NASDAQ:TFIN Triumph Financial Q3 2023 Earnings Report $48.62 -1.33 (-2.66%) Closing price 04/17/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$48.56 -0.05 (-0.11%) As of 04/17/2025 04:05 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Triumph Financial EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.51Consensus EPS $0.37Beat/MissBeat by +$0.14One Year Ago EPSN/ATriumph Financial Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$104.74 millionExpected Revenue$107.58 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$2.84 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/ATriumph Financial Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2023Date10/19/2023TimeN/AConference Call DateFriday, October 20, 2023Conference Call Time10:30AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Triumph Financial Q3 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 20, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00One which we do not yet see improving. We remain excited about the possibilities and our progress in spite of that. Last evening, we published our quarterly shareholder letter. That letter and our quarterly results will form the basis of our call today. However, before we get started, I would like to remind you that this call may include forward looking statements. Operator00:00:19Those statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual and anticipated results to differ. The company undertakes no obligation to publicly revise any forward looking statement. For details, please refer to the Safe Harbor statement in our shareholder letter published last evening. All comments made during today's call are subject to that Safe Harbor statement. With that, I'd like to Speaker 100:00:37turn the call over to Aaron for a welcome and to kick off our Q and A. Aaron? Thank you, Luke, and good morning. Thank you all for joining us. We made significant progress in the Q3 on several fronts. Speaker 100:00:51Our financial results were also better than in prior periods. In the shareholder letter released last night, I outlined 4 things that I thought were important to communicate to our investors about the quarter. Those included: First, TriumphPay's momentum and financial performance has exceeded even our own expectations. 2nd, We had a unique quarter from an expense perspective that is unlikely to repeat in the near term. 3rd, The freight market has not rebounded and it could get worse before it gets better. Speaker 100:01:24And finally, related to that, the things that make us uncomfortable in the short term, we believe will create value for us in the long term. As it relates to those 3rd and 4th points, the last few days have produced some interesting headlines. 2 days ago, freight waves broke a story detailing that Convoy, a well known tech enabled freight broker, had pulled its loads and that an announcement was forthcoming. We now know that Convoy is in the process of shutting down without a sale. That is something that would have been hard to imagine just a few months ago. Speaker 100:01:57Additional stories have followed speculating that several more freight brokers and carriers could face a similar fate. I'm friends with many people in this industry and it saddens me to think about the disruption this will bring to many employees and customers. But however I feel about it, That is the reality of how capitalism works. Companies that are not profitable will eventually fail. And one of the reasons I am bearish on freight over the short term is because I believe that private equity and venture capital Have artificially propped up some companies that were attempting to bring disruption to the industry without ever achieving profitability. Speaker 100:02:36I believe a significant amount of money will exit the stage in the freight industry and may not return anytime soon. I also believe that Triumph Financial and specifically what we're doing at Triumph Pay is bringing innovation to the and I know that this change is another healthy force of capitalism. The difference is that we are able to earn our cost of capital while bringing about this advancement instead of being beholden to additional outside funding. My journey into banking started in 2,008, 2000 And going through that process leaves you with a deep appreciation of the need to remain profitable even through the toughest cycles and that is what we are built to do. As it relates to Convoy, Triumph has less than 300,000 of counterparty risk outstanding, some of which we expect to collect in short order. Speaker 100:03:27And as additional brokers go through difficult times, we will continue to focus our attention on servicing the needs of the while we remain vigilant in protecting our own balance sheet as we always have. Before turning it over for questions, Let me explain that while my bearishness about the next 12 months or so is real, it also makes me extremely bullish on the long term future for Triumph Financial. We have a business plan and a balance sheet that is prepared for a soft freight market. We will be one of those companies who emerge stronger through this and we should have a materially greater market share than we do now. We are receiving more inbound inquiries than I can recall at any time in the past. Speaker 100:04:09As companies in the industry look to partner with a known industry leader with the financial experience and technology stack to help them navigate this market. And if the market ends up performing better than I expected, in the short term, we will be more profitable and that would be great, but I am far more interested in creating value for the long term. In conclusion, Triumph Financial is not a typical bank nor do we desire to B1. We are building a payments network in a market that needs 1 now more than ever. Communicating that requires effort, so we put a significant amount of time and energy in to our shareholder letters to help investors achieve an informed view. Speaker 100:04:50I hope you find those efforts valuable. With that, we're ready to take your questions. Speaker 200:04:57We will now go to Q and A. If you have connected via Zoom and would like to ask a question, please use the raise hand feature at the bottom of your Zoom window. Our first question comes from Michael Perito from KBW. Michael, please go ahead. Speaker 300:05:19Hey, everybody. Good morning. Speaker 100:05:21Good morning. Speaker 400:05:23I had Speaker 300:05:23a few things I wanted to touch on. Number 1, just off of your comments, Aaron, the the the shareholder letter was very helpful. So thanks for all the color and thoughts around the current environment. On TriumphPay, obviously, a very strong quarter. I know there were a couple things, it sounds like, on the expense side you guys highlighted, but one one comment in the release that I also noticed was around flow. Speaker 300:05:49And I was just curious, I mean, I imagine that's at pretty high margin. So I was wondering if you could maybe just dissect what the contribution of float was to TriumphPay in the quarter. And is it fair to think that that freight stay at current levels, you know, went higher for longer that that should be kind of a sustainable EBITDA margin contributor or do you expect any volatility around that? Speaker 100:06:10Sure. The as we've explained in the past, how we calculate Flow for purposes of intersegment accounting is at the fed funds rate overnight. So I believe that rate is roughly 5.4%. And so that contribution of that just under $300,000,000 of float at that That the fed funds rate would be $16,000,000 in pretax revenue. That is very valuable for us. Speaker 100:06:37That is very high margin for us. And of course, it's going to track what fed funds do. So as if we stay in a market that's higher for longer, then we expect that revenue component to grow because we Expect our float will grow as our payment volume grows and we definitely that will happen over the next 12 months. Speaker 300:06:54Yeah. That was more of the question. It's just does the volume Obviously, the rates are the rates, but does the volume, you expect that to continue to grow as your network transaction volume grows? Speaker 400:07:04Yes, we do. Especially as we move further up market into the shipper participants, we would expect that to be have exponential growth. Speaker 300:07:15Okay. And then secondly, I wanted to ask, Aaron, I thought some of your comments around credit stood out. And I appreciate that for you guys, it's less of a percentage of your business and what you're trying Become, but but, you know, still impactful near term. And so, you know, I did see that the nonperforming assets ticked up, but it looks like the reserve didn't really I was just wondering if you could give us some color about what you saw on the credit side and maybe near term Expectations around any provisioning or reserve build that we should just factor in as as we model out the early part of 24. Speaker 500:07:56Yes, I'll take that one. So, the tick up in the non performing assets, those particular assets happen to be so well covered that there was no reserve required. That's the short answer to that question. As we continue to look forward, If there are additional credits that need to be downgraded, we'll go through the same analysis. But we're already stress testing the portfolio, and we feel very good about secondary sources of repayment. Speaker 100:08:22And Mike, if I can just add, if you go back and look at our shareholder letters from a year or 2 years ago, That was the time to make sure you were being vigilant on credit when the market was far more competitive than it is now. And I would never submit to you that we got it perfectly correct, right, that doesn't happen. But what I do know is because we weren't Obsessed with growing our balance sheet and because we know this market operates in cycles, we were very disciplined, we are very thoughtful when we take credit on our books and and I believe that will serve us well. And so we have some things I'm sure we will work through in this cycle. Do I expect there to be material losses? Speaker 100:09:07I do not because I know how our team has approached that and the discipline we brought to it in a market when A lot fewer people were thinking about that, but we're going to have to navigate these waters and something may surprise us along the way, But I feel very good about where we sit relative to the collateral position we have in our loan book and the underwriting we did when we Yeah. The 2 years ago, when a lot of these credits would have showed up. Speaker 300:09:39Right. And then just lastly, I'm sure others have questions, so I don't want It's too much here, but just on the factoring, outlook near term, as you mentioned, Darren, it sounds like there continues to kind of be incremental events In the industry that that kind of give you guys the the clarity that you think the re the recessionary kind of trends could continue for some time. How do you do you have any near term outlooks or expectations around kind of invoice volume and average invoice size that we should be thinking over or maybe even if it's just directionally kind of what you Think that the current environment could mean for you guys as we think about the model? Speaker 600:10:17Mike, I'll take that one. We still see the freight market very soft. And one thing that we look at very closely to monitor that is how The freight market is reacting to fuel. In the Q3, fuel increased significantly where it took a long time For rates to actually catch up, we didn't see improvement in the rate until late in the quarter. And even still in a vibrant market, those items or those numbers will move more in lockstep. Speaker 600:10:45So we see increase in the average invoice amount, not so much as demand driven as more expense driven through the fuel side of the business. Speaker 300:10:56Got it. Okay. But I guess in high level, it's good. The EBITDA margin improvement on TPAY comes at A nice time for you guys to be able to sustain investment in that business even if the factory business is a little light for the near term? Speaker 200:11:18Our next question comes from Thomas Wendler from Stephens. Thomas, your line is open. Feel free to unmute. Speaker 700:11:25Hey, good morning, everyone. Good morning. Good morning. I just wanted to go back to tPAY. Can you give us an idea What the critical mass for the network volume looks like and then maybe how the conversations are going with moving some of the legacy pricing up close to that $5 per transaction target? Speaker 400:11:45Yes, I think I can take that, Aaron. My our projections for critical mass, we think that what the industry needs is for us to be processing And hopefully making payments on 1 out of 2 brokered freight transactions, over the road transactions. Right now, we are touching about 1 out of 3. And so our goal is to continue to build out the network and bring on clients to get to that 1 of 2 position and then further beyond. In terms of the $5 per transaction pricing, all of our pricing models for new business have been Updated to include the per transaction pricing. Speaker 400:12:23However, there are always going to be some cases where we have to be creative in how we price deals to get them on board onto the network and the value that they create for all the participants. There's creativity that happens there but there has been substantial progress made in repricing existing clients, as well as holding pricing on the new business, that we are chasing today. Speaker 700:12:48Great color. Thank you. And then sticking with T Pay, can you give us some color around the Expansion of network participants into verification only brokers. What does that opportunity look like with your audit only clients? Speaker 400:13:01Yeah, so that's a beautiful question, I'm glad you asked it. So as we have expanded our technology and capabilities, The point of conforming transactions or network transactions is to provide the data that factors need in order to do their verification, validation and cash application processes. TriumphPay while we're making 21, a little over $21,000,000,000 in payments, we are touching over $47,000,000,000 in, carrier spend. And so we have data associated with the audit only brokers On our platform that are very valuable to the factoring industry. And so over the last couple quarters we've been on our technology to be able to include those data sets into the conforming transactions or network transactions So that they begin to see the value and are able to utilize that data on the front end even though the payment data doesn't is not attached to it. Speaker 700:14:01Perfect. Thanks for that. And then just moving over to credit, You've seen some increased fears around CRE, and I noticed an uptick in the loan modifications for CRE. Was there any theme behind the loan modifications, any Specific group of loans and then are you expecting to see any more modifications moving forward? Speaker 500:14:20We did allude a little bit to that in the shareholder letter. The theme is that those are variable rate credits. And so when you have a variable rate credit that prices up 500 basis points in a short period of time, obviously, that puts Some borrowers had stressed and so we're we hit we had to make modifications to address that. We ended up at a rate that Still okay. Our economics are not as good as we would love, but it allows that loan to continue those loans to continue to perform And, there's still equity in those properties, so the borrowers are willing to work with us on a long term basis. Speaker 500:14:54So we expect more of that to over the course of the next few months as more and more of those variable rate borrowers are dealing with the reality of the new environment. Speaker 700:15:07All right. I appreciate you answering all my questions. Speaker 100:15:10Thank you. Speaker 200:15:12Our next question Comes from Joe Yanchunis from Raymond James. Speaker 800:15:18Good morning. Speaker 900:15:20Good morning, Joe. Speaker 800:15:23So kind of on expenses, you guys had, you mentioned in your shareholder letter that you expect 5%, Non expense growth in 2024 absent any ramping of large clients. I was wondering if you could flesh that out that growth by different segments for payment factoring, Community Bank and Corporate? Speaker 1000:15:48Bulk of the incremental spending that you'll see next year is likely to be in the payment side. You'll see a little bit in corporate, but I would Probably couches 60% corporate or excuse me, 60% payments, 40% corporate, roughly. Speaker 800:16:08Okay, perfect. And then whether through deepening customer penetration With the onboarding of new brokers, how much annualized payment volume is contracted to come on to the network in the next 6 to 12 months? Yes. Speaker 400:16:25So the way I would describe that for you, Joe, is we speak only about brokers that are in active integrations. And so Those that are contracted and in active integrations represent that's come on onboard in Q2, Q3 and then what we Expect to onboard in Q4 represents approximately $9,000,000,000 in annualized carrier payments amongst all of them. Some of them, They've been onboarded, and they're in their ramp up stage, again, which takes 6 to 12 months for them to typically fully ramp. Speaker 800:17:01So all else equal, if no other brokers or factors signed up on the network, you would have $9,000,000,000 Incremental volume. Okay. And then Speaker 400:17:13Yes, so the market conditions remain the same. Yes, right. Speaker 800:17:18Of course. So for tPAY, you've announced a lot of major wins on the broker side, but we haven't seen the same type of momentum on the factoring side. I think at this point, the quickest way to increase the network transaction penetration, which looks to be about 6% of all invoices in the quarter, would be to add some large Factoring companies? Can you discuss the progress on that front end, you know, when we might see some some large wins there? Speaker 100:17:44Let me take that one. So the and and we allude to it if you read the factoring section above this letter. The gating issue in my opinion towards driving greater factor participation in the network has to date been the fact that We were making 1 out of every 6 payments to them and then we were making 1 out of every 4 or providing network data on 1 out of every 4 and now we're at 1 out of every 3. I believe a day is coming sooner rather than later where it will be 1 out of every 2 and once you get to that level of penetration, Factoring companies now can start to use your technology to change their processes. I mean, that is the brand promise that TriumphPay makes to the factoring industry. Speaker 100:18:34If you look at our own factoring subsidiary, it costs us roughly $6 to do the back office processing per invoice and that's a generalization because it depends on whether it's a large fleet, a small carrier, but let's just use $6 as a good approximation. We need to, for our own benefit and for every other factor we want to join The network, we need to be able to demonstrate we can get that price down to $3 I mean, that would be a tremendous margin pickup for them. Well, you aren't going to be able to do that if you don't make a significant amount of their payments or provide a significant amount of audit data for conforming transactions. We are closing in on that mark. The second gating issue Is there is required technology improvement in most factoring management systems in able for them to be able to ingest load data before an invoice is created. Speaker 100:19:36No FMS was ever built to do that. We are having to our own FMS had to be improved to be able to ingest that data. And so one of the things we talk about in this letter is we are thinking through how we can offer to the factoring industry, the ability, the tech some of the technology we have built and the operational expertise we have so that they can more easily ingest that data so that they can pick up the cost savings that is the brand promise of TriumphPay. It's the cost savings and the assurance of the validity of the invoice. That is our promise to them. Speaker 100:20:11We are delivering on that. It's a very fair question, Joe. I think it comes in in a much faster rate after we achieved that 50% penetration that Melissa alluded to, and we are working towards that. Speaker 800:20:28All right. Well, thank you much for taking my questions. Speaker 900:20:31Sure. Speaker 200:20:33As a reminder, if you have a question, feel free to use the raise hand feature, which can be found at the bottom of the Zoom application. Our next question comes from Gary Tenner from D. A. Davidson. Gary, please go ahead. Speaker 900:20:48Thanks. Good morning, everybody. Speaker 300:20:49Good morning, Eric. Speaker 900:20:50Aaron, I wanted to ask your comments in the letter regarding your pessimism or bearishness About the freight industry, didn't sound like it was universal, but certainly your view of the world. As you looked at the data from, say, DAT, you've seen spot rates for van spot rates move up a little bit from Summer lows. But over the last couple of weeks, after moving a little higher, the van load or load load to van ratio seems like I mean, is that is that more recent data? Is that kind of really a big driver of your Of of your view going forward and and the lack of capacity coming out of the system? Speaker 100:21:36Yeah. I wouldn't tie it to that. That's just one data point. I I start with the point, Gary, that I think any of us in the industry begin with The hope that we're wrong. Right? Speaker 100:21:50We we all want, the industry to return to 2022 levels. Although, I think any of us who live through that would acknowledge, I don't know that that was particularly healthy either. It was very profitable in the short term in 2021 in in that time period. What I look at is normally in this part of the season, You would see invoice, the spot rates moving and those moves would certainly pick up a movement in diesel costs. Because if you think about what the spot rate is, it's just re it's marking to market every night. Speaker 100:22:27It's marking to market capacity. It's marking to market input cost of which diesel is a very large one. And at this point in the season, if we believe all that has been written about Retailers are at the end of the destocking phase that we went through this bullwhip effect that some people were very right on that of why the market got so tight for a while. If we believed we were coming to the end of that, we would see the spot rates more sensitive to the input costs In the system, we are not seeing that. And that plus just all of the things we see just leads me to believe we have excess capacity in the So I would think that many, a very significant number of small carriers are unable to earn their cost of capital Taking spot rate loads right now. Speaker 100:23:17Of course, there are exceptions if you're in a certain lane, but on the whole, I believe that to be true. And that is why you're seeing the attrition In our own factoring client base, that's why I think you're seeing softness across the market. And so my view is it is what it is. So what is it? I think Freight has not rebounded to the point where most carriers can earn their cost of capital, which means we need Capacity to leave the system in order to recreate equilibrium. Speaker 100:23:48And hope we're wrong. I don't think we are. How long it takes to do that? There will be catalysts. If you think about what's happened the last few days with the announcements we've referred to, It seems like these things always start slow at first and then they accelerate. Speaker 100:24:03And so that may be that the industry recalibrates more quickly than I would expect. But right now, my own personal view is this takes the next 12 months for the industry to sort itself out and achieve equilibrium. Speaker 900:24:19Appreciate that. And since you just kind of alluded to recent news and that convoy Wind down, I don't know that particular company particularly well, but was there anything my understanding is they were carrier that was kind of tech enabled, but And was there anything they were doing that you think was particularly interesting, that kind of plays into your longer term view of the freight industry? Speaker 100:24:42I think Convoy built tremendous technology. They were exceptionally talented and smart people. The problem that they and some of these other tech enabled brokers have is that in order to build go from just traditional brokerage, like if you think about what What was traditional freight brokerage? It was contracting with shippers to move loads and then using people and using phones to find carriers to haul those loans and make a 15% margin. Beautiful business model, highly scalable. Speaker 100:25:15A lot of freight brokers have done exceptionally well with that. Take the last 10 years, there has been this move to we should create digital freight marketplaces and conceptually, I don't disagree with that. I think the idea is right. The execution is exceedingly hard. It's exceedingly hard to get the scale and bring in all the dynamics that get priced into this very vibrant, very hard to predict trucking industry that is attached to the global supply chain. Speaker 100:25:44It's just hard. So I think convoy did great things. I think there are many other tech enabled freight brokers who have built really cool technology. But at the end of the day, Cool technology and and really good marketing will not make up for the inability to earn your cost of capital. And this market and where the capital markets are has brought that to bear and we've known that, none of us are surprised that This day is coming. Speaker 100:26:13We didn't know exactly when. We didn't know exactly what would cause it, but it's our job at Triumph because we've had freight brokers as our counterparties in our factoring business for over a decade, frankly, since the inception of our factoring business back in 2004 before we even bought it. We it's our job to think about not who has the best technology or who's in, has the best user interface, it's who can afford to repay us when payment is due. That is a banking discipline and that is a discipline we Never forgotten because we know what it's like when it goes the other way. So I suspect there will be some more. Speaker 100:26:51I suspect this technology will live on and we'll improve the industry for all of us. I hope that these really talented people I've gotten to know will land places and continue to make The freight industry better? It's just you have to do this. You have to build things. For us with TriumphPay, you have to build it In a way that when the market inevitably turns against you, you can afford to keep making investments, and that is a discipline we take very seriously. Speaker 900:27:19I appreciate your thoughts on that. I'll just throw in one last really quick question, follow-up on the expense question. Really thinking about the Q4 and kind of modeling a jumping up point there from a segment perspective, the return or normalization of expenses in the Q4 closer to 2nd quarter, I assume that's similarly weighted towards the payments segment. Speaker 1000:27:43I would expect the Q4 to look pretty similar, Gary, to the Q2 across each of our segments. Speaker 100:27:50And Gary, one thing if I may add on that. Those expenses and I think we're all in a cycle where talking about expense control is appropriate and that's what we should be talking about. But understand that those expense spikes that we sometimes have in TriumphPay that are tied to the onboarding of a large freight broker are the best kind of expense because that is an investment in a long term contractual relationship and so we Take a lot of that expense, not all of it, but we take a significant amount of that expense upfront and we have yet to have a large freight broker ever leave our eco Systems, the duration of those relationships is proving to be very long and every quarter we go forward and do more for these customers, The relationship gets deeper. So we want to be thoughtful about expenses. We don't take it lightly. Speaker 100:28:42But those specific spikes, That part of the expense base, I will take all day every day because I know over the long term, it creates a lot of value for us. Speaker 900:28:54Fair enough. Thanks, Speaker 100:28:56Aaron. Thank you. Speaker 200:28:58Our next question comes from Hal Goetzch from B. Riley Securities. Hal, please go ahead. Speaker 300:29:04Hey, guys. Just want to ask about the core banking side of the business. You've been truly your word in not really growing the asset side of the balance sheet. One of the areas where it does appear to have grown the business in commercial real estate year over year. And I just want to get your feel on, Are you just seeing some great conditions right now to make some good loans, but very selective opportunities for your team in that banking segment? Speaker 300:29:29Love your thoughts on that. Speaker 500:29:32Yes. I think you characterized it really well. There are a lot of opportunities out there. Not all of them have adjusted to the new realities This interest rate environment, this economy, but some have. And where we see really strong tenants, really strong borrowers, Great risk adjusted returns. Speaker 500:29:50We are still open for business and we will continue to be so. So yes, that's what drove the growth last quarter. Okay. Speaker 300:29:58Thanks. Thanks for you guys. That's all my questions. Thank you. Speaker 100:30:02Thank you. Speaker 200:30:04There are no other questions on this line at this time. Thank you. Speaker 100:30:21Assuming that was my invitation to conclude the call, we thank you all for joining us today. We appreciate, your an interest in what we are doing, and we look forward to speaking with you soon. Have a great day.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallTriumph Financial Q3 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Triumph Financial Earnings HeadlinesBank of America Securities Reaffirms Their Hold Rating on Vita Coco Company (COCO)April 17 at 8:02 AM | markets.businessinsider.comINVESTOR ALERT: Pomerantz Law Firm Investigates Claims On Behalf of Investors of The Vita Coco Company, Inc. - COCOApril 14, 2025 | prnewswire.comBREAKING: Trump Bans NVIDIA Chips to ChinaOn April 16th, 2025, President Trump banned Nvidia from selling its most advanced semiconductors to China. That brings the U.S. and China closer to war than at any time since the Korean War ended in 1953.April 18, 2025 | Behind the Markets (Ad)Axelum Resources posts P688-million net income in 2024April 14, 2025 | msn.com2 Reasons to Like COCO (and 1 Not So Much)April 14, 2025 | msn.comAxelum swings to profitability in 2024 on strong salesApril 12, 2025 | msn.comSee More Vita Coco Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Triumph Financial? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Triumph Financial and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Triumph FinancialTriumph Financial (NASDAQ:TFIN), a financial holding company, provides various payments, factoring, and banking services in the United States. It operates through Banking, Factoring, and Payments segments. The company offers deposit products, including checking, savings, money market and certificates of deposit; and loan products, such as commercial real estate, land, commercial construction and land development, residential real estate, commercial agriculture, and consumer loans, as well as commercial and industrial loans, equipment loans, asset-based loans, business loans for working capital and operational purposes, and liquid credit loans. It also provides electronic banking services, debit cards, insurance brokerage services, mortgage warehouse facilities, and transportation factoring services, as well as payments services offered through TriumphPay platform, a payments network for the over-the-road trucking industry. The company was formerly known as Triumph Bancorp, Inc. and changed its name to Triumph Financial Inc. in December 2022. Triumph Financial Inc. was incorporated in 2003 and is headquartered in Dallas, Texas.View Triumph Financial ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Archer Aviation Unveils NYC Network Ahead of Key Earnings Report3 Reasons to Like the Look of Amazon Ahead of EarningsTesla Stock Eyes Breakout With Earnings on DeckJohnson & Johnson Earnings Were More Good Than Bad—Time to Buy? 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There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00One which we do not yet see improving. We remain excited about the possibilities and our progress in spite of that. Last evening, we published our quarterly shareholder letter. That letter and our quarterly results will form the basis of our call today. However, before we get started, I would like to remind you that this call may include forward looking statements. Operator00:00:19Those statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual and anticipated results to differ. The company undertakes no obligation to publicly revise any forward looking statement. For details, please refer to the Safe Harbor statement in our shareholder letter published last evening. All comments made during today's call are subject to that Safe Harbor statement. With that, I'd like to Speaker 100:00:37turn the call over to Aaron for a welcome and to kick off our Q and A. Aaron? Thank you, Luke, and good morning. Thank you all for joining us. We made significant progress in the Q3 on several fronts. Speaker 100:00:51Our financial results were also better than in prior periods. In the shareholder letter released last night, I outlined 4 things that I thought were important to communicate to our investors about the quarter. Those included: First, TriumphPay's momentum and financial performance has exceeded even our own expectations. 2nd, We had a unique quarter from an expense perspective that is unlikely to repeat in the near term. 3rd, The freight market has not rebounded and it could get worse before it gets better. Speaker 100:01:24And finally, related to that, the things that make us uncomfortable in the short term, we believe will create value for us in the long term. As it relates to those 3rd and 4th points, the last few days have produced some interesting headlines. 2 days ago, freight waves broke a story detailing that Convoy, a well known tech enabled freight broker, had pulled its loads and that an announcement was forthcoming. We now know that Convoy is in the process of shutting down without a sale. That is something that would have been hard to imagine just a few months ago. Speaker 100:01:57Additional stories have followed speculating that several more freight brokers and carriers could face a similar fate. I'm friends with many people in this industry and it saddens me to think about the disruption this will bring to many employees and customers. But however I feel about it, That is the reality of how capitalism works. Companies that are not profitable will eventually fail. And one of the reasons I am bearish on freight over the short term is because I believe that private equity and venture capital Have artificially propped up some companies that were attempting to bring disruption to the industry without ever achieving profitability. Speaker 100:02:36I believe a significant amount of money will exit the stage in the freight industry and may not return anytime soon. I also believe that Triumph Financial and specifically what we're doing at Triumph Pay is bringing innovation to the and I know that this change is another healthy force of capitalism. The difference is that we are able to earn our cost of capital while bringing about this advancement instead of being beholden to additional outside funding. My journey into banking started in 2,008, 2000 And going through that process leaves you with a deep appreciation of the need to remain profitable even through the toughest cycles and that is what we are built to do. As it relates to Convoy, Triumph has less than 300,000 of counterparty risk outstanding, some of which we expect to collect in short order. Speaker 100:03:27And as additional brokers go through difficult times, we will continue to focus our attention on servicing the needs of the while we remain vigilant in protecting our own balance sheet as we always have. Before turning it over for questions, Let me explain that while my bearishness about the next 12 months or so is real, it also makes me extremely bullish on the long term future for Triumph Financial. We have a business plan and a balance sheet that is prepared for a soft freight market. We will be one of those companies who emerge stronger through this and we should have a materially greater market share than we do now. We are receiving more inbound inquiries than I can recall at any time in the past. Speaker 100:04:09As companies in the industry look to partner with a known industry leader with the financial experience and technology stack to help them navigate this market. And if the market ends up performing better than I expected, in the short term, we will be more profitable and that would be great, but I am far more interested in creating value for the long term. In conclusion, Triumph Financial is not a typical bank nor do we desire to B1. We are building a payments network in a market that needs 1 now more than ever. Communicating that requires effort, so we put a significant amount of time and energy in to our shareholder letters to help investors achieve an informed view. Speaker 100:04:50I hope you find those efforts valuable. With that, we're ready to take your questions. Speaker 200:04:57We will now go to Q and A. If you have connected via Zoom and would like to ask a question, please use the raise hand feature at the bottom of your Zoom window. Our first question comes from Michael Perito from KBW. Michael, please go ahead. Speaker 300:05:19Hey, everybody. Good morning. Speaker 100:05:21Good morning. Speaker 400:05:23I had Speaker 300:05:23a few things I wanted to touch on. Number 1, just off of your comments, Aaron, the the the shareholder letter was very helpful. So thanks for all the color and thoughts around the current environment. On TriumphPay, obviously, a very strong quarter. I know there were a couple things, it sounds like, on the expense side you guys highlighted, but one one comment in the release that I also noticed was around flow. Speaker 300:05:49And I was just curious, I mean, I imagine that's at pretty high margin. So I was wondering if you could maybe just dissect what the contribution of float was to TriumphPay in the quarter. And is it fair to think that that freight stay at current levels, you know, went higher for longer that that should be kind of a sustainable EBITDA margin contributor or do you expect any volatility around that? Speaker 100:06:10Sure. The as we've explained in the past, how we calculate Flow for purposes of intersegment accounting is at the fed funds rate overnight. So I believe that rate is roughly 5.4%. And so that contribution of that just under $300,000,000 of float at that That the fed funds rate would be $16,000,000 in pretax revenue. That is very valuable for us. Speaker 100:06:37That is very high margin for us. And of course, it's going to track what fed funds do. So as if we stay in a market that's higher for longer, then we expect that revenue component to grow because we Expect our float will grow as our payment volume grows and we definitely that will happen over the next 12 months. Speaker 300:06:54Yeah. That was more of the question. It's just does the volume Obviously, the rates are the rates, but does the volume, you expect that to continue to grow as your network transaction volume grows? Speaker 400:07:04Yes, we do. Especially as we move further up market into the shipper participants, we would expect that to be have exponential growth. Speaker 300:07:15Okay. And then secondly, I wanted to ask, Aaron, I thought some of your comments around credit stood out. And I appreciate that for you guys, it's less of a percentage of your business and what you're trying Become, but but, you know, still impactful near term. And so, you know, I did see that the nonperforming assets ticked up, but it looks like the reserve didn't really I was just wondering if you could give us some color about what you saw on the credit side and maybe near term Expectations around any provisioning or reserve build that we should just factor in as as we model out the early part of 24. Speaker 500:07:56Yes, I'll take that one. So, the tick up in the non performing assets, those particular assets happen to be so well covered that there was no reserve required. That's the short answer to that question. As we continue to look forward, If there are additional credits that need to be downgraded, we'll go through the same analysis. But we're already stress testing the portfolio, and we feel very good about secondary sources of repayment. Speaker 100:08:22And Mike, if I can just add, if you go back and look at our shareholder letters from a year or 2 years ago, That was the time to make sure you were being vigilant on credit when the market was far more competitive than it is now. And I would never submit to you that we got it perfectly correct, right, that doesn't happen. But what I do know is because we weren't Obsessed with growing our balance sheet and because we know this market operates in cycles, we were very disciplined, we are very thoughtful when we take credit on our books and and I believe that will serve us well. And so we have some things I'm sure we will work through in this cycle. Do I expect there to be material losses? Speaker 100:09:07I do not because I know how our team has approached that and the discipline we brought to it in a market when A lot fewer people were thinking about that, but we're going to have to navigate these waters and something may surprise us along the way, But I feel very good about where we sit relative to the collateral position we have in our loan book and the underwriting we did when we Yeah. The 2 years ago, when a lot of these credits would have showed up. Speaker 300:09:39Right. And then just lastly, I'm sure others have questions, so I don't want It's too much here, but just on the factoring, outlook near term, as you mentioned, Darren, it sounds like there continues to kind of be incremental events In the industry that that kind of give you guys the the clarity that you think the re the recessionary kind of trends could continue for some time. How do you do you have any near term outlooks or expectations around kind of invoice volume and average invoice size that we should be thinking over or maybe even if it's just directionally kind of what you Think that the current environment could mean for you guys as we think about the model? Speaker 600:10:17Mike, I'll take that one. We still see the freight market very soft. And one thing that we look at very closely to monitor that is how The freight market is reacting to fuel. In the Q3, fuel increased significantly where it took a long time For rates to actually catch up, we didn't see improvement in the rate until late in the quarter. And even still in a vibrant market, those items or those numbers will move more in lockstep. Speaker 600:10:45So we see increase in the average invoice amount, not so much as demand driven as more expense driven through the fuel side of the business. Speaker 300:10:56Got it. Okay. But I guess in high level, it's good. The EBITDA margin improvement on TPAY comes at A nice time for you guys to be able to sustain investment in that business even if the factory business is a little light for the near term? Speaker 200:11:18Our next question comes from Thomas Wendler from Stephens. Thomas, your line is open. Feel free to unmute. Speaker 700:11:25Hey, good morning, everyone. Good morning. Good morning. I just wanted to go back to tPAY. Can you give us an idea What the critical mass for the network volume looks like and then maybe how the conversations are going with moving some of the legacy pricing up close to that $5 per transaction target? Speaker 400:11:45Yes, I think I can take that, Aaron. My our projections for critical mass, we think that what the industry needs is for us to be processing And hopefully making payments on 1 out of 2 brokered freight transactions, over the road transactions. Right now, we are touching about 1 out of 3. And so our goal is to continue to build out the network and bring on clients to get to that 1 of 2 position and then further beyond. In terms of the $5 per transaction pricing, all of our pricing models for new business have been Updated to include the per transaction pricing. Speaker 400:12:23However, there are always going to be some cases where we have to be creative in how we price deals to get them on board onto the network and the value that they create for all the participants. There's creativity that happens there but there has been substantial progress made in repricing existing clients, as well as holding pricing on the new business, that we are chasing today. Speaker 700:12:48Great color. Thank you. And then sticking with T Pay, can you give us some color around the Expansion of network participants into verification only brokers. What does that opportunity look like with your audit only clients? Speaker 400:13:01Yeah, so that's a beautiful question, I'm glad you asked it. So as we have expanded our technology and capabilities, The point of conforming transactions or network transactions is to provide the data that factors need in order to do their verification, validation and cash application processes. TriumphPay while we're making 21, a little over $21,000,000,000 in payments, we are touching over $47,000,000,000 in, carrier spend. And so we have data associated with the audit only brokers On our platform that are very valuable to the factoring industry. And so over the last couple quarters we've been on our technology to be able to include those data sets into the conforming transactions or network transactions So that they begin to see the value and are able to utilize that data on the front end even though the payment data doesn't is not attached to it. Speaker 700:14:01Perfect. Thanks for that. And then just moving over to credit, You've seen some increased fears around CRE, and I noticed an uptick in the loan modifications for CRE. Was there any theme behind the loan modifications, any Specific group of loans and then are you expecting to see any more modifications moving forward? Speaker 500:14:20We did allude a little bit to that in the shareholder letter. The theme is that those are variable rate credits. And so when you have a variable rate credit that prices up 500 basis points in a short period of time, obviously, that puts Some borrowers had stressed and so we're we hit we had to make modifications to address that. We ended up at a rate that Still okay. Our economics are not as good as we would love, but it allows that loan to continue those loans to continue to perform And, there's still equity in those properties, so the borrowers are willing to work with us on a long term basis. Speaker 500:14:54So we expect more of that to over the course of the next few months as more and more of those variable rate borrowers are dealing with the reality of the new environment. Speaker 700:15:07All right. I appreciate you answering all my questions. Speaker 100:15:10Thank you. Speaker 200:15:12Our next question Comes from Joe Yanchunis from Raymond James. Speaker 800:15:18Good morning. Speaker 900:15:20Good morning, Joe. Speaker 800:15:23So kind of on expenses, you guys had, you mentioned in your shareholder letter that you expect 5%, Non expense growth in 2024 absent any ramping of large clients. I was wondering if you could flesh that out that growth by different segments for payment factoring, Community Bank and Corporate? Speaker 1000:15:48Bulk of the incremental spending that you'll see next year is likely to be in the payment side. You'll see a little bit in corporate, but I would Probably couches 60% corporate or excuse me, 60% payments, 40% corporate, roughly. Speaker 800:16:08Okay, perfect. And then whether through deepening customer penetration With the onboarding of new brokers, how much annualized payment volume is contracted to come on to the network in the next 6 to 12 months? Yes. Speaker 400:16:25So the way I would describe that for you, Joe, is we speak only about brokers that are in active integrations. And so Those that are contracted and in active integrations represent that's come on onboard in Q2, Q3 and then what we Expect to onboard in Q4 represents approximately $9,000,000,000 in annualized carrier payments amongst all of them. Some of them, They've been onboarded, and they're in their ramp up stage, again, which takes 6 to 12 months for them to typically fully ramp. Speaker 800:17:01So all else equal, if no other brokers or factors signed up on the network, you would have $9,000,000,000 Incremental volume. Okay. And then Speaker 400:17:13Yes, so the market conditions remain the same. Yes, right. Speaker 800:17:18Of course. So for tPAY, you've announced a lot of major wins on the broker side, but we haven't seen the same type of momentum on the factoring side. I think at this point, the quickest way to increase the network transaction penetration, which looks to be about 6% of all invoices in the quarter, would be to add some large Factoring companies? Can you discuss the progress on that front end, you know, when we might see some some large wins there? Speaker 100:17:44Let me take that one. So the and and we allude to it if you read the factoring section above this letter. The gating issue in my opinion towards driving greater factor participation in the network has to date been the fact that We were making 1 out of every 6 payments to them and then we were making 1 out of every 4 or providing network data on 1 out of every 4 and now we're at 1 out of every 3. I believe a day is coming sooner rather than later where it will be 1 out of every 2 and once you get to that level of penetration, Factoring companies now can start to use your technology to change their processes. I mean, that is the brand promise that TriumphPay makes to the factoring industry. Speaker 100:18:34If you look at our own factoring subsidiary, it costs us roughly $6 to do the back office processing per invoice and that's a generalization because it depends on whether it's a large fleet, a small carrier, but let's just use $6 as a good approximation. We need to, for our own benefit and for every other factor we want to join The network, we need to be able to demonstrate we can get that price down to $3 I mean, that would be a tremendous margin pickup for them. Well, you aren't going to be able to do that if you don't make a significant amount of their payments or provide a significant amount of audit data for conforming transactions. We are closing in on that mark. The second gating issue Is there is required technology improvement in most factoring management systems in able for them to be able to ingest load data before an invoice is created. Speaker 100:19:36No FMS was ever built to do that. We are having to our own FMS had to be improved to be able to ingest that data. And so one of the things we talk about in this letter is we are thinking through how we can offer to the factoring industry, the ability, the tech some of the technology we have built and the operational expertise we have so that they can more easily ingest that data so that they can pick up the cost savings that is the brand promise of TriumphPay. It's the cost savings and the assurance of the validity of the invoice. That is our promise to them. Speaker 100:20:11We are delivering on that. It's a very fair question, Joe. I think it comes in in a much faster rate after we achieved that 50% penetration that Melissa alluded to, and we are working towards that. Speaker 800:20:28All right. Well, thank you much for taking my questions. Speaker 900:20:31Sure. Speaker 200:20:33As a reminder, if you have a question, feel free to use the raise hand feature, which can be found at the bottom of the Zoom application. Our next question comes from Gary Tenner from D. A. Davidson. Gary, please go ahead. Speaker 900:20:48Thanks. Good morning, everybody. Speaker 300:20:49Good morning, Eric. Speaker 900:20:50Aaron, I wanted to ask your comments in the letter regarding your pessimism or bearishness About the freight industry, didn't sound like it was universal, but certainly your view of the world. As you looked at the data from, say, DAT, you've seen spot rates for van spot rates move up a little bit from Summer lows. But over the last couple of weeks, after moving a little higher, the van load or load load to van ratio seems like I mean, is that is that more recent data? Is that kind of really a big driver of your Of of your view going forward and and the lack of capacity coming out of the system? Speaker 100:21:36Yeah. I wouldn't tie it to that. That's just one data point. I I start with the point, Gary, that I think any of us in the industry begin with The hope that we're wrong. Right? Speaker 100:21:50We we all want, the industry to return to 2022 levels. Although, I think any of us who live through that would acknowledge, I don't know that that was particularly healthy either. It was very profitable in the short term in 2021 in in that time period. What I look at is normally in this part of the season, You would see invoice, the spot rates moving and those moves would certainly pick up a movement in diesel costs. Because if you think about what the spot rate is, it's just re it's marking to market every night. Speaker 100:22:27It's marking to market capacity. It's marking to market input cost of which diesel is a very large one. And at this point in the season, if we believe all that has been written about Retailers are at the end of the destocking phase that we went through this bullwhip effect that some people were very right on that of why the market got so tight for a while. If we believed we were coming to the end of that, we would see the spot rates more sensitive to the input costs In the system, we are not seeing that. And that plus just all of the things we see just leads me to believe we have excess capacity in the So I would think that many, a very significant number of small carriers are unable to earn their cost of capital Taking spot rate loads right now. Speaker 100:23:17Of course, there are exceptions if you're in a certain lane, but on the whole, I believe that to be true. And that is why you're seeing the attrition In our own factoring client base, that's why I think you're seeing softness across the market. And so my view is it is what it is. So what is it? I think Freight has not rebounded to the point where most carriers can earn their cost of capital, which means we need Capacity to leave the system in order to recreate equilibrium. Speaker 100:23:48And hope we're wrong. I don't think we are. How long it takes to do that? There will be catalysts. If you think about what's happened the last few days with the announcements we've referred to, It seems like these things always start slow at first and then they accelerate. Speaker 100:24:03And so that may be that the industry recalibrates more quickly than I would expect. But right now, my own personal view is this takes the next 12 months for the industry to sort itself out and achieve equilibrium. Speaker 900:24:19Appreciate that. And since you just kind of alluded to recent news and that convoy Wind down, I don't know that particular company particularly well, but was there anything my understanding is they were carrier that was kind of tech enabled, but And was there anything they were doing that you think was particularly interesting, that kind of plays into your longer term view of the freight industry? Speaker 100:24:42I think Convoy built tremendous technology. They were exceptionally talented and smart people. The problem that they and some of these other tech enabled brokers have is that in order to build go from just traditional brokerage, like if you think about what What was traditional freight brokerage? It was contracting with shippers to move loads and then using people and using phones to find carriers to haul those loans and make a 15% margin. Beautiful business model, highly scalable. Speaker 100:25:15A lot of freight brokers have done exceptionally well with that. Take the last 10 years, there has been this move to we should create digital freight marketplaces and conceptually, I don't disagree with that. I think the idea is right. The execution is exceedingly hard. It's exceedingly hard to get the scale and bring in all the dynamics that get priced into this very vibrant, very hard to predict trucking industry that is attached to the global supply chain. Speaker 100:25:44It's just hard. So I think convoy did great things. I think there are many other tech enabled freight brokers who have built really cool technology. But at the end of the day, Cool technology and and really good marketing will not make up for the inability to earn your cost of capital. And this market and where the capital markets are has brought that to bear and we've known that, none of us are surprised that This day is coming. Speaker 100:26:13We didn't know exactly when. We didn't know exactly what would cause it, but it's our job at Triumph because we've had freight brokers as our counterparties in our factoring business for over a decade, frankly, since the inception of our factoring business back in 2004 before we even bought it. We it's our job to think about not who has the best technology or who's in, has the best user interface, it's who can afford to repay us when payment is due. That is a banking discipline and that is a discipline we Never forgotten because we know what it's like when it goes the other way. So I suspect there will be some more. Speaker 100:26:51I suspect this technology will live on and we'll improve the industry for all of us. I hope that these really talented people I've gotten to know will land places and continue to make The freight industry better? It's just you have to do this. You have to build things. For us with TriumphPay, you have to build it In a way that when the market inevitably turns against you, you can afford to keep making investments, and that is a discipline we take very seriously. Speaker 900:27:19I appreciate your thoughts on that. I'll just throw in one last really quick question, follow-up on the expense question. Really thinking about the Q4 and kind of modeling a jumping up point there from a segment perspective, the return or normalization of expenses in the Q4 closer to 2nd quarter, I assume that's similarly weighted towards the payments segment. Speaker 1000:27:43I would expect the Q4 to look pretty similar, Gary, to the Q2 across each of our segments. Speaker 100:27:50And Gary, one thing if I may add on that. Those expenses and I think we're all in a cycle where talking about expense control is appropriate and that's what we should be talking about. But understand that those expense spikes that we sometimes have in TriumphPay that are tied to the onboarding of a large freight broker are the best kind of expense because that is an investment in a long term contractual relationship and so we Take a lot of that expense, not all of it, but we take a significant amount of that expense upfront and we have yet to have a large freight broker ever leave our eco Systems, the duration of those relationships is proving to be very long and every quarter we go forward and do more for these customers, The relationship gets deeper. So we want to be thoughtful about expenses. We don't take it lightly. Speaker 100:28:42But those specific spikes, That part of the expense base, I will take all day every day because I know over the long term, it creates a lot of value for us. Speaker 900:28:54Fair enough. Thanks, Speaker 100:28:56Aaron. Thank you. Speaker 200:28:58Our next question comes from Hal Goetzch from B. Riley Securities. Hal, please go ahead. Speaker 300:29:04Hey, guys. Just want to ask about the core banking side of the business. You've been truly your word in not really growing the asset side of the balance sheet. One of the areas where it does appear to have grown the business in commercial real estate year over year. And I just want to get your feel on, Are you just seeing some great conditions right now to make some good loans, but very selective opportunities for your team in that banking segment? Speaker 300:29:29Love your thoughts on that. Speaker 500:29:32Yes. I think you characterized it really well. There are a lot of opportunities out there. Not all of them have adjusted to the new realities This interest rate environment, this economy, but some have. And where we see really strong tenants, really strong borrowers, Great risk adjusted returns. Speaker 500:29:50We are still open for business and we will continue to be so. So yes, that's what drove the growth last quarter. Okay. Speaker 300:29:58Thanks. Thanks for you guys. That's all my questions. Thank you. Speaker 100:30:02Thank you. Speaker 200:30:04There are no other questions on this line at this time. Thank you. Speaker 100:30:21Assuming that was my invitation to conclude the call, we thank you all for joining us today. We appreciate, your an interest in what we are doing, and we look forward to speaking with you soon. Have a great day.Read morePowered by