Russ Hutchinson
Analyst · Goldman Sachs
Thank you, Michael. Good morning, everyone. I'll begin on Slide 8. In the second quarter, net financing revenue excluding OID, of $1.5 billion was lower year-over-year, driven by higher interest rates. Results were up $40 million quarter-over-quarter, as pricing actions on retail deposits drove cost of funds lower, while earning asset yields continue to expand, driven by the strength in fixed rate asset repricing. We expect asset yields to continue expanding over the medium term as lower-yielding assets run-off and are replaced by new originations. Adjusted other revenue of $533 million is up 11% from prior year, as we benefit from the momentum within insurance and diversified fee revenue from our SmartAuction and Passthrough programs. Provision expense of $457 million increased from the prior year, driven by higher net charge-offs and was down on a linked quarter basis as 2Q is the seasonal low point for retail auto NCOs. Retail auto NCOs were in-line with guidance provided at an investor conference last month, decreasing 46 basis points quarter-over-quarter. Retail auto losses continue to be pressured by the back-book, specifically the 2022 vintage. We expect losses from the 2022 vintage peaked in 2Q, and we expect NCOs to moderate in the second half of 2024, on a seasonally adjusted basis. I'll cover retail auto credit and vintage dynamics in more detail later. Adjusted non-interest expense of $1.3 billion was up 3% year-over-year, primarily driven by growth in the insurance business and historically elevated weather losses, also in insurance. Controllable non-interest expense was down more than 1% year-over-year and reflects our continued focus on expense discipline. Strong EV lease originations drove more than $90 million in EV tax credits within the period, resulting in a negative tax rate for the quarter. We will provide more on our EV originations and tax implications later. GAAP and adjusted EPS for the quarter were $0.86 and $0.97, respectively. Moving to Slide 9. Net interest margin, excluding OID of 3.3%, increased 14 basis points quarter-over-quarter, in-line with the guidance provided last month. Earning asset yields expanded 9 basis points quarter-over-quarter, while funding costs decreased 5 basis points, reflecting strength on both sides of the balance sheet. As expected, average earning assets are down linked quarter, largely as a result of proactive capital actions, which include the sale of Ally Lending, recent retail auto loan sales and the continued roll down of mortgage and securities balances. Lease yields were up 43 basis points quarter-over-quarter, driven by an expected increase in lease termination volume. On liabilities, cost of funds decreased 5 basis points within the quarter, driven by our pricing actions on deposit products throughout the first half of the year. The momentum on both sides of our balance sheet is in-line with expectations. Our NIM outlook is unchanged. We expect to exit 2024 near 3.5% and continue the march to 4% NIM as our lower-yielding back-book continues to be replaced by higher-yielding originations. And as we've said before, our 2024 exit rate is not dependent on Fed rate cuts. We expect a 4% NIM run rate to be reached at the end of 2025 in a range of rate scenarios. Slide 10 provides a look at the evolution of Ally's consumer deposits. We are pleased with the strength of the deposit franchise. Retail deposits across all vintages since the inception of Ally Bank have been stable or grown reflecting a consistent retention rate above 95%. We have steadily grown customers by offering a comprehensive value proposition that includes attractive deposit rates, our award winning digital platform, high service levels and our range of no fee products. And our customer growth continued in the second quarter, we added 54,000 deposit customers in the quarter and are now relentless allies for 3.2 million customers. As expected, deposit balances declined by $3 billion during the quarter, to land flat for the first half of the year. The decline in balances in the second quarter was driven by seasonality related to tax payments that was anticipated. The transformation of the Bank over the past 15 years has positioned Ally to optimize for sustainable earnings moving forward. Our balance sheet is fully funded with deposits and the $142 billion deposit portfolio is 92% FDIC insured. We continue to target approximately flat deposit balances for the remainder of the year based on our balance sheet growth trajectory. Turning to Page 11. CET1 of 9.6% increased quarter-over-quarter. We operate with a significant buffer to required CET1 minimums with $4 billion of excess capital above our preliminary SCB minimum. As you know, our preliminary SCB is up 10 basis points to 2.6% following this year's Fed Run Stress test. Given the size of our buffer and the modest increase this change in SCB does not impact the way we are managing capital. Within the quarter, we issued $330 million in credit-linked notes against a $3 billion reference pool of prime auto loans that generated 11 basis points of CET1 benefit at closing. We were pleased with the execution, and I will touch on credit risk transfer in more detail in the next slide. We recently announced our quarterly dividend of $0.30 for the third quarter which remains consistent with the prior quarter. On the bottom of the slide, you can see the trend of tangible book value over time. Excluding the temporary impact of OCI, we closed the quarter with adjusted tangible book value of $47. With the earnings trajectory in front of us and the natural pull to par on the securities portfolio we are confident in our ability to drive solid book value growth over the next several years. On Slide 12, we provide details on our first credit risk transfer transaction. Ally has a long history in the securitization market with an established infrastructure and investor base which supported our success in pricing and overall execution. In conjunction with the transaction, we issued $330 million of credit-linked notes, with a coupon just over 7% that is partially offset by our investment income on a corresponding cash collateral account. The transaction reduces RWA on the reference portfolio of $3 billion of prime retail auto loans from 100% to 38% and introduces another lever for Dynamic Capital Management. While we meaningfully reduced the risk weighting on the pool, we retain 100% of the economics on the assets and the net cost of the mezzanine notes equates to less than half-of-a-basis point of NIM. The transaction increased CET1 by 11 basis points at closing, and given the amortizing nature of the underlying assets, the capital benefit will amortize as the loans pay down. The CRT is another indication of strong market appetite for our loans and our ability to reduce RWA to free up capital. Consistent with how we use other capital management levers, we'll remain opportunistic in the CRT space going forward. Let's turn to Slide 13 to review asset quality trends. The consolidated net charge-off rate of 126 basis points was down quarter-over-quarter reflecting typical seasonality. Our commercial portfolios continue to demonstrate solid credit performance with no net charge-off activity in corporate finance and a net recovery in commercial auto. The credit card portfolio is performing in-line with expectations and the net charge-off rate of 12.6% is consistent with the prior quarter. Based on what we are seeing in terms of delinquency, we believe credit card NCOs have peaked in-line with the guidance we provided in December. Retail auto net charge-offs of 181 basis points were down 46 basis points quarter-over-quarter. In the bottom right, 30-plus day delinquencies increased 45 basis points quarter-over-quarter due to seasonality and were up 73 basis points on a year-over-year basis. The second quarter closed on a weekend. And as we talked about last quarter, that does have an impact on the spot delinquency rate we report externally. Looking throughout the month of June, the average delinquency rate was up less than 60 basis points on a year-over-year basis. Delinquencies will increase through the second half of 2024 in-line with seasonal patterns, but we expect the year-over-year increase to moderate further. I will cover retail auto credit trends in more detail in a couple of slides. Consolidated coverage was flat quarter-over-quarter and total reserves remained steady at $3.6 billion. Retail auto coverage was unchanged at 365 basis points. Our base case continues to assume no change in the retail auto coverage rate. Corporate Finance continues to demonstrate solid credit performance and had no new non-performing loans in the quarter. We expect consistency in the coverage rates across the portfolio near-term, barring any shifts in the macro environment. On Slide 15, we provide further detail around retail auto credit. Retail NCOs of 181 basis points were consistent with the preview provided in early June, but roughly 10 basis points higher than our expectations entering the quarter. The current pressure on NCOs continues to come from the back-book, particularly the 2022 vintage, which accounted for 42% of retail auto NCOs in the first half of the year. That vintage has moved past the typical point of peak loss for vintage and will be a smaller contributor to losses going forward. The majority of our prospective loss content will be driven by vintages originated in 2023 and later. Given the meaningful shift up in credit in the second quarter of 2023, more specifically the increase in our S-tier credit mix for the past year, we expect loss content to be lower on the front book than what we've seen on the 2022 vintage. And we continue to see signs of that favorable performance when we compare delinquency rates of those two vintages at various months on book. After 18 months on book, the 2023 vintage has a 30-day delinquency rate, that's 35 basis points below the 2022 vintage. That gap narrowed slightly from three months ago, but we don't expect it to be a straight line. Given the day of the week dynamics I touched on earlier, we've provided this chart using averages throughout the month, which we think is a more accurate view of delinquency. The traditional spot DQ comparison has also been provided. Delinquency is a key metric we use to assess expected loss content, but there are other factors that give us confidence, new originations will produce lower losses than the 2022 vintage. We expect the front book to outperform from a flow to loss rate perspective, given the increase in credit quality across borrower dimensions like FICO and PTI. And we expect less severity pressure given the front book was underwritten below the peak in collateral values and with lower LTVs. On collateral values, we've seen a 3% decline on a year-to-date basis and we are anticipating another 2% decline for the remainder of the year. The total change of 5% on a full year basis is unchanged from what we provided in January. Putting all the moving pieces together, we remain confident that our underwriting changes and shift in mix have resulted in a front book that will produce lower losses going forward. Turning to Slide 16. We've provided an update on trends we are seeing in electric vehicles. EV originations in the second quarter of $1 billion represented 10% of our total 2Q origination volume. Increased volume in the lease channel has been concentrated in battery electric vehicles, as we entered into a new OEM agreement in March. Importantly, virtually all of our battery electric vehicle lease contracts come with residual guarantees from the OEM that provides significant protection against declines in value. While the expected economics of an EV lease are identical to an internal combustion engine vehicle, there are some nuances that impact the timing and geography of the earnings stream. As the owner of leased vehicles, Ally is entitled to the tax credit associated with the transaction. We passed that benefit to the customer in the form of a lower monthly payment, reducing net interest income. Ally gets the full benefit of the tax credit which flows through the income statement as a reduction in tax expense. So while the economics of EV and traditional internal combustion or ICE leases are unchanged, EV leases drive accelerated income through the tax line that is offset by lower net interest income over the full life of the lease. Given the size of our originations in the quarter, that resulted in current tax benefits of approximately $92 million and reduced the tax rate by approximately 35 percentage points, relative to traditional lease volume that creates a modest NIM headwind going forward. We'll talk more about the financial outlook shortly, but we expect the momentum we've seen in EV leasing to result in a negative tax rate for the year, but the lower revenue associated with EV lease is not material enough to change our 2024 NIM outlook. Stepping back from the accounting dynamics, this increase in volume is another example of how our auto business is well-positioned for an evolving auto landscape. We are pleased with the risk-adjusted returns we're getting in the channel, particularly with the residual value protection we have in place. Moving to Slide 17 to review the auto segment highlights. Pretax income of $407 million was down from the prior year, driven by higher funding costs, provision expense and non-interest expense. Provision expense was primarily driven by elevated losses from the 2022 vintage. Non-interest expense was also up year-over-year, as servicing-related costs increased in connection with elevated loss content. On the origination side, we continue to benefit from the strength and scale of our auto finance franchise. Robust application volume enabled us to sustain pricing while originating 44% of our retail auto loan volume in our highest credit tier. Average FICO of 712 is up from prior periods and the highest in over a decade. Retail auto originated yield of 10.59% was down quarter-over-quarter, driven entirely by changes in mix, as our pricing remained very consistent across the credit spectrum. Portfolio yields continue to migrate towards originated yields. Excluding the impact from hedges, yields are up 21 basis points quarter-over-quarter as newer vintages make up a larger portion of the portfolio. Portfolio yields, including hedges are on track for 9.5% by year-end, consistent with prior expectations. Lease trends are on the bottom right, gains of $59 million in the second quarter reflect higher lease termination volume. Terminations do have seasonality as we see elevated activity in the second quarter each year, and termination volume is also impacted by how many contracts we wrote three years ago given our average lease term. So results this quarter certainly had seasonality, but we also saw the impact of elevated lease volume in the first half of 2021. Lease volume was very strong in the industry and our 2Q 2021 volume was a high watermark. Since that time, volumes have slowed, and as a result we expect lower termination volumes going forward. Lower units combined with continued normalization of used values will reduce lease gains for the remainder of 2024. The lease termination and gain dynamics are a key reason we've guided to a range of 5 to 15 basis points of quarterly NIM expansion for 2024 rather than a straight-line. Turning to Insurance on Slide 18. We recorded a pretax loss of $14 million as higher weather losses more than offset strong growth in premium and investment revenue. Total written premiums of $344 million increased 15% year-over-year. We continue to see great momentum across the business. Increased losses on a linked quarter and year-over-year basis were driven by weather activity. We saw the most active weather loss season in over a decade, including the most severe hail activity in the past 20 years. Our reinsurance program materially reduced our net exposure within the quarter. The team has been actively monitoring the impacts of Hurricane Beryl. While claim activity can be filed on a lag, we do not expect any material losses associated with the storm. Another example of the team's ability to help dealers minimize loss for named storms. Our focus in insurance remains on leveraging relationships in auto finance and growing earned premiums over time, a key driver of our fee revenue expansion. Corporate financial results are on Slide 19. The Core pretax income of $98 million is a record for Corporate Finance and demonstrates another quarter of steady returns with a 2Q ROE of 34%. End of period HFI loans decreased quarter-over-quarter, as favorable capital markets conditions, including a strong CLO market led to elevated payoffs. Our portfolio remains well diversified and is virtually all first-lien, and we remain well positioned from a credit standpoint with criticized assets and non-accrual loans near historic lows and limited commercial real estate exposure. On the bottom of the page, we highlight the return since our IPO. Corporate Finance remains a steady and meaningful contributor to Ally's earnings profile, with an average return on equity of 22% since 2014. Our success is driven by a relentless focus on our customers through the cycle lending approach and mutually beneficial sponsor relationships. While balances can be choppy quarter-to-quarter, we are committed to serving our customers and being disciplined about deploying capital. And over time, this is a business we will continue to prudently grow. Turning to Mortgage on Slide 20. Mortgage generated pre-tax income of $27 million and $261 million of DTC originations. Held-for-investment assets continue to decrease as we continue to allocate resources to our highest returning businesses. We remain committed to providing a best-in-class digital experience in driving operational efficiency within the business. I will provide an update on our 2024 outlook before heading into Q&A. In terms of net interest margin, second quarter represented an inflection point. A natural portfolio rollover will drive expansion from here with or without rate cuts. We see third quarter expansion at the low end of our 5 basis point to 15 basis point quarterly range given lease dynamics I talked about and expect to exit the year between 3.45% and 3.50%, resulting in a full year NIM of about 330 basis points. So relative to our last earnings call, we are increasing to the high end of our NIM guide. Similarly, we expect adjusted other revenues to be at the top of the range provided last quarter, increasing 12% year-over-year. Momentum within insurance, P&C earned premiums through recent OEM relationships and continued momentum in our other revenue streams more broadly gives us confidence in the revised outlook. We have narrowed the range of our expected consolidated loss rate to 1.45% to 1.5% and we now see retail auto NCOs of approximately 2.1%. As I noted earlier, we continue to see pressure from the 2022 vintage, but remain pleased with what we are seeing in the front book, which will be the largest driver of losses beyond 2024. Adjusted non-interest expense guidance is unchanged with controllable expenses expected to be down more than 1% year-over-year and total up less than 2%. We now expect average earning assets to be down 1% this year, reflecting the cumulative impact of all of the actions we've taken to manage RWA and capital levels in anticipation of regulatory changes. Over the last several quarters, we've deconsolidated $2.8 billion of lower yielding retail auto loans, sold our point-of-sale lending business and its $2 billion portfolio and executed a credit risk transfer to create access capital. These actions not only create incremental capital, but also improve overall returns. On tax rate, we have adjusted our full year guidance to a range of zero to negative 5% based on our outlook for EV lease volume in the back half of the year. To wrap, this was a solid quarter in terms of operational execution and financial results, and we remain confident in achieving a 4% NIM, $6 of EPS and mid-teens return run rate by the end of 2025. And with that, I'll turn it over to Sean for Q&A.