Ignacio Alvarez
Analyst · UBS. Your line is open
Good morning, and thank you for joining the call. We began the year with a very strong quarter, achieving a net income of $212 million. Our results reflect the continued recovery and economic activity, our diversified sources of revenue and prudent risk management. Please turn to slide three. Our quarterly net income of $212 million was $6 million higher than the fourth quarter and $51 million lower than the same quarter of 2021, which included significant reserve releases. The sequential variances driven by lower expenses and a lower tax rate partially offset by a lower benefit in the provision for credit losses, lower net interest income and lower fee income. During the quarter, loan growth was solid and broad-based both geographically and across all loan segments. Commercial loan grew during the period of both BPPR and PB despite the continued run off of PPP loans. Our margins in Puerto Rico continue to be impacted by our asset mix. However, we are well-positioned to benefit from higher market rate. Credit quality trends continue to be favorable during the period with a low level of net charge-offs and decreasing non-performing loans. With increasing expectations to digitize and improve our customer experience, we are constantly assessing, investing in our capabilities. In February, we entered in an agreement with EVERTEC to acquire key customer facing channels and to extend important commercial agreement. We expect this transaction will allow us to enhance our client experience and provide us with greater flexibility to meet our customers needs. During the quarter, we continue to return capital to our shareholders. In March, we enter into our $400 million accelerated share repurchased program. And on April 1st, we paid a dividend of $0.55 per common share, an increase of $0.10 per share. Please turn to slide four. Our customer mix in Puerto Rico grew by more than 6,000 since March 2021 and by 19% since March 2020. We captured two-thirds of the par increase by $302 million or 4%. Auto loan and lease balances at BPPR increased by 1% at quarter and consumer demand remains robust. The dollar value of credit and debit card sales for our customers have continue to trend higher, increasing by 5% compared to the same quarter a year ago. The housing market continues to be strong. However, mortgage originations have been impacted by rising rates. The dollar value of mortgage origination at BPPR increased by 28% year-over-year in the first quarter, but was more than 60% higher than the same period since 2019 and 2020. Please turn to slide five for an update on the current macroeconomic environment in Puerto Rico. The Puerto Rico economy performed well during the first quarter with business trends and customer activity remain solid. Auto sales increased by 1% in the first quarter compared to the same period in 2021. This was the highest level of new auto sales seen during the first quarter in more than a decade. The Puerto Rico economic activity index, which includes total employment, cement sales, electricity generation and gasoline sales has been steadily improving and has exceeded pre-pandemic levels for more than the past five months. We are particularly encouraged by the positive employment trend. In March, total employment in Puerto Rico reach its highest level in recent history. Additionally, the March 2022 unemployment rate of 6.5% is the lowest since records began nearly 60 years ago. It is especially encouraging that the decrease in unemployment levels was accompanied by an increased in participation rate. Airport traffic also continue to improve. Passenger volumes during the first quarter increased 35% compared to the same period a year ago and also exceeded the very strong traffic seen in the first quarter of 2019. The tourism and hospitality sector continue to be a source of strength for the local economy. Puerto Rico is a popular destination for mainland residents and the recent increase in COVID cases does not appear to be having the same impact on consumer demand for travel as prior surges have had. We believe that the recently completed debt restructuring should be an important catalyst for Puerto Rico's fiscal and economic recovery. In short, we are very pleased with the results of the quarter. We continue to be optimistic about the prospects for the future and remain attentive to how the evolving geopolitical inflation and health situation may impact the economy and our clients. I'll now turn the call over to Carlos for more details on our financial results.
Carlos Vázquez: Thank you Ignacio. Good morning. Please turn to slide six. As usual additional information is provided in the appendix to the slide deck. Today earnings press release, detail variances from the fourth quarter. Net interest income for the fourth quarter was $494 million, a decrease of $7 million from Q4. The variance was driven by lower PPP related income and lower income from the PCD loans repayment of BPPR, along with the impact of 2 fewer days in the quarter. This was somewhat offset by higher income from loan growth at BPPR and PB, as well as a higher balance of investment securities. Non-interest income decreased by $10 million to $155 million. The decrease in other service fees was mainly related to seasonality in credit and debit card fees, which were lower by $3 million due to higher purchase activity in Q4, and $4 million contingent insurance commission that typically happened in the last quarter of the year. Income from mortgage banking activities was $4 million lower, mainly driven by lower gain on securitization activities resulting from lower volume of transactions and unrealized premiums. These negative variances were partially offset by $3 million in higher income from investments held under the equity method. We continue to expect that the average quarterly level of non-interest income will be around $155 million to $160 million. The provision for the first quarter was a benefit of $16 million. This was $80 million lower than the benefit recorded in the fourth quarter. Total operating expenses were $402 million in the quarter, a decrease of $15 million from Q4. This was driven by three factors. First, an $11 million decrease in business promotional expenses primarily impacted by lower expenses associated with seasonal advertising, charitable donations and credit card rewards. Second, an $11 million decrease in other operating expenses driven by sundry losses -- lower sundry losses by $5 million mainly related to termination of a white label credit card contract and the $5 million in permit losses on undeveloped property taken in Q4. Finally, a $5 million decreased in amortization of intangibles due to the write-down of trademark in Q4. These decrease is were partially offset by a $7 million increase in employment compensation cost mostly driven by higher incentives and commissions, as well as seasonality in payroll taxes that increased by $4 million, a $4 million increase in credit and debit card processing expense due in part to lower volume incentives and a $3 million increase in professional fees. For 2022, we continue to expect our average quarterly expenses to be around $415 million. We will, of course, try to come in below this expected level of expenses. Our effective tax rate for the quarter was 19%. In 2022, we expect the effective tax rate to be between 18% and 20%. Please turn to slide seven. Net interest income on a taxable-equivalent basis was $548 million, $4 million higher than the fourth quarter. Net interest margin decreased by three basis points to 2.75% in Q1. On a taxable-equivalent basis, NIM was 3.05%, an increase of three basis. The increase in FTE margin was driven primarily by higher yields on our investment portfolio by 17 basis points due to asset compensation and improved market rates. During the quarter, average balance of U.S. treasury securities increased by $4.2 billion while the average balance of money market investment decreased by $3.1 billion. The FTE loan yield decreased by 20 basis points in Q1 to 6.06%, driven by lower PPP amortization. PPP income in Q1 was $11 million, down from $23 million in the prior quarter due to lower recognition of fees upon forgiveness and lower balances. The yield of the portfolio was 17% compared to 17.9% in Q4. The outstanding quarter balance of PPP loans was $173 million. The remaining unamortized portion of fees for this portfolio is $8 billion, most of which we expect to recognize during the second quarter. Excluding public deposits, deposit balances grew by $4.1 billion in the quarter. As of the end of the first quarter, public deposit were roughly $15 billion, a decrease of $5 billion from Q4. While the aggregate deposit outflow associated with the completion of the Puerto Rico debt restructuring was approximately $10 billion. We sell $5 billion additional public deposit inflows during the first quarter. We now expect public deposit balances to fluctuate between $11 billion and $15 billion, slightly higher than our prior estimate. The outflow of public deposit and the deployment of a portion of our cash position into loans and investments have reduced our asset sensitivity. But we will continue to benefit from raising rates. As of March 2022, each 25 basis point change in fed funds would correspond to 6 to 8 million in NII per quarter. Our ending loan balances increased by $344 million. This increase occurred despite a decrease of $180 million in PPP loans. Excluded the impact of PPP, loan balances grew by $524 million in Q1, reflecting higher commercial loan balances at BPPR and Popular Bank, higher construction balances and to a lesser extent higher auto and personal loans. These balance increases were offset in part by continued runoff for the mortgage loan portfolio in Puerto Rico. We are encouraged by the demand for credit at BPPR and PB as net growth has occurred earlier than expected. We will continue to take advantage of the evolution of the evolution of the economy and the opportunities to extend credit so we can continue to improve the use and yield of our exiting the liquidity. Please turn to slide eight. Capital levels remains strong. Our common equity tier 1 ratio in Q1 was 16.3% compared to 17.5% in Q4. Tangible book value per share in the quarter was $51.16 or a 22% decrease driven by four factors; $1.1 billion higher accumulated unrealized losses on debt securities available for sale, as a result of rising interest rates. The impact of the $400 million accelerated share repurchase program, the corporation entered into in February and declare quarterly common stock dividends. This was partially upset by the quarterly net income of $212 million. The lower mark-to-market valuation of our investment portfolio will not have an impact on our regulatory capital ratios. While this is a large variance intangible book value, the decrease in fair value of the investment portfolio should be temporary. Our investment portfolio is entirely comprised of treasury and agency mortgage-backed securities, which carry minimal credit risk. The bond portfolio has a duration of approximately four years. And as the position scroll down the yield curve their fair volume will converse to par and the mark down to zero. Despite extension of some cash into the investment portfolio over the last few quarters, we continue to have large cash balances. Continued extension of available liquidity into the investment portfolio would lead to higher earnings and improved tax effective markets in this interest rate environment. Our return on tangible equity was 16.4% in the quarter. As a result of the ASR, we recognize shareholders equity approximately $320 million in treasury stock and $80 million as a reduction in capital surplus. The final accounting treatment of the program will depend on the average price of the shares during the term of the ASR scheduled to close in Q3. Our EPS in Q1 increased by $0.03 as a result of this transaction. Our capital planning schedule should result in an announcement of Popular's 2023 capital actions no later than our January 2023 webcast. The announced intention to redeploy the net gains expected from the sale of our Evertec stake is subject to the closing of the transaction and regulatory approvals. As of now, the closing is still expected for midyear. We will continue to explore opportunities to manage our capital structure for the remainder of 2022 and in future periods. With that, I'll turn the call over to Lidio.