Eric Newell
Analyst · D.A. Davidson. You may proceed
Thanks, John. End-of-period loans declined modestly in the quarter. During the quarter, management made the decision to exit our remaining shared national credit exposures, and we had some customers that had asset dispositions that resulted in payoffs. Total loan originations in the second quarter were $153 million with a weighted average coupon of 7.8%. This compares to $143 million with a weighted average coupon of 7.71% in the first quarter and $330 million with a weighted average coupon of 5.04% in the second quarter of 2022. We continue to successfully originate loans at higher interest rates, and we are seeing higher yields. With an analysis completed at May 31, 2023, over the last 12 months, we repriced $1.2 billion of our loan book and originated $676 million of new loans at market rates, which has driven an increase of coupon of 204 basis points. The average change in rate for the repricing was 360 basis points. We have $1.2 billion of our portfolio that is either floating or adjusts monthly. Over the next four quarters, we have $407.7 million of loans with a contractual repricing with a weighted average coupon of 6.56%. Making a simple assumption that this reprices to prime, that adds an annual $7 million of revenue. During the second quarter, the yield on the loan portfolio increased 40 basis points to 6.34%. Cost of interest-bearing deposits increased 41 basis points to 2.14% in the quarter. This slowed from the first quarter, where we experienced a 68 basis point increase. Net interest income totalled $39.4 million in the second quarter, up $318,000 from the first quarter, driven by an increase in average earning assets. We continue to have enhanced liquidity on our balance sheet from actions we took to respond to market dislocation in the first quarter. Average Fed funds sold increased to $185 million from $120 million in the first quarter. While we continue to have $140 million outstanding at the Federal Reserve Bank's term funding program, we are currently earning a positive spread on that borrowing, though it does have the effect of reducing margin. We calculate that the excess liquidity has the effect of reducing margin by seven basis points. Salaries and benefits decreased $1.5 million in the quarter. Of this decline, about $730,000 of it is one-time in nature, with a reduction in expense of forfeited, unvested, restrictive stocks. Data processing increases are due to higher volumes on both credit and debit card platforms, repricing of contracts, exhibiting some inflationary pressures, and a new deposit processing system that will provide an enhanced customer experience. Professional services are driven by some legal expenses that we anticipate will be covered by insurance in future periods. Marketing is higher due to advertising to continue to attract deposits. Our outlook slide includes a forecast for the third quarter. We do not include future rate changes, though our forecast still includes the effect of lagging deposit rates. Our provision is forecasted to be closer to 10 basis points to average loans on an annualized basis. This is more optimistic view than the street, mainly because of our existing coverage level to loans, the lack of recognized losses, and our previous qualitative reserve bill for recognizing economic uncertainty. Ric?