R. Rosato
Analyst · factors. These factors are described in the company's earnings press release and most recent 10-K filed with the SEC. Any forward-looking statements made represents management's views and estimates as of today, and the company undertakes no obligation to update these statements because of new information or future events. The company will also discuss both GAAP and certain non-GAAP financial measures. For reconciliations, please refer to the company's earnings press release. I'd now like to turn the call over to Denis Sheahan, Eastern Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Denis, and good morning, everyone. I'll begin on Slide 3 of the presentation. The first quarter marked a solid start to the year and was mostly in line with our expectations. We reported net income of $65.3 million or $0.29 per diluted share. Included in net income was $30.8 million of nonoperating costs, mostly related to the Harbor One merger. On an operating basis, earnings were $88.6 million or $0.40 per diluted share. While operating earnings decreased 6% linked quarter, they were up 31% year-over-year reflecting the enhanced earnings power of the company. Looking at Slide 4. We are pleased with the continued strength of our profitability metrics while operating ROA of 117 basis points and return on average tangible common equity of 12.8% were down from Q4. Both metrics improved from a year ago when operating ROA was 109 basis points and operating return on average tangible common equity was 11.7%. We remain focused on driving sustainable growth and profitability. Moving to the margin on Slide 5. Net interest income of $244.7 million or $250.8 million on an FTE basis increased 3% from Q4. The growth was driven by margin improvement due to lower cost of funds, partially offset by $3.1 million of lower net discount accretion, which totaled $19.5 million compared to $22.6 million in the prior quarter. Excluding accretion, net interest income increased approximately 5%. As you all know, quarterly accretion income can be lumpy. Looking ahead, we expect accretion to average $21 million to $22 million per quarter. In Q1, accretion of $19.5 million was about $2 million below trend. The net interest margin expanded 2 basis points linked quarter to $3.63. The improvement was driven by a 16 basis point reduction in interest-bearing and liability costs, reflecting improved deposit pricing. This more than offset a 7 basis point decline in yield on interest-earning assets, primarily due to lower loan yields, partially offset by higher security yields. Net discount accretion contributed 28 basis points to the margin compared to 34 basis points in Q4. Excluding the impact of accretion, the margin expanded approximately 8 basis points from the fourth quarter, highlighting the underlying strength of our core margin performance. We have included a new disclosure report on the repricing characteristics of our interest-earning assets on Page 18 in the appendix. Excluding the impact of cash flow hedges, which are in runoff mode, $1 billion or approximately 35% of our total loan portfolio is floating at current rates. The remaining $14.9 billion is comprised of variable and fixed rate loans of $4.1 billion and $10.8 billion, respectively. The time buckets reflect the dollar value of any repricing or cash flow events for the portfolio, including projected prepayments based on the forward yield curve. We have also disclosed the projected yields as assets run off the balance sheet, inclusive of purchase accounting. Current loan origination yields are 5.75% to 6% for commercial, 5.5% to 6% for residential, and HELOCs are indexed to prime. Excluding floating rate loans, we expect approximately $2.8 billion of turnover for repricing over the next 3 years. Based on current origination yields, this activity is expected to be accretive to NII and margin. For the securities portfolio, we expect approximately $1.5 billion of principal cash flow in the next 3 years at a weighted average book yield of 2.86%. Again, this cash flow will be accretive to NII and margin. Turning to Slide 6. Noninterest income for the quarter was $43.6 million, a decrease of $2.5 million compared to the fourth quarter. On an operating basis, noninterest income was $45.1 million, down $1.6 million. The largest contributor contribute to the variance was a $1.9 million loss on investments related to employee retirement benefits, reflecting weaker equity market performance. This compares to $1.7 million in income for the prior quarter, resulting in a $3.6 million quarter-over-quarter reduction in noninterest income. The unfavorable impact on income was partially offset by a $1.2 million improvement and related benefit costs reported in noninterest expense. Conversely, noninterest income benefited from a $2.9 million increase in miscellaneous income and fees. Primarily driven by a $1.7 million gain on the sale of commercial loans. This gain is related to a Harbor One loan workout that resulted in a note sale above our remaining fair value mark. Turning to Slide 7, we highlight Wealth Management, which is our primary fee business and accounts for more than 40% of noninterest income. Wealth assets increased to a record $10.3 billion, including AUM of $9.8 billion, driven by strong positive net flows. We're particularly pleased with this performance given that weaker equity market conditions during the quarter created headwinds for asset values, yet we were still able to deliver growth. underscoring the strength of our client relationships and full-service capabilities. Fees decreased modestly from the fourth quarter, but increased nearly 12% from a year ago primarily driven by strong growth in assets. Moving to Slide 8. Noninterest expense was $198.6 million, an increase of $9.2 million compared to the fourth quarter. The increase was primarily driven by seasonal costs and a full quarter of Harbor One operating expenses, partially offset by lower nonoperating costs. On an operating basis, noninterest expense was $167.9 million, up $11.8 million from the prior quarter. The increase reflects seasonally higher payroll and benefit-related costs as well as the full quarter impact of Fiber One. The largest contributors to the quarter-over-quarter increase were salaries and benefits of $10.6 million. Occupancy and equipment costs increased $2.1 million and technology and data processing expenses rose $1.2 million. These increases were partially offset by a $2.2 million reduction in professional services expense. Nonoperating noninterest expense of $30.8 million decreased $2.6 million, primarily due to $1.8 million of lower merger-related costs and $800,000 lower other nonoperating expenses. As a reminder, the first quarter typically represents a seasonally high point for expenses, and we expect a moderation in the quarterly expense run rate over the remainder of 2026. Importantly, with the completion of the Harbor One core system conversion in February, we remain on track to achieve the projected merger cost savings. Moving to the balance sheet, starting with deposits on Slide 9. As expected, balances declined from year-end. Deposits finished the quarter at $25.1 billion, down $366 million or 1.4%, primarily due to seasonal outflows at elevated competition for deposits. In addition, $81 million of Harbor One's broker deposits matured in Q1. Total deposit costs decreased 13 basis points to 1.46% and primarily driven by lower costs and time deposits and money market accounts. We are committed to increasing deposits to support our loan growth strategies. The New England deposit environment remains competitive, and we are taking targeted actions to ensure our offerings are appropriately positioned to defend and grow share. While these efforts will result in some upward pressure on costs, we remain focused on balancing growth of our high-quality deposit base with that of the margin. Notably, retention of Harbor One deposits has been consistent with our expectations. Turning to Slide 10. Total loans declined modestly from year-end, consistent with our expectations. Period-end balances were down $187 million or less than 1%. The decrease was driven in part by nonperforming loan resolutions of $35 million and commercial real estate payoffs. We are pleased C&I continue to be a source of growth with balances increasing $49 million or 1.1% from year-end. We finished the quarter with record commercial pipeline of approximately $800 million. which gives us confidence in strong origination activity in the coming quarters and supports a favorable growth outlook as we move through the year. We continue to benefit from the strategic investments we have made in hiring talent and our differentiation in the market. We can deliver the breadth and products and services typically associated with much larger banks by retaining the certainty of execution that comes from local decision-making and a deep understanding of our customers and communities. Turning to consumer lending. Home equity balances grew slightly during the quarter. We are underpenetrated in this line of business, and growth has been somewhat episodic. Largely due to capacity constraints within our legacy origination platform. We are in the process of implementing a new home equity origination platform, which we expect will improve speed scalability and consistency, enabling more sustained growth. Given the strong underlying consumer demand across our footprint for this product, we are excited about the opportunity ahead and we see home equity as an attractive area of growth. Residential mortgage balances were down approximately 1% from year-end. Our expectation is the residential portfolio will remain relatively flat in 2026 as we favor HELOC and commercial loan growth. Turning to securities on Slide 11. We continue to be pleased with the overall quality and positioning of the portfolio. Balances increased $171 million since year-end, reflecting disciplined deployment into attractive opportunities. The portfolio yield increased 14 basis points to 3.18% for the quarter, supported by recent purchases. From a valuation perspective, AFS unrealized losses totaled $277 million at quarter end compared to $259 million at year-end. Turning to Slide 12. Our capital position remains strong, as indicated by CET 1 and TCE ratios of 13.2% and 10.2%, respectively. As Dennis stated earlier, we are focused on rightsizing capital through organic growth, share repurchases and quarterly dividends. We expect to generate excess capital but plan to manage our CET1 towards the median of the KRX, which is currently 12%. Our commitment to rightsizing capital was evident in Q1 and with the repurchase of 3.9 million shares for $75.1 million at an average price of $19.33 which was $0.68 below the VWAP for the quarter. As a result, our diluted common shares outstanding were 220.8 million as of March 31. Second quarter to date, we have repurchased an additional 740,000 shares through yesterday for a total cost of $14.4 million and now have 4.2 million shares remaining on our authorization. We have now completed 65% of the buyback. We currently anticipating completing the buyback around midyear, at which point we anticipate executing a new authorization subject to regulatory approval. Additionally, if the Basel III proposal to reduce risk weights on certain assets is adopted, our preliminary estimates suggest an increase to Eastern's risk-based ratios of approximately 1%, which will support additional share buybacks over time. As displayed on Slide 13, asset quality remains excellent as evidenced by net charge-offs to average total loans of 17 basis points. Nonperforming loans improved as expected, falling nearly $35 million linked quarter to $138 million or 60 basis points of total loans. NPLs were lower in both the legacy Eastern and acquired Harbor One portfolios. Progress has continued in the second quarter, and we expect further credit resolutions in the quarters ahead. Reserve levels remain robust as demonstrated by an allowance for loan losses to $37.9 million or 143 basis points of total loans. Criticized and classified loans of $801 million or 5.1% of total loans, were up modestly from $793 million or 5% of total loans at year-end. The increase was driven by higher criticized balances on the Harbor One portfolio, largely offset by continued improvement in legacy Easter loans. As we deepen our knowledge of the acquired portfolio, we further refined risk ratings and this led to the increase in Q1. In addition, we booked a provision of $5.8 million, up from $4.9 million in the prior quarter. Finally, slides covering our CRE and investor office portfolios can now be found in the appendix. We remain focused on the investor office portfolio and believe the worst of the office loan issues are behind us. so we remain realistic in our outlook. The portfolio totals $1 billion or 4% of total loans. Criticized and classified loans are $160 million an improvement from over $170 million at year-end. Our reserve level of 6% remains conservative. Importantly, we reunderwrite all investor office loans of $5 million or more each year, and we recently completed that process during the first quarter with no unexpected findings. Before turning to Q&A, I'd like to briefly address our 2016 outlook on Slide 14. At this time, we are not making any changes to full year guidance as the first quarter performance was mostly in line with our expectations. While there were some offsetting factors in the quarter, none alter our overall view of the year, and we remain confident in achieving the projections in the outlook. With that said, based on Q1 results, we may trend towards the lower end of the NII guidance range we shared in January. In addition, we are mindful that the economic environment remains fluid. We continue to closely monitor conditions impacting our business, our customers and the communities we serve. Given the ongoing uncertainty around geopolitical developments, interest rates, inflation and broader market volatility, we plan to revisit our outlook at mid-year this visibility improves. That concludes our comments, and we will now open up the line for questions.