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spk00: to make improvements in our adjusted OPEX ratio in the future through continued strong financial discipline and our reiterating our expectation to reduce gap operating expenses to $97.5 million or below by the fourth quarter. And finally, we were profitable for the second consecutive quarter on an adjusted net income basis at $3.2 million and drove a significant year-over-year improvement in adjusted EBITDA. At $30 million, our adjusted EBITDA reflected 109% year-over-year growth. In summary, I'm proud of how the team executed in Q2 and pleased that we continue to make good progress in the 2024 business recovery. More importantly, the positive trends in credit performance and originations combined with our lower expense levels mean we are positioned to improve upon our performance in the second half. setting up a strong runway heading into 2025. Before I turn the call over to Jonathan, I want to share two additional pieces of good news. First, I'm pleased to announce that we've signed a non-binding letter of intent to sell our credit card portfolio to a leading credit card marketer and servicer. The transaction will simplify our product portfolio and enhance our focus on our three core products, on secured personal loans, secured personal loans, and our award-winning set and save savings product. We ran a competitive sales process that resulted in multiple bids and we selected the best proposal. Based upon this proposal, we expect to sell the credit card portfolio for 70% of the receivables balance of current and less than 30-day delinquent receivables as of the closing date. We are in documentation now and currently expect to close by the end of the third quarter. The initiation of the transaction triggered a $36 million unfavorable one-time fair value mark to our credit card portfolio for an approximately $26 million reduction in stockholders' equity. We expect the sale to have an approximately $11 million negative impact on 2024 revenue due to no longer earning revenue on the sold receivables. However, We expect the sale to be accretive by $4 million to adjusted EBITDA this year as lower credit losses and operating expenses more than offset the loss in revenue. We expect 2025 adjusted EBITDA favorability resulting from the credit card sale to be approximately $11 million. Second, I'm excited to share the details of our new lending collaboration with Western Union, a leader in cross-border money transfers with 90% global brand recognition. Under the agreement, we have the potential to reach their millions of customers who are similar to our own. Structured like our other lending as a service agreements, it only requires us to pay for leads when a loan that has met our underwriting criteria has been funded. This is a significant opportunity to add new applicants to our originations funnel and generate incremental new loan volume under our current credit standards. With that, I will turn it over to Jonathan for additional details on our second quarter financial performance as well as our third quarter and four-year guidance. Jonathan will also discuss how this translates to progress towards our long-term unit economic objectives.
spk01: Thanks, Raoul, and good afternoon, everyone. As Raoul mentioned, we had a strong second quarter and are positioned to improve upon our performance in the second half of the year. The anticipated sale of the credit card portfolio and exciting new lending as a service collaboration with Western Union are integral milestones towards focusing the business on our core products, further reducing our expense base, and growing profitably over the long term. As shown on slide six, OPPORTUNE delivered total revenue of $250 million and we were profitable on an adjusted basis for the second consecutive quarter with adjusted net income of $3.2 million for adjusted EPS of $0.08. Continuing to operate under a conservative credit posture, originations of $435 million were down 10% year over year. Sequentially, originations were up 29%, aligning with the typical seasonal pattern for growth after the first quarter. Total revenue of $250 million declined by 6%, driven by an 8% decline in our average daily principal balance under our conservative credit posture. partially offset by price increases as portfolio yield increased 167 basis points year-over-year, improving to 33.9%. Net revenue was $60 million, down 49% year-over-year, primarily due to the one-time $36 million unfavorable fair value mark to our credit card portfolio that Raoul mentioned, along with the total revenue decline and higher interest expense. Our total net decrease in fair value of $136 million was primarily driven by current period charge-offs of $84 million and the credit card fair value mark. To elaborate on the impact of selling the credit card portfolio, the agreed-upon price at 70% of the receivables being sold reflects the highest offer that we received as part of our strategic review process, thus setting the new fair value mark. Interest expense of $54 million was up $13 million year over year. This was primarily driven by increased debt outstanding and an increase in our cost of debt to 7.7% versus 5.6% in the year-ago period, reflecting the higher rate environment. Turning now to operating expenses and efficiency, we continue to see the benefit of our cost reduction initiatives. Our $109 million in total operating expenses in Q2 reflected a 20% decrease from the prior year period while including a $6 million impairment of the right of use asset for our Bay Area headquarters and $2 million in workforce optimization expenses relating to the reductions in force we enacted in the second half of May. We will continue to drive our cost structure lower in the second half of 2024 and remain on track to achieve $97.5 million in Q4 gap operating expenses. In the second quarter, our sales and marketing expenses were just over $16 million, down 15% year-over-year, and I'm pleased to share that our CAC of $122 was a new low for us as a public company, down 25% year-over-year, driven by our cost discipline. For the quarter, we recorded adjusted net income of $3 million compared to $6 million in the prior year quarter, and adjusted EPS of 8 cents versus 17 cents. The decline was principally driven by lower revenue due to lower average daily principal balance, partially offset by higher yield and lower adjusted operating expenses. Adjusted EBITDA, which excludes the impact of fair value mark-to-market adjustments on our loan portfolio and notes, was $30 million in the second quarter. This reflected a year-over-year increase of $16 million, or 109%, driven by our sharply reduced cost structure and lower net charge-offs on a dollar basis. Our adjusted EBITDA performance exceeded the high end of our guidance range by $13 million, primarily on lower than anticipated operating expenses. We were able to lower our operating expenses by enacting the previously announced $30 million of annualized expense reductions more expediently than anticipated. Lower charge-offs also contributed to our adjusted EBITDA outperformance. Now, let me discuss Q2 credit performance. Our annualized net charge-off rate was 12.3% as compared to 12.5% in the prior year period. I'd also note that dollar net charge-offs declined 10% year-over-year from $93 million to $84 million. Our 30-plus day delinquency rate declined year-over-year by 30 basis points and sequentially by 28 basis points to 4.96%. As of the end of July, 30-plus delinquencies remain below 2023 levels. Our 30-plus-day delinquencies measured in dollars declined 13% year over year from $156 million to $135 million. Regarding our capital and liquidity, as shown on slide 15, net cash flows from operating activities for the second quarter were a record $108 million, up 5% year over year. As of June 30, total cash was $237 million, of which $73 million was unrestricted and $164 million was restricted. I'd note that these liquidity levels are after having paid down $17 million of corporate debt during the quarter. Further bolstering our liquidity was $523 million in available funding capacity under our warehouse lines and remaining whole loan sale agreement capacity of $181 million. I'm also pleased to share that since quarter end, we signed a new warehouse agreement for $245 million to fund our unsecured and secured personal loan activity into 2027. Since June of last year, OPPORTUNE has raised over $1.6 billion in diversified financings, including whole loan sales, securitizations, and warehouse agreements from fixed income investors and banks based upon the strong performance of recent finages and their confidence in our business model. Before I move on, I want to share with you that we are making good progress in discussions involving refinancing our Senior Secured Term Loan and will provide an update when we have a final arrangement to share. Turning now to our guidance as shown on slide 17, our outlook for the second quarter is total revenue of $248 to $252 million, annualized net charge-off rate of 12.3% plus or minus 15 basis points, adjusted EBITDA of $23 to $26 million. I'd note that the owned portfolio is projected to decline in Q3 by 10% year-over-year. As you can see on slide 18, were our loan portfolio to remain flat or to grow by 10% year-over-year during 3Q24, our expectations for annualized net charge-off rate would be 120 basis points and 220 basis points lower, respectively. Our Q3 adjusted EBITDA guidance at the midpoint reflects almost 70% year-over-year growth. Our Q3 adjusted EBITDA guidance is down from Q2 due to anticipated higher interest expense and a seasonal increase in marketing expense. It's also worth noting that our Q2 adjusted EBITDA benefited from our completing operating expense reductions sooner than planned in the quarter. Our guidance for the full year is total revenue, of $995 million to $1.01 billion, annualized net charge-off rate of 12.1% plus or minus 30 basis points, adjusted EBITDA of $84 to $92 million. While this revised full-year guidance reflects total revenue and adjusted EBITDA uplifts of $5 million and $3 million respectively at the midpoints, it also reflects expectations for our annualized to be 20 basis points higher than our prior guidance at the midpoint, which represents approximately $5 million for additional charge-offs in the second half of the year, largely driven by the performance of our back book. I'm pleased that we are able to increase our full-year revenue guidance driven by our yield enhancements and commitment to identifying high-quality originations despite the expected $11 million negative revenue impact from selling the credit card portfolio. Creating a strong runway into 2025 Our adjusted EBITDA guidance at the midpoint also implies that our second half will be over 70% higher than our first half, and we expect to generate markedly higher adjusted net income in the second half as well. Before handing the call back to Raul to close, I'd like to update you on our progress towards what we believe long-term investor returns for Opportune could look like. While our long-term targets are gap targets, I'll be using adjusted metrics for comparison since they remove non-recurring items and provide a better sense of our future run rate. As a reminder, our personal loan business has a 32% average APR, even while we deliver value to our borrowing members that we believe is better than alternatives. When non-interest income is added, primarily from our savings product, we see a 36% total revenue yield target as a percentage of own principal balance to be sustainable. As of Q2, we are already at our total revenue yield target. In our unit economics model, we are targeting an 8% cost of funds and a 9 to 11% annualized net charge-off rate to generate a 17 to 19% risk-adjusted yield. For Q2, we did report 8% cost of funds, but our charge-off rate of 12% was above the target range, impacted by our average daily principal balance declining 8% year-over-year under our conservative credit posture. However, I want to remind you again that if you remove the back book from our Q2 performance, the annualized net charge-off rate for the front book was 10.6%, already within our long-term target range. Lastly, our 14% risk-adjusted yield for 2Q24 also included 2% of unfavorable non-cash-fair value marks. Finally, assuming target operating expenses over the long term of 12.5% loan principal balance, we see a 3 to 4% return on assets as attainable. In Q2, we made progress towards this target by delivering a 13.8% adjusted operating expense ratio, while guiding to further cost reductions in the second half of the year. In summary, our adjusted ROE for 2Q24 was 4%, in comparison to our 20-28% long-term target. On slide 20, you can see the three key drivers we've identified to grow adjusted ROE from 4% to our 20-28% long-term target. First, we're seeking to reduce our annualized net charge-off rate from 12% to 9-11% and expect to do so by eliminating our back book, driving ongoing performance improvements from the rollout of our V12 credit model, and prudently growing our loan portfolio by 10% to 15% over time. Second, we're seeking to reduce our adjusted operating expenses as an annualized percentage of own principal balance from 13.8% to 12.5%. We're on our way to attaining that by achieving our $97.5 million gap operating expense target for 4Q. Maintaining cost discipline with our simplified product portfolio into 2025 and beyond and also benefiting from the tail end of conservative portfolio growth and resulting scale. And third, we're seeking to reduce our debt to equity leverage ratio from 7.9 to 1 to 6 to 1. We expect to do so by continuing to allocate our free cash flow towards debt repayment as we have in recent quarters, including our expected repayment of the $38 million remaining on our corporate financing facility secured by our securitization residuals before the end of January. We also expect to increase our stockholders' equity by returning to and maintaining GAAP profitability. I am confident in our ability to make progress towards our 20% to 28% hourly target over the next several years by executing on these key drivers. Raoul, back over to you.
spk00: Thanks, Jonathan. To close, I'd like to emphasize three points. First, we're pleased with our second quarter performance and our momentum going into the second half. where we expect to generate adjusted EBITDA levels that are over 70% higher than the first half and to be markedly more profitable on an adjusted net income basis. Second, we further focused our business on our core competencies by agreeing to an LOI to sell our credit card portfolio, which enables us to focus on our three core products and by forming a new lending collaboration with Western Union. Third, we've made strong progress towards our long-term profitability targets by improving credit outcomes, as evidenced by our front book generating a loss rate of 10.6%, which is already within our target 9% to 11% range, and by reducing operating expenses a percentage of our own principal balance. To wrap up, I want to thank the Opportun team for their solid execution in Q2 and their ongoing commitment to our mission of empowering members to build a better future. With that, Operator, let's open up the line for questions.
spk04: Thank you. At this time, we'll be conducting a question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question today, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad and a confirmation tone to indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star 2 if you'd like to withdraw your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. Thank you. Thank you. Our first question is from the line of John Hecht with Jefferies. Pleased to see you with your questions.
spk02: Hey, guys. Thanks very much for taking my questions, and I appreciate all the information update, and congratulations on some of the turning trends. It's good to hear. First question, and Jonathan, I think you might have noted this, but I just want to clarify that there's a $10.1 million other non-referring expense. Is that tied to the office expense or the workforce expense, or is Is there something else that goes on?
spk01: Sure. So the non-recurring expenses for the second quarter, John, it was $6 million related to the write-down of the right-of-use asset for our headquarters in San Carlos. And it was $2 million for severance for the workforce optimization that we announced at our prior earnings call. So that's a total of $8 million.
spk02: Okay, that's helpful. And then, you know, with respect to the Western Union, I know you guys said the arrangements, especially some of the other arrangements, but maybe talk about the ramp period and is the ramp going to be kind of, you know, over a period of time and different geographies or how should we think about that?
spk00: John, this is Raul. Thanks for the question. So first, as you can imagine, we're very excited about this collaboration with Western Union. We think it really validates our underwriting abilities in particular for the other members that we serve, people that don't have a lot of experience with credit, maybe are new to credit. So we're really proud of the fact that Western Union ran an RFP process and we were selected. In terms of ramp period, it's very early in this collaboration. We're still planning the rollout. So I think what we prefer to do is come back in subsequent quarters once we're in market and have a sense of how things are going to go. But again, it's something we're very excited about.
spk02: And then maybe just a final question. Can you give us like, you know, you've had a lot of partnerships that you've been building out over time, like the MetaBank partnership and retail partnership. Maybe could you give us an update on how those are doing and Maybe kind of the mix of what's being originated on the internet versus the partners versus the branches.
spk00: John, on the metabank partnership, that's a partnership that we think has gone very, very well. The bulk of our originations now are through Pathword. We think that they've really been a fantastic partner for us in terms of how we go to market, how we're able to serve customers together. So it's something that we're very, very pleased with. And then in terms of the channels, what I would do is for all investors, not just in terms of the question you're asking, I would point them to our investor presentation. The most recent one is March 2024. That's when we published the channel mix. And what you see there is about 36% of loans come from The retail channel, and that includes our lending as a service partnerships, 38% are from the contact center, and then 26% are mobile and digital. That's as of Q1, so we haven't updated that for Q2. Usually what we do is we update these investor presentations after the conclusion of the quarter, so we'll update these statistics with the most recent numbers, John. But the other thing that we're very pleased with is on that page, investors will see that when we look at all of 2023, about half of our applicants used more than one channel during their application process, and three-quarters used our mobile and digital channels as part of their application, even if they initiated in retail or in the contact center. Okay.
spk02: That's very good information. Thank you guys very much. Thank you for the question, John. Thank you, John.
spk04: Our next questions are from the line of Hal Gitch with B. Riley Securities. Please proceed with your questions.
spk03: Hey, guys. Great progress here. On the list of all the financials you've done over the last several months, has there been any change in trajectory of the cost of capital, or has it been relatively consistent in what your feelings about how it might be if rates were cut over time? Give us your thoughts on those things.
spk01: Thanks, Hal. The cost of capital has improved. So we talked about this back in our Q4 earnings call that we had just completed our February securitization of $200 million, which was over 10 times oversubscribed, and it actually priced 160 basis points better than our of a similar size just in October. So certainly that's been a very favorable trajectory And right now, we're continuing to see the market to be very strong, and so we certainly plan to do future ABS deals, and we're optimistic about where pricing for those could come in. Additionally, you talked about the potential for Fed rate cuts. While 80% or so of our debt is fixed rate, Fed rate cuts won't have an immediate impact, but over time, As we come to market with new term financings, we'll get the benefit of the lower benchmark treasury rates.
spk03: Thank you, Jonathan.
spk04: Thank you. At this time, we've reached the end of the question and answer session, and I'll turn the call back over to management for closing remarks.
spk00: Thank you again for joining us on today's call, and we look forward to speaking with you again soon.
spk04: This will conclude today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation and have a wonderful day.
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