Avinash Reddy
Analyst · Raymond James. Your line is now open
Thank you, Stu. Reported EPS was $0.41 per share in line with our expectations, the NIM bottomed in January and expanded to 2.23% in the month of March. The exit NIM would have been even higher by around three basis points, had we not carried some excess liquidity in February and March, as a precaution given the disruption caused, by a large regional bank in our footprint. We normalized our liquidity position, towards the middle to the end of March, and as such, the second quarter should not have this liquidity-related drag going forward. We are cognizant of the overall environment, and continue to manage expenses prudently. Our focus is on being as efficient as possible. Core cash operating expenses for the first quarter, excluding intangible amortization and extinguishment of debt was $51.7 million, or down 3% versus the prior quarter. Non-interest income for the first quarter was $10.5 million. This included a gain on the sale of a branch that we did a sale lease back on. We had a $5 million loan loss provision this quarter. The allowance to loans increased to 71 basis points. In light of the overall environment, our posture as it relates to the balance sheet, is to build capital methodically. This will in turn, support our clients when they need it. Our common equity Tier 1 ratio improved to 10%, which is an optically important benchmark in our mind. Our reported total capital ratio was 13.8%. Incorporating the full impact of AOCI, it would have been 13%. As you know, the focus these days is on capital with the AOCI impact. And in this regard, compared to banks between $10 million and $100 million of assets, our total capital ratio inclusive of AOCI of 13%, would put us in the top one-third of our peers. Next, I'll provide some updated thoughts on our expense guide for 2024. For those who follow Dime closely, in 2023, we were able to absorb the cost of the new deposit gathering groups into our organization, along with the addition of various corporate staff to support them, by rationalizing expenses across the organization. As part of our 2023 efforts, we significantly expanded our treasury management and back-office staff and intentionally built the bank for future expansion. As a result, we don't expect any meaningful additional staffing in corporate support areas, to support the new hires we have made in 2024. Said differently, any expense build in 2024, is primarily for revenue-generating staff that is expected to pay for itself relatively quickly. At the start of the year, we had guided to a range of $210 million to $212 million of core non-interest expense ex intangible amortization. We are now increasing the guide to a range of $214 million to $216 million. This represents the cost of all the new groups hired to-date, and is net of the benefits of additional bank-wide efficiency initiatives, we have planned for 2024. On a stand-alone gross basis, we expect the new group hires to begin generating pretax income, by the third quarter and be cumulatively breakeven, inclusive of all the start-up costs in the fourth quarter. Starting in 2025, they will contribute to growth in earnings and book value per share, versus our prior stand-alone numbers without the 2024 new hires. With respect to our positioning on lending, our strategy is to ensure we continue to support our key clients, and we continue to see growth in our business lending portfolio. Growth in the business portfolio will offset declines in multifamily and CRE, where we are still servicing existing relationships. On an aggregate basis, we expect loans year-over-year to be up in the low single-digits. With that, I'll turn the call back to Marvin, and we'll be happy to take your questions.