Good morning, and welcome to the Hilton Grand Vacations Third Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. A telephone replay will be available for seven days following the call. The dial-in number is 844-512-2921 and enter PIN number 13726011. At this time, all participants have been placed in a listen-only mode, and the floor will be opened for your questions following the presentation. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your touch-tone phone to enter the queue. If at any point your question has been answered, you may remove yourself from the queue by pressing star two. If you require operator assistance, please press star zero. If using a speakerphone, please lift your handset to allow the signal to reach our equipment.
Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up to allow the opportunity for everyone to ask questions. You may then re-enter the queue to ask additional questions. I would now like to turn the call over to Mark Melnyk, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead ir.
Thank you operator and welcome to the Hilton Grand Vacations third quarter 2022 earnings call. As a reminder, our discussion this morning will include forward-looking statements. Actual results could differ materially from those indicated by these forward-looking statements, and these statements are effective only as of today. We undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise these statements. For a discussion of some of the factors that could cause actual results to differ, please see the Risk Factors section of our 10-Q or other applicable SEC filings. We'll also be referring to certain non-GAAP financial measures. You can find definitions and components of such non-GAAP numbers as well as reconciliations of non-GAAP and GAAP financial measures discussed today in our earnings press release and on our website at investors.hgv.com.
Our reported results for all periods reflect accounting rules under ASC 606, which we adopted in 2018. Under ASC 606, we're required to defer certain revenues and expenses related to sales made in the period when a project is under construction, and then hold off on recognizing those revenues and expenses until the period when construction is completed. To help you make more meaningful period-to-period comparisons, you can find details of our current and historical deferrals and recognitions in Table T-1 of our earnings release. For ease of comparability and to simplify our discussion today, our comments on adjusted EBITDA and our real estate results refer to results excluding the net impact of construction-related deferrals and recognitions for all reporting periods.
A complete accounting of our historical deferral and recognition activity can be found in Excel format on the Financial Reporting section of our investor relations website. In a moment, Mark Wang, our President and Chief Executive Officer, will provide highlights from the quarter in addition to an update of our current operations and company strategy. After Mark's comments, our Chief Financial Officer, Dan Mathewes, will go through the financial details of the quarter. Mark and Dan will then make themselves available for your questions. With that, let me turn the call over to our President and CEO, Mark Wang. Mark?
Morning everyone and welcome to our third quarter earnings call. Before I get started, I'd like to take a moment to express our heartfelt sympathies to our owners and team members who were impacted by Hurricane Ian. We believe that all of our team members are safe, and that as a company we did not suffer any material financial impact from the storm but we know that is not the case for many other Floridians. We'll continue to provide assistance to our affected team members as they recover, along with maintaining our partnership with the Red Cross to support those communities in need. Looking at the quarter's results, we had another strong performance with contract sales ahead of 2019, driven by solid improvement in tour flow.
We produced a record $295 million of EBITDA in the quarter, over 37% ahead of pro forma 2019 with strong margins. We achieved our recently increased cost synergy goal well ahead of schedule. While our customers are not immune to the macro, our exclusive focus on leisure makes us a prime beneficiary of the resilience of the travel trends across the country. We see it in travel surveys. We see it at major airports serving markets throughout our portfolio, and importantly, we're seeing it at our properties and sales centers. Despite the tougher macro environment, we have several distinct advantages that have allowed us to outperform in this environment and maintain metrics ahead of 2019 across a number of KPIs. The prepaid nature of the product produces significant recurring revenues for our business while also providing some insulation for our members against inflation.
Additionally, our direct sales model allows us to actively engage with marketing guests in every environment, enabling us to leverage our relationship with Hilton and their growing pool of high-quality, travel-minded Hilton Honors members. Our compelling value proposition has been enhanced by HGV Max and Ultimate Access, which are key differentiators that are gaining tremendous traction with both owners and new buyers. We feel confident in the strength of our offering and the momentum we've seen through October, and that confidence in the business enabled us to raise guidance again for the year. Before we get into the details, let me start with an update on our strategic initiatives and integration. We've made steady progress expanding our marketing channels to engage our owners and marketing guests.
Our virtual tour channels showed notable growth again this quarter with tour volumes, close rates, VPGs, and contract sales all improving against Q2 at a lower cost than our traditional channels. We've seen favorable response from our owners and marketing guests on our virtual programs with a number of guests already returning for their second virtual tour since the program's inception. We've also continued to receive incredible response from our members on our Ultimate Access experiential platform. We're really excited about the quality of the upcoming events we have planned for our guests, and we expect that it will only get better as we continue to evolve the program. Turning to our rebranding, we're making great progress executing against our plan. We've completed the rebranding of our sales centers and are selling HGV Max across our network.
More than 50,000 members have joined Max since we launched sales in the spring. We continue to roll out additional features and benefits to Max throughout 2023 and beyond to further enhance the compelling value proposition. I'm impressed with how fast we were able to execute Max launch in the midst of our overall integration, and we're getting great feedback from our members on the program. Since our last call, we also rebranded eight additional resorts, bringing our total to 19 since the close. By the end of this year, we'll have rebranded 20 of our largest Diamond properties, representing over 1/3 of the total keys acquired. We remained on schedule to have nearly all Diamond targeted properties rebranded by 2025. Now let me turn to the performance for the quarter.
Contract sales were at a record $621 million, driven by strong tour flow and continued strength in VPG. Our tours were at the highest level since 2019, with a particularly strong September as we've continued to make steady progress in our tour flow recovery. Owner tour flow pace has surpassed 2019, and I was very pleased with our new buyer trends. New buyer tour flow outpaced owners against the prior year and versus 2019 as our package pipeline conversion and marketing efforts have shown success. VPGs of just over $4,200 was nearly 28% ahead of 2019. As we expected, we've seen some moderation as our segment mix and close rates continue to normalize versus pandemic highs.
Turning to demand indicators, our system occupancy improved to 83%, with September occupancy equal to 2019, the first month we've reached pre-pandemic levels. We saw broad trend improvements across our network led by our southern region and destination resorts, along with a continued improvement in Hawaii. As we look to the fourth quarter, total room nights and arrivals for our owners and rentals are ahead of 2019 levels. Even as we've monetized our package pipeline, we continue to see robust demand for new travel packages, which is another healthy sign for our business and the travel environment in general. We now have over 532,000 packages in our pipeline, and the percentage of those packages with a set travel date is the highest since 2019. We'll continue to focus on monetizing our pipeline to support NOG and drive embedded value in the business.
As I mentioned earlier, the direct financial impact of Hurricane Ian was limited, and our team members did a fantastic job of executing our protocols to minimize the storm's effects. We sustained damage at some of our sold-out legacy resorts that we manage in Southwest Florida, and we're working with our insurers to get those repaired. We don't have any sales centers in the directly affected region, and we estimate that the impact of the storm was immaterial to our EBITDA. Turning to other segments, NOG was 3.8%, with Diamond adding 1,900 new members in the quarter, bringing our member base up to 515,000. That drove another quarter of revenue improvement in our resort and club business. Our rental business also produced sequential revenue growth, supporting our view that the leisure travel environment remains robust.
Taken together, these factors produced a really strong EBITDA result in the quarter, even after excluding a one-time benefit that Dan will get into. We also produced strong cash flow enabling us to not only invest in the business, but also to maintain our commitment to returning cash to our shareholders through repurchases that were well in excess of our prior guidance. To sum up, I'm happy with our progress this quarter. The travel environment remains strong, with arrivals on the books exceeding 2019's levels. Demand for our new Max membership continues to be robust, and our value proposition stands out more and more each day. We're seeing success in our marketing efforts with the expansion of our digital channels, the excitement around Ultimate Access platform, and our investment to monetize our package pipeline.
We're generating more free cash flow than we ever have, allowing us to invest in our business and still return a substantial amount of cash to shareholders. The momentum in our business gave us confidence to raise guidance again. With that, I'll turn it over to Dan to talk you through the numbers. Dan?
Thank you Mark and good morning everyone. Before we start, please note that our reported results for this quarter included $86 million of sales recognitions that added to reported GAAP revenue due to the opening of the second phase of our Maui project. We also recorded an associated $43 million of direct expense recognitions from those sales, resulting in a net benefit of $43 million to our reported EBITDA for the quarter. In my prepared remarks, I'll only refer to metrics excluding the impact of deferrals, which more accurately reflects the cash flow dynamics of our financial performance during the period. Now let's review the results for the quarter. Total revenue in the third quarter was just over $1 billion. We saw sequential revenue growth during the quarter led by gains in our real estate segment, building upon the strong improvement in Q2.
Q3 reported adjusted EBITDA was $295 million, with margins of 29%. It is important to point out that during the quarter, we released $16 million of reserves that had been built ahead of the recent expiration of several government stimulus programs. I'll get into those details shortly, but those would be considered a one-time benefit that dropped straight through to EBITDA. We reached cost synergy run rate of $150 million during the quarter, which met our recently increased target several quarters ahead of schedule. I'm really proud of the teams for the efforts they've made during the integration to reach that milestone, and we intend to maintain our cost discipline as we move forward. Despite the macroeconomic noise, we saw a solid performance across Q3, with September being the strongest month of the quarter.
We think this speaks to the strength of our offering as well as the advantages of our direct sales model, which enables us to engage with existing and prospective owners in any environment. Now let's walk through the segment details. Within real estate, total contract sales were $621 million. The strong improvement in new buyer tour flow continued this quarter, with sequential and year-over-year tour growth again outpacing that of our owner channel. The strength of owner VPGs this quarter led owner contract sales mix to increase slightly to 71%, but we're very happy with the improvement that we've seen in our new buyer metrics as well. We'll continue to invest in our new buyer channel through the rest of this year and remain focused on driving toward our steady-state goal of 40% new buyer mix. VPG was just over 4,200 for the quarter.
As we've discussed before, as new buyer tour flow continues to recover towards 2019 levels, we've seen an expected normalization of our VPGs from the historic highs we've seen over the past 24 months. We continue to expect that VPGs will stabilize roughly 10%-15% ahead of 2019 levels due to our new product offering and efficiency initiatives. Cost of product was 17% of net VOI sales for the quarter, below our target of roughly 20%. Real estate S&M expense of $233 million for the quarter was 38% of gross contract sales as we made investments in our new buyer channel to drive additional tours. Real estate profit was $234 million for the quarter, with margins of 43%.
As I mentioned earlier, we've benefited from a lower provision for bad debt this quarter, which boosted our margins by roughly 300 basis points. In our financing business, third quarter segment profit was $43 million, with margins of 63%. Combined gross receivables for the quarter were $2.5 billion, or $1.75 billion net of allowance, and our interest income was $61 million. Our originated portfolio weighted average interest rate was 14.2%, while our acquired portfolio had a weighted average interest rate of 15.7%. That includes a $7 million contra revenue for the amortization of a non-cash premium associated with the portfolio of receivables that we acquired from Diamond during the acquisition. Our allowance for bad debt was $762 million on that $2.5 billion receivables balance.
Of these amounts, the acquired Diamond portfolio, which used their underwriting standards, was $388 million on a portfolio balance of $803 million. Our annualized default and delinquency rates for our originated portfolios continue to outperform levels achieved in 2019 and remain lower than our expectations for normalization of credit trends as we head into 2023. Our provision for bad debt was $32 million, or 7% of owned contract sales. Adjusting for the one-time reserve release that I mentioned earlier, this ratio was in double digits, which is up sequentially from Q2, but still below our steady state expectation of a normalized provision in the mid to high teens. In our resort and club business, our consolidated member count was 515,000. Looking at HGV's legacy business, NOG was 3.8% at the end of the quarter.
Diamond also added 1,900 net new members during the quarter. Revenue was $130 million for the quarter, and segment profit was $85 million, with margins of 65%. It's worth noting Q3 was the first quarter close where we fully integrated Diamond into HGV's general ledger system. In conjunction with this, we finalized the detailed mapping of Diamond's chart of accounts, resulting in certain one-time year-to-date true-ups impacting our resort and club business for the quarter. Excluding these true-ups, resort and club showed operational growth both on the top line and profit basis, with margins approximating historical norms of roughly 70%. Rental and ancillary revenues were $159 million in the quarter, with segment profit of $15 million. Our ancillary revenues and expenses were similarly impacted by the previously mentioned true-ups, resulting in certain one-time impacts that reduced our margins for the quarter.
For the full year, we still anticipate rental and ancillary margins to be in the low double digits. We still expect that rental and ancillary margins will continue to gradually improve each year as we sell through our inventory pipeline, lowering our developer maintenance fees and continuing to rebrand Diamond properties, bringing both revenue and cost synergies as the rooms are rented out. Bridging the gap between segment adjusted EBITDA and total adjusted EBITDA, corporate G&A was $41 million, license fees were $33 million, and JV income was $5 million.
Our adjusted free cash flow in the quarter was $393 million, which included inventory spending of $23 million and excludes acquisition related cost of $34 million. Our adjusted free cash flow conversion rate in Q3 was well over 100% in the quarter, owing to the timing of cash flows from our August securitization. In Q4, you will see the impact of higher contracted inventory spend, cash tax payments, and regular seasonality of our business driving negative adjusted free cash flow in the quarter. While our year-to-date EBITDA to cash flow conversion rate is 82%, we still feel confident with being well within our guidance of 50%-60% conversion for the year. During the quarter, the company repurchased 2.3 million shares of common stock for $89 million.
Through November 9th, the company has repurchased an additional 1.1 million shares for $38 million and currently has $290 million remaining of the $500 million repurchase plan approved by the board in May 2022. Turning to our outlook, we are raising our guidance again for the year, this time to $1.025 billion-$1.045 billion. As of September 30, our liquidity position consisted of $319 million of unrestricted cash, $218 million of escrow deposits on VOI sales, and a billion dollars of availability under our revolving credit facility. Our debt balance at the quarter end was comprised of corporate debt of $2.6 billion and non-recourse debt balance of $1.2 billion.
At quarter end, we had $750 million of remaining capacity in our warehouse facility, of which we had $178 million of notes available to securitize and another $324 million of mortgage notes we anticipate being eligible following certain customary milestones, such as first payment, deeding, and recording. Turning to our credit metrics, at the end of Q3, the company's total net leverage on a pro forma TTM basis was 2.1 x. We will now turn the call over to the operator and look forward to your questions. Operator?
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen as a reminder, if you'd like to join the question queue, please press star one on your telephone keypad. For participants who are using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star key. As a reminder also, we ask that you keep to one question and one follow-up. Our first question comes from the line of Ben Chaiken with Credit Suisse. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, good morning. Sounds like you guys completed the rebrand of the sales center. Can you just talk about the receptivity of Max with the Diamond customers? Any color there would be super helpful.
Yeah, sure. Ben, this is Mark. Look, really pleased with the reception we received with Max. As a reminder, this is the first new membership program that we've rolled out in decades and feedback has been very positive, not only with the Diamond members, but also very good feedback from our HGV members. Just to remind you know, we've added a lot of flexibility around the program, a lot of new features, but most importantly, we added the destinations, right? When we recalibrated our point levels for HGV, we created a common currency which allowed any Max members to go across the different portfolios, go across the HGV portfolio and the Hilton Vacation Club portfolio. We added new destinations like Lake Tahoe, you know, Arizona, Virginia Beach.
Those are locations that HGV members didn't have before in our portfolio and the same for the Diamond members who can now go to New York, Washington, D.C., Oahu in Hawaii. Anyways, good reception so far. We've got some new benefits in there from Hilton, which have also been positively received. Since the rollout, we've achieved more than 50,000 members since April, and we expect it to achieve nearly 70,000 by year-end. All in all, feel really good about the rollout. Most importantly, I'm really pleased with how fast our teams were able to get this done. If you think about, we closed you know in August, and we were able to roll it out in April, you know, that was a you know big hurdle that we had to achieve, and the teams did a really great job with it.
That's really helpful. Just one more quick one. Sounds like you gave some kind of commentary around the package, the pipeline package. Am I thinking about this correctly? 2022 was exposed to more existing owners, for obvious reasons, limiting your occupancy for rentals and package tours. As we think about 2023 and occupancy opens up, should that create a tailwind on tours 2023 versus 2022 because of the package pipeline kind of like buildup? Is that a fair way to frame it?
Yeah, I think when we think about our packages, first of all, I think it's a, you know, it's a great indicator of just really strong demand. Our activations during the quarter were the highest level we've had. What I mean by that is we have more people with actual dated reservations than we've had since 2019. Activations have really picked up, and we saw some really good sequential growth when you go back from Q1 to Q2 to Q3. Now while our activations picked up, our actual pipeline actually increased too. We're really capitalizing on the demand that's out there on the leisure side, and we continue to work with Hilton to generate those tours.
We've been investing into that segment in, you know, with staffing and just improving our tools in order to activate those packages. From a standpoint of availability of rooms, we're in a really good place. Should we get to a point where there is more demand than we have available rooms, we rent tens of thousands of rooms from Hilton on any given year. We have plenty of supply to meet the ability to monetize that pipeline. All in all, feel really good about the trajectory and the path we're on right now to bring back new buyers.
Okay, t hat makes sense. That's super helpful, t hank you.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of David Katz with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question.
Morning, everyone. Thanks for taking my question. Dan, did you talk at all about securitizations, you know, for the rest of the year or the near term? Apologies if I missed it. Do you expect to do more deals? Any thoughts on what those could look like?
Hey David, t hanks. I did not speak specifically the timing of the next deal, but given where we are in available collateral and the fact that we just completed securitization, just over a month ago, we do not plan to do another deal this year. It would roll into probably Q2 of next year, would be where we anticipate it to fall. You know, fortunately enough for us from a securitization basis, we had some great execution earlier this year and quite frankly, some great timing. I mean, we've done two deals, both sub 5%, the most recent one at 4.83% with a 96% advance rate. There is still a lot of demand for ABS timeshare, without a doubt.
I'm sure you've noticed some of our competitors just recently completed a deal at, you know, clearly at higher rates just given where interest rates have gone. If we wanted to get a deal done, or anyone in timeshare, to be quite honest, they're clearly getting done. It's still very robust demand. Where the interest rates have gone, that clearly would lead to some compression in margin. We do have a little bit of wiggle room from our perspective when we look at rates to what we charge the consumers. We're not going to be able to mitigate that fully. It's more of a partial offset. We look at this on an at least quarterly basis, but we will most likely be looking to raise rates nominally to our consumers in the near future as well.
Just to follow that up, any order of magnitude in terms of what those rate increases might be? Then I had one other detail I was really hoping to ask about, which you talked about a bit, was the loan loss benefited by a one-timer in the quarter, but would have been, it sounds like low double digits, and you're expecting to get back to normal. Just unpacking that a bit, what's in there is I assume the involvement of, you know, Diamond as well, right? So that's sort of a combined number. Is there some evolution to that or some learnings to that we can, you know, garner even though there's some noise in it this quarter?
Sure.
I realize there's a lot in there. Yeah.
Yeah, no problem. The first part of your question with regards to order of magnitude for us increasing interest rates, it's unfortunately not triple basis points. It's more in the order of magnitude of 25-50 basis points. Again, a partial offset to what we've seen from a spread perspective with regards to the ABS markets. With regards to our portfolio, the good news is it's still outperforming not only last year, but 2019 levels. If we look at delinquency rates compared to 2019, we're still in excess on the Diamond side, still in excess of 100 basis points better than where they were in 2019 in HGV, just under that level, just around 60 basis points better.
On a default basis, materially better, Diamond's close to 600 basis points better on a default basis, and the HGV's closer to 100 basis points better than 2019 levels. The portfolio continues to perform extremely well. These things naturally, just given the demographics, over time revert to a mean. We do anticipate in 2023 that that will slowly revert back to a mean. Maybe we do a little bit better than we did historically, just given some of the dynamics of the acquisition and the integration, etc. That remains to be seen. Right now we're in a good spot. The release of the reserve was associated with the termination of certain government stimulus packages that impacted our mortgage portfolio.
That $16 million, kind of a one-time clip that came back to us in this quarter. That's at the end of the day, the remnants of the reserves that we set up at the beginning of COVID that was all tied to employment levels, where the portfolio performed back in 2008, etc. . There's some nominal amounts that's probably still lingering in there, but this is the last material chunk that I would expect you to see.
Got it. We still wanna be mid-teens%, you know, out into next year and onward.
I think ultimately, building up to mid-teens, t hat's correct.
Okay, t hanks for the extra questions. Appreciate it.
Of course.
Thank you. Our next question comes in the line of Patrick Scholes with Truist Securities. Please proceed with your question.
Hi, g ood morning everyone.
Morning Patrick.
Morning. Mark, I wonder if you could give us your latest thoughts on the return of the Japanese customer. You know, it's really going slow. Yeah, it's really slower than initially expected, but you know, perhaps starting to come back to. You know, what are your latest thoughts and observations on that? Thank you.
Yeah, sure. Look, we expect a nice recovery from our Japan owners. In recent months, we're estimating that approximately one out of five of guests traveling to Hawaii from Japan are HGV related, and that compares to one out of 10 back in 2019, which shows not only, you know, our continued dominance really in that market, but the desire for those who've really invested in the great quality product that we have in that market to get back to their Hawaiian homes. It's been, you know, two and a half, three years now. While, you know, demand is not entirely back, the positive move to lift all the restrictions on October 11th has really had a beneficial impact for what we're seeing.
All of that said, you know, we expect the slope to full recovery will take about 12 months as we await the necessary airlift return. We really need to get the airlift and that is coming, i t's on its way. We've also rolled out some initiatives to help our Japan owners return in light of the continuing weakness in the yen. When you look at where we're at, you know, our arrivals were about 50% of 2019s in Q3, and right now what we have on the books is 67%. So clearly we're not back, but the good news is, it's all moving in the right direction. You know, this was, you know, with the restrictions, it was an artificial pushback on demand. The demand has been there.
We've seen it over the years, even during COVID our Japanese members were making reservations, but they would cancel them due to the restrictions. All in all, really pleased with, you know, how the teams have managed it and, our expectations is we get through well into 2023, we'll get back to a more normal, cadence there.
Okay, g reat. One follow-up question. You talked about achieving the $150 million run rate cost synergies. Is it possible that you could go above and beyond the $150 million? Thank you.
Yeah. Look, you know, I'll take part of this and maybe Dan can jump in here. I'd just say, number one, just really pleased with our ability to achieve the cost synergies that we laid out. I mean, we originally put $125 million out there in our first 24 months from, you know, the time we closed. We raised it to $150 million. We achieved that three quarters ahead of what we originally said. And then if you recall, on top of that, we took $25 million of savings that we realized early part of the pandemic, w e took that out. So all in all, we're much more efficient business now. Our teams are more productive and efficient than ever. I don't know, Dan, if you wanna add to that, but—
Yeah, no, absolutely. I mean, it's very impressive to see what the teams have done, without a doubt. What is also interesting is, you know. Well, maybe not interesting, but what's important to note is when you go through something like COVID and you shut down all of your resorts and basically build everything up, it really changes your mindset. That coupled with an acquisition where you've committed to significant cost savings, the discipline and the level of discipline within the organization has just shifted, right? So that we, without a doubt, do not plan to lose. But as you go forward, you know, the business is, you know, more integrated than it was. It's gonna be harder for me to say, "Hey, this is due to the acquisition." There are some benefits that we have not realized yet that we'll build on the $150.
We've talked about these in the past, most notably as we rebrand the resorts and they go on hilton.com, we will save expenses associated with OTAs. Some of the bookings will clearly go to hilton.com at a dramatically lower cost basis t hat will contribute to further cost synergies. Going forward, it's gonna be really difficult for us to say, "Hey, this is specifically associated with the acquisition." If anything material does come to mind, we'll obviously highlight that. At this point, it's really the most important thing to me is that increased discipline and on cost initiatives and just maintaining that focus as a combined organization going forward.
Okay. Thank you for the clarity on that. I'm all set.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen as a reminder, if you'd like to join the question queue, please press star one on your telephone keypad. Our next question comes from the line of Brandt Montour with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.
Hey everybody, g ood morning, t hanks for taking my questions. So the first one would be on tour flow. It looks like you had really nice lift quarter-over-quarter on tour flow. And you were talking about Japan coming back in 2023. Maybe to work our way backwards, when Japan comes all the way back in 2023, is tour flow going to be very similar looking to 2019 in absolute numbers, or is there some channel churn or channel calling that we should sort of expect on the Diamond side or anywhere else that you aren't gonna come back versus 2019?
Yeah. No Brant, yeah, good question. I think number one, if you kinda look at, you know, our tour flow, and you look at the trajectory of the recovery, you know, out of the gate, you know, our primary objective was to get our owners back and, you know, they've made a long-term commitment to our brand. You know, we put a lot of time and took a lot of care into our owners during the pandemic, and that's really paid off, and we're now exceeding our owners coming back or exceeding where we were in 2019. From a new buyer perspective, as you mentioned, the latter has been the Japanese guests and you know, I talked about that on the previous question from Patrick.
Our expectations is, you know, that gets back to a more normal pace by the time we get into the back half of 2023. Now one area that you know that we're recovering on the new buyer side is on the Diamond side. Diamond actually took out 40,000 less efficient tours, and they took that out pre-acquisition during the early part of the pandemic. As far as replacing those tours and generating incremental tours, we've now sold 50,000 packages to legacy Diamond locations that have been rebranded Hilton Grand Vacations. We're just starting to see those tours arrive at our sales centers. Overall, I think we saw a nice increase in new buyer tour flow. It's been growing. It's outpacing our owner tour flow growth right now.
Despite converting our pipeline to drive new buyer tours during the quarter, we grew our pipeline, so that's a great indicator that we've got more, you know, we've got more opportunities out in front of us, and we continue to invest in that. You know, I talked about it maybe earlier on the staffing side. We've invested in more digital tools. We've improved our processes to activate those packages. So our thinking is that we're gonna continue investing and working hard to get back our new buyers. The expectations are, you know, we'll be ahead of where we were in 2019 with owners, and we'll be back at least to our new buyer levels in 2023.
Great, t hat's great, t hanks for that. Then Dan, maybe for you on VPG, reiterated the 10%-15% level that you're sort of looking to hold. Can you remind us, you know, when you think about that 10%-15%, what's in there, right, versus 2019? Is it close rates? Is it pricing? Is there anything else? You know, what's sort of the makeup of that number, and why is that number where you guys are confident you can hold as things normalize?
Yeah, I know, t hanks for that. You know, with regards to the 10%-15%, it's driven across several metrics, right? HGV as a standalone, some of the product that we were bringing online, little higher transaction price, Maui, Cabo, Charleston, and Sesoko club level product. That combined with revenue synergies, which would most notably transfer through via close rate with the acquisition, are also supporting that 10%-15% over 2019.
Yeah. I'd also add to that Brant, that I think we have better insight into our customer than we ever have before, and you know, our algorithm has gotten a lot more advanced. We know who's spending, who's not spending. We know who's traveling, who's not traveling, and our focus is around putting our resources around those that are traveling. You know, I think we've just gotten better during this period of time at identifying in a more precise manner on the customers that we wanna go after, and then also just the value proposition of adding HGV Max and Ultimate Access, you know, along with what Dan mentioned. All in all, I just think we have a much better value proposition than we did with a much better way to identify the customer.
Okay, that's great. Then if I could squeeze one more in here on loan loss provisions Dan, if I'm reading your words correctly, the mid- to high-teens assumes a complete reversion of delinquency rates back to sort of prior cycle levels. Obviously, I guess you made it seem like you might not get there if the portfolio continues to outperform. Do you think the portfolio is outperforming because you guys have added so much value to the system, to the product that your customers just are less likely than maybe this, you know, in the prior cycle for each of these two individual businesses and systems are less likely to wanna give it up? Do you think that's some of that? Maybe, you know, that could be a bit of a good guy in terms of when you do hit a normalization point.
I definitely do. What I would say to that front is, look, it's very important for, you know, I think just generally people to recognize that just because you put a brand on something does not mean someone will not default, right? A lot of things have to go along with that. It's putting the brand on it, so rebranding the Diamond as Hilton Vacation Club. But also, how do you treat the customer? How does the sales process go? What are you actually delivering? Are you living up to the promises that you've sold the individuals? We, as you know, take the brand very seriously. We're big protectors of the brand, and we try to live up to a very high standard.
As that rolls out and as that experience is, you know, gained by our consumer base, I do see potential upside to that complete revision. But, you know, at the end of the day, we are only 12 months into the integration. That is the reason for the era of caution of where we are this quarter, where it's just under 11% provision, if you exclude the $16 million benefit, to where you ultimately may go back to, which is, you know, 15%-16% area.
Okay, t hanks for everything, guys. Good quarter.
Thanks.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen that concludes our question and answer session. I'll turn the floor back to Mr. Wang for any final comments.
All right. Well, thanks everyone for joining us today. I wanna give a special thanks to our team members for going above and beyond to deliver outstanding vacation experiences to our members and guests. I'm also proud that we were named the fifth in Newsweek's Top 100 Most Loved Workplaces, and number one for the Most Values-Driven Company. It's the dedication and passion of our team members that really creates our unique and amazing culture here at HGV, and we appreciate all that you do. Thank you and have a great day.
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