James Lally
Analyst · D.A. Davidson
Thank you all very much for joining us this morning, and welcome to our 2026 first quarter earnings call. Joining me this morning is Keene Turner, EFSC's Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, and Doug Bauche, Chief Banking Officer of Enterprise Bank & Trust. Before we begin, I would like to remind everybody on the call that a copy of the release and accompanying presentation can be found on our website. The presentation and earnings release were furnished on SEC Form 8-K yesterday. Please refer to Slide 2 of the presentation titled Forward-Looking Statements and our most recent 10-K for reasons why actual results may vary from any forward-looking statements that we make today. Our financial scorecard begins on Slide 3. The solid financial performance that we've generated over the past several years continued into the first quarter of 2026. For the quarter, we earned $1.30 per diluted share compared to a seasonally strong $1.45 in the linked quarter and $1.31 in the first quarter of 2025. This level of performance produced a return on assets of 1.16% and a pre-provision ROAA of 1.65%. I would characterize our performance in the quarter as solid and on plan. Net interest income was relatively stable when compared to the linked quarter at $166 million while net interest margin expanded 2 basis points to 4.28%. This reflects both better seasonal performance in our deposit balances and net interest margin expansion resulting from our relationship-oriented business model where our clients receive value-added service from our teams and returned for a few extra basis points when it comes to loan and deposit pricing. Our well-positioned balance sheet continues to be the strength of our company, as it provides great flexibility with respect to capital planning. Capital levels at quarter end remained stable and strong, with total stockholders' equity at $2 billion and the tangible common equity tangible assets ratio of 9%. At this level of TCE, we were able to produce a return on tangible common equity of 12.53%. Our strong return profile allowed our tangible book value per share to remain level at $41.38 despite the fact that we utilized approximately $27 million of capital to repurchase 483,000 shares at an average price of $56.13. In addition to this, given the strength of our earnings and our confidence in our continued execution, we increased the dividend by $0.01 per share for the second quarter of 2026 to $0.34 per share. Turning to Slide 4, you will see that loans dipped slightly in the quarter. Three things led to the slight decrease, the first is that several significant closings that we expected to see in Q1 have slid into the second quarter and have closed or will close in the coming weeks. The second reason for this decline was a $100 million pay down in our low-income housing tax credit portfolio. These paydowns happen annually and are the proceeds from successful sales that occurred in the fourth quarter of 2025. Another positive from these payoffs is the fact that the majority of these loans were made in 2021 and 2022 and the fixed rates earned on these loans are lower than what we can earn on this cash in our investment portfolio today. The final contributor was the sale of $25 million of SBA loans in the quarter, which produced a gain of $1.4 million. Doug will provide much more color on the performance of our markets and businesses in his comments. Our diversified deposit base continues to be a differentiator for us. We did experience a typical first quarter deposit outflows due to our heavy concentration of commercial-oriented accounts. We've worked extremely hard to blunt this trend through growth of our national deposit verticals as well as through market and business diversification within both the Commercial Bank and our more granular business banking and consumer relationships. The composition of deposits also remained stable as our percentage of [indiscernible] to total deposits remained at 33%. These trends were aided by a continued reduction in the overall cost of deposits to 1.52%, a 12 basis point drop in the quarter and 31 basis points when compared to the first quarter of 2025. It was on our 2025 first quarter earnings call that we first spoke with the 7 Southern California loans that ultimately landed in OREO. Our contention a year ago was that we would favorably work through these loans without a loss. Today, I'm pleased to report that we continue to make progress on this and currently have 4 of these properties under contract, representing total OREO balances of $46 million, with great progress on the other 3 properties being made. I would expect to report positive further progress in the remaining quarters of 2026. Additionally, the remainder of the portfolio continues to perform as expected. Ken will make additional comments about asset quality and provision expense in his comments. Turning to Slide 5. You will see our priorities for 2026. We made significant strides in asset quality improvement during the quarter and I'm confident that this will continue throughout 2026 highlighted by the expected sale of the 7 Southern California properties that are currently in OREO. I'm still bullish on overall mid-single-digit balance sheet growth for the year. Our ability to produce well-priced diversified deposits has been proven over the last several years, and I have a great degree of confidence that this will continue throughout 2026. However, the longer that uncertainty is the byproduct of the conflict in Iran, borrower sentiments may be cautious, which could impact future loan growth. Over the last few weeks, I have had the opportunity to visit with many clients representing the first array of businesses and industries. They continue to perform well, but their confidence to make large investments in capital expenditures or to think about any type of strategic hires or M&A is truly day-to-day. Like I stated on previous calls, entrepreneurs need to be able to see 90 to 120 days into the future to confidently make these strategic decisions and the recent volatility in the current environment could have an impact. Obviously, a quick resolution or stabilization of the current state changes this immediately. Finally, like many of our clients, we too are focused on efficiency gains through automation and expansion of our existing technology framework. This is a daily opportunity for our company, and we are excited about the progress we are making. Overall, I'm very pleased with our results for the first quarter of 2026. We are positioned extremely well for just about any environment. We have wonderful markets of growing diversified deposit base and an extremely strong balance sheet. We have used these tools to grow tangible book value per share over 10% annually for the last 14 years, and are in great shape to accomplish this again in 2026. With that, I would like to turn the call over to Doug Bauche. Doug?