BJ Losch
Analyst · JPMorgan. Please go ahead
Great. Thanks, Bryan and good morning everybody. I will start on Slide 7. By reviewing our EPS trends we saw quarter by quarter through the course of 2019 which gives a good perspective of how the momentum of the business has accelerated over the last year. Our key financial objectives this year were primarily twofold: first, to accelerate the strong loan and deposit growth momentum that we were seeing towards the end of 2018 post the Capital Bank integration; and number two, leverage the full year impact of merger cost savings and continue expense efficiency efforts.Coming into 2019, we like others expected a rising rate environment, yet that outlook quickly shifted at the beginning of the year and put significant pressure on our net interest income growth. However, our business model and our teams adapted as we expected. First, we did an excellent job of growing loan and deposits with total average loans up 7% and total average deposits up 5% year-over-year. Second, we maintained strong loan and deposit pricing discipline, in particular, our ability to continue growing core deposits, while lowering our deposit rates paid from 103 in 1Q ‘19 to 82 basis points in 4Q ‘19 help mitigate the impact of 3 Fed cuts. Third, our countercyclical businesses like fixed income and loans to mortgage companies generated strong earnings growth that more than offset the rate headwinds. And lastly, we took out almost 7% of our growth expense base through actions designed to both improve our efficiency and allow for needed reinvestment. Through all this, we posted quarterly earnings growth over the year on an adjusted basis that continued to strengthen throughout the year culminating in full year adjusted EPS growth of 18% versus 2018.As you can see on Slide 8 our consolidated financial results for the fourth quarter showed the line item drivers of growth both linked quarter and year-over-year. Few highlights I would point out, average loans from fourth quarter ‘19 versus fourth quarter ‘18 were up 13% year-over-year. Despite the challenging rate environment with the multiple Fed rate cuts, we still grew NII 3% year-over-year due to strong commercial loan growth and managing deposit costs lower. Fees were up materially both linked quarter and year-over-year from both continued increases in bank fees from strong customer growth and excellent performance from the fixed income business. You will see on the bottom right notable items are related to the merger costs from the pending IBERIA deal, a charitable contribution that we made to our foundation and our previously announced re-branding launch that occurred in the fourth quarter.Let’s take a deeper look at the broad-based loan growth we are seeing on Slide 9. And as you can see here, the 13% growth in loans which is well ahead of industry growth comes from all parts of our franchise in both our specialty businesses, which grew 31% and 8% excluding loans to mortgage companies, which had an outstanding year and across our markets we saw healthy growth with particular strength in our highest opportunity markets like Middle Tennessee, South Florida and Texas. Encouragingly, pipelines into 1Q also remain strong and we expect the favorable momentum to continue.Taking a look at deposit trends on Slide 10, you see that our core deposit gathering in the regional bank is strong and as with our loan growth, our growth in deposits is also broad-based across both our specialty businesses and our markets. And again we have done this while being very disciplined on pricing. Deposit rates paid declined 13 basis points linked quarter and are down 21 basis points since the first quarter of 2019.Turning to Slide 11, this brings us to the fixed income business, which again as Bryan said, had an outstanding year. We have known that this business had the nimbleness and capability to quickly capture revenue opportunities when the market turned. And with the decline in interest rates and the market volatility it was favorably impacted in terms of market activity in our sales and trading across all of our desks. And in addition, our other product revenue increased with customers continuing to execute rate swaps resulting in higher fees in our derivatives business. And during the last few years, the management team has repositioned the expense base for improved profit leverage as volume returned, which is clearly evident in the results we have seen this year. Giving the general level and direction rates along with some expectation of continued market volatility, we expect the fixed income business to continuing delivering solid results into 2020.Let’s turn to net interest income and margin on Slide 12. Linked quarter, we saw increases in both NII and NIM as strong loan and deposit growth coupled with deposit cost discipline and a rebound in accretion led to a 3% linked quarter increase in NII and a 5 basis point expansion in the net interest margin. In the bottom left, we wanted to dimension for you how much of a headwind the change in the interest rate environment was, yet how well our teams were able to manage through it through strong customer growth and solid pricing discipline.Now, let’s turn to expenses on Slide 13. Underlying the great growth and revenue performance we saw across our markets and businesses, we also continue to actively reposition our expense base for improved efficiency. The disciplined approach to expense management we have had over the last several years was a major contributor to our earnings power over the last year as well. And on an adjusted basis, we were able to reduce expenses slightly versus 2018 despite a $40 million increase in fixed income expenses that supported its higher revenue. We did it by both lowering our core expenses through the achievement of cost saves from the Capital Bank deal and continuing with further efficiency actions such as branch closures, decreases in vendor and discretionary spending. The $80 million of expense reductions we have referenced here equates to about 7% of the gross expense base.By continuing our efficiency efforts, we were able to make some reinvestment in our customer experience and technology initiatives that will be critical to our future success. And by driving significant positive operating leverage, we are able to bring down our efficiency ratio substantially about 600 basis points from 2018 to 2019 on an adjusted basis to finish fourth quarter at 59.9%. We believe expense management is the strength of our company and this track record gives us confidence in our ability to gain the expected further scale and efficiency benefits from the IBERIA merger.Turning to asset quality, on Slide 14 our credit trends remained excellent throughout the year as we maintained our underwriting discipline. Net charge-offs in the quarter were at only $3 million with delinquencies and non-performing loans declining both linked quarter and year-over-year as well with provision growth largely due to the strong loan growth. Again, credit quality remains strong and we expect our credit trends to remain stable.Slide 15 gives you a preview of our expected CECL impact, which as you are aware, we will adopt in first quarter of 2020. We currently estimate that the adoption of CECL will result in allowance to loans ratio of 100 basis points to 110 basis points. We will experience an increase in the reserve largely due to longer term consumer loans and establishing a reserve for previously marked and acquired loans. Other commercial portfolio reserves are expected to remain relatively stable. As a reminder, we will also see an impact on the reserves when we close our IBERIA transaction and we have repeated these and laid them out at the bottom half of the slide.On Slide 16, you see a brief update of our IBERIA merger and branch acquisition activities for both the closing and integration planning remains on track in addition to holding town halls and engaging employees, we have already completed several steps in the regulatory application process and commenced integration planning. Our current expectation is to close that and integrate the branch transaction in the second quarter of 2020 and to close the IBERIA merger sometime mid 2020.Wrapping up on Slide 17, again 2019 was the transformative year for us. Our successful execution of the Capital Bank deal strengthened our franchise, improved our efficiency and favorably shifted our funding mix through market and customer expansion. We delivered on our financial targets in 2019 that we had laid out in our Investor Day. We showed meaningful earnings growth despite the challenging rate environment. We showed strong business momentum by generating earnings and balance sheet growth and demonstrating the benefits of our complementary business model. Our merger of equals with IBERIABANK and the Truist branch acquisition will expand our opportunities in attractive high growth markets, enhance our scale and lead us towards top tier profitability. We are not done. Momentum continues across our business into 2020. That’s all I have, Bryan.