Ronald Farnsworth
Analyst · Piper Sandler
Okay. Thank you, Clint. We reported second quarter EPS of $0.70 and operating EPS of $0.69 per share, and our operating return on tangible equity was 16%, while the operating PPNR was $221 million. Please refer to the non-GAAP reconciliations provided at the end of our earnings release and presentation for details related to our calculation of operating metrics. On the balance sheet, we maintained our target interest-bearing cash levels of approximately $1.5 billion. As Clint mentioned, loans declined $200 million in the quarter, driven mostly by reduced transactional loans and deposits in total were flat. Within deposits, we saw the seasonal increase in noninterest-bearing DDA, along with strong customer interest bearing deposit growth and utilize the excess to reduce broker deposits by $635 million or 20%, along with reducing term borrowings $0.25 billion. Within investments, the increase in available-for-sale investments was market value driven as the bond market rallied during the quarter. The locked out structure of the portfolio, combined with this rally led to the 50% reduction in our accumulated other comprehensive loss, adding $1.06 or 6% to our tangible book value per share. Overall, tangible book value per share increased 10% to $17.81. Our net interest margin was stable at 3.56% in Q3 and on the upper end of our estimated range of 3.45% to 3.60%. Our interest-bearing deposit costs declined to 2.95% for Q3. Given the Fed's 50 basis point cut late in the quarter, it may help to compare the month of September to the month of June. Our month of September interest-bearing deposit costs was 2.90%, down 10 basis points from 3% in June. More importantly, the spot cost as of September 30 was 2.74%, down 26 basis points from the month of June. This represents a beta of 52% in a very short period of time. Now I want to thank all of our bankers and support professionals for their timely work with customers on reducing deposit rates. It was great to see the speed with which they worked, and it is reflective of a relationship banking strategy, where our customers bank with us for the value our bankers provide, not just rate. Absent any further Fed moves down, we expect continued reductions in our interest-bearing deposit costs in Q4 given the term structure on time deposit repricing and wholesale funding, along with continued expected reductions in wholesale funding balances. Our projected interest rate sensitivity under both ramp and shock scenarios remains in a liability-sensitive position. And we expect our rates down deposit betas to approximate those experienced on the way up. Our slide deck includes enhanced repricing and maturity disclosure including details on over $8 billion in customer CDs and wholesale funding that matures over the next 6 months. Our provision for credit loss was $29 million for the quarter. The portion related to our leasing portfolio declined again as expected this quarter to $16 million. Our overall allowance for credit loss remains robust, increasing to 1.17% of total loans or 1.34% when including the remaining credit discount. Total GAAP expense for the quarter was $271 million, while operating expense was $268 million. In Q2, we had the restructuring charge, along with the nonrecurring credit. So our operating expense of $268 million for Q3 was lower than the $270 million normalized level in Q2 and $287 million in Q1, reflecting continued achievement of our efficiency initiatives. The Q3 level, excluding CD amortization annualizes at $957 million. Clint mentioned our reinvestment plans earlier, which will increase our quarterly operating expense, including -- excluding CD amortization into the annualized range of $965 million to $985 million. We expect continued annual inflation of approximately 3% on top of our expected Q4 exit range, inclusive of items such as the typical Q1 payroll tax increase, a 7% increase in health insurance costs and the annual merit cycle for the end of Q1. We'll always work to find additional efficiencies to help offset these pressures and enable continued franchise reinvestment. Now I'll close with commentary about our regulatory capital position. Our risk-based capital ratios increased as expected in Q3 and are now all above our long-term target levels. We expect capital ratios to continue to build which will provide enhanced future allocation flexibility. With that, I will now turn the call over to Frank.