Bill Burns
Analyst · Piper Sandler. Please proceed
Okay. Thank you, Frank and good morning everyone. It was another great quarter for ConnectOne and I am happy to report that we are finally getting some recognition in terms of stock price performance stock prices up recent about 10% more than our peers, but I still believe we're undervalued. I base that view on our current earnings, our expected growth rate and our strategic plans to capitalize on the, this evolving financial services industry. And as you saw in today's release, we announced a couple of capital actions. First, we raised our dividend again the second this year by another $0.02. Naturally this reflects the board's confidence in our future earnings, but also reflects the fact that our dividend pay ratio is very low and a bit out of step with the peer group. And even with this increase, the pay ratio is below 20%. So there is room for more increases in the future. Now we are aware of the differing views out there, our dividends, but all things considered. We think this move makes sense, given our strong profitability and high return on tangible common equity. Secondly, our board just upped our stock. We purchased authority by two million shares or about 5% of outstanding shares. The non-cumulative preferred we just issued in August gave us added flexibility to establish a purchase plan. Capital ratios are strong and the target levels there are based on a host of factors. Those include growth earnings estimates as well as considerations for risk, but we presently have a cushion going forward. We're going to take into consideration these factors as well as our valuation on any given day, but bottom line, we stand ready to be aggressive when the timing is right. So now in terms of our core profitability for the quarter, as Frank was talking to our PPN, R increased significantly both sequentially by 7%. And from a year ago, by 17% to 2.2%, 3% of assets, that's a very, very strong metric, I was happy when we were over 2%, five quarters ago, and since then we've increased that metric every quarter. The main driver of the increase this time was then interest income growth, which we achieved through a combination of strong loan originations and margin expansion, average loans, growth, and annualized rate of 13%, which includes the negative impact of PPP forgiveness. So if you exclude the PPP our loan portfolio grow an annualized rate in excess of 20%, and then our margin, it widened by more than 10 basis points to 3.73%. And let give you some color there. You, we continue to see improvement in both our cost of funds and deposit mix. As CDs repriced, we continue to grow core deposits. Meanwhile, the match funded spread originations remains favorable, I'd say above 3%. However, the margin for the quarter was aid by two non-core items. One was an acceleration of PPP fee accretion due as unexpected forgiveness that added about an extra 1 million to the quarter's net interest income. And the other was the recovery of back interest. We collected upon the resolution of a non accrual loan. That was another 600,000 want to make one more point on the PPP. I think there is a misconception that PPP is adding to margin on a recurring basis. P PPP loan yields typically average below 3 25 per quarter, as they run off, we more than make up for it with new originations. What happened this quarter is we needed to accelerate the creation of fees, which temporally increased the yield on this small portfolio for the quarter. So without those items, I just mentioned the core margin was still wider, but probably just a few days basis points, not the 10 basis points on a gap basis. Let me get some color on non-interest income. The non-interest income line was down slightly sequentially as the second quarter concluded some non-recurring PPP referral income coming out of Boly. However, the underlying trend for our noninterest income was positive across the board. Frank mentioned this as well. Our SBA lending initiative continues to accelerate CRA loan sales continue to hold pace. And the outlook is for continued momentum. We have more and more small banks lacking the original capability of ConnectOne. And at both fly, we are seeing accelerating traffic and traction increased core revenues from that platform. Let me turn to OPEX for the quarter. Our efficiency ratio remained at a sub 40% level, and that was even with operating expenses increasing by 7% sequentially as was anticipated. As I alerted you to this on last quarter's earnings call most of the increase was related to the hiring along with experienced support staff. The staff count was up 5% from our quarter investment will support our continued organic growth and like others, we too are filling the effects of wage inflation, but whether or not wage inflation pressures continue, we will continue to reward our employees with superior individual performance. And we want them to share in the overall success of ConnectOne now, a little on credit metrics overall underlying credit quality remains strong. We did have a slight uptick in nauticals and TDRs that NCR increase was largely due to two isolated credits that we have deemed to be impaired, but they are not delinquent. They are current. And my expectation is by expectation is that the aggregate NCRs will decrease over the next couple of quarters. TDRs those increase as expected. And I did mention it last earnings call. These included a small handful of loans that were deferred under the cares act and are better served going forward with slightly relaxed terms. They are now performing under restructured terms and speaking of deferred loans, that total is now down to just 10 loans aggregating just 10 million, as far as loan loss provisioning. Many banks are still really leasing reserves while we have a small group adding, we had significant non PPP loan growth, and that was the driving factor for the very modest provision of 1 million for the quarter. Let me get into some guidance that I can feel comfortable giving you guys loan pipeline remains strong. So the fourth quarter is the likely to be similar to the past two quarters in terms of lung growth. I think it's a little early to project 2022, but, and I expect things to slow down a bit, but we still feel comfortable with approximately 10% growth, right next year, maybe a little more, maybe a little less the core margin this quarter was in the 360 to 365 range. And I spec some compression from that level. Maybe a few basis points per quarter in terms of expense growth. We might see just a modest uptick for the rest of this year. Not as big as the SCR increase we had this quarter next year could be more challenging. The labor markets are tight, there is wage inflation, but we will continue invest in our people technology and our overall infrastructure. So I definitely think a 40% efficiency ratio is certainly achievable hope we can do a little better than that. And then finally, just with regard to the tax rate a little bit higher than the street at estimated, just given the increased level of taxable income and our expected growth. I do see the tax rate increasing modestly over time. And before we get the questions, I'll turn it back over to Frank for closing comment.