Matthew Switzer
Analyst · Janney Montgomery Scott. Your line is open
Thank you, Dennis. As a reminder, a full description of our third quarter results can be found in our earnings release and third quarter earnings presentation, both of which can be found on our website. Earnings from continuing operations for the third quarter were $5.1 million or $0.20 per diluted share versus $5 million or $0.20 per diluted share in the second quarter. Excluding onetime items, earnings in the third quarter were $5.3 million or $0.21 per diluted share versus $6 million or $0.24 in the second quarter. Total assets were $3.36 billion at September 30, up slightly from June 30. Excluding PPP loans and loans held for sale, loan balances grew 18% annualized in the quarter. Growth was primarily driven by Panacea and Life Premium Finance in Q3. We expect growth in the fourth quarter in the loan portfolio, albeit at a seasonally slower pace. Deposits were up almost 4% annualized in Q3, while the mix continued to improve. Non-interest bearing deposits are 25.4%, which is a record for our bank. As we look out the next few quarters, we are confident we have the ability to keep growing deposits in the face of industry pressures. As Dennis alluded to, we have branches in strong markets, enhanced by our V1BE service, a digital platform with unique deposit account features and the nationwide brand in Panacea, all of which we plan to leverage for funding. Net interest income saw strong growth in the quarter, increasing to $27.5 million from $24.6 million in Q2 or 11.6% linked quarter growth. Our reported margin was 3.57% for the third quarter or 3.58%, excluding the effects of PPP, up 24 basis points and 23 basis points, respectively, from the second quarter. Yield on earning assets expanded 42 basis points, while cost of deposits and cost of funds increased 13 basis points and 18 basis points, respectively, from Q2. Our deposit beta this year remains low at only 4% cycle to date. Non-interest income increased to $5.6 million from $2.6 million linked quarter, largely due to a full quarter of premise mortgage. The premise mortgage management team has done an incredible job recruiting to the platform with two substantial teams in particular, added largely in the third quarter. With these additions, we are projecting originations of over $1 billion next year, up from roughly $300 million this year, with meaningful additions to non-interest income and overall profitability. Non-interest income also included a gain this quarter for an increase in credit indemnification asset of approximately $1.2 million tied to a segment of our loan portfolio. Non-interest expense included a number of items this quarter, including $308,000 in branch closure costs of $311,000 expense for unfunded commitment reserve and a full quarter of mortgage expenses, which included the build-out of origination teams, as Dennis discussed previously. Excluding these items and recovery or expense for unfunded commitments, non-interest expense was $20 million, up from $18.5 million last quarter. The increase was driven by lower deferred costs from lower commercial lending volumes in Q3, which was roughly $500,000 impact, an increase in fraud losses of roughly $250,000, increased marketing and advertising for the new digital platform and V1BE and a customer mailing, which combined was roughly $300,000. Increased professional costs of roughly $250,000 plus additional investments in our lines of business. Many of these expenses will be lower going forward. We will also start to benefit by approximately $500,000 starting in the fourth quarter from the renegotiation of our main data processing contract. Our provision for credit losses was $2.89 million in Q3 versus $408,000 in Q2. The provision was driven by three things: loan growth we experienced in the quarter, weakening economic forecasts included in our CECL models and an increase in specific reserves tied to one nonaccrual loan. We also had net charge-offs in Q3 of $1.1 million, largely tied to one credit that had already specific reserves established against it in previous quarters. As a result, our allowance for credit losses to gross loans, excluding PPP, increased slightly to 1.17% at September 30 versus 1.16% at June 30. Nonperforming assets net of SBA guarantees increased $17.3 million in Q3, primarily due to one relationship largely comprised of three assisted living facilities. This relationship was rated special mention last quarter and was downgraded and placed on nonaccrual in Q3. We are working with the borrower to dispose of the properties and current appraisals indicate we are fully collateralized. Our operating efficiency ratio was approximately 71% in the third quarter, essentially flat from Q2. Excluding the impact of mortgage, our operating efficiency ratio would have been approximately 65% in Q3. We consolidated two branches in Q3, bringing the total for the year to eight. With the data processing savings highlighted above, plus additional efficiency improvements we are pursuing, we continue to believe we can drive the operating efficiency on a combined basis below 65% as we finish 2022. As Dennis mentioned, pretax pre-provision operating ROA was 120 basis points in Q3, up from 100 basis points in Q2. Excluding the investment in mortgage, this ratio would have been approximately 10 basis points higher in the quarter. Our various business lines continue to ramp profitability quickly. Similar to the efficiency ratio discussion, we are confident pretax, pre-provision ROA and return on assets will continue to see meaningful improvement in the near future. With that, operator, we can now open the line to questions.