--Profit of $1.21 per share beat analysts' estimates

--Credit-card loans increased 4.2% from a year earlier to $48.12 billion

--Legal expenses increased due to settlement with CFPB and FDIC

(Updated with new details throughout.)

 
   By Andrew R. Johnson 
 

Discover Financial Services' (DFS) shares rose more than 3% in early trading Thursday after the credit-card lender's fiscal third-quarter earnings beat analysts' estimates on solid loan growth and improved credit quality.

The benefits were partially offset by an increase Discover's loan-loss provision and higher legal expenses tied to the company's recent $214 million settlement with federal regulators over the sale of add-on products, which led to a 3.4% decline in profit.

Discover's profit was $627 million, or $1.21 per share, down from $649 million, or $1.18 per share, a year earlier. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters were expecting the company to earn $1.03 per share.

The company's shares were up 3.5% at $38.30 in early trading.

"Card sales and receivables grew in a challenging environment while credit quality continued to improve," David Nelms, chairman and chief executive officer of Discover, said in a statement.

Discover has been one of the best-performing stocks this year as loan delinquencies have fallen to historic lows and the company has managed to eek out portfolio growth while most credit-card issuers are struggling to add new loans. The company's shares are up more than 54% this year, and it was recently cited as a possible acquisition target by analysts at Susquehanna Financial Group.

The company's credit card loans increased 4.2% from a year earlier to $48.12 billion. It also experienced growth in private student lending and personal loans, which are significantly smaller portfolios than Discover's main credit-card business but have become a more important focus for the company as it looks for new growth opportunities.

In June, Discover also launched a new online mortgage-origination business, through which it is making home loans that adhere to Freddie Mac (FMCC) and Fannie Mae (FNMA) standards and selling them in the secondary market versus holding them on its balance sheet.

Credit quality continued to improve in the quarter, with its delinquency rate for credit-card loans decreasing to 1.81% from 2.43% a year earlier and from 1.91% in the previous quarter. Its net charge-off rate, which measures the percentage of loans deemed uncollectible, decreased to 2.43% from 3.85% a year earlier and 2.79% in the previous quarter.

Loan quality has continued to improve for the credit-card industry as borrowers have been cautious about carrying large balances each month after deleveraging following the financial crisis. Analysts expect delinquencies and net charge-offs to edge up again, noting there is little room for further improvement.

That may lead to lenders adding more money to their loss reserves, reversing a trend in which they have released such money credit-quality has improved, boosting their earnings.

Discover said it recorded a loan-loss provision of $126 million in the quarter, up from $100 million a year earlier but down from $232 million in the previous quarter.

The prospect of increasing loan-loss provisions coupled with relatively muted consumer-loan demand amid an uncertain global economy has put pressure on credit-card issuers to seek new revenue opportunities.

"With credit tailwinds having largely abated, earnings growth could turn negative unless issuers are able to drive positive revenue growth ... and/or realize efficiency gains," Bill Carcache, an analyst with Nomura, wrote in a research note on Sept. 11.

In addition to lending to consumers, Discover also operates a payments network that competes with Visa Inc. (V), MasterCard Inc. (MA) and American Express Co. (AXP) to process transactions.

In addition to launching its mortgage business, Discover has struck partnerships to expand its payments-network business in foreign countries. Last month it announced a deal with eBay Inc.'s (EBAY) PayPal subsidiary to expand acceptance of the online-payments service in to brick-and-mortar merchants who accept Discover cards next year.

Discover will help process the transactions that PayPal customers make at its merchants, potentially growing its network revenue.

One major source of ancillary revenue faces ongoing pressure, though.

Discover agreed to pay $214 million to settle regulators' claims that it and its third-party telemarketers used deceptive tactics to sell add-on products including identity-theft protection and debt-suspension services to its credit-card customers.

In a joint consent order made public by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. on Monday, Discover was ordered to refund about $200 million to 3.5 million customers who bought the products between December 2007 and August 2011. It must also pay $14 million in penalties to the two agencies, which will split the amount.

The company said its expenses were up $178 million, or 29%, from the prior year mainly due to a $94 million year-over-year increase in expenses for legal reserves. That was primarily tied to the CFPB and FDIC settlement.

A Discover spokesman said this week that the company has stopped selling the products over the phone but continues to sell them online to customers.

Revenue from Discover's add-on products was $104 million in the quarter, down from $108 million a year earlier but up from $101 million in the previous quarter.

--Saabira Chaudhuri contributed to this story.

Write to Andrew R. Johnson at andrew.r.johnson@dowjones.com

Write to Saabira Chaudhuri at saabira.chaudhuri@dowjones.com

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