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Date

Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 9:00 a.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chief Executive Officer — Todd Schwartz
  • Chief Financial Officer — Pamela Johnson

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Takeaways

  • Planned Acquisition -- OppFi (OPFI 5.66%) announced it will acquire BNCC Corp and BNC National Bank for approximately $130 million in cash and stock, with closing targeted for the fourth quarter of 2026 and subject to regulatory approval.
  • Deposit Base of Acquisition Target -- BNC National Bank held over $1 billion in deposits at year-end 2025, with more than 80% of deposits costing less than 2%.
  • EPS Accretion Guidance -- Management projects the BNC deal will be at least 25% accretive to adjusted EPS in year one post-close, 40% in year two, and 50% in year three.
  • Expected Cost Synergies -- The acquisition is expected to yield at least $60 million in first-year synergies, $90 million in the second year, and over $115 million in the third year after closing, driven by geographic expansion, marketing, and funding optimization.
  • Structural Changes -- OppFi transitioned from an Up-C to a C corp structure, resulting in all shareholders holding Class A common stock and $466 million in tax amortizable goodwill, which is projected to generate approximately $111 million in future cash tax savings.
  • Revenue -- Reported $152 million, representing an 8% increase year over year, mainly due to higher receivables.
  • Receivables -- Ended the quarter at $445 million, up 9% compared to the same period last year.
  • Originations -- Originated $176 million, a decrease of 7%, attributed to credit tightening and reduced demand from increased tax refunds.
  • Net Charge-Offs -- Ratio to revenue increased to 42% from 35% last year; ratio to receivables rose to 55% from 47%.
  • Recoveries -- Increased by 38% from the prior-year quarter, partially offsetting higher delinquency rates.
  • Revenue Yield -- Decreased to 131%, down from 136% in the prior-year period as a result of higher defaults.
  • Expense Ratio -- Total expenses represented 34% of revenue, unchanged from last year.
  • Adjusted Net Income -- Fell 11% to $30 million; adjusted EPS decreased to $0.35 from $0.38.
  • Balance Sheet -- Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash totaled approximately $100 million; total debt was $284 million; total stockholders' equity was $343 million.
  • Total Funding Capacity -- $625 million, including $241 million of unused debt capacity as of quarter end.
  • Free Cash Flow -- Generated $69 million during the quarter.
  • Share Repurchases -- Repurchased 1 million shares for $9.9 million; newly authorized $40 million share repurchase program replaced prior authorization.
  • Guidance Maintained -- Management reiterated 2026 guidance despite ongoing investments and economic uncertainty.
  • Product Launch Timing -- Deployment of Model 6.1 completed in the quarter; Model 7 development underway with rollout planned for fall; migration to the LOLA origination system set to commence this month with substantial completion expected in the third quarter.
  • New Product Introduction -- A line of credit product is slated for summer 2026 launch in select geographies, offering additional credit access options.
  • LOLA System KPIs -- Auto approval rates on legacy system increased from 78.6% to 79.2% year over year; management expects LOLA migration to further accelerate cycle times and enable faster product delivery.

Summary

Management outlined a major acquisition, structural changes, and capital allocation shifts, all supported by explicit financial guidance and product innovation. The company expects substantial EPS accretion and synergies from combining with BNC National Bank, reflecting a multi-year outlook for earnings growth. A traditional C corp conversion enhances tax efficiency and simplifies the capital structure, while new tax amortizable goodwill improves projected future cash flow. The introduction of Model 7 and the rollout of the LOLA system aim to reinforce the company’s technological edge and accelerate time-to-market for future products.

  • The national bank charter from the BNC acquisition will allow OppFi to expand into all 50 states, versus the current presence in 40 states.
  • The projected investment of more than $150 million in 2026 encompasses product, technology, and integration initiatives, highlighting a strategy oriented toward sustainable long-term growth.
  • New product launches, including the line of credit, are designed to address additional customer segments and geographies, supported by enhanced platform architecture from the LOLA migration.
  • Higher-than-normal net charge-off ratios are described as a partial normalization from the outlier performance in the prior year, with rising recoveries cited as a mitigating factor.
  • Capital returned to shareholders through buybacks and new repurchase authorization signals management conviction that shares are undervalued at prevailing prices.

Industry glossary

  • Up-C Structure: A corporate structure permitting a company to combine with an operating partnership, often for tax deferral and structural flexibility, distinct from a traditional C corporation.
  • Tax Amortizable Goodwill: The portion of acquisition-related goodwill that may be deducted for tax purposes over a prescribed period, potentially lowering future cash tax payments.
  • LOLA System: OppFi's proprietary origination and servicing technology platform designed to leverage AI for lending and operational efficiencies.
  • Adjusted EPS: Earnings per share figure excluding certain items determined by management to better reflect operating results.
  • Receivables: Outstanding loan balances owed to the company at the end of the reporting period.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Todd Schwartz: Thanks, Mike, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. Pam will review our strategic investments and our Q1 financial performance and metrics. But first, I'd like to share a little bit more about OppFi's recently announced plans to acquire BNCC Corp and BNC National Bank in a cash and stock transaction valued at approximately $130 million. OppFi's goal has always been to be the leading digital finance platform, offering essential financial products and services to everyday Americans. This acquisition, in addition to our previous investment in Bitty, our LOLA lending system and our new line of credit product is a pivotal step toward fulfilling that promise.

BNC National Bank is a community-focused institution with over $1 billion in total assets and a veteran management team with decades of banking experience. They serve individuals and small to medium businesses through a diversified set of financial products, including personal and commercial loans, SBA loans and wealth management. We believe the BNC transaction will not only provide OppFi with a larger geographic footprint to expand credit access, but will also unlock significant synergies and operating efficiencies and capital. By uniting OppFi's technology with BNC's national charter and established deposit base, which totaled approximately $1 billion at the end of '25, we will be positioned to provide broader access to financial products for underserved populations.

Financially, this acquisition is expected to be transformative. BNC brings a stable, low-cost funding profile with over 80% of BNC's deposits carrying a cost of less than 2%. We expect this to significantly enhance our balance sheet flexibility and lower our overall funding costs. We expect this combination to be at least 25% accretive to adjusted EPS in the first year post closing, 40% accretive in the second year and 50% accretive in the third year. We are very excited to work alongside the BNC team to expand and digitize their core business.

We believe that vertically integrating with BNC will provide our platform with the strongest possible strategic footprint, allowing us to expand our products and consumer choices and credit access while reducing costs for our customers. We believe this will also benefit our investment in Bitty by enabling us to further expand our small business platform, offering multiple products and serving additional customer segments. We expect to close in the fourth quarter of 2026, subject to regulatory approval and other closing conditions and look forward to providing further updates throughout the year. In addition to the acquisition of BNC, we have simplified our corporate structure by transitioning from an Up-C structure to a traditional C corp legal structure.

This change is intended to provide tax optimization and remove operational complexity of the Up-C structure. As a result of this simplification, all OppFi stockholders now hold Class A common stock with identical economic and voting interest. We believe this enhances our acquisition currency as our stock is more straightforward and attractive vehicle for future growth and M&A activity, ensuring our capital structure is as agile as our technology platform. For the remainder of my remarks, I will be discussing product and credit initiatives and the LOLA migration. OppFi fully deployed the Model 6.1 refit in Q1. The refit is designed to increase volume while improving overall delinquencies.

As discussed last quarter, our current goal is to launch a model refit every 6 months and a new model every year. This will allow us to have the most current data to build our models and keep up with the ever-changing macro environment and customer sentiment. The team is hard at work building our most powerful model, Model 7. We expect to launch Model 7 in the fall of this year. OppFi continues to make great progress on building LOLA, the origination and servicing system of the future. LOLA provides a clean architecture designed to leverage rapidly evolving AI tools across origination, servicing and corporate operations.

The building phase and test phase is complete, and we are actively finalizing the quality assurance phase of the project. Initial migration is planned for this month with substantial completion to our new software system expected in the third quarter of 2026. Early indicators give us confidence in our belief that LOLA will help continue to improve funnel metrics, increase automated approvals, enhance efficiency in servicing and recoveries, better integrate major systems, deliver reduced cycle times and greater throughput for our product, tech and risk teams. With the initial launch of LOLA in Q2 2026, OppFi is excited to announce a new line of credit product.

We expect this product to launch with our bank partners in the summer of 2026. This exciting product will not only serve as another high-quality credit access option for customers in our current states, but also enable us to serve new geographies. This product will have the same fair and transparent features that OpLoan's installment product has provided to millions of customers. Our LOLA system and architecture enable us to deploy and develop new products in response to customer needs and market dynamics. Finally, the Board of Directors has approved a new $40 million share repurchase program, which replaces our prior repurchase program, reflecting our firm conviction that OppFi stock is currently trading below its intrinsic value.

This decision underscores our Board and management's confidence in the robust long-term cash generation capabilities of the business we have built. By allocating capital toward our own shares, we are reaffirming our commitment to enhancing stockholder value and signaling our optimistic outlook on the company's financial health and growth potential. Our recent announcement to acquire BNC marks another major milestone in the evolution of OppFi. OppFi is strategically retooling and investing more than $150 million in 2026 to prepare our business for sustainable long-term growth.

We are excited to get to work with the BNC team and execute on our shared vision of being a leading technology-enabled bank platform that offers essential credit access and community banking services to everyday Americans and businesses. With that, I'll turn the call over to Pam.

Pamela Johnson: Thanks, Todd, and good morning, everyone. I want to reiterate Todd's remarks. 2026 is a strategic and transformational year for OppFi as we direct our focus toward investing for the long term. While we remain confident in our ability to navigate the normal cycles of our business, we are not managing the company solely maximizing returns for the next quarter. Instead, we are executing against a clear long-term strategy, investing in our platform capabilities and customer experience with the goal of driving sustainable returns in the future. This commitment to future growth is reflected in our investment of more than $150 million this year.

This includes LOLA, the acquisition of BNC and its planned integration with OppFi and the strategic dissolution of our Up-C structure. Even as management navigates a challenging current environment, characterized by historically low consumer sentiment, inflationary pressures and higher average tax refunds that have temporarily limited loan demand, these investments are designed to ensure we are building a superior technology-enabled banking organization ready to lead the digital finance platform space for years to come. The announced acquisition of BNC is expected to be financially transformative. We expect significant revenue synergies in 2027 and beyond by expanding our ability to deliver a comprehensive suite of financial products in more states.

OppFi expects to generate adjusted EPS accretion from synergies of at least $60 million in the first year post closing, $90 million in the second year post closing and over $115 million in the third year post closing. Synergies are based on our views of achievable geographic expansion, marketing opportunities and funding optimization. The combination of OppFi and BNC will create a banking organization that will be well capitalized with significant liquidity and is expected to generate returns on assets on an equity of plus 10% and plus 35%, respectively, by 2028. We expect to maintain capital ratios well in excess of market standards. OppFi has also taken proactive steps to simplify our corporate structure.

With our announced reorganization moving from an Up-C structure to a traditional C corp, OppFi terminated the tax receivable agreement. OppFi recorded tax amortizable goodwill of approximately $466 million. This tax amortizable goodwill is expected to result in approximately $111 million in future cash tax savings for OppFi, subject to tax changes and other conditions with no associated ongoing tax receivable agreement liability. Transitioning to the existing business, we started 2026 on a positive note, generating revenue of $152 million, an 8% increase over Q1 '25. Revenue growth was fueled largely by higher receivables, which ended the quarter 9% higher at $445 million. First quarter 2026 originations decreased 7% to $176 million compared to the prior year quarter.

The year-over-year decrease in originations primarily reflects a tightening of credit for certain consumer segments as we began rationalizing new loan issuance to specific segments beginning in Q2 2025. Furthermore, the first quarter of 2026 had reduced demand due to higher average tax refunds, which naturally reduced the immediate need for loans. We have previously discussed that one of the benefits of OppFi shorter duration loans is that the loans move through the system relatively quickly. So the loans originated last summer had higher expected delinquencies as we had discussed, but this was partially offset by our recoveries, which were up 38% from the prior year quarter, helping mitigate the impact of higher default rates.

Overall, net charge-offs as a percentage of revenue increased to 42% for the quarter, up from 35% in the prior year quarter, and net charge-offs as a percentage of receivables increased to 55%, up from 47% in the prior year quarter. Due to higher defaults, the revenue yield decreased to 131%, down from 136% in Q1 '25. OppFi continues to maintain tight control over operating expenses. Total expenses as a percentage of total revenue were 34% in the first quarter, flat with the prior year.

As a result of our revenue growth, offset by higher net charge-offs, adjusted net income decreased 11% in the first quarter to $30 million, and adjusted earnings per share decreased to $0.35 from $0.38 last year. Looking at the balance sheet, we continue to maintain a robust financial position, ending the quarter with approximately $100 million in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash, alongside $284 million in total debt and $343 million in total stockholders' equity. Our total funding capacity is strong at $625 million at quarter's end, including $241 million in unused debt capacity. This robust balance sheet serves as the foundation for our capital allocation strategy.

OppFi has built a very strong cash generation engine with its existing business. In the first quarter of 2026, the company generated $69 million in free cash flow. We plan to put this cash to work through a combination of buybacks, dividends and strategic M&A. During the first quarter, the company repurchased 1 million shares of Class A common stock for $9.9 million. Additionally, as Todd mentioned, the Board has authorized $40 million for a new share repurchase program because at current share prices, the Board and management believe this is an attractive use of cash to generate positive returns for stockholders. Also, we will continue to explore strategic M&A opportunities in addition to our plan to acquire BNC.

Given our solid start to the year, current economic uncertainties and ongoing OppFi investments and restructuring, we are maintaining our 2026 guidance. With that, I would now like to turn the call over to the operator for Q&A. Operator?

Operator: [Operator Instructions] We'll move first to David Scharf with Citizens Capital Markets.

Zachary Oster: This is Zach on for David. I wanted to dig in a little bit on the SMB side, especially with the acquisition of BNC and kind of see if we can get some more details on how the average customer compares to the average SBA customer in the legacy BNC business? And what kind of -- any more details on what that combined SMB customer base might look like?

Todd Schwartz: Yes. Thanks for the question. So BNC has a well-established SBA and commercial lending program, and that will continue through their community bank. The area that OppFi is specifically focused on is working capital SMB originations in the neighborhood of below $150,000. We think there's a real supply-demand imbalance, and that's something through different products like revenue-based finance, installment line of credit. We plan to have a full suite of products across the risk segments. And that's something that we've been working with Bitty on to develop and are excited about the potential, especially becoming a bank.

Operator: We'll move next to Dave Storms with Stonegate Capital Markets.

Max Smith: This is Max Smith. I'll be asking questions for Dave today. I just wanted to start off with the recent acquisition opening up the opportunity for new states, we were just curious about if you guys can just apply the current playbook that you guys had prior to the acquisition, if this is a copy and paste. Specifically, like any changes to your risk-based pricing model or customer acquisition strategy?

Todd Schwartz: Yes. Thanks for the question. We think that there's a geographical expansion that will happen to allow us to operate in more states. We will continue to offer our core product, which is our installment product. And we already are risk-based pricing. We've introduced lower prices, higher prices across the risk spectrum and seen a lot of success there. So that will continue. But we think that there's a lot more geographical expansion. There's also potential to even further lower prices for consumers and our commitment to credit access with the operational and revenue synergies that we're going to receive from becoming a bank.

Max Smith: Awesome. And if you guys were able to walk through the main puts and takes and the outlook for the rest of 2026, particularly loan originations, receivables and revenue.

Todd Schwartz: Yes. I mean I think like -- I mean you read the news, the consumer sentiment because of some of the inflationary pressures with the war. We're being thoughtful about it. I mean it's not to say though, our origination -- new originations were up 8%, receivables were up 9.4% year-over-year. We're continuing to find ways to grow. We're also being thoughtful. We're about long-term sustainable growth. And we want customers to be successful. We're not just going to do short-term originations to show revenue spikes or growth. That really doesn't do a lot for us long term. So we're really focused on long-term value creation and being careful.

Our Model 6.1 launch in the quarter, which we're really excited about is our refit. And we're actively building our most powerful model ever Model 7, which will factor a new way of building models where we're using more AI. So we're very excited about that. That should launch in fall, which will allow us to propel us to grow with lower losses. So I think we're positioned really, really well with our pricing, our balance sheet is strong. And we're just going to -- we're waiting and seeing a little bit on some of the inflation and macro events, but we feel really, really confident we can continue to grow profitably in this environment.

Operator: We'll take our final question from Mike Grondahl with Northland Securities.

Mike Grondahl: A couple of questions here. But first, are you guys able to drill down a little bit into those revenue synergies $60 million is a lot. And I know the three, I think I wrote down was, one, more states; two, some marketing benefits, and three, some funding efficiency. Could you kind of just go through each one and talk through those like more states? Is that a couple of states? What kind of lift do you expect to get there? I don't know, if you could just help on those three revenue synergies, that would be great.

Todd Schwartz: Yes. Yes. No, good question. So we believe that with the national banking platform, we're currently in 40 states. It opens up the full 50. Obviously, we have to -- we're going to work with our regulatory council to make sure that we're doing everything federally and state applicable laws. But we do think there's definitely more than -- I think we said two states. We think there's more expansion. We also have the line of credit product, which we'll be expanding as well through that National Bank charter, which we're excited about. I think when it comes to some of the revenue synergies, it's the structure of the bank partnership program.

Doing it directly yields fields a lot of synergies that accrued to us and it is favorable in the funding structure, and we're doing a lot of volume. So if you look at it over a year, it's pretty significant.

Mike Grondahl: Got it. And then secondly, the LOC product, can you kind of describe like will the customer apply for a loan from you guys and then it will just automatically offer that if it's the best fit? Like I guess, what will the customer see and how will they apply for that product? And then what are your kind of goals for it? Is that going to be 5%, 10% of the mix in a year? Just a little bit of color on the LOC.

Todd Schwartz: Yes. So it's going to be done through the OpLoans brand. We're going to be offering two products under the OpLoans brand, an installment and a line of credit product. What's being contemplated for the summer launch is we're going to be picking up in three new geographies with the line of credit product. So originally, it's going to be offered in one -- in certain states and installment will be offered another. Soon after launch and once we get the early data read, we will provide customers with optionality to select between the two products, what they -- what best suits them and fits them. And so we're excited to have another product option for our customers.

And some customers prefer line of credit over installment. They feel that it provides them a little bit more control. It changes a little bit of how refinances happen versus the line of credit. There's no refinances. So we're excited to provide another high-quality option. It will have all the same features as our installment. There's going to be no draw fee on the original origination. There's going to be no late fees, no prepayment. So we're excited to offer a largely similar product, but just another option for customers. It also allows us to better compete. We know that a lot of our competition uses line of credit in various ways to serve their customers.

So we think it's merited and it will be a good high-quality option for our customers.

Mike Grondahl: Got it. And then just lastly, I wanted to ask about credit quality. I think there was a little cleanup in 4Q. Would you guys say there was also a little bit cleanup in 1Q? And do you see that continuing? Or just where are we in credit quality and how you guys are viewing it and thinking about it?

Todd Schwartz: Yes. I mean just to point out, our charge-offs receivables was elevated from last year. Last year was an exceptional year. We were kind of in a growth. We were extending term a little bit. So we had a really, really strong Q1 last year. This year is more of a normalization. If you go back to '24 and '23, it's still better than those months. We were able to grow receivables, like I said, 9.4% in new originations. It's elevated. There's elevated. I think customers are being a little cautious here. on the demand side and then also on the payments, you got to be a little cautious when there's inflationary pressures that we're seeing.

We're hopeful that this Iran conflict and gas prices will get resolved quickly. And we feel like in the second half, we have a lot of growth levers. Our pricing, our Model 6 are already in market. They're doing really, really well. And then this line of credit product is going to add new geography expansion, which will add a lot of growth. So we're able now with our risk-based pricing to be able to operate in different credit environments and cycles. It's much different kind of than in '22, we had a single price product.

And so we feel like we're much, much better prepared to be able to operate with a little bit of a higher past dues coming in.

Mike Grondahl: Fair. That's helpful. Best of luck the rest of '26 and with the acquisition.

Todd Schwartz: I'm sorry, Mike, could you just repeat the question?

Mike Grondahl: No, I just said best of luck in 2026 and with the acquisition.

Operator: We have a follow-up question from David Scharf with Citizens Capital Markets.

Zachary Oster: I just wanted to squeeze one more question in here. So obviously, seeing good things from the LOLA platform. I wanted to see if we can possibly get some KPIs or quantitative metrics around that to kind of show kind of the upside that's providing.

Todd Schwartz: Yes. I mean we're starting the migration literally this month, which we're very excited about. It's going to reduce cycle times. We were already really, really doing well, like our auto approval rate went from 78.6% last year in Q1 to 79.2%. So we're still even on our old system, making progress on auto approvals. But this is structurally going to allow us to reduce processing times and to approval for customers. So customers are going to get approved faster. We're going to continue to push up the auto approval rates. This allows us to launch products. So we started talking about line of credit product.

In the beginning of the year, and we're going to be able to launch it 4 months later, not even. That's all due to having a clean architecture and a modular infrastructure from our loan servicing system that will allow us to launch. So we're excited. I mean from a corporate standpoint, better corporate integrations into our accounting systems. Our data was all retagged and cleaned up. So we're going to have the ability to deploy AI tools to better read out data and have better information faster.

And I think from like product enhancements from a risk perspective, from a credit perspective, because of the clean architecture, we think cycle time, so meaning we have an idea to enhance our installment product for us to get that to market will be a 50% reduction in cycle time to get something to market by having that architecture. So there's tremendous benefits, and we'll continue to report out on those benefits in our quarterly earnings call and how the company is using it to its benefit going forward.

Zachary Oster: Congratulations on the strong quarter again.

Operator: It appears we have no further questions, and this concludes today's program. Thank you for your participation, and you may disconnect your line at any time.