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Achieved a strategic inflection point with a return to positive loan growth, driven by new partner launches and increased general-purpose spending.
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Credit sales growth of 7% was propelled by strong performance in health, beauty, jewelry, and travel verticals, alongside successful expansion into the automotive and home sectors.
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Management attributes six consecutive quarters of improving credit metrics to disciplined risk management and a deliberate shift toward co-brand and installment products.
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The company is leveraging a ‘full product suite’ strategy—combining private label, co-brand, and Bread Pay installments—to increase partner retention and lifetime customer value.
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Operational excellence initiatives are increasingly focused on deploying AI to accelerate productivity, innovation, and risk management frameworks.
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Consumer resilience remains a core narrative, with management noting that while sentiment is low, middle-income customers (average $100,000 income) maintain stable payment behaviors.
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Capital allocation remains focused on shareholder value, evidenced by the retirement of 8% of outstanding shares through repurchases and capped call unwinds.
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Full-year 2026 guidance assumes low-single-digit growth in average loans and total revenue, supported by a stable partner base and new business launches.
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Net interest margin (NIM) is expected to remain higher than 2025 levels, though the incremental benefit from previous pricing changes will slow as the portfolio fully reprices.
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Management anticipates ‘meaningfully higher’ Retailer Share Arrangements (RSAs) in upcoming quarters due to improved loan yields and lower credit losses shared with partners.
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Expense guidance for Q2 2026 is set at just under $500 million, reflecting continued investment in digital capabilities and partner platform enhancements.
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The company is targeting a net loss rate at the low end of the 7.2% to 7.4% range, contingent on stable labor markets and continued consumer resilience.
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Successfully retired 1.5 million shares through the unwind of capped call transactions following the prior repurchase of convertible notes.
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Optimized the capital stack by reducing parent senior notes from $900 million to $500 million and lowering the interest rate from 9.75% to 6.75%.
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Management flagged rising fuel costs and persistent inflation as primary macro headwinds that could impact consumer discretionary spending in the near term.
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Updated credit risk distribution reporting ranges to align with industry peers, showing 64% of cardholders now hold a prime credit score above 650.
