Derek Shelnutt
Analyst · Hovde Group. Please go ahead
Thanks Heath. To start [Technical Difficulty] footprint. Our deposit growth was primarily in interest bearing accounts and we are still seeing some shifting from DDA to interest bearing MMA, or money market accounts, and CDs. However, we did manage to grow non-interest bearing deposits by about $3 million quarter-over-quarter. And then taking a look at our uninsured and adjusted uninsured deposits, they remained relatively flat quarter-over-quarter, and that's indicated on slide 21 in the investor presentation. In terms of liquidity, we continue to maintain a strong position with access to various sources of liquidity, and that's outlined on slide 15 in the investor presentation. During the quarter, cash increased over $72 million to a total of $155 million, which represents roughly 5% of assets. We did not have any outstanding overnight borrowings at the end of the quarter, nor have we used the banks -- the Feds Bank Term Funding Program. Total FHLB advances declined $10 million during the quarter, which reduced our overall level of debt funding. Moving onto take a look at our AOCI. We went from about $60 million at the end of the previous quarter to just under $63 million at the end of this quarter, which is a little bit of an increase that's primarily driven by the move in interest rates that we've seen over that time period. Slide 25 gives an overview of our investment portfolio composition. We aren't seeing any credit concerns in the investment portfolio at this time. Over half of our portfolio is agency or government guaranteed with the biggest portion of the portfolio being high quality municipal securities. We haven't seen any rating downgrades or credit issues with our munis that would cause any concerns at this point. And our private label mortgage-backed securities and our corporate, which includes some bank sub debt are still performing well from a credit perspective. From an earnings perspective, we saw an increase of EPS from $0.29 last quarter to $0.30 this quarter. On an operating basis, EPS was up to $0.33 this quarter compared to $0.31 in the previous quarter. Non-interest income was up about $1.3 million from the prior quarter, with most of that increase coming from our mortgage division. Earning asset yields increased 20 basis points to 4.43%, but interest bearing liabilities increased by 57 basis points, which led to margin decline of 30 basis points to 2.7% for the quarter. Provision expense was $200,000 for the quarter and under CECL, expected credit losses on unfunded commitments are recognized when the commitment is made and those expected losses, they sit on the balance sheet as a liability. And so, our loan commitment activity quarter-over-quarter has slowed in that balance on those unfunded loan commitments has decreased. And as some of those are funded, it kind of shifted over to funded loans. And so, what we've seen also is some kind of re-class from what was provisioned in the previous time periods for those unfunded commitments. And as those loans are funded, that kind of moves over to the allowance account. So that's a -- we didn't have to re-provision for those funded loans that had already been provisioned for. We did see an increase in nonperforming assets of about $4.1 million in the quarter. Of this, $2.3 million was related to the repurchase of the guarantee portion of non-performing SBA loans, which will be ultimately repaid by the SBA. And then I'd like to take a moment to talk more about the margin and what we're seeing and kind of what we expect going forward. The decline in margin was primarily due to the increase in the cost of our interest bearing liabilities exceeding the increase that we're seeing in our earning asset yields. The increase in interest bearing liabilities is primarily deposit cost and it's driven by higher rates in the market with stronger competition for deposits. So, what we've done is on the funding side, we have extended a portion of our FHLB advances out longer to take advantage of the curve and that should help with some of the short-term sensitivity that we're seeing in funding costs. And then also, we've hedged a portion of our short-term borrowings by entering into some interest rate swaps. These swaps were near the end of the quarter, so we expect that benefit starting in the third quarter, and we should see savings on that interest expense of approximately $500,000 a year due to the initial positive carry on those swaps. At the end of the quarter, our cost of interest bearing deposits was close to 1.88%. But we've seen that increase starting to slow down from earlier in the quarter. Competition for deposits remained elevated, but there is some slowing down in our markets that we're starting to see. We feel like this is going to help provide some stability and ultimately kind of slow that outpacing difference between our liabilities and our earning assets. Our current assumptions indicate we should see margin at this level or maybe slightly lower over the next couple of quarters, and then start to move up from there. Continued deposit mix changes may drive the margin down some more, but we expect those mix changes to be less or slow down from what we've seen in the first half of the year. On non-interest expenses, non-interest expenses were up about $267,000 from the first quarter, variable commission based compensation expenses for our non-interest income lines of business increased about $0.5 million in the second quarter. But to T's point earlier, that was offset by the increase in non-interest income. We did have net severance expenses in the quarter of $635,000, which was up a little over $200,000 from the previous quarter. These severance expenses were related to a reduction in force that occurred during the second quarter. This initiative led to the reduction of 23 full-time employees and is expected to have an annual cost savings of about $2.5 million going forward. Net non-interest expense to assets was 165 -- 1.65% in the second quarter, which is down 21 basis points from 1.86% in the first quarter. On an operating basis, the second quarter net NIE was 1.58%. Our expected run rate on non-interest expenses going forward is around or slightly under $20 million per quarter and we continued our disciplined approach to expenses and manage that alongside our commitment to invest in areas that add value over the long-term. And with that, I think I hand it over to D to talk more about those business lines.
Dallis “D” Copeland: Thanks Derek. On the commercial side of the bank, as Heath mentioned, we did grow loans about 9% at an annualized rate. That is lower than we had been, but probably a little higher than we would see on the forecast going forward. That slowdown in growth is expected to continue throughout the remainder of the year. Page 14 in our earnings release details our loan growth by each of the markets. So, feel free to look at that. We still have solid asset quality, particularly in the commercial real estate portfolio, where the level of non-performing assets loans are still very low. Slide 22 in the investor presentation gives a breakdown of our loan portfolio, and slide 24 gives further details on our office portfolio, which we believe is very conservative. We feel comfortable with our office portfolio, and we aren't seeing any signs of credit concerns there. It is of note that we do not have any high rise office buildings and the majority of buyers are one or one or 2 story buildings. So, we feel good about that portfolio. Deposits, as mentioned, quarter-over-quarter grew 4.4%, 77% of that growth was in core deposits. As Derek mentioned, our non-interest bearing deposits were slightly up for the quarter. On slide 19, you can see our growth in deposits. Our referrals and our deposit pipeline are both strong. So, we expect to see continued growth in deposits and in new customer relationships. I'll talk a little bit about the complementary lines of business. Production in our SBSL group increased in the second quarter. As you can see, indicated in slide eight of the presentation. So, we're pleased with that performance in the rate environment, and they continue to remain profitable. I think one thing to note is in that production, we do see a larger portion of that production being in construction, which ends up being a positive as we're able to -- for the future as those are completed, and we're able to sell the guaranteed portion in the future. Mortgage, slide nine shows our mortgage production for the quarter, which was up about $44 million from the first quarter. Mortgage was profitable in the second quarter. And as we always like to see, we had more secondary market mix relative to the previous quarters, which was a positive. On slide seven, it provides details on some of the start-up lines of business. First, I'll touch on Alabama. We still have a lot of opportunity in our Alabama market. Our team is doing well over there. We had 8% growth, and we -- from a loan standpoint, we are just over $44 million there. We continue to move towards profitability as we grow those loans. The pipeline is still strong. And -- but I did want to touch base that as part of our efficiency efforts, we have decided to pull back in Alabama on the lending team and focus primarily on Birmingham as opposed to burning him and Huntsville. By doing this, it will allow us to be profitable more quickly in Alabama, but still provides us great growth opportunities in this environment and in the future. RV and Marine, was a very solid quarter. For the RV and Marine Group as we entered into the spring of the buying season, loans grew $15 million for the quarter. There's still a lot of demand in this space. Page 14 in the earnings release shows a breakdown of volumes for Marine and RV. Marine/RV, we are glad to say turn profitable at the end of the quarter and we expect to see this profitability on a go-forward basis. The other one I'll touch on would be merchant services. We can continue to see improvement in merchant services. We see a lot of referral -- internal referrals from the group. Our processing volume continues to grow every month. We expect to see that continue, and we would expect to see that be profitable during the second half of the year and then continuing to grow as a solid profitability in that business line. With that, I'll turn it back over to Heath.