Nov 9, 2018
Executives
Darby Schoenfeld - VP of IR Kevin Stevenson - President & CEO Pete Graham - EVP & CFO
Analysts
Mark Hughes - SunTrust Eric Hagen - KBW Brian Hogan - William Blair
Operator
Good day, everyone and welcome to the PRA Group's Third Quarter 2018 Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] And please note, that today's event is being recorded.
And I would now like to turn the conference over to Darby Schoenfeld, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Darby Schoenfeld
Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us.
With me today are Kevin Stevenson, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Pete Graham, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. We will make forward-looking statements during the call, which are based on management's current expectations.
We caution listeners that these forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations. Please refer to the earnings press release and our SEC filings for a detailed discussion of these factors.
The earnings release, the slide presentation that we will use during the presentation, and our SEC filings can be found on the Investor Relations section of our website at www.pragroup.com. Additionally, a replay of this call will be available shortly after the conclusion, and the information needed to listen is in the earnings press release.
All comparisons mentioned today will be between Q3 of 2018 and Q3 of 2017, unless otherwise noted. I'd now like to turn the call over to Kevin Stevenson, our President and Chief Executive Officer.
Kevin Stevenson
Well, thank you, Darby, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining our third quarter 2018 conference call.
In an opinion piece in The Wall Street Journal, earlier this year which is critical of short-term thinking. Jamie Dimon and Warren Buffett said, and I quote 'Companies frequently hold back on technology spending, hiring, and research and development to meet quarterly earnings forecast' and the quote continued on.
In my place '17 CEO Letter, and I said 'we acknowledge that striking the right balance between today and tomorrow is both necessary and difficult. Throughout our history we made decisions to invest in current period, create value in the future.'
This afternoon, I begin the call mentioning these quotes because they are germane to what PRAA has done for the better part of last two years. This is part of our founding philosophy, and our investment in this quarter is no exception.
As I see it, the past couple of years has been a story of investment in people, digital, data and legal. Let me tell you what we've done.
Our growth in domestic collectors began in the second half of 2016; since that time we have significantly increased the number of FTEs. To put this in perspective, we moved from approximately 1,500 in Q3 of 2016 to over 2,200 in Q3 of 2017, to nearly 3,100 in Q1 of 2018, we now stand at about 2,750; this represents a fast ramp up, and we did this to more optimally align our staffing with our portfolio, task that became more challenging as we proceeded to purchase new record number of accounts in U.S.
Core in 2017 and 2018. While this expansion allowed us to address our growing inventory of account with speed at which it was done to limit our workforce in terms of productivity.
It takes time for collector to gain experience, build negotiation skills, and payment plans and become fully productive; thus adding a lot of them in a short period of time is a drag to EPS. We did what we believed and done to maximize net cash flow over future periods.
And currently, with the operational investment in U.S., we were also investing in Europe. We had operational challenges in Italy as we green fielded entry into the market, however, we could be adopted building in-house operations and bringing the legal collections channel upto speed or while recording no associated revenue since we placed the portfolios on non-accrual.
We purchased a platform at Poland to allow us to bring operations in-house after we began investing in portfolios there in late 2014. We also improved legal collections operations there and then proceeded to improve our legal collections capabilities in countries such as the UK and Spain.
Next, we launched our improved U.S. digital platform in October 2016 and we didn't stop there.
Since then we've added additional mobile first features such as the slider to create custom payment plans and options to modify payments plans. And we recently increased our digital channels to include chat servicing, negotiations and collections.
In our European geographies, we continue to make great strides in improving our digital platforms and website capabilities including launches of new website in the UK, Germany and Spain; and we're actively redesigning and developing the stand for Poland, Italy and the Nordics. Investment in digital across our geographic areas will continue as we seek in the customers where they want to be met.
Moving onto data and analytics. In 2017, we restructured and consolidated what have been four separate areas across our U.S.
operations. We then recruited an experienced leader from outside to run this newly formed group.
This new structure and leadership has proven more successful than I hoped, it's driving more transparency, sharing and team work than we've ever had before. Levering of this success, just last quarter, we completed a full matrix reporting structure across our global platform which included our data and analytics group in Europe having reporting lines back to the U.S.
Like the success we've seen domestically, we anticipate this move will create very interesting and productive jobs and will pave the way for people in the U.S. to better assist those in Europe, and importantly, we also want our team in Europe to lend fresh eye in looking at what we do in Americas.
Which now brings us to U.S. legal investment which is a critical component in Q3, and will also be important for Q4.
As we described over the past few years, we've been experiencing a shift towards more legal, eligible accounts in the U.S. The build started in 2017 and by the middle of 2018 the size of the U.S.
legal eligible inventory had increased significantly. The build was driven by the substantial number of accounts we've purchased, coupled with a change in the nature of the account making them more legal eligible and enhanced by much better account documentation supplied by sellers.
Another factor that has also played a role in the build is a general change in consumer phone answering behavior. People are simply picking up the phone less often than they have in the past.
A phenomenon is generally reported in industry-wide. If you like some third-party collaboration there is a 2.5 hour joint FTC/FCC panel discussion on the matter from March 2018 that contains a fulsome discussion.
The consumers cannot answer calls when they don't know whose calling. Additionally, the FCC instructed phone companies to actively address what's known as illegal robo [ph] calling, and to make an effort to block or tag these calls.
Unfortunately, there was little guidance provided on exactly how the carriers and their partners should identify and then subsequently block or tag these calls. As such, many legitimate business calls are getting caught up in this scam tagging, including those originating from the collection industry.
Fortunately, it appears as though the FCC has recognized this issue, and in August passed the public comment which we responded. Additionally, just this week, Chairman Pai of the FCC sent a letter to the carriers asking them to adopt a call authentication system by next year.
It's referred to as 'Shaken and Stir'; this will require digital signing and call validation from the carriers, hopefully, providing us with a permanent solution to being erroneously identified as scam likely. In the meantime, we are pushing multiple directions to avoid our calls being tagged to scam, including working with third-party vendors to whitelist our numbers, and having dialogues with the carriers and their data partners.
All of that backdrop from the increased volumes to changing nature of accounts, more documents and call answering leads us to this discussion related to our legal inventory and our investment in legal costs. Last quarter we indicated, we plan to ramp up our legal collection expenses in the second half of 2018 in the amount of $20 million over what you saw in the first half of 2018.
As we began to execute this strategy in Q3, we found a favorable environment where our third-party legal attorneys had excess processing capacity. This allowed us to move more accounts in the legal this quarter than we had originally projected last quarter.
As a result, the increase in Q3's U.S. legal collection expenses were nearly $15 million versus the $10 million that you might have expected based on our Q2 commentary.
We saw an opportunity to invest more than planned and took advantage of it and to accelerate future cash, also completely consistent with our long-term thinking. As with the collector ramp up, it's important to recognize what we did not do, and that was hold back collection expenses just because we initially believed we could only invest in incremental $10 million.
The system opened the door and the opportunity to intelligently put an additional $5 million to work and we did it. Believe me, we fully understand that expensing this level of cost is a drag on our current EPS.
I talked about this legal investment situation since we became public in 2002. We have been, and we plan to remain focused on cash flow.
I would like to paraphrase my own CEO Letter; cash flow is the essential measuring stick at PRA and sometimes GAAP aligns well with our focus on cash flow and other times it does not. While it's [indiscernible] I was speaking of the revenue recognition process, the same holds true for expensing these costs and the benefit will be in later quarters and years.
So what are the next steps? On the employee front; now that we have most of the backlog from the underworked portfolios caught up, we started to rationalize the number of domestic collectors, and we have lot of attrition to decrease the employee base by about 300 FTEs during the quarter, although the average was only down about 150.
This number will even flow with seasonality, so you should expect us to increase in late Q4 as the tax season in the U.S., and then decrease throughout the year unless portfolio investment volumes dictate otherwise. Moving onto legal; people have more information but we plan to repeat, if not increase our legal investment in Q4 to the extent possible, given the fluctuating capacity and holiday schedules.
It's important to understand what's happening today in the newer vintages in U.S. Core.
Given the significant legal inventory growth that's happened for all the reasons cited, we believe this is an opportunity to intelligently put significant dollars to work, in fact, we believe that taking this action should drive an uplift to the curves in these vintages. Now here is the important concept to understand, and it's one that we've long talked about, and one that we have great data on; account selection.
Account selection in the legal channel is critical because we select incorrect account that damages the legal collection margin. However, as long as we are not overworking the accounts in the call centers, and properly selecting them, realizing what we believe is the most complete 22-year dataset in the U.S., the legal collection margins should be comparable to that of call center.
Finally, in Europe; we have begun a new phase improving and automating call centers. We recently implemented a new dialer in some countries and plan to roll it out to more geographies in 2019, and I've already mentioned efforts in our digital channel.
The results of these investments will be seen in the coming years by balancing and optimizing U.S. call center with the U.S.
legal channel, combined with the investment in legal [ph] in the second half of 2018 we will likely have an improvement in the cash efficiency ratio from the 2018 numbers as we move through 2019. It's also possible in our more recent vintages of upside to them based on the potential for collections earlier in the curve and overall uplift from legal.
Non-performing loans or NPL sales volume in the U.S. continues to be significant.
Pricing is stable, and because of the amendment to our credit facility, we have significant capital available for portfolio purchases. We are hopeful we'll be able to continue at this level unless with some time to come.
Early in October we announced a strategic partnership with Banco Bradesco in Brazil which significantly enhances our Brazilian venture. Bradesco, one of Brazil's largest banks is taking a majority stake in the servicing operations.
PRA will continue our majority stake in the NPL purchasing business which will be expanded to include new investment vehicles that Bradesco will participate in as a minority investor. The founding partners of RCB will continue to manage the servicing platform and have a stake in the investment vehicles as well.
The transaction has cleared anti-trust approval and it's pending approval by the Brazilian controlled banking authority. This partnership is similar to other partnerships that have been created in the Brazilian market between banks and debt buyers and gives us better opportunity to expand our investment capabilities.
Our NPL purchases in Brazil have been sporadic recently, and this gives us the possibility with this strategic partner to have more stable and sizeable buying opportunities than before. We also believe that in terms -- that the terms of this transaction demonstrates the considerable value that we've built in this enterprise together with our partners in RCB.
In insolvency, the engine is fine-tuned; and as an additional investment opportunities are created we will be able to easily and quickly leverage additional supply over our current operations that recognize significant economies of scale. In Europe, we expected our efforts will not only continue to improve productivity but also speed up our cash cycles and improve our competitiveness.
Additionally, we're in a great capitable [ph] position there with almost $0.5 billion in capital available for portfolio purchases. While the market remains very competitive, we have seen a small shift in the pricing environment.
For the past two years, we've talked openly about irrational pricing, and for the past few quarters we believed, based on our data, that about 50% to 60% of portfolios are trading in the mid-single digit returns or lower, many dipping into negative returns. This quarter, we saw things get slightly better.
Based on our pricing models, we believe that about 40% of portfolios are trading in the mid-single digit range with few dipping into negative returns. We'll have to wait and see if this is the single quarter's data point or part of a larger trend, we certainly hope for the latter.
In the meantime, we did acquire reasonable amounts of portfolio during Q3 that meet our return requirements. What you've seen from PRA is a passive investment since I took over as CEO.
But that roadmap I followed was one that's long been a hallmark of PRA. These investments are designed to build long-term sustainable value for our shareholders and allow us to be poised for action in each of our markets.
Finally, I'll need to cover quickly our global portfolio investment in the quarter which was $238 million. Americas Core investment of $170 million was second only to the record we set in Q2.
Buying in America's insolvency has been muted this year after a record year in 2017 due to our new relationship in an asset class that we've been cultivating since 2012. The 2017 portfolios are performing generally in line with expectations.
After this quarter ended, we closed another transaction with the same seller in the same asset class. In Europe, we invested $50 million in portfolios during the quarter, which is the best quarterly investment amount we've had this year.
The better news is that we are on-track to post an investment amount more than double that in Q4, the bulk of which is located in more mature markets where risk is lower and our data is strong. At the end of the third quarter, we have committed maximum forward flow investment amounts globally of $584 million.
And with that, I'd like to turn the call over to Pete to go through the financials.
Pete Graham
Thanks, Kevin. I'll start with a quick overview of our GAAP results and then we move onto cash operations.
Cash collections were $389 million, an increase of $7 million or 2% over the third quarter of 2017 and total revenues were $226 million, a 11% increase. Operating expenses were $173 million and net income was $10 million, generating $0.22 in diluted earnings per share.
Americas Core collections were $231 million, an increase of $18 million or 9%; this was led by a $14 million or 12% increase in U.S. call center and other cash collections, and a $7 million or a 11% increase in U.S.
legal cash collections. This was partially offset by the translation impact of the weakening Brazilian real which drove a decrease of $4 million.
Europe Core cash collections were essentially flat at $103 million. The biggest driver of this was lower levels of investment over the past few quarters.
Our portfolios continue to perform well, and as a result, we raised yields in a number of countries. Global insolvency cash collections decreased $11 million or 17%, driven primarily by muted investment volumes in the U.S., not offsetting the wind-down of older pools.
Net allowance charges were $8 million in the quarter with $7 million in U.S. Core, almost entirely in the 2013 and 2014 vintages.
These pools are the ones most impacted by the CFPB consent order. Early and significant outperformance prior to 2016 resulted in yield increases on these pools, and they currently bear gross yields of 50% to over 70%.
We've been adjusting our curves to accommodate these impacts as they occur. However, given the yields were raised so high historically in reaction to the initial overperformance, we continue to incur allowance charges.
It's important to understand that these are non-cash charges on over-performing deals. And even though we've incurred these allowance charges, these vintages remain well ahead of their underwritten expectations.
For those of you that follow the industry from Europe, it's important to highlight that GAAP accounting is very different from IFRS. Under IFRS, yields are never changed once the deal is booked, any changes that estimated remaining collections up or down are reflected in the income statement on a discounted basis in the period of change.
GAAP by contrast requires yield raises for upward revisions to ERC which spreads the incremental revenues over future periods and requires current period recognition of allowance charges per dollar revisions to ERC without regard to any prior yield raises. This results in a situation as we have on these 2013 and 2014 less Core vintages, where we we're taking allowance charges on deals that have materially over-performed original underwriting.
Operating expenses were $173 million, an increase of $27 million from the previous year. This was largely due to increases in legal collection expenses and compensation in employee services due to expansion of the U.S.
call center staff. Legal collection expenses which combines fees and costs increased $13.6 million, mainly due to the increase in the number of accounts qualifying for the legal channel in the U.S.
As Kevin stated, we were able to get more accounts through the process in the quarter than we expected, investing about $5 million more than we had originally anticipated. Given the favorable environment we're seeing in both internal and external legal channels in the U.S., plus the trends Kevin mentioned, we will likely see a build in our legal collection costs in the fourth quarter.
Depending on capacity, it's possible that we could spend between $32 million and $36 million in the fourth quarter in legal collection costs. We broke out legal collection costs and fees on the income statement this quarter to help with transparency, and this number relates only to the legal collection cost line which was $30.8 million in the third quarter.
To give you some idea of the payback timing for these legal investments by the end of the second quarter after we make an investment, we're currently collecting in excess of 200% of our initial investment; it means for every dollar invested we'll collect $2 cumulatively over the next two quarters. This is just an example of the near-term timing for payback, obviously our anticipated total return on the investment is much higher.
Compensation and employee services costs have increased as anticipated due to the higher number of collection staff this year compared to the third quarter of 2017. Our cash efficiency ratio was 58.9% from the first nine months of 2018, compared to 60.8% for the full year 2017.
As expected, this has declined due to the increase in investment in the legal collection channel. For the full year, we expect this to be close to 58%.
Below the operating income line, interest expense was $31 million, an increase of $4.7 million due to higher balances outstanding and higher average interest rates. Our effective tax rate for the first nine months of 2018 was 17%, down from 18% expected at the end of the second quarter.
For the full year of 2018, the tax rate could still be influenced by additional guidance around U.S. tax reform, and by mix of income by jurisdiction, but at this time 16% to 18% is our best estimate for the full year.
Estimated remaining collections were a record $5.81 billion with 59% in the U.S. and 39% in Europe.
ERC increased sequentially, primarily due to investment in the Americas. After the quarter ended, we executed an amendment to our North American credit facility which increased the revolving portion by $363 million.
We also increased the amount available on the accordion from $45 million to $500 million. The term loan portion of the facility, as well as the rates and maturity remain unchanged.
Concurrently, we reduced our European credit facility by $100 million. These changes allow us to better balance what was excess capacity in Europe with significant opportunity for supply in the U.S.
We appreciate the support from our U.S. and European bank groups in meeting our global funding objectives.
In addition to the substantial cash flow generated by the business, we had capital available for portfolio purchases after the amendment, amounting to $670 million in the Americas, and $452 million in Europe for a total of $1.1 billion globally. Each quarter, we provide a revenue model, which produces a base revenue estimate on our currently owned portfolio; last quarter that estimate was $212 million.
Actual income on finance receivables was $223 million, the difference of $12 million driven primarily by new buying and yield increases. In addition, there was $2.1 million in cash from fully amortized pools not accounted before by the model.
This quarter, the same model generates a base estimate of $219 million of finance receivable income. A reminder that there are three items that can impact the base estimate; investments in NPLs in the fourth quarter, yield increases and cash from fully amortized pools not already accounted before by the model.
Operator, we're now ready for questions.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] And today's first question will be Leslie [ph] with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Unidentified Analyst
In your first slide, when -- in the prepared remarks, you were discussing investment costs, recent focuses on increasing capacity on data and analytics, and the digital platform over the next 12 months, so fourth quarter of this year kind of to the end of 2019, so five quarters. Now, what are you looking at for costs for similar investments continuing restructuring in data and analytics, the digital platform all of that, what kind of cost you're looking at there?
Kevin Stevenson
I guess, broadly I would say the digital expansions likely going to be CapEx as opposed to material current period expense. Data and analytics.
I think largely the people build around that is fully baked in our current -- our current OpEx. And then legal collections, again, that's going to vary depending on what we see coming in the portfolio.
We broadcast an estimate for our legal investments for the fourth quarter. I guess following anything else, you could take that and run rate it for the year.
Pete Graham
And if I can also add to that. Our goal, I talked a little bit about rebalancing and rationalizing the mix between your collector headcount and legal expenses; so just know that our goal is to push that cash efficiency ratio to improve it as we get into 2019.
Unidentified Analyst
And then on that point, on the collectors and you talked about seasonality in the prepared remarks with them needing lessons towards in the year, more -- tax season or post-tax season. But in the past you discussed the amount of time the ramp-up a collector takes and the efficiency of third quarter when they first start versus maybe a year-end.
So can you discuss that with balancing out seasonally adjusting your headcount?
Kevin Stevenson
Sure. So let me give you some numbers, these are just ballpark numbers.
So as we were entering Q4 of last year, we were at around somewhere in the average of 2,500 people, and then we moved up to 3,100 in Q1 and stayed there; and again, this is for collector FTEs, and stayed there for our Q2 as well and then moved down to about 27 today. These are kind of at the margin and it's one of those things where as you look at the mix of portfolio coming in coupled with all the things I talked about, I'm just trying to balance that number.
And so the margins, there is plus a few couple of hundred people minus a couple of hundred people, the big difference was -- I know, Raymond James has been around for a while watching our stuff, but if you look back into 2016, we are like 1,600 people part of the collectors goal. Those ramp ups are significant and again, a drag on EPS.
Moving a couple hundred people around the margins probably won't have a dramatic impact for you. I'm just trying to lighten up the burden on the salary line while I can.
Unidentified Analyst
And then -- but on to the part of that question of balancing the fact that a new collector as you ramp up in the season as you needed is probably not anywhere near as efficient as one that's been there the whole year?
Kevin Stevenson
You're absolutely right. And we've recently put some more -- with the technology in place, a little more coaching guidance in place that's helping that along the way, and we're popping more screens up to help people and we're buffering some of that.
But at the end of the day, you're right, from a cash posted perspective per person, they're not as efficient. Pete, has something to say.
Pete Graham
Yes, I think other point too, just to reiterate what we said previously as the level of attrition we have in the call centers, we're constantly hiring to maintain a flat number, so we're constantly going to have new people in that mix that are less efficient. It's all about timing of those hiring spurts if you will, as to how we manage, it's not like we're going to go in and layoff tenured fully productive collectors in order to manage a headcount number, it's more just sort of stemming that tide of natural attrition in the call centers.
Kevin Stevenson
That's great point, Pete, thank you. And I'm going -- and open this topic up anyway, just because I'm hoping someone will ask me.
The issue -- one year ago, I talked about attrition, and I talked about turnover, and I told you guys it was one of my goals to move that downward and largely. Now that's not happened, and so turnover is about where it was last year, and it's a little frustrating for me and I'm -- we have a few more ideas to try to help that but Pete's explanation is completely correct and just know that the turnover rate is still about where it was a year ago.
Unidentified Analyst
On the allowance charge in the quarter, you gave some color in the prepared remarks, you said about a $7 million on that was on the '13 and '14 vintage U.S. core portfolios, is that correct?
Kevin Stevenson
That's correct.
Unidentified Analyst
And then you mentioned the CFPB consent order that -- those were largely impacted by that. What changed in this quarter for those portfolios having to do with that, that led to this charge?
Kevin Stevenson
Sorry, I didn't mean to cut you off. It's not necessarily a change in this quarter, if you actually look at the details in the 10-Q, as you can see that we've had a continuing trend of allowance charges on these particular pools.
Just in prior quarters, we had some reversals and other things that were sort of dampening the total impact that we didn't have to repeat this quarter.
Unidentified Analyst
But I guess what I'm saying is, what's between the end of 2Q and the 3Q; what changed to results in the additional $7 million there?
Kevin Stevenson
Maybe I wasn't clear, if there's nothing changed quarter-over-quarter, these pools have been suffering shortfalls in terms of anticipated cash collection versus the yields that they're currently booked at for a number of periods, and we've continued to sort of chip away the allowance charges as we see the impact of those shortfalls. So nothing materially changed with regards to these two vintages quarter-over-quarter, just other areas of the portfolio did not have reversals that offset the total.
Unidentified Analyst
And then my last question for you guys this afternoon, you discussed the issue with phone carriers and you guys possibly getting constant with the blocking for -- what that people use for scams. What percentage of your accounts that you attempt to collect on, whether it's first attempt from you guys or the tenth -- what percentage of them do you not get on the phone because of these kinds of issues?
How big of an impact is this?
Kevin Stevenson
First thing first is I'd love just one more time to recommend that everyone listening either live or recorded later, go watch that FTC/FCC panel discussion. I know it's long, it's 2.5 hours, but you can kind of run it in your background.
It's -- again, it's a fulsome discussion and it covers a lot of turf. So this issue is tough to throw sound by that, so -- and it depends on whether you're calling landline, cellphone, it depends on what kind of -- depends a lot of different things, geography and similar.
So what I think about is, the best thing for me to do here is instead of slapping a number on it, just the average number, just understand that really in all of our areas we are experiencing some of these lower contract grades, and they're at the margins, but did not worth mentioning, I think it's something that is worth mentioning and it's something that's contributing some volume to the legal channel. So again, I really don't want to generalize a rate across our entire portfolio.
Operator
And the next questioner today will be Mark Hughes with SunTrust. Please go ahead.
Mark Hughes
I'll ask that same sort of question; do you think it's -- the fact that people aren't picking up their phones is that -- has that been a headwind on collections, has that led to disappointment in terms of the collections relative to expectations?
Kevin Stevenson
It would be certainly a part of that equation. But again, it's kind of on the margins, but to the extent you see some kind of contact rate or right party contact rate or something like that trending downward, on otherwise well valued accounts.
And that's what -- that's what we're seeing. And that's at least a part of what we did in Q3 and moving people into the legal channel sooner.
Mark Hughes
And that I assume that's been incorporated into your underwriting and so your pricing is now reflective of that dynamic?
Pete Graham
We'll certainly. But again, I spent some time talking about legal channel.
It's really -- it's important for people to understand that as long as our selection engine is doing good job, it's just a secondary form of repayment and it's from a margin perspective, it's a good-margin business. So the mistake that can be made in legal is to put -- is to choose poorly.
And so, I think we have a great track record of not doing that. So they've gotten -- so I'm sure you have more questions.
Mark Hughes
Yes. The legal collections cost of $32 million to $36 million in the fourth quarter, could you correlate that with the original $20 million expectation?
You're already at $15 million through the third quarter. How much incremental for the year when you take into account your fourth quarter thoughts?
Kevin Stevenson
Pete's pulling some data out.
Pete Graham
Yes. I had to pull out a sheet here.
So for the US, in the first quarter we split --
Mark Hughes
Just say it, what was $20 million is now, what total for Q3 and Q4?
Pete Graham
We'll probably be -- I'd say we had originally said $20 million, it will probably going to be $35 million -- $30 million to $35 million depending on capacity in the channel in the fourth quarter.
Mark Hughes
You have used 58% number. Was that the efficiency ratio, was that the expectation for 2018?
Pete Graham
Yes. Full-year 2018 cash efficiency, again driven down by the increased level of legal expense.
Mark Hughes
And then likely to improve -- are targeted to improve next year?
Pete Graham
Yes. That's right.
Mark Hughes
And then final question, the rate of growth in charge-offs has slowed a bit. I think you suggested supply was still healthy, you said you anticipate you can stick with this level for the foreseeable future.
Have you seen any change in behavior and willingness to sell anything like that, related to the broader environment?
Kevin Stevenson
No, we've not. I think it's been pretty -- and I can say that it's been a healthy environment with fairly steady pricing.
Operator
And the next questioner today will be Eric Hagen with KBW.
Eric Hagen
You mentioned irrational pricing in Europe; can you maybe identify which markets are kind of on the spectrum of the most irrational?
Kevin Stevenson
Sure. It is again -- it's, generally speaking, and we addressed this a couple times in the past, but not every quarter.
Generally, where there is more regulation, little more seasoned market [indiscernible] UK would have less of that, maybe in the Nordics you'd have lesser than of that and you have more toward Italy and Spain and other markets like that. So that's a generalization.
And it depends on the competitors and all that, but that's in general what we think.
Eric Hagen
And then, I guess I'll stick with the Europe theme. For the curves in Europe, I mean even if we expect the multiple to stay, somewhat sluggish in the portfolio, I guess sluggish was the best word I could think of.
Can you identify any catalysts that would really kind of steepen the curve itself? What should we be looking at to maybe drive some incremental kind of value even if the multiples staying sort of weak?
Pete Graham
You said -- steepen it upward in the future. Is that your question?
Eric Hagen
Yes. Steepen it upward.
Pete Graham
So obviously, we're not expecting as we didn't book it. But a couple of things on that, with the type of paper we are buying in Europe, generally a stuff that we know pretty well, there is a fair component of paying as we call -- it's still charged off-paper, but they've got payment plans wrapped around them.
So they got a longer flatter curve than kind of what we all think of as more traditional charge-off curve. And so, that's that.
I would also say that the digital platform is something that we're pretty optimistic about. Europe is significantly ahead of the United States in terms of digital currency and transactions.
And like I said in my script, we are really, really pushing that hard. Steve Roberts and Martin Sjolund are -- it's all hands on deck on that.
So I think digital has some potential for uplift. And then, add those legal, again we always -- we like to say we're great collectors, but we never say we're the best.
And our digital arm -- I'm sorry, our legal channel new work and we did it, and we're continuing to improve that. So there could be some uplift there as well.
Eric Hagen
It's quite interesting, thank you. And then, Pete, I guess I'm glad you talked about the differences between GAAP and IFRS have got me thinking about CISO and the -- and I guess the mandatory requirement to move over to that in 2020.
I guess, a two-part question; one, I mean have you guys thought about in early adoption period for CISO; and number two, in the period in which you make the change and move over to CISO, what -- can you just walk me through the accounting. I know that ERC, I guess, will stay the same.
But maybe you can just kind of shed some light on what that accounting would look like. Thanks.
Pete Graham
Yes, I'll caveat it with -- we are still awaiting final guidance from the TRG, the resource group at the FASB that's working on implementation guidance for the standard. And as you can imagine, it's very voluminous standard that was written primarily for the banks, and not necessarily focused on our part of the credit spectrum.
But in broad terms, we think what's going to happen in that transition is that we will reset yields in the portfolio based on our outstanding NFR balance and our ERC curve at the initial transition. And then once that said, that won't change.
And then any changes going forward in ERC or estimates of future collections, whether up or down, would come through as the current period charge. Very similar to the profile of how IFRS currently works.
That's about as far as I can go because it's sort of broad conceptual framework for us at this point. We don't have the exact mechanics of how that's going to actually work.
Eric Hagen
When you say a reset and yield, do you mean to the original yield? And when you say the word reset, I guess just --
Kevin Stevenson
No, I think just to simply taking the portfolio at the inception date -- or implementation date. So in this example, 01/01 of 2020.
You've got a fixed balance in terms of your NFR balance, and you've got an estimated future collections curve and you've got yields set a targeted ending amortization period. So, for all intents and purposes, 10 years and whatever the yield is would be [indiscernible] for in terms of setting a revenue yield or resetting a revenue yield on the portfolio.
That's again -- we're working through implementation guidance, but as of right now, that's simply how we're thinking about it.
Operator
And the next questioner today will be Colin [ph] with Sterling Capital. Please go ahead.
Unidentified Analyst
I'm just curious if you could give us some comments on the competitive environment over in Europe?
Kevin Stevenson
Sure. I can recap.
I talked about a little bit in my script, what we saw -- what we saw this quarter was a little bit of a relaxation in pricing. Again, I always say one quarter does not a trend make but we did see instead of 50% to 60% of portfolios again in our estimation trading for mid-to-low single digits or lower, and a lot of them trading for negative.
We saw more like 40% in that range and fewer of them trading for negative. So again, I hope that continues.
Because if you think about it, what we really need is a whole shift of that pricing spectrum and so we'll certainly update you next quarter on what we think about it.
Unidentified Analyst
Can you just characterize, just to add a little bit more color there. If your bid percentage up or are you bidding fairly consistently and just your win percentages up, I'm just trying to better understand the positive ramp up, which is certainly welcome?
Kevin Stevenson
Well, that's a good question. So a lot of obviously what we're talking about we lost.
And I would say we're not -- we are not changing dramatically any kind of expectation shift. We're not really built much of anything into it, so I would say we're fairly consistent.
I'm just kind of running through my head. I think -- I really do think it's a bit of a crack this quarter.
Now whether it continues or not, I don't know.
Unidentified Analyst
And then final question is just domestically; can you just characterize the amount of fresh paper and its contribution over time to your efficiency ratio improvement next year? Thank you.
Kevin Stevenson
Do you have just what percentage we bought? We'll see if we can dig that percentage of fresh paper we bought this year in this quarter.
First paper though to kind of drill down on your question is certainly paper we like is obviously tends to be more legal eligible and not yet again, for all those reasons, that's something we definitely like and I think that does ultimately improve our ratios -- cash collection into expense ratios and Darby or Pete will dig that up and they'll announce it once we get it.
Operator
And our next question or two with Brian Hogan with William Blair. Please go ahead.
Brian Hogan
Just on the bankruptcy collections, actually, and I understand the buying trends, less buying this year than it was in the past but am I understanding the bankruptcy trends, you're buying a cash flow stream, right? I just a little confused about the -- maybe the magnitude of the decline quarter-over-quarter.
Can you just kind of discuss the bankruptcy trends?
Pete Graham
So first of all, we did have a record year last year and it was very front-half weighted. Most of the buying was in the first half of 2017.
And what everybody has to remember -- I know it's been a while since we talked about bankruptcy, but to the extent you buy a piece of freshly filed unsecured bankruptcy, you have kind of a flat spot in the curve, then it then it ramps up over time as the secured tend to payout. So it looks like a very different curve even though we're all priced at the same way.
Conversely, much like we did especially in 2012, you can buy paper that's deep into its flow and almost, if you think about a hill, maybe ski slope, you could be coming down off that, you could buy it at any point, you can buy it at the point of filing, which is really early, you can buy it going up the hill or you can buy it coming down the hill. And so, it just depends on where that's out in that curve, you're right there, you're buying a piece of cash flow.
So what we had was, it was a little bit more flowing paper in a secured asset class last year, early in the year, and that's really the dynamics you saw.
Brian Hogan
And then, did I hear you correct that you -- from the same seller of last year bought another secured BK portfolio in the first quarter, is that what I heard?
Pete Graham
Yes.
Brian Hogan
And do you care to share the magnitude?
Pete Graham
No. You'll find out in Q4.
It was -- but we did secure…
Brian Hogan
Is it similar to last year?
Pete Graham
I'm sorry, I was talking over you. What did you say?
Brian Hogan
Similar to last year?
Pete Graham
Again, let's wait -- we'll leave something in the back-pocket to surprise you guys in the next quarter. We might have an answer on the fresh paper, can you hold on, Brian just for a second?
Brian Hogan
Sure.
Pete Graham
Don't hang up yet.
Kevin Stevenson
Yes. The fresh -- 61.8 out of 181 including 17 [ph].
Pete Graham
Okay. Go ahead Brian.
They'll make sure you get that right.
Brian Hogan
So the amortization rate, excluding fully amortized collections and excluding impairments is lowest I've seen since early 2016. I'm just kind of thinking of all your legal investment that you've been doing and I was thinking obviously mix shift to allowing less bankruptcy collections.
I guess, is the amortization rate we saw in the quarter kind of good one to think about going forward as we think about your legal spend and investments in pulling forward and raising those yields and what have you as you talked about in your prepared remarks?
Kevin Stevenson
I wouldn't necessarily take one quarter's amortization rate and run rate it, but I will tell you that moving the amortization rate in the quarter is driven by yield increases, both in the US as well as in Europe.
Pete Graham
And then I guess I would add that, you're right Brian, it's nice to see that rate come down; and also to the extent that some of those legal investment, I think you alluded to it does end up lifting the multiple of the more recent deals as I talked about in my script that would also have downward pressure on that rate as well.
Brian Hogan
Shifting to Brazil real quick; with your deal with Banco Bradesco, are you only buying from them now with -- given a new agreement or are you still allowed -- still go out with all of debt buyer or sellers as well? I'm just trying to understand.
Kevin Stevenson
Yes, we can -- so if you listen to my script, so the investment vehicles that exist today, we still own and there are new ones created; and so we'll be able to -- again, we hopefully would buy paper from Bradesco and -- but also -- we can also whatever is in the market, we can either buy it in that fleet [ph] or into an existing one. So we have a lot of flexibility on where we can go and where we put that investment.
Brian Hogan
And just to be clear on geography as all the revenue streams show up, obviously you got the NPL collections filling up on your core collections or what have you -- and so then your minority stake comes through that non-controlling interest in that [ph]?
Kevin Stevenson
In the future, we'll deconsolidate once this deal closes. We'll deconsolidate the servicing operation, and that will come through as sort of another income line item like in the same sort of [indiscernible] fee income.
And we have material servicing income in that entity that's not related to our -- servicing of our owned portfolio and that will be additional revenue there.
Brian Hogan
Have you seen any changes in consumer behavior, any improvement in recovery rates or vice-versa the other way? Just -- what is your view on the consumer?
Kevin Stevenson
We don't see any unforeseen changes. I talked about picking the phone up less often, but other than that from a payment standpoint, I wish I could say conversion rates are improving.
So maybe that is a -- I'm thinking of the cuff right now, we call them conversion rates. Once you get some on the phone, how often do you convert them into payers; and that has been moving up for a while.
So I guess you could extend that to say there is a healthy view of the consumer.
Brian Hogan
And last one, or maybe a couple more; with the European purchases, I mean -- did I hear you double? I guess -- repeat what you said on your European purchase outlook?
Kevin Stevenson
Sure. So we put about $50 million to work in Q3, and we believe that number is going to be about double that for Q4.
Brian Hogan
That's what I heard there. And then I guess, looking at longer term, pulling way back and what is growth at PRA look like, is it -- I mean, are you targeting 15% growth-ish in earnings and that's driven by -- what type of revenue growth and margin expansion, if you will, or just kind of what does the overall model look like?
Kevin Stevenson
We've been public since 2002, we don't give any guidance. So I'll have to do my best to give you a feel on strategy, I guess, around that question.
Pete Graham
Yes, that's essentially up.
Kevin Stevenson
First things first, is that -- we've been growing the core business, and it's the bankruptcy asset class that has been the real issue for the past several years. You go back to 2015; the 2015, 2016, each of those years we faced about $100 million of year-over-year decrease in cash collections and bankruptcy.
I think 2017 was somewhere in the $30 million range. And again, for folks who have been around a while, that bankruptcy asset class -- once you get that engine humming, it's got a very low cost to collect.
So you just got to affect that by amortization, and that's pretty much what goes down to the income before taxes. So that's a significant headwind we dealt with in the past few years.
So clearly, my goal would be to continue to buy more insolvency, especially in United States, and having a flat spot like we had in the back half of '17 and '18 doesn't help that effort; so that's job one. Job one is to shake lose more volume in that bankruptcy asset class and lever the platform.
Two, it would be Europe. We want to make sure that we've gotten a platform that is one of the best in each country we're in.
I don't have to be the best, but I want to be one of the Top 3 buyers in a different area, so each area; so I'd like to do that. And I think as I -- as the other caller asked me, I think digital and our legal expertise is going to help us do that.
We're a fairly small player in some of the markets we're in. And then of course United States; we want to see it right now -- we want to see those buying volumes continue and I want to get my share of it.
We've got some really good competitors in United States and that's the good news, and it's -- I like to say rational competitors are something that is great for everybody, it's great for us, it's great for the banks, and dumb money is the hardest thing to deal with.
Operator
And the next questioner today will be Dominic Gabrial [ph] with Oppenheimer. Please go ahead.
Unidentified Analyst
I just wanted to make sure that I heard right in the prepared remarks. Is it -- did you say that between $35 million and maybe $40 million a quarter as a run rate for both total legal costs?
And if that's correct, is that $10 million in other legal that you've broken out, is that the right run rate number as the seasonality there as well? Thank you so much.
Pete Graham
What I said in the remarks was for the fourth quarter, we thought we'd spend somewhere between $32 million and $36 million. And don't have necessarily a view on the quarters for next year, but I would anticipate a similar level based on the build of the portfolio we've had; and so as we continue to buy portfolio that meet these same criteria, we'll continue to put a similar amount to work.
The other component of legal collection expenses is the fees that are more like -- you don't think about it as a feature to the external firm that they take with regards to collections as they come in. So as that legal collections amount grows, that fee amount will grow in some proportion in relation to that.
Kevin Stevenson
I would also like to add a commentary on that. Pete's talking about raw numbers and forgive me if I'm wrong.
So hopefully, what we're doing is actually producing a lot of cash and that ratio will probably normalize back to where it was in the past. Would you say it's fair?
Pete Graham
Yes. I think again, we're in the early stage of this ramp in legal investments.
So we're making that investment well in advance of getting uplift in terms of cash collections, and once we get into next year, our expectation is that will start to normalize out. We'll have sort of steady run rate of legal investment each quarter but we'll also have uplift in the top line, and so the ratio will start to normalize.
Unidentified Analyst
And then I guess, just to make sure I still understand correctly, is there still something around a six-month bit lag time where that revenue does start to ramp? Does that kind of still -- what you're thinking is somewhere on that range?
Pete Graham
Again, it's kind of six months or two quarters after the initial investments when we start to get payback of that initial invested amount; and so that plus the ultimate amount of collections that we would expect based on our return hurdles would be coming in those future periods and start to layer on top of each other with each quarterly investment.
Operator
And this will conclude our question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Kevin Stevenson for any closing remarks.
Kevin Stevenson
Great. Well, thank you everyone for listening to our call this evening.
And we look forward to speaking to you next quarter. Operator, you may disconnect.
Operator
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation and you may now disconnect your lines.