Christopher Maher
Analyst · Matthew Breese with Stephens, Inc. Your line is now open
Well, it’s a great question, Matt. I think just a really simple answer for it. When we look at the value of our shares, we think there’s an opportunity there. We feel very good about the balance sheet. We feel very good about credit. We feel very good about our long-term prospects. And the sector, including us, is just trading at reasonably cyclical lows. So as long as we’re below tangible book value, it’s a very compelling investment decision. That said, to your earlier point, Matt, we’re a growth company, and we’re anxious to be back in the growth side. But we do get this opportunity as we grow loans in the second half of the year, we have the opportunity potentially with margin stabilization and a little bit of growth to see some earnings power as well. So, if we’re returning to growth, you’re going to see earnings growth as well, which should provide some more growth capital too. So, we don’t want capital levels to drift up. We do have certain floors. We want to make sure we’re above. But trading below -- substantially below tangible book value for us. It’s just a unique opportunity. And you asked about the outlook. Look, the first quarter would probably represent -- I couldn’t see us doing more than that, because we do want to preserve capital for growth. But if we continue to do anywhere near that level by the end of the year, we would fill our current plan, we’d have to think about whether we wanted to do another plan. So I think it’s going to depend a lot on, believe it or not, kind of margins, structure and growth opportunities. We can bring on new clients, but we want to make sure we’re bringing them on at the right margins. It is not the right part of the cycle to give up your margin discipline and chase just like stand-alone EPS at the end of what could be a multi-year expansion. The soft landing is not off the table. But you could also imagine that by ‘25, we’re in a recession, right? I mean we don’t know what the Fed is going to have to do later in the year. So, we’re not going to drive capital levels down. But at these prices, if we have excess capital, we’re going to use it.