YBR overhauls company, CEO to step down

Yellow Brick Road Holdings Limited has announced that it is to create a “much simpler business” by disposing of its head office wealth business functions and focusing on mortgages, which will see CEO Frank Ganis step down from his role. Via The Adviser.

In an update to the ASX, YBR revealed a new business strategy which would not include wealth advisory – but instead focus on mortgages, both through distribution and servicing, as its mortgage businesses “offer significant leverage to the market”.

Under the new structure, YBR would retain its franchise network (which currently consists of 115 branches and more than 140 accredited business writers) that has an underlying mortgage book of approximately $7.6 billion.

According to the company, the present value of the net trail commission receivable as of the end of the calendar year was around $15.7 million.

YBR will also retain Vow Financial aggregation, which reportedly has a network of 505 broker firms with more than 1,000 accredited brokers origination around $785 million in mortgage settlements per month.

The underlying mortgage book is reportedly around $39.8 billion with net trail commission receivable at $13.6 million.

The new YBR group will also retain its mortgage servicing arm, via the manufacture and servicing of mortgage originations through its existing Resi Mortgage Corporation business.

The Resi and Loan Avenue brands under this business have a current underlying mortgage book of around $1.8 billion and net trail receivable of $18.5 million, according to YBR.

The Resi sales team currently sources and services the mortgage distribution networks and mortgage funding entities and will reportedly undertake the credit function for the YBR group’s intended securitisation programme, when that comes to fruition.

This securitisation programme will be taken “in joint venture with a major US alternative asset manager” and intends to manufacture and fund mortgage products for YBR’s in-house and third-party distribution outlets.

According to YBR, the joint venture is “in the later stages of final due diligence and negotiation and documentation in this long and complex process with multiple parties”.

Speaking of the Resi business, YBR said: “This existing business allows us to more closely manage and track mortgage application and approval times and outcomes and assist in directing flow to the most appropriate funding sources and is an essential component of the mortgage value chain, particularly in the post Hayne Royal Commission period. It allows us to bring our distribution partners closer to the process of approving loans.”

Wealth business to be ‘disposed of, outsourced, or otherwise restructured’

In order to “concentrate its efforts” as a mortgage distribution, servicing and manufacturing group – and “reduce significantly the cost-to-income ratio of the business” – the YBR board has reportedly decided to commence a process to “dispose of,outsource or otherwise restructure the head office wealth business functions”.

This will therefore result in “a headcount reduction to the business overall”.

While YBR franchisees will still be able to distribute wealth products and give wealth advice to their existing and future clients, it is intended that this would be done under a separate Australian Financial Services Licence (AFSL) with one or more third parties.

“Going forward, the cost of maintaining YBR’s AFSL and associated compliance functions and liabilities would then no longer be borne by the YBR Group.

“The restructure of the wealth business is expected to significantly reduce our cost base allowing us to run a leaner and more cost-effective organisation,” the update reads.

However, YBR said that “there is no certainty that the securitisation initiative or the wealth restructure process will result in a definitive proposal or transaction, however YBR will continue to implement the operational improvements and the restructure of key operational roles.”

Given the changes, Group CEO Frank Ganis will step down from his role to take up a part-time position where he will “consult to the group on a number of initiatives, including “building [its] securitisation programme and funding partnerships, growing [its] brands, continue operational and customer service improvements, and industry advocacy”.

Executive chairman Mark Bouris will oversee the transition of the YBR Group to the “new, streamlined business structure”.

The move comes following a difficult year for the brokerage brand, with its unqualified audit-reviewed half-year report for the six months to 31 December 2018, reporting a net loss after tax (NLAT) of $34.15 million.

However, the company’s most recent financial results for the quarter ending 31 March 2019 (3Q19), recorded an operating cash surplus of $40,000, a $110,000 increase from a deficit of $70,000 in the previous quarter.

The increase was partly driven by a 5 per cent reduction in its operating cash outflows (excluding its branch and broker share of revenue), which declined from $8.4 million to $8 million.

The improvement in YBR’s cash position was also reported against a backdrop of falling home lending volumes, with settlements declining by 20 per cent in 3Q19, from $3.1 billion to $2.5 billion.

The group stated that its lending performance was “impacted by regulatory factors and the royal commission into banking and financial services”.

Its decision to offload its wealth business follows a spate of similar divestments, with several major banks – including CBA and ANZ – announcing in the past year that they would offload their wealth businesses and run “more simplified” banking businesses.

YBR in trading halt, flags loss

YBR told the market on Friday it will incur a statutory after-tax loss for the six months to 31 December 2018, via Financial Standard.

The results include a material non-cash impairment charge on the carrying value of the wealth management and lending business and various other assets across the group, it said.

However, the impairment will not affect the net present value of the group’s net trail commission receivable from its underlying mortgage book or book of insurance premiums under management, but will be applied against goodwill and intangible and other assets.

The charge results from assessing goodwill and other intangibles in light of recent events, including the Royal Commission, YBR said.”It is a non-cash balance sheet adjustment and has no impact on the underlying operations of the business.”

One of the Royal Commission’s final recommendations is to ban lenders paying trail commission to mortgage brokers and other commissions for new loans.

This should be enacted within two or three years, Commissioner Kenneth Hayne said. “The borrower, not the lender, should pay the mortgage broker a fee for acting in connection with home lending.”

YBR expects the audited half-year report to be lodged before the Corporations Act deadline of 15 March 2019.

It last traded at 5.4 cents per share, plunging from about 14 cents compared to a year ago, down more than 61%.

Yellow Brick Road offloads legacy wealth subsidiary

From Financial Standard.

YBR announced that Yellow Brick Road Investment Services has entered into a book sale and purchase agreement with INPRO Australia.

The transaction will see INPRO senior financial adviser Alex Kean acquire YBRIS’ advice service relationships, records and recurring revenues – impacting about 150 private clients.

YBR said the decision to sell is based solely on the YBR Wealth division focusing on the scale provided by the YBR branch franchisee and Vow adviser and broker network, and other platforms.

INPRO will pay $425,000 for the client book; about 80% of which is payable upfront. The remainder is to be paid 12 months post-completion, adjusted depending on revenues.

YBR executive chairman Mark Bouris said it is important that clients are provided with the best financial service possible, saying INPRO is in a better position to offer this than YBR.

“YBRIS is a stand-alone legacy business within the broader YBR Wealth division of the YBR Group and its portfolio did not fit within the operational structure required for a branch and broker focused network,” Bouris said.

INPRO is delighted with this announcement and is looking forward to working with YBR’s wealth clients, Kean said.

“INPRO has a long and proud history of working closely with clients to deliver tailored advice solutions in a professional, yet highly personalised manner. Our clients value our integrity, transparency and dependability which we’re confident the YBR clients will also embrace,” he added.

YBR will work with INPRO to ensure a seamless transition, he added. The transaction is expected to be complete within two months.

Macquarie reduces stake in Yellow Brick Road

From Investor Daily.

Macquarie has reduced its stake in financial services firm Yellow Brick Road from 18 per cent to 5 per cent.

Yellow Brick Road revealed in a disclosure to the ASX that Macquarie Group had sold more than 4 million shares on 22 May, dropping its holding from 6.6 per cent to 5.15 per cent. The banking group now owns a little over 14.5 million shares in YBR.

Macquarie began offloading its stake in YBR in April, prior to which it owned more than 51 million shares. On 24 April, the banking group decreased its stake from 18.4 per cent to 7.8 per cent; then on 15 May, its holding dropped further to 6.6 per cent.

The equity reduction comes despite YBR turning around years of significant losses into profits. In FY17, it posted a net profit after tax of $1 million, up from a loss of $9.5 million in FY16.

Yellow Brick Road’s underlying EBITDA increased from negative $3.9 million in FY16 to $5.2 million in FY17, and the value of its underlying loan book grew from $37.8 billion in FY16 to $44.1 billion in the last financial year.

As of 30 June 2017, the firm’s underlying funds under management totalled nearly $1.5 billion, more than double the $703 million recorded in the previous corresponding period.

Yellow Brick Road executive chairman Mark Bouris told InvestorDaily sister title Mortgage Business that the firm’s relationship with Macquarie “remains the same and is still as strong as ever”, adding that the reduction in ownership is a result of corporate raider Sir Ron Brierley’s Mercantile Investment Company increasing its stake from 9.1 per cent to 19.9 per cent.

“We aren’t the only company Macquarie Group has reduced its shareholder stake in, and we won’t be the last,” Mr Bouris said.

While there have been no disclosures around a potential takeover by Mercantile, Yellow Brick Road shares are trading at a record low of around 11 cents, taking its market capitalisation to around $31 million.

Yellow Brick Road Benefits From Digital Strategy

Yellow Brick Road, the full service wealth management company that offers products and services for home loans, financial planning, insurance, superannuation, and investments, released their H1 FY18 results and reported an 85% increase in profitability with Net Profit Before Tax up to $0.53m (H1 FY17: $0.29m). This is the Company’s third successive profitable half. Higher revenue (up by 5%) and lower costs (down by 4%), have driven the improved result, together with an investment in digital, and a reduction in branch outlets. This though  contributed to a short-term decline in origination revenue – Lending down 6%, and Wealth down 12%.

Revenue growth included:

  • Strong increase in sustainable, recurring revenue streams, up by 17% to $47.8m (H1 FY17: $41.0m)
  • High-margin scale income grew by 22% to $1.8m (H1 FY17: $1.5m)
  • Increased recurring revenue helped Wealth revenue grow by 7% to $6.5m (H1 FY17: $6.1m)
  • New revenue stream of $0.5m in Training and Support recognised as part of ‘Other Income’. The introduction of the YBR Professional Development Platform is expected to drive future organic growth and new opportunities.

Underlying Loan Book, and Underlying Funds Under Management (FUM) have increased substantially, contributing to the 17% increase in recurring revenue (Wealth and Lending combined).

Key fundamentals underlying the Company’s financial performance for the 6 months to 31 December 2017 were:

  • 56% increase in underlying Funds under Management (FUM) to $1,446m
  • 20% increase in Premiums under Management (PUM) to $17.6m
  • 2% decrease in settlement volume to $7.74b
  • 14% increase in Underlying Loan Book, drawn value, to $46.1b

The small decline in Lending settlement volumes has been offset by improvements in high margin, scale income.

In H1 the Company invested $1.9m in technology to develop and enhance operational platforms. These strategic initiatives support future growth in profitability across the Company’s distribution networks. These include:

  • Money Manager Platform. Released to the network in Q2 FY18, this financial fitness digital tool will enhance the depth and extent of adviser client engagement and increase acquisition and retention.
  • Vow Lending Platform (Vownet): Industry-leading functionality to establish a significant point of difference for the Vow network.
  • Professional Development Platform: Intended to provide a new source of revenue and improve quality, consistency and risk and compliance assurance throughout the Company’s distribution network.
  • Business Reporting Platform: Automated reporting platform to enhance business agility and efficiency.

The YBR branch network has been rationalised to create a higher quality network. As a result, there has been a reduction in branch network numbers and a related decline in Lending and Wealth volumes. This contributed to a short-term decline in origination revenue – Lending down 6%, and Wealth down 12%.

 

Yellow Brick Road Turns A Profit

Yellow Brick Road says their H1 FY2017 result has delivered a maiden profit as a result of a focused and disciplined business approach and back to basics cost control.

Net profit after tax is $0.4m, a $4.5m improvement on H1 FY2016 (loss of $4.1m). The Company’s Underlying EBITDA (which excludes non-operating costs) was $3.1m, a $5.1m improvement on H1 FY2016 (loss of $2.0m).

The Wealth business gained strong momentum with revenue growth of 25%, including a 29% improvement in recurring revenues. Recurring revenue growth was derived from a 28% increase in underlying Funds Under Management (FUM) and a 20% increase in Premiums Under Management (PUM) since 30 June 2016.

The Lending business continues to perform strongly. Apart from an anticipated drop in settlement volumes from Vow Flat Fee lending (which is low margin and had minimal impact on the bottom line), all lending distribution channels – including other Vow lending – exceeded market growth.

A highlight was the YBR network’s 20% settlement growth. The drawn value of the Company’s underlying loan book grew 11% to $41b (30 June 2016: $37b) and the embedded value of the underlying loan book, capitalized on the Company’s balance sheet, grew 6% to $46.1m (30 June 2016: $43.3m). This strong performance has been achieved despite a tightening regulatory framework and with restrictions on offshore borrowers constraining market growth.

Central to this outcome has been a focus on delivering results that are sustainable so that the momentum and business efficiencies achieved benefit our shareholders’ long-term value. H1 2017 has also been a period of transition for the Company, with three new General Managers responsible for Yellow Brick Road Lending, Yellow Brick Road Wealth Management and Vow Financial appointed.

We have undertaken a managed reduction in operating overheads. The business is now operating with a sustainable, scalable cost base. The current level of overheads support an infrastructure that provides scalability to meet future business growth under a more efficient operating cost framework.

In H1 FY2017, high margin, scale income declined slightly. Scale income includes high margin revenue from white label (Vow or YBR branded) loans. White label settlement penetration of the Vow and YBR networks was less than anticipated. In response, to gain greater control and flexibility of our white label value proposition, and increase penetration, we have created a centralised group lending function to consolidate the capabilities and offerings of recent business acquisitions, Resi (August 2014) and Loan Avenue (May 2016) under common management. Importantly this provides us with:

  • The capability to source white label loans from a variety of funders on high margin and high profit share terms
  • Added flexibility to funnel business between funders to enhance the attractiveness of the Company’s branded products
  • An experienced channel team to match the right loan applications with the right lenders, which will increase conversion rates

YBR CEO to step down

From Australian Broker.

Yellow Brick Road has announced that Tim Brown, CEO of lending, will be stepping down from his position effective 31 December this year.

Yellow-Brick-RoadMark Bouris, the company’s executive chairman, said that the role will not be replaced. Instead, the two existing roles of general manager for both YBR and its aggregator Vow Financial will take on more responsibility for driving growth and productivity in the lending division.

“In line with the previously announced restructure of corporate operations this year, senior managers and I have been adopting additional responsibilities, with a major focus on achieving efficiencies and network productivity,” Bouris said.

He continued, saying that the appointment of the new general manager roles has commenced with Andrew Rasby starting his position as general manager as lending for Yellow Brick Road on Tuesday (1 November). The appointment of a general manager of lending for Vow Financial will be announced in due course.

“Our establishment phase is nearing completion and we have a clear strategy to increase productivity and conversion in our networks. Deepening the responsibility for two very hands-on general managers to drive those networks forward makes good sense for this stage of our business growth.”

Bouris thanked Brown for his contribution to the company in the two years since YBR acquired Vow Financial. Brown has been CEO of lending at YBR since January 2016 and CEO of Vow for five years.

YBR Under Pressure

From Australian Broker.

In a candid interview with the Australian Financial Review column, Chanticleer, high-profile business guru and founder of financial firm Yellow Brick Road Mark Bouris has reportedly said he will fire himself this financial year if his company could not to make a profit.

He admitted his reputation was at stake if he could not build YBR into one of Australia’s largest independent financial firms, the AFR said.

Yellow-Brick-Road

However, a company spokesperson told Australian Broker that this comment was intended as a direct reflection of Bouris’ commitment to do everything he could to deliver.

“He hasn’t made a commitment to resign; he has indicated his commitment to work as hard as he possibly can to deliver to outcomes the market expects,” they said.

These statements come at a tumultuous time for YBR after the firm failed to bring in a profit for FY16.

In an interview with Chanticleer, owner of accounting firm Kelly+Partners, Brett Kelly, criticised YBR’s wealth management strategy, saying it will never work.

However, in a response to this article, Bouris told Australian Broker that this was an over-simplification and that YBR was not reliant on home loans as a single entry point.

“The person talking here has never once sat down with me to talk about our wealth management strategy,” Bouris said. “He miscast the strategy and doesn’t understand Australian consumers and their preferences when it comes to financial advice. Nor does he understand our value proposition.

“In reality, Yellow Brick Road is made up of representatives across the nation – several hundred of which are financial planners. Business is driven both through people seeking a mortgage and the ensuing opportunity to discuss holistic financial goals, and conversely through a customer requiring financial advice or a specific wealth management product. This multi-faceted approach allows the business to ensure relevance to a wide demographic of people at different stages of their financial journey.”

The company also responded to Kelly’s comments to Chanticleer that Australians with money for wealth management do not go to mortgage brokers.

“It may be true that traditional mortgage broking models don’t lend themselves easily to wealth management integration,” a spokesperson told Australian Broker. “This is not the case for us. Yellow Brick Road was set up from the get-go as an integrated total wealth business where mortgages are part of a broader financial services offering.”

The company’s corporate strategy was changed in an investor update released last week with new goals for 2017 and 2020. This included an improved focus on wealth management, increased levels of accountability and greater branch commerciality through a franchise model.

Currently with a $38b loan book, YBR hopes to increase this to $100 billion by 2020. The firm’s distribution network presently consists of 300 branches and 1,000 broker groups.

In 2017, the company hopes to drive out its wealth model by doubling the number of branches with specialist wealth advisors. Bouris also hopes to dramatically increase lending conversion by recruiting experienced brokers with business acumen.

“Our loan book is at $38b. For context, that’s a $43b asset on our balance sheet and a 28% increase on the prior comparable period,” a spokesperson said. “We currently write more than 4% of all home loans in Australia and our market share continues to improve year on year.”

Yellow Brick Road Announces FY16 Loss

Wealth management company Yellow Brick Road Holdings Ltd has announced a full year loss for FY16 of $9.5m compared with a loss of $2.5m in the prior year. This despite an increase in revenue for the year 31.4% to $217.9m. No dividends were recommended or paid in the financial year. They did not meet their revenue targets and as a result, a period of consolidation and cost cutting is now the order of the day.

Underlying earnings before interest expense, tax, depreciation and amortisation (‘EBITDA’) and excluding impairment charges and other non-operating expenses for the consolidated entity was a loss of $3,901,000 (2015: profit of $1,276,000).

During the year they made a number of acquisitions, and recently announced a significant restructure.

YBR-PathThey aspire to become Australia’s leading non-bank financial services company by 2020 through four core activities.

  1. Central is lending activity that provides scale. Group settlements grew by $3.5 billion in FY16, up 28 per cent and with over $37 billion in loans
    under management to date. They are pursuing a $100 billion loan book under management which equates to an approximate market share of 5 per cent. With residential lending softening, the group has invested further in commercial lending achieving 32 per cent growth vs PCP. Additionally in November they entered the small business lending market via a partnership with new SME lending platform Valiant Finance.
  2. This lending business provides a foundation and opportunity for warm introductions for wealth management services which provide margin. Wealth management revenue is up 11 per cent against FY15, with insurance premiums under management up 25 per cent and Yellow Brick Road Super funds under management up 19 per cent on the prior comparable period. Their suite of wealth offerings was rounded out in FY16 by the launch of critical gateway and adjacent products including My YBR Account (OneVue) and eight separately managed accounts, Loan Protect (Metlife), and Protected Equities Fund (Smarter Money Investment and NWQ). They are targeting wealth penetration of 30 per cent of their client base.
  3. Using geographic modelling, they are increasing their distribution network of local business owners in all communities across Australia. Ongoing recruitment initiatives have netted 354 additional qualified representatives in the Vow Financial and Yellow Brick Road networks in FY16. New quality benchmarks and onboarding procedures are helping ensure higher productivity of these new members with a particular focus on the first two years of operation. The group now has 1500 qualified members operating in all markets across Australia. The FY17 focus is on maintaining momentum in broker recruitment whilst creating multiple avenues for access to financial planners. The target is 300 branded branches and 1000 broker groups.
  4. Strategic partnerships that leverage scale are an important source of product income. By 2020, they intend to see 10 per cent of income through partnerships, which can be achieve without the complexity or cost of vertical integration.

They say they have faced a number of headwinds in the year.

  • Lower rates have increased competition and the addition of more players in the marketplace has seen an increase in refinancing behaviour. Customers are more aware of their ability to get a better rate and the landscape is more competitive than ever. This is of benefit to the younger Yellow Brick Road book but does place some challenges on our more established Vow brokers.
  • An increase in the cost of funding has put pressure on margins across the
    industry. As lenders respond to regulatory pressure, borrowers face the hurdle of greater scrutiny on household expenditure measurement (HEM) and income verification, which plays into lower approval rates and impacts market size.
  • The outcome of the current broker remuneration review will likely further shape the mortgage industry in FY17. For planners, new legislation that mandates a biennial obligation to seek client permission to continue servicing and charging will require significant changes to the servicing model of most.
  • Australia’s investment lending landscape changed with tougher rules for offshore purchasers and restrictions to lenders’ investor ratios. This has resulted in a restricted environment.

“The completion of a period of heavy investment in brand and distribution build has been met with tough lending conditions and as a result our revenue targets have not been reached.  As is appropriate, when macro factors shift in this way, we adapt by shifting to a period of consolidation. This means some tough cost cutting and maintaining strict spending
discipline, while bedding down the recent acquisitions. It also means delivering our technology innovations and leveraging our brand equity”.

Yellow Brick Road Restructures

Wealth management company Yellow Brick Road Holdings Ltd has announced the transition to a franchise model, consolidation in staff numbers and a focus on increased network productivity and adviser recruitment.

Yellow-Brick-RoadThe changes follow the acquisition of four businesses: Resi Mortgage Corporation, Vow Financial, Brightday and Loan Avenue, and a three-year, $20million brand investment in Yellow Brick Road to position itself for growth and offer clients a diverse range of financial and wealth management services and products respectively.

Executive Chairman Mark Bouris says the company, as part of the franchise transition, will release three proprietary technologies to the network which will ramp up local customer acquisition capabilities to improve productivity.

“Moving to a franchise model is an important progression in our operations. The old licence structure served us well but is not adequately responsive or commercial to meet the future challenges and opportunities for a retail oriented businesses like ours,” Mr Bouris said.

“We’ve had a period of phenomenal growth with multiple acquisitions and the development of new proprietary technologies. It is prudent we bed down this activity and successfully consolidate the acquisitions.”

The acquisitions were made to increase scale, market share and distribution to the existing business and there will be some ongoing costs associated with the integration of Loan Avenue.

“We’ve also developed a great brand and can now move to lower levels of advertising spend. Meanwhile, our new branch customer acquisition technology will allow us to fully leverage the brand at a local level.”

Wealth management restructure

Following the recent resignation of the CEO – Wealth Management, the wealth division will be restructured and in future will be led by the newly created role of General Manager reporting directly to the Executive Chairman. This appointment will be announced in due course and will consolidate the roles of CEO and National Manager.

“We have done a great job in attracting mortgage brokers. We now have a compelling offer for financial advisers, and with the wealth strategy set and our service offering near complete, our focus is on increasing adviser numbers and driving uptake of our wealth services with customers.”

The broader corporate restructure involves the removal of a number of management level roles across the company in lending, wealth, and marketing that are no longer required due to the fulfilment of projects and integration of acquired businesses. This will result in a decrease of direct staffing costs.

“In line with the reduction of a number of high cost senior management roles and other various management layers in the whole group, I have asked the remaining senior managers to adopt what I call a ‘step in’ mindset so they will be stepping into the roles that have been eliminated and this will be done starting with me as Executive Chairman. Consolidation is about creating new efficiencies and reducing costs and all of us working harder to achieve the targets,” Mr Bouris concluded.