Arnold Martines
Analyst · Piper Sandler
Thank you, Dayna, and aloha, everyone. We appreciate your interest in Central Pacific Financial Corp. As we normally do, I'll start with an update on the Hawaii market, then I'll turn it over to the team to provide additional detail and insights on our financial and credit metrics as well as other key updates. The wildfire in Lahaina, Maui in August was devastating, and I want to first thank our employees, customers and all of you for your continued support. While it will be a long road to recovery, Maui is strong and resilient. Central Pacific Bank is committed to servicing and supporting our Maui community to the fullest. We were fortunate that our Lahaina branch was unimpacted by the fires and reopened late August, which enabled us to help meet the needs of the community. The Hawaii tourism industry has been affected by the Maui wildfires with a significant drop in visitor arrivals to Maui in August compared to a year ago. With government officials now encouraging visitors back to Maui, we hope the negative impacts will be short lived and Maui visitor counts will return to normal. Fortunately, we continue to see increases in visitors to the other islands, and overall, the Hawaii state economy is expected to have limited impact. In the month of August, a total of 769,000 visitors came to the State of Hawaii, which was down 7% from a year ago and 83% of prepandemic levels. Total visitor spending was $1.58 billion in August, down 9% from a year ago, and up 5% from August 2019. Total statewide hotel occupancy in August was 74%, down 3% from a year ago, with an average daily rate of $370, down 4% from a year ago. Hawaii statewide seasonally adjusted unemployment rate continued to decline to 2.8% in September and is outperforming the national unemployment rate of 3.8%. Year-over-year statewide nonfarm payroll increased by 6,600 jobs or 1.1%. Unemployment claims on May have surged following the fires, but is expected to gradually recede with government leaders focused on supporting businesses and reopening areas of West Maui unaffected by the fires to help start the -- restart the island's economy. Real estate values in Hawaii continue to hold up firmly. The Oahu median single family home price remains at $1.1 million and the median condo sales price was $533,000 in September. While home sales volumes continue to be down year-over-year, there is still strong demand and limited inventory with properties staying on the market for a median of 20 days. 47% of single family homes sold at or above original asking price in September, an indication of the sustained demand and strength of Hawaii real estate despite mortgage rates reaching levels higher than we've seen in the last 20 years. Strong construction activity in Hawaii continues to drive economic growth. Our governor recently issued an emergency proclamation on housing that will help accelerate housing development to address the lack of inventory and affordable housing in the state. Additionally, major infrastructure improvement projects as well as large federal military projects continue to be on the roadmap for the state. On top of this, Maui reconstruction efforts will be a priority and the state will need to balance construction worker demand and a likely increase in construction costs. In the third quarter, we continue our focus on growing relationship based deposits and I'm pleased that we were once again successful in growing total deposits. As part of our strong risk management focus, we continue to moderate loan growth. But with that said, our loan portfolio churn is resulting in favorable repricing and deposit costs continue to be managed at levels lower than our peers. I'll now turn the call over to David Morimoto, our Chief Financial Officer. David?