Earnings Call Transcript
WEX Inc. (WEX)
Earnings Call Transcript - WEX Q2 2021
Operator, Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the WEX Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Steve Elder, Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you. Please go ahead, sir.
Steve Elder, Vice President, Investor Relations
I will review adjusted net income, or ANI, during our call. Adjustments for this year's second quarter to arrive at these metrics include unrealized gains on financial instruments, net foreign currency remeasurement losses, change in fair value of contingent consideration, acquisition-related intangible amortization, other acquisition and divestiture-related items, stock-based compensation, other costs, debt restructuring and debt issuance cost amortization, ANI adjustments attributable to noncontrolling interests and certain tax-related items. Please see Exhibit 1 of the press release for an explanation and reconciliation of adjusted net income attributable to shareholders to GAAP net income attributable to shareholders. I would also like to remind you that we will discuss forward-looking statements under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results may differ materially from those forward-looking statements as a result of various factors, including those discussed in our press release and the risk factors identified in our annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020, filed with the SEC on March 1, 2021 and subsequent SEC filings. While we may update forward-looking statements in the future, we disclaim any obligations to do so. You should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, all of which speak only as of today. With that, I'll turn the call over to Melissa.
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Steve, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. I hope all of you and your families are healthy and doing well. I'm pleased to report that Q2 was a very strong quarter as a result of our laser focus on execution against our strategic pillars and continuous innovation across our technology platform. We're successfully building off strong momentum from earlier this year, supported by our financial and operating results this quarter, which continued to reflect very positive trends across the business and strong demand for our platform and services. Our overall value proposition in the marketplace is to leverage our deep industry knowledge, while continuously developing upon a strong set of capabilities. This allows us to give our customers a broad range of bespoke services that meet requirements of easy integration into their systems and the ability to scale quickly and securely. Because of this, we're able to deliver significant benefits to our customers, resulting in market share gains and strong customer retention rates. The pandemic sparked an increased wave of digital engagement, and WEX's products and services are uniquely positioned to not only benefit from but also enable the transition to an increasingly digital economy. We're excited about the acceleration in digital payment adoption. We see this as a significant opportunity for WEX. And as a result, we've increased our focus and investments into accelerating digital transformation across the company. Turning to our results this quarter. We delivered robust year-over-year growth with revenue increasing 32% and adjusted net income up an impressive 91% per diluted share. Total purchase volume processed across the organization in the second quarter grew 104% year-over-year to $21 billion. For further perspective, revenue and adjusted earnings were ahead of Q2 2019 in the best second quarter in WEX's history. We have had strong momentum in organic growth this quarter, reflecting spend patterns returning as mobility rebounds coupled with new customer wins. Solid execution from the WEX team led to favorable margin expansion across the business. Revenue was up 12%, and adjusted net income per share was up 29% compared to Q1 of this year, underscoring the gains we made during Q2 and making us feel very good about the quarter as we look at performance from multiple financial perspectives. We made progress integrating our recent acquisitions, including eNett and Optal, which contributed to our sequential improvement in performance. Finally, I'd like to point out that during the past two years, we have deepened our revenue capabilities and shifted more of our revenue into a high-quality SaaS revenue streams. The mix of our revenue has continued to shift towards account servicing revenue, which primarily represents our SaaS revenue stream, going from 24% of total revenue in Q2 2019 to 29% this quarter. Now, I'd like to discuss a few highlights from the quarter and the innovative solutions we're delivering for our customers. The combination of our technology platform, deep payment expertise and track record in configuring integrated solutions to meet the needs of industry verticals continues to open the door to new opportunities. This along with our ability to seamlessly integrate into customers' operations via API or to meet them at their level of technical sophistication bolsters our value proposition and remains core to our overall strategy. This also leads to very high customer retention rates as demonstrated by our 95% net revenue retention in the health business in Q2. Our results demonstrate the strength of our many diverse offerings. I'd like to highlight a few notable examples of how our differentiated products and services and multichannel go-to-market approach have resulted in new wins this quarter. Our health business continues to drive differentiated growth. We set out years ago to create an ecosystem within health and benefits. We began with a focus on providing the payment technology behind tax-deferred accounts, such as HSA and FSA accounts, expanded into COBRA benefits, extended into a broker channel with greater transit and servicing capabilities, and most recently acquired Benefit Express in June, which now gives us enrollment capabilities. I'm excited about this acquisition because it makes WEX the first to form a full-service health and benefit marketplace, bringing together benefit administration, compliance services and consumer-directed health and lifestyle spending accounts as one offering. Additionally, this transaction meaningfully expands WEX's total addressable market. Benefit Express is another important piece in our capability to serve the needs of this dynamic and growing market. WEX has a proven ability to invest in extending our technology platform functionality, both through internal builds and through acquisitions. We look to offer our existing partners additional opportunities for growth by leveraging technology and services that meet the full set of employee benefit needs. As we further develop our health and benefit service ecosystem, we expect to create new and exciting opportunities. While we have strong new customer and partner growth and high retention rates, we continue to see a lag in employment growth with our existing partners and customers, which is a trend that we believe will return to normal over time. In the meantime, we are focused on innovating and outperforming competitively in the marketplace, and we are reiterating our expected organic growth target this year of 8% to 12%. In our existing Health business, we continue to see the power of the health ecosystem that we have developed. For example, together as one of our key partners we were able to cross-sell COBRA services to a large benefits and payroll provider's small business group. This shows the strength of our expanded offerings for our partner base, the ease of integrating with WEX, our ability to successfully integrate new acquisitions on the tech platform and our ability to quickly scale our offerings through APIs. I'm also excited to announce that we're continuing the strong momentum in corporate payments, including the recent renewal of our agreement with American Express for an additional five years. American Express has grown its payables program into billions of dollars of annual spend in just a few years using our issuing technology. With this agreement, WEX and Amex combined each partner's core strength to provide a best-in-class, customizable accounts payable automation solution for Amex's corporate customers. By working with businesses' existing accounting systems to streamline the AP process, our technology allows Amex business and corporate card customers to make supplier payments via single and multiuse virtual cards, increasing the ease and efficiency for Amex clients to pay their suppliers. We're excited about continuing our partnership with Amex and delivering best-in-class payment automation solutions to their corporate customer base. For our largest customers, our deep payment expertise allows us to develop bespoke solutions and expanded global currency capabilities, all delivered with easy-to-integrate APIs and built upon enterprise-grade cloud-based solutions that allow us to win and retain key brands. This is another piece of the large and growing B2B payments market. We are committed to continuing to develop upon our capabilities to capture additional market share. Before I conclude, I'd like to talk about ESG. We published our inaugural ESG report at WEX earlier this year, which is a baseline we will continue to build upon. Our goal is to further integrate our ESG program into our overall business strategy. And I'd like to update you on some of our ESG-related activities, which are part of our overall strategy. A great example is the work we're doing around WEX's electric vehicle or EV strategy and how we're working with our customers and partners to meet their evolving needs. Our customers' and partners' goals are expanding, and that would often include sustainability targets in compliance with future government mandates. We believe our expanded EV products will support WEX's future growth and benefit the environment. We've been providing EV payment solutions, such as data capture, seamless integration and secure payment solutions to customers for several years, including the General Services Administration or GSA. GSA Fleet is the largest public fleet in the United States, and they've been using our integrated EV payment and reporting solutions for the past two years. Looking forward, we're planning on helping our customers meet their needs for mixed fleets comprised of both internal combustion engines and EV. Our product roadmap includes options for broader access to public charging locations, on-site or depot charging, enhanced data capabilities, reimbursement tools for employees that charge at home and integrated reporting and insights. Our customers' transition to EV will progress over time, and WEX will be ready to meet their needs. We're also keeping in mind possibilities for future products as the industry evolves. We've also made progress on the diversity, equity and inclusion front, following the most recent election of our Board of Directors. Our belief is that our Board can embody a diverse set of skills, experiences and backgrounds, which provides us an informed approach to governance and strategy. With the election of new directors at our Annual Meeting in June, our gender diversity at WEX's Board of Directors is now five women and seven men, and 25% of our members come from ethnically diverse backgrounds. These individuals bring decades of experience in leadership in areas that are critical to our future. I'll continue to update you on our ESG journey along the way. As I look back on the quarter, I'm extremely proud of WEX's performance in this dynamic and fluid environment. Keeping the customer as the center of all we do allows us to win in the marketplace. Our customers and partners value the power of our differentiated products and services, the experience WEX brings to the table to meet their needs and to provide seamless integration with their systems. Our new customer signings and pipeline remains robust, and we'll continue to drive innovative solutions that meet the dynamic needs of our customers. These results are only possible due to the talent, passion and focus of our employees. I'd like to thank them for their hard work and dedication in delivering another excellent quarter. As you've heard me talk about before, we believe the WEX culture is a significant competitive differentiator, and this is more relevant than ever as we navigate the ever-changing effects of the pandemic. For example, as we began the transition back into the office, we're listening to the needs of our employees and fostering a flexible work environment, which allows our talent to best focus on customer needs. This collaborative process has allowed us to maintain our strong employee retention rates and add new talent. We're proactively positioning WEX to continue to scale and capture additional profit and volume increases. We're seeing strong momentum across our sales channels with significant new wins and renewals. And we are successfully integrating acquired businesses. Our combination of innovative technology and talented people with deep industry expertise differentiates us in the market, and we remain well positioned for future growth. With that, I'll turn the call over to our CFO Roberto Simon. Roberto?
Roberto Simon, Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, and good morning, everyone. As Melissa talked about earlier, operating and financial results in the second quarter were very impressive, building off a strong first quarter. Overall results are above the second quarter of 2019. And as I look forward to the second half of the year, we continue to position the company for long-term sustainable growth, as we execute against the customer pipeline, M&A integration and drive innovation across the technology platform. Starting with the quarter results on Slide 11. For the second quarter, total revenue exceeded the high end of expectations, primarily due to better-than-expected volume recovery in the Fleet and Travel and Corporate Solutions segment, higher fuel prices and COBRA revenue stemming from recent law changes. Total revenue came in at $459.5 million, a 32% increase versus Q2 2020, up 12% sequentially and up 4% compared to Q2 2019. From an earnings perspective, on a GAAP basis, we had a net loss attributable to shareholders of $33.9 million. Non-GAAP adjusted net income was $104.9 million or $2.31 per diluted share. This represents a 91% increase versus the prior year and the fourth consecutive quarter of adjusted earnings growth. This was driven by higher revenue as well as robust adjusted operating income margins in each of the segments. To put this in perspective, it represents the highest second quarter revenue and adjusted earnings in WEX history. Turning to Slide 12 and breaking down the revenue by segment. Fleet Solutions grew 34%. Travel and Corporate Solutions posted a 50% increase and finally Health and Employee Benefit Solutions was up 17%. Now, let's move to segment results starting with Fleet on Slide 13. Total Fleet Solutions revenue for the quarter was $274.4 million, a 34% increase versus prior year, primarily driven by new customer wins and renewals, higher fuel prices and continued recovery in the existing customer base. This also reflects a strong sequential growth of 13% when compared to Q1 this year and 3% growth when compared to Q2 2019. Payment processing transactions were up 26.2% year-over-year. Over-the-road transactions maintained a strong growth of 31%, with the North American and international fleet businesses up 25% and 34%, respectively. The net late fee rate decreased to 41 basis points in comparison to 57 basis points in Q2 2020, as customers continued to pay their bills on time. On the other hand, finance fee revenue was up 40% from the prior year period due to the significant increases in volume and fuel prices. To finish Fleet, the average domestic fuel price in Q2 2021 was $3.04 versus $2.07 in Q2 2020. This increased Fleet revenue by approximately $37.8 million and was partially offset by fuel price spread in Europe. Turning to Travel and Corporate Solutions on Slide 14. Total segment revenue for the quarter increased 50% to $81.8 million. Additionally, purchase volume issued by WEX was $8.7 billion with volume from travel-related customers representing the majority. Breaking it down, corporate payments customer revenue was up 49%, led by continued strength in the partner channel. Revenue from travel-related customers was up 53%, including approximately $10 million in revenue from eNett and Optal. As a reminder, in Q2 2020, we recorded a revenue true-up from the renewal of a scheme fee contract. Finally, let's take a look at the Health and Employee Benefit Solutions segment on Slide 15. We continue to drive a strong growth resulting in Q2 revenue of $103.3 million. This represents 17% increase over prior year and 24% versus 2019. We are excited about the growth opportunities we are seeing in this business and are finding ways to expand our offering, supported by the recent acquisition of Benefit Express, which closed this quarter. In the U.S. Health business, revenue was up 19% and SaaS account growth was 13%. These numbers include approximately $3 million in revenue and approximately 200,000 accounts related to Benefit Express. Of particular note this quarter, we were able to pivot and respond quickly on behalf of our partners to participate in the American Rescue Plan Act legislation. This led to an unusually high number of COBRA participants in May and June, adding close to 1 million temporary accounts and approximately $7 million in revenue. Looking forward, we expect to transition back to employment-related growth. Now let's move on to expenses and adjusted operating income margins on Slide 16. For the quarter, total cost of service expense was $171.7 million, up from $161.9 million in Q2 last year. Total SG&A, depreciation and amortization expenses were $205.6 million, which is up $49.2 million versus 2020. In the Fleet segment, adjusted operating income margin for the quarter was 50.2% compared to 37.8% in 2020 and 45.9% in 2019. The increase reflects revenue growth, very low credit losses, higher fuel prices and operating leverage in the expense baseline. Credit loss in this segment was 8 basis points of spend volume compared to 27 basis points in Q2 prior year. Travel and Corporate payments delivered adjusted operating income margin of 21%, up from 20.1% in Q2 2020 and a significant sequential increase from 9.9% last quarter. As we expected, we are seeing additional benefits in the margin from the eNett and Optal synergies and the increased volume, which led to a high drop-through rate. So far, we have implemented approximately $30 million of run rate synergies. The remaining $10 million will take longer as it relates to platform consolidation and back-end processing. The health segment's adjusted operating income margin was 28.1% compared to 28.6% in 2020. This also compares to 25.4% in 2019, showing clear progress over time. For the total company, adjusted operating income margin was 36.3%, which is up from 28.7% last year. Let's discuss taxes on Slide 17. On a GAAP basis, the effective tax rate was negative 7.9% compared to 310.8% for the second quarter of 2020. On an ANI basis, the tax rate was 24.8% for the quarter and 25.2% for Q2 prior year. Changing gears now to Slide 18. I would like to provide an update on the balance sheet. We remain in a healthy financial position and ended the quarter with $425.3 million in cash, down from $852 million at the end of 2020. From a liquidity perspective, WEX had over $613 million of available borrowing capacity and a corporate cash balance of $109 million. Both are defined under the company's credit agreement. These numbers reflect the acquisitions completed this year. At the end of the quarter, the total outstanding balance on the revolving line of credit, term loans and convertible notes was $3 billion. The leverage ratio, as defined in the credit agreement, stands at just under 4x, which is up from 3.7x at the end of 2020. To finish the balance sheet discussion in June, we executed $900 million of interest rate swap at an average rate of 67 basis points. As of now, the interest rate on the financing debt is approximately 90% fixed through the end of the year. To close out the call, we are extremely pleased by the results of the second quarter and the recovery we have seen so far. The first half of the year set a solid foundation, and we believe we are entering a post-pandemic business environment. Therefore, we are resuming revenue and earnings guidance for the third quarter and the full year which you can see on Slide 19. Starting with the third quarter, we expect to report revenue in the range of $465 million to $480 million and adjusted net income in the range of $98 million to $107 million. On an EPS basis, we expect adjusted net income to be between $2.15 and $2.35 per diluted share. For the full year, we expect to report revenue in the range of $1.81 billion to $1.84 billion and adjusted net income in the range of $377 million to $395 million. On an EPS basis, we expect adjusted net income to be between $8.30 and $8.70 per diluted share. Now let me walk you through a few more assumptions. Exchange rates are based as of the end of June 2021. We estimate domestic fuel prices will average $3.18 per gallon for the third quarter and $3.00 for the full year. Both are based on the NYMEX future price from last week. The adjusted net income tax rate is expected to be between 24.5% and 25.5% for the third quarter and the full year. And finally, we are assuming approximately 45.4 million shares outstanding. And with that, operator, please open the line for questions.
Steve Elder, Vice President, Investor Relations
All right. Before we jump into questions, this is Steve, and I just want to apologize for the technical issues we had at the beginning of the call, and I know that we got a little bit cut off. And just to note that some of the information that we discussed in the call was non-GAAP metrics as you'll be accustomed to. So Julie, you can go ahead with the Q&A now.
Operator, Operator
Your first question comes from Sanjay Sakhrani with KBW.
Sanjay Sakhrani, Analyst (KBW)
Obviously, you guys are seeing some constructive trends as we move through the second quarter. Maybe you could just talk about these new forecasts that you provided? And how much continued improvement you're expecting as we move through the second half of this year? So when we think about some of the macro factors like SME recovery, the travel volume growth, could you just talk about contextually how much improvement you're seeing assuming relative to 2Q?
Roberto Simon, Chief Financial Officer
Sanjay, this is Roberto. Let me give you some color on how we have come with the guidance. And I know that Melissa probably will also add some color as well. So the first thing I would say, we have been sharing all along the weekly trends. And as you can see, the weekly trends have been improving. Especially from the month of May, we saw a big jump on travel, and the trend has continued to improve. So from there, what we have done is taken into account the seasonality for the third and the fourth quarter. As you know, normally in the third quarter, we have more travel and also the fleet volume improved from Q2. So we have also taken that into consideration. And then when you get to Q4, what we have modeled also is the seasonality that we have always seen in the last four, five years, where the travel volumes turned down a bit, the same with the fleet numbers. Now that can be different this year. This is what we have modeled. We will keep watching every week to know the trends. And if something changes, so it's a bit different, obviously, we will discuss that. And then the other two things that we have added on our projections for Q3 and Q4 are an increase on both credit losses and late fees. So more or less, they wash from an earnings point of view, but you should see as we go along into Q3 and Q4 some increases on both. And finally, on the revenue side, with the closing of the transaction of Benefit Express, we have added between $20 million and $25 million in revenue in a full year. So if you take the almost $3 million that we did in the second quarter, so you are talking just over $20 million in revenues.
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
Yes. And the other thing, this is Melissa, that I will add to that is we've seen obviously some nice sequential improvement between Q1 and Q2. And as we're looking through the latter half of the year, we're looking at the trends that we're showing you in these graphs, and that's how we're coming up with our estimates.
Roberto Simon, Chief Financial Officer
Sanjay, don't forget that we are already ahead of '19 from a revenue point of view overall. So that's why we have considered now that that's the appropriate way to go now that, seems that the patterns are going to become a bit more normal.
Sanjay Sakhrani, Analyst (KBW)
Understood. And just a follow-up question on the travel yield. That obviously sequentially declined a decent amount. Can you explain like how much of it is mix versus other stuff that drove that decline?
Roberto Simon, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. So we talked about last quarter about the changes on the overall rate in the Travel and Corporate segment. In this particular quarter, there's no surprises. I mean, sequentially, it's down 16 basis points, but you also need to consider that if you look at the mix between the volume from travel and the mix of the volume from corporate payments, it has increased materially. So overall, we went from $6.1 billion of spend in Q1 this year to $8.7 billion this year, but the increase on the travel side has been more than $2.3 billion. So the mix is the one that has impacted the most the yield. If you think about what we are projecting based on our guidance for the remainder of the year, Sanjay, it's going to be very close to what we have reported in this quarter, unless the mix changes dramatically.
Operator, Operator
Your next question comes from Bob Napoli with William Blair.
Bob Napoli, Analyst (William Blair)
Melissa, Roberto and Steve, nice to see the rebound in the business. A question on the corporate payments business, which has shown obviously some pretty strong growth. Can you give some color around what is working in corporate payments? And maybe, Melissa, some longer-term thoughts on what you think the growth of that portion of your business can be over the next 3 to 5 years?
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
Sure. This part of the business, obviously, we're excited about the growth trends that we're seeing. We would say by being the pioneer in virtual cards and virtual payments, we already had a base and foundation to build upon. We have about $300 million worth of run rate revenue associated with this business that has been primarily digital from the beginning. And so as we've continued to add customers and new partners into that mix, we benefited from the rebound in the quarter from prior year spend patterns, but also the additional partners coming on and they're adding new customers within their base. And we've seen really the benefit of all of those things coming together. So we really believe that the offerings that we have in the marketplace are compelling. We're adding marquee names into this part of the business because of the underlying technology and our capabilities. And so we look at this as a new growth avenue for us here at WEX. So I wouldn't call out if anything that was specifically different in Q2. It's just a continuation of some really positive trends that we've seen for the last probably six quarters.
Bob Napoli, Analyst (William Blair)
And the longer-term growth outlook for that business?
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
I mean it's a huge market, and we see a tremendous amount of opportunity for us. And we have continued to reinvest in this part of the business. We've shifted through the pandemic, a lot of our internal development towards this area because we see the capability that we have, we see the momentum we have in the marketplace. And so we feel bullish about the long-term trajectory and growth opportunity we have in this market.
Bob Napoli, Analyst (William Blair)
Then lastly, regarding American Express and the expansion or renewal of that, it sounds like an expansion to include AP automation because I think that was primarily virtual cards. Is that right? How is the Amex relationship going? If you can give any color, what's included?
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
Amex has been a great partner of ours. We know we've continued to build upon the relationships that we have with them. We're providing issuing technology to them. And through that, we've grown revenue as they've grown their spend volume. And so primarily, the growth that you've seen from us and what we're projecting forward is that they are continuing to build their book of business and as their provider of issuing technology, we will grow as well.
Operator, Operator
Your next question comes from George Mihalos with Cowen.
George Mihalos, Analyst (Cowen)
Congrats on the quarter. I wanted to kick things off with a question on competition and yield. Can you talk about the competitive landscape as it relates to the Corporate and Travel segment? There are new entrants competing in the virtual card market—anything different there? Also, is there an opportunity to improve yield in travel at some point going forward? How are you thinking about that?
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
Yes. One thing I'd add is that when we think about the business we also consider what happens from a profitability standpoint. Yield has been a big focus for us; over the last several years we've worked to create a cost structure that is highly competitive. It's not just the technology but the underlying costs — both matter, especially in this part of the market. You can see the significant drop-through from Q1 to Q2 as increased revenue flowed to earnings, which is a result of the scalability we've built into the model. A few years ago we brought processing in-house, and that's something we now sell in the marketplace. We believe our product capability is better than what we used before and much more cost-effective. So you have to look at both sides: not just the new spend and volume we bring on, but how much of that actually drops through to the bottom line. On competition, this has always been a competitive part of the market. Over time networks have increased incentives and ensured those incentives reach the marketplace, which has added pressure around distributing rebates. Day to day, we compete in a competitive market, and we win because of the strength of our underlying technology, our product capabilities, the way we configure solutions for specific use cases and industries, and our deep payments expertise. All of that gives us a strong competitive position and allows us to keep bringing on new customers and growing with them.
George Mihalos, Analyst (Cowen)
That's helpful, Melissa. I appreciate that color. And then, Roberto, one quick one as it relates to EPS sort of sequentially from 2Q to 3Q. Obviously, you've got revenue coming up sequentially and sort of adjusted income rather flattish. Just want to make sure I understand what might be happening from an expense standpoint, 2Q to 3Q. It sounds like increased provisioning, but is there anything else to kind of keep in mind?
Roberto Simon, Chief Financial Officer
So what I would say to you is during, as you know, starting after the pandemic, we took some cost out that we announced last year. And then as we saw at the end of 2020, we saw that things were starting to rebound. So we reinstituted some costs and some investments, especially in health and in technology. And during the first half of the year, as we went through budgeting process and adding some incremental investments, we have been cautious, obviously. And we are feeling that — as we said today, I mean, we feel now that we are in a post-pandemic environment. This is business as usual, and we want to continue investing and growing, as Melissa just said. So there are a few puts and takes. What I can tell you is that as we go from Q2 to Q3 to Q4, I talked about — especially on the fleet, we believe, and we are now on our guidance projecting that both late fees will improve as we go along the months, the same with the credit losses. You need to consider also the Benefit Express acquisition within the Health segment of the U.S. business. And as you know, that business sequentially is very strong in the first half of the year in revenue and on earnings. And then on the second half of the year, there's obviously some investments and getting ready for the enrollment season. And finally, between the cost that I was talking about before, restating that and some incremental investments that we continue to do, as Melissa said, on technology, on the cloud and other areas, that's where you see a bit of that impact. But it's nothing different from where we would be on a normal course, and it's all linked with our long-term strategy now of 10% to 15% growth in revenue and 15% to 20% growth on ANI EPS.
Operator, Operator
Your next question comes from Dan Dolev with Mizuho.
Dan Dolev, Analyst (Mizuho)
Nice results. So two questions on the take rate. So it looks like travel is picking up. Can you maybe just reaffirm that should we expect that the yield in Travel and Corporate to keep coming down as the year progresses? Is that sort of the assumption we have to make given the improvement in Travel? And then I have a follow-up, please.
Roberto Simon, Chief Financial Officer
So this is Roberto. What I said is, sequentially, we had 16 basis points decline. And I would say most of it were related to the mix between the volume on travel and the volume on corporate payments. In Q1, as I said, it was almost around 40% travel and 60% corporate payments. In Q2, the majority of the volume is travel. As you go through Q3 and as we said on our guidance, we expect travel to continue to rebound. So we expect to be slightly higher, probably around 60% travel and 40% corporate payments. So you should see a small erosion. But then as we go through Q4, it should flip the other way around. As the travel volume goes slightly down from a mix point of view and probably will be around 50-50, the rates will improve. But if we look at what we are in Q2 and you compare our guidance, I mean, we are talking five basis points or so difference up or down depending on the mix, but nothing major.
Dan Dolev, Analyst (Mizuho)
Got it. And then my quick follow-up is on the Fleet. It looks like at 16.2 vehicles, you've had a very nice improvement in your Fleet. Like how much of it is share gains versus macro versus mix shift? Can you shed some more light on what's going on there? Because obviously, the number is really strong.
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
It's an interesting question. Trying to do year-over-year comparisons gets pretty challenging in years like this. So what we know is that we're continuing to win new business and implement those wins. And we can see the results of that flowing through from a revenue and earnings perspective. We know the same-store sales have come back. If you look at total volume compared to Q2 of 2019, we're down 2% to 3%. And so we've largely rebounded from the pre-pandemic arena. And I'd say a lot of that has been — it's been a combination of the rebound in volume from existing customers. And you look across categories like construction, which looks like it's really fully rebounded and then other parts of the North American Fleet business, like some of our larger fleets, which still looks like it's lagging. But in aggregate, you can see that we've really largely come back to where we were before the pandemic, and then we're benefiting from the increased sales that we've had across the portfolio and really the strength we've had in the over-the-road business. And so while they're still lagging a little bit in the North American Fleet same-store sales, we've gotten the benefit of all of those things that you just talked about. Some of it is new sales, some of it is rebound in existing volume. And the rebound isn't equal depending on the customer categories.
Operator, Operator
Your next question comes from Trevor Williams with Jefferies.
Trevor Williams, Analyst (Jefferies)
I wanted to ask on the margins in Fleet, which looks like just relative to 2Q, historically. You're running at basically the highest level you ever have. I'm just curious if we're thinking kind of pre versus post COVID, any structural changes? I mean is this a new normal level of margin that we can expect now going forward? Or is it maybe the credit performance is still maybe skewing margins a bit higher than what might be sustainable over maybe whether that's the back half of the year than even further out in '22 and '23?
Roberto Simon, Chief Financial Officer
So I will start by saying that obviously, the quarter was very strong, and Fleet was a big component and a big driver of that. So we haven't seen over 50% margins on the Fleet in years. There are a couple of things that I mentioned before when we were talking about guidance. But just think with the lower late fees and the lower credit losses, obviously, your margin is going to improve. That's one thing that we need to take into consideration. The second thing is, as I was talking before, during the pandemic, we took some cost out, so we have been benefiting from that. Some of those costs as we continue to reinvest and we continue to grow volumes, as Melissa said, obviously, we're going to be reinstituting that cost. But other than that, the business is doing really well, high margins. And if I think about where we should land on a full year basis this year, it's probably going to be slightly better than in the past because of the late fee and the credit losses because we have got over $50 million lower credit losses, but the late fee rate is also very low. But other than that, there's nothing major change in the environment. And then, obviously, fuel prices. I mean, fuel prices have increased from last year to this year in Q2, more than $1 from $2.07 to $3.02. So obviously, that's also a significant yield improvement on margins. But if you put fuel prices aside, the two drivers are what I said to you.
Trevor Williams, Analyst (Jefferies)
Okay. Perfect. A quick follow-up on health: for the COBRA accounts you added this quarter, do you expect them to remain in the base, or might you convert them into more permanent accounts? I'm wondering whether that's embedded in the rest of your guidance and could remain through part of 2022. Any help there would be great.
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
Yes, sure. So the ARP program ends September 30 this year. And so our expectation is that the large number of those 1 million that we had in the quarter would step down by the end of Q3. And so from a benefit perspective, the work that we did within the quarter, the big part of the number that Roberto was talking about was the work we did was informing employers of the change and our partners of the change. What that allowed us to then do is reactivate customers within the system, so that employees could opt to take advantage of the changes and so get the step-up as a result. And again, we think most of that will step down at the end of Q3.
Operator, Operator
Next question comes from Darrin Peller with Wolfe Research.
Darrin Peller, Analyst (Wolfe Research)
Listen, when we look at the guide again quickly for the second half, just to be clear, I mean, you're assuming basically what's equivalent to the run rate as of now, right, over the last couple of weeks. So you're not really assuming incremental recovery relative to what we're seeing right now. I just want to make sure that's clear. And then secondly, when we consider the travel segment in particular, I think it's around 80% international versus 20% domestic pro forma, right, for travel so what assumptions are you making, I guess, on just cross-border travel embedded in that?
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
Let me start with the second part, and I'm sure Roberto will jump in on the first part of your question. We've actually seen a little bit of an unusual mix so far in travel where we're normally not as skewed towards North America. And I've said before that we do see a lot of the more complicated cross-border travel, but that is where we've seen a pickup in volumes, more than our North American volume base. And so a little less strength in Europe than we would normally see, more in North America and then less in Asia than we would normally see. And so from a trend perspective, given what's happening right now in the world, we would expect those trends to continue, that North America would be the place that would be stronger than other parts of the world.
Roberto Simon, Chief Financial Officer
That would be the case, yes. And also let me give you again the color on the travel guidance. So we reported around a bit less than $5 billion on spend on travel in this quarter. And as you can see from the weekly volume metrics, we have continued to improve during the month of July. And what we have done, obviously, the range is, on purpose, of our guidance is a bit wider than it used to be before. Because, obviously, especially on the travel side, we are expecting that what we have seen in July continues. And at the same time that the seasonality that happened during the summer time also stays course on the next two quarters. And from there, obviously, we expect that travel volume to slightly come down because of the seasonality that we always see now between the summer and then the before summer period. If that's different, and we see this year an increase from Q3 to Q4, obviously, that is contemplated on the high end of the range. But I would say to you that I will stick with the seasonality that we have discussed. And the comments Melissa said, obviously, the cross-border is going to be more challenged for the next few months.
Darrin Peller, Analyst (Wolfe Research)
But to be clear, I mean, a pickup in cross-border probably would be a pretty big swing for the travel segment, just given that mix I was talking about earlier.
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
Yes. And just one thing I'd add to that is in order to give out guidance, I just decided to be transparent around the assumptions that we're making around this. There is still uncertainty on what's going to happen within travel specifically over the next couple of quarters because of what's happening with COVID. But that's — we're giving you the assumptions, and we're putting a range around it, depending on how that plays out. And to your point, if cross-border picks up, that would be an opportunity for us.
Darrin Peller, Analyst (Wolfe Research)
Sure. Melissa, one quick follow-up, it's just more structural. When we think about the position you have across your businesses, primarily in Corporate and Travel, there's been — I know this came up a little bit earlier, but there's been a lot of discussion over incremental competition. But on the same thing, you're obviously very well positioned in the early innings. So you're digesting eNett and Optal. But are there other assets structurally that you think could make sense to be additive? I'm just thinking about when you think of the portfolio of assets you have, specifically in Corporate and Travel, anything else you feel like you want to do in the next couple of years?
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
Well, clearly, we're always active from an M&A perspective. We've got a pretty good history of being able to execute and deliver on what we purchase. And so I would say that is a place that we'll continue to be active. That's my first point. My second point is that prices have been pretty high. And when we've looked at assets, we don't often get a lot right now in this marketplace for the purchase price. We've had more of a bias towards building internal capabilities in this space of late. So we've been increasing and ramping our internal investment dollars, but we will continue to evaluate and look at assets, like we would normally do and go through the rigorous process that we would go through and make sure it fits both what we want to do strategically, but also hits our financial criteria.
Operator, Operator
Your last question comes from the line of Mihir Bhatia with Bank of America.
Mihir Bhatia, Analyst (Bank of America)
Maybe just on the health care side, I just wanted to go back to the COBRA accounts that are there. Can you just talk a little bit about the timing of the roll off? And also do the COBRA accounts pay higher fees per account?
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
So from a timing perspective, the way that this played out is that we started adding accounts. So we went through a process, obviously, of working with our partners on determining how to inform people about the American Rescue Plan Act. And we went through a process of working with them and employers to inform employees of the changes and that happened within the second quarter. Then the partner could elect to re-implement or reactivate their customers so that they could choose to make an election themselves, and that all happened largely within the second quarter of this year. What will then happen over the next quarter is that people will choose to re-up and participate further or they will roll off. And so based on what we're seeing so far the expectation is since this is a backward view, the people that are electing, or people that had costs that COBRA covers. And so it's going to be the minority as opposed to the majority that's going to continue on. And so we expect that they will roll off within the third quarter. So we think we'll get a little bit of benefit within the third quarter, but not anywhere near as the same amount we saw in Q2.
Mihir Bhatia, Analyst (Bank of America)
Right. And that was $7 million, right, in Q2, I think that was called out?
Roberto Simon, Chief Financial Officer
Approximately, yes.
Mihir Bhatia, Analyst (Bank of America)
Yes. Okay. And then just — sorry to go back to the travel questions, but I just want to make sure I understand. What is actually embedded in terms of the travel volume recovery in your guidance? Maybe if you can give it relative to 2019 or something like geographically? But I guess I understand what you're saying that volume trends have been improving in July, do you assume they keep improving from here? Do you assume the cross-border questions that were just asked? Like I'm just trying to understand that what is exactly embedded in terms of volumes in the travel.
Roberto Simon, Chief Financial Officer
So yes, this is Roberto. So if you look at the weekly volume metrics up to 7/23, you see that in the month of July, we have come from around 50% down from '19 levels and we are, I would say, around 30% down. So if you think about that, we have built from — obviously, we know what is coming in July. From there, we have built two things. One is the seasonality that I was talking about that has happened in '19. So the comps are similar to that. And at the same time, we have modeled that there is some continued improvement there. However, as Melissa has been talking about on the cross-border side, obviously, with everything we are seeing, we have not modeled incremental improvement or a material improvement from where we are today. But at the same time, that's why there's a range. So if things improve more than what we are seeing as of today and what we are seeing on the weekly volume metrics, that would be an improvement and a benefit. If things deteriorate a bit, they will go the other way around. But that's why we have given a wider range because we feel good on where we are. We feel really good about the recovery, especially since the month of May. But it's really hard to predict what is going to happen in the next six months. Obviously, July was very good because we continue to see not only the improvement and the recovery from '19 but also the seasonality has been helping us. That's why we have taken that approach.
Mihir Bhatia, Analyst (Bank of America)
Got it. And my last question, and I'll get off is just, is there a particular geography, whether it's Australia or something like that, where if we saw a sea change, that would be very material?
Melissa Smith, Chief Executive Officer
If you look across the volume right now, it's about a total of one-third in the U.S. with the majority of it being about 45% in Europe and then the rest in Asia and the Middle East. And so what I was calling out earlier is the U.S. in Q2 2019 was a quarter of spend. So this shift that's happening in that period of time.
Roberto Simon, Chief Financial Officer
And that's why it's important to consider the cross-border and what Melissa said before about the different markets. So North America is performing much better than Europe, which is second. And then Asia is way behind where things were back in the past. So we have continued to model improvements. But considering that if in Asia, we are say 75% or 80% down from '19 levels, we have not considered the improvement we have seen in North America or in Europe in the last few weeks because the news are not telling that.
Operator, Operator
And there are no more questions at this time.
Steve Elder, Vice President, Investor Relations
Thanks, everyone, for joining us this quarter. And as always, we look forward to chatting again next quarter, and this will conclude the call.
Operator, Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.