Jared Wolff
Analyst · Raymond James. Please go ahead
Good morning, and welcome to Banc of California's third quarter earnings call. Joining me on today's call is Lynn Hopkins, our Chief Financial Officer, who will talk in more detail about our quarterly results. During the third quarter, we continued to capitalize on the core strength of our franchise, which is our ability to deliver on clients' needs in our markets in an exceptional way. This enables us to consistently add new commercial clients and expand existing relationships, which resulted in growth of noninterest-bearing deposits despite a rapidly rising rate environment that has put a premium on low-cost deposits. The rapid increase in rates and expectation of further rate increases has made for a challenging operating environment, but our core earnings power demonstrated our ability to continue to drive earnings despite a slightly smaller balance sheet, which was primarily a result of lower warehouse balances. Our strong earnings power, combined with the actions we took during the first quarter to mitigate the impact of rising rates on our investment portfolio resulted in growth in tangible book value per share this quarter, excluding the impact of the Deepstack acquisition and even as we continue to implement our stock repurchase program. We recorded another quarter of core double-digit annualized loan growth, excluding warehouse. At the start of the quarter, we continue to see the same level of business development momentum that we experienced in the second quarter. Turning to the latter part of the quarter, however, we experienced a pullback in loan demand, as the expectation of further rate hikes weighed on economic activity. While this resulted in a pipeline slowing in our overall loan fundings coming in below the level we had experienced in the first half of the year, our loan production was at higher rates and the repricing on our variable rate loans resulted in a 19 basis point increase in our average loan yields compared to the prior quarter. Excluding both warehouse and in the SFR purchases, we had annualized commercial loan growth of 11% during the third quarter, which reflects our continued success in growing the core areas of the portfolio. As expected, mortgage warehouse line utilization continued to decline, which we were able to partially offset with purchases of high-quality SFR loans through the relationships with our warehouse clients. Further, our warehouse unit is best-in-class, and they continue to manage our portfolio very well. With one third to half of our warehouse portfolio self-funded with low-cost deposits, it remains a very profitable business unit. I'm particularly pleased that on an adjusted earnings basis, we were able to earn about the same amount of money as the prior quarter despite a smaller balance sheet. This is consistent with our stated plans to diversify our lending without a decline in earnings. Further, while our margin was flat for the quarter, our margin is expected to expand based on our asset sensitivity to further support earnings growth going forward. The strength of our deposit franchise continues to show through, as noninterest-bearing deposits held at 38% on average for the quarter and grew to 40% at the end of the quarter. We continue to attract new commercial clients to the bank. During the third quarter, we increased noninterest-bearing accounts by $117 million or 17% annualized. This was fueled by a continued increase in the number of commercial accounts for an eighth consecutive quarter. We highlight this information in a new slide in the investor deck. As we have added new clients, we have exited certain deposit relationships and products with higher rate expectations, particularly those that are pegged to the Fed funds rate. This resulted in a decline in interest checking and money market account balances that we had this quarter. Going forward, we will look to continue to replace these types of relationships with continued growth in noninterest-bearing deposits while balancing our overall funding needs to support future loan growth. We also added some longer-term fixed rate funding in the form of FHLB advances and time deposits to strategically lock in some of our funding costs going forward as interest rates continue to rise. While this had the effect of increasing our cost of funds in the third quarter, we were still able to keep our net interest margin consistent with the prior quarter, and we believe it puts us in a better position to realize margin expansion over the next year as we expect to see higher earning asset yields and noninterest-bearing deposit growth. While our loan-to-deposit ratio remains around 100%, we are able to manage our balance sheet efficiently, as we observed the net interest margin starting to expand in the latter part of the quarter. As I mentioned earlier, our warehouse business influences our loan-to-deposit ratio based on the variability of line utilization and the level of funding provided directly from this business line. On average, approximately a third to half of our warehouse lending is self-funded, and we fund the rest of it with core deposits and flexible short-term sources that we utilize to match the remaining outstanding balances. For the third quarter, when warehouse loans and deposits are excluded, our loan-to-deposit ratio would decline from 100% to 96%. While the economy is showing signs of slowing, to date, we have not seen any impact on our asset quality. We have stress tested our portfolio under a number of scenarios involving rising rates and lower valuations with a particular focus on credits that were underwritten 3 or 4 years ago that will be coming up for renewal in the next 12 to 24 months in a much different environment. And due to the conservative approach we take at initial underwriting, the stress tests indicate that our asset quality should remain strong even in adverse scenarios. While we continue to deliver strong financial results for our shareholders in the third quarter, we also took another significant step in building long-term franchise value with our acquisition of Deepstack Technologies and entry into the payments processing business. We closed in the acquisition on September 15, and we have made good progress on integrating Deepstack's technology into our internal platform. We remain on track to complete the integration by the end of Q4 or early Q1 and at which point we will begin ramping up our business development efforts and growing the client base in targeted verticals that we expect will make this a high-margin business that also attracts noninterest-bearing deposits. Now let me hand it over to Lynn, who will provide more color on our financial performance. Then I'll have some closing remarks before opening up the line for questions.