Mike Price
Analyst · B. Riley FBR. Please go ahead with your question
Hey thanks Ryan. Jim Reske, our CFO will provide some detail around fourth quarter earnings in a moment, but first, I'd like to reflect on our progress in 2019 as a company.2019 marked the seventh straight year of growth in earnings per share since the current management team came together. We ended 2019 with core earnings per share of $1.10 which represents 16% compound annual growth from 2012 starting point of $0.40 per share in core earnings.In 2019, we produced $108 million of core net income, a net interest margin of 3.75%, and a core efficiency ratio of 56.9%. The earnings capacity of First Commonwealth continues to grow.Adjusted for securities gains in 2018, earnings per share grew by 6.8% in 2019, driven by year-over-year growth of $17.4 million in spread income and $4.7 million in fee income.Our momentum as we enter 2020 is good and I would highlight the following. Loan growth of 7% in 2019 were 6% without the acquired loans associated with the 14 branch acquisitions we got from Santander and deposit growth of 13% helped stabilize the margin at 3.73% in the fourth quarter and continued to meaningfully and granularly grow our company.Corporate banking, mortgage, and indirect lending led the way with loan growth. Total deposits grew to $6.7 billion with an average cost of 56 basis points. Our deposit base is comprised of 25% non-interest-bearing DDA accounts and other 21% in checking now accounts at a relatively low cost of funds. So, $3 billion or 46% of the deposit total is in transaction accounts of which 56% are business accounts.The culture of deposit gathering is strong. As an aside, we required -- we acquired roughly $470 million in deposit balances in early September following the acquisition of the Central PA branches from Santander and as of December 31st, 2019, had grown those deposits by $22 million.Despite the quarter-over-quarter uptick in our provision expense, our credit metrics continue to strengthen as does the credit culture of our company. Several key credit indicators were at either -- were either at or near historic lows for our company. For example, net charge-offs of 18 basis points, nonperforming loans to loans at 52 basis points and nonperforming assets to loans at 57 basis points with criticized loans also at an historic low for our company. The sharp decrease in special mention loans at $48 million in the fourth quarter is particularly encouraging.Our ongoing focus on improving granularity, maintaining concentration discipline and increasing geographic diversity leaves the bank well positioned at this stage in the economic cycle. Our noninterest income of $85.5 million also was an historic high for our company and now comprises roughly 25% of our total revenue.Interchange income and deposit fee income set internal records for our company in the fourth quarter. Excluding security gains, our average quarterly noninterest income was $21.4 million in 2019, up from $19.9 million per quarter in 2018 and an average of only $16 million per quarter in 2016. Moreover, our mortgage, wealth, corporate banking and SBA and insurance businesses have become a meaningful part of our noninterest income momentum. Additionally, our five acquisitions over the last four years have added precious new checking households.Core efficiency of 56.9% in 2019 improved year-over-year despite the integration of the Santander branch acquisition and as the interest rate environment pressured margin. That being said, we're ever mindful of the importance of operating leverage, not only in our forecasts and budgets, but also in our actual quarterly results and we pay close attention to that.In short, the bank has a broader base of fee businesses. And our two key businesses retail and corporate banking are getting better each year and now growing across geographies. These same businesses are led by strong line of business leaders and coordinated through regional presidents who are focused on winning and fulfilling our mission in their respective communities. Our credit metrics and balance sheet are stronger, even as we experienced a tougher external environment in 2019.And with that, I will turn it over to Jim Reske for our fourth quarter detail and other insights. Jim?