Charles Levingston
Analyst · Pepper -- I'm sorry, Piper Sandler & Company. Go ahead, your line is open
Thank you, Jan. This was a good quarter for earnings coupled with strong loan growth and strong asset quality metrics. These results were in an unprecedented economic environment that saw aggressive Fed action on rates, continuing inflation pressures and the prospect of an oncoming recession. Fortunately, as Jan mentioned, we operate in a strong market, which has remained resilient and continues to grow. Typically, I'd start with a discussion on changes on the income statement, but the bigger changes this quarter are on the balance sheet, so I'll start there. The items of note are the strong loan growth, a small decrease in deposits and a pickup in short-term borrowings. And I'm very pleased to say we were active throughout the quarter with stock repurchases. On loans, quarter-over-quarter, the loan growth was strong with loans up $331 million or 4.5% for the quarter. But a lot of these loans came on near the end of the quarter as average loans were up by a smaller $97 million. As we manage our liquidity carefully, we drew on some FHLB advances late in the quarter and ended up carrying more cash balances at year-end than we normally would. In terms of deposits, we remained focused on relationship deposits as that is where we see more cost-effective funding and we continue to strive to improve our deposit mix. To this end, our relationship managers are focusing on deposit retention and deposit growth. Now, stock repurchases. This quarter, we repurchased just over 738,000 shares. This was 46% of the 1.6 million shares the Board authorized for 2022 and about 2.3% of the shares outstanding from the beginning of the year. In total, the aggregate purchase price was $33.1 million and the average share price was $44.82 per share. As the 2022 plan terminated at the end of the year, we have a new plan in place for 2023, which authorizes another 1.6 million shares for repurchase. Turning to the income statement. While net interest income improved marginally up $1.7 million, the most notable changes from the prior quarter were its components, interest income and interest expense. Interest income was up $17.6 million on a higher loan rates and higher loan balances. For the quarter, the average yield on loans was 5.7%, up 77 basis points, and average loans were up $96.6 million. Interest expenses were up $15.9 million on higher funding costs. But the impact was a bit muted by a reduction in interest-bearing liabilities. For the quarter, the cost of interest-bearing liabilities was 2.86%, up 111 basis points, while average interest-bearing liabilities were down $218.2 million. While borrowings were up, the majority of the increase in interest expenses were from higher rates paid on deposits. As the Fed moved aggressively to raise rates to combat inflation, we have subsequently raised rates each time. This quarter, our jump-in rates reflect the Fed raise in late September and two more during this quarter. As a result, our cost of interest-bearing deposits were up 107 basis points, as the average effective rate from Fed funds for the quarter was up 145 basis points. While this resulted in a relatively high beta for us, it was only slightly more than our modeling assumptions. And with our low overhead from our limited branch network, our efficiency ratio is still low at just under 43%. This level of efficiency is much better than our peers and represents a significant built in cost advantage we retain even in the rising rate environment. Other items impacting the income statement were the decrease in income tax expense. This reduction was primarily driven by an update in our state apportionment of revenues. This resulted in less taxable income being apportioned to jurisdictions with higher tax rates. While expenses were up on incentive accruals for this quarter, our accrual allocation is generally lower in the first quarter and larger in the last quarter of the year, as we evaluate ongoing performance. On the bottom-line, earnings were $42.2 million, up 13.1% from the prior quarter, and fully diluted EPS was $1.32, up 13.8%. Lastly, equity at quarter-end rose to $1.2 billion, as earnings and higher carrying values on available for sale securities outpaced the reduction from funds returned to shareholders through stock repurchases and the declaration of the dividend. With that, I'll hand it back to Susan for a short wrap up.