Charles Levingston
Analyst · Piper Sandler. Your line is open
Thank you, Jan., As you may have noticed, we have made some improvements to the earnings release format. On page 1, our bullets are more dynamic, focusing on items of interest for the quarter. Right below that, we have a table of selected highlights that shows trends from the prior quarter, and the year-ago quarter. And in the Texan tables, we focus more on changes from the prior quarter. We hope this helps you with your analysis and understanding. Turning back to the numbers for the quarter, net income was $45.7 million, which is up 4.1 million or 9.9% from the prior quarter and assets were 11.2 billion down 634 million or 5.4%. In regard to earnings, the primary differences to the quarter -- to the prior quarter were, net interest income increased by $2.3 million. The increase in net interest income from the prior quarter was driven by the develop -- the deployment of excess liquidity into investment securities. As rates have increased, it has become more attractive to put more of our excess liquidity to work. The additional interest income securities were partially offset by lower interest on fees on loans. While loan balances were up for the quarter, higher-yielding loans continue to be replaced by lower yielding loans. Additionally, the impact of rising rates which ramped up throughout the quarter has not yet fully impacted outstanding adjustable rate loans. A good portion of which are still at the rate floors. And new loans, particularly those funded later in the quarter, have yet to have much impact. non-interest income was down $3.1 million for the prior quarter. Our FHA group had a good year-end 2021, but FHA multi-family income, which can be inconsistent quarter-to-quarter and revenue for that business was down to start the year. The impact of a higher rate environment also reduced gain on sale from investment securities and residential mortgage activity was also reduced. Lock commitments for residential mortgage loans were a $137 million down from a $163 million in the prior quarter. Non-interest expense was down $8.3 million from the prior quarter. Legal accounting and professional fees were down $1.4 million. And as Susan mentioned, the largest change to non-interest expense was a one-time reduction in salaries and employee benefits. Absent the $5 million accrual reduction, salaries and employee benefits were down $2.6 million primarily on lower incentive bonus accruals offset by increases in share-based compensation and payroll taxes. The $5 million accrual reduction also positively impacted the efficiency ratio bringing it down to 35.3% for the first quarter 2022, compared to 44.3% for the prior quarter and it lowered the effective tax rate to 23.4% compared to 26.3% from the -- for the prior quarter. The reduction in the effective tax rate from the prior quarter was because the one-time adjustment was not tax deductible when recorded. Conversely, there was no negative tax impact when reversed. On the balance sheet, assets declined by $634 million. We had a small decline in deposits of $395 million at quarter-end and paid off $150 million FHLB advance during the quarter. These reductions of liabilities along with an increase in securities of $306 million reduced some of our excess liquidity. The biggest movement on the balance sheet though was that we transferred $1.1 billion of securities from available for sale to held to maturity. There's no impact of this transfer on the income statement. The unrealized loss associated with the held to maturity portfolio will amortize off with the life of those securities. In regard to the transfer of securities that are held to maturity, the impact of rising rates during the quarter created unrealized losses in the available for sales securities portfolio, which negatively impacted equity on the balance sheet. These unrealized losses reduced equity as well as both book value and tangible book value. During the quarter, we evaluated our securities portfolios and determined that certain securities will be maintained for the life of the instrument and made a decision to change the accounting designation to held-to-maturity. The securities transferred were generally municipal bonds, corporate bonds, bonds that we buy for CRA credit and longer final maturity mortgage-backed securities. Having these securities designated as held-to-maturity will mitigate some of the impact of future changes and interest rates on equity, book, and tangible book values. With regards to interest rate sensitivity, we believe our asset-sensitive balance sheet remains well-positioned to take advantage of higher interest rates in the future. For net interest margin, we were up 10 basis points to 265 on a linked-quarter basis. The reduction of excess liquidity and the deployment of cash into security had a positive impact. Looking at our cost of funds, it was changed -- it was unchanged at 26 basis points. While not much changed during the quarter, toward the end of March we raised rates on most interest-bearing demand deposit accounts by five basis points and FHLB advances of $150 million were repaid. Another measure impacting funding costs is average non-interest-bearing deposits to average deposits. The bank has historically done well averaging 36.1% in this quarter down slightly from 36.3% the prior quarter. Overall, in terms of rate sensitivity, we are asset-sensitive and should benefit from rising rates as loans come off the floor and reprice. And a large percentage of our deposits are non-interest bearing. With that, I'll hand it back to Susan for a short wrap up.