John Flynn
Analyst · such statements
Thank you, operator, and good afternoon, everyone. Thanks again for joining us today for Open Lending’s second quarter 2022 earnings conference call. I will briefly discuss the highlights of our results for the quarter and how we are performing given the current industry and economic conditions. Ross will then discuss current auto industry trends and Open Lending’s relative performance in prior cycles. And then lastly, Chuck will go over the financials and thoughts for the remainder of the year. For the second quarter, our results were in line with our expectations despite continued challenging economic and industry headwinds to our business with our results modestly growing quarter-over-quarter. The industry is still facing low levels of dealer inventory due to the continued global semiconductor chip shortages and the supply chain challenges. In addition, and equally significant, our inflated used car values impact on affordability to the near and non-prime consumers. When we began the second quarter of 2022, there were indications that fundamentals were beginning to stabilize and then expectation that the second half of the year would lead to higher auto transaction volume compared to the first half of the year. Instead, continued lockdowns in Asia and the effects of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, collectively dampened the supply to fuel recovery. Even more notable has been the impact of 40 year high record inflationary conditions and the impact on consumer’s budgets and the Federal Reserve’s monetary tightening response of 75 basis point hike in both June and July. The results of high inflation and higher borrowing costs have pushed consumer sentiment at the lowest level seen in our company’s history. Despite these industry headwinds, our business has performed well. Our current expectations for full year 2022 auto originations at Open Lending are projected to be in line with full year 2021. While the current run rates at many of the universal banks implies auto lending originations will be down over 20% year-over-year. So we remain focused on what we can control, including investing in our go-to-market sales strategy to capture more of our significant and growing TAM. In the first half of the year, we increased our sales and account management teams by 23%. The individuals we’ve hired have deep experience in the auto loan origination space in particular with credit unions and banks. While some players in our ecosystem are holding flat or even reducing their employee base during this period of economic uncertainty, we are actively hiring high quality talent and positioning ourselves to take market share. Although early, we have seen good tractions on these investments. It is worth noting that during the second quarter, our non-OEM business, primarily credit unions, grew certified loans 27% year-over-year. During the quarter, we signed 18 new customers and had 10 lenders certify their first loan in the quarter. We also further grew our existing customer base with our top 10 non-OEM customers increasing their certification volume by 33% in the second quarter of 2022, as compared to Q2 2021. Another area of focus has been on enhancing lenders protection by continuing to invest in the platform and the infrastructure to support our growth, as well as improving lender onboarding, reporting and claims administration capabilities and investing in development resources. Early indications support improved onboarding and cycle times from contract signing to our first certified loan and revenue. These initiatives and associated investments are all to support our large growing TAM, which according to a recent assessment prepared for us by a third-party now totals approximately $270 billion for auto loan origination, which is up 8% from the study prepared prior to our public listing. In addition, there is approximately $40 billion in TAM related to the auto refinance opportunity, which represents 32% of our certs test quarter and is expected to continue to perform well, even with the current macroeconomic backdrop. Based on the recent TAM analysis, we have penetrated less than 2% market share, leaving a significant room for growth. As you know, we bring together the various players in the auto retail ecosystem offering a very compelling value proposition to each. We enable lenders to make loans to consumers that would otherwise not make deepening their relationships with other existing customers and helping forge relationships with new customers. The loans made through our Lenders Protection program provide yields that often exceed that of our customer’s prime portfolio with lower risk to the lender. The ultimate beneficiary is the underserved near and non-prime consumer who receives access to credit from a larger range of lenders with higher loan amounts, better rates and appropriate down payments, which is even more important in today’s environment where consumer’s affordability is being squeezed. The benefits we offer are needed now more than ever. In addition to the massive underserved and growing TAM and our mission to help both lenders and consumers, we have considerable moat around our business with over 20 years of proprietary data, a 5 second underwriting decision and our exclusive relationships with 4 A-rated insurance partners. This moat continues to widen as we make strategic investments in new data, technology and talent. We believe our value proposition to the various players in the auto retail ecosystem supports our confidence in the resiliency of our business through any cycle and gets us even more excited about our long-term opportunities. A few reminders about our business as we head into potentially slower economic growth. First and foremost, we will maintain our discipline and rigor at all times in our underwriting process during this economic contractions. And in the second quarter, we adjusted our underwriting models to optimize for the health of our portfolio from a risk perspective. As you were all aware, we do not take balance sheet risk and we will continue to prudently manage our balance sheet to ensure we maintain financial flexibility. In the end, we will continue to target growth rates in excess of industry growth rates, but never at the expense of our commitment to managing risk. Our business fundamentals and our long-term outlook are strong. I would not like to turn the call over to Ross who will provide more details on what we are currently seeing in the auto lending industry, as well as the comparison to how the industry performed during the recession of 2008 to 2009. Ross?