William Losch
Analyst · JPMorgan. Your line is open
Thanks, Jeff. Good morning, everybody. Thanks again for joining us. Let's start on some full year 2022 highlights on slide 10. Earnings per share were $3.92. From a core earnings results perspective, they were driven by healthy production growth, $4 billion of production in the year leading to strong loan growth. This combined with net interest margin resiliency led to excellent net interest income growth. And then of course, we had significant gains from successful exits of two ventures investments, which gave us the flexibility to moderate our guaranteed sales activity due to market dislocation, and continue investing in our people and technology while adding meaningful organic capital. Put some numbers behind the highlights the full year 2022 net interest margin of $3.87 held up incredibly well ahead of expectations. This is a testament to the excellent discipline our lenders demonstrated to balance production and profitability along with the great work by our deposits team to manage the positive pricing in a very highly competitive, rapidly rising rate environment. Our adjusted net interest income growth was up 31% year-over-year on that $4 billion of loan production and 24% loan growth ex-PPP along with 25% deposit growth. This balance sheet growth was made even stronger by the guaranteed loans we did not sell. While gain on sale income was down meaningfully from last year due to secondary market dynamics that income was not last forever. Those loans that we kept will be a strong tailwind to our balance sheet and NII growth in 2023. As Chip said, credit quality remains quite strong, despite the uncertainty of the economic outlook. And of course, our history of successful incubation and investment in FinTech ventures again served us well, generating significant gains in organic capital for future growth. All of this led to significant tangible book value per share growth as well 12% year-over-year. And as we look at slide 11, we also know that our 2022 results had a lot of moving parts that didn't make it easy for investors. A few comments on these as we head into 2023. I'll make five quick points. Number one, PPP loans and associated impacts are immaterial at this point and won't be a factor going forward. Number two, while we will continue to mark our servicing asset each quarter as required, we are working on ways to better forecast and minimize its impact on our quarterly results. Number three, while we will continue to make tax credit investments when attractive, we are modifying our strategy to lessen the earnings volatility associated with those investments. Number four, we plan to keep gain on sale income as a percentage of total revenues more in current ranges, which will afford us additional flexibility and stronger recurring spread income growth. And number five while we continue to find our existing Live Oak and canopy ventures investments attractive, and we'll continue to make further investments we are not currently anticipating any exits in the near term. Turning into slide 13. Let's take a quick look at Q4 '22 performance, where you see our adjusted results and the notable items that make up those adjustments. Adjusted PPNR was down 12% quarter-to-quarter as continued strong net interest income growth of 4% linked quarter was offset by lower gain on sale income and continued investment in people and technology. As Chip discussed earlier, our credit remains quite healthy. We did build our provision proactively in anticipation of a potential recession in '23. I'll get into credit trends a little bit more fully in a few minutes. Turning to slide 14. We generated almost $1.2 billion of loan production in the quarter and $4 billion for the year. You see, our loan originations remain quite diverse across our multiple areas, with particular strength in numerous small business verticals and our middle market sponsor finance vertical. In energy and infrastructure solar remains quite strong, while bio-energy lending was down from last year. Both of those verticals should benefit from the clean energy incentives in the recently passed Inflation Reduction Act. Breaking down the components of revenue on slide 15, we see very strong and encouraging revenue trends particularly in net interest income. While linked quarter revenue was down modestly as continued NII growth was offset by lower gain on sale income, total revenue growth was up 16% year-over-year, even with significantly lower gain on sale income, thanks to 31% year-over-year growth in net interest income. Given the fact we held more loans on the balance sheet and expect to continue to healthy NIM we are optimistic about continued strong NII growth in 2023. Secondary market for SBA and USDA fixed rate sales remain unattractive and pricing for variable rate SBA is recovering but still not quite at normalized levels. So we expect to continue to hold more assets on the balance sheet. Again, it's important to understand that lower gain on sale income is not income that is permanently lost, we simply earn it over time in the form of spread income. And because of the flexibility we have with strong capital and liquidity levels, we are more than happy to hold these high quality assets, and we will remain patient with secondary market sales until further normalization. Digging deeper into net interest margin trends on slide 16. Margin again held strong in Q4 at 3.76% and for the full year at 3.87% versus last year's 3.86%. While we still expect some downward pressure as deposit competition shows no signs of easing we continue to be very encouraged by the resiliency of our margin due the excellent work by our lenders in adjusting loan pricing commensurate with market funding costs. Turning to expenses on slide 17. We have been incredibly pleased with the quality of talent that has joined Live Oak in our various groups across the company. We have now largely worked through our hiring bubble to right size our lenders support to accommodate the significant step up in production and balance sheet growth over the past two years. And in addition, as we have discussed, we accelerated our technology hiring in 2022 thanks to the FinTech gain that is now also largely complete. So going forward, while we will continue to be opportunistic on hiring, particularly for revenue producers, we expect to see our expense growth moderate considerably into 2023 and significantly improve our operating leverage and PPNR growth going forward. Few more points on credit trends on slide 18. As Chip discussed earlier, credit metrics remain quite strong. We continue to actively monitor the existing portfolio and do not currently see any glaring weak spots. Net charge offs and non-accruals remain quite low. 30 day past dues remain low as well. In fact, the Q4 dollar amount of $19 million you see in the upper right is down to only about $3 million as of yesterday. Yet we grew the provision well in excess of the $1.4 million of net charge offs we experienced in Q4 and as you can see in the upper left 40% of that provision was due to strong balance sheet growth. To me that's good provision. 55% of the growth was continued proactivity in building appropriate reserves for a less certain outlook and regressing to the norm. With what we see combined with a conservative outlook we currently feel very well positioned with our current reserve coverage and levels. Slide 19 shows the advantages of the Live Oak business model. Having 42% of year total loan portfolio government guaranteed a stronger net interest margin than most and reserves over twice the industry average is quite new unique and comforting. Add to that our overall capital strength on slide 20, we believe we're credibly well-positioned to thrive in whatever environment lies ahead. With that, I'll turn it over to Huntley for a little more color on our outlook and areas of focus for '23. Huntley.