Russell Hutchinson
Analyst · Goldman Sachs. Please proceed
Thank you, JB. Good morning, everyone. I'll begin on Slide 11. Net financing revenue of 1.5 billion was down year-over-year, driven by the continued pressure on funding cost, given increased short-term rates as the majority of our consumer deposit portfolio is comprised of liquid products. While the strong pricing momentum we've demonstrated on the asset side of the balance sheet partially mitigates the near-term compression and sets us up for strong NIM expansion. We'll come back to NIM expansion in a few slides. Adjusted other revenue of 491 million increased year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter, reflecting momentum within our insurance business as well as our smart auction and pass through initiatives in auto finance, which we highlighted last quarter. Despite modest investment gains we are effectively at the $500 million quarterly run rate we've previously alluded to and continue to see opportunities for expansion ahead. Provision expense of 508 million was up quarter-over-quarter, reflecting seasonal trends and a modest reserve bill to support asset growth. Retail NCOs were in line with prior guidance. I'll provide a more granular update on retail auto credit shortly. Noninterest expense of $1.2 billion reflects higher cost within auto finance relating to application volume and higher repo costs seen across the industry. Record application volume drove higher variable cost within auto finance, but has enabled us to achieve a nearly 95% pricing beta throughout the tightening cycle. The incremental revenue driven by the strength of our pricing significantly exceeds the marginal expense of increased application flow. We've also seen higher pricing from third party vendors when vehicles go to repossession. We remain focused on minimizing net credit losses and bottom line impacts to Ally. Despite these headwinds, the year-over-year growth in expenses slowed again this quarter as our efficiency initiatives begin to take hold. As JB covered, our recent actions to reduce costs positioned us for $80 million in annualized savings next year, and the anticipated year-over-year growth reflects our ability to navigate the near-term revenue headwinds brought on by the higher interest rate environment. We've called out the $30 million of restructuring costs which have been excluded from core pre-tax results. GAAP and adjusted EPS for the quarter were $0.88 and $0.83 respectively. We've excluded the benefit of certain tax planning strategies from adjusted EPS to better reflect underlying recurring results, but these tax benefits are a nice boost to capital generation. Moving to Slide 12, net interest margin of 3.26% was down 15 basis points quarter-over-quarter. Momentum within earning asset yields continued in the quarter, but was offset by deposit costs as the OSA rate moved up within the quarter. Total average loans and leases of $149 billion were up $8 billion year-over-year, driven by growth within commercial and retail auto balances. Quarter-over-quarter growth of 1.5 billion reflects our disciplined capital deployment as we focus on accretive risk-adjusted returns when originating. Earning asset yield of 7.14% increased 15 basis points quarter-over-quarter and more than 150 basis points year-over-year given the cumulative impact of trends we've discussed previously, including retail auto portfolio yield expansion, the increasing contribution from higher yielding assets, and over $50 billion of floating rate exposure across our commercial loan and hedging portfolios. Retail portfolio yield continued to expand this quarter as recent vintages comprise a larger portion of the portfolio. I'll talk more about retail auto portfolio yield dynamics later. Commercial portfolio yields expanded alongside benchmark rates given their floating rate nature. Turning to liabilities, cost of funds continue to increase, but the rate of change on both a quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year basis slowed relative to 2Q as we approach the end of the tightening cycle. Competition for deposits remains intense and market pricing increased within the quarter, but we have remained disciplined on pricing. The themes of our NIM trajectory are largely unchanged. We expect NIM to trough a couple of quarters after rates stabilize, followed by gradual expansion each quarter, even without the benefit of rate cuts. Moving to Slide 13, our CET1 ratio increased quarter-over-quarter to 9.3% given our disciplined approach to capital allocation. Our TCE ratio of 4.9% includes unrealized losses within our AFS securities portfolio, which increased this quarter given the shift in long-term rates. Based on the current forward curve, we expect around $500 million per year of after-tax OCI accretion as we allow the portfolio to roll off. We announced another quarterly common dividend of $0.30 for the fourth quarter, and as mentioned earlier, the outlook for loan growth is modest and will be primarily comprised of auto assets at attractive risk-adjusted levels. At current levels, we exceed our 7% regulatory minimum for CET1 by $3.7 billion. Let's turn to Slide 14 to review asset quality trends. Consolidated net charge-offs of 131 basis points increased quarter-over-quarter given typical seasonal trends. Retail Auto net charge-offs of 185 basis points were in line with prior guidance of 1.8% to 1.9%. We continue to see modestly offsetting impacts of slightly elevated delinquencies and favorable flow-to-loss trends. Severity levels were elevated early in the quarter, reflecting softer used values that strengthened in September. In the bottom right, 30-day delinquencies increased seasonally, but the year-over-year change continues to decline. Delinquencies will increase seasonally in the fourth quarter, and we continue to assess the impacts of inflation, but remain comfortable with our full year NCO guidance. I'll cover Retail Auto credit in more detail shortly. Slide 15 shows that consolidated coverage increased 1 basis point to 2.73%. The total reserve balance of $3.8 billion was relatively flat quarter-over-quarter and is $1.2 billion higher than CECL day one. Our macro assumptions is seeing worsening employment conditions with unemployment reaching 4.3% next year before increasing beyond 6% under our reversion to historical mean methodology. Retail Auto coverage was flat at 3.62% and remains well above the 3.34% on CECL day one. The remaining weighted average life of our Retail Auto portfolio remains under two years, reflecting the coverage we have for expected lifetime losses of this portfolio. Turning to Slide 16, we remain focused on leveraging our differentiated go-to-market approach, coupling high tech and high touch, which has generated significant scale and a competitive advantage. Record application flow enables us to be dynamic and selective in what we originate and continues to drive strong risk-adjusted returns. Ending assets in the top right were up slightly quarter-over-quarter as commercial balances gradually increased alongside modest growth in Retail Auto. Originations of $10.6 billion on the bottom of the page demonstrates the scale of our franchise and the compelling volume we're able to generate given application volume despite tighter underwriting criteria. Given year-to-date volumes slightly above $30 billion, we remain on track to originate around $40 billion this year in total consumer originations. Additionally, used comprised 66% of originations, which was up modestly quarter-over-quarter and highlights our ability to navigate industry disruptions in new vehicle production. Non-prime again represents less than 10% of retail originations in the quarter. Let's move to Slide 17 to talk about the scale of our auto franchise. Put simply, our goal is to help our dealers sell as many cars and trucks as possible. We encourage them to send us all of their application volume. Increased application volume means increased incremental work and cost on our side, but enables us to be selective on what we choose to originate in terms of credit criteria and pricing. This year, we will decision 13.5 million applications or $400 billion in potential loan -- in loan volume. By optimizing within that application volume, we are on track to book around $40 billion in consumer volume, $37 billion in Retail Auto loans at an estimated 10.7% yield with approximately 37% of the volume in our highest credit tier. Accessing 13.5 million applications is a result of unique scale and strong and mutually beneficial relationships with our dealer customers. And that scale allows us to adapt quickly to changing market conditions, like we did when returns and super prime volume became more attractive earlier this year. Our ability to pivot up and down the credit mix should also give you more confidence in our ability to continue booking very strong yields. Going forward, we'll continue to leverage our platform to optimize our capital allocation within the auto business. Let's move to Slide 18, which highlights the tailwinds embedded in our Retail Auto portfolio. Throughout this tightening cycle, we've demonstrated strong pricing on both sides of our balance sheet, with Retail Auto beta around 95% and a deposits beta around 70%. While origination pricing has been strong, the majority of the portfolio is yielding 8% or less. Only 38% of the portfolio was originated this year. As we continue to originate loans at today's pricing, the runoff of lower-yielding vintages being replaced by current originations drives natural yield expansion on our largest asset class. Assuming stable originated yields, turnover is projected to drive the portfolio to 9.5% in 2024 and a 10% in 2025. On an $85 billion portfolio, that yield expansion drives meaningful revenue growth over the medium term. Obviously, the path of interest rates and the credit mix of our originations will impact the eventual yield migration but we remain confident retail portfolio yields will meaningfully increase over the next couple of years. On Slide 19, we provide context around Retail Auto credit trends to date as well as our outlook for the fourth quarter. As noted previously, we ended the quarter with NCOs of 1.85%, in line with expectations. Additionally, the full year outlook remains on track for losses of 1.8%. The drivers of performance are consistent with what we've shared on recent earnings calls. We continue to monitor delinquency levels which have been elevated this year, but importantly, flow-to-loss rates remain well below pre-pandemic levels and have been consistent throughout the year, and vintage performance trends have been encouraging. Loans originated last year show improving trends as they season and our strategic shift into higher credit quality loans will ultimately reduce portfolio loss content. On the bottom left, we've again provided quarterly loss expectations results and a full year loss of around 1.8%. We've lowered the bottom end of our fourth quarter loss rate expectation given the support in used values we expect from the UAW strike, which I'll cover on the next page. On the bottom right, we show the year-over-year change in 30-day delinquency rates, which has declined again for the third quarter in a row. Slide 20 provides our latest view of used vehicle values given performance year-to-date, which has resulted in values flat relative to year-end 2022 following a 4% decline in the third quarter. We continue to embed a conservative outlook for used values and maintain our longer-term outlook for further declines, but the UAW strike is expected to provide support near term. We are currently forecasting a 4% decline in the fourth quarter and, thereby, on a full year basis as well. An elongated strike could create a near-term support for used vehicle values, but would also pressure fore client [ph] balances and our insurance business. So the net P&L impact is immaterial overall. Let's move to Slide 21 to cover auto segment results. Pretax income of $377 million reflected pricing momentum alongside higher provision and noninterest expense. Provision reflected typical seasonality while expenses were the result of elevated repo costs across the industry and requisite spend to support the strength and scale we just highlighted. On the bottom left, we've highlighted the consistent progression in portfolio yield, up more than 160 basis points year-over-year. Despite the progression to date, the portfolio was still well below recent originated yields, once again highlighting the prospective tailwinds to earning assets. The bottom right chart summarizes lease portfolio trends. Gains declined quarter-over-quarter, but were favorable year-over-year, given the decline in dealer and lessee buyouts. And we continue to assess the near-term net impact from the UAW strike as used values are supported, but tighter supply could lead to elevated dealer and lessee buyouts. Turning to Insurance on Slide 22. Core pretax income of $30 million was the result of the highest earned premium revenue since 2009, partially offset by elevated loss activity given the highest severe weather activity since 2014. The reinsurance we have in place capped our exposure, but weather was still a headwind given favorability seen in the prior year. Our proactive engagement with dealers to mitigate losses was on display again in the third quarter. Initial estimates for property losses from Hurricane Idalia exceeds $2.5 billion. But given our actions, we didn't incur any losses from the storm. Named storms often gives dealers the time to move inventory, but this still takes a lot of coordination. The challenges one's faced are the violent hail and wind storms with little warning, and that was more what was encountered in the previous quarter. Written premiums of $335 million increased 15% year-over-year as we remained focused on increasing dealer relationships and benefit from normalizing inventory levels. Our focus remains on leveraging the scale we've established within Auto Finance and highlighting our full spectrum product suite to dealers, driving further integration of insurance across our auto dealer base. Turning to Slide 23, retail deposits of $140 billion increased $1.1 billion quarter-over-quarter and $6.2 billion year-over-year, demonstrating the strength and resilience of our leading franchise. Total deposits of $153 billion were up $7 billion year-over-year. 95,000 net new customers was our 58th consecutive quarter of growth and year-to-date customer growth of 307,000 is the highest in Ally Bank's history. 2023 is on track with the highest annual customer growth in Ally Bank's history as customers become increasingly aware of the opportunity to earn more on their savings and the value Ally provides beyond rates. And we continue to see strong growth in multiproduct customers, which has grown by 30% annually over the past several years. The continued evolution and consumer preferences driving the migration towards digital offerings provides a tailwind for continued growth across the entirety of our customer base and product suite. Moving to Slide 24, our digital bank platforms provide diversification and deepened customer relationships. Ally Invest complements the deposit franchise well as we once again saw 85% of new account openings from existing customers as they leverage the ease of money movement between accounts within Ally. Ally Credit Card added 53,000 new cardholders in the quarter, now 1.2 million strong as we prudently grow the portfolio. The continued integration and launch of One Ally in the fourth quarter will accelerate our ability to deepen relationships across Ally's product suite. Ally lending balances were relatively flat given our disciplined approach to underwriting and capital allocation. Corporate Finance results are on Slide 25. Core pretax income of $84 million was up $13 million quarter-over-quarter, benefiting from higher interest rates given the entire portfolio is floating rate. The year-over-year comparison was down slightly as an investment gain in the prior year period did not repeat, but was largely offset by accretive disciplined asset growth. The portfolio remains high quality with 61% asset based and 100% of loans are in a first lien position. Our HFI portfolio balance of $10.6 billion shows modest growth reflecting the team's discipline and focus on maximizing risk-adjusted returns. Slide 26 includes details for Mortgage Finance. Mortgage generated pretax income of $26 million and $267 million of direct-to-consumer origination. Expenses were down $10 million year-over-year, highlighting the benefits of a variable cost partner model. More than half of our origination volume came from existing deposit customers, highlighting the benefits of our One Ally experience and deepened customer relationships. We remain focused on a great experience for customers rather than a specific origination target. Slide 27 contains our current financial outlook for 2023. The operating environment remains dynamic and interest rate volatility persists, increasing the difficulty in providing granular guidance. But we're committed to maintaining a transparent approach to guidance based on what we know currently. You'll notice the page is largely unchanged versus the outlook we provided in July. Assuming a forward curve from quarter end, peak Fed funds is unchanged versus 2Q guidance at 5.5%, but costs have been pushed out considerably. Continued competition for deposits has put incremental pressure on portfolio yield, which could pick up to 4.2% in the fourth quarter. And we see full year NIM above 3.3%, likely in the 3.35% area. Our expectation for full year 2023 other revenue remains $1.9 billion, and importantly, we're achieving the $500 million quarterly run rate we guided to in January. And as we covered previously, Retail Auto portfolio yield is still projected around 9% in the fourth quarter, with continued expansion thereafter. Retail NCOs are expected to be at 1.8% for the full year, unchanged from prior guidance. And no change to operating expense guidance as we limit spend to nondiscretionary costs and essential investments. We see the tax rate closer to 9% for the year given some of the tax planning items that hit in 3Q. We expect our near-term effective tax rate to return to approximately 18% absent tax planning items as we've had solid momentum in generating EV tax credits and expect that trend to continue. While elevated and increasing interest rates are a headwind, we expect most of the tightening cycle is behind us and have positioned the balance sheet for margin and earnings growth over the medium term and remain confident in our ability to continue to execute and drive long-term profitability. From my perspective, JB’s news last week was a bit of a surprise but when you unpack it and also realize his love for cars and the Hendrick Group, this was simply the right next step for him. We are going to miss JB dearly, and at the same time, we're excited for him. JB's news in no way changes how I feel about the opportunity or Ally. I am excited for all that we have to accomplish, my fantastic teammates, and Ally's attractive financial outlook. The scale businesses are in an enviable position. I remember talking to JB about -- and the team about the moat positions, and it's clear that those have been established today. And with that, I'll turn it back to JB