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Watchlist
Account
Nelnet
NNI
#3223
Rank
$4.59 B
Marketcap
๐บ๐ธ
United States
Country
$128.15
Share price
-0.63%
Change (1 day)
16.08%
Change (1 year)
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Annual Reports (10-K)
Nelnet
Quarterly Reports (10-Q)
Financial Year FY2012 Q1
Nelnet - 10-Q quarterly report FY2012 Q1
Text size:
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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-Q
(Mark One)
ý
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended
March 31, 2012
or
¨
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from
to
.
COMMISSION FILE NUMBER 001-31924
NELNET, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
NEBRASKA
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)
84-0748903
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
121 SOUTH 13TH STREET, SUITE 201
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
(Address of principal executive offices)
68508
(Zip Code)
(402) 458-2370
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
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 [X] No [ ]
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 (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files). Yes [X] No [ ]
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer” and “smaller reporting company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
Large accelerated filer [ ] Accelerated filer [X]
Non-accelerated filer [ ] Smaller reporting company [ ]
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes[ ] No[X]
As of
April 30, 2012
, there were
35,818,110
and
11,495,377
shares of Class A Common Stock and Class B Common Stock, par value $0.01 per share, outstanding, respectively (excluding 11,317,364 shares of Class A Common Stock held by wholly owned subsidiaries).
NELNET, INC.
FORM 10-Q
INDEX
March 31, 2012
PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Item 1.
Financial Statements
2
Item 2.
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
27
Item 3.
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk
56
Item 4.
Controls and Procedures
61
PART II. OTHER INFORMATION
Item 1.
Legal Proceedings
62
Item 1A.
Risk Factors
63
Item 2.
Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
63
Item 6.
Exhibits
65
Signatures
66
PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
ITEM 1. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
NELNET, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(Dollars in thousands, except share data)
As of
As of
March 31, 2012
December 31, 2011
(unaudited)
Assets:
Student loans receivable (net of allowance for loan losses of $48,435 and $48,482, respectively)
$
23,836,832
24,297,876
Cash and cash equivalents:
Cash and cash equivalents - not held at a related party
6,693
7,299
Cash and cash equivalents - held at a related party
54,007
35,271
Total cash and cash equivalents
60,700
42,570
Investments
70,552
50,780
Restricted cash and investments
705,953
614,322
Restricted cash - due to customers
38,642
109,809
Accrued interest receivable
296,378
308,401
Accounts receivable (net of allowance for doubtful accounts of $1,359 and $1,284, respectively)
64,215
63,654
Goodwill
117,118
117,118
Intangible assets, net
23,682
28,374
Property and equipment, net
34,119
34,819
Other assets
90,587
92,275
Fair value of derivative instruments
107,534
92,219
Total assets
$
25,446,312
25,852,217
Liabilities:
Bonds and notes payable
$
24,060,609
24,434,540
Accrued interest payable
19,281
19,634
Other liabilities
177,586
178,189
Due to customers
38,642
109,809
Fair value of derivative instruments
42,321
43,840
Total liabilities
24,338,439
24,786,012
Equity:
Nelnet, Inc. shareholders' equity:
Preferred stock, $0.01 par value. Authorized 50,000,000 shares; no shares issued or outstanding
—
—
Common stock:
Class A, $0.01 par value. Authorized 600,000,000 shares; issued and outstanding 35,821,057 shares and 35,643,102 shares, respectively
358
356
Class B, convertible, $0.01 par value. Authorized 60,000,000 shares; issued and outstanding 11,495,377 shares
115
115
Additional paid-in capital
50,948
49,245
Retained earnings
1,056,058
1,017,629
Accumulated other comprehensive income, net
605
—
Employee notes receivable
(368
)
(1,140
)
Total Nelnet, Inc. shareholders' equity
1,107,716
1,066,205
Noncontrolling interest
157
—
Total equity
1,107,873
1,066,205
Commitments and contingencies
Total liabilities and equity
$
25,446,312
25,852,217
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
2
NELNET, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
(Dollars in thousands, except share data)
(unaudited)
Three months
ended March 31,
2012
2011
Interest income:
Loan interest
$
153,058
137,358
Investment interest
1,095
726
Total interest income
154,153
138,084
Interest expense:
Interest on bonds and notes payable
69,297
52,307
Net interest income
84,856
85,777
Less provision for loan losses
6,000
3,750
Net interest income after provision for loan losses
78,856
82,027
Other income (expense):
Loan and guaranty servicing revenue
49,488
40,413
Tuition payment processing and campus commerce revenue
21,913
19,369
Enrollment services revenue
31,664
33,868
Other income
10,954
6,492
Gain on sale of loans and debt repurchases
—
8,307
Derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments and derivative settlements, net
(15,180
)
(3,036
)
Total other income
98,839
105,413
Operating expenses:
Salaries and benefits
49,095
43,912
Cost to provide enrollment services
21,678
22,839
Depreciation and amortization
8,136
6,776
Other
32,263
26,105
Total operating expenses
111,172
99,632
Income before income taxes
66,523
87,808
Income tax expense
(23,230
)
(32,928
)
Net income
43,293
54,880
Net income attributable to noncontrolling interest
152
—
Net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc.
$
43,141
54,880
Earnings per common share:
Net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc. shareholders - basic
$
0.91
1.13
Net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc. shareholders - diluted
$
0.91
1.13
Weighted average common shares outstanding:
Basic
46,989,773
48,171,317
Diluted
47,184,079
48,363,035
Dividends paid per common share
$
0.10
0.07
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
3
NELNET, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
(Dollars in thousands)
(unaudited)
Three months
ended March 31,
2012
2011
Net income
$
43,293
54,880
Other comprehensive income:
Unrealized gains (losses) on securities:
Unrealized holding gains (losses) arising during period, net
934
—
Income tax effect
(329
)
—
Total other comprehensive income
605
—
Comprehensive income
43,898
54,880
Comprehensive income attributable to noncontrolling interest
152
—
Comprehensive income attributable to Nelnet, Inc.
$
43,746
54,880
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
4
NELNET, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
(Dollars in thousands, except share data)
(unaudited)
Nelnet, Inc. Shareholders
Preferred stock shares
Common stock shares
Preferred stock
Class A common stock
Class B common stock
Additional paid-in capital
Retained earnings
Accumulated other comprehensive income, net
Employee notes receivable
Noncontrolling interest
Total equity
Class A
Class B
Balance as of December 31, 2010
—
36,846,353
11,495,377
$
—
368
115
76,263
831,057
—
(1,170
)
—
906,633
Net income
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
54,880
—
—
—
54,880
Other comprehensive income
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Cash dividend on Class A and Class B common stock - $0.07 per share
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
(3,387
)
—
—
—
(3,387
)
Contingency payment related to business combination
—
—
—
—
—
—
(5,893
)
—
—
—
—
(5,893
)
Issuance of common stock, net of forfeitures
—
151,669
—
—
2
—
3,087
—
—
—
—
3,089
Compensation expense for stock based awards
—
—
—
—
—
—
355
—
—
—
—
355
Repurchase of common stock
—
(14,465
)
—
—
—
—
(310
)
—
—
—
—
(310
)
Balance as of March 31, 2011
—
36,983,557
11,495,377
$
—
370
115
73,502
882,550
—
(1,170
)
—
955,367
Balance as of December 31, 2011
—
35,643,102
11,495,377
$
—
356
115
49,245
1,017,629
—
(1,140
)
—
1,066,205
Issuance of minority membership interest
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
5
5
Net income
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
43,141
—
—
152
43,293
Other comprehensive income
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
605
—
—
605
Cash dividend on Class A and Class B common stock - $0.10 per share
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
(4,712
)
—
—
—
(4,712
)
Issuance of common stock, net of forfeitures
—
220,584
—
—
2
—
2,424
—
—
—
—
2,426
Compensation expense for stock based awards
—
—
—
—
—
—
395
—
—
—
—
395
Repurchase of common stock
—
(42,629
)
—
—
—
—
(1,116
)
—
—
—
—
(1,116
)
Reduction of employee stock notes receivable
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
772
—
772
Balance as of March 31, 2012
—
35,821,057
11,495,377
$
—
358
115
50,948
1,056,058
605
(368
)
157
1,107,873
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
5
NELNET, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(Dollars in thousands)
(unaudited)
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc.
$
43,141
54,880
Net income attributable to noncontrolling interest
152
—
Net income
43,293
54,880
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:
Depreciation and amortization, including loan and debt premiums/discounts and deferred origination costs
17,521
18,964
Provision for loan losses
6,000
3,750
Derivative market value adjustment
(16,835
)
(66,450
)
Foreign currency transaction adjustment
32,242
65,334
Proceeds to terminate and/or amend derivative instruments
—
12,369
Payments to terminate and/or amend derivative instruments
—
(141
)
Gain on sale of loans
—
(1,345
)
Gain from debt repurchases
—
(6,962
)
Change in investments - trading securities, net
(752
)
5,517
Deferred income tax (benefit) expense
(7,190
)
100
Non-cash compensation expense
700
557
Other non-cash items
(697
)
(189
)
Decrease in accrued interest receivable
12,023
9,668
Increase in accounts receivable
(561
)
(198
)
Decrease in other assets
1,140
1,016
Decrease in accrued interest payable
(353
)
(3,566
)
Increase (decrease) in other liabilities
14,040
(11,637
)
Net cash provided by operating activities
100,571
81,667
Cash flows from investing activities:
Originations and purchases of student loans
(176,212
)
(235,599
)
Purchases of student loans from a related party
(221
)
(29
)
Net proceeds from student loan repayments, claims, capitalized interest, participations, and other
597,034
630,606
Proceeds from sale of student loans
32,592
95,131
Purchases of available-for-sale securities
(27,719
)
—
Proceeds from sales of available-for-sale securities
6,843
—
Purchases of property and equipment, net
(2,306
)
(2,992
)
Increase in restricted cash and investments, net
(91,631
)
(127,472
)
Business and asset acquisition contingency payments
(1,550
)
(7,193
)
Issuance of minority membership interest
5
—
Net cash provided by investing activities
336,835
352,452
Cash flows from financing activities:
Payments on bonds and notes payable
(692,408
)
(1,090,797
)
Proceeds from issuance of bonds and notes payable
279,667
533,097
Payments on bonds payable due to a related party
—
(107,050
)
Payments of debt issuance costs
(1,595
)
(1,460
)
Dividends paid
(4,712
)
(3,387
)
Repurchases of common stock
(1,116
)
(310
)
Proceeds from issuance of common stock
116
124
Payments received on employee stock notes receivable
772
—
Net cash used in financing activities
(419,276
)
(669,783
)
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
18,130
(235,664
)
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period
42,570
283,801
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period
$
60,700
48,137
Supplemental disclosures of cash flow information:
Interest paid
$
61,338
53,674
Income taxes paid, net of refunds
$
2,920
32,293
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
6
NELNET, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Information as of
March 31, 2012
and for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
and
2011
is unaudited)
(Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts, unless otherwise noted)
1. Basis of Financial Reporting
The accompanying unaudited consolidated financial statements of Nelnet, Inc. and subsidiaries (the “Company”) as of
March 31, 2012
and for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012 and 2011
have been prepared on the same basis as the audited consolidated financial statements for the year ended
December 31, 2011
and, in the opinion of the Company’s management, the unaudited consolidated financial statements reflect all adjustments, consisting of normal recurring adjustments, necessary for a fair presentation of results of operations for the interim periods presented. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles 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
months ended
March 31, 2012
are not necessarily indicative of the results for the year ending
December 31, 2012
. The unaudited consolidated financial statements should be read in conjunction with the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2011
.
Noncontrolling Interest
Noncontrolling interest reflects the proportionate share of membership interest (equity) and net income attributable to the holders of minority membership interests in Whitetail Rock Capital Management, LLC ("WRCM"), a subsidiary of the Company that issued minority membership interests on January 1, 2012.
2. Student Loans Receivable and Allowance for Loan Losses
Student loans receivable consisted of the following:
As of
As of
March 31, 2012
December 31, 2011
Federally insured loans
$
23,881,483
24,332,709
Non-federally insured loans
24,825
26,916
23,906,308
24,359,625
Unamortized loan premiums (discounts) and deferred origination costs, net
(21,041
)
(13,267
)
Allowance for loan losses – federally insured loans
(36,783
)
(37,205
)
Allowance for loan losses – non-federally insured loans
(11,652
)
(11,277
)
$
23,836,832
24,297,876
Allowance for federally insured loans as a percentage of such loans
0.15
%
0.15
%
Allowance for non-federally insured loans as a percentage of such loans
46.94
%
41.90
%
7
Activity in the Allowance for Loan Losses
The provision for loan losses represents the periodic expense of maintaining an allowance sufficient to absorb losses, net of recoveries, inherent in the portfolio of student loans. Activity in the allowance for loan losses is shown below.
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Balance at beginning of period
$
48,482
43,626
Provision for loan losses:
Federally insured loans
6,000
3,500
Non-federally insured loans
—
250
Total provision for loan losses
6,000
3,750
Charge-offs:
Federally insured loans
(5,495
)
(4,855
)
Non-federally insured loans
(769
)
(994
)
Total charge-offs
(6,264
)
(5,849
)
Recoveries - non-federally insured loans
351
370
Purchase (sale) of loans, net:
Federally insured loans
(927
)
—
Non-federally insured loans
—
—
Transfer to/from repurchase obligation related to loans sold/purchased, net
793
(800
)
Balance at end of period
$
48,435
41,097
Allocation of the allowance for loan losses:
Federally insured loans
$
36,783
31,553
Non-federally insured loans
11,652
9,544
Total allowance for loan losses
$
48,435
41,097
Repurchase Obligations
As of March 31, 2012
, the Company had participated a cumulative amount of
$117.1 million
of non-federally insured loans to third parties. Loans participated under these agreements have been accounted for by the Company as loan sales. Accordingly, the participation interests sold are not included on the Company’s consolidated balance sheets. Per the terms of the servicing agreements, the Company’s servicing operations are obligated to repurchase loans subject to the participation interests in the event such loans become 60 or 90 days delinquent.
In addition, on January 13, 2011, the Company sold a portfolio of non-federally insured loans for proceeds of $91.3 million (100% of par value). The Company retained credit risk related to this portfolio and will pay cash to purchase back any loans which become 60 days delinquent.
The Company’s estimate related to its obligation to repurchase these loans is included in “other liabilities” in the Company’s consolidated balance sheets. The activity related to this accrual is detailed below.
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Beginning balance
$
19,223
12,600
Transfer to/from the allowance for loan losses related to loans purchased/sold, net
(793
)
800
Repurchase obligation associated with loans sold on January 13, 2011
—
6,269
Ending balance
$
18,430
19,669
8
Student Loan Status and Delinquencies
Delinquencies have the potential to adversely impact the Company’s earnings through increased servicing and collection costs and account charge-offs. The table below shows the Company’s student loan delinquencies.
As of March 31, 2012
As of December 31, 2011
As of March 31, 2011
Federally Insured Loans:
Loans in-school/grace/deferment (a)
$
3,625,631
$
3,664,899
$
4,332,130
Loans in forbearance (b)
3,363,627
3,330,452
3,086,292
Loans in repayment status:
Loans current
14,696,906
87.0
%
14,600,372
84.2
%
13,933,107
87.3
%
Loans delinquent 31-60 days (c)
557,476
3.3
844,204
4.9
595,386
3.7
Loans delinquent 61-90 days (c)
337,791
2.0
407,094
2.3
392,008
2.5
Loans delinquent 91-270 days (c)
973,406
5.8
1,163,437
6.7
838,404
5.3
Loans delinquent 271 days or greater (c)(d)
326,646
1.9
322,251
1.9
190,380
1.2
Total loans in repayment
16,892,225
100.0
%
17,337,358
100.0
%
15,949,285
100.0
%
Total federally insured loans
$
23,881,483
$
24,332,709
$
23,367,707
Non-Federally Insured Loans:
Loans in-school/grace/deferment (a)
$
2,046
$
2,058
$
3,069
Loans in forbearance (b)
316
371
239
Loans in repayment status:
Loans current
15,144
67.4
%
16,776
68.5
%
16,564
82.1
%
Loans delinquent 31-60 days (c)
534
2.4
706
2.9
363
1.8
Loans delinquent 61-90 days (c)
1,820
8.1
1,987
8.1
692
3.4
Loans delinquent 91 days or greater (c)
4,965
22.1
5,018
20.5
2,562
12.7
Total loans in repayment
22,463
100.0
%
24,487
100.0
%
20,181
100.0
%
Total non-federally insured loans
$
24,825
$
26,916
$
23,489
(a)
Loans for borrowers who still may 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 for law students.
(b)
Loans for borrowers who have temporarily ceased making full payments due to hardship or other factors, according to a schedule approved by the servicer consistent with the established loan program servicing procedures and policies.
(c)
The period of delinquency is based on the number of days scheduled payments are contractually past due and relate to repayment loans, that is, receivables not charged off, and not in school, grace, deferment, or forbearance.
(d)
A portion of loans included in loans delinquent 271 days or greater includes federally insured loans in claim status, which are loans that have gone into default and have been submitted to the guaranty agency.
9
3. Bonds and Notes Payable
The following tables summarize the Company’s outstanding debt obligations by type of instrument:
As of March 31, 2012
Carrying
amount
Interest rate
range
Final maturity
Variable-rate bonds and notes (a):
Bonds and notes based on indices
$
19,832,162
0.50% - 6.90%
11/25/15 - 7/27/48
Bonds and notes based on auction or remarketing
970,575
0.18% - 2.27%
5/1/28 - 5/25/42
Total variable-rate bonds and notes
20,802,737
FFELP warehouse facilities
959,978
0.18% - 0.35%
7/1/14 - 4/2/15
Department of Education Conduit
2,261,104
0.24%
5/8/14
Unsecured line of credit
50,000
1.74%
2/17/16
Unsecured debt - Junior Subordinated Hybrid Securities
100,697
3.86%
9/15/61
Other borrowings
40,154
3.73% - 5.72%
11/14/12 - 3/1/22
24,214,670
Discount on bonds and notes payable
(154,061
)
Total
$
24,060,609
As of December 31, 2011
Carrying
amount
Interest rate
range
Final maturity
Variable-rate bonds and notes (a):
Bonds and notes based on indices
$
20,252,403
0.42% - 6.90%
11/25/15 - 7/27/48
Bonds and notes based on auction or remarketing
970,575
0.11% - 2.19%
5/1/28 - 5/25/42
Total variable-rate bonds and notes
21,222,978
FFELP warehouse facilities
824,410
0.26% - 0.70%
7/1/14
Department of Education Conduit
2,339,575
0.24%
5/8/14
Unsecured line of credit
64,390
0.69%
5/8/12
Unsecured debt - Junior Subordinated Hybrid Securities
100,697
3.95%
9/15/61
Other borrowings
43,119
3.78% - 5.72%
11/14/12 - 3/1/22
24,595,169
Discount on bonds and notes payable
(160,629
)
Total
$
24,434,540
(a)
Issued in asset-backed securitizations
Secured Financing Transactions
The Company has historically relied upon secured financing vehicles as its most significant source of funding for student loans. The net cash flow the Company receives from the securitized student loans generally represents the excess amounts, if any, generated by the underlying student loans over the amounts required to be paid to the bondholders, after deducting servicing fees and any other expenses relating to the securitizations. The Company’s rights to cash flow from securitized student loans are subordinate to bondholder interests and may fail to generate any cash flow beyond what is due to bondholders. The Company’s secured student loan financing vehicles during the periods presented above include loan warehouse facilities, asset-backed securitizations, and the government’s Conduit Program.
The majority of the bonds and notes payable are primarily secured by the student loans receivable, related accrued interest, and by the amounts on deposit in the accounts established under the respective bond resolutions or financing agreements. Certain variable rate bonds and notes are secured by a letter of credit and reimbursement agreement issued by a third-party liquidity provider.
10
FFELP warehouse facilities
The Company funds a portion of its Federal Family Education Loan Program (the “FFEL Program” or “FFELP”) loan acquisitions using its FFELP warehouse facilities. Student loan warehousing allows the Company to buy and manage student loans prior to transferring them into more permanent financing arrangements.
As of
March 31, 2012
, the Company has three FFELP warehouse facilities as summarized below.
NFSLW-I (a)
NHELP-II (b)
NHELP-I (c)
Total
Maximum financing amount
$
500,000
250,000
500,000
1,250,000
Amount outstanding
(484,856
)
(229,667
)
(245,455
)
(959,978
)
Amount available
$
15,144
20,333
254,545
290,022
Expiration of liquidity provisions
July 1, 2012
January 31, 2013
October 2, 2013
Final maturity date
July 1, 2014
January 31, 2015
April 2, 2015
Maximum advance rates
85 - 95%
93.5%
93 - 95%
Minimum advance rates
84.5 - 90%
90.5%
80 - 95%
Advanced as equity support
$
37,138
21,125
14,922
73,185
(a)
The terms of this facility were amended on February 22, 2012. The table above reflects all amended terms.
(b)
The Company entered into this facility on February 1, 2012.
(c)
The terms of this facility were amended on April 2, 2012. The table above reflects all amended terms.
Each FFELP warehouse facility is supported by 364-day liquidity provisions, which are subject to the respective expiration date shown in the table above. In the event the Company is unable to renew the liquidity provisions by such date, the facility would become a term facility at a stepped-up cost, with no additional student loans being eligible for financing, and the Company would be required to refinance the existing loans in the facility by the facility's final maturity date. The warehouse facilities provide for formula-based advance rates, depending on FFELP loan type, up to a maximum of the principal and interest of loans financed as shown in the table above. The advance rates for collateral may increase or decrease based on market conditions, but they are subject to minimums as disclosed above.
The FFELP warehouse facilities contain financial covenants relating to levels of the Company’s consolidated net worth, ratio of adjusted EBITDA to corporate debt interest, and unencumbered cash. Any noncompliance with these covenants could result in a requirement for the immediate repayment of any outstanding borrowings under the facilities.
Unsecured Line of Credit
As of December 31, 2011, the Company had a $750.0 million unsecured line of credit with a maturity date of May 8, 2012. As of December 31, 2011, there was $64.4 million outstanding on this line. On February 17, 2012, the Company entered into a new $250.0 million unsecured line of credit. In conjunction with entering into this new agreement, the outstanding balance on the $750.0 million unsecured line of credit of $64.4 million was paid off in full and the agreement was terminated.
As of March 31, 2012
, the
$250.0 million
unsecured line of credit had an outstanding balance of
$50.0 million
and
$200.0 million
was available for future use. The
$250.0 million
line of credit has a maturity date of February 17, 2016. Upon the maturity date in 2016, there can be no assurance that the Company will be able to renew this line of credit, increase the amount outstanding under the line, if necessary, or find alternative funding.
The new line of credit agreement contains certain financial covenants that, if not met, lead to an event of default under the agreement. The covenants include maintaining:
•
A minimum consolidated net worth
•
A minimum adjusted EBITDA to corporate debt interest (over the last four rolling quarters)
•
A limitation on subsidiary indebtedness
•
A limitation on the percentage of non-federally insured loans in the Company’s portfolio
11
As of March 31, 2012
, the Company was in compliance with all of these requirements. Many of these covenants are duplicated in the Company’s other lending facilities, including its FFELP warehouse facilities.
The Company’s new operating line of credit does not have any covenants related to unsecured debt ratings. However, changes in the Company’s ratings (as well as the amounts the Company borrows) have modest implications on the pricing level at which the Company obtains funding.
A default on the Company’s FFELP warehouse facilities would result in an event of default on the Company’s new unsecured line of credit that would result in the outstanding balance on the line of credit becoming immediately due and payable.
Repurchase Agreement
On April 12, 2012, the Company entered into a $50.0 million line of credit, which is collateralized by asset-backed security investments. The line of credit has a maturity date of April 12, 2014 and has covenants similar to the Company's $250.0 million unsecured line of credit.
4. Gain on Sale of Loans and Debt Repurchases
During the first quarter of 2011, the Company sold a portfolio of non-federally insured student loans and recognized a gain of $1.4 million. In addition, during the first quarter of 2011, the Company purchased $62.6 million (notional amount) of its Junior Subordinated Hybrid Securities (unsecured debt) for $55.7 million and recognized a gain of $6.9 million. These items are included in "Gain on sale of loans and debt repurchases" in the consolidated statements of income.
5. Derivative Financial Instruments
The Company is exposed to certain risks relating to its ongoing business operations. The primary risks managed by using derivative instruments are interest rate risk and foreign currency exchange risk.
Interest Rate Risk
The Company’s primary market risk exposure arises from fluctuations in its borrowing and lending rates, the spread between which could impact the Company due to shifts in market interest rates. Because the Company generates a significant portion of its earnings from its student loan spread, the interest rate sensitivity of the balance sheet is a key profitability driver. The Company has adopted a policy of periodically reviewing the mismatch related to the interest rate characteristics of its assets and liabilities together with the Company’s assessment of current and future market conditions. Based on those factors, the Company uses derivative instruments as part of its overall risk management strategy.
Basis Swaps
The Company funds the majority of its student loan assets with one-month or three-month LIBOR indexed floating rate securities. Meanwhile, the interest earned on the Company’s student loan assets is indexed to commercial paper and treasury bill rates. The different interest rate characteristics of the Company’s loan assets and liabilities funding these assets results in basis risk.
The Company also faces repricing risk due to the timing of the interest rate resets on its liabilities, which may occur as infrequently as once a quarter, in contrast to the timing of the interest rate resets on its assets, which generally occur daily. In a declining interest rate environment, this may cause the Company’s student loan spread to compress, while in a rising rate environment, it may cause the spread to increase.
As of March 31, 2012
, the Company had
$23.0 billion
and
$0.9 billion
of FFELP loans indexed to the three-month financial commercial paper rate and the three-month treasury bill rate, respectively, both of which reset daily, and
$19.2 billion
of debt indexed to three-month LIBOR, which resets quarterly, and
$0.9 billion
of debt indexed to one-month LIBOR, which resets monthly.
The Company has used derivative instruments to hedge the repricing risk due to the timing of the interest rate resets on its assets and liabilities. The Company has entered into basis swaps in which the Company receives three-month LIBOR set discretely in advance and pays one-month LIBOR plus or minus a spread as defined in the agreements (the 1:3 Basis Swaps).
12
The following table summarizes the Company’s 1:3 Basis Swaps outstanding as of both
March 31, 2012
and
December 31, 2011
:
Maturity
Notional amount
2021
$
250,000
2023
1,250,000
2024
250,000
2026
800,000
2028
100,000
2036
700,000
2039
(a)
150,000
2040
(b)
200,000
$
3,700,000
(a)
This derivative has a forward effective start date in 2015.
(b)
This derivative has a forward effective start date in 2020.
The Company does not generally hedge the basis risk on those assets indexed to the commercial paper rate that are funded with liabilities in which the Company pays primarily on the LIBOR indice, since the derivatives needed to hedge this risk are generally illiquid or non-existent. On December 23, 2011, the President signed the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2012 into law. This Act includes changes that permit student loan lenders to change the index on which the Special Allowance Payments (or "SAP") are calculated for FFELP loans from the commercial paper rate to the one-month LIBOR rate effective April 1, 2012. As of March 31, 2012, the Company had $23.0 billion of loans in which it elected to change the SAP calculation to the one-month LIBOR rate. This change mitigates the Company's exposure to basis risk and will allow the Company to better match borrowing and lending rates.
Interest rate swaps – floor income hedges
FFELP loans originated prior to April 1, 2006 generally earn interest at the higher of a floating rate based on the SAP formula set by the Department of Education (the "Department") and the borrower rate, which is fixed over a period of time. The SAP formula is based on an applicable indice plus a fixed spread that is dependent upon when the loan was originated, the loan’s repayment status, and funding sources for the loan. The Company generally finances its student loan portfolio with variable rate debt. In low and/or declining interest rate environments, when the fixed borrower rate is higher than the rate produced by the SAP formula, the Company’s student loans earn at a fixed rate while the interest on the variable rate debt typically continues to decline. In these interest rate environments, the Company may earn additional spread income that it refers to as floor income.
Depending on the type of loan and when it was originated, the borrower rate is either fixed to term or is reset to an annual rate each July 1. As a result, for loans where the borrower rate is fixed to term, the Company may earn floor income for an extended period of time, which the Company refers to as fixed rate floor income, and for those loans where the borrower rate is reset annually on July 1, the Company may earn floor income to the next reset date, which the Company refers to as variable rate floor income. In accordance with legislation enacted in 2006, lenders are required to rebate fixed rate floor income and variable rate floor income to the Department for all FFELP loans first originated on or after April 1, 2006.
Absent the use of derivative instruments, a rise in interest rates may reduce the amount of floor income received and this may have an impact on earnings due to interest margin compression caused by increasing financing costs, until such time as the federally insured loans earn interest at a variable rate in accordance with their SAP formulas. In higher interest rate environments, where the interest rate rises above the borrower rate and fixed rate loans effectively become variable rate loans, the impact of the rate fluctuations is reduced.
As of
March 31, 2012
and
December 31, 2011
, the Company had
$9.0 billion
and
$10.9 billion
, respectively, of student loan assets that were earning fixed rate floor income. The following table summarizes the outstanding derivative investments as of
March 31, 2012
and
December 31, 2011
used by the Company to economically hedge these loans.
13
Maturity
Notional amount
Weighted average fixed rate paid by the Company (a)
2013
$
2,150,000
0.85
%
2014
750,000
0.85
2015
100,000
2.26
2020
50,000
3.23
$
3,050,000
0.93
%
(a) For all interest rate derivatives, the Company receives discrete three-months LIBOR.
Interest rate swaps – unsecured debt hedges
The Company has
$100.7 million
of unsecured Junior Subordinated Hybrid Securities debt outstanding. The interest rate on the Hybrid Securities through September 29, 2036 is equal to three-month LIBOR plus 3.375%, payable quarterly. As of
March 31, 2012
and
December 31, 2011
, the Company had the following derivatives outstanding that are used to effectively convert the variable interest rate on the Hybrid Securities to a fixed rate.
Notional amount (a)
Weighted average fixed rate paid by the Company (b)
$
75,000
4.28
%
(a)
The maturity date of these derivatives is September 29, 2036.
(b)
For all interest rate derivatives, the Company receives discrete three-month LIBOR.
Foreign Currency Exchange Risk
During 2006, the Company completed separate debt offerings of student loan asset-backed securities that included
€420.5 million
and
€352.7 million
Euro Notes with interest rates based on a spread to the EURIBOR index. As a result of these transactions, the Company is exposed to market risk related to fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates between the U.S. dollar and Euro. The principal and accrued interest on these notes are re-measured at each reporting period and recorded on the Company’s balance sheet in U.S. dollars based on the foreign currency exchange rate on that date. Changes in the principal and accrued interest amounts as a result of foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations are included in the “derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments and derivative settlements, net” in the Company’s consolidated statements of income.
The Company entered into cross-currency interest rate swaps in connection with the issuance of the Euro Notes. Under the terms of these derivative instrument agreements, the Company receives from a counterparty a spread to the EURIBOR indice based on notional amounts of
€420.5 million
and
€352.7 million
and pays a spread to the LIBOR indice based on notional amounts of
$500.0 million
and
$450.0 million
, respectively. In addition, under the terms of these agreements, all principal payments on the Euro Notes will effectively be paid at the exchange rate in effect between the U.S. dollar and Euro as of the issuance of the notes.
The following table shows the income statement impact as a result of the re-measurement of the Euro Notes and the change in the fair value of the related derivative instruments. These items are included in “derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments and derivative settlements, net” in the Company's consolidated statements of income.
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Re-measurement of Euro Notes
$
(32,242
)
(65,334
)
Change in fair value of cross currency interest rate swaps
13,026
62,532
Total impact to statements of income - income (expense)
$
(19,216
)
(2,802
)
The re-measurement of the Euro-denominated bonds generally correlates with the change in fair value of the cross-currency interest rate swaps. However, the Company will experience unrealized gains or losses related to the cross-currency interest rate swaps if the two underlying indices (and related forward curve) do not move in parallel. Management intends to hold the cross-currency interest rate swaps through the maturity of the Euro-denominated bonds.
14
Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments
The Company records derivative instruments on the consolidated balance sheets as either an asset or liability measured at its fair value. Management has structured the majority of the Company’s derivative transactions with the intent that each is economically effective; however, the Company’s derivative instruments do not qualify for hedge accounting. As a result, the change in fair value of the Company’s derivatives at each reporting date are included in “derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments and derivative settlements, net” in the Company’s consolidated statements of income. Changes or shifts in the forward yield curve and fluctuations in currency rates can significantly impact the valuation of the Company’s derivatives. Accordingly, changes or shifts to the forward yield curve and fluctuations in currency rates will impact the financial position and results of operations of the Company.
Any proceeds received or payments made by the Company to terminate a derivative in advance of its expiration date, or to amend the terms of an existing derivative, are included in “derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments and derivative settlements, net” on the consolidated statements of income and are accounted for as a change in fair value of such derivative. During the
three
months ended March 31,
2011
, the Company terminated and/or amended certain derivatives for
net proceeds of
$12.2 million
. There were no terminations and/or amendments during the first quarter of 2012.
The following table summarizes the fair value of the Company’s derivatives:
Fair value of asset derivatives
Fair value of liability derivatives
As of
As of
As of
As of
March 31, 2012
December 31, 2011
March 31, 2012
December 31, 2011
1:3 basis swaps
$
13,626
10,988
277
641
Interest rate swaps - floor income hedges
—
592
23,427
18,384
Interest rate swaps - hybrid debt hedges
—
—
18,617
24,814
Cross-currency interest rate swaps
93,657
80,631
—
—
Other
251
8
—
1
Total
$
107,534
92,219
42,321
43,840
The following table summarizes the effect of derivative instruments in the consolidated statements of income. All gains and losses recognized in income related to the Company’s derivative activity are included in “derivative market value and foreign currency and derivative settlements, net” on the consolidated statements of income.
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Settlements:
1:3 basis swaps
$
1,381
208
Interest rate swaps - floor income hedges
(3,137
)
(6,218
)
Interest rate swaps - hybrid debt hedges
—
(246
)
Cross-currency interest rate swaps
2,109
2,109
Other
(126
)
(5
)
Total settlements - income (expense)
227
(4,152
)
Change in fair value:
1:3 basis swaps
3,002
(4,210
)
Interest rate swaps - floor income hedges
(5,634
)
6,395
Interest rate swaps - hybrid debt hedges
6,197
1,448
Cross-currency interest rate swaps
13,026
62,532
Other
244
285
Total change in fair value - income (expense)
16,835
66,450
Re-measurement of Euro Notes (foreign currency transaction adjustment) - income (expense)
(32,242
)
(65,334
)
Derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments and derivative settlements - income (expense)
$
(15,180
)
(3,036
)
15
Derivative Instruments - Credit and Market Risk
By using derivative instruments, the Company is exposed to credit and market risk.
The Company manages credit and market risks associated with interest rates by establishing and monitoring limits as to the types and degree of risk that may be undertaken and by entering into transactions with high-quality counterparties that are reviewed periodically by the Company's risk committee. As of
March 31, 2012
, all of the Company's derivative counterparties had investment grade credit ratings. The Company also has a policy of requiring that all derivative contracts be governed by an International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. Master Agreement.
Credit Risk
When the fair value of a derivative contract is positive (an asset on the Company's balance sheet), this generally indicates that the counterparty would owe the Company if the derivative was settled. If the counterparty fails to perform, credit risk with such counterparty is equal to the extent of the fair value gain in the derivative less any collateral held by the Company. If the Company was unable to collect from a counterparty, it would have a loss equal to the amount the derivative is recorded on the consolidated balance sheet. As of
March 31, 2012
, the trustee for certain of the Company's asset-backed securities transactions held
$59.7 million
of collateral from the counterparty on the cross-currency interest rate swaps.
The Company considers counterparties' credit risk when determining the fair value of derivative positions on its exposure net of collateral. However, the Company does not use the collateral to offset fair value amounts recognized in the financial statements for derivative instruments.
Market Risk
When the fair value of a derivative instrument is negative (a liability on the Company's balance sheet), the Company would owe the counterparty if the derivative was settled and, therefore, has no immediate credit risk. If the negative fair value of derivatives with a counterparty exceeds a specified threshold, the Company may have to make a collateral deposit with the counterparty. The threshold at which the Company may be required to post collateral is dependent upon the Company's unsecured credit rating. At the Company's current unsecured credit rating (Standard & Poor's: BBB- (stable outlook) and Moody's: Ba1 (stable outlook)), the Company has substantially collateralized its corporate derivative liability position with its counterparties. As such, any further downgrades would not result in additional collateral requirements of a material nature. In addition, no counterparty has the right to terminate its contracts in the event of further downgrades. However, some derivative contracts have mutual optional termination provisions that can be exercised in 2016 and 2021. As of
March 31, 2012
, the fair value of derivatives with early termination provisions was a positive $0.5 million (an asset on the Company's balance sheet). As of
March 31, 2012
, the Company had
$35.4 million
posted as collateral to derivative counterparties, which is included in “restricted cash and investments” in the Company's consolidated balance sheet.
Interest rate movements have an impact on the amount of collateral the Company is required to deposit with its derivative instrument counterparties. With the Company's current derivative portfolio, the Company does not currently anticipate any movement in interest rates having a material impact on its capital or liquidity profile, nor expects that any movement in interest rates would have a material impact on its ability to meet potential collateral deposits with its counterparties. Due to the existing low interest rate environment, the Company's exposure to downward movements in interest rates on its interest rate swaps is limited. In addition, the historical high correlation between 1-month and 3-month LIBOR and the limited notional amount of 1:3 Basis Swaps derivatives outstanding limits the Company's exposure to interest rate movements on these derivatives.
The Company's cross-currency interest rate swaps are derivatives entered into as a result of certain asset-backed security financings. These derivatives are entered into at the trust level with the counterparty. Trust related derivatives do not contain credit contingent features related to the Company or the trust's credit ratings.
6. Investments
The Company's available-for-sale investment portfolio consists of student loan asset-backed securities and equity and debt securities. These securities are carried at fair value, with the temporary changes in fair value carried as a separate component of stockholders’ equity, net of taxes. The amortized cost of debt securities in this category (including the student loan asset-backed securities) is adjusted for amortization of premiums and accretion of discounts, which are amortized using the effective interest rate method. Other-than-temporary impairment is evaluated by considering several factors, including the length of time and extent to which the fair value has been less than the amortized cost basis, the financial condition and near-term prospects of the security (considering factors such as adverse conditions specific to the security and ratings agency actions), and the intent and ability to
16
retain the investment to allow for an anticipated recovery in fair value. The entire fair value loss on a security that is other-than-temporary impairment is recorded in earnings if the Company intends to sell the security or if it is more likely than not that the Company will be required to sell the security before the expected recovery of the loss. However, if the impairment is other-than-temporary, and either of those two conditions does not exist, the portion of the impairment related to credit losses is recorded in earnings and the impairment related to other factors is recorded in other comprehensive income.
Securities classified as trading are accounted for at fair value with unrealized gains and losses included in "other income" on the consolidated statements of income.
Securities that the Company has the intent and ability to hold to maturity are classified as held-to-maturity and are accounted for at amortized cost unless the security is determined to have an other-than-temporary impairment. In that case, it is accounted for in the same manner as described above.
A summary of the Company's investments and restricted investments follows:
As of March 31, 2012
Amortized cost
Gross unrealized gains
Gross unrealized losses
Fair value
As of
December 31, 2011
Investments:
Available-for-sale investments (a):
Student loan asset-backed securities
$
54,595
618
(942
)
54,271
—
Equity securities
4,250
1,365
(107
)
5,508
—
Debt securities (b)
1,308
—
—
1,308
—
Total available-for-sale investments
$
60,153
1,983
(1,049
)
61,087
—
Trading investments (a):
Student loan asset-backed securities
$
9,465
42,412
Equity securities
—
6,847
Debt securities (b)
—
1,521
Total trading investments
$
9,465
50,780
Total available-for-sale and trading investments
$
70,552
50,780
Restricted Investments (c):
Guaranteed investment contracts - held-to-maturity
$
284,639
236,899
(a)
The Company transferred the majority of its investments from trading to available-for-sale on January 1, 2012 to reflect management's intention regarding such securities.
(b)
Debt securities include corporate bonds, mortgage-backed securities, U.S. government bonds, and U.S. Treasury securities.
(c)
Restricted investments are included in “Restricted cash and investments” on the Company's consolidated balance sheets. The Company's restricted investments include cash balances that the Company's indentured trusts deposit in guaranteed investment contracts that are held for the related note holders. These investments are classified as held-to-maturity and the Company accounts for them at amortized cost.
The Company sold available-for-sale securities with a fair value of $10.0 million during the three months ended
March 31, 2012
and recognized $1.4 million and $0.2 million in gross realized gains and losses, respectively, which are included in “other income” in the Company's consolidated statement of income. The cost basis for these securities was determined through specific identification of the securities sold.
17
Maturities of student loan asset-backed securities and debt securities classified as available-for-sale were as follows at
March 31, 2012
.
Year of Maturity:
Amortized cost
Fair value
2013-2016
$
200
200
2017-2021
1,108
1,108
After 2021
54,595
54,271
Total
$
55,903
55,579
As of
March 31, 2012
, the stated maturities for the Company's restricted investments, which are classified as held-to-maturity, are shown in the following table:
Year of Maturity (a):
2017-2021
$
35,731
After 2021
248,908
Total
$
284,639
(a)
On May 1, 2012, the majority of the Company's remaining guaranteed investment contracts were terminated due to a downgrade in the credit rating of a guaranteed investment contract counterparty. The sales of these investments were at par and had no income statement impact. The proceeds from the sale of these investments were used to purchase permitted investments as specified by each underlying student loan asset-backed securitization trust indenture. The new investments will continue to be classified as “restricted cash and investments” included on the consolidated balance sheet while otherwise remaining as assets within their respective trust estates. As of May, 7, 2012, the Company has $28.1 million of guaranteed investment contracts outstanding.
7.
Intangible Assets
Intangible assets consist of the following:
Weighted average remaining useful life as of March 31, 2012 (months)
As of March 31, 2012
As of December 31, 2011
Customer relationships (net of accumulated amortization of $63,302 and $59,893, respectively)
66
$
19,831
23,240
Computer software (net of accumulated amortization of $5,806 and $5,103, respectively)
9
2,112
2,815
Trade names (net of accumulated amortization of $9,854 and $9,274, respectively)
9
1,739
2,319
57
$
23,682
28,374
The Company recorded amortization expense on its intangible assets of
$4.7 million
and
$4.0 million
for the three months ended
March 31, 2012 and 2011
, respectively. The Company will continue to amortize intangible assets over their remaining useful lives. As of
March 31, 2012
, the Company estimates it will record amortization expense as follows:
2012 (April 1 - December 31)
$
13,941
2013
3,399
2014
2,102
2015
829
2016
639
2017 and thereafter
2,772
$
23,682
18
8.
Goodwill
The following table summarizes the Company’s allocation of goodwill by operating segment as of
March 31, 2012
and
December 31, 2011
:
Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing
$
8,596
Tuition Payment Processing and Campus Commerce
58,086
Enrollment Services
8,553
Asset Generation and Management
41,883
$
117,118
9. Earnings per Common Share
Presented below is a summary of the components used to calculate basic and diluted earnings per share. The Company applies the two-class method of computing earnings per share, which requires the calculation of separate earnings per share amounts for unvested share-based awards and for common stock. Unvested share-based awards that contain nonforfeitable rights to dividends are considered securities which participate in undistributed earnings with common stock. Earnings per share attributable to common stock and a reconciliation of weighted average shares outstanding are shown in the table below.
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc.
$
43,141
54,880
Less earnings allocated to holders of unvested restricted stock
279
346
Net income available to Nelnet, Inc. common shareholders
$
42,862
54,534
Weighted average common shares outstanding - basic
46,989,773
48,171,317
Dilutive effect of the assumed vesting of restricted stock awards
194,306
191,718
Weighted average common shares outstanding - diluted
47,184,079
48,363,035
Earnings per common share:
Net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc. shareholders - basic
$
0.91
1.13
Net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc. shareholders - diluted
$
0.91
1.13
There were no shares that were antidilutive and not included in average shares outstanding for the diluted earnings per share calculation.
10. Segment Reporting
The Company earns fee-based revenue through its Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing, Tuition Payment Processing and Campus Commerce, and Enrollment Services operating segments. In addition, the Company earns net interest income on its student loan portfolio in its Asset Generation and Management operating segment. The Company’s operating segments are defined by the products and services they offer and the types of customers they serve, and they reflect the manner in which financial information is currently evaluated by management.
The management reporting process measures the performance of the Company’s operating segments based on the management structure of the Company as well as the methodology used by management to evaluate performance and allocate resources. Executive management (the "chief operating decision maker") evaluates the performance of the Company’s operating segments based on their profitability. Prior to 2012, management measured the profitability of the Company’s operating segments based on “base net income.” The Company's "base net income" was not a defined term within U.S. generally accepted accounting principles ("GAAP") and was not necessarily comparable to similarly titled measures reported by other companies. However, “base net income,” which consisted of GAAP net income excluding the derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments, amortization of intangible assets, compensation related to business combinations, and variable rate floor income, net of settlements on derivatives, was the primary financial performance measure used by management to develop the Company’s financial plans, track results, and establish corporate performance targets and incentive compensation. Unlike financial accounting, there is no
19
comprehensive, authoritative guidance for management reporting. Accordingly, information regarding the Company’s operating segments was historically provided based on “base net income.” Due to the decrease in the number and dollar amount of differences between "base net income" and GAAP net income, during the first quarter of 2012, executive management determined to discontinue utilizing "base net income" and began to evaluate the performance and profitability of the Company's operating segments based on financial results prepared in conformity with GAAP. As such, the Company has changed its operating segment income measurement from "base net income" to GAAP net income. Prior period segment operating results have been restated to conform to the current period presentation.
The accounting policies of the Company’s operating segments are the same as those described in note 2 in the notes to the consolidated financial statements included in the Company’s Annual Report filed on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2011
(the "2011 Annual Report"). Intersegment revenues are charged by a segment to another segment that provides the product or service. Intersegment revenues and expenses are included within each segment consistent with the income statement presentation provided to management. Changes in management structure or allocation methodologies and procedures may result in changes in reported segment financial information. The Company allocates certain corporate overhead expenses to the individual operating segments. These expenses include certain corporate activities related to executive management, human resources, accounting, legal, occupancy, and marketing. These costs are allocated to each operating segment based on estimated use of such activities and services. In addition, income taxes are allocated based on 38% of income (loss) before taxes for each individual operating segment. The difference between the consolidated income tax expense and the sum of taxes calculated for each operating segment is included in income taxes in Corporate Activity and Overhead.
The following describes the products and services of each operating segment. In addition, the tables below include the results of each of the Company's operating segments reconciled to the consolidated financial statements.
Fee-Based Operating Segments
Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing
The following are the primary product and service offerings the Company offers as part of its Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing segment:
•
Servicing FFELP loans
•
Origination and servicing of non-federally insured student loans
•
Servicing federally-owned student loans for the Department of Education
•
Servicing and support outsourcing for guaranty agencies
•
Student loan servicing software and other information technology products and services
The Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing operating segment provides for the servicing of the Company’s student loan portfolios and the portfolios of third parties. The loan servicing activities include loan origination activities, loan conversion activities, application processing, borrower updates, payment processing, due diligence procedures, funds management reconciliations, and claim processing. These activities are performed internally for the Company’s portfolio in addition to generating external fee revenue when performed for third party clients.
In June 2009, the Department of Education named the Company as one of four private sector companies awarded a servicing contract to service federally-owned student loans. In September 2009, the Company began servicing loans under this contract. The contract spans five years with one five-year renewal at the option of the Department.
This operating segment also provides servicing activities for guaranty agencies. These activities include providing software and data center services, borrower and loan updates, default aversion tracking services, claim processing services, and managing third-party collection agencies.
This operating segment also develops student loan servicing software, which is used internally by the Company and also licensed to third party student loan holders and servicers. In addition, this operating segment provides information technology products and services with core areas of business in educational loan software solutions, technical consulting services, and enterprise content management solutions.
Tuition Payment Processing and Campus Commerce
The Company’s Tuition Payment Processing and Campus Commerce operating segment provides products and services to help students and families manage the payment of education costs at all levels (K-12 and higher education). It also provides innovative
20
education-focused technologies, services, and support solutions to help schools with the everyday challenges of collecting and processing commerce data.
In the K-12 market, this operating segment offers actively managed tuition payment plans as well as assistance with financial needs assessment and donor management. This operating segment offers two principal products to the higher education market: actively managed tuition payment plans and campus commerce technologies and payment processing.
Enrollment Services
The Enrollment Services operating segment offers products and services that are focused on helping colleges recruit and retain students and helping students plan and prepare for life after high school. The following are the primary service offerings the Company offers as part of the Enrollment Services segment:
•
Inquiry Generation - Inquiry generation services include delivering qualified inquiries or clicks to third-party customers, primarily for-profit schools.
•
Inquiry Management (Agency) - Agency services include managing the marketing activities for third-party customers, primarily for-profit schools, in order to provide qualified inquiries or clicks.
•
Inquiry Management (Software) - Inquiry management services include the licensing of software to third-party customers, primarily for-profit schools. This software is also used internally by the Company. The inquiry management software has been adapted so that it can be offered as a hosted software solution that can be used by third-parties to manage and obtain qualified inquiries or clicks.
•
Digital Marketing (Peterson's Interactive) - Digital marketing services include on-line information about colleges and universities and are sold primarily based on subscriptions. Digital marketing services also include online editing services for admission essays.
•
Content Solutions - Content solutions includes test preparation study guides, school directories and databases, career exploration guides, on-line courses, scholarship search and selection data, career planning, and on-line information about colleges and universities. Content solutions also includes providing list marketing services to help higher education institutions and businesses reach the middle school, high school, college bound high school, college, and young adult market places.
Asset Generation and Management Operating Segment
The Asset Generation and Management Operating Segment includes the acquisition, management, and ownership of the Company’s student loan assets, which has historically been the Company’s largest product and service offering. The Company generates a substantial portion of its earnings from the spread, referred to as the Company’s student loan spread, between the yield it receives on its student loan portfolio and the associated costs to finance such portfolio. The student loan assets are held in a series of education lending subsidiaries designed specifically for this purpose. In addition to the student loan spread earned on its portfolio, all costs and activity associated with managing the portfolio, such as servicing of the assets and debt maintenance are included in this segment.
As a result of legislation effective July 1, 2010, all new federal loan originations are made by the Department of Education through the Direct Loan Program and the Company no longer originates FFELP loans. This legislation does not alter or affect the terms and conditions of existing FFELP loans.
Corporate Activity and Overhead
Corporate Activity and Overhead includes the following items:
•
The operating results of WRCM, the Company's SEC-registered investment advisory subsidiary
•
Income earned on certain investment activities
•
Interest expense incurred on unsecured debt transactions
•
Other products and service offerings that are not considered operating segments
21
Corporate Activities also includes certain corporate activities and overhead functions related to executive management, human resources, accounting, legal, occupancy, and marketing. These costs are allocated to each operating segment based on estimated use of such activities and services.
Segment Results of Operations
Three months ended March 31, 2012
Fee-Based
Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing
Tuition Payment Processing and Campus Commerce
Enrollment
Services
Total Fee-
Based
Asset
Generation and
Management
Corporate
Activity
and
Overhead
Eliminations
Total
Total interest income
$
20
4
—
24
153,512
1,588
(971
)
154,153
Interest expense
—
—
—
—
68,829
1,439
(971
)
69,297
Net interest income
20
4
—
24
84,683
149
—
84,856
Less provision for loan losses
—
—
—
—
6,000
—
—
6,000
Net interest income after provision for loan losses
20
4
—
24
78,683
149
—
78,856
Other income (expense):
Loan and guaranty servicing revenue
49,488
—
—
49,488
—
—
—
49,488
Intersegment servicing revenue
16,954
—
—
16,954
—
—
(16,954
)
—
Tuition payment processing and campus commerce revenue
—
21,913
—
21,913
—
—
—
21,913
Enrollment services revenue
—
—
31,664
31,664
—
—
—
31,664
Other income
—
—
—
—
5,000
5,954
—
10,954
Gain on sale of loans and debt repurchases
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments, net
—
—
—
—
(21,604
)
6,197
—
(15,407
)
Derivative settlements, net
—
—
—
—
227
—
—
227
Total other income (expense)
66,442
21,913
31,664
120,019
(16,377
)
12,151
(16,954
)
98,839
Operating expenses:
Salaries and benefits
29,042
8,618
6,279
43,939
719
4,437
—
49,095
Cost to provide enrollment services
—
—
21,678
21,678
—
—
—
21,678
Depreciation and amortization
4,413
1,740
1,617
7,770
—
366
—
8,136
Other
18,666
2,816
1,956
23,438
3,632
5,193
—
32,263
Intersegment expenses, net
1,385
1,333
848
3,566
17,143
(3,755
)
(16,954
)
—
Total operating expenses
53,506
14,507
32,378
100,391
21,494
6,241
(16,954
)
111,172
Income (loss) before income taxes and corporate overhead allocation
12,956
7,410
(714
)
19,652
40,812
6,059
—
66,523
Corporate overhead allocation
(1,503
)
(501
)
(501
)
(2,505
)
(1,392
)
3,897
—
—
Income (loss) before income taxes
11,453
6,909
(1,215
)
17,147
39,420
9,956
—
66,523
Income tax (expense) benefit
(4,352
)
(2,625
)
462
(6,515
)
(14,979
)
(1,736
)
—
(23,230
)
Net income (loss)
7,101
4,284
(753
)
10,632
24,441
8,220
—
43,293
Net income attributable to noncontrolling interest
—
—
—
—
—
152
—
152
Net income (loss) attributable to Nelnet, Inc.
$
7,101
4,284
(753
)
10,632
24,441
8,068
—
43,141
Three months ended March 31, 2011
Fee-Based
Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing
Tuition Payment Processing and Campus Commerce
Enrollment
Services
Total Fee-
Based
Asset
Generation and
Management
Corporate
Activity
and
Overhead
Eliminations
Total
Total interest income
$
15
6
—
21
137,639
1,146
(722
)
138,084
Interest expense
—
—
—
—
49,716
3,313
(722
)
52,307
Net interest income (loss)
15
6
—
21
87,923
(2,167
)
—
85,777
22
Less provision for loan losses
—
—
—
—
3,750
—
—
3,750
Net interest income (loss) after provision for loan losses
15
6
—
21
84,173
(2,167
)
—
82,027
Other income (expense):
Loan and guaranty servicing revenue
40,413
—
—
40,413
—
—
—
40,413
Intersegment servicing revenue
17,857
—
—
17,857
—
—
(17,857
)
—
Tuition payment processing and campus commerce revenue
—
19,369
—
19,369
—
—
—
19,369
Enrollment services revenue
—
—
33,868
33,868
—
—
—
33,868
Other income
—
—
—
—
4,136
2,356
—
6,492
Gain on sale of loans and debt repurchases
—
—
—
—
1,400
6,907
—
8,307
Derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments, net
—
—
—
—
(589
)
1,705
—
1,116
Derivative settlements, net
—
—
—
—
(4,038
)
(114
)
—
(4,152
)
Total other income (expense)
58,270
19,369
33,868
111,507
909
10,854
(17,857
)
105,413
Operating expenses:
Salaries and benefits
25,388
7,152
6,257
38,797
778
4,337
—
43,912
Cost to provide enrollment services
—
—
22,839
22,839
—
—
—
22,839
Depreciation and amortization
3,406
1,334
1,691
6,431
—
345
—
6,776
Other
14,579
2,634
2,318
19,531
1,538
5,036
—
26,105
Intersegment expenses, net
1,369
1,093
818
3,280
18,147
(3,570
)
(17,857
)
—
Total operating expenses
44,742
12,213
33,923
90,878
20,463
6,148
(17,857
)
99,632
Income (loss) before income taxes and corporate overhead allocation
13,543
7,162
(55
)
20,650
64,619
2,539
—
87,808
Corporate overhead allocation
(753
)
(251
)
(251
)
(1,255
)
(1,255
)
2,510
—
—
Income (loss) before income taxes
12,790
6,911
(306
)
19,395
63,364
5,049
—
87,808
Income tax (expense) benefit
(4,860
)
(2,626
)
117
(7,369
)
(24,078
)
(1,481
)
—
(32,928
)
Net income (loss)
7,930
4,285
(189
)
12,026
39,286
3,568
—
54,880
Net income attributable to noncontrolling interest
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Net income (loss) attributable to Nelnet, Inc.
$
7,930
4,285
(189
)
12,026
39,286
3,568
—
54,880
11. Related Party Transactions
The Company has entered into certain contractual arrangements with related parties as described in note 19 in the notes to the consolidated financial statements included in the Company's 2011 Annual Report. The following provides an update for related party transactions that have occurred during the first quarter of 2012.
Transactions with Union Financial Services, Inc.
Union Financial Services Inc. (“UFS”) is a corporation which is owned 50 percent by Michael S. Dunlap, a significant shareholder, Chief Executive Officer, Chairman, and a member of the Board of Directors of the Company, and 50 percent by Stephen F. Butterfield, Vice Chairman and a member of the Board of Directors of the Company.
The Company owns a majority interest in an aircraft due to the frequent business travel needs of the Company's executives and the limited availability of commercial flights in Lincoln, Nebraska, where the Company's headquarters are located. UFS owns the remaining interest in the same aircraft. On March 1, 2012, the Company sold an additional 9.753 percent of its ownership in the aircraft to UFS for total consideration of approximately $156,000. The purchase price was determined by a third-party and the sale had no income statement impact to the Company. After this transaction, the Company and UFS own 65 percent and 35 percent of the aircraft, respectively.
23
Investment Services
Union Bank and Trust Company ("Union Bank"), an entity under common control, has established various trusts whereby Union Bank serves as trustee for the purpose of purchasing, holding, managing, and selling investments in student loan asset-backed securities. On May 9, 2011, WRCM, an SEC-registered investment advisor and a subsidiary of the Company, entered into a management agreement with Union Bank, effective as of May 1, 2011, under which WRCM performs various advisory and management services on behalf of Union Bank with respect to investments in securities by the trusts, including identifying securities for purchase or sale by the trusts. The agreement provides that Union Bank will pay to WRCM annual fees of 25 basis points on the outstanding balance of the investments in the trusts. As of March 31, 2012, the outstanding balance of investments in the trusts was $470.2 million, of which the Company had a $7.8 million investment. The Company's investment in the trusts are included in "investments" on the consolidated balance sheet and as of March 31, 2012 are classified as available-for-sale as discussed in note 6, "Investments." In addition, Union Bank will pay additional fees to WRCM of up to 50 percent of the gains from the sale of securities from the trusts.
On February 9, 2012, WRCM established a private investment fund (the “Fund”) for the primary purpose of purchasing, selling, investing, and trading, directly or indirectly, in student loan asset-backed securities (“Student Loan ABS”), and to engage in financial transactions related thereto. As of the date the Fund was established, the total amount invested in the Fund was $48.9 million, and Michael S. Dunlap, UFS, Jeffrey R. Noordhoek (an executive officer of the Company), Farmers & Merchants Investment Inc. ("F&M") (which owns 81.4 percent of Union Bank and of which Mr. Dunlap along with his spouse owns 40.3 percent of its stock), Ms. Muhleisen (who is Mr. Dunlap's sister, as well as Director, Chairperson, President, and Chief Executive Officer of Union Bank, and owner of 38.6 percent of F&M stock) and her spouse, and WRCM had investments in the Fund in the amounts of $2.5 million, $1.0 million, $1.0 million, $2.0 million, $2.6 million, and $0.1 million, respectively. The management agreement for the Fund provides that WRCM will earn 50 basis points (annually) from the Fund on the outstanding balance of the investments in the Fund, of which WRCM will pay approximately 50 percent of such amount to Union Bank as custodian. In addition, WRCM will earn up to 50 percent of the gains from the sale of securities from the Fund.
For the three months ended March 31, 2012, the Company recognized $3.0 million of fee revenue related to the agreements discussed above, which is included in "other income" in the Company's consolidated statement of income.
12. Fair Value
The following tables present the Company’s financial assets and liabilities that are measured at fair value on a recurring basis.
As of March 31, 2012
Level 1
Level 2
Total
Assets:
Investments: (a)
Student loan asset-backed securities
$
—
63,736
63,736
Equity securities
5,508
—
5,508
Debt securities
1,308
—
1,308
Total investments
6,816
63,736
70,552
Fair value of derivative instruments (b)
—
107,534
107,534
Total assets
$
6,816
171,270
178,086
Liabilities:
Fair value of derivative instruments (b)
$
—
42,321
42,321
Total liabilities
$
—
42,321
42,321
24
As of December 31, 2011
Level 1
Level 2
Total
Assets:
Investments: (a)
Student loan asset-backed securities
$
—
42,412
42,412
Equity securities
6,847
—
6,847
Debt securities
1,521
—
1,521
Total investments
8,368
42,412
50,780
Fair value of derivative instruments (b)
—
92,219
92,219
Total assets
$
8,368
134,631
142,999
Liabilities:
Fair value of derivative instruments (b)
$
—
43,840
43,840
Total liabilities
$
—
43,840
43,840
(a)
Investments represent investments recorded at fair value on a recurring basis. Level 1 investments are measured based upon quoted prices and include investments traded on an active exchange, such as the New York Stock Exchange, and corporate bonds, mortgage-backed securities, U.S. government bonds, and U.S. Treasury securities that trade in active markets. Level 2 investments include student loan asset-backed securities. The fair value for the student loan asset-backed securities is determined using indicative quotes from broker dealers or an income approach valuation technique (present value using the discount rate adjustment technique) that considers, among other things, rates currently observed in publicly traded debt markets for debt of similar terms to companies with comparable credit risk.
(b)
All derivatives are accounted for at fair value on a recurring basis. The fair value of derivative financial instruments is determined by derivative pricing models using the stated terms of the contracts and observable yield curves, forward foreign currency exchange rates, and volatilities from active markets.
When determining the fair value of derivatives, the Company takes into account counterparty credit risk for positions where it is exposed to the counterparty on a net basis by assessing exposure net of collateral held. The net exposures for each counterparty are adjusted based on market information available for the specific counterparty.
There were no transfers into or out of level 1, level 2, or level 3 for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
.
The following table summarizes the fair values of all of the Company’s financial instruments on the consolidated balance sheets:
As of March 31, 2012
Fair value
Carrying value
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Financial assets:
Student loans receivable
$
23,759,545
23,836,832
—
—
23,759,545
Cash and cash equivalents
60,700
60,700
60,700
—
—
Investments
70,552
70,552
6,816
63,736
—
Restricted cash
421,314
421,314
421,314
—
—
Restricted cash – due to customers
38,642
38,642
38,642
—
—
Restricted investments
284,639
284,639
284,639
—
—
Accrued interest receivable
296,378
296,378
296,378
—
—
Derivative instruments
107,534
107,534
—
107,534
—
Financial liabilities:
Bonds and notes payable
23,010,542
24,060,609
—
23,010,542
—
Accrued interest payable
19,281
19,281
19,281
—
—
Due to customers
38,642
38,642
38,642
—
—
Derivative instruments
42,321
42,321
—
42,321
—
25
As of December 31, 2011
Fair value
Carrying value
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Financial assets:
Student loans receivable
$
23,894,005
24,297,876
—
—
23,894,005
Cash and cash equivalents
42,570
42,570
42,570
—
—
Investments
50,780
50,780
8,368
42,412
—
Restricted cash
377,423
377,423
377,423
—
—
Restricted cash – due to customers
109,809
109,809
109,809
—
—
Restricted investments
236,899
236,899
236,899
—
—
Accrued interest receivable
308,401
308,401
308,401
—
—
Derivative instruments
92,219
92,219
—
92,219
—
Financial liabilities:
Bonds and notes payable
23,003,453
24,434,540
—
23,003,453
—
Accrued interest payable
19,634
19,634
19,634
—
—
Due to customers
109,809
109,809
109,809
—
—
Derivative instruments
43,840
43,840
—
43,840
—
The methodologies for estimating the fair value of financial assets and liabilities that are measured at fair value on a recurring basis are discussed above. The fair values of the remaining financial assets and liabilities were estimated using the following methods and assumptions:
Student Loans Receivable
If the Company has the ability and intent to hold loans for the foreseeable future, such loans are held for investment and carried at amortized cost. Fair values for student loan receivables were determined by modeling loan cash flows using stated terms of the assets and internally-developed assumptions to determine aggregate portfolio yield, net present value, and average life. The significant assumptions used to project cash flows are prepayment speeds, default rates, cost of funds, required return on equity, and future interest rate and indice relationships. A number of significant inputs into the models are internally derived and not observable to market participants.
Cash and Cash Equivalents, Restricted Cash, Restricted Cash – Due to Customers, Restricted Investments, Accrued Interest Receivable/Payable and Due to Customers
The carrying amount approximates fair value due to the variable rate of interest and/or the short maturities of these instruments.
Bonds and Notes Payable
Bonds and notes payable are accounted for at cost in the financial statements except when denominated in a foreign currency. Foreign currency-denominated borrowings are re-measured at current spot rates in the financial statements. The fair value of bonds and notes payable was determined from quotes from broker dealers or through standard bond pricing models using the stated terms of the borrowings, observable yield curves, and market credit spreads. Fair value adjustments for unsecured corporate debt are made based on indicative quotes from observable trades.
Limitations
The fair value estimates are made at a specific point in time based on relevant market information and information about the financial instruments. Because no market exists for a significant portion of the Company's financial instruments, fair value estimates are based on judgments regarding future expected loss experience, current economic conditions, risk characteristics of various financial instruments, and other factors. These estimates are subjective in nature and involve uncertainties and matters of significant judgment and therefore cannot be determined with precision. Therefore, the calculated fair value estimates in many instances cannot be substantiated by comparison to independent markets and, in many cases, may not be realizable in a current sale of the instrument. Changes in assumptions could significantly affect the estimates.
26
13. Legal Proceedings
General
The Company is subject to various claims, lawsuits, and proceedings that arise in the normal course of business. These matters principally consist of claims by student loan borrowers disputing the manner in which their student loans have been processed and disputes with other business entities. In addition, from time to time, the Company receives information and document requests from state or federal regulators concerning its business practices. The Company cooperates with these inquiries and responds to the requests. While the Company cannot predict the ultimate outcome of any inquiry or investigation, the Company believes its activities have materially complied with applicable law, including the Higher Education Act, the rules and regulations adopted by the Department of Education thereunder, and the Department's guidance regarding those rules and regulations. Other than as specifically discussed below, on the basis of present information, anticipated insurance coverage, and advice received from counsel, it is the opinion of the Company's management that the disposition or ultimate determination of these claims, lawsuits, and proceedings will not have a material adverse effect on the Company's business, financial position, or results of operations.
Bais Yaakov of Spring Valley v. Peterson's Nelnet, LLC
On January 4, 2011, a complaint against Peterson's Nelnet, LLC (“Peterson's”), a subsidiary of the Company, was filed in the U.S. federal District Court for the District of New Jersey (the “District Court”). The complaint alleges that Peterson's sent six advertising faxes to the named plaintiff in 2008-2009 that were not the result of express invitation or permission granted by the plaintiff and did not include certain opt out language. The complaint also alleges that such faxes violated the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act (the “TCPA”), purportedly entitling the plaintiff to $500 per violation, trebled for willful violations for each of the six faxes. The complaint further alleges that Peterson's had sent putative class members more than 10,000 faxes that violated the TCPA, amounting to more than $5 million in statutory penalty damages and more than $15 million if trebled for willful violations. The complaint seeks to establish a class action. As of the filing date of this report, the District Court has not established or recognized any class.
On April 14, 2012, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, which has jurisdiction over the District Court, issued an order in an unrelated TCPA case which remanded that case to the District Court to determine whether the statutory provisions of the TCPA limit whether or to what extent a TCPA claim can be heard as a class action in federal court where applicable state law would impose limitations on a class action if the claim were brought in state court. The resolution of this issue may affect whether the claim against Peterson's can be pursued as a class action.
Peterson's intends to continue to contest the suit vigorously. Due to the preliminary stage of this matter and the uncertainty and risks inherent in class determination and the overall litigation process, the Company believes that a meaningful estimate of a reasonably possible loss, if any, or range of reasonably possible losses, if any, cannot currently be made.
14. Subsequent Events
Subsequent to March 31, 2012, state income tax laws were enacted that will reduce the Company's income tax expense by approximately $4.6 million for the quarter ending June 30, 2012.
ITEM 2. MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
(Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations is for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
and
2011
. All dollars are in thousands, except per share amounts, unless otherwise noted.)
The following discussion and analysis provides information that the Company’s management believes is relevant to an assessment and understanding of the consolidated results of operations and financial condition of the Company. The discussion should be read in conjunction with the Company’s consolidated financial statements included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2011
.
Forward-looking and cautionary statements
This report contains forward-looking statements and information that are based on management’s current expectations as of the date of this document. Statements that are not historical facts, including statements about the Company’s plans and expectations for future financial condition, results of operations or economic performance, or that address management’s plans and objectives
27
for future operations, and statements that assume or are dependent upon future events, are forward-looking statements. The words “may,” “should,” “could,” “would,” “predict,” “potential,” “continue,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “future,” “intend,” “plan,” “believe,” “estimate,” “assume,” “forecast,” “will,” and similar expressions, as well as statements in future tense, are intended to identify forward-looking statements.
The forward-looking statements are based on assumptions and analysis made by management in light of management’s experience and its perception of historical trends, current conditions, expected future developments, and other factors that management believes are appropriate under the circumstances. These statements are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions, and other factors that may cause the actual results and performance to be materially different from any future results or performance expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. These factors include, among others, the risks and uncertainties set forth in the “Risk Factors” section included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2011
and subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and elsewhere in this report, and include such risks and uncertainties as:
•
risks related to the Company's student loan portfolio, such as interest rate basis and repricing risk resulting from the fact that the interest rate characteristics of the Company's student loan assets do not match the interest rate characteristics of the funding for those assets, the risk of loss of floor income on certain student loans originated under the Federal Family Education Loan Program (the “FFEL Program” or “FFELP”) of the U.S. Department of Education (the “Department”), risks related to the use of derivatives to manage exposure to interest rate fluctuations, and potential losses from loan defaults, changes in prepayment rates, guaranty rates, loan floor rates, and credit spreads;
•
risks related to the Company's funding requirements, including the Company's ability to maintain credit facilities or obtain new facilities, the ability of lenders under the Company's credit facilities to fulfill their lending commitments under these facilities, the Company's ability to satisfy debt obligations secured by student loan assets and related collateral, and changes in the general interest rate environment and in the securitization markets for education loans, which may increase the costs or limit the availability of financings necessary to purchase, refinance, or continue to carry education loans;
•
risks from changes in the student loan and educational credit and services marketplace resulting from the implementation of, or changes in, applicable laws, regulations, and government programs, including the discontinuance of private sector student loan originations under the FFEL Program effective July 1, 2010, and new regulations effective July 1, 2011 that could affect enrollment at for-profit schools, the uncertain nature of the potential impact of the Department's new loan consolidation initiative or similar consolidation programs, and the Company’s ability to maintain or increase volumes under its loan servicing contract with the Department to service federally-owned student loans and to comply with servicing agreements with third-party customers for the service of loans under the Federal Direct Loan and FFEL Programs;
•
risks from changes in the demand or preferences for educational financing and related services by educational institutions, students, and their families;
•
uncertainties inherent in forecasting future cash flows from student loan assets and related asset-backed securitizations;
•
risks associated with litigation, complex government regulations, changes in general economic conditions (which have recently led to higher rates of student loan defaults), changes in credit market conditions, and related party transactions; and
•
uncertainties inherent in the estimates and assumptions about future events that management is required to make in the preparation of the Company's consolidated financial statements.
All forward-looking statements contained in this report are qualified by these cautionary statements and are made only as of the date of this document. Although the Company may from time to time voluntarily update or revise its prior forward-looking statements to reflect actual results or changes in the Company’s expectations, the Company disclaims any commitment to do so except as required by securities laws.
28
OVERVIEW
The Company is an education services company focused primarily on providing fee-based processing services and quality education-related products and services in four core areas: loan financing, loan servicing, payment processing, and enrollment services (education planning). These products and services help students and families plan, prepare, and pay for their education and make the administrative and financial processes more efficient for schools and financial organizations. In addition, the Company earns net interest income on a portfolio of federally insured student loans.
A summary of consolidated results and financial highlights as of and for the three months ended March 31, 2012 include:
•
Continued strong earnings (net income of $52.7 million, or $1.11 per share, excluding derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments)(a)
•
An increase in book value per share to $23.41, or 18.8%, from March 31, 2011
•
An increase in revenue from fee-based businesses to $120.1 million, or 7.6%, as compared to the first quarter of 2011
•
Strong liquidity represented by $100.6 million of net cash provided by operating activities during the first quarter of 2012 and $495.1 million of liquidity available for use as of March 31, 2012 (b)
The following tables set forth financial and other operating information of the Company.
Three months ended
March 31, 2012
December 31, 2011
March 31, 2011
Operating Data:
Core student loan spread
1.43
%
1.51
%
1.46
%
Net interest income, net of settlements on derivatives
$
79,083
85,868
77,875
Fixed rate floor income, net of settlements on derivatives
38,092
39,373
31,682
Total revenue (c)
193,102
194,800
186,324
Operating expenses
111,172
102,691
99,632
Net income
43,141
64,879
54,880
Net income, excluding derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments (a)
52,693
57,577
54,188
Net income - per share
0.91
1.37
1.13
Net income, excluding derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments - per share (a)
1.11
1.22
1.12
As of
As of
As of
March 31, 2012
December 31, 2011
March 31, 2011
Balance Sheet Data:
Total assets
$
25,446,312
25,852,217
25,294,699
Nelnet, Inc. shareholders' equity
1,107,716
1,066,205
955,367
Nelnet, Inc. tangible shareholders' equity
966,916
920,713
803,513
Book value per common share
23.41
22.62
19.71
Tangible book value per common share
20.43
19.53
16.57
Ratios:
Nelnet, Inc. shareholders' equity to total assets
4.35
%
4.12
%
3.78
%
(a)
"Derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments" include (i) the unrealized gains and losses that are caused by the change in fair value on derivatives in which the Company does not qualify for "hedge treatment" under GAAP; and (ii) the foreign currency transaction gains or losses caused by the re-measurement of the Company's Euro-denominated bonds to U.S. dollars. The derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments, net of tax, was an expense of $9.6 million ($0.20 per share) and income of $7.3 million ($0.15 per share) and $0.7 million ($0.01 per share) for the three months ended March 31, 2012, December 31, 2011, and March 31, 2011, respectively.
(b)
See "Liquidity and Capital Resources - Sources of liquidity currently available" in this Item 2.
(c)
Total revenue includes "net interest income after provision for loan losses" and "total other income" from the Company's statements of income, excluding the impact from the change in fair value on derivatives and the foreign currency transaction adjustments of $15.4 million, $11.8 million, and $1.1 million for the three months ended March 31, 2012, December 31, 2011, and March 31, 2011, respectively.
29
The Company earns fee-based revenue through the following operating segments:
•
Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing ("LGS") - referred to as Nelnet Diversified Solutions ("NDS")
•
Tuition Payment Processing and Campus Commerce ("TPP&CC") - referred to as Nelnet Business Solutions ("NBS")
•
Enrollment Services ("NES") - commonly called Nelnet Enrollment Solutions ("NES")
In addition, the Company earns net interest income on its student loan portfolio in its Asset Generation and Management ("AGM") operating segment.
The information below provides the operating results for each reportable operating segment for the three months ended March 31, 2012 and 2011.
(a)
Total revenue includes "net interest income after provision for loan losses" and "total other income" from the Company's segment statements of income, excluding the impact from the change in fair value on derivatives and the foreign currency transaction adjustment, which were expenses of $21.6 million and $0.6 million for the three months ended March 31, 2012 and 2011, respectively. Net income excludes the change in fair value on derivatives and the foreign currency transaction adjustment which was $13.4 million and $0.4 million for the three months ended March 31, 2012 and 2011, respectively.
30
A summary of the results and financial highlights for each reportable operating segment for the first quarter of 2012 and a summary of the company's liquidity and capital resources follows. See "Results of Operations" for each reportable operating segment and "Liquidity and Capital Resources" under this Item 2 for additional detail.
Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing
•
An increase in government servicing revenue due to increased volume from the Department.
•
An increase in guaranty servicing revenue due to an increase in rehabilitation collection revenue.
•
An increase in software services revenue as a result of the Company beginning to provide hosted student loan servicing to a significant customer in October 2011.
•
A decrease in operating margin due to the government servicing portfolio growing as a percentage of the Company's total servicing portfolio.
•
An increase in operating expenses due to incurring additional costs related to the government servicing contract and the hosted servicing software product.
Tuition Payment Processing and Campus Commerce
•
An increase in revenue as a result of an increase in the number of managed tuition payment plans and campus commerce customers.
•
A slight compression in margin due to an increase in amortization of intangible assets and continued investment in new products and services to meet customer needs and expand product and service offerings.
Enrollment Services
•
Continued decrease in revenue and operating margin due to the effects from regulatory uncertainty in the for-profit college industry, which has caused schools to decrease spending on marketing efforts.
Asset Generation and Management
•
A decrease in variable student loan spread as a result of the widening student loan yield and debt indices (CP/LIBOR spread).
•
Continued recognition of significant fixed rate floor income due to historically low interest rates.
Liquidity and Capital Resources
•
As of March 31, 2012, the Company had $495.1 million of liquidity available for use.
•
For the three months ended March 31, 2012, the Company generated $100.6 million in net cash provided by operating activities.
•
Forecasted future cash flows from the Company's FFELP student loan portfolio remain strong and are estimated to be $1.81 billion as of March 31, 2012.
•
On February 17, 2012, the Company entered into a new $250.0 million unsecured line of credit that has a maturity date of February 17, 2016. In conjunction with entering into this new agreement, the outstanding balance on the previous $750.0 million unsecured line of credit of $64.4 million was paid off in full and that agreement was terminated.
•
The Company will continue to use its strong liquidity position to capitalize on market opportunities, including FFELP student loan acquisitions; strategic acquisitions and investments in its core business areas of loan financing, loan servicing, payment processing, and enrollment services (education planning); and capital management initiatives, including stock repurchases, debt repurchases, and dividend distributions.
31
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
The Company’s operating results are primarily driven by the performance of its existing student loan portfolio and the revenues generated by its fee-based businesses and the costs to provide such services. The performance of the Company’s portfolio is driven by net interest income and losses related to credit quality of the assets, along with the cost to administer and service the assets and related debt.
Net Interest Income
The Company generates a significant portion of its earnings from the spread, referred to as its student loan spread, between the yield the Company receives on its student loan portfolio and the cost of funding these loans. This spread income is reported on the Company’s consolidated statements of income as net interest income. The amortization/accretion of loan premiums and discounts, including capitalized costs of origination, the 1.05% per year consolidation loan rebate fee paid to the Department, and yield adjustments from borrower benefit programs, are netted against loan interest income on the Company’s consolidated statements of income. The amortization of debt issuance costs is included in interest expense on the Company’s consolidated statements of income.
The Company’s portfolio of FFELP loans originated prior to April 1, 2006 earns interest at the higher of a variable rate based on the special allowance payment or SAP formula set by the Department and the borrower rate. The SAP formula is based on an applicable indice plus a fixed spread that is dependent upon when the loan was originated, the loan’s repayment status, and funding sources for the loan. The Company’s portfolio of FFELP loans originated on or after April 1, 2006 earns interest at a variable rate based on the SAP formula. For the portfolio of loans originated on or after April 1, 2006, when the borrower rate exceeds the variable rate based on the SAP formula, the Company must return the excess to the Department.
Because the Company generates a significant portion of its earnings from its student loan spread, the interest rate sensitivity of the Company’s balance sheet is very important to its operations. The current and future interest rate environment can and will affect the Company’s interest earnings, net interest income, and net income. The effects of changing interest rate environments are further outlined in Item 3, “Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk — Interest Rate Risk.”
Investment interest income, which is a component of net interest income, includes income from unrestricted interest-earning deposits and investments and funds in the Company’s special purpose entities which are utilized for its asset-backed securitizations.
Net interest income also includes interest expense on unsecured debt offerings. The proceeds from these unsecured debt offerings were used by the Company to fund general business operations and certain asset and business acquisitions.
Provision for Loan Losses
Management estimates and establishes an allowance for loan losses through a provision charged to expense. Losses are charged against the allowance when management believes the collection of the loan principal is unlikely. Recovery of amounts previously charged off is credited to the allowance for loan losses. Management maintains the allowance for federally insured and non-federally insured loans at a level believed to be appropriate to provide for estimated probable credit losses inherent in the loan portfolio. This evaluation is inherently subjective because it requires estimates that may be susceptible to significant changes. The Company analyzes the allowance separately for its federally insured loans and its non-federally insured loans.
The allowance for the federally insured loan portfolio is based on periodic evaluations of the Company’s loan portfolios considering loans in repayment versus those in a nonpaying status, delinquency status, trends in defaults in the portfolio based on Company and industry data, past experience, trends in student loan claims rejected for payment by guarantors, changes to federal student loan programs, current economic conditions, and other relevant factors. The federal government guarantees 97% of the principal of and the interest on federally insured student loans disbursed on and after July 1, 2006 (and 98% for those loans disbursed prior to July 1, 2006), which limits the Company’s loss exposure on the outstanding balance of the Company’s federally insured portfolio. Student loans disbursed prior to October 1, 1993 are fully insured.
In determining the appropriateness of the allowance for loan losses on the non-federally insured loans, the Company considers several factors including: loans in repayment versus those in a nonpaying status, delinquency status, type of program, trends in defaults in the portfolio based on Company and industry data, past experience, current economic conditions, and other relevant factors. The Company places a non-federally insured loan on nonaccrual status when the collection of principal and interest is 30 days past due, and charges off the loan and accrued interest when the collection of principal and interest is 120 days past due.
32
Other Income
The Company also earns fees and generates revenue from other sources as summarized below.
Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing Revenue
– Student loan and guaranty servicing revenue consists of the following items:
•
Loan and guaranty servicing fees
- Loan servicing fees are determined according to individual agreements with customers and are calculated based on the dollar value of loans, number of loans, or number of borrowers serviced for each customer. Guaranty servicing fees, generally, are calculated based on the number of loans serviced, volume of loans serviced, or amounts collected. Revenue is recognized when earned pursuant to applicable agreements, and when ultimate collection is assured.
•
Software services revenue
- Software services revenue is determined from individual agreements with customers and includes license and maintenance fees associated with student loan software products. Computer and software consulting and remote hosting revenues are recognized over the period in which services are provided to customers.
Tuition Payment Processing and Campus Commerce Revenue
– Tuition payment processing and campus commerce revenue primarily includes actively managed tuition payment solutions and online payment processing. Fees for these services are recognized over the period in which services are provided to customers.
Enrollment Services Revenue
– Enrollment services revenue primarily consists of the following items:
•
Inquiry Generation
- Inquiry generation services include delivering qualified inquiries or clicks to third-party customers, primarily for-profit schools.
•
Inquiry Management (Agency)
- Agency services include managing the marketing activities for third-party customers, primarily for-profit schools, in order to provide qualified inquiries or clicks.
•
Inquiry Management (Software)
- Inquiry management services include the licensing of software to third-party customers, primarily for-profit schools. This software is also used internally by the Company. The inquiry management software has been adapted so that it can be offered as a hosted software solution that can be used by third-parties to manage and obtain qualified inquiries or clicks.
Inquiry generation and management revenue described above is derived primarily from fees which are earned through the delivery of qualified inquiries or clicks. The Company recognizes revenue when persuasive evidence of an arrangement exists, delivery has occurred, the fee is fixed or determinable, and collectability is reasonably assured. Delivery is deemed to have occurred at the time a qualified inquiry or click is delivered to the customer provided that no significant obligations remain. From time to time, the Company may agree to credit certain inquiries or clicks if they fail to meet the contractual or other guidelines of a particular client. The Company has established a sales reserve based on historical experience. To date, such credits have been immaterial and within management’s expectations.
For a portion of its inquiry generation and management revenue, the Company has agreements with providers of online media or traffic (“Publishers”) used in the generation of inquiries or clicks. The Company receives a fee from its customers and pays a fee to Publishers either on a cost per inquiry, cost per click, or cost per number of impressions basis. The Company is the primary obligor in the transaction. As a result, the fees paid by the Company’s customers are recognized as revenue and the fees paid to its Publishers are included in “cost to provide enrollment services” in the Company’s consolidated statements of income.
•
Digital Marketing (Peterson's Interactive)
- Digital marketing services include on-line information about colleges and universities and are sold primarily based on subscriptions. Revenues from sales of subscription services are recognized ratably over the term of the contract as earned. Subscription revenues received or receivable in advance of the delivery of services is included in deferred revenue. Digital marketing services also include on-line editing services for admission essays. Fees for these services are recognized over the period in which services are provided to customers.
•
Content Solutions
- Content solutions includes test preparation study guides, school directories and databases, career exploration guides, on-line courses, scholarship search and selection data, career planning, and on-line information about colleges and universities. Several of these services are sold based on subscriptions. Revenues from sales of subscription services are recognized ratably over the term of the contract as earned. Subscription revenues received or receivable in advance of the delivery of services is included in deferred revenue. Revenue from the sale of print products is generally
33
earned and recognized, net of estimated returns, upon shipment or delivery. All other services are recognized over the period in which services are provided to customers. Content solutions also includes providing list marketing services to help higher education institutions and businesses reach the middle school, high school, college bound high school, college, and young adult market places. Revenue from the sale of lists is generally earned and recognized, net of estimated returns, upon delivery.
Other income -
Other income includes realized and unrealized gains and losses on investments and borrower late fee income, which is earned by the education lending subsidiaries and is recognized when payments are collected from the borrower. Other income also includes investment advisory income, which is recognized as these services are provided to customers.
Operating Expenses
Operating expenses includes indirect costs incurred to acquire student loans; costs incurred to manage and administer the Company's student loan portfolio and its financing transactions; costs incurred to service the Company's student loan portfolio and the portfolios of third parties; collection costs related to rehabilitation revenue; the cost to provide enrollment services; costs incurred to provide tuition payment processing and campus commerce to third parties; the depreciation and amortization of capital assets and intangible assets; investments in products, services, and technology to meet customer needs and support continued revenue growth; and other general and administrative expenses. The cost to provide enrollment services, as discussed previously, consists of costs incurred to provide inquiry generation, agency, digital marketing, and content solutions services in the Company's Enrollment Services operating segment.
Consolidated Results - Summary and Comparison of Operating Results
Net Interest Income (net of settlements on derivatives)
Three months ended March 31,
Change
2012
2011
$
%
Interest income:
Loan interest
$
153,058
137,358
15,700
11.4
%
Investment interest
1,095
726
369
50.8
Total interest income
154,153
138,084
16,069
11.6
Interest expense:
Interest on bonds and notes payable
69,297
52,307
16,990
32.5
Net interest income
84,856
85,777
(921
)
(1.1
)
Provision for loan losses
6,000
3,750
2,250
60.0
Net interest income after provision for loan losses
78,856
82,027
(3,171
)
(3.9
)
Derivative settlements, net (a)
227
(4,152
)
4,379
(105.5
)
Net interest income after provision for loan losses (net of settlements on derivatives)
$
79,083
77,875
1,208
1.6
%
(a)
The Company maintains an overall risk management strategy that incorporates the use of derivative instruments to reduce the economic effect of interest rate volatility. Management has structured the majority of the Company’s derivative transactions with the intent that each is economically effective; however, the Company’s derivative instruments do not qualify for hedge accounting. Derivative settlements for each applicable period should be evaluated with the Company’s net interest income.
34
Net interest income after provision for loan losses, net of settlements on derivatives, includes the following items:
Three months ended March 31,
Change
2012
2011
$
%
Variable student loan interest margin, net of settlements on derivatives (a)
$
47,335
52,644
(5,309
)
(10.1
)%
Fixed rate floor income, net of settlements on derivatives (b)
38,092
31,682
6,410
20.2
Investment interest
1,095
726
369
50.8
Non-portfolio related derivative settlements
—
(114
)
114
(100.0
)
Corporate debt interest expense (c)
(1,439
)
(3,313
)
1,874
(56.6
)
Provision for loan losses (d)
(6,000
)
(3,750
)
(2,250
)
60.0
Net interest income after provision for loan losses (net of settlements on derivatives)
$
79,083
77,875
1,208
1.6
%
(a)
Variable student loan spread is impacted by variable rate student loan interest, consolidation rebate fees, amortization/accretion of loan premiums and discounts, and interest expense on bonds and notes. See "Asset Generation and Management Operating Segment – Results of Operations" in this Item 2 for additional information.
(b)
The Company has a portfolio of student loans that are earning interest at a fixed borrower rate which exceeds the statutorily defined variable lender rates generating fixed rate floor income. See Item 3, “Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk – Interest Rate Risk” for additional information.
(c)
Corporate debt interest expense includes interest expense incurred by the Company on its Junior Subordinated Hybrid Securities and its unsecured line of credit. Corporate debt interest expense decreased for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
compared with the same
period
in
2011
due to a reduction in debt outstanding. The Company repurchased $62.6 million of Junior Subordinated Hybrid Securities in February 2011. The average balance outstanding on the Company's unsecured line of credit was $33.3 million during the first quarter of 2012 compared to $202.1 million in 2011.
(d)
The provision for loan losses represents the periodic expense of maintaining an allowance sufficient to absorb losses inherent in the Company's portfolio of loans. The provision for loan losses recognized by the Company increased during the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
compared to the same
period
in
2011
, primarily due to an increase in delinquent loans.
Other Income
Three months ended March 31,
Change
2012
2011
$
%
Loan and guaranty servicing revenue (a)
$
49,488
40,413
9,075
22.5
%
Tuition payment processing and campus commerce revenue (b)
21,913
19,369
2,544
13.1
Enrollment services revenue (c)
31,664
33,868
(2,204
)
(6.5
)
Other income (d)
10,954
6,492
4,462
68.7
Gain on sale of loans and debt repurchases (e)
—
8,307
(8,307
)
(100.0
)
Derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments (f)
(15,407
)
1,116
(16,523
)
(1,480.6
)
Derivative settlements, net (g)
227
(4,152
)
4,379
(105.5
)
Total other income
$
98,839
105,413
(6,574
)
(6.2
)%
(a)
"Loan and guaranty servicing revenue" increased for the three months ended
March 31, 2012
compared to the same period in
2011
due to an increase in servicing revenue from the Department of Education, an increase in guaranty servicing revenue, and an increase in software services revenue. See Item 2 under "Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing Operating Segment – Results of Operations" for additional information.
(b)
"Tuition payment processing and campus commerce revenue" increased due to an increase in the number of managed tuition payment plans and campus commerce customers as discussed in this Item 2 under "Tuition Payment Processing and Campus Commerce Operating Segment – Results of Operations."
35
(c)
"Enrollment services revenue" decreased due to decreases in inquiry generation and inquiry management volume, as further discussed in this Item 2 under "Enrollment Services Operating Segment – Results of Operations." Enrollment services revenue has been negatively affected by the ongoing regulatory uncertainty in the for-profit college industry, which has caused schools to decrease spending on marketing efforts.
(d)
The following table summarizes the components of "other income."
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Borrower late fee income
$
3,703
3,590
Investment advisory fees (1)
2,989
—
Investments - realized gains/(losses), net
1,610
(1,760
)
529 Plan administration fees
420
1,133
Trading investments - unrealized gains/(losses), net
(192
)
1,922
Other
2,424
1,607
Other income
$
10,954
6,492
(1) The Company provides investment advisory services through its subsidiary, WRCM, and earns annual fees of 25 basis points on the outstanding balance of investments and up to 50 percent of the gains from the sale of securities in which it provides advisory services. As of March 31, 2012, the outstanding balance of investments subject to these arrangements was approximately $520 million.
(e)
During the first quarter of 2011, the Company sold a portfolio of non-federally insured student loans and recognized a gain of $1.4 million. In addition, during the first quarter of 2011, the Company purchased $62.6 million (notional amount) of its Junior Subordinated Hybrid Securities (unsecured debt) for $55.7 million and recognized a gain of $6.9 million. Due to improvements in the capital markets, the opportunities for the Company to repurchase debt at less than par are becoming more limited.
(f)
The change in “derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments” is the result of the change in the fair value of the Company’s derivative portfolio and translation gains/losses resulting from the re-measurement of the Company’s Euro-denominated bonds to U.S. dollars. These changes are summarized below.
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Change in fair value of derivatives - income (expense)
$
16,835
66,450
Foreign currency transaction adjustment - income (expense)
(32,242
)
(65,334
)
Derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments - income (expense)
$
(15,407
)
1,116
(g)
The Company maintains an overall risk management strategy that incorporates the use of derivative instruments to reduce the economic effect of interest rate volatility. Management has structured the majority of the Company’s derivative transactions with the intent that each is economically effective; however, the Company’s derivative instruments do not qualify for hedge accounting. Derivative settlements for each applicable period should be evaluated with the Company’s net interest income.
Further detail of the components of derivative settlements is included in Item 3, "Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk."
36
Operating Expenses
As shown below, operating expenses, excluding the cost to provide enrollment services and collection costs related to loan rehabilitation revenue, increased $11.2 million (15.2%) for the three months ended
March 31, 2012
compared to the same
period
in
2011
.
Three months ended March 31,
Change
2012
2011
$
%
Salaries and benefits
$
49,095
43,912
5,183
11.8
%
Depreciation and amortization
8,136
6,776
1,360
20.1
Other expenses
27,465
22,804
4,661
20.4
Operating expenses, excluding cost to provide enrollment services and collection costs related to loan rehabilitation revenue
84,696
73,492
$
11,204
15.2
%
Cost to provide enrollment services
21,678
22,839
Collection costs related to loan rehabilitation revenue (a)
4,798
3,301
Total operating expenses
$
111,172
99,632
(a)
The Company incurred collection costs directly related to revenue earned from rehabilitation loans. These costs are included in "other" under the operating expense section of the consolidated statements of income and are shown separately in the above table for comparability purposes for the periods shown.
The increase in operating expenses for the three months ended March 31, 2012 compared to the same period in 2011 was due to the addition of resources and incurring other expenses to (i) support the growth in loan and guaranty servicing revenue and improve survey results related to the government servicing contract; (ii) support the hosted servicing software product; (iii) implement and comply with the Special Direct Consolidation program; and (iv) support the increase in the number of managed tuition payment plans and campus commerce customers.
Income Taxes
The Company's effective tax rate was 35.0% for the three months ended March 31, 2012 compared to 37.5% for the same period in 2011. The effective tax rate for 2012 decreased compared to the same period in 2011 due to state incentive tax credits and an overall reduction of the state effective tax rate.
Subsequent to March 31, 2012, state income tax laws were enacted that will reduce the Company's income tax expense by approximately $4.6 million for the quarter ending June 30, 2012.
Segment Operating Results
Additional information on the Company’s results of operations is included with the discussion of the Company’s operating segments in this Item 2 under “Operating Segments.”
37
Financial Condition as of
March 31, 2012
compared to
December 31, 2011
As of
As of
Change
March 31, 2012
December 31, 2011
$
%
Assets:
Student loans receivable, net
$
23,836,832
24,297,876
(461,044
)
(1.9
)%
Cash, cash equivalents, and investments
875,847
817,481
58,366
7.1
Goodwill
117,118
117,118
—
—
Intangible assets, net
23,682
28,374
(4,692
)
(16.5
)
Fair value of derivative instruments
107,534
92,219
15,315
16.6
Other assets
485,299
499,149
(13,850
)
(2.8
)
Total assets
$
25,446,312
25,852,217
(405,905
)
(1.6
)%
Liabilities:
Bonds and notes payable
$
24,060,609
24,434,540
(373,931
)
(1.5
)%
Fair value of derivative instruments
42,321
43,840
(1,519
)
(3.5
)
Other liabilities
235,509
307,632
(72,123
)
(23.4
)
Total liabilities
24,338,439
24,786,012
(447,573
)
(1.8
)
Shareholders' equity
Nelnet, Inc. shareholders' equity
1,107,716
1,066,205
41,511
3.9
Noncontrolling interest
157
—
157
100.0
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity
$
25,446,312
25,852,217
(405,905
)
(1.6
)%
The primary items on the Company's balance sheet are student loans and notes payable. During the three months ended March 31, 2012, student loans receivable decreased primarily as a result of repayments and the loss of loans to consolidation to external parties, partially offset by loan acquisitions during the quarter. See the activity of loans acquired and loan repayments in this Item 2 under "Asset Generation and Management - Results of Operations." Bonds and notes payable decreased primarily as a result of less funding needs as the student loan portfolio decreases.
OPERATING SEGMENTS
The results of each of the Company's reportable operating segments, as well as descriptions of the segments, are included in note 10, "Segment Reporting," in the notes to the consolidated financial statements included in this report. The following provides additional information and analysis of the results of operations for each reportable segment.
38
STUDENT LOAN AND GUARANTY SERVICING OPERATING SEGMENT – RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
The following are the primary services the Company offers as part of its Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing segment:
•
Servicing FFELP loans
•
Originating and servicing non-federally insured student loans
•
Servicing federally-owned student loans for the Department of Education
•
Servicing and outsourcing services for guaranty agencies
•
Providing student loan servicing software and other information technology products and services
The Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing operating segment provides for the servicing of the Company's student loan portfolio and the portfolios of third parties. The loan servicing activities include loan origination activities, loan conversion activities, application processing, borrower updates, payment processing, due diligence procedures, funds management reconciliations, and claim processing. These activities are performed internally for the Company's portfolio in addition to generating external fee revenue when performed for third-party clients.
Beginning in 2009, the Company began servicing loans for the Department of Education as further discussed below.
This operating segment also provides servicing activities for guarantee agencies. These activities include providing software and data center services, borrower and loan updates, default aversion tracking services, claim processing services, and managing third-party collection agencies.
This operating segment also provides student loan servicing software, which is used internally by the Company and licensed to third-party student loan holders and servicers. This software system has been adapted so that it can be offered as a hosted servicing software solution that can be used by third-parties to service various types of student loans, including Federal Direct Loan Program and FFEL Program loans. In October 2011, the Company began hosting student loan servicing volume on its servicing software platforms for a significant customer. The Company earns a monthly fee from remote hosting customers for each unique borrower on the Company's platform. As of
March 31, 2012
,
8.6 million
borrowers were hosted on the Company's hosted servicing software solution platforms. In addition, this operating segment provides information technology products and services, with core areas of business in educational loan software solutions, technical consulting services, and enterprise content management solutions.
Direct Loan Servicing Contract
In June 2009, the Company was one of four private sector companies awarded a student loan servicing contract by the Department to provide additional servicing capacity for loans owned by the Department. These loans include Direct Loan Program loans and FFEL Program loans purchased by the Department. The Company earns a monthly fee from the Department for each unique borrower that has loans owned by the Department that are serviced by the Company. In September 2009, the Department began assigning FFELP purchased loans to the four servicers. Beginning with the second year of servicing, the Department began allocating new loan volume among the four servicers based on five performance metrics.
•
Three metrics measure the satisfaction among separate customer groups, including borrowers, financial aid personnel at postsecondary schools participating in the federal student loan programs, and Federal Student Aid and other federal agency personnel or contractors who work with the servicers.
•
Two performance metrics measure the success of default prevention efforts as reflected by the percentage of borrowers and percentage of dollars in each servicer’s portfolio that go into default.
Based on the first and second years of survey results, the Company was ranked fourth out of the four private sector companies and has been allocated 16% of new loan volume originated by the Department from the period from August 15, 2010 through August 14, 2012 (the second and third years of the servicing contract). The Department projects it will originate new loans for 4.1 million borrowers in total during the third year of this contract (August 15, 2011 through August 14, 2012), which is currently being allocated to the four servicers. The Company is focused on improving survey results to increase this allocation in future periods and has and will continue to incur additional operating expenses in support of these initiatives. Based on the most recent survey results that will affect the next year of loan allocations by the Department, the Company has improved upon its ranking among the other servicers. The improved survey results could lead to a larger allocation of loan volume to the Company during the fourth year of this contract (August 15, 2012 through August 14, 2013).
The servicing contract with the Department spans five years (through June 2014), with one five-year renewal at the option of the Department. Servicing loans under this contract will increase revenue earned by this segment. However, as the federally-owned
39
student loan portfolio becomes a larger portion of the Company's total student loan servicing portfolio, operating margins are expected to be lower than historical levels achieved.
Student Loan Servicing Volumes (dollars in millions)
Company owned
$23,139
$23,727
$23,249
$22,757
$22,503
$22,650
$22,277
% of Total
61.6%
38.6%
34.2%
33.0%
30.2%
29.8%
27.1%
Number of servicing borrowers:
Government servicing:
441,913
2,804,502
2,814,142
2,666,183
2,966,706
3,036,534
3,096,026
FFELP servicing:
2,311,558
1,912,748
1,870,538
1,837,272
1,812,582
1,799,484
1,779,245
Total:
2,753,471
4,717,250
4,684,680
4,503,455
4,779,288
4,836,018
4,875,271
Summary and Comparison of Operating Results
Three months ended March 31,
Change
2012
2011
$
%
Net interest income
$
20
15
5
33.3
%
Loan and guaranty servicing revenue
49,488
40,413
9,075
22.5
Intersegment servicing revenue
16,954
17,857
(903
)
(5.1
)
Total other income
66,442
58,270
8,172
14.0
Salaries and benefits
29,042
25,388
3,654
14.4
Depreciation and amortization
4,413
3,406
1,007
29.6
Other expenses
18,666
14,579
4,087
28.0
Intersegment expenses, net
1,385
1,369
16
1.2
Total operating expenses
53,506
44,742
8,764
19.6
Income before income taxes and corporate overhead allocation
12,956
13,543
(587
)
(4.3
)
Corporate overhead allocation
(1,503
)
(753
)
(750
)
99.6
Income before income taxes
11,453
12,790
(1,337
)
(10.5
)
Income tax expense
(4,352
)
(4,860
)
508
(10.5
)
Net income
$
7,101
7,930
(829
)
(10.5
)%
Before Tax Operating Margin
17.2
%
21.9
%
40
Loan and guaranty servicing revenue
.
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Origination
revenue
Servicing
revenue
Total
revenue
Origination
revenue
Servicing
revenue
Total
revenue
FFELP servicing (a)
$
—
6,714
6,714
—
6,997
6,997
Private servicing
195
2,073
2,268
274
2,143
2,417
Government servicing (b)
—
14,810
14,810
—
12,285
12,285
Guaranty servicing (c)
—
18,029
18,029
—
13,937
13,937
Software services (d)
—
7,667
7,667
—
4,777
4,777
Loan and guaranty servicing revenue
$
195
49,293
49,488
274
40,139
40,413
(a)
FFELP servicing revenue
decreased
in
2012
compared to
2011
due to the loss of servicing volume from third-party customers as a result of these customers selling their portfolios to the Company and/or the Department under the Purchase Program. The decrease is also due to third-party customers' FFELP portfolios decreasing in size due to runoff.
(b)
Government servicing revenue
increased
during
2012
compared to
2011
due to an increase in volume from the Department.
(c)
Guaranty servicing revenue
increased
in
2012
compared to
2011
due to an increase in revenue earned from rehabilitation collections on defaulted loan assets. For the three months ended
March 31, 2012
, the Company earned
$10.1 million
in revenue from rehabilitation collections compared to
$6.5 million
for the same period in
2011
. Excluding the rehabilitation collection revenue, guaranty servicing revenue
increased
$0.4 million
.
(d)
In October 2011, the Company began providing hosted student loan servicing to a significant customer, which resulted in an increase in software services revenue compared to the prior year. This increase was offset by a reduction in revenue due to a decrease in the number of other products and services provided to external customers as a result of legislative changes in the student loan industry.
Intersegment servicing revenue
.
Intersegment servicing revenue includes servicing revenue earned by the Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing operating segment as a result of servicing loans for the Asset Generation and Management operating segment.
Operating expenses
.
Excluding collection costs related to loan rehabilitation revenue,
operating expenses increased $9.4 million (23.8%)
for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
,
compared with the same
period
in
2011
. These increases were due to incurring additional costs related to:
•
Supporting the increase in government servicing volume
•
Supporting initiatives to improve performance metrics under the government servicing contract
•
Supporting the additional volume that was added to the Company's servicing platforms in October 2011 related to the hosted servicing software solution
There is potential for continued compression of operating margin in this operating segment as a result of the government servicing portfolio growing as a percentage of the Company’s total servicing portfolio.
TUITION PAYMENT PROCESSING AND CAMPUS COMMERCE OPERATING SEGMENT – RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
The Company’s Tuition Payment Processing and Campus Commerce operating segment provides products and services to help students and families manage the payment of education costs at all levels (K-12 and higher education). It also provides innovative education-focused technologies, services, and support solutions to help schools with the everyday challenges of collecting and processing commerce data.
In the K-12 market, the Company offers actively managed tuition payment plans as well as assistance with financial needs assessment and donor management. The Company offers two principal products to the higher education market: actively managed tuition payment plans and campus commerce technologies and payment processing.
41
This segment of the Company’s business is subject to seasonal fluctuations which correspond, or are related to, the traditional school year. Tuition management revenue is recognized over the course of the academic term, but the peak operational activities take place in summer and early fall. Revenue associated with providing electronic commerce subscription services is recognized over the service period with the highest revenue months being July through September and December and January. The Company’s operating expenses do not follow the seasonality of the revenues. This is primarily due to generally fixed year-round personnel costs and seasonal marketing costs. For example, generally revenue and pre-tax operating margin are higher in the first and third quarters and lower in the second and fourth quarters.
Summary and Comparison of Operating Results
Three months ended March 31,
Change
2012
2011
$
%
Net interest income
$
4
6
(2
)
(33.3
)%
Tuition payment processing and campus commerce revenue
21,913
19,369
2,544
13.1
Salaries and benefits
8,618
7,152
1,466
20.5
Depreciation and amortization
1,740
1,334
406
30.4
Other expenses
2,816
2,634
182
6.9
Intersegment expenses, net
1,333
1,093
240
22.0
Total operating expenses
14,507
12,213
2,294
18.8
Income before income taxes and corporate overhead allocation
7,410
7,162
248
3.5
Corporate overhead allocation
(501
)
(251
)
(250
)
99.6
Income before income taxes
6,909
6,911
(2
)
—
Income tax expense
(2,625
)
(2,626
)
1
—
Net income
$
4,284
4,285
(1
)
—
%
Before Tax Operating Margin
31.5
%
35.7
%
Tuition payment processing and campus commerce revenue
. Tuition payment processing and campus commerce revenue
increased
for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
compared to the same
period
in
2011
as a result of an increase in the number of managed tuition payment plans, as well as an increase in campus commerce customers.
Operating expenses
.
Operating expenses
increased
for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
compared to the same periods in
2011
as a result of incurring additional costs to support the increase in the number of managed tuition payment plans and campus commerce customers. In addition, the Company continues to invest in new products and services to meet customer needs and expand product and service offerings. The 2012 operating expenses includes $0.6 million of amortization expense related to the acquisition of tuition payment plan contracts in June 2011. These investments increased operating expenses in
2012
compared to
2011
.
ENROLLMENT SERVICES OPERATING SEGMENT – RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
The Enrollment Services operating segment offers products and services that are focused on helping colleges recruit and retain students and helping students plan and prepare for life after high school. The following are the primary service offerings the Company offers as part of the Enrollment Services segment:
•
Inquiry Generation - Inquiry generation services include delivering qualified inquiries or clicks to third-party customers, primarily for-profit schools.
•
Inquiry Management (Agency) - Agency services include managing the marketing activities for third-party customers, primarily for-profit schools, in order to provide qualified inquiries or clicks.
•
Inquiry Management (Software) - Inquiry management services includes the licensing of software to third-party customers, primarily for-profit schools. This software is also used internally by the Company. The inquiry management software has been adapted so that it can be offered as a hosted software solution that can be used by third-parties to manage and obtain qualified inquiries or clicks.
42
•
Digital Marketing (Peterson's Interactive) - Digital marketing services include on-line information about colleges and universities and are sold primarily based on subscriptions. Digital marketing services also includes online editing services for admission essays.
•
Content Solutions - Content solutions includes test preparation study guides, school directories and databases, career exploration guides, on-line courses, scholarship search and selection data, career planning, and on-line information about colleges and universities. Content solutions also includes providing list marketing services to help higher education institutions and businesses reach the middle school, high school, college bound high school, college, and young adult market places.
Summary and Comparison of Operating Results
Three months ended March 31,
Change
2012
2011
$
%
Enrollment services revenue
$
31,664
33,868
(2,204
)
(6.5
)%
Salaries and benefits
6,279
6,257
22
0.4
Cost to provide enrollment services
21,678
22,839
(1,161
)
(5.1
)
Depreciation and amortization
1,617
1,691
(74
)
(4.4
)
Other expenses
1,956
2,318
(362
)
(15.6
)
Intersegment expenses, net
848
818
30
3.7
Total operating expenses
32,378
33,923
(1,545
)
(4.6
)
Loss before income taxes and corporate overhead allocation
(714
)
(55
)
(659
)
1,198.2
Corporate overhead allocation
(501
)
(251
)
(250
)
99.6
Loss before income taxes
(1,215
)
(306
)
(909
)
297.1
Income tax benefit
462
117
345
294.9
Net loss
$
(753
)
(189
)
(564
)
298.4
%
Before Tax Operating Margin
(3.8
)%
(0.9
)%
Enrollment services revenue, cost to provide enrollment services, and gross profit
Three months ended March 31, 2012
Inquiry Generation (a)
Inquiry Management (Agency) (b)
Inquiry Management (Software)
Digital Marketing (Peterson's Interactive)
Content Solutions
Total
Enrollment services revenue
$
4,552
20,365
894
1,197
4,656
31,664
Cost to provide enrollment services
2,700
18,214
—
58
706
21,678
Gross profit
$
1,852
2,151
894
1,139
3,950
9,986
Gross profit %
40.7%
10.6%
Three months ended March 31, 2011
Inquiry Generation (a)
Inquiry Management (Agency) (b)
Inquiry Management (Software)
Digital Marketing (Peterson's Interactive)
Content Solutions
Total
Enrollment services revenue
$
6,258
21,339
586
1,157
4,528
33,868
Cost to provide enrollment services
3,674
18,651
—
76
438
22,839
Gross profit
$
2,584
2,688
586
1,081
4,090
11,029
Gross profit %
41.3%
12.6%
(a)
Inquiry generation revenue decreased $1.7 million (27.3%) for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
compared to the same
period
in
2011
as a result of a decrease in services volume. The gross profit margin for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
compared to the same
period
in
2011
decreased as a result of more competitive pricing. Revenue and
43
profit margin have been affected by the ongoing regulatory uncertainty in the for-profit college industry, which has caused schools to decrease spending on marketing efforts.
(b)
Inquiry management revenue decreased $1.0 million (4.6%) for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
compared to the same
period
in
2011
as a result of a decrease in volume. The gross margin decreased as a result of more competitive pricing. Revenue and profit margin have been affected by the ongoing regulatory uncertainty in the for-profit college industry, which has caused schools to decrease spending on marketing efforts.
Operating expenses
.
Excluding the cost to provide enrollment services, operating expenses for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
decreased $0.4 million (3.5%) compared to the same
period
in
2011
due to cost saving measures relating to the decline in revenue.
ASSET GENERATION AND MANAGEMENT OPERATING SEGMENT – RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
The Asset Generation and Management Operating Segment includes the acquisition, management, and ownership of the Company’s student loan assets, which has historically been the Company’s largest product and service offering. The Company generates a substantial portion of its earnings from the spread, referred to as the Company’s student loan spread, between the yield it receives on its student loan portfolio and the associated costs to finance such portfolio. The student loan assets are held in a series of education lending subsidiaries designed specifically for this purpose. In addition to the student loan spread earned on its portfolio, all costs and activity associated with managing the portfolio, such as servicing of the assets and debt maintenance are included in this segment.
Student Loan Portfolio
The table below outlines the components of the Company’s student loan portfolio:
As of
As of
March 31, 2012
December 31, 2011
Federally insured loans:
Stafford and other
$
7,257,986
7,480,182
Consolidation
16,623,497
16,852,527
Total
23,881,483
24,332,709
Non-federally insured loans
24,825
26,916
23,906,308
24,359,625
Unamortized loan (discount) premium and deferred origination costs, net
(21,041
)
(13,267
)
Allowance for loan losses – federally insured loans
(36,783
)
(37,205
)
Allowance for loan losses – non-federally insured loans
(11,652
)
(11,277
)
$
23,836,832
24,297,876
Allowance for federally insured loans as a percentage of such loans
0.15
%
0.15
%
Allowance for non-federally insured loans as a percentage of such loans
46.94
%
41.90
%
Loan Activity
The following table sets forth the activity of loans.
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Beginning balance
$
24,359,625
23,784,069
Loan acquisitions (a)
183,293
240,733
Repayments, claims, capitalized interest, participations, and other
(437,039
)
(424,896
)
Consolidation loans lost to external parties
(165,908
)
(205,710
)
Loans sold
(33,663
)
(3,000
)
Ending balance
$
23,906,308
23,391,196
44
(a)
As a result of legislation effective July 1, 2010, all new federal loan originations are made by the Department of Education through the Direct Loan Program and the Company no longer originates FFELP loans. However, the Company believes there will be opportunities to continue to purchase FFELP loan portfolios from current FFELP participants looking to adjust their businesses.
Allowance for Loan Losses, Loan Repurchase Obligations, and Loan Delinquencies
The provision for loan losses represents the periodic expense of maintaining an allowance sufficient to absorb losses, net of recoveries, inherent in the portfolio of student loans.
In addition, the Company’s servicing operations are obligated to repurchase loans subject to certain participation interests in the event such loans become 60 or 90 days delinquent, and the Company has also retained credit risk related to certain non-federally insured loans sold and will pay cash to purchase back any of these loans which become 60 days delinquent. The Company’s estimate related to its obligation to repurchase these loans is included in “other liabilities” in the Company’s consolidated balance sheets.
Delinquencies have the potential to adversely impact the Company’s earnings through increased servicing and collection costs and account charge-offs.
Activity in the allowance for loan losses and accrual related to the Company's loan repurchase obligations for the three months ended March 31, 2012 and 2011 and a summary of the Company's student loan delinquency amounts as of March 31, 2012, December 31, 2011, and March 31, 2011 is included in note 2, "Student Loans Receivable and Allowance for Loan Losses," in the notes to the consolidated financial statements included in this report.
The delinquency trends on the Company's portfolio of federally insured loans increased as of
December 31, 2011
compared to
March 31, 2011
due to the sustained downturn in the economy. During the
first
quarter of
2012
, the notional amount of delinquent loans has improved as the Company continues to allocate resources to improve the performance of its portfolio. However, the increase in the amount of loans delinquent compared to the prior year has resulted in an increase in the federally insured loan provision for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
compared to
March 31, 2011
.
The Company's non-federally insured loan portfolio has decreased since 2008 as a result of loan sales, runoff, and the Company no longer originating non-federally insured loans. The amortization of the non-federally insured student loan portfolio has resulted in provision expense being less than charge-offs during the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
and
2011
.
Student Loan Spread Analysis
The following table analyzes the student loan spread on the Company’s portfolio of student loans and represents the spread on assets earned in conjunction with the liabilities and derivative instruments used to fund the assets.
Three months ended
March 31,
2012
December 31,
2011
March 31,
2011
Variable student loan yield, gross
2.63
%
2.59
%
2.60
%
Consolidation rebate fees
(0.75
)
(0.74
)
(0.72
)
Premium/discount and deferred origination costs amortization/accretion, net (a)
(0.02
)
(0.02
)
(0.17
)
Variable student loan yield, net
1.86
1.83
1.71
Student loan cost of funds - interest expense
(1.02
)
(0.91
)
(0.83
)
Student loan cost of funds - bonds and notes payable discount accretion (a)
(0.11
)
(0.11
)
—
Student loan cost of funds - derivative settlements
0.06
0.06
0.03
Variable student loan spread
0.79
0.87
0.91
Fixed rate floor income, net of settlements on derivatives
0.64
0.64
0.55
Core student loan spread
1.43
%
1.51
%
1.46
%
Average balance of student loans
$
24,118,892
24,505,476
23,586,250
Average balance of debt outstanding
24,236,068
24,590,560
23,853,620
45
(a)
On July 8, 2011, the Company purchased the residual interest in $1.9 billion of consolidation loans and recorded the loans and related debt at fair value resulting in the recognition of a significant student loan discount and bonds and notes payable discount. These discounts are being accreted using the effective interest method over the lives of the underlying assets/liabilities.
A trend analysis of the Company's core and variable student loan spreads is summarized below.
(a)
The interest earned on the majority of the Company's FFELP student loan assets is indexed to the three-month commercial paper indice. The Company funds the majority of its assets with the three-month LIBOR indexed floating rate securities. The relationship between these two indices has a significant impact on student loan spread. This table (the right axis) shows the difference between the average three-month LIBOR and commercial paper indices by quarter.
Variable student loan spread decreased during the first quarter of 2012 as compared to the first quarter of 2011 as a result of the widening of the CP/LIBOR spread, offset by a decrease in the amortization of loan premiums/discounts and deferred origination costs as a result of loans purchased at a discount, reducing the net costs being amortized.
The primary difference between variable student loan spread and core student loan spread is fixed rate floor income, net of settlements on derivatives. A summary of fixed rate floor income and its contribution to core student spread follows:
Three months ended
March 31, 2012
December 31, 2011
March 31, 2011
Fixed rate floor income, gross
$
41,229
43,574
37,900
Derivative settlements (a)
(3,137
)
(4,201
)
(6,218
)
Fixed rate floor income, net
$
38,092
39,373
31,682
Fixed rate floor income contribution to spread, net
0.64
%
0.64
%
0.55
%
(a)
Includes settlement payments on derivatives used to hedge student loans earning fixed rate floor income.
The high levels of fixed rate floor income earned during
2012
and
2011
are due to historically low interest rates. In addition, in July 2011, the Company purchased the residual interest in $1.9 billion of consolidation loans which has increased the amount of fixed rate floor income earned by the Company. If interest rates remain low, the Company anticipates continuing to earn significant fixed rate floor income in future periods. See Item 3, “Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk,” which provides additional detail on the Company’s portfolio earning fixed rate floor income and the derivatives used by the Company to hedge these loans.
46
On December 23, 2011, the President signed the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2012 into law. This Act includes changes that permit student loan lenders to change the index on which the Special Allowance Payments are calculated for FFELP loans from the commercial paper rate to the one-month LIBOR rate effective April 1, 2012. As of March 31, 2012 , the Company had $23.0 billion of loans in which it elected to change the SAP calculation to the one-month LIBOR rate. This change mitigates the Company's exposure to basis risk and will allow the Company to better match borrowing and lending rates.
Summary and Comparison of Operating Results
Three months ended March 31,
Change
2012
2011
$
%
Net interest income after provision for loan losses
$
78,683
84,173
(5,490
)
(6.5
)%
Other income
5,000
4,136
864
20.9
Gain on sale of loans and debt repurchases
—
1,400
(1,400
)
(100.0
)
Derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments, net
(21,604
)
(589
)
(21,015
)
(3,567.9
)
Derivative settlements, net
227
(4,038
)
4,265
(105.6
)
Total other income
(16,377
)
909
(17,286
)
(1,901.7
)
Salaries and benefits
719
778
(59
)
(7.6
)
Other expenses
3,632
1,538
2,094
136.2
Intersegment expenses, net
17,143
18,147
(1,004
)
(5.5
)
Total operating expenses
21,494
20,463
1,031
5.0
Income before income taxes and corporate overhead allocation
40,812
64,619
(23,807
)
(36.8
)
Corporate overhead allocation
(1,392
)
(1,255
)
(137
)
10.9
Income before income taxes
39,420
63,364
(23,944
)
(37.8
)
Income tax expense
(14,979
)
(24,078
)
9,099
(37.8
)
Net income
$
24,441
39,286
(14,845
)
(37.8
)%
Additional information:
Net income
$
24,441
39,286
(14,845
)
(37.8
)%
Derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments, net
21,604
589
21,015
3,567.9
Tax effect
(8,210
)
(224
)
(7,986
)
(3,565.2
)
Net income, excluding market value and foreign currency adjustments
$
37,835
39,651
(1,816
)
(4.6
)%
Net interest income after provision for loan losses (net of settlements on derivatives)
.
Three months ended March 31,
Change
2012
2011
$
%
Variable interest income, net of settlements on derivatives (a)
$
161,142
153,411
7,731
5.0
%
Consolidation rebate fees (b)
(44,889
)
(41,784
)
(3,105
)
7.4
Amortization/accretion of loan premiums/discounts and deferred origination costs, net (c)
(1,060
)
(9,989
)
8,929
(89.4
)
Interest on bonds and notes payable (d)
(61,290
)
(48,994
)
(12,296
)
25.1
Bonds and notes payable discount accretion (e)
(6,568
)
—
(6,568
)
100.0
Variable student loan interest margin, net of settlements on derivatives
47,335
52,644
(5,309
)
(10.1
)
Fixed rate floor income, net of settlements on derivatives (f)
38,092
31,682
6,410
20.2
Investment interest
454
281
173
61.6
Intercompany interest
(971
)
(722
)
(249
)
34.5
Provision for loan losses (g)
(6,000
)
(3,750
)
(2,250
)
60.0
Net interest income after provision for loan losses (net of settlements on derivatives (h))
$
78,910
80,135
(1,225
)
(1.5
)%
47
(a)
Variable interest income, net of settlements on derivatives, increased as a result of an increase in the average student loan portfolio of $0.5 billion (2.3%) for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
compared to the same
period
in
2011
. In addition, the yield earned on student loans, net of settlements on derivatives, increased to 2.69% for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
from 2.63% during the same
period
in
2011
.
(b)
Consolidation rebate fees increased for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
compared to the same
period
in
2011
due to the purchase of the residual interest in $1.9 billion of consolidation loans in July 2011.
(c)
The amortization/accretion of loan premiums/discounts and deferred origination costs decreased as a result of the ongoing purchase of loans at a discount, which has reduced the net costs being amortized/accreted.
(d)
Interest on bonds and notes payable increased as a result of an increase in average debt outstanding of $0.4 billion (1.6%) for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
,
compared to the same
period
in
2011
. In addition, the Company’s cost of funds increased to 1.02% for the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
from 0.83% during the same
period
in
2011
.
(e)
During July 2011, the Company recorded a discount on bonds and notes payable assumed as a result of the purchase of the residual interest on $1.9 billion of student loans and related debt. The bonds and notes payable discount is being accreted using the effective interest method over the lives of the bonds and notes payable.
(f)
Depending on the type of loan and when it was originated, the borrower rate on student loans is either fixed to term or is reset to an annual rate each July 1. As a result, for loans where the borrower rate is fixed to term, the Company may earn floor income for an extended period of time, which the Company refers to as fixed rate floor income.
The high levels of fixed rate floor income earned during the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012 and 2011
are due to historically low interest rates. In addition, the 2012 amount increased due to the purchase of the residual interest in $1.9 billion of consolidation loans in July 2011.
(g)
The provision for loan losses represents the periodic expense of maintaining an allowance sufficient to absorb probable losses inherent in the Company's portfolio of loans. The federally insured loan provision increased $2.5 million during the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
compared to the same
period
in
2011
primarily due to a increase in delinquent loans.
(h)
The Company maintains an overall risk management strategy that incorporates the use of derivative instruments to reduce the economic effect of interest rate volatility. Management has structured the majority of the Company’s derivative transactions with the intent that each is economically effective; however, the Company’s derivative instruments do not qualify for hedge accounting. Derivative settlements for each applicable period should be evaluated with the Company’s net interest income.
Other income.
The following table summarizes the components of “other income”.
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Borrower late fee income
$
3,703
3,590
Other
1,297
546
Other income
$
5,000
4,136
Gain on sale of loans and debt repurchases
. During 2011, the Company recognized a gain of $1.4 million from the sale of a portfolio of non-federally insured loans.
Derivative market value and foreign currency adjustment, net.
The Company maintains an overall interest rate risk management strategy that incorporates the use of derivative instruments to reduce the economic effect of interest rate volatility. Derivative instruments primarily used by the Company to manage interest rate risk includes interest rate swaps and basis swaps. Management has structured the majority of the Company's derivative transactions with the intent that each is economically effective. However, the Company does not qualify its derivatives for “hedge treatment,” and the stand-alone derivative must be marked-to-market, the adjustments for which are included in “derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments, net” in the consolidated statements of income.
48
In addition, the Company has Euro-denominated bonds of which the principal and accrued interest are re-measured at each reporting period to U.S. dollars. Changes in the principal and accrued interest amounts as a result of foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations are included in “derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments, net.” In connection with the issuance of the Euro-denominated bonds, the Company has entered into cross-currency interest rate swaps in which the Company did not qualify for "hedge treatment" for accounting purposes. The re-measurement of the Euro-denominated bonds generally correlates with the change in fair value of the cross-currency interest rate swaps. However, the Company will experience unrealized gains or losses related to the cross-currency interest rate swaps if the two underlying indices (and related forward curve) do not move in parallel.
The gains and/or losses included in “derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments and derivative settlements, net” on the Company's statements of income are primarily caused by interest rate and currency volatility, as well as the volume and terms of derivatives not receiving hedge treatment.
Included in the table of operating results above, the Company has included additional information which reflects the operating results of this segment excluding the unrealized gains and losses from the Company's derivative portfolio and the foreign currency transaction adjustment.
Other expenses
.
Other expenses increased during the three months ended March 31, 2012 compared to the same period in 2011 as a result of an increase in fees paid to third-parties for the servicing of the Company's student loan portfolio primarily due to the acquisition of the residual interest of $1.9 billion of loans in July 2011.
Intersegment expenses, net
.
Intersegment expenses include fees paid to the Student Loan and Guaranty Servicing operating segment for the servicing of the Company’s student loan portfolio.
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
The Company’s fee generating businesses are non-capital intensive and all produce positive operating cash flows. As such, a minimal amount of debt and equity capital is allocated to the fee-based segments and any liquidity or capital needs are satisfied using cash flow from operations. Therefore, the Liquidity and Capital Resources discussion is concentrated on the Company’s liquidity and capital needs to meet existing debt obligations in the Asset Generation and Management operating segment.
The Company may issue equity and debt securities in the future in order to improve capital, increase liquidity, refinance upcoming maturities, or provide for general corporate purposes. Moreover, the Company may from time-to-time repurchase certain amounts of its outstanding secured and unsecured debt securities, including debt securities which the Company may issue in the future, for cash and/or through exchanges for other securities. Such repurchases or exchanges may be made in open market transactions, privately negotiated transactions, or otherwise. Any such repurchases or exchanges will depend on prevailing market conditions, the Company’s liquidity requirements, contractual restrictions, compliance with securities laws, and other factors. The amounts involved in any such transactions may be material.
The Company has historically utilized operating cash flow, secured financing transactions (which include warehouse facilities, asset-backed securitizations, and liquidity programs offered by the Department), operating lines of credit, and other borrowing arrangements to fund its Asset Generation and Management operations and student loan acquisitions. In addition, the Company has used operating cash flow, borrowings on its unsecured line of credit, and unsecured debt offerings to fund corporate activities, business acquisitions, and repurchases of common stock. The Company has also used its common stock to partially fund certain business acquisitions.
As of March 31, 2012, the Company had $495.1 million of liquidity available for use (as summarized below). In addition, the Company generates a significant amount of cash from operations. The Company will continue to use its strong liquidity position to capitalize on market opportunities, including FFELP student loan acquisitions; strategic acquisitions and investments in its core business areas of loan financing, loan servicing, payment processing, and enrollment services (education planning); and capital management initiatives, including stock repurchases, debt repurchases, and dividend distributions.
49
Sources of liquidity currently available
The following table details the Company’s sources of liquidity currently available:
As of March 31, 2012
Sources of primary liquidity:
Cash and cash equivalents
$
60,700
Investments
70,552
Unencumbered private student loan assets
15,925
Asset-backed security investments - Class B subordinated notes (a)
76,513
Asset-backed security investments (b)
71,453
Available balance on unsecured line of credit
200,000
Total sources of primary liquidity
$
495,143
(a)
As part of the Company’s issuance of asset-backed securitizations in 2008, due to credit market conditions when these notes were issued, the Company purchased the Class B subordinated notes of
$76.5 million
(par value). These notes are not included on the Company’s consolidated balance sheet. If the credit market conditions continue to improve, the Company anticipates selling these notes to third parties. Upon a sale to third parties, the Company would obtain cash proceeds equal to the market value of the notes on the date of such sale. The amount included in the table above is the par value of these subordinated notes and may not represent market value upon sale of the notes.
(b)
The Company has repurchased its own asset-backed securities (bonds and notes payable). For accounting purposes, these notes are effectively retired and are not included on the Company’s consolidated balance sheet. However, as of
March 31, 2012
,
$71.5 million
of these securities are legally outstanding at the trust level and the Company could sell these notes to third parties or redeem the notes at par as cash is generated by the trust estate. Upon a sale to third parties, the Company would obtain cash proceeds equal to the market value of the notes on the date of such sale. The amount included in the table above is the par value of these notes and may not represent market value upon sale of the notes.
Cash generated from operations
The Company has historically generated positive cash flow from operations. For the
three
months ended
March 31, 2012
and year ended
December 31, 2011
, the Company had net cash flow from operating activities of $100.6 million and $310.9 million, respectively.
Liquidity Needs and Sources of Liquidity Available to Satisfy Debt Obligations Secured by Student Loan Assets and Related Collateral
The Company had the following debt obligations outstanding that are secured by student loan assets and related collateral.
As of March 31, 2012
Carrying
amount
Final maturity
Asset Generation and Management:
Bonds and notes issued in asset-backed securitizations
$
20,802,737
11/25/15 - 7/27/48
FFELP warehouse facilities
959,978
7/1/14 - 4/2/15
Department of Education Conduit
2,261,104
5/8/14
Other borrowings
40,154
11/14/12 - 3/1/22
$
24,063,973
Bonds and notes issued in asset-backed securitizations
The majority of the Company’s portfolio of student loans is funded in asset-backed securitizations that are structured to substantially match the maturity of the funded assets, thereby minimizing liquidity risk. In addition, due to (i) the difference between the yield the Company receives on the loans and cost of financing within these transactions, and (ii) the excess servicing and administration fees the Company earns from these transactions, the Company has created a portfolio that will generate earnings and significant cash flow over the life of these transactions.
50
As of
March 31, 2012
, based on cash flow models developed to reflect management’s current estimate of, among other factors, prepayments, defaults, deferment, forbearance, and interest rates, the Company currently expects future undiscounted cash flows from its portfolio to be approximately
$1.81 billion
as detailed below. The
$1.81 billion
includes approximately
$358.0 million
(as of
March 31, 2012
) of overcollateralization included in the asset-backed securitizations. These excess net asset positions are reflected variously in the following balances on the consolidated balance sheet: "student loans receivable," "restricted cash and investments," and "accrued interest receivable."
The forecasted cash flow presented below includes all loans currently funded in asset-backed securitizations. As of
March 31, 2012
, the Company had
$20.6 billion
of loans included in asset-backed securitizations, which represented
86 percent
of its total FFELP student loan portfolio. The forecasted cash flow does not include cash flows that the Company expects to receive related to loans funded through the Department of Education’s Conduit Program and other warehouse facilities or loans acquired subsequent to
March 31, 2012
.
FFELP Asset-backed Securitization Cash Flow Forecast (a)
$1.81 billion
(dollars in millions)
(a)
The Company uses various assumptions, including prepayments and future interest rates, when preparing its cash flow forecast. These assumptions are further discussed below.
Prepayments
: The primary variable in establishing a life of loan estimate is the level and timing of prepayments. Prepayment rates equal the amount of loans that prepay annually as a percentage of the beginning of period balance, net of scheduled principal payments. A number of factors can affect estimated prepayment rates, including the level of consolidation activity and default rates. Should any of these factors change, management may revise its assumptions, which in turn would impact the projected future cash flow. The Company’s cash flow forecast above assumes prepayment rates that are generally consistent with those utilized in the Company’s recent asset-backed securities transactions. If management used a prepayment rate assumption two times greater than what was used to forecast the cash flow, the cash flow forecast would be reduced by approximately
$290 million
to
$350 million
.
Interest rates
: The Company funds the majority of its student loans with three-month LIBOR ("LIBOR") indexed floating rate securities. Meanwhile, the interest earned on the Company’s student loan assets are indexed primarily to a commercial paper rate ("CP"). The different interest rate characteristics of the Company’s loan assets and liabilities funding these assets result in basis risk. The Company’s cash flow forecast assumes LIBOR will exceed CP by 12 basis points for the life of the portfolio, which approximates the historical relationship between these indices. If the forecast is computed assuming a spread of 24 basis points between CP and LIBOR for the life of the portfolio, the cash flow forecast would be reduced by approximately
$60 million
to
$100 million
.
On December 23, 2011, the President signed the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2012 into law. This Act includes changes that permit student loan lenders to change the index on which the Special Allowance Payments are calculated for FFELP loans from the commercial rate to the one-month LIBOR rate effective April 1, 2012. As of March 31, 2012 , the Company had $23.0 billion of loans in which it elected to change the SAP calculation to the one-month LIBOR rate.
51
This change mitigates the Company's exposure to basis risk and will allow the Company to better match borrowing and lending rates. The Company does not believe the index change will have a significant impact on the forecasted cash flows.
The Company uses the current forward interest rate yield curve to forecast cash flows. A change in the forward interest rate curve would impact the future cash flows generated from the portfolio. An increase in future interest rates will reduce the amount of fixed rate floor income the Company is currently receiving. The Company attempts to mitigate the impact of a rise in short-term rates by hedging interest rate risks. As of
March 31, 2012
, the net fair value of the Company’s interest rate derivatives used to hedge loans earning fixed rate floor income was a
liability
of
$23.4 million
. See Item 3, "Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk — Interest Rate Risk."
FFELP Warehouse Facilities
The Company funds a portion of its FFELP loan acquisitions using its FFELP warehouse facilities. Student loan warehousing allows the Company to buy and manage student loans prior to transferring them into more permanent financing arrangements.
As of
March 31, 2012
, the Company has three FFELP warehouse facilities as summarized below.
NFSLW-I (a)
NHELP-II (b)
NHELP-I (c)
Total
Maximum financing amount
$
500,000
250,000
500,000
1,250,000
Amount outstanding
(484,856
)
(229,667
)
(245,455
)
(959,978
)
Amount available
$
15,144
20,333
254,545
290,022
Expiration of liquidity provisions
July 1, 2012
January 31, 2013
October 2, 2013
Final maturity date
July 1, 2014
January 31, 2015
April 2, 2015
Maximum advance rates
85 - 95%
93.5%
93 - 95%
Minimum advance rates
84.5 - 90%
90.5%
80 - 95%
Advanced as equity support
$
37,138
21,125
14,922
73,185
(a)
The terms of this facility were amended on February 22, 2012. The table above reflects all amended terms.
(b)
The Company entered into this facility on February 1, 2012.
(c)
The terms of this facility were amended on April 2, 2012. The table above reflects all amended terms.
Each FFELP warehouse facility is supported by 364-day liquidity provisions, which are subject to the respective expiration date shown in the table above. In the event the Company is unable to renew the liquidity provisions by such date, the facility would become a term facility at a stepped-up cost, with no additional student loans being eligible for financing, and the Company would be required to refinance the existing loans in the facility by the facility's final maturity date. The warehouse facilities provide for formula-based advance rates, depending on FFELP loan type, up to a maximum of the principal and interest of loans financed as shown in the table above. The advance rates for collateral may increase or decrease based on market conditions, but they are subject to minimums as disclosed above.
The FFELP warehouse facilities contain financial covenants relating to levels of the Company’s consolidated net worth, ratio of adjusted EBITDA to corporate debt interest, and unencumbered cash. Any noncompliance with these covenants could result in a requirement for the immediate repayment of any outstanding borrowings under the facilities.
Upon termination or expiration of the warehouse facilities, the Company would expect to access the securitization market, use operating cash, rely on sale of assets, or transfer collateral to satisfy any remaining obligations.
Department of Education Conduit
In May 2009, the Department implemented a program under which it finances eligible FFELP Stafford and PLUS loans in a conduit vehicle established to provide funding for student lenders (the "Conduit Program"). Loans eligible for the Conduit Program had to be first disbursed on or after October 1, 2003, but not later than June 30, 2009, and fully disbursed before September 30, 2009, and meet certain other requirements. Funding for the Conduit Program is provided by the capital markets at a cost based on market rates, with the Company being advanced 97 percent of the student loan face amount. Excess amounts needed to fund the remaining 3 percent of the student loan balances were contributed by the Company. The Conduit Program expires on May 8, 2014. The
52
Student Loan Short-Term Notes ("Student Loan Notes") issued by the Conduit Program are supported by a combination of (i) notes backed by FFELP loans, (ii) a liquidity agreement with the Federal Financing Bank, and (iii) a put agreement provided by the Department. If the conduit does not have sufficient funds to pay all Student Loan Notes, then those Student Loan Notes will be repaid with funds from the Federal Financing Bank. The Federal Financing Bank will hold the notes for a short period of time and, if at the end of that time, the Student Loan Notes still cannot be paid off, the underlying FFELP loans that serve as collateral for the Conduit Program will be sold to the Department through a put agreement at a price of 97 percent of the face amount of the loans. As of
March 31, 2012
, the Company had
$2.3 billion
borrowed under the facility and
$80.7 million
advanced as equity support in the facility. Effective July 1, 2010, no additional loans could be funded using the Conduit Program.
The Company expects to access the securitization market prior to the Conduit Program’s maturity to refinance the student loan collateral included in the Conduit with debt that is structured to match the maturity of the assets.
Other Uses of Liquidity
On March 30, 2010, President Obama signed into law the Reconciliation Act of 2010. Effective July 1, 2010, this law prohibits new loan originations under the FFEL Program and requires that all new federal loan originations be made through the Federal Direct Loan Program. As a result of the Reconciliation Act of 2010, the Company no longer originates new FFELP loans.
Due to the legislative changes in the student loan industry, the Company believes there will be opportunities to purchase FFELP loan portfolios on behalf of current FFELP participants looking to adjust their FFELP businesses.
The Company plans to fund FFELP student loan acquisitions from third-parties using its agreement with Union Bank, as trustee for various grantor trusts, under which Union Bank has agreed to purchase from the Company participation interests in student loans (as described below); using its FFELP warehouse facilities (as described above); and continuing to access the asset-backed securities market.
Union Bank Participation Agreement
The Company maintains an agreement with Union Bank, as trustee for various grantor trusts, under which Union Bank has agreed to purchase from the Company participation interests in student loans (the "FFELP Participation Agreement"). As of
March 31, 2012
,
$498.8 million
of loans were subject to outstanding participation interests held by Union Bank, as trustee, under this agreement. The agreement automatically renews annually and is terminable by either party upon five business days notice. This agreement provides beneficiaries of Union Bank’s grantor trusts with access to investments in interests in student loans, while providing liquidity to the Company. The Company can participate loans to Union Bank to the extent of availability under the grantor trusts, up to $750 million or an amount in excess of $750 million if mutually agreed to by both parties. Loans participated under this agreement have been accounted for by the Company as loan sales. Accordingly, the participation interests sold are not included on the Company’s consolidated balance sheets.
Asset-backed securities transactions
Depending on market conditions, the Company anticipates continuing to access the asset-backed securities market. Asset-backed securities transactions would be used to refinance student loans included in the FFELP warehouse facilities, the Department of Education Conduit facility, and/or existing asset-backed security transactions. The FFELP warehouse facilities and Department Conduit facility have advance rates that are less than par. As of
March 31, 2012
, the Company had
$73.2 million
advanced in the FFELP warehouse facilities and
$80.7 million
advanced in the Department Conduit facility. Depending on the terms of asset-backed security transactions, refinancing loans included in these facilities could produce positive cash flow to the Company by reducing required advance rates and are contemplated by management when making student loan financing decisions.
Although the Company has demonstrated its ability to access the asset-backed securities market and expects asset-backed securities transactions to remain a primary source of funding over the long term, the Company also expects its transaction volumes to be more limited and pricing less favorable than prior to the credit market dislocation that began in August 2007, with significantly reduced opportunities to place subordinated tranches of asset-backed securities with investors. At present, the Company is unable to predict when market conditions will allow for more regular, reliable, and cost-effective access to the term asset-backed securities market.
Liquidity Impact Related to Hedging Activities
The Company utilizes derivative instruments to manage interest rate sensitivity. By using derivative instruments, the Company is exposed to market risk which could impact its liquidity. When the fair value of a derivative instrument is negative (a liability on
53
the Company's balance sheet), it would owe the counterparty if the derivative was settled. If the negative fair value of derivatives with a counterparty exceeds a specified threshold, the Company may have to make a collateral deposit with the counterparty. The threshold at which the Company may be required to post collateral is dependent upon its unsecured credit rating. Based on the Company's current unsecured credit ratings (Standard and Poor: BBB- (stable outlook) and Moody's: Ba1 (stable outlook)), the Company has substantially collateralized its corporate derivative liability position with counterparties. As such, further downgrades would not result in additional collateral requirements of a material nature. In addition, no counterparty has the right to terminate its contracts in the event of further downgrades. However, some long-dated derivative contracts have mutual optional termination
provisions that can be exercised in 2016 and 2021. As of
March 31, 2012
, the fair value of derivatives with early termination provisions was a positive $0.5 million (an asset on the Company's balance sheet).
Based on the derivative portfolio outstanding as of
March 31, 2012
, the Company does not currently anticipate any movement in interest rates having a material impact on its capital or liquidity profile, nor does the Company expect that any movement in interest rates would have a material impact on its ability to meet potential collateral deposits with its counterparties. However, if interest rates moves materially and negatively impact the fair value of the Company's derivative portfolio or if the Company enters into additional derivatives in which the fair value of such derivatives become negative, the Company could be required to deposit additional collateral with its derivative instrument counterparties. The collateral deposits, if significant, could negatively impact the Company's liquidity and capital resources. As of
March 31, 2012
, the fair value of the Company's derivatives, which had a negative fair value (a liability on the Company's balance sheet), was
$42.3 million
and the Company had
$35.4 million
posted as collateral to derivative counterparties.
Description of Other Debt Facilities
Unsecured Line of Credit
The Company had a $750.0 million unsecured line of credit with a maturity date of May 8, 2012. On February 17, 2012, the Company entered into a new $250.0 million unsecured line of credit. In conjunction with entering into this new agreement, the outstanding balance on the $750.0 million unsecured line of credit of $64.4 million was paid off in full and the agreement was terminated.
As of March 31, 2012
, the
$250.0 million
unsecured line of credit had an outstanding balance of
$50.0 million
and $200.0 million was available for future use. The
$250.0 million
line of credit has a maturity date of February 17, 2016. Upon the maturity date in 2016, there can be no assurance that the Company will be able to renew this line of credit, increase the amount outstanding under the line, if necessary, or find alternative funding.
The new line of credit agreement contains certain financial covenants that, if not met, lead to an event of default under the agreement. The covenants include maintaining:
•
A minimum consolidated net worth
•
A minimum adjusted EBITDA to corporate debt interest (over the last four rolling quarters)
•
A limitation on subsidiary indebtedness
•
A limitation on the percentage of non-federally insured loans in the Company’s portfolio
As of March 31, 2012
, the Company was in compliance with all of these requirements. Many of these covenants are duplicated in the Company’s other lending facilities, including its FFELP warehouse facilities.
The Company’s new operating line of credit does not have any covenants related to unsecured debt ratings. However, changes in the Company’s ratings (as well as the amounts the Company borrows) have modest implications on the pricing level at which the Company obtains funding.
A default on the Company’s FFELP warehouse facilities would result in an event of default on the Company’s new unsecured line of credit that would result in the outstanding balance on the line of credit becoming immediately due and payable.
Repurchase Agreement
On April 12, 2012, the Company entered into a $50.0 million line of credit, which is collateralized by asset-backed security investments. The line of credit has a maturity date of April 12, 2014 and has covenants similar to the Company's $250.0 million unsecured line of credit.
54
Junior Subordinated Hybrid Securities
In September 2006, the Company issued $200.0 million aggregate principal amount of Junior Subordinated Hybrid Securities ("Hybrid Securities"). The Hybrid Securities are unsecured obligations of the Company. As of
March 31, 2012
, $100.7 million of Hybrid Securities were outstanding. The interest rate on the Hybrid Securities from the date they were issued through the optional redemption date, September 28, 2011, was 7.40%, payable semi-annually. Beginning September 29, 2011 through September 29, 2036, the "scheduled maturity date," the interest rate on the Hybrid Securities is equal to three-month LIBOR plus 3.375%, payable quarterly, which was 3.86% at
March 31, 2012
. The principal amount of the Hybrid Securities will become due on the scheduled maturity date only to the extent that the Company has received proceeds from the sale of certain qualifying capital securities prior to such date (as defined in the Hybrid Securities’ prospectus). If any amount is not paid on the scheduled maturity date, it will remain outstanding and bear interest at a floating rate as defined in the prospectus, payable monthly. On September 15, 2061, the Company must pay any remaining principal and interest on the Hybrid Securities in full whether or not the Company has sold qualifying capital securities. At the Company's option, the Hybrid Securities are redeemable in whole or in part, any time on or after September 29, 2011, at their principal amount plus accrued and unpaid interest, provided in the case of a redemption in part that the principal amount outstanding after such redemption is at least $50.0 million.
Dividends
A dividend of $0.10 per share on the Company's Class A and Class B common stock was paid on March 15, 2012, to all holders of record as of March 1, 2012. In addition, a $0.10 per share dividend on the Company's Class A and Class B stock, declared on April 23, 2012, will be paid on June 15, 2012 to all holders of record as of June 1, 2012.
The Company currently plans to continue making quarterly dividend payments, subject to future earnings, capital requirements, financial condition, and other factors. In addition, the payment of dividends is subject to the terms of the Company’s outstanding Hybrid Securities, which generally provide that if the Company defers interest payments on those securities it cannot pay dividends on its capital stock.
RECENT ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS
In June 2011, the FASB issued ASU 2011-05,
Comprehensive Income, “Presentation of Comprehensive Income."
The objective of this ASU is to improve the comparability, consistency, and transparency of financial reporting and to increase the prominence of items reported in other comprehensive income. The new guidance requires all non-owner changes in stockholders’ equity be presented either in a single continuous statement of comprehensive income or in two separate but consecutive statements. The new guidance will be applied retrospectively for fiscal years, and interim periods within those years, beginning after December 15, 2011. This guidance was effective for the Company in the first quarter 2012. The Company has presented other comprehensive income in two separate but consecutive statements in the attached consolidated financial statements included in the report.
In December 2011, the FASB issued ASU 2011-12,
Comprehensive Income, “Deferral of the Effective Date for Amendments to the Presentation of Reclassifications of Items out of Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income
.” The objective of this ASU is to defer the requirement to present reclassification adjustments out of accumulated other comprehensive income to net income on the face of the financial statements, and instead, entities should continue to report reclassifications out of accumulated other comprehensive income consistent with the presentation requirements in effect prior to the issuance of ASU 2011-05. All other aspects of ASU 2011-05 are still effective, and the amendment in ASU 2011-12 became effective at the same time as the amendments in ASU 2011-05.
In June 2011, the FASB issued ASU 2011-04,
Fair Value Measurement, "Amendments to Achieve Common Fair Value Measurement and Disclosure Requirements in U.S. GAAP and IFRSs."
The objective of this ASU is to clarify the FASB's intent about the application of existing fair value measurement and disclosure requirements and to update certain principles and requirements for measuring fair value or for disclosing information about fair value measurements. The guidance clarifies: (i) the application of the highest and best use and valuation premise concepts; (ii) measuring the fair value of an instrument classified in a reporting entity's shareholders' equity; and (iii) disclosure of quantitative information about the unobservable inputs used in a fair value measurement that is categorized within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy. The guidance updates or changes certain measurement and disclosure requirements including: (i) the measurement of the fair value of financial instruments that are managed within a portfolio; (ii) the application of premiums and discounts in a fair value measurement; and (iii) additional disclosures about fair value measurements, which includes the requirement for more information for fair value measurements categorized within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy, as well as categorization by level in the hierarchy for items that are not measured at fair value in the statement of financial position but for which the fair value is required to be disclosed. This guidance is to be applied prospectively and is effective during interim and annual periods beginning after December 15, 2011. This guidance was effective for the Company in the first quarter 2012 and the adoption of ASU 2011-04 resulted in additional disclosures in note 12, "Fair Value," included in the notes to the consolidated financial statements included in this report.
55
ITEM 3. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK
(All dollars are in thousands, except share amounts, unless otherwise noted)
Interest Rate Risk
The Company’s primary market risk exposure arises from fluctuations in its borrowing and lending rates, the spread between which could impact the Company due to shifts in market interest rates. Because the Company generates a significant portion of its earnings from its student loan spread, the interest sensitivity of the balance sheet is a key profitability driver.
The following table sets forth the Company’s loan assets and debt instruments by rate characteristics:
As of March 31, 2012
As of December 31, 2011
Dollars
Percent
Dollars
Percent
Fixed-rate loan assets
$
9,018,523
37.7
%
$
10,899,733
44.7
%
Variable-rate loan assets
14,887,785
62.3
13,459,892
55.3
Total
$
23,906,308
100.0
%
$
24,359,625
100.0
%
Fixed-rate debt instruments
$
26,576
0.1
%
$
29,517
0.1
%
Variable-rate debt instruments
24,188,094
99.9
24,565,652
99.9
Total
$
24,214,670
100.0
%
$
24,595,169
100.0
%
Loans originated prior to April 1, 2006 generally earn interest at the higher of a floating rate based on the Special Allowance Payment or SAP formula set by the Department and the borrower rate, which is fixed over a period of time. The SAP formula is based on an applicable indice plus a fixed spread that is dependent upon when the loan was originated, the loan’s repayment status, and funding sources for the loan. The Company generally finances its student loan portfolio with variable rate debt. In low and/or declining interest rate environments, when the fixed borrower rate is higher than the rate produced by the SAP formula, the Company’s student loans earn at a fixed rate while the interest on the variable rate debt typically continues to decline. In these interest rate environments, the Company may earn additional spread income that it refers to as floor income.
Depending on the type of loan and when it was originated, the borrower rate is either fixed to term or is reset to an annual rate each July 1. As a result, for loans where the borrower rate is fixed to term, the Company may earn floor income for an extended period of time, which the Company refers to as fixed rate floor income, and for those loans where the borrower rate is reset annually on July 1, the Company may earn floor income to the next reset date, which the Company refers to as variable rate floor income. In accordance with legislation enacted in 2006, lenders are required to rebate fixed rate floor income and variable rate floor income to the Department for all new FFELP loans first originated on or after April 1, 2006. A summary of fixed rate floor income follows.
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Fixed rate floor income, gross
$
41,229
37,900
Derivative settlements (a)
(3,137
)
(6,218
)
Fixed rate floor income, net
$
38,092
31,682
(a)
Includes settlement payments on derivatives used to hedge student loans earning fixed rate floor income.
The high levels of fixed rate floor income earned during
2012
and
2011
are due to historically low interest rates. If interest rates remain low, the Company anticipates continuing to earn significant fixed rate floor income in future periods.
Absent the use of derivative instruments, a rise in interest rates may reduce the amount of floor income received and this may have an impact on earnings due to interest margin compression caused by increasing financing costs, until such time as the federally insured loans earn interest at a variable rate in accordance with their special allowance payment formulas. In higher interest rate environments, where the interest rate rises above the borrower rate and fixed rate loans effectively become variable rate loans, the impact of the rate fluctuations is reduced.
56
The following graph depicts fixed rate floor income for a borrower with a fixed rate of 6.75% and a SAP rate of 2.64%:
The following table shows the Company’s student loan assets that are earning fixed rate floor income as of
March 31, 2012
:
Borrower/
Estimated
Fixed
lender
variable
interest
weighted
conversion
Loan
rate range
average yield
rate (a)
balance
3.0 - 3.49%
3.20%
0.56%
$
1,971,878
3.5 - 3.99%
3.65%
1.01%
1,930,698
4.0 - 4.49%
4.20%
1.56%
1,471,582
4.5 - 4.99%
4.72%
2.08%
838,166
5.0 - 5.49%
5.24%
2.60%
561,631
5.5 - 5.99%
5.67%
3.03%
341,241
6.0 - 6.49%
6.18%
3.54%
398,963
6.5 - 6.99%
6.70%
4.06%
355,614
7.0 - 7.49%
7.17%
4.53%
140,474
7.5 - 7.99%
7.70%
5.06%
235,674
8.0 - 8.99%
8.17%
5.53%
526,017
> 9.0%
9.04%
6.40%
246,585
$
9,018,523
(a)
The estimated variable conversion rate is the estimated short-term interest rate at which loans would convert to a variable rate. As of
March 31, 2012
, the short-term interest rate was
28
basis points.
57
The following table summarizes the outstanding derivative instruments as of
March 31, 2012
used by the Company to hedge loans earning fixed rate floor income.
Notional amount
Weighted average fixed rate paid by the Company (a)
Maturity
2013
$
2,150,000
0.85
%
2014
750,000
0.85
2015
100,000
2.26
2020
50,000
3.23
$
3,050,000
0.93
%
(a)
For all interest rate derivatives, the Company receives discrete three-month LIBOR.
As of
March 31, 2012
, the Company had
$2.7 billion
of student loan assets that were eligible to earn variable-rate floor income.
The Company is exposed to interest rate risk in the form of basis risk and repricing risk because the interest rate characteristics of the Company’s assets do not match the interest rate characteristics of the funding. The Company attempts to match the interest rate characteristics of certain pools of loan assets with debt instruments of substantially similar characteristics. Due to the variability in duration of the Company’s assets and varying market conditions, the Company does not attempt to perfectly match the interest rate characteristics of the entire loan portfolio with the underlying debt instruments. The Company has adopted a policy of periodically reviewing the mismatch related to the interest rate characteristics of its assets and liabilities together with the Company’s outlook as to current and future market conditions. Based on those factors, the Company uses derivative instruments as part of its overall risk management strategy. Derivative instruments used as part of the Company’s interest rate risk management strategy currently include interest rate swaps, basis swaps, and cross-currency swaps.
The following table presents the Company’s FFELP student loan assets and related funding arranged by underlying indices as of
March 31, 2012
:
Index
Frequency of variable resets
Assets
Debt outstanding that funded student loan assets (a)
3 month H15 financial commercial paper (b)
Daily
$
22,965,881
—
3 month Treasury bill
Varies
915,602
—
3 month LIBOR (c)
Quarterly
—
19,203,746
1 month LIBOR
Monthly
—
873,871
Auction-rate or remarketing (d)
Varies
—
970,575
Asset-backed commercial paper (e)
Varies
—
2,975,627
Other (f)
182,490
40,154
$
24,063,973
24,063,973
(a)
The Company has certain basis swaps outstanding in which the Company receives three-month LIBOR and pays one-month LIBOR plus or minus a spread as defined in the agreements (the "1:3 Basis Swaps"). The Company entered into these derivative instruments to better match the interest rate characteristics on its student loan assets and the debt funding such assets. The following table summarizes these derivatives as of
March 31, 2012
:
Maturity
Notional amount
2021
$
250,000
2023
1,250,000
2024
250,000
2026
800,000
2028
100,000
2036
700,000
2039
150,000
2040
200,000
$
3,700,000
58
(b)
The Company’s FFELP student loans earn interest based on the daily average 90-day H15 financial commercial paper index calculated on a fiscal quarter.
On December 23, 2011, the President signed the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2012 into law. This Act includes changes that permit student loan lenders to change the index on which the Special Allowance Payments are calculated for FFELP loans from the commercial paper rate to the one-month LIBOR rate effective April 1, 2012. As of March 31, 2012 , the Company had $23.0 billion of loans in which it elected to change the SAP calculation to the one-month LIBOR rate. This change mitigates the Company's exposure to basis risk and will allow the Company to better match borrowing and lending rates.
(c)
The Company has Euro-denominated notes that reprice on the EURIBOR index. The Company has entered into derivative instruments (cross-currency interest rate swaps) that convert the EURIBOR index to three-month LIBOR. As a result, these notes are reflected in the three-month LIBOR category in the above table. See “Foreign Currency Exchange Risk.”
(d)
The interest rates on certain of the Company's asset-backed securities are set and periodically reset via a "dutch auction" (“Auction Rate Securities”) or through a remarketing utilizing remarketing agents (“Variable Rate Demand Notes”). As of
March 31, 2012
, the Company is sponsor on
$751.4 million
of Auction Rate Securities and
$219.2 million
of Variable Rate Demand Notes.
For Auction Rate Securities, investors and potential investors submit orders through a broker-dealer as to the principal amount of notes they wish to buy, hold, or sell at various interest rates. The broker-dealers submit their clients' orders to the auction agent, who then determines the clearing interest rate for the upcoming period. Interest rates on these Auction Rate Securities are reset periodically, generally every 7 to 35 days, by the auction agent or agents. During the first quarter of 2008, as part of the credit market crisis, auction rate securities from various issuers failed to receive sufficient order interest from potential investors to clear successfully, resulting in failed auction status. Currently, all of the Company’s Auction Rate Securities are in a failed auction status and the Company believes they will remain in a failed status for an extended period of time and possibly permanently. As a result of a failed auction, the Auction Rate Securities will generally pay interest to the holder at a maximum rate as defined by the indenture. While these rates will vary, they will generally be based on a spread to LIBOR or Treasury Securities, or the Net Loan Rate as defined in the financing documents.
For Variable Rate Demand Notes, the remarketing agents set the price, which is then offered to investors. If there are insufficient potential bid orders to purchase all of the notes offered for sale, the Variable Rate Demand Notes will generally pay interest to the holder at a rate as defined in the indenture.
(e)
Asset-backed commercial paper consists of
$714.5 million
funded in the Company’s NFSLW-I and NHELP-II FFELP warehouse facilities and
$2.3 billion
funded through the Department’s Conduit Program. Funding for the Conduit Program is provided by the capital markets at a cost based on market rates.
(f)
Assets include restricted cash and investments and other assets. Debt outstanding includes other debt obligations secured by student loan assets and related collateral.
Financial Statement Impact of Derivative Instruments
The Company recognizes changes in the fair value of derivative instruments currently in earnings unless specific hedge accounting criteria are met. Management has structured the majority of the Company’s derivative transactions with the intent that each is economically effective. However, the Company’s derivative instruments do not qualify for hedge accounting; consequently, the change in fair value of these derivative instruments is included in the Company’s operating results. Changes or shifts in the forward yield curve and fluctuations in currency rates can significantly impact the valuation of the Company’s derivatives. Accordingly, changes or shifts to the forward yield curve and fluctuations in currency rates will impact the financial position and results of operations of the Company.
The following table summarizes the effect of derivative instruments included in the consolidated statements of income. All gains and losses recognized in income related to the Company's derivative activity are included in "derivative market value and foreign currency and derivative settlements, net" on the consolidated statements of income.
59
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Settlements:
1:3 basis swaps
$
1,381
208
Interest rate swaps - floor income hedges
(3,137
)
(6,218
)
Interest rate swaps - hybrid debt hedges
—
(246
)
Cross-currency interest rate swaps
2,109
2,109
Other
(126
)
(5
)
Total settlements - income (expense)
227
(4,152
)
Change in fair value - income (expense)
16,835
66,450
Derivative impact included in the consolidated statements of income - income (expense)
$
17,062
62,298
Sensitivity Analysis
The following tables summarize the effect on the Company’s earnings, based upon a sensitivity analysis performed by the Company assuming hypothetical increases in interest rates of 100 basis points and 300 basis points while funding spreads remain constant. In addition, as it relates to the effect on earnings, a sensitivity analysis was performed assuming the funding indice increases 10 basis points and 30 basis points while holding the asset indice constant, if the funding indice is different than the asset indice. The effect on earnings was performed on the Company’s variable rate assets (including loans earning fixed rate floor income) and liabilities. The analysis includes the effects of the Company’s interest rate and basis swaps in existence during these periods.
Three months ended March 31, 2012
Interest rates
Asset and funding indice mismatches
Change from increase of 100 basis points
Change from increase of 300 basis points
Increase of 10 basis points
Increase of 30 basis points
Dollar
Percent
Dollar
Percent
Dollar
Percent
Dollar
Percent
Effect on earnings:
Decrease in pre-tax net income before impact of derivative settlements
$
(16,554
)
(24.9
)%
$
(29,080
)
(43.8
)%
$
(6,026
)
(9.1
)%
$
(18,078
)
(27.2
)%
Impact of derivative settlements
7,604
11.5
22,812
34.4
—
—
—
—
Increase (decrease) in net income before taxes
$
(8,950
)
(13.4
)%
$
(6,268
)
(9.4
)%
$
(6,026
)
(9.1
)%
$
(18,078
)
(27.2
)%
Increase (decrease) in basic and diluted earnings per share
$
(0.12
)
$
(0.08
)
$
(0.08
)
$
(0.24
)
Three months ended March 31, 2011
Interest rates
Asset and funding indice mismatches
Change from increase of 100 basis points
Change from increase of 300 basis points
Increase of 10 basis points
Increase of 30 basis points
Dollar
Percent
Dollar
Percent
Dollar
Percent
Dollar
Percent
Effect on earnings:
Decrease in pre-tax net income before impact of derivative settlements
$
(15,384
)
(17.5
)%
$
(26,752
)
(30.5
)%
$
(5,882
)
(6.7
)%
$
(17,645
)
(20.1
)%
Impact of derivative settlements
18,897
21.5
56,692
64.6
—
—
—
—
Increase (decrease) in net income before taxes
$
3,513
4.0
%
$
29,940
34.1
%
$
(5,882
)
(6.7
)%
$
(17,645
)
(20.1
)%
Increase (decrease) in basic and diluted earnings per share
$
0.05
$
0.39
$
(0.08
)
$
(0.23
)
60
Foreign Currency Exchange Risk
During 2006, the Company completed separate debt offerings of student loan asset-backed securities that included 420.5 million and 352.7 million Euro-denominated notes with interest rates based on a spread to the EURIBOR index. As a result of this transaction, the Company is exposed to market risk related to fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates between the U.S. dollar and Euro. The principal and accrued interest on these notes is re-measured at each reporting period and recorded on the Company’s balance sheet in U.S. dollars based on the foreign currency exchange rate on that date. Changes in the principal and accrued interest amounts as a result of foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations are included in the “derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments and derivative settlements, net” in the Company’s consolidated statements of income.
The Company entered into cross-currency interest rate swaps in connection with the issuance of the Euro Notes. Under the terms of these derivative instrument agreements, the Company receives from a counterparty a spread to the EURIBOR indice based on notional amounts of €420.5 million and €352.7 million and pays a spread to the LIBOR indice based on notional amounts of $500.0 million and $450.0 million, respectively. In addition, under the terms of these agreements, all principal payments on the Euro Notes will effectively be paid at the exchange rate in effect between the U.S. dollar and Euro as of the issuance of the notes. The Company did not qualify these derivative instruments as hedges under accounting authoritative guidance; consequently, the change in fair value is included in the Company’s operating results.
The following table summarizes the financial statement impact as a result of the remeasurement of the Euro Notes and change in the fair value of the related derivative instruments. These amounts are included in “derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments and derivative settlements, net” on the Company’s consolidated statements of income.
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Re-measurement of Euro Notes
$
(32,242
)
(65,334
)
Change in fair value of cross currency interest rate swaps
13,026
62,532
Total impact to statements of income - income (expense)
$
(19,216
)
(2,802
)
The re-measurement of the Euro-denominated bonds generally correlates with the change in fair value of the cross-currency interest rate swaps. However, the Company will experience unrealized gains or losses related to the cross-currency interest rate swaps if the two underlying indices (and related forward curve) do not move in parallel. Management intends to hold the cross-currency interest rate swaps through the maturity of the Euro-denominated bonds.
Financial Statement Impact – Derivatives and Foreign Currency Transaction Adjustments
The following table summarizes all of the components of “derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments and derivative settlements, net” included in the consolidated statements of income.
Three months ended March 31,
2012
2011
Change in fair value of derivatives
$
16,835
66,450
Foreign currency transaction adjustment (Euro Notes)
(32,242
)
(65,334
)
Derivative settlements, net
227
(4,152
)
Derivative market value and foreign currency adjustments and derivative settlements, net - income (expense)
$
(15,180
)
(3,036
)
ITEM 4. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
Disclosure Controls and Procedures
Under supervision and with the participation of certain members of the Company’s management, including the chief executive and chief financial officers, the Company completed an evaluation of the effectiveness of the design and operation of its disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in SEC Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934). Based on this evaluation, the Company’s principal executive and principal financial officers concluded that the disclosure controls and procedures were effective as of the end of the period covered by this report to provide reasonable assurance that information required to be disclosed in reports the Company files or submits under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 is recorded, processed,
61
summarized, and reported, within the time periods specified in the SEC's rules and forms, and is accumulated and communicated to the Company's management, including the chief executive and chief financial officers, as appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.
Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting
There was no change in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting during the Company’s last fiscal quarter that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.
PART II. OTHER INFORMATION
ITEM 1. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
General
The Company is subject to various claims, lawsuits, and proceedings that arise in the normal course of business. These matters principally consist of claims by student loan borrowers disputing the manner in which their student loans have been processed and disputes with other business entities. In addition, from time to time the Company receives information and document requests from state or federal regulators concerning its business practices. The Company cooperates with these inquiries and responds to the requests. While the Company cannot predict the ultimate outcome of any inquiry or investigation, the Company believes its activities have materially complied with applicable law, including the Higher Education Act, the rules and regulations adopted by the Department of Education thereunder, and the Department's guidance regarding those rules and regulations. Other than as specifically discussed below, on the basis of present information, anticipated insurance coverage, and advice received from counsel, it is the opinion of the Company's management that the disposition or ultimate determination of these claims, lawsuits, and proceedings will not have a material adverse effect on the Company's business, financial position, or results of operations.
Bais Yaakov of Spring Valley v. Peterson's Nelnet, LLC
On January 4, 2011, a complaint against Peterson's Nelnet, LLC (“Peterson's”), a subsidiary of the Company, was filed in the U.S. federal District Court for the District of New Jersey (the “District Court”). The complaint alleges that Peterson's sent six advertising faxes to the named plaintiff in 2008-2009 that were not the result of express invitation or permission granted by the plaintiff and did not include certain opt out language. The complaint also alleges that such faxes violated the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act (the “TCPA”), purportedly entitling the plaintiff to $500 per violation, trebled for willful violations for each of the six faxes. The complaint further alleges that Peterson's had sent putative class members more than 10,000 faxes that violated the TCPA, amounting to more than $5 million in statutory penalty damages and more than $15 million if trebled for willful violations. The complaint seeks to establish a class action for two different classes of plaintiffs: Class A, to whom Peterson's sent unsolicited fax advertisements containing opt out notices similar to those contained in the faxes received by the named plaintiff; and Class B, to whom Peterson's sent fax advertisements containing opt out notices similar to those contained in the faxes received by the named plaintiff. As of the filing date of this report, the District Court has not established or recognized any class.
On February 16, 2011, Peterson's filed a motion to dismiss the complaint based on a lack of federal question or diversity jurisdiction with respect to the complaint, which was denied by the District Court on April 15, 2011, shortly after a similar motion to dismiss that had been granted in an unrelated case involving alleged TCPA violations related to faxes, titled
Landsman & Funk PC v. Skinder-Strauss Associates
(the “Landsman Case”), was reversed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (the “Appeals Court”), which has jurisdiction over the District Court. On April 29, 2011, Peterson's filed an answer to the complaint, but also filed a motion for reconsideration of the motion to dismiss. On May 17, 2011, the Appeals Court granted a petition for rehearing of the motion to dismiss in the Landsman Case, and on May 31, 2011, Peterson's filed a motion for stay pending the outcome of that rehearing. On September 12, 2011, the motion for stay was granted, and the motion for reconsideration was denied by the District Court. On September 20, 2011, the named plaintiff filed a motion for reconsideration of the District Court's order, and at a hearing on November 22, 2011 the District Court ordered counsel to submit a proposed order to modify the stay for a limited third party subpoena, which the District Court approved on December 5, 2011. On January 18, 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a decision in an unrelated TCPA case which held that federal courts have federal question jurisdiction over private causes of action under the TCPA. On January 20, 2012, the named plaintiff requested that the stay be lifted on the basis of the Supreme Court's decision, and on January 25, 2012 the District Court denied that request since the stay was based on the outcome of the Appeals Court rehearing in the Landsman Case. On April 14, 2012, the Appeals Court issued an order in the Landsman Case vacating its prior order for rehearing, and remanding that case to the District Court to determine whether the statutory provisions of the TCPA limit whether or to what extent a TCPA claim can be heard as a class action in federal court where applicable state law would impose limitations on a class action if the claim were brought in state court. The resolution of this issue may affect whether the claim against Peterson's can be pursued as a class action.
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Peterson's intends to continue to contest the suit vigorously. Due to the preliminary stage of this matter and the uncertainty and risks inherent in class determination and the overall litigation process, the Company believes that a meaningful estimate of a reasonably possible loss, if any, or range of reasonably possible losses, if any, cannot currently be made.
ITEM 1A. RISK FACTORS
There have been no material changes from the risk factors described in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2011
in response to Item 1A of Part I of such Form 10-K.
ITEM 2. UNREGISTERED SALES OF EQUITY SECURITIES AND USE OF PROCEEDS
Stock Repurchases
The following table summarizes the repurchases of Class A common stock during the
first
quarter of
2012
by the Company or any “affiliated purchaser” of the Company, as defined in Rule 10b-18(a)(3) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Period
Total number of shares purchased (a)
Average price paid per share
Total number of shares purchased as part of publicly announced plans or programs (b)
Maximum number of shares that may yet be purchased under the plans or programs (b)
January 1 - January 31, 2012
2,413
$
24.38
2,413
1,564,151
February 1 - February 29, 2012
7,994
25.76
7,055
1,557,096
March 1 - March 31, 2012
32,222
26.43
25,177
1,531,919
Total
42,629
$
26.18
34,645
(a)
The total number of shares includes: (i) shares purchased pursuant to the stock repurchase program discussed in footnote (2) below; and (ii) shares owned and tendered by employees to satisfy tax withholding obligations upon the vesting of restricted shares. Shares of Class A common stock purchased pursuant to the stock repurchase program included
2,413
shares,
1,205
shares, and
799
shares in
January
,
February
, and
March
2012
, respectively, that had been issued to the Company’s 401(k) plan and allocated to employee participant accounts pursuant to the plan’s provisions for Company matching contributions in shares of Company stock, and were purchased by the Company from the plan pursuant to employee participant instructions to dispose of such shares. Shares of Class A common stock tendered by employees to satisfy tax withholding obligations included
0
shares,
939
shares, and
7,045
shares in
January
,
February
, and
March
2012
, respectively. Unless otherwise indicated, shares owned and tendered by employees to satisfy tax withholding obligations were purchased at the closing price of the Company’s shares on the date of vesting.
(b)
On May 25, 2006, the Company announced that its Board of Directors authorized a stock repurchase program to repurchase up to a total of five million shares of the Company's Class A common stock. On February 9, 2007, the Company announced that its Board of Directors increased to ten million the total number of shares of Class A common stock authorized for repurchase under that program. That program is set to expire on May 24, 2012. On May 9, 2012, the Company announced that its Board of Directors had authorized a new stock repurchase program to repurchase up to a total of five million shares of the Company's Class A common stock during the three-year period ending May 24, 2015. The five million shares authorized under the new program include the remaining un-repurchased shares from the previous program, which the new program will replace. Certain share repurchases included in the table above were made pursuant to a trading plan adopted by the Company in accordance with Rule 10b5-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Working capital and dividend restrictions/limitations
The Company’s credit facilities, including its revolving line of credit which is available through February of 2016, impose restrictions on the Company’s minimum consolidated net worth, the ratio of the Company’s adjusted EBITDA to corporate debt interest, the indebtedness of the Company's subsidiaries, and the ratio of non-FFELP loans to all loans in the Company's portfolio. In addition, trust indentures and other financing agreements governing debt issued by the Company's education lending subsidiaries may have general limitations on the amounts of funds that can be transferred to the Company by its subsidiaries through cash dividends.
The supplemental indenture for the Company’s Hybrid Securities issued in September 2006 provides that so long as any Hybrid Securities remain outstanding, if the Company gives notice of its election to defer interest payments but the related deferral period
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has not yet commenced or a deferral period is continuing, then the Company will not, and will not permit any of its subsidiaries to:
•
declare or pay any dividends or distributions on, or redeem, purchase, acquire or make a liquidation payment regarding, any of the Company’s capital stock.
•
except as required in connection with the repayment of principal, and except for any partial payments of deferred interest that may be made through the alternative payment mechanism described in the Hybrid Securities indenture, make any payment of principal of, or interest or premium, if any, on, or repay, repurchase, or redeem any of the Company’s debt securities that rank
pari passu
with or junior to the Hybrid Securities.
•
make any guarantee payments regarding any guarantee by the Company of the subordinated debt securities of any of the Company’s subsidiaries if the guarantee ranks
pari passu
with or junior in interest to the Hybrid Securities.
In addition, if any deferral period lasts longer than one year, the limitation on the Company’s ability to redeem or repurchase any of its securities that rank
pari passu
with or junior in interest to the Hybrid Securities will continue until the first anniversary of the date on which all deferred interest has been paid or canceled.
If the Company is involved in a business combination where immediately after its consummation more than 50% of the surviving entity’s voting stock is owned by the shareholders of the other party to the business combination, then the immediately preceding sentence will not apply to any deferral period that is terminated on the next interest payment date following the date of consummation of the business combination.
However, at any time, including during a deferral period, the Company will be permitted to:
•
pay dividends or distributions in additional shares of the Company’s capital stock.
•
declare or pay a dividend in connection with the implementation of a shareholders’ rights plan, or issue stock under such a plan, or redeem or repurchase any rights distributed pursuant to such a plan.
•
purchase common stock for issuance pursuant to any employee benefit plans.
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ITEM 6. EXHIBITS
10.1**
Agreement for Purchase and Sale of Interest in Aircraft dated effective as of March 1, 2012, by and between National Education Loan Network, Inc. and Union Financial Services, Inc.
10.2**
Second Amended and Restated Aircraft Joint Ownership Agreement made and entered into as of March 1, 2012, by and between National Education Loan Network, Inc. and Union Financial Services, Inc.
10.3*
Sixteenth Amendment of Amended and Restated Participation Agreement, dated as of March 23, 2012, by and between Union Bank and Trust Company and National Education Loan Network, Inc.
10.4**
Investment Management Agreement, dated effective as of February 10, 2012, by and among Whitetail Rock SLAB Fund I, LLC, Whitetail Rock Fund Management, LLC, and Whitetail Rock Capital Management, LLC.
10.5
Credit Agreement, dated as of February 17, 2012, among Nelnet, Inc., U.S. Bank National Association, as Administrative Agent, Lead Arranger and Book Runner, Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as Syndication Agent, and Citibank, N.A., and Royal Bank of Canada, as Co-Documentation Agents, and various lender parties thereto, filed as Exhibit 10.1 to the registrant's Current Report on Form 8-K filed on February 24, 2012 and incorporated herein by reference.
10.6
Guaranty, dated as of February 17, 2012, by and among each of the subsidiaries of Nelnet, Inc. signatories thereto, in favor of U.S. Bank National Association, as Administrative Agent, filed as Exhibit 10.2 to the registrant's Current Report on Form 8-K filed on February 24, 2012 and incorporated herein by reference.
31.1**
Certification Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 of Chief Executive Officer Michael S. Dunlap.
31.2**
Certification Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 of Chief Financial Officer Terry J. Heimes.
32***
Certification Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
101.INS***
XBRL Instance Document
101.SCH***
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document
101.CAL***
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document
101.DEF***
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document
101.LAB***
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document
101.PRE***
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document
* Filed herewith for purposes of providing a complete set of all amendment documents to the Amended and Restated Participation Agreement by and between Union Bank and Trust Company and Nelnet, Inc. (f/k/a NELnet, Inc.)(subsequently renamed National Education Loan Network, Inc.). The Amended and Restated Participation Agreement and all prior amendment documents thereto have been previously filed.
**
Filed herewith
*** Furnished herewith
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SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.
NELNET, INC.
Date:
May 9, 2012
By:
/s/ MICHAEL S. DUNLAP
Name:
Michael S. Dunlap
Title:
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Principal Executive Officer
By:
/s/ TERRY J. HEIMES
Name:
Terry J. Heimes
Title:
Chief Financial Officer
Principal Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer
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