Earnings Labs

First Internet Bancorp (INBK)

Q3 2022 Earnings Call· Thu, Oct 20, 2022

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good day, everyone, and welcome to the First Internet Bancorp Earnings Conference Call for the Third Quarter of 2022. My name is Drew and I’ll be coordinating your call today. [Operator Instructions] And please note that today’s event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Larry Clark from Financial Profiles, Inc. Please go ahead, Mr. Clark.

Larry Clark

Analyst

Thank you, Drew. Good day, everyone, and thank you for joining us to discuss First Internet Bancorp’s financial results for the third quarter of 2022. Company issued its earnings press release yesterday afternoon and is available on the company’s website at www.firstinternetbancorp.com. In addition, the company has included a slide presentation that you can refer to during the call. You can also access these slides on the website. Joining us today from the management team are Chairman and CEO, David Becker; and Executive Vice President and CFO, Ken Lovik. David will provide an overview and Ken will discuss the financial results. Then we’ll open the call up to your questions. Before we begin, I’d like to remind you that this conference call contains forward-looking statements with respect to the future performance and financial condition of First Internet Bancorp that involve risks and uncertainties. Various factors could cause actual results to be materially different from any future results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. These factors are discussed in the company’s SEC filings, which are available on the company’s website. The company disclaims any obligation to update any forward-looking statements made during the call. Additionally, management may refer to non-GAAP measures, which are intended to supplement, but not substitute the most directly comparable GAAP measures. The press release available on the website contains the financial and other quantitative information to be discussed today, as well as a reconciliation of the GAAP to non-GAAP measures. At this time, I’d like to turn the call over to David.

David Becker

Analyst

Thank you, Larry. Good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. For the third quarter 2022, we reported net income of $8.4 million and earnings per share of $0.89. Excluding non-reoccurring expenses, adjusted net income for the third quarter was $8.5 million and adjusted diluted earnings per share were $0.90. Adjusted for the non-reoccurring item, we produced a return on average assets of 0.83% for the third quarter and a return on tangible common equity of 9.24%. As the fellow shareholder of First Internet Bancorp, I am disappointed in these results. I would like to use this opportunity to speak openly about what went well in the third quarter, where we were challenged and what to expect from us in the future periods. To begin, capital levels continued to remain strong. Ending a quarter with a tangible common equity ratio of 8.36% leads us very well-positioned going forward. Additionally to repurchase activity during the third quarter, we were able to offset the effect of AOCI and maintain a consistent tangible book value per share, which many other banks have not been able to do in the current environment. Loan production was one of the highlights of the quarter. Total loan balances increased $174 million. This is nearly 6% growth from the prior quarter, puts our loan balances at an all time high of almost $3.3 billion. Loan originations for the quarter, including unfunded commitments were $491.3 million, up to 47% increase of origination volume in the second quarter. New funded originations total $272.5 million, up 9% of our volumes in the prior quarter. Our construction lending team had a tremendous quarter sourcing almost $190 million in new originations. While very little of this new production funded during the quarter, we expected to draw down over the next 12 months…

Ken Lovik

Analyst

Thanks, David. If we move to Slide 4 on the presentation, total loans at the end of the third quarter were $3.3 billion, up 5.6% from the second quarter and up 10.9% from September 30 of 2021. We are pleased with the growth in franchise finance, small business lending and consumer, as well as the strong origination activity in our construction business. We also saw a growth in our single tenant lease financing portfolio as the team had another nice quarter of originations. This activity was offset by the continued decrease in healthcare finance, which has been running off for several quarters now and will continue to do so. Moving on to deposits on Slide 5. Overall deposit balances were up modestly from the end of the second quarter, both non-maturity deposits and CDs declined offset by an increase in brokered deposits. The decline in non-maturity deposits was due primarily to lower BaaS deposits at quarter end, and the decline in CDs reflects the impact of our continued strategy to avoid the price competition in the CD market, which is even more intense than for money market balances. Price competition in the digital checking and money market space combined with the secular trend of overall deposits leaving the banking system has made it challenging to grow deposits. Furthermore, as you can see on the deposit table in the earnings release, we experienced a significant decline in BaaS deposits. We expected some volatility in these deposits, as we noted last quarter the fintech space has been experiencing some upheaval. We are seeing a rational return in focus to long-term viability and profitability as opposed to simply customer or revenue growth. While we applaud the common sense approach changes at two fintechs in particular this quarter impacted our pipeline. In the first…

Operator

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question today is from George Sutton from Craig-Hallum. Your line is now open.

George Sutton

Analyst

Thank you, guys. Thanks for all the detail provided. So, I really have one key question that’s related to the BaaS deposits. So, we anticipated with these relationships that the rates would be relatively low to non-existent and they moved very quickly the quarter, and you mentioned they were tied to Fed funds rate. Could you just walk through that specific dynamic a little bit more?

Ken Lovik

Analyst

Well, I think what we’ve seen in the BaaS space is that we’ve seen the pricing on BaaS opportunities increase as well, and that specific opportunity that we had, that was in partnership with another bank that was working with the fintech directly. And in all honesty, the fintech partnership there was, it was a fintech depository that kind of had a constantly changing business model, and with the increase in market rates throughout the – really throughout the year the program bank we worked with kind of had to change pricing on it with that and move towards more of a market rate. So that’s what impacted the pricing there. I will say in some of the other opportunities with the platform partners we’re working with, those deposit opportunities are priced much lower than this particular opportunity. So, I think our expectation on deposit opportunities in the BaaS space and with fintech partners going forward will be priced at a lower level than what we witnessed with this particular partnership.

David Becker

Analyst

In the fintech space George, the only deposits today that we’re seeing, at least at this current point that are totally free are the settlement accounts for the payment services, which can be hundreds of thousands of dollars potentially approaching a million on large payment servicers. But the fintech world, obviously they’re scrambling for earnings, they need to make money and they know there is value in that deposit base. So six months ago they were free. Today they have a charge, as Ken said, not all of them are at Fed funds rate, but the idea of just, the fintech world providing billions of dollars of free money, that’s really not out there today. They’re, as they are having to prove a path to profitability to continue to get funding they’re looking for earnings wherever they can, and some of that comes obviously in selling off the cash. So it’s still opportunities and we’re seeing some very good ones at much lower costs than Fed funds rate, but it’s not a totally pregame like it was two or three years ago.

George Sutton

Analyst

Understand. Thanks for the clarity.

David Becker

Analyst

Appreciate it. Thanks sir.

Operator

Operator

Our next question today comes from Michael Perito from KBW. Your line is now open.

Michael Perito

Analyst

Hey guys. Good afternoon. I guess just maybe a big picture question, like where – with the stock where it is today? I mean, where do you guys kind of see yourself proceeding from here, right? I mean, it doesn’t seem like it, it pays to grow the consumer books and fund it with higher cost money market deposits, I mean, you guys mentioned the buyback and it seems like that’s in play here, but just would love a comment and just overall maybe David, about how you’re thinking about what the priority should be as you budget for next year, just given this quarter and maybe a little bit of a slower rollout here on the BaaS side, at least from a lower cost funding perspective.

David Becker

Analyst

Yes, Michael. We pulled back where pricing any loans that we’re doing today on a 4% cost of funds, which obviously we’re not even remotely close to that yet, but anticipation of the Fed pushes through to 4.50% 4.75% [ph] early 2023, we’re going to be there by the end of the year depending on how long they hold that rate in place. So, we’re not focused on growth, we’re focused on good solid margins. We’re focused on bearable rate product, replacing some of the fixed term stuff that is rolling off. Our portfolios are large enough and the repayment structure that we’re funding a lot of the new loan activity with cash coming back that was in the 4%, 5% range now rolling out the door in a 6%, 7%, 8% range. So yeah, you’re spot on. It’s not, we’re not totally done, which we’ve done a lot of calculations for 2023, but we’re not anticipating tremendous growth in of any kind, in any fashion until rates stabilize and we get a handle on where the marketplace is going. I guess a little bit of maybe a good indication with the 10 year starting to rise maybe the market’s thanking that things are stabilizing a little bit, but with an inverted yield curve when a lot of, an awful lot of our product is priced off 10 year, it doesn’t make sense. We literally shut down a couple of the verticals in total where we just can’t get competitive pricing.

Michael Perito

Analyst

And then – thanks, David. And then on the, maybe Ken on the margin, so I mean, it sounds like you guys are going to drift down to where you were at the beginning of 2021, give or take. Obviously there’s some range on that, but I mean, what about after that? I realize that’s a loaded hard question, but I mean, is this with the Fed on the trajectory it is. I mean, is this a NIM in this with this balance sheet now that likely heads back down towards two or and I heard what David’s saying about maintaining kind of good margin, but it’s a challenging curve for your book of business that’s currently constructed. So just wondering structurally if you guys think, if you still think there’s room for that margin to kind of trough in the cycle much, much higher than where it had, in the prior rate cycle on relative basis.

Ken Lovik

Analyst

I think that’s an accurate observation. I think between this quarter, the third quarter, the fourth quarter and probably into the first quarter a bit it’s probably where we’ll feel the biggest impact of these rate increases. If you think about it, we’re kind of modeling, as we said earlier, we’re modeling towards the Fed heading 4.75% and if you assume we got a 75 basis point rate hike coming up here in a couple weeks and perhaps anywhere from 25 basis points to 75 basis points on top of that. We’re getting to that we’re, we’ve already felt the full brunt of that. So, we’ll kind of see those deposit costs continue to model upward. But as David said on the loan side, it’s a lot, as opposed to where we were sitting maybe, three months ago, six months ago with a lot of loan growth in front of us today, it’s going to be much more measured loan growth priced, very rationally priced on the higher end, lower growth. So probably looking forward to next year and not trying, not giving any credit to any BaaS deposits or any cheaper deposits that come in the door, but just kind of looking at the deposit mix as it is today. I mean we’re probably looking next year, for the full year a margin of probably anywhere from say, call it 2.10 to 2.20 or yes, 2.10 to 2.20 with taking the kind of the hits up front and then over the course of the year kind of stabilizing and hopefully bringing a kind of back kind of slowly upward near the end of the year.

David Becker

Analyst

And again, Michael, the…

Ken Lovik

Analyst

Sorry. Go ahead, David.

David Becker

Analyst

We just had a conversation about the BaaS deposits. There are a couple opportunities out here that could really put significant money on board quickly, and one of the reasons that we didn’t chase kind of the institutional CD game, one, it’s a 130 basis points to 140 basis points higher than the consumer, but some of the money market opportunities that we’ve opened up, we can step down pretty quickly and get out of that, if we do land one of the whales that can drop several hundred million in low cost deposits on this and they’re still out there. We’re working with a couple but we’re not building that in the forecast until we have it in hand. So I agree with Ken. I think we’re going to get crunched there in the fourth quarter. We’ll get crunched probably a little bit in the first quarter, but with some of the pipeline, and believe me, you guys will be the first to know if we can land a couple of these, we could see a significant change through the third – second or third quarter of 2023. We got a good shot at pulling it back in pretty quickly.

Ken Lovik

Analyst

Yes. And I think David hit on a key point there with that. We have the ability with – if we do have those opportunities, we have the ability to scale back and exit some of the higher cost deposit funding that we have in our balance sheet. It wouldn’t take a terribly long time to move a lot of that off the balance sheet, should we have an opportunity in the BaaS or other fintech space or other deposit verticals opportunities we’re looking at. So we can reposition very quickly.

Michael Perito

Analyst

Got it. Thanks for spending a minute on that. And then just lastly for me just to kind of pull this all together just on the – I mean, so you’re at a little over $4.2 billion today on total assets. I mean, is it fair to think that that probably does not grow much as long as this kind of margin dynamic is ongoing. So maybe call it into the early part of next year that the balance sheet size likely doesn’t change a whole lot? Is that a fair – generally fair assumption?

David Becker

Analyst

Yes. I think so Michael, if anything, it’ll shrink a little bit. So yes, we’re not going to do growth for the sake of growth by any means.

Michael Perito

Analyst

Okay. Thank you, guys. Appreciate the taking my questions.

David Becker

Analyst

Thank you.

Ken Lovik

Analyst

All right. Thanks, Mike.

Operator

Operator

Our next question today comes from Nathan Race from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.

Nathan Race

Analyst

Yes. Hi guys. Good afternoon. Appreciate taking the question.

David Becker

Analyst

Hey, Nate.

Ken Lovik

Analyst

Hey, Nate.

Nathan Race

Analyst

Just kind of drill into the balance sheet and loan growth outlook. It sounds like you guys are going to be much more selective in terms of what you guys add to the balance sheet going forward. So I was wondering if you could just help kind of frame that up, rethinking kind of more low-single digit or mid-single digit loan growth from here. Any kind of parameters around how you guys are thinking about the loan growth opportunities on in terms of what you want to put on the balance sheet going forward in the context of the rate environment, what you guys are having to do on the deposit pricing side of things.

Ken Lovik

Analyst

Well, from the loan perspective, a lot of it is really just repositioning the loan book and letting some of the lower yielding assets just lower yielding books that we’re really not going to be originating new product in roll off with as we’ve said, kind of a strong focus. Again, we expect SBA to do well in the fourth quarter. And SBA, the guaranteed or the unguaranteed balances we retain our priced after another rate hike, those are going to have a nine in front of them. Construction balances, as we talked about, our construction team had a great year. So there’s going to be a lot of draw activity over the next 12 months to 18 months to 24 months. And those rates again with another rate hike on top of those, I mean, those are priced it, prime plus or a silver plus type spread, so you’re going to have 8s and 9s in front of those. In the franchise finance, those new deals are being priced with 8s in front of those. So it’s really just and even in the consumer space, those rates have moved up as well in the RVs and the horse trailers and are going to be mid-high 7s probably moving towards 8s there. So some of it is just repositioning the balance sheet a bit or repositioning the loan portfolio could be a little bit of growth. But as we talked about, it’s really just letting some of the other portfolios cash flow and just replacing lower yielding stuff maturing with higher yielding originations.

David Becker

Analyst

If the Fed stops at 4.70 or 4.50 to 4.75, we’ll see almost overnight stabilization on the deposit side from our end. And we’ll revisit kind of what the lending opportunities are at that point. Particularly if tenure starts to climb and we get out of the inverted curve, our opportunities will change tremendously. Part of our fear, obviously to date, they haven’t had tremendous success in shutting down the or lowering the CPI. So if 4.50, 4.75 doesn’t get there, and God forbid they decide they’re going to move it up again into the 5 range. We don’t want to be kind of hung out to drive by doing a lot of activity. Now that’s not adjustable rate and movable with the Fed activity. So it’s kind of a safety net precaution on our side that if the Fed overshoots their target, we’re not going to get crushed by it. So we’ll set on the sidelines and kind of let the dust settle here and then kind of reevaluate, hopefully at year end if they send out a message that they’re done, but be fantastic, but we’ll wait and see what they’re up to.

Nathan Race

Analyst

Got it. Super helpful. And perhaps kind of within that context and Ken appreciate your margin thoughts for next year. And I guess just thinking if in terms of the Fed potentially cutting rates at some point next year, how elastic do you think your deposit pricing can be in that type of scenario? Or does the kind of outflows of liquidity industry-wide perhaps results in the competitive environment remaining pretty fierce from a deposit pricing perspective, even if the Fed were to cut rates at some point middle late next year?

David Becker

Analyst

I think from the deposit side, it’ll move as fast as it did this time around when they – I don’t think they’re going to be dumb enough to drop us back down to zero but if they cut rate, our peers are in the same position we are, particularly the folks if you caught it yesterday. Citizens Bank jump money market rates to the consumers up to 3%. They’ve been in the 2.20, 2.25. But the rest of us, and I’m for a lot of different reasons, I can understand why they did what they probably did, but everybody would be as anxious as we are to bring it back down. So I think if the food – if the Fed has overshot the runway and they realize that and they start backing off early in 2023. We’ll be able to almost get it penny for penny. So they drop a quarter, I think we can get that quarter back.

Nathan Race

Analyst

Okay, great. And then just in terms of thinking about the expense run rate lastly, any thoughts on just how you’re kind of thinking about the timing of additional investment just given the margin environment that we find ourselves in today into the fourth quarter into 2023 as well?

Ken Lovik

Analyst

Yes. I think if you probably look at what we had here for the fourth quarter, you take that and maybe run rate that and maybe add high single digit growth to that kind of probably ramping up over the course of the year. I mean, the one thing, obviously, I think a lot of our costs probably don’t fully reflect true inflationary cost yet. And obviously there’s – as we’ve been talking about here, there’s – over the course of the year, we have, again, continue to add to our staff, continue to build out small business lending. We’ve had to add folks in risk management to help with the BaaS side of things and the fintech initiatives and just kind of bolstered some groups around the bank. So we have had some head count increase and there’s probably going to be some inflationary effects there as well, but going to try to do our best to keep overall costs within under a double-digit increase for next year.

David Becker

Analyst

Actually, carrying that just one step further guys, the growth in staff numbers, I think we’re – as Ken said, we’re kind of settling down. We’re getting a very robust SBA team with a great capacity and opportunities. We’ve repositioned some folks internally in areas that we have growth and we have activity in compliance and wherever from the mortgage area. So we’re trying to keep existing employees employed maybe in different positions they have been historically. One thing that is going to hit us, and I think it’s hitting everybody in the industry. We’re not going to get away with a 3%, 3.5% increase on salaries for next year with COLA and Social Security being 8.2%, we’re not going to match that. But I would tell you, we’re probably looking instead of a 3%, 3.5%, somewhere in that 6%, 7% average salary increase. So that will be more impactful than it’s been in past years. But with the fight for good quality employees on a national basis with people having the ability to work for virtually any company in the U.S. from home, we are going to have to put in a pretty significant bump on base salaries through 2022 – 2023, I’m sorry.

Nathan Race

Analyst

Got it. Very helpful. I appreciate you guys taking the questions. Thank you. Thanks, sir.

David Becker

Analyst

Thanks, Nate.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question today is from Brett Rabatin from Hovde Group. Your line is now open.

Brett Rabatin

Analyst

Hey, guys, good afternoon.

David Becker

Analyst

Hey, Brett.

Ken Lovik

Analyst

Hey, Brett.

Brett Rabatin

Analyst

Why don’t you just go back to the fintechs for a second and maybe start with Treasury Prime. As I understand it’s more of a middleware and ledger that kind of integrates fintechs into the core and allows the bank to hold a single account for each fintech client versus plugging the fintech directly into the core. Can you maybe explain a little bit more the scope of the opportunity as it relates to Treasury Prime and then these others that you’re looking at what size range we might be talking about, and then relative to the current cost of the fintechs, if that improves. I’m not sure if I’m entirely clear on if you’re expecting relative improvement in the betas related to the fintechs.

David Becker

Analyst

Yes. You nailed it, Brett. Treasury Prime is the long-term season veteran in that kind of third party integration. The fintech connects to them, they have a single source connection to us, so the overhead is minimal on our side. Return is much greater higher than going direct. They have been around for a very long time. They have a tremendous reputation, fintech company that might have started with another provider that’s not as strong. And they’re growing and outgrow the capacity of somebody else. These guys are the seasoned veteran. They get the best deals, the largest deals, and the largest opportunity. So we’ve chatted with them off and on for months. It took us time to get established. We are technically linked with Treasury Prime. We’re finishing the testing of the credit card, debit card connection with them. They have a half a dozen very solid, very large fintechs in their queue that they’re working on integrating with that we’ll need a banking partner. So we’re now one of the 15 banks that are part of their organization. So we’re a lot of the other kind of middleware services, they do service fintech organizations, but they’re getting smaller. If you’re credible fintech and you have capital and you have a real product, they’ll go to Treasury Prime first. So it’s taken us time to get that interface done and ready to go, we think there’s tremendous opportunity there. Increase, on the other side is a relatively new, but Daraz, the gentleman that runs increase was like employee number three out of strike the large unicorn credit card company. As I’ve mentioned in meetings before, conversations there’s kind of a FinTech 2.0 coming and Daraz background and what he helped create at strike. And the next wave of companies coming on board is who he’s getting a shot at. So between these two connections, we should get the hardest, newest FinTech 2.0 opportunities and we should also get some very stable larger opportunities that maybe their current situations not working for them anymore. So we think these two connections, it’s been a long time coming. It’s taken some work on our part and their part that get things lined up, but we think we have a really, really strong future. The three we have in process with increase should all be live and two will definitely be live. We’re in real testing stages now, but third should come live first quarter next year. That one is deposit lending. It’s the full gamut of services. He has a queue behind that of another seven to eight opportunities for us to look at. So as I mentioned time and again, we’ve looked at an awful lot of opportunities, we’ve looked at a lot of third party providers, but we think we really honed in on two of the best in the industry that we can now really start to produce some results in the not too distant future.

Brett Rabatin

Analyst

Okay. And that’s really helpful. And then I guess, I just need to make sure, I’m clear on the opportunity to improve the relative deposit beta on these fintechs. Is that in play? Or is it more just managing the relative opportunities for the fintech growth on the deposits on it?

David Becker

Analyst

It’s a little bit of both. I think we can – as we talked, as Ken mentioned a while ago, and I did too, that some of the lease up deposits that we have now, we can unwind pretty quickly. So if we truly do get a fintech opportunity, that’s several $100 million that low to no cost as George stated. And we are chatting with a couple that have that potential. But I can’t give you a number at this point. We thought as I talked last time, that we had a lending opportunity that would’ve been a tremendous fee income producer for us going to the fourth quarter, and it just literally evaporated it walked away. So, we’re not forecasting anything at the current time, but if we get one running that is significant, believe me, we’ll put out a press release and let you guys know just as soon as it’s queued up. But there are, without question, some opportunities in the pipeline today that could have significant impact on our cost of funds.

Brett Rabatin

Analyst

Okay, I appreciate that. And then the other question I had was just around the loan growth, and the production originations in the quarter $190 million, I think you mentioned, and obviously a lot of the growth this quarter was in the franchise finance portfolio. How much of the originations was in construction, and is that finest and correctly going to be the brunt of the growth and maybe the next quarter or two or maybe can you walk through a little bit of that piece as well?

Ken Lovik

Analyst

Yes, the $190 million you referenced, that was the amount of unfunded originations. Well, I guess a little bit of it funded, but for the most part that was the origination activity from our construction team. And that added to what we already had in unfunded commitments. Basically unfunded commitments right now are, as of the end of the third quarter, roughly $365 million. So that is going to be a significant part of loan, like true funded originations over the next 12 months to 18 months and longer. And that’s obviously something we’re happy with in and want to fund because that’s the vast majority of that activity is all variable rate construction priced at higher yields in the environment that we’re in. So yes, that’s going to be a big piece of the growth of the – well, let’s not say growth, it’s going to be part of what you would see a change in the composition of the loan portfolio. You’re going to see other portfolios perhaps decline, but you’re going to see construction balances. Again we don’t hard to always predict the timing quarter-to-quarter of draws, but over the course of the year we feel confident that we’re going to have significant draw activity. And again, as we’ve said, very nice high rate variable rate activity.

Brett Rabatin

Analyst

Okay. And then just lastly for me on expenses and kind of the run rate you mentioned for 2023 is the compliance and back office fully built out for the fintech platform, or do you need to have some additional hires from that perspective?

David Becker

Analyst

At the current time, we actually just completed our safety soundness exam and one of the things they focus on is, you’ve probably seen in the press a couple banks have gotten in trouble for not having good compliance programs in place for their BaaS operations. And we passed in with flying colors. So yes, we’ve got a significant team structured today. If we get a couple whales, we might add about a year or two that they’ll be paid for. But the crew to get us off the ground, get us up and established with everything we have in the pipeline is with us today. So yes, that’s already all built in.

Brett Rabatin

Analyst

Okay, great. Appreciate all the color guys.

David Becker

Analyst

Thank you, sir.

Ken Lovik

Analyst

Thanks, Brett.

Operator

Operator

We lastly have a follow up question from Michael Perito from KBW. Your line is now open.

Michael Perito

Analyst

Hey guys. Yes, thanks. I just wanted to make sure, I heard because you guys were – you were mentioning a couple different like individual growth rates, but overall you had said, low double digit growth on non-interest expense next year, correct?

David Becker

Analyst

Yes, correct.

Michael Perito

Analyst

Okay, thank you. And then just Ken again, secondly, just last couple of questions, just, obviously the earnings kind of mix, and the growth and it’s all shifting quite a bit this next few quarters. Just any initial thought on kind of where the tax rate might shake out just I guess, near term, but also as you pleasure ahead for next year any range that that we should be thinking of?

Ken Lovik

Analyst

Yes, I think, we’ll probably migrate down a little bit. I mean, I think we are roughly the 10.5% or so this quarter. That’s probably; I would say probably 10% to 11% over the next probably over the next several quarters is the right way to look at it.

Michael Perito

Analyst

Great. Thanks guys for the follow up.

David Becker

Analyst

Thanks Mike.

Operator

Operator

There are no further questions at this time. So I’ll hand you back over to David Becker for closing remarks.

David Becker

Analyst

Thank you, Drew. Well obviously guys, this is a very historic rising rate environment. Believe me; we are using all the discipline and tools that are disposal to preserve earnings. We remain intently focused on driving higher – driving higher levels of return for the shareholders. And we appreciate your time and conversation today. Thank you for joining us.

Operator

Operator

That does conclude today’s call. You may now disconnect your line.