Stocks/OPRT

OPRT

Oportun Financial Corporation
Financial Services·Financial - Credit Services
$5.42
$248M market cap
Claude Rating
3/10SELL
Revenue
$616.9M
Free Cash Flow
$395.3M
Rev Growth
-12.5%
FCF Margin
64.1%
P/FCF
0.6x
EV/FCF
7.0x
Fwd EV/EBITDA
52.1x
Fair Value
$4.25
Upside
-21.6%

Oportun Financial Corporation provides financial services. It offers personal loans, auto loans, and credit cards. The company serves customers online and over-the-phone, as well as through retail locations. It operates in 24 states in the United States, which include Arkansas, Delaware, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, New Hampshire, Oregon, South Carolina, South Dakota, and Virginia. Oportun Financial Corporation was founded in 2005 and is headquartered in San Carlos, Cal

2-Year Price History

$5.45+61.2%
$3.0$4.0$5.0$6.0$7.0volMay 24Sep 24Jan 25May 25Sep 25Jan 26May 26

Quarterly Financials & Projections

Quarterly Waterfall ($ M)
PeriodRevEBITDAOpInNIOCFFCFCapExCashDebtSharesROICIntCovEV/EBITDA
Est2028-Q1268.018.8--8.0--88.4-1.3959.9----------
Est2027-Q4265.023.9--10.6--100.7-1.3871.5----------
Est2027-Q3260.022.1--9.1--93.6-1.3770.8----------
Est2027-Q2255.017.9--7.7--94.4-1.3677.2----------
Est2027-Q1248.012.4--5.0--86.8-1.2582.8----------
Est2026-Q4245.018.4--7.4--102.9-1.2496.0----------
Est2026-Q3238.014.3--6.0--90.4-1.2393.1----------
Est2026-Q2232.08.1--3.5--92.8-1.2302.7----------
Act2026-Q1142.812.63.62.4103.7103.7-6.5209.92,72248.50.3%0.3x42.4x
Act2025-Q4148.46.66.63.4108.9108.9-0.0105.511.548.223.9%0.1x2.5x
Act2025-Q3161.724.414.25.299.072.6-6.1104.62,74448.31.3%0.4x34.7x
Act2025-Q2164.120.810.16.9104.5110.1-5.696.82,76347.91.0%0.3x84.7x
Act2025-Q1163.224.213.29.8101.095.4-5.678.52,80647.01.4%0.4x--
Act2024-Q4167.115.43.98.791.462.4-6.160.02,82243.60.6%0.2x--
Act2024-Q3118.4-26.0-39.5-30.0108.576.7-4.871.82,85740.0-4.2%-0.5x--
Act2024-Q2114.3-36.1-49.2-31.0107.776.5-5.372.92,82939.8-4.5%-0.7x--
Act2024-Q1133.6-17.3-30.5-26.485.982.8-3.169.22,83038.9-3.7%-0.3x--
Act2023-Q4124.1-43.5-57.3-41.8106.372.7-6.191.23,22938.5-5.2%-0.8x--
Act2023-Q3132.1-23.4-37.4-21.1107.172.8-6.481.93,34838.3-2.9%-0.5x--
Act2023-Q2160.1-3.7-17.5-14.9102.568.0-7.073.43,42236.7-1.7%-0.1x--
Act2023-Q143.8-128.1-141.5-102.176.838.3-11.774.13,37534.0-12.1%-3.3x--
Act2022-Q4179.05.0-7.9-8.488.550.7-12.198.83,28433.2-0.9%0.1x--
Act2022-Q3173.7-100.1-112.4-105.867.729.9-13.2175.93,25133.0-12.6%-3.8x--
Act2022-Q2162.3-1.0-12.7-9.253.116.9-12.966.73,10432.8-1.1%-0.1x--
Act2022-Q1218.768.457.745.738.66.5-10.6109.92,68933.36.3%5.0x--

AI Analysis

LLM Evaluations

Claude3/10SELLFV: $4.25

Oportun is a highly leveraged subprime lender operating on razor-thin margins with a 15% cost of corporate debt, penny-warrant dilution, CEO transition, proxy contest, and a customer base acutely vulnerable to inflation and recession. While the company has achieved six quarters of GAAP profitability, net income margins of 1-3% provide virtually no margin of safety. The reported FCF margins of 40-70% are misleading for a lending business — they reflect portfolio runoff rather than true free cash flow, as the company must continuously originate new loans to sustain the business. The stock appears optically cheap at 0.37x P/S and low P/E, but this is a classic value trap: the equity is a thin sliver atop a massive debt stack, and the Neuberger relationship (10%+ owner, secured lender, warrant holder, loan buyer) creates serious conflicts. The fiduciary duty lawsuit regarding dilutive financing terms validates shareholder concerns. Until the company can materially reduce leverage, lower its cost of capital, and demonstrate sustained profitability through a full credit cycle, the risk/reward is unfavorable.

Catalyst Successful deployment of B13 underwriting model and bank partnership for above-36% APR lending could meaningfully improve unit economics and demonstrate the platform's viability; continued debt paydown reducing interest burden would also help.
Risk A recession or sustained inflation spike could send charge-offs well above the 12.65% peak, potentially erasing the thin equity cushion and forcing dilutive capital raises or restructuring, given the company's 6.8x leverage and 15% cost of corporate debt.
Trend
DETERIORATING
Mgmt
4/10
Quarter
4/10
Exp. Move
-8.0%

Latest Earnings Call

Transcript Summary

Oportun Financial Corporation (OPRT) reported Q1 2026 results featuring the introduction of new CEO Doug Bland and the company's sixth consecutive quarter of GAAP profitability ($2.3 million). Oportun is navigating macro headwinds by maintaining a tight credit posture, with 79% of originations going to returning members. The annualized net charge-off rate of 12.65% is expected to be the peak for the year, with 30-day delinquency rates already showing sequential improvement. Key strategic initiatives include the upcoming B13 underwriting model and the reintroduction of risk-based pricing above 36% through a bank partner in H2 2026. The company successfully reduced high-cost corporate debt by $100 million, lowering interest expenses and improving its debt-to-equity ratio to 6.8x. Secured personal loans grew 30% year-over-year, representing a shift toward higher-quality collateral. Management reiterated its full-year 2026 guidance, projecting adjusted EPS of $1.50 to $1.65 and revenue up to $955 million. While monitoring inflation and fuel costs, Oportun remains committed to its long-term GAAP ROE target of 20-28%, driven by expense discipline and optimized cost of capital.

Valuation & Metrics

Market Stats

Price$5.42
Market Cap$248M
Enterprise Value$2.8B
P/S Ratio0.4x
P/FCF0.6x
EV/FCF7.0x
FCF Margin (TTM)64.1%
FCF Yield159.5%
Dividend Yield (TTM)--
Annual Dilution3.1%
CurrencyUSD

TTM Financial Snapshot

Revenue$616.9M
Net Income$17.9M
Free Cash Flow$395.3M

Revenue Growth (YoY)-12.5%
EBITDA Margin10.4%
Net Margin2.9%
FCF Margin64.1%
CapEx % of Revenue3.0%
SBC % of Revenue0.8%
ROIC6.6%
WC Change % Rev0.8%
Interest Coverage0.3x

DCF Fair Value Estimate

$9.48
+74.9% upside
Fair Enterprise Value$3.0B
− Net Debt$2.5B
= Fair Equity$460M
Revenue Growth8.8% → 3.0%
FCF Margin64.1% → 8.0%
Discount Rate16.0%
Terminal EV/FCF6.0x

Forward Outlook & Risk

Short Interest

Short % of Float4.3%
Short Shares1.3M
Days to Cover3.0
Change (vs Prior)-9.5%
Short % Float History
4.30%+3.40pp
0.0%2.0%4.0%6.0%8.0%04-3007-1509-1511-1401-1504-30

Options

Call IV (ATM)68%
Put IV (ATM)79%
ATM Spread13.8%
Call $OI (near money)$287K
Put $OI (near money)$46K
ATM ExpiryJuly 17, 2026 (56D)
ATM Strike$5.0
Major Expirations3
Near-money chain · July 17, 2026
StrikeCall Bid/AskCall OIPut Bid/AskPut OI
$2.50$2.20/$3.400--/$0.750
$5.00$0.45/$1.2015$0.05/$0.805
$7.50--/$0.750$1.80/$2.550
$10.00--/$0.200$4.00/$5.200
Snapshot: 2026-05-22

Forward Projections & Estimates

NTM Revenue Growth+56.1%
Forward FCF Margin38.7%
Forward EBITDA Margin5.5%
Forward P/FCF0.7x
Forward EV/FCF7.4x
Forward Int. Coverage0.3x
Model Risk Score8/10
Bankruptcy Odds18%
Est. Borrow Rate15.0%
Terminal EV/FCF6.0x
LT Growth3.0%
LT FCF Margin8.0%

Employees

Headcount2,312
Revenue / Employee$266,831
Gross Profit / Employee$170,767
2022: 1,553 → 2023: 2,340 → 2024: 2,312 → 2025: 2,405 (16% CAGR)

Institutional Ownership

Headline & net flow

NET BUYING

In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are net buyers — bought 21.7% of float, sold 5.3%. 3 filers moved >1% of shares (3 buying, 0 selling).

Net flow · Q1 2026still filing
+16.4% of float (net)
Bought 21.7% · Sold 5.3%
128 filers reported (last quarter: 121)

Ownership composition

Active
48.8%(+0.1% YoY)
110 filers
hedge / family / endowment
Retail funds
Fidelity, Schwab, 401(k)
Passive
12.0%(+4.2% YoY)
5 filers
Vanguard, iShares, SPDR
Market makers
0.1%(-1.5% YoY)
3 filers
Citadel, Susquehanna
Insiders
10.0%
Form 4 — latest per insider
0%25%50%75%100%2022-062023-032023-122024-092025-062026-03
ActiveRetail fundsPassiveMarket makersRetail direct

Top holders

Fund$ valueCost basisΔ QoQΔ YoYα lifeFund AUM
Neuberger Berman Group LLC$17.6M$7.16−$587K+$17.6M+0.1%$131.37B
Forager Capital Management, LLC$15.5M$5.60+$4.5M+$15.5M-2.1%$201M
BlackRock, Inc.Passive$14.2M$5.73−$129K+$10.2M-0.2%$5.69T
FINDELL CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC$12.7M$3.54+$830K−$3.0M+1.4%$340M
MILLENNIUM MANAGEMENT LLC$10.4M$5.07+$1.6M+$1.5M-0.5%$127.40B
Long Focus Capital Management, LLC$7.0M$3.94+$0+$0-1.6%$2.22B
DIMENSIONAL FUND ADVISORS LPPassive$6.3M$5.65+$1.1M+$3.0M-0.4%$480.92B
Simcoe Capital LLC$4.6M$5.15+$953K+$4.6M+7.7%$109M
TWO SIGMA INVESTMENTS, LP$4.4M$5.13+$1.6M+$1.9M-0.7%$117.03B
GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive$4.4M$6.36−$1.5M+$2.8M+2.3%$1.61T
BOOTHBAY FUND MANAGEMENT, LLC$4.0M$2.81+$374K−$2.1M-0.4%$4.25B
GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC$3.8M$5.14+$1.9M+$2.3M-0.2%$760.93B
STATE STREET CORPPassive$3.5M$6.66+$41K+$2.8M-0.2%$2.89T
Meros Investment Management, LP$3.3M$4.61+$3.3M+$3.3M-3.2%$226M
AQR CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC$3.2M$5.30+$2.7M+$3.2M-0.2%$218.19B
SEGALL BRYANT & HAMILL, LLC$2.9M$5.55−$123K+$2.9M+0.2%$6.98B
MACKENZIE FINANCIAL CORP$2.3M$4.91+$1.9M+$2.3M-0.7%$83.32B
AMERICAN CENTURY COMPANIES INC$2.1M$5.21+$435K+$1.8M+0.3%$193.48B
Summa Corp.$1.8M$3.93+$0−$763K+0.7%$242M
CANNELL CAPITAL LLC$1.7M$7.14−$5.1M+$1.6M-2.2%$147M
Cost basis is a volume-weighted estimate from accumulation periods within our 13F history; holders who built their position before our window started will show a stale basis. % above the cost basis is the unrealized gain at the current price.

Trading behavior

Smart-money alpha (lifetime, %/qtr)BULLISH
Holders
-0.20%
avg per quarter
Holders (ex-self)
-0.20%
excl. this stock
Buyers (this Q)
-0.90%
51 buyers · $0.02B in
Sellers (this Q)
-1.41%
44 sellers · $0.03B out
alpha coverage: 100% of $ has a lifetime-alpha record
Holder behavior on this stocksource: stock
On big dips (−10%+)
-5.9%
how holders react when this stock falls
On quiet Qs
+12.6%
−10% to +10% baseline
On rallies (+10%+)
-18.1%
how they react when this stock rises
Holders' portfolio flow this Q
+6.1%
inflows — adds are organic
Sellers' portfolio flow this Q
-0.2%
Sellers' overall flow ~ flat.
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Holder dip (any stock)
-1.9%
Holder mid (any stock)
-2.2%
Holder rally (any stock)
-7.7%

Top Holders Over Time

5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price

03.3M6.6M9.8M13.1M$2.43$5.41$8.39$11$142021-062022-062023-062024-062025-062026-03
hover the chart for per-quarter detailprice (right axis)
Institutional Venture Management XIV, LLCKAYNE ANDERSON RUDNICK INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT LLCWELLINGTON MANAGEMENT GROUP LLPASHFORD CAPITAL MANAGEMENT INCGLYNN CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLCNeuberger Berman Group LLC3.8MFINDELL CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC2.7MPUNCH & ASSOCIATES INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT, INC.EMG Holdings, L.P.139KClearbridge Investments, LLC

Corporate

Insider Trading (last 12mo)

Open-market only (Form 4 P-Purchase + S-Sale). Excludes grants, option exercises, tax withholding, gifts.
Officers & directors
Buys ($, 12mo)
$0
0 txns · 0 insiders · 0 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$389K
3 txns · 2 insiders · 77,868 sh
Recent transactions
DateSideInsiderTitleSharesPriceDollarsOwned $
2026-03-10SELLKirscht Patrickofficer: Chief Credit Officer54,299$4.90$266K$2.15M
2026-03-10SELLLayton Kathleen I.officer: Chief Legal Officer19,355$4.90$95K$1.11M
2025-09-10SELLLayton Kathleen I.officer: Chief Legal Officer4,214$6.64$28K$1.06M

Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)

19.0%retail+0.5pp
18.2%dark+1.4pp
week of 2026-04-13
10%15%20%25%30%35%40%24-1125-0225-0525-0825-1126-0226-04retail (non-ATS)dark (ATS)
Off-exchange volume from FINRA. Retail = non-ATS (wholesaler PFOF + broker internalization). Dark = ATS (dark-pool crossing networks, institutional). Lit-exchange = remainder.

Filing Risk Analysis

Filing Risk Scores

OPORTUN FINANCIAL CORPORATION: Penny-Warrant Financing and Fair Value Discretion Masking High-Yield Distress

Overall Risk
8/10
Fraud
4/10
Dilution
9/10
Insolvency
7/10
Earnings Overstated
6/10
Hidden Liabilities
4/10
Legal
5/10
Audit Warnings
2/10
Hidden Upside
2/10
Contextually Acceptable
4/10

Counter-Thesis

Counter-Thesis & Recent News

📰 Recent News

On May 7, 2026, Oportun reported Q1 2026 earnings showing a 47.5% year-over-year decline in EPS ($0.21 vs $0.40) and a 3% drop in total revenue ($229M). Following this, JP Morgan (April 2026) maintained a 'Neutral' rating but cut its price target to $5.00, citing a 16.7% decrease in valuation expectations. Additionally, the company underwent a leadership transition with Doug Bland appointed as CEO in April 2026 amid an ongoing proxy contest with Findell Capital Management.

🐻 Bear Case

The bear case centers on Oportun’s extreme financial leverage (debt-to-equity ratio of ~7.7x) and its reliance on a fragile subprime customer base. Skeptics argue the business is a 'value trap' where low P/E multiples (currently ~8) are offset by the high cost of debt (15%+ effective rates) and deteriorating credit quality. The failed expansion into credit cards—which the company exited in 2024 to save costs—is seen as evidence of a flawed growth strategy and poor capital allocation by management.

🚩 Red Flags

Significant insider selling occurred in March 2026, with executives Kathleen Layton and Patrick Kirscht liquidating over 70,000 shares at roughly $4.90. Structurally, the company is facing a lawsuit from Cotchett, Pitre & McCarthy alleging breaches of fiduciary duty regarding 'highly dilutive' financings that 'wiped out' common shareholder value. Furthermore, the risk-adjusted net interest margin plummeted by 271 basis points in Q1 2026 due to higher net charge-offs.

⚔️ Competitive Threats

Oportun faces intense pressure in a fragmented market from digital-first fintechs and traditional subprime card issuers. The company's retreat from the credit card market suggests an inability to compete on scale in revolving credit. Regulatory headwinds also pose a threat; the CFPB is expected to implement new rules in 2026 regarding personal financial data rights and the banning of medical debt in credit decisions, which will likely force costly overhauls of Oportun’s proprietary underwriting models.

💬 Customer Sentiment

While Oportun recently received a USA Today customer service award (May 2026), the underlying sentiment from a risk perspective is one of 'rising distress.' Serious delinquencies among its subprime core are climbing, and the median borrower income of $56,000 makes the customer base highly vulnerable to persistent inflation and macroeconomic volatility, leading to a 'normalization' of charge-offs at levels significantly higher than pre-pandemic norms.

Full Earnings Call Transcript

Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q1 • 2026-05-07

Operator: Welcome to Oportun Financial Corporation's first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. Today's call is being recorded. For opening remarks and introductions, I would like to turn the call over to Dorian Hare, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Dorian, you may begin.
Dorian Hare: Thanks, and hello, everyone. With me to discuss Oportun Financial Corporation's first quarter 2026 results are Doug Bland, our Chief Executive Officer, and Paul Appleton, our Interim Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer, and Head of Capital Markets. Kate Layton, Oportun Financial Corporation's Chief Legal Officer, and Gaurav Rana, our Senior Vice President and General Manager of Lending, will also join for the question and answer session. I will remind everyone on the call or webcast that some of the remarks made today will include forward-looking statements related to our business, future results of operations, and financial position, including projected adjusted ROE attainment and expected originations growth, planned products and services, business strategy, expense savings measures, and plans and objectives of management for future operations. Actual results may differ materially from those contemplated or implied by these forward-looking statements, and we caution you not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. A more detailed discussion of the risk factors that could cause these results to differ materially is set forth in our earnings press release and in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the caption Risk Factors, including our upcoming Form 10-Q filing for the quarter ended 03/31/2026. Any forward-looking statements that we make on this call are based on assumptions as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or future events other than as required by law. Also on today's call, we will present both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures, which we believe can be useful measures for period-to-period comparisons of our core business and which will provide useful information to investors regarding our financial condition and results of operations. A full list of definitions can be found in our earnings materials available at the Investor Relations section of our website. Non-GAAP financial measures are presented in addition to, and not as a substitute for, financial measures calculated in accordance with GAAP. A reconciliation of non-GAAP to GAAP financial measures is included in our earnings press release, our first quarter 2026 supplement, and the appendix section of the first quarter 2026 earnings presentation, all of which will be available at the Investor Relations section of our website at oportun.com. In addition, this call is being webcast, and an archived version will be available after the call along with a copy of our prepared remarks. With that, I will now turn the call over to Doug.
Doug Bland: Thanks, Dorian, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us. I am honored to be speaking with you for the first time as CEO of Oportun Financial Corporation. I was drawn to Oportun Financial Corporation because it stands out: a technology-driven platform with a critical mission and proven ability to responsibly improve the financial lives of people who are too often overlooked by traditional lenders. I also saw a business known for high-quality customer service, uniquely positioned to seamlessly engage with both English- and Spanish-speaking members across its retail, contact center, and mobile app. My initial meetings with team members across the company and with key stakeholders have only reinforced this view. I look forward to working with our team and board to strengthen the business, build deeper relationships with our members, and deliver long-term value for shareholders. I am optimistic about what we can achieve together. I joined Oportun Financial Corporation on April 20, so I have been in the role for less than three weeks. I am not going to use my first earnings call to declare a new strategy before I have completed a deeper review. What I can say from my early assessment is that the team has made real progress strengthening the foundation of the business, particularly profitability, liquidity, and funding costs. While important work remains to improve through-cycle credit performance and rebuild a durable growth engine, the 2026 plan was already in motion before I arrived. Based on my review so far, I support reiterating the full-year guidance. I will now hand it over to Paul for a review of how we are executing against our current strategy and our first quarter financial results. He will also provide our Q2 guidance while updating you on our full-year outlook.
Paul Appleton: Thank you, Doug, and good afternoon, everyone. I would like to start by updating you on our strategic priorities, which include improving credit outcomes, strengthening business economics, and identifying high-quality originations. Starting with improving credit outcomes, we have remained in a tight credit posture, maintaining an emphasis on returning members amid an uncertain macroeconomic outlook for low- and moderate-income households. Our annualized net charge-off rate was 12.65% in Q1, at the midpoint of our guidance range. In Q1, the proportion of originations to returning members was 79%, 16 percentage points higher than the 63% recorded in the prior-year quarter. Importantly, our Q1 30+ delinquency rate of 4.5% met the expectations we set on our February earnings call, down 38 basis points sequentially and 18 basis points year over year. We expect the second quarter's 30+ delinquency rate to improve further to a range between 4.1% and 4.2%, which is 22 to 32 basis points lower than Q2 2025 and 30 to 40 basis points lower sequentially than the first quarter. These proof points support our continued confidence that Q1's 12.65% annualized net charge-off rate should be the highest of 2026. As also mentioned on our February earnings call, a key focus this year is continuing to invest in our credit decisioning capabilities to accelerate model training, deployment, and effectiveness. In Q2, we are introducing the latest iteration of our primary underwriting model, B13, which features an enhanced model architecture designed to better capture both long-term and more recent emerging trends. The model also incorporates new alternative data sources to improve predictive power and reduce adverse selection risk. Turning to business economics, we remain committed to improving on full-year 2025 17.5% adjusted ROE and 6.8% GAAP ROE, making progress toward our objective of 20% to 28% GAAP ROEs on an annual basis. A key component of this is continuing our expense discipline. During Q1, total operating expenses declined 1% year over year to $91 million, in line with the substantially flat expectation we set for the full year. Another important part of our efforts to attain our ROE goal is exploring the launch of risk-based pricing. As discussed on our last earnings call, this effort would reintroduce pricing above 36% for shorter-term loans and higher-risk segments, including some customers we are not able to approve today. We have made good progress with this initiative, including signing a letter of intent with a new bank partner. As a result, we continue to expect to roll this initiative out in the second half of the year. Last month, we launched another initiative, a payment protection offering, that we expect will provide more certainty for our members and a positive financial contribution to Oportun Financial Corporation in future years. Payment protection is an opt-in offering that members can elect during the loan application process, which provides protection against unforeseen events like involuntary unemployment, death, or disability by completely or partially paying off the loan. The offering is currently available to loan applicants in several states, and in coordination with our bank partner, we expect to introduce the offering across most of our footprint in the coming months. Due to the phased rollout, we are currently assuming only a modest financial benefit from the payment protection initiative in our 2026 guidance. However, at scale, we see potential for profit enhancement in future years due to lower credit losses on enrolled loans and fees earned. Lastly, regarding identifying high-quality originations, in Q1, originations declined by 11%. This was in line with our expectations, reflecting typical seasonality and the higher mix of returning borrowers I referenced a moment ago. We continue to expect to grow originations in the mid-single-digit percentage range this year. Expanding our secured personal loan portfolio secured by members' autos remains a key pillar of our responsible growth strategy. Partially offsetting the unsecured personal loan originations decline, in Q1 secured personal loan originations grew 12% year over year, and the secured portfolio grew 30% year over year to $233 million. As a result, secured personal loans now represent 9% of our owned portfolio, up from 7% last year. Importantly, average losses on secured personal loans continued to run substantially lower than unsecured personal loans in the first quarter. Turning now to Q1 highlights on Slide 6, we recorded our sixth consecutive quarter of GAAP profitability with net income of $2.3 million and diluted EPS of $0.05 per share. We also generated adjusted net income of $10 million and adjusted EPS of $0.21 per share. Total revenue of $229 million declined by $7.1 million, or 3% year over year, which again was in line with our expectations and driven by the 11% year-over-year decline in originations I mentioned a moment ago. Net decrease in fair value was $86 million this quarter due to $85 million in net charge-offs. The net decrease in fair value was $13 million higher than the prior period, which benefited from a favorable $12 million mark-to-market adjustment on loans. First-quarter interest expense was $48 million, down $9 million year over year. This improvement reflects recent balance sheet optimization initiatives that I will share shortly. Net revenue was $90 million, down $11 million year over year, as the impact of lower total revenue and fair value offset the benefit from lower interest expense. Operating expenses were $91 million, down $1.3 million, or 1% year over year, reflecting continued cost discipline. Adjusted EBITDA, which excludes the impact of fair value mark-to-market adjustments on our loan portfolio and notes, was $29 million in the first quarter. This reflects a year-over-year decrease of $4.2 million as lower total revenue and higher net charge-offs more than offset lower interest expense and adjusted operating expense. Adjusted net income was $10 million, down $8.4 million year over year due to lower net revenue, partially offset by lower adjusted operating expense. Adjusted EPS declined year over year from $0.40 per share to $0.21 per share. Finally, GAAP net income of $2.3 million was similarly down $7.4 million year over year. Turning now to capital and liquidity as shown on Slide 9, we continue to strengthen our debt capital structure through continued balance sheet optimization by further reducing higher-cost corporate debt, lowering our overall cost of capital, and enhancing liquidity. I am pleased with the progress we made deleveraging, ending the quarter with a 6.8x debt-to-equity ratio. That is down from 7.6x a year ago and materially lower than the peak leverage of 8.7x we reported in Q3 2024. The improvements achieved since then and through the end of the first quarter include consistent GAAP profitability, a $69 million, or 21%, increase in shareholders' equity, and a $70 million, or 30%, reduction in our high-cost corporate debt. Q1 interest expense was $48 million, which was $9 million, or 16%, lower than the prior-year quarter, supporting our sustained profitability. This was driven by corporate debt repayments as well as actions taken related to our ABS notes and warehouse facilities. Also supporting our strong liquidity position, our cash flow has enabled us to continue to grow our unrestricted cash balance to $130 million as of the end of Q1 2026, up $25 million from year-end 2025 and up $52 million year over year. With this strong cash position, we paid down another $30 million of high-cost corporate debt following the end of the first quarter, lowering our remaining corporate debt principal balance to $135 million. Corporate debt repayments since the facility's October 2024 inception now total $100 million, reducing outstandings from the initial $235 million balance to $135 million, resulting in $15 million in annual run-rate expense savings. On the capital markets side, we completed a $485 million ABS transaction at a 5.32% yield in February. Over the last 12 months, we have issued $1.9 billion in ABS bonds at sub-6% yields, demonstrating our sustained access to capital on favorable terms. Next, I would like to turn to our updated guidance as shown on Slide 10. While our member base remains resilient, inflation above Federal Reserve targets, uneven job creation, policy uncertainty, and higher gas prices continue to create a cautious environment for low- to moderate-income consumers. We are particularly monitoring the impact of high fuel prices on our members, and while we have not seen any deterioration in our metrics as a result, we understand the pressure this can place on our customers if higher prices persist. Consequently, our outlook prudently assumes we maintain a tight credit posture through the balance of the year. We remain well positioned to adjust quickly as conditions evolve. Our outlook for the second quarter is total revenue of $227 million to $232 million, annualized net charge-off rate of 12.2% plus or minus 15 basis points, and adjusted EBITDA of $34 million to $39 million. At the midpoint, our Q2 revenue guidance implies a modest sequential increase from Q1 and a lesser year-over-year decline driven by higher originations from first-quarter levels. Our Q2 annualized net charge-off rate midpoint guidance of 12.2% implies 45 basis points of sequential improvement from the first quarter, supported by the favorable 30+ delinquency trends I discussed earlier. At the midpoint of $37 million, our Q2 adjusted EBITDA guidance implies strong sequential growth and a return to year-over-year growth of $5 million, or 17%, driven primarily by lower interest expense along with ongoing operating expense discipline. We are fully reiterating our full-year 2026 guidance, including total revenue of $935 million to $955 million, annualized net charge-off rate of 11.9% plus or minus 50 basis points, adjusted EBITDA of $150 million to $165 million, adjusted net income of $74 million to $82 million, and adjusted EPS of $1.50 to $1.65. Our full-year 2026 guidance continues to be underpinned by our expectations for a 1% to 2% decline in average daily principal balance, a reduction in interest expense of at least 10%, and substantially flat operating expenses. Also, our full-year annualized net charge-off rate midpoint guidance of 11.9% continues to indicate slight year-over-year improvement. Midpoint growth of 16% in adjusted EPS and 6% in adjusted EBITDA, even amid macro uncertainty for low- to moderate-income consumers, reflects the resilience of both our members and our business model. Before I turn it back to Doug, let me conclude with a brief summary of our unit economics progress. Although our long-term targets are GAAP targets, I will reference adjusted metrics because they remove non-recurring items and better reflect our future run rate. As shown on Slide 11, we generated 10.5% adjusted ROE during the first quarter. With ramping originations and lower credit losses embedded in our full-year guidance, we expect to improve on our first-quarter adjusted ROE performance in the balance of the year and outpace last year's 17.5% adjusted ROE. I am encouraged by the positive fundamentals we exhibited in Q1, particularly year-over-year improvement in cost of funds and operating expense efficiency. Our balance sheet optimization initiatives drove improvement in our cost of funds from 8.2% to 7%, a level well below our 8% target. And expense discipline enabled improvement in our adjusted OpEx ratio from 13.3% to 12.7%, nearing our 12.5% target. Our North Star remains delivering GAAP ROEs of 20% to 28% annually. We plan to achieve this by driving positive credit outcomes, growing the owned loan portfolio, and effectively managing operating expenses. We also intend to continue to drive our debt-to-equity leverage ratio this year toward our 6x target by reducing our debt outstanding and continuing to grow GAAP profitability. With that, Doug, back over to you.
Doug Bland: Thanks, Paul. To close, I would like to emphasize that while Oportun Financial Corporation's foundation is stronger than it was, we need to establish predictable outcomes that result in durable growth. My focus now is on disciplined execution, deeper assessment, and coming back to you on our second quarter earnings call with a clearer view of the path forward. I want to underscore that Oportun Financial Corporation's mission to empower members to build a better future will continue. I see a tremendous opportunity to accelerate this mission. It is my focus to partner with our teams to determine ways to accomplish this. I am energized by what is ahead. With that, we will now open the call for questions.
Operator: We will now open the call for questions. You may press 2 if you would like to remove your questions from the queue. It may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. The first question comes from the line of Brendan McCarthy with Sidoti. Please go ahead.
Brendan McCarthy: Great, thanks, everybody, for taking my questions, and welcome, Doug. I just wanted to start off on the outlook here. Originations were down 11% year over year. That makes sense considering your tighter underwriting position. How does the new risk-based pricing initiative fit into the 2026 guidance that calls for a mid-single-digit increase for the year?
Paul Appleton: Thanks, Brendan. I appreciate the question. When it comes to the risk-based pricing initiative, as I mentioned in my comments, we are making good progress rolling out that program. As you know, for most of Oportun Financial Corporation's history, we did price above 36%. As we reintroduce this pricing regime, we certainly want to be thoughtful about the glide path and what it looks like. For guidance, we have embedded a little bit of benefit in there for 2026, but just a small amount given we want to test into it and the program is not live yet.
Brendan McCarthy: Understood. I appreciate the color there. Looking at interest expense, it looked like a pretty steep year-over-year decline, and if you annualize Q1 it looks like you are trending well under that target for a 10% reduction in interest expense for full-year 2026. Do you see room there to boost margins over the course of the year?
Paul Appleton: Possibly, yes. I see what you are looking at when you look at the run rate there. We are obviously pleased with the progress in paying down the corporate debt. As I mentioned in my comments, we are down $100 million from the initial balance of the corporate loan, and that is driving a $15 million annualized interest expense run-rate benefit. As I mentioned as well, we paid down another $30 million after the end of the quarter, which is included in that $100 million. So yes, there may be a bit of opportunity there, especially given some of the ABS execution we have had recently.
Brendan McCarthy: That makes sense. And as a follow-up on leverage, I think you mentioned you are at about 6.8x leverage at this point. You are trending pretty quickly toward your 6x target. How can we think about your capital allocation once you reach that target? How might capital allocation change going forward?
Paul Appleton: Great question, Brendan, thank you. The capital allocation priorities we have right now are continuing to invest in profitable growth and paying down the corporate debt. When we pay that down, that comes with a certain return—we know exactly the expense we are going to save, and the corporate debt has a high price to it. We are at that 6.8x leverage you mentioned. As we said on our last earnings call, we do expect to trend toward that 6x by the end of the year. For now, those are going to remain our two priorities, and then we can look beyond that once we reach the target.
Brendan McCarthy: That is great. Thanks, Paul. Thanks, Doug. That is all for me. I will hop back in the queue.
Operator: Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Analyst with Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Analyst: Good afternoon, and thank you for taking my question. Welcome, Doug. I was just wondering if you have seen any changes to demand trends given the high fuel prices. Has this driven more borrowing given cash constraints? Thank you.
Paul Appleton: In the first quarter, we continued to see demand outpace our originations, so there is certainly continued robust demand in the market.
Analyst: Great, thank you. And then just a second question—thinking about the current mix of digital versus branch originations. Do you plan to evaluate any changes moving forward, and how should we expect this to trend in the future?
Gaurav Rana: Thank you. The trends that we have today you can expect to continue through the course of the year. As Paul alluded to, we are still guiding toward mid-single-digit growth in originations, and we have lined up our marketing spend accordingly to drive that growth.
Operator: Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Brendan McCarthy with Dougherty. Please go ahead.
Brendan McCarthy: Great, thank you. Just a quick follow-up here. On the net charge-off guidance, I think hitting the 11.9% midpoint for the full year assumes a pretty nice step-down in the net charge-off rate to an average of around 11.6% for the rest of the year. How confident are you that you can really hit the midpoint there? What specific credit indicators are you looking for?
Paul Appleton: Thank you for the follow-up question, Brendan. As you know, the 12.65% net charge-off rate we reported in the first quarter was elevated but expected—it was the midpoint of our guidance, and we achieved that. As we mentioned on prior earnings calls, the reason for that spike in net charge-offs was due to the mix shift that we experienced in 2025 when new loan originations accounted for a greater share of the mix than they do now. We have since shifted the mix back to returning borrowers, which is a positive tailwind for credit. Then you look at the guidance we set for the second quarter—we are doing that very informed by what we are seeing in roll rates. Late-stage roll rates that will contribute to second-quarter charge-offs are improving. The third positive trend is 30+ day delinquency that I mentioned in the comments, where those are trending lower than the first quarter. All those signs point to continued improvement. As you no doubt have factored in, when you put in the 12.65%, the 12.2%, and the 11.9% target for the full year, that does imply we are at the 11-handle for the second half of the year, in line with our 9% to 11% target.
Operator: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of the question and answer session. I would now like to turn the floor over to Doug Bland, Chief Executive Officer, for closing comments.
Doug Bland: Thank you, everyone, for joining today's call. Before we close, I want to say a special thanks to the team, in particular Kate, Paul, and Gaurav, for working through the transition. Transition is, even under the best circumstances, never easy, and I think the team has done an excellent job continuing to drive this business focused on discipline, as you heard from the results they achieved during this quarter. I want to thank this team and look forward to working with them as we move forward. We appreciate your continued interest in Oportun Financial Corporation and look forward to speaking with you again soon. Thank you.
Operator: This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.