Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to Navient's fourth quarter 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After today's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star 1 1 on your telephone. You will then hear an automatic message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star 1 1 again. Please be advised that today's conference may be recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your speaker host for today, Jenifer Earyes, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Hello, good morning. Welcome to Navient's earnings call for the fourth quarter of 2022. With me today are Jack Remondi, Navient's CEO, and Joe Fisher, Navient's CFO. After their prepared remarks, we will open up the call for questions. Before we begin, keep in mind our discussion will contain predictions, expectations, forward-looking statements, and other information about our business that is based on management's current expectations as of the date of this presentation. Actual results in the future may be materially different from those discussed here. This could be due to a variety of factors, listeners should refer to the discussion of those factors on the company's Form 10-K and other filings with the SEC. During this conference call, we will refer to non-GAAP financial measures, including Core Earnings, Adjusted Tangible Equity Ratio, and various other non-GAAP financial measures that are derived from Core Earnings.
We will also refer to Adjusted Core Earnings, which are measurements derived from Core Earnings and adjusted to exclude one-time expenses related to regulatory and restructuring costs. Our GAAP results and description of our non-GAAP financial measures can be found in the fourth quarter 2022 supplement earnings disclosure, which is posted on the Investors page at navient.com. You will find more information about these measures beginning on page 18 of Navient's fourth-quarter earnings release. There's also a full reconciliation of Core Earnings to GAAP results included in the disclosure. Thank you, and now I will turn the call over to Jack.
Thank you, Jen. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today, and thank you for your interest in Navient. We completed 2022 with another quarter of strong financial performance. We delivered Adjusted Core Earnings of $0.85 for the quarter and $3.43 for the year, and a core return on equity of 17%. These results demonstrate our ability to deliver solid financial performance even in disruptive economic environments. The business environment ended 2022 very differently than it started. For example, inflation pressured operating expenses, rising rates and the CARES Act extensions virtually eliminated current demand for student loan refinancing, and rule changes impacting the management of defaulted federal loans ended our portfolio management business earlier than anticipated. A strength of our franchise is our ability to adjust to both expected and unexpected events to deliver for our customers and investors.
For example, in-school originations grew 52% this year with our growth outlook increasing. We are leveraging our client relationships to win new business processing contracts. We successfully reduced operating expense in a high inflationary environment. Our hedging strategies and efficient funding programs mitigated the impact of rising rates to our net interest margins. Your management team is focused on delivering exceptional results by executing our strategy, delivering on our growth potential, maximizing our loan portfolio cash flows, continuously improving our operating efficiency, and prudent and consistent capital management. In consumer lending, we are focused on growing originations of high-quality loans with attractive risk-adjusted returns. In 2022, rising rates and zero-interest federal loans reduced our opportunities in refi to $1.7 billion in new originations. We rapidly adapted to these conditions to slash marketing spend and focus on our in-school products.
We grew new loan volume by 52% over last year to $321 million, an estimated 10 times market growth. We also continued to build relationships with students planning to go to college, adding over 700,000 new students to our Going Merry platform. We help students and families complete the FAFSA, compare financial aid award packages from schools, and apply for scholarships. We see these products as important ways of helping students and families throughout their going to and paying for college journey. In our business processing solutions segment, we grew non-pandemic-related revenue by $25 million or 11%.
It's also worth noting that our pandemic-related contracts extended longer than the original award, and we have been able to leverage this past work to win several new contracts in 2022, both strong statements on the value we provided to our clients. Our large and profitable portfolio of student loans is a key contributor to earnings. Our goal has and continues to be to maximize the performance of this portfolio. This includes helping borrowers navigate repayment options and avoid default, and innovative funding and hedging strategies to maximize net interest income. Our funding and hedging strategies help deliver a stable net interest margin despite the rapid rise in rates this year. Since our founding in 2014, we have clearly excelled at maximizing the value of our portfolio, and we will continue to do so. We are also continuously improving our operating efficiency.
In 2022, operating expense declined by 21% or $205 million. We delivered improved efficiency in our operating segments. We continued to take action that reduced our risk profile. In the final area, we seek to be ex-excellent stewards of your capital. Our goals are to be efficient and prudent while delivering attractive returns. Here, our priorities remain unchanged. Invest capital in attractive and relevant growth opportunities, support our dividend, return excess capital to you via share repurchases. This consistent and transparent approach supports our business growth, our debt investors, our corporate ratings, enabled the return of $491 million via dividends and share repurchases last year. Our financial and business success last year positions us for another year of strong performance.
For 2023, we are focused on the same four objectives: profitably growing our loan origination and BPS revenue, maximizing the performance of our loan portfolios, improving operating efficiency, and prudent and consistent capital management. In consumer lending, we expect to double in-school loan originations, building on the progress we made in 2022. We expect that demand for refi loans will continue to be suppressed, but we are prepared to move quickly when market conditions change. We will also continue to grow and build long-term relationships with students and families as we support their going to college journey. In BPS, we are well-positioned to deliver 10% growth in revenue from our traditional clients. With this growth, we also expect to earn a high teen EBITDA margin.
New contract wins in late 2022 and expansions of existing contracts have created a clear path to these goals. As a result of our ongoing focus on operating efficiency, we will reduce operating expense by an additional 10% in 2023. In capital management, our plan is to complete approximately $310 million in share repurchases. Our results this quarter cap a strong year for Navient. They reflect our commitment and ability to generate high quality, high value products and services, and deliver solid financial results, even in volatile and changing markets. They also reflect our ongoing commitment to simplify our business model and reduce our risk profile. More importantly, our efforts have built a solid foundation from which to create and deliver value.
Our guidance for 2023 reflects our confidence in our ongoing ability to grow new business, maximize portfolio performance, deliver better margins through operating efficiency, and deliver attractive returns on capital. I want to thank my colleagues for their efforts and commitment to success. Together, we look forward to delivering another great year of results in 2023. Joe will now provide a more detailed review of our results. Thank you for your time, I look forward to your questions later in the call. Joe?
Thank you, Jack, and thank you to everyone on today's call for your interest in Navient. During my prepared remarks, I will review the fourth quarter and full year results for 2022 and provide our outlook for 2023. I'll be referencing the earnings call presentation, which can be found on the company's website in the investor section. In 2022, we successfully met or exceeded our original full year guidance targets. Key highlights from the quarter and year, beginning on slide 3, include fourth quarter Adjusted Core EPS of $0.85 and full year EPS of $3.43. Achieved an ROE of 17% and an overall efficiency ratio of 52% for the year in the face of a challenging inflationary environment. FFELP NIM of 94 basis points and full year NIM of 101 basis points.
Private NIM of 287 basis points and full year NIM of 281 basis points. Grew in-school originations by 52% to $322 million for the full year and achieved total originations of $2 billion. Reported BPS revenues of $70 million in the quarter and $330 million for the year while achieving full year EBITDA margins of 16%. Increased our Adjusted Tangible Equity Ratio to 7.7% while returning $491 million to shareholders through dividends and repurchases. I'll provide additional detail on the quarter and our 2023 full year outlook by segment, beginning with federal education loans on slide 5.
In the federal education loan segment, we achieved a net interest margin of 101 basis points for the full year, exceeding our original mid-nineties guidance in a volatile interest rate environment. The quarter's results continued to be impacted by an incremental level of consolidation activity from previously announced loan forgiveness proposals. The incremental prepayments that were processed during the fourth quarter represented 3% of our portfolio. This activity reduced FFELP net interest margin by 11 basis points to 94 basis points. There has since been a significant decline in consolidation requests to historical levels. Our expectation for full year 2023 FFELP NIM of 100 to 110 basis points assumes that prepayment speeds remain at historical levels in 2023.
Felt delinquency rates decreased to 15.6% from 18.6% in the third quarter. Charge-offs declined by $1 million, resulting in a net charge-off rate of 13 basis points in the quarter. We anticipate a net charge-off rate between 10 and 20 basis points for the full year 2023. Let's turn to our consumer lending segment on slide 6. Net interest income in the quarter was $147 million and resulted in a net interest margin of 287 basis points, an improvement of 11 basis points compared to the prior year. We are seeing a slowdown in prepayment speeds in the overall portfolio as borrowers with fixed interest rates have less of an incentive to refinance in the current environment, which is benefiting net interest income.
We anticipate our full year net interest margin for 2023 to be between 280 and 290 basis points. Our credit trends continue to perform as expected as net charge-offs ended on the low end of our original guidance of 1.5%-2%, with 156 basis points for the quarter and 159 basis points for the full year of 2022. The $17 million of provisions in the quarter included $3 million related to new originations. We feel confident that we are adequately reserved for the expected life of loan losses given the well -seasoned and high credit quality of our portfolio and anticipate net charge-offs to remain in the 1.5%-2% range for 2023.
In the quarter, we originated $169 million of private education loans. This was comprised of $35 million of new in-school volume, representing a 52% increase compared to the prior year. The expected decline in refinanced loan origination volume to $134 million was primarily driven by the higher rate environment and delay in Department of Education loans entering repayment. We expect that the higher rate environment continues throughout 2023, the extension of the CARES Act will result in lower quarterly originations for our refi product. Let's continue to slide 7 to review our business processing segment. Revenue from our traditional BPS services increased 27% from the year ago quarter, partially offsetting the expected wind down of revenue from pandemic-related services. Fourth quarter revenues totaled $70 million and earned an 11% EBITDA margin.
The 11% margin was below our targeted levels due to wind down costs associated with pandemic-related services in the quarter. We anticipate the benefit of recent efficiency initiatives to increase the margin in this segment as we progress throughout the year. We expect to see continued fee revenue growth of 10% in our traditional services in 2023 with full year EBITDA margins in the high teens. Let's turn to our financing and capital allocation activity that is highlighted on slide 8. During the year, we reduced our share count by 15% due to repurchase of 24.8 million shares. In total, we returned $491 million to shareholders through share repurchases and dividends while increasing our Adjusted Tangible Equity Ratio to 7.7% from 5.9% a year ago.
Our 2023 guidance includes the repurchase of $310 million of shares while building our Adjusted Tangible Equity Ratio to a range of 8%-9%. Turning to GAAP results on slide 9. We recorded fourth quarter GAAP net income of $105 million or $0.78 per share, compared with a net loss of $11 million or a loss of $0.07 per share in 2021 for the same period. In closing, turning to our outlook for 2023 on slide 10, the success of 2022 and steps we have taken to simplify the business, improve efficiency while building capital, positions us well for 2023.
As a result, we expect our 2023 Adjusted Core Earnings per share to be $3.15-$3.30, reflecting our continued efforts to improve efficiency. Our outlook excludes regulatory and restructuring costs, assumes no gains or losses from future loan sales or debt repurchases, reflects a continued rising interest rate environment and no meaningful impact from an expiration of the CARES Act in 2023. Thank you for your time. I will now open the call for questions.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question coming from the line of Matthew Herbek with Jefferies. Your line is open.
Hi there. I'm on for John Hecht. Thanks for taking our questions. Our first one is just about funding markets. If you could provide a bit more detail on puts and takes for NIM over the next few quarters, that'd be helpful. From a funding perspective, we feel we're very well positioned. We have a $1.3 billion due this coming year, of which $1 billion is actually being paid off today. We have a $1.5 billion sitting on our balance sheet at the end of the year, so we're well cushioned for the remainder of 2023. Also, we feel we're well-placed for entering into 2024. We certainly think that the securitization market overall is starting to rebound and starting to see benefits here over the last month.
For us, while we expect to do fewer securitizations compared to prior years, that's primarily driven just by the growth of our refi business. We do anticipate that there'll be less originations on the refi side compared to prior year. If as that market potentially picks up, if you see a change in the interest rate environment or the expiration of CARES Act, I would anticipate that you would see further securitizations from us.
Okay, great. Thank you. The second question would be mix of business in the business services segment and what's growing or shrinking. You mentioned COVID services slowing down. Could you provide more detail on mix otherwise?
Sure. So during the pandemic, we picked up a number of contracts with various states and municipalities to deliver, to help them deliver COVID relief initiatives. Some of that would be things like unemployment insurance, contact tracing, vaccination awareness, et cetera. Those naturally do run off, and that's a good thing, right? That they're running off because it means we, you know, this, as a country, we don't need them any longer. What is growing is our traditional services. These would be things that we do for states and municipalities, toll authorities and healthcare institutions. We're pretty excited about the growth opportunities in these areas. Some of them were certainly suppressed during the pandemic, and they're starting to rebound.
More importantly, and as I mentioned in my comments, we've been able to leverage the work we did for a number of entities during the pandemic and translate that into new, more permanent contracts. This is work we do, you know, handling communications for these entities, both inbound and outbound and kind of omni-channel types of directions, processing forms, completing applications, things of that nature. It's, it's really right within our wheelhouse of the years and years of experience we've developed in loan servicing. This is, as we said, we expect to grow that revenue by 10% next year on the traditional side. That excludes all the pandemic-related revenue we generated, and we are forecasting a high teens EBITDA margin in that business.
Got it. Thanks very much.
Mm-hmm.
Our next question coming from the line of Bill Ryan with Seaport. Your line is open.
Thanks. Good morning. A couple of questions. First, to start off with, there's been some proposed changes in IDR and debt forgiveness in the Federal Register. I wonder if you've taken a look at it and maybe give some initial thoughts about how it might impact your business. It seems like the administration is trying to do an end run around the debt forgiveness program. Thanks. That's just the first question.
Sure. Thanks, Bill. On broad-based loan forgiveness, this is in limbo right now. A number of states filed lawsuits against the proposed administration, and it is now scheduled for a hearing at the Supreme Court sometime later this year. Briefs are just being filed kind of as we speak. We'll learn more about where that goes in the next couple of weeks and months. As you pointed out, the administration also announced broad changes to the income-based repayment programs that they offer to students in the federal program side of the equation. These are proposed right now. They're open for comments and questions.
They are pretty significant in terms of their reach, compared to what was in place before and what Congress had initially established as the guidelines for income-based repayment plans. We'll wait and see here what those comments are and what kinds of challenges might arise. To some extent, you're looking at what's the impact on the private loan originations business. You know, I think in the area that probably is gonna have the greatest impact would be on the graduate school side of the equation, graduate school demand and how that is financed. You know, I think the bigger questions that we would have as a taxpayer might be how do these programs release pressure on schools to kind of control the cost of education?
Does it make it more likely or not that college costs increase faster? Those are some of the policy issues that we'll be watching.
Thanks. Just as a follow-up, it looks like you kind of bumped up your Adjusted Tangible Equity Ratio target from what it had been historically, and that's reflected in the buyback. Is that in anticipation of growing the in-school loans which have higher capital requirements, or is there something, other types of instrument that you might be looking at?
Bill, that's a good question. In terms of the 8%-9% guidance, that is purely a function of what we anticipate our book to look like over the next year and beyond. As the refinance loan originations, as we anticipate shrinking for this year, we hold 5% capital against refinance loans, and we hold closer to 10% for our in-school. It really is benefiting the overall capital ratio, that mix shift of growing the in-school volume, which brings us above our levels that we had guided last year of above 6% to that range of 8%-9% for this coming year.
Thanks for taking my questions.
Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Sanjay Sakhrani with KBW. Your line is open.
Thanks. Good morning. Jack, could you provide us an update around the loan forgiveness plan? I think it's with the Supreme Court right now. Maybe also just, you know, to the extent that it's an adverse ruling, you know, how you, how you intend to proceed going forward?
Sure. As I mentioned, it is at the Supreme Court. Briefs have been filed from the Department of Education. The states, or the plaintiffs', briefs are due this Friday. Hearings will be scheduled sometime, I think, in February. When the Supreme Court will issue their opinion is somewhat unknown, but, you know, obviously we expect it before they recess in the June-July timeframe. Right now, the proposal from the administration is only for direct loans. FFELP loans are not eligible and borrowers cannot become FFELP borrowers cannot become eligible via loan consolidation. It's not clear how that would necessarily impact on perception versus reality.
You know, as Joe mentioned in his comments, last year, we saw a significant increase in consolidation activity, of borrowers as they were hoping to qualify for various forgiveness initiatives from the administration or announced by the administration. That stopped in large and returned to pre-pandemic levels in December and January so far. You know, we expect more of that. However, you know, I think the politics of this make it an area that we will continue to watch very closely and be able to manage our portfolio and react to changes that may be announced, future changes that may be announced by the administration down the road.
Okay, great. Then maybe just a question on economy and how you've, how you see your customers behaving. You know, I think you added a little bit to the reserve this quarter. I mean, you know, what are you guys assuming inside your economic forecasts? Are you seeing any potential weakness of any kind?
Yeah. We, earlier last year, we began to be concerned about changes in economic outlook, and reflect a more conservative position in terms of rising rates, and potentially, you know, a significant or mild slowdown in the economy. We're still positioned for that. We look at our reserve, and the way we see it is the hedging strategies that we've been able to employ, those have helped mitigate the rise in rates that took place in 2022. Our NIMs were relatively stable. Our reserve levels, we believe, are adequate for the economic outlook that we see in front of us. You're definitely seeing some rising delinquency and charge-off rates in both our FFELP and private loan portfolios.
Well, they're actually better than what we expected. During the COVID, during the pandemic, we offered a number of different payment relief options, and as those ended, some borrowers that were previously on a path to default, you know, slowed down and didn't, and now they're kind of jumping or bundling together, and you're seeing some rise in delinquency and default rates. We expect those to return to more normalized levels next year. The outlook for delinquencies and defaults remains pretty consistent with what we saw last year. It does take into consideration a belief that we will have an economic slowdown here.
Okay, great. Is there a specific, like, unemployment rate assumption you guys are using?
We, not in terms of the generic default rate. Our portfolio, when we look at what drives delinquencies and defaults in our portfolio, it's really a function of the where the borrowers are in their life cycle. Students who are graduating from college or leaving college early, that's where we have our greatest exposure and where unemployment rates tend to have the biggest impact on delinquencies and defaults. We have a relatively small exposure to that right now. For borrowers that have been in repayment for extended periods of time, have high levels of income, high levels of employability. These are generally people who have graduated, earned their degree, and have an established career.
We see less sensitivity to changes in unemployment rates. That's been consistent, you know, for years and years or decades in the student loan space. Unemployment rates for college graduates typically run about half the national average. While you might see those numbers, spiking in different areas, they tend to impact college graduates less. They definitely impact college graduates less than they do the rest of the population.
Okay, great. Thank you so much.
Mm-hmm.
Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Mark DeVries with Barclays. Your line is open.
Yeah, thanks. Just wanted to clarify some of the comments around the FFELP NIM and the guidance. Joe, did you imply that there was about an 11 basis point drag in the quarter from elevated prepayment speeds, and if that normalizes, that gets you to about 105 basis points, kind of the midpoint of your guidance range for 2023?
That is correct. That the incremental activity was above what we were anticipating as we entered into this in the third quarter. Absent that impact, we would have been at 105 basis points.
Okay, got it. Can you give us any sense of how kind of rate sensitive your guidance is for both the FFELP and private student loan NIM, you know, if you got a 100 basis point rate shock kind of up or down, what might that do to your expected NIM?
Sure. From a FFELP perspective, keep in mind it's really the pace at which it increases. The assets themselves are resetting daily and our liabilities typically lag, so they're resetting either monthly or quarterly. As you've seen over the last year, you get a benefit as rates continue to increase. For the first half of the year where the expectation is that those rates continue to increase, you would see a little bit of a pickup before that levels out. That 100 basis points shock upwards would be a benefit to us. Any downward movement that we would see in terms of where we are, we would start to benefit from a Floor Income perspective.
We feel pretty confident just based off of where the forward rate curve is today, within our guidance of that 100 to 110 basis points. We provide the ultimate shock in our Qs and Ks, so you can take a look at that, of what that impact is for the overall earnings. Similarly, on the private side, the impact there is, again, you have the lag of assets that are earning off of prime and funded through LIBOR. You have the reverse where there is a drag from the rate environment increasing. Again, as we anticipate that leveling out in this back half of the year, you would get a slight benefit there.
Okay. Just in terms of cadence over the course of the year, should we expect for FFELP, it's a little more front-end loaded, and then for private it's a little bit more back-end loaded in terms of where the NIM averages out to?
I'd say just overall it should be fairly consistent throughout the year within that band, but that's a decent way of thinking about it.
Okay, great. Thank you.
Thank you. One moment before our next question. Our next question coming from the line of Moshe Orenbuch from Credit Suisse. Your line is now open.
Great, thanks. maybe just to Joe, so a little further clarification kind of on the guide. you know, you mentioned that on the FFELP you expect kind of normal prepays. I mean, it's hard to know exactly what normal is given, especially since they've been elevated and elevated beyond your earlier expectations the last couple of quarters. Same sort of thing is like, what's the assumption in the guide for, you know, for the consumer loan or private loan given, you know, the level of originations now are kind of low?
Our overall prepay assumptions for the FFELP portfolio for Stafford loans, we tend to think about that as 8% CTR. For consolidation, 5%. On the private portfolio, you see our assumptions are 15% for the refi and 10% for our legacy book. Obviously, if you go back a year on the refi side of the equation, it was much higher than that in a lower rate environment. We are benefiting from the fact that for our refi portfolio with less incentive to prepay, you are seeing a slowing of those CPRs. Similarly on the FFELP side, to your point about the last two quarters, we've seen a dramatic drop-off at the start of this year in terms of just overall consolidation requests.
We would anticipate that that remains at these historical levels going forward.
Okay. Yeah, I mean, I guess the, you know, the real question is gonna be how the borrower perception is with respect to the rule changes, you know, in response to the earlier question on IDR and other sorts of things. On the business services, I guess the 10% growth, what base is that off? Could you just be, you know, a little more specific and maybe what actions you have to take to get the margins from where they are to the, you know, to the guidance level?
That base is off of $247 million that we achieved for this year in terms of the non-pandemic related revenues. Just to compare that to 2021, we had $222 million in, I would say, more traditional services.
Great.
sorry, the second part of your question, just the actions that are taken. this is just some investment in technology that we've taken on in the third quarter and fourth quarter in terms of new phone systems, the efficiency in this initiatives and some of the restructuring that you saw in this quarter, we would expect to benefit us into 2023.
Great. Thanks, Joe.
Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question coming from the line of Richard Shane with JP Morgan. Your line is open.
Thanks, guys, and for taking my questions this morning. Look, you guys have done a really good job managing expenses. You've done a really good job managing capital in the face of a shrinking balance sheet and revenue declines. When we look at the different business units.
Should we expect this year to, by year-end, see loan balances in the consumer lending segment up on a year-over-year basis? Should we see that inflection this year, or what would need to happen for that to occur?
From a private side, we would continue to expect a slight decline year-over-year. Just as if you think about the CPR assumptions that I just provided in the last question, that book is running off on the legacy side greater than 10% on the refi 15%. Our originations overall, that Jack cited would not make up for the overall just decline in the book.
Got it. When we look at the contour of that runoff, you know, as we moved into the beginning of 2022, you were starting to show growth there, and then that obviously decelerated with the inflection in rates. Is the big variable there to ultimately sort of drive that growth going to be, the opportunity on the consolidation side? What type of rate environment would you need to see that inflection?
Well, I think it's a combination of both the refi opportunities and the in-school side of the equation. Refi obviously is, well, not, historically has been a greater opportunity in terms of immediate impact because you're addressing all loans outstanding, whereas in-school, you're only addressing that the students who are actually in school and borrowing in the private loan segment. It's a bit of a smaller opportunity set year-over-year. The difference, the other big difference between the loans is the in-school portfolio has a much longer average life, a lower prepayment speed compared to refi, which has typically been about a three-year average life portfolio. We are getting closer to the inflection point, no question about it on the private side of the equation.
It will be a function of what our overall originations are, to your point, how quickly the refi marketplace rebounds. Right now, you know, with the rise in rates, we saw about an 80% decline in what we would say is the addressable market size, which means borrowers that have a coupon higher, an existing coupon on their student loans higher than what we would be offering today. Most of that's in the federal space. In the private loan side of the equation, a significant portion of outstanding inventory is variable rate. There is an opportunity for us to be able to offer a refinance product to those customers.
We've made some changes to our products to allow, for example, a cosigner on a refi loan, that would give us the opportunity to target undergraduate, in-school borrowings, that have a variable prime rate, for example, even in this high-rate environment. We are working to address some of that and create additional opportunities for borrowers to save money through the refinancing activity. We like this product for what it is. It is, you know, we've always said that, you know, the two biggest risks in student lending are will the student graduate and will their income upon graduation support their debt levels. In refi, those risk factors are known, or the answers to those questions are known, I should say.
We continue to be highly focused on driving volume in that area when the opportunities exist.
Okay, got it. If you would indulge one last question. I'm trying to see where the green shoots will be in terms of growth, and clearly it's going to be on the in-school consumer lending. Can you talk a little bit more about your go-to-market there? Is it traditional being on preferred lending lists? Is it omni-channel? When you think about the growth in 23, is it a function of higher penetration for the existing institutions or adding new institutions? I apologize for such a long question.
Sure. Look, this market is The marketplace and how students and families secure financing for paying for college has been changing. It has moved from almost universally through the financial aid office and a requirement to be on their preferred lender list to some online activity, some referral activity. The in-school, the financial aid office continues to be an important channel. Our go-to-market strategy is really driven by those different segments, and we try to target our marketing activities and the outreach that we make, whether it be digital, mail, or, financial aid office, with different approaches for those different market segments.
One area that we see as a significant new opportunity for us is working with high school students and their families in the guidance office, the guidance offices of high schools, through our Going Merry products. By building relationships with those consumers, helping them complete the FAFSA, helping them compare their different award letters that they receive from college on acceptance, helping them lower their need to borrow through scholarship opportunities, is an opportunity for us to build those relationships. If and when they do need private student loans, be there for them with that additional product as well. These are different ways we're kind of targeting
Our opportunities in the in-school marketplace and you know, with the doubling of originations next year, we expect to continue to grow our market share in that space. You know, we mentioned we grew 52% this year, which we think is 10 times the market rate. It's a very high growth opportunity for us, albeit just starting off a relatively small origination base.
Great. Hey, thank you so much for the answers.
Mm-hmm.
As a reminder, ladies and gentlemen, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star 11 on your telephone keypad. Our next question coming from the line of Giuliano Bologna from Compass Point. Your line is open.
Good morning, and thanks for taking my question. One thing I was curious about was when we look at the FFELP NIM outlook, the 100-110 basis points implies a midpoint of, you know, 105, and that's roughly call it 10 basis points above the original outlook when you guys are going into 2022 for 2022. There was discussion, I believe, in the last two quarters about how you guys were able to hedge out some of your Floor Income at, you know, during the lows from a rate perspective and that that was having a benefit on a flow-through basis.
I'm curious if how we should think about that impact and if there's any kind of, you know, duration to those hedges that might roll off, you know, in a, in a higher rate environment and how that could impact, you know, FFELP NIM as we move throughout 2023 and into 2024.
Sure. 2 of the things here in terms of benefits. 1, we're completely hedged for 2023 as it relates to the Floor Income. On the benefit that we've seen that I've been talking about the last several quarters, that has to do more so with the fact that we have increased our fixed rate funding in 2021 compared to what we have done historically. That benefit will continue to offset the component of the unhedged Floor Income that has declined over the last, call it, 4 quarters here. We've seen the benefit from that funding environment continue throughout this year. We expect that benefit to continue into 2023.
As we enter into 2024 and we look at our interest rate assumptions, we'll see if there's opportunities there to swap the floating. Otherwise we feel very confident based off of the current curves of achieving that 100-110 basis point range.
That's great. Thank you. I appreciate it, and I'll jump back in the queue.
Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Heather Balsky with Bank of America. Your line is now open.
Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. I know you mentioned that you're paying off the $1 billion of notes due in January with cash today. I guess you guys still have the $1.2 billion of unsecured maturities through the first half of 2024. Can you just talk about, you know, your appetite and kind of the attractiveness of refinancing that in the high yield markets currently that seem to have opened up a little bit? Then, can you remind us of how much capacity you have to, you know, refinance a portion of that in the ABS market?
Sure. As I said before, we have $1.5 billion of cash on hand. We provided our cash flow projections on the private portfolio and the FFELP portfolio in our earnings deck. You can see the cash being generated there to meet upcoming maturities. As well as we have $1.6 billion of unencumbered FFELP and private assets that we have the ability to tap into, an additional $5.2 billion of overcollateralization. We have a number of funding mechanisms available to us to address maturities in 2023 and 2024 and beyond. Your comment about the unsecured markets starting to come back positively, that's certainly something that we keep an eye on. As we've done in the past, and you can look at more recently in 2021, we've been opportunistic.
Should there be an opportunity available to us, at attractive, in an attractive market, we may refinance that through unsecured debt. Otherwise, we'll look at the other options that we have available to us, whether that's cash on hand or the other elements that I just mentioned.
Okay, thanks. I guess, you know, given the delay in the CFPB resolution, as the judge entered senior status last year, have you guys had conversations with, you know, the rating agencies on potential upgrades? I know that that lawsuit was kind of a point for some of the rating agencies. Just wondering now that that's kind of been delayed, if there's been an ability to kind of get beyond that, or the conversation has been a non-starter given the current regulatory environment.
We have very frequent conversations with the rating agencies, certainly as recently as just yesterday, just in prep for this call today. That dialogue has continued. Unfortunately, there's no update to provide to the agencies on the path of that court case. I do think from a quantitative perspective that we should certainly be rated higher across the board in terms of elements within our control. Our capital ratios are increasing. We've reduced our debt stack. I think we've done everything that we can do in terms of meeting, certainly fixed income investors' questions, meeting their expectations, and positioning ourselves well for the remainder of this year as well as 2024.
Great. Thanks, guys.
Thank you. I'm showing no further question at this time. I would now like to turn the call back over to Jenifer Earyes for any closing remarks.
Thank you, Olivia. We'd like to thank everyone for joining us on today's call. Please contact me if you have any other follow-up questions. This concludes today's call. Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, that does end our conference for today. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.