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Atlantic Union Bankshares Corporation (AUB)

Q3 2025 Earnings Call· Thu, Oct 23, 2025

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Atlantic Union Bankshares Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I'd now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Bill Cimino, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

William Cimino

Analyst

Thank you, Daniel, and good morning, everyone. I have Atlantic Union Bankshares' President and CEO, John Asbury; and Executive Vice President and CFO, Rob Gorman, with me today. We also have other members of our executive management team with us for the question-and-answer period. Please note that today's earnings release and the accompanying slide presentation we are going through on this webcast are available to download on our investor website, investors.atlanticunionbank.com. During today's call, we will comment on our financial performance using both GAAP metrics and non-GAAP financial measures. Important information about these non-GAAP financial measures, including reconciliations to comparable GAAP measures, is included in the appendix to our slide presentation and our earnings release for the third quarter of 2025. In our remarks on today's call, we will also make forward-looking statements, which are not statements of historical fact and are subject to risks and uncertainties. There can be no assurance that actual performance will not differ materially from any future expectations or results expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. We undertake no obligation to publicly revise or update any forward-looking statements except as required by law. Please refer to our earnings release and the slide presentation issued today and our other SEC filings for further discussion of the company's risk factors and other important information regarding our forward-looking statements, including factors that could cause actual results to differ from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statement. All comments made during today's call are subject to that safe harbor statement. And at the end of the call, we'll take questions from the research analyst community. Now I'll turn the call over to John.

John Asbury

Analyst

Thank you, Bill. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Atlantic Union Bankshares delivered a solid third quarter, while maintaining our focus on execution and integration of the Sandy Spring acquisition. Our quarterly operating results illustrate the earnings potential of the company we envisioned. While merger-related costs continued to create a noisy quarter, we believe we are on a path to deliver on the expectations related to the acquisition of Sandy Spring for adjusted operating return on assets, return on tangible common equity and efficiency ratio. The Sandy Spring integration is progressing smoothly. Over the weekend of October 11, we successfully completed our core systems conversion and closed 5 overlapping branches as planned. We are experienced acquirers, and I want to recognize our outstanding and dedicated team for their commitment and diligence in executing this complex process. We have now unified Sandy Spring Bank under the Atlantic Union Bank brand and operate as one integrated team. While some merger-related impacts will persist in our fourth quarter results, we expect to enter 2026 having achieved our cost savings targets from the acquisition and with our enhanced earnings power visible on a reported basis. Our commitment to creating shareholder value remains unwavering. We believe Atlantic Union is well positioned to deliver sustainable growth, top-tier financial performance and long-term value for our shareholders. The strategic advantages gained from the Sandy Spring acquisition, combined with continued organic growth opportunities, reinforce our status as the premier regional bank headquartered in the lower Mid-Atlantic. We have a robust presence in attractive markets, providing us with further growth opportunities. I will now summarize the key highlights from our third quarter performance and share insights into current market conditions before turning the call over to Rob for a detailed financial review. Here are the highlights…

Robert Gorman

Analyst

Well, thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. I'll now take a few minutes to provide you with some details of Atlantic Union's financial results for the third quarter. A commentary today will primarily address Atlantic Union's third quarter financial results presented on a non-GAAP adjusted operating basis, which excludes $34.8 million in pretax merger-related costs from the Sandy Spring acquisition and a $4.8 million pretax loss recorded in the third quarter for the final CRE loan settlement related to the approximately $2 billion of Sandy Spring acquired CRE loans that we sold in the second quarter. As a result, the final net pretax gain from the CRE sale transaction was $10.9 million. That said, in the third quarter, reported net income available to common shareholders was $89.2 million, and earnings per common share were $0.63. Adjusted operating earnings available to common shareholders for $119.7 million or $0.84 per common share for the third quarter, resulting in an adjusted operating return on tangible common equity of 20.1% and adjusted operating return on assets of 1.3% and an adjusted operating efficiency ratio of 48.8% in the third quarter. Turning to credit loss reserves. At the end of the third quarter, the total allowance for credit losses was $320 million, which is a decrease of approximately $22.4 million from the second quarter, primarily driven by the net charge-off of two individually assessed commercial and industrial loans that were partially reserved for in the prior quarter, as John noted. As a result, the total allowance for credit losses as a percentage of total loans held for investment decreased to 117 basis points at the end of the third quarter, down from 125 basis points at the end of the prior quarter. Net charge-offs increased to $38.6 million or 56 basis points annualized in…

William Cimino

Analyst

Thanks, Rob. And Daniel, we're ready for our first caller, please.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Russell Gunther with Stephens.

Russell Elliott Gunther

Analyst

First question for me is on the loan growth front. I appreciate your guys' thoughts in terms of what transpired this quarter in the mid-single-digit outlook for next. Wondering, is that mid-single-digit sustainable outcome for 2026 based on where pipelines and investor sentiment stands today? And as you look out, is a high single-digit a possibility on this larger pro forma balance sheet? And I guess an adjacent question, John, I think you mentioned whether it's an increased appetite or expectation for growth within specialty lines. So I'd be curious if you could expand upon that as well.

John Asbury

Analyst

Sure. To answer your questions, we do expect at this point, mid-single-digit loan growth on the total company for next year. Based on past experience, we certainly believe that we're capable of doing high single-digit loan growth. And what I will refer to as a more normalized environment, assuming we see such a thing again, which I think we will eventually, but there's still a lot of uncertainty out there, obviously. And we do see strength in our specialty lines. And as part of our strategic planning process. And as a reminder, we're going to do an Investor Day in early December, and we'll take you into more detail. We continue to look at additional opportunities to further grow and expand our specialty lines such as equipment finance and others. Dave, do you have anything to add to that?

David Ring

Analyst

Yes. I mean we're still seeing production for new client acquisition and growing at a slightly higher rate, 35% of our production this quarter came from new clients. Coming into the bank, that's a great trend and positive momentum. The pipelines at Sandy Spring now that they've been converted here since April 1 have grown dramatically, three or fourfold. And our pipeline within the legacy bank is higher than it normally is as well. So if pull-through is what we expected to be, we think we'll have a good solid fourth quarter.

John Asbury

Analyst

Yes. And so as you saw, loans averaged up 4.3% Q-over-Q, which is good. But what really happened is in the back half of the quarter, we saw paydowns, which are always an issue to some extent. But the line utilization drop was kind of what really hit us towards the end of the quarter, and that should come back over time.

Russell Elliott Gunther

Analyst

I appreciate that. And then just last question for me, switching gears a bit on to the expense outlook. I appreciate the thoughts on where 4Q could shake out. And I believe you guys mentioned cost saves for Sandy Spring will fully be in the run rate in early 2026. So I just wanted to circle back to what was a, I believe, the efficiency guide for the pro forma franchise, about 45%, excluding amortization expense. Is that still on the cards for 2026? And as it relates to the expense side of the house, how are you guys thinking about keeping a lid on the absolute expense base as you organically build out North Carolina over the next few years?

Robert Gorman

Analyst

Yes. Russell, I'll take that one. Yes, we still -- we're, of course, in the middle of our 2026 planning process, but we fully expect to see mid-single -- mid-40s on the efficiency ratio, inclusive of the investments in the North Carolina franchise. Coming out of the -- you see our guide in the fourth quarter is $183 million to $188 million. If you annualize that at some inflation to that and additional costs associated with North Carolina. We should be flat year-over-year to pro forma first quarter. If you include the first quarter run rate for Sandy Spring in 2025, it should be flattish, which would basically be able to provide us with the mid-40s efficiency ratio. So feel good about that. Of course, if we don't see the revenue come in, but the other part of that is revenue growing at high single-digit level going into next year. If we don't see that, we're obviously focused on positive operating leverage. So we would take some actions on the expense side, maybe have to delay some things. But at this point in time, we don't anticipate that happening.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Stephen Scouten with Piper Sandler.

Stephen Scouten

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Rob, I wanted to just follow back on that expense messaging you just gave there. So if we're looking at $190 million and then you said add North Carolina, add inflation and then it should be flat from there? Or is there a baseline like of a 1Q '26 kind of all in? I'm assuming all cost saves out kind of run rate you can give us as a starting point?

Robert Gorman

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Yes. So what I would say is it's probably about the $190 million give or take level would be a good run rate for going forward on excluding any of the related or amortization of intangibles. That's how we're kind of looking at it. So you've got, call it, a $185-ish million run rate at another $5-or-so million annualized that for those items that we talked about inflation, et cetera, so it would be pretty good run rate.

Stephen Scouten

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Got it. And that 1Q '26 run rate shouldn't calculate all the Sandy Spring cost savings at that point in time, correct -- more or less?

Robert Gorman

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Yes. We don't see it all in the fourth quarter because there's -- we just finished the conversion, there's cleanup going on. There's some related systems disengagement that's happening. We still got some duplicate costs there. So those will all come up by the end of the fourth quarter.

Stephen Scouten

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Got it. Got it. Okay. And on the -- John, you noted there were a higher level of paydowns and I think you guys noted in the press release to lower line utilization there at quarter end. Do you have any data in terms of kind of what paydown levels were this quarter maybe versus any prior quarters? And kind of what would lead you to believe that maybe that paydown activity would slow a bit? Or is the better growth not so much about paydown levels slowing but production levels continue to ramp higher?

John Asbury

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Yes. I think it's probably more about production levels continuing to ramp higher. And let's see, I'll call on Dave Ring here, who leads all our commercial businesses. But -- we've seen for a while higher levels of paydowns. But as I think about Q3 versus Q2, I don't think it was out of line.

David Ring

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

No. No. Production in both quarters was very close. It's a little higher this quarter than last quarter. Paydowns were relatively the same over the quarter. There are just more players right now in our markets, and we're going to see some of the paydown activity that we're seeing today probably throughout the rest of the year and into next year, but we're relying on higher production cost.

John Asbury

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Yes. And so often on paydowns, you'll see commercial real estate that is sold or refinanced into the institutional non-recourse term markets like some of the Fannie or Freddie programs, for example, for multifamily. And the pullback that we've seen in term yields tends to create more of that. But we feel good about the overall setup.

Stephen Scouten

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Got it. And then last thing for me, just around the margin, obviously, the low end of that range kind of remained at the 3.75%, but obviously, the range was tightened kind of removing some theoretical upside there. What kind of changed quarter-over-quarter that kind of takes that higher level off the table? Is it just where we ended up here in the third quarter? Or is it more rate cuts being baked in? Or kind of -- any color there to what's leading to that?

Robert Gorman

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Yes. It's more about where we came out in the third quarter, kind of dialed back some of the impacts of the accretion income in the fourth quarter. That would have been driving -- it could be higher on the higher end. So we dialed that back a bit. But we feel like on the core basis, we should see some expansion. That's why we're guiding to 3.85% to 3.90% in the fourth quarter. So it's a bit higher than when we came in at 3.83% in the third quarter. But that 3.75% to 3.80% is for the full year, Stephen. So that's kind of where we are. So it's going to -- we see it going up, but not quite as much as we had anticipated. We had a 3.75% to 4% coming in this year. But accretion hasn't been coming in as high as we were expecting.

John Asbury

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Yes. It is somewhat difficult to predict that with great precision because it's influenced, as you know, by payoffs and that sort of thing. And so you'll see a little bit of volatility. And obviously, as we get a few more quarters under our belt, we'll have a better sense for the sort of what to normally expect. But there's always an element of fluctuation in that, be it up or down.

Stephen Scouten

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Yes, no doubt. All this modeling is a little bit art, a little bit science. So definitely...

John Asbury

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Correct, Stephen.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Catherine Mealor with KBW.

Catherine Mealor

Analyst · KBW.

My question is just back to the margin, maybe just getting into the pieces of it. And on the deposit side, as we think about another couple of rate cuts, I think of you as asset-sensitive, but Sandy Spring lessens that a little bit, right? And so then as we think about on the NIM expansion over the next few quarters even with rate cuts. Can you help us think about, first, on the deposit side, how much room you think you can lower deposit costs to keep the margin kind of in that level? And then secondly, if you could give us just some color on new loan yield rates and kind of where you see -- where you think loan yields go outside of some of the purchase accounting noise?

Robert Gorman

Analyst · KBW.

Yes. So Catherine, we think we have a lot of room on the deposit cost side as the Fed gives us cover and continues to lower rates, we're expecting. Obviously, we saw a 25 basis point cut in September. We're expecting one in late October and then in December. Just to give you a perspective on that, we had about $13 billion of deposits that reprice pretty quickly, following that cut like an 85 basis -- of that population, about 85% betas. The good news that we're seeing is on the deposit side, we can lower rates pretty quickly. We're talking probably in mid-50s betas on interest-bearing deposits in mid-40s through the cycle on total deposits. If you look at the short-term rate changes we just made, those pretty much offset the variable rate note loan book that we have, which is about $13 billion, $14 billion. So those kind of are offsetting each other in terms of reducing or having the impact of lower yields on the loan side versus lower deposit costs. So the real impact as we go forward here in terms of looking for a core margin expansion is what's happening with term loans and the back book fixed rate and new loans coming on, what rates are those coming on. We think as a result of our average portfolio yields of, call it, [ 5.10 to 5.15 ] on our fixed loan portfolio today, repricing in the, call it, [ 6.10 to 6.20 ] range in the last quarter. We should be able to see a pickup in terms of the core margin, primarily due to lower deposit costs, lower variable rate loan yields offset by higher fixed rate loan yields.

Catherine Mealor

Analyst · KBW.

Okay. That's awesome. And then my second question is just on credit. I know you were -- you didn't like having these two C&I losses this quarter. Just kind of curious if you could give just a broader perception of any of the credit trends you're seeing within the portfolio. I think there's especially within D.C. and just kind of the health of the Sandy Spring portfolio now that you've got a couple of quarters under your belt with that portfolio. Just any kind of credit -- additional credit commentary would be helpful. Just to try to figure out whether those two are isolated events or if there's anything else we should be aware of happening within the portfolio?

John Asbury

Analyst · KBW.

Yes. Those are certainly the two that you saw that had specific reserves. One of them was partially reserved and it was just an unusual situation that -- both actually were identified and partial reserves were taken in Q4 of last year. One in the end was fully reserved, actually slightly more than the ultimate resolution. The other just due to ongoing uncertainty, we elected to charge the rest of it off as we work to maximize recovery. So that's totally unrelated. Broadly speaking, the overall credit trends look good. You can see that in our numbers. You can see, obviously, 0.49% nonperforming assets as a percentage of the total loan book is a pretty good number. Past dues down criticized down. And we feel pretty good. Obviously, we're well aware of all the headlines that go on in the greater Washington region, but we're hard-pressed to point to any real problems as a result of that. The client base is actually quite resilient. So we feel pretty good about it. Doug, anything you would add?

Douglas Woolley

Analyst · KBW.

Now all the leading indicators of those kinds of big problems all look very good and moving in the right direction. Like John said, criticized noticeably lower since the second quarter. Past dues continue to be low. So we all feel very good about where we are. Obviously, we're paying attention to what's going on in and around D.C. with the shutdown. But we just don't see any weakness anywhere, and we'll be prepared for anything supporting customers and whatnot. I was Chief Credit Officer, Doug Woolley.

Catherine Mealor

Analyst · KBW.

Great. Is it fair to say the D.C. noise is maybe more of a growth issue than a credit issue for that?

John Asbury

Analyst · KBW.

Yes, I would say so. I do think that it impacts confidence to some extent. But as Dave Ring pointed out, the pipelines are growing. And you've heard me make this point before, don't think of us as a D.C. Bank. About 23% of the total portfolio would be in the broad Greater Washington metro area. But Sandy itself was -- is and always has been the Bank of Maryland. And we are seeing opportunities there. So overall, we think that we're in the right spot. As you know, we do not finance larger office buildings, which definitely could be problematic. And from a government contract finance standpoint, I would expect to see more opportunity there over time since it's mostly focused on national security and defense. And even interestingly, we were talking to the head of government contract finance yesterday, even with the government shutdown because the defense department is still operating, we're seeing contracts awarded like right now. So we do feel pretty good about the opportunity there over time. But yes, it's -- I think it does put a damper on growth, particularly as it relates to commercial real estate investment, but it's very submarket specific as well, even in that Greater Metro D.C. area.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Janet Lee with TD Cowen.

John Asbury

Analyst · TD Cowen.

Janet, we're glad. Thank you for picking up coverage on us.

Sun Young Lee

Analyst · TD Cowen.

Of course. I believe you guys touched on it a little bit. Apologies if I missed it. So are you attributing all of the loan decline that you saw on the C&I side to lower utilization? And basically, are you also referring to the loan growth coming back in that mid-single digits as the utilization picks back up seasonally in the fourth quarter to the mid-single digits range? Or is that more so in a typical environment, you'd be a mid-single digit to high single-digit grower?

John Asbury

Analyst · TD Cowen.

Yes. I wouldn't say all of it was a result of the reduced line utilization, but that was a material number contributing to that. And I think it's -- Dave Ring, you'll have to weigh in here. From my standpoint, we've got the pipeline right now to support the targets that we laid out, which are roughly mid-single-digit loan growth based on what we're seeing in Q4. So that's not really predicated on a reversal and line utilization, although that would be helpful. Is that accurate?

David Ring

Analyst · TD Cowen.

Yes. We're -- we have the pipeline to -- it's just pull through. We just have to pull it through. And sometimes it takes longer than others and things creep into other quarters. But we have the pipeline that will -- that implies...

John Asbury

Analyst · TD Cowen.

Dave makes a good point. We actually had some financings that were slated and expected to have closed in Q3 that did not. And we're seeing that come through now. We're actually off to a pretty good start in Q4.

Sun Young Lee

Analyst · TD Cowen.

Got it. That's a helpful color. So on a core basis, I guess you're not guiding to 2026, but -- should I think of the core NIM trajectory based on your comment as being able to stay stable as rates come down with an upper bias if the yield curve steepens? Or would it be a sort of board pressure given your asset sensitivity profile? How should I think about that?

Robert Gorman

Analyst · TD Cowen.

Yes. The way we're thinking about it is we think there's opportunity for core expansion, give or take, in the low single digits per quarter. That's predicated on that the fixed rate loan portfolio back book and new fixed loans coming on are repricing higher, call it, 100 or so basis points higher. So that really depends on where term rates go. So if we do have a steeper curve, that would be very helpful to that projection that goes -- if it increases more, that will be more beneficial. So we are calling for in our baseline for the Fed to cut 2x here in the remainder of this year, 2x next year, but we do expect to see some expansion in the margin, again, not material. If term rates were to drop materially from really looking at, call it, the 5-year term rate, we could see some contraction in that projection that I'm talking about -- either a flat margin or it could be down depending on the term rate structure.

John Asbury

Analyst · TD Cowen.

And we are certainly less asset sensitive than we used to be. Sandy acts as a bit of a natural hedge. And as you can see on Slide 11 of the supplemental presentation, where we break out the drivers of net interest margin change, to Rob's earlier point, the core net interest margin actually went up Q-over-Q. It was really just fluctuation in accretion that caused the reported net interest margin to be stable.

Sun Young Lee

Analyst · TD Cowen.

If I could just ask one more question. For those of us including myself, who is newer to the name. So you made it clear that the government contractor finance group is doing fine. I mean, it's more security like national security and defense focus or more protected there. If the government shut down is prolonged, hopefully not. But if it does get extended, like what would you be -- in what way could it -- or could it impact you the most in terms of -- like what would you be most worried about? Is it the consumers in your -- the consumer customers in your market? Or is it just lower commercial activity? Could you just elaborate on what would you be most worried about or maybe not?

John Asbury

Analyst · TD Cowen.

Yes. Sure. The government contractors should be fine. We have lived through many shutdowns before. The longer shutdown was 35 days in the first Trump administration. We've never had an issue as it relates to government shutdowns. They have to wait to be paid, but most of them are doing essential services. And so they will continue to work, as I indicated. Normally, what we would expect to see them do is they'll draw on their lines as they await payment. It creates a timing difference. To the extent that they -- we have any that are working on nonessential services, what they do, it's a variable cost structure. They would furlough workers. You're already seeing that in some cases up there. So I think broadly, it certainly could sort of, I guess, I would say, further slow things down, we should be fine. The one thing we -- the only thing we can say with certainty is the U.S. government will reopen. That will happen. The question is how long it's going to take? Interestingly, I was just looking at some data. As of the end of the day yesterday, we had 50, 5-0 consumers contact us, wanting to talk about some sort of potential relief because they've been impacted. And the most common thing that you would see might be a payment deferral or a fee deferral. And that's on the consumer side, and we're very happy to work with customers if there's any sort of event weather like this in that region. So we do not have any reason at this point in time to be particularly concerned about it.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Brian Wilczynski with Morgan Stanley.

Brian Wilczynski

Analyst · Morgan Stanley.

Maybe just sticking with the loan growth. I think during your prepared remarks, you talked a little bit about higher competition that you saw in the third quarter across some of your markets. I was wondering if you could give some more detail on that, where it's coming from and just what you're seeing broadly?

John Asbury

Analyst · Morgan Stanley.

Yes. We're certainly accustomed to competition. I'm a 38-year commercial banker by background, and I don't ever remember a time when it's not been competitive, at least for the better credits, which is the types of things that we do. We sometimes see other banks kind of turn it on and turned it off, which we've never done. We've always been a consistent provider of capital, and that's part of how we differentiate ourselves in the marketplace. We are definitely in a turn it on environment right now, where some who had pulled back or fully open for business. We see that show up in terms of an element of pricing pressure, not that we've ever been the low-cost provider. But it's -- the banks are eager for business. Dave, anything to add?

David Ring

Analyst · Morgan Stanley.

In the first couple of quarters, we were impacted a bit by private credit.

John Asbury

Analyst · Morgan Stanley.

Yes, particularly in the government contract space.

David Ring

Analyst · Morgan Stanley.

Right. As a competitor in some of the specialty businesses, but that slowed down a little bit, frankly. And it's really the traditional banks coming in back in, turning it on again, like John said. And one of the things we're very proud of is we're consistently in the market. We don't turn it on and turn it off. And -- but we're seeing some of those banks come back in and turn it on.

Brian Wilczynski

Analyst · Morgan Stanley.

That's really helpful. And then maybe just on Sandy Spring. You mentioned that the integration is now complete. I was wondering if you could talk a little bit more about some of the revenue-related synergies. I think you mentioned briefly that swap income was higher. But as you look out to Sandy Spring, what are the opportunities that you see on the revenue side that you can lean into a little bit more over the next few quarters?

John Asbury

Analyst · Morgan Stanley.

Yes. Sort of moving -- starting at the top of the house, the single best opportunity is simply the fact that they're no longer constrained by commercial real estate concentrations or liquidity issues, which means they are, in fact, fully open for business. So that's good from a lending standpoint. They do pick up additional capabilities. Interest rate hedging is a great example. Other examples that we'll see as it begins to mature, will be foreign exchange, where we have a good offering broadly. They had a good treasury management offering, but we brought additional capabilities to the table as well. Dave, do you want to pick up from their specialty lines? We've already seen equipment finance business up there.

David Ring

Analyst · Morgan Stanley.

I mean the biggest probably help over the next, call it, 15 months is just them getting back into the market. We've retained almost all of their bankers. And most of them have stayed on their own as well without us having to work hard to retain them. And they are back to business back and calling. So new client acquisition is going to be a real important thing in that market for us. The things we bring to the table around talking at a higher level to clients, bringing in products like John said, plus loan syndications, asset-based lending and some other things into that market. That's a really good asset-based lending market, for instance, which we will penetrate deeper because of our acquisition of Sandy Spring. So there are a lot of things just -- but I would think of it just holistically as two good banks coming together, combining products and services, they had some that we didn't have.

John Asbury

Analyst · Morgan Stanley.

Correct.

David Ring

Analyst · Morgan Stanley.

They had some really interesting offerings, some niche treasury management capabilities that we now have.

John Asbury

Analyst · Morgan Stanley.

Right. And they've brought some really good leadership to the table as well. And so we really think we're just stronger in that market because of the combination.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from David Bishop with Hovde Group.

David Bishop

Analyst · Hovde Group.

Staying on that topic in terms of the Sandy Spring opportunity. John and Rob and Dave, as you expand maybe their pure commercial C&I lending capabilities, do you see the opportunity to sort of harvest more deposits behind new loan relationships and maybe what legacy Sandy Spring is bringing to the table?

David Ring

Analyst · Hovde Group.

Overall, they did a pretty good job gathering deposits. And we've done a pretty good job since April 1 of retaining those and trying to deepen and enhance relationships to get more. But -- they actually brought some products to the table that we're going to leverage in that market around escrow, the title businesses, litigation services, things like that, that will bring pretty chunky, nice big deposits into the bank. But in general, if you acquire a C&I client and you're giving them a line of credit, it comes with the deposits. It comes with the treasury management fees. And so we're really focused on new client acquisition in that market. And we do think we give them the capacity and the ability to do more faster new client acquisition. Like I said earlier, 35% of our production this quarter was from new client acquisition, and we expect that to kind of ramp up with Sandy over time.

John Asbury

Analyst · Hovde Group.

It's a good team with great leadership, and we complement each other.

David Bishop

Analyst · Hovde Group.

Got it. And then a follow-up, maybe, John, I think you mentioned the freeable some pretty material movement, I think it was $250 million decline in criticized. Maybe curious any sort of color you can give on where you saw that improvement types of credits, segments, et cetera?

John Asbury

Analyst · Hovde Group.

Pretty much across the board. Part of what we did in part just a function of the environment, we continue to dig pretty deeply in terms of scrutinizing the portfolio, not that we don't do that in the normal course. We've especially done that with the Sandy Spring portfolio being new to us. And the reality is we call them as we see them. The overall health of our client base is pretty good. And so we've seen it pretty much across the board. Doug Woolley, the Chief Credit Officer is here, is that a fair assessment?

Douglas Woolley

Analyst · Hovde Group.

Dave, the improvement in credit is at the client level. There are no industries or markets that are of any concern. It's just individual clients that may suffer difficulties. And of course, we work with them all the way through, and that's where the improvement comes from, the improvement of their operations. And we do believe we are conservative risk raters.

Operator

Operator

Our final question comes from Steve Moss with Raymond James.

Stephen Moss

Analyst

Maybe going back to loan growth here. John, I hear you on the mid-single digits with potential to be doing higher single digits over time here. And obviously, the pipeline has increased. Just curious here with the North Carolina expansion, what kind of contribution could you see next year from that from loan growth, if any, that could be additive?

John Asbury

Analyst

Dave?

David Ring

Analyst

So we're adding bankers in North Carolina. We've actually seen North Carolina turn to positive growth after...

John Asbury

Analyst

Initial America...

David Ring

Analyst

Yes. And there's very positive momentum there. What we like about North Carolina is it is a real active market, and you could drive down any highway and see multiple manufacturing distribution facilities. And -- we have now -- we think we placed a lot of talent in that market to go after that business. We have pretty low market share. So there's a lot of upside in that state.

John Asbury

Analyst

Yes. It's arguably from an economic development standpoint, it's arguably the best of the growth markets where we have a physical presence, which we're expanding. So Steve, that is potential upside. We're being very conservative in terms of how we think about it. We're speaking to loan growth expectations for the entirety of the franchise. But Dave, you and I have a conversation yesterday, you've been here 8 years. And we think about how diversified the bank is now versus what we first saw and all the -- I think you referred to it as the levers that we have to pull now. So this is a very diversified franchise. And so we see opportunities really in all markets, but North Carolina will have the fastest rising tide.

David Ring

Analyst

And we do have roughly 20 bankers now in that market going at it, which is an increase over time. So we're very excited about the opportunity there. We're in Wilmington. We're also in the Triad and Triangle markets, and we have a presence in Charlotte and in South Carolina as well. So we're pretty excited about that.

Stephen Moss

Analyst

Okay. Appreciate that color there. And then one last one for me. Most of my questions have been asked and answered. But I'm not sure if I missed it. Curious, Rob, as to the purchase accounting assumptions for the fourth quarter and for 2026.

Robert Gorman

Analyst

Yes. So in terms of the accretion income, I think you could -- if you take a look at the third quarter, it's kind of what we're anticipating for the fourth quarter, call it about $40 million, $41 million which was down from the third quarter, as we mentioned. It's probably going to continue to decline as we go through next year. But call it about between $35 million and $40 million run rate -- quarterly run rate going throughout next year and continue to come down as we go into '27.

John Asbury

Analyst

And of course, that's being replaced, that cash income has been reinvested.

Robert Gorman

Analyst

Yes, exactly. Turning into core.

John Asbury

Analyst

Since it's mostly interest rate marks.

Stephen Moss

Analyst

Okay. And actually, maybe just one last one for me here. John, with regard to capital return here, profitability, you're talking about -- you're definitely building capital. Just curious, you talked about a buyback as well, how to think about maybe the timing of a buyback starting next year?

John Asbury

Analyst

Yes. We're definitely going to be accreting capital at a good rate. And even more so as we get through Q4 once all of the Sandy Spring related expenses are out. And you can see we have pretty handsome operating metrics right now, which should get better still. So Rob, do you want to talk about how we would think about the -- well, actually, let me say this, clearly, as always, first priority for capital is simply to reinvest in the business and fund lending growth. But what we're guiding for implies that we're going to be accumulating capital faster than we need it. Therefore, capital will continue to rise.

Robert Gorman

Analyst

Yes. Taking into consideration our growth on the balance sheet, the investment and strategic initiatives and things, assuming we've got the capital for that. We're comfortable managing with a CET1 between 10% and 10.5%. So anything beyond, call it, 10.5% would be available for buybacks, excess capital, if you will. Our projection call for that is probably be in that position probably in the second half of next year. So likely we would export for an authorization to repurchase shares sometime in that time frame.

William Cimino

Analyst

Thank you, Steve. And thanks, everyone, for joining us today. We look forward to talking with you at our Investor Day in December. Have a good day.

Operator

Operator

This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.