Scott Kingsley
Analyst · Piper Sandler. Your line is open
Thank you, John. And good morning. Turning to Slide four of our earnings presentation. Our first quarter earnings per share were $0.90, which was consistent with the first quarter of 2021, excluding securities, gains and losses and $0.04 a share higher than the fourth quarter of last year. These results were achieved despite a $4.2 million or $0.08 a share decline in PPP income recognition compared to the first quarter of last year and a $5.6 million decline in PPP income from the fourth quarter of 2021 or $0.10 a share. The increase in net interest income over the two comparative quarters of last year was a result of solid organic loan growth and productive incremental deployment of a portion of our excess liquidity into investment securities. Despite this improvement in earning asset mix, the company's still carried a significant level of overnight funds at the Federal Reserve at quarter-end, leaving us with still more improvement opportunities. We recorded a loan loss provision expense of $600 thousand in the first quarter compared to a provision benefit of $2.8 million in the first quarter of 2021, and a provision expense of $3.1 million in the fourth quarter of last year. Net charge-offs in the first quarter were $2.6 million or 14 basis points of loans compared to 13 basis points of loans in the first quarter of 2021 and '22 basis points of loans in the linked fourth quarter, our reserve coverage decreased to 1.18% of loans from 1.24% at the end of 2021. Slide 5 shows trends in outstanding loans on a core basis, excluding PPP loans were up $202 million for the quarter and included strength in both our consumer and commercial portfolios. Our total PPP balances as of first quarter in 2022 were just over $50 million with forgiveness almost complete for both the two thousand, twenty and two thousand twenty one vintage loans, we recognized $2 million of interest and fees associated with PPP lending during the quarter and have approximately $1.6 million in unamortized fees remaining. We would expect most of these remaining fees to be recognized in the next two quarters, excluding PPP recognition, loan yields were down just one basis point from the fourth quarter of 2021, meaning new volume rates and blended portfolio yields were essentially the same by first quarter end. Moving now to Slide six deposits were up 200 and$27 million for the quarter and included growth in municipal deposits as seasonally expected. Customer balances continued to remain elevated from liquidity associated with various government support programs, as well as higher consumer savings levels. Our quarterly cost of deposits declined to seven basis points, and we continue. Good to add new accounts. On Slide 7, you'll see the detailed changes in our net interest income and margin. Net interest income increased $1.2 million as compared to the first quarter of last year, but it was up $5.4 million excluding PPP recognition reflective of year-over-year loan growth and additional investment securities purchases. Reported first quarter net interest margin was 2.95% and 3.17%, excluding PPP income recognition and the impact of excess liquidity. Looking forward with interest rates rising across the yield curve, earning assets are expected to begin to reprice at levels above our blended portfolio yields in the second quarter, and as such, we would expect to see some opportunities for core margin improvement. In addition, our Balance Sheet continues to exhibit a meaningful level of assets sensitivity. Slide 8 shows trends in non-interest income, excluding security in losses; our fee income was up 4% on a linked-quarter basis to $42.8 million. More broadly, non-spread revenue was 35% of our total revenue in the first quarter of 2022. And remains a key strength and value driver for NBT. Our wealth management insurance and retirement plan administration businesses experienced strong year-over-year growth from new business wins, market appreciation, and certain seasonal activity-based revenues. Banking fees improved almost 17% from the pandemic impacted first-quarter of 2021, principally from higher card related services. During the quarter, the company made some adjustments to certain customer non-sufficient funds, processing practices, and expect once fully implemented that these changes will reduce service charge fee income by approximately a cents per share per quarter. Also, as a reminder, the bank will be subject to the provisions of the Durbin amendment to the Dodd -Frank X beginning in the third quarter of this year, which caps are per transaction compensatory opportunity for debit interchange. We estimate this will reduce quarterly debit card interchange income by approximately $3.7 million or almost $0.07 a share turning to non-interest expense slide on. Non-interest expense on Slide nine, our total operating expenses were $72.1 million for the quarter, which was $4.3 million or 6.3% above the first quarter of 2021. Salaries and employee benefit costs of 45.5 million were up 9% over the prior year and included merit-related salary increases, as well as higher performance-based incentive compensation accruals compared to a much more muted first quarter of last year. Total operating expenses were lower than the linked fourth quarter of 2021, reflective of two less payroll days, as well as certain seasonably higher costs incurred in the fourth quarter, consistent with historical trends. We'd expect core operating expenses to drift upward over the next several quarters, including the full-quarter impact of 2022 merit-related wage increases, which were awarded in March, as well as our continued efforts to fill a higher-than-historical level of open positions in support of our customer engagement and growth objectives. In addition to investing in our people, we expect to continue to invest in technology-related applications and tools, in order to advance our customer-facing and processing infrastructure. On Slides 10 and 11, we provide an overview of key asset quality metrics and a walk forward of our low loss reserve changes. As previously mentioned, net charge-offs were 14 basis points of loans in the first quarter of 2022, compared to 22 basis points in the prior quarter. Both NPLs and NPAs declined again this quarter. We are continuing to benefit from our conservative underwriting and certainly observed credit metrics have been much better than would have been suggested by the seasonal models, 12 to 24 months ago. We continue to start each quarter with the underlying assumption that the combination of loan growth and net charge-offs will be a proxy for the provision for loan losses before the consideration of any changes in macroeconomic conditions in forecasts, which has continued to exhibit improvements since late 2020. As I wrap up my prepared remarks, some closing thoughts. We started 2022 on strong footing and we are pleased with the fundamental results achieved in the first quarter. Stable to improving net interest income, solid results from our recurring fee income lines, sustained expense discipline, and exceptional credit quality outcomes have been clear highlights. Our capital accumulation results over the past several quarters continue to put us in an enviable position as we consider growth opportunities for the balance of 2022 and beyond. With that, we're happy to answer any questions you may have at this time.