John Allison
Analyst · Stephens
Thank you, Donna. Welcome to our 2022 year-end and fourth quarter earnings release and conference call. Properly managing last year was both arduous, stressful and somewhat exhausting at bear. Loan and deposit rates had not been this high since the late 70s and the early 80s. That's when Volcker took rates to the low 20s and; finally, killed the snake, better known as inflation. This is the second fastest that we've ever raised rates in the history of our country. Our belief is that we have higher rates for longer. We've not even hit the 50-year average at 5.44 fed funds and the pivot crowd will be disappointed because Powell is aware of the early pivot that Volcker did in the 70s. Inflation was not over then and it's not over now. We must hold the course, maybe not raise rates as much as in the past, but continue to raise, pause, observe as it takes almost a year for the impact of what we did today to show up in the comments. We're seeing some signs of inflation slowing but without continued rate increases. This could be no more than a hearsay The naysayers are saying, there will be run-on banks. Bad loans will start raising their hand. The recession is here. The biggest stock market crash is imminent. There is a financial hurricane leading in this direction, banks are out of money and higher interest rates are destroying the value by reducing the value of the securities due to ALCI. I have to agree that some of these risks are certainly out there, but most can be properly managed. A lot of the deposits at much higher rates are finding their way to those who did not show patience and continued on the same path, ploughing deposits into low rate loans and security. It will be a long road for those companies. They will not catch up for three to five years if that quick or until the low rate loans and securities roll off the books. I have said this before and I want to say it again, there is no substitute for experience. The key essentially have interest income down to our own interest expense to result in an increase in net interest income, even as conservative as Home is and the position we were in, this is a very trying task during the quarter, because those who spent their money were forced to buy money regardless of the cost as evidenced by their CD ads everywhere. There has not been a CD ad run at Home. We let deposits leave the bank only when they hit the stupid point. Otherwise we attempt to retain the deposits. In good times, these branded banks had a race to the bottom on loan rates and now they're having a race to the top on deposit rates. As tough as it is to maintain excess cash, we're still hanging out around 80% loan to deposit, additional cash flows from securities, principal payments and smaller payouts are resulting in about $300 million per month in cash flow. February is expected to be about $550 million because we have a $250 million treasury put that in where we could get another bite at the apple. We get that in early February. We have - with 80% loan to deposits, virtually no broker deposits, limited borrowing with billions of capacity plus cash flow only sets us in a great position. In spite of the damage done and more attempted by the West Texas Group, it appears the intent was to destroy shareholder value. The strength of the entire franchise is stepped up and delivered three record quarters in a row since we closed that transaction. We're keeping a tally of the unprofessional damage doing to our franchise and we'll talk more about that in coming months. I found this pretty interesting. Bill Bonner described as an underappreciated economic genius, explained that financial innovation always appear brig at first, but they sooner take you to access and become a forest and eventually the forest leads to a tragedy. All banks are not created equal as all cars, it's all land, people, management teams, football teams, we pride ourselves by trying to separate ourselves from the rest of the pack with top tier performance being named best bank in America by Forbes three of the last five years is certainly a great achievement by our team. I don't know if any other bank in the country that has achieved that goal. We just witnessed the Georgia Bulldogs, separate themselves from the pack in a very impressive fashion, no doubt about who is the national champion in the US. I don't know that Home is the national bank champion, but we're certainly in the playoffs and congratulations goes to our team. We are [indiscernible] of the trading given to us by our supporters as there are only a handful of banks trading over two times tangible book, while 66% of all publicly-trading banks are trading at 125 [ph] or less and that number came from last week and were taking them all down this week. The conservative management team at Home believes in maintaining a fortress balance sheet with excess capital and sufficient reserves. We do that in the event of a major downturn in the economy, all while continuing to report record profits and top care performers. We’ll continue to carry these conservative balances, but regardless of the situation, Home will be open in the morning next week and next month. There is no substitute for strength. You cannot get it when you need it. Therefore, we carried it all times better safe than sorry. Don't worry about Home. We're taking care of you buying. Let's go to the numbers. I'm pretty impressed with these numbers myself. Record fourth quarter income of $115.7 million or $0.57 a share, I'm sure that's a beat. Record '22 earnings as adjusted for the one-time second quarter adjustment of the merger expense of $107 million, $375.9 million or $1.93 EPS, fourth quarter ROA 1.98%, a little discipline I wanted to, but that's about as close to the [indiscernible]. ROTCE, return on tangible common equity in the fourth quarter amazing 22.96%. Tangible book grew from $9.82 to $10.17, even though we continue to buy back stock. AOCI [indiscernible] reported AOCI improved by $2 million. That's not much, but it's certainly moving in the right direction. ROE 13.26%; revenue, record revenue, $272.3 for the fourth quarter; fourth quarter margin, 4.21%, up from 4.05%, that’s up 16 basis points. I think at the end of the first quarter, we said we'll continue to expand the margin in the second quarter, but not as much. It was a pretty good battle and somebody better be managing their bank every day to grow that margin. Non-performing assets from 0.27% and non-performing loans were 0.42% same or about the same or lower than last quarter. We did fourth quarter loan growth was $580 million and I think Stephen will report on how that rate that was over - I think overall portfolio was up 60 basis points in the fourth quarter. We added $5 million to reserve; puts us at 475.99 times classified assets, I guess that's what it may be reserved is 475.99% to performing loans, I'm sorry, non-performing loans. At the 2.01%, number is $289.7 million; efficiency ratio of 42.44%, we repurchased 840,000 shares for $20 million during the quarter. We didn't make any change in dividend. We'll be discussing that at the meeting on Friday. We received $15 million from our lawsuit against First Service in a lawsuit statement. And next quarter, I want to introduce a very exciting and profitable portion of our company that has never been properly recognized or promoted. So stay tuned for that. I think you'll enjoy that. It's taken a lot of my attention recently. And strong capital levels, and I think Stephen will go over those in his presentation. These are some of the best numbers that we've ever produced and probably the best that anyone has ever produced. We didn't win the National Bank championship, but I can guarantee you we were going to the playoffs. And during all this time we get down green with these numbers, I find that really totally unbelievable. But anyway, it is what it is. Donna, I think that pretty much wraps up what I've got to say. And if you want to take it from here?