NYSE:BHLB Berkshire Hills Bancorp Q2 2023 Earnings Report $23.60 +0.13 (+0.57%) Closing price 04/17/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$23.94 +0.34 (+1.43%) As of 04/17/2025 04:20 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Berkshire Hills Bancorp EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.55Consensus EPS $0.60Beat/MissMissed by -$0.05One Year Ago EPS$0.51Berkshire Hills Bancorp Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$111.82 millionExpected Revenue$112.39 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$570.00 thousandYoY Revenue GrowthN/ABerkshire Hills Bancorp Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2023Date7/20/2023TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateThursday, July 20, 2023Conference Call Time10:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsBerkshire Hills Bancorp's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, April 24, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 9:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Berkshire Hills Bancorp Q2 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 20, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Berkshire Hills Bancorp Second Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all lines are in listen only mode. Following the presentation, we will conduct a question and answer session. This call is being recorded today, Thursday, July 20, 2023. I would now like to turn the conference over to Kevin Kahn. Operator00:00:37Please go ahead, sir. Speaker 100:00:41Good morning, and thank you for joining the Berkshire Bank's 2nd quarter earnings call. My name is Kevin Khan, Investor Relations and Corporate Development Officer. Here with me today are Nitin Mahathre, Chief Executive Officer Sean Gray, Chief Operating Officer David Rosato, Chief Financial Officer and Greg Lindenmuth, Chief Risk Officer. Our remarks will include forward looking statements and refer to non GAAP financial measures. Actual results could differ materially from those statements. Speaker 100:01:08Please see our legal disclosure on Page 2 of the earnings presentation referencing forward looking statements and non GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of non GAAP to GAAP measures is included in our news release. At this time, I'll turn the call over to Nitin. Nitin? Speaker 200:01:25Thank you, Kevin. Good morning, everyone. I'll begin my comments on Slide 3, where you can see the highlights for the Q2. We continue to make steady progress and are thankful that the heightened market uncertainty, which began on March 8, has subsided significantly in the Q2. We are encouraged by our deposit durability, strong liquidity and capital position. Speaker 200:01:50We're also encouraged by our continued disciplined credit management with charge offs declining $1,100,000 linked quarter, while we added $2,200,000 to our loan loss allowance commensurate with loan growth. Fee revenues were up versus 1st quarter providing a modest offset to the decline in net interest income from rising funding costs. While we intend to provide our outlook once a year on our Q4 earnings call each January, we've included an updated 2023 outlook slide given the meaningfully different operating environment. David will review that in a few minutes. Operating net income of $23,900,000 declined 14% linked quarter and was up 1% year over year. Speaker 200:02:41Operating earnings per share of $0.55 declined 13% versus 1st quarter and was up 8% year over year. Operating return on tangible common equity was 8.27%, A decline versus 1st quarter and down 21 basis points year over year. Deposits were stable in the 2nd quarter. On an end of period basis, deposit balances were flat to 1st quarter and down 1% on an average balance basis. As a comparison, Fed H8 data shows small banks ending deposit balances were down 1% and average deposit balances were down 3%. Speaker 200:03:25While we're not immune to the funding cost and mix pressures facing the industry, We believe our deposit base is relatively stable given our history and long term relationships with clients in smaller cities across New England market. Average loan balances were up 3% linked quarter with commercial loan balance growth of 2% over that period. We recognize that while many banks may be pulling back or even cutting lending, We continue to serve our customers' borrowing and banking needs prudently and to that extent, we expect continued loan growth, albeit at a slower pace in the second half of the year. Longer term, we're targeting to have about 65% to 70% of our loans book in commercial and 30% to 35% in consumer loans. On an average balance basis, Commercial loans were 66% of loans this quarter. Speaker 200:04:23Our balance sheet remains strong. We ended the quarter with a common equity Tier 1 ratio of 12.1% and a tangible common equity ratio of 7.9%. Given macroeconomic trends, we remain vigilant on credit even as our asset quality continues to remain strong. Provision expense for this quarter was $8,000,000 Our allowance to loans ended the quarter at 113 basis points, in line with our guided range of 110 basis points to 120 basis points. A year ago, we decided to de risk the balance sheet and run off non strategic loan books, including Upstart and Firestone. Speaker 200:05:08We continue to do so and have included updated data On those run off books in an appendix page, which provides more details. We have also updated the appendix page that provides details on our office portfolio, which highlights how our portfolio mix is geographically diverse, granular and resultantly less risky. David will cover some of these metrics in more detail in a few moments. On the best strategy front, This quarter marks the 2nd year anniversary of our 3 year plan. I'll provide more details on the overall progress of the program on the next slide, but A couple of additional highlights to note are, we completed the allocation of our $100,000,000 sustainability bond in this past quarter, resulting in creation of 330 units of affordable housing with more than 200,000 square feet of green building development. Speaker 200:06:05A detailed report on this is available on our website. Slide 4 shows our BEST program's overall progress on 5 key performance metrics. As we've said in the past, the path to our targets will not be a straight line. We are near the low end of our target range On return on assets at 78 basis points and our return on tangible common equity at 8.3%. Our quarterly PPNR annualizes $243,000,000 We've been tracking our customer Net Promoter Score through customer surveys that JD Power helped us design and administer. Speaker 200:06:44Our Net Promoter Score or NPS for the quarter came in at the highest ever level of 56.7 versus 52.8 in the Q1 and was significantly higher than our full year score of 44. I want to use this opportunity to thank all of my Berkshire Bank colleagues for their continued hard work and commitment to our vision of becoming a high performing leading socially responsible community bank. Their commitment to our strategy and dedication to our customers is what is driving our ongoing performance improvement over the past 2 years. With that, I'll turn the call over to David to discuss our financials in more detail. David? Speaker 300:07:26Thank you, Nitin. Slide 5 shows an overview of the quarter. As Nitin mentioned, operating earnings, which matched GAAP earnings were $23,900,000 or $0.55 per fully diluted share, down $0.08 linked quarter and up $0.04 year over year. Net interest margin was 3.24%, down 34 basis points quarter over quarter and up 13 basis points year over year. Our June NIM was 3.19 and we believe the worst of the NIM compression is behind us. Speaker 300:08:03Net interest income declined $4,800,000 or 5 percent linked quarter and was up $11,400,000 or 14% year over year. Non interest revenues were up $488,000 or 3 percent linked quarter and up 743,000 or 5 percent year over year. Operating expenses were up $2,000,000 or 3 percent linked quarter and up $5,600,000 or 8 percent year over year. Average loans increased 270 Provision expense for the quarter was $8,000,000 at the midpoint of our January guidance and down $1,000,000 from the Q1. Net charge offs were in line with expectations at $5,800,000 or 26 basis points of average loans, and we increased our allowance for credit losses by $2,200,000 Slide 6 shows more detail on our average loan balances, which were up $276,000,000 or 3 percent linked quarter. Speaker 300:09:19Growth in residential mortgage was offset by a modest decline in our consumer book, driven by a $13,000,000 reduction in our Upstart portfolio. CRE loans were up $117,000,000 or 3% and C and I loans were down $31,000,000 or 2% Linked Quarter. Total commercial loans were up $86,000,000 or 2%, below the 1st quarter pace of 5% as we continue to be more selective with clients. Slide 7 shows our average deposit balances. Total deposits declined $108,000,000 or 1% in the quarter and declined $187,000,000 or 2% year over year. Speaker 300:10:06Broker deposits on an average balance basis increased $168,000,000 to $321,000,000 linked quarter and are just 3% of average total deposits. End of period deposits in the 2nd quarter were flat to the 1st quarter. As expected, the deposit mix shifted with a modest decline in non interest bearing deposits and an increase in time deposits. Non interest bearing deposits as a percentage of total deposits were 27% in the 2nd quarter versus 28% in Q1. As expected, time deposits were up 26% versus the 1st quarter, and we expect growth in time deposits to continue. Speaker 300:10:54Deposit costs were 151 basis points, up 42 basis points from the Q1. The total deposit beta for the 2nd quarter was 89% And the cumulative deposit beta is 28% through 500 basis points of total Fed tightening. We continue to anticipate that the cumulative total deposit beta will approach 40% through the rest of 2023. Turning to Slide 8, we show net interest income. Higher loan volumes provided a lift to 2nd quarter net interest income, while higher funding costs contributed to the $4,800,000 or 5% decrease in net interest income. Speaker 300:11:41The $11,400,000 or 14 percent year over year growth in NII was primarily a function of higher loan volume and higher interest rates. Slide 9 shows fee income, which was up $488,000 or 3 percent linked quarter. Deposit related fees were up $260,000 or 3%, driven by higher commercial cash management fees. Loan fees and other were up $720,000 on higher swap income, but I'd caution that swap income is a volatile line item. Gain on sale of 44 BC SBA loans We're up 416,000 versus the 1st quarter on increased balances sold. Speaker 300:12:32Wealth management fees were down $156,000 linked quarter, primarily due to seasonal tax prep fees in the Q1. The decline in other fee revenues mostly reflects annual credit card revenue fees of 600,000 paid in the Q1. Slide 10 shows our expenses. Expenses were up $2,000,000 or 3% from the Q1 and at the high end of our January guidance. Compensation expense was up $889,000 or 2% linked quarter from new hires and from sales incentive compensation. Speaker 300:13:14Occupancy and equipment was down 409,000 or 4th percent, reflecting continued expense saves from office and branch consolidation. Technology and communications expenses We're up $994,000 or 10 percent versus the Q1 as we continue to invest to digitize the bank, which is a strategic priority for us. Technology spend will normalize over the back half of the year as we complete our digital banking conversion. The increase in other expenses largely reflects increases in deposit insurance premiums. The balance of the increase in other expenses is spread over several small items. Speaker 300:14:01I'd like to talk about our expense base for a moment. Since joining in February, I've spent considerable time working to understand our expense base. We are committed to managing expenses with discipline and transparency. And we will continue to identify opportunities for expense reduction and reinvest part of those saves in our franchise, frontline and support teams to grow revenue organically, Including the opportunities to attract new talent stemming from market disruption, we will manage to a quarterly run rate of $73,000,000 to $76,000,000 while carefully evaluating every dollar of expense. Slide 11 is a summary of our asset quality metrics. Speaker 300:14:48Non performing loans were up $1,400,000 from the Q1 and stand at 32 basis points of total loans. Net charge offs of $5,800,000 were down $1,100,000 or 16% from the Q1. Net charge offs mostly consisted of C and I charge offs of $4,200,000 and consumer loans of 2,300,000 We had a net recovery of $664,000 in CRE. While current credit quality metrics are benign, We recognize that economic uncertainties exist and we are monitoring both of our originations and portfolios very carefully. As Nitin mentioned, we updated the page in the appendix on our office portfolio. Speaker 300:15:39As noted last quarter, the weighted average loan to value ratios are approximately 60% and a large majority is suburban and Class A space. Last quarter, we mentioned that lease maturities for our larger office loans are not significant until 2027. I'd also note that CRE non performing loans to end of period loans were 3 basis points in the 2nd quarter, down from 21 basis points a year ago. We've added a page in the appendix, which shows our net loan charge offs as a percentage of loans versus all FDIC banks. We have generally outperformed peer banks over a long time frame. Speaker 300:16:25Our long term net charge offs to average loans averaged 38 basis points from the year 2000 to today, first 83 basis points for all FDIC insured Thanks. This data of course includes the great financial crisis. Over the last 10 years, as the prior slide shows, Our net charge offs have averaged 27 basis points of loans. Slide 12 shows our returns over the past 5 quarters on a GAAP and an operating basis. As you know, the current operating environment is presenting many headwinds, but we remain focused on improving our long term performance. Speaker 300:17:12Slide 13 shows Details of our liquidity and capital positions. In the Q2, we unwound the excess liquidity we prudently built in the Q1. FHLB borrowings at quarterend were $674,000,000 down $230,000,000 from March 31. As a reminder, from our last call, we held excess liquidity on the balance sheet. We held that liquidity from March 8 Through June 15, following the resolution of the debt ceiling, our average FHLB balance was $1,100,000,000 in the quarter. Speaker 300:17:54The loan to deposit ratio at period M was 88% versus 86% in the 1st quarter And our TCE ratio ended the 2nd quarter at 7.9%, roughly flat to the 1st quarter and included an AOCI mark of $186,000,000 on an after tax basis, which was up $22,000,000 Tangible book value per share ended the quarter at $21.60 down 1% versus the 1st quarter and flat to the Q2 of 2022. The chart on the bottom right shows stability in our tangible book value per share and an improvement in tangible book value per share excluding AOCI. Our top capital management priority is to deploy capital to support organic loan growth. Secondly, We remain biased to opportunistic stock repurchases given our stock price. In Q2, we repurchased a little over $12,200,000 of stock at an average cost of $21.16 We believe Berkshire stock is undervalued Given our growth potential and the low risk business model we employ, our preferred use of capital remains to support organic loan growth and we will continue to opportunistically repurchase stock. Speaker 300:19:25Slide 15 shows our updated 2023 outlook. Our refreshed outlook echoes what many banks have already reported in the Q2. We see modestly lower loan growth And stable deposits versus the first half of the year and lower net interest income on funding mix changes. We also expect expenses to be between $73,000,000 $76,000,000 per quarter for the second half of the year for $71,000,000 to $74,000,000 prior guidance. Given lower expected pre tax income, We expect our tax rate to be 14% to 16% for full year 2023. Speaker 300:20:09We also expect second half fees to be around first half levels. We have no change to our outlooks for expected credit provision or share repurchases, And we plan to provide our 2024 outlook on our Q4 call in January. With that, I'd like to turn it back to Nitin for further comments. Thanks, David. I'll close my remarks with comments on the economy, the industry and our positioning. Speaker 300:20:37We're fortunate to be operating in the stable New England market, which continues to Speaker 200:20:41be on a solid footing. The sector issues of the Q1 have by and large passed and we're prepared to face typical banking industry cyclicality issues such as NIM compression from the inverted yield curve and the credit cycle tightening. While we expect credit costs to increase through this cycle, we believe that they'll be significantly better than the losses during the GFC cycle. We also believe that the increased regulatory costs will impact the industry, but are likely to impact larger regional banks more versus community banks like Berkshire. While we can't control the macro environment, we are focused on controlling what we can and have several levers, including opportunistic hiring, de risking our balance sheet and prudent expense management. Speaker 200:21:30Finally, as I mentioned earlier, we have a strong capital and liquidity position and are positioned to benefit from the market disruption in our footprint. We remain focused on selective, responsible and profitable organic growth and are confident that we will get bigger while getting better. With that, I'll turn it over to the operator. Operator? Operator00:21:55Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Your first question will come from Dave Bishop at Hovde Group. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:22:34Hey, good morning, Nitin and Dave. Speaker 300:22:37Good morning, Dave. Good morning. Speaker 400:22:41Nitin, maybe a sort of like a holistic question here. We appreciate the growth in the residential mortgage segment here, but it It appears like those average loan yields are pretty sticky, maybe up 30 basis points over a year over year basis and becoming A bigger part of the loan portfolio, just curious how those are positioned to maybe reprice or maybe reprice upward. It looks like they're impacting the margin, which is obviously impacting profitability. Just curious maybe just the decision making there to grow that as fast At these lower yields, are we missing something in terms of the repricing and yield benefit there? Speaker 200:23:26Yes, sure, Dave. Great question, great observation. I think the guiding factor here is the commercial consumer mix. We stated that we would like it to be 65% commercial. This quarter was 66%. Speaker 200:23:40So we continue to manage That at the highest level. And then the other part is, it's a smaller portfolio, which had lower portfolio yields. The new book that we're getting for the quarter had about 5.5% yield and the applications are about 6% yield. So I think that's Slowly improving the portfolio yields, but it takes a while. I think what comes with it is high quality relationships That are new customers to the bank. Speaker 200:24:11And I think what's even more important that's not maybe visible is A tremendous amount of infrastructure has now been put in place to selling conforming production that comes through. So that's going to generate higher fee income In the second half of the year. But I think the overall governor here is we want to maintain our commercial consumer mix At 65 plus and in fact as David stated, we're looking to make that 65% to 70% commercial. Speaker 400:24:41Got it. So could there be select portfolio sales to generate fee income in the second half of the year twenty twenty four? Speaker 200:24:50Yes, I think just the originations, we would be looking to sell about 20% to 25% of production starting pretty much next quarter. Speaker 300:25:00Yes. Hey, Dave. It's David. It's yes, it takes time to transition. Gain on sale was up linked quarter. Speaker 300:25:08It's the relatively modest numbers. We had not something we would large enough to call out, but We expect further improvement in the back half of the year and we're actively talking with the business managers About how we can generate a bit more gain on sale. Speaker 400:25:34Got it. Speaker 300:25:34Yes. And then just lastly Yes. Oh, I was just going to say just to add to Nitin's comments, The quality of that portfolio from an LTV, from a FICO perspective, the 50% risk based capital perspective, it's capital efficient. It's lagging In the portfolio repricing, a lot of that is legacy purchases that predates Most of the people sitting around this table, but it's on our books. But the new volume that's been generated each quarter is going on At healthy spreads and as Nitin said, we're approaching just right now in the current environment, we're approaching 6% Yields. Speaker 400:26:28Got it. And then in terms of The guidance in terms of the back half, it looks like it implies some balance sheet growth relative to stability deposits. But the funding of loan growth, is that going to be from Securities, cash flow or borrowings, just curious how should we think about the balance sheet mix and shift into the second half of the year? Speaker 300:26:52Sure. And that's the money question for 2023. I would start by saying, And I said this last quarter, I believe, was newcomer to the bank, very impressed with The retail and commercial deposit franchise, I said that 3 months ago and I would Say that again, and I'd say it even a little bit stronger today because of what happened in the last quarter, Our deposit base really performed nicely, and the mix is changing. It's changing for us. It's changing for everyone. Speaker 300:27:31But we had strong we still have strong noninterest Sparing deposits, there was just very little slippage there as a percent of total deposits. So it is a challenge because loans even in Year to date and in our guidance are growing faster than deposits. So we need to fund that. And we will fund that How we did in the last quarter, which is partially with broker deposits, partially with home loan advances, But also continuing to fight tooth and nail for consumer and commercial deposits. And I caught out a little bit in my expense comments around working hard On the expense front, but still making the comment around reinvesting in the franchise and some of the hires That we're doing, those are frontline bankers that are generating deposits as well as loans. Speaker 300:28:37So we continue to invest to build the business And our deposit base has stood up really well, but I also believe it's going to when the environment gets a little Better. We'll continue to grow reasonably and we will get more into balance over time. Speaker 400:29:02Got it. Then just one final question Dave for you. I noted the Appreciate the color on the average swap advances versus end of period. Any color you can give in terms of your maybe average rate or just versus Maybe what the end of period borrowing rate on the slump advances were? Was it materially different given the late quarter pay down? Speaker 400:29:22Thanks. Speaker 300:29:24No, it really wasn't. So back in April, The funding turmoil around First Republican and Silicon Valley, etcetera, It was starting to abate, but we were really early in that process. So I remember calling out, we had ballooned up the balance sheet Just to harbor liquidity, and I said we would bring that down by about a third. So that's what we did. However, the only what we didn't know back then that we experienced in the quarter was the debt ceiling Turmoil. Speaker 300:30:07So we wound up holding that liquidity, call it 3 weeks maybe longer than we thought we would have. Pretty marginal impact, in the grand scheme of things, especially on net interest income. But that's about the only color. The rates In the short end of the curve are not that differentiated. So Average rate versus ending rate, really not material. Speaker 400:30:40Got it. That's what I thought. Just wanted to confirm. Thanks, Dave. I'll hop off. Speaker 300:30:44You're welcome. Thanks, Dave. Operator00:30:48Your next question will come from Billy Young at RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:30:56Hey, good morning guys. Can you hear me okay? Speaker 300:30:59Yes, Billy. Good morning. Great, Billy. Thanks. Speaker 500:31:03Great. First, I just wanted to apologize if I maybe missed this in your comments. What is your outlook or your guidance currently assuming in terms of Fed actions? Speaker 300:31:14Well, you didn't miss it because we didn't say it. I'd like to share it. So it's really not Inconsistent or it is, I should better said, it is consistent with market forwards. So One more move higher and then an easing cycle beginning in March of next year. Market forwards have About 125 basis points build in, and we don't really have a view different from that. Speaker 500:31:53Okay, got it. And I guess, just switching over to Just kind of loan growth. Could you just kind of maybe speak high level to, I guess, what kind of economic scenario We could be in that would maybe make you more comfortable in terms of pushing or achieving loan growth at the higher end of your $9,400,000,000 range. I think that's maybe about 6%. Speaker 300:32:28Sure. I just if you think we were all together 3 months ago, right? And the difference from an economic perspective Is the possibility of a recession at the end of 'twenty three is now pretty much off the table. It's been pushed out. You've seen the equity market respond quite strongly. Speaker 300:32:56The You've seen interest rates up as well. So the I would never say we're not concerned about a downturn, but I would say with the data that's come in, It feels like it's been pushed out. What I would say is in our Collective management of the balance sheet, there's 2 high level drivers that govern almost all of our thinking. One is the economic outlook that you're referencing, but the other is just Funding, funding costs and then the ability to fund loan growth. And as Nitin talked about in his comments, So our originations are down linked quarter. Speaker 300:33:52Our pipelines are reduced a bit linked quarter. We're being more selective, but we are we want to service Our customer base, especially our existing customer base. So but it under that overlay of What if the economic scenario gets worse? What if the Fed overtightens? And how are we going to fund it? Speaker 200:34:23Yes, agreed, Billy. And I think one more thing I would add is the other part of it is relatively less controllable to the extent that what do the customers want. And I think we've seen the line utilization, for example, go down significantly in the Q2. And depending on the needs of the consumers, that might ramp up and that might So up in the balances, especially in the C and I and ABL segment. Speaker 300:34:45Yes. Nitin, that's a really good point. So our line utilization Was down 5% in the quarter. We called out muted or even down C and I And we had an elevated level of payoffs in our ABL book. And It's mostly around customers who are paying on a floating rate basis doing everything To minimize their interest expense, right? Speaker 300:35:20They're maximizing their cash utilization. They're paying down lines when they can. Speaker 500:35:28Got it. And just to kind of follow-up on that, the 5% down utilization rate, What is that, at quarter end versus what it was in the Q1? Speaker 300:35:38It was 38% on the round. Speaker 500:35:42Got it. Got it. And just one, I guess, housekeeping question. Just the 9.2 to 9.4 Loans, that's end of period, right, not average? Speaker 300:35:56Yes, that's ending. Speaker 500:35:58Okay. Speaker 200:35:59And Billy, just more color on that is The delta Billy, the delta between 2nd quarter to the end of the year that 9.2% to 9.4%, roughly about 70% to 75% of the growth would come from commercial. Speaker 500:36:14Understood. Thank you. Appreciate that color. And just one final question and then I'll step back. Just following up on David's expense based comment, Are you perhaps signaling maybe some more additional cost savings actions you might take in the near future in terms of Branch consolidation or headcount reduction? Speaker 200:36:38We're certainly looking at avenues and the levers within expenses. We have internally a The counsel to look at all of expenses and resource and projects kind of management and prioritization. So There are different levers. There's levers in procurement, levers in real estate, and there's also levers in managing The staff growth, so I think we're looking at everything and some of those will also come through some completion of the projects That David talked about, when we complete digital banking, for example, we'll start seeing offsets coming through in the second half of the year Because we'll be managing to a lower cost platforms while providing better delivery to the customers. Speaker 500:37:26Understood. Thank you for taking my questions. Speaker 300:37:29Thanks, Billy. Thank you. Operator00:37:33Your next question will come from Mark Fitzgibbon at Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:37:39Hey, guys. Good morning. Speaker 300:37:42Good morning, Mark. Speaker 600:37:44First question I had, David, I heard your comments about the margin with the worst being behind, but it sounds like We'll see some additional compression in the margin. Based on the forward curve and your modeling, When do you think the margin bottoms? And do you think it can stay above 3%? Speaker 300:38:05So I'll limit my comments to 2023. So in the first half of the year, Yes, we were 3.58%, 3.24%, down 34 basis points, but an average of 3.41%. We think the margin will be down in Q3 and in Q4. And that range in the back half of the year is probably 315 to 320. So, we don't see Enough deposit pressure and based on forward curves right now, so there's no easing in 2023. Speaker 300:38:57We should be well above 3%, full year margin and back half of the year margin. My comment was really mostly in reference to the delta between 1st and second quarter. We don't think we're going to see that type of pressure again. Speaker 600:39:20Okay. And then next on the buyback program, you guys have obviously been very aggressive with it over the last several quarters. Given the economic uncertainty and the fact that your capital ratios have now gotten sort of more normalized or a little bit thinner, how aggressive Are you all likely to be with the buyback program, say, the next couple of quarters? Speaker 300:39:45So I wouldn't use the word aggressive, Mark. We've been We'd like to think we've been really thoughtful around this. So we talked about this a little bit last quarter where We did nothing prior to the turmoil at the end of March. So and we bought just bought a few shares. It was $1,200,000 in the Q1. Speaker 300:40:14So we executed on about $12,200,000 $12,300,000 Dollars in this quarter were I would it's the word aggressive When I think about what we bought and the change in our capital levels, there was really no change in our capital levels. So we didn't bring capital down. We bought shares. We earned money. We retained that capital. Speaker 300:40:43You're looking for what we're going to do in the back half of the year quarter by quarter and we don't want to over signal, but Our thought process is going to be consistent. Economic uncertainty, the worse it is, the more capital we should hold First, the opportunity to buy our stock back at basically tangible book value. Speaker 600:41:06Okay. And then last question I had, Nitin for you, your best program goals in terms of ROTCE and ROA are pretty significantly below what peers are generating today and you guys are a fair way below those goals. I guess the question I'm wondering, do you think you need to take more extreme kind of actions to drive profitability higher In the quarters ahead, maybe like selling off additional pieces of the business to try to get profitability levels over time up to Something close to a peer like level? Speaker 200:41:48Hey, Mark, I think I mentioned in my remarks, We completed 2nd year of the program, entering into 3rd year and where we were when we started to where we are, I think we are on the trajectory that kind of matches the run rate. We're pleased but not satisfied as I say internally all the time. So yes, we'll continue to manage and accelerate that journey. I think the aggressive part of the actions will most likely come from How tightly we manage our expenses going forward, while continuing to part invest into our Revenue generation activities that support the growth. I think that's where we're not talking about any aggressive Portfolio business sales at this point of time, we're looking at more expense, revenue and efficiency initiatives as the acceleration path. Speaker 300:42:42I would just add one thought to that, Mark, which is those goals were set In an economic environment and an outlook of an economic environment that's now very different from what we're dealing with. The actions, the thought process, the goals are all the same. It's just there's a lot more headwinds than when they were set. Speaker 600:43:11Okay. Thank you. Speaker 300:43:15Thank you, Mark. You're welcome, Mark. Operator00:43:19Your next question will come from Chris O'Connell at KBW. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:43:26Good morning. Good morning, guys. So just wanted to start off On some of the expense stuff and the items that you mentioned as far as frontline hires, and have you make it maybe walk us through The frontline hires that you've made so far, perhaps in the last quarter, and if you've been able To take advantage of the M and A disruption in your markets and then how many Frontline hires, you think there's an opportunity to add going forward? And what type of hires you'd be looking to make? Speaker 200:44:08Yes, Chris, great question. I'll go back to what we started out when we announced the BEST program. We did see our frontline folks, frontline teams outside of For branch network, we were going to grow by about 40% and that's roughly translated to about 4 to 5 a quarter. We did hire about 7 in the Q2 in 2023. So we're managing to that run rate And net of attrition, I think we're continuing to grow. Speaker 200:44:39We'll probably be at the same pace. What we're seeing increasingly, however, is the More incoming calls and our Head of Commercial, Jim Brown, for example, Who ran the commercial banking for Boston Private. He knows the pretty much the all of the producing bankers in the Boston Private, Silicon Valley Bank, First Republic. So we will get more swings at the plate and we believe that there'll be more opportunities to hire selectively Folks that bring in good client base and books. So that might accelerate a little bit, but we're maintaining the Overarching momentum that we signed up for. Speaker 700:45:21Got it. And for the ones that you hired, is it go ahead. Speaker 300:45:25I was just going to say and it's across Wealth Management, Private Banking and Commercial Banking. And within Commercial, A bit more emphasis on deposit generators, people have just have a track record of large deposit books. Speaker 700:45:46Got it. And I was going to ask for the ones that you have hired particularly from the Boston Private, SIB, or FRC recently that are deposit focused. Any sense of the size of their books At the prior institution that they can maybe get to over the long term? Speaker 200:46:09Chris, we won't put those names and books sizes on the call, but suffice it to say that they're Really talented high quality producers with outstanding relationships in the market. So we are hopeful that, That comes with customers and books over time and it's relatively new hires, so it takes time to build that pipeline. Speaker 700:46:33Great. And then I may have missed it if you mentioned earlier in the yield discussion, But where are the commercial origination yields coming on? Speaker 200:46:46The new business for commercial? Speaker 700:46:48Yes. Speaker 200:46:49Is that correct? Yes, that was roughly about those 7, 7.3 ish. Speaker 700:46:58Great. And for the securities portfolio, it seems like In the near term, still some opportunity to run off. But on the yield, Which has remained relatively stable here the past few quarters. Any sense of where that Speaker 300:47:26Yes. Good question. It's relatively static. It's a fixed rate portfolio. So the yield is not going to change. Speaker 300:47:42This is another one of these Fundamental questions, right, which is the we haven't bought a bond In that portfolio for a long period of time and it's way underwater basically like almost every other bank in the country. You've started to see some people talk about the accretion back of AOCI And laying out those cash flows, which is a really important concept. So I can't tell you what those numbers are yet. Honestly, we haven't done the work. But the We did see a tick up surprisingly in prepayment activity linked quarter. Speaker 300:48:31It's modest. But We will probably share that next quarter, our cash flow expectations and AOCI Build out of that. And obviously, there's a static view there. Then there's a if rates fall, Like forward suggest, it's going to accelerate dramatically in 2024. But Specifically, your question is, will the yield change in the back half of the year from the front half of the year very marginally because it's a fixed rate portfolio. Speaker 700:49:11Okay, got it. Just circling back on the resi, RE Growth in selling off 20% to 25% going forward. Is there any thought as to Selling off more of that production just given the marginal cost of funding versus the marginal yield of what's coming on the balance sheet there? Speaker 300:49:40It's a little bit more complicated than that. So we're really good at originating and a lot of it is in some of our markets Higher balance loans, so jumbos, and that's a harder Product to sell, we do sell some of that. There are outlets to sell some of that, but that's a Harder sell than conventional Freddy's and Fandys to the agencies, right? So part of it is Is generating the right product and having the geography To do conforming loans and sell to the agencies, which we already do, we just want to do a bit more of that. And then while there's funding pressures, do put a little bit slow down some of the Originations that hit our balance sheet, but we have to give our business people time to do that. Speaker 200:50:53Yes. I think the shorter version of the answer would be, Chris, yes. I think the business leader in managing that group Is working on improving the mix so that it's more conforming to that extent. Yes, 20%, 25% is the current target. If we can sell more, we will sell more in Speaker 700:51:15Great. And then just lastly, If you could provide any additional color as to the allocation of the $100,000,000 sustainability bond. And is that backward looking or is that commitments going forward? Just yes, any additional color there. Speaker 200:51:39Yes, I think the typical models that are out there for Issuance of these loans and how the proceeds are allocated, they typically give you a minus 2, plus 2 kind of construct, whereas you look at What you did 2 years prior to the issuance and how you deploy the proceeds in the 2 years. And the reason why we reported this on the call is We were successful in deploying all of it within the 1st year, which actually we are very proud of. And so it's all done. And Big chunk of it, as I said, was 200,000 square feet of green building development, affordable housing, and the rough mix was 41% ish about affordable housing, 33 ish percentage for green building development and another quarter For about financial inclusion and access to projects in LMI neighborhoods. Speaker 700:52:39Okay, great. Appreciate the color. That's all I have for now. Thank you. Speaker 200:52:46Thank you, Chris. Operator00:52:49At this time, there are no further questions. So I will turn the conference back to Nitin Mahathri for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:52:58Thank you all for joining us today on our call and for your interest in Berkshire. Have a great day and be well. Michelle, you can close the call now. Operator00:53:07Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude your conference call for this morning. We would like to thank you all for participating and ask you to please disconnect yourRead morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallBerkshire Hills Bancorp Q2 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K) Berkshire Hills Bancorp Earnings HeadlinesBerkshire Hills Bancorp, Inc. (NYSE:BHLB) is a favorite amongst institutional investors who own 89%April 17 at 2:46 AM | finance.yahoo.comSHAREHOLDER ALERT: Kaskela Law LLC Announces Investigation of Berkshire Hills Bancorp, Inc. (BHLB) and Encourages Long-Term Shareholders to Contact the FirmApril 16 at 6:10 PM | investing.comTrump’s betrayal exposed Trump’s Final Reset Inside the shocking plot to re-engineer America’s financial system…and why you need to move your money now.April 18, 2025 | Porter & Company (Ad)Brokerages Set Berkshire Hills Bancorp, Inc. (NYSE:BHLB) PT at $31.13April 13, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comBerkshire Hills Announces First Quarter 2025 Earnings Release and Conference Call ScheduleApril 4, 2025 | prnewswire.comBHLB Makes Notable Cross Below Critical Moving AverageMarch 7, 2025 | nasdaq.comSee More Berkshire Hills Bancorp Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Berkshire Hills Bancorp? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Berkshire Hills Bancorp and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Berkshire Hills BancorpBerkshire Hills Bancorp (NYSE:BHLB) operates as the bank holding company for Berkshire Bank that provides various banking products and services in the United States. The company provides various deposit accounts, including demand deposit, interest-bearing checking, regular savings, money market savings, time certificates of deposit, and retirement deposit accounts. It offers loans, such as commercial real estate, commercial and industrial, residential mortgage, and consumer loans. In addition, the company provides wealth management services comprising investment management, trust administration, tax return preparation, and financial planning; and investment products and brokerage services. Further, it offers commercial cash management, online banking and mobile banking, small business banking, and asset based lending services; and debit cards and other electronic fee producing payment services to transaction account customers. It serves its products to personal, commercial, non-profit, and municipal deposit customers. Berkshire Hills Bancorp, Inc. was founded in 1846 and is headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts.View Berkshire Hills Bancorp ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Archer Aviation Unveils NYC Network Ahead of Key Earnings Report3 Reasons to Like the Look of Amazon Ahead of EarningsTesla Stock Eyes Breakout With Earnings on DeckJohnson & Johnson Earnings Were More Good Than Bad—Time to Buy? 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There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Berkshire Hills Bancorp Second Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all lines are in listen only mode. Following the presentation, we will conduct a question and answer session. This call is being recorded today, Thursday, July 20, 2023. I would now like to turn the conference over to Kevin Kahn. Operator00:00:37Please go ahead, sir. Speaker 100:00:41Good morning, and thank you for joining the Berkshire Bank's 2nd quarter earnings call. My name is Kevin Khan, Investor Relations and Corporate Development Officer. Here with me today are Nitin Mahathre, Chief Executive Officer Sean Gray, Chief Operating Officer David Rosato, Chief Financial Officer and Greg Lindenmuth, Chief Risk Officer. Our remarks will include forward looking statements and refer to non GAAP financial measures. Actual results could differ materially from those statements. Speaker 100:01:08Please see our legal disclosure on Page 2 of the earnings presentation referencing forward looking statements and non GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of non GAAP to GAAP measures is included in our news release. At this time, I'll turn the call over to Nitin. Nitin? Speaker 200:01:25Thank you, Kevin. Good morning, everyone. I'll begin my comments on Slide 3, where you can see the highlights for the Q2. We continue to make steady progress and are thankful that the heightened market uncertainty, which began on March 8, has subsided significantly in the Q2. We are encouraged by our deposit durability, strong liquidity and capital position. Speaker 200:01:50We're also encouraged by our continued disciplined credit management with charge offs declining $1,100,000 linked quarter, while we added $2,200,000 to our loan loss allowance commensurate with loan growth. Fee revenues were up versus 1st quarter providing a modest offset to the decline in net interest income from rising funding costs. While we intend to provide our outlook once a year on our Q4 earnings call each January, we've included an updated 2023 outlook slide given the meaningfully different operating environment. David will review that in a few minutes. Operating net income of $23,900,000 declined 14% linked quarter and was up 1% year over year. Speaker 200:02:41Operating earnings per share of $0.55 declined 13% versus 1st quarter and was up 8% year over year. Operating return on tangible common equity was 8.27%, A decline versus 1st quarter and down 21 basis points year over year. Deposits were stable in the 2nd quarter. On an end of period basis, deposit balances were flat to 1st quarter and down 1% on an average balance basis. As a comparison, Fed H8 data shows small banks ending deposit balances were down 1% and average deposit balances were down 3%. Speaker 200:03:25While we're not immune to the funding cost and mix pressures facing the industry, We believe our deposit base is relatively stable given our history and long term relationships with clients in smaller cities across New England market. Average loan balances were up 3% linked quarter with commercial loan balance growth of 2% over that period. We recognize that while many banks may be pulling back or even cutting lending, We continue to serve our customers' borrowing and banking needs prudently and to that extent, we expect continued loan growth, albeit at a slower pace in the second half of the year. Longer term, we're targeting to have about 65% to 70% of our loans book in commercial and 30% to 35% in consumer loans. On an average balance basis, Commercial loans were 66% of loans this quarter. Speaker 200:04:23Our balance sheet remains strong. We ended the quarter with a common equity Tier 1 ratio of 12.1% and a tangible common equity ratio of 7.9%. Given macroeconomic trends, we remain vigilant on credit even as our asset quality continues to remain strong. Provision expense for this quarter was $8,000,000 Our allowance to loans ended the quarter at 113 basis points, in line with our guided range of 110 basis points to 120 basis points. A year ago, we decided to de risk the balance sheet and run off non strategic loan books, including Upstart and Firestone. Speaker 200:05:08We continue to do so and have included updated data On those run off books in an appendix page, which provides more details. We have also updated the appendix page that provides details on our office portfolio, which highlights how our portfolio mix is geographically diverse, granular and resultantly less risky. David will cover some of these metrics in more detail in a few moments. On the best strategy front, This quarter marks the 2nd year anniversary of our 3 year plan. I'll provide more details on the overall progress of the program on the next slide, but A couple of additional highlights to note are, we completed the allocation of our $100,000,000 sustainability bond in this past quarter, resulting in creation of 330 units of affordable housing with more than 200,000 square feet of green building development. Speaker 200:06:05A detailed report on this is available on our website. Slide 4 shows our BEST program's overall progress on 5 key performance metrics. As we've said in the past, the path to our targets will not be a straight line. We are near the low end of our target range On return on assets at 78 basis points and our return on tangible common equity at 8.3%. Our quarterly PPNR annualizes $243,000,000 We've been tracking our customer Net Promoter Score through customer surveys that JD Power helped us design and administer. Speaker 200:06:44Our Net Promoter Score or NPS for the quarter came in at the highest ever level of 56.7 versus 52.8 in the Q1 and was significantly higher than our full year score of 44. I want to use this opportunity to thank all of my Berkshire Bank colleagues for their continued hard work and commitment to our vision of becoming a high performing leading socially responsible community bank. Their commitment to our strategy and dedication to our customers is what is driving our ongoing performance improvement over the past 2 years. With that, I'll turn the call over to David to discuss our financials in more detail. David? Speaker 300:07:26Thank you, Nitin. Slide 5 shows an overview of the quarter. As Nitin mentioned, operating earnings, which matched GAAP earnings were $23,900,000 or $0.55 per fully diluted share, down $0.08 linked quarter and up $0.04 year over year. Net interest margin was 3.24%, down 34 basis points quarter over quarter and up 13 basis points year over year. Our June NIM was 3.19 and we believe the worst of the NIM compression is behind us. Speaker 300:08:03Net interest income declined $4,800,000 or 5 percent linked quarter and was up $11,400,000 or 14% year over year. Non interest revenues were up $488,000 or 3 percent linked quarter and up 743,000 or 5 percent year over year. Operating expenses were up $2,000,000 or 3 percent linked quarter and up $5,600,000 or 8 percent year over year. Average loans increased 270 Provision expense for the quarter was $8,000,000 at the midpoint of our January guidance and down $1,000,000 from the Q1. Net charge offs were in line with expectations at $5,800,000 or 26 basis points of average loans, and we increased our allowance for credit losses by $2,200,000 Slide 6 shows more detail on our average loan balances, which were up $276,000,000 or 3 percent linked quarter. Speaker 300:09:19Growth in residential mortgage was offset by a modest decline in our consumer book, driven by a $13,000,000 reduction in our Upstart portfolio. CRE loans were up $117,000,000 or 3% and C and I loans were down $31,000,000 or 2% Linked Quarter. Total commercial loans were up $86,000,000 or 2%, below the 1st quarter pace of 5% as we continue to be more selective with clients. Slide 7 shows our average deposit balances. Total deposits declined $108,000,000 or 1% in the quarter and declined $187,000,000 or 2% year over year. Speaker 300:10:06Broker deposits on an average balance basis increased $168,000,000 to $321,000,000 linked quarter and are just 3% of average total deposits. End of period deposits in the 2nd quarter were flat to the 1st quarter. As expected, the deposit mix shifted with a modest decline in non interest bearing deposits and an increase in time deposits. Non interest bearing deposits as a percentage of total deposits were 27% in the 2nd quarter versus 28% in Q1. As expected, time deposits were up 26% versus the 1st quarter, and we expect growth in time deposits to continue. Speaker 300:10:54Deposit costs were 151 basis points, up 42 basis points from the Q1. The total deposit beta for the 2nd quarter was 89% And the cumulative deposit beta is 28% through 500 basis points of total Fed tightening. We continue to anticipate that the cumulative total deposit beta will approach 40% through the rest of 2023. Turning to Slide 8, we show net interest income. Higher loan volumes provided a lift to 2nd quarter net interest income, while higher funding costs contributed to the $4,800,000 or 5% decrease in net interest income. Speaker 300:11:41The $11,400,000 or 14 percent year over year growth in NII was primarily a function of higher loan volume and higher interest rates. Slide 9 shows fee income, which was up $488,000 or 3 percent linked quarter. Deposit related fees were up $260,000 or 3%, driven by higher commercial cash management fees. Loan fees and other were up $720,000 on higher swap income, but I'd caution that swap income is a volatile line item. Gain on sale of 44 BC SBA loans We're up 416,000 versus the 1st quarter on increased balances sold. Speaker 300:12:32Wealth management fees were down $156,000 linked quarter, primarily due to seasonal tax prep fees in the Q1. The decline in other fee revenues mostly reflects annual credit card revenue fees of 600,000 paid in the Q1. Slide 10 shows our expenses. Expenses were up $2,000,000 or 3% from the Q1 and at the high end of our January guidance. Compensation expense was up $889,000 or 2% linked quarter from new hires and from sales incentive compensation. Speaker 300:13:14Occupancy and equipment was down 409,000 or 4th percent, reflecting continued expense saves from office and branch consolidation. Technology and communications expenses We're up $994,000 or 10 percent versus the Q1 as we continue to invest to digitize the bank, which is a strategic priority for us. Technology spend will normalize over the back half of the year as we complete our digital banking conversion. The increase in other expenses largely reflects increases in deposit insurance premiums. The balance of the increase in other expenses is spread over several small items. Speaker 300:14:01I'd like to talk about our expense base for a moment. Since joining in February, I've spent considerable time working to understand our expense base. We are committed to managing expenses with discipline and transparency. And we will continue to identify opportunities for expense reduction and reinvest part of those saves in our franchise, frontline and support teams to grow revenue organically, Including the opportunities to attract new talent stemming from market disruption, we will manage to a quarterly run rate of $73,000,000 to $76,000,000 while carefully evaluating every dollar of expense. Slide 11 is a summary of our asset quality metrics. Speaker 300:14:48Non performing loans were up $1,400,000 from the Q1 and stand at 32 basis points of total loans. Net charge offs of $5,800,000 were down $1,100,000 or 16% from the Q1. Net charge offs mostly consisted of C and I charge offs of $4,200,000 and consumer loans of 2,300,000 We had a net recovery of $664,000 in CRE. While current credit quality metrics are benign, We recognize that economic uncertainties exist and we are monitoring both of our originations and portfolios very carefully. As Nitin mentioned, we updated the page in the appendix on our office portfolio. Speaker 300:15:39As noted last quarter, the weighted average loan to value ratios are approximately 60% and a large majority is suburban and Class A space. Last quarter, we mentioned that lease maturities for our larger office loans are not significant until 2027. I'd also note that CRE non performing loans to end of period loans were 3 basis points in the 2nd quarter, down from 21 basis points a year ago. We've added a page in the appendix, which shows our net loan charge offs as a percentage of loans versus all FDIC banks. We have generally outperformed peer banks over a long time frame. Speaker 300:16:25Our long term net charge offs to average loans averaged 38 basis points from the year 2000 to today, first 83 basis points for all FDIC insured Thanks. This data of course includes the great financial crisis. Over the last 10 years, as the prior slide shows, Our net charge offs have averaged 27 basis points of loans. Slide 12 shows our returns over the past 5 quarters on a GAAP and an operating basis. As you know, the current operating environment is presenting many headwinds, but we remain focused on improving our long term performance. Speaker 300:17:12Slide 13 shows Details of our liquidity and capital positions. In the Q2, we unwound the excess liquidity we prudently built in the Q1. FHLB borrowings at quarterend were $674,000,000 down $230,000,000 from March 31. As a reminder, from our last call, we held excess liquidity on the balance sheet. We held that liquidity from March 8 Through June 15, following the resolution of the debt ceiling, our average FHLB balance was $1,100,000,000 in the quarter. Speaker 300:17:54The loan to deposit ratio at period M was 88% versus 86% in the 1st quarter And our TCE ratio ended the 2nd quarter at 7.9%, roughly flat to the 1st quarter and included an AOCI mark of $186,000,000 on an after tax basis, which was up $22,000,000 Tangible book value per share ended the quarter at $21.60 down 1% versus the 1st quarter and flat to the Q2 of 2022. The chart on the bottom right shows stability in our tangible book value per share and an improvement in tangible book value per share excluding AOCI. Our top capital management priority is to deploy capital to support organic loan growth. Secondly, We remain biased to opportunistic stock repurchases given our stock price. In Q2, we repurchased a little over $12,200,000 of stock at an average cost of $21.16 We believe Berkshire stock is undervalued Given our growth potential and the low risk business model we employ, our preferred use of capital remains to support organic loan growth and we will continue to opportunistically repurchase stock. Speaker 300:19:25Slide 15 shows our updated 2023 outlook. Our refreshed outlook echoes what many banks have already reported in the Q2. We see modestly lower loan growth And stable deposits versus the first half of the year and lower net interest income on funding mix changes. We also expect expenses to be between $73,000,000 $76,000,000 per quarter for the second half of the year for $71,000,000 to $74,000,000 prior guidance. Given lower expected pre tax income, We expect our tax rate to be 14% to 16% for full year 2023. Speaker 300:20:09We also expect second half fees to be around first half levels. We have no change to our outlooks for expected credit provision or share repurchases, And we plan to provide our 2024 outlook on our Q4 call in January. With that, I'd like to turn it back to Nitin for further comments. Thanks, David. I'll close my remarks with comments on the economy, the industry and our positioning. Speaker 300:20:37We're fortunate to be operating in the stable New England market, which continues to Speaker 200:20:41be on a solid footing. The sector issues of the Q1 have by and large passed and we're prepared to face typical banking industry cyclicality issues such as NIM compression from the inverted yield curve and the credit cycle tightening. While we expect credit costs to increase through this cycle, we believe that they'll be significantly better than the losses during the GFC cycle. We also believe that the increased regulatory costs will impact the industry, but are likely to impact larger regional banks more versus community banks like Berkshire. While we can't control the macro environment, we are focused on controlling what we can and have several levers, including opportunistic hiring, de risking our balance sheet and prudent expense management. Speaker 200:21:30Finally, as I mentioned earlier, we have a strong capital and liquidity position and are positioned to benefit from the market disruption in our footprint. We remain focused on selective, responsible and profitable organic growth and are confident that we will get bigger while getting better. With that, I'll turn it over to the operator. Operator? Operator00:21:55Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Your first question will come from Dave Bishop at Hovde Group. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:22:34Hey, good morning, Nitin and Dave. Speaker 300:22:37Good morning, Dave. Good morning. Speaker 400:22:41Nitin, maybe a sort of like a holistic question here. We appreciate the growth in the residential mortgage segment here, but it It appears like those average loan yields are pretty sticky, maybe up 30 basis points over a year over year basis and becoming A bigger part of the loan portfolio, just curious how those are positioned to maybe reprice or maybe reprice upward. It looks like they're impacting the margin, which is obviously impacting profitability. Just curious maybe just the decision making there to grow that as fast At these lower yields, are we missing something in terms of the repricing and yield benefit there? Speaker 200:23:26Yes, sure, Dave. Great question, great observation. I think the guiding factor here is the commercial consumer mix. We stated that we would like it to be 65% commercial. This quarter was 66%. Speaker 200:23:40So we continue to manage That at the highest level. And then the other part is, it's a smaller portfolio, which had lower portfolio yields. The new book that we're getting for the quarter had about 5.5% yield and the applications are about 6% yield. So I think that's Slowly improving the portfolio yields, but it takes a while. I think what comes with it is high quality relationships That are new customers to the bank. Speaker 200:24:11And I think what's even more important that's not maybe visible is A tremendous amount of infrastructure has now been put in place to selling conforming production that comes through. So that's going to generate higher fee income In the second half of the year. But I think the overall governor here is we want to maintain our commercial consumer mix At 65 plus and in fact as David stated, we're looking to make that 65% to 70% commercial. Speaker 400:24:41Got it. So could there be select portfolio sales to generate fee income in the second half of the year twenty twenty four? Speaker 200:24:50Yes, I think just the originations, we would be looking to sell about 20% to 25% of production starting pretty much next quarter. Speaker 300:25:00Yes. Hey, Dave. It's David. It's yes, it takes time to transition. Gain on sale was up linked quarter. Speaker 300:25:08It's the relatively modest numbers. We had not something we would large enough to call out, but We expect further improvement in the back half of the year and we're actively talking with the business managers About how we can generate a bit more gain on sale. Speaker 400:25:34Got it. Speaker 300:25:34Yes. And then just lastly Yes. Oh, I was just going to say just to add to Nitin's comments, The quality of that portfolio from an LTV, from a FICO perspective, the 50% risk based capital perspective, it's capital efficient. It's lagging In the portfolio repricing, a lot of that is legacy purchases that predates Most of the people sitting around this table, but it's on our books. But the new volume that's been generated each quarter is going on At healthy spreads and as Nitin said, we're approaching just right now in the current environment, we're approaching 6% Yields. Speaker 400:26:28Got it. And then in terms of The guidance in terms of the back half, it looks like it implies some balance sheet growth relative to stability deposits. But the funding of loan growth, is that going to be from Securities, cash flow or borrowings, just curious how should we think about the balance sheet mix and shift into the second half of the year? Speaker 300:26:52Sure. And that's the money question for 2023. I would start by saying, And I said this last quarter, I believe, was newcomer to the bank, very impressed with The retail and commercial deposit franchise, I said that 3 months ago and I would Say that again, and I'd say it even a little bit stronger today because of what happened in the last quarter, Our deposit base really performed nicely, and the mix is changing. It's changing for us. It's changing for everyone. Speaker 300:27:31But we had strong we still have strong noninterest Sparing deposits, there was just very little slippage there as a percent of total deposits. So it is a challenge because loans even in Year to date and in our guidance are growing faster than deposits. So we need to fund that. And we will fund that How we did in the last quarter, which is partially with broker deposits, partially with home loan advances, But also continuing to fight tooth and nail for consumer and commercial deposits. And I caught out a little bit in my expense comments around working hard On the expense front, but still making the comment around reinvesting in the franchise and some of the hires That we're doing, those are frontline bankers that are generating deposits as well as loans. Speaker 300:28:37So we continue to invest to build the business And our deposit base has stood up really well, but I also believe it's going to when the environment gets a little Better. We'll continue to grow reasonably and we will get more into balance over time. Speaker 400:29:02Got it. Then just one final question Dave for you. I noted the Appreciate the color on the average swap advances versus end of period. Any color you can give in terms of your maybe average rate or just versus Maybe what the end of period borrowing rate on the slump advances were? Was it materially different given the late quarter pay down? Speaker 400:29:22Thanks. Speaker 300:29:24No, it really wasn't. So back in April, The funding turmoil around First Republican and Silicon Valley, etcetera, It was starting to abate, but we were really early in that process. So I remember calling out, we had ballooned up the balance sheet Just to harbor liquidity, and I said we would bring that down by about a third. So that's what we did. However, the only what we didn't know back then that we experienced in the quarter was the debt ceiling Turmoil. Speaker 300:30:07So we wound up holding that liquidity, call it 3 weeks maybe longer than we thought we would have. Pretty marginal impact, in the grand scheme of things, especially on net interest income. But that's about the only color. The rates In the short end of the curve are not that differentiated. So Average rate versus ending rate, really not material. Speaker 400:30:40Got it. That's what I thought. Just wanted to confirm. Thanks, Dave. I'll hop off. Speaker 300:30:44You're welcome. Thanks, Dave. Operator00:30:48Your next question will come from Billy Young at RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:30:56Hey, good morning guys. Can you hear me okay? Speaker 300:30:59Yes, Billy. Good morning. Great, Billy. Thanks. Speaker 500:31:03Great. First, I just wanted to apologize if I maybe missed this in your comments. What is your outlook or your guidance currently assuming in terms of Fed actions? Speaker 300:31:14Well, you didn't miss it because we didn't say it. I'd like to share it. So it's really not Inconsistent or it is, I should better said, it is consistent with market forwards. So One more move higher and then an easing cycle beginning in March of next year. Market forwards have About 125 basis points build in, and we don't really have a view different from that. Speaker 500:31:53Okay, got it. And I guess, just switching over to Just kind of loan growth. Could you just kind of maybe speak high level to, I guess, what kind of economic scenario We could be in that would maybe make you more comfortable in terms of pushing or achieving loan growth at the higher end of your $9,400,000,000 range. I think that's maybe about 6%. Speaker 300:32:28Sure. I just if you think we were all together 3 months ago, right? And the difference from an economic perspective Is the possibility of a recession at the end of 'twenty three is now pretty much off the table. It's been pushed out. You've seen the equity market respond quite strongly. Speaker 300:32:56The You've seen interest rates up as well. So the I would never say we're not concerned about a downturn, but I would say with the data that's come in, It feels like it's been pushed out. What I would say is in our Collective management of the balance sheet, there's 2 high level drivers that govern almost all of our thinking. One is the economic outlook that you're referencing, but the other is just Funding, funding costs and then the ability to fund loan growth. And as Nitin talked about in his comments, So our originations are down linked quarter. Speaker 300:33:52Our pipelines are reduced a bit linked quarter. We're being more selective, but we are we want to service Our customer base, especially our existing customer base. So but it under that overlay of What if the economic scenario gets worse? What if the Fed overtightens? And how are we going to fund it? Speaker 200:34:23Yes, agreed, Billy. And I think one more thing I would add is the other part of it is relatively less controllable to the extent that what do the customers want. And I think we've seen the line utilization, for example, go down significantly in the Q2. And depending on the needs of the consumers, that might ramp up and that might So up in the balances, especially in the C and I and ABL segment. Speaker 300:34:45Yes. Nitin, that's a really good point. So our line utilization Was down 5% in the quarter. We called out muted or even down C and I And we had an elevated level of payoffs in our ABL book. And It's mostly around customers who are paying on a floating rate basis doing everything To minimize their interest expense, right? Speaker 300:35:20They're maximizing their cash utilization. They're paying down lines when they can. Speaker 500:35:28Got it. And just to kind of follow-up on that, the 5% down utilization rate, What is that, at quarter end versus what it was in the Q1? Speaker 300:35:38It was 38% on the round. Speaker 500:35:42Got it. Got it. And just one, I guess, housekeeping question. Just the 9.2 to 9.4 Loans, that's end of period, right, not average? Speaker 300:35:56Yes, that's ending. Speaker 500:35:58Okay. Speaker 200:35:59And Billy, just more color on that is The delta Billy, the delta between 2nd quarter to the end of the year that 9.2% to 9.4%, roughly about 70% to 75% of the growth would come from commercial. Speaker 500:36:14Understood. Thank you. Appreciate that color. And just one final question and then I'll step back. Just following up on David's expense based comment, Are you perhaps signaling maybe some more additional cost savings actions you might take in the near future in terms of Branch consolidation or headcount reduction? Speaker 200:36:38We're certainly looking at avenues and the levers within expenses. We have internally a The counsel to look at all of expenses and resource and projects kind of management and prioritization. So There are different levers. There's levers in procurement, levers in real estate, and there's also levers in managing The staff growth, so I think we're looking at everything and some of those will also come through some completion of the projects That David talked about, when we complete digital banking, for example, we'll start seeing offsets coming through in the second half of the year Because we'll be managing to a lower cost platforms while providing better delivery to the customers. Speaker 500:37:26Understood. Thank you for taking my questions. Speaker 300:37:29Thanks, Billy. Thank you. Operator00:37:33Your next question will come from Mark Fitzgibbon at Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:37:39Hey, guys. Good morning. Speaker 300:37:42Good morning, Mark. Speaker 600:37:44First question I had, David, I heard your comments about the margin with the worst being behind, but it sounds like We'll see some additional compression in the margin. Based on the forward curve and your modeling, When do you think the margin bottoms? And do you think it can stay above 3%? Speaker 300:38:05So I'll limit my comments to 2023. So in the first half of the year, Yes, we were 3.58%, 3.24%, down 34 basis points, but an average of 3.41%. We think the margin will be down in Q3 and in Q4. And that range in the back half of the year is probably 315 to 320. So, we don't see Enough deposit pressure and based on forward curves right now, so there's no easing in 2023. Speaker 300:38:57We should be well above 3%, full year margin and back half of the year margin. My comment was really mostly in reference to the delta between 1st and second quarter. We don't think we're going to see that type of pressure again. Speaker 600:39:20Okay. And then next on the buyback program, you guys have obviously been very aggressive with it over the last several quarters. Given the economic uncertainty and the fact that your capital ratios have now gotten sort of more normalized or a little bit thinner, how aggressive Are you all likely to be with the buyback program, say, the next couple of quarters? Speaker 300:39:45So I wouldn't use the word aggressive, Mark. We've been We'd like to think we've been really thoughtful around this. So we talked about this a little bit last quarter where We did nothing prior to the turmoil at the end of March. So and we bought just bought a few shares. It was $1,200,000 in the Q1. Speaker 300:40:14So we executed on about $12,200,000 $12,300,000 Dollars in this quarter were I would it's the word aggressive When I think about what we bought and the change in our capital levels, there was really no change in our capital levels. So we didn't bring capital down. We bought shares. We earned money. We retained that capital. Speaker 300:40:43You're looking for what we're going to do in the back half of the year quarter by quarter and we don't want to over signal, but Our thought process is going to be consistent. Economic uncertainty, the worse it is, the more capital we should hold First, the opportunity to buy our stock back at basically tangible book value. Speaker 600:41:06Okay. And then last question I had, Nitin for you, your best program goals in terms of ROTCE and ROA are pretty significantly below what peers are generating today and you guys are a fair way below those goals. I guess the question I'm wondering, do you think you need to take more extreme kind of actions to drive profitability higher In the quarters ahead, maybe like selling off additional pieces of the business to try to get profitability levels over time up to Something close to a peer like level? Speaker 200:41:48Hey, Mark, I think I mentioned in my remarks, We completed 2nd year of the program, entering into 3rd year and where we were when we started to where we are, I think we are on the trajectory that kind of matches the run rate. We're pleased but not satisfied as I say internally all the time. So yes, we'll continue to manage and accelerate that journey. I think the aggressive part of the actions will most likely come from How tightly we manage our expenses going forward, while continuing to part invest into our Revenue generation activities that support the growth. I think that's where we're not talking about any aggressive Portfolio business sales at this point of time, we're looking at more expense, revenue and efficiency initiatives as the acceleration path. Speaker 300:42:42I would just add one thought to that, Mark, which is those goals were set In an economic environment and an outlook of an economic environment that's now very different from what we're dealing with. The actions, the thought process, the goals are all the same. It's just there's a lot more headwinds than when they were set. Speaker 600:43:11Okay. Thank you. Speaker 300:43:15Thank you, Mark. You're welcome, Mark. Operator00:43:19Your next question will come from Chris O'Connell at KBW. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:43:26Good morning. Good morning, guys. So just wanted to start off On some of the expense stuff and the items that you mentioned as far as frontline hires, and have you make it maybe walk us through The frontline hires that you've made so far, perhaps in the last quarter, and if you've been able To take advantage of the M and A disruption in your markets and then how many Frontline hires, you think there's an opportunity to add going forward? And what type of hires you'd be looking to make? Speaker 200:44:08Yes, Chris, great question. I'll go back to what we started out when we announced the BEST program. We did see our frontline folks, frontline teams outside of For branch network, we were going to grow by about 40% and that's roughly translated to about 4 to 5 a quarter. We did hire about 7 in the Q2 in 2023. So we're managing to that run rate And net of attrition, I think we're continuing to grow. Speaker 200:44:39We'll probably be at the same pace. What we're seeing increasingly, however, is the More incoming calls and our Head of Commercial, Jim Brown, for example, Who ran the commercial banking for Boston Private. He knows the pretty much the all of the producing bankers in the Boston Private, Silicon Valley Bank, First Republic. So we will get more swings at the plate and we believe that there'll be more opportunities to hire selectively Folks that bring in good client base and books. So that might accelerate a little bit, but we're maintaining the Overarching momentum that we signed up for. Speaker 700:45:21Got it. And for the ones that you hired, is it go ahead. Speaker 300:45:25I was just going to say and it's across Wealth Management, Private Banking and Commercial Banking. And within Commercial, A bit more emphasis on deposit generators, people have just have a track record of large deposit books. Speaker 700:45:46Got it. And I was going to ask for the ones that you have hired particularly from the Boston Private, SIB, or FRC recently that are deposit focused. Any sense of the size of their books At the prior institution that they can maybe get to over the long term? Speaker 200:46:09Chris, we won't put those names and books sizes on the call, but suffice it to say that they're Really talented high quality producers with outstanding relationships in the market. So we are hopeful that, That comes with customers and books over time and it's relatively new hires, so it takes time to build that pipeline. Speaker 700:46:33Great. And then I may have missed it if you mentioned earlier in the yield discussion, But where are the commercial origination yields coming on? Speaker 200:46:46The new business for commercial? Speaker 700:46:48Yes. Speaker 200:46:49Is that correct? Yes, that was roughly about those 7, 7.3 ish. Speaker 700:46:58Great. And for the securities portfolio, it seems like In the near term, still some opportunity to run off. But on the yield, Which has remained relatively stable here the past few quarters. Any sense of where that Speaker 300:47:26Yes. Good question. It's relatively static. It's a fixed rate portfolio. So the yield is not going to change. Speaker 300:47:42This is another one of these Fundamental questions, right, which is the we haven't bought a bond In that portfolio for a long period of time and it's way underwater basically like almost every other bank in the country. You've started to see some people talk about the accretion back of AOCI And laying out those cash flows, which is a really important concept. So I can't tell you what those numbers are yet. Honestly, we haven't done the work. But the We did see a tick up surprisingly in prepayment activity linked quarter. Speaker 300:48:31It's modest. But We will probably share that next quarter, our cash flow expectations and AOCI Build out of that. And obviously, there's a static view there. Then there's a if rates fall, Like forward suggest, it's going to accelerate dramatically in 2024. But Specifically, your question is, will the yield change in the back half of the year from the front half of the year very marginally because it's a fixed rate portfolio. Speaker 700:49:11Okay, got it. Just circling back on the resi, RE Growth in selling off 20% to 25% going forward. Is there any thought as to Selling off more of that production just given the marginal cost of funding versus the marginal yield of what's coming on the balance sheet there? Speaker 300:49:40It's a little bit more complicated than that. So we're really good at originating and a lot of it is in some of our markets Higher balance loans, so jumbos, and that's a harder Product to sell, we do sell some of that. There are outlets to sell some of that, but that's a Harder sell than conventional Freddy's and Fandys to the agencies, right? So part of it is Is generating the right product and having the geography To do conforming loans and sell to the agencies, which we already do, we just want to do a bit more of that. And then while there's funding pressures, do put a little bit slow down some of the Originations that hit our balance sheet, but we have to give our business people time to do that. Speaker 200:50:53Yes. I think the shorter version of the answer would be, Chris, yes. I think the business leader in managing that group Is working on improving the mix so that it's more conforming to that extent. Yes, 20%, 25% is the current target. If we can sell more, we will sell more in Speaker 700:51:15Great. And then just lastly, If you could provide any additional color as to the allocation of the $100,000,000 sustainability bond. And is that backward looking or is that commitments going forward? Just yes, any additional color there. Speaker 200:51:39Yes, I think the typical models that are out there for Issuance of these loans and how the proceeds are allocated, they typically give you a minus 2, plus 2 kind of construct, whereas you look at What you did 2 years prior to the issuance and how you deploy the proceeds in the 2 years. And the reason why we reported this on the call is We were successful in deploying all of it within the 1st year, which actually we are very proud of. And so it's all done. And Big chunk of it, as I said, was 200,000 square feet of green building development, affordable housing, and the rough mix was 41% ish about affordable housing, 33 ish percentage for green building development and another quarter For about financial inclusion and access to projects in LMI neighborhoods. Speaker 700:52:39Okay, great. Appreciate the color. That's all I have for now. Thank you. Speaker 200:52:46Thank you, Chris. Operator00:52:49At this time, there are no further questions. So I will turn the conference back to Nitin Mahathri for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:52:58Thank you all for joining us today on our call and for your interest in Berkshire. Have a great day and be well. Michelle, you can close the call now. Operator00:53:07Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude your conference call for this morning. We would like to thank you all for participating and ask you to please disconnect yourRead morePowered by