Kelly S. King
Analyst · the subsidiary
Thank you, Alan. Good morning, everybody, and thanks for joining our call. So overall, we had a strong fourth quarter. Our revenues were up. Expenses were down. Credit was great. And I think, importantly, we believe the economy has hit kind of a positive pivotal point, and I'll talk some about that in a little bit. So net income totaled $537 million, up 6.1% compared to the fourth quarter of '12. Diluted EPS was $0.75 on a GAAP basis, an increase of 5.6% versus the fourth quarter of '12. For the year, we earned $1.6 billion or $2.19 a share. But remember, those results include $519 million in tax adjustments for prior quarters, which we've talked to you about. So if you exclude those adjustments, we would have had made $2.19 billion, which were record operating earnings. In the revenue area, our total revenue on an FTE basis was $2.4 billion. It was up 3.9% annualized compared to our Q3. That was largely based on a seasonally strong quarter for insurance, record performances in trust, investment banking groups, lower deposit cost. It was substantially offset, though, by decline in mortgage banking income. Our fee income ratio did increase to 43.5%. Regarding loans, average balances were down 1.2% on a GAAP basis. But remember, this includes the sale of a subsidiary we discussed in the last quarter. If you x that sale, loans were up slightly, consistent with the guidance that we gave at our mid-quarter conference. Importantly, income-producing CRE has turned, that's a big story for us, and grew 5.2% annualized. Combined with the residential CRE, total CRE grew 3%, and this is the first quarter this has turned and grown in 6 years, going back to postcrisis. So that would really help us in 2014. If you exclude the sale of the subsidiary and related transfer, other lending subsidiaries grew 3.5% versus the third quarter, even though this is a normally soft quarter for those subsidiaries, primarily in insurance premium finance. Residential mortgage increased 9.8% on a GAAP basis compared to third quarter. Now we did have the transfer in as part of the subsidiary sale, but still, that was up 6% excluding those loans. Deposits had another good quarter. They did decrease $2 billion or 6.3% overall. But importantly, noninterest-bearing deposits increased $1.1 billion or 12.8% annualized. And our deposit mix improved, and our cost declined 3 basis points to 28, which is what we had indicated earlier in the year. Credit performance was a really big story for the quarter. Net charge-offs remained unchanged from third quarter at 0.49% of our average loans and leases. That is below our long-term estimated normalized charge-off rate. We are, by the way, reducing that from 55 to 75 down to 50 to 70 basis point range. That's due to strong performance and mostly because of the change in our loan mix. NPLs decreased 9.2%. NPA has decreased 9.4%. ALLL coverage improved to 1.73 relative to NPLs, up from 1.66. Expenses was a good story for us. Noninterest expenses decreased 4% annualized versus the third quarter, mostly driven by lower professional services, regulatory and other expenses. In the professional services area, they decreased $14 million due to systems- and project-related reductions. Efficiency ratio improved, and we produced positive operating leverage for the fourth quarter. As we discussed in mid-quarter, we believe expenses peaked in 2013 and will decline consistently during all of 2014. We do expect continued improvement on efficiency ratios throughout the entire year. If you look at Slide 4 with me, there are just a couple of unusual items this quarter. The subsidiary sale, again, which we mentioned on the third quarter, did occur. We had a $31 million pretax gain, $19 million after tax, so that was about a $0.03 positive impact on EPS. We did have a relatively small but a meaningful number of merger-related restructuring charges, some related to the subsidiary sale. It's about $10 million pretax, and that was about $0.01 negative to our EPS. So if you look at Slide 5, a few more comments in regards to loans. Loans were down, as I said, 1.2% on GAAP, but that includes the mortgage warehouse being down, seasonality and the sub sale. So if you x the sub sale, they were flat. It's really up 0.3%, with some real positive improving trends, which I'll talk about. If you x the sub sale and the decline in mortgage warehouse, loans were up, actually, 1.5%, which is kind of a look at kind of an operating or a normalized kind of look at loan growth. C&I was flat, excluding mortgage warehouse, even though in a GAAP basis it's down 3.6% from the third. CRE, as I indicated, was strong. Other -- CRE other experienced solid growth of 5.2%. We had some good performance in some key retail areas: 11.9% growth in sales finance; 8.4% in revolving credit; 9.8% in residential mortgage, again, 6% if you exclude the loan transfer. Excluding the sale of the subsidiary and the related transfer, loans in other lending subsidiaries increased 3.5%. That was led by Sheffield, up 11.8%; equipment finance, up 17.5%; Grandbridge, up 7.4%; and Regional Acceptance, up 5.4%. So a little more commentary for you with regard to the loan area. As I said, we are seeing some real positive points. Just a macro perspective to begin with. We really believe we are at a pivotal point in the economy. Admittedly, that's substantially intuitive, but I am meaningfully more positive about where we are and where we're going today than, say, 90 and certainly, 120 days ago. So what are the reasons for that? Well, first of all, we had better job growth over the last several months. I know December was down, but we think that was a fluke. The budget deal in Congress, we think, was a really big deal. And then psychology matters in situations like this. So people have been feeling bad for 6 years. There's a natural psychological reaction when you go through a period like that, where you just kind of want to feel better. And it doesn't take too much positive news to make you feel better, and this is what we're beginning to see. People need to invest. A lot of small-, medium-sized companies, particularly have not invested in growing stock equipment, automation equipment for 5, 6 years, and they need to invest. The global environment is more stable, and we're seeing some positive signs in terms of growth, in terms of the eurozone and other areas. The stock market is much better. So there's just a long list of positives that I think are pretty meaningful in terms of how you ought to think about where we are. Just those -- just in the last couple of days, I just picked up some things like, for example, the World Bank says that global economy is at a turning point. Wall Street Journal, just yesterday or maybe it was Tuesday, had an article that said, "Why Business Investment Could Break Out." Kiplinger, just yesterday, said, "Calmer waters lie ahead for the economy". So there's some pretty positive indicators out there. I'm not trying to say it's perfect, and I'm not trying to say we've had a 180-degree turn. I just simply think we'd made a turn, and that's a big deal. And I think that '14 is more positive productivity and production as we go forward. Nonetheless, whatever happens to the macroeconomic condition is what it's going to be. What we're really focused on is what we can do to execute on our strategies to grow faster than the market. There are just a number of those to give you some comfort in terms of our optimism. On the second half of the fourth quarter, we definitely saw a meaningful positive change in loan activity. We ended 2013, particularly second half of the fourth quarter, with the best momentum I've seen in just a number of quarters. Growth in CRE, as I described, was led by stronger performance in office properties, hotel, motel, retail. And we also continue to have good growth in multifamily. So we expect CRE to have a meaningful positive growth in 2014. Runoff in key portfolios improved. That's a big thing, mathematically, in terms of loan growth. Community Banking runoff in December was the lowest in sometime. Single-family runoff, which is a smaller portfolio now, is beginning to stabilize. Mortgage warehouse lending stabilized in December. So mathematically, as these portfolios stabilize and runoffs subside, that makes a positive kick in terms of the growth. Our CRE specialist strategy has produced 5 consecutive months of growth and continues to gain momentum across our footprint. To give you perspective on that, in the fourth quarter, end-of-period annualized growth was 12%. And we have unfunded construction loans at about $1 billion. ABL asset base financing has been restructured, added additional resources. That's a big, big potential for us as we go into 2014. Key new markets of Texas, Florida, Alabama are gaining traction, really positive momentum there. Dealer floor plan doubled commitments during 2014. We have a $800 million pipeline. Large corporate initiatives, including new offices in California, Chicago, Ohio and New York. We've added a food and ag specialty group, all improved focus during last -- latter part of last year and heading into this year. So we're gaining a lot of momentum in all of those areas. And we're selectively increasing our hold [ph] positions in some large corporate opportunities, which is positive as well. Equipment finance is a big opportunity for us as it's experiencing strong growth, and we're really focusing on that in the large corporate space. We've reinstituted our fixed rate owner-occupied program, which is very well received by our people in the Community Bank, and we have more focus on pricing in government finance, which produced very positive results in Q4. So looking forward, for the first quarter, we expect average loans to grow between 2% and 3% and to accelerate in the second quarter, as our more seasonal loan categories, like insurance premium finance and Sheffield, really begin to kick into the seasonal growth. So loan growth is still going to be tough, lots of competition, but we are optimistic as we head into '14. Looking at Slide 6. With regard to deposits, we had a good quarter for deposits as we continue to execute a mix of strategies. We had noninterest-bearing DDA up 12.8%. Interest checking is up 3% fourth to third. Money market and savings up 5.1%. Now CD is another type that was down substantially 61%, $3.9 billion, but that was a conscious strategy. A lot of that is large corporate CDs not out of the Community Bank, and so that was a part of our mix change and our cost control. Speaking of cost control, we're making really good progress. We had told you, at the beginning of the year, we thought we could break 0.30%. We did. We got down to 0.28%, 3 basis points better than 0.31% for the third and 10 better than the fourth quarter of last year. So nice improvement there. I would point out these costs are likely to kind of flatten at this kind of level. We have new liquidity requirements, and so we want to keep our mix of deposits really diversified. So look for that to be kind of flattish, it might be down a little bit more, but kind of flattish. And so we expect continued growth in all client deposit categories during 2014 as we continue to focus on penetrating the client market. So that's a little bit of color there. Daryl is going to give you a lot more detail. Now let me turn it over to him. Daryl?