer network to diversify OneMain’s lending products. The credit card business ended Q1 with 509,000 accounts and $386 million of receivables, with strong response rates and utilization, and the company is executing a disciplined rollout focusing on annual-fee products. Q1 net income was $155 million ($1.29 per share, down 13% YoY) with adjusted EPS of $1.45 flat YoY, and the board approved a 4% dividend increase to $4.16 annually, underscoring confidence in capital generation. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallOneMain Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xThere are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00It is now my pleasure to turn the floor over to Peter Poyon. Operator00:00:03You may begin. Speaker 100:00:06Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Let me begin by directing you to Page 2 of the Q1 2024 investor presentation, which contains important disclosures concerning forward looking statements and the use of non GAAP measures. The presentation can be found in the Investor Relations section of the OneMain website. Our discussion today will contain certain forward looking statements reflecting management's current beliefs about the company's future, financial performance and business prospects, and these forward looking statements are subject to inherent risks and uncertainties and speak only as of today. Speaker 100:00:45Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these forward looking statements are set forth in our earnings press release. We caution you not to place undue reliance on forward looking statements. If you may be listening to this via replay at some point after today, we remind you that the remarks made herein are as of today, April 30, and have not been updated subsequent to this call. Our call this morning will include formal remarks from Doug Schulman, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and Jenny Osterhout, our Chief Financial Officer. After the conclusion of our formal remarks, we will conduct a question and answer session. Speaker 100:01:25I'd like to now turn the call over to Doug. Speaker 200:01:29Thanks, Pete, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. Today, I'll cover our results for the Q1 as well as discuss our strategic initiatives. Before I do that, I want to welcome Jenny Osterhout to today's call in her new role as Chief Financial Officer. I've worked with Jenny for many years, most recently in her role as Chief Strategy Officer at OneMain, where she worked closely with Micah and me and had responsibility for strategy, new products, technology, digital, corporate development and has been a key partner in driving our strong performance the last several years. Speaker 200:02:15As you get to know her, I'm sure you will find her to be strategic, knowledgeable and a straight shooter. I also want to thank Micah for facilitating a smooth transition and he will continue to partner closely with Jenny and me to drive value for our customers and our shareholders in his new role as Chief Operating Officer. I'll start by saying we feel very good about the results this quarter, especially the credit trends, as we are seeing clear evidence that the credit tightening actions we have taken over the last couple of years are driving delinquency and ultimately losses in the right direction. Capital generation, the key metric against which we measure financial performance and manage our business was $155,000,000 this quarter. Our receivables grew 6% year over year, benefiting from our expanded product offerings and strong balance sheet. Speaker 200:03:24We've been able to grow our portfolio and our customer base while maintaining a cautious credit posture across all of our products. Year on year total revenue growth was 7%. Our originations totaled $2,500,000,000 down 10% from a year ago, a result of our disciplined management of the business where we only make loans that meet our return hurdles. As we've discussed previously, we have continued to selectively increase prices and tighten credit over the last year. Let me say a couple of things about the health of the consumer. Speaker 200:04:11Before I do so, let me remind you that while we monitor these overall trends, we actually lend customer by customer based on their individual credit risk, taking into consideration their geography, net disposable income, our proprietary data on current and former customers and over 1,000 other variables. For the consumer overall, there remains a set of crosscurrents. Even though inflation has slowed down and there has been healthy wage growth and unemployment remains quite low, interest rates remain elevated and living expenses have increased the last few years. For our customer who makes on average $65,000 to $70,000 a year, Their average income is up about 25% compared to pre pandemic, but the cost of everyday expenses in aggregate from food to housing to gas is also up over 20%. So while we have seen income catch up with inflation, resulting in an increase in net disposable income for our customers when compared to 2019, consumers still need to carefully manage their household budgets in this environment. Speaker 200:05:45Our 30% to 89% delinquency was 2.72%, down 56 basis points from the 4th quarter, which is better than normal seasonal trends. Loan net charge offs were 8.6%, consistent with our expectation given the delinquency we saw in the second half of last year and in line with our full year strategic priorities. We remain pleased with the performance of our newer vintages or front book comprised of loans originated since August 2022 as they continue to perform in line with expectations. And while these new vintages now comprise about 70% of our receivables, the back book, those loans originated before August 2022 still account for about 50% of our delinquencies. Our increased pricing in certain segments and tighter credit box has resulted in lower originations, especially in the last two quarters. Speaker 200:06:54This has led to portfolio dynamics, which Jenny will discuss later. We remain confident that the credit performance of the overall portfolio is moving in the right direction and continue to expect that losses will peak in the first half of twenty twenty four, assuming that the macroeconomic environment remains relatively stable. Nonetheless, we are maintaining our conservative credit posture at this time. Our OpEx ratio was 6.6%. We are always disciplined in our expense management and closely evaluate where to invest and where to cut. Speaker 200:07:41This quarter, we took some targeted expense actions, primarily across headcount and real estate, as we continually hone our business for optimal efficiency and performance. Turning now to our strategic initiatives, which we discussed in detail at our Investor Day in December. We talked then about how we plan to capitalize on our clear competitive advantages, including deep experience with and proprietary data on the non prime consumer, best in class underwriting, a unique business model with a branch network supported by digital and central capabilities and a fortress balance sheet. We are using these competitive advantages to position OneMain for the future and expand our addressable market in a highly disciplined manner and drive profitable growth. We served 3,000,000 customers during the quarter, up from 2,600,000 a year ago. Speaker 200:08:49Much of the growth in our customer base is attributable to our new products, the Brightway credit card and auto finance, highlighting the importance of these new products to our long term customer acquisition, customer engagement and growth strategies. Our auto finance receivables were $843,000,000 atquarterend and credit performance remains very good in this business. We recently enhanced our auto finance business with the acquisition of Foresight Capital, which closed on April 1. This acquisition brings us an experienced team, scalable technology, tested credit models, a franchise dealer network and a high quality loan portfolio. It substantially expands our total addressable market in the auto finance segment, complementing our current direct to consumer independent dealer strategy by adding a national network of franchise dealers. Speaker 200:09:59Importantly, it further diversifies and expands our suite of lending products, supporting our position as the lender of choice for non prime consumers. In our credit card business, we ended the quarter with 509,000 accounts $386,000,000 of receivables. We continue to feel really good about key business metrics, including response rates, utilization and digital engagement. Given the credit environment, we are focusing our customer acquisition on cards that have an annual fee and a lower line of credit. We are confident that our credit card business will be a significant driver of profitable growth in the coming years. Speaker 200:10:49But today, we have a tight credit box and we'll remain disciplined as we expand this business. Now let me briefly touch on capital allocation. Our top priority to invest in the business to position us for ongoing success has not changed. As I mentioned earlier, we grew our receivables year over year with a focus on high quality, profitable originations. Once again this quarter, about 2 thirds of new customer originations were in our top 2 credit tiers. Speaker 200:11:27And we allocated a portion of our capital for the acquisition of Foresight, which will provide important benefits to our company and our shareholders in the years ahead. We are committed to a strong regular dividend and our Board increased the dividend by 4% this quarter. The annual dividend is now $4.16 per share, reflecting our continued confidence in the capital generation of the business and our commitment to return capital to shareholders. Share repurchases in the Q1 were modest, about 100,000 shares for approximately $5,000,000 With that, let me now turn the call over to Jenny. Speaker 300:12:19Thanks, Doug, and good morning, everyone. I'd like to start by saying that it's great to be here on my first earnings call as Chief Financial Officer of OneMain. Doug, Micah and I, along with the rest of the executive team at OneMain, will continue to focus on serving our customers, managing the company to outperform in any environment and executing on the strategy that we laid out at Investor Day in December. 2024 is off to a strong start with the Q1 highlighted by positive momentum resulting in our continued proactive and granular management of the portfolio, ongoing expense discipline and further enhancement of our already strong balance sheet. First quarter net income was $155,000,000 $1.29 per diluted share, down 13% from $1.48 per diluted share in the Q1 of 2023. Speaker 300:13:20The current quarter included a $27,000,000 restructuring charge associated with expense initiatives that will support strategic investment in the company. G and I adjusted net income was $1.45 per diluted share, essentially flat as compared to the Q1 of 2023. Capital generation was $155,000,000 for the quarter compared to $179,000,000 a year ago, reflecting the impacts of the current macroeconomic environment on our interest expense, yield and net charge offs. Managed receivables this quarter were $22,000,000,000 up $1,300,000,000 or 6% from a year ago. This does not reflect receivables from the 1st quarter originations of $2,500,000,000 were down seasonally from the 4th quarter and down 10% year over year as we've maintained our conservative approach to new originations. Speaker 300:14:31As discussed in previous quarters, a good portion of our tightening has come via pricing actions that we've taken, which offer what we view as a compelling trade off of lower volume for higher profitability. The average APR on our loan originations in the quarter was 26.8%, up more than 100 basis points from Q1 2023. While we're encouraged by positive signs in our portfolio's credit performance, for now we are maintaining Total revenue comprising interest income and total Total revenue comprising interest income and total other revenue grew 7% as compared to Q1 2023, in line with our full year guidance range of 6% to 8%. Interest income was $1,200,000,000 up 7% year over year, driven by higher average receivable. Yield in the Q1 was 22.1%, flat compared to the Q4, as our pricing actions, which I mentioned earlier, offset the impacts of the credit environment and the growth of the auto book, which has lower APRs. Speaker 300:15:52Other revenue was $180,000,000 up 2% from the prior year. Interest expense for the quarter was $276,000,000 up $38,000,000 versus the prior year, driven by an increase in average debt to support our receivables growth, higher cash levels as well as modestly higher cost of funds. Interest expense as a percentage of receivables in the quarter was 5.2%. 1st quarter interest expense was impacted by the excess cash we've been carrying on our balance sheet through the quarter. Excluding these impacts, interest expense would have been closer to 5% in the quarter, and we continue to expect full year interest expense of approximately 5.2%. Speaker 300:16:38While the interest rate environment remains uncertain, our balance sheet strategy with staggered maturities and longer tenures has allowed us to mitigate the volatility in the markets over the last few years. Provision expense was $431,000,000 comprising net charge offs of $457,000,000 and a $26,000,000 decrease in our allowance, which was driven by the seasonal decline in our receivables. Our allowance ratio remained flat to the 4th quarter at 11.6%. Policyholder benefits and claims expense for the quarter was $50,000,000 compared to the $47,000,000 in Q1 2023. This is in line with our previously stated expectation of approximately $50,000,000 each quarter. Speaker 300:17:28Let's now turn to the C and I credit trends highlighted on Slide 9. Loan net charge offs were 8.6%, in line with expectations for the quarter. Recoveries remained strong in the quarter. They were $77,000,000 or 1.5 percent of receivables and included some opportunistic sales of charged off loans during the quarter. 30 to 89 day delinquency at March 31 was 2.72%, which was 56 basis points better than the 3.28% we saw in December. Speaker 300:18:03While we typically see a seasonal reduction in 30 to 89 day delinquency from 4th to 1st quarter, this 56 basis point reduction is better than normal seasonal trends. Front book vintages, which we define as originations starting in August 2022, now comprise about 70% of total receivables as compared to 65% at year end. However, currently 50% of our 30 plus delinquencies still come from the back book vintages that only represent 30% of our receivables. So while we are pleased that we continue to see the front book perform in line with expectations, as we discussed last quarter, our portfolio is growing at a slower pace due to our credit tightening and pricing actions. The result of this slower growth is an extension of the weighted average life of our portfolio. Speaker 300:18:58This drives the delinquency and loss performance of the portfolio to skew more to the older and higher delinquency receivables with a smaller percentage of the more recent lower delinquency receivables on the book. Without this dynamic, our current quarter 30 to 89 delinquencies would be lower than last year. I want to emphasize that we remain pleased with the performance of the loans we are booking today. And as the back book runs down and the better performing front book continues to grow, our losses will improve. We continue to expect net charge offs to peak in the first half of twenty twenty four with typical seasonal patterns thereafter. Speaker 300:19:41Now let's turn to Slide 12. Operating expenses were $362,000,000 in the quarter, flat year over year. Expenses in the quarter were positively impacted by expense reduction taken this quarter. We expect our full year OpEx ratio to fall in line with our guidance of approximately 6.7% as we continue our practice to both manage expenses and further invest in our business for future growth. The specific expense reduction actions taken this quarter were the result of our rigorous focus on expense management as well as the fruits of our focus on digital engagement and the optimization of our branch footprint. Speaker 300:20:24The majority of these expense reductions came from headcount and real estate. These expense actions will create additional capacity for us to invest for growth in the future, while continuing to drive operating leverage. Our OpEx ratio was 6.6% in the first quarter, down from 7.1 just described as well as the operating leverage inherent in our business that we outlined at Investor Day in December. Now let's turn to funding and our balance sheet on Slide 13. We came into 2024 in great shape from a liquidity perspective, having issued $2,500,000,000 of unsecured and secured debt in the second half of last year and having redeemed the March 2024 maturity. Speaker 300:21:19During the Q1, we didn't issue any debt, but we continued to make progress on our best in class liquidity profile by increasing our bank facilities and adding a new partner to our whole loan sale program. You also probably saw that last week we issued a $1,100,000,000 7 year revolving securitization priced at a blended rate of 5.99%. This was the first 7 year tenor ADS we've issued since 2019 and is a testament to the strength of our funding program. We had a deep order book that included both new investors and a long list of returning ABS investors. This issuance extends our maturity profile into 2,031 and beyond, and with the cash on our balance sheet provides further funding flexibility. Speaker 300:22:13Let me add a little more context on the changes to our liquidity profile that I mentioned. In January, we closed our 1st credit card facilities with 2 members of our banking group. The initial combined commitment for the 2 facilities is $300,000,000 bringing company bank facilities to $8,000,000,000 from $7,700,000,000 in Q4 2023. We see these new credit card facilities as strategically important as we build out the ABS program for cards, giving us a new funding channel that further diversifies our balance sheet. On the whole loan sales front, we signed an 18 month $600,000,000 forward flow agreement with a new partner with attractive pricing, essentially swapping out another partnership that we chose not to renew. Speaker 300:23:04While small, we see the whole loan sale program as a positive development and a further extension of our best in class funding program. Wrapping up the balance sheet. Our net leverage at the end of the first quarter was 5.3x, flat compared to last quarter. Turning briefly to Slide 15, our 2024 priorities. We continue to feel very good about the priorities we laid out on the 4th quarter earnings call, and those priorities remain unchanged. Speaker 300:23:36We expect to end the year with managed receivables of approximately $24,000,000,000 which includes approximately $1,000,000,000 from foresight. We continue to expect full year total revenue growth in a range of 6% to 8%. We also expect full year interest expense as a percentage of average net receivables to be approximately 5.2 percent and full year consolidated net charge offs in the range of 7.7% to 8.3% with peak charge offs in the first half of the year. And finally, as I mentioned earlier, we expect our full year operating expense ratio to be around 6.7%. We had a really solid first quarter with positive signs in our credit trends and remain confident in our ability to execute and deliver shareholder value throughout the years ahead. Speaker 300:24:31While over the past few years, I've had the opportunity to meet many of you, I look forward to spending more time with all of you going forward. With that, let me turn the call back over to Doug. Speaker 200:24:45Thanks, Jenny. We feel really good about the direction of credit as we have carefully managed our underwriting and pricing to ensure we meet our return hurdles. Our new products, credit card and auto finance, have matured nicely and are positioned to be major contributors to profitable growth in the coming years. And as we deepen our customer relationships and expand and diversify our product offerings, we have further solidified our position as the lender of choice to the non prime consumer. As always, I'm incredibly grateful to all of our talented team members who are highly committed to helping our customers meet their credit needs today, but also helping them progress to a better financial future. Speaker 200:25:43With that, let me open it up for questions. Operator00:26:06Thank you. And our first question will come from John Rowan Speaker 400:26:15Jenny, I just wanted Speaker 500:26:16to just unpack what you were talking about with the delinquency buckets and the growth math, right? Because it sounded like you said that one of the buckets, maybe the 30, 89 day came down more than you would expect seasonally because of the Fed growth math, but maybe the 90 plus day did not come down in lockstep because of that growth math. I should make sure I understood that correctly and maybe just walk us through what we should expect on the growth math, the effect on delinquencies going forward? Speaker 300:26:45Thanks. Thanks for the question. Let me give a bit more context. So the way we think about it, the weighted average life of our receivables has increased from that slower growth that I mentioned. And we decreased the number of new originations, meaning those younger originations, so those originated in the last two quarters, think of that as Q4 and Q1. Speaker 300:27:11And those younger originations as a percentage of the overall book today are 24% of the book and on a pre COVID book, that's growing more would have been about 33%. So we increased the average age of our receivables for nearly 10% of the book. And that matters because those newer originations have a sub-one percent delinquency and we replaced those with those older vintages that have about a 4 percent delinquency. So to put that in context, excluding that change in the growth dynamic, it would be like you said, a little bit lower than last year and that's to the 30 to 89 delinquency. And we expect that impact will decrease as we get newer vintages on the books. Speaker 300:28:04We aren't seeing anything abnormal with our 90 plus. I just want to add that in too. Speaker 500:28:10Okay. Thank you. And then, Doug, maybe just discuss kind of the market opportunity in credit cards. We haven't talked a lot about the fee structure on the credit card, but obviously there is a proposal out to or finalized rule out to reduce late fees. How do you see that market shaking out in the next couple of years with the new fee structure and what's your opportunity there? Speaker 500:28:28Thank you. Speaker 200:28:30So look, we think we've got a huge opportunity in credit card. To put it in context, we have a 20% market share in the $100,000,000,000 personal loan market and the credit card market for the non prime consumer is about $500,000,000,000 So run simple math, if we got 1% market share in the $500,000,000,000 market, we'd have $5,000,000,000 any sort of undue Speaker 400:29:02risk. Speaker 200:29:05And so we really like to see on any sort of undue risk. And so we really like our product, which the way it's designed is payments equal progress, which means as you are a good payer, we will share some economics with you, either decrease the rate or increase your line after 6 on time payments. And then we've got a graduation strategy where people can start with a card with an annual fee. And if they have 24 on time payments, they can go to a no fee card. And so we have a unique value proposition. Speaker 200:29:46We know the non prime consumer. We've got a lot of history with this consumer. We've got a lot of infrastructure. We can do things like cross sell cards and loans and now we're adding auto. And we've been slowly building this business very deliberate for 3 years. Speaker 200:30:04As I mentioned, we've got a tight credit box and we're going to be very disciplined in the rollout. When it comes to late fees, I actually really like our positioning. Incumbent players who have a huge book and late fees were a big part of their business are going to have to shift the value proposition. We have the advantage of being a challenger and we've assumed this was coming and built in a business model where we can hit our 20% ROE thresholds with the $8 late fee. And so there's lots of levers from pricing to annual fees to the structure of the card. Speaker 200:30:51And so I think we'll see how it all shakes out. Most of the large players what I've heard who are already out there have basically said they'll take up pricing to make up for the fee. People will do what they're going to do. We built the model, so we've assumed it's going to be an $8 late fee that will be the max that we'll be able to charge and we'll build a great business with that as the parameters. Speaker 400:31:17Okay. Thank you very much. Speaker 200:31:20Thank you. Operator00:31:22Our next question will come from Terry Ma with Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:31:27Hi, this is Julia Guillaume on for Terry. Two questions. First on originations, which were down 10% year over year. Was that driven by incremental tightening during the quarter or more a function of what you did in the last couple of quarters pulling through? And then what do you need to see to get less conservative with underwriting? Speaker 200:31:47Yes. Your first quarter is seasonally our lowest origination quarter. People just had a fair amount of spending around the holidays and then tax refunds come in, which is a big check for most people in America. Originations were on pace of what we expected and we've stated that we think our receivables will be $24,000,000,000 at the end of the year. We still think we're on pace for that. Speaker 200:32:22I'd also note originations were down in the Q1 10% year on year. They were actually down 13% year on year in the Q4. So, the trend lines are not disturbing to us at all and we expected this with seasonality. So I think part of the year on year is seasonality. We also, as I mentioned, did 2 things. Speaker 200:32:501 is we increased pricing in certain segments. There we really like the trade, lower originations, but more profit. And in this environment, we'll take that trade all day long. And then we have incrementally tightened our credit box during the year last year, which also contributed to it. What do we need to see to open the credit box? Speaker 200:33:20We are being conservative. As I mentioned, there's still some crosscurrents in the macro economy. On the positive side, unemployment is low, wage growth has been healthy and inflation has slowed, but bumping up against that is prices are still persistently higher than they were in 2019 and interest rate environment remains uncertain, which affects housing prices, especially in the overall economy. We continually have a what we call weather vein where we're booking a de minimis amount of business right below our credit cut off. It's actually profitable. Speaker 200:34:05It just doesn't meet our 20% ROE threshold. So we look at the performance of those loans we've been originating. And so we'll keep an eye on that. When we decide to loosen up a little bit, it's not a big bang. I mean, we underwrite by state, by risk grade, by product type, by the channel where the customer comes from with if it's a new customer, whether they're coming through a digital channel or direct mail channel or walking into our branch, we see different performance. Speaker 200:34:41We have former customers, present customers, new customers. And so I think you can expect us to when we loosen up, do it in distinct pockets. And I'd also just mention, every month we are changing assumptions and we do some loosening and some tightening. And just the net effect over the last year has been more tightening than loosening. And so we're quite comfortable with our originations. Speaker 200:35:15I just want to repeat, we do not we don't manage to growth, we manage to profitability and we view growth as an outcome of running a great business, having a great value proposition to customers, having a great customer experience. And so we're super comfortable with where we are now and we'll keep an eye on both the macro and our internal data and we'll decide where we go from there. Speaker 600:35:43Very helpful. Thank you. And then on delinquencies, the 30 to 89 days moving in the right direction. Could you talk about your near term outlook and the confidence level and timing on getting back to our 6% to 7% target loss ratios, please? Speaker 200:35:58Sure. As I said, we like the trends. Quarter on quarter, we were 56 basis points down on our delinquency, which is a bigger drop than we saw in 2018 2019. And so we're really feeling like we've turned a corner. Our front book is in line with expectations and performing well. Speaker 200:36:22And we think peak losses will be first half of twenty twenty four. The math will take it down from there. The business we're booking now is in that 6% to 7% loss range in aggregate of the portfolio. When we get there, it's going to depend on a lot of factors, our growth, does the macro remain stable, etcetera. So we're not calling when we're getting there, but we like the business we're booking now. Speaker 200:36:57It meets our 20% return thresholds and we like the general trends. Speaker 300:37:09And we will take Operator00:37:10our next question from John Hecht with Jefferies. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:37:15Good morning, guys, and thanks for taking my questions, and welcome to the call, Jenny. First question is just based on the guidance and the seasoning of the back book, it looks like I think charge offs should be peaking I think in this quarter. The ALL has been pretty consistent for several quarters, but how do we think about where the ALL might go once you've gone through that peak charge off cycle? Speaker 300:37:47Thanks. I'll take this. So I think you've hit it pretty spot on. We're pretty pleased with what we see on delinquency. We still think we're going to be in that range of 7.7% to 8.3% for the year for the annualized loss rate. Speaker 300:38:05And we feel pretty comfortable in that range. I think typically you would see delinquency move to charge off about 2 quarters later. So you can expect to see the delinquency that we have here moving in the Q3. And also there's some seasonality in delinquency as well. So we have our lowest delinquency in this quarter, in the Q1 of the year as customers get their tax refunds and then we trend upward throughout the remainder of the year. Speaker 300:38:40So you expect those same seasonal patterns to continue, but we're pretty pleased with this improvement in delinquency and we expect that to translate to losses later in the year. Speaker 700:38:55And just to round that out the ALL ratio, like keep it at consistent levels or as delinquency start to drop with that drop? Speaker 300:39:08Yes. I think we're going to be thinking about reserves. We take into account what's happening in the macro environment, the growth of the book, obviously lifetime losses as well. So, we've maintained our 11.6 coverage ratio for reserving and we'll be continually looking at all those factors as they change. And as we get to a more normalized environment, we'd expect reserve coverage to start to come down. Speaker 300:39:39But for now, we're very happy with where we have our reserves. Speaker 700:39:44Okay. That's helpful. And then how do we think about yields? I mean, you're clearly on the front book and the personal loan book, you're priced a lot higher. But how do we think about yields with that mix and then the delinquency buckets and then also the auto and card segments? Speaker 700:40:04How should we think about the impact of all those factors on yields in the near term? Speaker 300:40:12Yes. I can walk a little bit through yield because it's flat here. And we discussed we're deliberately taking those pricing actions and we increased APR by over 100 basis points. We're only starting to see that flow through the portfolio, but it will in time, it will take sort of full effect. And then offsetting that are the impact of the current macro environment, which is which you're seeing flow through charge offs. Speaker 300:40:42And then there is some increased impact from the auto book specifically. So but we like that trade that we're making for the lower loss volatility and lower APR content. So over time, we think yields in a normalized environment would come back on the personal loan book to about 23% to 24%. And in the auto finance, it would be remain in about 15% to 17%. So really, it will depend on the product mix going forward in terms of where that lands. Speaker 700:41:22Okay. Thanks very much. Operator00:41:26Our next question will come from David Scharf with Citizens JMP. Please go Speaker 800:41:32ahead. Great. Thank you. Good morning and thanks for taking my questions. Maybe just a couple technical follow ups. Speaker 800:41:42On the loss rate, there was an elevated recovery rate in the quarter. And I know you mentioned you had some opportunistic sale of charge offs. Are you planning on increasing that? Or are you involved in any forward flow arrangements for charge off sales? Or was this just a one off event? Speaker 300:42:05No, we're always looking at internal and external collections and we continue to see pretty strong recovery performance and positive trends. So we're still above our pre pandemic recovery levels, and they're in line with our expected charge offs. So we had $77,000,000 in this quarter, which included that $11,000,000 you mentioned of post charge off debt sales. That's pretty consistent with prior year where we had $10,000,000 of post charge off debt sales. So again, we're always looking at that trade and making decisions where the economics are good. Speaker 300:42:43But overall, we're actually quite pleased with where recoveries are. Speaker 800:42:47Got it. Got it. So just to clarify, there's no forward flow arrangements as far as debt sales are concerned? Speaker 200:42:56No. Okay. And just Speaker 800:42:59a quick follow-up on OpEx, the 27,000,000 dollars restructuring charge, is there a way to translate the movements in the quarter to sort of an annualized expense savings? I mean, how we should interpret Speaker 300:43:18the 2020? Yes. Yes. The easiest way I do think the easiest way to do that is to think of the OpEx ratio, the 6.7% OpEx ratio. Obviously, the direct cost save is well in excess of that $27,000,000 onetime restructuring charge. Speaker 300:43:38So it just gives us the ability to create further capacity and continue to invest in the business throughout the year. But you you would I would look at the OpEx ratio and expect that OpEx ratio to be about 6.7% for the year. And that's a 30 basis point drop as compared to last year. So we feel like it's a pretty good drop and shows the disciplined management while we're simultaneously rolling out all of these new products. Yes. Speaker 200:44:06And it's built in we are always cutting some places and investing some places. We think that's what disciplined management is. And the charge we took and the cost saves around that were built into the guidance we gave you last quarter. So I wouldn't change anything around that. Speaker 800:44:29Got it. Appreciate the follow-up. Thank you. Operator00:44:34Our next question comes from Rick Shane with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:44:39Hey guys, thanks for taking my questions this morning. Two things. Look, the delinquency trends as Speaker 900:44:45you guys have cited, look good in the Q1. It is worth mentioning some context, which is that other companies have cited some headwinds in Q1 credit related to lower or delayed tax refunds. I'm curious, it seems like you guys might have a little bit of potential something left in the tank if tax refunds come through. How are you looking at that? And I don't mean that to Speaker 100:45:21be spun as a positive question Speaker 900:45:24or a leading question, but I'm curious how you guys are thinking about tax refund season and whether or not we're going to see a catch up? Speaker 200:45:31I mean, we didn't see that data. We heard other companies come in. I mean, our view, we thought tax refunds came in pretty normal and we so we're not factoring in any big boom of tax refunds coming in at abnormal times. If they do, that'll be upside, but that's not in our the way we're thinking about it. We're managing the book tightly and I won't repeat myself too much, but we like the direction, the front book is becoming bigger, everything is happening as we thought the math would play out. Speaker 200:46:08And so we like that direction. Speaker 300:46:11Yes, I'll just add a little bit here. I mean, overall, we are seeing actually a slight increase in the total amount refunded to customers. So with average refunds are up about $100 So and there's probably about 3 weeks left in the season. I don't I think we're feeling pretty good about where we are. You see that Speaker 100:46:32in the delinquency results and we'll see what Speaker 300:46:32happens next quarter. Got the delinquency results and we'll see what happens next quarter. Speaker 100:46:35Got it. Thank you. And the word I think I was grasping for, Speaker 900:46:36but I've been up since 3 o'clock was tailwind. The second thing and this question came up a couple of times. On your guidance slide, you pulled out the little box that talks about your medium term strategic priorities. Is there anything to read into that? Or is that still realistically what you're targeting? Speaker 200:47:03No, that's what we're targeting. You shouldn't read anything into it. It's just we put together earnings slides every quarter. But what we laid out at Investor Day, we stand by 100%, which is targeting $30,000,000,000 of receivables in the medium term, to have net charge offs in the 6 percent to 7% range and to have our capital generation return on receivables in the range we've run historically. And so we feel very confident in our trajectory to get there. Speaker 200:47:36We've got a lot of opportunities with our current business, our superior business model, our cards and our autos. So, we definitely stand by where we're headed and where we laid out at Investor Day. Speaker 900:47:50Terrific. Thank you so much, guys. Speaker 700:47:53Thank you. Operator00:47:56Our next question comes from Nate Richam with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:48:02Good morning and thanks for taking my questions. Can you talk a little bit about the demand environment from consumers and on this current backdrop? I guess it more elevated given like higher inflation, maybe the need for more debt consolidation or is it more or less the same? Speaker 200:48:18Demand is pretty strong. It peaked in the first half of twenty twenty two and it's now been a lot more normal. We're seeing kind of if you look industry wide, we think demand is about what it was in 2019 and has hit industry, it's kind of gone back to a state of post pandemic equilibrium. As I mentioned, demand is always a bit slower in the Q1 and you see that in our originations and you generally see that across the industry. We've been pretty pleased that we've been able to book good business with the increased pricing, which shows our competitive advantage and our positioning in the market. Speaker 200:49:23And so I think the demand environment is healthy. We don't see any reason that it will fall off in any significant way. Generally, the way it works, which is counterintuitive, I think most people think, oh, if you go into a recession or if customers are really struggling, they take out more debt. The reality is, consumers are actually pretty rational and they take out debt when they they take out debt when we're when they're feeling good about things. And so we see demand pretty steady in this quarter. Speaker 400:50:03Awesome. And then turning back to expenses, the run rate from here looks pretty solid. And I was just curious, like what specific areas are you looking for these like reinvestments? And will it kind of be like a steady throughout the year trickle down? Or is it more like an opportunistic timing of like a bulk of those reinvestments? Speaker 300:50:21Yes. I think it's more of the latter of what you described. So we'll look at as we're growing out our new products and as we're looking at what is happening throughout the year with both the macroeconomic environment and with our customers where we want to make those investments. So it could be both geographically where we see growth opportunities, it could be based on the product growth. But we want to leave ourselves some room to make those investments and we're feeling pretty good about where we are in terms of expenses. Speaker 700:50:59Got it. Thank you. Speaker 200:51:01All right. Thank you very much. So I see we're coming up on the hour. So I want to thank everyone for joining us this morning and we're looking forward to talking with all of you in the near future. Thank you. Operator00:51:15Thank you. And this does conclude today's OneMain Financial First quarter 2024 earnings conference call. Please disconnect your line at this time and have a wonderful day.Read morePowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) OneMain Earnings HeadlinesOneMain Holdings, Inc. (OMF) Stock Competitors & Similar Stocks ...July 18 at 10:29 AM | seekingalpha.comOneMain (NYSE:OMF) Given New $63.00 Price Target at JPMorgan Chase & Co.July 13, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comThe Trump Dump is starting; Get out of stocks now?The first 365 days of the Trump presidency… Will be the best time to get rich in American history.July 19 at 2:00 AM | Paradigm Press (Ad)4OMF : Where OneMain Holdings Stands With AnalystsJuly 12, 2025 | benzinga.comOneMain (NYSE:OMF) Stock Price Expected to Rise, Barclays Analyst SaysJuly 10, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comDo Options Traders Know Something About OneMain Holdings Stock We Don't?July 9, 2025 | msn.comSee More OneMain Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like OneMain? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on OneMain and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About OneMainOneMain (NYSE:OMF) Financial Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: OMF) is a leading consumer finance company headquartered in Evansville, Indiana. The company specializes in providing personal loans to nonprime borrowers across the United States through a combination of branch-based locations and digital channels. With a network of more than 1,500 branches operating in 44 states, OneMain serves over one million customers seeking credit solutions that traditional lenders may not offer. OneMain traces its roots to mid-20th-century finance operations that later became part of Citigroup’s consumer lending division. In 2011, the business was divested from Citigroup and rebranded as Springleaf Financial. In 2015, Springleaf adopted the OneMain name to reflect its focus on personal lending, and the company subsequently completed an initial public offering in 2017, listing its shares on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker OMF. OneMain’s core products include unsecured personal loans for purposes such as debt consolidation, home improvement, and unexpected expenses, with loan amounts typically ranging from $1,500 to $20,000. The company also offers secured auto-related loans that use a borrower’s vehicle as collateral, along with ancillary products such as payment protection plans, vehicle service contracts, and gap insurance. OneMain’s lending model combines in-branch customer service with online applications and digital account management, catering to borrowers who value both personal interaction and technological convenience.Written by Jeffrey Neal JohnsonView OneMain ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Netflix Q2 2025 Earnings: What Investors Need to KnowHow Goldman Sachs Earnings Help You Strategize Your PortfolioCitigroup Earnings Could Signal What’s Next for Markets3 Analysts Set $600 Target Ahead of Microsoft EarningsTesla: 2 Plays Ahead of Next Week's Earnings ReportFastenal Surges After Earnings Beat, Tariff Risks Loom3 Catalysts Converge on Intel Ahead of a Critical Earnings Report Upcoming Earnings NXP Semiconductors (7/21/2025)Verizon Communications (7/21/2025)Comcast (7/22/2025)Intuitive Surgical (7/22/2025)Texas Instruments (7/22/2025)America Movil (7/22/2025)Chubb (7/22/2025)Canadian National Railway (7/22/2025)Capital One Financial (7/22/2025)Danaher (7/22/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00It is now my pleasure to turn the floor over to Peter Poyon. Operator00:00:03You may begin. Speaker 100:00:06Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Let me begin by directing you to Page 2 of the Q1 2024 investor presentation, which contains important disclosures concerning forward looking statements and the use of non GAAP measures. The presentation can be found in the Investor Relations section of the OneMain website. Our discussion today will contain certain forward looking statements reflecting management's current beliefs about the company's future, financial performance and business prospects, and these forward looking statements are subject to inherent risks and uncertainties and speak only as of today. Speaker 100:00:45Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these forward looking statements are set forth in our earnings press release. We caution you not to place undue reliance on forward looking statements. If you may be listening to this via replay at some point after today, we remind you that the remarks made herein are as of today, April 30, and have not been updated subsequent to this call. Our call this morning will include formal remarks from Doug Schulman, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and Jenny Osterhout, our Chief Financial Officer. After the conclusion of our formal remarks, we will conduct a question and answer session. Speaker 100:01:25I'd like to now turn the call over to Doug. Speaker 200:01:29Thanks, Pete, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. Today, I'll cover our results for the Q1 as well as discuss our strategic initiatives. Before I do that, I want to welcome Jenny Osterhout to today's call in her new role as Chief Financial Officer. I've worked with Jenny for many years, most recently in her role as Chief Strategy Officer at OneMain, where she worked closely with Micah and me and had responsibility for strategy, new products, technology, digital, corporate development and has been a key partner in driving our strong performance the last several years. Speaker 200:02:15As you get to know her, I'm sure you will find her to be strategic, knowledgeable and a straight shooter. I also want to thank Micah for facilitating a smooth transition and he will continue to partner closely with Jenny and me to drive value for our customers and our shareholders in his new role as Chief Operating Officer. I'll start by saying we feel very good about the results this quarter, especially the credit trends, as we are seeing clear evidence that the credit tightening actions we have taken over the last couple of years are driving delinquency and ultimately losses in the right direction. Capital generation, the key metric against which we measure financial performance and manage our business was $155,000,000 this quarter. Our receivables grew 6% year over year, benefiting from our expanded product offerings and strong balance sheet. Speaker 200:03:24We've been able to grow our portfolio and our customer base while maintaining a cautious credit posture across all of our products. Year on year total revenue growth was 7%. Our originations totaled $2,500,000,000 down 10% from a year ago, a result of our disciplined management of the business where we only make loans that meet our return hurdles. As we've discussed previously, we have continued to selectively increase prices and tighten credit over the last year. Let me say a couple of things about the health of the consumer. Speaker 200:04:11Before I do so, let me remind you that while we monitor these overall trends, we actually lend customer by customer based on their individual credit risk, taking into consideration their geography, net disposable income, our proprietary data on current and former customers and over 1,000 other variables. For the consumer overall, there remains a set of crosscurrents. Even though inflation has slowed down and there has been healthy wage growth and unemployment remains quite low, interest rates remain elevated and living expenses have increased the last few years. For our customer who makes on average $65,000 to $70,000 a year, Their average income is up about 25% compared to pre pandemic, but the cost of everyday expenses in aggregate from food to housing to gas is also up over 20%. So while we have seen income catch up with inflation, resulting in an increase in net disposable income for our customers when compared to 2019, consumers still need to carefully manage their household budgets in this environment. Speaker 200:05:45Our 30% to 89% delinquency was 2.72%, down 56 basis points from the 4th quarter, which is better than normal seasonal trends. Loan net charge offs were 8.6%, consistent with our expectation given the delinquency we saw in the second half of last year and in line with our full year strategic priorities. We remain pleased with the performance of our newer vintages or front book comprised of loans originated since August 2022 as they continue to perform in line with expectations. And while these new vintages now comprise about 70% of our receivables, the back book, those loans originated before August 2022 still account for about 50% of our delinquencies. Our increased pricing in certain segments and tighter credit box has resulted in lower originations, especially in the last two quarters. Speaker 200:06:54This has led to portfolio dynamics, which Jenny will discuss later. We remain confident that the credit performance of the overall portfolio is moving in the right direction and continue to expect that losses will peak in the first half of twenty twenty four, assuming that the macroeconomic environment remains relatively stable. Nonetheless, we are maintaining our conservative credit posture at this time. Our OpEx ratio was 6.6%. We are always disciplined in our expense management and closely evaluate where to invest and where to cut. Speaker 200:07:41This quarter, we took some targeted expense actions, primarily across headcount and real estate, as we continually hone our business for optimal efficiency and performance. Turning now to our strategic initiatives, which we discussed in detail at our Investor Day in December. We talked then about how we plan to capitalize on our clear competitive advantages, including deep experience with and proprietary data on the non prime consumer, best in class underwriting, a unique business model with a branch network supported by digital and central capabilities and a fortress balance sheet. We are using these competitive advantages to position OneMain for the future and expand our addressable market in a highly disciplined manner and drive profitable growth. We served 3,000,000 customers during the quarter, up from 2,600,000 a year ago. Speaker 200:08:49Much of the growth in our customer base is attributable to our new products, the Brightway credit card and auto finance, highlighting the importance of these new products to our long term customer acquisition, customer engagement and growth strategies. Our auto finance receivables were $843,000,000 atquarterend and credit performance remains very good in this business. We recently enhanced our auto finance business with the acquisition of Foresight Capital, which closed on April 1. This acquisition brings us an experienced team, scalable technology, tested credit models, a franchise dealer network and a high quality loan portfolio. It substantially expands our total addressable market in the auto finance segment, complementing our current direct to consumer independent dealer strategy by adding a national network of franchise dealers. Speaker 200:09:59Importantly, it further diversifies and expands our suite of lending products, supporting our position as the lender of choice for non prime consumers. In our credit card business, we ended the quarter with 509,000 accounts $386,000,000 of receivables. We continue to feel really good about key business metrics, including response rates, utilization and digital engagement. Given the credit environment, we are focusing our customer acquisition on cards that have an annual fee and a lower line of credit. We are confident that our credit card business will be a significant driver of profitable growth in the coming years. Speaker 200:10:49But today, we have a tight credit box and we'll remain disciplined as we expand this business. Now let me briefly touch on capital allocation. Our top priority to invest in the business to position us for ongoing success has not changed. As I mentioned earlier, we grew our receivables year over year with a focus on high quality, profitable originations. Once again this quarter, about 2 thirds of new customer originations were in our top 2 credit tiers. Speaker 200:11:27And we allocated a portion of our capital for the acquisition of Foresight, which will provide important benefits to our company and our shareholders in the years ahead. We are committed to a strong regular dividend and our Board increased the dividend by 4% this quarter. The annual dividend is now $4.16 per share, reflecting our continued confidence in the capital generation of the business and our commitment to return capital to shareholders. Share repurchases in the Q1 were modest, about 100,000 shares for approximately $5,000,000 With that, let me now turn the call over to Jenny. Speaker 300:12:19Thanks, Doug, and good morning, everyone. I'd like to start by saying that it's great to be here on my first earnings call as Chief Financial Officer of OneMain. Doug, Micah and I, along with the rest of the executive team at OneMain, will continue to focus on serving our customers, managing the company to outperform in any environment and executing on the strategy that we laid out at Investor Day in December. 2024 is off to a strong start with the Q1 highlighted by positive momentum resulting in our continued proactive and granular management of the portfolio, ongoing expense discipline and further enhancement of our already strong balance sheet. First quarter net income was $155,000,000 $1.29 per diluted share, down 13% from $1.48 per diluted share in the Q1 of 2023. Speaker 300:13:20The current quarter included a $27,000,000 restructuring charge associated with expense initiatives that will support strategic investment in the company. G and I adjusted net income was $1.45 per diluted share, essentially flat as compared to the Q1 of 2023. Capital generation was $155,000,000 for the quarter compared to $179,000,000 a year ago, reflecting the impacts of the current macroeconomic environment on our interest expense, yield and net charge offs. Managed receivables this quarter were $22,000,000,000 up $1,300,000,000 or 6% from a year ago. This does not reflect receivables from the 1st quarter originations of $2,500,000,000 were down seasonally from the 4th quarter and down 10% year over year as we've maintained our conservative approach to new originations. Speaker 300:14:31As discussed in previous quarters, a good portion of our tightening has come via pricing actions that we've taken, which offer what we view as a compelling trade off of lower volume for higher profitability. The average APR on our loan originations in the quarter was 26.8%, up more than 100 basis points from Q1 2023. While we're encouraged by positive signs in our portfolio's credit performance, for now we are maintaining Total revenue comprising interest income and total Total revenue comprising interest income and total other revenue grew 7% as compared to Q1 2023, in line with our full year guidance range of 6% to 8%. Interest income was $1,200,000,000 up 7% year over year, driven by higher average receivable. Yield in the Q1 was 22.1%, flat compared to the Q4, as our pricing actions, which I mentioned earlier, offset the impacts of the credit environment and the growth of the auto book, which has lower APRs. Speaker 300:15:52Other revenue was $180,000,000 up 2% from the prior year. Interest expense for the quarter was $276,000,000 up $38,000,000 versus the prior year, driven by an increase in average debt to support our receivables growth, higher cash levels as well as modestly higher cost of funds. Interest expense as a percentage of receivables in the quarter was 5.2%. 1st quarter interest expense was impacted by the excess cash we've been carrying on our balance sheet through the quarter. Excluding these impacts, interest expense would have been closer to 5% in the quarter, and we continue to expect full year interest expense of approximately 5.2%. Speaker 300:16:38While the interest rate environment remains uncertain, our balance sheet strategy with staggered maturities and longer tenures has allowed us to mitigate the volatility in the markets over the last few years. Provision expense was $431,000,000 comprising net charge offs of $457,000,000 and a $26,000,000 decrease in our allowance, which was driven by the seasonal decline in our receivables. Our allowance ratio remained flat to the 4th quarter at 11.6%. Policyholder benefits and claims expense for the quarter was $50,000,000 compared to the $47,000,000 in Q1 2023. This is in line with our previously stated expectation of approximately $50,000,000 each quarter. Speaker 300:17:28Let's now turn to the C and I credit trends highlighted on Slide 9. Loan net charge offs were 8.6%, in line with expectations for the quarter. Recoveries remained strong in the quarter. They were $77,000,000 or 1.5 percent of receivables and included some opportunistic sales of charged off loans during the quarter. 30 to 89 day delinquency at March 31 was 2.72%, which was 56 basis points better than the 3.28% we saw in December. Speaker 300:18:03While we typically see a seasonal reduction in 30 to 89 day delinquency from 4th to 1st quarter, this 56 basis point reduction is better than normal seasonal trends. Front book vintages, which we define as originations starting in August 2022, now comprise about 70% of total receivables as compared to 65% at year end. However, currently 50% of our 30 plus delinquencies still come from the back book vintages that only represent 30% of our receivables. So while we are pleased that we continue to see the front book perform in line with expectations, as we discussed last quarter, our portfolio is growing at a slower pace due to our credit tightening and pricing actions. The result of this slower growth is an extension of the weighted average life of our portfolio. Speaker 300:18:58This drives the delinquency and loss performance of the portfolio to skew more to the older and higher delinquency receivables with a smaller percentage of the more recent lower delinquency receivables on the book. Without this dynamic, our current quarter 30 to 89 delinquencies would be lower than last year. I want to emphasize that we remain pleased with the performance of the loans we are booking today. And as the back book runs down and the better performing front book continues to grow, our losses will improve. We continue to expect net charge offs to peak in the first half of twenty twenty four with typical seasonal patterns thereafter. Speaker 300:19:41Now let's turn to Slide 12. Operating expenses were $362,000,000 in the quarter, flat year over year. Expenses in the quarter were positively impacted by expense reduction taken this quarter. We expect our full year OpEx ratio to fall in line with our guidance of approximately 6.7% as we continue our practice to both manage expenses and further invest in our business for future growth. The specific expense reduction actions taken this quarter were the result of our rigorous focus on expense management as well as the fruits of our focus on digital engagement and the optimization of our branch footprint. Speaker 300:20:24The majority of these expense reductions came from headcount and real estate. These expense actions will create additional capacity for us to invest for growth in the future, while continuing to drive operating leverage. Our OpEx ratio was 6.6% in the first quarter, down from 7.1 just described as well as the operating leverage inherent in our business that we outlined at Investor Day in December. Now let's turn to funding and our balance sheet on Slide 13. We came into 2024 in great shape from a liquidity perspective, having issued $2,500,000,000 of unsecured and secured debt in the second half of last year and having redeemed the March 2024 maturity. Speaker 300:21:19During the Q1, we didn't issue any debt, but we continued to make progress on our best in class liquidity profile by increasing our bank facilities and adding a new partner to our whole loan sale program. You also probably saw that last week we issued a $1,100,000,000 7 year revolving securitization priced at a blended rate of 5.99%. This was the first 7 year tenor ADS we've issued since 2019 and is a testament to the strength of our funding program. We had a deep order book that included both new investors and a long list of returning ABS investors. This issuance extends our maturity profile into 2,031 and beyond, and with the cash on our balance sheet provides further funding flexibility. Speaker 300:22:13Let me add a little more context on the changes to our liquidity profile that I mentioned. In January, we closed our 1st credit card facilities with 2 members of our banking group. The initial combined commitment for the 2 facilities is $300,000,000 bringing company bank facilities to $8,000,000,000 from $7,700,000,000 in Q4 2023. We see these new credit card facilities as strategically important as we build out the ABS program for cards, giving us a new funding channel that further diversifies our balance sheet. On the whole loan sales front, we signed an 18 month $600,000,000 forward flow agreement with a new partner with attractive pricing, essentially swapping out another partnership that we chose not to renew. Speaker 300:23:04While small, we see the whole loan sale program as a positive development and a further extension of our best in class funding program. Wrapping up the balance sheet. Our net leverage at the end of the first quarter was 5.3x, flat compared to last quarter. Turning briefly to Slide 15, our 2024 priorities. We continue to feel very good about the priorities we laid out on the 4th quarter earnings call, and those priorities remain unchanged. Speaker 300:23:36We expect to end the year with managed receivables of approximately $24,000,000,000 which includes approximately $1,000,000,000 from foresight. We continue to expect full year total revenue growth in a range of 6% to 8%. We also expect full year interest expense as a percentage of average net receivables to be approximately 5.2 percent and full year consolidated net charge offs in the range of 7.7% to 8.3% with peak charge offs in the first half of the year. And finally, as I mentioned earlier, we expect our full year operating expense ratio to be around 6.7%. We had a really solid first quarter with positive signs in our credit trends and remain confident in our ability to execute and deliver shareholder value throughout the years ahead. Speaker 300:24:31While over the past few years, I've had the opportunity to meet many of you, I look forward to spending more time with all of you going forward. With that, let me turn the call back over to Doug. Speaker 200:24:45Thanks, Jenny. We feel really good about the direction of credit as we have carefully managed our underwriting and pricing to ensure we meet our return hurdles. Our new products, credit card and auto finance, have matured nicely and are positioned to be major contributors to profitable growth in the coming years. And as we deepen our customer relationships and expand and diversify our product offerings, we have further solidified our position as the lender of choice to the non prime consumer. As always, I'm incredibly grateful to all of our talented team members who are highly committed to helping our customers meet their credit needs today, but also helping them progress to a better financial future. Speaker 200:25:43With that, let me open it up for questions. Operator00:26:06Thank you. And our first question will come from John Rowan Speaker 400:26:15Jenny, I just wanted Speaker 500:26:16to just unpack what you were talking about with the delinquency buckets and the growth math, right? Because it sounded like you said that one of the buckets, maybe the 30, 89 day came down more than you would expect seasonally because of the Fed growth math, but maybe the 90 plus day did not come down in lockstep because of that growth math. I should make sure I understood that correctly and maybe just walk us through what we should expect on the growth math, the effect on delinquencies going forward? Speaker 300:26:45Thanks. Thanks for the question. Let me give a bit more context. So the way we think about it, the weighted average life of our receivables has increased from that slower growth that I mentioned. And we decreased the number of new originations, meaning those younger originations, so those originated in the last two quarters, think of that as Q4 and Q1. Speaker 300:27:11And those younger originations as a percentage of the overall book today are 24% of the book and on a pre COVID book, that's growing more would have been about 33%. So we increased the average age of our receivables for nearly 10% of the book. And that matters because those newer originations have a sub-one percent delinquency and we replaced those with those older vintages that have about a 4 percent delinquency. So to put that in context, excluding that change in the growth dynamic, it would be like you said, a little bit lower than last year and that's to the 30 to 89 delinquency. And we expect that impact will decrease as we get newer vintages on the books. Speaker 300:28:04We aren't seeing anything abnormal with our 90 plus. I just want to add that in too. Speaker 500:28:10Okay. Thank you. And then, Doug, maybe just discuss kind of the market opportunity in credit cards. We haven't talked a lot about the fee structure on the credit card, but obviously there is a proposal out to or finalized rule out to reduce late fees. How do you see that market shaking out in the next couple of years with the new fee structure and what's your opportunity there? Speaker 500:28:28Thank you. Speaker 200:28:30So look, we think we've got a huge opportunity in credit card. To put it in context, we have a 20% market share in the $100,000,000,000 personal loan market and the credit card market for the non prime consumer is about $500,000,000,000 So run simple math, if we got 1% market share in the $500,000,000,000 market, we'd have $5,000,000,000 any sort of undue Speaker 400:29:02risk. Speaker 200:29:05And so we really like to see on any sort of undue risk. And so we really like our product, which the way it's designed is payments equal progress, which means as you are a good payer, we will share some economics with you, either decrease the rate or increase your line after 6 on time payments. And then we've got a graduation strategy where people can start with a card with an annual fee. And if they have 24 on time payments, they can go to a no fee card. And so we have a unique value proposition. Speaker 200:29:46We know the non prime consumer. We've got a lot of history with this consumer. We've got a lot of infrastructure. We can do things like cross sell cards and loans and now we're adding auto. And we've been slowly building this business very deliberate for 3 years. Speaker 200:30:04As I mentioned, we've got a tight credit box and we're going to be very disciplined in the rollout. When it comes to late fees, I actually really like our positioning. Incumbent players who have a huge book and late fees were a big part of their business are going to have to shift the value proposition. We have the advantage of being a challenger and we've assumed this was coming and built in a business model where we can hit our 20% ROE thresholds with the $8 late fee. And so there's lots of levers from pricing to annual fees to the structure of the card. Speaker 200:30:51And so I think we'll see how it all shakes out. Most of the large players what I've heard who are already out there have basically said they'll take up pricing to make up for the fee. People will do what they're going to do. We built the model, so we've assumed it's going to be an $8 late fee that will be the max that we'll be able to charge and we'll build a great business with that as the parameters. Speaker 400:31:17Okay. Thank you very much. Speaker 200:31:20Thank you. Operator00:31:22Our next question will come from Terry Ma with Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:31:27Hi, this is Julia Guillaume on for Terry. Two questions. First on originations, which were down 10% year over year. Was that driven by incremental tightening during the quarter or more a function of what you did in the last couple of quarters pulling through? And then what do you need to see to get less conservative with underwriting? Speaker 200:31:47Yes. Your first quarter is seasonally our lowest origination quarter. People just had a fair amount of spending around the holidays and then tax refunds come in, which is a big check for most people in America. Originations were on pace of what we expected and we've stated that we think our receivables will be $24,000,000,000 at the end of the year. We still think we're on pace for that. Speaker 200:32:22I'd also note originations were down in the Q1 10% year on year. They were actually down 13% year on year in the Q4. So, the trend lines are not disturbing to us at all and we expected this with seasonality. So I think part of the year on year is seasonality. We also, as I mentioned, did 2 things. Speaker 200:32:501 is we increased pricing in certain segments. There we really like the trade, lower originations, but more profit. And in this environment, we'll take that trade all day long. And then we have incrementally tightened our credit box during the year last year, which also contributed to it. What do we need to see to open the credit box? Speaker 200:33:20We are being conservative. As I mentioned, there's still some crosscurrents in the macro economy. On the positive side, unemployment is low, wage growth has been healthy and inflation has slowed, but bumping up against that is prices are still persistently higher than they were in 2019 and interest rate environment remains uncertain, which affects housing prices, especially in the overall economy. We continually have a what we call weather vein where we're booking a de minimis amount of business right below our credit cut off. It's actually profitable. Speaker 200:34:05It just doesn't meet our 20% ROE threshold. So we look at the performance of those loans we've been originating. And so we'll keep an eye on that. When we decide to loosen up a little bit, it's not a big bang. I mean, we underwrite by state, by risk grade, by product type, by the channel where the customer comes from with if it's a new customer, whether they're coming through a digital channel or direct mail channel or walking into our branch, we see different performance. Speaker 200:34:41We have former customers, present customers, new customers. And so I think you can expect us to when we loosen up, do it in distinct pockets. And I'd also just mention, every month we are changing assumptions and we do some loosening and some tightening. And just the net effect over the last year has been more tightening than loosening. And so we're quite comfortable with our originations. Speaker 200:35:15I just want to repeat, we do not we don't manage to growth, we manage to profitability and we view growth as an outcome of running a great business, having a great value proposition to customers, having a great customer experience. And so we're super comfortable with where we are now and we'll keep an eye on both the macro and our internal data and we'll decide where we go from there. Speaker 600:35:43Very helpful. Thank you. And then on delinquencies, the 30 to 89 days moving in the right direction. Could you talk about your near term outlook and the confidence level and timing on getting back to our 6% to 7% target loss ratios, please? Speaker 200:35:58Sure. As I said, we like the trends. Quarter on quarter, we were 56 basis points down on our delinquency, which is a bigger drop than we saw in 2018 2019. And so we're really feeling like we've turned a corner. Our front book is in line with expectations and performing well. Speaker 200:36:22And we think peak losses will be first half of twenty twenty four. The math will take it down from there. The business we're booking now is in that 6% to 7% loss range in aggregate of the portfolio. When we get there, it's going to depend on a lot of factors, our growth, does the macro remain stable, etcetera. So we're not calling when we're getting there, but we like the business we're booking now. Speaker 200:36:57It meets our 20% return thresholds and we like the general trends. Speaker 300:37:09And we will take Operator00:37:10our next question from John Hecht with Jefferies. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:37:15Good morning, guys, and thanks for taking my questions, and welcome to the call, Jenny. First question is just based on the guidance and the seasoning of the back book, it looks like I think charge offs should be peaking I think in this quarter. The ALL has been pretty consistent for several quarters, but how do we think about where the ALL might go once you've gone through that peak charge off cycle? Speaker 300:37:47Thanks. I'll take this. So I think you've hit it pretty spot on. We're pretty pleased with what we see on delinquency. We still think we're going to be in that range of 7.7% to 8.3% for the year for the annualized loss rate. Speaker 300:38:05And we feel pretty comfortable in that range. I think typically you would see delinquency move to charge off about 2 quarters later. So you can expect to see the delinquency that we have here moving in the Q3. And also there's some seasonality in delinquency as well. So we have our lowest delinquency in this quarter, in the Q1 of the year as customers get their tax refunds and then we trend upward throughout the remainder of the year. Speaker 300:38:40So you expect those same seasonal patterns to continue, but we're pretty pleased with this improvement in delinquency and we expect that to translate to losses later in the year. Speaker 700:38:55And just to round that out the ALL ratio, like keep it at consistent levels or as delinquency start to drop with that drop? Speaker 300:39:08Yes. I think we're going to be thinking about reserves. We take into account what's happening in the macro environment, the growth of the book, obviously lifetime losses as well. So, we've maintained our 11.6 coverage ratio for reserving and we'll be continually looking at all those factors as they change. And as we get to a more normalized environment, we'd expect reserve coverage to start to come down. Speaker 300:39:39But for now, we're very happy with where we have our reserves. Speaker 700:39:44Okay. That's helpful. And then how do we think about yields? I mean, you're clearly on the front book and the personal loan book, you're priced a lot higher. But how do we think about yields with that mix and then the delinquency buckets and then also the auto and card segments? Speaker 700:40:04How should we think about the impact of all those factors on yields in the near term? Speaker 300:40:12Yes. I can walk a little bit through yield because it's flat here. And we discussed we're deliberately taking those pricing actions and we increased APR by over 100 basis points. We're only starting to see that flow through the portfolio, but it will in time, it will take sort of full effect. And then offsetting that are the impact of the current macro environment, which is which you're seeing flow through charge offs. Speaker 300:40:42And then there is some increased impact from the auto book specifically. So but we like that trade that we're making for the lower loss volatility and lower APR content. So over time, we think yields in a normalized environment would come back on the personal loan book to about 23% to 24%. And in the auto finance, it would be remain in about 15% to 17%. So really, it will depend on the product mix going forward in terms of where that lands. Speaker 700:41:22Okay. Thanks very much. Operator00:41:26Our next question will come from David Scharf with Citizens JMP. Please go Speaker 800:41:32ahead. Great. Thank you. Good morning and thanks for taking my questions. Maybe just a couple technical follow ups. Speaker 800:41:42On the loss rate, there was an elevated recovery rate in the quarter. And I know you mentioned you had some opportunistic sale of charge offs. Are you planning on increasing that? Or are you involved in any forward flow arrangements for charge off sales? Or was this just a one off event? Speaker 300:42:05No, we're always looking at internal and external collections and we continue to see pretty strong recovery performance and positive trends. So we're still above our pre pandemic recovery levels, and they're in line with our expected charge offs. So we had $77,000,000 in this quarter, which included that $11,000,000 you mentioned of post charge off debt sales. That's pretty consistent with prior year where we had $10,000,000 of post charge off debt sales. So again, we're always looking at that trade and making decisions where the economics are good. Speaker 300:42:43But overall, we're actually quite pleased with where recoveries are. Speaker 800:42:47Got it. Got it. So just to clarify, there's no forward flow arrangements as far as debt sales are concerned? Speaker 200:42:56No. Okay. And just Speaker 800:42:59a quick follow-up on OpEx, the 27,000,000 dollars restructuring charge, is there a way to translate the movements in the quarter to sort of an annualized expense savings? I mean, how we should interpret Speaker 300:43:18the 2020? Yes. Yes. The easiest way I do think the easiest way to do that is to think of the OpEx ratio, the 6.7% OpEx ratio. Obviously, the direct cost save is well in excess of that $27,000,000 onetime restructuring charge. Speaker 300:43:38So it just gives us the ability to create further capacity and continue to invest in the business throughout the year. But you you would I would look at the OpEx ratio and expect that OpEx ratio to be about 6.7% for the year. And that's a 30 basis point drop as compared to last year. So we feel like it's a pretty good drop and shows the disciplined management while we're simultaneously rolling out all of these new products. Yes. Speaker 200:44:06And it's built in we are always cutting some places and investing some places. We think that's what disciplined management is. And the charge we took and the cost saves around that were built into the guidance we gave you last quarter. So I wouldn't change anything around that. Speaker 800:44:29Got it. Appreciate the follow-up. Thank you. Operator00:44:34Our next question comes from Rick Shane with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:44:39Hey guys, thanks for taking my questions this morning. Two things. Look, the delinquency trends as Speaker 900:44:45you guys have cited, look good in the Q1. It is worth mentioning some context, which is that other companies have cited some headwinds in Q1 credit related to lower or delayed tax refunds. I'm curious, it seems like you guys might have a little bit of potential something left in the tank if tax refunds come through. How are you looking at that? And I don't mean that to Speaker 100:45:21be spun as a positive question Speaker 900:45:24or a leading question, but I'm curious how you guys are thinking about tax refund season and whether or not we're going to see a catch up? Speaker 200:45:31I mean, we didn't see that data. We heard other companies come in. I mean, our view, we thought tax refunds came in pretty normal and we so we're not factoring in any big boom of tax refunds coming in at abnormal times. If they do, that'll be upside, but that's not in our the way we're thinking about it. We're managing the book tightly and I won't repeat myself too much, but we like the direction, the front book is becoming bigger, everything is happening as we thought the math would play out. Speaker 200:46:08And so we like that direction. Speaker 300:46:11Yes, I'll just add a little bit here. I mean, overall, we are seeing actually a slight increase in the total amount refunded to customers. So with average refunds are up about $100 So and there's probably about 3 weeks left in the season. I don't I think we're feeling pretty good about where we are. You see that Speaker 100:46:32in the delinquency results and we'll see what Speaker 300:46:32happens next quarter. Got the delinquency results and we'll see what happens next quarter. Speaker 100:46:35Got it. Thank you. And the word I think I was grasping for, Speaker 900:46:36but I've been up since 3 o'clock was tailwind. The second thing and this question came up a couple of times. On your guidance slide, you pulled out the little box that talks about your medium term strategic priorities. Is there anything to read into that? Or is that still realistically what you're targeting? Speaker 200:47:03No, that's what we're targeting. You shouldn't read anything into it. It's just we put together earnings slides every quarter. But what we laid out at Investor Day, we stand by 100%, which is targeting $30,000,000,000 of receivables in the medium term, to have net charge offs in the 6 percent to 7% range and to have our capital generation return on receivables in the range we've run historically. And so we feel very confident in our trajectory to get there. Speaker 200:47:36We've got a lot of opportunities with our current business, our superior business model, our cards and our autos. So, we definitely stand by where we're headed and where we laid out at Investor Day. Speaker 900:47:50Terrific. Thank you so much, guys. Speaker 700:47:53Thank you. Operator00:47:56Our next question comes from Nate Richam with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:48:02Good morning and thanks for taking my questions. Can you talk a little bit about the demand environment from consumers and on this current backdrop? I guess it more elevated given like higher inflation, maybe the need for more debt consolidation or is it more or less the same? Speaker 200:48:18Demand is pretty strong. It peaked in the first half of twenty twenty two and it's now been a lot more normal. We're seeing kind of if you look industry wide, we think demand is about what it was in 2019 and has hit industry, it's kind of gone back to a state of post pandemic equilibrium. As I mentioned, demand is always a bit slower in the Q1 and you see that in our originations and you generally see that across the industry. We've been pretty pleased that we've been able to book good business with the increased pricing, which shows our competitive advantage and our positioning in the market. Speaker 200:49:23And so I think the demand environment is healthy. We don't see any reason that it will fall off in any significant way. Generally, the way it works, which is counterintuitive, I think most people think, oh, if you go into a recession or if customers are really struggling, they take out more debt. The reality is, consumers are actually pretty rational and they take out debt when they they take out debt when we're when they're feeling good about things. And so we see demand pretty steady in this quarter. Speaker 400:50:03Awesome. And then turning back to expenses, the run rate from here looks pretty solid. And I was just curious, like what specific areas are you looking for these like reinvestments? And will it kind of be like a steady throughout the year trickle down? Or is it more like an opportunistic timing of like a bulk of those reinvestments? Speaker 300:50:21Yes. I think it's more of the latter of what you described. So we'll look at as we're growing out our new products and as we're looking at what is happening throughout the year with both the macroeconomic environment and with our customers where we want to make those investments. So it could be both geographically where we see growth opportunities, it could be based on the product growth. But we want to leave ourselves some room to make those investments and we're feeling pretty good about where we are in terms of expenses. Speaker 700:50:59Got it. Thank you. Speaker 200:51:01All right. Thank you very much. So I see we're coming up on the hour. So I want to thank everyone for joining us this morning and we're looking forward to talking with all of you in the near future. Thank you. Operator00:51:15Thank you. And this does conclude today's OneMain Financial First quarter 2024 earnings conference call. Please disconnect your line at this time and have a wonderful day.Read morePowered by