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BREAD FINANCIAL HOLDINGS, INC. (BFH)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 delivered resilient results with adjusted diluted EPS of $2.90, a clear beat versus S&P Global consensus $2.23, aided by lower provisioning and disciplined OpEx; GAAP diluted EPS from continuing ops was $2.86 . EPS consensus: $2.23*, actual: $2.90* (beat). Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- “Revenue” as defined by company (total net interest and non-interest income) was $0.97B; net revenue after provision was $0.674B, below S&P consensus of $0.954B. Using S&P’s definition (after provision) implies a large miss; using company’s pre-provision revenue implies a modest beat . S&P revenue consensus: $0.954B*, actual: $0.674B* (miss). Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Credit metrics improved YoY (delinquency 5.9%, net loss rate 8.2% vs 6.2% and 8.5% YoY), while NIM rose sequentially to 18.1%; CET1 at 12.0% and TRBC at 15.5% reflect stronger capital after a $400M sub debt issuance and completion of a $150M buyback (3.2M shares) .
- Management lowered 2025 loan growth outlook (flat to slightly down) and trimmed revenue outlook (flat to slightly up), citing tariff/ macro uncertainty, but maintained net loss rate (8.0–8.2%) and tax rate (25–26%) guidance; dividend of $0.21 declared for Q2 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strong EPS performance: adjusted diluted EPS from continuing ops $2.90 vs $2.73 YoY; GAAP diluted EPS from continuing ops $2.86 vs $2.73 YoY. “We reported strong first quarter 2025 earnings… net income of $138 million and EPS of $2.78” (total) .
- Balance sheet/capital actions: $400M sub notes increased Tier 2 capital, lifting TRBC by >200 bps; completed $150M buyback at ~5% below TBV/share; liquidity resources $7.4B (33% of assets) .
- Credit improvement and funding mix: delinquency 5.9% (down 30 bps YoY), net loss rate 8.2% (down 30 bps YoY), direct-to-consumer deposits $7.9B (+13% YoY), comprising 43% of average funding vs 36% YoY .
Management quotes:
- “We are well positioned to generate capital and cash flow to deliver strong returns and create sustainable long-term value” .
- “Our direct-to-consumer deposits… increased to $7.9 billion… up 13% year-over-year” .
- “We completed our $150 million… repurchase program… 3.2 million shares” .
What Went Wrong
- Top-line pressure: revenue down 2% YoY on lower finance charges/late fees; NIM down 60 bps YoY (18.1% vs 18.7%), reflecting lower average prime, fewer late fees, mix shift toward co-brand .
- Macro/tariffs uncertainty: management flagged consumer pull-forward of spend (electronics, home, auto parts) and risks that tariffs/inflation could pressure future demand; baseline outlook lowered for loans and revenue .
- Near-term credit/loss dynamics: Q2 net loss rate to be elevated given $13M hurricane loss timing shift; reserve rate stable at 12.2% (little room to release until macro improves) .
Financial Results
Core P&L and Margins (oldest → newest)
Estimates vs Actuals (Q1 2025)
Notes: Values retrieved from S&P Global. Company-reported “Revenue” (pre-provision) was $0.970B . S&P’s “Revenue actual” reflects net of provision (after credit losses) for BFH.
KPIs and Balance Sheet (oldest → newest)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategy and capital: “We are well positioned to allocate more of our capital and sustainable cash flow generation towards supporting responsible, profitable growth and generating value” .
- Macro posture: “The risk of economic weakness continues to grow… risks associated with tariffs, trade policies and inflation may adversely impact consumer strength” .
- Pricing and mitigants: “We have not seen an immaterial impact to retail sales… incremental profit share to the partner… maintain a risk‑adjusted margin” .
- Deposits/funding: “Direct‑to‑consumer deposits accounted for 43% of our average total funding… wholesale deposits decreased from 37% to 29% YoY” .
- Partnerships: “Card program announcement with Crypto.com… expanded AAA… extended Academy Sports” .
Q&A Highlights
- Reserves and scenarios: Management weights severe scenarios (avg ~7% unemployment assumption), keeping reserve rate stable amidst macro uncertainty; potential to dial back severe weights if baseline worsens, stabilizing reserve rate .
- NIM trajectory: Slight full-year NIM expansion expected despite headwinds from prime cuts, lower billed late fees, and mix shift; pricing changes and lower reversals as gross losses improve act as tailwinds .
- Loan growth and credit posture: Loan guide trimmed due to uncertainty; credit unwind actions deferred; maintaining conservative posture with targeted adjustments .
- Capital returns: Buybacks opportunistic, below TBV; future buybacks contingent on capital ratios, pipeline, stress scenarios; Board discussions ahead .
- Partner economics: Mitigants phased; 95% of partners have contractual understanding; APR increases vary by cohort and partner mix .
Estimates Context
- EPS: BFH beat consensus EPS (actual $2.90 vs $2.23 consensus), driven by lower provision and OpEx discipline; S&P’s “Primary EPS” appears aligned with adjusted continuing-ops EPS . EPS consensus/actual: 2.23*/2.90*. Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Revenue: Using S&P’s definition (net of provision), BFH missed consensus ($0.674B actual vs $0.954B consensus). Company’s pre-provision revenue was $0.970B, reflecting lower finance charges/late fees YoY, but a sequential NIM lift . Revenue consensus/actual: 0.954B*/0.674B*. Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Implication: Street models may need to reconcile definitions (pre vs post provision) and incorporate updated 2025 guide (flat/slightly down loans; flat/slightly up revenue ex gains; net loss rate unchanged), lowering top-line assumptions while raising EPS on cost/pricing mitigation.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- EPS beat vs consensus was meaningful; revenue optics depend on pre-/post-provision definition. Expect Street to adjust frameworks accordingly.
- Watch tariff/inflation developments: management flagged accelerated purchases now and potential give-back later; loan growth outlook trimmed accordingly .
- Credit stabilization is underway (better delinquency, modest roll-rate improvement), but reserve rate prudently stable; Q2 loss rate will be elevated due to hurricane timing .
- NIM slight expansion for 2025 despite prime cuts, thanks to pricing actions and improving reversals as losses normalize; quarterly NIM could be choppy .
- Capital strength improved: TRBC 15.5% after $400M sub debt; buyback completed below TBV; dividend maintained ($0.21), leaving optionality for further returns as ratios approach targets .
- Structural mix shift (co-brand/proprietary, DTC deposits) lowers late fees and yields but enhances risk-adjusted returns and funding stability .
- Near-term trading: EPS beat vs consensus is supportive; caution for Q2 credit headline (hurricane loss shift) and macro tariff rhetoric; medium term thesis rests on operating leverage, pricing mitigants, and pipeline wins.
Footnote: All S&P Global estimate values are marked with an asterisk and were retrieved from S&P Global.