Samvir Sidhu
Analyst · Piper Sandler
Thanks, Jay. Good morning, everyone. In the first quarter of 2023, we earned $1.55 in GAAP EPS on net income of $50.3 million. From a profitability perspective, our ROA was 1.03% and ROE was 16%. On Slide 6, you can see we generated $1.58 of core EPS on net income of $51.1 million. Our earnings were positively impacted by $9.6 million or $0.30 of EPS attributable to PPP resulting in core EPS ex PPP of $1.28. Importantly, given the successful significant rundown of the PPP loan portfolio in the quarter, this will be the last quarter that we will be formally separating financial metrics adjusted for PPP. Our net interest margin in the quarter was 2.96%. After backing out the positive impact of PPP, our net interest margin was 2.80%. Our NIM was negatively impacted by holding conservatively higher cash balances, which Carla will provide additional commentary on further along in the presentation. From a balance sheet perspective, both our loans and deposits were relatively flat in the quarter. This was consistent with our disciplined approach of moderating loan growth and focusing on remixing our funding base into higher quality, lower cost deposits in 2023. The overall balance sheet did grow in the quarter by approximately 4% and attributable to these higher cash balances as we fortified the balance sheet with robust levels of liquidity. Credit remained benign with a flat level of NPAs at 15 basis points and NPLs of $32 million. As Jay mentioned, reserve levels remained robust at north of 400% of NPLs. Credit quality continues to be a strength of our company. Moving to Slide 7, on deposit franchise. Our focused efforts to improve our deposit franchise in the nimbleness of our balance sheet paid dividend during the recent market stress events. From February 28 to March 31, total deposit were down about $150 million or less than 1%. in the first 2 months of the quarter we had proactively run off some rate sensitive deposits. In aggregate for the quarter our total deposits ended down $430 million or about 2%. Despite the industry headwinds we experienced the meaningful positive mix shift from interest-bearing to noninterest-bearing DDAs resulting in the addition of $1.6 billion of noninterest-bearing deposits by quarter end. This positive mix shift drove our spot cost of deposit down by 14 basis points quarter-over-quarter despite the 2 rate hikes. Well positioned us from margin expansion going forward. At the end of the first quarter we had approximately 81% of our deposits either in short or collateralized. This is second highest among regional bank peers and one of the highest in the industry overall. Clients that were focused on increasing their level of insured deposits with us were able to take advantage of our ICS suite product, which allowed us to reassure them. we set up a smart team that worked around the clock to help our client to open up accounts within hours of request. I'm incredibly proud of the work that team put forth opening up several hundred accounts representing $900,000 from March 10 to March 31 alone. In addition to the stability that insured deposits provide for further stability we have also been focused on ensuring the portion of our deposit base always has contractual term. At the end of the first quarter about half of our deposits had term with laddered maturity schedule over the next few years. Pivoting to lending franchise on Slide 8, we have executed on what we guided you together in terms of our loan portfolio composition and growth. We continued to emphasis our low-to-no credit risk lending verticals which have driven the vast majority of our growth for several quarters in mainly variable rate and shorter duration loans. This has positioned our balance sheet well, especially in the current environment from an interest rate risk and asset and liability management perspective, as I mentioned earlier, we have had minimal originations of fixed rate loans for investment since the second quarter of 2022. The focus on variable rate lending has resulted in our loan yield, excluding PPP increasing by over 130 basis points over the last 2 quarters. As previously guided, the pace of our loan growth was intentionally slowed as we continued to focus on improving capital levels and profitability. We've prudently operated our balance sheet at about an 80% loan-to-deposit ratio for the last 4 quarters, ensuring that we have adequate liquidity given the uncertainty in both the stability and pricing of the deposit market. Moving to Slide 9. As I mentioned earlier, I'm thrilled to announce that this will be the last quarter where PPP will be significant enough of our P&L that we will be providing financial metrics, including and excluding PPP. I'm sure the analysts listen in are just as grateful for their models and reports. PPP was a phenomenal program that enabled small businesses across the country to withstand the many challenges of the pandemic. Customers Bank is proud that we were able to assist both existing and many new clients of the bank across access much needed funds during the pandemic. Using our unique combination of technological expertise and SBA experience, Customers Bank was able to deliver for small businesses and our shareholders throughout this program. As a reminder, to recap Customers Bank participated in over 350,000 PPP loans for over $10.3 billion and associated origination fees from PPP generated about $350 million in pretax revenue for the bank in addition to net interest income over the past few years. I want to personally again, thank all of the Customers Bank employees that dedicated their time to ensuring PPP was a success for our clients, our shareholders, the bank and the entire country. On Slide 10, you can see our securities portfolio is truly best-in-class. Before I pass it over to Carla to walk us through more specifics around the financials, I want to provide some context as to how Customers Bank is positioned relative to regional banking peers from an interest rate risk perspective. Interest rate risk management is sometimes overlooked, but the events of the last month have reinforced the importance of remaining vigilant and disciplined. We have been proactively monitoring our interest rate risk position throughout the hike cycle without taking undue credit risk by repositioning to floating rate securities, we've generated approximately 2x the yield on securities relative to regional bank peers. Even more importantly, we've been able to generate that return by taking on only 1/3 of the duration risk that regional bank peers have exposed themselves to. The graph on the left plots yield against duration. We are on the very top left of the graph, highlighting a high book yield of 4.9% and the shortest duration at just 1.5 years. This is well above peers. Many of the challenged institutions covered in the recent news would have appeared in the very right bottom right of the graph with low yield and long duration. Said differently, our securities book is the best positioned of all regional banks and likely the banking industry. I want to thank the finance and treasury team led by our incredibly experienced Treasurer, Dan Park, for all of us being forward thinking and delivering these phenomenal results. As you can imagine, pointing out the strengths of our bond portfolio was an incredibly critical communication tool with clients last month. With that, I'd like to pass the presentation to Carla to provide additional details on the financials, starting on Slide 11.