Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Uex Q4 2020 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Steve Elder, Vice President of Investor Relations.
Thank you. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone.
With me today is Melissa Smith, our Chair and CEO and our CFO, Roberto Simon. The press release we issued earlier today and a slide deck to walk through our prepared remarks have been posted to the Investor Relations section of our website at wexinc.com. A copy of the release and the slide deck have also been included in 8 ks's we submitted to the SEC. As a reminder, we will be discussing a non GAAP metric, specifically adjusted net income attributable to shareholders, which we refer to as adjusted net income or ANI. Adjustments for this year's Q4 and full year GAAP results to arrive at this metric include unrealized gains and losses on financial instruments, net foreign currency remeasurement gains and losses, acquisition related intangible amortization, other acquisition and divestiture related items, loss on sale of subsidiary, stock based compensation, a legal settlement, restructuring and other costs, an impairment charge, debt restructuring and debt issuance cost amortization, non cash adjustments related to our tax receivable agreement, similar adjustments attributable to non controlling interests and certain tax related items as applicable.
Please see Exhibit 1 of the press release for an explanation and reconciliation of adjusted net income attributable to shareholders to GAAP net income attributed to shareholders. I would also like to remind you that we will discuss forward looking statements under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results may differ materially from those forward looking statements as a result of various factors, including those discussed in our press release, the risk factors identified in our 2019 annual report on Form 10 ks filed with the SEC on February 28, 2020, our quarterly reports on Form 10 Q and subsequent SEC filings. While we may update forward looking statements in the future, we disclaim any obligations to do so. You should not place undue reliance on these forward looking statements, all of which speak only as of today.
With that, I'll turn the call over to Melissa Smith.
Good morning, and thank you for joining us today. I hope everyone is well and staying healthy. As we all know, 2020 proved to be a year like no other. WEX remained resilient and nimble, which allowed us to stack up a series of competitive wins and renewals, target our spending in areas that will drive benefit for years to come and build upon our robust technology capabilities. We ended 2020 with the purchase of ENET and Opto with a very favorable result and successfully navigated an extraordinarily complex set of circumstances in the process.
I remain excited about strengthening our travel position and adding these two assets will enhance our global payment capability, creating value for our customers and our investors over the long term. Our focus on the health and safety of our people, customers and partners and the communities in which we operate was paramount in 2020 and remains the same today. We're focused on WEX's next chapter of growth, enhancing our culture, extending our diversity and inclusion programs and implementing new programs to broader support ESG efforts. Before I dive into our results for the quarter, I want to express my gratitude and deep appreciation for the hard work and dedication of the entire WEX team. Under unprecedented circumstances, they executed extraordinarily well this past year and once again have proven why they are the cornerstone of our organization.
Turning to our results for the quarter the year. The Q4 played out better than we had expected given the expectations we had laid out on the last call. We generated $399,000,000 of revenue and adjusted net income was $1.45 per diluted share. We've received a number of questions around the ENET and Optil acquisitions, so I'd like to hit this right off. We're very sensitive to the challenges our travel customers are facing in this pandemic.
We're partnering with these customers additional travel exposure will introduce some additional uncertainty into our performance. We have a highly talented team of individuals coming together with the Optal and E Net teams, building upon our existing bench of talent. Together, we will create even greater value in the marketplace by leveraging the combination of our collective assets and global reach as the foundation for our future innovation. Over the long term, we see great growth potential, and I remain very excited about the future potential we will create for our customers and shareholders. As a reminder, our end customers are in the consumer travel category, which we believe will rebound much quicker than business travel.
We started the integration, are in the process of updating our assumptions around potential synergies that come from combining the 3 organizations together. Turning to our strategic outlook. We refreshed our strategic pillars to better reflect the opportunities we see in front of us as well as the operating environment we expect to see going forward. As a technology focused company, we're focused on increasing speed and reliability through the use of modern tools. New development of WEX continues to be cloud first.
And during 2020, we reached a major milestone where now approximately 2 thirds of our volume is running within the cloud. We'll continue to build upon our technology and risk management skills and carry forward our diversification. We also remain focused on winning in the marketplace by anticipating customer needs and bringing innovative offerings to the market first using modular integrated solutions and fostering our value based culture to attract and retain the best talent in the industry. Successfully executing against these pillars, coupled with our strategic investments in growth, which allowed us to continue to win in the marketplace, growing our market share. Our increased speed and continued advancement of our products is reflected in the large number of customer signings and renewals we announced during 2020.
We created a great deal of sales momentum in the course of the year. Customers can have confidence that we will continue to advance our capability and innovate with them in the marketplace. I'd like to take a moment to reflect upon some of the most significant wins in contract renewals in 2020, which demonstrate our ability to grow business in even the most challenging of market conditions. While the majority of our new business wins represent smaller customers, of size wins and renewals notably include OMV, JB Hunt, Enterprise Truck Rental, Heartland Express, Diligent Delivery Systems, Charles Schwab, Transamerica, Hormel Foods, Citco Petroleum, HRC Total Solutions, the states of Michigan and Georgia and many others across our business. Importantly, this provides us with another leg of growth as new wins get implemented.
Similarly, we expect to reap the benefits of the investments we made in technology in 2020 to not only meet the dynamic needs of our customers, but to also better position WEX for growth and scalability in the future. We completed a large shift to the cloud with successful migrations of the majority of our fleet business in 2020, following our move to a cloud first development methodology of all new technology in 2019. We'll continue to build upon these existing capabilities. Areas of focus going forward include advancing our data lake, building on machine learning and artificial intelligence capabilities, as well as further development of microservices and cloud native capabilities to provide differentiation, speed and value in our products and new ways in which we can support our customers. Again, the aim of all this is to be able to offer unique products and services at an increasing speed.
Our development cycle now across WEX is on average 2 weeks. I would now like to turn to what we're seeing in volume trends so in year. Similar to the past few quarters, over the road trucking volumes continue to be strong, up 18% quarter to date, while the North American fleet and international volumes continue to be down. In our travel and corporate payments segment, purchase volumes are down 52% quarter to date compared to the prior year period. Global travel related spend volumes continue to be the hardest hit by the pandemic with Q1 quarter to date volumes down 76% year over year, excluding eNET and also volumes.
Corporate payment volumes, on the other hand, remained strong with growth of 20% quarter to date. Lastly, turning to our U. S. Health business, the account growth rate is consistent with the end of the year, while spend volume remains healthy. Finally, I'd like to provide some additional perspective on how we're thinking about 2021.
Building off the weekly trend data I just shared with you, we expect the same slow and steady volume recovery across our business will continue through the first half of twenty twenty one with acceleration in the second half of the year. However, the pace and breadth of the vaccine rollout, as well as the potential for government stimulus, will be critical factors in determining how quickly our existing customer activity will rebound. Given the current pace of vaccine distribution, as well as our own customer mix, we believe customer activity will increase in the second half of the year, but likely more fully in the Q4. In fleet, we've seen a significant rebound in over the road volumes as contract signings continue to be reflected in our volume trends. Based on the size of an average transaction, we believe there is a lag in automotive transactions versus larger vehicles.
This would likely represent sales professionals who've had a local territory, senior executives or more administrative types of roles. We expect that these will be among the last types of transactions to return based on the success in rolling out vaccines. We're winning new direct business in this market because of our technology, the level of customer integration from our products that offer our customers a unique set of financial controls and data capabilities. Carrying that same technology over to the partner side, we have a demonstrated ability of growing partner portfolios using a proprietary marketing and sales engine. In travel, we continue to expect a longer recovery time.
We expect to recover volumes as leisure travels slowly improve, but we also believe COVID has structurally changed the travel market. And speaking with our customers, they are eager for us to support them through this difficult period and to innovate together for the future. The increased scale resulting from the ENET and Awful acquisitions will help margins once we have implemented expected synergies, which we expect to do over the next 3 years. With all that said, we will pursue volume and opportunities where we believe we will earn a return in line with the rest of the business. Importantly, our pipeline of new corporate payments customers remains strong with a number of large opportunities.
This is another area where we've seen most existing customers spend less than in the prior year, but we've been able to offset that by signing up new business, primarily through our partner channel to fill the gap and maintain growth. As this industry continues to mature, we're confident we will emerge as one of the long term winners. We believe our unique group of assets, including compliance, issuing technology and transaction processing, combined with leading edge products in integrated payables and dynamic payments, position us well for future growth. Across travel and corporate payments, we win in the marketplace because of our enterprise grade cloud based solutions, our global currency capabilities, our level of seamless integration and our broad spectrum of payment expertise bridging many different marketplaces. Moving to the Health and Employee Benefits segment.
We completed the open enrollment season with a strong showing relative to our competitors, recognizing that current unemployment rates provide a headwind to normal growth rates. That said, this is an exciting growth opportunity for WEX. We continue to invest in our capabilities here and have an exciting pipeline of new customer opportunities ahead of us. We win new business in this marketplace with our customizable multi account offerings, innovative benefit solutions, ability to integrate, proven data and analytics and our mobile capabilities. Finally, we recently announced the purchase of certain HSA assets from Healthcare Bank, the custodian bank of WEX Health's division.
This expands WEX's role in the attractive consumer directed healthcare ecosystem in line with our growth strategy. We're excited to provide a more streamlined customer experience, one that positions us to better leverage our investments to provide leading HSA solutions. We expect that this purchase to have a positive impact on adjusted net income in 2021. In summary, I'm extremely proud of the way WEX responded to this year's challenging environment. As disruptive as the pandemic has been, we continued down the path we entered in 2020 and delivered on our strategic imperatives.
We entered 2021 having laid the groundwork for success when market conditions recover, accelerated initiatives that will enhance the value we deliver our customers and are continuing to make significant investments in our market leading technology. At the same time, we're executing extremely well, retaining our customers and signing new ones, all part of the building blocks for accelerating future growth and gaining market share. To put our future outlook in perspective, WEX is a diversified business that operates in large, growing and relatively underpenetrated markets and where we have leading positions. While the pace of recovery remains variable, we believe that volumes with existing customers will come back and coupled with new customer additions will position us well to succeed post pandemic. These factors bolstered by the strategic investments we made in 2020 gives me confidence that our next chapter of growth will be our best yet and that we'll get back to our long term targeted revenue growth rates of 10% to 15%.
We've established a strong platform for growth that is more resilient and more diversified than ever before, and we remain committed to driving long term growth and value for our shareholders. I'd now like to turn the call over to our CFO, Roberto Simon. Roberto?
Thank you, and good morning, everyone. As Melissa just mentioned, WEX demonstrated remarkable resilience in 2020. We continue to execute on the strategic pillars, invest in high growth areas and maintain high customer retention rates. I am proud of the way the company has adapted to the new environment and remain confident in the strength of the long term strategy. I will start with a review of the full year, then moving to the details of Q4 and finally provide some commentary for 2021.
Starting with the results for the full year on Slide 10. WEX delivered total revenue of $1,560,000,000 down 10% versus 2019. GAAP net loss attributable to shareholders was $5.56 per share. Adjusted net income per diluted share was $6.06 compared to $9.20 in 2019. Fuel prices and FX rates had a $63,200,000 negative impact on revenue as well as $0.74 on EPS.
We were challenged in each of the segments. However, we saw positive trends. First, the U. S. Health Business grew revenue 18%.
2nd, the corporate payment revenue grew 13%. And finally, the U. S. OTR Business increased gallon volumes by 6%. Now let's move on to Q4 results starting on Slide 11.
The quarter was better than we expected. Revenue was up approximately 4% sequentially, primarily due to the strong growth in the U. S. Health and Corporate Payment Businesses as well as improvements in fuel prices. From an earnings perspective, we also performed better than anticipated.
Adjusted net income declined sequentially. However, as we discussed last quarter, we intentionally placed larger investments in Q4, which were targeted in North American Fleet, U. S. Health and Technology to position the company to capture additional revenue in 2021 beyond. Total revenue in the quarter was 399,000,000 a 9% decrease compared to prior year.
GAAP net loss attributable to shareholders was $5.30 per diluted share. Non GAAP adjusted net income was $64,800,000 or $1.45 per diluted share compared to $2.61 in Q4 2019. Turning to Slide 12. You can see the overall revenue performance by segment. Breaking down revenue, there were no surprises.
As expected, Fleet Solutions segment revenue declined 10%, Travel and Corporate Solutions declined 22% And finally, Health and Employee Benefit Solutions grew 6%. Moving to segment results, beginning with Fleet on Slide 13. Fleet Solutions achieved $235,400,000 in revenue, down 10% from Q4 2019. Revenue was impacted by lower fuel prices, partially offset by continued strength in the over the road business. As a reminder, in the Q4 of 2019, we had a negative $14,000,000 revenue recognition adjustment that also reduced sales and marketing expenses by the same amount.
Payment processing transactions declined 7% when compared to last year. On a positive note, over the road transactions went up 14%, reflecting the strength of this industry and new customer wins. This was offset by the North American and International Fleet Businesses, which were down 9% 8%, respectively. This is an improvement versus the last two quarters where payment processing transactions declined 20% in Q2 and 11% in Q3 of 2020. The net payment processing rate in Q4 was 127 basis points, which was up 17 basis points over the last year and down 7 basis points sequentially.
Versus prior year, the increase was primarily due to lower fuel prices and the accounting adjustment to revenue. Versus Q3, the decrease was due to an increase in OTR volume mix and a reduction in positive spread in Europe. The net late fee rate was 54 basis points in comparison to 65% in Q4 twenty nineteen and 48% in Q3 2020. The year over year decrease was primarily driven by volume mix and improved customer payment behaviors. Similar to Q3 results, customers continue to pay their bills on time.
The number of late fee incidents went down 10% versus last year. Although finance fee revenue was down 25%, it is a positive sign as fleet credit losses improved both sequentially and year over year. I will go over this shortly. To finish in fleet, the average domestic fuel price in Q4 was $2.26 versus $2.80 in 2019. This lowered revenue by approximately 20,000,000 dollars Additionally, positive spreads in Europe increased revenue by 1,100,000 dollars Turning to the Travel and Corporate Solutions segment on Slide 14.
As expected, this segment remains the most challenged area of the business with total revenue down 22% to $74,700,000 Breaking the segment down, Corporate Payments customer revenue was up 23%. This was offset by continued softness in travel customer revenue that was down 60%. This includes a small contribution from
INET and Opto.
Additionally, total purchase volume issued by WEX was 5,000,000,000 To conclude this segment, the net interchange rate was 126 basis points, which was up 42 from Q4 last year. The increase was mainly due to higher corporate payments related volumes and the new scheme fee arrangement that was signed in Q2 2020. Finally, let's take a look at Health and Employee Benefit Solutions on Slide 15. I am pleased to report that the segment posted another quarter of growth with revenue growing 6% versus Q4 2019 to $88,900,000 In the U. S.
Health Business, revenue grew 12%, driven again by sales accounts, which were up 8%. Roughly 2 thirds of the segment revenue was SaaS fee related, which was up 13%. This is reflected in the account servicing revenue line. To close the segment, in Q4 2019, we had $3,900,000 of revenue from the divested Brazilian business, primarily reported in other revenue. Now let's move to expenses on Slide 16.
For the quarter, total cost of service expense was $168,600,000 down from $180,100,000 in Q4 last year. Total SG and A, depreciation and amortization expenses were $427,500,000 which is up $271,400,000 dollars versus 2019. Breaking down the line items within these categories, both processing costs and service fees were essentially flat. Credit loss on a consolidated basis was $11,600,000 down from $18,200,000 a year ago. Fleet credit losses were $9,200,000 significantly down year over year and sequentially.
This equates to 6.9 basis points of spend volume versus 18.5 in Q4 twenty nineteen and 10.8% in Q3 2020. Consistent with last quarter, the reduction in credit losses was driven by the change in customer payment behavior, the operational improvements and internal controls that were implemented in the credit and collections area. While we are pleased with the overall credit loss performance of the past couple of quarters, we are closely watching for any signs of weakening. Operating interest expense was $3,700,000 down $6,500,000 from the prior year quarter. This is due to lower interest rates on waxband deposits and lower deposits overall.
G and A expenses increased 24,900,000 dollars versus Q4 last year, mostly due to expenses related to the INET and OPTAL transaction and stock compensation. Sales and marketing expenses were up $29,300,000 The increase was largely due to a $14,000,000 revenue recognition adjustment that I mentioned earlier, higher partner rebates associated with corporate payment volumes and the expected investments in the Fleet and Health businesses. Next on the income statement, there is a charge of 162,500,000 Of the total $577,500,000 that we paid for INET and Aptal, this reflects the estimated apportionment for settling the litigation. The remaining amount was allocated to the purchase price of the company's. Finally, the last item in operating expenses is a charge of $53,400,000 related to a goodwill impairment for the European Fuel Business as a result of the pandemic volume decline.
Changing gears to taxes on Slide 17. On a GAAP basis, the effective tax rate this quarter was 7% compared to 26.9% for the Q4 of 2019. On an ANI basis, the tax rate was 22.4%, down 2.30 basis points from a year ago. Turning now to Slide 18. I would like to provide an update on the strength of our balance sheet.
Despite a very volatile 2020, we maintain financial flexibility with robust levels of liquidity. We ended the quarter with $852,000,000 in cash, up from $811,000,000 at the end of 2019. The corporate cash balance, as defined in the credit agreement, was $642,000,000 at quarterend, down from $1,000,000,000 at the end of Q3 2020. This reduction was due to the closing of the Innet and Optal acquisition, partially offset by very strong cash flow generation. Additionally, there is over 818,000,000 dollars of available borrowing capacity under the company's credit agreement.
At year end, the total balance on the revolving line of credit, term loans and notes outstanding was $3,000,000,000 The leverage ratio stands at approximately 3.7x at the end of 2020, which is up from 3.5x at the end of last year. As expected, the increase reflects the acquisition of Innett and Octho. Finally, in this section, we announced the redemption of the outstanding $400,000,000 senior secured notes. It is expected to be funded from cash on hand and completed on March 15. To close out the call, and as you probably anticipated, we will not be providing revenue and earnings guidance at this time.
The present environment does not allow us to accurately make projections. However, we do want to share some observations and give input where we can. Fleet volumes have been improving sequentially for the past three quarters, and we expect this positive trend to continue. Corporate Payments customer volumes are expected to continue to see strong momentum. Travel customer volumes are still depressed, and this market remains uncertain in the short term.
However, in the long term, we feel positive about this part of the business. In the meantime, we are focused on the integration of Inet and Optel. Finally, looking at the U. S. Health business, we expect revenue to grow in the range of 8% to 12%.
On the operating expense side and assuming the prevailing economic environment does not change, we do not plan to make meaningful adjustments. Both operating and financing interest will benefit from lower interest rates. Translating this into a view for Q1, we are expecting revenue to increase between 0 percent 2% compared to Q4 2020 revenue, which includes the full quarter contribution from INET and OPTEL. From an earnings point of view, we expect ANI EPS to improve sequentially, driven by higher revenue and higher fuel prices offset by the InetanOptal integration. To give you more color on the Inet and Optal timing, we are planning on improvements each quarter, leading to a no material impact on earnings on a full year basis.
To conclude, we are proud of work resilience in 2020 and are confident and well positioned to capture future growth as the economy continues to improve. And with that, operator, please open the line for questions.
Your first question comes from Darrin Peller with Wolfe Research. Your line is open.
Hey, thanks guys. Can we just start off, now that Enid and Opto is behind you on the travel side, is there any change to the way that you're going to be managing that business, meaning more like if Enan and Opto were resolved earlier, would there be anything you would have done differently by now? And then just thinking of the fundamental changes in the OTV payment space OTP payment space from a competitive standpoint, any developing opportunities post pandemic beyond rebounding volumes you can talk through. Just we get a lot of questions on the corporate and travel segment as being a key highlight for you guys long term. So strategically, I'd love to hear your thoughts there.
And then obviously, if you could just touch on the B2B side, the corporate payment side as well. Thanks guys.
Sure. Good morning. On your first question around travel, when we had originally intended to do the transaction, we had planned to split out the travel group in terms of having a separate management team focusing on the integration of the business and really focused on those customers. And so we really just carried forward with that after we settled the transaction. So we now have Anthony Hines and his team that is in charge of that part of the business working very closely with Jay Dearborn, who runs our corporate payments business.
And a lot of integration around the technology and the product set. But beyond that, we felt like we wanted to create a lot of focus because of the opportunity set and because of the amount of
work we need to do
on the integration. We think both parts of the business have really great long term growth. You were talking about the B2B space. In the B2B space, the place that we really have been having the most amount of success is this kind of concept of embedded payments, which we're doing it through partners. Some of those are FinTech companies.
They have different needs, but the fact that we have the underlying technology, our processing system that we developed was cloud based, it's highly reliable. It's a nice selling point we have within that marketplace. We also have a merchant portal and a number of different payment capabilities beyond our virtual payment capabilities. So in the wins that we are having, there's a combination of the expertise we have in the marketplace, the technology that we have. And again, we've been really primarily focused in the partner channel of that marketplace.
It's a place we see continued growth opportunity and we're excited about the prospects there. And I'd say equally, we're excited about the prospects we have in travel, albeit that we expect to have more volatility in the short term there. It's a little bit less predictable what's going to happen with that customer set right now in terms of volume. Okay.
And then I guess when we look at the overall corporate side, just to think about the strategy of what you can do there, I mean, obviously, that's held up very well. Was any of that a bit of a pull forward just given the pandemic? Or do you think that's really sustainable run rate now plus and strategically what Melissa can give us a sense of what you may or may not want to do in that? Thanks again guys.
Yes. I think that we as part of the business, we are getting a benefit in new contract signings in terms of our partners bringing on new business because of the digital needs in the marketplace right now. So there's benefit of that. There's also been a headwind in this last year where some of the existing customers just aren't spending as much as we've been able to overcome that through new contract signings. So we feel particularly bullish, I guess, about it right now because we're working against a headwind, we're still able to show some pretty significant growth there.
So going forward into the marketplace, this is the place we're going to continue to put emphasis, continue to spend internal investment dollars and we do see a long runway. It's also a huge market. And so we like it's just a great market. It's huge. We have an ability to differentiate within the marketplace.
And as a result, we think that, that can create some great growth potential for us long term.
And I will add to Melissa's point. If you think about the Q2 where we were flat in volume, Q3 we were over 10% then Q4 over 20%. And as Melissa said, we expect a good 2020 one when we are projecting on what the things that are happening now.
Your next question comes from Tien Tsin Huang with JPMorgan. Your line is open.
Hey, good morning. Thanks for the presentation. I wanted to ask Melissa, just curious, obviously, good sales results. How did new sales land versus your original 2020 target? And what are you thinking about this year sales targets for 2021?
Yes. We had particularly strong sales in our Over the Road business. We have a tremendous amount of momentum coming into that business. And you can hear it in the contract wins that we've had throughout the course of this year. I'd also say, when we set up our targets as we go into each year, we are pretty aggressive about that.
So we over delivered across a number of the different parts of the business. And as we go into 2021, it's the same thing. Since we established our targets, we established some pretty strong targets, we expect to continue to have momentum in the marketplace. Again, we've got a lot of momentum specifically in the over the road marketplace. We have a really good pipeline in corporate payments and we have a really good pipeline in health.
And I'd say the one caveat with Health I Have is that talked about the fact that we are seeing some headwinds in that business because of unemployment rates. And so we think that you're going to see that business be skewed towards the second half of the year, where enrollment season was strong for us competitively. But the growth rates going into the 1st part of the year are lower than what we would normally see, again, because of the headwinds and unemployment. We have a really good already closed and we continue to close some of the ones that are in our pipeline. And then, already closed and we continue to close some of the ones that are in our pipeline.
Good to know. Just as my second quick follow-up and then I'll jump off. Just on the cloud update, which is I know you all went through that pretty thoroughly in your Investor Day. You're at 2 thirds now. So do you see the potential for improvement in competitiveness?
Or is this more of a benefit from a cost standpoint now as we think about getting to that last third of migration if that's where you're going on the cloud side? Just trying to understand what the impact would be for the P and L? Thanks.
Yes. I think the impact actually in 3 different ways. 1 has been around speed for us. It's something we care a lot about in the market now, the ability to move really rapidly. And as we have moved things into the cloud, it's a combination moving into the cloud and then architectural work that some of which we're well underway, some of which we're kind of in the middle part of doing.
But as we finish that, just making sure that we can continue to move with speed, bring products into the marketplace and being able to share across the different parts of our business as we bring forward features and product sets. That's really important to us competitively if we kind of think long term about the competitive set. We also believe that you're going to see benefit from a cost perspective as we continue to reduce the number of data centers that we're operating in. And so that will over time create some benefit for us. And then the final thing from a customer perspective, it just increases the overall reliability performance from a customer perspective, and that's something that's also very important to us.
So it really hits across all three categories for us.
Thanks for that. Appreciate it.
Your next question comes from Ramsey El Assal with Barclays. Your line is open.
Hi, good morning and thanks for taking my question today. I wanted to first ask about the impact of fuel prices and how we should think about incorporating fuel into our models for 2021. It seems like the futures curve is up pretty dramatically quarter over quarter in a typical cycle where you guys would guide, you'd give us that average fuel price and it would flow into EPS. I'm just kind of curious if that if there's if we should be thinking about this in a consistent way as the past where we just basically see what the RBOB curve has done and kind of take your last average fuel price and kind of mark it up basically in our models. If you could give any color on how fuel prices will impact 'twenty one in terms of your internal thinking would be super helpful for us.
Of course, good morning. So obviously, as fuel prices increase, we are going to see the benefit and we are very happy to see fuel oil prices going up. So I will start you saw the presentation the year the quarter to date, it's around $255,000,000 Obviously, the number has improved significantly from the average of those 6 weeks. So it's going to go up for the second half of February and also for March. If you recall from the past experience, so in 2019, for every $0.10 of fuel price movement on a full year, we had approximately $0.20 of ANI EPS and $14,000,000 in revenue.
So as we go into 2021, you should see it's going to be very similar, maybe slightly lower than that $0.18 or $0.19 of ANI EPS because of the mix between OTR and North American fleet. But that's the number that you should be expecting when you compare 2020 afterwards, where the average of fuel prices were around $2.30 overall compared to where we are now in the month of February and where the curve is turning now into 2021. Okay. That's actually really helpful.
Thank you. And the other question I wanted to ask was about your travel business. And putting aside the timing of a potential travel recovery because who knows, is there any reason to not think that your travel business and the eNET Optil business as well will not get back to 2019 levels? Are there any customer bankruptcies or any other kinds of deteriorations in these businesses that would keep us from basically saying, look, when we look out to 'twenty two or even beyond, these businesses should get back really largely on track with where they left
off. So when I talked about structural change in the travel marketplace, it's because I think of people, particularly businesses, as they travel, I just think that it's going to be different going forward as a result of the pandemic. Most of the customer base, the end customers we deal with there are consumers, which is a benefit. So we do think that you're going to see that migrating back, that volume pattern migrating back. We also think that you're going to see health coming back sooner than you see airline travel.
And so from just a timing perspective, we think you're going to see some variability in what's going to happen with the travel business, probably more than what you're seeing in other customer end markets. But it's really a question of when it returns. I talked about supporting our travel customers in this period of time. We know that they've been particularly hard hit. And so our focus has largely been working with them around how we can continue to innovate together.
And we have more assets now than we have ever had with the combination of eNET and Optil and WEX and really not looking across the portfolio of what we've got to look at ways that we can help create even more product for them, which can be a benefit to them as well. And so I look at that marketplace, I think that there's great long term opportunity for us and a lot of work that we need to do with that customer set to make sure that we're putting together products the way that we have across the rest of WEX to bring into the marketplace even more unique and innovative offerings for the future.
Okay. All right. Thanks so much.
Your next question comes from Bob Napoli with William Blair. Your line is open.
Thank you. Good morning. Question on the maybe first, same store sales and the I mean, obviously, up 18% for the OTR, very strong. And I know you've won a lot of customers, but maybe could you give a little color on same store sales between OTR and non OTR?
Sure. Good morning. So on the OTR side, same store sales are up about 5%. So getting a benefit in that part of the business. On the North American fleet side, down significantly in the order of around 15%.
So still down and I don't really have a lot of insights to add because it's really kind of across the board.
Thank you, Melissa. Then on Enet, what was the what are you assuming as far as to get to material, How dilutive is EBIT like in the Q1 on an EPS basis? And then what does it take to get it back to normal? What are you assuming on travel getting back to I mean American Express throughout the consumer travel would be 70% of pre pandemic by the Q4. Are you assuming something like that or what is so how dilutive?
Then what was eNET's revenue prior to the pandemic?
Yes, I'm going to start and I can see Rupert is eager to jump in here. On Ena and Optil, part of what we're looking at right now and I said this before in our prepared remarks, but we're refreshing the model around our synergies. And when we originally announced the transaction, it was in a different environment. So as we've brought the assets in and have spent time with Anthony and his team, that's really we're pretty deep into that process right now. We know the $25,000,000 that we've laid out before, and I think that that is a baseline, We are targeting a number bigger than that.
We historically have taken 3 years to get through an integration process and some of this will take some time for us. There's a lot of complexity around that, but we're eager to be pulling some of those forward and that's part of why we talk about it being dilutive now and then being breaking for the year. It's a lot to do with the synergy work that we have ahead of us right now. And with that, I'll let Roberto talk to you about the specifics.
Great. Yes, Bob. So just to give you some color in the 15 days of the Q4, we had less than $2,000,000 in revenues, so very material and then the impact to EMI EPS was $0.02 to $0.03 So as you get into Q1, obviously, we are going to see a dilution because obviously revenues are still or volumes are still down. But as Melissa said, so as we get from Q1 into Q2, we should see improvement. And then on the second half of the year, we should be being accretive.
And when you think about on a full year basis and based on the projections that we are seeing on volume, we should be on a, call it, no material impact on a full year basis from an A and I EPS point of view. But the cadence of the recovery is what Melissa also said. So we are going to start having synergies late in Q1, Q2 and then probably more run rate in the second half of the year. So it's going to be dilutive on the first half and accretive on the second half.
Anything on the revenue pre pandemic from what do you see? Yes.
So the revenue in 2019 was almost $160,000,000 that's what we had in revenue and the volumes were around $20,000,000,000 of spend. And obviously, as Melissa said before, I mean, we don't know when we are going to get to the 2019 level. What we know is, what you have seen today on these 6 weeks where we are on the 60%, 65% down from last year, and we keep monitoring daily how things are improving. But it's hard to tell now when we're going to get back to the 'nineteen levels. Then real
quick on the Healthcare acquisition, the HSA assets, is that going to get you enable you to earn the interest income? I mean, that's what is how accretive is that? And is that really over the long term, assuming the Fed raises interest rates, is that something that's really going to move the needle? I mean, obviously HealthEquity makes a lot of money off of the float, off of the deposits.
Yes. What we like about it is it gives us the control over that part of the economics. It also creates a better customer experience because we're streamlining the whole process. And so from both a customer perspective and an economic perspective, we think there's a benefit of this. It's going to be accretive this year, but it's not going to have a material impact, particularly if you compare it to the prior year.
But what it does allow us to do is the future is have a lot more control, which will give us a benefit financially going forward.
Yes. Thank you.
Your next question comes from Ashish Sabadra with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open.
Thanks for taking my question. Maybe just a quick question on fleet. How do we think about any benefit from a potential infrastructure spending bill? Can you talk about some of your end markets that could potentially benefit from the infrastructure spending? And maybe just a quick question on fleet also is the recent weather in Texas, could we see any impact on the fleet business near term?
Thanks. Sure. So I'm going to answer your second question first off the top of mind. Yes, where we did see weakness during the weather in the within the southern part of the state. And so that was reflected in Roberto's commentary there when he was giving a framework for what was going to happen in the Q1.
We're anticipating that. They both we both expect that to have an impact in sleep but also in health. We saw a little bit of an impact on consumers going out and spending money on their routine medical costs as a result of what was happening with the weather. On the infrastructure spending question, we do think that there's a benefit to us if you look across our customer categories. A big part of our North American fleet business are in the construction trades and that includes infrastructure type of trades.
And so we do think that we would get benefit of that.
That's very helpful color. And maybe if I can just ask quick question on the corporate payments side, obviously very strong momentum there, a lot of it is partner driven. I was wondering if you could provide more color on your direct business Noventis acquisition and how do we think about your ability to sell into your existing small business customer base? Thanks.
Sure. On the direct side, that actually really has where our primary focus has been to cross sell within our existing customer base.
We have
a relatively small sales force that has been executing against that, has been doing well. We have a primary customer. Their ability to cross sell has been actually quite strong. So it's a place that we look at as an area that we may want to expand. But right now, it's the smaller part of where the corporate payments revenue is coming from.
The larger part is coming from the partner channel.
Your next question comes from Dave Koning with Baird. Your line is open.
Yes. Hey, guys. Thank you. And I just wanted to dig in a little more. I think you said revenue up 0% to 2% sequentially.
Is that right, first of all?
That's correct compared to the Q4 results, yes.
Yes. And so I guess my question is, I would have thought, normally health is seasonally strong in Q1 from what I remember. And then you have the full quarter of e net optical coming on as well. So it seems like those 2 are going to provide just alone much better than 0% to 2% growth to the total company. And then fleet, you have fuel prices getting better too.
So I'm wondering is something in core in fleet going down or is there something else in the core business that's coming down sequentially that I'm just missing when I think through that?
Well, I will start with the fleet. So the fleet fuel prices last year in the Q1 were 2.57 dollars and what we gave you today's year to date is $255,000,000 So from a fuel price point of view, when we get to the end of the quarter, it's going to be, call it, breakeven. Obviously, as Melissa has shared and we have shared on the presentation, the volumes are still down in fleet. So when you put the fleet everything together, you are not going to see an improvement sequentially. And obviously, on the travel and corporate payment side, so you also have seen the progress in the volumes.
We have a very strong corporate payment volume growth on the 1st 6 weeks, but the travel is still being impacted from the Q1 of last year, and we are still down on the 60%. So when you put all the pieces together and what we are seeing, the 0% to 2% improvement sequentially, it's we believe it's the right guidance, if we want to call, but we feel good with that. And obviously, that continues to improve from where we were in Q3, Q4 and getting into the Q1 of 2021.
Okay, good. Thank you. And then just my follow-up on Healthcare, I think you said up 8% to 12% for the year. How much of that is from the acquisition? And does the acquisition just hit the yield on accounts?
And maybe how much does that yield go up? How much do we think for that?
So the acquisition, as Melissa said, is not going to have a material impact neither in revenue nor in ANA EPS. It's going to be accretive, but it's going to be small. And it's not going to change the number of accounts that we have because we were managing. We were reporting already all the accounts. What is giving us is what Melissa said, it's going to give us a much greater opportunity as we think in the future from an economic point of view.
And for the customers and our customers, it's going to be better because we are going to be managing everything with them.
And I would now like to turn the call back over to Steve Elder for closing remarks.
I just want to thank everyone once again for listening to the call this morning and we'll look forward to updating you again in a couple of months after our Q1 results.