Welcome to the Capital One Q4 2021 earnings conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer period. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press the star key, then the number 1 on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press the star key then the number 2. Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. Jeff Norris, Senior Vice President of Global Finance. Sir, you may begin.
Thanks very much, Justin, and welcome everyone to Capital One's Q4 2021 earnings conference call. As usual, we are webcasting live over the internet. To access the call on the internet, please log on to Capital One's website at capitalone.com and follow the links from there. In addition to the press release and financials, we've included a presentation summarizing our Q4 2021 results. With me this evening are Mr. Richard Fairbank, Capital One's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and Mr. Andrew Young, Capital One's Chief Financial Officer. Rich and Andrew are gonna walk you through the presentation. To access a copy of the presentation and the press release, please go to Capital One's website, click on Investors, then click on Quarterly Earnings Release. Please note that this presentation may contain forward-looking statements.
Information regarding Capital One's financial performance and any forward-looking statements contained in today's discussion and the materials speak only as of the particular date or dates indicated in the materials. Capital One does not undertake any obligation to update or revise any of this information, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. Numerous factors could cause our actual results to differ materially from those described in forward-looking statements. For more information on these factors, please see the section titled Forward-Looking Information in the earnings release presentation and the Risk Factors section in our annual and quarterly reports accessible at capitalone.com and filed with the SEC. With that, I'll turn the call over to Mr. Young. Andrew?
Thanks, Jeff, and good afternoon, everyone. I'll start on slide 3 of tonight's presentation. In Q4, Capital One earned $2.4 billion or $5.41 per diluted common share. For the full year, Capital One earned $12.4 billion or $26.94 per share. On an adjusted basis, full-year earnings per share were $27.11. Full-year ROTCE was 28.4%. Included in the results for Q4 was an upgrade to a legacy rewards program, which increased our rewards liability and decreased non-interest income by $92 million. Both period-end and average loans held for investment grew 6% on a linked-quarter basis. Ending loans grew 10% in domestic card, 7% in commercial, and 1% in consumer banking.
Revenue in the linked quarter increased 4%, driven by the loan growth I just described, while total non-interest expense increased 12% in the quarter, driven by increases in both operating and marketing expenses. Provision expense in the quarter was $381 million, as net charge-offs of $527 million were partially offset by a modest allowance release. Turning to slide four, I will cover the changes in our allowance in greater detail. For the total company, we released $145 million of allowance in Q4, bringing the total allowance balance to $11.4 billion. The total company coverage ratio now stands at 4.12%. Turning to slide 5, I'll discuss the allowance of each of our segments in greater detail.
As you can see in the graph, our allowance coverage ratio declined in each of our segments. In the Domestic Card, the allowance balance remained flat at $8 billion. The decline in card coverage was driven by the impact of balance growth that I highlighted earlier. In our Consumer Banking segment, continued strength in auto auction values drove a decline in both the allowance balance and the coverage ratio. In Commercial, the decline in allowance balance was driven by modest credit improvement in the existing portfolio. In addition to the allowance decline, the coverage ratio was also aided by growth in lower loss segments. Turning to page six, I'll now discuss liquidity. You can see our preliminary average liquidity coverage ratio during Q4 was 139%. The LCR remains stable and continues to be well above the 100% regulatory requirement.
We continue to gradually run off excess liquidity built during the pandemic. Relative to the prior quarter, ending cash and equivalents were down about $5 billion, and investment securities were down about $3 billion as we used our liquidity to fund loan growth and share buybacks. Turning to page 7, I'll cover our net interest margin. You can see that our Q4 net interest margin was 6.6%, 25 basis points higher than Q3 and 55 basis points higher than the year-ago quarter. The linked quarter increase in NIM was largely driven by balance sheet mix, as we had a reduction in cash and securities, as well as a higher amount of card loans. Outside of quarterly day count effects, the NIM from here will largely be a function of the change in card balances, cash and securities levels, and interest rates.
Turning to slide 8, I will end by discussing our capital position. Our common equity tier-one capital ratio was 13.1% at the end of Q4, down 70 basis points from the prior quarter. Net income in the quarter was more than offset by share repurchases and growth in risk-weighted assets. We continue to estimate that our CET1 capital need is around 11%. In Q4, we repurchased $2.6 billion of common stock, which completed our $7.5 billion board authorization. Our board of directors has approved an additional repurchase authorization of up to $5 billion of the company's common stock. With that, I will turn the call over to Rich. Rich?
Thanks, Andrew, and good evening, everyone. I'll begin on slide 10 with our credit card business. Accelerating year-over-year growth in purchase volume and loans, coupled with strong revenue margin, drove an increase in revenue compared to Q4 of 2020. Credit card segment results are largely a function of our domestic card results and trends, which are shown on slide 11. As you can see on slide 11, our domestic card business posted strong growth in every top-line metric in Q4. Purchase volume for the Q4 was up 29% year over year and up 30% compared to the Q4 of 2019. The rebound in loan growth accelerated, with ending loan balances up $10.2 billion or about 10% year over year.
Ending loans also grew 10% from the sequential quarter, ahead of typical seasonal growth of around 4%. Ending loan growth was the result of the strong growth in purchase volume as well as the traction we're getting with new account origination and line increases, partially offset by continued high payment rates. Revenue was up 15% year over year, driven by the growth in purchase volume and loans. Domestic card revenue margin increased 123 basis points year over year to 18.1%. Two factors drove most of the increase. Revenue margin benefited from spend velocity, which is purchase volume and net interchange growth outpacing loan growth. Favorable year-over-year credit performance enabled us to recognize a higher proportion of finance charges and fees in Q4 revenue. Credit results remain strikingly strong.
The domestic card charge-off rate for the quarter was 1.49%, a 120 basis point improvement year over year. The +30 delinquency rate at quarter end was 2.22%, 20 basis points better than the prior year. On a linked-quarter basis, the charge-off rate was up 13 basis points, and the delinquency rate was up 29 basis points. Non-interest expense was up 24% from Q4 of 2020. The biggest driver of non-interest expense was an increase in marketing. Total company marketing expense was $999 million in the quarter. Our choices in domestic card marketing are the biggest driver of total company marketing trends. We continue to see attractive opportunities to grow our domestic card business, and our growth opportunities are enhanced by our technology transformation.
We continue to lean into marketing to drive growth and build our domestic card franchise. At the same time, we're keeping a watchful eye on the competitive environment, which is intensifying. Pulling up, our domestic card business continues to deliver significant value as we invest to grow and build our franchise. Moving to slide 12. Strong loan growth in our consumer banking business continued in Q4. Driven by auto, Q4 ending loans increased 13% year-over-year in the consumer banking business. Average loans also grew 13%. Q4 auto originations were up 32% year-over-year. Our digital capabilities and deep dealer relationship strategy continued to drive year-over-year growth in our auto business. In Q4, we saw a pickup in competitive intensity in the marketplace. On a linked-quarter basis, auto originations were down 16%.
Q4 ending deposits in the Consumer Bank were up $6.6 billion or 3% year-over-year. Average deposits were up 2% year-over-year. Consumer Banking revenue grew 7% from the prior-year quarter, driven by growth in auto loans, partially offset by declining auto loan yields. Non-interest expense increased 15% year-over-year. In Q4, provision for credit losses improved by $58 million year-over-year, driven by an allowance release in our auto business. The auto charge-off rate and delinquency rate remained strong and well below pre-pandemic levels. On a linked-quarter basis, the charge-off rate for the Q4 was 0.58%, up 40 basis points, and the +30 delinquency rate was 4.32%, up 67 basis points.
Slide 13 shows Q4 results for our Commercial Banking business, which delivered strong growth in loans, deposits, and revenue in the quarter. Q4 ending loan balances were up 12% year-over-year, driven by growth in selected industry specialties. Average loans were up 8%. Ending deposits grew 13% from the Q4 of 2020 as middle market and government customers continued to hold elevated levels of liquidity. Quarterly average deposits also increased 14% year-over-year. Q4 revenue was up 19% from the prior year quarter, with 29% growth in non-interest income. Non-interest expense was up 17%. Commercial credit performance remained strong. In Q4, the commercial banking annualized charge-off rate was a negative 2 basis points. The criticized performing loan rate was 6.1%, and the criticized non-performing loan rate was 0.8%.
Our commercial banking business is delivering solid performance as we continue to build our commercial capability. I'll close tonight with some thoughts on our results and our strategic positioning. Growth momentum is evident throughout our Q4 results. In the quarter, we drove strong growth in domestic card revenue, purchase volume, and loans. We also posted strong auto and commercial growth. Credit remains strikingly strong across our businesses, and we continued to return capital to our shareholders. As we enter 2022, we continue to see attractive opportunities to grow our businesses and build our franchise. We will continue to lean into marketing to capitalize on these opportunities and drive growth. For years, we've talked about how sweeping digital change and modern technology are changing the game in banking. Last quarter, I noted that the stakes are rising faster than ever before.
The investment flowing into fintech is breathtaking, and it's growing. Also, many legacy companies are embracing the realization that technology capabilities may be an existential issue for them and are increasing technology investments. The war for tech talent continues to escalate, which is driving up tech labor costs even before any headcount increases. All these developments underscore the significant opportunity for players who have modern technology and who are in a position to drive growth. Capital One is very well-positioned to do that. We've spent years driving our technology transformation from the bottom of the tech stack up. We were an original fintech, and we have built modern technology infrastructure and capabilities at scale. We're investing to leverage these capabilities to grow and to realize the many benefits of our digital transformation. We have been on a long journey to drive our operating efficiency ratio down.
We expect that the striking rise in the cost of modern tech talent on top of our growth investment will pressure annual operating efficiency in the near term. These pressures do not change our belief in the longer-term opportunity to drive operating efficiency improvement powered by revenue growth and digital productivity gains. Pulling way up, we're living through an extraordinary time of digital change. Our modern technology stack is powering our performance and our growth opportunity. It's setting us up to capitalize on the accelerating digital revolution in banking. And it's the engine that drives enduring value creation over the long term. Now we'll be happy to answer your questions. Jeff?
Thank you, Rich. We'll now start the Q&A session. As a courtesy to other investors and analysts who may wish to ask a question, please limit yourself to one question, plus a single follow-up question. If you have follow-up questions after the Q&A, the investor relations team will be available after the call. Justin, please start the Q&A.
Thank you. Our first question will come from Moshe Orenbuch with Credit Suisse.
Great, thanks. Rich, I want to kind of circle back to the efficiency ratio comment, that you highlighted. I guess, if I look at the Q4, it's tough to know how to think about that level of expenses kind of going forward. it's not generally your practice to give specific guidance, but it would really be helpful because in Q4 relative to the third quarter, it's not just an efficiency ratio that deteriorated. It's actual, PPNR was down because even though revenues were quite strong, the increase in expenses, was more than that in dollars. Can you talk about, are there any gating factors in terms of when you think about expense levels kind of into 2022?
Moshe, sorry, I was on mute there. Moshe, there are a number of different factors going on in the Q4, and maybe Andrew can comment specifically about the Q4. My point about efficiency is really, and some of the factors that I'm talking about in the efficiency ratio certainly manifested themselves in Q4. Our real point is that we're on a journey to improve operating efficiency. We've been leaning into this, and we're very optimistic about not only what we've done but what we can continue to do.
We're just flagging that the tech talent costs and the continued investment in the opportunity, and that opportunity continues to be toward the top of the tech stack, which translates more into growth opportunities, probably than some years ago when our investment was began at the bottom of the tech stack. These investments are very important. Our point is that collectively these things will pressure the annual efficiency ratio in the near term, but it's really the same journey and the same drivers of opportunity and efficiency. Andrew, I don't know if you want to make any comments about Q4 specifically.
Sure. Moshe, you're well aware that we seasonally typically have higher expenses in the quarter, largely driven by the marginal cost of growth. Beyond that normal seasonal pattern, there were a few things that were reflected in this Q4. The first of which is we saw some, revenue-driven and other incentive compensation. We also chose to make some of the investments that Rich just described in the professional services side to help accelerate some of the technology and other project work that Rich is referencing that will drive future growth. Those couple of factors, some of which will continue as we head into next year, and we're seeing a little bit of the leading edge of the wage pressures. I would expect that to accelerate a bit.
me of the mark-related items in incentive compensation and the project work will likely fall off.
Maybe just as a follow-up, just to talk specifically about marketing was just about $1 billion in the quarter. December was the industry's largest month of mail volume in a decade. it's. You're not alone in that, although your level is fairly high. I do know that marketing was also typically high for you in Q4. It was particularly low in the first half of 2021. How do we think about it as we go into 2022?
Rich, you're on mute again.
Sorry. I got to get off mute each time.So rry. Moshe, it's clear that competition is intense. You can see from the one you pointed out direct that mail is back at pretty high levels. You can see media advertising increasing throughout 2021. Of course, earnings calls from card players have indicated an expectation of increasing competition. Also in the reward space, you can see competition's pretty intense there. We have a very careful eye on that. I would say, though, that even as we have a very careful eye on that, I am struck by how the consumer is in a very good place right now.
I think there's some natural growth capacity there, and I'm really struck by the traction that we're getting at Capital One. We continue to see some really good origination opportunities.
Really across our businesses. We like very much the results that we're seeing. The other thing about the competitive intensity at this point, it's more in upfront investment, such as marketing and upfront bonuses. At this point, we're not seeing in the competitive environment sort of the sacrifices of margin and resilience. I'm talking particularly in the card business there. we have experience through competitive cycles, and we know what to look for, but we are really pleased by the results, really struck by our opportunity to capitalize on them, and that's why we're leaning in. That's also why we're flagging, of course, that we have our eyes on the very important issue that you mentioned relative to competition. Next question, please.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Betsy Graseck with Morgan Stanley.
Hi, good morning.
Good morning, Betsy.
Good morning.
Hi. Rich, I wanted to get a sense from you on the opportunity set that you have in front of you with regard to the loan growth. I'm asking the question because I get, investor questions on, hey, is this loan growth rate we're seeing right now reflecting peak levels this cycle that we could get? Would rather hear from you as to what do you think about the loan growth acceleration that you got in Q4? What's it being driven by in terms of new accounts versus increased line utilizations, increased offers? What's the legs on this as we go into the next year? Thanks.
Betsy, great questions there. We feel very good about our growth and our growth opportunities that we're seeing right now. let me start with purchase volume. obviously, our 29% purchase volume growth was really significant. We've seen a lot of purchase volume growth across the industry. Of course, that's not just a Capital One effect, but with Capital One specifically, we are seeing a lot of traction in our various spender programs. We're optimistic about that trajectory.
The loans, I've been talking for quite a while about the poor loans are sort of losing out in the growth race, to purchase volume and some of the other things that card issuers don't really disclose like originations of accounts the building of the franchise. That of course was driven by another kind of elephant in the room which has been the high payment rate. I think for a lot of players the payment rates have really muted the loan growth. That includes Capital One. But I think what's striking what you see Betsy here is that we saw still very high payment rates and you can look in our trust to see some of the electrifying levels there.
Despite that, some very nice traction in the quarter on loan growth. What's driving that? In many ways, this stands on the shoulders of a number of years of leaning hard into origination growth and having the balances build over time. Also, on credit line increases, we are leaning into those as well, not like a big dramatic thing. I think in this environment and seeing the results we're seeing, we are leaning more into the credit line opportunity as well. Loan growth is still going to be a hard one to predict and will be very affected by the payment rate.
Parenthetically, we love high payment rates because I think it's a very healthy customer base, an indication of a healthy consumer, and we love what it does for the credit side. I think that we see the opportunity for loan growth in addition to the other growth metrics as good. Do you have a follow-up, Betsy? Next question, please.
Ugh, why can't they hear me?
Oh, you there, Betsy?
Can you hear me?
Yes.
We can.
Okay, thanks. Just pivoting to capital, I saw the board authorization for $5 billion. Can you give us a sense as to the timeframe that that's over? If there was a view on what drove that decision to do $5 billion as opposed to any other number? Thanks.
Hey, Betsy, it's Andrew. I'll take that. We take into account a number of factors to derive these programs. As is always the case, our pace for this repurchase authorization, as well as the pace and amount
Our future authorizations are driven by a number of factors, including our actual and forecasted levels of capital and earnings and growth, as well as market capacity to repurchase shares. It also needs to consider the results from each unique CCAR cycle, which effectively happens at the midpoint of each year. We take all of those factors into account to figure out the amount and the pacing of that. We will dynamically manage that, given that we are now under SCB and we have a great deal more flexibility to execute than we have previously.
Next question, please.
Thank you. Our next question will come from Rick Shane with J.P. Morgan.
Thanks, everybody, for taking my question this afternoon. Hey, Rich, when we think about the factors that are contributing to the high payment rate, we're all aware of a lot of the economic factors. One thing that we've started to wonder about is there some sort of 80/20 rule on transactions? Are large transactions, idiosyncratic transactions, getting scraped off by some of the alternative products? Is that changing the composition of the book anyway in terms of payment rates?
Are large transactions getting scraped off by some of the alternative, players out there? It's not a thesis that I have explored. I think that, any question people are asking about are there kind of on little cat feet, effects going on from the Fintechs, the huge investment in them and their own investment in our very business, I think they're great things to look for. One thing I would say about payment rates, though, is how broadly across the spectrum of our card business that we have seen payment rates increase over this period of time.
It really does not seem to exist or be dominated by a particular segment, let's say, the top of the market or whatever. It's been really pretty broad-based. We also have had another growth story going on beneath our growth story, which is the continuing gains and growth in the heavy spender side of the business.
What we see is, maybe your effect is going on, but what we see, if anything, is particularly good growth rates over time in the heavy spender side of the business, which I think is more a manifestation of our investments in the kind of products that we've been marketing for a number of years and our investment in the comprehensive experience to really win in that part of the market.
Okay. Very helpful. Thank you, Rich.
Thank you, Rick.
Next question, please.
Our next question will come from Bill Carcache with Wolfe Research.
Thank you. Good evening. Rich, I wanted to follow up on your payment rate comments. Are you at all concerned about the normalization of credit outpacing the normalization of payment rates, or would you expect those metrics to normalize together?
Well, I think two things are kind of driving elevated payment rates right now. it's a really funny thing. Payment rates, I've been in this business for, as like three decades, and payment rates are just not something in general that people always talked about. We would always watch them. some years ago, even before the pandemic, we started noticing some elevation in payment rates, but we probably more attributed that to the gradual mix change towards spenders in our own portfolio. If we talk about the two main drivers of elevated payment rates, first is payment rates tend to correlate with spend levels.
for obvious reasons, when people are spending more, they're not gonna be spending for very long unless they're also paying to keep their open to buy there. I think that pattern is sort of almost, in a way, sort of just, spend and payment math. Given how strong spending has been, that is a important factor, I think, behind the payment rates. Then there's the continued impact of healthy consumer balance sheets. It's, unmistakable the effect that I.
while there are many factors going on, just watching what happened across various segments of our business as things like government stimulus came in and, what happened to payment rates, it's pretty clear that consumers, when their balance sheets improved, really used a bunch of those resources to pay down on their credit cards and build more open to buy. We have gone back and really studied the relationship between payment rates and credit throughout for the whole history of our company, and the relationship is unmistakable. It is also, Bill, to your point, though, it's not like one for one. I think that, we could certainly expect there could be some divergences there. On the topic of normalization, just to, I...
When we think about the normalization of payment rates, my mind first goes to the normalization of credit. I think these record levels of low credit losses, inevitably have to normalize. I think when you pull out a magnifying glass and sort of look at various metrics and things in the numbers and behind the numbers, you can see the early signs of normalization that are a little bit ahead of seasonality, for example. That's a very natural thing. Probably what strikes us and kind of surprises us is how modest and moderate those are. We certainly operate with an assumption of normalization. I think that that I would expect the payment rates to follow, not exactly in lockstep, but I think that that should follow.
What happens for investors is a little bit of a trade. At the moment, the financial trade is lower payment rates, lower growth of loans and, really spectacular credit. as things normalize, I think that gives a boost to the loan growth and, but sort of is offsets on the, on the credit side of the house. The other thing that's going on at Capital One, 'cause if you look at our trust data. By the way, our trust, and this is probably true for every player, the securitization trust is not an absolutely representative sample of anybody's full, portfolio. But if you look at payment rates at Capital One, probably even in particular, have just risen so significantly over this period of time.
I haven't looked at it lately, but it wouldn't surprise me if it even rose sort of more than for a number of other competitors. I think that also reflects another Capital One specific thing that's going on, which is the continued traction of the spending side of the business at Capital One, which, of course, manifests itself in year after year being kind of at the high end of the league tables in terms of purchase volume growth.
That's super helpful, Rich. If I could squeeze in a related follow-up, maybe could you expand on that a little bit and discuss your confidence level in the normalization of payment rates and maybe what some of the puts and takes are to the extent that the normalization occurs a bit faster or slower?
Well, I again think of payment rates. I just go back to the two drivers. It's one is the strong correlation with spending levels. One really needs an outlook for what's gonna happen to purchase volume in our business and in card business. Purchase volume has an incredible strength to it right now, a manifestation of the consumer. me of it, by the way, is catching up for big pullbacks of course, during the pandemic. There's real strength there. If that strength continues, and that's pretty plausible, that would tend to have an upward boost on the payment rate.
Then you get to the consumer credit side of the business, and I just believe, gravity, reverse gravity has got to pull these numbers up. we all have to understand that normalization, the word normal is a really important part of that. It would be extremely normal. It would be expected. We are certainly managing the business to expect that. As that happens, count me as betting that payment rates, that driver of payment rates, is gonna pull the payment rates down.
Next question, please.
Our next question will come from Ryan Nash with Goldman Sachs.
Hey, good evening, everyone.
Good evening, Ryan.
Ryan.
Rich, in your prepared remarks, you noted that all these investments that you're making in tech and tech talent will pressure the efficiency ratio. I guess, just giving a follow-up on some of the questions from earlier, the revenue backdrop is clearly much better, 10% exit run rate, loan growth. I was wondering, can you maybe just talk about it? You used the phrase pressure. I'm wondering, are you actually expecting the efficiency ratio to increase? If you are, maybe can you just give us some parameters on how long do you expect this to last, how much of an increase can we see over an intermediate timeframe, and maybe what are some of the things that you and the team are doing to offset some of these pressures?
Okay. Thanks, Ryan. we're not giving really explicit operating efficiency ratio guidance. There's so many factors that go into that, and them well. What we wanted to point out is the things that we always wanna share with investors, the things that we see going on in our company to make sure that they, that they understand this. The first one, this tech cost. I'm struck a lot of companies. Well, most companies are kind of waving at labor costs. I think tech labor costs are an elephant in the room. Every tech company I've talked to says this is an absolute elephant in their room.
I think it's when you stand back and think about it, that's because every company in the world pretty much these days, says, "we really need to drive tech change and opportunities as fast as we can." How long that supply and demand imbalance is gonna last, we'll have to see. It is the biggest imbalance I've seen in my three decades of building and running this company in a labor market. You know what? It may be that this is more of a headwind right now for Capital One in our numbers than for some of the banks or just others. I wanna savor that for a second.
One of the big things we've done in our tech transformation is bring in-house engineering talent at scale. A lot of companies do a lot of outsourcing of that. We have built a very big engineering team and the related facilities there. We've built a brand, and we're a destination for really top tech talent. That's a wonderful thing, and it really helps us on the recruiting side. I just wanted to flag that one because how long that imbalance lasts, I don't know, but it's something that to me is very, very clear. The other point is on the investment side. It's not.
I really wanna say it's not like we're just going along doing our tech transformation and looking at the market and say, "Oh my gosh, we have to just massively invest in ways like we weren't before." That's not really what I'm saying. What I'm saying is that, we are continuing to move up the tech stack in terms of where our investments are, and that's a wonderful thing because the closer you get to the consumer and the top of the tech stack, the more those opportunities directly can be capitalized, in the marketplace. That's a good thing. We've been investing for a long time.
My point is that we are still really leaning into this opportunity because the opportunity, the time frames, and the imperative is real. Already, what's driving a lot of the growth that you're seeing is the benefit to those things, and it's what will drive a lot of the future growth as a company. Back to your question, while we're not giving explicit efficiency ratio guidance, the use of the word pressure is to explain those two phenomena that are going on that I wanted to share with investors that are real and that pressure the efficiency ratio. Exactly what number it comes out in the end depends in the end on a lot of things and revenue growth and things.
I just wanted to share that, and I made the same comment in the call, the quarter before.
If I
Yes, go ahead, Ryan.
No. Finish your thought. I have a follow-up.
No. No, no. Go for it.
I was gonna say, as a follow-up to Moshe's question on marketing, I understand the thought that you're leaning in, and we're obviously seeing really, really good traction on the growth side. if I think about the competitive intensity, we've heard Amex saying that marketing is gonna come down a little, Discover's growing, J.P. Morgan's accelerating. I think all of us are just looking for some parameters to maybe understand where you are in the stage of investment. Maybe if you could just help us understand, are we at run rate levels in the back half of the year? Do you see another step up? Just any color that you could provide on how you're thinking about the pace of marketing spend, I think, would be helpful.
Ryan, it is striking the comments everyone's making about this, and probably a little bewildering for investors to understand where the equilibrium is these days. You know our philosophy, Ryan. You and I have known each other for a long time. We don't really start the year by saying, "This is precisely the marketing." I mean, we always make a budget, but we don't start the year and say, "Well, this is what everybody has in marketing dollars, no matter what." Sometimes we contract what we put in there, sometimes we expand it, but it's very focused on the nature of the opportunity. We also have a strong belief that there are windows of opportunity for growth. You capitalize on those when you get them, or those windows pass.
That doesn't also lend itself to the kind of, let's go and just allocate it at the same marketing budget every quarter to different parts of our business or anything like that. What we do at Capital One is, when we see opportunities, we really lean into them. I can't in advance tell quite how far we lean into them because we really look at what's the productivity at the margin for what we are investing. We look at marketing efficiency, on average. We look at it at the margin, we look at it in all of our programs. Of course, also, we look at our brand investments and the other things that we're doing to lift the boats. My message to you here is really two points.
One, this is a lean-in time, and we're gonna continue to do that to the extent that that the opportunity is there. You can see Q4 was a pretty high level of lean in. That would be an example of that. My other point is, we are as closely as you watching the competition and the choices they're making. Higher levels of competition themselves can manifest in different ways. It can affect the ability to generate response. It can affect pricing. The worst thing is when it starts making its way into underwriting practices and starts affecting the credit side of the business.
Right now, if I pull way up on the marketplace, we've got a strong consumer. We're kind of everybody sort of roaring out of the sort of pandemic, not society necessarily what I'm talking about, many of the metrics here. The marketplace is still generating this opportunity resiliently, and we are leaning into that. Next question, please.
Thank you. Our next question will come from Sanjay Sakhrani. Again, go ahead, sir.
Hey. Hey, Sanjay.
Hey. How's it going? Maybe just to ask Ryan's question a little bit differently. I mean, shouldn't we expect revenue growth to be above average given these accelerated investments you're making? Maybe you could just give us a sense of what kind of revenue growth you're targeting and what some of the specific products might be that you're rolling out that are sort of unique and separate yourself from the peers. I'm just thinking about buy now, pay later. Like, where are we with the product rollout? Thanks.
Okay, we're not giving specific revenue guidance. We are commenting and pleased with the momentum that we have, and particularly momentum you saw that picked up in the Q4, and we certainly hope to keep our momentum going there. I think on the purchase volume side, there's, a lot of thrust. We're very pleased with the account originations that we have been able to generate from the enhanced marketing that we're doing and the loan growth, which is very important part of the revenue growth. that one is always the kind of hardest one to sort of predict because of its linkage to the payment rates.
We do see a good trajectory there. We're not giving specific guidance, but we like what we see there. In terms of what is driving the growth, I don't think. you'll occasionally see Capital One on TV with a new product or whatever. We are always coming up with new products. Competition is, by the way. Our surge in growth is not the result of some new product there that's suddenly driving this. This is the result of, many things, coming together, working particularly well right now. I think a lot of it is really driven by opportunities and capabilities and expansions and experiences for the customer that stand on the shoulders of our tech transformation.
We're hopeful we can continue to drive some strong growth. We're not giving guidance on that. The biggest, I think, question will be what happens to payment rates and what that does to loan growth.
Maybe just another follow-up on expenses. I'm sorry, I'm asking the same questions everyone else is. When we think, Rich, you seem to think that the workforce sort of inflationary pressure is transitory. Is that the only risk in terms of getting back to the sort of that 42% operating efficiency ratio? It, if that sort of passes at some point, you guys can get back there, or is there something else too?
We are still driving toward the same destination for operating efficiency improvement, but the timing that needs to incorporate the imperatives of the current marketplace, and, particularly the one we flagged here more recently, the striking rise in the cost of modern tech talent. The investment imperatives of the marketplace and the rising cost of tech talent will, pressure our operating efficiency ratio in the near term, as we have discussed. Modern technology capabilities are the engine that drives revenue growth and digital productivity gains. The investments we're making today are, the drivers of the efficiency improvements that we expect to continue to get over time. We're not in a position to declare the timing of, operating efficiency destinations. It's the same journey, the same engine powering it.
There's some pressures we shared with you in the nearer term, but it's the same journey, and delivering positive operating leverage over time continues to be one of the important payoffs of our technology journey and a key element of delivering long-term shareholder value. Next question, please.
Our next question will come from Donald Fandetti with Wells Fargo.
Hi, good evening. I'll shift gears a little bit, but I do also agree it would be helpful to have some kind of sizing around the expenses, just given the environment. You have a really good story to tell outside of that. I guess on auto lending, are you signaling that you might moderate a little bit of growth there? The Auto Navigator product, which I think is really benefiting from the public cloud, are you getting penetration on that? Can you size that?
Yes, Don. the auto business has really been, growing strongly. For starters, that's a very important industry point. a lot of factors have aligned to create, a lot of demand for used cars, high used-car valuations, and, it's certainly been for us and really for the industry, a bit of a, one of our strongest periods in history. If we look beneath that, because obviously all those things normalize over time, we continue to leverage our leading technology, our data and underwriting capabilities to identify market opportunities that we think have attractive and resilient risk-adjusted returns.
By the way, a very important part of that is keeping an eye on the very, very high used car prices, and as we underwrite, assuming a significant decline in those, so we don't count on something that's, not gonna be long-term sustainable. whether the industry fully does that, we'll have to see. Our technology journey, and you mentioned the Auto Navigator product, that's a manifestation of a lot of the technology we've built in the auto business, has really helped us not only deepen our relationship with consumers, but also with dealers. Because Auto Navigator is a winning product for dealers as well as it is for consumers because it's bringing in consumers who've already done a lot of the work to pre-qualify themselves.
It's the highest quality lead like a dealer can have. We're not giving out, data on the success of Auto Navigator, but we believe that it is a powerful product. I've often said to investors, if you wanna look at it as an example and go kind of, see the differentiation that Capital One has created in a tech-based, information-based, machine-learning-based product, the Auto Navigator and the real-time underwriting of any car on any lot in America in less than a second is a manifestation of that. That is getting traction, but I do want to say that.
there are a lot of changes going on in a lot of in the auto industry, a number of competitors working hard to reinvent how car buying works. I think for Capital One and a lot of players who are on the frontier of some of those changes, I think there is opportunity for us and I think some of the success in auto is exactly a manifestation of that. Let me say one other thing, though, with respect to growth in the auto business. I've always said that the auto business is even more sensitive to competition than the credit card business is because of the role that a dealer plays between the consumer and the lender in holding an auction.
The dealers understandably really tend to drive their business toward the lender who is the most flexible on pricing and terms and, that we have seen some of those metrics move in the last quarter. I think a very, robust auto market. It's a natural thing to expect that competition might overheat and pricing and practices could be affected along the way. I don't want to overstate my point. It's a caution that I put out there, but we are still leaning into our opportunity. The bit of the volume decline in the Q4, I think, was a competitive effect of the very thing we're talking about.
Thank you.
Don, you have a follow-up?
No, Jeff. I'm all set.
Thanks, Don. Next question, please.
Thank you. Our next question will come from John Hecht with Jefferies.
Afternoon, guys. Thanks very much. I'm interested in maybe talking through the mechanics of your net interest margin. obviously want to hear your thoughts on what, maybe, each rate hike might do to the margin. Beyond that, there's a lot of other moving factors you're going to get some suppression of yield with the evolution of NPAs. You're going to get some late fees to offset that, and so on and so forth. Maybe can you give us a sense for what to expect as all those factors come to play in the next few months?
Sure, John. It's Andrew, and maybe I'll expand the horizon beyond the next few months because it'll take a while for some of the factors that you just described to play out. Why don't I start with the rate side of the equation that you brought up? Our current balance sheet is asset sensitive, so as rates move up, we'll clearly be a tailwind to NII. At this point, while it's moved a fair amount over the last few months, including, I think, about a 10 basis point retraction over the last week in the 10-year. It's a volatile number, but the market is currently, last time I checked at least, expecting around 4 hikes in 2022.
That equates to an average Fed Funds rate that's about 50 basis points higher for the whole year. You can get a directional indication of the impact of that. In our Q3 disclosures, I think we showed that, relative to forwards, the 50 basis point shock impacts the next 12 months of NII by 1.9%, I believe is the number. That's just roughly under $500 million. That's the dollar effect of rates. If you translate the dollar effects into NIM to the other side of your question, the three big factors that are ultimately going to impact NIM are the three things that I highlighted in my talking points, and that is just the quantum of card balances.
Even though some of the factors you described will potentially impact card margin, it's much more about the card balances to the overall company NIM. The other is cash and securities, which, you saw we had an investment portfolio at $100 billion at its peak, was probably something like $15 billion higher than what is a more normal level, and cash levels that were also really high. you could see cash and securities coming down, which all else equal benefit NIM. Then finally the rate effect that I just described. Really those are the three things that we're primarily looking at and will ultimately have the biggest effect on NIM on a run rate basis.
In terms of the next few months, the only thing that I know for sure is, there's 2 fewer days in the first quarter, so that's roughly a 15 basis points headwind to NIM, all else equal. The other effects are really what's going to drive the NIM over the longer term.
That's great. Really appreciate that detail. I guess an unrelated follow-up is, it seems like you guys have put out a lot of products over the past, several quarters that maybe targeting, some of the fintechs and neobanks, you don't have. You I think you've canceled overdraft protection or moderated that. You've got early payment mechanisms. You've got, direct auto-type products. I guess the question is, are you able to quantify how that impacts your customer base? Are you able to. Do you get good cross-sell? Does it impact retention rates? Or generally speaking, how do these compete against these new banks that are trying to, I guess, disrupt the overall system?
John. Well, I love the focus that investors have on Fintechs, and let's talk about the reasons for that. First of all, I think the investors are voting with their feet to, just the amount of money that is poured into Fintechs on the venture capital side. The valuation of Fintechs, although, the last little bit has been rough for them, really speaks to a belief, I think, in the investor community that banking is going to be transformed and the Fintechs are gonna be important, drivers of making that happen. we were an original Fintech, so maybe I have a soft spot in my heart for Fintechs and also an understanding of the challenges they face as well.
To start with, one thing is very clear. Fintechs start with modern technology. Everybody starts in the cloud. They don't have all the scale technology you need. They gotta build a lot of things, but they start in the cloud. There's also another phenomenon going on, and that is, one of the most successful parts of Fintech has been the platform companies building the shoulders for other Fintechs to then stand on and build their business. The ability to enter businesses and move quickly and have modern technology is really striking.
The fintechs are also unregulated, so there's a whole vector there in terms of some of the things they're doing and some of the, the ways that they move and operate that wouldn't be consistent with the banking side of the business. I savor all that because I believe also, as do so many investors beating a path into this space, that banking is absolutely, in the process of being transformed. It's kind of striking. The industry has taken as long as it has to be as transformed relative to a lot of other industries. I think a big reason for it is the regulation that has tended to surround the banking space.
Interestingly, by far the biggest growth vectors have been sort of in the least regulated side of things, in payments and platforms and, crypto. I think those, the almost unmitigated success of companies in those spaces are really striking. Let me now go back to Capital One. I say this as an original Fintech and a Fintech that really transformed itself into and became one of America's biggest banks. We are building essentially a Fintech. I mean, we have built a Fintech at scale. We don't have some of the benefits that the Fintechs have.
We have a lot of benefits a lot of fintechs don't have, including a gigantic customer base and national brand, 3.5 decades of underwriting experience, an unbelievable amount of data that we have collected. We have, through our tech transformation, built a very sophisticated kind of comprehensive way to manage big data and machine learning in real time to create opportunities to be at the forefront of how banking is being transformed. We, as a bank, face our own unique set of challenges fintechs don't have. Fintechs face a lot of challenges they have.
It's not an accident that you notice Capital One out there with a number of products and even a bit of a brand personality consistent with, where Fintechs are because we are leaning into the opportunities. me opportunities are the same ones the Fintechs are. me are ones that we're creating in places they're not. when you hear an optimism in my voice and an excitement, it relates to, standing on the shoulders of our tech transformation and the scale and market position we have as a company to create opportunities that I think Capital One is uniquely positioned to do it. It's a tough journey. It requires continued investment, which we talked about.
It's not easy, but I really like our chances, and I think Capital One is ideally positioned to take advantage of the accelerating transformation in banking.
Next question, please.
Our last question will come from John Pancari with Evercore ISI.
Good evening.
Hey, John. Hey, good evening, John.
Good evening. On the credit front, I just want to see if you can give a little bit of color on the increase in charge-offs and delinquencies and on the non-card consumer businesses. I know you mentioned auto. Just wanted to see if you can give a little bit more granularity on the drivers there. Also on the reserve side, another sizable reserve release. As you're looking forward here and as loans begin to strengthen in terms of the balance sheet, do you expect ultimately to begin matching or building reserves here in the coming quarters?
Okay, John, let me talk about credit. Andrew will do the reserve question. The consumer credit just remains strikingly strong. I mean, in all my years, I've never seen anything quite like what we have been through with consumer credit in the last couple of years, and it's still strikingly strong. We, of course, have been saying all through this normalization is bound to happen, how fast and, it does and at what trajectory, we'll have to see. In the Q4, our card losses were up on a quarter-over-quarter basis, they were up 13 basis points, which is consistent with normal seasonal trends. Our card delinquencies increased 29 basis points, and that increase is a bit more than the normal seasonal trend.
I would, point at that as an indicator of, more likely than not, early signs of some normalization off of a very, very low base, of course. In the auto business, let's talk about credit performance there. Auto credit performance has been strikingly strong through the pandemic. Q4 losses were just 58 basis points, and that's roughly a third of what they were before the pandemic. In addition to all the positives that have supported consumer credit in general, as you see in our card business, auto has seen exceptionally strong recoveries supported by record high vehicle values. This was enough to push losses negative earlier in 2021. Obviously that's not sustainable, but by any measure, losses remain exceptionally low.
The quarter-over-quarter increase in Q4 was largely a normal seasonality. Auto vehicle values remain about 50% above pre-pandemic levels, backed by strong consumer demand and ongoing supply constraints. We certainly would expect auto losses to increase from current levels, even if the health of the consumer remains strong, especially because auction prices should normalize over time as supply constraints are resolved. It's an amazing period that we're in. We are, trying to lean in and capitalize on the opportunities to grow the business with the strength the consumer has and the capacity to grow their own balance sheet. We are especially watchful of the natural things that can happen to credit at a time like this. I'm talking about the industry.
Let me just name two there. One is, of course, the natural things like, more aggressive marketing and in the auto business, more aggressive practices with the dealers and things like this. There's also just one other thing we'll all have to keep an eye on, and that is when we think about any of us, and we ask ourselves this question, but I think we're in a stronger position to answer it than maybe many. When one is doing credit underwriting, how do you build models? What are your models supposed to be looking at when they look in the rearview mirror and see the best credit in the history of, these businesses?
Capital One has a very long kind of history of data on consumers, and we very much point our models to a longer horizon there. I do worry, especially for the Fintechs who are building their own companies from scratch. Exactly. What's the rear view mirror and what's the underwriting, the information-based underwriting capabilities that can be built here. we'll just keep an eye out for those effects and expect normalization to occur and take advantage of the opportunities while they're in front of us.
John.
Andrew.
With respect to-
Yes.
Yep. Yep. John, with respect to the allowance, unfortunately, I don't have an easy yes, no answer for you around allowance releases. Let me just start by describing the current allowance because I think that backdrop will be helpful in just painting various pictures of how the coming quarters might unfold, and that way you have as much knowledge as we do. When we think about the composition of the allowance, the first thing is just our expectation of future losses and recoveries. Right now, our outlook assumes relatively swift normalization of losses from today's unusually strong levels. The second factor is just qualitative factors, which we've described before. Today, these qualitative factors remain elevated to account for the remaining uncertainties around the pandemic and the economy.
This is why our coverage ratios remain high. The last factor is just the size of the balance sheet each successive quarter. Keep in mind that under CECL, allowance impacts of new growth is pulled forward. it definitely adds to the quantum of allowance that we need as we grow. Future allowance movements from where we are today will just be determined by how all of these effects net out. if normalization plays out and we continue to grow at a significant clip, we could see allowance balance build over the next few quarters. The other scenario could be, and clearly there's many scenarios, but another scenario is, favorable credit trends continue.
The uncertainties that drive the qualitative factors subside and, growth is a little bit more modest than we would likely see further allowance releases. I just wanted to give you a window into all of the pieces that go into the calculation. We'll go through a rigorous process every quarter, and we'll see how it ultimately plays out over the year.
Got it. Okay. Thank you. That's very helpful. Just lastly, can you just, maybe comment a bit on the commercial loan growth, trends you're seeing? I know your commercial segment loans were up double digits year-over-year. Just want a quick bit of color on the drivers there. Thanks.
John. Our commercial loan growth was 7% quarter-over-quarter and 12% year-over-year. It outpaced industry growth. Normalizing for PPP forgiveness, we're much more in line with the growth of our peers. While we did see a slight increase in our revolver utilization this quarter, our growth was almost entirely driven by originations in our specialty businesses where we generate strong risk-adjusted returns. of course, just the other thing I would point out, of course, is our activity in commercial reflects the increased economic activity in a quite attractive market. Quite attractive lending conditions, in 2021. It's been, I think, a good time for, all commercial lenders.
This is in the context of actually a market that we still have a very cautious eye looking at, with the tremendous growth of non-bank lenders and some of the lending practices that are happening outside the banking industry that make their way into our customers. I think it's a great period at the moment. We continue to be cautious about the opportunity in the context of the bigger marketplace. Thanks very much, John.
Thanks, Rich. Thanks, everybody for joining us on tonight's conference call. Thank you for your continuing interest in Capital One. The Investor relations team will be here to answer any follow-ups you may have later on. Have a good evening, everybody.
Thank you. That does conclude today's conference. We do thank you for your participation. Have an excellent night.