Mark McCollom
Analyst · Piper Sandler. Your line is now open
Thanks, Curt and good morning to everyone on the call. Unless I knew it otherwise, the quarterly comparisons I will discuss are with the third quarter of 2020. Starting on Slide 3, earnings per diluted share this quarter were $0.30 on net income available to common shareholders of $48.7 million. This is $0.08 lower than the third quarter. Included in these results were $15.4 million of expenses recognized as part of our cost savings initiatives previously announced. Our fourth quarter performance included a lower provision for credit losses and higher net interest income offset by lower non-interest income and higher non-interest expense due to the charges related to the cost savings initiatives I just mentioned. Compared to our quarterly guidance, loan growth and operating expenses were in line and deposit growth, net interest income and our tax rate all exceeded expectations. Our non-interest income came in just a little bit below our guidance. Moving to Slide 4, our net interest income was $161.6 million, a $7.5 million increase linked quarter, mainly due to fees earned on PPP loans forgiven during the period. Our net interest margin for the fourth quarter was 2.75% versus 2.70% in the third quarter. The 5 basis points of linked quarter increase largely resulted from PPP loan forgiveness and related fee income recognition. Without the $6.4 million of accelerated PPP fee income during the quarter, our net interest margin would have been 2.65% in the fourth quarter. As Phil and Curt mentioned, deposit growth and retention continues to be stronger than we anticipated and our fourth quarter saw average deposits grow by approximately $400 million. We also grew our investment portfolio during the quarter as we invested the net proceeds of our $200 million preferred stock offering. And we also selectively deployed some of our excess cash into mortgage-backed securities as the yield curve steepened in the fourth quarter. Our average loan to deposit ratio declined slightly during the quarter from 92.6% to 91.4%. Turning to credit, our fourth quarter provision for credit losses was $6 million versus $7 million in the third quarter and $20 million a year ago. As you know, COVID-19 had a significant impact on our allowance for credit losses in the first half of 2020. But as economic forecasts have eased in the second half of the year, so have the needs for allowance for credit loss. Of course, this can change in future periods based on new loan origination volumes, loan mix, net charge-off activity and the economic projections. Non-performing loans as a percentage of total loans, excluding PPP loans, were 85 basis points for the quarter up from 83 basis points linked quarter and 84 basis points a year ago. Including PPP loans, non-performing loans to loans were 78 basis points up 3 basis points on a linked quarter basis. The allowance for credit losses as a percentage of loans at year end was 1.60%, excluding PPP loans, an increase of 4 basis points from the prior quarter. The allowance for credit loss as a percentage of non-performing loans was 189% at December 31, an increase from 188% last quarter. Moving to Slide 6, non-interest income, excluding securities gains, was $56 million, down approximately $8 million from $63 million last quarter and in line with $55 million a year ago. This was slightly lower than our guidance as a result of lower mortgage sales gains. Mortgage banking revenues were also impacted by $1.3 million impairment on our mortgage servicing rights during the quarter compared to $1.5 million in the prior quarter. This brings our total MSR impairments for the year to $10.5 million. Wealth management revenues were $16 million for the quarter, an increase of 5% from the third quarter and an increase of 9% from the prior year. Capital markets revenues declined linked quarter after very strong performance for the prior four quarters. Moving to Slide 7, our non-interest expenses were $155 million in the fourth quarter, up $16 million linked quarter. However, as I previously noted in the fourth quarter, we incurred $15.4 million of expenses related to cost savings initiatives. Excluding these expenses, we came in at the low end of our guidance range. Slide 8 provides detail on the special charges recognized in 2020 related to these cost savings initiatives. In total, we expect this initiative will reduce our operating expenses by $25 million on an annual basis. We anticipate reinvesting a portion of these savings in 2021 in order to accelerate the digital transformation of our company. We also plan to continue making normal ongoing investments into our franchise in 2021. However, on an overall basis, we expect this expense initiative will result in 2021 core operating expenses lower than our 2020 core expenses. Our effective tax rate was 9.5% for the quarter compared to 13.4% in the third quarter of 2020 primarily due to lower pre-tax earnings. Slide 9 gives you more detail on our capital ratios. During the quarter, we raised $200 million of Tier 1 qualified preferred stock, which increased Tier 1 capital and related ratios. We continue to maintain solid capital and liquidity. Our previous share repurchase program expired on December 31 of last year and we are considering a new repurchase program for 2021. Lastly, we would like to provide our thoughts about forward guidance for 2021. We are streamlining our guidance for 2021 to the following areas. We expect our annual net interest income to be in the range of $620 million to $640 million. We expect our provision for credit losses to be in the range of $30 million to $50 million for the full year. We expect our annual non-interest income to be in the range of $210 million to $220 million. And lastly, we expect our core operating expenses to be in the range of $550 million to $570 million for the year. And with that, I will now turn the call over to the operator for questions. Stacy?