Q4 2024 Capital One Financial Corp Earnings Call

John Pancari, John Pancari, John Pancari, John

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The End

Speaker Change: Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Capital One Q4 2024 earnings call.

Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded.

Speaker Change: After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question, please press star-one-one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star-one-one again. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Jeff Norris, Senior Vice President of Finance. Please go ahead.

Thanks, Josh, and welcome, everyone.

Speaker Change: Just as a reminder, as always, we are webcasting live over the Internet, and to access the call on the Internet, please log on to Capital One's website, CapitalOne.com, and follow the links from there. In addition to the press release and financials, we've included a presentation summarizing our fourth quarter 2024 results.

Speaker Change: With me this evening are Mr. Richard Fairbank, Capital One's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and Mr. Andrew Young, Capital One's Chief Financial Officer. Rich and Andrew are going to walk you through this presentation.

Speaker Change: To access a copy of the presentation and press release, please go to Capital One's website, click on Investors, and click on Financials, and then click on Quarterly Earnings Release.

Please note that this presentation may contain forward-looking statements.

Speaker Change: Information regarding Capital One's financial performance, and any forward-looking statements contained in today's discussion in the materials, speak only as of the particular date or dates indicated in the materials.

Speaker Change: Capital One does not undertake any obligation to update or revise any of this information, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.

Speaker Change: Numerous factors could cause our actual results to differ materially from those described in forward-looking statements.

Speaker Change: And for more information on these factors, please see the section titled Forward-Looking Information in the earnings release presentation, and the Risk Factor section in our annual and quarterly reports that are accessible at Capital One's website, filed with the SEC. Now I'll turn the call over to Mr. Young. Andrew?

Andrew Young: Thanks, Jeff, and good afternoon, everyone. I will start on slide three of tonight's presentation.

Andrew Young: In the fourth quarter, Capital One earned $1.1 billion, or $2.67 per diluted common share.

Andrew Young: For the full year, Capital One earned $4.8 billion, or $11.59 per share.

Andrew Young: Included in the results for the fourth quarter were adjusting items related to discover integration costs and a legal reserve bill.

Andrew Young: Net of these adjusting items, fourth quarter earnings per share were three dollars and nine cents.

Full year adjusted earnings per share were $13.96.

Andrew Young: We also had one notable item in the quarter, which was $100 million of accelerated philanthropy contributions.

Andrew Young: Pre-provision earnings of $4.1 billion in the fourth quarter were down 13% from the third quarter, driven by higher non-interest expense.

Andrew Young: The linked quarter increase in non-interest expense was driven by increases in both operating expense and marketing spend.

Andrew Young: Revenue in the linked quarter increased 2% driven by higher non-interest income.

Andrew Young: Provision for credit losses was 2.6 billion dollars in the quarter, up about 160 million relative to the prior quarter.

Andrew Young: The quarterly increase in provision was driven by higher net charge-offs.

partially offset by a larger allowance release.

Andrew Young: Turning to slide four, I will cover the allowance in greater detail.

Andrew Young: We released $245 million in allowance this quarter, and our allowance balance now stands at $16.3 billion.

Andrew Young: The decrease in this quarter's allowance was driven by releases in our commercial banking and commercial segments.

Andrew Young: Our total portfolio coverage ratio decreased 20 basis points to 4.96 percent.

Speaker Change: I'll cover the drivers of the changes in allowance and coverage ratio by segment on slide 5.

The allowance balance in our domestic car business was flat.

Speaker Change: The coverage ratio declined 33 basis points, primarily driven by seasonal balances, as well as favorable near-term credit trends.

Speaker Change: In our consumer banking segment, we released $131 million in allowance.

Speaker Change: resulting in a 22 basis point decrease to the coverage ratio.

Speaker Change: Vehicle values were stable in the quarter, resulting in an improved recoveries outlook, which drove the release.

Thank you.

Thank you.

Thank you. Bye.

Speaker Change: And finally, our commercial banking allowance decreased by $130 million, resulting in a 15 basis point decrease to the coverage ratio.

Speaker Change: The release was primarily driven by the reduction in criticized loans and to a lesser extent by charge-offs in the quarter.

turning to page six.

I'll now discuss liquidity.

Speaker Change: Total liquidity reserves in the quarter decreased by about $8 billion to approximately $124 billion.

Speaker Change: Our cash position ended the quarter at approximately $43 billion, down about $6 billion from the prior quarter.

Speaker Change: The decline in cash was largely driven by seasonally higher card loans and funding maturities, which were partially offset by continued strong growth.

in Consumer Banking Business Deposits.

Speaker Change: Our preliminary average liquidity coverage ratio during the fourth quarter was 155 percent.

Turning to page 7, I'll cover our net interest margin.

Our fourth quarter net interest margin was 7.03 percent.

Speaker Change: 8 basis points lower than last quarter, and 30 basis points higher than the year-ago quarter.

Speaker Change: Turning to slide 8, I will end by discussing our capital position.

Speaker Change: Our Common Equity Tier 1 Capital Ratio ended the quarter at 13.5%.

Ten bases points lower than the prior quarter.

Speaker Change: Net income in the quarter was more than offset by the impact of loan growth, dividends, and 150 million dollars of share repurchases.

Speaker Change: As a reminder, the announcement of the acquisition of Discover constituted a material business change.

Speaker Change: Therefore, we continue to be subject to the Federal Reserve's pre-approval of our capital actions until the merger approval process has concluded.

Rich: With that, I will turn the call over to Rich. Rich?

Thanks, Andrew, and good evening, everyone.

Rich: Slide 10 shows fourth quarter results in our credit card business.

Rich: Credit card segment results are largely a function of our domestic card results and trends which are shown on slide 11.

Rich: In the fourth quarter, our domestic card business delivered another quarter of steady top-line growth, strong margins, and stable credit.

Rich: Year-over-year purchase volume growth for the quarter was 7%. Ending loan balances increased $8 billion, or about 5% year-over-year.

Rich: Average loans increased about 6% and fourth quarter revenue was up 9% from the fourth quarter of 2023, driven by the growth in purchase volume and loans.

Rich: Revenue margin for the quarter increased 55 basis points from the prior year quarter to 18.6 percent, largely driven by the impact of the end of the Walmart revenue sharing agreement.

The charge-off rate for the quarter was 6.06 percent.

the impact of the end of the Walmart law-sharing agreement.

Rich: increased the fourth quarter charge-off rate by roughly 40 basis points. Excluding this impact, the charge-off rate for the quarter would have been 5.66 percent, up 31 basis points year over year.

and after 20 consecutive months of

Second derivative improvement.

The 30-plus delinquency rate crossed into actual year-over-year improvement.

Rich: The 30-plus delinquency rate at the end of December was 4.53% down 8 basis points from the prior year. As a reminder, the end of the Walmart law-sharing agreement did not have a meaningful impact on delinquency rate.

Rich: On a sequential quarter basis, the charge-off rate was up 45 basis points. The 30-plus delinquency rate was flat compared to the length quarter.

Rich: Domestic card non-interest expense was up 13% compared to the fourth quarter of 2023.

Rich: Operating expense and marketing both increased year over year. Total company marketing expense in the quarter was 1.4 billion dollars up 10% year over year.

Rich: Our choices in domestic card are the biggest driver of total company marketing. We continue to see compelling growth opportunities in our domestic card business.

Rich: Our marketing continues to deliver strong new account growth across the domestic card business.

Rich: Compared to the fourth quarter of 2023, domestic card marketing in the quarter included higher media spend and increased investment in premium benefits and differentiated customer experiences.

like our travel portal, airport lounges, and Capital One shopping.

Rich: Slide 12 shows fourth quarter results in our consumer banking business.

Rich: Auto originations were up 53% from the prior year quarter. A portion of this growth can be attributed to overall market growth, while the remainder is the result of our strong position to pursue resilient growth in the current marketplace.

Rich: As a reminder, our choices to tighten credit and pull back in anticipation of credit score inflation and declining vehicle values were still in effect in the fourth quarter of 2023, resulting in relatively low originations.

These choices also drove out

you know.

Rich: Really, basically, they drove strong and stable credit performance that positioned us to lean into current marketplace opportunities and return to originations growth in 2024.

Rich: With four consecutive quarters of Originations growth in 2024, consumer banking loan balances returned to growth in the fourth quarter.

Rich: Ending loans increased to $0.7 billion, or about 4% year-over-year, and average loans were up 1%.

Rich: On a linked quarter basis, ending loans were up 2% and average loans were up 1%. Compared to the year-ago quarter, ending consumer deposits grew about 7% and average consumer deposits were up about 8%.

Rich: Consumer banking revenue for the quarter was up about 1% year-over-year. Growth in loans and deposits was partially offset by a higher year-over-year average deposit interest rate.

Andrew Young: Non-interest expense was up about 10% compared to the fourth quarter of 2023, driven largely by the unique fourth quarter items Andrew discussed, as well as increased auto originations and continued technology investments.

The auto charge-off rate for the quarter.

Andrew Young: was 2.32%, up 13 basis points year over year. The 30-plus delinquency rate was 5.95%, down 39 basis points year over year.

Andrew Young: Largely as the result of our choice to tighten credit and pull back in 2022, auto charge-offs have been strong and stable on a seasonally adjusted basis.

Thank you.

Andrew Young: Slide 13 shows fourth quarter results for our commercial banking business.

Andrew Young: Compared to the linked quarter, ending loan balances were essentially flat. Average loans were down about 1%. Both ending and average deposits were up about 4% from the linked quarter.

Andrew Young: Fourth quarter revenue was up 7% from the linked quarter and non-interest expense was up by about 5%.

Andrew Young: The commercial banking annualized net charge-off rate for the fourth quarter increased four basis points from the sequential quarter to 0.26 percent.

Andrew Young: The commercial criticized performing loan rate was 6.35% down 131 basis points compared to the linked quarter. The criticized non-performing loan rate

decreased 16 basis points to 1.39 percent.

Andrew Young: In closing, we continued to post strong and steady results in the fourth quarter. We delivered another quarter of top-line growth in domestic card loans, purchase volume, and revenue.

Andrew Young: In the auto business, we posted growth and originations for the fourth consecutive quarter and a return to year-over-year growth in loan balances.

and consumer credit trends remain stable.

Our Full Year Operating Efficiency Ratio Net of Adjustments

was 42.35 percent.

Andrew Young: consistent with our guidance of the low 42s even after incurring a hundred million dollars in accelerated philanthropy contributions.

Andrew Young: and turning to the discover acquisition. The shareholder votes are scheduled for February 18th and we continue to work closely with the Federal Reserve, the OCC and the Department of Justice as our applications continue to work their way through the regulatory approval process.

Andrew Young: We remain well positioned to complete the acquisition early in 2025, subject to regulatory and shareholder approval.

Andrew Young: Pulling way up, the acquisition of Discover is a singular opportunity. It will create a consumer banking and global payments platform with unique capabilities, modern technology, powerful brands, and a franchise of more than 100 million customers.

Andrew Young: It delivers compelling financial results and offers the potential to enhance competition and create significant value for merchants and customers. And now we'll be happy to answer your questions. Jeff.

Thank you, Rich.

Andrew Young: We will now start the Q&A session. Remember, as a courtesy to other investors and analysts who may wish to ask a question, please limit yourself to one question plus a single follow-up. And if you have any follow-up questions after the Q&A session, the investor relations team will be available after the call.

Josh, please start the Q&A.

Andrew Young: Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. One moment for questions.

Speaker Change: And our first question comes from Ryan Nash with Goldman Sachs. He may proceed.

Hey, good afternoon, everyone.

Hey Ryan.

Speaker Change: followed suit, but at a little bit of a slower pace. You've outlined a lot of the reasons, the deferred charge-offs, the press recoveries.

Speaker Change: When you think about credit from here, just broadly, what are you seeing from the consumer? And how are you thinking about loss performance, as well as any other factors that could be impacting losses? And do you think we're on a downward trajectory from here? Thank you, and I have a follow-up.

Thank you, Ryan.

Speaker Change: So, let me start by just talking about the health of the consumer and then maybe I'll turn and talk about the credit performance at Capital One.

Speaker Change: So the U.S. consumer continues to, you know, to be a source of strength in the overall economy.

Speaker Change: The labor market remains strong, and we saw signs of softening in the first half of 2024. But in the second half of the year, the unemployment rate has been stable, and job creation data has shown renewed strength.

Speaker Change: Incomes are growing steadily in real terms as inflation, you know, settles out a bit. Consumer debt servicing burdens are stable near pre-pandemic levels.

Consumers have higher bank account balances than before the pandemic.

Speaker Change: Now, of course, the circumstances of individual consumers and households are highly variable, and so, you know, talking in averages doesn't always, you know, fully...

Speaker Change: cover what's going on. We do see some pockets, as I've been saying for for some time now, we do see some pockets of pressure related to the cumulative effects of inflation and elevated interest rates.

Speaker Change: among consumers whose incomes have not kept up with inflation or who have high debt servicing burdens.

Speaker Change: Of course, there's still some inflation pressure and longer-term interest rates strikingly have increased since the Fed started lowering rates in September.

So,

Speaker Change: You know, we do see a bit of a disconnect between the average consumer and the folks, you know, closer to the margin.

Speaker Change: And you can see that, for example, in payment rates in our card business. On the one hand, card payment rates remain, on average, meaningfully above pre-pandemic levels. And this is true overall and within each of our major customer segments.

Speaker Change: On the other hand, the proportion of customers making just the minimum payment is also running somewhat above pre-pandemic levels, which is consistent with our current delinquencies running above pre-pandemic levels.

Speaker Change: Now, I should add that we're seeing this minimum payment effect across the credit spectrum. I'm not making a point here about the low end of the market or even about subprime. In fact, if anything, the lower end appears to be doing relatively better at the moment.

Speaker Change: So, you know, just pulling up, I believe we're almost certainly still seeing some pandemic-related effect like delayed charge-offs from the period of unprecedented stimulus and forbearance in 2020 and 2021 and 2022.

Speaker Change: This effect is impossible to isolate, but we can infer it from our own credit trends and industry credit trends over the past several years. But sort of pulling up on the consumer, I think consumers are in good shape compared to most historical benchmarks.

Speaker Change: You know, there are, as we've been saying for some time, there are pockets of pressure.

That I have to

Speaker Change: you know, work their way through before levels can get down, you know, credit loss levels can get down to sort of pre-pandemic levels. But I think the consumer story is very consistent with what I've been saying for a number of quarters, and it is very solid.

So...

Speaker Change: Let me turn to Capital One credit. Over the course of 2024, our card delinquencies have moved in line with normal seasonality, with losses following about a quarter behind.

Speaker Change: As a reminder, earlier this year we flagged that changes in the level and timing of tax refunds due to tax law changes were probably changing seasonal credit patterns in our card business.

Speaker Change: We derived new seasonality benchmarks for car delinquencies based on post-pandemic performance.

Speaker Change: And those benchmarks have less amplitude in both directions than in the past.

Speaker Change: You know, as we now look at the whole year, this experience is very confirmatory and we very much sort of believe that we've got the benchmark right.

Speaker Change: You know, when we first saw delinquencies settling out, it is clear that, you know, really for the whole year now, we've been calling stabilization. We've not been declaring a peak or declaring that credit would improve from here, but we can now look at the whole year.

Speaker Change: and see a really nice stabilization. In the fourth quarter, and again you saw this in the month we just reported,

We saw our delinquencies improve on a seasonally adjusted basis.

in the quarter for the first time since normalization began.

Speaker Change: and, you know, they ended the year slightly lower on a year-over-year basis. So that's certainly an encouraging sign.

Speaker Change: You know, looking ahead, we're not, you know, giving guidance on future credit, but over a time there are a number of forces that play out.

Speaker Change: Our recoveries inventory will continue to rebuild, and that should be a gradual tailwind to our losses over time, all else equal.

Speaker Change: Still high interest rates will probably remain a source of pressure for some consumers, especially those with higher debt servicing burdens.

Speaker Change: And there still is, we believe, the phenomenon of delayed charge-offs.

Speaker Change: And, of course, this effect is hard to measure and certainly hard to forecast, but over time it should play through, but, you know, how long it plays out, that's just something, you know, that is just a matter of speculation.

Speaker Change: I think we will eventually get back to the place where traditional labor market indicators are the main drivers of change in consumer credit, but that will still take some time.

Speaker Change: And finally, as we move into the new year, we'll keep an eye on the level and timing of tax refunds, since we know these can materially affect seasonal movements in card credits.

Thank you.

Boo!

Speaker Change: Thanks for the call. If I can throw in one high-level follow-up. So, Rich, efficiency improvement has been a hallmark of Capital One for, you know, the last seven or eight years X, a small period during COVID.

Speaker Change: You know, you recently talked about investments you wanted to make in the network, you know, once the deal hopefully closes at some point in the first quarter.

Speaker Change: I guess the question is, do you expect to continue to be on an efficiency journey, fully recognizing that the cost saves obviously make it easier, but just curious how you're thinking about efficiency for the consolidated company over the medium term, fully recognizing that there's going to be a lot of noise in the results.

Thank you.

Speaker Change: You know, we look forward to, you know, the completion of our deal and actually really getting inside the financials and the performance and all the details of the business. The business is at this rather remarkable company, Discover.

But, as we've talked about, you know, when we look

Still from the outside

Speaker Change: We see just a great opportunity there and of course, you know, we have said there are, you know, three areas that are going to need

Speaker Change: in, you know, continued investment. When we think about virtually anything that, you know, all the strategic upside of this Discover deal, it's sort of all roads lead through.

three areas, kind of obvious areas, of continued investment.

Speaker Change: And the first, of course, is compliance and risk management. And, you know, DISCOVER has really been leaning into that. And we, of course, are doing everything we can to prepare to continue to lean into that. And we'll do whatever it takes on that front. Obviously, that's an investment.

Speaker Change: The second is, you know, is network acceptance. We've talked about how struck we are and how struck we were to, you know, find out and confirm just how good

The acceptance is in the United States for DISCOVER.

Speaker Change: You can see, in fact, they've been putting some ads on TV, sort of touting that, and it's a very good story.

Speaker Change: And internationally, they've been investing there and focusing on where their customers

travel.

Speaker Change: and they've made a lot of progress there. When we look...

at...

Speaker Change: our customer base at Capital One and where we would love to be over time in terms of being in a position to add more and more volume onto the Discover network. We think an incredibly important objective is to increase the number of customers

the depth and breadth of acceptance.

Speaker Change: internationally, sloping the work, of course, working backwards from where our customers and discoverers.

Speaker Change: travel so that you know that's going to be a multi-year thing that that you know

Speaker Change: That's a very important strategic imperative, I think, for us. And then the third one will be building the network brand. We plan to keep the name Discover for the network. We think it's a great brand.

Speaker Change: We're really happy with the underlying reality of where acceptance is.

Speaker Change: We know there are challenges in terms of consumer perception relative to those realities, and we know also we need to, in fact, build the international reality and then the brand perception that follows that. So, those are the three.

strategic

the kind of, you know, obvious and strategic investment areas.

Speaker Change: that we've been identifying really since the start of the deal.

Speaker Change: And back to your question about how do we think that fits in relative to efficiency ratio.

Speaker Change: We, of course, on the Capital One side, have had a decade-long journey of continuing to improve operating efficiency ratio, and it's striking that that improvement

Speaker Change: has come even as we have continued to really ramp up investment in technology. Now the way that paradox works is the technology is we're also investing more in technology and at the same time

Speaker Change: getting all the benefits on the efficiency side, both in terms of growth and in terms of cost, that come from such an investment in technology. So the engine that drives operating efficiency ratio strategically

Speaker Change: will continue at Capital One, and it should continue with the combined institution as well. Now, then you ask, will the big three investment areas that we talk about, what will that do to operating?

Speaker Change: You know, I think that, you know, we always at Capital One have strategic imperatives that we're investing in. I think the overall picture of how

Capital One's Tech Journey.

Speaker Change: One of the important ways investors get paid is through operating efficiency improvement. I think that story, to me, stays strategically intact, even as we have new investment areas.

Speaker Change: Because we'll also have new areas to capture synergy and growth opportunities and things that really wouldn't have been possible for either of our companies alone.

Speaker Change: Thanks for the question. Operating efficiency is a really important way that we create values for investors, and in the long run we continue to really see increased opportunities there.

Next question, please.

Thank you.

Speaker Change: Our next question comes from Terry Ma with Barclays. He may proceed.

Terry MA: Hi, thank you. Good evening. I want to follow up on credit first. It seems the trend that we've seen for the second derivative suggests there's room for that to continue to go lower. Is there some sort of framework to think about how much lower DQs can trend going forward? And is there anything in the near term that can cause the second derivative to inflect higher again? And I have a follow-up.

Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

Terry MA: So, Terry, yes, thank you for the question. Obviously, well, you know, since the founding of the company we've always had our microscopes out looking at delinquencies because they're the single best.

Terry MA: predictor of credit of all the metrics. There are many metrics we watch but that certainly is at the top of the list.

Terry MA: And it is, I think, a really important, you know, it's certainly a gratifying milestone to where finally...

Terry MA: The second derivative, you know, crossed the horizontal axis effectively and, you know, we certainly note that milestone.

Terry MA: The first thing I would say about, as we all get our microscopes out,

to just talk about seasonality itself.

Terry MA: and you know we don't we don't publish a seasonality curve per se because there's no precise benchmark with which to do it but we certainly like to guide our investors about how we think about that.

Terry MA: Seasonality for Capital One has tended to have more amplitude up and down over the course of a year than most other card players. And one might ask, why is that? You know, we...

Terry MA: We believe that the biggest driver of seasonality, while there are several, the biggest driver of seasonality is tax refunds.

Terry MA: And since we have a larger subprime book than most other players who really don't do subprime, those customers do tend to have higher seasonality in their...

Terry MA: in their credit performance than folks higher up market. So I think that's why Capital One has.

Terry MA: a greater seasonality effect and for these customers in particular tax refunds certainly in terms of the monthly flow of cash.

Terry MA: can end up creating something very nice that comes seasonally and some of that makes its way into payments.

Now the...

changes in the

Terry MA: Tax withholding rules a few years ago led to fewer tax refunds and lower average refund payments.

Terry MA: and the IRS was also paying certain refunds later than before.

Terry MA: So, you know, that created a lot of noise, as I've been saying on recent calls, you'd think it would be easy to reestablish a seasonality curve, but while credit was normalizing so dramatically, it was sometimes swamping the seasonality effect.

Terry MA: kind of summarize what we saw in 2024. 2024 settled out with fewer refunds paid than before the pandemic and about 25% lower total refund volume in real terms.

Terry MA: Delinquencies moved with our new post-pandemic seasonality benchmarks which have similar timing but if I were to summarize at what

Terry MA: this new curve versus the one we've had for many years, it appears to have about 35 to 40% less amplitude in both directions than in the past.

Thank you.

Terry MA: By the way Just a note for a second on auto all of this also happens in auto seasonality But in in an even faster and more concentrated way We tend to see auto delinquencies at their seasonal low in q1 and losses in q2 and this year that seasonal improvement was delayed a bit so that's

Terry MA: the backdrop for now, you know, talking about the credit performance that we see.

Terry MA: You know, if you start, Terry, with the sort of foundation that the consumer is in very good shape, the economy is in quite good shape overall.

Terry MA: You know, one would certainly feel there's sort of a gravitational pull toward, you know, even better credit in the business that is helped by the math associated with recoveries.

Terry MA: that our recovery's rate has been very constant, but the recovery inventory that we have had to collect on

Terry MA: got very small during the pandemic and that has been replenishing, and so there's sort of a good guy gradually coming as recoveries fully restore.

Terry MA: And then that really gets us to whatever effects there are of inflation, whatever effects there are on the consumers on the tails that are not in as good shape as sort of the averages that we all look at.

Terry MA: And what we see there is probably the way, actually, that the delayed charge-offs...

Terry MA: are actually playing out. They're probably playing out exactly through these consumers on the tail that, you know, are not, they're still struggling at the margin.

Terry MA: So, the credit metrics are looking great. We have more solid benchmarks, Terry. The consumer is in a great place, but I think the, you know, the sort of bigger picture phenomenon of delayed charge-offs that, you know, still has...

you know, intuitively, you know, to play out.

Terry MA: and sort of these effects going on at the tail puts us in a position not to be declaring that things are headed down from here but it's certainly you know positive indicators that we see at the margin.

Speaker Change: Got it. That's helpful. Maybe just to talk about the auto business. You called out the loan book return to growth this quarter. Should we expect you to lean into that and see loan growth accelerate? And maybe can you just talk about the overall profitability of the loans you're booking today versus what you've seen historically? Thank you.

Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

Thank you. Thank you.

So...

We...

Thank you.

We feel very good about the auto business.

Speaker Change: You know, the credit performance is really striking, and in fact, let's just savor something that is, I think, an outlier relative to the industry.

Our auto delinquencies have remained consistently below pre-pandemic levels.

Speaker Change: and they've been lower on a year-over-year basis for the past two quarters.

You know, so the auto business is...

Speaker Change: sort of intervened in the business and trimmed credit around the edges. It might have been even more dramatic than the term around the edges, what we did in the auto business over the last

Speaker Change: You know over the last few years when we were worried about

Speaker Change: margin pressures in the business as prices were not being sort of passed the inflation pressures were not being passed through so there were margin pressures

and each of those have sort of

Speaker Change: have been resolving themselves. You asked about margins. The margins are sort of much more sort of normal in the business right now. The great inflation on credit scores is resolving itself as credit normalizes.

Speaker Change: Vehicle values, you know, we'll have to you know, continue to keep an eye on on those but pulling way up

Speaker Change: on the shoulders of a lot of the changes that we have made and the technology that we have massively invested in this business, in underwriting and in originations and in our.

You know, I think we...

Speaker Change: You know, all the trends that we see on margins, credit, and competition, we feel good about, and that lines up to a story of leaning in on the auto business.

Next question, please.

Thank you.

Speaker Change: Our next question comes from Rick Shane with JP Morgan. You may proceed.

Rick Shane: Thanks for taking my question. Hey, Rich, you did a great job laying out the factors that have caused the historical relationship between labor and credit to weaken. And one of the factors you mentioned was the impact of rates, and that makes sense. Credit cards are, you know, one of the two largest classes of floating rate consumer debt.

Rick Shane: As we think about reversion to historical norms, should we expect charge-off rates to be...

Rick Shane: structurally higher as long as interest rates are structurally higher or is it possible to get back to historic loss rates in a high interest rate environment?

You know, it's a great question. It's interesting how.

Rick Shane: You know, all of us, you know, some of us were were around doing similar things back when in

Speaker Change: Well, Capital One, we hadn't even come up with the idea for Capital One back when inflation was really raging the last time around. So I think we would be...

Speaker Change: speculating there but I but I think Rick if we if we pull up and think about you know interest rates and their impact

You know, we think about...

How

Speaker Change: How, you know, higher rates as a thing affect consumer credit. So, debt servicing burdens for consumers.

Speaker Change: of course can get affected. The higher rates as they work their way through consumer products gradually but not immediately sort of make their way into higher debt burdens.

Speaker Change: So, you know, you have mortgages that tend to have fixed rates, auto loans have fixed rates. So you have time delays before.

Speaker Change: interest rates make their way to more pressure on consumers, but still that effect obviously can continue. Most credit cards have variable APRs, so rising interest rates have...

Speaker Change: You know, tended to lead to somewhat higher minimum payments for consumers overall. But if we pull up, I think that if wages...

Speaker Change: You know, if things stabilize and wages tend to keep up...

Speaker Change: with inflation. I would think on the credit card side there's...

It is plausible that

Speaker Change: Charge-off rates could be very consistent with what they've been in in in a lower ambient rate environment I think it gets very challenging when they're suddenly in motion

up.

Speaker Change: But if they stabilize, I'm just speculating here, at a moderate level that's higher than they were for the last couple of decades.

Speaker Change: I think as wages sort of stabilize to make real incomes move the way they should, I would think

Speaker Change: that credit numbers could be very consistent with historical patterns. I think the biggest driver of why they're not right now, if I were to speculate, probably number one on my list.

Speaker Change: is really the just unprecedented number of years of which charge-offs

with all the the government stimulus and the forbearance.

that so many consumers

Speaker Change: got a lifeline that those for whom that lifeline was a little more temporary in its benefit.

Speaker Change: Some of those issues are still resolving themselves in terms of current charge-offs. It's always an interesting thing to just take a look at the area under the curve in credit losses for

Speaker Change: You know, if we look back over the last number of years and look at where credit losses would typically have been versus where they were, and you look at the area under the curve and ask yourself, well, what if all of that were delayed charge-offs?

Speaker Change: You know, you still have a majority of that area under the curve that would still have to play out in terms of delayed charge-offs. Now, we don't believe...

Speaker Change: that anything close to all of the area under the curve would need to come on the other side. But I think if, you know, a one-sentence soundbite, to me...

Speaker Change: of why, in such a benign environment, credit losses in businesses like credit cards are running higher than pre-pandemic. It is the delayed charge-off effect.

Speaker Change: and you know time should be our friend there that should resolve itself over time and there are a lot of positive factors behind that that that are putting

Speaker Change: sort of good gravitational pull in the right direction in this industry.

Thank you very much, Rich.

Next question, please.

Thank you.

Speaker Change: Our next question comes from John Pancari with Evercore ISI. You may proceed.

Good evening.

Speaker Change: Just on the efficiency side, just a follow-up to Ryan's line of questioning. I know you've guided to an operating efficiency ratio in the low 42% range for 2024. You know, does this 42% range remain the case as you look at 2025 or do you see a...

change to the upside or the downside off of this?

level. Thanks.

So...

You know, we...

Speaker Change: I think the operating efficiency ratio has really been, you know, hopefully our investors share our excitement that, you know, this 700 basis point improvement that has happened since we began our tech transformation in 2013.

Speaker Change: has, you know, certainly been a great guy. There are multiple things behind that, but I think the driver is...

Speaker Change: The technology transformation and even as we invest a lot, there are also ways to create savings, savings through, you know, reduced vendor costs.

Speaker Change: The really high cost of a lot of legacy technology, the benefits on the cloud, and really the ability to then...

Speaker Change: on the other side of the technology transformation sort of rebuild the company and how it operates.

Speaker Change: on a foundation of modern technology. And so that's a journey that continues and so we see benefits there. I do wanna say though, also, we've had a lot of...

Thank you very much.

Speaker Change: beneficial increase in the ratio in the last couple of years and you know I wouldn't want people to just draw you know take the curve and say wow that thing almost looks like

Speaker Change: It's accelerating down and you know, we don't we don't give guidance in the short term There there are a lot of things that very important Investments we're making in the business. But what I like to do is

Speaker Change: really just point out that when we stand back over a longer time frame and look at the journey of Capital One.

Speaker Change: This has been a journey for which the efficiency was never the objective function. It was one of the many benefits of a tech transformation, but it's very gratifying to see that continue.

Speaker Change: But I think the extrapolation from, you know, any one year to the next is not something that we would recommend. And so, but it's a great long-term story.

Rick Shane: Got it. Okay. Thanks, Richard. Then one a quick second one. I assume this will be a

Pretty quick answer, but would be helpful.

Rick Shane: If there's any, have you made any changes to your expected deal metrics tied to the

Rick Shane: Discover Deal, either the 15% or greater EPS accretion in 27 or the expense efficiencies or the timing of adding the 175 billion in purchase volume to the network. Thanks.

Hello.

Hey Jon, yeah, what I'll say is, two-

Speaker Change: independent public companies. You know, we still are operating separately at this point and there are a number of

Speaker Change: Now in legal day one, and so I'm not going to specifically

Speaker Change: comment on how any one of those, you know, variables or metrics are changing since the the deal model. What I will say is, you know, we considered a wide range of outcomes across

Speaker Change: each of the line items, and we continue to be comfortable with the estimates that we included in the deal model. We feel very good, both strategically and financially, about the deal today, as we did nearly a year ago when we announced it. And so, as we get to legal day one and, you know, put the marks on the balance sheet, we'll provide updates on the relevant metrics at that point.

Thank you.

Speaker Change: Our next question comes from Mihir Bhatia with Bank of America. You may proceed.

Good afternoon, and thank you for taking my questions.

Mihir Bhatia: I wanted to start first by just talking about Nim a little bit. You called out the Walmart impact this quarter. Any other call-outs for the quarter?

Mihir Bhatia: I just feel banks have been quite disciplined about lowering saving account interest rates as the Fed has reduced rates. Do you think that continues or are you starting to see some demand for deposits or deposit competition ramping as we start contemplating loan growth here in 2025?

Mihir Bhatia: I guess just related to that, if you could just talk about some of the puts and takes on NIM in 2025, that'd be great. Thank you.

Sure, Mihir. Well, let me...

Mihir Bhatia: start with, you know, just reminding everyone that the one thing for sure we know is that in the first quarter we have two fewer days, and so that will drive a 15 basis point roughly decrease in NIM, but if I kind of pull up and think beyond day count and look at a longer term

Mihir Bhatia: the longer term, a lot of the same forces that I've been describing for

Mihir Bhatia: The last number of quarters as potential headwinds and tailwinds still exist today.

Mihir Bhatia: So, you know, if you think about the headwinds, first of all, we're very modestly asset-sensitive. And so you'd see a small decrease in them if rates continue to decrease, and you saw

Mihir Bhatia: a little bit of that effect here in this quarter. The other one you bring up, deposit beta, of course, in our rate risk.

Mihir Bhatia: Lower or slower on the way down, you know, we would be a little bit more

would be a good guy if that persists.

Mihir Bhatia: but then probably the single biggest factor and we've seen this play out over the last number of quarters is the card growth and card becoming a bigger percentage of our balance sheet all else equal is a pretty meaningful tailwind to NIM so those are really the forces at play that I would highlight for you

Thank you very much.

Speaker Change: You've been doing 150 million in my last few quarters. Your CET1 is up to 13.5.

Speaker Change: You understand with the deal, you have to get approval, right, for any capital actions, but...

The question is...

Speaker Change: Two-part question then. A, is that approval keeping you a little conservative right now? And two, once the deal is approved, should we assume you'll be pretty aggressive in getting that down, or would it probably fair to assume it stays elevated for a little bit, even post-deal, as you get through the integration?

Speaker Change: I'll wrap my answer to both of those questions into one for you.

Speaker Change: Meagher, you know, first of all, just, you know, go without saying, but I will say it, which is we clearly recognize that over the longer term, capital return is

key component of shareholder value creation and you've seen

In prior periods, we've executed substantial share repurchases.

Speaker Change: But in the near term, our pending deal is certainly influencing our approach to capital in a few ways. As you said, we're still under regulatory pre-approval rules for each of our capital actions.

Speaker Change: And second, we will need to run our own bottoms-up analyses as a combined company to just assess our view.

Speaker Change: of the combined capital need and we continue to be two separate companies and therefore you know don't have the ability to do that analysis until after close.

Speaker Change: And then third, we will need the Fed's approval to go back to operating under the SCB framework.

Speaker Change: You know, if I pull up from there and put all of those together, I think it's likely we're going to stay at a slower repurchase pace.

Speaker Change: until we resolve these factors, but after that, we'll have more flexibility.

Next question, please.

Speaker Change: Thank you. Good evening, Rich and Andrew. It was good to hear all the references to the Capital One arena around the inauguration. I wanted to ask about your ability to better compete against the big banks in debit, assuming the Discover transaction closes, as you expect.

Speaker Change: We know debit rewards for Visa MasterCard issuers essentially went away after the forced reduction and interchange under Dodd-Frank, but would reintroducing debit rewards be something that you'd consider given the greater flexibility that owning the Discover Network will afford you?

Hey, Bill.

Thank you. Bye.

Obviously, it really...

Key part of the deal is our excitement about

Speaker Change: getting the network and being able to add such a key dimension in vertically integrating our business. And, you know, we talk so much about credit cards all the time. The debit business is a really important one. And on little cat feet, Capital One has really been investing in our national banking business. So I.

Speaker Change: And by the way, having our own network will be valuable there and we'll be able to enjoy the vertically integrated economics.

Speaker Change: of Owning a Network and, you know, and the scale that comes, of course, from pulling Discover and a bunch of Capital One's volume together.

Now,

Speaker Change: I just want to pull back and just talk a little bit about Capital Ones.

Speaker Change: consumer banking strategy and therefore you know the end debit is of course right.

Speaker Change: in the transaction business right at the heart of that. If you pull way up and think about consumer banking, way back to when banks began, you had banks with branches on every corner.

We, of course, also, through our acquisitions, have acquired several

Speaker Change: You know, banks with branches on every corner, and we also acquired the nation's largest direct bank. And I announced at the time of that acquisition, this is a great financial trade, but it is also a strategic game-changer for Capital One. That was back, you know, like 12 years ago.

So, since then, we have been

very steadily.

Speaker Change: systematically, relentlessly, and patiently, if I could put so many adjectives on adverbs on that, pursuing a business model that actually doesn't really exist right now because we have those two endpoints.

Speaker Change: But what we're really trying to do is build, in a sense, the bank of the future.

Speaker Change: And we believe that Bank of the Future is not just a direct bank. It's also not a bank with a branch on every corner.

It is a bank with...

Thin Physical Distribution

Speaker Change: For us, we've, you know, got branches, but then also in major metropolitan areas, we have put in cafes that are really basically

Speaker Change: you know, less about coffee, but really more about being sort of a hybrid of a branch and a showroom for Capital One and a place people can go and understand Capital One's there to help them and get a sense for really what this company is about and how it may be able to help them.

live their life more effectively.

Speaker Change: So, this strategy has been about, you know, if we work backwards from what we believe is the bank of the future, from a distribution point of view, that's thin physical distribution and highlighted by these café showrooms.

Speaker Change: is digital capabilities that enable something that's a very, very difficult thing to do, which is to take.

Speaker Change: you know just about everything that can be done in a branch.

Speaker Change: and make it available digitally. Now, there's some things, like safe deposit boxes. We haven't figured out how to create a digital safe deposit box for your valuables. And there are a few things that just you can't get there on a digital basis.

Speaker Change: But as we've looked at this, we said just pretty much, you know, virtually all the activities.

that

people go to branches for

Speaker Change: We want to be able to deliver to them through our thin physical distribution plus massive full-service digital capability.

and that's what we've been building over these years.

Speaker Change: you know, generate business. We need great products and, you know, we've been the only major bank out there with no fees, no minimums, and even a recent move of no overdraft fees.

and those better deals come from having

Speaker Change: built the, in a sense, superior economics that come from this sort of physical distribution light model.

Now, then...

Speaker Change: You asked the question, so what will be our debit card strategy? You know, we haven't completed the deal. We haven't fully gone in on the other side of exactly seeing, you know, how things are working on the Discover side.

Speaker Change: But we are very pleased with the results that we're having with our current strategy, including our current debit card strategy. And we are...

Speaker Change: investing heavily to continue to grow that business. You know, you look at the significant increase in marketing over the years. One of the drivers of this is that Capital One is building a national bank

organically.

Speaker Change: without a lot of physical distribution and to get there it takes a lot of marketing.

Speaker Change: I think the best way to think about it is DISCOVER gives a shot in the arm and a boost to a strategy we've been pursuing for more than a decade and the best way to think about it I think is picture just more of the same from Capital One with a little bit of an accelerator.

I appreciate all the details, Rich. Thank you.

Speaker Change: Our next question comes from Moshi Ornbuck with TD Cowan. You may proceed.

Moshi Ornbuck: Great, thanks. Rich, you talked about, you know, better growth in auto and CARD, talked about the high-end CARD. Talk about the non-prime businesses in both CARD and auto, given the improved credit, how you're thinking about growth in those businesses and in the coming quarters.

Moshi Ornbuck: Moshe, the word that I would use at the lower and the sort of lower end of the business, obviously there are parts of the market below, you know, below where we play, but if we sort of loosely call it at the

Moshe Ornbuck: lower end of the non-prime or sub-prime part of the marketplace, the word that I would use to describe it is stability.

Moshe Ornbuck: and stability of, let's look at the key aspects of that.

Moshe Ornbuck: On the consumer credit side, actually the first part of our business to normalize, really to settle out with respect to credit, was the lower end of the market. That's been very stable.

The

Moshe Ornbuck: Our originations in that segment and really pretty much across our business, the originations are coming in on top of each other for years, so that has a stability.

Moshe Ornbuck: as well. Competitively, it's a very competitive part of the business that has many, in addition to regular card players, many non-traditional players as well, so the competitive intensity is high.

Moshe Ornbuck: You know, we watch it very carefully. And so with the stability of performance and the strength of the consumer.

Moshe Ornbuck: We, in both the card and the auto side of the business, continue to lean in.

Moshe Ornbuck: in a very similar way that we have, well for CARD it's just been very consistent for years. With AUTO we kind of pulled back quite a bit in that part of the business and we're leaning in as we often have done historically. So we're leaning into both of them and we're

Moshe Ornbuck: really pleased with the stability and strength of the metrics that underlie those businesses.

Got it. Thanks. And maybe just as a follow-up.

Moshe Ornbuck: When you think about reserve levels, given that, you know, you are seeing or likely to see some improvement in credit losses, kind of on a...

Moshe Ornbuck: core basis or like for like, and, you know, it sounds like the growth is probably, you know, growth that you have in the balance sheet is probably going to come in your lower loss categories, not the higher ones. You know, thoughts about the reserve level as we move forward?

Moshe Ornbuck: Sure, Moshe, so what's going to happen in future quarters starts with what happened this quarter, so I just want to reiterate a couple of the the drivers of this quarter as a jumping-off.

Moshe Ornbuck: point, as I said in the prepared remarks, your coverage was down 33%.

Moshe Ornbuck: basis points by two things. The bigger effect being that we typically have seasonally higher balance balances in the fourth quarter that require very low levels of coverage and that denominator effect from those balances put downward pressure on coverage.

Moshe Ornbuck: The other effect was that, you know, the allowance we needed for what I'll call non-seasonal growth was offset by favorable

Moshe Ornbuck: dollars of allowance balance to the numerator, but the nonseasonal growth impacted the denominator. And so, you know, in the first quarter, I just wanted to provide that.

Moshe Ornbuck: backdrop to say the seasonal balances will run off and so there will be a corresponding upward pressure on coverage all else equal.

Moshe Ornbuck: from that effect, but beyond that, it's really going to come down to growth and our loss forecast and loss forecast specifically for the coverage. And to the extent that loss forecast improves, you know, changes in coverage could be modest in the near term as we just reflect.

Moshe Ornbuck: More certain and so, you know, while the direction of travel would be down the pace and timing is going to depend on a variety of factors one of which will include the mix of businesses as you say, but you know when it's

Moshe Ornbuck: denominated to the whole portfolio the relative growth of different forecasted loss you know

Moshe Ornbuck: portions of the of the book aren't going to have material impact to coverage just given that the New Originations as a percentage of the overall book in any given quarter is relatively small.

Moshe Ornbuck: and then the only thing I also want to remind you of is I know you know our investors look at at history as a potential guide for

Moshe Ornbuck: levels of coverage, and I just want to remind you that, you know, we called out the roughly 50 basis points of impact to coverage from the determination of the loss-sharing agreement with with Walmart. So that created a, you know, a step function change in coverage relative to our prior history as well.

Next question, please.

Speaker Change: Our next question comes from Don Pandetti with Wells Fargo. You may proceed.

Don Pandetti: Yes, Rich, your credit card purchase volume growth like account basis has picked up. I'm just trying to get a sense if this is a Q4 blip or are you thinking that the consumer is actually more confident here after the election? Are you seeing that same improvement in consumer and small business as well?

Well, we have, if we think about our purchase volume,

Don Pandetti: Our growth and overall purchase volume continues to be driven by growth in our branded card customer base, and the branded card includes both our consumer and our small business.

Certainly, a thing powering it has been strength and origination.

Don Pandetti: and some strength and originations at the higher end of the market.

Don Pandetti: But the other way to think about your question is at a customer level.

Don Pandetti: what, you know, on a per-customer basis, what's been happening to spend growth. And even as our spend metrics were growing overall,

Don Pandetti: The spend growth per customer in our consumer business had been largely flat through 2023 and really the first half of 2024.

Don Pandetti: And then they started to pick up midway through last year and they grew further in Q4.

Don Pandetti: And I don't have in front of me the small business card numbers, they're embedded in the numbers that I gave you.

Don Pandetti: So, the fact that we have seen spend per customer finally pick up here

Don Pandetti: is striking, whether it will continue and exactly what's driving it is hard to say, but I did want to point out that positive trajectory as the year finished off.

Rick Shane: Got it. Andrew, you touched on this, but you're 24 vintage. Can you talk a little bit about how you're feeling, how you're seeing that shape up in terms of credit performance? I've seen some industry data that shows delinquencies are still pretty high for 24.

Yeah, Don, why don't I take that?

Rick Shane: So, recent originations in our card business, we continue to see stability in the performance of our originations. It's really striking here, we've been calling this out consistently over the past few years.

Rick Shane: Vintage over vintage, we're seeing mostly stable risk levels over time.

Rick Shane: and also striking is our overall front book of new origination, Vintages.

Rick Shane: continues to perform in line with pre-pandemic vintages. Now when you compare with pre-pandemic vintages you can't look at 2019 because 2019 very quickly got sort of corrupted by the pandemic. So we're looking at 2017 and 2018 when we make these comparisons.

But, so...

Speaker Change: From a Capital One point of view, I think this is

Speaker Change: this at this stability and origination performance and you know quarter over quarter and the consistency with pre-pandemic is

The result of our intervention.

Speaker Change: and that has led to a sustained stability on the the part of Capital One and some of our most recent vintages. Now again we're still looking you got to look like you know

Speaker Change: Six months in the rearview mirror to see much, but we continue to see

Speaker Change: Some very positive results there. We also have looked at industry data that shows some gapping out in vintages over the last couple of years. So I think the industry effect.

is not...

probably

Speaker Change: consistent with what we have described and if I were to you know explain why because I think they're you know very capable companies doing this.

Speaker Change: I'm not sure that most of the industry adjusted for inflated credit scores, and we intervened on our models with a belief that...

Speaker Change: You know, the university was suddenly giving out A's that should be B's, basically.

Speaker Change: And so we intervened and then kept validating along the way. But for a while, we didn't have validation, we just intervened because we believed it was the right thing to do. So I think what has been seen, if you look at just overall industry originations, is, as you say, some gapping out.

and I think that would be the biggest driver.

Next question please.

Speaker Change: Our next question comes from Sanjay Sikrani with KBW. You may proceed.

Sanjay Sikrani: Thank you. I guess, Rich, just one more on the deal. Given the timeline that you've outlined early this year, is it fair to assume like everything's going pretty smoothly in terms of the regulatory approval process and there hasn't been any surprises? I'm also wondering sort of where you guys are in terms of the integration efforts and how much work has been done there.

Okay.

Sanjay Sikrani: Yeah, so no, the approval process continues to move forward. We've made substantial process in the recent months.

Sanjay Sikrani: We remain actively engaged with the Fed and the OCC about our merger applications.

Sanjay Sikrani: and it is the Fed and the OCC who ultimately decide on our merger application.

Sanjay Sikrani: Late last year, we received approval from the Delaware State Bank Commissioner, which we needed because Discover is a.

a state-chartered bank.

and I'm going to start with the first one.

Sanjay Sikrani: We, of course, had the, you know, the big public hearing in July.

And that went very well, we feel.

Sanjay Sikrani: Earlier this month, of course, we finalized a joint proxy statement with the SEC setting up the February 18th shareholder vote, so that was good.

Sanjay Sikrani: progress finally there. We are also engaged with the Justice Department as they play a key role in advising the Fed and the OCC on the competitive aspects of the deal.

Sanjay Sikrani: And we continue to believe that this transaction is both pro-competitive and pro-consumer, bringing our best-in-class products and services to a broader set of consumers and small businesses.

Sanjay Sikrani: and really enhancing opportunities and benefits for merchants as well. So, pulling way up, it's certainly, you know, the deal process is a, it's a long labor, but we remain well positioned to get approval of the deal early this year.

Sanjay Sikrani: And, you know, I'm really proud of the work everyone is doing here and we look forward to, you know, getting this over the goal line.

Sanjay Sikrani: Okay, just to follow up on a question Ryan asked some time ago on sort of when you put the companies together and the efficiencies

Sanjay Sikrani: and sort of the investments that need to be made. I guess when you put the two companies together, the efficiency ratio actually goes down.

and obviously there's a lot of synergies.

Sanjay Sikrani: both on revenues and expenses. Do you think those are sufficient enough to sort of accomplish, I'm just trying the question again, do you think those are sufficient enough to make all of the investments that you sort of outlined or do you think that there's others that you might have to make as you, you know, peel the onion a little bit when you have the company?

Sanjay Sikrani: So, you know, I don't think we're in a position to.

Sanjay Sikrani: It's not just because we, you know, want to be coy about it. We're not in a different place than we were at the time we announced the deal.

Sanjay Sikrani: You know we should point out that we are working really hard preparing for integration, but we are still separate companies

Sanjay Sikrani: and Discover is working incredibly hard and working on their compliance and I know they're they're doing preparations for integration as well and we certainly are we're not getting an inside view of their numbers, their performance, their business model so you know we're mostly

Sanjay Sikrani: sort of where we were at the outset, but if we pull up, to your point,

Sanjay Sikrani: So, Discover operates with a significantly lower operating efficiency ratio than Capital One. That's certainly a good thing for the combined company.

I think it is also the case that

Sanjay Sikrani: The, you know, I think Discover has had a heritage of

probably less investment in certain areas than Capital One.

Sanjay Sikrani: And in a few cases, they're sort of making up for lost time there, but I think, you know...

Sanjay Sikrani: having not seen on the other side we assume that there's some areas that you know we will and we've assumed this from the beginning we're going to need to step up the investments in obviously on the risk management side there's a lot of investment to be done whether it is how

Sanjay Sikrani: What ultimately needs to be done compares with what they're investing and all of that, you know remains to be seen We obviously had assumptions in our deal model about leaning in on that but what we get

Sanjay Sikrani: So there's going to be a lot of effects that are all.

Sanjay Sikrani: You know pretty significant that just go in different directions a company with an amazing efficiency ratio a company That's probably under invested in a number of areas that relative to capital one and we would shore up some of those investments

Sanjay Sikrani: We also get a lot of synergy that comes from bringing, you know, overlapping businesses together. That's a very strong effect.

Sanjay Sikrani: And then these three, the investment areas, the three that we're pointing out.

We are talking about

Sanjay Sikrani: investing in those at a level that's a lot different than what DISCOVER has done traditionally. Obviously, the risk management one, we've all talked about that, and they're leaning in hard now. On international acceptance, they certainly...

Sanjay Sikrani: Again, I'm amazed with their not that great scale, what they've done, but we would expect to invest at a higher level than they have there. And in terms of the network brand, relative to – I wanted to make a comment about the network brand and some of this other investment.

Sanjay Sikrani: It is, we have sloped, we have taken our card business and sloped.

The business that we think most

naturally.

Sanjay Sikrani: and easily can go to the Discover Network and it involves, you know, folks that aren't big international travelers, for example.

the longer-term opportunity of being able to move more business.

Sanjay Sikrani: than what we put into our deal model. And again, in doing that, we, you know, we sloped, we took our whole customer base and imagined sort of sloping it in terms of.

Sanjay Sikrani: of what part of the business fits most naturally within the context of the capabilities and the brand of Discover's network.

Sanjay Sikrani: And that as we want to move more, we're going to need, you know, the bar to be raised relative to acceptance and brand. And that's why...

Sanjay Sikrani: I think, you know, these other investments we're talking about will be multi-year, they'll be over time, and there'll be things that help make the deal pay off even more so in the longer term.

Next question, please.

And our final question goes from

John Hecht with Jeffries, you may proceed.

Good afternoon, guys, and thanks for fitting me in here.

Sanjay Sikrani: First question just you're thinking about the the mix of the overall consumer book I mean, you've got some new cards like the venture one and Quicksilver

Yes, so thank you, John.

So...

We

Sanjay Sikrani: So, let me take Discover just in a minute. So, if you pull way up on Capital One for...

You know a long long time Capital One has been

sort of a full-spectrum player. We have had, for

Sanjay Sikrani: For several decades, we have had a subprime business that is tailor-made for the information-based strategy we have, because it's all about surviving and winning on the credit side of the business. But also in that business, we've also very, very much focused.

Sanjay Sikrani: Relative to others who play in the space to receive exceptionally good deals, it's not just about sort of surviving on the credit side, but really giving great deals, helping people use credit wisely, and in fact, really, I think the deals that we're offering are very, very simple.

Sanjay Sikrani: profoundly better than a lot of the deals that are available in the marketplace and so that business has is a very stable part of what we do at Capital One and you know we continue to lean into that.

Sanjay Sikrani: The probably the most dramatic thing that's been happening in the last decade in Capital One's card business is, as you reference, the quest toward the top of the market, and that is a journey that, you know, as far out as we can see, we will continue to lean into that because there is so much opportunity at the top of the market.

Sanjay Sikrani: Obviously it takes a lot of investment but a key indicator to us that that when we stratify out the segments of our business by spend levels.

Sanjay Sikrani: The part that's growing the fastest consistently year after year at Capital One is the heaviest spenders. And there's just so much upside north of where we are. We will continue to invest in that. Now, if you stand back, just think about our card business.

while our

Sanjay Sikrani: Subprime business has been going along, and we keep leaning into that. There has been a gradual mix shift up market for the company, and even within each segment, within the sort of the subprime book, the sort of the prime book, and certainly the top of the market.

Sanjay Sikrani: There has been a gradual mixed change with a spender-first philosophy that permeates our business. And some of that you can see in just some of the structural changes in the payment rates.

Sanjay Sikrani: at Capital One. So, I believe that what you see and what you have seen for a number of years, for many years, is a good prognosticator of probably the future of legacy Capital One.

would likely go, meaning...

continued leaning in across the spectrum.

But...

Sanjay Sikrani: differentially an awful lot of investment toward the top of the market and and the the most growth opportunity there.

Sanjay Sikrani: Now let me turn to Discover. Discover, interestingly, has taken a very different approach than Capital One. While we have taken a very broad approach playing in all parts of the market, Discover has had a very focused strategy on the prime...

Sanjay Sikrani: that portion of the market, which probably differentially got a little less emphasis, if anything. It's not like we weren't playing there, but if anything, we had a greater emphasis probably north and south.

Sanjay Sikrani: of that part of the business. But, so from a mixed point of view, we certainly, we will be bringing in a

Sanjay Sikrani: a business that's very homogeneous relative to the very heterogeneous business that we have.

Sanjay Sikrani: And then on the other side of all of that, I think that we will, if I were to summarize our strategy, it will be to continue everything we were doing as Capital One, because we're getting a lot of traction in that, and then making very sure.

Sanjay Sikrani: That we don't crush the butterfly of this beautiful business model that Discover has in the prime part of the market but that we

Sanjay Sikrani: go in there and while while yes in you know integrating things like technology and and and some of the risk management processes and a lot of things do everything that we can to make sure that

Sanjay Sikrani: We don't directly, or even unwittingly, sort of crush the really nice butterfly of what they do. And in that way, we hope to bring in a growth business.

Sanjay Sikrani: that Discover has and add it to the very complementary growth businesses that Capital One has.

Sanjay Sikrani: and collectively continue to try to get the best of both worlds, bringing along the way some, you know, better efficiencies and really bringing top technology to all aspects of the business.

Great, very much appreciated. Thanks.

Sanjay Sikrani: Well, thank you, everyone, for joining us on the conference call today, and thank you for your continuing interest in Capital One. Have a great night, everybody. Thanks, everybody.

Music

[music]

Andrew Young: St. John Arfstrom,

Speaker Change: Welcome back to One Minute Shosh Please Subscribe and tap the notification bell

Speaker Change: The New York Times, Richard Fairbank, Andrew Young, and Andrew Young.

[music]

Speaker Change: Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Capital One Q4 2024 earnings call. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question, please press star 1 1 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced.

Speaker Change: To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Jeff Norris, Senior Vice President of Finance. Please go ahead.

Thanks, Josh, and welcome, everyone.

Speaker Change: Just as a reminder, as always, we are webcasting live over the Internet, and to access the call on the Internet, please log on to Capital One's website, CapitalOne.com, and follow the links from there. In addition to the press release and financials, we've included a presentation summarizing our fourth quarter 2024 results.

Speaker Change: With me this evening are Mr. Richard Fairbank, Capital One's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and Mr. Andrew Young, Capital One's Chief Financial Officer. Rich and Andrew are going to walk you through this presentation.

Speaker Change: To access a copy of the presentation and press release, please go to Capital One's website, click on Investors, and click on Financials, and then click on Quarterly Earnings Release.

Please note that this presentation may contain forward-looking statements.

Speaker Change: Information regarding Capital One's financial performance, and any forward-looking statements contained in today's discussion in the materials, speak only as of the particular date or dates indicated in the materials.

Speaker Change: Capital One does not undertake any obligation to update or revise any of this information, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.

Speaker Change: Numerous factors could cause our actual results to differ materially from those described in forward-looking statements.

Speaker Change: And for more information on these factors, please see the section titled Forward-Looking Information in the Earnings Release Presentation and the Risk Factors section in our annual and quarterly reports that are accessible at Capital One's website filed with the SEC.

Now I'll turn the call over to Mr. Young. Andrew?

Andrew Young: Thanks, Jeff, and good afternoon, everyone. I will start on slide three of tonight's presentation.

Andrew Young: In the fourth quarter, Capital One earned $1.1 billion, or $2.67 per diluted common share.

Andrew Young: For the full year, Capital One earned $4.8 billion, or $11.59 per share.

Andrew Young: Included in the results for the fourth quarter were adjusting items related to discover integration costs and a legal reserve bill.

Andrew Young: Net of these adjusting items, fourth quarter earnings per share were three dollars and nine cents.

Full year adjusted earnings per share were $13.96.

Andrew Young: We also had one notable item in the quarter which was 100 million dollars of accelerated philanthropy contributions.

Andrew Young: Pre-provision earnings of $4.1 billion in the fourth quarter were down 13% from the third quarter, driven by higher non-interest expense.

Andrew Young: The linked quarter increase in non-interest expense was driven by increases in both operating expense and marketing spend.

Andrew Young: Revenue in the linked quarter increased 2% driven by higher non-interest income.

Andrew Young: Provision for credit losses was 2.6 billion dollars in the quarter, up about 160 million relative to the prior quarter.

Andrew Young: The quarterly increase in provision was driven by higher net charge-offs.

partially offset by a larger allowance release.

Andrew Young: Turning to slide four, I will cover the allowance in greater detail.

Andrew Young: We released $245 million in allowance this quarter, and our allowance balance now stands at $16.3 billion.

Andrew Young: The decrease in this quarter's allowance was driven by releases in our commercial banking and commercial segments.

Andrew Young: Our total portfolio coverage ratio decreased 20 basis points to 4.96%.

Andrew Young: I'll cover the drivers of the changes in allowance and coverage ratio by segment on slide 5.

The allowance balance in our domestic car business was flat.

Andrew Young: The coverage ratio declined 33 basis points, primarily driven by seasonal balances, as well as favorable near-term credit trends.

Andrew Young: In our consumer banking segment, we released $131 million in allowance.

Andrew Young: resulting in a 22 basis point decrease to the coverage ratio.

Thank you. Bye.

Thank you.

Andrew Young: And finally, our commercial banking allowance decreased by $130 million, resulting in a 15 basis point decrease to the coverage ratio.

Andrew Young: The release was primarily driven by the reduction in criticized loans and to a lesser extent by charge-offs in the quarter.

Turning to page six.

I'll now discuss liquidity.

Andrew Young: Total liquidity reserves in the quarter decreased by about $8 billion to approximately $124 billion.

Andrew Young: Our cash position ended the quarter at approximately $43 billion, down about $6 billion from the prior quarter.

Andrew Young: The decline in cash was largely driven by seasonally higher card loans and funding maturities, which were partially offset by continued strong growth.

in Consumer Banking Business Deposits.

Andrew Young: Our preliminary average liquidity coverage ratio during the fourth quarter was 155 percent.

Turning to page 7, I'll cover our net interest margin.

Our fourth quarter net interest margin was 7.03 percent.

Andrew Young: 8 basis points lower than last quarter, and 30 basis points higher than the year-ago quarter.

Andrew Young: The linked quarter decrease in NIM was primarily driven by lower asset yields, which were only partially offset by lower deposit in wholesale funding costs.

Andrew Young: Turning to slide eight, I will end by discussing our capital position.

Andrew Young: Our Common Equity Tier 1 Capital Ratio ended the quarter at 13.5%.

10 bases point lower than the prior quarter.

Andrew Young: Net income in the quarter was more than offset by the impact of loan growth, dividends, and $150 million of share repurchases.

Andrew Young: As a reminder, the announcement of the acquisition of Discover constituted a material business change.

Andrew Young: Therefore, we continue to be subject to the Federal Reserve's pre-approval of our capital actions until the merger approval process has concluded.

Rich: With that, I will turn the call over to Rich. Rich?

Rich: Slide 10 shows fourth quarter results in our credit card business.

Rich: Credit card segment results are largely a function of our domestic card results and trends which are shown on slide 11.

Rich: In the fourth quarter, our domestic card business delivered another quarter of steady top-line growth, strong margins, and stable credit.

Rich: Year-over-year purchase volume growth for the quarter was 7%. Ending loan balances increased $8 billion, or about 5% year-over-year.

Rich: Average loans increased about 6% and fourth quarter revenue was up 9% from the fourth quarter of 2023, driven by the growth in purchase volume and loans.

Q4 2024 Capital One Financial Corp Earnings Call

Demo

CapitalOne

Earnings

Q4 2024 Capital One Financial Corp Earnings Call

COF

Tuesday, January 21st, 2025 at 10:00 PM

Transcript

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