Terry Heimes
Analyst · factors
Thanks, Jeff. As Jeff mentioned, we had a very strong second quarter from a financial perspective. Our base net income excluding certain restructuring and liquidity related charges was $0.60 per share or nearly $30 million compared to $0.54 per share a year ago. For the six months ended June 30, our base net income excluding restructuring activities was more than $60 million compared to $42 million a year ago. As a reminder, base net income excludes the mark-to-market adjustment on our derivative portfolio, amortization of intangible assets and the economic benefit received from variable-rate floor income. Base net income is a measure used by management to evaluate the company’s performance. GAAP net income for the second quarter was $0.16 per share. The primary differences between GAAP and base net income this quarter was a $34 million mark-to-market adjustment our derivative products. The financial highlights related to our second quarter can be summarized with three basic operating metrics. One continued growth and diversification of our revenue through our fee-based businesses. Two, improvement in our core student loans, and three, continued reduction in our operating expenses. First, as it relates to revenue diversification, for the second quarter, our total fee-based revenues were up $10 million, or 15% compared to last year and revenues from tuition payment plans, campus commerce and lead generation product lines grew more than 23% more over $6 million when compared to last year. I know we’ve said this before, but we are excite and energized by our fee-based businesses because they have solid growth potential provide recurring positive cash flow and most importantly are the cornerstone to our diversification strategy. Second, related to our portfolio performance, our core student loan spread improved during the second quarter to 109 basis points. Two significant factors were in play here. First, CP/LIBOR spreads narrowed substantially, which improved the spread on our variable rate assets and second, we continued to earn fixed rate floor income on a larger pool of assets due to the unprecedented low interest rate environment. For the quarter, CP/LIBOR averaged about 45 basis points. Through the third quarter, it’s averaged between 17 basis points and 20 basis points, so we will likely experience additional improvement in the core student loan spread in the third quarter as well and finally, as it relates to operating expenses, on the surface, total operating expenses were flat to last year. However, excluding restructuring charges and direct cost of certain lead generation activities, our run rate expenses were down over $7 million or 9% compared to the same period a year ago and down nearly 12% year-to-date. I would also like to touch base briefly on our improved liquidity. During the quarter, we funded over $1 billion in the government-backed Straight-A Funding vehicle, leaving us with just over $400 million remaining in our FFELP warehouse facility. We are pleased to announce that we have structured a new $500 million revolving warehouse facility that will provide funding through July 2012, virtually eliminating the short to mid-term liquidity needs related to these assets. We were also able to repurchase an additional $35 million of our unsecured notes due in 2010 during the second quarter, generating a gain of just over $4 million. Combined with the successful tender for an additional $103 million that we completed in July, we have roughly $102 million outstanding in these notes due in May of 2010. So when we recap the quarter from a financial perspective, I would focus on the following. One, our base net income $0.60 per share or roughly $30 million in the midst of an extremely challenging economic conditions, we are excited to report such positive operating results during a time when many companies are experiencing operating losses. Two, we continue to grow and diversify our fee-based revenues. The government servicing contract will supplement our growth and continue diversification, but we will likely not see significant bottom line impact until 2010 or beyond as we get clarity on volume. Three, our portfolio continues to serve as a valuable annuity stream. The improvement in CP/LIBOR combined with the low interest rate environment increased our core student loan spread to 109 basis points this quarter. Four, we continue to manage our operating costs with expenses down 9% compared to prior year and nearly 12% year-to-date. Five, we have virtually eliminated our liquidity risk related to our student loan assets and have begun to systematically reduce our operating debt. We are very pleased with our performance and believe we are well positioned for the future, no matter what happens when the legislative for clears. At this time, we’d be happy to take your questions.