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GBank Financial Holdings Inc. (GBFH)

NASDAQ·Financial Services·Banks - Regional

$28.69

-0.03%

Mkt Cap $419.79M

Q4 2024 Earnings Call

GBank Financial Holdings Inc. (GBFH) Q4 2024 Earnings Call Transcript & Results

Reported Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Results

Earnings reported

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Revenue

$10.32B

Estimate

$10.40B

Surprise

-0.80%

YoY +8.70%

EPS

$2.40

Estimate

$2.25

Surprise

+6.80%

YoY +12.40%

Share Price Reaction

Same-Day

-3.20%

1-Week

+5.70%

Prior Close

$184.21

Transcript

Ed Nigro:

Well, good morning for those of you on the West Coast, and good afternoon for those on the East Coast. This is Ed Nigro, I'm Executive Chairman of GBank Financial Holdings and GBank, and I have in the room with me Ryan Sullivan, our Chief Executive Officer and President, and also Jeff Whicker, our Chief Financial Officer, and both will be presenting today with me. And I'd like to kick it off by an introductory paragraph or rather statement that's important. And we'll set the tone for this call. On January 10 of 2025, the GBFH filed on a confidential basis a selling shareholder re-offer of securities on an SEC Form S-1. In other words, we filed a registration statement for the 1,081,081 shares that we sold in a private placement offering in October, which I believe we concluded in October of 2024. Now, we filed for the registration of those shares as we had indicated we would in the offering document. This is also a filing to become a registered SEC company. Now, we must carefully control our communications, especially through this registration process. Even though we have no shares for sale, we're not doing an IPO. We are subject to many of the same application procedures and SEC rules and regulations. And most important among those are forward-looking statements and offerings during this period of registration from which we need to refrain. So you will notice, and we will not have as many forward-looking statements in order to comply with SEC regulations. We are in the 30-day period for response from the SEC, and it is a confidential filing, so none of these -- the application or the responses, are public information at this time. And that is also the reason for a lot of the requisites that are placed upon us for our statements. Having said that, we can comment as we do in a normal business call on what actually we are doing today, and what we have accomplished in 2024. And I'm very pleased, as you can imagine, to announce our net income of $18.6 million, or $1.37 per diluted share for the year 2024, especially since it was a 70.6% increase compared to our earnings of 2023. I'm particularly pleased, as we all are, on the fact that we achieved over $500 million in originations in our SBA program, and Ryan will be digging more into that. That's $500 million in 1 year and over $2 billion since our origination in the SBA business. I'll also be talking about our Gaming FinTech division. But particularly, we noticed the credit card transactions of $51.7 million in the fourth quarter, compared to $13.9 million in the third quarter. And you will also recall $1 million in the first quarter. So it is showing particularly strong growth. And we also have achieved an interesting 1-day margin of -- when I say margin, we had a 1-day transactions of $1.5 million recently. So it is being very well accepted, and we'll be getting into more of those details. And so I will turn it over now to Ryan Sullivan. Ryan Sullivan: Yes. Thank you, Ed, and welcome everyone on the call. We're happy to celebrate a number of events during the quarter and really it's the culmination of what has constituted a standout and breakout year for the company and bank. As Ed mentioned, total earnings for the year at $18.6 million, that's a 71% year-over-year increase. As we all get ready for a big football game with a team that's looking to 3-peat, we're celebrating our own 3-peats here with the company and the bank specifically. Q4 was our third consecutive quarter of both record-breaking earnings and net revenue, earnings for the quarter of $5.2 million. And then also many of you may have seen for the third consecutive year that the company was recognized with the OTCQX Best 50 for the company's stock performance. Really pleased with continued performance and operating metrics of the company. As indicated, record loan origination for the year. Our SBA operations surpassed $500 million for 2024 as mentioned and $2 billion cumulative since we launched in 2015. A big driver of our revenue and earnings for the quarter, obviously, was the gain on sales loans, which was $4 million for the quarter on increased volume of nearly $99 million. We continue to see small improvements on the pricing there as we sell the guaranteed loans, and you can see in the quarter in the low 4% GAAP gain percentage. As Ed mentioned, we're particularly excited about credit card development and seeing very strong utilization growth there, over $51 million in credit card spend during the quarter. And also on a subsequent basis, we are celebrating $100 million in total credit card transactions, and that was a threshold that was surpassed in January after year-end. So that's very exciting as well. You'll note on the income statement that we broke out interchange specifically as we see very high transaction and utilization rates, as we mentioned, within our credit card customers, we've seen significant growth in that line item. That line item is, we think, pretty interesting today and will be interesting to track as time goes on. As we think about credit card and its overall contribution, specifically in 2024, our credit card activities generated approximately a $1.1 million pretax loss. As mentioned, we did reach breakeven during the quarter. And as we expect future growth into 2025, we think that there will be a significant swing in generated earnings from that line specifically. You'll also note, we did have some net interest margin compaction or compression in the quarter. Now part of that was shoring up, getting ready for really stabilizing NIM into 2025. As noted, approximately $170,000 in accelerated interest costs. And what that allowed us to do was to call approximately $20 million in callable CDs during the quarter and put us in good shape for calling an additional $20 million in the current quarter, Q1. We do expect to see some significant repricing down in the CD book specifically. We were going into Q4 with approximately $64 million in maturing CDs. By March, we were able to replace those on average between 50 and in some cases, as much as 100 basis points lower as they matured and were replaced or renewed. And as we look into Q1, we have the $20 million in brokered CDs that are callable that we expect to call during the quarter and another $100 million almost in CDs that will mature that we'll be repricing down on that portion of our funding mix as well. So another item just to highlight, and then I'll kick it over to Jeff. We're happy to celebrate 2024 really on the credit side was very benign. We've had very low nonperforming assets. And then also net charge-offs for the quarter and the year were $157,000 and $164,000, respectively. I think for the entire year, that's less than 2 basis points on average loans. We did unfortunately have some loans that migrated to nonaccrual status, several of which right at year-end. So total NPAs at year-end were $14.2 million. Now included in that is approximately $9.3 million in SBA guarantees. So our at-risk nonperforming assets and loans at year-end are $4.8 million. As you'd expect and with that guarantee balance, most of those are SBA loans. There's 11 loans outside of the small, about $40,000 in credit cards. That balance was comprised by 11 loans, 10 of which were SBA, 8 of which were SBA hospitality. Very confident in our ability to work through that group. As we look kind of for possible trends and anything that would highlight kind of future growing problems, not really seeing anything there. As you might expect, we've been in very kind of elevated contact and communication with our borrowers through Q4, particularly in the East Coast with some of the storms and hurricanes and then more recently with the fires in the L.A. area. Happy to report that we haven't seen really collateral issues or notable issues of damage there. I will say, in some cases, maybe more of an impact on business conditions, particularly with some of the northern states that always have a little bit of slow time or slow period during the winter months. But on a relative basis, that $4.8 million, 0.4% of total assets or 3.2% of total equity capital plus reserves. So we have a really good track record of working through those NPAs. We don't expect that to change, particularly on the SBA side, specifically in 2024 really 2 notable dispositions, as we mentioned before, both of them were SBA Hospitality, one involved 0 loss and then the losses that you see in Q4 was relating to an approximate $3.6 million loan and our total charge-offs on that one came in at less than $200,000. So overall, a very good quarter. We think we're in really good shape as we head into 2025. Very excited about our business lines and anticipated growth there. And with that, I'll turn it over to Jeff for his detailed comments. Jeff Whicker: Thank you, Ryan, and good morning, everyone. As Ed and Ryan discussed, 2024 has been a better year for the bank, driven by strong growth and record earnings. The company reported earnings of $5.2 million or $0.36 per diluted share for the fourth quarter of 2024, which is a $200,000 increase over the prior quarter earnings of $5 million. For the year, the company reported earnings of $18.6 million, which is a 71% increase over the prior year earnings of $10.9 million or $1.37 per diluted share. Net margins decreased quarter-over-quarter to 4.53% from 5% in the linked quarter. This decrease included a $341,000 reversal of interest and fees on nonaccrual loans and $170,000 of accelerated amortization on callable brokered CDs, as Ryan talked about. We would anticipate -- we anticipate continued pressure in margins in the first quarter as the additional 50 basis point Fed rate decrease will impact the variable rate loans as of January 1 and will be offset by $97 million of higher rate CD maturities that will be replaced at 40 to 80 basis points lower than the current cost. The bank's asset sensitivity has held steady as testing continues to show a 10% impact to net interest income with a 200 basis point change in rates either direction. And the company has made great progress in bringing down this asset sensitivity during the prior year. As Ryan mentioned, we are encouraged by the results of the SBA credit card activity for the quarter. SBA commercial lending activity has remained strong with the bank producing $120 million in loans during the quarter. SBA had a banner year producing a record $500 million in new loans through the year and crossing over $2 billion in total production since the inception of the program. SBA loan sales increased 38% to $98.5 million during the quarter, increasing the gain on sale income by $1.2 million. Sale pricing continues to trend up, providing an earnings hedge as we see reduced net interest margins related to recent rate decreases. Credit card has found a solid footing and continues to build on each quarter. Transaction volume increased 272% for the quarter to $51.7 million, as Ed talked about from $13.9 million in the linked quarter. Additionally, the program is now showing a positive contribution margin and is expected to be a meaningful contributor to income in the upcoming year. SBA and credit card activity has led to a 49.1% increase in noninterest income quarter-over-quarter. Total net noninterest income of $5.8 million was driven by the increased gain on sale income and a $700,000 increase on net interchange income on the credit card portfolio. Noninterest expense increased approximately $700,000 during the quarter, primarily due to the $367,000 stock compensation expense related to a one-time employee stock grant. In addition, the company incurred approximately $300,000 in expenses related to the filing of the S-1 and registration of the shares from the 2024 offering. The efficiency ratio favorably decreased to 55.4% for Q4 2024 from 55.9% in the linked quarter and improved to 58.1% from 68.1% year-over-year as the bank has been able to continue to execute on the technology initiatives that were launched in 2022 and 2023. Taxes decreased quarter-over-quarter by $273,000 due mainly to the additional tax write-off the company can record on vesting stock-based compensation due to the recent increase in stock price. The bank continues to grow the balance sheet, increasing assets by 7.1% in the quarter and 22.4% for the year. Assets closed the year over $1.1 billion and shareholders saw -- and shareholders' equity saw 42.9% growth year-over-year related mainly to earnings and the $20 million private placement that was in October of 2024. The bank continues to fund the loan growth with a mixture of deposits effectively growing deposits in all categories year-over-year. Loan growth has mainly been focused in the CRE and C&I portfolios as SBA lending continues to grow the lending pipeline. In addition, the bank purchased $29 million in fixed rate government-guaranteed securities during the quarter with an average yield of 5.1% this brings the overall book yield on the securities portfolio to 4.78%. 100% government-guaranteed loan balances were $231 million. The decrease of $36 million from the prior quarter is mainly due to a decrease in loans held for sale. The loans held for investment guaranteed balances only decreased $1.5 million due to normal paydowns. The bank recorded $1.3 million of provision expense during the fourth quarter, approximately $800,000 of which was due to an increase of reserves on at-risk nonaccrual loans, while the remaining $500,000 was due to the portfolio growth. Total nonaccrual loans increased $8.7 million quarter-over-quarter. While the increase in nonaccrual loans for the quarter was higher than we've seen in the prior quarters, the bank continues to show better-than-anticipated losses portfolio-wide year-to-date. Given the workout history of the special assets department of the bank, we anticipate being able to quickly work through the troubled assets and have provision recorded for anticipated losses. The overall allowance for credit loss was 1.07% of gross loans and 1.47% of at-risk loans, which is net of the government guaranteed balances. Capital levels remain strong with the bank's Tier 1 capital ratio at 12.9%. In addition, as discussed, the holding company has raised $20 million in new capital during the month of October, and we'll look to inject some of the capital down to the bank to provide for future growth expectations. The bank continues to focus on liquidity with on-balance sheet liquidity increasing $44.9 million quarter-over-quarter. Total liquidity of $738 million as of year-end was 76.9% of total deposits, which included $475 million in untapped borrowing capacity. This year has been a record-breaking year for the bank, and we look forward to continuing to execute on the current initiatives to strengthen and grow the organization and continue to return strong earnings to the shareholders. With that, I'll turn it back over to you, Ed. Ed Nigro: Thank you. I wanted to go back to my quote at the beginning of this press release where I identify GBank as a digital bank as involved in digital banking and payments -- as a digital banking and payments company. And that's the first time we've really focused on identifying ourselves as a digital bank, payments company, because we have been in payments since 2015 when we launched our Play+ card, our prepaid card with Discover way back in 2015. MGM was our first client and only in the state of Nevada. So we were focusing on payments and gaming. And as we discuss who we are as a bank, our Gaming FinTech division focuses on gaming and payments. And the gaming and payments world has changed a great deal, especially as an article in Banker magazine pointed out even since 2019. In 2019, they started a revolution in digital banking amongst banks, where everyone wanted to get into this digital banking world very quickly with a lot of fintechs offering different digital banking solutions to clients, customers and consumers. Some have been good and some you've seen over the recent 2 years have been not so good. Well, we've been developing our digital banking processes for 10 years now. And we've been particularly spending what people do not see these last 2 years or 3 years since we brought in our own IT officer. Our technology development with protecting the consumers and knowing our clients, our vendor management and how we manage our payment system is very unique. You have seen programs like our pool player accounts and pool consumer accounts that are going to be foundations and our foundations for customers we're developing today. We had hoped to go live in the fourth quarter with our first major client BoltBetz for cashless gaming for slot machines. And actually, they're in live testing right now with all of the processing necessary to create the digital accounts that the platform or the app needs and how they flow to the bank, because all those funds on that app, on that gaming app are going to be held at the bank and all the transactions are done at the bank. And there's also recent articles on the payments industry in American Banker Magazine, the December issue, which talks about these revolutions that are occurring and says that it will occur even faster with the faster pay mechanisms. Such as The Clearing House is RTP, and we will be live with The Clearing House RTP. The advantages, we also believe of focusing on the gaming industry. The gaming industry, and I've been in a very long time, used to have a stigma attached to it, not anymore. It's part of everyday life, turn on an NFL game. And they'll tell you how to bet the odds and the announcement will tell you the odds of certain things occurring during that quarter. College football has paid athletes now. Look at the college football playoffs. Look what's coming up with March Madness, Look how sports and sports gaming are part of everyday life across America. And this has been our focus for 10 years. And we're starting to see and we shall see the participation of our clients in this arena, and as manifested by our credit card, which we're specializing for our gaming clients, for our consumer of our gaming clients. What we did that is so different than anyone else is that we wanted as a bank in Nevada, we wanted to bank our gaming industry from the beginning. But we can't do loans to these multibillion-dollar companies to build a casino or finance their operations when we're not -- we can't give $2 billion loans. But what we can do is finance the customers, the consumer. And so way back in 2015, we went to service the consumer who likes to participate in both license gaming and skills gaming. And we developed this credit card so that we would have a clear -- another process besides our prepaid cards of loading these apps, so that the consumer can participate in this activity. And you know the way we do it, we protect the consumer because we have worked so diligently to create our internal processes. So I guess what I'm saying and why I'm bringing this up is because as you look at the credit card growth, we did what I said, 1 million in transactions in the very first quarter of 2024, and we did 1.5 million in transactions in 1 day this month. So we're seeing that the participation in the groundwork and the foundations that we've built are working. Now we teed ourselves when we had 700,000 prepaid cards in the gaming industry. So our transition to the credit card was based on a lot of experience in being a card issuer. This particular card, of course, now has credit. The credit side is relatively small, which we had anticipated. The transaction side is what we have focused upon, and that is what is working. But I wanted to say that, we believe that we are finishing this year in the technology aspects of what we're doing to be able to process very accurately, very rapidly in very large volumes, all the payments mechanisms that our digital wallet clients are going to require. And we are building that network right now. We have been building it for years. And we've been building it on a foundation of good governance, consumer protection and safety and soundness. So I just wanted to conclude with that because we are in very many markets with very interesting products -- and we believe that our focus on the consumer side and on the protection of the consumer is and has been and will continue to be very important. So -- and you could see we reported on our Gaming FinTech division and the clients that we are boarding and the activity we believe will be occurring very soon, especially our first live clicks-and-mortar casino payments program. So with that, I will conclude, and thank you all very much and open it up for questions. Q - Tim Coffey : Ed, its Tim Coffey from Janney. I guess, my first question is, what is the time line for being a fully registered SEC company? Ed Nigro: Well, unfortunately, the only time line I can give you is the one that is published right now. When we submitted our application on January 10, we are in what is the -- call the comment period with the SEC. So we will wait -- we shall wait to hear back from them commenting on our application, and that generally happens within 30 days. Then the rest of the process is a process that's published is that you conclude that you respond to their responses and move towards the registration. Now I can't give you a specific time line because we haven't seen their comments yet. And I think that's the best answer I can give you other than we've reported in the past that we can hope to accomplish all this by the end of the first quarter, which you'll see. Tim Coffey: Okay. As far as expenses and being a fully SEC registered company, are there additional expenses you're anticipating this next year? Ryan Sullivan: Yes. I would say, Tim, this is Ryan. Yes, there are, although I think we started to see the incur of those expenses in Q4. So Jeff had highlighted that there was about -- approximately $300,000 in expenses related to SEC in the Form S-1. We think that that's a pretty good run rate going forward. It might ebb and flow a little bit, change a little bit on any particular quarter, but we think that, that will probably be relatively stable as part of the overhead structure. Ed Nigro: That amount was included in our fourth quarter results. That's right. So that we didn't pull it down as a one-time expense because Ryan and Jeff and I were talking it will probably continue for some time. Tim Coffey: Yes. Okay. That's helpful. And then the credit card product, is there a way of kind of determine how additive it could be to earnings in 2025, if it just now broke -- was breakeven, how much did the product lose in 2024? Ryan Sullivan: Yes. We -- I mentioned that. But if you think about credit card in 2024 on a pretax basis, the burn rate for the whole year would constitute approximately a $1.1 million pretax loss. And then we turned the corner, obviously, in Q4. So, how big that swing is in 2025 is going to be exciting to see. And I think, it will really tie into what's the growth rate going forward, but we're encouraged by what we see so far. Ed Nigro: One of the things that I think that -- and we have to refrain from forward-looking statements right now about the credit card, but we can actually report -- you've seen the growth in the first year. And we have active footprints to continue issuing those cards. So I wish I could give a little more information than that. I cannot at this time other than I do know and we do know that we're very early in the game. Tim Coffey: Yes. Ryan Sullivan: We are -- and we've talked about this in the past, Tim. I mean, we are continuing to see some of the metrics that we've talked about before. In terms of spend, greater than 90% of the credit card spend is still gaming. So these are heavy gaming transactors, which is great for us as we look at the income statement and that interchange. That's really kind of the key utilization. Ed Nigro: We think that if you look at our current revenues, $26.1 million for December. And I also said that in January, we hit a $1.5 million day. The interchange fee and the revenue -- the gross revenue we're experiencing right now, as an example, for the month of December reached almost $1 million in gross interchange. So you sort of put those numbers together and that has that kind of -- out of the gross revenue comes, of course, our rewards program and our marketing and participation programs. But we anticipate that 50% of that revenue is to the -- is net to the bank. Ryan Sullivan: That's what we have. Tim Coffey: Okay. How is it going getting non-gaming transactions through that pipeline? Because I mean, obviously, 90% of the spend in gaming is pretty good, but is there enough opportunity to spend that? Ed Nigro: We've geared all our marketing to gaming. So we have not geared our marketing to non-gaming. We give a 1% reward for every dollar you load onto your gaming app. And so -- and we give a 2% -- these are cash rewards for all non-gaming transactions. So we feel that, that reward for gaming transactions is an important driver, and we want the card in the hands of people that enjoy skills games, well, enjoy legalized gaming. And that's where like 95% of our transactions are in legalized gaming. Our primary merchants are BetMGM, DraftKings, FanDuel, Caesars and 6 or 7 other companies in Pennsylvania. Tim Coffey: Okay. And then my next question goes to -- I mean, obviously, credit card is doing well. SBA is doing well. Is it your expectation that you'll be able to continue to do really well at both those going through 2025? Ryan Sullivan: Yes. The question was just to restate for Ed. SBA is going very well. Credit card is going well. Do we expect that to continue? Generally, yes, I would say, we did see -- on the production side for SBA, we saw something that we hadn't seen for the prior couple of years, an actual seasonal slowdown on production. So even though we did total new loan originations of $120 million, mostly SBA. We did see some of the pipeline shift Q1 anticipated. But on the SBA side, we're sitting with one of the strongest pipelines that we've ever had, expanded pipeline of nearly $0.25 billion. And then credit card is really the -- is kind of the interesting one to watch. We're still just scratching the surface, we think, in terms of what that market could represent. Ed Nigro: And we also are most anxious to go live with 2 slot programs, bricks-and-mortar programs, hopefully in the first quarter, which we believe one of the things that -- and that caused some slowdown for the launching of these is that November, December for the credit card companies and a lot of the payments companies, it's very difficult to launch new programs. And launching these programs, we're in live testing right now with integrating the slot machine, the payments app and the banking apps to have this process move quickly, including RTP. As a matter of fact, we exercised yesterday, first ACH and RTP is being worked on today to where it will actually occur with these wallets. And this is -- these are major breakthroughs. Unidentified Analyst: Ed and Ryan, Mike Valentino. Ryan, that 3P thing with the Kansas City Chiefs she's brought up at the beginning of the call is -- Ryan Sullivan: It's not going to happen, right, Mike? Unidentified Analyst: It's not going to happen. What are you going to do? Most of us, including all my boys from January from Philadelphia, so I would appreciate it, if you didn't throw that out there as bad mojo. Ryan Sullivan: I said that truly. Unidentified Analyst: Actually, I have a 2-part question. One of them, I guess, to Ryan in terms of how many number of SBA loans were originated in 2024? And then on the flip side of that, how many -- what's the total number of SBA loans that were sold in 2024? And the second part of my question might be to Ed. I know, you can't comment because you're kind of going through a semi-quiet period here, but the massive growth -- by the way, you guys had a phenomenal quarter. I mean, congratulations on that. But the massive growth in the interchange fees, do you see that hockey stick continuing? Or aren't you allowed to comment on that right now, Ed? Ed Nigro: You go ahead first, Ryan. Ryan Sullivan: Yes, we probably can't comment specifically kind of tying to forward-looking statements. I will say, obviously, from Q3 to Q4 on the interchange, that was great, not that we expect that to continue. But on the SBA side, just kind of some round numbers to kind of give you a sense. And that was part of the big increase in SBA year-over-year. I think 2023, that was in the low hundreds in terms of new individual loans. And essentially that we got a double on the number of loans in 2024, nearly 200. And then the sold, I get back to you with an exact number, Mike, but it would be about 70% of the origination volume would be the sales for 2024. So probably about 140 in terms of kind of individual sales transactions during the year. Unidentified Analyst: Okay. So for clarity, what would be the dollar amount of originations? Do you have a rough estimate of what that number would be? Ryan Sullivan: Yes. So dollar amount, like we said, for the year, just the SBA operations was $0.5 billion or just slightly above $500 million. And we expect that level to, by and large, be repeatable, maybe with some small growth in '25. Ed Nigro: The interchange fee is based on transactions. And the transaction is a load to your app on the credit card. So the transactions have nothing to do with bets. And the credit card has nothing to do with bets replacing the wager. What the credit card does is just simply like every time you use the credit card to load an app, you have an interchange fee. The merchant pays an interchange fee. And of course, our merchants will gladly pay the interchange fee because they're getting an active customer who is staying active by the use of the card on multiple times during the month. So it is really transaction-based revenue. If you remember the old -- oh God, in the old days, the old American Express business plan when they first came out was we're going to bring you the best customers and we're going to charge you a higher interchange fee because most of BofA customers back in those days pay their account down every month. So they just wanted the transactions. And that's what we're doing. Our customers are paying off their credit card multiple times a month. And this is a step we created an arrange because we know how one who's interested in gaming performs and they like to load their app, then they'll do whatever they want with multiple bets or wagering and then they'll pay their card off so that they can load it again another time. So the transaction amounts on these cards are very good. And we knew they would be transaction-based. That's why we started it. So we're seeing the transactions occur. And so the interchange fee growth is going to -- is a function of how the card is utilized by the gamer. And the game likes this card because we -- they are able to use some credit to initially launch their wagering accounts or to load their apps. I hope I answered the question. Unidentified Analyst: No, no, no, that's great. I'll step aside, but I got one last question for Ryan, back to the SBA question. So you did $500 million and you said about 70% was sold, so that's $350 million. You guys are just killing it in this space, right? Do you have any competition? Or do you see any competition on the horizon for that business? And the second part would be -- my question would be how does 2024 in terms of bond or SBA loans you sold in 2023? Was that an increase? Was there more opportunistic profits for you in '24 than '23? Or was it basically flat year-over-year? Ryan Sullivan: Yes, a pretty big increase year-over-year compared to 2023, Mike. Just to clarify, the number of loans, the sole portion is the guaranteed portion. So our total sale volume for '24 wouldn't be 350. It'd be less than that because we're just selling the portion. But certainly, nearly a double in volume year-over-year, an improvement. Obviously, you remember in 2023, some instability, I would say, in terms of the financial market. So we saw that in SBA pricing. We've seen some recovery there. We think that the recovery on the pricing could continue. Like I said, the most recent quarter, our GAAP sales percentage was still in the low 4s. Long-term average is above that. So hopefully, we start to see that bump up in some of the future quarters. But in terms of competition to that question, there are a number of SBA lenders up there. It tends to be a pretty concentrated business. Some are really good at it. One of the things that really causes us to stand apart is our core competency in hospitality. We don't really have an effective peer competitor on that. 2024 would be the fifth year in a row that we were the #1 hospitality SBA 7(a) lender. We don't expect that to change. There are some banks that focus on hospitality, and they do a very good job in their own right. But a lot of times, that's not government-guaranteed lending, which is very specialized. So we feel really good about our competitive position there. Ed Nigro: I think from a competitive position, there's an important move we did and we have been doing over the last 3 years, 3 to 4 years. And a lot of many SBA banks use a massive broker network because -- to generate their loans. We do not. We use a relatively small broker network and our brokers are major shareholders of our bank. Most of the 5 top brokers that we have are major shareholders of our bank and significant participants with us. They're valued assets to us and our relationship remains -- we believe will remain very strong. And this is a vast majority of the production of our loans come from this relatively small network, but the relatively small network is part of us. And they're part of our -- they're as much part of us as I, Unidentified Analyst: It's David Verlander. Congrats on a great quarter. Can you give us an update on the state lottery initiatives? What's going on there? And can you help us understand why the states would elect to use a prepaid card versus what they're doing now, whether it's checks or what have you? Ed Nigro: Well, the tech company that we brought the state lottery program to us that has executed an agreement with us has been unable to launch the first state yet. And some of the obstacles are seem to be that the individuals running the state lottery don't want to change the way they are function for whatever reasons they have in the sense of the manual processes they're doing and the number of employees they have and the number of just the way they do it, although the concept of issuing a prepaid card is much less expensive than writing these checks that they have to do for every lottery winner and some lottery winners remember, are relatively small. So the intent of this technology company was to issue prepaid cards for all lottery payments over $500 because some of the smaller payments are given by some of the locations themselves where you scratch and win. But -- the interesting part is the state approved it, but the process, but they haven't been able to launch it yet. So it's still on hold with this one processor, and we have one technology company, and we haven't pushed it really hard because he's pushing as hard as he can. I think that's the only update I have on the state lottery because he had -- he believes he has several other states lined up once he launched his first, which he has been unable to launch. What was the second part of your question? Unidentified Analyst: Well, I was just trying to understand the economics of the state lottery program. One, why would they elect to use prepaid cards versus checks and you answer that because it's lower cost. But are there any insights you can give us as to the economics for you? How do you get paid? Do you get paid when the card is loaded? Or do you get paid when the consumer uses the card? And can you give us an idea of what that interchange would be? Ed Nigro: Yes, the fee would be when the card is loaded. Okay. And then if they spend the card within a merchant services area, there's an interchange fee there. But it's very small. It's like what's been happening as an example, in many of these critical areas that have suffered, especially like in North Carolina, where so many people suffer some huge losses, the best way to get money to these people is with prepaid cards. And so there are many of the charitable organizations in the organization set up to help those are giving them prepaid cards. And it's the easiest way to move money to disaster areas of the people. Well, the same thing is true of lotteries. When you have -- we only hear about the major lottery winner who wins billions of dollars, but there are a lot of lottery winners that win a small amount of money. And so it becomes much cheaper just to issue the prepaid card. Ryan Sullivan: And one of the key economic drivers on that program like others is when you think about the payments that are being processed above the de minimis either $500 million or $600 million, that's a pretty substantial amount in aggregate. And I think one of the big economic drivers for us as we look forward is the continuation of growth of noninterest-bearing deposits. So that's certainly our key focus. Ed Nigro: We've heard -- well, our tech company has reported to us that the cost is about $6 a check to pay these lottery people because of all of the divisions it goes through and the state treasury and all the other -- all the hands that touch it, it's expensive. Ryan Sullivan: It's a cost, it's a convenience. There's also a compliance factor of it. It's easier in a prepaid access and prepaid environment to meet all the compliance. Ed Nigro: We think that we stay very active, David, as an example, the FDIC had come out with 2 rulemakings recently, the one about core deposits and changing it they withdrew that whole proposal. And the most recent one on custodial accounts and how they want to administer and understand and provide greater consumer protection in custodial accounts. I've been involved in responses to the FDIC on that in the fourth quarter. And we believe there are some very interesting things occurring at the FDIC. Of course, you've seen Travis Hill, he is now the acting Chairman of the FDIC. And if anyone wants to see what Travis Hill thinks, he gave a speech about 3 weeks ago before he was named active Chairman. And it's really an interesting speech. And in the speech, he said, he wants to -- we should reactivate FDI Tech. And FDI Tech was a division that Elena McWilliams has set up to create what they call government private partnerships to enhance new technology for banking. And I think Travis Hill is going to reinstitute that division. And that is a division that we are most interested in talking to with respect to our pool player accounts and our pool consumer accounts because we know, as you have dug deep into it, David, that it is a very, very effective solution in protecting the consumer. So there's a lot going on in that arena right now, but early monetization of it, I don't have any projections. I think that one of the things, and that's why I mentioned so much our payments and our gaming. We are so focused on that right now for our bank because there is -- there where we see the sort of more instant gratification in terms of earnings potential because of the programs we've been working on some of them for 3 and 4 years now. When they finally get launched, it's going to be, what took you so long. But the reality of it is we get calls all the time from banks that are having problems with their tech divisions, Fresno Bank recently. You know some of the other stories of some of the other banks and synapse. And the way that some have chosen, and I'm not throwing any allegations of any of them, but some have chosen their relationship with the fintechs like is different than what we do. And that's why I mentioned that the technology we're developing. We manage them all inside our vendor management. We know who everybody is that we do business with. And we had -- we took about 4 companies in our pipeline that were going to bring us a considerable amount of deposits that we did not at the bank or BCS because of the -- once we dug deeper into our vendor management and looked at their consumer customers and the merchants they were using or bringing aboard, we did not want to be exposed to them. So we canceled. So we are very discriminatory and gaming. When I pointed out that gaming is our industry because it's so regulated, the programs in licensed gaming that we're doing, we're dealing with highly regulated entities. And you saw where we even have now and he's a very fine distinguished gentleman A.G. Bet, who was our former Gaming Control Board Chairman in the State of Nevada. And that's the top. The Gaming Control Board are the ones that issue the licenses and issued the finance. And they're the ones that control our $15 billion a year industry in the state. So many states have controlling entities like that. And the companies we're doing business with -- when we go in or management them, as an example, I'll give you one example on our credit card because of the high volume that we're generating already, we've gone to BetMGM and MGM Resorts and their compliance people are talking directly with our compliance people. We want to make sure that these transactions with their accounts, their digital accounts at BetMGM are really being used for what they say they are, and they are. We dig that deep. So it's difficult for us to bet many customers as fast as some other banks do because of the way we function. I hope I answered that question. But that does not mean we're not working on some licensing transactions, especially custodial account issues with the FDIC, we think we're in a very important place to do some very -- without forward-looking, I'm talking about what we're doing today. Unidentified Analyst: Got you. And that leads to my final question, which is as you're going through your final testing on the slot program and as you interact with Konami or other slot companies, has anything happened that would cause you to temper your expectations or conversely make you more optimistic than you were for this opportunity? Ed Nigro: Well, I think both are forward-looking, David. I can say that nothing has changed -- our status in terms of -- we believe, as we have said before and we'll say today, this is a very, very important program that we're going to launch very soon. Unidentified Analyst: Got it. Okay. That was helpful. Ed Nigro: Well, I want to thank all of you very much for listening to our story, and we'll see where we are 1 quarter from now when we talk to you again, and I should have better inputs and updates on our SEC filing position by then. Ryan Sullivan: Thank you, everybody.

AI Summary

First 500 words from the call

Ed Nigro: Well, good morning for those of you on the West Coast, and good afternoon for those on the East Coast. This is Ed Nigro, I'm Executive Chairman of GBank Financial Holdings and GBank, and I have in the room with me Ryan Sullivan, our Chief Executive Officer and President, and also Jeff Whicker, our Chief Financial Officer, and both will be presenting today with me. And I'd like to kick it off by an introductory paragraph or rather statement that's important. And we'll set the tone for this call. On January 10 of 2025, the GBFH filed on

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