Nicole Stokes
Analyst · KBW
Great. Thank you, Palmer. So we reported net income of $110.5 million or $1.63 per diluted share in the first quarter. Our return on assets was 1.62%. Our PPNR ROA was 2.3%, and our return on tangible common equity was 14.75% for the quarter. Our tangible book value increased to $44.79 and that's about 12.5% higher than a year ago. As Palmer said, capital levels remain robust, and we were notably active in our share buybacks during the quarter, repurchasing $74.9 million of common stock or 950,400 shares at an average price of $78.76. Combined with our full year 2025 share buybacks, we've repurchased just over 3% of the company over the last 5 quarters. Our remaining share repurchase authorization was $84.3 million at the end of the first quarter. Our net interest margin expanded 3 basis points to a strong 3.88%. The expansion came from 6 basis point positive impact on the funding side, more than offsetting the 3 basis point decline from the lower asset yields. Our margin level is well above peer and it's 100% core without any purchase accounting accretion from M&A. Our asset liability sensitive is effectively neutral and has really served us well through this macroeconomic environment. That said, we do anticipate we could have some slight margin compression over the next few quarters, and that's really due to pressure on the deposit costs as we fund our balance sheet growth. We believe the margin could decline a few basis points per quarter, probably 5 to 10 total basis points lower over the next few quarters. But we will continue to focus on growth in net interest income, both through earning asset growth and margin management. Non-interest income increased $8.1 million this quarter, mostly from better mortgage fees as well as an increase in our equipment finance fees. Total non-interest expense increased about $14 million in the quarter, partially driven by seasonally higher compensation costs, specifically higher payroll taxes, 401(k) matching expense and incentive accruals. Comparing cyclical first quarters, our efficiency ratio this year was 49.97%, an improvement from 52.83% first quarter of last year. This improvement was driven by the positive operating leverage as year-over-year quarterly revenue growth was $28.5 million, and our expense growth was only $6 million for that same period. Going forward, I anticipate the efficiency ratio to be slightly above 50% for the rest of the year. During the quarter, we recorded $16.6 million of provision expense, annualized net charge-offs this quarter decreased to 21 basis points. We continue to anticipate net charge-offs in the 20 to 25 basis point range for 2026. Our reserve remained strong at 1.62% of loans, the same as last quarter and overall asset quality trends remain strong with non-performing assets, excluding government-guaranteed mortgages and net charge-offs down in the quarter and both classified and criticized remain well below peer. Looking at our balance sheet. We ended the quarter at $28.1 billion of total assets compared to $27.5 billion at year-end. Earning assets grew $607.8 million or 9.7% annualized as we grew both the loan book and the bond portfolio. Loans grew $314.5 million or about 5.9% annualized. And as Palmer mentioned, our loan production and our pipelines remain strong. The real big win for the quarter was our core deposit growth. Deposits grew $261 million or 4.7% annualized, and that was really strong growth in both our consumer and commercial customers of $547 million. As expected, we had the seasonal outflows of about $430 million of public funds and our noninterest-bearing to total deposit ratio improved back up to 29.8% from 28.7% at year-end. We project our loan and deposit growth to be in the mid-single-digit range for the rest of the year. And as I previously mentioned, we expect longer-term deposit growth will be the governor on loan growth. With that, I'm going to wrap it up and turn the call back over to Bailey for any questions from the group.