Mark McCollom
Analyst · Piper Sandler. Your line is open
Great. Thank you, Curt, and good morning to everyone on the call. Unless I note otherwise, the quarterly comparisons I will discuss are with the third quarter of 2022. And the loan and deposit growth numbers I will be referencing are annualized percentages on a linked quarter basis. Starting on Slide 3, operating earnings per diluted share this quarter were $0.48, on operating net income available to common shareholders of $81.2 million. This is consistent with $0.48 of operating EPS in the third quarter of 2022. Our operating results exclude $1.9 million of merger related charges recorded during the quarter for our acquisition of Prudential Bancorp, and $514,000 in core deposit in tangible amortization. At this point, we believe all the costs for our acquisition of Prudential Bancorp had been incurred. Moving to the balance sheet. As Curt noted, loan growth was very strong for the quarter at $584 million or 12% annualized. Commercial lending contributed $349 million of this growth or 10% annualized. C&I lending grew $244 million, led by automobile floorplan increases, agricultural lending and an overall increase in-line utilization, which increased from 22.5% last quarter to 23% this quarter. Commercial real estate lending grew $139 million, or 7% annualized. Consumer lending produced organic growth of $240 million, or 15% during the quarter. Mortgage lending was still the largest component of our consumer loan growth and increased to $163 million with the majority of this growth coming from adjustable rate products. Total deposits excluding customer repo accounts declined $727 million during the quarter. Approximately, one-third of this decline was attributable to anticipated outflows within our municipal deposit portfolio, consistent with prior year trends. Our investment portfolio was relatively flat for the quarter, closing at $4 billion. Putting together all of those balance sheet trends on Slide 4, net interest income was $226 million, a $10 million increase linked quarter. Loan yields expanded 59 basis points during the period, increasing to 4.8% versus 4.21% last quarter. Our total cost of deposits increased 24 basis points to 42 basis points during the quarter. Cycle to date, our total deposit beta is only 9% cumulatively. Our increase this quarter puts us where we expect it to be at year-end, and we continue to believe a cumulative through the cycle total deposit beta of approximately 30% is achievable. Our net interest margin for the third quarter was 3.69% versus 3.54% last quarter. The 15 basis points of improvement resulted primarily from loan betas being higher than deposit betas during the period. Going forward, I would expect our net interest margin expansion to be more modest with additional rate increases, due to higher deposit betas and changes in our funding mix. Our loan-to-deposit ratio increased from 92.1% at September 30 to 98.2% currently. Turning to credit quality. Our NPAs declined $21 million during the quarter, which led to our NPA to assets ratio improving from 76 basis points at September 30 to 66 basis points at year-end. Net charge-offs of $12 million were driven by a $12 million write-down on one commercial office loan due to credit related concerns. Overall criticized and classified loans continued trending lower with a decline of $26 million or 3% during the quarter, following a $251 million or a 24% decline from the second to third quarters of 2022. Despite these positive trends, changes to our macroeconomic outlook and strong portfolio growth led to the increase in our provision for credit losses this quarter. Turning to Slide 6. Commercial banking fees declined $2.2 million to $18.6 million, with decreases in cash management revenues driven by higher interest rates and capital markets declines driven by reduced interest rate swap activity. Consumer banking fees declined $1.2 million linked quarter to $12.1 million led by decreases in overdraft fees. As a reminder during the prior quarter, we implemented changes to our overdraft products and services to improve our customers' experience. Wealth management revenues were effectively flat with the prior quarter at $17.5 million. New business activity continued and the market value of assets under management and administration increased to $13.5 billion at year-end compared to $12.7 billion for the prior quarter. Mortgage banking revenues declined and were driven by a decline in mortgage loan sales as well as a decrease in gain on sales spreads 266 basis points this quarter versus 202 basis points last quarter. Moving to Slide 7. Non-interest expenses excluding merger related charges were approximately $167 million in the fourth quarter, up $4 million linked quarter. As a reminder, many of the cost savings from the Prudential Bancorp acquisition will not be recognized until the first quarter of '23 as many impacted employees of Prudential Bank had worked through dates of mid-December. We also had certain expenses occurring in the fourth quarter of '22 that we expect to reset to lower levels in the first quarter of '23. Included in this list, our incentive compensation related accruals of $3 million due to strong earnings. Expense accruals of $800,000 for branch consolidations planned for 2023. And lastly, $1.9 million of legal expenses and related reserves for a contingent liability. Turning to Slide 8. As of December 31, we maintained solid cushions over our regulatory capital minimums and our bank and parent company liquidity remains strong. Accumulated other comprehensive losses improved $57 million during the quarter. Along with strong earnings, this improved our tangible common equity ratio and drove linked quarter growth of 6% and our tangible book value per share. Our tangible common equity ratio was 6.9% at quarter end, up from 6.7% last quarter. Excluding the impact of AOCI our tangible common equity ratio was 8.2% at December 31. During the quarter, we did not repurchase any common shares. However, our Board has approved a new $100 million share repurchase authorization, which is available and in place until the end of 2023. On Slide 9, we are providing our first iteration of guidance for 2023. Our guidance assumes a total of 75 basis points of future Fed funds increases occurring in 2023 as follows, 50 basis points in February, and 25 basis points in March. With that, our 2023 guidance is as follows: we expect our net interest income on a non-FTE basis to be in the range of $895 million to $915 million; we expect our non-interest income, excluding securities gains to be in the range of $220 million to $235 million; we expect non-interest expenses to be in the range of $645 million to $665 million for the year; and lastly, we expect our effective tax rate to be in the range of 19% plus or minus for the year. Many of you also look at pre-provision net revenue or PPNR as a key metric to assess the profitability of our core operations. Our version of this metric is included in the financial tables of our press release. PPNR has increased 48% year-over-year as a result of earning asset growth over the past year, as well as net interest margin expansion from our asset-sensitive balance sheet. With that, I'll now turn the call over to the operator for questions. Chris, please help us.