Doug Goddard
Analyst · Sandler O'Neill. Please go ahead
Thank you, Kyu. As we would expect, this is an unusual quarter in terms of the variances from prior periods due to the merger. As such I'm going to forgo the usual quarter-to-quarter comparisons and just discuss those items where I believe some additional color is wanted. I'll begin with a brief overview of the purchase accounting related to the MOE. We took a total loan mark of 1.7% against Wilshire's portfolio. This increased the overall dollar amount of accredible [ph] discount on our books to approximately $45 million at September 30th, 2016. The total impact of the purchase accounting adjustments added approximately $7.3 million to a pretax income in the third quarter, which positively impacted our net interest margin by 29 basis points. Excluding the impact of purchase accounting adjustments, our net interest margin is 3.48%. In the second quarter 2016, both BBCN and Wilshire had core demand of 3.53%. The decline in core margin that we saw this quarter was due to continued pressure on loan pricing. On a core business, going forward, until we see a meaningful increase in interest rates, it's likely we will continue to see some erosion in our net interest margin. Moving to non-interest income, we chose to remain largely out of the secondary market for SBA loan sales in the third quarter. In part due to the significant corporate activities in the quarter and recorded just $230,000 in net gain on sales. Given that we did not sell any SBA loans this quarter, you may have noticed a significant increase in the balance of our loans held for sale at September 30th, 2016. We expect to resume our usual practice of selling the majority of our 7(a) loan production in the fourth quarter, presuming the prevailing rates in the market remain relatively attractive. We did record $1.5 million of gain on sale for residential mortgage loans, which was primarily related to loans originated by the platform that Wilshire contributed to the combined company. We also did some repositioning in the investment portfolio after the acquisition and sold a number of securities for a net gain of $948,000. Turning to non-interest expense, there was nothing particularly notable in any of the line items other than the merger-related expense. But I will remind everyone that these figures reflect just two months of combined operation, so there will be an increase in expense levels next quarter prior to the cost savings from the branch optimizations taking effect. Moving onto asset quality, we recorded $4 million in charge-offs during the third quarter, $3 million of which was related to one commercial loan relationship. After several years of good performance, the underlying business of this relationship deteriorated very rapidly late in the third quarter, following a partnership dispute that caused the main operator of the business to leave the company. The remaining partner found that he was unable to sustain the business and had to shut it down, resulting in a full charge-off of the loan. Aside from this one issue, we are also closely monitoring any potential impact on our customers as a result of the bankruptcy filing of Hanjin Shipping. We believe we have identified all the borrowers that have direct and/or indirect exposure to the ship -- shipper and we have assigned a dedicated team internally to be responsible for the ongoing review and monitoring. Our analysis to-date is most of our customers have minimal inventory on the stranded ships after the bankruptcy filing and other shipping companies seem to have stepped in to fill the void. This remains an evolving issue that we are closing monitoring. We have downgraded the credits that were determined to have a more direct exposure to Special Mention in light of the inherent uncertainty of this situation and will continue to allocate resources as necessary to proactively identify any changes in the health of these borrowers. Otherwise, we remain generally positive on our asset quality trends with declines quarter-over-quarter in the outstanding balances of the impaired loans, restructured loans, and non-accrual loans. Due to the charge-offs and an increase in reserve factors related to The Hanjin issue, we recorded a provision for loan losses of $6.5 million in third quarter. With that, let me turn the call back to Kevin.