SF
Synchrony Financial (SYF)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 delivered resilient results: Net earnings $774M and diluted EPS $1.91, supported by 3% NII growth, lower provision (reserve release of $100M vs prior-year build), higher other income from PPPC fees, and 4% lower other expense; offset by higher net charge-offs and increased RSA .
- Versus Wall Street: S&P Global consensus data unavailable. Third‑party sources varied; EPS $1.91 vs MarketBeat $1.89 (beat) and SeekingAlpha $1.92 (slight miss); net revenue $3.801B vs SeekingAlpha $3.83B (slight miss). Note: non-SPGI estimates referenced due to SPGI unavailability .
- 2025 framework introduced: Net revenue $15.2–$15.7B; net charge-offs 5.8–6.1%; RSA/ALR 3.60–3.85%; efficiency 31.5–32.5%; period-end receivables low single-digit growth, assuming stable macro and no CFPB late fee rule impact; PPPC included .
- Stock reaction: Despite EPS near consensus, some outlets reported mixed revenue vs different “revenue” definitions; pre-market moved modestly lower, reflecting estimate dispersion and revenue metric confusion .
- Catalyst: Improved delinquency formation, efficiency ratio improvement YoY, and strong capital (CET1 13.3%) underpin confidence in returning to long-term NCO target and potential reacceleration of growth later in 2025 as credit actions normalize .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Net earnings up 76% YoY to $774M, EPS $1.91; driven by reserve release ($100M), PPPC-related yield benefits, and operating efficiency (33.3% vs 36.0% YoY) .
- Net revenue rose 4% YoY to $3.801B; NII up 3% on higher interest & fees and PPPC; other income up 80% from PPPC fees; RSA aligned with program performance .
- Management highlighted strengthening delinquency trajectory from prior credit actions and confidence in returning to long-term NCO target; reiterated robust capital for growth and shareholder returns .
What Went Wrong
- Net charge-offs increased to 6.45% (vs 5.58% LY) with continued normalization and industry credit pressure .
- Purchase volume declined 3% YoY to $48.0B as customers remained selective and credit actions constrained origination; average active accounts down 2% .
- Platform purchase volumes fell across categories (e.g., Home & Auto −6%, Digital −1%, Diversified & Value −2%, Health & Wellness −3%, Lifestyle −5%) reflecting selective spending and credit actions .
Financial Results
Quarterly Performance vs Prior Periods
Year-over-Year (Q4 2024 vs Q4 2023)
Segment Platform Breakdown (Q4)
Key KPIs
vs Estimates (Non‑SPGI references; SPGI unavailable)
Note: S&P Global/Capital IQ consensus data was unavailable; third-party sources are cited for context.
Guidance Changes
Baseline assumptions: U/E 4.1% YE’25; GDP 2.2% FY’25; Fed Funds 4.25% YE’25; deposit betas ~60%; excludes late fee rule impact; PPPC included .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “Synchrony's fourth quarter performance demonstrated the power of our differentiated business model and our ability to execute… for approximately 70 million customers…” .
- CFO: “Net revenue grew… driven by PPPC-related fees… efficiency ratio was 33.3%… we remain confident in our ability to return to our long-term net charge-off target.” .
- Strategy: Renewed and extended long-standing partnerships (Sam’s Club; JCPenney with Pay Later) to deepen alignment and value; multi-product ecosystem supports lifetime value .
- 2025 Outlook: Stable macro assumptions; PPPC impact included; RSA rising as program performance improves with declining NCO; efficiency focus remains .
Q&A Highlights
- PPPC performance and neutrality: PPPC performing generally in line; stronger retention and interest yield; paper statement fees lighter due to e-bill adoption; neutrality point unchanged; trough timing depends on rule .
- Capital returns cadence: Q4 buybacks lower due to anticipated market volatility; $600M authorization intended to be completed; capital remains a strength .
- Credit actions reversal timing: Potential lift in 2H 2025 contingent on NCO trajectory, macro stability, and delinquency improvements; initial focus on dual card upgrades and line management in larger-balance platforms .
- Allowance and reserve rate: Downward bias through 2025 if NCOs decline and macro clarity improves; Q4 reserve higher end due to denominator and conservatism .
- Deposit betas: ~60% 2025 beta driven by timing of cuts and lag in digital repricing; CDs reprice largely in 1H .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global/Capital IQ consensus estimates were unavailable for this recap. Third‑party sources indicated: EPS consensus $1.89–$1.92 and net revenue consensus ~$3.83B; actual EPS $1.91 and net revenue $3.801B. Variations reflect differing revenue definitions (company “net revenue” vs some outlets’ “total revenues”) .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Credit normalization remains the swing factor: delinquency formation is improving, but NCOs elevated; management expects trend toward long-term target, which underpins 2025 RSA improvement and margin durability .
- PPPC execution is a core mitigant: building interest yield and fee mix while maintaining customer retention; provides a buffer against potential regulatory outcomes; watch consumer behavior and any partner-driven adjustments .
- Operating leverage and efficiency: YoY efficiency ratio improvement and lower operational losses drove EPS acceleration; continued focus expected in 2025 .
- Capital position supports optionality: CET1 13.3% and 84% deposit funding provide flexibility for buybacks and selective growth; cadence may vary with market conditions .
- Demand reacceleration tied to credit posture and confidence: management may selectively ease credit later in 2025; near-term origination remains constrained, with outperformance more likely from health & wellness and larger-balance dual card upgrades .
- Estimate dispersion calls for caution around “revenue” definitions; anchor to company net revenue for comparability and rely on management’s framework rather than headline beats/misses across conflicting metrics .
- Near-term trading: watch for updates on late fee rule litigation, PPPC neutrality milestones, delinquency/charge-off cadence, and buyback execution; medium-term thesis hinges on PPPC yield, efficiency, RSA normalization, and disciplined growth .