Marcy Mutch
Analyst · Piper Sandler
Thanks, Kevin, and good morning, everyone. As I walk through our financial results, unless otherwise noted, all of the prior period comparisons will be with the second quarter of 2023. I'll begin with our income statement. Our net interest income decreased by $4.7 million as the increase in our average yield on earning assets was outpaced by the increase in our total cost of funds. This was partially offset by a $600,000 increase in purchase accounting accretion quarter-over-quarter. Our reported net interest margin was 3.07%, a decrease of 5 basis points from the prior quarter. This is significantly less than the 24 basis point decrease we saw in the second quarter. Our adjusted net interest margin excluding purchase accounting accretion, also decreased by 5 basis points from the prior quarter to 3%. This is stable to our exit rate last quarter as we expected. From here, the margin is expected to remain relatively stable to modestly lower in the fourth quarter with earning assets also slightly lower than in our third quarter reported results. We expect this, in turn, to lead to a modest decline in net interest income in the fourth quarter. Our total noninterest income decreased $2.1 million quarter-over-quarter as we face pressure in the mortgage and payment service businesses. We expect noninterest income to be similar to third quarter levels in the fourth quarter, generally reflecting our core fee run rate. While we expect continued pressure in the mortgage origination environment, our newly restructured mortgage business allows us to process volume more efficiently and with improved profitability. So while demand remains minimal in the near term, as the environment improves, we can now respond to increasing demand more profitably. Moving to total noninterest expense. Reported expenses declined $2.8 million from the prior quarter as salaries and wages declined in the period. This was generally due to the severance expense we noted in the prior quarter, lower expenses from the mortgage business and a lower incentive accrual. We anticipate a similar level of expenses in the fourth quarter. Moving to the balance sheet. Loans held for investment decreased by $50 million from the end of the prior quarter. Our outstanding commercial construction lines totaled just under $900 million at the end of the third quarter at a weighted average rate of approximately 5.5%. This represents about a $200 million decline from the prior quarter. The securities portfolio declined by $288 million in the quarter due to normal amortization with a modest impact from higher unrealized losses. On the liability side, 3 developments underscore the stability of our balance sheet, a reduction in short-term borrowings of $522 million, an increase of $100 million in total deposits and a moderation of our mix shift out of noninterest-bearing deposits. Let me reiterate that we have no broker deposits on the balance sheet. Moving to asset quality. Nonperforming assets decreased by $11 million and criticized loans decreased by $8.7 million from the prior quarter. This is in keeping with our principle of addressing credit matters as they arise as you've seen us do in the past. We continue to have limited exposure in metro office commercial real estate and the remaining portfolio is performing well. As a note, we have de minimis exposure to syndicated national credits and by de minimis, I mean 2 credits for a total of $6 million, and we do not participate in that market. While our allowance for credit losses was up 1 basis point to 1.24% of total loans held for investment, our total provision expense was essentially 0. Net charge-offs in the quarter were minimal at just $1.1 million or 2 basis points of average loans. Our coverage rate of nonaccrual loans increased to 268% in this period. Finally, all regulatory capital ratios strengthened in the third quarter as we continue to manage our risk-weighted asset exposure, and we were pleased to announce our $0.47 dividend per share. Tangible book value declined slightly as the AOCI position expanded and offset retained earnings. Going forward, our strong capital position gives us the flexibility to take advantage of market opportunities and to remain dedicated to serving the needs of our customers and attracting new households to the bank. Now with that, I'll turn it back over to Kevin. Kevin?