Walter Phifer
Analyst · Cantor
Thanks, BJ. Good morning, everyone. Diving into the quarter on Page 8. Our Q3 earnings per share of $0.55 increased 8% linked quarter and almost doubled compared to Q3 of 2024. This outstanding growth was aided by the 7% linked quarter and 24% versus prior year increase in core operating leverage that BJ just highlighted as well as a lower quarterly provision expense. The 7% quarter-over-quarter improvement in core operating leverage was driven by a 6% quarter-over-quarter increase in net interest income, aided by $551 million or 5% linked quarter in loan balance growth and 5 basis points of margin expansion to 3.33%. On the growth front, our small business and commercial banking lenders as well as our loan support teams continue to generate high-caliber loans while replenishing their pipelines. Our deposits business continues to fund the bank in an extremely competitive market. As BJ mentioned, we continue to be encouraged by the momentum in our 2 focused initiatives of growing noninterest-bearing business checking balances and originating small dollar SBA 7(a) loans via our Live Oak Express product. Quarterly provision expense was $22 million and was lower for the fourth consecutive quarter. Our reserve and resulting quarterly provision expense continue to be driven by strong loan growth and our navigation of the small business credit cycle that we have discussed over the past few quarters. Lastly, on the capital front, we successfully raised $100 million with our inaugural preferred offering, generating quality Tier 1 growth capital to support our growth aspirations. Next quarter, we will have another earnings and capital accretive event with Apiture agree to sale, which will result in a $24 million onetime gain while also removing approximately $6 million of annual pass-through losses from our income statement. Page 9 provides a financial snapshot of our Q3 earnings results on the top left with quarter-over-quarter demonstrated improvement across all major profitability and growth metrics highlighted on the bottom left. I'd like to briefly highlight 2 other items on this page. The first being the bottom right corner of this slide, where we capture notable noncore items each quarter as they arise. Specifically, in Q3 of 2025, these items collectively had an estimated negative impact of approximately $1.5 million on our reported earnings. The second item is the tax expense line. Similar to last year, we had seasonal increase in the third quarter effective tax rate that was driven by compensation-related accounting treatment in the tax calculation. Slide 10 highlights our loan originations by vertical and business units. A few things to note here. As shown on the right-hand side of the page, our Q3 2025 loan originations totaled approximately $1.65 billion, an 8% increase linked quarter, driven primarily by our Commercial Banking segment. Production momentum in 2025 remains strong across our spectrum of verticals with approximately 2/3 of our verticals originating more production year-to-date in 2025 than they did in year-to-date 2024. Lastly, the bottom right of the page highlights the linked quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year loan portfolio growth trends by lending segment, with both segments providing double-digit year-over-year growth rates. Slide 11 illustrates quarter-over-quarter loan and deposit balance growth, highlighting the strong consistent growth trends on both fronts. Our total loan portfolio grew approximately 5% linked quarter with year-over-year loan balances increasing approximately 17%, outstanding durable growth that you don't often see across the current industry landscape. The approximately 3% linked quarter increase in customer deposits was consistent with Q2 2024's customer deposit growth rate, while our year-over-year customer deposit growth rate was an outstanding 20%. As you can see in the second half of 2024's growth rates on the bottom of the page, we typically experience a slower seasonal growth rate in the second half of the year on the customer deposit front and expect the second half of 2025 to be no different. Year-to-date growth in customer deposits has primarily been driven by our consumer and business savings products as we remain competitively priced in the market to support our aforementioned loan growth and via our business checking growth, which we highlight on our growth trends on Page 12. We saw a nice ramp in business checking in Q3 of 2025, with checking balances increasing 26% linked quarter to $363 million. Our total low-cost deposits, including noninterest-bearing checking balances as well as low-cost collateral construction and loan reserve accounts, now totals approximately 4% of our total deposit basis, a 2% -- or 2x increase year-over-year. As BJ highlighted, adding noninterest-bearing deposits to our primarily competitively market priced customer deposits and wholesale deposit portfolio is substantially accretive to our earnings profile. These deposits not only enhance our margin efficiency, but also strengthen the overall resilience of our funding mix with deeper customer relationships. As such, they remain a key strategic priority for us as we head into 2026 and beyond. Net interest income and margin trends are highlighted on Slide 13. In Q2 of 2025 -- sorry, Q3 of 2025, we saw our quarterly net interest income increased $6 million or 6% linked quarter and $23 million or 19% compared to Q3 of 2024. Our net interest margin also expanded another 5 basis points to 3.33%, our third consecutive quarter of margin expansion, aided both by growth as well as continued deposit repricing as highlighted on the bottom of the table in the middle of the page. As the Fed cut in September, and we expect more cuts to come in the very near future, perhaps as early as next week, here is a general reminder of how this impacts our net interest income and margin trajectory. The first is we have an asset-sensitive balance sheet with approximately 2/3 of our loans being variable and tied to either SOFR or prime. The second is our funding base is predominantly in liquid savings accounts, short-term customer CDs and broker deposits. Since the Fed began easing last December, our blended savings cumulative downward beta is approximately 44%. This is largely a result of us not pricing to the top of the market while the Fed was tightening. And as such, we have blended the top of the market reprice down towards us through 2025. Ultimately, we monitor both deposit market and funding levels closely, ensuring that we continue to support our loan growth appropriately while also adjusting pricing to support margin aspirations and profitability. Our current outlook is that the Fed cuts 25 basis points in October and December of 2025, followed by 3 additional 25 basis point cuts in March, June and September of 2026. Yet Fed forecasts vary and as such, we so do net interest income and margin outlooks. We evaluate a gauntlet of forward-looking scenarios to assess the potential tone of net interest income and margin outcomes. And generally speaking, larger or more frequent Fed cuts provide more margin compression in the near term, while flat interest rates less cuts and less frequent cuts provide more margin opportunity. Ultimately, assuming that the deposit market is rational and reprices appropriately, our margin typically recovers relatively quickly due to the short-term nature of our funding base. Ultimately, what really matters, however, is not simply the margin but the net interest income generated. And our net interest income performance is more resilient due to our strong growth. To drive this point home, over the last 6 years, 24 out of 26 quarters experienced stable or growth in net interest income despite our net interest margin peaking at 4% and valuing at 2.56% over the same time frame. Moving to guaranteed loan sale trends on Slide 14. The secondary market continues to provide consistent earnings while acting as a good source of recycled liquidity. We added some depth to this page this quarter to provide insight to our gain on sale composition and to highlight the accretive contribution we are already realizing from our small loan SBA origination efforts. Our quarterly gain on sale remains primarily driven by our typical larger SBA loan sales, which have provided a consistent $13 million to $15 million a quarter of gain on sale at an average premium in the 106 to 107 range. We've now had 2 consecutive quarters of USDA loan sales, which is encouraging, yet ultimately, the timing and execution of these sales is driven by the completion of the underlying projects, rate environment and investor demand. Similar to my comments on growing checking balances, our focus on ramping our Live Oak Express origination is providing immediate results with our small loan SBA sales providing for $12 million in year-to-date gain on sale, approximately 4x or $9 million more compared to year-to-date 2024, while also providing for approximately 20% of our year-to-date total gain on sale compared to only 8% in year-to-date 2024. To help ramp this product going forward, we remain focused on both filling the top of the funnel through partnerships and lender referrals while also leveraging AI to make the origination and servicing more efficient for our people and our customers. Expense trends are detailed on Slide 15. Q3 reported noninterest expense of $87 million decreased approximately $2 million or approximately 2% linked quarter. We remain focused on supporting our growth via good costs while also working to improve efficiency. This renewed focus on growing revenues faster than expenses and improving operating leverage really began back in the third quarter of 2023. You can see the results of that focus on the right-hand side of this page with loan production, core operating leverage and revenue growth, all significantly outweighing our expense growth as compared to the third quarter of -- comparing the third quarter of 2025 to the third quarter of 2023. We are keenly focused on improving both our customer and employee experiences, embracing the automation and AI wave across our entire business and enhancing our current technology stack, all with the resulting goal of creating internal and external raving fans, improving efficiency and providing for a solid mature foundation that will support our growth. Turning to credit. Slide 16 provides insight into the portfolio with a view of key credit ratio trends in the table at the top with visualization of over 30-day past dues, nonaccruals and provision trends on the bottom. Our over 30-day past dues remained low for the fourth consecutive quarter with $16 million or 14 basis points of our held-for-investment loan portfolio past due as of September 30. The amount of nonaccrual loans increased to $85 million or 73 basis points of our unguaranteed held for investment loan portfolio in Q3. Nonaccrual balances remain very manageable as our servicing team continues to support SBA customers impacted by the small business credit cycle. Provision expense of $22 million improved in Q3 and was influenced by strong $551 million quarter-over-quarter loan growth, what we often refer to as good provision and portfolio performance. While quarter-over-quarter provision will fluctuate based on growth and portfolio activity, we remain comfortable with our reserves. Last page for me on capital -- our capital strength was bolstered in Q3 of 2025 with our preferred issuance as shown on Page 17. The $100 million issuance added approximately 90 basis points of total risk-based capital and approximately 70 basis points of Tier 1 leverage, excellent Tier 1 growth capital. Our equity method investment in Apiture will provide for an additional capital accretive event in Q4 with Apiture's recent sale closing in October. In addition, the removal of approximately $6 million of pass-through losses going forward will largely help fund the annual preferred dividends on the preferred issuance. Thank you again for joining this morning. And with that, I'll turn it back over to BJ for his closing comments before we head to Q&A.
William C. (BJ) Losch III: Great. Thanks, Walt. Momentum is building. We're focused on the biggest and best opportunities, and we're modernizing our activities to take full advantage of the AI-driven possibilities that are right in front of us. So with a big thank you to all Live Oakers and our customers, let's take some questions.