NASDAQ:CACC Credit Acceptance Q3 2025 Earnings Report $545.63 +19.96 (+3.80%) As of 10:08 AM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Credit Acceptance EPS ResultsActual EPS$10.28Consensus EPS $9.61Beat/MissBeat by +$0.67One Year Ago EPS$9.25Credit Acceptance Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$405.10 millionExpected Revenue$592.19 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$187.09 millionYoY Revenue Growth+5.80%Credit Acceptance Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2025Date10/30/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, October 30, 2025Conference Call Time5:00PM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Credit Acceptance Q3 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 30, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Negative Sentiment: Loan performance weakened as the 2022–2024 vintages underperformed (2025 vintage outperformed), driving a 0.5% decline in forecasted net cash flows (about $59 million). Negative Sentiment: Originations and volumes fell and market share in the core subprime used-vehicle segment dropped to 5.1% from 6.5%, with management citing the Q3 2024 scorecard change and heightened competition. Positive Sentiment: The loan portfolio remained at a record adjusted level of $9.1 billion; the company financed nearly 80,000 contracts this quarter and enrolled over 1,300 new dealers (10,180 active dealers). Positive Sentiment: Engineering modernization of the loan origination system accelerated dealer-facing delivery, increasing the speed of enhancements by almost 70%, enabling faster innovation and frictionless dealer experiences. Negative Sentiment: G&A was affected by ongoing legal matters, with a $15 million contingent legal loss this quarter (after a $23.4 million charge in Q2), reducing near-term earnings visibility. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallCredit Acceptance Q3 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, everyone, and welcome to the Credit Acceptance Corporation third quarter 2025 earnings call. A webcast recording and transcript of today's earnings call will be made available on Credit Acceptance's website. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to Credit Acceptance Chief Financial Officer, Jay Martin. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:00:22Thank you. Good afternoon and welcome to the Credit Acceptance Corporation third quarter 2025 earnings call. As you read our news release posted on the investor relations section of our website at ir.creditacceptance.com, and as you listen to this conference call, please recognize that both contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities law. These forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control and which could cause actual results to differ materially from such statements. These risks and uncertainties include those spelled out in the cautionary statement regarding forward-looking information included in the news release. Consider all forward-looking statements in light of those and other risks and uncertainties. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:01:09Additionally, I should mention that to comply with the SEC's Regulation G, please refer to the financial results section of our news release, which provides tables showing how non-GAAP measures reconcile them with GAAP measures. At this time, I'll turn the call over to our Chief Executive Officer, Ken Booth, to discuss our third quarter results. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:01:29Thanks, Jay. Our results for this quarter reflected steady execution with declines in loan performance and year-over-year originations volume, balanced by a portfolio that remains at a record high. Loan performance declined this quarter with our 2022, 2023, and 2024 vintages underperforming our expectations and our 2025 vintage exceeding our expectations, while our other vintages were stable during the quarter. Overall, forecasted net cash flows declined by 0.5%, or $59 million. During the quarter, we experienced a decline in unit and dollar volumes, though our loan portfolio remained at its record high of $9.1 billion on an adjusted basis, up 2% from last Q3. Our market share in our core segment of used vehicles financed by subprime consumers was 5.1% for the first eight months of the year, down from 6.5% from the same period in 2024. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:02:30Our unit volume was impacted by our third quarter 2024 scorecard change that has resulted in lower advance rates and is also likely impacted by increased competition. Beyond these two key drivers, we continued making progress during the quarter towards our mission of maximizing intrinsic value and positively changing the lives of our five key constituents: dealers, consumers, team members, investors, and the communities we operate in. We do this by providing a valuable product that enables dealers to sell vehicles to consumers regardless of their credit history. This allows dealers to make incremental sales to the 55% of adults with other-than-prime credit. For these adults, it enables them to obtain a vehicle to get to their jobs, take their kids to school, etc. It also gives them the opportunity to improve or build their credit. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:03:21Our customers are people like Becky, a single mother who has faced significant financial challenges. Her career as a chef meant that her hours and her paycheck were unpredictable. Between this and needing frequent car repairs, she was living paycheck to paycheck and was struggling with poor credit after falling behind on her bills. Determined to turn things around, she was eventually able to finance a dependable vehicle through Credit Acceptance, which gave her stability and relief despite continuing to face financial hurdles. Credit Acceptance worked with Becky to come up with a realistic payment plan and provided her the flexibility she needed to get back on track. Becky hopes to be able to purchase a home in the near future and urges others with similar struggles to look to Credit Acceptance. During the quarter, we financed almost 80,000 contracts for our dealers and consumers. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:04:09We collected $1.4 billion overall and paid $52 million in dealer holdback and accelerated dealer holdback to our dealers. We enrolled over 1,300 new dealers and had 10,180 active dealers during the quarter. We continue to invest in our engineering team, which is focused on modernizing both our key technology architecture and how our teams perform work. The engineering team has made significant strides in modernizing our loan origination system. This modernization has laid a strong foundation for innovation, frictionless dealer experiences, and we've increased the speed that we deliver enhancements to our dealers by almost 70% compared to a year ago. This allows us to innovate faster and accelerate value to our business and customers. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:04:55During the quarter, we received four awards for our amazing workplace, including being named one of the best workplaces in financial services and insurance by The Great Place to Work and Fortune Magazine for the 11th year in a row. We're proud to be one of the few companies in our industry that offers remote-first work. We work hard to ensure that every team member feels supported and connected, keeping our culture strong. In July, team members from around the country gathered in Detroit to celebrate the company's 53rd anniversary. During this celebration, we recognized eight of our team members, each of whom had been with the company for more than 30 years. Additionally, on a personal note, this will be my last quarterly earnings call. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:05:32After starting my career over 34 years ago, including the last 22 years at Credit Acceptance, I've decided to retire and embark on the next chapter of my life. My decision wasn't easy. I will miss working with our amazing team members, and I'm so proud of everything we've accomplished together. I believe the company is in great position for the future. During his four-and-a-half-year tenure on the board, Vinayak has been an invaluable partner as we modernized our approach to the business. His strong mix of experience in technology, marketing, engineering, and product, along with a proven track record of driving transformation and growth, will be an excellent complement to our experienced management team. I look forward to both working alongside Vinayak as he transitions into his new role and continuing to serve the company as a board member going forward. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:06:23At this time, Jay Martin and I will take your questions, along with Andrew Rostami, our Chief Product and Marketing Officer, Jay Brinkley, our Senior Vice President and Treasurer, and Jeff Sutar, our Vice President and Assistant Treasurer. Operator00:06:41To ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from John Rowan with Janney Montgomery Scott. Your line is open. John RowanManaging Director at Janney Montgomery Scott00:07:04Good afternoon, guys. Your asset-backed securities used to have a covenant in them that said if there was a 10% forecast shortfall, that it would enter into early amortization. Does the current ABS still have that, and are you close on any of those? I mean, just looking at the 2022 vintage, it's down 8% relative to the initial forecast. Is that the right way to look at it? Just walk us through kind of the ABS covenants there. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:07:38Yeah, absolutely. We still have that covenant in both our warehouse facilities and our ABS securitization debt. As you know our business well with the pooling concept, we tend to contribute loans to a securitization for our Portfolio Program, a lot of which are uncapped. As additional loans are originated, they belong to the securitization. If you were to look at the actual performance from a collection rate standpoint, they tend to run above 100%. We have no outstanding securitizations that are close to the 90% trigger. John RowanManaging Director at Janney Montgomery Scott00:08:17Okay. G&A was still higher than I expected. Obviously, last quarter you had a contingent legal loss in there, but it didn't go back to the run rate of prior quarters. Can you give us an idea if there was any kind of one-time items in the $36 million G&A expense? Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:08:39Yeah. I would suggest that you look at the adjusted results. We've used that to eliminate the one-time charges related to the contingent legal losses. I think if you look at that, you'll see G&A is fairly consistent the last several quarters as a percentage of average capital. You're right, if you're looking at just the GAAP, we had a $23.4 million contingent legal loss in Q2, and we had an additional $15 million contingent legal loss this quarter. John RowanManaging Director at Janney Montgomery Scott00:09:07Okay. Can you let us know what your share repurchase authorization is? Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:09:14Yep. We've got just over 2 million shares currently under the board authorization. John RowanManaging Director at Janney Montgomery Scott00:09:21Okay. Just last question for you. I was a little bit surprised to see the advance rate was actually up a little bit in the quarter relative to the first half of the year, but unit volume still continues to decline. Obviously, the advance rate's not back to where it was. Can you just talk us through that a little bit? Are you still having trouble, competitively speaking, even at a higher advance rate? Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:09:45I think it's really a little bit of a change in mix in our business. I think there's a higher % of purchased loans. I also think there's a higher % of our product that is designed for people with a little bit better credit. Those tend to have higher advance rates. John RowanManaging Director at Janney Montgomery Scott00:10:02Okay. All right. Thank you. Operator00:10:06Thank you. Our next question comes from Robert Wildhack with Autonomous Research. Your line is open. Robert WildhackDirector, Equity Research Analyst of Consumer Finance, Fintech, and Payments at Autonomous Research00:10:15Hi, guys. Are you seeing any of your peers pull back at all in the industry? I just would love to get sort of the boots-on-the-ground view of what's happening at the industry level in the wake of some of the headlines we've seen around subprime auto in the last couple of weeks. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:10:35I think overall, while there have been some that have had struggles and have pulled back, in general, the environment's very competitive right now. We're seeing a lot of competition out there. You can look at our volume per dealer, and it's down. It's a competitive market. Robert WildhackDirector, Equity Research Analyst of Consumer Finance, Fintech, and Payments at Autonomous Research00:10:55Why do you think the competitive intensity hasn't really reacted to the poor credit results that we've seen for the last few vintages? I would have expected people to pull back a little bit more with the delinquencies and losses as high as they are. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:11:09It's always hard to tell what our competitors are doing. The market's fragmented. Oftentimes, at the beginning of downturns, it is a competitive environment. We've lived through this before. 2021 was super competitive, and those vintages ultimately didn't turn out very well. 2016, 2007, I mean, there have been times where it's been like this. I will say this has been a long time where it's been competitive, and we're seeing underperformance. I will say we build our business for the long run. Our goal is always to have a large margin of safety in the aggregate in our pricing. We're at a point where our loan portfolio is kind of at the highest it's been, and we'd rather do a little less volume at solid margins than chase volume. That's where we're at on that. Robert WildhackDirector, Equity Research Analyst of Consumer Finance, Fintech, and Payments at Autonomous Research00:12:09Okay. Just quickly, we noticed that attrition had been increasing in the last few quarters. Could you comment on some of the drivers there? Is there a chance that dealers are pushing back on the scorecard change or anything like that? Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:12:23It could be a little bit. The way we measure attrition is if they've done a deal in the period shown. Given that we've got our lower volume, we've got some dealers that just aren't doing business with us right now. I'm sure a little bit that's the scorecard, but it's also our scorecard relative to what everybody else is doing. Like I said before, it's a large fragmented market, so there's lots of different options out there. I would point out, though, that while it's been a challenging year for growth for Credit Acceptance, we're coming off our record year last year, and this will still end up probably we're kind of trending towards it being our fifth best year ever. It's not like we've gone super, super far backwards. We've got tough comparables. Robert WildhackDirector, Equity Research Analyst of Consumer Finance, Fintech, and Payments at Autonomous Research00:13:12Yep, okay. Thank you. Operator00:13:16Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone. Again, that is star one one to ask a question. Our next question comes from Ryan Shelley with Bank of America. Your line is open. Ryan ShelleyHigh Grade and High Yield Credit Research VP at Bank of America00:13:32Hey, guys. Thanks for the question. I wanted to ask around the impact of tariffs. I mean, obviously, it's kind of on again, off again. Have you guys seen any profound impact, whether it's in the marketplace or to your own business from federal policy? Just going into next year, how do you guys kind of handicap that? Thanks. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:13:59Anything that impacts affordability for our consumer is a negative for us generally. Our consumer already has affordability issues, and anything that tends to impact affordability will be a negative. It's hard to say how much the tariffs are impacting things. They seem like they change quite a bit. Anything that puts pressure on our consumers from an affordability standpoint ultimately is generally not good for us and good for people in our industry. Ryan ShelleyHigh Grade and High Yield Credit Research VP at Bank of America00:14:36Got it. Thanks. Just one more, if I could, on this scorecard change. Forgive me if you've already clarified this. Going forward, is there a potential for any loosening or change back, maybe come next year or the year after, or is that a permanent change going forward? Thanks. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:14:58We always try to price to maximize the amount of economic profit we originate. We consider recent trends in loan performance and capital market conditions. We adjust our scorecard and our pricing based upon what we think we're going to collect and how we think we can maximize that economic profit originated. I don't know what the future will hold. It's not like this is probably the permanent scorecard from now until the end of time. As the situation changes, we make updates to it. We always try to maximize economic profit originated. Ryan ShelleyHigh Grade and High Yield Credit Research VP at Bank of America00:15:38Got it. Thanks for the questions. Operator00:15:43Thank you. Our next question comes from Moshe Orenbuch with TD Cowen. Your line is open. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:15:51Great, thanks. Maybe just to come back a little bit to the volume story and market share, because I guess, do you attribute it to supply of vehicles being down, or are there cars being sold and just some competitor is financing them? By October, you fully anniversary the scorecard change and still down double-digit, maybe not as much as in Q3, but still down pretty hard. Any way to think about that? Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:16:27Your question's a great one. We are, I would say, anniversary on the scorecard change for sure by October. While it happened in Q3, there's a little bit of a lag, but by October, it's more apples to apples. I will say that Q4 last year was one of our better quarters. It was the second best Q4 in the history of the company, so it's still a little bit of a tougher comparable. You're right, you wouldn't have expected it to be down as much as it is other than the fact that the intensity of the competitive environment's probably higher. I do think, as you mentioned, affordability of vehicles has been a detriment to us. Our consumer is challenged by prices, and they're kind of getting squeezed out. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:17:15If you were to look at the size of the subprime market, it has declined over the last four or five years. It seems like it's kind of stabilized somewhat right now, but our consumer has a lot of pressure on them in order to try to make purchases, which I think is impacting us negatively because we tend to be a little bit deeper in the subprime space than some other companies. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:17:40Got it. I guess from the competitive standpoint, because the other aspect that's been an issue this year, the first last three quarters, has been the fact that your prepays have slowed. I mean, you still got a full quarter of the 2022 vintage still on the books, right, at the end of September. Wouldn't it stand to reason that if competition were higher, there would be somewhat more prepays, not less? Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:18:14Can you say the question again? I didn't quite understand what you had. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:18:17Sure. Yeah. I mean, one of the phenomena that you've observed this year has been that the loans are staying on the books longer. I think you had said in the second quarter call that that was an issue, that there were just fewer people who were able to either refinance or trade into another vehicle. I guess, wouldn't a competitive environment be easier to turn that in as opposed to harder? Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:18:47Yeah. I think generally, over time, what you've seen is sort of a lag effect of when competition heats up, prepays tend to speed up because obligors have other options. I think what you're pointing out here, Moshe, is that we're not really seeing that. It's tough to say. There is always a natural lag. I just think we're in a unique environment right now. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:19:20Got it. In terms of your leverage. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:19:24If history holds true. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:19:28I was just going to say, if history holds true, we should see prepays tick up if competition continues. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:19:37Got it. Could you, this $15 million contingent loss that you talked about, I guess it said it related to previously disclosed legal matters. I guess the dollars are coming because you're making settlement offers in the lawsuit, right? I mean, that's what it says in the 10-Q, which I think is the first mention of that. Is there any way for us to kind of think about whether there are other terms that we should be aware of that might be part of that settlement? Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:20:17You're correct. This is the first time that we've mentioned that. I would tell you since it is an ongoing legal matter, we can't comment on it beyond the disclosures we've included in the 10-Q and the earnings release. We can't provide any more detail than what's out there. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:20:32Gotcha. Appreciate that. Just last one for me. Maybe just talk about your leverage and your kind of outlook given what you're seeing both from a growth and how that impacts your thoughts on share repurchase. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:20:47Yeah. Our current leverage on an adjusted basis is at the high end of that historical range. We've tended to operate in that two to three times adjusted debt to equity range. As we've talked about, all else equal, we tend to generally repurchase more shares when our leverage or growth rates are lower. I would also say that our leverage is modest relative to other industry participants. I don't think there has been a wholesale change in how we view the leverage on our balance sheet. As we think about repurchasing shares, leverage is certainly a key aspect of that dialogue. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:21:30Got it. Thank you. Operator00:21:34Thank you. Our next question comes from Kyle Joseph with Stephens. Your line is open. Kyle JosephManaging Director at Stephens00:21:41Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. I just wanted to get an update from you guys on capital markets activity, given things that have gone on in the auto space. I want to get a sense for what credit markets are doing. Are they really differentiating between quality operators and whatnot, and the investor appetite in the fixed income market? Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:22:08Sure. Yeah. Happy to take that one. It's generally been a fairly favorable environment for ABS issuers this year. I say ABS issuers, those of our peers, including ourselves in the subprime auto ABS market, where aside really from a couple of weeks around Liberation Day where everything kind of froze, spreads have been pretty tight. I will note that in recent weeks, we have seen some widening in spreads, really on the back of the Treacleur bankruptcy, but that's mostly been deeper in the capital structure than where we issue. We actually have an ABS deal in the market right now. We began marketing this morning, and we're seeing a lot of demand at levels that I think you'll see comparable to our recent deals. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:23:04Feel good about our access there, and would just point out as well that we think we're pretty well positioned regardless with the amount of liquidity that we keep on the books. Right now, as of quarter end, we have $1.6 billion of unused availability on our revolving credit facilities. Kyle JosephManaging Director at Stephens00:23:26Very helpful. Appreciate the update. Thank you. Operator00:23:31Thank you. With no further questions in the queue, I would like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Martin for any additional or closing remarks. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:23:42We would like to thank everyone for their support and for joining us on the conference call today. If you have any additional follow-up questions, please direct them to our investor relations mailbox at ir@creditacceptance.com. We look forward to talking to you again next quarter. Thank you. Operator00:24:00Once again, this does conclude today's conference. We thank you for your participation.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesKen BoothCEOAnalystsRyan ShelleyHigh Grade and High Yield Credit Research VP at Bank of AmericaRobert WildhackDirector, Equity Research Analyst of Consumer Finance, Fintech, and Payments at Autonomous ResearchKyle JosephManaging Director at StephensJohn RowanManaging Director at Janney Montgomery ScottJay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance CorporationMoshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD CowenPowered by Earnings DocumentsEarnings Release(8-K)Quarterly Report(10-Q) Credit Acceptance Earnings HeadlinesCredit Acceptance: Q1 Earnings Snapshot4 hours ago | finance.yahoo.comCredit Acceptance Corporation (CACC) Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 6 at 4:05 AM | seekingalpha.comBefore you buy SpaceX shares, consider this alternative approachSpaceX has confidentially filed for an IPO with the SEC, targeting a June 2026 listing at a valuation exceeding $1.75 trillion - potentially the largest IPO in history. But one expert says buying shares directly may not be the smartest move. There is a lesser-known way to tap into this windfall that most investors haven't considered.May 6 at 1:00 AM | Weiss Ratings (Ad)Credit Acceptance: Mixed Q1, Mounting Competitive Pressures Lead to Hold Rating Despite Price Target Hike to $500May 5 at 12:30 AM | tipranks.comCredit Acceptance (NASDAQ:CACC) Delivers Strong Q1 CY2026 NumbersMay 5 at 11:09 PM | finance.yahoo.comCredit Acceptance Announces First Quarter 2026 ResultsMay 5 at 4:02 PM | globenewswire.comSee More Credit Acceptance Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Credit Acceptance? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Credit Acceptance and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Credit AcceptanceCredit Acceptance (NASDAQ:CACC), founded in 1972 and headquartered in Southfield, Michigan, is a specialty finance company focused on the indirect automotive lending market. The company partners with independent and franchised auto dealers to facilitate purchase financing for consumers who may not qualify for traditional prime auto loans. By purchasing retail installment contracts originated by these dealers, Credit Acceptance provides capital and credit insurance to support vehicle sales, enabling dealers to broaden their customer base and reduce credit risk. Through its proprietary underwriting platform and risk management strategies, Credit Acceptance evaluates borrower applications, structures credit plans, and retains servicing rights on the acquired contracts. The company’s financial and operational support includes payment processing, collections, and loss mitigation programs, all designed to manage default risk and optimize cash flow. This integrated service model allows dealer partners to focus on retail operations while Credit Acceptance assumes the responsibility for credit evaluation, funding, and contract administration. Over the decades since going public, Credit Acceptance has expanded its dealer network to serve thousands of auto dealerships across the United States. Its growth has been driven by a disciplined credit approach, technology‐enabled infrastructure, and a focus on underserved consumer segments. The company’s management team comprises experienced professionals in auto finance and subprime lending, guiding strategic initiatives aimed at sustainable portfolio performance and market expansion.View Credit Acceptance 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 Latest Articles Just How Big a Problem Could Amazon’s Cash Burn Rate Be?BlackBerry Rewrites Its Own Operating SystemGrab Holdings Faces Hurdles, But Upside Potential Is Hard to IgnorePalantir Drops After a Blowout Q1—What Investors Should KnowShopify’s Valuation Crisis Creates Opportunity in 2026onsemi Stock Dips After Earnings: Why the Dip Is BuyableTSLA: 3 Reasons the Stock Could Hit $400 in May Upcoming Earnings Coinbase Global (5/7/2026)Airbnb (5/7/2026)Datadog (5/7/2026)Ferrovial (5/7/2026)Gilead Sciences (5/7/2026)Microchip Technology (5/7/2026)MercadoLibre (5/7/2026)Monster Beverage (5/7/2026)Canadian Natural Resources (5/7/2026)W.W. Grainger (5/7/2026) 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. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In Email Me a Login Link or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, everyone, and welcome to the Credit Acceptance Corporation third quarter 2025 earnings call. A webcast recording and transcript of today's earnings call will be made available on Credit Acceptance's website. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to Credit Acceptance Chief Financial Officer, Jay Martin. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:00:22Thank you. Good afternoon and welcome to the Credit Acceptance Corporation third quarter 2025 earnings call. As you read our news release posted on the investor relations section of our website at ir.creditacceptance.com, and as you listen to this conference call, please recognize that both contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities law. These forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control and which could cause actual results to differ materially from such statements. These risks and uncertainties include those spelled out in the cautionary statement regarding forward-looking information included in the news release. Consider all forward-looking statements in light of those and other risks and uncertainties. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:01:09Additionally, I should mention that to comply with the SEC's Regulation G, please refer to the financial results section of our news release, which provides tables showing how non-GAAP measures reconcile them with GAAP measures. At this time, I'll turn the call over to our Chief Executive Officer, Ken Booth, to discuss our third quarter results. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:01:29Thanks, Jay. Our results for this quarter reflected steady execution with declines in loan performance and year-over-year originations volume, balanced by a portfolio that remains at a record high. Loan performance declined this quarter with our 2022, 2023, and 2024 vintages underperforming our expectations and our 2025 vintage exceeding our expectations, while our other vintages were stable during the quarter. Overall, forecasted net cash flows declined by 0.5%, or $59 million. During the quarter, we experienced a decline in unit and dollar volumes, though our loan portfolio remained at its record high of $9.1 billion on an adjusted basis, up 2% from last Q3. Our market share in our core segment of used vehicles financed by subprime consumers was 5.1% for the first eight months of the year, down from 6.5% from the same period in 2024. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:02:30Our unit volume was impacted by our third quarter 2024 scorecard change that has resulted in lower advance rates and is also likely impacted by increased competition. Beyond these two key drivers, we continued making progress during the quarter towards our mission of maximizing intrinsic value and positively changing the lives of our five key constituents: dealers, consumers, team members, investors, and the communities we operate in. We do this by providing a valuable product that enables dealers to sell vehicles to consumers regardless of their credit history. This allows dealers to make incremental sales to the 55% of adults with other-than-prime credit. For these adults, it enables them to obtain a vehicle to get to their jobs, take their kids to school, etc. It also gives them the opportunity to improve or build their credit. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:03:21Our customers are people like Becky, a single mother who has faced significant financial challenges. Her career as a chef meant that her hours and her paycheck were unpredictable. Between this and needing frequent car repairs, she was living paycheck to paycheck and was struggling with poor credit after falling behind on her bills. Determined to turn things around, she was eventually able to finance a dependable vehicle through Credit Acceptance, which gave her stability and relief despite continuing to face financial hurdles. Credit Acceptance worked with Becky to come up with a realistic payment plan and provided her the flexibility she needed to get back on track. Becky hopes to be able to purchase a home in the near future and urges others with similar struggles to look to Credit Acceptance. During the quarter, we financed almost 80,000 contracts for our dealers and consumers. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:04:09We collected $1.4 billion overall and paid $52 million in dealer holdback and accelerated dealer holdback to our dealers. We enrolled over 1,300 new dealers and had 10,180 active dealers during the quarter. We continue to invest in our engineering team, which is focused on modernizing both our key technology architecture and how our teams perform work. The engineering team has made significant strides in modernizing our loan origination system. This modernization has laid a strong foundation for innovation, frictionless dealer experiences, and we've increased the speed that we deliver enhancements to our dealers by almost 70% compared to a year ago. This allows us to innovate faster and accelerate value to our business and customers. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:04:55During the quarter, we received four awards for our amazing workplace, including being named one of the best workplaces in financial services and insurance by The Great Place to Work and Fortune Magazine for the 11th year in a row. We're proud to be one of the few companies in our industry that offers remote-first work. We work hard to ensure that every team member feels supported and connected, keeping our culture strong. In July, team members from around the country gathered in Detroit to celebrate the company's 53rd anniversary. During this celebration, we recognized eight of our team members, each of whom had been with the company for more than 30 years. Additionally, on a personal note, this will be my last quarterly earnings call. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:05:32After starting my career over 34 years ago, including the last 22 years at Credit Acceptance, I've decided to retire and embark on the next chapter of my life. My decision wasn't easy. I will miss working with our amazing team members, and I'm so proud of everything we've accomplished together. I believe the company is in great position for the future. During his four-and-a-half-year tenure on the board, Vinayak has been an invaluable partner as we modernized our approach to the business. His strong mix of experience in technology, marketing, engineering, and product, along with a proven track record of driving transformation and growth, will be an excellent complement to our experienced management team. I look forward to both working alongside Vinayak as he transitions into his new role and continuing to serve the company as a board member going forward. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:06:23At this time, Jay Martin and I will take your questions, along with Andrew Rostami, our Chief Product and Marketing Officer, Jay Brinkley, our Senior Vice President and Treasurer, and Jeff Sutar, our Vice President and Assistant Treasurer. Operator00:06:41To ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from John Rowan with Janney Montgomery Scott. Your line is open. John RowanManaging Director at Janney Montgomery Scott00:07:04Good afternoon, guys. Your asset-backed securities used to have a covenant in them that said if there was a 10% forecast shortfall, that it would enter into early amortization. Does the current ABS still have that, and are you close on any of those? I mean, just looking at the 2022 vintage, it's down 8% relative to the initial forecast. Is that the right way to look at it? Just walk us through kind of the ABS covenants there. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:07:38Yeah, absolutely. We still have that covenant in both our warehouse facilities and our ABS securitization debt. As you know our business well with the pooling concept, we tend to contribute loans to a securitization for our Portfolio Program, a lot of which are uncapped. As additional loans are originated, they belong to the securitization. If you were to look at the actual performance from a collection rate standpoint, they tend to run above 100%. We have no outstanding securitizations that are close to the 90% trigger. John RowanManaging Director at Janney Montgomery Scott00:08:17Okay. G&A was still higher than I expected. Obviously, last quarter you had a contingent legal loss in there, but it didn't go back to the run rate of prior quarters. Can you give us an idea if there was any kind of one-time items in the $36 million G&A expense? Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:08:39Yeah. I would suggest that you look at the adjusted results. We've used that to eliminate the one-time charges related to the contingent legal losses. I think if you look at that, you'll see G&A is fairly consistent the last several quarters as a percentage of average capital. You're right, if you're looking at just the GAAP, we had a $23.4 million contingent legal loss in Q2, and we had an additional $15 million contingent legal loss this quarter. John RowanManaging Director at Janney Montgomery Scott00:09:07Okay. Can you let us know what your share repurchase authorization is? Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:09:14Yep. We've got just over 2 million shares currently under the board authorization. John RowanManaging Director at Janney Montgomery Scott00:09:21Okay. Just last question for you. I was a little bit surprised to see the advance rate was actually up a little bit in the quarter relative to the first half of the year, but unit volume still continues to decline. Obviously, the advance rate's not back to where it was. Can you just talk us through that a little bit? Are you still having trouble, competitively speaking, even at a higher advance rate? Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:09:45I think it's really a little bit of a change in mix in our business. I think there's a higher % of purchased loans. I also think there's a higher % of our product that is designed for people with a little bit better credit. Those tend to have higher advance rates. John RowanManaging Director at Janney Montgomery Scott00:10:02Okay. All right. Thank you. Operator00:10:06Thank you. Our next question comes from Robert Wildhack with Autonomous Research. Your line is open. Robert WildhackDirector, Equity Research Analyst of Consumer Finance, Fintech, and Payments at Autonomous Research00:10:15Hi, guys. Are you seeing any of your peers pull back at all in the industry? I just would love to get sort of the boots-on-the-ground view of what's happening at the industry level in the wake of some of the headlines we've seen around subprime auto in the last couple of weeks. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:10:35I think overall, while there have been some that have had struggles and have pulled back, in general, the environment's very competitive right now. We're seeing a lot of competition out there. You can look at our volume per dealer, and it's down. It's a competitive market. Robert WildhackDirector, Equity Research Analyst of Consumer Finance, Fintech, and Payments at Autonomous Research00:10:55Why do you think the competitive intensity hasn't really reacted to the poor credit results that we've seen for the last few vintages? I would have expected people to pull back a little bit more with the delinquencies and losses as high as they are. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:11:09It's always hard to tell what our competitors are doing. The market's fragmented. Oftentimes, at the beginning of downturns, it is a competitive environment. We've lived through this before. 2021 was super competitive, and those vintages ultimately didn't turn out very well. 2016, 2007, I mean, there have been times where it's been like this. I will say this has been a long time where it's been competitive, and we're seeing underperformance. I will say we build our business for the long run. Our goal is always to have a large margin of safety in the aggregate in our pricing. We're at a point where our loan portfolio is kind of at the highest it's been, and we'd rather do a little less volume at solid margins than chase volume. That's where we're at on that. Robert WildhackDirector, Equity Research Analyst of Consumer Finance, Fintech, and Payments at Autonomous Research00:12:09Okay. Just quickly, we noticed that attrition had been increasing in the last few quarters. Could you comment on some of the drivers there? Is there a chance that dealers are pushing back on the scorecard change or anything like that? Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:12:23It could be a little bit. The way we measure attrition is if they've done a deal in the period shown. Given that we've got our lower volume, we've got some dealers that just aren't doing business with us right now. I'm sure a little bit that's the scorecard, but it's also our scorecard relative to what everybody else is doing. Like I said before, it's a large fragmented market, so there's lots of different options out there. I would point out, though, that while it's been a challenging year for growth for Credit Acceptance, we're coming off our record year last year, and this will still end up probably we're kind of trending towards it being our fifth best year ever. It's not like we've gone super, super far backwards. We've got tough comparables. Robert WildhackDirector, Equity Research Analyst of Consumer Finance, Fintech, and Payments at Autonomous Research00:13:12Yep, okay. Thank you. Operator00:13:16Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone. Again, that is star one one to ask a question. Our next question comes from Ryan Shelley with Bank of America. Your line is open. Ryan ShelleyHigh Grade and High Yield Credit Research VP at Bank of America00:13:32Hey, guys. Thanks for the question. I wanted to ask around the impact of tariffs. I mean, obviously, it's kind of on again, off again. Have you guys seen any profound impact, whether it's in the marketplace or to your own business from federal policy? Just going into next year, how do you guys kind of handicap that? Thanks. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:13:59Anything that impacts affordability for our consumer is a negative for us generally. Our consumer already has affordability issues, and anything that tends to impact affordability will be a negative. It's hard to say how much the tariffs are impacting things. They seem like they change quite a bit. Anything that puts pressure on our consumers from an affordability standpoint ultimately is generally not good for us and good for people in our industry. Ryan ShelleyHigh Grade and High Yield Credit Research VP at Bank of America00:14:36Got it. Thanks. Just one more, if I could, on this scorecard change. Forgive me if you've already clarified this. Going forward, is there a potential for any loosening or change back, maybe come next year or the year after, or is that a permanent change going forward? Thanks. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:14:58We always try to price to maximize the amount of economic profit we originate. We consider recent trends in loan performance and capital market conditions. We adjust our scorecard and our pricing based upon what we think we're going to collect and how we think we can maximize that economic profit originated. I don't know what the future will hold. It's not like this is probably the permanent scorecard from now until the end of time. As the situation changes, we make updates to it. We always try to maximize economic profit originated. Ryan ShelleyHigh Grade and High Yield Credit Research VP at Bank of America00:15:38Got it. Thanks for the questions. Operator00:15:43Thank you. Our next question comes from Moshe Orenbuch with TD Cowen. Your line is open. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:15:51Great, thanks. Maybe just to come back a little bit to the volume story and market share, because I guess, do you attribute it to supply of vehicles being down, or are there cars being sold and just some competitor is financing them? By October, you fully anniversary the scorecard change and still down double-digit, maybe not as much as in Q3, but still down pretty hard. Any way to think about that? Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:16:27Your question's a great one. We are, I would say, anniversary on the scorecard change for sure by October. While it happened in Q3, there's a little bit of a lag, but by October, it's more apples to apples. I will say that Q4 last year was one of our better quarters. It was the second best Q4 in the history of the company, so it's still a little bit of a tougher comparable. You're right, you wouldn't have expected it to be down as much as it is other than the fact that the intensity of the competitive environment's probably higher. I do think, as you mentioned, affordability of vehicles has been a detriment to us. Our consumer is challenged by prices, and they're kind of getting squeezed out. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:17:15If you were to look at the size of the subprime market, it has declined over the last four or five years. It seems like it's kind of stabilized somewhat right now, but our consumer has a lot of pressure on them in order to try to make purchases, which I think is impacting us negatively because we tend to be a little bit deeper in the subprime space than some other companies. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:17:40Got it. I guess from the competitive standpoint, because the other aspect that's been an issue this year, the first last three quarters, has been the fact that your prepays have slowed. I mean, you still got a full quarter of the 2022 vintage still on the books, right, at the end of September. Wouldn't it stand to reason that if competition were higher, there would be somewhat more prepays, not less? Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:18:14Can you say the question again? I didn't quite understand what you had. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:18:17Sure. Yeah. I mean, one of the phenomena that you've observed this year has been that the loans are staying on the books longer. I think you had said in the second quarter call that that was an issue, that there were just fewer people who were able to either refinance or trade into another vehicle. I guess, wouldn't a competitive environment be easier to turn that in as opposed to harder? Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:18:47Yeah. I think generally, over time, what you've seen is sort of a lag effect of when competition heats up, prepays tend to speed up because obligors have other options. I think what you're pointing out here, Moshe, is that we're not really seeing that. It's tough to say. There is always a natural lag. I just think we're in a unique environment right now. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:19:20Got it. In terms of your leverage. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:19:24If history holds true. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:19:28I was just going to say, if history holds true, we should see prepays tick up if competition continues. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:19:37Got it. Could you, this $15 million contingent loss that you talked about, I guess it said it related to previously disclosed legal matters. I guess the dollars are coming because you're making settlement offers in the lawsuit, right? I mean, that's what it says in the 10-Q, which I think is the first mention of that. Is there any way for us to kind of think about whether there are other terms that we should be aware of that might be part of that settlement? Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:20:17You're correct. This is the first time that we've mentioned that. I would tell you since it is an ongoing legal matter, we can't comment on it beyond the disclosures we've included in the 10-Q and the earnings release. We can't provide any more detail than what's out there. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:20:32Gotcha. Appreciate that. Just last one for me. Maybe just talk about your leverage and your kind of outlook given what you're seeing both from a growth and how that impacts your thoughts on share repurchase. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:20:47Yeah. Our current leverage on an adjusted basis is at the high end of that historical range. We've tended to operate in that two to three times adjusted debt to equity range. As we've talked about, all else equal, we tend to generally repurchase more shares when our leverage or growth rates are lower. I would also say that our leverage is modest relative to other industry participants. I don't think there has been a wholesale change in how we view the leverage on our balance sheet. As we think about repurchasing shares, leverage is certainly a key aspect of that dialogue. Moshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD Cowen00:21:30Got it. Thank you. Operator00:21:34Thank you. Our next question comes from Kyle Joseph with Stephens. Your line is open. Kyle JosephManaging Director at Stephens00:21:41Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. I just wanted to get an update from you guys on capital markets activity, given things that have gone on in the auto space. I want to get a sense for what credit markets are doing. Are they really differentiating between quality operators and whatnot, and the investor appetite in the fixed income market? Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:22:08Sure. Yeah. Happy to take that one. It's generally been a fairly favorable environment for ABS issuers this year. I say ABS issuers, those of our peers, including ourselves in the subprime auto ABS market, where aside really from a couple of weeks around Liberation Day where everything kind of froze, spreads have been pretty tight. I will note that in recent weeks, we have seen some widening in spreads, really on the back of the Treacleur bankruptcy, but that's mostly been deeper in the capital structure than where we issue. We actually have an ABS deal in the market right now. We began marketing this morning, and we're seeing a lot of demand at levels that I think you'll see comparable to our recent deals. Ken BoothCEO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:23:04Feel good about our access there, and would just point out as well that we think we're pretty well positioned regardless with the amount of liquidity that we keep on the books. Right now, as of quarter end, we have $1.6 billion of unused availability on our revolving credit facilities. Kyle JosephManaging Director at Stephens00:23:26Very helpful. Appreciate the update. Thank you. Operator00:23:31Thank you. With no further questions in the queue, I would like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Martin for any additional or closing remarks. Jay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance Corporation00:23:42We would like to thank everyone for their support and for joining us on the conference call today. If you have any additional follow-up questions, please direct them to our investor relations mailbox at ir@creditacceptance.com. We look forward to talking to you again next quarter. Thank you. Operator00:24:00Once again, this does conclude today's conference. We thank you for your participation.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesKen BoothCEOAnalystsRyan ShelleyHigh Grade and High Yield Credit Research VP at Bank of AmericaRobert WildhackDirector, Equity Research Analyst of Consumer Finance, Fintech, and Payments at Autonomous ResearchKyle JosephManaging Director at StephensJohn RowanManaging Director at Janney Montgomery ScottJay MartinCFO at Credit Acceptance CorporationMoshe OrenbuchManaging Director and Senior Analyst at TD CowenPowered by