Synchrony Financial (NYSE: SYF) Q1 2026 Earnings Call dated Apr. 21, 2026
Corporate Participants:
Kathryn Miller — Senior Vice President and Director of Investor Relations
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Brian Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Terry Ma — Analyst
Ryan Nash — Analyst
Sanjay Sakhrani — Analyst
Darrin Peller — Analyst
Richard Shane — Analyst
Mihir Bhatia — Analyst
Erika Najarian — Analyst
Mark DeVries — Analyst
Moshe Orenbuch — Analyst
Saul Martinez — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good morning, and welcome to the Synchrony Financial First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. Please refer to the company’s Investor Relations website for access to their earnings materials. Please be advised that today’s conference call is being recorded. [Operator Instructions]
I will now turn the call over to Kathryn Miller, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.
Kathryn Miller — Senior Vice President and Director of Investor Relations
Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to our quarterly earnings conference call. In addition to today’s press release, we have provided a presentation that covers the topics we plan to address during our call. The press release, detailed financial schedules and presentation are available on our website, synchronyfinancial.com. This information can be accessed by going to the Investor Relations section of the website.
Before we get started, I wanted to remind you that our comments today will include forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainty, and actual results could differ materially. We list the factors that might cause actual results to differ materially in our SEC filings, which are available on our website.
During the call, we will refer to non-GAAP financial measures in discussing the company’s performance. You can find a reconciliation of these measures to GAAP financial measures in our materials for today’s call.
Finally, Synchrony Financial is not responsible for and does not edit or guarantee the accuracy of our earnings teleconference transcripts provided by third parties. The only authorized webcast are located on our website. On the call this morning are Brian Doubles, Synchrony’s President and Chief Executive Officer; and Brian Wenzel, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
I will now turn the call over to Brian Doubles.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Kathryn, and good morning, everyone. Synchrony started the year with strong momentum and delivered first quarter financial results that included record first quarter purchase volume of $43 billion, reflecting the enduring appeal of Synchrony’s multi-product suite.
Customers engaged across our diversified portfolio, contributing to continued sequential improvement in average active account trends, higher spend per account across all five platforms and 6% growth in total portfolio purchase volume compared to last year. At the platform level, diversified and value purchase volume grew 9% primarily reflecting the impact of partner expansion.
Digital platform purchase volume increased 8%, driven by strong customer response to enhanced product offerings and refresh value propositions. Purchase volume in lifestyle increased 7%, primarily driven by other apparel and goods and luxury partially offset by lower average active accounts. Health & Wellness purchase volume was 3% higher primarily reflecting growth in Pet & Audiology. And purchase volume in Home & Auto was flat, generally reflecting partner expansion in furniture and electronics offset by selective spend in home improvement and lower average active accounts.
Synchrony’s co-branded credit cards, including our dual cards, accounted for 51% of our total purchase volume in the first quarter and increased 20% versus last year, driven by product upgrades, higher broad-based spend and enhanced utility across these card programs. The mix of discretionary spend within our auto partner portfolio increased during the first quarter, making the third consecutive quarter of year-on-year improvement.
Additionally, the rate of discretionary spend growth continue to accelerate, outpacing non-discretionary spend growth also for the third consecutive quarter and even during the month of March when fuel prices began to rise. This discretionary spend strength came in particular from categories like retail, entertainment and electronics. And while spending on fuel was up significantly during March in our non-discretionary spend, total portfolio spend per account growth remains strong as consumers navigated the higher costs.
Meanwhile, payment rate increased approximately 50 basis points compared to last year. Collectively, we believe these spend and payment trends are a testament to the efficacy of our prior credit actions and consistent credit discipline as well as resilient consumer health supported by some early benefit from increased tax refunds and lower tax withholdings.
Synchrony continued to execute across our key strategic priorities during the first quarter, adding or renewing more than 15 partners including Indian Motorcycle, Harbor Freight and Miracle Ear. We renewed our partnership with Indian Motorcycle, America’s first motorcycle companies founded in 1901 to offer flexible financing solutions through their nationwide dealer network.
We also extended our relationship with Harbor Freight, America is the number one tool store with nearly 50 years in business and more than 1,600 locations nationwide to provide private label credit card financing with the option of 5% back or 0 interest equal payment installment loans. And our program with Miracle Ear enables patients to pay for hearing devices and related services over time, leveraging practice management software that optimizes the financing experience for both consumers and staff.
Synchrony also continued to broaden distribution of CareCredit financing during the first quarter, through our expanded strategic partnerships with Planet DDS. As the preferred patient financing solution across all Planet DDS practice management platforms, CareCredit will be integrated across more than 2,500 Cloud 9 orthodontic practices and more than 15,000 Denticon dental practices to improve patient access to treatment while also supporting practice growth operational efficiency and better patient outcomes. And we’re also delivering streamlined care credit experiences for pet families through our new partnership with both Figo and Embrace Pet Insurance.
Today, consumers can use CareCredit at approximately 85% of U.S. pet locations and now approved pet insurance claims can be reimbursed directly as a credit to the consumer’s CareCredit account after they pay for their pet’s care using our CareCredit card. These partnerships extend CareCredit’s pet insurance reimbursement ecosystem to more than 1.7 million insured pets and underscore the larger opportunity we have to our strategic partnership with Independence Pet Holdings. Together, we are making it easier for consumers to pay for and manage the cost of pet care.
And lastly, we continue to enhance the utility of care credit by broadening its acceptance for eligible health and wellness purchases on walmart.com, complementing CareCredit’s long-standing acceptance in-store across Walmart and Sam’s Club locations nationwide.
In addition to currently eligible health and wellness purchases, CareCredit cardholders can now use their card to make purchases across a wider selection of in-store and online product categories, including medical supplies and equipment, fitness products and sleep essentials. This expanded collaboration with Walmart will enable us to empower more consumers with financial flexibility to purchase health and wellness products and services whenever and however the need arrives.
And as we look to the remainder of the year ahead, Synchrony is positioned to drive our momentum further as we grow our existing partner programs and win new ones, diversify our programs, products and markets to reach and serve more consumers and more businesses across the country and power best-in-class experiences for all those we serve.
I am proud to say that we are doing all of this while also earning the privilege of being ranked as the number one best company to work for in the U.S. by Fortune magazine and Great Place to Work in 2026. Together, all of our incredible people at Synchrony have built a high trust culture that makes us faster, bolder and better for the customers and partners who count on us every single day.
With that, I’ll turn the call over to Brian to discuss our financial performance in greater detail.
Brian Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Brian, and good morning, everyone. Synchrony’s first quarter financial performance delivered record first quarter purchase volume a positive inflection in loan receivables growth, strong credit performance and higher return on average assets intangible common equity compared to last year. These results reflected Synchrony’s disciplined execution as we focus on delivering consistent risk-adjusted returns amid evolving market conditions.
Turning to our performance in more detail. Synchrony generated $43 billion of purchase volume a first quarter record and a 6% increase compared to last year. Ending loan receivables were flat at $100 billion, though we did achieve a positive inflection in ending loan receivables with an increase of approximately $477 million at the end of the first quarter. This reflected the impact of higher purchase volume, generally offset by the effects of elevated payment rates.
The payment rate of 16.3% was approximately 50 basis points higher than last year and approximately 110 basis points above the pre-pandemic first quarter average, primarily reflecting shifts in portfolio and product mix as well as the impacts of new portfolio seasoning, our previous credit actions and higher average tax refunds.
Net interest income increased 4% to $4.6 billion primarily driven by the combination of higher interest and fees and lower interest expense. Interest and fees increased 2%, primarily driven by the impact of our PPPCs, partially offset by lower benchmark rates. Interest expense decreased 11%, primarily due to lower benchmark rates.
Our first quarter net interest margin increased 76 basis points versus last year to 15.5%, reflecting three key drivers. One, a 47 basis point increase in our loan receivables yield, which was partially driven by the impact of our PPPCs and contributed approximately 39 basis points to our net interest margin; two, a 44 basis point decline in our total interest-bearing liabilities cost which reflected the impact of lower benchmark rates and contributed approximately 35 basis points to our net interest margin; and three, a 76 basis point increase in the mix of loan receivables as a percent of interest-earning assets versus last year, which contributed approximately 14 basis points to our net interest margin.
These improvements were partially offset by a 69 basis point reduction in our liquidity portfolio yield, which reduced our net interest margin by 12 basis points. The decline was generally driven by lower benchmark rates.
Turning to the remainder of our P&L. RSAs of $1.1 billion or 4.31% of average loan receivables in the first quarter and increased $175 million versus the prior year. primarily reflecting program performance, which included lower net charge-offs and the impact of our PPPCs. Provision for credit losses decreased $156 million to $1.3 billion, primarily driven by a $242 million decrease in net charge-offs, partially offset by a $97 million reserve release in the prior year.
Other expense increased 6% to $1.3 billion, primarily driven by the costs related to technology investments and higher operational losses. The first quarter efficiency ratio was 35.6%, approximately 220 basis points higher than last year. This resulted from higher overall expenses and the impact of higher RSA as program performance improved.
To summarize Synchrony’s first quarter results, we generated net earnings of $805 million or $2.27 per diluted share, a return on average assets of 2.7% and return on tangible common equity of 24.5% and an 8% increase in tangible book value per share.
Shifting focus to our key credit trends on Slide 8. Our portfolio’s mix of below men payers remain well below pre-pandemic levels across all credit cohorts during the first quarter with the non-prime population outperforming relative to other credit cohorts since the end of 2023. We believe this continued trend in non-prime is reflective of our previous credit actions. We also continue to see normalization in the prime and super prime cohorts with some gradual shifting in the mix from above minimum to minimum payments.
At quarter end, both our 30 plus and 90 plus delinquency rates were generally in line with the prior year, and our net charge-off rate was 5.42% in the first quarter, a decrease of 96 basis points from 6.38% in the prior year. Collectively, efficacy of our previous credit actions and ongoing credit management strategies as well as the resilience of our customers and portfolio amid an uncertain environment.
Finally, our allowance for credit loss as a percent of loan receivables was 10.42% which increased approximately 36 basis points from 10.06% in the fourth quarter, in line with our seasonal trends and a decreased 45 basis points from 10.87% in the first quarter of 2025.
Turning to Slide 9. Synchrony’s funding, capital and liquidity remain a foundational strength of our business. Synchrony grew our direct deposits by $3.1 billion and reduced broker deposits by $3.7 billion compared to last year. And during the first quarter, we issued $750 million of senior unsecured debt and our tightest five year credit spread to date and a final coupon of 4.95% and a $500 million three year secured public bond from the Synchrony Card Issuance Trust with a final coupon of 4.22%.
As of March 31, deposits represented 83% of our total funding with secured debt representing 9% and unsecured debt representing 8%. Total liquid assets decreased 4% to $22.8 billion and represented 18.8% of total assets, 72 basis points lower than last year.
Now focusing on our capital ratios. Synchrony ended the quarter with CET1 ratio of 12.7%, a Tier 1 capital ratio of 13.9% and a total capital ratio of 16%, each of which declined by approximately 50 basis points versus the prior year. And our Tier 1 capital plus reserve ratio decreased to 24.1% compared to 25.1% last year.
Synchrony returned $1 billion to shareholders during the first quarter, which included $900 million in share repurchases and $104 million in common stock dividends. In addition, our Board of Directors approved a new share repurchase program of up to $6.5 billion of the company’s common stock which commenced in the second quarter of 2026 and a change from our prior share repurchase program does not have an expiration date.
The new share repurchase program replaces the company’s prior program, which was scheduled to expire on June 30, 2026, and had approximately $300 million remaining. The pace and amount of share repurchases are flexible and will be executed from time to time subject to various factors, including capital levels, financial performance, market conditions, legal and regulatory requirements and in accordance with our capital plans.
Finally, I’d like to discuss our outlook on Slide 10. We continue to expect accelerated growth in purchase volume and average active accounts without any further broad-based credit refinements as we move through the year. The outcome should more than offset the impact of elevated payment rates to drive mid single-digit growth in ending loan receivables by year end. The rate of receivables growth should follow seasonality and accelerate as we move into the back half of the year. This will be driven by growth in our core portfolio as well as a combination of both recently launched and soon-to-be launched programs, including Walmart OnePay, Bob’s Discount Furniture, RH and approximately $725 million of those commercial co-brand loan receivables, which was added in early April.
Net interest income is expected to grow in 2026 as a result of higher loan receivables the impact of PPPCs is continuing to build and as we reduce our funding liabilities costs, these trends will partially offset the lower late fee incidents. We expect delinquency and losses to follow normal seasonality through the year with net charge-offs peaking in the second quarter.
We expect our net charge-offs to be less than 5.5% for the full year, and we remain focused on our disciplined approach to underwriting our business. And as program performance strengthens due to higher net interest income and lower losses compared to last year, we continue to expect RSAs to increase but remain within our long-term range of 4% to 4.5% of average receivables.
Lastly, we remain focused on operating expense discipline while also investing in the long-term potential of our business. As a result, we continue to expect other expense growth to trend in line with loan receivables. Putting all these elements together, Synchrony remains on track to deliver between $9.10 and $9.50 in diluted earnings per share, but also executing across key strategic priorities to deliver consistent risk-adjusted growth and strong capital generation, and we are well positioned to return excess capital in aggressive but prudent way.
With that, I’ll turn the call back over to Brian.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Brian. Before I turn the call over to Q&A, I’d like to leave you with three key takeaways from today’s discussion. First, the consumer remains resilient and the foundation of our portfolio is strong. Our consistent underwriting discipline, credit management strategies and portfolio performance have positioned us well for both the near and long-term.
Second, Synchrony’s investments are driving results across our business and for the millions of consumers and hundreds of thousands of small and midsized businesses we serve across the country. And third, because of the results we deliver, Synchrony is generating growth at strong risk-adjusted returns and robust capital, positioning us well to drive considerable long-term value for our stakeholders.
With that, I’ll turn the call back to Kathryn to open the Q&A.
Kathryn Miller — Senior Vice President and Director of Investor Relations
That concludes our prepared remarks. We will now begin the Q&A session. So that we can accommodate as many of you as possible, I’d like to ask the participants to please limit yourself to one primary and one follow-up question. If you have additional questions, the Investor Relations team will be available after the call.
Operator, please start the Q&A session.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] We’ll take our first question from Terry Ma with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Terry Ma
Hi. Thank you. Good morning. Just wanted to start off with the loan growth guide of mid single-digits. Can you maybe just give a little bit more color on kind of what you’re seeing in the account acquisitions and just borrower behavior to give you confidence in that second half acceleration?
Brian Wenzel
Yes. Thanks for the question, Terry. As we look at the first quarter and how we exited you saw a clear acceleration of our purchase volume to a record high for the first quarter, 6% year-over-year. So we’ve seen that acceleration positively pay rates up from a credit perspective, up 50 basis points. Some of that in the first quarter was a result of higher income tax refunds, which impacted the quarter by 14 basis points. But we feel good about the purchase volume coming through and we feel good about some of the discretionary purchases that we see as we go through.
As you kind of step out into the quarters, again, what we’re going to start to see is some of the acquisition, whether it’s Walmart, OnePay, Lowe’s commercial begin to build into the portfolio as we move into the back half of the year. And we saw a strong new account originations of 15% in the first quarter of this year. So we see positive momentum as we exited out of the first quarter. For the first couple of weeks in April, we’ve seen that to be consistent with how we exited to maybe slightly stronger from a purchase volume standpoint. So we feel good that the consumer is engaging with our products and wanting our products as we move forward.
Terry Ma
Got it. That’s helpful. And then on the payment rate of 16.3% this quarter and it being over 100 basis points above your pre-pandemic average. Has your product mix if driven a permanent resetting of that payment rate higher? If that’s the case, what does that mean for your long-term loss expectations and loan growth? Thank you.
Brian Wenzel
Thanks, again, Terry. So I don’t think it’s permanently reset it. I think what you look at is two fundamental elements that have happened over the last couple of years, which has been driven by our credit actions. Number one, we have a higher credit quality into the portfolio, particularly into the higher super prime versus what we normally have. So non-prime has gone down, which has a higher revolve rate, number one.
Number two, you see a mix in the portfolio as people pull back on discretionary purchases in the last couple of years, particularly in the Home & Auto space and Lifestyle, when you have those larger promotional purchases, those payment rates are generally sub 10%, probably around 8% or 9%. So when you remix the portfolio and the percent of promotional financings are down, you artificially bring the payment rate up. So that, plus the acceleration of new accounts here in the last year or so, they tend to pay off at a slightly higher level. So it’s more a phenomenon of a shift inside the portfolio as it relates to credit actions and two, the return to growth.
Terry Ma
Got it. Thank you.
Ryan Nash
Thank you.
Brian Wenzel
Terry. Have a good day.
Operator
Thank you. We’ll take our next question from Ryan Nash with Goldman Sachs.
Ryan Nash
Good morning, everyone.
Brian Wenzel
Hey, Ryan. Good morning, Ryan.
Ryan Nash
Brian, maybe to start on the EPS guide of $9.10 to $9.50. Can you maybe just help us with how some of the moving pieces have shifted. It’s clear credit is better with the guide below $5.50. But what else would you say has shifted, given obviously, we’ve seen rates moving? And where do you think we’re tracking within the range after a quarter? And I have a follow-up.
Brian Wenzel
Yes. Thanks, Ryan. So again, I think you started with net charge-offs. I think as we guided at the start of the year that our loss rate would be in line with our long-term target, now it’s slightly below. So there’s a little bit of favorability. You do have some payment rate pressure that we saw in the first quarter. But if you take a step back and you say, okay, how do you think about the range for a second and how do you move towards the higher end of the range.
There’s clearly a couple of things that could play into that equation. Number one, will you see a slowing in the payment rate, which will increase revolve rate, particularly on existing accounts that will drive more revenue towards you, number one. Two, on the delinquency formation and performance of delinquencies, will that continue to improve or stay steady that improves most certainly, you have a little bit of headwind from late fees, but most certainly, you’ll get potentially a reserve release and net charge-off benefits. Both of those two items have an RSA offset to it.
So again, we’re not guiding inside the range. But clearly, there are cases where you can get to the higher end of the range. Even if the payment rate stays higher, and charge-offs stay where they are from our first quarter exit, you then see you’re towards the middle or lower end of the range. So again, I think we see pathways both ways. The question you’re going to have to answer is what happens in the macro environment. The consumer has been incredibly resilient both from a purchasing behavior pattern and a payment behavior pattern. So again, we’ll have to watch the uncertainty as it relates to the geopolitical risk that exists today.
Ryan Nash
Got you. And then in terms of the buyback, I guess, how do we think about the pacing of the $6.5 billion, which is open ended, do you think it will be done differently than under the prior process? And I guess, maybe just touch upon what are your expectations for capital relief under the Basel proposal? And how do you think about standardized versus ERB, which I’m assuming is more onerous on your business, but it would be good to hear how you flesh it out.
Brian Wenzel
Yes. So to parse that question, Ryan, when you think about the $6.5 billion again being open ended. We don’t give quarterly cadence. What — I’d sit back and say is, if you look back at the recent history and look at that cadence, that’s probably what we’ll end up doing. That’s all dependent upon how the business performs macroeconomic environment, legal, regulatory or capital plans, etc., there are a bunch of caveats there. But again, looking back at history probably gives you a good cadence on how we step out under this plan. Again, this was designed really to align us now that we have a stress capital buffer of 250 basis points with our category for peers.
With regards to your question on the Basel III proposal, under the standardized approach, it is favorable to Synchrony. So we absolutely appreciate the Fed’s thoughtfulness of reproposing the rules here and their ability and willingness to listen to industry participants with regard to that rule. So when you look at the standardized approach, we clearly get a benefit on the retail exposures or on the risk weighting of assets and only a small negative as it goes to the AOCI inclusion into that would generate — if the rule is adopted exactly as it is with no changes, you would see our RWAs go down and our capital get relief of 125 basis points to 150 basis points.
If you step out and look at the enhanced risk-based approach, that’s a little bit more mixed. You do get more risk weighting risk rating assets benefit, but you’re now going to introduce a capital charge for the open to buy in the portfolio, which treats all those open to buys the same way. You’re going to introduce operating risk into the equation and then you have an impact on the DTA, which is when you combine all those effects, it’s a net negative for us if the rule is adopted exactly as is. But I think we continue to study the rule and I think we’ll provide comments as well as industry participants in ways in which you can eliminate some of the double counts, particularly on the operating risk and maybe be a little bit more thoughtful on the open to buy and how that’s converted to a risk-weighted asset.
Ryan Nash
Thanks for calling, Brian.
Brian Wenzel
Thanks, Ryan. Thanks, Ryan.
Operator
Thank you. We’ll go next to Sanjay Sakhrani with KBW. Please go ahead.
Sanjay Sakhrani
Thank you. Maybe Brian Wenzel, if we could just follow-up on the earnings guide question just in the commentary. When we look at sort of credit doing better and loan growth sort of still remaining the same. Is it that the — an EPS remaining stable? Is it that your expectation on yield has changed in some way lower or maybe you could just put that because it would seem like there’s sort of — you’re moving towards the higher end of the range with the credit coming in better.
Brian Wenzel
Yes. Thanks for the question, Sanjay. And again, I think if you go back to what I said back in January, and I said kind of coming through here, our guidance was around in line with the 5.5% to 6%. Really, we’re trying to give a position of stability as it relates to the charge-off guidance. I think as you look at it now being less than 5.5%, I don’t think there’s a material difference in the way in which we thought about credit at the end of January and the way we think about credit today. So I think you may be overweighting that change relative to our guide.
Sanjay Sakhrani
Got it. All right. Thank you. And then maybe just more of an elaboration on the health of the consumer. I’m just trying to think about the geopolitical events that are happening and the impact on fuel price. You guys talked a little bit about — I don’t know, Brian Doubles, you talked about, you’re seeing early benefits of tax refunds. I’m just curious if you could just sort of list how those are impacting the consumer? I mean, where are we with the tax refunds? Like is there more to come in the second quarter? Maybe you can just help us just think about the assumptions you’re making and sort of where we are. Thanks.
Brian Doubles
Yes, I’ll start on that one, Sanjay. Look, I think the consumer is still in pretty good shape. It’s been very consistent over the past few quarters. We’re seeing signs of strength when you look at spending patterns, credit continues to outperform our expectations. So I think the macro environment is still pretty constructive, strong labor market, you do have the higher tax refunds when you get into that in a little bit.
And you’ve got some watch items. We’re watching inflation very closely, higher gas prices, other factors that I think are creating some uncertainty out there with consumers, but they’re really — they really seem to be looking past at this point. We don’t see it impacting spend. You saw spend for us accelerated really nicely this quarter. When you look at the platforms, D&B was up 9%. Digital is up 8%, lifestyle up 7%. That’s indicative of, one, I think, our product suite, but also a pretty healthy resilient consumer. So there’s a lot of, what I would call, noise out there right now and things that we’re watching and tracking really carefully. But at this point, whether you’re looking at spend patterns or early stage, late stage, everything points to a pretty resilient consumer.
And I don’t know if you want to add on tax refund.
Brian Wenzel
Yes. Let me just add some color, both on tax and then on gas, Sanjay. So first on tax refunds, the tax refunds are slightly lower than our expectations, low end of the range for us, we thought would be around $500. They’re coming in $350. And the way we’ve seen that — well, it hasn’t had a material effect on our book. We’ve seen it will certainly impact when we look at payment rate and we lag payment rates to the refunds there’s about a 14 basis point impact in the quarter from higher payment rate in the quarter related to tax refunds.
You hit on a good point where in the next couple of weeks, you tend to see a little bit higher refunds of people who file closer to the April 15 deadline. So that refund amount could creep up a little bit. But we didn’t see a week on week when you look at it, we did not see any real change in purchasing behavior pattern. When I look at the depository side of the business, we saw lower inflows and lower outflows, but that trend week-on-week with returns has mirrored for the last three years. So I think when we look at refunds, there hasn’t been a material impact on to the business.
When you look at gas prices, if you look at the average transaction value for gas in March, it’s up 17% sequentially February to March of this year and up 10% year-over-year, but we haven’t seen any change in the frequency. It’s actually up slightly, to be honest with you, year-over-year on frequency of gas purchases, and we haven’t seen any pullback as it relates to gas. So at this point, I think the consumer is probably annoyed, but they haven’t changed their behavioral patterns to date as it relates to that spending.
Sanjay Sakhrani
Thank you, Very helpful.
Brian Wenzel
Thanks so much. Thanks, Sanjay. Have a good day.
Operator
Thank you. We’ll go next to Darrin Peller with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Darrin Peller
Hey guys. Thanks. Could we just start on expenses, just given it grew 8% on an adjusted basis in the first quarter and your guidance appears to imply expense growth decelerates throughout the year, even as receivables growth improves. How much of that is due to upfront investment in new program adds rolling off? Or any other color on any expense, that would be great.
Brian Wenzel
Yes. Thanks, Darren. The expense, there are two, what I’d say items I’d point you to inside the quarter. Number one is slightly higher information technology expense that goes in there. There’s two components that are in there. Number one is the association fees that we paid to MasterCard and Visa. So on a volume basis, with volume being up, particularly in the co-brand space, we see slightly higher expense. That should continue on for the year. And then you have some information technology and investments that we’re making, whether it’s cloud and the like. And again, that will probably continue on.
The other item that you see is up is in the other, which relates to some operational losses, which I think is a little bit more syncratic in the first quarter and should reduce down as we move forward. So again, I think when you think about the run rate of expense dollars, there’ll probably be about the same. But again, you get a step up as assets kind of come through and get some leverage in the back half of the year.
Darrin Peller
Okay. All right. That’s helpful. Thanks. And just for my follow-up, I want to touch on AI and Agentic for a moment. Just maybe you guys can give us more color on any incremental investments you’ve been making around both the AI side and the efficiencies in the business. I know your FTEs have been effectively flat since 2023. But any early signs of evidence where you might be able to create more efficiencies on that front.
And then on the Agentic side, also just incremental investments being made over the past couple of quarters to ensure that your placement on choice at the point of sale stays as high as it should be for Synchrony and its merchant partners.
Brian Doubles
Yes. It’s a great question. I’ll start with the second piece of that because I actually think this is the more important of the two, which is around Agentic commerce. It’s a big area of focus for us. I think we’re moving very quickly here. We’ve got, hopefully, first mover advantage. And like you said, this is going to fundamentally change how consumers discover new products, how they research REIT reviews and ultimately purchase. It’s still early. We’re working with all of the top companies to ensure that as that purchasing path changes, our financing offers, our products are embedded in that experience.
So there’s still a lot that is unknown here in terms of how this could play out. One scenario, which is probably the most prevalent right now is that when a consumer research is a product inside of the AI platform, to complete the purchase, it will still go back to the merchant site. We’re already embedded there. So that’s kind of the easier of the two use cases. I think the second one which is bound to happen at some point is that the purchase actually gets completed inside of the AI platform. And that’s where, as you indicated, it’s really important that were in there, our financing options are present in that checkout process.
The good news is our partners have a huge incentive to make sure that, that’s the case. So as they’re talking to all of the AI companies about how this is going to work, they’re pulling us in and saying, okay, it’s imperative that Synchrony’s cards, our cards with them are present an option for the consumer to purchase because they want to make sure that those transactions run on our rails that the valve prop is protected, that the consumer benefits and it feels very similar to as they were purchasing on the merchant side. So that’s kind of the genic piece of it.
The Gen AI or what I would call it more the productivity and efficiency piece, we’ve been on this for well over a year at this point, big opportunity for us. You referenced holding head count last I think the bigger benefit, frankly, in the near-term is just speed to market, right? We’re using this. Our coders are using it, 90% of our professional workforce is using it across all functions, across all platforms. And they’re getting real economies of scale. And so I think the early returns are — this is going to help us be a lot faster, a lot more efficient, but also free up and redeploy our resources to things that are frankly more challenging, more strategic and frankly, more fun to work on. So I’m very optimistic about how we’re operating here. I think we’re off and running. I think there’s big benefits in the future.
Darrin Peller
Okay. That’s great to hear. Thanks, Brian. Thanks, guys.
Brian Doubles
Yes. Thanks, Darrin.
Ryan Nash
Thank you. We’ll take our next question from Rick Shane with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Richard Shane
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Look, you mentioned strength in luxury strength in discretionary. You also mentioned 17% increase at the pump on a ticket basis, to follow-up on Sanjay’s question, can you help us understand spending and credit performance right now based on both income level and FICO score realizing that they’re difference? Are you seeing divergence in the portfolio based upon sort of borrower category?
Brian Wenzel
Yes. Thanks for the question, Shane. So when you go back One of the key things we talked about on this call has been payment rate. And when you look at payment rate by credit cohort — I’m sorry, by credit — yes, credit cohort, you see strength coming at $780, $780 plus. That is up the largest as you look at that piece of it. The next group is then the non-prime that is up. And then the middle at $650 to $720 and $720 to $780 is performing about equally.
So again, you see the top end continuing to pull up, which goes back to the mix shift I indicated earlier on the call. When you look at it by behavioral pattern inside of that, you do see a little bit of shift as it relates into in pay but that’s really getting offset by — between MinPay and Statement Pay. And when you look at it by cohort, then again, underneath that and that — if you were paying MinPay or full pay, again, the bottom end is holding firm with regard to that MinPay and really where you see more MinPay happening is in the prime segment between $650 and $780.
So again, I think we see the middle moving a little bit here. But again, the high end is continuing to pull through. When we look at it generationally, again, generations in that high-end cohort are continuing to pull the spend, but slightly higher payment rates particularly at the high end of the portfolio.
Richard Shane
Got it. Super interesting. Thank you, Brian.
Brian Wenzel
Thanks, Rick. Have a good day.
Operator
Thank you. We’ll go next to Mihir Bhatia with UBS. Please go ahead.
Mihir Bhatia
Hi, thanks. Maybe just talking about average accounts for a second. They’ve been declining for six quarters here I think some of that is just a deliberate byproduct of your previous credit restrictions. But I had a two part question on that. The first was just, are you seeing any shifts in consumer engagement with programs there? And maybe relatedly, we’ve seen a little bit of an increase in loyalty costs. So is that like have you just readjusting programs to see that to drive a little bit more volume there? Or is it just the Walmart and some of the other co-brand programs picking up speed in the loyalty costs.
Brian Wenzel
Yes. Thanks, Mihir, for the question. I’m glad you didn’t change firms, by the way, as well. But on the active account, the first part of your question, that’s generally just lagging the loan receivables. You should see that in Vertis we’ve accelerated new accounts and they begin to engage into the portfolio. So again, it trails a little bit, but you will see that inversion happen probably in the middle part of this year. So that’s one.
I think when you get to the loyalty question, again, a couple of things. One, we’ve enhanced certain value propositions last year on some of the cards that drives a slightly higher loyalty cost. And then to a large degree, what happens when you launch some new programs, you are going to see higher loyalty costs as some of the most engaged people take up that product and they tend to spend in store, which has a higher value proposition for our partners and merchants than it does in the world. And that’s just a phenomenal a byproduct of how the portfolio seasons when you add those new accounts.
Again, having 15% new account growth, again, will drive a little bit more of that in-store value proposition versus world as you launch. But again, when you look at the co-branded volume being up 20%, you are going to drive more loyalty costs, which is really a good thing. When you look at transaction frequency, it is up. So it’s not — our customers are engaging with the product and engaging in a bigger way year-over-year.
Mihir Bhatia
Got it. And then just a follow-up. I wanted to go back to Ryan’s question about just buybacks. Can you just remind us like what’s the — what factors impact that level of buyback? Is CET1 just the binding other considerations we should be keep in mind, things like rating agencies, requirements, etc.
Brian Wenzel
Yes. CET1 is not the binding constraint for us. Obviously, the only thing left in the capital stack that we have to fully develop is the Tier 1, so it’s a little bit more preferred to do. That is not a binding constraint today for us. We still have plenty of room right relative to our targets.
There are multiple factors. Yes, you hit on one, which is radio ages and things like that, that kind of come in our regulators. But again, I think we start with how is the business performing, what’s the visibility to our business performance, what do we see as RWA growth as we move through. Then you start looking into factors around, okay, what is the regulatory environment? And how do you think about that? And just step through those things, that’s when we set the cadence along with our capital plan and the Board with regard to do it.
We are going to be aggressive but prudent. And I think you’d have to appreciate the fact that we can’t drop 100 basis points right away or go right down to the target. I think the regulators and most certainly rating agencies, our Board probably wouldn’t be comfortable on that. But I think we’ve shown a measured discipline. You see that really on the chart that we laid out in the in the earnings deck on Page 3, where we have been accelerating capital return to shareholders.
And we’ll certainly, I think when you look at the latter part of the deck, and you go back into the capital ratio page, which sits on Page 9, you see the earnings generation power of the business, generating year-over-year 350 basis points of CET1. So we are we are driving towards that target. And again, we’ll use an appropriate cadence to get there and hopefully an aggressive but prudent way.
Mihir Bhatia
Thank you for taking my questions.
Brian Wenzel
Thanks, Mihir. Have a good day.
Operator
Thank you. And we’ll go next to Erika Najarian from UBS. Please go ahead.
Erika Najarian
Hi, good morning. I’m glad Mihir didn’t take my job. So just…
Brian Wenzel
We’re happy for you too, Erika.
Erika Najarian
So my first question is I know you don’t love this question, but it’s a fierce debate in the marketplace right now. So I have to reask it. So for — I guess, it’s two parts. First, based on the RSA mass, under Basel III end game that you gave us, Brian, that would essentially take your CET1 from 12.7% closer to 14%, if I’m hearing you right on the 120 basis points I guess as you think about having a higher level of CET1 relative to that 11% minimum, is that going to be biased towards buybacks or more aggressive portfolio acquisition.
And additionally, I know you don’t love the question about pacing of buybacks, but that is a fierce debate right now with the investor community. Over the past three quarters, your buyback average has been about $900 million per quarter, which would then suggest that you would go through this current authorization in under two years. And thus, I guess I’m just wondering what drove that $900 million pacing? And as the receivables growth improves, is that an immediate offset to that buyback pacing?
Brian Wenzel
Thanks, Erika. I won’t comment whether we love or dislike the question, but let me try to — let me try to parse it out for you a little bit as you kind of go through it. With regard to what happens ultimately with Basel III, I mean, to be honest with you, we don’t know what the final rule will look like. To the extent that, that rule gets implemented the way it is today, we certainly would have a discussion with the Board with regard to our capital levels and what we do with that incremental capital. And I think we have shown over time to either invest that capital into acquisitions such as Ally Lending and Allegro and other things or we can return it back to shareholders.
But that’s a decision that’s going to be out. We don’t — we haven’t really engaged the Board with that today. It’s not something that we’re working on. We’re currently studying that evaluation right in that rule and seeing what are the positives and negatives and where does the need to be adjusted and where we may come on either with the industries or by ourselves. So that part of the question.
With regard to the cadence in the pacing, again, I look at a slightly longer horizon. Again, where we see opportunities and where we saw how the business perform, right, relative to the earnings power of the business and the market will lean in to the extent that, that shifts or we allocate more to RWAs, we’ll adjust that pattern. So again, I’m not sure many people give a quarterly cadence. I know that’s something everyone would like to do. But again, we’ll be aggressive but prudent. But I think if you look back over the past history, I think you’ll get a better read versus a quarter or two.
Erika Najarian
And just my second follow-up. Just clarifying your response to Ryan and Sanjay’s question, is the reserve release in the guide? Or is there only — is the reserve release at sort of the mid to high point of the EPS guide?
Brian Wenzel
Yes. So let’s make sure we’re clear, Erika. I was trying to sit back and say ways in which you can get to the high end. Again, we haven’t given any view on whether or not we’ll be releasing reserves or not. I think if I take a step back, right, credit has been a strength for us. I think we’ve been a leader in the industry. I think our performance has been terrific.
Now the question becomes in the macro, we have qualitative overlays that sit there and say, okay, we’re prepared to the extent that the macro environment gets worse. I think I’ve consistently said that where I see this if the environment continues to play out the way we think there’s a little bit more of a downward bias, but I’m not necessarily sure I would plan on that today. Again, we continue to evaluate the environment and we step out quarter by quarter. But again, we haven’t provided guidance that I was only trying to give some of the previous analysts away when you think about the range of where you can end up inside the range.
Erika Najarian
Thank you.
Brian Wenzel
Thanks Erica. Have a good day.
Operator
Thank you. We’ll take our next question from Mark DeVries with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Mark DeVries
Yes. Thanks. Could you comment on how the pipeline for new program acquisitions or signs look kind of relative to recent history. And how meaningful those types of opportunities could be for growth over the next year? And if possible, comment on kind of how big of an opportunity you think the new RH program could be?
Brian Doubles
Yes. Look, we continue to have a very active pipeline, a combination of new start-up de novo programs, which we’re really excited about, some existing programs I would say the existing programs that are coming to market in the next year or two are in kind of the midsized range, nothing really that significant in terms of portfolios we require, but we’ve got a great track record of buying portfolios, winning programs then driving a lot of penetration and seeing really good growth there.
So across all five of our platforms, it’s got a very robust pipeline, I would say, in traditional programs, but also a nice pipeline of opportunities in what I would consider non-traditional opportunities, whether it’s ISVs inside of Health & Wellness or Home & Auto in the more fragmented space.
So — and the good news, too, just to add on to that, we’re seeing pretty good price discipline in the market. That continues to be the case. That’s been consistent for the last two or three years. There’s always some pockets of rational behavior. But generally, I think the industry is pricing in the right way for this environment, and we’re winning the programs that we want to win. And we’re very excited about RH. It’s a great franchise, and we think we’ll be able to drive a lot more penetration and really grow that program.
Mark DeVries
Got it. Thank you.
Brian Doubles
Thanks, Mark.
Operator
Thank you. And we’ll go next to Moshe Orenbuch from TD Cowen. Please go ahead.
Moshe Orenbuch
Great. Thanks. Maybe to kind of follow-up, four out of your five verticals all had growth, some have been pretty strong growth in purchase volume and Home & Auto was flat, although with down 6% accounts, I guess, had okay growth per account. Could you drill into that a little bit? Like what went on there from an account perspective? Are there things that you’re doing to restart account growth in some of those programs? Obviously, you’ve got some new programs. But in other words, that existing base because that is about 30% of your receivables. So can you talk about the plans there a little bit?
Brian Wenzel
Yes. Thanks, Moshe, for the question. So when you think about the Home & Auto platform, this is a large portion of our promotional financing business. So those average active accounts when consumers are engaging in those discretionary purchases have a tendency to stick. And again, as we’ve said, they have been a little bit more challenged, particularly in the home specialty space with regard to making those bigger ticket purchases. So that has impacted more of the more of the average account growth.
Again, what you’ve seen is a positive trajectory on Home receivables. But again, you have a fairly broad mix inside that sales platform everywhere from do yourself at Lowe’s to home furnishings than to Furniture. And then we’ll, certainly, you have Auto, which has a very different dynamic right relative to the average transaction values and frequencies of purchase. So it’s more about the mix inside the Home & Auto platform than a delivered strategy that we have.
Again, we’re moving into an important part of the year for that vertical as you begin to see more things around the Home, whether the Home projects and specialty will certainly do it yourself, etc., that again, you tend to see a little bit more of the volume acceleration. So that with the launch of a couple of new programs, both Bobs and RH and again, hopefully, that will create a little bit of a tailwind for that platform.
Moshe Orenbuch
Thanks. And maybe just as a follow-up, Brian, you had mentioned that not just the impact of tax refunds, but the benefit going forward kind of lower withholdings, I guess could you talk about that a little bit and whether that has been a driver in your — both credit and spend outlook?
Brian Wenzel
Yes. That’s a great question, Moshe. And it’s probably harder to discern that piece of it. You can look at the flow of dollars into the economy in a similar level relative to the refunds themselves because they’re lumpy. As you begin to see this flow that comes through throughout the year, it is harder to pull that piece apart.
What I’d say is if you looked at our purchase volume going through the quarter, it has been relatively consistent. Absent the two storms we saw at the end of January and early February, has been pretty consistent with regard to the growth. Now that’s a combination. Part of that’s going to be withholding. Part of it is income tax refunds. But really, it’s the consumer and some of the discretionary purchases and rotation that Brian talked about in the prepared remarks, kind of pulling through.
Again, if I look at the first three weeks of April, we continue to see that strength kind of come through. Again, I’m not sure I can isolate or anyone can really isolate the withholding piece of it. But it must have some effect inside the overall consumer spending behavioral patterns. And the last thing I’d say, even inside of April, we saw the last three weekends have been three strongest weekends of the year, most certainly ahead of last year’s pace. So we’re encouraged about the consumer, the resilience and their willingness to engage with our products.
Moshe Orenbuch
Thanks very much.
Brian Wenzel
Thanks, Moshe.
Operator
Thank you. At this time, we have time for one final question. And we’ll take our final question from Saul Martinez with HSBC. Please go ahead.
Saul Martinez
Great. Thank you for squeezing in here. Wanted to go back to expenses. I know for ’26, you’re expecting expenses to track loan growth. But beyond ’26, is the idea — can you just comment on your ability to deliver operating leverage as you exit ’26 and into ’27 and top line growth accelerates. And just kind of how do you weigh investment needs? You talked about AI and Agenetic earlier versus the ability and willingness to let revenue flow down to the bottom line.
Brian Wenzel
Yes. Thanks for the question, Saul. Our intended way in which we want to run the company is we don’t want to be adding head count right now. We want to be able to drive productivity through tools that Brian talked about, when you think about simpler things like engineering, but how do we drive AI for all aspects of our business to drive a flat head count environment and get leverage and drive the operating leverage when you look at NII growth relative to opex growth.
So again, where we want to increase our spending inside opex is around some of the technology that creates a differentiator for us and gives us first-mover advantage, particularly when Brian talks about things like AI. So again, I think we want to be disciplined on the core cost, bring our core operating costs down for the consumer, but then continue that investment for the medium to long-term in technology, whether it’s cloud or AI or other things in that nature. So again, while trying to drive that operating leverage of having NII grow faster than operating expenses.
Saul Martinez
Okay. Great. That’s helpful. Then maybe just a follow-up on the consumer. It seems like there’s a little bit of a divergence between really strong credit trends, high payment rates persisting — but you also mentioned minimum payments having gone up and correct me if I get maybe details wrong, but in the super prime and the higher end of the prime market. Can you just comment on what you’re seeing there? Is that just a normalization from historically low levels? Just any color there would be helpful.
Brian Wenzel
Yes. I don’t believe it’s necessary you saw a divergence. I think it’s the way customers engage with how they pay. A lot of times, you see people engage in auto payments and they set it for minimum payments versus setting it for a full statement payment and make the option to make incremental payments. So it’s not really a divergence.
I think if you take it up a level, what we’re clearly trying to articulate is that we see strength in the consumer from a spending behavior pattern from a payment behavior pattern and is flowing through, which has a little bit of a drag on NII but clear strength in maintaining credit now we’re in April, and we have a good portion of the year now covered, that’s a good base for us to continue to deliver through what is an evolving macroeconomic environment. So I think it’s relatively consistent, and we’re pleased with the performance of the consumer inside of our products.
Saul Martinez
All right. Thank you very much.
Brian Wenzel
Thank you. Have a good day.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]