Marcy Mutch
Analyst · Stephens
Thank you, Kevin. As I walk through our financials, unless otherwise noted, all of the prior period comparisons will be with the second quarter of 2024, and I’ll begin with our income statement. Our net interest income was $205.5 million in the third quarter, an increase of $3.8 million. Our yield on interest-earning assets increased three basis points quarter-over-quarter driven again by an increase in loan yields. During the quarter, we also terminated $550 million of swaps at approximately breakeven, which mitigated the impact to net interest income during the period. Our cost of interest-bearing liabilities declined in the third quarter, driven by a $205.3 million reduction in average borrowings. Ending borrowings declined approximately $600 million quarter-over-quarter. As the September rate cut by the Fed was widely anticipated by the market, we saw some of our customers more aggressively pursue higher rates ahead of the Fed action. While this resulted in the cost of our interest-bearing deposits increasing more than we had anticipated at the beginning of the quarter, this activity has slowed significantly in the rate cut aftermath. Our fully tax equivalent net interest margin increased 4 basis points to 3.04% in the third quarter. And as Kevin stated, our net interest margin, excluding purchase accounting accretion, increased 5 basis points to 2.97%. This increase is net of a 1 basis point impact to our net interest margin from lower unrealized losses in our investment securities portfolio during the quarter, resulting in higher average balances. Overall, we continue to anticipate a sequential increase in the net interest margin in the fourth quarter and into 2025. Our balance sheet responded to the September rate cut as we expected, with similar loans and interest-bearing deposit betas. Our outlook now includes two more rate cuts by the Fed in the fourth quarter, each 25 basis points, neither of which should materially impact fourth quarter earnings results. As a result, we believe that net interest income will continue to increase sequentially in the fourth quarter, and the increase in margin will more than offset the impact of modestly declining interest-earning assets. In the fourth quarter, our balance sheet is neutral as the amount of overnight borrowings repricing this quarter is de minimis. In the first quarter of 2025, we will see $1.7 billion of borrowings repriced early in the quarter which includes both our BTFP and a portion of our term FHLB advances. Noninterest income increased to $46.4 million in the third quarter. Excluding the $2.6 million gain on the sale of one of our branches, as Kevin mentioned, we saw an increase of approximately 3% quarter-over-quarter. Noninterest expense increased in the third quarter by $2.5 million. However, a onetime expense of $3.8 million related to the CEO transition more than fully accounts for that increase. Excluding that cost, our noninterest expenses again declined compared to the prior period. As we anticipated, our medical insurance expenses normalized somewhat in the third quarter after running consistently below our expectations for the first half of the year. That moderate increase was more than offset by savings in other expense lines. As we've done all year, we remain focused internally on expense control and more effective management of our resources and branch network. Moving to our balance sheet. Loan balances decreased by $207.9 million in the third quarter. The conversion of construction loans to permanent real estate financing with typically lower risk profiles continued this quarter, which is reflected in the increase of $164.8 million in our commercial real estate loans. Construction loans declined $212 million. We did experience some seasonality in our commercial and industrial balances with utilization declining about 2%. We also saw a decline in our lower-yielding mortgage balances as a result of normal amortization and subdued production demand. Our unfunded commercial construction commitment balance stood at approximately $300 million at the end of the quarter at a weighted average rate of approximately 6%. This should now be reflective of somewhat normal levels of unfunded construction commitments and we no longer believe that funding for this portfolio will have a material drag on our loan yields going forward. With that in mind, we don't intend to continue to call out these commitments in the future. We continue to see stability in our noninterest-bearing deposits, which again averaged 26% of our total deposits in the period, roughly unchanged from the end of 2023. In the third quarter, we recorded a modest decrease of $6.6 million in deposits compared to the prior period. However, excluding the effect of the temporary outflow we've identified, our deposits increased approximately 1% as we expected. With respect to credit, as Kevin pointed out, criticized and classified loans both decreased in the third quarter. Our total provision expense was $19.8 million with our funded ACL coverage at 1.25% of total loans. As we indicated last quarter, we've been keeping our eye on the Metro office portfolio, which included higher-than-expected net charge-offs this quarter. Approximately 80% of our charge-offs were comprised of two loans in that portfolio. The smaller of the two, a construction real estate loan is fully charged off with no remaining exposure. The larger metro office loan was written down 70% this quarter, which reflects our estimated realizable value. For additional transparency, we have added a slide in our investor presentation that describes this portfolio in more granular detail. Overall, our exposure in the metro office sector is now less than $90 million, and we believe there are no more material losses in the portfolio at this time. Our total charge-offs for the quarter were $27.4 million, excluding the two metro office loans we just discussed, our charge-offs were $5.3 million or 12 basis points of average loans. We also wanted to give you an update regarding the two other significant nonperforming loans we've been reporting on in previous quarters. Regarding the agricultural credit, we anticipate a resolution in the fourth quarter. With respect to the commercial loan for which we have a specific reserve, we remain in weekly communication with the borrower who is performing as expected under our agreement. At this time, little has changed, but we anticipate additional clarity in the fourth quarter and believe this specific reserve is adequate based on what we know today. And finally, our capital continued to accrete in the third quarter, our common equity Tier 1 capital ratio increased 30 basis points to 11.83% as we continue to prudently manage risk-weighted assets. We also declared a dividend of $0.47 per share or a yield of 6.3% for the third quarter of 2024. And with that, I’ll turn it back to Kevin.