Michele Kawiecki
Analyst · Piper Sandler. Your line is now open
Thanks, Mike. My comments will begin on Slide 8, covering third quarter results. You can see our balance sheet growth on lines one through five, and that we continue to trend towards a more favorable earning asset mix. Total loans on line two, which Mike covered in his remarks, increased over $290.6 million through organic growth during the quarter, which was offset by PPP loan forgiveness of $21.7 million. Deposits decreased to $136 million during the quarter and investments on line three decreased $335 million. Liquidity from the investment portfolio funded our loan growth this quarter, as a result, our loan-to-deposit ratio continued to trend up and was approximately 81% this quarter compared to 73% in the prior quarter. Mark covered earnings per share for the quarter in his remarks, rising yields on the loan and investment portfolios, drove higher profitability this quarter, which is reflected in the increase in net interest income on line 11 of $11.6 million. Non-interest income also increased $1.3 million, which you can see on line 13. Non-interest expense on line 14 remains elevated, which included $3.4 million of merger costs. Our stated efficiency ratio was 53.34%, but was a low 51.39% excluding merger costs, reflecting strong operating leverage. The tangible common equity ratio on line 6 declined 38 basis points, and the tangible book value per share on line 26 declined $1.19, as those metrics continue to be impacted by changes in the unrealized loss on the available for sale securities portfolio. Slide 9 shows our year-to-date results. Line 25 shows year-to-date earnings per share of $2.62. Pre-tax pre-provision income year-to-date was $205.1 million, an increase of $19 million or 10% when excluding merger costs. Keep in mind that the prior year, year-to-date pre-tax pre-provision income included $27 million of PPP fee income. So, year-over-year, the core growth was exceptional. Slide 10 shows highlights of our investment portfolio. On the bottom right you can see we had a net unrealized loss on the mark-to-market of the available for sale security portfolio of $392.5 million compared to last quarter's loss of $246.1 million. Although the mark-to-market adjustment is meaningful. Half of our portfolio is classified as held to maturity and protects equity from the decline in value for that portion of the portfolio. In the bottom left, you will see the cash flow we expect to receive from principal roll off totaling $260 million over the remaining months of 2022 and for the year 2023. In addition to this principle, we will also receive an additional $100 million of interest income from the portfolio, so we will have a fair amount of liquidity provided by the investment portfolio over the next 15 months without selling securities. Slide 11 contains highlights of our loan portfolio. In the bottom-left corner, you will see the stated third quarter loan yield increased 67 basis points from 4.76% from last quarter's yield of 4.09%. Yield on new and renewed loans increased significantly from 3.87% last quarter to 4.96% this quarter, an increase of 109 basis points. On the bottom right, you will see $7.7 billion of loans or 66% of our portfolio are variable rate with 42% of the portfolio repricing in one month and 52% repricing in three months. So we will continue to see meaningful increases in interest income from the loan portfolio as the Fed continues to increase rates. Slide 12 shows the details related to our allowance for credit losses on loans. We did not record any provision expense during the third quarter. The provision expense recorded year-to-date was to establish the CECL Day one allowance associated with the acquisition of Level One. During the third quarter, we had net recoveries of 400,000, which brought the ending allowance for credit losses on loans to a robust $226.7 million. The coverage ratio trend is shown in the graph on the top left. Our coverage ratio at the end of Q3 was 1.94% down from 1.98% from prior quarter due to strong loan growth. This reserve coupled with the remaining fair value accretion of $34 million provides excellent protection as we head into an uncertain economic environment. Now we will move to Slide 13. The total cost of deposits on the bottom chart shows deposit cost increased this quarter by 23 basis points up to a total cost of 46 basis points reflecting the strong pricing discipline we've had in this increasing interest rate environment. Our interest bearing deposit betas this quarter were 20%, which were flat compared to prior quarter. Competition for deposits has increased significantly and we do not expect our deposit beta to remain at the current 20% deposit beta. Slide 14 shows the trending of our net interest margin. Line 1 shows net interest income on a fully tax equivalent basis of $146.6 million, when you back out non-core interest income items such as fair value accretion on line 2 and the impact of PPP loans shown on line 3, our core net interest income totaled $143.1 million, which is shown on line 4 compared to the prior quarter total of $130.7 million, the increase in core net interest income was $12.4 million, reflecting our higher loan yields. Stated net interest margin on line 7, totaled 3.55% for the quarter. Adjusting for fair value accretion in the impact of PPP loans brings us to core net interest margin of 3.47% which is shown on line 10, an increase of 28 basis points from last quarter's core NIM of 3.19%. The tax equivalent yield on earning assets increased 53 basis points and cost of funding only increased 26 basis points. We will see additional NIM expansion next quarter with the expected Fed rate increases in November and December. On Slide 15, non-interest income totaled $29.6 million for the quarter, with the acquisition of Level One contributing a couple million of non-interest income per quarter in Q2 and Q3. Customer-related fees this quarter totaled $22.9 million, a decrease of $2.9 million from prior quarter. The decrease in service charges on deposits reflect changes to our overdraft practices put in place mid-year. Mortgage loan production is still strong at $275 million in loans were originated this quarter, we retained approximately 75% of those loans in the portfolio and sold only 25% of them in the secondary market, causing a reduction in the gain on the sale of loans and non-interest income. Derivative hedge fees and wealth management fees were negatively impacted by the markets. Derivative hedge fees has slowed because of the rising rate environment and wealth management fees were under pressure due to the decline in asset values. A couple of unique items that were recorded this quarter was a BOLI gain of $5.3 million, which was offset by a write-down of an equity investment of $1.9 million reflected in other income. Moving to Slide 16. Total expenses for the quarter totaled $96.4 million which included merger costs incurred during the quarter of $3.4 million in severance of $600,000. Core compensation-related expenses reflected the impact of wage inflation. The success we've had filling some recent positions there are other some open positions recently and accruals for incentive. We also incurred an increase in marketing costs as we launched ads in the Detroit market to communicate our brand. We feel confident in our ability to realize the 30% cost savings in the acquisition of Level One in the fourth quarter, but going forward, expense levels will reflect our investments in people and technology. Our low core efficiency ratio reflected in the top right shows that we continue to achieve strong operating leverage even with these investments. Slide 17 shows our capital ratios. The decline in tangible common equity ratio over the last few quarters was due to the AOCI changes I've mentioned earlier on the available for sale investment portfolio and [indiscernible] $79 million in cash in the acquisition of Level One. Going forward our strong earnings and increasing net interest income will create capital and strengthen this ratio going forward. Additionally, given we have $226 million in the allowance for credit losses, which adds to our balance sheet, safety and soundness, we feel comfortable with our current capital position. Overall, our financial results reflect strong fundamentals for the quarter and we are very pleased with the results. That concludes my remarks. And I will now turn it over to our Chief Credit Officer, John Martin to discuss asset quality.