UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
Form 10-Q
(Mark One)
For the quarterly period ended March 31, 2017
or
For the transition period from to
Commission File Number: 001-36228
Navient Corporation
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)
(302) 283-8000
(Registrants telephone number, including area code)
(Former name, former address and former fiscal year, if changed since last report)
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant: (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes ☑ No ☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company. See the definitions of large accelerated filer, accelerated filer, smaller reporting company and emerging growth company in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. (Check one):
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically and posted on its corporate Web site, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files). Yes ☑ No ☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes ☐ No ☑
Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuers classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date:
Class
Outstanding at March 31, 2017
NAVIENT CORPORATION
Table of Contents
Financial Statements
Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk
Controls and Procedures
Legal Proceedings
Risk Factors
Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
Defaults Upon Senior Securities
Mine Safety Disclosures
Other Information
Exhibits
PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(In millions, except share and per share amounts)
(Unaudited)
Assets
FFELP Loans (net of allowance for losses of $64 and $67, respectively)
Private Education Loans (net of allowance for losses of $1,311 and $1,351 respectively)
Investments
Available-for-sale
Other
Total investments
Cash and cash equivalents
Restricted cash and investments
Goodwill and acquired intangible assets, net
Other assets
Total assets
Liabilities
Short-term borrowings
Long-term borrowings
Other liabilities
Total liabilities
Commitments and contingencies
Equity
Common stock, par value $0.01 per share, 1.125 billion shares authorized: 439 million and 436 million shares issued, respectively
Additional paid-in capital
Accumulated other comprehensive income (net of tax expense of $13 and $3, respectively)
Retained earnings
Total Navient Corporation stockholders equity before treasury stock
Less: Common stock held in treasury at cost: 154 million and 145 million shares, respectively
Total Navient Corporation stockholders equity
Noncontrolling interest
Total equity
Total liabilities and equity
Supplemental information assets and liabilities of consolidated variable interest entities:
FFELP Loans
Private Education Loans
Other loans
Restricted cash
Other assets, net
Net assets of consolidated variable interest entities
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
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CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
(In millions, except per share amounts)
Interest income:
Cash and investments
Total interest income
Total interest expense
Net interest income
Less: provisions for loan losses
Net interest income after provisions for loan losses
Other income (loss):
Servicing revenue
Asset recovery and business processing revenue
Other income (loss)
Gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities, net
Total other income
Expenses:
Salaries and benefits
Other operating expenses
Total operating expenses
Goodwill and acquired intangible asset impairment and amortization expense
Total expenses
Income before income tax expense
Income tax expense
Net income
Less: net loss attributable to noncontrolling interest
Net income attributable to Navient Corporation
Basic earnings per common share attributable to Navient Corporation
Average common shares outstanding
Diluted earnings per common share attributable to Navient Corporation
Average common and common equivalent shares outstanding
Dividends per common share attributable to Navient Corporation
2
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
(In millions)
Other comprehensive income (loss):
Unrealized gains (losses) on derivatives:
Unrealized hedging gains (losses) on derivatives
Reclassification adjustments for derivative (gains) losses included in net income (interest expense)
Total unrealized gains (losses) on derivatives
Income tax (expense) benefit
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax expense (benefit)
Total comprehensive income attributable to Navient Corporation
3
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS EQUITY
(Dollars in millions, except share and per share amounts)
Balance at December 31, 2015
Comprehensive income:
Other comprehensive loss, net of tax
Total comprehensive income
Cash dividends:
Common stock ($.16 per share)
Dividend equivalent units related to employee stock-based compensation plans
Issuance of common shares
Tax impact of employee stock-based compensation plans
Stock-based compensation expense
Common stock repurchased
Shares repurchased related to employee stock-based compensation plans
Balance at March 31, 2016
Balance at December 31, 2016
Other comprehensive income, net of tax
Balance at March 31, 2017
4
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(Dollars in millions)
Operating activities
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:
Unrealized (gains) losses on derivative and hedging activities
Provisions for loan losses
Increase in restricted cash other
Decrease in accrued interest receivable
Decrease in accrued interest payable
Decrease in other assets
Increase (decrease) in other liabilities
Total net cash provided by operating activities
Investing activities
Education loans acquired
Reduction of education loans:
Installment payments, claims and other
Other investing activities, net
Purchases of other securities
Proceeds from maturities of other securities
Increase in restricted cash variable interest entities
Total net cash provided by investing activities
Financing activities
Borrowings collateralized by loans in trust issued
Borrowings collateralized by loans in trust repaid
Asset-backed commercial paper conduits, net
Other short-term borrowings repaid
Other long-term borrowings issued
Other long-term borrowings repaid
Other financing activities, net
Common stock dividends paid
Net cash used in financing activities
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period
Cash disbursements made (refunds received) for:
Interest
Income taxes paid
Income taxes received
5
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Information at March 31, 2017 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2017 and 2016 is unaudited)
Basis of Presentation
The accompanying unaudited, consolidated financial statements of Navient have been prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States of America (GAAP) for interim financial information. Accordingly, they do not include all of the information and footnotes required by GAAP for complete consolidated financial statements. The consolidated financial statements include the accounts of Navient and its majority-owned and controlled subsidiaries and those Variable Interest Entities (VIEs) for which we are the primary beneficiary, after eliminating the effects of intercompany accounts and transactions. In the opinion of management, all adjustments considered necessary for a fair statement of the results for the interim periods have been included. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Operating results for the three-month period ended March 31, 2017 are not necessarily indicative of the results for the year ending December 31, 2017 or for any other period. These unaudited financial statements should be read in conjunction with the audited financial statements and related notes included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2016 (the 2016 Form 10-K). Definitions for certain capitalized terms used but not otherwise defined in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q can be found in our 2016 Form10-K.
Reclassifications
Certain reclassifications have been made to the balances as of and for the three months ended March 31, 2016 to be consistent with classifications adopted for 2017, and had no effect on net income, total assets, or total liabilities.
Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements
Revenue Recognition
On May 28, 2014, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (the FASB) issued Accounting Standards Update (ASU) No 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers, which requires an entity to recognize the amount of revenue to which it expects to be entitled for the transfer of promised goods or services to customers. The new guidance supersedes current U.S. GAAP guidance on revenue recognition and requires the use of more estimates and judgements than the current revenue standards. The new guidance does not apply to revenue associated with financial instruments, including loans, that are accounted for under other U.S. GAAP. Accordingly, we do not expect the new revenue recognition guidance to have a material impact on our consolidated results of operations associated with our loan portfolios including net interest income.
We plan to adopt the new standard as of January 1, 2018, the effective date. The new standard permits the use of either the retrospective or cumulative effect transition method. Our implementation efforts to date include the identification of revenue and review of related contracts within the scope of the new standard. We have not yet identified nor do we anticipate material changes in the timing of revenue recognition. However, our review is ongoing as we continue to evaluate both contract revenue and certain contract costs.
Classification and Measurement
On January 5, 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-01, Recognition and Measurement of Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities, which reconsiders the classification and measurement of financial instruments. The new standard requires certain equity instruments be measured at fair value, with fair value changes
6
March 31, 2017 and 2016 is unaudited) (Continued)
recognized in earnings. In addition, the standard requires a cumulative-effect adjustment to retained earnings as of the beginning of the reporting period of adoption. It will be effective for the Company as of January 1, 2018. We have concluded that adopting this new accounting standard will be immaterial to our consolidated financial statements and footnote disclosures.
Leases
On February 25, 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-02, Leases, which requires the identification of arrangements that should be accounted for as leases by lessees. In general, for lease arrangements exceeding a twelve-month term, these arrangements must be recognized as assets and liabilities on the balance sheet of the lessee. A right-of-use asset and lease obligation will be recorded for all leases, whether operating or financing, while the income statement will reflect lease expense for operating leases and amortization/interest expense for financing leases. The balance sheet amount recorded for existing leases at the date of adoption must be calculated using the applicable incremental borrowing rate at the date of adoption. The standard requires the use of the modified retrospective transition method, which will require adjustment to all comparative periods presented. It will be effective for the Company as of January 1, 2019. Early adoption is permitted. We are currently assessing the impact that adopting this new accounting standard will have on our consolidated financial statements and footnote disclosures, but expect it to be immaterial.
Stock Compensation
On March 30, 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-09, Compensation Stock Compensation, which identifies areas for simplification involving several aspects of accounting for share-based payment transactions, including the income tax consequences, classification of awards as either equity or liabilities, an option to recognize gross stock compensation expense with actual forfeitures recognized as they occur, as well as certain classifications on the statement of cash flows. The new standard also requires that all excess tax benefits and tax deficiencies that pertain to employee stock-based incentive payments be recognized within income tax expense in the consolidated statements of income, rather than as previously reported within additional paid-in capital. The new standard was adopted on January 1, 2017 and is expected to have an immaterial impact on our consolidated financial statements and footnote disclosures. In the first quarter of 2017, this new standard resulted in a $3 million reduction to income tax expense.
Allowance for Loan Losses
On June 16, 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-13, Financial Instruments Credit Losses, which requires measurement and recognition of an allowance for loan loss that estimates remaining expected credit losses for financial assets held at the reporting date. Our current allowance for loan loss is an incurred loss model. As a result, we expect the new guidance will result in an increase to our allowance for loan losses. The standard is to be applied through a cumulative-effect adjustment to retained earnings as of the beginning of the first reporting period in which the guidance is effective. The standard is effective for the Company as of January 1, 2020, and will primarily impact the allowance for loan losses related to our Private Education Loans and FFELP Loans. Early adoption is permitted on January 1, 2019. This standard represents a significant departure from existing GAAP, and may result in material changes to the Companys accounting for the allowance for loan losses. We are currently evaluating the impact of adopting this accounting standard on our consolidated financial statements and footnote disclosures.
7
Intra-Entity Transfer of Assets
On October 24, 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-16, Income Taxes Intra-Entity Transfer of Assets Other and Inventory, which requires recognition of the income tax consequences of an intra-entity transfer of non-inventory assets when the transfer occurs. The new standard is effective for the Company as of January 1, 2018. We are currently assessing the impact that adopting this new accounting standard will have on our consolidated financial statements and footnote disclosures, but expect it to be immaterial.
Goodwill Impairment
On January 26, 2017, the FASB issued ASU No. 2017-04, Intangibles Goodwill and Other, which eliminates the two-step process that required identification of potential impairment and a separate measure of the actual impairment. The annual assessment of goodwill impairment will be determined by using the difference between the carrying amount and the fair value of the reporting unit. The new standard will be effective for the Company as of January 1, 2020. Early adoption is permitted. We are currently assessing the impact that adopting this new standard will have on our consolidated financial statements and footnote disclosures.
Our provisions for loan losses represent the periodic expense of maintaining an allowance sufficient to absorb incurred probable losses, net of expected recoveries, in the held-for-investment loan portfolios. The evaluation of the provisions for loan losses is inherently subjective, as it requires material estimates that may be susceptible to significant changes. We believe that the allowance for loan losses is appropriate to cover probable losses incurred in the loan portfolios.
We segregate our Private Education Loan portfolio into two classes of loans traditional andnon-traditional. Non-traditional loans are loans to (i) customers attending for-profit schools with an original Fair Isaac and Company (FICO) score of less than 670 and (ii) customers attending not-for-profit schools with an original FICO score of less than 640. The FICO score used in determining whether a loan is non-traditional is the greater of the customer or cosigner FICO score at or near origination. Traditional loans are defined as all other Private Education Loans that are not classified as non-traditional.
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Allowance for Loan Losses Metrics
Beginning balance
Provision for loan losses
Charge-offs(1)
Reclassification of interest reserve(2)
Ending balance
Allowance:
Ending balance: individually evaluated for impairment
Ending balance: collectively evaluated for impairment
Loans:
Ending balance: individually evaluated for impairment(3)
Ending balance: collectively evaluated for impairment(3)
Charge-offs as a percentage of average loans in repayment (annualized)
Allowance coverage of charge-offs (annualized)
Allowance as a percentage of the ending total loan balance
Allowance as a percentage of the ending loans in repayment
Ending total loans(3)
Average loans in repayment
Ending loans in repayment
Charge-offs are reported net of expected recoveries. For Private Education Loans, the expected recovery amount is transferred to the receivable for partially charged-off loan balance. Charge-offs include charge-offs against the receivable for partiallycharged-off loans which represents the difference between what was expected to be recovered and any shortfalls in what was actually recovered in the period. See Receivable for Partially Charged-Off Private Education Loans for further discussion.
Represents the additional allowance related to the amount of uncollectible interest reserved within interest income that is transferred in the period to the allowance for loan losses when interest is capitalized to a loans principal balance.
Ending total loans for Private Education Loans includes the receivable for partially charged-off loans.
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Charge-offs are reported net of expected recoveries. For Private Education Loans, the expected recovery amount is transferred to the receivable for partially charged-off loan balance. Charge-offs include charge-offs against the receivable for partiallycharged-off loans which represents the difference between what was expected to be collected and any shortfalls in what was actually collected in the period. See Receivable for Partially Charged-Off Private Education Loans for further discussion.
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Key Credit Quality Indicators
FFELP Loans are substantially insured and guaranteed as to their principal and accrued interest in the event of default; therefore, the key credit quality indicator for this portfolio is loan status. The impact of changes in loan status is incorporated quarterly into the allowance for loan losses calculation.
For Private Education Loans, the key credit quality indicators are school type, FICO scores, the existence of a cosigner, the loan status and loan seasoning. The school type/FICO score are assessed at origination and maintained through the traditional/non-traditional loan designation. The other Private Education Loan key quality indicators can change and are incorporated quarterly into the allowance for loan losses calculation. The following table highlights the principal balance (excluding the receivable for partially charged-off loans) of our Private Education Loan portfolio stratified by the key credit quality indicators.
Credit Quality Indicators
School Type/FICO Scores:
Traditional
Non-Traditional(1)
Total
Cosigners:
With cosigner
Without cosigner
Seasoning(2):
1-12 payments
13-24 payments
25-36 payments
37-48 payments
More than 48 payments
Not yet in repayment
Defined as loans to customers attendingfor-profit schools (with a FICO score of less than 670 at origination) and customers attending not-for-profit schools (with a FICO score of less than 640 at origination).
Number of months in active repayment for which a scheduled payment was received.
Balance represents gross Private Education Loans.
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The following tables provide information regarding the loan status and aging of past due loans.
Loans in-school/grace/deferment(1)
Loans in forbearance(2)
Loans in repayment and percentage of each status:
Loans current
Loans delinquent 31-60 days(3)
Loans delinquent 61-90 days(3)
Loans delinquent greater than 90 days(3)
Total FFELP Loans in repayment
Total FFELP Loans, gross
FFELP Loan unamortized premium
Total FFELP Loans
FFELP Loan allowance for losses
FFELP Loans, net
Percentage of FFELP Loans in repayment
Delinquencies as a percentage of FFELP Loans in repayment
FFELP Loans in forbearance as a percentage of loans in repayment and forbearance
Loans for customers who may still be attending school or engaging in other permitted educational activities and are not yet required to make payments on their loans, e.g., residency periods for medical students or a grace period for bar exam preparation, as well as loans for customers who have requested and qualify for other permitted program deferments such as military, unemployment, or economic hardships.
Loans for customers who have used their allowable deferment time or do not qualify for deferment, that need additional time to obtain employment or who have temporarily ceased making full payments due to hardship or other factors.
The period of delinquency is based on the number of days scheduled payments are contractually past due.
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Total traditional loans in repayment
Total traditional loans, gross
Traditional loans unamortized discount
Total traditional loans
Traditional loans receivable for partially charged-off loans
Traditional loans allowance for losses
Traditional loans, net
Percentage of traditional loans in repayment
Delinquencies as a percentage of traditional loans in repayment
Loans in forbearance as a percentage of loans in repayment and forbearance
Deferment includes customers who have returned to school or are engaged in other permitted educational activities and are not yet required to make payments on their loans, e.g., residency periods for medical students or a grace period for bar exam preparation.
Loans for customers who have requested extension of grace period generally during employment transition or who have temporarily ceased making full payments due to hardship or other factors, consistent with established loan program servicing policies and procedures.
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Total non-traditional loans in repayment
Total non-traditional loans, gross
Non-traditional loans unamortized discount
Total non-traditional loans
Non-traditional loans receivable for partiallycharged-off loans
Non-traditional loans allowance for losses
Non-traditional loans, net
Percentage of non-traditional loans in repayment
Delinquencies as a percentage of non-traditional loans in repayment
Receivable for Partially Charged-OffPrivate Education Loans
At the end of each month, for loans that are 212 or more days past due, we charge off the estimated loss of a defaulted loan balance. Actual recoveries are applied against the remaining loan balance that was not charged off. We refer to this remaining loan balance as the receivable for partiallycharged-off loans. If actual periodic recoveries are less than expected, the difference is immediately charged off through the allowance for Private Education Loan losses with an offsetting reduction in the receivable for partially charged-off Private Education Loans. If actual periodic recoveries are greater than expected, they will be reflected as a recovery through the allowance for Private Education Loan losses once the cumulative recovery amount exceeds the cumulative amount originally expected to be recovered.
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The following table summarizes the activity in the receivable for partially charged-off Private Education Loans.
Receivable at beginning of period
Expected future recoveries of current period defaults(1)
Recoveries(2)
Charge-offs(3)
Receivable at end of period
Represents our estimate of the amount to be collected in the future.
Current period cash collections.
Represents the current period recovery shortfall the difference between what was expected to be collected and what was actually collected. These amounts are included in total charge-offs as reported in the Allowance for Private Education Loan Losses table.
Troubled Debt Restructurings (TDRs)
We sometimes modify the terms of loans for certain customers when we believe such modifications may increase the ability and willingness of a customer to make payments and thus increase the ultimate overall amount collected on a loan. These modifications generally take the form of a forbearance, a temporary interest rate reduction or an extended repayment plan. For customers experiencing financial difficulty, certain Private Education Loans for which we have granted either a forbearance of greater than three months, an interest rate reduction or an extended repayment plan are classified as TDRs. Approximately 62 percent and 61 percent of the loans granted forbearance have qualified as a TDR loan at March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, respectively. The unpaid principal balance of TDR loans that were in an interest rate reduction plan as of March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016 was $2.5 billion and $2.6 billion, respectively.
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At March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, all of our TDR loans had a related allowance recorded. The following table provides the recorded investment, unpaid principal balance and related allowance for our TDR loans.
March 31, 2017
Private Education Loans Traditional
Private Education Loans Non-Traditional
December 31, 2016
The recorded investment is equal to the unpaid principal balance and accrued interest receivable net of unamortized deferred fees and costs.
The following table provides the average recorded investment and interest income recognized for our TDR loans.
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The following table provides information regarding the loan status and aging of TDR loans that are past due.
Loans in deferment(1)
Total TDR loans in repayment
Total TDR loans, gross
The following table provides the amount of loans modified in the periods presented that resulted in a TDR. Additionally, the table summarizes charge-offs occurring in the TDR portfolio, as well as TDRs for which a payment default occurred in the current period within 12 months of the loan first being designated as a TDR. We define payment default as 60 days past due for this disclosure.
Represents period ending balance of loans that have been modified during the period and resulted in a TDR.
Represents loans that charged off that were classified as TDRs.
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Accrued Interest Receivable
The following table provides information regarding accrued interest receivable on our Private Education Loans.
The following table summarizes our borrowings.
Unsecured borrowings:
Senior unsecured debt
Total unsecured borrowings
Secured borrowings:
FFELP Loan securitizations
Private Education Loan securitizations(1)
FFELP Loan other facilities
Private Education Loan other facilities
Other(2)
Total secured borrowings
Total before hedge accounting adjustments
Hedge accounting adjustments
Includes $548 million and $548 million of short-term debt related to the Private Education Loan asset-backed securitization repurchase facility (Repurchase Facility) as of March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, respectively. Includes $476 million and $475 million of long-term debt related to the Repurchase Facility as of March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, respectively.
Other primarily includes the obligation to return cash collateral held related to derivative exposures, which includes $95 million and $193 million of securities re-pledged subject to an overnight repurchase transaction as of March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, respectively.
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Variable Interest Entities
We consolidated the following financing VIEs as of March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, as we are the primary beneficiary. As a result, these VIEs are accounted for as secured borrowings.
Secured Borrowings VIEs:
Includes $548 million of short-term debt, $476 million of long-term debt and $39 million of restricted cash related to the Repurchase Facility as of March 31, 2017. Includes $548 million of short-term debt, $475 million of long-term debt and $49 million of restricted cash related to the Repurchase Facility as of December 31, 2016.
Our risk management strategy and use of and accounting for derivatives have not materially changed from that discussed in our 2016 Form 10-K. Please refer to Note 7Derivative Financial Instruments in our 2016 Form 10-K for a full discussion.
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Summary of Derivative Financial Statement Impact
The following tables summarize the fair values and notional amounts of all derivative instruments at March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, and their impact on other comprehensive income and earnings for the three months ended March 31, 2017 and 2016.
Impact of Derivatives on Consolidated Balance Sheet
Fair Values(1)
Derivative Assets:
Interest rate swaps
Cross-currency interest rate swaps
Total derivative assets(3)
Derivative Liabilities:
Floor Income Contracts
Total derivative liabilities(3)
Net total derivatives
Fair values reported are exclusive of collateral held and pledged and accrued interest. Assets and liabilities are presented without consideration of master netting agreements. Derivatives are carried on the balance sheet based on net position by counterparty under master netting agreements, and classified in other assets or other liabilities depending on whether in a net positive or negative position.
Other includes embedded derivatives bifurcated from securitization debt as well as derivatives related to our Total Return Swap Facility.
The following table reconciles gross positions without the impact of master netting agreements to the balance sheet classification:
(Dollar in millions)
Gross position
Impact of master netting agreements
Derivative values with impact of master netting agreements (as carried on balance sheet)
Cash collateral (held) pledged
Net position
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The above fair values include adjustments when necessary for counterparty credit risk for both when we are exposed to the counterparty, net of collateral postings, and when the counterparty is exposed to us, net of collateral postings. There were no adjustments to the overall net asset positions at March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016. In addition, the above fair values reflect adjustments for illiquid derivatives as indicated by a wide bid/ask spread in the interest rate indices to which the derivatives are indexed. These adjustments decreased the overall net asset positions at March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016 by $28 million and $31 million, respectively.
(Dollars in billions)
Notional Values:
Other(1)
Total derivatives
Impact of Derivatives on Consolidated Statements of Income
Fair Value Hedges:
Total fair value derivatives
Cash Flow Hedges:
Total cash flow derivatives
Trading:
Total trading derivatives
Less: realized gains (losses) recorded in interest expense
Recorded in Gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities, net in the consolidated statements of income.
Represents ineffectiveness related to cash flow hedges.
For fair value and cash flow hedges, recorded in interest expense. For trading derivatives, recorded in Gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities, net.
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Collateral
Collateral held and pledged related to derivative exposures between us and our derivative counterparties are detailed in the following table:
Collateral held:
Cash (obligation to return cash collateral is recorded in short-term borrowings)
Securities at fair value corporate derivatives (not recorded in financial statements)(1)
Securities at fair value on-balance sheet securitization derivatives (not recorded in financial statements)(2)
Total collateral held
Derivative asset at fair value including accrued interest
Collateral pledged to others:
Cash (right to receive return of cash collateral is recorded in investments)
Total collateral pledged
Derivative liability at fair value including accrued interest and premium receivable
The Company has the ability to sell orre-pledge securities it holds as collateral.
The trusts do not have the ability to sell orre-pledge securities they hold as collateral.
Our corporate derivatives contain credit contingent features. At our current unsecured credit rating, we have fully collateralized our corporate derivative liability position (including accrued interest and net of premiums receivable) of $355 million with our counterparties. Downgrades in our unsecured credit rating would not result in any additional collateral requirements, except to increase the frequency of collateral calls. Trust related derivatives do not contain credit contingent features related to our or the trusts credit ratings.
The following table provides the detail of our other assets.
Accrued interest receivable, net
Income tax asset, net current and deferred
Benefit and insurance-related investments
Derivatives at fair value
Other loans, net
Fixed assets, net
Accounts receivable
22
The following table summarizes common share repurchases and issuances.
Common shares repurchased(1)
Average purchase price per share
Shares repurchased related to employee stock-based compensation plans(2)
Common shares issued(3)
Common shares purchased under our share repurchase program.
Comprises shares withheld from stock option exercises and vesting of restricted stock for employees tax withholding obligations and shares tendered by employees to satisfy option exercise costs.
Common shares issued under our various compensation and benefit plans.
The closing price of our common stock on March 31, 2017 was $14.76.
Dividend and Share Repurchase Program
In March 2017, we paid a common stock dividend of $0.16 per share.
We repurchased 7.4 million shares of common stock for $110 million in the first quarter of 2017. The shares were repurchased under our previously disclosed share repurchase program. As of March 31, 2017, the remaining repurchase authority was $490 million. In the first quarter of 2016, we repurchased 19.2 million shares for $200 million.
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Basic earnings per common share (EPS) are calculated using the weighted average number of shares of common stock outstanding during each period. A reconciliation of the numerators and denominators of the basic and diluted EPS calculations follows.
(In millions, except per share data)
Numerator:
Denominator:
Weighted average shares used to compute basic EPS
Effect of dilutive securities:
Dilutive effect of stock options, non-vested restricted stock, restricted stock units and Employee Stock Purchase Plans (ESPPs)(1)
Dilutive potential common shares(2)
Weighted average shares used to compute diluted EPS
Basic earnings (loss) per common share attributable to Navient Corporation
Diluted earnings (loss) per common share attributable to Navient Corporation
Includes the potential dilutive effect of additional common shares that are issuable upon exercise of outstanding stock options, non-vested restricted stock, restricted stock units, and the outstanding commitment to issue shares under applicable ESPPs, determined by the treasury stock method.
For the three months ended March 31, 2017 and 2016, stock options covering approximately 5 million and 9 million shares, respectively, were outstanding but not included in the computation of diluted earnings per share because they were anti-dilutive.
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We use estimates of fair value in applying various accounting standards in our financial statements. We categorize our fair value estimates based on a hierarchical framework associated with three levels of price transparency utilized in measuring financial instruments at fair value. Please refer to Note 12Fair Value Measurements in our 2016 Form 10-K for a full discussion.
During the three months ended March 31, 2017, there were no significant transfers of financial instruments between levels, or changes in our methodology or assumptions used to value our financial instruments.
The following table summarizes the valuation of our financial instruments that are marked-to-market on a recurring basis.
Available-for-sale investments:
Agency residential mortgage-backed securities
Total available-for-saleinvestments
Derivative instruments:(1)
Total derivative assets(2)
Liabilities(3)
Derivative instruments(1)
Total derivative liabilities(2)
Fair value of derivative instruments excludes accrued interest and the value of collateral.
See Note 4Derivative Financial Instruments for a reconciliation of gross positions without the impact of master netting agreements to the balance sheet classification.
Borrowings which are the hedged items in a fair value hedge relationship and which are adjusted for changes in value due to benchmark interest rates only are not carried at full fair value and are not reflected in this table.
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The following tables summarize the change in balance sheet carrying value associated with level 3 financial instruments carried at fair value on a recurring basis.
Balance, beginning of period
Total gains/(losses) (realized and unrealized):
Included in earnings(1)
Included in other comprehensive income
Settlements
Transfers in and/or out of level 3
Balance, end of period
Change in unrealized gains/(losses) relating to instruments still held at the reporting date(2)
Included in earnings is comprised of the following amounts recorded in the specified line item in the consolidated statements of income:
Interest expense
Recorded in gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities, net in the consolidated statements of income.
The following table presents the significant inputs that are unobservable or from inactive markets used in the recurring valuations of the level 3 financial instruments detailed above.
Derivatives
Prime/LIBOR basis swaps
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The significant inputs that are unobservable or from inactive markets related to our level 3 derivatives detailed in the table above would be expected to have the following impacts to the valuations:
Prime/LIBOR basis swaps These swaps do not actively trade in the markets as indicated by a wide bid/ask spread. A wider bid/ask spread will result in a decrease in the overall valuation. In addition, the unobservable inputs include Constant Prepayment Rates of the underlying securitization trust the swap references. A decrease in this input will result in a longer weighted average life of the swap which will increase the value for swaps in a gain position and decrease the value for swaps in a loss position, everything else equal. The opposite is true for an increase in the input.
Cross-currency interest rate swaps The unobservable inputs used in these valuations are Constant Prepayment Rates of the underlying securitization trust the swap references. A decrease in this input will result in a longer weighted average life of the swap. All else equal in a typical currency market, this will result in a decrease to the valuation due to the delay in the cash flows of the currency exchanges as well as diminished liquidity in the forward exchange markets as you increase the term. The opposite is true for an increase in the input.
The following table summarizes the fair values of our financial assets and liabilities, including derivative financial instruments.
Earning assets
Cash and investments(1)
Total earning assets
Interest-bearing liabilities
Total interest-bearing liabilities
Derivative financial instruments
Excess of net asset fair value over carrying value
Cash and investments includes available-for-sale investments whose cost basis is $3 million and $3 million at March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, respectively, versus a fair value of $3 million and $3 million at March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, respectively.
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The Company has been named as defendant in a number of putative class action cases alleging violations of various state and federal consumer protection laws. One of these putative class action suits is Randy Johnson v. Navient Solutions, Inc. (NSI). On May 4, 2015, Randy Johnson filed a putative class action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana alleging violations of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA). During the fourth quarter of 2016, the parties entered into a settlement agreement and, on December 23, 2016, filed a Motion to Approve the Class Action Settlement with the Court. The Court preliminarily approved the settlement on January 26, 2017. NSI denied all claims asserted, but agreed to settle the case to avoid the burden, expense, risk and uncertainty of continued litigation. A reserve was established for this matter as of December 31, 2016. The proposed settlement is subject to Court approval with a hearing currently scheduled for July 2017.
On January 18, 2017, the CFPB and Attorneys General for the State of Illinois and the State of Washington (collectively the Attorneys General) initiated civil actions naming Navient Corporation and several of its subsidiaries as defendants alleging violations of Federal and State consumer protection statutes, including the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act and various State consumer protection laws. For additional information on these civil actions, please refer to section entitled Regulatory Matters below.
Regulatory Matters
On May 2, 2014, Navient Solutions, Inc., now known as Navient Solutions, LLC (Solutions), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Navient, and Sallie Mae Bank entered into consent orders, without admitting any wrongdoing, with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (the FDIC) (respectively, the Solutions Order and the Bank Order; collectively, the FDIC Orders) to settle matters related to certain cited violations of Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, including the disclosures and assessments of certain late fees, as well as alleged violations under the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (the SCRA). The FDIC Orders, which became effective upon the signing of the consent order with the United States Department of Justice (the DOJ) by Solutions and SLM BankCo on May 13, 2014, required Solutions to pay $3.3 million in civil monetary penalties. Solutions paid its civil monetary penalties. In addition, the FDIC Orders required the establishment of a restitution reserve account totaling $30 million to provide restitution with respect to loans owned or originated by Sallie Mae Bank, from November 28, 2005 until the effective date of the FDIC Orders. The FDIC lifted the consent order effective as of March 23, 2017 with no conditions.
With respect to alleged civil violations of the SCRA, Solutions and Sallie Mae Bank entered into a consent order with the DOJ in May 2014. The DOJ consent order (the DOJ Order) covers all loans either owned by Sallie Mae Bank or serviced by Solutions from November 28, 2005 until the effective date of the settlement. The DOJ Order required Solutions to fund a $60 million settlement fund, which represents the total amount of compensation due to service members under the DOJ agreement, and to pay $55,000 in civil penalties. The DOJ Order was approved by the United States District Court in Delaware on September 29, 2014 and has a term of four years. Shortly thereafter, Navient funded the settlement fund and paid the civil money penalties pursuant to the terms of the order. The funds were disbursed beginning in the second quarter of 2015. In the third quarter of 2016, the Company completed the distributions from the fund by distributing the remaining funds to charities approved by the DOJ.
The total reserves established by the Company in 2013 and 2014 to cover these costs were $177 million, and as of March 31, 2017, substantially all of this amount had been paid or credited or refunded to customer
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accounts. The final cost of these proceedings will remain uncertain until all of the work under the consent orders has been completed and the remaining consent order is lifted.
As previously disclosed, the Company and various of its subsidiaries have been subject to the following investigations and inquiries:
In December 2013, Navient received Civil Investigative Demands (CIDs) issued by the State of Illinois Office of Attorney General and the State of Washington Office of the Attorney General and multiple other state Attorneys General. According to the CIDs, the investigations were initiated to ascertain whether any practices declared to be unlawful under the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act have occurred or are about to occur.
In April 2014, Solutions received a CID from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (the CFPB) as part of the CFPBs separate investigation regarding allegations relating to Navients disclosures and assessment of late fees and other matters. Navient has received a series of supplemental CIDs on these matters. In August 2015, Solutions received a letter from the CFPB notifying Solutions that, in accordance with the CFPBs discretionary Notice and Opportunity to Respond and Advise (NORA) process, the CFPBs Office of Enforcement is considering recommending that the CFPB take legal action against Solutions. The NORA letter relates to a previously disclosed investigation into Solutions disclosures and assessment of late fees and other matters and states that, in connection with any action, the CFPB may seek restitution, civil monetary penalties and corrective action against Solutions. The Company responded to the NORA letter in September 2015.
In November 2014, Navients subsidiary, Pioneer Credit Recovery, Inc. (Pioneer), received a CID from the CFPB as part of the CFPBs investigation regarding Pioneers activities relating to rehabilitation loans and collection of defaulted student debt. The CFPB has informed the Company that they have combined this matter with the aforementioned servicing matter.
In December 2014, Solutions received a subpoena from the New York Department of Financial Services (the NY DFS) as part of the NY DFSs inquiry with regard to whether persons or entities have engaged in fraud or misconduct with respect to a financial product or service under New York Financial Services Law or other laws.
On January 18, 2017, the CFPB and Attorneys General for the State of Illinois and the State of Washington (collectively the Attorneys General) initiated civil actions naming Navient Corporation and several of its subsidiaries as defendants alleging violations of Federal and State consumer protection statutes, including the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act and various state consumer protection laws. These civil actions are related to the aforementioned CIDs and the NORA letter that were previously issued by the CFPB and the Attorneys General. In addition to these matters, a number of lawsuits have been filed by nongovernmental parties or may be filed by additional governmental or nongovernmental parties seeking damages or other remedies related to similar issues raised by the CFPB and the Attorneys General. The Company filed its Motion to Dismiss on March 20, 2017 with respect to the Attorneys General actions and on March 24, 2017 with respect to the CFPB action. On April 25, 2017, the CFPB filed their response to our Motion to Dismiss. As the Company has previously stated, we believe the suit improperly seeks to impose penalties on Navient based on new servicing standards applied retroactively and applied only against one servicer and that the allegations are false. We intend to vigorously defend against the allegations. At this point in time, the Company is unable to anticipate the timing of a resolution or the ultimate impact that these legal proceedings may have on the Companys consolidated financial position, liquidity, results of operation or cash flows. As a result, it is not possible at this time to estimate a range of potential exposure, if any, for amounts that may be payable in connection with these matters and reserves have not been established. It is possible that an adverse ruling or rulings may have a material adverse impact on the Company.
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In addition, Navient and its subsidiaries are subject to examination or regulation by the SEC, CFPB, FDIC, ED and various state agencies as part of its ordinary course of business. Items or matters similar to or different from those described above may arise during the course of those examinations. We also routinely receive inquiries or requests from various regulatory entities or bodies or government agencies concerning our business or our assets. The Company endeavors to cooperate with each such inquiry or request.
Under the terms of the Separation Agreement, Navient has agreed to indemnify SLM BankCo for all claims, actions, damages, losses or expenses that may arise from the conduct of all activities of pre-Spin-Off SLM BankCo occurring prior to the Spin-Off other than those specifically excluded in the Separation and Distribution Agreement. As a result, liabilities arising out of the regulatory matters and CFPB and State Attorneys General lawsuits mentioned above, other than fines or penalties directly levied against Sallie Mae Bank and other matters specifically excluded, are the responsibility of, or assumed by, Navient or one of its subsidiaries, and Navient has agreed to indemnify and hold harmless Sallie Mae and its subsidiaries, including Sallie Mae Bank, therefrom. Navient has no additional reserves related to indemnification matters with SLM BankCo as of March 31, 2017.
OIG Audit
The Office of the Inspector General (the OIG) of ED commenced an audit regarding Special Allowance Payments (SAP) on September 10, 2007. On September 25, 2013, we received the final audit determination of Federal Student Aid (the Final Audit Determination) on the final audit report issued by the OIG on August 3, 2009 related to this audit. The Final Audit Determination concurred with the final audit report issued by the OIG and instructed us to make adjustment to our government billing to reflect the policy determination. In August 2016, we filed our notice of appeal relating to this Final Audit Determination to the Administrative Actions and Appeals Service Group of ED. This matter remains open. We continue to believe that our SAP billing practices were proper, considering then-existing ED guidance and lack of applicable regulations. The Company established a reserve for this matter in 2014 as part of the total reserve for pending regulatory matters discussed previously and does not believe, at this time, that an adverse ruling would have a material effect on the Company as a whole.
Contingencies
In the ordinary course of business, we and our subsidiaries are defendants in or parties to pending and threatened legal actions and proceedings including actions brought on behalf of various classes of claimants. These actions and proceedings may be based on alleged violations of consumer protection, securities, employment and other laws. In certain of these actions and proceedings, claims for substantial monetary damage are asserted against us and our subsidiaries.
In the ordinary course of business, we and our subsidiaries are subject to regulatory examinations, information gathering requests, inquiries and investigations. In connection with formal and informal inquiries in these cases, we and our subsidiaries receive numerous requests, subpoenas and orders for documents, testimony and information in connection with various aspects of our regulated activities.
In view of the inherent difficulty of predicting the outcome of such litigation and regulatory matters, we cannot predict what the eventual outcome of the pending matters will be, what the timing or the ultimate resolution of these matters will be, or what the eventual loss, fines or penalties, if any, related to each pending matter may be.
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We are required to establish reserves for litigation and regulatory matters where those matters present loss contingencies that are both probable and estimable. When loss contingencies are not both probable and estimable, we do not establish reserves.
Based on current knowledge, reserves have been established for certain litigation or regulatory matters where the loss is both probable and estimable. Based on current knowledge, management does not believe that loss contingencies, if any, arising from pending investigations, litigation or regulatory matters will have a material adverse effect on our consolidated financial position, liquidity, results of operations or cash flows, except as otherwise disclosed.
FFELP Loans Segment
In the FFELP Loans segment, we acquire and finance FFELP Loans. Although FFELP Loans are no longer originated, we continue to pursue acquisitions of FFELP Loan portfolios. These acquisitions leverage our servicing scale and generate incremental earnings and cash flow. In this segment, we generate revenue primarily through net interest income on the FFELP Loan portfolio (after provision for loan losses). This segment is expected to generate significant amounts of earnings and cash flow as the portfolio amortizes.
The following table includes GAAP basis asset information for our FFELP Loans segment.
Includes restricted cash and investments.
Private Education Loans Segment
In this segment, we acquire, finance, and service our Private Education Loans. Private Education Loans primarily bridge the gap between the cost of higher education and the amount funded through financial aid, federal loans, or students and families resources. They also allow borrowers to refinance existing education loans at a lower rate. We pursue acquisitions of Private Education Loan portfolios. These acquisitions leverage our servicing scale and generate incremental earnings and cash flow. In this segment, we generate revenue primarily through net interest income on the Private Education Loan portfolio (after provision for loan losses). This segment is expected to generate significant amounts of earnings and cash flow as the portfolio amortizes.
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The following table includes GAAP basis asset information for our Private Education Loans segment.
Private Education Loans, net
Business Services Segment
Our Business Services segment generates revenue from business processing solutions related to servicing, asset recovery and other business processing activities. Within this segment, we generate revenue primarily through servicing our FFELP Loan portfolio as well as servicing education loans for Guarantors of FFELP Loans and other institutions, including ED. We provide asset recovery services for loans and receivables on behalf of Guarantors of FFELP Loans and higher education institutions. In addition, we provide asset recovery and other business processing solutions for federal, state, court, and municipal clients, public authorities, and health care organizations.
At March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, the Business Services segment had total assets of $587 million in each period on a GAAP basis.
Other Segment
Our Other segment primarily consists of activities of our holding company, including the repurchase of debt, our corporate liquidity portfolio, unallocated overhead and regulatory-related costs. We also include results from certain smaller wind-down operations within this segment.
At March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, the Other segment had total assets of $2.2 billion and $2.1 billion, respectively, on a GAAP basis.
Measure of Profitability
We prepare financial statements and present financial results in accordance with GAAP. However, we also evaluate our business segments and present financial results on a basis that differs from GAAP. We refer to this different basis of presentation as Core Earnings. We provide this Core Earnings basis of presentation on a consolidated basis for each business segment because this is what we review internally when making management decisions regarding our performance and how we allocate resources. We also refer to this information in our presentations with credit rating agencies, lenders and investors. Because our Core Earnings basis of presentation corresponds to our segment financial presentations, we are required by GAAP to provide Core Earnings disclosure in the notes to our consolidated financial statements for our business segments.
Core Earnings are not a substitute for reported results under GAAP. We use Core Earnings to manage our business segments because Core Earnings reflect adjustments to GAAP financial results for three items,
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discussed below, that are either related to the Spin-Off or create significant volatility mostly due to timing factors generally beyond the control of management. Accordingly, we believe that Core Earnings provide management with a useful basis from which to better evaluate results from ongoing operations against the business plan or against results from prior periods. Consequently, we disclose this information because we believe it provides investors with additional information regarding the operational and performance indicators that are most closely assessed by management. When compared to GAAP results, the three items we remove to result in our Core Earnings presentations are:
While GAAP provides a uniform, comprehensive basis of accounting, for the reasons described above, our Core Earnings basis of presentation does not. Core Earnings are subject to certain general and specific limitations that investors should carefully consider. For example, there is no comprehensive, authoritative guidance for management reporting. Our Core Earnings are not defined terms within GAAP and may not be comparable to similarly titled measures reported by other companies. Accordingly, our Core Earnings presentation does not represent a comprehensive basis of accounting. Investors, therefore, may not be able to compare our performance with that of other financial services companies based upon Core Earnings. Core Earnings results are only meant to supplement GAAP results by providing additional information regarding the operational and performance indicators that are most closely used by management, our board of directors, credit rating agencies, lenders and investors to assess performance.
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Segment Results and Reconciliations to GAAP
Education loans
Net interest income (loss)
Net interest income (loss) after provisions for loan losses
Total other income (loss)
Direct operating expenses
Overhead expenses
Operating expenses
Goodwill and acquired intangible asset impairment and amortization
Income (loss) before income tax expense (benefit)
Income tax expense (benefit)(3)
Net income (loss)
The eliminations in servicing revenue and direct operating expense represent the elimination of intercompany servicing revenue where the Business Services segment performs the loan servicing function for the FFELP Loans segment.
Core Earnings adjustments to GAAP:
Total Core Earnings adjustments to GAAP
Income tax expense (benefit)
Income taxes are based on a percentage of net income before tax for the individual reportable segment.
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Summary of Core Earnings Adjustments to GAAP
Net impact of derivative accounting(1)
Net impact of goodwill and acquired intangibles assets(2)
Net tax effect(3)
Derivative accounting: Core Earnings exclude periodic unrealized gains and losses that are caused by the mark-to-market valuations on derivatives that do not qualify for hedge accounting treatment under GAAP as well as the periodic unrealized gains and losses that are a result of ineffectiveness recognized related to effective hedges under GAAP. These unrealized gains and losses occur in our FFELP Loans, Private Education Loans and Other business segments. Under GAAP, for our derivatives that are held to maturity, the cumulative net unrealized gain or loss over the life of the contract will equal $0 except for Floor Income Contracts where the cumulative unrealized gain will equal the amount for which we sold the contract. In our Core Earnings presentation, we recognize the economic effect of these hedges, which generally results in any net settlement cash paid or received being recognized ratably as an interest expense or revenue over the hedged items life.
Goodwill and acquired intangible assets: Our Core Earnings exclude goodwill and intangible asset impairment and amortization of acquired intangible assets.
Net tax effect: Such tax effect is based upon our Core Earnings effective tax rate for the year.
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This report contains forward-looking statements and other information that is based on managements current expectations as of the date of this report. Statements that are not historical facts, including statements about our beliefs, opinions, or expectations and statements that assume or are dependent upon future events, are forward-looking statements and often contain words such as expect, anticipate, intend, plan, believe, seek, see, will, would, or target. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other factors that may cause actual results to be materially different from those reflected in such forward-looking statements.
For us, these factors include, among others, the risks and uncertainties associated with:
increases in financing costs;
the availability of financing or limits on liquidity resulting from disruptions in the capital markets or other factors;
unanticipated increases in costs associated with compliance with federal, state or local laws and regulations;
changes in the marketplaces in which we compete (including changes in demand or changes resulting from new laws and regulations);
changes in accounting standards including but not limited to changes pertaining to loan loss reserves and estimates or other accounting standards that may impact our operations;
adverse outcomes in any significant litigation to which we are a party;
credit risk associated with our exposure to third parties, including counterparties to hedging or other derivative transactions; and
changes in the terms of education loans and the educational credit marketplace (including changes resulting from new laws and the implementation of existing laws).
We could also be affected by, among other things:
unanticipated deferrals in our FFELP securitization trusts that would delay repayment of the bonds beyond their legal final maturity date;
reductions to our credit ratings, the credit ratings of asset-backed securitizations we sponsor or the credit ratings of the United States of America;
failures of our operating systems or infrastructure, or those of third-party vendors;
risks related to cybersecurity including the potential disruption of our systems or potential disclosure of confidential customer information;
damage to our reputation resulting from cyber-breaches, litigation, the politicization of student loan servicing or other actions or factors;
failure to successfully implement cost-cutting initiatives and adverse effects of such initiatives on our business;
failure to adequately integrate acquisitions or realize anticipated benefits from acquisitions including delays or errors in converting portfolio acquisitions to our servicing platform;
changes in law and regulations including but not limited to changes with respect to the student lending or servicing business and financial institutions generally, securitizations or derivatives;
increased competition from banks and other consumer lenders;
changes in the general interest rate environment, including the relationship between the relevant money-market index rate and the rate at which our assets are priced;
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our ability to successfully effectuate any acquisitions and other strategic initiatives;
changes in the demand for asset management and business processing solutions;
changes in general economic conditions; and
the other factors that are described in the Risk Factors section of our Annual Report on Form 10-Kfor the year ended December 31, 2016 (the 2016 Form 10-K) and in our other reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
The preparation of our consolidated financial statements also requires management to make certain estimates and assumptions including estimates and assumptions about future events. These estimates or assumptions may prove to be incorrect and actual results could differ materially. All forward-looking statements contained in this report are qualified by these cautionary statements and are made only as of the date of this report. We do not undertake any obligation to update or revise these forward-looking statements except as required by law.
Definitions for certain capitalized terms used but not otherwise defined in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q can be found in the Glossary section of our 2016 Form 10-K.
Through this discussion and analysis, we intend to provide the reader with some narrative context for how our management views our consolidated financial statements, additional context within which to assess our operating results, and information on the quality and variability of our earnings, liquidity and cash flows.
Navients Business
Navient is a Fortune 500 company that provides asset management and business processing solutions to education, health care and government clients at the federal, state, and local levels. We help our clients and millions of Americans achieve financial success through our services and support. Headquartered in Wilmington, Delaware, Navient employs team members in Western New York, Northeastern Pennsylvania, Indiana, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and other locations.
Navient holds the largest portfolio of education loans insured or federally guaranteed under the Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP). We also hold the largest portfolio of Private Education Loans. Navient services its own portfolio of education loans, as well as education loans owned by the United States Department of Education (ED), financial institutions and nonprofit education lenders. Navient is one of the largest servicers to ED under its Direct Student Loan Program (DSLP). Our data-driven insight, service and innovation support customers on the path to successful education loan repayment.
Navient also provides business processing solutions to education-related clients, such as guaranty agencies and colleges and universities.
Finally, the company leverages its scale and expertise to provide additional business processing solutions to a variety of other clients, including federal agencies, state and local governments, regional authorities, courts, hospitals, health care systems and other health care providers, financial service providers, and municipalities.
For all our clients, we aim to improve their financial performance, optimize their operations, and maintain compassionate, compliant service for their customers and constituents.
As of March 31, 2017, Navients principal assets consisted of:
$85.3 billion in FFELP Loans, with a net interest margin of .77 percent for the quarter ended March 31, 2017 on a Core Earnings basis and a weighted average life of 7.1 years;
$22.6 billion in Private Education Loans, with a net interest margin of 3.16 percent for the quarter ended March 31, 2017 on a Core Earnings basis and a weighted average life of 6.5 years;
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a leading education loan servicing platform that services loans for more than 12 million DSLP Loan, FFELP Loan and Private Education Loan customers (including cosigners), including 6.1 million customer accounts serviced under Navients contract with ED; and
a leading business processing platform through which we provide services for over 1,000 clients in the education, health care and public sectors.
Strengths and Opportunities
Navient possesses a number of competitive advantages that distinguish it from its competitors, including:
Large, high quality asset base generating significant and predictable cash flows. At March 31, 2017, Navients $107.8 billion education loan portfolio is 78 percent funded to term and is expected to produce consistent and predictable cash flows over the remaining life of the portfolio. Navients $85.3 billion portfolio of FFELP Loans generally bears a maximum 3 percent loss exposure under the terms of the federal guaranty. Navients $22.6 billion portfolio of Private Education Loans bears the full credit risk of the borrower and any cosigner. Navient expects that cash flows from its FFELP Loan and Private Education Loan portfolios will significantly exceed future debt service obligations. Our interest earning assets are funded by both secured and unsecured debt.
Efficient and large-scale operating platforms. Navient is the largest servicer of education loans, servicing over $300 billion in education loans for more than 12 million customers. Navients inventory of contingent asset recovery receivables is $18.7 billion as of March 31, 2017. We provide services to over 1,000 education, health care and public sector clients. Navient has demonstrated scalable infrastructure with capacity to add volume at a low cost. Our market share and tested infrastructure have enabled expansion to additional clients and asset types.
Superior performance. Navient has demonstrated superior default prevention performance and industry-leading services. The combined portfolio of federal loans serviced by Navient experienced a Cohort Default Rate (CDR) that is 31 percent lower than our peers, as calculated from the most recent CDR released by ED in September 2016. We are consistently a top performer in our asset recovery business and deliver superior service to our public and private sector clients. We continually leverage data-driven insights and customer service to identify new ways to add value to our clients.
Commitment to compliance and customer centricity. Navient fosters a robust compliance culture driven by a customer first approach. We invest in rigorous training programs, internal and external auditing, escalated service tracking and analysis, and customer research to enhance our compliance and customer service.
Strong capital return. As a result of our significant cash flow and capital generation, Navient expects to return excess capital to stockholders through dividends and share repurchases. In December 2016, Navients board of directors authorized a new $600 million share repurchase program effective January 1, 2017. For the quarter ended March 31, 2017, Navient repurchased 7.4 million shares of common stock for $110 million. As of March 31, 2017, the remaining common share repurchase authority was $490 million.
Navient has paid a quarterly dividend of $0.16 per share of common stock since the first quarter of 2015. For the three months ended March 31, 2017, Navient paid $46 million in dividends.
Meaningful growth opportunities. In the Asset Management business, Navient will continue pursuing opportunistic acquisitions of FFELP and Private Education Loan portfolios, including refinanced Private Education Loans, and other consumer loans. During the three months ended March 31, 2017, Navient acquired $798 million of education loans. In April 2017, we agreed to purchase a $6.9 billion education loan portfolio from JPMorgan Chase, comprised of $3.7 billion in FFELP Loans and $3.2 billion in Private Education Loans. We expect to close on this transaction in the second quarter of 2017.
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In the Business Processing Solutions business, Navient will pursue additional growth opportunities, including, among others:
The continued expansion and growth of providing services to state and local governments through our Gila LLC subsidiary (commonly known as Municipal Services Bureau, or MSB). Gila provides receivables management services and account processing solutions for state governments, agencies, court systems, municipalities, toll authorities and financial services entities. Gila expands our customer base in the public sector and leverages our business processing solutions.
The continued expansion and growth of providing services to federal agencies. For example, on September 26, 2016, the Internal Revenue Service announced that it plans to begin private collection of certain overdue federal tax debts in the spring of 2017. A Navient subsidiary, Pioneer Credit Recovery, was selected along with three other contractors to implement the new program. We began collecting under this new contract in April 2017.
The continued expansion and growth of providing services to hospitals, health care systems and other health care providers through our Xtend Healthcare subsidiary, a health care revenue cycle management company. Xtends services include full revenue cycle outsourcing, accounts receivable management, extended business office support and consulting engagements. Xtend leverages Navients asset recovery and business processing capabilities into the health care payments sector.
The continued expansion and growth of providing services to education related clients. On April 4, 2016, ED published the first part of a two-part RFP related to a new servicing platform for the Direct Student Loan Program. The first part of the RFP focused on screening candidates capabilities relative to certain published criteria. In July 2016, Navient was selected as one of three companies eligible to submit responses in the second part of the RFP process. On October 26, 2016, ED published the second part of the RFP for which we submitted our bid on January 9, 2017. One of the two other bidders filed a bid protest in relation to this RFP on January 5, 2017. This protest was dismissed on April 13, 2017.
Navient intends to leverage its large-scale operating platforms, superior and data-driven default prevention and asset recovery performance, operating efficiency and regulatory compliance and risk management infrastructure in growing these businesses and in pursuing other growth opportunities.
Navients Approach to Helping Education Loan Borrowers Achieve Success
Navient services loans for more than 12 million DSLP Loan, FFELP Loan, and Private Education Loan customers, including 6.1 million customers whose accounts are serviced under Navients contract with ED. We help our customers navigate the path to financial success through proactive outreach and innovative, data-driven approaches.
Leveraging four decades of expertise: In our experience, customer success means making steady progress toward repayment and avoiding falling behind on or putting off payments. With customer success and default prevention as our top priorities, we apply data-driven outreach that draws from our more than 40 years of experience. Our strategists employ risk modeling to pinpoint struggling borrowers and deploy resources where needed. By tailoring our approach to each borrowers unique situatione.g., recent graduates, students re-entering school, those experiencing hardships or those with student debt but no degreewe help ensure industry-leading outcomes, as evidenced by a default rate that is 31 percent lower than other servicers. Nine times out of 10 when we can reach federal loan customers who have missed payments, we can identify a solution to help them avoid default.
Getting borrowers into the right payment plans: We help customers understand the complex array of federal loan repayment options so they can make informed choices about the plans that are aligned with their financial circumstances and goals. We promote awareness of federal repayment plan options, including Income-Driven Repayment (IDR), through more than 170 million communications annually, including mail, email, phone calls, videos and text messages. For example, approximately one in four federal student borrowers and half
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of student loan balances serviced by Navient for the government were enrolled in an IDR plan (excluding loan types ineligible for the plans). We also help borrowers understand that options lengthening their repayment term may increase the total cost of their loans, while reminding them that they may pay extra or switch repayment plans at any time.
Leading the industry: Navient is a leader in recommending policy reforms aimed at improving upfront education and simplifying federal loan repayment optionsreforms that we believe would make a meaningful difference for millions of Americans with student loans.
In 2009, we pioneered the creation of a loan modification program to help Private Education Loan borrowers needing additional assistance. As of March 31, 2017, $2.5 billion of our Private Education Loans were enrolled in this interest rate reduction program, helping customers through more affordable monthly payments while making progress in repaying their principal loan balance.
We continually make enhancements designed to help our customers, drawing from a variety of inputs including customer surveys, analysis of customer inquiries and complaint data, regulator commentary and website activity. We regularly use customer and employee research panels to gather real-time feedback to inform enhancements underway.
Our Office of the Customer Advocate, established in 1997, offers escalated assistance to customers who request it. We are committed to working with customers and appreciate customer comments, which, combined with our own customer communication channels, help us improve the ways we assist our customers.
We also continue to offer free resources to help customers and the general public build knowledge on personal finance topics, and we make recommendations for reforms to enhance student loan repayment success. We offer Path to Success, a series of interactive financial literacy videos, and Career Playbook, a career development video series. We also conduct a national research study, Money Under 35, that measures the financial health of Americans ages 22 to 35.
We take seriously our commitment to serve military customers and have developed a best-in-class approach to assist them. Navient was the first student loan servicer to launch a dedicated military benefits customer service team, website (Navient.com/military), and toll-free number. Navients military benefits team offers a single point of contact for all calls from service members and their families to help them learn about and access the benefits designed for them, including interest rate benefits, deferment and other options.
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Selected Historical Financial Information and Ratios
GAAP Basis
Weighted average shares used to compute diluted earnings per common share
Net interest margin, FFELP Loans
Net interest margin, Private Education Loans
Return on assets
Ending FFELP Loans, net
Ending Private Education Loans, net
Ending total education loans, net
Average FFELP Loans
Average Private Education Loans
Average total education loans
Core Earnings Basis(1)
Core Earnings arenon-GAAP financial measures and do not represent a comprehensive basis of accounting. For a more detailed explanation of Core Earnings, see the section titled Core Earnings Definition and Limitations and subsequent sections.
Overview
The following discussion and analysis presents a review of our business and operations as of and for the three months ended March 31, 2017.
We monitor and assess our ongoing operations and results based on the following four reportable segments: (1) FFELP Loans (2) Private Education Loans, (3) Business Services and (4) Other.
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Key Financial Measures
Our operating results are primarily driven by net interest income, provisions for loan losses and expenses incurred in our education loan portfolios; the revenues and expenses generated by our servicing, asset recovery and business processing businesses; and gains and losses on loan sales and debt repurchases. We manage and assess the performance of each business segment separately as each is focused on different customers and each derives its revenue from different activities and services. A brief summary of our key financial measures (net interest income; provisions for loan losses; charge-offs and delinquencies; servicing, asset recovery and business processing revenues; other income (loss); and operating expenses) can be found in Item 7. Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations in our 2016 Form 10-K.
First-Quarter 2017 Summary of Results
We report financial results on a GAAP basis and also present certain Core Earnings performance measures. Our management, equity investors, credit rating agencies and debt capital providers use these Core Earnings measures to monitor our business performance. See Core Earnings Definition and Limitations for a further discussion and a complete reconciliation between GAAP net income and Core Earnings.
First-quarter 2017 GAAP net income was $88 million ($0.30 diluted earnings per share), versus net income of $181 million ($0.53 diluted earnings per share) in the first-quarter 2016. The changes in GAAP net income are impacted by the same Core Earnings items discussed below, as well as changes in net income attributable to (1) unrealized, mark-to-market gains/losses on derivatives and (2) goodwill and acquired intangible asset amortization and impairment. These items are recognized in GAAP but have not been included in Core Earnings results. First-quarter 2017 GAAP results included losses of $23 million from derivative accounting treatment that are excluded from Core Earnings results, compared with gains of $54 million in the year-ago period. See Core Earnings Definition and LimitationsDifferences between Core Earnings and GAAP for a complete reconciliation between GAAP net income and Core Earnings.
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Core Earnings for the quarter were $107 million ($0.36 diluted earnings per share), compared with $147 million ($0.43 diluted earnings per share) for the year-ago quarter. The decrease in diluted core earnings per share was primarily the result of an $82 million reduction in net interest income primarily due to the amortization of the portfolio, partially offset by a $4 million reduction in provisions for loan losses, a $5 million increase in fee revenue, a $9 million decrease in operating expenses, and fewer shares outstanding due to common share repurchases. First-quarter 2017 and 2016 diluted core earnings per share were $0.37 and $0.44, respectively, excluding regulatory-related costs of $4 million recognized in each period.
During the first three months of 2017, we:
acquired $798 million of education loans;
issued $1.9 billion of FFELP asset-backed securities (ABS);
extended the maturity date of our FFELP ABCP facility from March 2018 to April 2019; the maximum financing amount decreased as scheduled to $6.75 billion from $7.5 billion;
issued $843 million in unsecured debt;
retired or repurchased $568 million of our senior unsecured debt;
repurchased 7.4 million common shares for $110 million; and
paid $46 million in common dividends.
Results of Operations
We present the results of operations below first on a consolidated basis in accordance with GAAP. Following our discussion of consolidated earnings results on a GAAP basis, we present our results on a segment basis. We have four business segments: FFELP Loans, Private Education Loans, Business Services and Other. Since these segments operate in distinct business environments and we manage and evaluate the financial performance of these segments using non-GAAP financial measures, these segments are presented on a Core Earnings basis (see Core Earnings Definition and Limitations).
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GAAP Statements of Income (Unaudited)
Consolidated Earnings Summary GAAP basis
Three Months Ended March 31, 2017 Compared with Three Months Ended March 31, 2016
For the three months ended March 31, 2017, net income was $88 million, or $0.30 diluted earnings per common share, compared with net income of $181 million, or $0.53 diluted earnings per common share, for the three months ended March 31, 2016. The decrease in net income was primarily due to a $146 million decrease in net interest income and a $17 million decrease in net gains on derivative and hedging activities. This was partially offset by a $4 million decrease in the provision for loan losses and a $9 million decrease in operating expenses.
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The primary contributors to each of the identified drivers of changes in net income for the current quarter compared with the year-ago quarter are as follows:
Net interest income decreased by $146 million, primarily as a result of a decline in the net interest margin and the amortization of the education loan balance. The decline in net interest margin was primarily due to higher funding credit spreads and a widening of the asset and related funding interest rate indices.
Provisions for loan losses decreased $4 million from the year-ago quarter, primarily related to the provision for Private Education Loan losses. The provision for Private Education Loan losses was $95 million in the first quarter of 2017, down $9 million from the first quarter of 2016 primarily due to a 12 percent decrease in Private Education Loans outstanding and a $7 million and $24 million reduction in charge-offs and delinquent loans, respectively, compared to the year-ago quarter. These factors led to decreases in expected future charge-offs.
Net gains on derivative and hedging activities decreased $17 million. The primary factors affecting the change were interest rate and foreign currency fluctuations, which primarily affected the valuations of our Floor Income Contracts, basis swaps and foreign currency hedges during each period. Valuations of derivative instruments fluctuate based upon many factors including changes in interest rates, credit risk, foreign currency fluctuations and other market factors. As a result, net gains and losses on derivative and hedging activities may vary significantly in future periods.
First-quarter 2017 and 2016 expenses included regulatory-related costs of $4 million in each period. Excluding these regulatory-related costs, operating expenses were $234 million in first-quarter 2017, a $9 million decrease from first-quarter 2016. This decrease was primarily due to a general reduction in costs primarily related to operating efficiency initiatives.
We repurchased 7.4 million and 19.2 million shares of our common stock during the three months ended March 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively, as part of our common share repurchase programs. Primarily as a result of ongoing common share repurchases, our average outstanding diluted shares decreased by 47 million common shares (or 14 percent) from the year-ago quarter.
Core Earnings Definition and Limitations
Core Earnings are not a substitute for reported results under GAAP. We use Core Earnings to manage our business segments because Core Earnings reflect adjustments to GAAP financial results for three items, discussed below, that are either related to theSpin-Off or create significant volatility mostly due to timing factors generally beyond the control of management. Accordingly, we believe that Core Earnings provide management with a useful basis from which to better evaluate results from ongoing operations against the business plan or against results from prior periods. Consequently, we disclose this information because we believe it provides investors with additional information regarding the operational and performance indicators that are most closely assessed by management. When compared to GAAP results, the three items we remove to result in our Core Earnings presentations are:
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The following tables show Core Earnings for each business segment and our business as a whole along with the adjustments made to the income/expense items to reconcile the amounts to our reported GAAP results as required by GAAP and reported in Note 10 Segment Reporting.
Less: provisions for loanlosses
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Differences between Core Earnings and GAAP
The following discussion summarizes the differences between Core Earnings and GAAP net income and details each specific adjustment required to reconcile our Core Earnings segment presentation to our GAAP earnings.
Core Earnings net income attributable to Navient Corporation
Net impact of derivative accounting
Net impact of goodwill and acquired intangible assets
Net tax effect
GAAP net income attributable to Navient Corporation
1) Derivative Accounting: Core Earnings exclude periodic unrealized gains and losses that are caused by the fair value adjustments on derivatives that do not qualify for hedge accounting treatment under GAAP, as well as the periodic unrealized gains and losses that are a result of ineffectiveness recognized related to effective hedges under GAAP. These unrealized gains and losses occur in our FFELP Loans, Private Education Loans and Other business segments. Under GAAP, for our derivatives that are held to maturity, the cumulative net unrealized gain or loss over the life of the contract will equal $0 except for Floor Income Contracts, where the cumulative unrealized gain will equal the amount for which we sold the contract. In our Core Earnings presentation, we recognize the economic effect of these hedges, which generally results in any net settlement cash paid or received being recognized ratably as an interest expense or revenue over the hedged items life.
The accounting for derivatives requires that changes in the fair value of derivative instruments be recognized currently in earnings, with no fair value adjustment of the hedged item, unless specific hedge accounting criteria are met. We believe that our derivatives are effective economic hedges, and as such, are a critical element of our interest rate and foreign currency risk management strategy. However, some of our derivatives, primarily Floor Income Contracts and certain basis swaps, do not qualify for hedge accounting treatment and the stand-alone derivative must be adjusted to fair value in the income statement with no consideration for the corresponding change in fair value of the hedged item. These gains and losses recorded in Gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities, net are primarily caused by interest rate and foreign currency exchange rate volatility and changing credit spreads during the period as well as the volume and term of derivatives not receiving hedge accounting treatment.
Our Floor Income Contracts are written options that must meet more stringent requirements than other hedging relationships to achieve hedge effectiveness. Specifically, our Floor Income Contracts do not qualify for hedge accounting treatment because the pay down of principal of the education loans underlying the Floor Income embedded in those education loans does not exactly match the change in the notional amount of our written Floor Income Contracts. Additionally, the term, the interest rate index, and the interest rate index reset frequency of the Floor Income Contract can be different than that of the education loans. Under derivative accounting treatment, the upfront contractual payment is deemed a liability and changes in fair value are recorded through income throughout the life of the contract. The change in the fair value of Floor Income Contracts is primarily caused by changing interest rates that cause the amount of Floor Income paid to the counterparties to vary. This is economically offset by the change in the amount of Floor Income earned on the underlying education loans but that offsetting change in fair value is not recognized. We believe the Floor Income Contracts are economic hedges because they effectively fix the amount of Floor Income earned over the contract period, thus eliminating the timing and uncertainty that changes in interest rates can have on Floor Income for that period. Therefore, for purposes of Core Earnings, we have removed the unrealized gains and losses related to these contracts and added back the amortization of the net contractual premiums received on the
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Floor Income Contracts. The amortization of the net contractual premiums received on the Floor Income Contracts for Core Earnings is reflected in education loan interest income. Under GAAP accounting, the premiums received on the Floor Income Contracts are recorded as revenue in the gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities, net line item by the end of the contracts lives.
Basis swaps are used to convert floating rate debt from one floating interest rate index to another to better match the interest rate characteristics of the assets financed by that debt. We primarily use basis swaps to hedge our education loan assets that are primarily indexed to LIBOR or Prime. The accounting for derivatives requires that when using basis swaps, the change in the cash flows of the hedge effectively offset both the change in the cash flows of the asset and the change in the cash flows of the liability. Our basis swaps hedge variable interest rate risk; however, they generally do not meet this effectiveness test because the index of the swap does not exactly match the index of the hedged assets as required for hedge accounting treatment. Additionally, some of our FFELP Loans can earn at either a variable or a fixed interest rate depending on market interest rates and therefore swaps economically hedging these FFELP Loans do not meet the criteria for hedge accounting treatment. As a result, under GAAP, these swaps are recorded at fair value with changes in fair value reflected currently in the income statement.
The table below quantifies the adjustments for derivative accounting between GAAP and Core Earnings net income.
Core Earnings derivative adjustments:
Gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities, net, included in other income
Plus: Realized losses on derivative and hedging activities, net(1)
Unrealized gains on derivative and hedging activities, net(2)
Amortization of net premiums on Floor Income Contracts in net interest income for Core Earnings
Other derivative accounting adjustments(3)
Total net impact of derivative accounting(4)
See the section titled Reclassification of Realized Gains (Losses) on Derivative and Hedging Activities below for a detailed breakdown of the components of realized losses on derivative and hedging activities.
Unrealized gains on derivative and hedging activities, net comprises the following unrealized mark-to-market gains (losses):
Basis swaps
Foreign currency hedges
Total unrealized gains on derivative and hedging activities, net
Other derivative accounting adjustments consist of adjustments related to: (1) foreign currency denominated debt that is adjusted to spot foreign exchange rates for GAAP where such adjustment are reversed for Core Earnings and (2) certain terminated derivatives that did not receive hedge accounting treatment under GAAP but were economic hedges under Core Earnings and, as a result, such gains or losses amortized into Core Earnings over the life of the hedged item.
Negative amounts are subtracted from Core Earnings net income to arrive at GAAP net income and positive amounts are added to Core Earnings net income to arrive at GAAP net income.
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Reclassification of Realized Gains (Losses) on Derivative and Hedging Activities
Derivative accounting requires net settlement income/expense on derivatives and realized gains/losses related to derivative dispositions (collectively referred to as realized gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities) that do not qualify as hedges to be recorded in a separate income statement line item below net interest income. Under our Core Earnings presentation, these gains and losses are reclassified to the income statement line item of the economically hedged item. For our Core Earnings net interest margin, this would primarily include: (a) reclassifying the net settlement amounts related to our Floor Income Contracts to education loan interest income and (b) reclassifying the net settlement amounts related to certain of our basis swaps to debt interest expense. The table below summarizes the realized losses on derivative and hedging activities and the associated reclassification on a Core Earnings basis.
Reclassification of realized gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities:
Net settlement expense on Floor Income Contracts reclassified to net interest income
Net settlement income on interest rate swaps reclassified to net interest income
Total reclassifications of realized losses on derivative and hedging activities
Cumulative Impact of Derivative Accounting under GAAP compared to Core Earnings
As of March 31, 2017, derivative accounting has reduced GAAP equity by approximately $90 million as a result of cumulative net unrealized losses (after tax) recognized under GAAP, but not in Core Earnings. The following table rolls forward the cumulative impact to GAAP equity due to these unrealizedafter-tax net losses related to derivative accounting.
Beginning impact of derivative accounting on GAAP equity
Net impact of net unrealized gains (losses) under derivative accounting(1)
Ending impact of derivative accounting on GAAP equity
Net impact of net unrealized gains (losses) under derivative accounting is composed of the following:
Total pre-tax net impact of derivative accounting recognized in net income(a)
Tax impact of derivative accounting adjustments recognized in net income
Change in unrealized gain (losses) on derivatives, net of tax recognized in other comprehensive income
Net impact of net unrealized gains (losses) under derivative accounting
See Core Earnings derivative adjustments table above.
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Hedging FFELP Loan Embedded Floor Income
Net Floor premiums received on Floor Income Contracts that have not been amortized into Core Earnings as of the respective year-ends are presented in the table below. These net premiums will be recognized in Core Earnings in future periods. As of March 31, 2017, the remaining amortization term of the net floor premiums was approximately 5.0 years. Historically, we have sold Floor Income Contracts on a periodic basis and depending upon market conditions and pricing, we may enter into additional Floor Income Contracts in the future. The balance of unamortized Floor Income Contracts will increase as we sell new contracts and decline due to the amortization of existing contracts.
In addition to using Floor Income Contracts, we also use pay-fixed interest rate swaps to hedge the embedded Floor Income within FFELP Loans. These interest rate swaps qualify as GAAP hedges and are accounted for as cash flow hedges of variable rate debt. For GAAP, gains and losses on the effective portion of these hedges are recorded in accumulated other comprehensive income and gains and losses on the ineffective portion are recorded immediately to earnings. Hedged Floor Income from these cash flow hedges that has not been recognized into Core Earnings and GAAP as of the respective period-ends is presented in the table below. This hedged Floor Income will be recognized in Core Earnings and GAAP in future periods and is presented net of tax. As of March 31, 2017, the remaining hedged period is approximately 5.2 years. Historically, we have used pay-fixed interest rate swaps on a periodic basis to hedge embedded Floor Income and depending upon market conditions and pricing, we may enter into swaps in the future. The balance of unrecognized hedged Floor Income will increase as we enter into new swaps and decline as revenue is recognized.
Unamortized net Floor premiums (net of tax)
Unrecognized hedged Floor Income related to pay-fixed interest rate swaps (net of tax)
Total(1)
$(1.1) billion and $(1.0) billion on apre-tax basis as of March 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively.
2)Goodwill and Acquired Intangible Assets: Our Core Earnings exclude goodwill and intangible asset impairment and the amortization of acquired intangible assets. The following table summarizes the goodwill and acquired intangible asset adjustments.
Core Earnings goodwill and acquired intangible asset adjustments(1)
Negative amounts are subtracted from Core Earnings net income to arrive at GAAP net income.
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Business Segment Earnings Summary Core Earnings Basis
The following table includes Core Earnings results for our FFELP Loans segment.
Core Earnings interest income:
Total Core Earnings interest income
Total Core Earnings interest expense
Net Core Earnings interest income
Less: provision for loan losses
Net Core Earnings interest income after provision for loan losses
Core Earnings
Core Earnings for the segment were $51 million in first-quarter 2017, compared with the year-ago quarters $66 million. This decrease was primarily the result of a $29 million decrease in net interest income due to the amortization of the portfolio and a decrease in net interest margin, partially offset by an $11 million decrease in operating expenses. Core Earnings key performance metrics are as follows:
FFELP Loan spread
Net interest margin
Charge-offs
Charge-off rate
Total delinquency rate
Greater than 90-day delinquency rate
Forbearance rate
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FFELP Loan Net Interest Margin
The following table includes the Core Earnings basis FFELP Loan net interest margin along with reconciliation to the GAAP basis FFELP Loan net interest margin.
Core Earnings basis FFELP Loan yield
Hedged Floor Income
Unhedged Floor Income
Consolidation Loan Rebate Fees
Repayment Borrower Benefits
Premium amortization
Core Earnings basis FFELP Loan net yield
Core Earnings basis FFELP Loan cost of funds
Core Earnings basis FFELP Loan spread
Core Earnings basis other interest-earning asset spread impact
Core Earnings basis FFELP Loan net interest margin(1)
Adjustment for GAAP accounting treatment(2)
GAAP basis FFELP Loan net interest margin(1)
The average balances of our FFELP Loan Core Earnings basis interest-earning assets for the respective periods are:
Other interest-earning assets
Total FFELP Loan Core Earnings basis interest-earning assets
Represents the reclassification of periodic interest accruals on derivative contracts from net interest income to other income and other derivative accounting adjustments. For further discussion of these adjustments, see section titled Core Earnings Definition and Limitations Differences between Core Earnings and GAAP above.
The Company acquired $686 million of FFELP Loans in first-quarter 2017. As of March 31, 2017, our FFELP Loan portfolio totaled $85.3 billion, comprising $31.2 billion of FFELP Stafford Loans and $54.1 billion of FFELP Consolidation Loans. The weighted average life of these portfolios as of March 31, 2017 was 4.6 years and 8.4 years, respectively, assuming a Constant Prepayment Rate (CPR) of 5 percent and 3 percent, respectively.
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Floor Income
The following table analyzes on a Core Earnings basis the ability of the FFELP Loans in our portfolio to earn Floor Income after March 31, 2017 and 2016, based on interest rates as of those dates.
Education loans eligible to earn Floor Income
Less: post-March 31, 2006 disbursed loans required to rebate Floor Income
Less: economically hedged Floor Income
Education loans earning Floor Income
The following table presents a projection of the average balance of FFELP Consolidation Loans for which Fixed Rate Floor Income has been economically hedged with derivatives for the period April 1, 2017 to December 31, 2021.
Average balance of FFELP Consolidation Loans whose Floor Income is economically hedged
Operating Expenses FFELP Loans
Operating expenses for our FFELP Loans segment primarily include the contractual rates we pay to service loans in term asset-backed securitization trusts or a similar rate if a loan is not in a term financing facility (which is presented as an intercompany charge from the Business Services segment who services the loans), the fees we pay for third-party loan servicing and costs incurred to acquire loans. The intercompany revenue charged by the Business Services segment and included in those amounts was $90 million and $101 million for the quarters ended March 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. These amounts exceed the actual cost of servicing the loans. Operating expenses were 44 basis points of average FFELP Loans in both of the quarters ended March 31, 2017 and 2016. The decrease in operating expenses from theyear-ago quarter was primarily the result of the decrease in the balance of the portfolio.
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The following table includes Core Earnings results for our Private Education Loans segment.
Core Earnings for the segment were $35 million in first-quarter 2017, compared with the year-ago quarters $61 million. This decrease was primarily the result of a $53 million decrease in net interest income due to the amortization of the portfolio and a decrease in net interest margin, partially offset by a $9 million decrease in the provision for loan losses. Core Earnings key performance metrics are as follows:
Private Education Loan spread
Loans in repayment with more than 12 payments made
Cosigner rate
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Private Education Loan Net Interest Margin
The following table shows the Core Earnings basis Private Education Loan net interest margin along with reconciliation to the GAAP basis Private Education Loan net interest margin before provision for loan losses.
Core Earnings basis Private Education Loan yield
Core Earnings basis Private Education Loan cost of funds
Core Earnings basis Private Education Loan spread
Core Earnings basis Private Education Loan net interest margin(1)
GAAP basis Private Education Loan net interest margin(1)
The average balances of our Private Education Loan Core Earnings basis interest-earning assets for the respective periods are:
Total Private Education Loan Core Earnings basis interest-earning assets
Represents the reclassification of periodic interest accruals on derivative contracts from net interest income to other income and other derivative accounting adjustments. For further discussion of these adjustments, see section titled Core EarningsDefinition and Limitations Differences between Core Earnings and GAAP above.
The decline in the net interest margin primarily relates to an increase in the cost of funds as a result of higher funding credit spreads, as well as a widening of the asset and related funding interest rate indices.
The Company acquired $112 million of Private Education Loans in the first-quarter 2017. As of March 31, 2017, our Private Education Loan portfolio totaled $22.6 billion. The weighted-average life of this portfolio as of March 31, 2017 was 6.5 years assuming a CPR of 5 percent.
Private Education Loan Provision for Loan Losses
In establishing the allowance for Private Education Loan losses as of March 31, 2017, we considered several factors with respect to our Private Education Loan portfolio. Among these factors were: total loan delinquencies decreased to $1.45 billion, down $24 million from $1.47 billion in the year-ago quarter. Loan delinquencies of 90 days or more decreased to $746 million, down $3 million from $749 million in the year-ago quarter. Charge-offs decreased to $137 million, down $7 million from $144 million in the year-agoquarter. Loans in forbearance decreased to $793 million, down $123 million from $916 million in the year-ago quarter.
The provision for Private Education Loan losses was $95 million in the first quarter of 2017, down $9 million from the first quarter of 2016 primarily due to a 12 percent decrease in Private Education Loans outstanding and a $7 million and $24 million reduction in charge-offs and delinquent loans, respectively, compared to the year-ago period. These factors led to decreases in expected future charge-offs.
Operating Expenses Private Education Loans Segment
Operating expenses for our Private Education Loans segment include costs incurred to service and collect on our Private Education Loan portfolio. Operating expenses were $40 million and $43 million for the three months ended March 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively.
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The following table includes Core Earnings results for our Business Services segment.
Servicing revenue:
Intercompany loan servicing
Third-party loan servicing
Guarantor servicing
Total servicing revenue
Other Business Services revenue
Core Earnings were $77 million in the first quarter of 2017, compared with $75 million in the year-ago quarter. Key segment metrics are as follows:
Number of accounts serviced for ED (in millions)
Total federal loans serviced
Contingent collections receivables inventory:
Total contingent collections receivables inventory
Revenues related to services performed on FFELP Loans accounted for 66 percent and 64 percent, respectively, of total Business Services segment revenues for the quarters ended March 31, 2017 and 2016.
Servicing Revenue
Our Business Services segment includes intercompany loan servicing fees from servicing the FFELP Loans in our FFELP Loans segment. The average balance of this portfolio was $86 billion and $94 billion for the quarters ended March 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. The decline in the intercompany loan servicing revenue from the year-ago quarter was the primary reason for the decline in servicing revenue and was due to the decline in the average balance of FFELP Loans serviced.
The Company services education loans for more than 12 million DSLP Loan, FFELP Loan and Private Education Loan customers (including cosigners), including 6.1 million customer accounts under the ED Servicing Contract as of March 31, 2017, compared with 6.3 million customer accounts serviced at March 31, 2016. Third-party loan servicing fees in the quarters ended March 31, 2017 and 2016 included $37 million and $37 million, respectively, of servicing revenue related to the ED Servicing Contract. On June 13, 2014, ED extended its servicing contract with us to service Direct Student Loan Program federal loans for five more years.
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On April 4, 2016, ED published the first part of atwo-part RFP related to a new servicing platform for the Direct Student Loan Program. The first part of the RFP focused on screening candidates capabilities relative to certain published criteria. In July 2016, Navient was selected as one of three companies eligible to submit responses in the second part of the RFP process. On October 26, 2016, ED published the second part of the RFP for which we submitted our bid on January 9, 2017. One of the two other bidders filed a bid protest in relation to this RFP on January 5, 2017. This protest was dismissed on April 13, 2017.
Asset Recovery and Business Processing Revenue
Our asset recovery and business processing revenue consists of fees we receive for asset recovery of delinquent and defaulted debt on behalf of third-party clients performed on a contingent basis. Business processing revenue consists of fees we earn processing transactions on behalf of our municipal, public authority and health care clients. Asset recovery and business processing revenue increased $10 million primarily due to an increase in revenue related to an increase in education loan-related asset recovery volume.
Since 1997, Navient has provided asset recovery services on defaulted education loans to ED. This contract expired by its terms on February 21, 2015 and our Pioneer Credit Recovery (Pioneer) subsidiary received no new account placements under the contract. We engaged with ED to learn more about their decision and address any questions or concerns they may have. In addition, in March 2015, Pioneer filed a bid protest with the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) which protest was dismissed in March 2015 from the GAO based upon overlapping jurisdiction. Following the bid protest dismissal, Pioneer filed its own complaint with the U.S. Court of Federal Claims (COFC), which complaint was consolidated with several similar cases filed by other private collection agencies. On April 16, 2015, Pioneers complaint, together with the other plaintiffs consolidated complaints, was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. We appealed this decision to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit and, on July 16, 2016, the Court of Appeals reversed the ruling of the Federal Court of Claims and remanded the case for further proceedings. This matter remains open.
Separately, we had submitted a response to EDs RFP in relation to a new contract for similar services. On December 9, 2016, Navient was informed by ED that neither of our subsidiaries, Pioneer nor General Revenue Corporation (GRC), was awarded a contract to perform collections and loan rehabilitation services for federal student loan borrowers. In December 2016, both Pioneer and GRC filed bid protests with the GAO. GRCs bid protest was dismissed in part in January 2017 and GRC filed a supplemental protest. GRCs protest was sustained on March 27, 2017. Pioneers bid protest with the GAO was dismissed from the GAO on March 30, 2017 based upon over lapping jurisdiction. Pioneer filed a substantially similar complaint with the COFC on April 11, 2017. These matters are still outstanding.
In December 2016, Great Lakes Higher Education Assistance Corp. (Great Lakes) assumed control of United Student Aid Funds, Inc. (USAF). As part of this transfer, Great Lakes notified us of their intent to rebid the services we currently provide for USAF and Northwest Education Loan Association (NELA). The services we provide primarily relate to FFELP-related servicing and asset recovery services. Prior to this announcement, Navient had not provided these services directly to Great Lakes. If we are unsuccessful in our efforts to win these services along with additional opportunities with Great Lakes, the current agreements would be terminated effective as of December 31, 2017.
Operating Expenses Business Services Segment
Operating expenses for our Business Services segment primarily include costs incurred to service our FFELP Loan portfolio, third-party servicing and asset recovery and business processing costs, and other operating costs. The $8 million decrease in operating expenses in the first quarter of 2017 compared with theyear-ago quarter was primarily due to a general reduction in costs primarily related to operating efficiency initiatives.
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The following table includes Core Earnings results of our Other segment.
Net interest loss after provision for loan losses
Other income
Overhead expenses:
Corporate overhead
Unallocated information technology costs
Total overhead expenses
Loss before income tax benefit
Income tax benefit
Core Earnings (loss)
Net Interest Loss after Provision for Loan Losses
Net interest loss after provision for loan losses includes net interest loss related to our corporate liquidity portfolio, partially offset by net interest income related to our mortgage and consumer loan portfolios.
Overhead Other Segment
Unallocated corporate overhead is comprised of costs related to executive management, the board of directors, accounting, finance, legal, human resources and stock-based compensation expense. Unallocated information technology costs are related to infrastructure and operations.
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Financial Condition
This section provides additional information regarding the changes in our loan portfolio assets and related liabilities as well as credit quality and performance indicators related to our loan portfolio.
Average Balance Sheets GAAP
The following table reflects the rates earned on interest-earning assets and paid on interest-bearing liabilities and reflects our net interest margin on a consolidated basis.
Average Assets
Total interest-earning assets
Non-interest-earning assets
Average Liabilities and Equity
Non-interest-bearing liabilities
Rate/Volume Analysis GAAP
The following rate/volume analysis shows the relative contribution of changes in interest rates and asset volumes.
Three Months Ended March 31, 2017 vs. 2016
Interest income
Changes in income and expense due to both rate and volume have been allocated in proportion to the relationship of the absolute dollar amounts of the change in each.
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Summary of our Education Loan Portfolio
Ending Education Loan Balances, net GAAP and Core Earnings Basis
Total education loan portfolio:
In-school(1)
Grace, repayment and other(2)
Total, gross
Unamortized premium/(discount)
Receivable for partially charged-off loans
Allowance for loan losses
Total education loan portfolio
% of total FFELP
% of total
Loans for customers still attending school and are not yet required to make payments on the loan.
Includes loans in deferment or forbearance.
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Average Education Loan Balances (net of unamortized premium/discount) GAAP and Core Earnings Basis
% of FFELP
Education Loan Activity GAAP and Core Earnings Basis
Acquisitions
Capitalized interest and premium/discount amortization
Consolidations to third parties
Repayments and other
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Education Loan Allowance for Loan Losses Activity GAAP and Core Earnings Basis
Less:
Plus:
Percent of total
Troubled debt restructuring(3)
Charge-offs are reported net of expected recoveries. For Private Education Loans, the expected recovery amount is transferred to the receivable for partially charged-off loan balance. Charge-offs include charge-offs against the receivable for partiallycharged-off loans which represents the difference between what was expected to be collected and any shortfalls in what was actually collected in the period. See Private Education Loan Portfolio Performance Receivable for Partially Charged-Off Private Education Loans for further discussion.
Represents the recorded investment of loans identified as troubled debt restructuring.
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FFELP Loan Portfolio Performance
FFELP Loan Delinquencies and Forbearance GAAP and Core Earnings Basis
Loans for customers who may still be attending school or engaging in other permitted educational activities and are not yet required to make payments on the loans, e.g., residency periods for medical students or a grace period for bar exam preparation, as well as loans for customers who have requested extension of grace period during employment transition or who have temporarily ceased making payments due to hardship or other factors.
Loans for customers who have used their allowable deferment time or do not qualify for deferment, that need additional time to obtain employment or who have temporarily ceased making payments due to hardship or other factors.
Allowance for FFELP Loan Losses GAAP and Core Earnings Basis
Allowance at beginning of period
Provision for FFELP Loan losses
Allowance at end of period
Allowance as a percentage of ending total loans, gross
Allowance as a percentage of ending loans in repayment
Ending total loans, gross
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Private Education Loan Portfolio Performance
Private Education Loan Delinquencies and Forbearance GAAP and Core Earnings Basis
Total Private Education Loans in repayment
Total Private Education Loans, gross
Private Education Loan unamortized discount
Total Private Education Loans
Private Education Loan receivable for partially charged-off loans
Private Education Loan allowance for losses
Percentage of Private Education Loans in repayment
Delinquencies as a percentage of Private Education Loans in repayment
Percentage of Private Education Loans with a cosigner
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Allowance for Private Education Loan LossesGAAP and Core Earnings Basis
Provision for Private Education Loan losses
Allowance as a percentage of ending total loans
Charge-offs are reported net of expected recoveries. The expected recovery amount is transferred to the receivable for partially charged-off loan balance. Charge-offs include charge-offs against the receivable for partially charged-off loans which represents the difference between what was expected to be collected and any shortfalls in what was actually collected in the period. See Receivable for Partially Charged-Off Private Education Loans for further discussion.
Ending total loans represents gross Private Education Loans, plus the receivable for partially charged-off loans.
Receivable for Partially Charged-Off Private Education Loans
At the end of each month, for loans that are 212 or more days past due, we charge off the estimated loss of a defaulted loan balance. Actual recoveries are applied against the remaining loan balance that was not charged off. We refer to this remaining loan balance as the receivable for partially charged-off loans. If actual periodic recoveries are less than expected, the difference is immediately charged off through the allowance for Private Education Loan losses with an offsetting reduction in the receivable for partially charged-off Private Education Loans. If actual periodic recoveries are greater than expected, they will be reflected as a recovery through the allowance for Private Education Loan losses once the cumulative recovery amount exceeds the cumulative amount originally expected to be recovered.
The following table summarizes the activity in the receivable for partially charged-off loans.
Represents the current period recovery shortfallthe difference between what was expected to be collected and what was actually collected. These amounts are included in total charge-offs as reported in the Allowance for Private Education Loan Losses table.
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Use of Forbearance as a Private Education Loan Collection Tool
Forbearance involves granting the customer a temporary cessation of payments (or temporary acceptance of smaller than scheduled payments) for a specified period of time. Using forbearance extends the original term of the loan. Forbearance does not grant any reduction in the total repayment obligation (principal or interest). While in forbearance status, interest continues to accrue and is capitalized to principal when the loan re-enters repayment status. Our forbearance policies include limits on the number of forbearance months granted consecutively and the total number of forbearance months granted over the life of the loan. In some instances, we require good-faith payments before granting forbearance. Exceptions to forbearance policies are permitted when such exceptions are judged to increase the likelihood of recovery of the loan. Forbearance as a recovery tool is used most effectively when applied based on a customers unique situation, including historical information and judgments. We leverage updated customer information and other decision support tools to best determine who will be granted forbearance based on our expectations as to a customers ability and willingness to repay their obligation. This strategy is aimed at mitigating the overall risk of the portfolio as well as encouraging cash resolution of delinquent loans.
Forbearance may be granted to customers who are exiting their grace period to provide additional time to obtain employment and income to support their obligations, or to current customers who are faced with a hardship and request forbearance time to provide temporary payment relief. In these circumstances, a customers loan is placed into a forbearance status in limited monthly increments and is reflected in the forbearance status at month-end during this time. At the end of their granted forbearance period, the customer will enter repayment status as current and is expected to begin making their scheduled monthly payments on a go-forward basis.
Forbearance may also be granted to customers who are delinquent in their payments. In these circumstances, the forbearance cures the delinquency and the customer is returned to a current repayment status. In more limited instances, delinquent customers will also be granted additional forbearance time.
The tables below show the composition and status of the Private Education Loan portfolio aged by the number of months for which a scheduled monthly payment was received. As indicated in the tables, the percentage of loans that are in forbearance status, are delinquent greater than 90 days or that are charged off decreases the longer the loans have been making scheduled monthly payments.
At March 31, 2017, loans in forbearance status as a percentage of loans in repayment and forbearance were 13.6 percent for loans that have made less than 25 monthly payments. The percentage drops to 1.8 percent for loans that have made more than 48 monthly payments.
At March 31, 2017, loans in repayment that are delinquent greater than 90 days as a percentage of loans in repayment were 9.9 percent for loans that have made less than 25 monthly payments. The percentage drops to 1.9 percent for loans that have made more than 48 monthly payments.
For the three months ended March 31, 2017, charge-offs as a percentage of loans in repayment were 9.3 percent for loans that have made less than 25 monthly payments. The percentage drops to 1.2 percent for loans that have made more than 48 monthly payments.
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GAAP and Core Earnings Basis:
Loans in-school/grace/deferment
Loans in forbearance
Loans in repayment current
Loans in repayment delinquent 31-60 days
Loans in repayment delinquent 61-90 days
Loans in repayment delinquent greater than 90 days
Unamortized discount
Total Private Education Loans, net
Loans in repayment delinquent greater than 90 days as a percentage of loans in repayment
Charge-offs as a percentage of loans in repayment
March 31, 2016
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Private Education Loan Repayment Options
Certain loan programs allow customers to select from a variety of repayment options depending on their loan type and their enrollment/loan status, which include the ability to extend their repayment term or change their monthly payment. The chart below provides the optional repayment offerings in addition to the standard level principal and interest payments as of March 31, 2017.
Loan Program
Signature and Other
Smart Option
CareerTraining
$ in repayment
$ in total
Payment method by enrollment status:
In-school/grace
Deferred(1),
interest-only or fixed
$25/month
Interest-only or fixed
Repayment
Level principal and
interest
Deferred includes loans for which no payments are required and interest charges are capitalized into the loan balance.
The graduated repayment program that is part of Signature and Other Loans includes an interest-only payment feature that may be selected at the option of the customer. Customers elect to participate in this program at the time they enter repayment following their grace period. This program is available to customers in repayment, after their grace period, who would like a temporary lower payment from the required principal and interest payment amount. Customers participating in this program pay monthly interest with no amortization of their principal balance for up to 48 payments after entering repayment (dependent on the loan product type). The maturity date of the loan is not extended when a customer participates in this program. As of March 31, 2017 and 2016, customers in repayment owing approximately $0.6 billion (3 percent of loans in repayment) and $1.5 billion (6 percent of loans in repayment), respectively, were enrolled in the interest-only program.
Liquidity and Capital Resources
Funding and Liquidity Risk Management
The following Liquidity and Capital Resources discussion concentrates on our FFELP Loans and Private Education Loans segments. Our Business Services and Other segments require minimal capital and funding.
We define liquidity as cash and high-quality liquid assets that we can use to meet our cash requirements. Our two primary liquidity needs are: (1) servicing our debt and (2) our ongoing ability to meet our cash needs for running the operations of our businesses (including derivative collateral requirements) throughout market cycles, including during periods of financial stress. Secondary liquidity needs, which can be adjusted as needed, include acquisitions of Private Education Loan and FFELP Loan portfolios, acquisitions of companies, the payment of common stock dividends and the repurchase of common stock under common share repurchase programs. To achieve these objectives, we analyze and monitor our liquidity needs, maintain excess liquidity and access diverse funding sources including the issuance of unsecured debt and the issuance of secured debt primarily through asset-backed securitizations and/or other financing facilities.
We define our liquidity risk as the potential inability to meet our obligations when they become due without incurring unacceptable losses or to invest in future asset growth and business operations at reasonable market rates. Our primary liquidity risk relates to our ability to service our debt, meet our other business obligations and to continue to grow our business. The ability to access the capital markets is impacted by general market and
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economic conditions, our credit ratings, as well as the overall availability of funding sources in the marketplace. In addition, credit ratings may be important to customers or counterparties when we compete in certain markets and when we seek to engage in certain transactions, including over-the-counter derivatives.
Credit ratings and outlooks are opinions subject to ongoing review by the ratings agencies and may change, from time to time, based on our financial performance, industry and market dynamics and other factors. Other factors that influence our credit ratings include the ratings agencies assessment of the general operating environment, our relative positions in the markets in which we compete, reputation, liquidity position, the level and volatility of earnings, corporate governance and risk management policies, capital position and capital management practices. A negative change in our credit rating could have a negative effect on our liquidity because it might raise the cost and availability of funding and potentially require additional cash collateral or restrict cash currently held as collateral on existing borrowings or derivative collateral arrangements. It is our objective to improve our credit ratings so that we can continue to efficiently access the capital markets even in difficult economic and market conditions.
We have unsecured debt that totaled $14.0 billion at March 31, 2017. Three credit rating agencies currently rate our long-term unsecured debt at below investment grade. From May 1, 2014 (Spin-Off) to March 31, 2017, we issued $3.6 billion of unsecured debt ($1.0 billion in fourth-quarter 2014, $500 million in first-quarter 2015, $1.3 billion in third-quarter 2016 and $843 million in first-quarter 2017) at an average all-in cost of one-month LIBOR plus 4.73 percent and an average term to maturity of 6.2 years.
We no longer originate Private Education Loans or FFELP Loans and therefore have no liquidity requirements for new originations. We have purchased and may purchase, in future periods, Private Education Loan and FFELP Loan portfolios from third parties such as the $6.9 billion portfolio acquisition from JPMorgan Chase expected to close in the second quarter of 2017. This portfolio purchase and any future purchases will be part of our ongoing liquidity needs.
We expect to fund our ongoing liquidity needs, including the repayment of $0.6 billion of senior unsecured notes that mature in the next twelve months, primarily through our current cash, investments and unencumbered FFELP Loan portfolio, the predictable operating cash flows provided by operating activities ($350 million in the three months ended March 31, 2017), the repayment of principal on unencumbered education loan assets, and the distribution of overcollateralization from our securitization trusts. We may also, depending on market conditions and availability, draw down on our secured FFELP Loan and Private Education Loan facilities, issue term ABS, enter into additional secured loan facilities or additional Private Education Loan ABS repurchase facilities, or issue additional unsecured debt.
Sources of Liquidity and Available Capacity
Ending Balances
Sources of primary liquidity:
Total unrestricted cash and liquid investments
Unencumbered FFELP Loans
Total GAAP and Core Earnings basis
Average Balances
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Liquidity may also be available under secured credit facilities to the extent we have eligible collateral and capacity available. Maximum borrowing capacity under the FFELP Loan-other facilities will vary and be subject to each agreements borrowing conditions, including, among others, facility size, current usage and availability of qualifying collateral from unencumbered FFELP Loans. As of March 31, 2017 and 2016, the maximum additional capacity under these facilities was $3.1 billion and $1.2 billion, respectively. For the three months ended March 31, 2017 and 2016, the average maximum additional capacity under these facilities was $2.7 billion and $1.9 billion, respectively.
In addition to the FFELP Loan-other facilities, liquidity may also be available from our Private Education Loan asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) facility which matures on June 26, 2017. This facilitys maximum financing amount is $750 million. At March 31, 2017, the available capacity under this facility was $209 million. Borrowing under this facility will vary and is subject to the availability of qualifying collateral from unencumbered Private Education Loans and the other terms and conditions set forth in the agreement.
Depending upon market conditions and other available funding at the time of each portfolio purchase, we expect a portion of the JPMorgan Chase portfolio acquisition to be funded through our existing ABCP facilities.
At March 31, 2017, we had a total of $6.9 billion of unencumbered assets inclusive of those listed in the table above as sources of primary liquidity. Total unencumbered education loans comprised $3.3 billion of our unencumbered assets of which $2.7 billion and $0.6 billion related to Private Education Loans and FFELP Loans, respectively. In addition, as of March 31, 2017, we had $10.8 billion of encumbered net assets (i.e., overcollateralization) in our various financing facilities (consolidated variable interest entities). In fourth-quarter 2015, we closed on a $550 million Private Education Loan ABS Repurchase Facility and in the second-quarter 2016, we closed on a second $478 million Private Education Loan ABS Repurchase Facility. Both repurchase facilities are collateralized by Residual Interests in previously issued Private Education Loan ABS trusts. These are examples of how we can effectively finance previously encumbered assets to generate additional liquidity in addition to the unencumbered assets we traditionally have encumbered in the past. Additionally, these repurchase facilities had a cost of funds lower than that of a new unsecured debt issuance.
For further discussion of our various sources of liquidity, our access to the ABS market, our asset-backed financing facilities, and our issuance of unsecured debt, see Note 6Borrowings in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2016.
The following table reconciles encumbered and unencumbered assets and their net impact on GAAP total tangible equity.
Net assets of consolidated variable interest entities (encumbered assets) FFELP Loans
Net assets of consolidated variable interest entities (encumbered assets) Private Education Loans
Tangible unencumbered assets(1)
Mark-to-market on unsecured hedged debt(2)
Other liabilities, net
Total tangible equity GAAP Basis
At March 31, 2017, December 31, 2016 and March 31, 2016, excludes goodwill and acquired intangible assets, net, of $664 million and $670 million, respectively.
At March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, there were $319 million and $403 million, respectively, of net gains on derivatives hedging this debt in unencumbered assets, which partially offset these losses.
First-Quarter 2017 Financing Transactions
During the first-quarter 2017, Navient issued $1.9 billion in FFELP asset-backed securities (ABS) and $843 million in unsecured debt.
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In the first-quarter 2017, Navient extended the maturity date of its FFELP ABCP facility. The facilitys maturity date was extended to April 2019 from March 2018 and its maximum financing amount was decreased as scheduled to $6.75 billion from $7.5 billion, with a step down to $6.0 billion in April 2018. This facility provides liquidity for FFELP loans.
Shareholder Distributions
Recent Second-Quarter 2017 Financing Transactions
In April 2017, we issued $1.0 billion in FFELP ABS.
Counterparty Exposure
Counterparty exposure related to financial instruments arises from the risk that a lending, investment or derivative counterparty will not be able to meet its obligations to us. Risks associated with our lending portfolio are discussed in the section titled Financial Condition FFELP Loan Portfolio Performance and Private Education Loan Portfolio Performance.
Our investment portfolio is composed of very short-term securities issued by a diversified group of highly rated issuers, limiting our counterparty exposure. Additionally, our investing activity is governed by board of director approved limits on the amount that is allowed to be invested with any one issuer based on the credit rating of the issuer, further minimizing our counterparty exposure. Counterparty credit risk is considered when valuing investments and considering impairment.
Related to derivative transactions, protection against counterparty risk is generally provided by Master Agreements, Schedules, and Credit Support Annexes (CSAs) developed by the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. (ISDA documentation). In particular, Navients CSAs require a counterparty to post collateral if a potential default would expose the other party to a loss. All corporate derivative contracts entered into by Navient are covered under such agreements and require collateral to be exchanged based on the net fair value of derivatives with each counterparty. Corporate derivative contracts traded through a clearing organization also require daily movement of collateral to be exchanged based on the net fair value of the contracts. Our securitization trusts with swaps have ISDA documentation with protections against counterparty risk. The collateral calculations contemplated in the ISDA documentation of our securitization trusts require collateral based on the fair value of the derivative which may be adjusted for additional collateral based on rating agency criteria requirements considered within the collateral agreement. The trusts are not required to post collateral to the counterparties. In all cases, our exposure is limited to the value of the derivative contracts in a gain position net of any collateral we are holding. We consider counterparties credit risk when determining the fair value of derivative positions on our exposure net of collateral.
We have liquidity exposure related to collateral movements between us and our derivative counterparties. Movements in the value of the derivatives, which are primarily affected by changes in interest rate and foreign exchange rates, may require us to return cash collateral held or may require us to access primary liquidity to post collateral to counterparties. See Note 7Derivative Financial Instruments in our 2016 Form 10-K for more information on the amount of cash that has been received and delivered to derivative counterparties.
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The table below highlights exposure related to our derivative counterparties at March 31, 2017.
Exposure, net of collateral
Percent of exposure to counterparties with credit ratings below S&P AA-orMoodys Aa3
Percent of exposure to counterparties with credit ratings below S&P A-or Moodys A3
Core Earnings Basis Borrowings
The following tables present the ending balances of our Core Earnings basis borrowings at March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, and average balances and average interest rates of our Core Earnings basis borrowings for the three months ended March 31, 2017 and 2016. The average interest rates include derivatives that are economically hedging the underlying debt but do not qualify for hedge accounting treatment. (See Core Earnings Definition and Limitations Differences between Core Earnings and GAAP Reclassification of Realized Gains (Losses) on Derivative and Hedging Activities of this Item 2.)
Secured borrowings comprised 88 percent of our Core Earnings basis debt outstanding at March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016.
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Core Earnings basis borrowings
Adjustment for GAAP accounting treatment
GAAP basis borrowings
Includes $1.0 billion and $546 million of debt related to the Private Education Loan asset-backed securitization repurchase facility (Repurchase Facility) for the three months ended March 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively.
Other primarily includes the obligation to return cash collateral held related to derivative exposures.
Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates
Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations addresses our consolidated financial statements, which have been prepared in accordance with GAAP. A discussion of our critical accounting policies, which include allowance for loan losses, premium and discount amortization related to our loan portfolio, fair value measurement, transfers of financial assets and the VIE consolidation model, and derivative accounting can be found in our 2016 Form 10-K. There were no significant changes to these critical accounting policies during the first three months of 2017.
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Interest Rate Sensitivity Analysis
Our interest rate risk management seeks to limit the impact of short-term movements in interest rates on our results of operations and financial position. The following tables summarize the potential effect on earnings over the next 12 months and the potential effect on fair values of balance sheet assets and liabilities at March 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, based upon a sensitivity analysis performed by management assuming a hypothetical increase in market interest rates of 100 basis points and 300 basis points while funding spreads remain constant. Additionally, as it relates to the effect on earnings before unrealized gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities, a sensitivity analysis was performed assuming the funding index increases 10 basis points while holding the asset index constant, if the funding index and repricing frequency are different than the asset index. These earnings sensitivities are applied only to financial assets and liabilities, including hedging instruments that existed at the balance sheet date and does not take into account new assets, liabilities or hedging instruments that may arise over the next 12 months.
(Dollars in millions, except per share amounts)
Effect on Earnings:
Change in pre-tax net income before unrealized gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities
Unrealized gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities
Increase (decrease) in income before taxes
Increase (decrease) in net income after taxes
Increase (decrease) in diluted earnings per common share
If an asset is not funded with the same index/frequency reset of the asset then it is assumed the funding index increases 10 basis points while holding the asset index constant. There is no sensitivity analysis related to the unrealized gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities as part of this potential impact on earnings.
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Effect on Fair Values:
Other earning assets
Total assets gain/(loss)
Total liabilities (gain)/loss
A primary objective in our funding is to minimize our sensitivity to changing interest rates by generally funding our floating rate education loan portfolio with floating rate debt. However, due to the ability of some FFELP loans to earn Floor Income, we can have a fixed versus floating mismatch in funding if the education loan earns at the fixed borrower rate and the funding remains floating. In addition, we can have a mismatch in the index (including the frequency of reset) of floating rate debt versus floating rate assets.
During the three months ended March 31, 2017 and 2016, certain FFELP Loans were earning Floor Income and we locked in a portion of that Floor Income through the use of derivative contracts. The result of these hedging transactions was to fix the relative spread between the education loan asset rate and the variable rate liability.
In the preceding tables, under the scenario where interest rates increase 100 and 300 basis points, the change in pre-tax net income before the unrealized gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities is primarily due to the impact of (i) our unhedged loans being in a fixed-rate mode due to Floor Income, while being funded with
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variable rate debt in low interest rate environments; and (ii) a portion of our variable rate assets being funded with fixed rate liabilities and equity. Item (i) will generally cause income to decrease when interest rates increase from a low interest rate environment, whereas item (ii) will generally cause income to increase when interest rates increase. In both 2017 and 2016, the loss of income is due almost entirely to item (i) above. The decrease in the loss in 2017 as compared to 2016 was due to both the natural amortization of the FFELP loan portfolio as well as higher interest rates in first-quarter 2017 compared to first-quarter 2016, which resulted in a loss of unhedged Floor Income between the first quarter of 2016 and the first quarter of 2017. Item (ii) had little impact in either period as the Company entered into derivative contracts in 2015 to convert a portion of fixed rate debt to variable rate debt as a part of its overall interest rate risk management strategy, thereby better match-funding its floating rate assets with variable rate debt.
In the preceding tables, under the scenario where interest rates increase 100 and 300 basis points, the change in unrealized gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities in 2017 and 2016 are primarily due to (1) the notional amount and remaining term of our derivative portfolio and related hedged debt and (2) the interest rate environment. As of March 31, 2017, the Companys derivative portfolio has declined in size and has a shorter remaining term than the prior year period due to the natural amortization of the education loan portfolios over the year. Both factors contribute to the Company losing less income in an increasing interest rate environment in the current period as compared to the prior-year period.
Under the scenario in the tables above labeled Impact on Annual Earnings If: Funding Indices Increase 10 Basis Points, the main driver of the decrease in pre-tax income before unrealized gains (losses) on derivative and hedging activities in both the March 31, 2017 and 2016 analyses is primarily the result of one-month LIBOR-indexed FFELP Loans being funded with three-month LIBOR and other non-discreteindexed liabilities, as well as, to a lesser extent, Prime-indexed Private Education Loans being funded with LIBOR and other non-discrete indexed liabilities. See Asset and Liability Funding Gap of this Item 3 for a further discussion.
In addition to interest rate risk addressed in the preceding tables, we are also exposed to risks related to foreign currency exchange rates. Foreign currency exchange risk is primarily the result of foreign currency denominated debt issued by us. When we issue foreign denominated corporate unsecured and securitization debt, our policy is to use cross currency interest rate swaps to swap all foreign currency denominated debt payments (fixed and floating) to U.S. dollar LIBOR using a fixed exchange rate. In the tables above, there would be an immaterial impact on earnings if exchange rates were to decrease or increase, due to the terms of the hedging instrument and hedged items matching. The balance sheet interest bearing liabilities would be affected by a change in exchange rates; however, the change would be materially offset by the cross-currency interest rate swaps in other assets or other liabilities. In the current economic environment, volatility in the spread between spot and forward foreign exchange rates has resulted in material mark-to-market impacts to current-period earnings which have not been factored into the above analysis. The earnings impact is noncash, and at maturity of the instruments the cumulative mark-to-market impact will be zero.
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Asset and Liability Funding Gap
The tables below present our assets and liabilities (funding) arranged by underlying indices as of March 31, 2017. In the following GAAP presentation, the funding gap only includes derivatives that qualify as effective hedges (those derivatives which are reflected in net interest margin, as opposed to those reflected in the gains (losses) on derivatives and hedging activities, net line on the consolidated statements of income). The difference between the asset and the funding is the funding gap for the specified index. This represents our exposure to interest rate risk in the form of basis risk and repricing risk, which is the risk that the different indices may reset at different frequencies or may not move in the same direction or at the same magnitude.
Management analyzes interest rate risk and in doing so includes all derivatives that are economically hedging our debt whether they qualify as effective hedges or not (Core Earnings basis). Accordingly, we are also presenting the asset and liability funding gap on a Core Earnings basis in the table that follows the GAAP presentation.
GAAP Basis:
Index
3-month Treasury bill
Prime
PLUS Index
3-month LIBOR
1-month LIBOR
1-month LIBOR daily
CMT/CPI Index
Non-Discrete reset(3)
Non-Discrete reset(4)
Fixed Rate(5)
FFELP Loans of $22.7 billion ($20.1 billion LIBOR index and $2.6 billion Treasury bill index) are currently earning a fixed rate of interest as a result of the low interest rate environment.
Funding (by index) includes all derivatives that qualify as hedges.
Funding consists of auction rate ABS and ABCP facilities.
Assets include restricted and unrestricted cash equivalents and other overnight type instruments. Funding includes the obligation to return cash collateral held related to derivatives exposures.
Assets include receivables and other assets (including goodwill and acquired intangibles). Funding includes other liabilities and stockholders equity.
The Funding Gaps in the above table are primarily interest rate mismatches in short-term indices between our assets and liabilities. We address this issue typically through the use of basis swaps that typically convert quarterly reset three-month LIBOR to other indices that are more correlated to our asset indices. These basis swaps do not qualify as effective hedges and, as a result, the effect on the funding index is not included in our interest margin and is therefore excluded from the GAAP presentation.
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Core Earnings Basis:
FFELP Loans of $4.8 billion ($4.8 billion LIBOR index) are currently earning a fixed rate of interest as a result of the low interest rate environment.
Funding (by index) includes all derivatives that management considers economic hedges of interest rate risk and reflects how we internally manage our interest rate exposure.
We use interest rate swaps and other derivatives to achieve our risk management objectives. Our asset liability management strategy is to match assets with debt (in combination with derivatives) that have the same underlying index and reset frequency or, when economical, have interest rate characteristics that we believe are highly correlated. The use of funding with index types and reset frequencies that are different from our assets exposes us to interest rate risk in the form of basis and repricing risk. This could result in our cost of funds not moving in the same direction or with the same magnitude as the yield on our assets. While we believe this risk is low, as all of these indices are short-term with rate movements that are highly correlated over a long period of time, market disruptions (which have occurred in prior years) can lead to a temporary divergence between indices resulting in a negative impact to our earnings.
Weighted Average Life
The following table reflects the weighted average life of our earning assets and liabilities at March 31, 2017.
(Averages in Years)
Borrowings
Total borrowings
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Disclosure Controls and Procedures
Our management, with the participation of our principal executive and principal financial officers, evaluated the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the Exchange Act) as of March 31, 2017. Based on this evaluation, our chief principal executive and principal financial officers concluded that, as of March 31, 2017, our disclosure controls and procedures were effective to ensure that information required to be disclosed by us in the reports that we file or submit under the Exchange Act is (a) recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the SECs rules and forms and (b) accumulated and communicated to our management, including our chief principal executive and principal financial officers as appropriate, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.
Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting
No change in our internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Exchange Act) occurred during the fiscal quarter ended March 31, 2017 that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.
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PART II. OTHER INFORMATION
We and our subsidiaries and affiliates are subject to various claims, lawsuits and other actions that arise in the normal course of business. We believe that these claims, lawsuits and other actions will not, individually or in the aggregate, have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations, except as otherwise disclosed. Most of these matters are claims including individual and class action lawsuits against our servicing and collection subsidiaries by borrowers and debtors alleging the violation of state or federal laws in connection with servicing or collection activities on their education loans and other debts.
In the ordinary course of our business, the Company, our subsidiaries and affiliates may receive information and document requests and investigative demands from state attorneys general, U.S. Attorneys, legislative committees and administrative agencies. These requests may be informational or regulatory in nature and may relate to our business practices, the industries in which we operate, or other companies with whom we conduct business. Our practice has been and continues to be to cooperate with these bodies and to be responsive to any such requests.
These inquiries and the volume of related information demands are increasing the costs and resources we must dedicate to timely respond to these requests and may, depending on their outcome, result in payments of additional amounts of restitution, fines and penalties in addition to those described below.
On March 18, 2011, an education loan borrower filed a putative class action complaint against SLM Corporation as it existed prior to the Spin-Off (Old SLM) in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. The complaint was captioned Tina M. Ubaldi v. SLM Corporation et. al. The plaintiff brought the complaint on behalf of a putative class consisting of other similarly situated California borrowers. The complaint alleged, among other things, that Old SLMs practice of charging late fees that were proportional to the amount of missed payments constituted liquidated damages in violation of California law and that Old SLM engaged in unfair business practices by charging daily interest on private educational loans. Plaintiffs subsequently amended their complaint to include usury claims under California state law and to seek restitution of late charges and interest paid by members of the putative class, injunctive relief, cancellation of all future interest payments, treble damages as permitted by law, as well as costs and attorneys fees, among other relief. In the fourth quarter of 2016, the parties reached a settlement in principle that would resolve the Ubaldi matter, as well as the related lawsuit of Marlene Blyden v. Navient Corporation, et al. While we cannot provide any assurances that we will be able to finalize the proposed settlement on terms that are acceptable to the Company or if the Court will ultimately approve of the proposed settlement, we do not believe that the financial impact of the final settlement, if any, will be material. The Company agreed to settle these matters to avoid the burden, expense, risk, and uncertainty of continued litigation. A reserve was established for this matter as of December 31, 2016.
During the first quarter of 2016, Navient Corporation, certain Navient officers and directors, and the underwriters of certain Navient securities offerings were sued in three putative securities class action lawsuits filed on behalf of certain investors in Navient stock or Navient unsecured debt. These three cases, which were filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware, were consolidated by the District Court, with Lord Abbett Funds appointed as Lead Plaintiff. The caption of the consolidated case is Lord Abbett Affiliated Fund, Inc., et al. v. Navient Corporation, et al. The plaintiffs filed their amended and consolidated complaint in September 2016. The Navient defendants intend to vigorously defend against the allegations in this lawsuit, and filed a Motion to Dismiss the Consolidated Amended Class Action Complaint in November 2016. Plaintiffs filed an Opposition in December 2016. At this stage in the proceedings, we are unable to anticipate the timing of resolution or the ultimate impact, if any, that the legal proceedings may have on the consolidated financial position, liquidity, results of operations or cash-flows of Navient and its affiliates. As a result, it is not possible at this time to estimate a range of potential exposure, if any, for amounts that may be payable in connection with these matters and reserves have not been established. It is possible that an adverse ruling or rulings may have a material adverse impact on the Company.
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On January 18, 2017, the CFPB and Attorneys General for the State of Illinois and the State of Washington (collectively the Attorneys General) initiated civil actions naming Navient Corporation and several of its subsidiaries as defendants alleging violations of Federal and State consumer protection statutes, including the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act and various state consumer protection laws. For additional information on these civil actions, please refer to section entitled Regulatory Matters below.
The total reserves established by the Company in 2013 and 2014 to cover these costs were $177 million, and as of March 31, 2017, substantially all of this amount had been paid or credited or refunded to customer accounts. The final cost of these proceedings will remain uncertain until all of the work under the consent orders has been completed and the remaining consent order is lifted.
In December 2013, Navient received Civil Investigative Demands (CIDs) issued by the State of Illinois Office of Attorney General and the State of Washington Office of the Attorney General and multiple
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other state Attorneys General. According to the CIDs, the investigations were initiated to ascertain whether any practices declared to be unlawful under the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act have occurred or are about to occur.
Under the terms of the Separation Agreement, Navient has agreed to indemnify SLM BankCo for all claims, actions, damages, losses or expenses that may arise from the conduct of all activities of pre-Spin-Off SLM BankCo occurring prior to the Spin-Off other than those specifically excluded in the Separation and Distribution Agreement. As a result, liabilities arising out of the regulatory matters and CFPB and State Attorneys General lawsuits mentioned above, other than fines or penalties directly levied against Sallie Mae Bank and other matters specifically excluded, are the responsibility of, or assumed by, Navient or one of its subsidiaries, and Navient has
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agreed to indemnify and hold harmless Sallie Mae and its subsidiaries, including Sallie Mae Bank, therefrom. Navient has no additional reserves related to indemnification matters with SLM BankCo as of March 31, 2017.
There have been no material changes from the risk factors previously disclosed in our 2016 Form 10-K.
Share Repurchases
The following table provides information relating to our purchase of shares of our common stock in the three months ended March 31, 2017.
Period:
January 1 January 31, 2017
February 1 February 28, 2017
March 1 March 31, 2017
Total first-quarter 2017
The total number of shares purchased includes: (i) shares purchased under the stock repurchase program discussed below, and (ii) shares of our common stock tendered to us to satisfy the exercise price in connection with cashless exercise of stock options, and tax withholding obligations in connection with exercise of stock options and vesting of restricted stock and restricted stock units.
In December 2016, our board of directors authorized us to purchase up to $600 million of shares of our common stock.
The closing price of our common stock on the NASDAQ Global Select Market on March 31, 2017 was $14.76.
Nothing to report.
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The following exhibits are furnished or filed, as applicable:
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SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
(Registrant)
/s/ CHRISTIAN M. LOWN
Christian M. Lown
Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)
Date: April 27, 2017
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