OppFi Inc. (NYSE:OPFI) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript

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OppFi Inc. (NYSE:OPFI) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript November 9, 2023

Operator: Good afternoon, and welcome to OppFi’s Third Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. All participants are in listen-only mode. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. After management’s presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Shaun Smolarz, Head of Investor Relations. You may now begin.

Shaun Smolarz: Thank you, operator. Good afternoon. On today’s call are Todd Schwartz, Chief Executive Officer and Executive Chairman; and Pam Johnson, Chief Financial Officer. Our third quarter 2023 earnings press release and supplemental presentation can be found at investors.oppfi.com. During this call, OppFi will discuss certain forward-looking information. These forward-looking statements are based on assumptions and assessments made by OppFi’s management in light of their experience and assessment of historical trends, current conditions, expected future developments and other factors they believe to be appropriate. Any forward-looking statements made during this call are made as of today and OppFi undertakes no duty to update or revise any such statement, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

Important factors that could cause actual results, developments and business decisions to differ materially from forward-looking statements are described in the company’s filings with United States Securities and Exchange Commission, including the sections entitled Risk Factors. In today’s remarks by management, the company will discuss certain non-GAAP financial metrics. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable GAAP measures can be found in the earnings press release issued earlier this afternoon. This call is being webcast live and will be available for replay on our website. I would now like to turn the call over to Todd.

Todd Schwartz: Thanks, Shaun, and good afternoon, everyone. I’m very excited to discuss our third quarter results, which demonstrate that we are achieving the goals that we set out to accomplish. For the second consecutive quarter, our earnings significantly rebounded year-over-year while we generated solid revenue growth. Throughout this year, we have continued to make impactful adjustments to credit models with our bank partners that have resulted in improved credit performance and accelerated earnings growth. We believe the portfolio is as strong as it has ever been from a credit profile perspective, which gives me confidence in continued credit performance and earnings growth prospectively. I strongly believe our results indicate yet again our ability to balance growth and risk while maintaining expense discipline.

Pam will review our third quarter results in detail as well as discuss our full year guidance update, which includes raising our earnings outlook for the third time this year. Before she does, I will cover two topics. The key highlights from our third quarter financial performance and our progress on strategic business priorities for 2023. The third quarter was highlighted by substantial improvement in credit performance year-over-year, including net charge-off rate as a percentage of revenue, yield, and recoveries. The key highlights for the third quarter this year compared to last year are a strong 7.2% total revenue growth to $133.2 million, solid 7.6% growth in originations to $195.7 million and significant rebounds in net income to $15.5 million from an approximate $1 million loss and adjusted net income to $13.8 million from an approximate $1 million profit.

We achieved these results while maintaining disciplined in the approach to underwriting considering the macro environment and our continued emphasis on profitability over portfolio growth. Now, I’d like to provide updates on our core strategic initiatives. For the third quarter, credit performance continued to improve as expected. The annualized net charge-off rate as a percentage of total revenue decreased 23% or 2 percentage points, falling to 42.4% from 54.8% in Q3 last year. In addition, the annualized net charge-off rate as a percentage of average receivables decreased 17% or 11 percentage points, falling to 54.5% from 65.9% in the year ago period. Credit modeling enhancements and adjustments have created dynamic credit models that continue to improve early stage delinquency metrics as the portfolio shifts to the lowest risk segments.

At the end of the third quarter year-over-year, the total first payment default decreased 9% and total delinquency rate declined 14%. As has been the trend this year, our recovery strategy performed well with a 58% increase compared to the third quarter last year. We also realized solid growth in yield, expanding to 129% compared to 120% in the year ago period and thereby strengthening our unit level economics. This was achieved with a decrease in delinquent loans in the portfolio, lower enrollment and hardship and assistance programs, and a relative shift away from states with lower interest rates. Our product and marketing team are focused on cost effective initiatives to attract greater lower risk origination volume, including SEO and direct mail, while also strengthening our relationships and fine tuning our competitive strategy in the partner channel.

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For the third quarter, this resulted in our marketing cost per funded loan being steady year-over-year. We also continued to be vigilant on expenses. Total expenses, excluding interest expense as a percentage of total revenue increased less than 1% to 36.1% from 35.8% in Q3 last year. We have previously discussed our corporate development initiatives, while we are evaluating acquisition opportunities in adjacent customer or product categories, we will be patient to find the right fit. Concurrently, we are exploring other initiatives to create shareholder value given our strong balance sheet and the inherent options that it provides us. At its core, OppFi is a tech enabled mission driven specialty finance platform that broadens the reach of community banks to extend credit access to everyday Americans.

Through transparency, responsible lending, financial inclusion and an excellent customer service experience, the company supports consumers who are turned away by mainstream options to build better financial health. In summary, we expect to continue to grow profitably with originations growth, improved credit performance and prudent expense management. These dynamics combined with our strong balance sheet and excess funding capacity provide us with options next year to create additional shareholder value. We will remain disciplined with underwriting and expenses. We plan to share our detailed view of 2024 when we report Q4 results. Now I’ll turn the call over to Pam to review our Q3 financial performance and updated full year outlook.

Pam Johnson: Thanks, Todd, and good afternoon everyone. Q3 was a strong quarter as credit metrics continued to improve, resulting in back to back quarters of solid performance. Total revenue increased 7.2% to $133.2 million. Net originations increased 7.6% year-over-year to $195.7 million due to greater customer demand in the lowest credit risk segments of our adjustable market. New customer originations for the quarter decreased by 5% year-over-year, while existing customer originations increased by 20.2%. The annualized net charge-off rate as percentage of average receivables improved to 54.5% compared to 65.9% for the prior quarter. As a percentage of total revenue, the annualized net charge-off rate decreased to 42.4% from 54.8% in the comparable period last year.

Turning to expenses. Total expenses, including interest expense were $60.1 million, or 45.1% of total revenue compared to $53.6 million or 43.1% of total revenue for the third quarter of 2022. The year-over-year increase was primarily the result of higher interest expense. Interest expense totaled $12.1 million or 9.1% of total revenue compared to $9.1 million, or 7.3% of total revenue for the same period last year. The increase was due to higher interest rates on our credit facilities utilized to fund originations over the past year. Adjusted EBITDA totaled $33 million for the quarter, 149.8% increase from $13.2 million for the comparable period last year. Adjusted net income was $13.8 million compared to $0.8 million for Q3 last year. Adjusted earnings per share was $0.16 compared to $0.01 for the same period last year.

For the three months ended September 30, 2023, OppFi had 85.3 million weighted average diluted shares outstanding on an adjusted basis. Our balance sheet remained strong with cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash of $66 million, total debt of $344.3 million, ending receivables of $415.9 million and equity of $189.8 million as of quarter end. We believe we have ample liquidity available to support our current growth plans with $591 million in total capacity to fund receivables at the end of the third quarter. Turning now to our outlook. For full year 2023, we are reaffirming guidance for total revenue of $500 million to $520 million, which implies growth of 10% to 15% year-over-year. In addition, we are increasing guidance for adjusted net income to between $40 million and $42 million from the $29 million to $35 million prior range.

As a result, we are also raising our outlook for adjusted earnings per share to between $0.47 and $0.49 from the $0.34 to $0.41 previous range. Before concluding our prepared remarks, I will provide a brief update on our proactive Investor Relations strategy for the remainder of the year. We are very excited by our substantial earnings turnaround this year and are confident in our long-term growth strategy. We plan to amplify our message and communicate the story to a broader audience, both institutional and retail investors, through investor conferences, non-deal road shows and other opportunities. In addition to further our engagement with retail investors, we recently launched our participation on the Webull Corporate Connect platform where we can directly communicate with investors to highlight corporate news and answer questions.

With that, I would now like to turn the call over to the operator for Q&A. Operator?

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Q&A Session

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Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from David Scharf from JMP Securities. Please go ahead.

David Scharf: Great, thanks. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. Todd, we’re obviously seeing the benefits of kind of the credit tightening you implemented last year and more disciplined underwriting, certainly translating into improved unit economics. Just big picture, we’re kind of at the tail end of a reporting season where a lot of non-prime lenders have been communicating little easing of the pace of credit normalization, but still highlighting a lot of economic uncertainty. What are you seeing, if anything, that signals potentially leaning into marketing and customer acquisition a little more? I just want to make sure I kind of accurately interpret sort of what your view heading into next year is in terms of the health of the consumer or whether you’re still maintaining a pretty cautious outlook.

Todd Schwartz: Yes, thanks for the question, David. It’s a good question. And it becomes a little more challenging, when you look back to the three prior years, like last year being a tough one with inflation, 2021 being the stimulus of COVID and 2020 being COVID. So we kind of look back to 2019, that’s how we’ve been. And we look at the loss curves compared to how performing today. There’s a lot of growth out there, but obviously we got to be very disciplined and I think we would need a sustained period of where we were confident in loss curves looking like 2019 and some macro factors as well to be able to lean into growth again. We’re also still able to grow, though. I want to point out that we’re still going to grow at 10% to 15% this year.

We just have a much higher quality book of business right now. And we’ve been able to maintain acquisition cost. So really happy to do that as well. But as you look in the economy, there’s a bunch of mixed signals. You have unemployment is still really low, but then you have – these things like wars going on. So we’re not prognosticators of the economy, but we look at some key factors. But we also base it upon our past experience. One of the great things is that we’ve been around since 2011, 2012 and we pull on that information and our team’s experience, frankly, to make those decisions.

David Scharf: Got it. No, completely understood. Hey, switching to the funding side, you highlighted the capacity you have right now, but can you just remind us about the fixed versus variable component of your facilities and how we ought to be thinking about sort of the near-term average borrowing rate in the next few quarters.

Todd Schwartz: Yes. I mean, it’s really – we wish we had the interest rates of last year. We have voting rate in our facilities. It’s based on SOFR, and SOFR, as you know, has increased about 400 basis points year-over-year. It’s something that we’re definitely feeling. But I think like if you look at the business, even in probably the worst interest rate environment we’ve seen in 30 years, we’re still able to generate strong returns, right. And that really is if you look at our OpEx, the leverage on OpEx, if you look at our loss curves and you look at our acquisition discipline, any reduction in rate we’re going to get the benefit of. Now, I don’t know when that’s going to happen. I think we’re going to probably forecast it to stay, probably maintained at the certain levels that they are today for next year. But I do think that that would be a nice thing for next year if rates were able to come down a little because we would get that benefit.

David Scharf: Got it. And just for modeling purposes, is there a number. I apologize – I don’t know what your spread is offhand. Is there a good weighted average cost of borrowing? We ought to factor in near-term.

Todd Schwartz: Yes. I mean, weighted average like roughly 11% is what we’re currently paying.

David Scharf: Got it. Got it. And then one final question, just on the marketing side, as you noted, the expense per funded loan held pretty steady. I think last year, there may have been a pretty big decline. There was something about the Q2 comp last year, but overall CAC levels, should we pretty much assume that steady rate per funded loan going forward, or are there any other potential improvements near-term?

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