Synchrony Financial (NYSE: SYF) Q2 2021 earnings call dated Jul. 20, 2021
Corporate Participants:
Kathryn Miller — Senior Vice President of Investor Relations
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Sanjay Sakhrani — Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. — Analyst
John Hecht — Jefferies LLC — Analyst
Donald Fandetti — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Betsy Graseck — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Richard Shane — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Moshe Orenbuch — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Mark DeVries — Barclays — Analyst
Nate Richard — Bank of America — Analyst
Dominick Gabriele — Oppenheimer & Co. — Analyst
Bill Carcache — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Welcome to the Synchrony Financial’s Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Vanessa, and I will be your operator for today’s call. [Operator Instructions] Please note that this conference is being recorded.
I will now turn the call over to Kathryn Miller, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. You may begin.
Kathryn Miller — Senior Vice President 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 webcasts 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 delivered strong results during the second quarter, reflecting the power of our technology-enabled model, the durability of our partner-centric value proposition, and the early indications of a consumer resurgence. With now more than a year of the COVID-19 pandemic moving into the rearview mirror, I am proud of how our team has continued to execute on our strategic priorities. Our multi-product, multi-capability strategy has enabled us to nimbly adapt and deliver best-in-class products and services to address our partners’ evolving needs, while also generating appropriate risk-adjusted returns for all our stakeholders.
Let’s get things started by reviewing some of the key financial highlights from the quarter. Net earnings reached a record $1.2 billion, or $2.12 per diluted share. This reflected an increase of $2.06 over last year as we mark the anniversary of the pandemic’s initial impact on our business and really, the world. We are deeply grateful for all of the front line workers, scientists and leaders have done to support our community and make progress toward an eventual return to normalcy.
Purchase volume grew 35% over last year, reflecting a 33% increase in purchase volume per account. This increased spend was broad-based across our five business platforms. This strength in purchase volume was largely offset by the persistently elevated payment rate trends resulting from the government stimulus and industry-wide forbearance actions, leading to a slight increase in loan receivables, which were $78.4 billion for the second quarter. Average balances per account were down about 4% for the period, while new accounts were up about 58%.
Net interest margin of 13.78% was 25 basis points higher than last year. Elevated payment rates and excess liquidity levels continue to have an impact on receivables and yield. The efficiency ratio was 39.6% for the quarter, primarily reflecting lower net interest income. Expenses were down about 4%, compared to last year and down 5% year-to-date as our cost efficiency initiatives continue as planned. We remain on track to remove about $210 million from our expense base by year end, even as we continue to invest in our business.
Credit continue to perform very well. Net charge-offs were 3.57% for the second quarter, down almost 178 basis points from last year.
Turning to our balance sheet. Deposits were down $4 billion, or 7% versus last year, reflecting retail deposit rate actions we took to manage our excess liquidity position. Deposits represented 81% of our funding mix at quarter end, a slight increase versus last year due to the retirement of some of our debt during the second quarter of 2021.
During the quarter, we returned $521 million in capital through share repurchases of $393 million and $128 million in common stock dividends. We also continue to reinvest in our business. One of our greatest competitive differentiators remains our digital capabilities. We continue to invest in innovative products and services that enable our partners to meet their customers wherever and however they want to be met. That where and how, of course, can change fairly quickly, as can the objectives that our partners seek to achieve. So we need to stay nimble and ahead of the curve.
We have continued to win and renew key partnerships, including our recent renewal with TJX Companies. This has been a very valuable partnership for over 10 years now, and we are excited to continue to provide innovative financing products to TJX customers. We also renewed 10 other programs during the quarter, including Shop HQ, Daniels, and Sutherlands and added four new programs, including JCB and Ochsner Health.
Our go-to-market strategy utilizes innovative and scalable ways to reach and serve customers effectively across a broad spectrum of industries and financing needs and over the course of their life cycle. We have built a technology platform that harnesses our proprietary data analytics, cutting edge digital capabilities to offer a customized suite of products specifically designed with our partners and their customers in mind, all while delivering appropriately aligned economic outcomes.
Our recent business reorganization, which included the creation of a growth organization and the redistribution of our partners from three sales platforms into five will allow us to better leverage these company resources and deliver swifter, more optimized products and capabilities for our partners and sustainable profitable growth for our business. In fact, the growth we expect to achieve within each platform will be driven by utilizing our suite of products to expand lifetime value, deploying more of our digital capabilities to expand customer reach, or adapting our value propositions to harness organic trends as the landscape evolves. In the case of our Home & Auto platform, a combination of all three.
In particular, our home partnerships have been a focus of Synchrony’s going back to our business inception when we started providing financing for appliance purchases. Over the years, we’ve significantly broadened the scope of this platform and expanded our customer reach. Today, Synchrony has penetrated across all distribution points in each sector of the home market, from big retailers, to independent merchants and contractors and OEMs and dealers, our Home platform provides financing solutions to about 60,000 merchants and locations across a broad spectrum of industries, including furniture and accessories, mattresses and bedding, appliances, windows, roofing, HVAC and flooring. Our partnerships are deeply rooted in industry expertise, data-driven strategic objectives, and mutually beneficial economic outcomes. The average length of our top 20 partners is over 30 years, because we are able to deliver a breadth of financing products, innovative digital capabilities, and seamless customer experiences that are customized to each partners’ needs as they evolve over time.
Our data insights and analytics expertise, when combined with the partners’ own data, empowers each merchant as they seek to optimize their marketing, customer acquisition and sales strategies. And the value that our suite of products provides to their customers is clear, about 58% of our sales are repeat purchases. Whether customers are looking to upgrade their living room couch, or suddenly find themselves in need of a new washing machine, we enable our partners to consistently support those needs through a variety of financing options that are best suited to the customer and the particular purchase they’re considering. So, whether we’ve been entrusted to enhance customer loyalty, drive transaction volume, or usher a retailers’ adoption of digital assets, our strategy has enabled steady growth across the home market. For the four years prior to the pandemic, Synchrony’s Home receivables grew at a 7% CAGR as consumers spend within home improvement, furniture and decor and electronic and appliances sectors each grew by between 4% and 8% annually.
Certainly, the pandemic has brought with it both challenges and opportunities. As consumers quarantined in their homes, the desire to renovate their homes or upgrade their furniture and decor intensified. As people thought to leave crowded metropolitan communities for suburban neighborhoods, home improvement spend increased. In 2020 alone, the home industry represented an approximate $600 billion market opportunity. Synchrony serves a fraction of that today. Even as we normalize toward a pre-pandemic cadence, the consumers’ desire to invest in their living spaces is as strong as ever, perhaps reflecting a secular shift in favor of more remote work. We have positioned our Home platform very well to capitalize on these trends. We have opportunities to deepen the scope and reach of existing partnerships, while also implementing a number of strategic initiatives to better leverage our core competencies and deepen our market penetration. For example, we have begun using more data and advanced analytics to enhance our acquisition marketing and drive higher repeat sales.
We’ve also launched our direct-to-device capability, which puts the simplicity of our financing application and the power of our underwriting in the hands of the contractors and customers as they seek to install a new HVAC system, replace their windows or repair an oven. This direct-to-device technology is also being deployed in retailer locations, which helps shorten checkout lines and delivers a completely digital solution to apply and buy when in store. In short, we are excited about the opportunities for growth that we see in our Home platform. There are certainly some natural tailwinds in the industry that should feel home spend even as life normalizes in a post-pandemic world. But we are actually more excited about the ways in which we’re leveraging our technological innovations to extend our customer reach, enhance the value of the products and services we offer, and deepen our competitive differentiation. As we continue to execute on our long-term strategy, we are driving even greater customer lifetime value for our partners, better experiences for their customers and strong returns for our stakeholders.
With that, I’ll turn the call over to Brian.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Brian, and good morning, everyone. As Brian mentioned earlier, the strong results we achieved during the second quarter reflected a number of factors. First, a healthy consumer with significant savings and pent-up demand to spend it leading to broad-based purchase volume growth. Second, continued strength in credit quality across our portfolio. We continue to closely monitor our portfolio as industry-wide forbearance begins to expire across the broader consumer finance landscape and for some customers, as rental forbearance also expires. Finally, the strong positioning of our business, combined with consistent execution by our team, while we maintain focus on efficient delivery of customized financing solutions and digitally-enabled customer experiences across our diverse portfolio of partners, merchants and providers focusing on the healthy consumer who has robust savings and desire to spend in an environment with improving economic trends.
During the second quarter, consumer savings rates remained strong, unemployment continued to improve and consumer confidence reached a 16-month high. As a result, discretionary spend seems to be making a gradual return to pre-pandemic levels. In fact, a conference board survey from June indicated that there is also a healthy interest among consumers to spend on long-lasting manufactured goods over the next six months, including homes, cars, and major household appliances, which we expect to be a positive tailwind for our Home & Auto platform in particular. Across our diverse set of platforms, strong consumer spend trends contributed to 35% higher purchase volume compared to last year, primarily reflecting 33% stronger purchase volume per account. When comparing these trends to the more normalized operating environment of the second quarter 2019, and excluding the impact of Walmart, purchase volume was 18% higher in the second quarter 2021 and purchase volume per account was 22% higher. This demonstrates strong consumer demand translating to higher spend relative to pre-pandemic levels.
Dual and co-branded cards accounted for 39% of the purchase volume in the second quarter and increased 56% from last year. On a loan receivables basis, they accounted for 23% of the portfolio and were flat to the prior year. Average active accounts were up about 2%, compared to last year and new accounts were 58% higher, totaling more than 6 million new accounts in the second quarter and over 11 million new accounts year-to-date.
Loan receivables reached $78.4 billion in the second quarter, a slight increase year-over-year as the period [Phonetic] strong purchase volume growth was largely offset by persistently elevated payment rate. This marks the first quarter of year-over-year growth since the start of the pandemic. Payment rate was almost 300 basis points higher when compared to last year, which primarily led to a 6% reduction in interest and fees on loans.
RSAs increased $233 million, or 30% from last year and were 5.25% of average receivables. The increase relative to last year’s second quarter was primarily reflecting the significant improvement in net charge-offs. As a reminder, our retailer share arrangements are designed to share in the program’s performance and when the portfolios are performing better on a risk-adjusted basis, our partner share in this performance. So the RSA is performing as it is designed and the elevated levels we have seen over the last few quarters are a reflection of Synchrony’s particular financial strength through the pandemic. We continue to expect RSAs to decline as net charge-offs begin to rise.
With an improved credit performance and a more optimistic macroeconomic environment, we reduced our loan loss reserves by $878 million this quarter. Other income decreased $6 million, generally reflecting higher loyalty program costs from higher purchase volume during the quarter. Other expense decreased $38 million due to lower operational losses, partially offset by an increase in employee, marketing and business development, and information processing costs.
Moving to Slide 8 and our platform results. We saw a broad-based purchase volume growth across all five platforms as consumers have become increasingly confident and remaining local restrictions are being lifted. Both our Health & Wellness and Diversified & Value platforms experienced more than 50% growth in purchase volume. In Health & Wellness, this primarily reflected lifting of local restrictions on in-person interactions and consumers being more comfortable with the environment and undergoing elective procedures. The lifting of state restrictions was also a primary driver of the significant purchase volume growth in our Diversified & Value platform as consumers increased their discretionary spend in categories like clothing and assorted household goods. Meanwhile, purchase volume grew by 30% in our Digital platform, 25% in Home & Auto and 9% in Lifestyle.
Loan receivable growth trends by platform generally reflected stabilization or modest growth versus the prior year as the higher purchase volume was partially offset by the elevated payment rates. The one exception being our Diversified & Value platform, which is also impacted by store closures in 2020.
Average active account trends were mixed on a platform basis, up by as much as 5% in Digital and down by as much as 6% in Health & Wellness. The active account growth in Digital generally reflected the combination of a shift in the timing of an annual promotional events and the ramp up of some of our recent partner launches. The active account decline in Health & Wellness was primarily associated with the continued strength in consumer balance sheets. Interest and fees were generally down across the platforms, with the exception of Lifestyle due to lower yield as a result of elevated payment trends we’ve been discussing.
I’ll move to Slide 9 to discuss net interest income and margin trends. During the quarter, the continued combined impacts of the March stimulus and high savings balance built during the pandemic led to higher-than-average payment rate across our portfolio. As Slide 9 shows, payment rate ran approximately 280 basis points higher than our five-year historical average and about 300 basis points higher relative to last year’s second quarter. It’s worth noting the gradual moderation in payment rate from April to June, at which point the payment rate was 18.5%, a 90 basis point decrease for the March monthly peak of 19.4%. We expect continued gradual moderation in payment rate as consumers continue to spend the excess savings they accumulated resulting from the combined impact of stimulus and slower discretionary spend during the lockdown.
Interest and fees were down about 6% in the second quarter, reflecting lower finance charge yield from elevated payment rate trends and continued lower delinquent accounts resulting from our strong credit performance. Net interest income decreased 2% from last year. The net interest margin was 13.78%, compared to last year’s margin of 13.53%, a 25 basis points year-over-year improvement driven by favorable interest-bearing liabilities costs and mix of interest earning assets, partially offset by the pandemic’s impact of loan receivable yield. More specifically, interest-bearing liabilities costs were 1.42%, a year-over-year improvement of 73 basis points, primarily due to lower benchmark rates. This provided a 62 basis point increase in our net interest margin.
The mix of loan receivables as a percent of total earning assets increased by 170 basis points from 78% to 79.7% driven by lower liquidity held during the quarter. This accounted for 32 basis point increase in the margin. The loan receivables yield was 18.62% during the second quarter. The 84 basis points year-over-year reduction reflected the impact of higher payment rate and lower interest and fees, which we discussed earlier and impacted our net interest margin by 65 basis points. We continue to believe that in the second half of the year liquidity will continue to be deployed into asset growth and slowing payment rates should result in a higher interest and fee yields leading to increasing net interest margin.
Next, I’ll cover our key credit trends on Slide 10. In terms of specific dynamics for the quarter, I’ll start with the delinquency trends. Our 30-plus delinquency rate was 2.11%, compared to 3.13% last year. Our 90-plus delinquency rate was 1%, compared to 1.77% last year. Higher payment trends continue to drive delinquency improvements.
Focusing on the net charge-off trends. Our net charge-off rate was 3.57%, compared to 5.35% last year. Our reduction in net charge-off rate was primarily driven by improving delinquency trends as customer behavior pattern improved over the last several quarters.
Our allowance for credit losses as a percent of loan receivables was 11.51%. As far as our credit outlook is concerned, we are monitoring trends in our portfolio closely as the accounts enrolled in multiple forbearance programs roll off, but have not seen any indication in our portfolio to date. Our best expectation at this time is that, delinquencies should begin to rise sometime in the back half of 2021, leading to peak delinquencies in mid-2022. This would translate a net charge-off peak in late 2022.
Moving to Slide 11, I will cover expenses for the quarter. Overall expenses were down $38 million, or 4% from last year to $948 million as we continue to execute on our strategic plan to reduce cost and remain disciplined in managing our expense base. Specifically, the decrease was driven by lower operational losses, partially offset by increased employee, marketing and business development, and information processing costs.
The efficiency ratio for the second quarter was 39.6%, compared to 36.3% last year. The main driver of the increase of the efficiency ratio was a negative impact from lower revenue that resulted from a combination of lower receivables and lower interest and fee yield. This was partially offset by a reduction in expenses.
Moving to Slide 12. Given the reduction in our loan receivables in 2020 and early 2021 and the strength in our deposit platform, we continue to carry a higher level of liquidity. While we believe it’s prudent to maintain a higher liquidity level during uncertain and volatile periods, we continue to actively manage our funding profile to mitigate excess liquidity where appropriate. As a result of this strategy, there was a shift in our mix of funding during the quarter. Our deposits declined $4.3 billion from last year. Our securitized and unsecured funding sources declined by $2.6 billion. This resulted in deposits being 81% of our funding, compared to 80% last year with securitized funding comprising 10% and unsecured funding comprising 9% of our funding sources at quarter end. Total liquidity, including undrawn credit facilities, was $21.2 billion, which equated to 23% of our total assets, down from 29% last year.
Before I provide details on our capital position, it should be noted that we elected to take the benefit of the transition rules issued by the joint federal banking agencies, which had two primary benefits. First, it delays the effect of the CECL transition adjustment for an incremental two years. And second, it allows for a portion of the current period provisioning to be deferred and amortized with the transition adjustment. With this framework, we ended the quarter at 17.8% CET1 under the CECL transition rules, 250 basis points above last year’s level of 15.3%. The Tier 1 capital ratio was 18.7% under the CECL transition rules, compared to 16.3% last year. The total capital ratio increased 250 basis points to 20.1% and the Tier 1 capital plus reserves ratio on a fully phased in basis was 28%, compared to 26.5% last year, reflecting the impact of the retained net income.
During the quarter, we returned $521 million to shareholders, which included $393 million in share repurchases and paid a common stock dividend of $0.22 per share. During the quarter, we also announced the approval of a $2.9 billion share repurchase program through June 2022, as well as our plans to maintain our regular quarterly dividend. Our business generates a considerable amount of capital, thanks to the scalability of our digital capabilities, utility of our diversified product suite, and the prioritization of growth at attractive risk-adjusted returns. We will continue to take an opportunistic approach to returning capital to shareholders as our business performance and market conditions allow subject to our capital plan in any regulatory restrictions.
As we exit the pandemic and the environment normalizes, we are confident in our capabilities and positioning of our business. We are emerging from this period as a stronger and more dynamic Company and we’re excited about the opportunities we see to drive strong financial results and shareholder value.
I will now turn the call back over to Brian for his final thoughts.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Brian. While the pandemic has presented our Company and the world with never before seen challenges, Synchrony has continued to rise to the occasion facilitating the evolution of many of our partners as a new operating environment has been ushered in. We have a truly unique understanding of the partners we serve and the customer needs they seek to address. We have an almost 90-year history in consumer financing. We have continued to invest in our comprehensive product suite, amass our proprietary data and leverage our advanced analytics to achieve targeted outcomes for each of the merchants we work with. We have been consistently investing in digital innovation for years and have demonstrated how effectively we can adapt to deliver the value our partners have come to expect, while also driving strong financial results and attractive returns for our shareholders.
With that, I’ll now turn the call back to Kathryn to open the Q&A.
Kathryn Miller — Senior Vice President 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] And our first question is from Sanjay Sakhrani with KBW. Please go ahead.
Sanjay Sakhrani — Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. — Analyst
Thanks. Good morning. So, Brian Doubles, you mentioned an early indication of consumer resurgence. I’m just curious which macro data points and micro ones give you the most encouragement. And then, I guess, the question I’m getting quite a bit is, what the setup is for loan growth with us moving away from stimulus and there being other benefits coming from the government, like the tax credits and obviously infrastructure. Maybe you could just help us think through all of that? Thanks.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Hey, Sanjay. So, look, I think no matter where you look, we feel pretty bullish around what we’re seeing in the economy. Consumer confidence continues to build. The trends on retail sales and spending, all of that is translating into really good spend on our cards. So as we look across our five platforms, it really is broad-based. 35% purchase volume growth year-over-year really strong across all five platforms. The fact that we were up 18% versus 2019, I think is a really good indication. So, it’s not just that we’re comping against a weak 2020. It really is broad-based growth across the Company.
And then as you look at kind of per account purchase volume, per account was up 33%. So that’s another positive indicator. And then this is a little more anecdotal, but as we talk to our partners, no matter what segment we’re in, they’re seeing a lot of pent-up demand to spend. The providers in CareCredit, they are booking appointments now three, four months out. They’re opening the practices on Saturdays and Sundays to keep up with the volume. So, I know that’s a little more anecdotal. But as our teams are out every day talking to the partners that are in the stores, they’re just seeing and feeling a lot of pent-up demand to spend.
I don’t know, Brian, if you want to add to that a little bit on?
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. The only thing I’d add, Sanjay, to that is, as we look at savings rates, you clearly see the consumer who increase their savings in the beginning part of the pandemic back in line, clearly, with the spending behavior patterns, as well as the increase in the financial obligations as mortgage forbearance, auto forbearances, and the enhanced unemployment benefits begin to fade here in the back half of the year.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. I think, Sanjay, you touched on receivables growth, that will absolutely come. We had four out of our five platforms had receivables growth. The payment rate is a little bit tough to predict. But we don’t see anything that is permanent inside of the portfolio. So, I do think we will see a reversion to the mean around payment rate. And based on the spend that we’re seeing on our cards, receivables growth will absolutely come and we’re starting to see some positive signs there. And like I said, four out of our five platforms this quarter.
Sanjay Sakhrani — Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. — Analyst
Okay, great. That’s perfect. And just a follow-up. There is a couple of portfolios that have been out there, you mentioned to be for RFP. I’m just curious how you’re seeing your pipeline develop in terms of deal — portfolio acquisition, etc. Maybe you can just touch on that?
And just one clarification, Brian Wenzel, the framework for key drivers from last quarter, I mean, it sounds like most of them stand, but I just wanted to clarify that they still stand? Thanks.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. So, let me start on the pipeline question, Sanjay. So, I would say, across all five platforms, we’ve got a good pipeline of new opportunities. One of the benefits of the reorganization is, our teams are getting even deeper and aligned by industry. And we’ve got some fresh set of eyes on certain things and we’re looking at opportunities for new programs and start-ups that are a little bit unconventional, a little bit creative. And I think that’s a great sign and kind of part of what we are trying to achieve with the reorg. I would tell you, most of the opportunities that we’re seeing in the pipeline are start-ups or new programs with a couple exceptions of things that are out there that we’re looking at that have existing portfolios. But, again, strong pipeline across all five platforms.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Sanjay, to your framework question, so the lack of the page, I wouldn’t confuse with the fact that we’re changing that framework. Again, I think when you look at what we put out in the first quarter, we highlighted the continued high payment rates that would impact loan growth in the first half of the year, that’s going to continue. We do think it begins to abate in the back half of the year. So, I think from the purchase volume and receivable growth standpoint, it’s the same. Clearly, the elevated payment rate and persistency of that will provide a little bit of headwind in net interest margin as we move into the back half of the year.
From a credit perspective, the higher payment rate really has given us, what I’d say, almost pristine-type credit. So I think you’ll see, in the back half of the year, and really for the full-year for the Company, we’re going to be sub-4% on a loss rate perspective, which is remarkable for this business given the high margins.
And then the RSA, following those trends will be a little bit more elevated in the back half of the year, which again is working as it’s designed to share in the upside performance of the Company. So, that’s how I think about it. It’s largely consistent with what we’ve said back in the first quarter, so.
Sanjay Sakhrani — Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. — Analyst
Thank you.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Sanjay.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks.
Operator
And thank you. Our next question is from John Hecht with Jefferies.
John Hecht — Jefferies LLC — Analyst
Hey. Good morning, and thanks for taking my questions. Good new customer activity. Maybe can you tell us how much of that was, say, from the newer channels like Venmo and Verizon? Maybe just give us kind of an update on, call it, the maturation of those two new programs?
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, John. So we, obviously, can’t break out any specific performance on the programs, but I can just talk generally about both. Venmo is going really well. We’re in full launch mode. The, I would say, performance is better than our expectations. So far, we’re getting really great feedback from the customers around just the value prop and the fact that we maximize rewards in those spend categories. They love the card design. They love the QR code. The ability to split payments and share. And so, that program is off to a great start. It’s still early, but all of the key indicators that we look at are performing really well.
And similarly, on Verizon, this is another program for us that will be a top 10 program in the future. Performing ahead of our expectations. I think great feedback on the value prop. It’s definitely behaving like a top of wallet card, which is what we intended. That was the goal. And so, we’re seeing really good spend on Verizon products and even — and outside as well. So, off to a great start on both, and like I said, I think these can both be top 10 programs for us in the future.
John Hecht — Jefferies LLC — Analyst
Okay. Very good, thanks. And then, Brian, I’m wondering, just maybe if you could give us a high-level kind of quick discussion in your opinion on the state of the market. And really what I’m kind of interested in is, you’ve got some new kind of emerging market participants in the buy now, pay later product and so forth. And, yeah, I’m kind of getting — wondering if you’re — what your sense is for kind of underwriting quality across the spectrum, and kind of competitive factors across the spectrum given the changing elements of the market?
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, John, it’s a great question. I think, obviously, there are always new entrants in the buy now, pay later space. I think it’s pretty clear at this point that every financial service provider out there will offer a buy now, pay later product. Equal Pay financing is a big part of our business already. We highlighted, we do over $15 billion of balances currently on Equal Pay products. We offer those products over 70,000 locations. So, our goal at the end of the day is to have a multi-product, multi-capability solution. I think ultimately that’s what’s going to win. And that’s what we’re offering to our providers.
In terms of the competitive dynamics, it’s hard to tell how others are underwriting. What I can tell you is, we’ve been in this business a long time. It is really important to stay disciplined, which means, you don’t go a lot deeper in really good times and you try not to contract too much in bad times because we know that our partners really value that stability, the consistency of our underwriting and they get used to a certain approval rate and we try to protect that in both good times and bad times. And as we all know, if you’ve been in this business a long time, if you do take on substantially more risk and you’re winning business by lowering your underwriting standards, and that’s a losing strategy over the long-term. And so, that’s not how we operate. We’ve got a very experienced disciplined credit team. And look, we want to win business based on our products and capabilities, based on our technology, our partnership model, we never want to win business based on just going deeper and taking on more risk.
John Hecht — Jefferies LLC — Analyst
Really I appreciate the update. Thanks very much.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, John.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, John.
Operator
And we have our next question from Don Fandetti with Wells Fargo.
Donald Fandetti — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Yes. Brian, can you talk a little bit about the child tax credit dig in a little bit more? For example, do you think that will lead to higher payment rates in July versus June? And how do you think about the overall materiality of it versus prior stimulus?
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Thanks, Don. Obviously, an influx of $15 billion of cash on top of what’s already out there is clearly not going to be beneficial. That being said, being it’s targeted to folks that earn less $150,000, that’s a pull forward really from 2022. I’m not necessarily sure it will have a material impact necessarily on our payment rates. As we look in the beginning part of July, we have not seen a real elevation of the payment rates, more consistent with what we saw as we exited out of June. So I don’t really see any data yet that says that that’s going to be a potential problem. Most certainly, we’ll watch and see whether or not that that becomes a permanent credit — a permanent pull forward as legislation gets enacted later on this year. So, we’ll continue to watch it, Don.
Donald Fandetti — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Okay. Thank you. I’m all set.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Don. Have a good day.
Operator
And we have our next question from Betsy Graseck with Morgan Stanley.
Betsy Graseck — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Hi. Good morning.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Good morning, Betsy.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Hey, Betsy.
Betsy Graseck — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
A couple of questions. Just the first one, you talked through the NIM and the loan growth and how it’s being impacted by the payment rates, etc. But could you speak to how much the loan growth, and potentially NIM is impacted by some of these new entrants that we’ve been seeing and discussing here, be it either BNPL or other kinds of payment schemes that enable people to really shift some of their spending away from what might have been their primary payment device? I’m just wondering if that had any impact.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, Betsy, I’ll let Brian chime in here, but what we’re seeing is really attributed to the higher payment rate just because consumers’ balance sheets are stronger than they’ve ever been. And I think that is the primary driver. I don’t think this is competitive in — competitive pressure in anyway.
But I’ll let Brian add some color to that.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. I’ll just point you back to a couple of things, Betsy. First, when you look at our new account origination, we — the 6.3 million new accounts up 1% versus 2019. So, we’re not seeing — and even when we look down at the providers that may have alternative type of products, these buy now, pay later products, we are not seeing a real impact relative to new accounts. We also don’t really see it in the payment rate and where we’re kind of coming through. It really is, as Brian points out, the accumulated savings rates that you’re seeing and stimulus that has flowed through the consumer that’s really driving the pressure against purchase volume and the headwind on to net interest margin, which is producing tremendous credit, which we sometimes put in the back mirror, but the credit is really terrific right now. So, we will continue to monitor, but we don’t see an impact from the alternative players.
Betsy Graseck — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Great. Okay. Now, I get it. And clearly, credit is a part of math here, so it’s a little bit surprising when people only look at like a PPOP instead of including the credit in there. I agree. I guess, the other question I have on this is, with regard to deposit products that you might be planning or thinking of offering because when you think about the BNPL, the Pay in 4, the pure Pay in 4, I know there’s different BNPLs but the pure Pay in 4 should be financed or funded with a checking account, right? I mean, you shouldn’t be paying for your Pay in 4 with a card balance. But just wanted to understand how you’re thinking about that when you’re developing your own products? And whether or not we should be anticipating more in the way of deposit products coming out from you? Thanks.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. No, I mean, Betsy, it’s a great question, and we agree you shouldn’t pay off one credit product with another credit product. So that’s — we agree with that. The — I think we’re looking at some alternative kind of savings products as part of our broader product strategy. Buy now, pay later is, obviously, top of mind right now across, I think, all issuers. Like I said, I think everybody will have a version of it. We have $15 billion of balances today, as I said, and we’re rolling out some new capabilities and features in the second half of the year. So, nothing I can get too specific on at this point, but more to come and definitely part of our multi-product strategy that I touched on earlier.
Betsy Graseck — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Okay. Thank you.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Betsy. Have a good day.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question is from Rick Shane with J.P. Morgan.
Richard Shane — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Hey, everybody. Thanks for taking my questions this morning. Brian, you did a great job highlighting the impact of Home & Auto on the portfolio. I’m curious with the changes in the composition over the last several years, how important you think back-to-school is, particularly in light of the challenges for back-to-school spending last year.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Back-to-school hasn’t been a big driver for us for a number of years, Rick, which is kind of surprising. We just — we don’t see a ton of volume there and I think it’s not as much of an event as it was probably when you and I were growing up, it was more of an event. I know even for my girls, they don’t — there isn’t a back-to-school event where they go, I’ll go get new clothes and stuff for school. So, we tend to see that spend space out over a longer period of time and it’s less of a spike for us. So, I think that trend will continue even in the new paradigm.
Richard Shane — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Got it. I appreciate that. I’m chuckling because you know me well enough to know that my closing budget is not that great either even when I was a kid. Thanks, guys.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Rick.
Operator
And we have our next question from Moshe Orenbuch with Credit Suisse.
Moshe Orenbuch — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Great, thanks. Brian, I’m hoping that you could kind of talk a little bit about the kinds of conversations that you have with your large retail partners about BNPL. In other words, I have to believe that they are quite vested in the success of your programs, given they earn a significant amount of money, whereas on BNPL, they’re kind of paying a significant amount of money. And so, kind of — maybe could you just — obviously, not asking about any specific partner. But what are those conversations like?
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. It’s a great question. Moshe, I think the — a lot of our partners are still in kind of the evaluation phase, where they look at the buy now, pay later product and they, obviously, see a customer desire for that product, right, and a customer demand for it. But one of the big questions is, as you pointed out, it’s around economics. And it’s still early there. And I think some retailers are willing to pay, what is a pretty steep merchant discount rate, if they believe that they are attracting new customers and they’re getting sales that they wouldn’t otherwise get. But when they look at that comparison, they look at compared to some of our products where, not only do we not charge interchange, we’re also paying them quite a bit through the RSA, and they look at that and they say, okay. Clearly, economically they would prefer that the purchase goes on the private label card or a co-brand card because it’s much better for them financially. And so, to the extent that they stop believing that they’re actually getting incremental purchases or new customers, then the economic tradeoff is very clear. And so, I do think down the road there is an economic reckoning that will happen as this plays out, and it’s still early in terms of these products and how they’re offered.
The other thing I would mention is that, the other advantage and the things that we hear from our partners is, they like the lifetime relationship that a card provides. They can do life cycle marketing, they can do promotions and offers over number of years. And one of the things that we talk a lot about with our partners and one of the things that we measure across all of our partners is repeat purchases. And we talk to you guys a lot about that as well, because that has been a big focus for us over the last five years. And one of the things that, frankly, our partners look to us for is that, ongoing customer loyalty. We measure that. We look at it by customer. When was the last time they made a purchase, okay, let’s send them a customized offer or promotion. So they really like that ability to do that life cycle marketing. So, I think it’s a combination of economics and that’s still kind of a TBD on how all this is going to shake out. But the other thing that we hear across the board is, they want to have a long-term relationship with the customer. They really value the loyalty that a lot of our products provide.
Moshe Orenbuch — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Thank you. And then my follow-up question for Brian Wenzel, I mean, you kind of highlighted the impact of late fees along with the payment rate. Could you just talk a little bit about how that comes back, like what is the timeframe? Is it — is kind of early stage delinquencies? How should we think about that normalization of that factor?
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Great question, Moshe. I think the way we’ve kind of think about the credit outlook now, delinquencies build towards the latter part of this year, heading into 2022. So late fees will begin to come back, as you see the entry rate delinquency begin to rise. So that will come first before you get into the charge-offs. So, if you believe that the latter part of this year you’ll begin to see the yield impact benefit coming from higher late fees in the portfolio.
Moshe Orenbuch — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Thank you.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Moshe. Have a good day.
Operator
And thank you. Our next question comes from Mark DeVries with Barclays.
Mark DeVries — Barclays — Analyst
Yeah, thanks. I had a question about the NIM. Can you help us think about the lift that you may get from both a normalization of the payment rate to kind of the long-term historic average and also maybe the normalization of liquidity as a percentage of assets?
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. So, the way I would think about — let’s take liquidity first in the portfolio. So, clearly, we’ve been able to burn off some of that liquidity here in the second quarter both through the $2 billion in asset growth that we had, as well as the acceleration of some of the maturities in the funding profile. So, we’re running over $2 billion continued excess liquidity as we enter into the back half of the year. If you take out all the excess liquidity from here, there is probably another 40 basis points on to the net interest margin that you’d see a lift from. Again, we’ve highlighted before you probably have 20 basis points to 30 basis points from benchmark rate, so put that off to the side. The residual comes in probably two fashions: one is late fees, which you’re probably 80 basis points to 90 basis points of lift going back to a normalized late fee load, so not even at a loss rate higher than 5.5%, but your normal load. And then you have the residual, which will be the revolve when payment rates come back in line.
So, the one thing I’d say is, we do not see anything in the portfolio today that gives us any indication that the net interest margin in that 16% realm is not going to be the mean that we go back to. We will continue to watch it, but there is nothing fundamentally or structurally that we think is different. It’s just really the timing to get there, given the excess liquidity that the consumer has and that they’re going to deploy here in the short-term.
Mark DeVries — Barclays — Analyst
Okay, great. That’s helpful. And then just a follow-up question on — Brian, on your comments about your partners really wanting to kind of stimulate the longer life cycle with customers. Did they find that using the revolving product where they’ve got incentives on spend is the best way to do that as opposed to offering some type of a maybe a lower rate kind of fixed loan product on balances?
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, Mark. I mean, it really does vary by partner, but I would say the majority — particularly the larger partners, they see the value of the value prop, right, the rewards, the loyalty that that drives when they go into one of our large partners and a lot of times they are saving 5%, that is really meaningful. We do that at Amazon. We do it with Lowe’s. We do at a number of places now. And that’s a great way to incent that repeat purchases.
I think the other thing that we’ve been doing for a number of years now is, in most of our partners, we store the card as the default payment type. Right? And so, you don’t even have to think about it. It just goes right on the card, you get your 5%, and that’s something that our partners have been very focused on as well to drive that, again, the lifetime relationship with the cardholder and the loyalty that comes with it.
Mark DeVries — Barclays — Analyst
Okay. And I assume they also get the fastest checkout using the revolving products. Correct?
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. I mean, it’s just incent, right? It stored as I know — for Amazon, for me, that stored as my default, I get my 5%. I don’t even think about it. It just automatically goes on the card. So, it’s certainly the easiest, fastest way to checkout for most of our partners.
Mark DeVries — Barclays — Analyst
Great. Thank you.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Mark.
Operator
And thank you. Our next question is from Mihir Bhatia with Bank of America.
Nate Richard — Bank of America — Analyst
Hi. This is Nate Richard [Phonetic] on behalf of Mihir Bhatia. Thanks for taking my question. I’m curious about how program costs are trending. And I know you don’t typically comment on specific portfolios. But are the rewards for consumers increasing for newer portfolios? Like, for instance, I’ve noticed more prominent rewards, promotions for Venmo. I’m just curious, that’s additive or representative of the product portfolio in trying to get new customers.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Your quality wasn’t that clear. Are you asking about the loyalty cost trends?
Nate Richard — Bank of America — Analyst
Right. Is that increasing for the newer portfolios? Like I’ve seen Venmo have like more promotions and rewards that’s additive or representative of the product portfolio for new customer acquisitions?
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. The way I would think about the loyalty cost, first of all, our volume is up significantly year-over-year and up versus 2019. So you’re going to see a general trend in loyalty costs higher. Most certainly, the new programs, Verizon and Venmo, we’ll have those costs that are in there and probably about certainly higher percent of the asset because the assets just beginning to build. But it’s not significantly different than our overall portfolio, not necessarily the driver. It’s really the increased purchase volume across the entire portfolio that’s driving our value prop and loyalty costs.
Nate Richard — Bank of America — Analyst
Okay. Thank you. That’s it from me.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Great. Thank you.
Operator
And we have our next question from Dominick Gabriele with Oppenheimer.
Dominick Gabriele — Oppenheimer & Co. — Analyst
Hey. Thanks so much for taking my questions. Can you — we, obviously, have the new segments that you’ve broken out the new platforms. Can you talk about the differences in each of the platforms that have made you decide to break them up this way? And as far as the marketing teams that go-to-market strategy and if they’re actually running a software that’s different among them? Thanks so much, guys.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, sure. So, the reason to reorganize and align more by industry was a couple fold. First, in terms of, to your point, the products and capabilities that we offer tend to align better by industry. And even more important than that how we integrate — and the products and capabilities and how we integrate them into the digital environment or the store footprint tends to align as well by industry. So, one example, for our purely digital players, PayPal, Venmo, Amazon, we’re integrating through our API technology or through SyPI right inside of their app. And that’s a different than what we would do in Home & Auto where, for some of our larger partners, we’re integrating both in their digital environment, mobile, online, but we also have tools and technologies to apply an buy in-store. And so, because of the product suite tends to be catered more towards industry because of the types of products that they’re selling, as well as whether or not they’re purely digital or have a store footprint, it just made more sense to align by industry.
I’d say, the second piece of this and we saw this in CareCredit over the last 30 years. It really is an advantage to get really deep domain expertise in an industry. And one of the things that I think has been a secret to our success in CareCredit is that, domain expertise. Our teams get — they build lifetime relationships, they get really deep in the different domains that we support, dental, vet, etc. And we’re trying to replicate that in these other platforms. So, those were the two primary reasons.
I can tell you, it’s been great. Just a couple of months in having these teams in place, looking at these segments differently, seeing kind of natural synergies and ideas for new products and capabilities as they’re out talking to partners and thinking about it more with an industry than to it. So, so far, the progress has been really great.
Dominick Gabriele — Oppenheimer & Co. — Analyst
Great. Great. Thank you for that detail. And then, this might be a long shot. But can you talk about the tender share by each of those? And if not, specific numbers? Because I know that’s unlikely. Maybe just perhaps which one of the segments is at the average tender share below and above average of the whole Company? And then when we think about the RSA in the second quarter, is that the high watermark if you think about NCO rate stay roughly fairly in line with where they are for the rest of this year? Is that at the high watermark on a percentage basis for the RSA? Thank you very much. I really appreciate it, guys.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Let me start on the kind of the penetration question. I would say, across each of those platforms we’ve got significant room to grow penetration. Inside of each of those platforms we have start-up programs where we’re relatively small percentage of the payments inside of those programs and we have very mature programs where we can be 30%, 40% pen [Phonetic]. What I can tell you is, we measure our teams on increasing that penetration rate regardless of where they’re at. So, even for the more mature programs, our teams that are embedded inside of our partners, they get measured based on growth and driving that incremental tender share. So, even in mature programs we are very focused on that — the penetration rate.
I don’t know, Brian, if you want to take the second piece of that?
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. So, RSA — as you think about RSA in the back half, there are two factors really to focus on is: one, the purchase volume, right, because RSAs is not only sharing, there is volume-oriented purchases. So, the strength in purchases you see in the back half of the year and then how the net charge-off and provision-like continues to develop. I mentioned earlier in the call, we expect the NCO rate for the full-year to be below 4%. But if there are incremental ACL releases that could impact it. So, we will remain elevated in the back half of the year from where we are historically. But it shouldn’t be dramatically larger than what we saw in the second quarter.
Dominick Gabriele — Oppenheimer & Co. — Analyst
Great. Thanks so much.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thank you.
Kathryn Miller — Senior Vice President of Investor Relations
Operator, we have time for one more question.
Operator
And thank you. Our last question is from Bill Carcache with Wolfe Research.
Bill Carcache — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Good morning.
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Hey, Bill.
Bill Carcache — Wolfe Research — Analyst
As you look a bit further out do you see the normalization of payment rates providing a tailwind to the normalization of your revolve rates such that we could see your loan growth start to outpace your spending growth? If you could just speak to that dynamic?
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Clearly, we’ve said that we believe payment rate will move back to the mean. That will accelerate loan growth and most certainly, if you had a slowing purchase volume market that could push the loan growth ahead of the purchase volume growth. Again, the way we’ve thought about the back half of the year and it hasn’t really changed in the back half heading into 2022 is that, you are going to continue to see elevated purchase volume, one, from pent-up demand that we see and we — as we talk to our partners, merchants and providers, that you’re going to see the consumer who has the wherewithal with the savings to continue to spend. So, I think over the next 18 months you’re going to continue to see elevated purchase volume, Bill, and then you’re going to combine that with a moderation of the payment rate to the mean over time. So, the two will work in concert.
Bill Carcache — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Got it. And then separately on capital, there has been some skepticism around your ability to get down to peer levels of capital. Can you speak to what gives you confidence that you can get there? And I might have missed this, but any commentary on the potential for increasing the authorization above your current plan?
Brian Doubles — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Bill, I’m going to first point you back to a little bit of the history, right, as we separated from GE, we had an 18% capital level. We had work that down to 14% over a couple of years, three, four years. So, we’ve demonstrated the ability, we’ve demonstrated the ability just before the pandemic to take that capital. I think $3.3 billion in the nine-month period before the pandemic happened. So, I think we have the ability to — and demonstrated the capability to do that. So, I think we’re confident in our ability to get down there.
Now, with regard to the current authorization, right, we talked about this a little bit in the first quarter, that is a backwards looking authorization rate. So the data in which we used to run our stress scenarios under our processes and our governance mechanisms were based off of December and early January assumptions, right? So that’s where we had the capital plan put together and approved by our Board. If things continue to change, we’ll evaluate, whether or not, there is a — that [Phonetic] is higher for the Board and leadership team to increase that authorization level and we’ll revisit that. But right now we have $2.5 billion remaining. We’ve executed $593 million so far this year, which were slightly regulated by the restrictions put on by the Fed. And we will be aggressive with regard to our execution against the $2.5 billion. And again, if the environment warrants, we’ll revisit that.
Bill Carcache — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Thank you.
Brian J. Wenzel — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Bill.
Kathryn Miller — Senior Vice President of Investor Relations
Thank you all for joining us this morning. The Investor Relations team will be available to answer any further questions you have.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]