Steve McGarry
Analyst · Credit Suisse
Thank you, Jon. Good morning, everyone. I will continue this morning's discussion with what is on everyone's mind, a deeper dive into the details of our reserve build, followed by a discussion of our credit metrics and where we think they're headed. I will then discuss the rest of the drivers of the income statement and end up highlighting our strong capital and reserve position. At the quarter end, our loan loss reserve totaled $2 billion. The private education loan reserve including a reserve for unfunded commitments was $1.85 billion or 7.7% of our total student loan exposure which under CECL includes not only on-balance sheet portfolio loans. It also includes the accrued interest receivable of $1.4 billion and unfunded loan commitments of $1.1 billion. As discussed previously, we use a discounted cash flow methodology to determine our reserve. The discount factor is approximately 70%. And that is how we get to the 11% coverage of life of loan defaults on the portfolio that Jon just mentioned. The provision for credit losses was $352 million in the quarter. The major components of the provision were an additional $243 million for expected economic impact from our CECL model and $99 million for loans originated but not yet funded on the balance sheet. We took a cautious approach to our loan loss allowance in the second quarter. Our CECL implementation reserve built at the end of 2019, as well as the first quarter reserve, run through our model using a Moody's baseline, near-term improvement and recession scenario, weighted 40%, 30% and 30% respectively. For this quarter, given the uncertainties around the economy, we used a baseline and a more severe economic downturn forecast than used in the past each weighted 50%. The weighted average unemployment rate from these scenarios are 11.3% in Q2 of 2021 and 10.6% in Q4 2021. This is an increase of nearly 4% for each period from what we used in the first quarter. In addition, we have added $50 million to the reserve to account for lower charge-offs than expected in the quarter due to granting forbearance as a result of the pandemic. For the next few minutes I will be discussing our credit metrics, all of which can be found on Page 6 of our investor presentation. Private education loans and forbearance were 9.3% of loans in repayment and forb. This was up from Q1 and the year-ago quarter, all of course due to the pandemic. While the reported number is down significantly from its peak in the mid-teens, we are still working through the backlog of borrowers exiting forbearance. In April, we issued disaster forbearance to a large number of borrowers, who stated that they were impacted by the pandemic, which posted their April, May and June loan payments. These borrowers are no longer technically in disaster forbearance and have payments scheduled this month. As of July 15, 49% of these borrowers resolved their forbearance status favorably, 24% of these borrowers reenrolled in forb and 27% of these borrowers are continuing to work with us and we'll either reenroll in the forbearance program, make a payment, or enter a delinquency status. But keep in mind I'm reporting as of July 15 and many of these borrowers had not even reached their payment date. We are very encouraged, however, by what we have seen so far from borrowers exiting forbearance. And based on the performance of these borrowers to date, we expect 35% of the total population to reenroll, in excess of 50% to make a payment and low single digits to enter delinquency. If this trend holds, we would expect forbearance to drop to 7% at the end of July and then move lower by the end of the quarter, likely in the 5% to 6% range. In the early stages of the pandemic, forbearance was granted, without determining if it was truly needed. This was absolutely the correct approach at the time. Going forward, to remain in a forbearance status, a borrower must demonstrate that they and the cosigner are unemployed due to the current economic conditions, or will be able to make a payment in the future. Another change is we will be granting forbearance for just one month at a time going forward. This will enable us to stay in close contact and work with our borrowers during this time. The characteristics of the loans in forbearance are positive and the source of encouragement. At the end of May, the average current FICO score was 727 and less than 2% of these borrowers had been delinquent greater than 90 days in the last 12 months. A large component of the loans in forbearance recently went into repayment. Our listeners are all familiar with our repay waves. So just three months before the pandemic began, $2.5 billion went into repayment for the first time. And in the current quarter, an additional $1 billion went into repayment. I call this out, because it is not unusual for borrowers in early stages of P&I to use forbearance. Typically 10% of a cohort will. In addition, we are working closely with a segment of borrowers that have used forbearance frequently in the past. And for these individuals, we are offering a 12-month interest-only payment program to help them manage their payments. Turning to credit performance. Private education loans, delinquent 30-plus days, were 2.7% of loans in repay and delinquent forbearance. This is down from Q1 and in line with the year ago quarter. Ordinarily, delinquent loans do not receive forbearance and are therefore not in our delinquency tables. However, as a result of the pandemic, we granted forbearance to certain delinquent customers, that will return to their delinquent status when the forbearance period ends if they do not make a payment. Forbearance is clearly dampening delinquency more broadly and we expect delinquency to rise in future quarters. Again, if the forbearance resolution trends we just discussed hold, we think 31-plus day delinquency at the end of August could increase to over 4% and basically remain between 4% and 5% for the rest of the year. Net charge-offs, for average loans and repayment, were just 0.8%. This was down from Q1 and also down from the year ago quarter. Again, the use of forbearance is dampening charge-offs as well as delinquencies. We now expect net charge-offs for the full year of 2020 to total 1.7%. This is lower than what we forecast at the end of Q1. This is simply because forbearance usage has pushed back charge-offs into 2021. We expect net charge-offs for the full year of 2021 to total 2.5% based on the forecast discussed during this conversation. This is consistent with what we saw in our stress testing exercises, using the Fed's CCAR severely adverse scenarios. And it's also consistent with how the highest quality private student loans performed during the 2008-2009 financial crisis. Back then, losses peaked at 2.7% for loans similar to our smart option portfolio. Loan origination stats are on page five of the deck. As you can see, we originated $497 million of private student loans in the second quarter and $2.8 billion year-to-date. Originations are down 7% from the second quarter, compared to the year ago quarter. 74% of these loans were cosigned with an average FICO score of 747. This compares to 77% and 745 in the prior year. Seasonally, Q2 has lower cosign rates due to a higher mix of non-traditional students. We are already seeing an increase in FICO scores and cosigner rates in our early peak season results. This will continue. And as Jon has already discussed, we have taken steps to tighten our underwriting and stress our expected returns in the current environment. Net interest margin stats are reported on page 4 of the deck. As you can see, net interest margin on our interest-earning assets came in at 4.55%, down from the prior quarter and the prior year. The decline in the quarter was principally driven by our liquidity portfolio. While cash and liquid assets declined to $6.6 billion from $7.6 billion at the end of the quarter, average cash and liquid assets in Q2 were still slightly higher than Q1. So in response to actions taken by the Federal Reserve and the impacts of the pandemic, we saw yields on risk-free assets such as treasuries and Federal Reserve deposits, which is where our cash is invested decline much faster than bank deposits and LIBOR-indexed liabilities during the first quarter of the month, and this pressured our NIM as well. Spreads have now normalized and we do still expect our full year NIM to come in right around 4.9%. Few quick words on operating expenses in the quarter that came in at $142 million, compared to $147 million in the prior quarter, and $139 million in the year ago quarter. OpEx in our core student loan business increased 7% from the year ago quarter, while average customers increased 5.5% and delinquent borrowers declined 14.1%. Ultimately, full year operating expenses will come in around $565 million and that is just below full year 2019 OpEx. Finally, let me comment on our strong capital position. At the end of the second quarter, total risk-based capital was at 13.7% and CET1 to risk-weighted assets came in at 12.4%. Both of these ratios are significantly in excess of regulatory well-capitalized ratios. In the post-CECL world, we also look at GAAP equity plus loan loss reserves over risk assets and that came in at a very strong 15.7%. In conclusion, our balance sheet remains rock solid in terms of liquidity, capital and loan loss reserves. I'll now turn the call back to Jon.