PRA Group, Inc.

Q4 2023 Earnings Conference Call

2/15/2024

spk02: Good evening and welcome to PRA Group's fourth quarter and full year 2023 conference call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing star followed by zero on your telephone keypad. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star, then the number one on your touchtone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. Najee Mostamand, Vice President, Investor Relations for PRA Group. Please go ahead.
spk07: Thank you. Good evening, everyone, and thank you for joining us.
spk04: With me today are Victor Tal, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Rakesh Sehgal, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. We will make forward-looking statements during the call which are based on management's current beliefs, projections, assumptions, and expectations. We assume no obligation to revise or update these statements. We caution listeners that these forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties, assumptions, and other factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from our expectations. Please refer to the earnings press release and our SEC filings for a detailed discussion of these factors. The earnings release, the slide presentation that we will use during today's call, and our SEC filings can all be found in the investor relations section of our website at www.pragroup.com. Additionally, a replay of this call will be available shortly after its conclusion and the replay dial-in information is included in the earnings press release. All comparisons mentioned today will be between Q4 2023 and Q4 2022, unless otherwise noted, and our America's results include Australia. During our call, we will discuss adjusted EBITDA and debt to adjusted EBITDA for the 12 months ended December 31, 2023, and December 31st, 2022. Please refer to today's earnings release and the appendix of the slide presentation used during this call for a reconciliation of the most directly comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures to these non-GAAP financial measures. And with that, I'd now like to turn the call over to Vik Atal, our President and Chief Executive Officer.
spk08: Thank you, Najeeb, and thank you everyone for joining us this evening. At the start, I want to spend a moment thanking each and every one of our team members for their hard work, sacrifice, and dedication through a challenging year. I could not be prouder of their contributions. As we move into the new year, it is, of course, necessary that we look back at our performance in 2023. Equally, if not more importantly, it is an opportune time for us to share our perspectives and expectations with regard to our future performance. Our disappointing loss in the first quarter of 2023, largely due to underperformance in our U.S. business, crystallized our imperatives through the balance of last year. First, stabilized performance and, in parallel, drive the turnaround. It's worth reminding everyone that I assumed the position as the CEO in late March 2023, and that during the year, we experienced significant changes to the vast majority of our policy and strategy-making C-suite team. In rebuilding my senior team, in whom I have the highest confidence, I have concentrated on returning a keen sense of urgency, operational excellence, teamwork, and shareholder alignment to our collective focus. Furthermore, senior leaders and employees of the company have stepped up to play significant roles as we realign responsibilities. Together, we have identified and made substantive progress since April 2023 on numerous important areas of operations where gaps in strategy and performance had developed. I will cover some of this in greater detail later on the call. A few of these changes have involved complex process or organizational redesign, which have taken some time to properly implement and whose financial results are expected to flow through commencing in 2024. As Rakesh has outlined in a moment, our financial performance for the fourth quarter and full year of 2023 underscores the progress we made to stabilize performance. Following his remarks, I will provide details regarding the scope, pacing, and progress of our turnaround and the associated financial expectations. With that, it's over to Rakesh.
spk06: Thanks, Vic. At a macro level, during 2023, we integrated our management team globally, grew our business with additional portfolio investments, had our debt rating affirmed, and made tangible progress on our cash-generating and operational initiatives while controlling our expenses.
spk07: Turning now to our fourth quarter results, starting with portfolio purchases.
spk06: We purchased $285 million of portfolios during the quarter, consistent with the prior year period. For the full year, we purchased $1.2 billion of portfolios, up 36% year over year. This full year volume represents the third highest level in company history, and it's particularly encouraging when you consider that these investments are being achieved at improved prices and expected returns compared to the 2020 to 2022 time period. which was marked by low supply in the U.S.
spk07: and tight pricing globally. In the Americas, we invested $162 million in the quarter, up 27 percent year over year.
spk06: In the U.S., we deployed $141 million, which was up 61 percent year over year. This reflected our strongest Q4 investment level in the U.S. in the last five years. The improved pricing is demonstrated by the purchase price multiple in our 2023 Americas Core Vintage, which was initially recorded at 1.75 times at the end of the first quarter but ended the year at 1.97 times. Moving to Europe. We invested $123 million across multiple markets during the quarter, demonstrating the diversification of our European business. This amount was up sequentially, but lower when compared to Q4 of last year, driven by fewer large spot transactions coming to market than what we would typically see in Q4. Moving on to our financial results. Total revenues were $221 million for the quarter and $803 million for the year. Total portfolio revenue for the quarter was $217 million, with portfolio income of $195 million and changes in expected recoveries of $23 million. As a reminder, portfolio income is the yield component of our revenue. You can see on the chart on the left that the fourth quarter represented the second quarter in a row that portfolio income has grown year over year. We expect this growth in portfolio income to continue, reflecting not only purchases and pricing changes that have already taken place, but also new projected investments that are expected to grow the portfolio. Turning to the chart on the right, in addition to portfolio income, our revenues include changes in expected recoveries, which encompasses a combination of cash overperformance or underperformance in the current period, and the net present value of expected changes in our ERC. To the extent that the operational initiatives that are underway create incremental value, Such benefit would flow through our P&L as changes in expected recoveries. During the quarter, we collected $18 million in excess of our expected recoveries, exceeding our expectations on a consolidated basis by 3%, with the Americas overperforming by 1% and Europe overperforming by 6%. Operating expenses for the quarter were $176 million, which was up 8% compared to the prior year period. This increase was largely driven by legal collection costs, agency fees, and communication expenses, which importantly are all linked to growth in our portfolio. Cash efficiency was 57.3% for the fourth quarter. Legal collection costs were $23 million for the quarter, which were up $4 million from the prior year period, driven by a higher volume of accounts flowing into the legal channel from underlying portfolio growth in 2023. As a reminder, there is a timing lag when we invest in our legal channel. Typically, there is an upfront cost paid to the courts when a lawsuit is filed, which is then followed several months later by cash collections starting to build. Agency fees, which are variable and largely driven by cash collections in Brazil, were up $4 million this quarter as we continue to experience strong cash collections growth in that market. Communication expenses were up $3 million this quarter, primarily due to expanded business volumes. Net interest expense for the fourth quarter was $51 million, an increase of $16 million, reflecting higher debt balances and increased interest rates. We recorded a tax benefit of $16 million in 2023. We expect our effective tax rate to be in the low 20% range for 2024, depending on income mix and other factors. Net loss attributable to PRA was $9 million, or negative 22 cents in diluted earnings per share. For the full year, net loss attributable to PRA was $83 million, or negative $2.13 cents in diluted earnings per share. Cash collections for the quarter were $410 million, up 5% from the prior year period, and up 2% on a constant currency basis. For the quarter, America's cash collections increased 5%, or 4% on a constant currency basis, driven primarily by higher collections in Brazil. U.S. cash collections decreased 5% for the quarter, largely as a result of lower yields and purchase price multiples from the 2020 to 2022 vintages as the older, higher-yielding vintages rolled off. This impact should gradually reverse as a result of higher multiples and volumes we recorded in 2023 and the early part of 2024. European cash collections for the quarter increased 5% or roughly flat on a constant currency basis. Our 2023 cash performance versus our expectations at December 31, 2022 experienced 6% overperformance in Europe and 3% underperformance in the Americas or 1% overperformance on a consolidated basis. With regard to pressures on the consumer, we had mentioned last quarter that the cost of living in certain European markets has been having an impact. We continue to see the dynamic resulting in fewer large one-time payments, although the proportion of customers paying us has remained stable. Within the U.S., we see a relatively stable collections environment and are not seeing any significant impact from customer segments that may be experiencing stress. However, to the extent such consumer stress becomes evident, we intend to manage this dynamically through a combination of various contact strategies, alternative offer strategies, and where applicable, an expansion of legal collections. ERC at December 31st was $6.4 billion. which was up 12 percent compared to $5.7 billion at December 31st last year. On a sequential basis, ERC increased $423 million, with ERC in the U.S. increasing by $147 million. We expect to collect $1.5 billion of our ERC balance during the next 12 months. It's important to note that this number only reflects the amount we expect to collect on our existing portfolio. It does not include the cash we expect to collect from new purchases made over the next 12 months. Based on the average purchase price multiples we recorded in 2023, we would need to invest approximately $858 million globally over the same timeframe. to replace this runoff and maintain current ERC levels. In this environment of increasing supply, we expect that we can exceed this investment level and grow ERC during 2024. Our capital structure remains strong with a debt to adjusted EBITDA leverage ratio of 2.89 times at December 31st. Our long-term goal is to have our sustained leverage fee in the two to three times range. In all three of our credit facilities, we have deep banking relationships, most of which stretch back over a decade. In terms of our funding capacity, we have $3.2 billion in total committed capital to draw under our credit facilities. Our bank lines have margins ranging from 235 to 380 basis points over benchmark. that provide an attractive cost of capital. As of December 31st, we have total availability of $1.3 billion, comprised of $344 million based on our current ERC, and $939 million of additional availability that we can draw from, subject to debt covenants, including advance rates. Lastly, Given we have our 2025 senior notes maturing in the fall of next year, we are actively monitoring the capital markets. We believe the capital available under our credit facilities, the cash generated from our business, and access to capital markets in both the U.S. and Europe position us favorably to accommodate the expected bills in portfolio supply.
spk07: With that, I'll turn it back to Vic. Thank you, Rakesh.
spk08: Over the nine months through December 2023, we have taken significant, decisive action to stabilize performance and drive the turnaround of our business, with particular emphasis on our U.S. operations. The new leadership team, supplemented by the onboarding of industry consultants with significant operational experience, is focused on the key initiatives needed to turn around the U.S. business with a broad scope and emphasis on speed, and above all, a commitment to the quality of our execution. Our roadmap to enhance profitability is supported by three pillars. First, ERC and pricing, which allows us to grow the portfolio with discipline. Second, operational effectiveness, which focuses on maximizing cash collected per dollar invested on our existing back book. And third, expense management, which is geared to optimizing our cost structure. Let me now address each of these pillars in turn.
spk07: First, ERC and pricing.
spk08: We have benefited from significant growth in portfolio supply within the U.S. in 2023. As shown by the chart on the left of the slide, there is a strong correlation between industry credit card charge-off rates and our US portfolio purchases. As supply in the US continues to build, driven by rising industry credit card balances and higher delinquency and charge-off rates, we expect another very strong year for US portfolio purchases. On the other hand, Given the historic preponderance of spot transactions in the European market, the precise timing and amount of investment opportunities in Europe are less predictable. We remain disciplined in our capital allocations and are intensely focused on ensuring we can underwrite and purchase portfolios responsibly through the cycle. And to reiterate, with respect to pricing, we have placed significant emphasis on both pricing new purchases and proactively managing pricing on existing forward flow arrangements to fully reflect market conditions. The repricing of certain large forward flows took effect in the latter part of 2023. As a result, we will begin realizing these year-over-year pricing improvements and their associated uplift to portfolio income in 2024. While portfolio growth and pricing are important factors driving cash collections and revenues, pillar number two, which we have referred to as operational effectiveness, is absolutely central to our ultimate success as it seeks to extract value from the portfolios that we already own. Recognizing that there were numerous shortfalls in operational execution across our U.S. business, we launched multiple initiatives in April 2023.
spk07: This work materialized along two principal axes. First, call center actions, and second, legal activities.
spk08: With regard to our call centers during 2023, we addressed gaps in inventory management, optimized dialogue strategies, enhanced customer engagement processes, reconfigured offers, and rebuilt capacity to support portfolio growth. Further, our ongoing review of processes led to our testing and additional change in contact strategies to drive customer engagement. This process was fully rolled out in the fourth quarter and has shown very encouraging results with regard to incremental payment plans being established. The second axis of our operational effectiveness focuses on our end-to-end legal processes with a particular emphasis on post-judgment activities. Our review has identified very significant opportunities with regard to our existing inventory of judgments. Addressing these opportunities required enhancements to multiple internal processes, as well as the establishment of new third-party relationships, which commenced early in the second quarter of 2023 and were largely completed in the fourth quarter. Following the rollout, we have seen a meaningful increase in post-judgment value creation. the associated cash collection from the opportunities identified to date to be in excess of $100 million, commencing in the first half of 2024 with the majority anticipated to flow through by year-end 2026. Looking ahead, we continue to evaluate additional improvements to our legal collection processes. While my remarks regarding the call center and legal processes focus on existing portfolios, These enhancements will also apply to new investments that we are making. Over the long term, this should make us both more profitable and a more competitive buyer of portfolios. The third important pillar to our business turnaround is expense management. Since our industry is cyclical and highly competitive, it is imperative that we have an expense management structure that is flexible, and enables us to drive lower marginal costs while continuing to ensure optimal customer outcomes. Our expenses for 2024 are expected to reflect a number of year-over-year pressures, largely offset by the benefit of our cost management program. The factors contributing to increased costs include growth in business volumes, both in the U.S. and globally, call center contact strategy changes in the U.S., investment in our legal channel, inflationary impacts, and appropriate investments in digital and analytics capabilities. Our cost management program has therefore focused with real intensity on countering this impact with actions to, A, restructure and eliminate non-essential processes and costs, B, Re-examine and simplify our operational and management processes. And C, rebalance resources to leverage lower-cost locations. These actions are designed to build overall expense flexibility to operate efficiently across the business cycle. In the first quarter of 2023, we completed a reduction in force in the U.S. and restructured our Italy business. We also implemented new processes through automation initiatives that eliminated over 100 vendor resources supporting the U.S. business, and we closed a non-strategic U.S. call center in the third quarter. Further, in the fourth quarter of 2023, we restructured our Australia business. As it relates to reexamining and simplifying processes, we have taken numerous steps to increase call center productivities. We are also deploying new workforce management tools and have enhanced our vendor management processes and oversight. In addition, we implemented a dynamic business prioritization process to drive requisite speed in our operational decisioning. Finally, we are intensely focused on lowering our marginal cost of operations. Historically, PRA's U.S. business has been almost entirely supported by domestic resources. Starting early in the second quarter of 2023, we began implementing a strategic shift on this front, which has led to an expansion of an existing partnership and the establishment of relationships with two well-recognized global service providers. To demonstrate the progress of these efforts, a process that required upwards of 150 resources was successfully offshored in the fourth quarter. we have a target to have less than 25% of this team to be based in the U.S. by the end of the first half of 2024. Additionally, we have successfully piloted an offshore call center in the fourth quarter of 2023 and are moving rapidly to scale up these operations in 2024. Based on the initiatives underway and others that are planned, we anticipate that our utilization of resources in lower-cost locations by the end of 2024 will be up almost 500 full-time employees from the level we had in 2022. With the expense mitigation actions that have been completed and high confidence in others that are in flight, we are targeting overall expense levels to grow at a meaningfully slower pace year-over-year in 2024 compared to cash collections. Having laid out a broad map as to our turnaround, it is important to summarize the key themes and link these stats to measurable outcomes. First, we expect strong portfolio investment levels, largely driven by the projected increase in U.S. portfolio supply. Second, we expect cash connections to grow by double digits compared to 2023, driven by higher portfolio purchases and improved pricing, but as importantly, by the execution of cash generation initiatives on our existing back book. We anticipate modest expense growth compared to double-digit growth in cash collections, driving cash efficiency levels into the low 60% range for 2024. To place our turnaround into context and provide an overall metric capturing the creation of shareholder value, we are introducing return on average tangible equity as an added metric to our existing measures of performance and expect to achieve a return on average tangible equity of six to 8% for the full year. It's important to note that the financial improvement is expected to gain momentum through the year as the cash generating and operating initiatives are scaled.
spk07: Further, we expect this metric to continue to see additional uplift as we move beyond 2024.
spk08: In closing, while we are encouraged by the pacing and progress of the business turnaround, we recognize that achieving our aspirations to become a high-performing company requires ongoing focus. To that end, we are building on a roadmap, including a view on required organizational needs and capacity, with expectations to drive additional shareholder value as we move into 2025 and beyond. I wish to conclude by thanking our shareholders and broader set of stakeholders for their continued support to an important transition year at PRA.
spk07: And with that, we are now ready for questions.
spk02: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Should you have a question, please press star followed by the number one on your touchtone phone. You will hear a prompt that your hand has been raised. Should you wish to decline from the polling process, please press star followed by the number two. If you are using a speakerphone, please lift the handset before pressing any keys. Your first question comes from the line of David Scharf from Citizens JMP. Your line is now open.
spk01: Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. I appreciate all the background on the operational process. initiative, Vic, and I wanted to maybe follow up on your comments regarding kind of offshore call center piloting. You know, maybe I didn't write down quick enough, but can you give us a sense for how you're viewing the longer term, you know, call center model at the company and specifically whether you feel the company can achieve the kind of returns on both assets and tangible equity that you're targeting without a substantial move, a substantial mix of the collections taking place offshore. Obviously, your largest U.S. competitor has been collecting U.S. collections out of India for close to 20 years. Can you just give us a little more sense for how we ought to think about what the domestic versus offshore and collection mix is being targeted at, and can you also provide, based on both your piloting and your analysis, what the cost differential is based on current legislation?
spk08: So, let me take the second part of your question, David, first. to say we don't disclose the cost differential between the U.S. and overseas, and I don't want to get ahead of myself there, but I can tell you that the purpose is to take advantage of what we believe to be tangible differential in the labor cost between the U.S. and overseas. With regard to the first part of your question in terms of where we would see this mature into, we are taking the view that it is too early to determine what the ultimate balance will be between the U.S. and offshore and any other factors. As we pointed out in the remarks, we have piloted, which means we've just started the first phase of our offshore program. We are looking to scale that up with requisite speed, probably through the first half of 2024. Along with scaling it up, we are regularly tracking the operating performance metrics of the pilot and the expansion program to ensure that not only are we getting the benefit of lower labor costs, but that we are getting appropriate file performance from the team. And as we go through the second half of the year, we will have a better view with regard to decisions that might need to be made with regard to the ultimate balance. In addition, you know, we, as you know, have been working for a while on, you know, continuing to expand our digital presence. So there's a lot of factors that go into this. And I think we will be in a better place to have this conversation with you and others at the back end of this year once these pilots and the learnings have been embedded into our business understanding.
spk01: Understood. And maybe just a follow-up on the outlook for purchase volumes in the U.S. Obviously, balances are at record highs in loss rates. have returned to pre-pandemic levels. I'm just curious, is there any change in behavior among your key sellers, whether they're looking to unload more than they typically do, whether they're using collection agencies instead of selling to you, just trying to get a sense for whether any of your maybe top five sellers is... behaving differently than you would expect at this part of the cycle.
spk06: Hey, David. It's Rakesh. I'll take that one. So, look, we see a very stable selling environment here from a seller perspective. The market structure is not changing. In the U.S., we expect yet another strong year of buying from our perspective, and importantly, We expect pricing also to be holding up at the levels that we're seeing, which are significantly improved, as I mentioned in my remarks earlier, on the America score. It's not getting better from where we are. So we feel good, as Vic mentioned, in this outlook for 2024. We feel very good from a U.S. perspective, both from a buying perspective as well as from pricing.
spk07: Got it.
spk01: Thanks so much.
spk02: Your next question comes from the line of Mark Hughes from Truist. Your line is now open.
spk05: Yeah, thank you. Good afternoon. Does the stockholder's equity include AOCI or exclude AOCI? I'm just looking for balance between 1.5 billion as opposed to 1.2 billion.
spk06: So you have the $1.2 billion. That's reflected net of AOCI, Mark.
spk05: Right. And is that the bogey we should be looking at, less the goodwill of $430 million?
spk08: That's exactly right.
spk05: Okay. And then just to be clear, is that an after-tax return, the 6% to 8% return?
spk06: Yeah, we're looking at, so maybe just to give a little color, so, you know, we're talking about a 6% to 8% average return on tangible equity. So we're talking about net income attributable to PRA, and that is going to be on an after-tax basis. And, you know, the other thing, importantly, to keep in mind, you know, we're giving guidance for the full year, and you've seen our results in Q4 of 2023. And as we mentioned about the imperative around stabilizing the business in 23 and then turning it around and continuing to grow, so that growth in 2024, importantly, is going to be over time. We're working on a lot of cash initiatives that Vic outlined earlier on the call that are going to get scaled up as we move into 2024 coming months. And then at the same time, we expect expenses to modestly grow. So cash collections, we expect double digit growth and then expenses modestly. And we're going to see a lot of the benefits coming over the coming quarters in 2024.
spk05: Yeah, I appreciate all this detail. The portfolio income, should it grow faster than cash collections?
spk06: So look, we should see cash collections doing the double digit, and then portfolio income is going to continue to grow, but I would say that's going to be on a quarterly basis, you'll see it growing year over year, slightly under the cash collections. Remember that portfolio income is also dependent on our full book, and there are lower yielding vintages that we have purchased recently in the 2020 to 2022 timeframe that would continue to impact that portfolio income. But we're very optimistic here, Marcus. We've seen the improvement now for the last two quarters as portfolio income has started moving up in the right direction. We expect that to continue going into the next few quarters of 2024. Again, thanks for this detail.
spk07: Appreciate it. Thank you.
spk02: Your next question comes from the line of John Rowan from Danny. Your line is now open.
spk00: Good evening, guys. Just to make sure I understand all the guidance correctly. So there is the number of 1.5 billion of collections, but that's just under the current ERC. But you're guiding for collections to be up double digits. That would imply something north of 1.8 billion. Am I correct? I'm just trying to make sure I get the the collections and the expense numbers correct to foot up with the cash efficiency ratio guidance. So is the $1.8 billion, give or take, kind of the baseline figure for cash collections for the year, assuming at least a 10% growth rate?
spk06: Yes, you're thinking about it correctly, which is the $1.5 billion is just our ERC. That does not take into account the new buying that's going to happen as well as the cash collections. So I think you're headed in the right direction that we're talking about a cash collection number that is north of that $1.5 billion. And so you're absolutely headed in the right direction.
spk00: Okay. But then just to make sure the expense numbers are correct. So you're saying that there's modest growth, right? You had $702 million expenses in this year. Now, there were a couple of items in there that were you know, non-recurring or non-operational, you know, in the first and the third quarters. So are we just expecting growth? I mean, are operating expenses supposed to be north of $702 million for 2024?
spk06: Yeah, the way I would approach that is, as Vic said, we are going to continue to invest in the business, to grow the business, and there is the expense management program. And so there will be modest growth in expenses. But the way to think about it is we have cash collections growth that is going to be significantly higher than the growth in those expenses.
spk08: And, you know, just to be clear, Mark, we don't have a governor in the business on the dollar amount of expenses, right? We are looking at the business to say we want to – optimize and maximize cash collections in an appropriate way. And if that requires additional expense spend, we will do that. I think the way that we would guide your thinking on this is to say that the expense growth rate will be lower than the cash collections rate that we're experiencing.
spk00: Okay, no, that's helpful. You know, if we're trying to pin an efficiency ratio, right, obviously, you know, the 57.3% number in the fourth quarter came in kind of well below, you know, guidance, which I believe you guys had said was going to be flattish relative to the third quarter. So just kind of understanding what the actual numbers are as opposed to the efficiency ratio is helpful. But, okay, thank you. That's all for me.
spk02: Your next question comes from the line of Robert Dodd from Raymond James. Your line is now open.
spk03: Hi, guys. First, a question about purchasing. In Europe, you're prepared to talk about EU being more for Europe, being a little bit hard to predict, right? Is it getting more so is the question. I mean, even the forward flow agreements in Europe are lower this quarter than they were last quarter. And obviously, they're down more than half from where they were this time last year. So has there been any definition change in how you're disclosing forward flow in Europe? Or is it getting even more spore-oriented than it was even, say, a year ago or six months ago? Any comments?
spk08: I don't think so. Robert, I think that the behavior of sellers in Europe has remained the same. We have forward flow arrangements with major institutions across the continent and in the UK. You know, I think unlike the U.S., we have not seen the same uptake or similar uptake in losses, you know, across the pond. And so there's been no change. I think as we pointed out in our remarks, you know, there were fewer spot transactions that came to market in the fourth quarter. And, you know, that timing is dependent on when players choose to bring that to market. So, you know, there's no change in seller behavior. And, you know, we are making sure that we are taking a – in building our expectations for 2024 that we do not have, you know, expectations, you know, that are outside – you know, what we're recently experiencing. So we're being careful not to overestimate, you know, what the future buying would be. We want to be like, you know, running this business with appropriate baseline assumptions.
spk03: Got it, got it. Thank you. And if I can, one more on beating the implicit guidance horse. Does the 628 include any assumptions on... forward change in curves or expected, you know, changes in curve shapes during the course of 2024? I mean, if you execute, then you said, you know, hey, it will flow through in change in expected collections. But is any of that built into the six-weight target or is that excluded from that?
spk08: Yeah, so I think as we tried to point out, right, the portfolio income line is sort of locked in, right, effectively as we buy stuff, Rakesh, right? And I think to the extent that the initiatives we have create incremental value, right? That flows in as an uptick against that. So, you know, I think that's, I would just reiterate the remarks we made in the script, right?
spk06: Yeah, Robert, that's what I was mentioning earlier, right? You have the two-line items, and so we do expect through overperformance, for example, versus what our current curves are as these initiatives come into play, we would expect cash overperformance, and then to the extent we see some sustained improvement, we'll make some decisions around the line item going forward.
spk03: Got it.
spk02: Thank you. As a reminder, if you have any questions, please press star followed by the number one in your touchstone form. There are no further questions at this time. I will now hand the call over to Vic Atal, President and CEO. Please continue.
spk08: Thank you, everybody, for joining us this evening and look forward to continuing our conversation through an exciting 2024. Thank you.
spk02: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.
Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

-

-