Earnings Labs

Independent Bank Corporation (IBCP)

Q1 2016 Earnings Call· Mon, Apr 25, 2016

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning and welcome to the IBCP Independent Bank Corp. First Quarter 2016 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. [Operator instructions] Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Brad Kessel, President and CEO. Please go ahead, sir.

Brad Kessel

Analyst · Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead

Good morning. Thank you for joining Independent Bank Corporation's conference call and webcast to discuss the company's 2016 first quarter results. I am Brad Kessel, President and Chief Executive Officer and joining me is Rob Shuster, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin today's call, it is my responsibility to direct you to the cautionary note regarding forward-looking statements. This is Slide 2 in our presentation. If anyone does not already have a copy of the press release issued by Independent Bank today, you can access it at our company's website, www.independentbank.com. The agenda for today's call will include prepared remarks, followed by a question-and-answer session and then closing remarks. Beginning with the financial summary slide, Page 4 in our deck, we are reporting for the first quarter 2016 net income of $4.1 million, or $0.19 per diluted share, versus net income of $3.8 million, or $0.16 per diluted share in the prior-year period. This represents 8.4% and 18.8% increases in net income and diluted earnings per share respectively over the prior year period. Turning to Slide 5, this quarter's results were highlighted by a year-over-year and sequential increase in net interest income of $1.7 million and $0.4 million respectively. Growth in portfolio loans, which increased $23.9 million or 6.4% annualized. Growth in total deposit balances, which increased $68.7 million or 13.3% annualized. Continued progress and improving asset quality with non-performing assets down $0.6 million or 3.5% since December 31, 2015 and MPAs have declined by $3.2 million or 15.7% since March 31, 2015. Non-performing assets to total assets are now at 69 basis points. This compares to 74 basis points at December 31, 2015 and 88 basis points at March 31, 2015. During the first quarter of 2016, we repurchased 1,59,865 shares of our stock at…

Rob Shuster

Analyst · Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead

Thanks, Brad, and good morning, everyone. I am starting at Page 10 of our presentation. Our net interest income totaled $19.8 million during the first quarter of 2016, an increase of $1.7 million or 9.2% from the year-ago period and an increase of $0.4 million or 2.1% on a linked quarter basis. Our tax equivalent net interest margin was 3.61% during the first quarter of 2016, compared to 3.57% in the year ago period and 3.56% in the fourth quarter of 2015. Although the net interest margin remains under some stress due to the prolonged low interest rate environment that has pressured yields on the company's loan portfolio, we remain optimistic that we can offset this stress by a remix of our earning asset base largely through loan growth. Average interest earning assets were $2.21 billion in the first quarter of 2016 compared to $2.06 billion in the year-ago quarter and $2.18 billion in the fourth quarter of 2015. Page 11 contains a more detailed analysis of the linked quarter increase in net interest income. This increase was primarily due to an increase in interest income and loans that was partially offset by an increase in interest expense on deposits and borrowings. Net recoveries of interest on charged-off or non-accrual loans increased by $365,000 in the first quarter of 2016. Going in the other direction one less day in the first quarter of 2016 is compared to the fourth quarter of 2015 reduced net interest income by about $116,000. We’ll comment more specially on our outlook for net interest income for the remainder of 2016 later in this presentation. Moving on to Page 12, non-interest income totaled $7.8 million in the first quarter of 2016 as compared to $9 million in the year-ago quarter and $10.1 million in the fourth…

Brad Kessel

Analyst · Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead

Thanks, Rob. Moving to Page 20 in our deck, we are pleased to report a solid start to 2016 with growth and earnings and earnings per share as compared to the same quarter one year ago. The improvement is directly related to the successful execution of our strategy to migrate earning assets from lower yielding investments to higher yielding loans which then grew net interest income on both a quarter-over-quarter basis and on a same quarter year ago basis. Similarly improvement was seen with reductions in non-interest expense on a quarter-over-quarter basis, as well as on a same quarter one year ago basis. Additionally Rob outlined our plans for further reductions in non-interest expense beginning on the second quarter. Our quarterly return on average assets was 0.68% compared to 0.67% for the same quarter one year ago. Our quarterly return on average common shareholder's equity was 6.7% compared to 6.05% for the same quarter one year ago. Our management team recognizes we need to continue to grow revenue and improve our overall earnings as we work toward our next performance milestones of 1% or better return on assets and 9% to 10% better return on equity in 2016 and beyond. As previously shared, our target or roadmap to this level of performance is built on improving net interest income to $20 million per quarter, non-interest income of $10 million or better per quarter, and non-interest expense of less -- of $21 million or less per quarter and a normalized provision. As we look ahead, we will continue to execute on our strategies outlined on Slide 20 to increase long-term shareholder total return. As it relates to our capital, our near-term target for tangible common equity is 9.5% to 10.5% and the longer-term target is 8.5% to 9.5%. At quarter end we now stand at 9.55% very close to the top end of our long range target. Our plan is to retain capital for organic loan growth and return capital through both a consistent dividend payout plan and share repurchase plan. As we now have 52,703 shares remaining in our current authorized share repurchase plan, our Board will be revisiting this topic in a very near future and a public announcement will be made shortly thereafter. We believe sound execution on our strategies will generate solid total shareholder returns over the long run. At this point, we would now like to open up the call for questions.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] The first question comes today from Matthew Forgotson with Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead.

Matthew Forgotson

Analyst · Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead

Hi, good morning gentlemen. Brad, the dislocation in your markets, can you give us a sense of the opportunities you’re seeing to gain market share and attract talent as a result of this dislocation?

Brad Kessel

Analyst · Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead

Sure Matthew. I would say that disruption through M&A today is present in almost one of our markets and it has been going on now for a period of time and we are seeing that in our numbers, it’s in pipelines that we have in terms of opportunity to look at loans that we might otherwise not have had. And it's also been fruitful for us in terms of talent acquisition. And I guess I'll leave it at that.

Matthew Forgotson

Analyst · Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead

Okay. Rob, couple questions on margin; first, can you give us a sense of how much interest recoveries have been contributing to margin on an average basis relative to the 550,000 you booked this quarter?

Rob Shuster

Analyst · Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead

Yes, the previous quarter the fourth quarter of '15 we bought about 148,000. I would say somewhere around a 100,000 would be sort of a normal run rate plus or minus from there. So clearly the 550,000 was an exceptional quarter and I think you and your notes sort of hit the impact of that, which was about that the margin would have been down you said two basis points. It's about one and a half basis points. So you're very close there. One other item I would say that was unique to the first quarter and I commented briefly about it and I can't sitting here give you an exact basis point number of the impact, but we did also liquidate quite a few investment securities, almost $50 million and you'll see in our cash and cash equivalents. Now those produced the gains, which most people would take out, but the other impact we're sitting on a lot more low yielding cash in the first quarter as we were transitioning a $150 million of our investment portfolio to PIMCO to act as our investment advisor there and they didn't really have an opportunity during most of the first quarter to reinvest those monies. But as we got toward the end of the quarter, more and more of that occurred and it's largely now been completed and they've added about 44 basis points of book yield on that portfolio. So that's where costs, I come up with that $500,000 annualized improvement that I talked about in my comments. So I do feel that we'll start seeing some benefit from that in the second quarter and that weighed down the first quarter a bit whether it would offset that entire 1.5 basis points that we saw if you take out our normalized interest recoveries, it probably have some impact there. So maybe we would have been more close to flat on the margin rather than down 1.5 basis points if you would normalize the interest recoveries. On that basis, I think that that 355ish kind of level is probably reasonable when you take all the factors into account.

Matthew Forgotson

Analyst · Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead

Right. Okay. And I guess just going one step further on that, I know that you outlined that you have two fed fund rate hikes based into your margin expectations. If we're -- if the guidance calls for or your commentary I should say, calls for holding it at or around this $355, what will the impact be if we don't get those two fed fund hikes.

Rob Shuster

Analyst · Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead

Well, we would have -- we would have expected our margin to gradually increase with those hikes. So what I would say is that we might see a tiny bit of erosion, but we feel that the combination of continuing to remix the earning asset base with more loans and fewer investment securities along with having PIMCO assist on a portion of our investment portfolio to move the book yield up that even absent any rate increases we still see a reasonably steady margin.

Matthew Forgotson

Analyst · Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead

Thanks very much.

Rob Shuster

Analyst · Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead

Yes.

Operator

Operator

The next question is from John Rodis with FIG Partners. Please go ahead.

John Rodis

Analyst · FIG Partners. Please go ahead

Good morning, guys.

Brad Kessel

Analyst · FIG Partners. Please go ahead

Hi John.

John Rodis

Analyst · FIG Partners. Please go ahead

Rob, maybe a question for you, just I think last quarter you talked about maybe doing a bulk loan purchase again this year. Can you just talk about where you are at in that process?

Rob Shuster

Analyst · FIG Partners. Please go ahead

Yes, as you're aware, we did about a $32 million one late last year. I would tell you right now and we did plan anticipate doing something midyear, but we may elect not to do that with where the 10-year treasury has fallen, we're seeing a couple things and the whole loan mortgage front, one is absolute yields are lower. Two is at least with where the production is you’re having to pay a relatively high premium on what we we're seeing out in the market. So, I guess what I would say is we’re going to be patient there. We don’t feel we really have to press that and we feel at least with the start we’ve had in 2016, the organic loan growth has been solid enough where we don’t feel pressure to supplement with the whole loan purchase. So, we're going to be cautious on what we do on that front.

John Rodis

Analyst · FIG Partners. Please go ahead

Okay. So the goal of high single digit growth in '16 assumes no bulk purchase, is that correct?

Rob Shuster

Analyst · FIG Partners. Please go ahead

No, it did assume a bulk purchase, but we’ve also started the year much stronger than what we anticipated. So, whether -- I guess I’d say it would be within the range of when you say high single digit, high is nine plus, but you can also argue that 6.5 is or 7 is there to. So, I feel like we’re still going to get good mid single digit without a bulk purchase, solid mid single digit to get it up into the very high end of that without a purchase might be a bit challenging, but I don’t feel like we also think we need to do that to kindly get the operating results we're looking for and we're reluctant to either pay a high premium or end up with book yields that we just feel we look back in that and think, maybe we just press too hard there.

John Rodis

Analyst · FIG Partners. Please go ahead

Okay. Fair enough. And then Brad just one question for you I think you said the Board would be I guess revaluating a new buyback, is that correct and I guess sounds like we'll hear something relatively soon.

Brad Kessel

Analyst · FIG Partners. Please go ahead

Yeah. That’s correct.

John Rodis

Analyst · FIG Partners. Please go ahead

Okay. Okay. Thanks guys.

Operator

Operator

The next question is from Damon DelMonte with KBW. Please go ahead. Mr. DelMonte, the floor is yours. Perhaps your line is muted. I will go to the next question and that question is Louis Feldman with Wells Capital Management. Please go ahead.

Louis Feldman

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Mr. DelMonte, the floor is yours. Perhaps your line is muted. I will go to the next question and that question is Louis Feldman with Wells Capital Management. Please go ahead

Thank you. Good morning gentlemen.

Rob Shuster

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Mr. DelMonte, the floor is yours. Perhaps your line is muted. I will go to the next question and that question is Louis Feldman with Wells Capital Management. Please go ahead

Good morning, Louis.

Louis Feldman

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Mr. DelMonte, the floor is yours. Perhaps your line is muted. I will go to the next question and that question is Louis Feldman with Wells Capital Management. Please go ahead

Question for you Rob, I wanted clarification of something I thought I heard you say on the -- during your prepared remarks. In terms of margin improvement by remix, how much price elasticity is there in the rates that you're able to ask that you would be able to remix and improve the earning yield on the portfolio? To what extent are you able to move prices versus competition?

Rob Shuster

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Mr. DelMonte, the floor is yours. Perhaps your line is muted. I will go to the next question and that question is Louis Feldman with Wells Capital Management. Please go ahead

Well, it’s really for us, it’s not as much based on the competition and getting rates higher than what our competitors might be able get. I think like most banks that we have to be very competitive in terms of our offering. Where we're seeing benefit is we have relatively speaking a well loans to asset, loans to deposit ratio. So the remix I’m talking about is really getting loan growth that actually if I look at where the average yield is coming on our new origination volume it’s still lower than our average portfolio yield, but what we're doing is we’re driving dollars out of our investment portfolio and picking up 250 to 300 basis points of additional yield by having less investments in more loans. So that's the remix that I’m referring to. So that remix is helping us keep that margin stable or hopefully we get even may be some expansion there, but it’s still with loan yields and new production being a little bit lower than our average portfolio yields sitting here today, but its moving dollars out of lower yielding investments and into higher yielding loans.

Louis Feldman

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Mr. DelMonte, the floor is yours. Perhaps your line is muted. I will go to the next question and that question is Louis Feldman with Wells Capital Management. Please go ahead

Okay. That’s the clarification I was looking for. Thank you much.

Rob Shuster

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Mr. DelMonte, the floor is yours. Perhaps your line is muted. I will go to the next question and that question is Louis Feldman with Wells Capital Management. Please go ahead

Yes.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Next question is from Damon DelMonte with KBW. Please go ahead.

Damon DelMonte

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead

Hey good morning guys. Sorry about that. I guess I had trouble un-muting myself before. I just wanted to follow-up on the loan growth outlook. Brad, could you talk a little bit about where across your footprint you think the best opportunity is to achieve this growth?

Brad Kessel

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead

Well, so for the first quarter, the bulk of our growth was in the West Michigan market. The pipeline today is strong on the commercial side really in all three markets, but I would say particularly West Michigan and Southeast Michigan and it’s a very good mix between both commercial real estate and C&I. And then I would say on the consumer loan side, typically the first quarter is soft for us and it was I think continued to be, but actually it wasn’t bad, We had pretty good originations out of the branch network and putting originations out of our indirect desk and I think we’re going to see that pick up here in second quarter and third quarter. So we expect the consumer portfolio pick up. And then if we can continue forward with the growth that we saw in the mortgage portfolio like we did this past quarter that would be great because really this was one of the outside of the bulk purchase. This is one of the first quarters we've actually grown in the mortgage portfolio and one of the reasons behind that was or two reasons behind it are that we sell predominantly all 15 and 30-year fixed rate mortgages. But we had a line of business, our resort line of business that we discontinued years ago that's been in runoff and there is not much left in that portfolio. So it would be great to see some growth in the mortgage book. So hope it answer Damon.

Damon DelMonte

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead

Yes, it does. Thank you. And then just on the topic of capital, I know you laid out 9.50% to 10.50% as your near term TC target and you're getting to that 9.50% level. So just given the outlook for the good organic loan growth opportunities and you’re going to revisit the buyback, should we expect you guys to take it to that next level sooner rather than later?

Brad Kessel

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead

I don’t necessarily think so because I think the loan growth can get supported by bringing investments down a bit. So I don’t necessarily see assets growing a lot. I will say also and you might have seen it approved expenses and other liabilities in the first quarter we had about $20 million of unsettled investment trade. So there we increased investments and we increased other liabilities, but settled in early April and so that's actually going to reduce assets $20 million because cash comes down as we settle on those investment transactions and that we get rid of that accrued liabilities. So I don’t necessarily see asset -- overall asset growth pushing our capital ratio down and I think with good earnings and where our dividend level is, I still think we have good room for additional share repurchases that will not pressure the tangible assets or tangible equity, tangible assets ratio. Rather maybe it gets spread out a little bit more over the last three quarters. We just had a lot of opportunities for share repurchases in the first quarter, I think in part driven because the stock market was so poor, but I think as we move forward maybe it’s spread out a little bit more, but I think the earnings less the dividend still gives us some enough additional ammunition to continue to do share repurchases.

Damon DelMonte

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead

Got you. Okay. That's helpful. Thank you very much.

Operator

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Brad Kessel for any closing remarks.

Brad Kessel

Analyst · Sandler O'Neill & Partners. Please go ahead

I would like to thank each of you for your interest in Independent Bank Corporation and for joining us on today's call. We wish everybody a great day.

Operator

Operator

Thank you, sir. The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.