Russ Hutchinson
Analyst · Goldman Sachs
Thanks, Michael. Good morning, everyone. I'll begin on Slide 6. In the third quarter, net financing revenue excluding OID of $1.5 billion was lower year-over-year, driven by lower average earning assets and higher cost of funds. The decline in benchmark rates as the Fed continues to move rates lower will be a tailwind over the medium term given the liability-sensitive nature of our balance sheet. But as we've covered previously, we are modestly asset-sensitive in the near term as floating rate assets and hedges will contractually reprice faster than deposits. We expect to achieve our medium-term NIM target of 4%, but the rapid change in Fed funds implied by the forward curve will create some volatility in the next few quarters if those cuts materialize. I'll discuss margin dynamics in more detail shortly. Adjusted other revenue of $556 million is up 13% from the prior year as we continue to benefit from the momentum within insurance and other revenue streams. Provision expense of $645 million increased from the prior year driven by higher net charge-offs and a 15 basis point reserve built in Retail Auto to reflect our outlook on net charge-offs going forward, including potential losses from Hurricane Helene. As I previewed at a recent conference, net charge-offs continue to be elevated in the quarter, driven by pressure in late-stage delinquent accounts. I'll cover Retail Auto credit and vintage dynamics in more detail later. Adjusted net interest expense of $1.2 billion reflects our continued focus on tightly managing expenses even while continuing to make accretive investments to support the growth of our insurance business and necessary investments in areas such as cybersecurity. Continued momentum in EV lease originations drove $179 million in EV tax credits and a negative tax rate within the quarter. We will also provide more on EV originations later. GAAP and adjusted EPS for the quarter were $1.06 and $0.95, respectively. Moving to Slide 7. Net interest margin excluding OID of 3.25% decreased 5 basis points from the prior quarter. Earning asset yields decreased 6 basis points quarter-over-quarter driven by lower lease revenue. Retail Auto portfolio yields excluding the impact from hedges increased 13 basis points this quarter. The linked quarter expansion slowed relative to prior periods as late-stage delinquency buckets drove a higher proportion of loans moving to non-accrual status. On liabilities, cost of funds increased 3 basis points quarter-over-quarter. Retail deposit yields were flat quarter-over-quarter, while broker deposits drove a modest increase in total deposit costs. Notwithstanding near-term choppiness, the pricing dynamics on both sides of our balance sheet support NIM expansion to our 4% medium-term target. Let's discuss net interest margin in more detail on Slide 8. Over the medium term, we're well positioned for NIM expansion as the deposit portfolio, including consumer CDs, reprices lower. In addition to the tailwinds from our liability sensitive balance sheet, the favorable asset mix shift of the balance sheet will support margin expansion throughout 2025. So in the medium term we're confident NIM will move higher, but want to provide context on the timing dynamics that will factor into NIM progression. The graphic on the bottom of the page illustrates NIM drivers as we move through the Fed's easing cycle. This is not a specific forecast. Rather, it's a simple way to think about the dynamics impacting our NIM if the Fed moves rates materially lower over the next few quarters. As you'd expect, changes in the pace and magnitude of Fed cuts will impact each of these variables, particularly in the shorter term. On deposits, we continue to expect a through-the-cycle beta of around 70%, which is consistent with our experience during the tightening cycle and prior easing cycles. But we expect that downward beta to be lower to start and then increase over time. Again, that's consistent with what we saw in 2022 and 2023 on the way up. We have begun to move deposits down, including 20 basis points last month and 35 basis points in total, including the actions we took earlier this year. In Retail Auto, our origination yields remain higher than the back book, and we expect the portfolio yield excluding hedging to move higher over the next few quarters. And the continued shift from mortgage loans and securities into retail auto and corporate finance loans will be a consistent tailwind going forward. Across those three primary drivers we have significant margin tailwinds. Floating rate assets in our hedge position are temporary offsets. Floating rate assets are mainly commercial loans in both auto and corporate finance. We also include cash balances in this bucket. Those assets will reprice quickly, which represents an immediate headwind that grows over time as the Fed is expected to reduce rates further. Hedges have been an effective mechanism to reduce exposure to rising rates. Hedging activity has contributed more than $1 billion in NII since the tightening cycle and continues to generate significant positive carry. That benefit has come down over time, which will continue given the decline in benchmark rates and natural maturity of the swaps. So in the near term, we have contractual repricing of floating rate exposures. The expected move in deposit rates will more than offset that headwind over time, but the next few quarters may see margins contract modestly. The direction of NIM movement over the next few quarters is heavily dependent on competitive dynamics and deposits. NIM in the near term may be choppy, but over a variety of rate paths, we expect NIM expansion in the medium term to reflect favorable dynamics on both sides of our balance sheet. Turning to Page 9, CET 1 of 9.8% was up quarter-over-quarter. We operate with a significant buffer to required CET 1, with over $4 billion of excess capital above our SCB minimum 7.1% that went into effect October 1st. Within the quarter, we saw over $600 million of after-tax AOCI accretion given the move lower in interest rates. We expect natural AOCI accretion of $400 million per year based on the forward curve. Excluding the impacts of AOCI, adjusted tangible book value per share is $48, up more than 2 times from 2014. We are confident in our ability to continue driving shareholder value and tangible book value per share growth over the next several years. We recently announced a quarterly dividend of $0.30 for the fourth quarter, which remains consistent with the prior quarter. In the first quarter of 2025, we expect a 19 basis point impact to CET1 from the final phase in a CECL. And we'll talk shortly about a potential change in accounting treatment on EV leases, which would temporarily reduce CET1. Let's turn to Slide 10 to review asset quality trends. The consolidated net charge-off rate of 150 basis points was up 24 basis points quarter-over-quarter. Consistent with the first and second quarters of 2024, our commercial portfolios continue to perform well with no charge-off activity in corporate finance or commercial auto during the quarter. The credit card portfolio is performing in line with expectations and both delinquencies and net charge-offs improved in the quarter. Credit card NCOs of 9.9% were down from 12.6% in the prior quarter. Retail auto net charge-offs of 224 basis points were up 43 basis points quarter-over-quarter, driven by seasonal patterns and elevated delinquencies. In the bottom right, 30-plus day delinquencies increased 18 basis points quarter-over-quarter and were up 66 basis points year-over-year, slightly higher than our expectations a few months ago. I'll cover auto credit trends in more detail in a couple of slides. Retail auto and consolidated coverage rates were up 15 and 12 basis points, respectively. The increase in coverage rates reflects our updated outlook for retail auto credit loss trends, including potential impacts from Hurricane Helene. The retail auto coverage rate will remain elevated until we see loss performance normalize. Let's turn to Page 12 to discuss retail auto underwriting actions. The curtailment and pricing actions we've taken over the past two years have meaningfully reduced the risk content of originations and protected risk-adjusted returns. We opportunistically tightened underwriting and took pricing actions in the second quarter of 2023 that resulted in an increase to 40% in S-Tier originations, our highest credit quality tier. While the move up tier in credit in 2Q 2023 was a meaningful pivot, we're always evaluating strategies to refine the credit [buybacks] (ph). We continue to identify segments of underperformance and have taken further action which includes curtailment of originations and higher pricing. More recent examples of additional curtailment include tightening credit policy for contracts with higher monthly payments or PTI. We've increased the frequency with which we require income and employment verification and are more selective around trade equity. We've also lowered approvals for applicants in higher debt to income segments and those that have limited credit history. These are just a few simple examples, but the broader point is, while our origination mix may look very consistent over the past 12 plus months, we continue to take very granular actions to optimize risk-adjusted returns. The effectiveness of these actions is reflected in the loan characteristics on the bottom left. Our move up in credit was most pronounced in 2023 with our S-Tier mix increasing from around 25% in prior years to more than 40%. And within the past year, we've seen an increase in FICO. Also, you can see our PTI took a step down from 2022 to 2023 and again over the last year. We continue to be more selective in what we're putting on the balance sheet. The continued tightening gives us confidence our loss rate will decline over time. On Slide 13, let's discuss retail auto vintage credit trends. Retail auto origination trends are on the top half of the page. Our origination trends reflect a deliberate strategy to be increasingly selective in our underwriting with a focus on prioritizing risk-adjusted returns over origination volume. We have moved up significantly in terms of borrower credit quality since early 2023, which will be a tailwind to delinquency and frequency over time. We expect less severity pressures as we move further away from peak collateral values of early 2022. While losses remain elevated, we are seeing benefits from our underwriting changes. Our 2023 vintage continues to outperform 2022 in the aggregate, despite a more challenging macro environment after equivalent months on book. While not shown on the page, the quarterly vintage comparisons from those years show even more separation. And the very early signs on the 2024 vintage are also encouraging. As we move past peak losses on the 2022 vintage, we expect the rate of change in delinquency and charge-offs to continue to move lower and ultimately decline on a year-over-year basis. The exact timing of improvement in credit performance is difficult to forecast in this environment, particularly as we are managing a larger pool of late-stage delinquent accounts. But our continuous refinement of the buybacks and the results of our detailed vintage analysis give us confidence in lower losses over time. Moving to Slide 14 to review auto segment highlights. Pre-tax income of $175 million was down from the prior year, driven by higher funding costs and provision expense. Provision reflected typical seasonality, elevated net charge drops, and a 15 basis point increase in the coverage rate. On the bottom left, we've highlighted the steady progression of retail auto portfolio yields. Excluding the impact from hedges, yields are up 83 basis points year-over-year. Strong application volume drove high credit quality originations, including 43% in our S-Tier, while maintaining a yield above 10.5%, which is consistent with the prior quarter. We continue to prioritize risk-adjusted spread over retail loan origination volume and our originated yield has been resilient. Even as two and three-year swap rates have moved over 100 basis points lower from the peak earlier this year, while we have prioritized credit quality through further curtailment actions. We expect originated yields to move lower in the fourth quarter, but remain above the back book, leading to continued expansion in portfolio yield ex hedges. Lease trends are in the bottom right. Gains of $24 million in the third quarter reflect lower lease termination volume and softer lease gains per vehicle. We expect lease termination volume to decrease further in 4Q and 2025, reflective of the industry decline in origination volume three years ago for each respective period. Turning to Slide 15, we've provided an update on EV lease trends. EV originations in the third quarter of $1.1 billion represented 12% of our total 3Q origination volume. Consistent with the prior quarter, increased lease volume is driven by the new OEM agreement we entered into in March and includes residual guarantees that provide significant protection against the decline in values. Higher EV lease origination volume generated significant tax credits within the quarter. Under our current accounting treatment, these credits flow through the income statement at the time of origination. In addition, we also made an adjustment to align our year-to-date tax credit recognition with year-to-date earnings as a percentage of full year expectation. The combined impact from EV volume and the quarterly true-up was $179 million within the quarter. In the prior year quarter, EV tax credits impacted our effective tax rate by single-digit percentage points. In the third quarter, the impact of EV tax credits was larger, resulting in a negative tax rate. With the ongoing momentum in EV lease volume and to mitigate future tax rate volatility, we are evaluating a change in the election of accounting methods from flow-through method accounting to deferral method accounting. A switch to deferral method of accounting would result in the EV tax credit benefit being realized in net interest margin over the life of the lease instead of tax expense on day one under the existing flow through method. Deferral method of accounting for EV lease tax credits would align the recognition of the credit with the economics of a traditional internal combustion engine or ICE lease contract. A potential change in accounting methods would be made retroactively and reduce retained earnings by approximately $310 million and CET1 by approximately 20 basis points as of Q3. Importantly, the impact to Ally would be offset over the life of the lease with higher reported NIM. In the third quarter, NIM would have been 6 basis points higher under the deferral method of accounting. We expect to decide on the accounting methodology at some point in the fourth quarter, and it remained subject to approval from our external auditors. Turning to insurance on Slide 16, core pre-tax income was up $15 million year-over-year, driven by higher earned premiums and investment income. Total written premiums of $384 million are a quarterly record for Ally since the IPO and reflective of the momentum we see across this business. P&C written premiums of $115 million are also a record, driven by new OEM relationships and higher inventory exposure. The success we've had growing our insurance business is driving higher losses, which are up $28 million year-over-year. These losses are more than offset by revenue. Hurricane Helene occurred during the final week of the quarter, and we expect the storm to be among our largest historical hurricane events in terms of gross losses. Our Q3 results reflect our current estimate of insurance losses from Helene. Our reinsurance program is expected to cover most of the loss. As we look ahead, insurance is a key driver of fee revenue expansion and we remain focused on generating strong premium volume by leveraging relationships in auto finance. Corporate finance results are on Slide 17. Core pre-tax income of $94 million was another strong quarter for corporate finance and highlights the steady return profile of the business. End of period HFI loans of $10.3 billion are up $600 million quarter-over-quarter. Our portfolio remains well diversified, virtually all first lane, and we remain well positioned from a credit standpoint. On the bottom of the page, we highlight the accretive return profile of the corporate finance business. While balances can fluctuate depending on market dynamics and competition, we'll look to prudently deploy capital into corporate finance to continue serving customers and generating strong returns. Turning to mortgage on Slide 18, mortgage recorded pre-tax income of $27 million and $256 million of DTC originations. Consistent with prior quarters, held for investment assets continue to decrease as virtually all DTC originations are held for sale. Our focus remains on providing a great customer digital experience, while simultaneously demonstrating efficiency by adapting to different operating environments. I'll provide an update on our 2024 outlook on Slide 19. We are updating our full year 2024 NIM outlook to approximately 3.2%. The update assumes another 50 basis point decrease in Fed funds by year end and the assumption that deposit betas will be slow to start. Given the near-term asset sensitivity we discussed earlier, this puts temporary pressure on margin exiting the year. Momentum in insurance, earned premiums through new OEM relationships and continued success in diversified auto channels such as smart auction and pass-through position us to grow adjusted other revenue by 12% year-over-year. That's consistent with our update in July and well above the 5% to 10% we guided to in January. We see retail auto NCOs of 2.25% to 2.3% for the year, which results in a total consolidated loss rate of 1.5% to 1.55%. Adjusted noninterest expense guidance is unchanged with controllable expenses expected to be down within 1% year-over-year and total expenses up less than 2%. We expect average earning assets to increase on a linked quarter basis, but still expect to be down approximately 1% this year, reflecting our disciplined approach to optimizing risk adjusted returns over origination volume and growth. We have adjusted our full year guide on tax rate to negative 25% to 30% based on the momentum in EV lease and the update to earnings outlook. Before I turn it over to Michael, I want to again reiterate our focus on delivering a mid-teens return over time. We have significant tailwinds based on the strength of our auto and deposit franchises that will drive net interest margins sustainably higher. And we've taken the appropriate steps to drive losses lower over time. The exact timing of mid-teens will depend on several factors. It will not be a straight line, and the combination of temporary margin pressure and elevated losses will be a headwind for the next few quarters. But we're confident in what the business can deliver. And with that, I'll turn it back over to Michael.