Lindsay Corby
Analyst · Stephens. Terry, your line is now open, please go ahead
Thanks Alberto. Good morning everyone. I'll start with some additional information on our loan and lease portfolio on slide four. Our total loans and leases were $5.2 billion at June 30th, an increase of $357 million or 30% annualized from the end of the prior quarter. Payoffs are relatively flat quarter-over-quarter coming in at $128 million. We believe payoffs will increase in the coming quarters. I'll note that this will be the last quarter we reference PPP loans as the balances and related financial impact are reaching levels that are relatively insignificant to our results on a quarter-over-quarter basis. Furthermore, based on our year-to-date results, we are updating our loan and lease growth guidance for the full year to low to mid-teens, up from high single-digits previously provided. All else equal, our outlook does imply a slower rate of loan growth in the second half of the year compared with the pace of the first half. Our current pipelines are healthy and we are optimistic about the future of Byline. Turning to slide five, we'll look at our government guaranteed lending business. At June 30th, the on balance sheet SBA 7(a) exposure was $479 million, flat from the prior quarter with $102 million being guaranteed by the SBA. USDA on balance sheet exposure was $64 million, nearly flat from the end of the prior quarter, of which $26 million is guaranteed. We continue to see stable trends in this portfolio and as a result, we've decreased our allowance as a percent of the unguaranteed loan balance to 6.6% from 7.4% at the end of the prior quarter. Turning to slide six, total deposits decreased by 2.6% compared with the first quarter. This was primarily due to lower commercial deposits and business accounts as a result of seasonal fluctuations that typically occur at the end of the second quarter due to business needs. Total average deposits increased by 1.6% compared with the first quarter, driven by growth in both average interest bearing deposits and average non-interest bearing demand deposits. Total average deposits increased by 7.7% compared with the year ago period. Our deposit composition and ability to generate core deposits continues to be a strength of our franchise. Commercial deposits represent about half of our total deposits and 76% of non-interest bearing deposits. During last quarter's call, we mentioned that with rising rates, we would anticipate deposit pricing pressure at some point during the year. In the second quarter, deposit costs were 16 basis points, increasing eight basis points from the cycle low in prior quarter. Moving on to net interest income and margin on slide seven. Our net interest income was $61.6 million for the quarter, an increase of 4.9% from the prior quarter. This was primarily due to higher average balances of loans and leases, which more than offset the impact of higher interest expense on deposits, reflecting the rising rate environment. Net interest income on a year-over-year basis increased 5.9%, driven by our ability to replace PPP loans with organic loan growth. On a GAAP basis, our net interest margin was $376, down five basis points from last quarter, but up from the year ago period. Accretion income on acquired loans contributed eight basis points to the margin, slightly down from 10 basis points in the last quarter. PPP, interest, and net fee income combined contributed approximately $746,000 to net interest income compared to $2.7 million last quarter. The yield on loans and leases excluding PPP was $474, up nine basis points from the first quarter. With all of that said, our margin remained strong both in absolute terms and relative to peers, remaining in the top quartile for banks of our size. The NIM performed as we expected in Q2 and as a result of the rising rate environment, our asset-sensitive profile and organic growth, we believe net interest margin excluding accretion and PPP will begin to expand during the second half of 2022. Moving on to slide eight, we believe our asset-sensitive balance sheet positions as well for rising rates. The asset sensitivity is principally driven by our loan portfolio, of which 56% of loans including PPP are variable rates and nearly all of those with floors are currently priced at or above the floor. We estimate that an instant 100 basis point increase in interest rates will result in additional 7.8% increase in net interest income, which to reiterate guidance provided last quarter, every 25 basis point increase would result in approximately $4 million to $5 million of additional net interest income on an annualized basis. We believe with SBA loans repricing in July and rate hikes during this quarter, coupled with floating rate portfolio being repriced going forward, positions as well for future margin expansion. Our loan to deposit ratio increased at quarter end and 96% as a result of deposit fluctuations. We believe the ratio will trend back down to the lower 90s as balance will return from commercial relationships during the quarter. Turning to non-interest income on slide nine. Non-interest income decreased from the prior quarter, primarily due to a negative $4.6 million loan servicing asset revaluation expense, due to higher discount driven by lower premiums on government guaranteed loan sales. We sold $118 million of government guaranteed loans in the second quarter, an increase of 16% linked quarter. The net average premium continued to be strong a 10% during the quarter, which was as expected lower than the first quarter. Our pipeline for government guaranteed loans remain strong and we continue to anticipate premium pressures next quarter due to negative market conditions resulting from higher interest rates and higher government guaranteed inventory levels in the secondary market. Moving on to non-interest expense trends on slide 10. Our non-interest expense was $43.8 million in the second quarter, a decrease of 2% from $44.6 million in the prior quarter. The decrease was primarily attributed to three factors. First, we saw a decrease of $1.3 million in salaries and employee benefits related to lower payroll taxes and higher deferred salary costs related to loan and lease origination. Second, due to higher reimbursements of legal fees; and third, we saw a decrease in occupancy and equipment expense due to the net effects of our branch consolidation and real estate strategies. We remain focused on expenses and continue to look for opportunities to offset the expense pressures as a result of inflation. We are reaffirming our quarterly non-interest expense guidance to trend between $45 million and 47 million. Turning to slide 11, asset quality continues to remain stable, reflecting our diverse portfolio and disciplined risk culture. Our non-performing assets increased 21 basis points to 54 basis points of total assets in the prior quarter, and net charge offs were $2.9 million in the second quarter. Total delinquencies were $15.8 million on June 30th, a 13 million or 46% declines linked quarter, reflecting lower commercial loan delinquencies. Our second quarter allowance increase to $62.4 million from $59.5 million at the end of March and represents 121 basis points of total loans. Reserve build was driven by an increase provision, primarily due to growth in the loan portfolio and higher qualitative factors surrounding the macroeconomic environment and rising interest rates. And while we do not see any broad base signs of deterioration in our portfolio today, we believe that the uncertainty in the economy warrants the current level of allowance coverage. Turning to slide 12, we display our strong capital ratios and return of capital. Through the first six months of the year, we returned approximately 47% of our earnings to stockholders through the common stock dividend and our share repurchase program. We believe our capital ratios position us well to pursue both organic and strategic opportunities, while managing our capital through dividends and opportunistically executing on share repurchases. As previously stated, we want to run our total common equities and tangible asset ratio between 8% to 9%. Our TCE ratio at 8.65% gives us the ability to grow our balance sheet, while utilizing share repurchases and dividends to return capital as needed. With that, for the last time, Alberto back to you.