Bill Burns
Analyst · Stephens. Please go ahead
Okay. Thank you, Frank. Good morning, everyone. So there continues to be a tremendous amount of excitement and optimism here at ConnectOne. Frank just mentioned, we've been focusing our resources on accelerating organic growth. At the same time, we are bracing technology and making investments in progress on several fronts. But even with that increased investment and the associated additional expense, we continue to produce superior financial metrics with stability across the board. The PPNR as a percent of average assets actually exceeded 2.15 for the fourth consecutive quarter. Our return on tangible common equity again exceeded 15% and that was without the benefit of any reserve releases. Our efficiency ratio for the quarter was 38.7%, and that's improved from just slightly above 40% in the prior year first quarter. Our net interest income contracted by just 4 basis points, but remained above 3.70, near historic highs for ConnectOne. And tangible book value per share increased by 2%. The fact that our tangible book value increased while most of the industry saw decreases was due to a disciplined approach to securities investments during the low-rate environment of the pandemic. We chose to stay out of the market and let securities run down. Combined it with that, we were effective at hedging most of the existing portfolio. And really behind all of this is the strong organic loan growth we maintained at good spreads, which enabled the investment discipline and hedging strategies I just mentioned. I just want to -- one more point here. All of our securities are in the available-for-sale category. So complete transparency there. There's no hiding in the fair value adjustment. So, all in all, ConnectOne is faring quite well in a rising rate environment. The NIM remains high, and we continue to grow per share book value. Now let me turn to the income statement and give you guys some color. Net interest income was flat sequentially. That's -- that I expected, but was up a significant 15% from the first quarter of last year. Average loans for the quarter grew by 10% from the year ago quarter. And combined with that, the margin expanded by 15 basis points over the past year. In terms of the net interest margin, just to repeat, our margin has been expanding throughout the pandemic and today remains at or near historic highs, and we continue to originate loans at favorable rates and spreads on the asset side are improving in my view. Loan origination for the quarter was an average weighted rate of about 3.8%. But based on our pipeline indications, our origination yields to be above 4% for the second quarter, could be as high as 4.5%. Our dynamic modeling continues to show asset sensitivity. And although I expect the margin to remain relatively flat for the remaining 9 months of the year, I just want to remain cautious with respect to any guidance as we are seeing competition for deposits heating up. Now let me turn to our noninterest income. This line item came in lighter than I expected and the Street expected. But most of that was due to a valuation charge against the CRA fund that we hold. So, excluding that valuation charge because of the rise in interest rates, we were about $300,000 to $400,000 below expectations. BoeFly had a good quarter. They recorded fees in excess of $400,000. The franchisers utilizing this platform have increased significantly over the past few quarters. So, I can't promise exactly what that will translate into, but the trend is clearly positive. Gains on sales loans were down. Some of that was residential and some of the decline was commercial. And I've mentioned this before that there will be some volatility in gains on sale numbers. But my expectation with the rest of '22 is for that number to increase from the first quarter levels. And just one last item, and there's going to be some additional BOLI in this quarter. So we're going to probably add about $200,000 per quarter going forward. Turning to expenses, we grew 4% sequentially. As I did indicate in the last call, most of that increase is on the comp line, that reflects new hires, salary increases, wage inflation, and the assertive stance we've been taking to both add to and retain our team. A couple of other items I want to mention. These two things, special items essentially offset one another. There was an additional earn-out charge for the BoeFly acquisition. And that was offset by a favorable lease termination. That was something we had written off at a higher level as a merger charge in the Bank of New Jersey deal. In terms of any additional future BoeFly charges, we've still got a little to go later this year, but it's under $1 million, and that would be the last of any expense associated with both BoeFly earnout. Also wanted to make you aware that we reorganized the OpEx section of the financials. So, we have now one line item that now essentially is technology expense. I think that will be helpful and add some transparency going forward. I want to add our operations and tech teams have done a great job of strategic spending on technology, but they’ve also reduced the cost of core and legacy systems. Going forward, I think some of the same trends will continue, quarterly sequential growth in expenses probably in the 2% range. I will give you guys an update on that after the second quarter. I just want to talk a little bit about CECL provisioning. Many banks released reserves in the quarter, while others added modest amounts. We were in that latter category, adding a small amount of reserves, $1.5 million. The reserving first reflected loan growth, but it also reflected that we made some minor qualitative adjustments to our CECL model, and that reflects an expectation that economic forecast could trend in a negative direction. Keep in mind, these are macro forecasts. It is not an indication at all of credit quality here at ConnectOne. Our nonaccrual assets have declined for the second straight quarter, while delinquencies and charge-offs remain very, very low. Before turning back to Frank, I want to add a couple of things. Look, we are very optimistic about performance in 2022. Strong loan growth is anticipated and marginal pressure is likely to be moderate. We are building noninterest income at both lien through SBA and CRE loan sales. Expenses do continue to grow to support our growing businesses and the investments that Frank's been highlighting. But as always, we aim to grow revenues faster and then expenses. And just wrap up with final [indiscernible] comments. Given the strength of our earnings and capital position, we have a great deal of financial flexibility. First, we have the capital to support double-digit organic growth. Along with that, there's still room for continued dividend increases and share repurchases. And as always, although our strength is organic growth, we continue to opportunistically explore growth through M&A. As you know, deals are hard to come by, but we have a track record of being financially disciplined, and we are going to stick to that. And with that, I will turn it back to Frank.