John Gavigan
Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead
Thank you, Claude and good morning, everyone. Slide 3 provides an overview of our quarterly performance. Net income was $24.8 million or $0.40 per diluted share for the quarter with a return on average assets of 1.13% and a return on average tangible common equity of 14%. Turning to slide 4, we’ve provided a comparison of reported earnings to adjusted earnings highlighting items we believe are significant to understanding our fourth quarter performance. We’ve recognized that our results include a number of significant moving pieces this quarter particularly around expenses and income taxes and we hope this information provides additional clarity. On the expense front, we’ve adjusted our reported expenses to include -- to exclude the write-down of a significant historic tax credit investment, merger related cost, a write-down of our FDIC indemnification asset, the charitable contribution Claude mentioned earlier as well as branch consolidation cost during the period. I’ll note that the tax credit write-down is accounting geography should be viewed economically as a component of the income taxes. Additionally, the impairment of the indemnification asset resulted from a preliminary agreement to early terminate our FDIC loss sharing agreements during the quarter. The termination agreement is subject to final certification and is expected to settle early this year. Excluding these items, non-interest expense totaled $54.5 million for the fourth quarter ahead of our $50 million quarterly projection as a result of higher incentive compensation and a 401K contribution based on full year performance. Specific to taxes, we’ve adjusted income tax expense to exclude the tax effect of the items I just discussed as well the revaluation of our deferred tax liabilities and low-income housing tax partnerships as a result of the tax reform legislation signed in late December. Additionally, we’ve excluded the after-tax impact of the $11 million historic tax credit write-down that we excluded from non-interest expense, essentially netting the historic tax credit down to the $1.1 million after-tax benefit we mentioned last quarter. As detailed on the graph on slide 4 and reflecting the adjustments I just described, net income totaled $27.7 million or $0.45 per diluted share with a 1.26% return on average assets, a 15.5% return on tangible common equity and a 58% efficiency ratio for the fourth quarter. Turning to slide 5 and 6, net interest income for the fourth quarter was $75.6 million, increasing $5.1 million or 7%, while the net interest margin increased 25 basis points compared to the linked quarter to 3.82% on a fully tax equivalent basis. Slide 6 details the drivers of the margin increase including a significant increase in loan fees, interest recaptured for non-accrual loans and a more favorable asset and liability mix during the period. Additionally, as we have previously discussed, we implemented targeted strategies late in the third quarter intended to lower deposit cost and we recognized the full benefit of those efforts here in the fourth quarter. Turning to slide 8, credit performance was strong during the quarter with a modest decrease in the allowance driven by a 16% decline in non-performing loans, a 7.5% decline in classified assets and annualized net charge-offs totaling 2 basis points of average loans. Our credit metrics remain at historically lower levels. And as such, we recorded $200,000 of provision recapture or negative provision expense during the period. Overall, we are extremely pleased with our fourth quarter and full year 2017 performance, and in particular, our ability to grow earnings and tangible book value through the combination of solid organic loan and deposit growth, strong credit performance, a continued focus on efficiency and disciplined tax planning efforts. While results fell short of our expectations earlier in the year, we adjusted course along the way and our strong fourth quarter and full year performances are a direct result of those efforts. Turning your attention to slide 10 and our outlook for 2018, we believe that we are positioned for continued success in the New Year. In regards to the loan portfolio, we are targeting mid-single-digit annualized growth on a percentage basis consistent with 2017. We expect the first quarter net interest margin to be between 3.7% and 3.75% on a fully tax equivalent basis reflecting more normalized loan fee and interest recapture activity, two fewer days in the quarter and a smaller tax equivalent adjustment due to the lower corporate tax rate in 2018. With respect to expenses, we are targeting a $51 million quarterly expense base excluding one-time costs. We remained focused on efficiency while also continuing to make strategic investments to support the continued long-term success of our business. On credit, our outlook is stable, though we do expect that loan losses will ultimately migrate upward toward historical levels overtime. And finally, on taxes, we expect an effective tax rate of approximately 21% for 2018 reflecting the lower statutory corporate rate, the elimination of certain deductions and reduced impact from state taxes, tax credits and tax-exempt income. We will continue to evaluate and update you on the impact of tax reform as implementation guidance becomes more available. This concludes my remarks and I will now turn the call back over to Claude.