NASDAQ:PEBO Peoples Bancorp Q2 2024 Earnings Report $27.85 +0.16 (+0.58%) Closing price 04/17/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$27.82 -0.03 (-0.09%) As of 04/17/2025 06:18 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 Peoples Bancorp EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.84Consensus EPS $0.85Beat/MissMissed by -$0.01One Year Ago EPS$0.83Peoples Bancorp Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$154.47 millionExpected Revenue$111.30 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$43.17 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/APeoples Bancorp Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date7/23/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, July 23, 2024Conference Call Time11:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsPeoples Bancorp's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, April 22, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 11:00 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)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Peoples Bancorp Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 23, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 7 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to the Peoples Bancorp, Inc. Conference Call. My name is Cole, and I'll be your conference facilitator. Today's call will cover a discussion of the results of operations for the 3 6 months ended June 30, 2024. Please be advised that all lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. Operator00:00:20After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer period. This call is also being recorded. If you object to the recording, please disconnect at this time. Please be advised that the commentary in this call will contain projections or other forward looking statements regarding people's future financial performance or future events. These statements are based on management's current expectations. Operator00:00:57The statements in this call, which are not historical facts, are forward looking statements and involve a number of risks and uncertainties detailed in the Peoples' Security and Exchange Commission's filings. Management believes that the forward looking statements made during this call are based on reasonable assumptions within the bounds of their knowledge of Peoples Business and Operations. However, it is possible actual results may differ materially from those from these forward looking statements. Peoples disclaims any responsibility to update these forward looking statements after this call, except as may be required by applicable legal requirements. Peoples' Q2 2024 earnings release conference call presentation were issued this morning and are available under the peoplesbancorp.com under Investor Relations. Operator00:01:45A reconciliation of the non general accepted accounting or GAAP financial measures discussed during this call to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is included at the end of the earnings release. This call will include about 15 to 20 minutes of prepared commentary, followed by a question and answer period, which I will facilitate. An archived webcast of this call will be available on the peoplesbancorp.com in the Investor Relations section for 1 year. Participants in the call today will be Tyler Wilcox, President and Chief Executive Officer and Katie Bailey, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, and each will be available for questions following opening statements. Mr. Operator00:02:27Wilcox, you may begin your conference. Speaker 100:02:30Thank you, Cole. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our call today. This quarter, we're providing an earnings conference call presentation, which we filed as part of our Form 8 ks this morning with our earnings release and is also posted on our website with this webcast. We are pleased to bring another quarter of consistent results for our shareholders. And for the Q2, diluted earnings per share were $0.82 compared to $0.84 for the linked quarter. Speaker 100:02:57For the first half of twenty twenty four, diluted EPS were 1.66 dollars compared to $1.56 for 2023. And positives for the 2nd quarter included loan growth of 8% annualized compared to the linked quarter, improvements in our criticized and classified loans, which declined 6% 19% respectively compared to the linked quarter end. While our total deposits declined 29,000,000 dollars our core deposits grew by $42,000,000 for the quarter, which excludes brokered CDs. Our brokered CDs continue to decline as we generate customer deposits. Our book value increased from $29.93 at the linked quarter end to $30.36 at June 30, while our tangible book value per share grew to 18.91, a 3% increase from March 31. Speaker 100:03:53Our tangible equity to tangible assets ratio improved 24 basis points to 7.6%. Our regulatory capital ratios improved by double digit percentages compared to the linked quarter end. Our return on average assets for the 2nd quarter was 1.3%. We had a decline in our provision for credit losses compared to the linked quarter and we generated improvements in our fee based income excluding the annual performance based insurance commissions we recognized last quarter. As it relates to our credit quality, we had many improvements this quarter, including a reduction in our criticized and classified loans, which were down $17,000,000 $27,000,000 respectively compared to the linked quarter end. Speaker 100:04:41This was driven by pay downs on some loans that we downgraded last quarter as we diligently work those credits. We noted last quarter in our call that we did not believe the downgrades at that time were indicative of core portfolio issues and this is shown to be the case. We continue to receive pay downs on these loans and have received additional funds in July including another $8,000,000 We also had upgrades of 2 classified credits totaling $5,000,000 to watch status and one upgrade of $2,500,000 from criticized to fair. Our allowance for credit losses remained at 1.05 percent of total loans at quarter end consistent with the linked quarter end. Our provision for credit losses for the quarter was driven by net charge offs, higher reserves on individually annualized leases and loan growth. Speaker 100:05:33Our annualized net charge off rate for the quarter increased to 27 basis points compared to 22 basis points for the Q1. Combined, our leasing and consumer indirect net charge offs contributed 21 of the 27 basis points of our annualized net charge off rate for the Q2. We continue to see elevated net charge offs in small ticket leases from our North Star division, which contributed 14 of the 27 basis points to our annualized net charge off rate. These charge off levels are similar to pre pandemic rates or the rates we expected to see when we acquired the business. We continuously evaluate the various lending verticals in the small ticket leasing area and adjust our appetite based on performance. Speaker 100:06:20For the Q2, the yield on our small ticket leasing balances was over 14% and we continue to be very satisfied with return on our core small ticket leasing business. Our net charge offs have grown in consumer indirect loans adding 7 basis points to our annualized net charge off rate for the Q2, we are seeing a national trend of increased delinquency in auto lending leading to higher surrender rates. When combined with the previous spike in used values, the dollar value of our net charge offs has increased. We remain disciplined in our lending practices with weighted average FICO scores at over 750 on our production and remain optimistic about the business. Non performing assets increased 2,400,000 dollars which was mostly due to higher non accrual leasing balances. Speaker 100:07:12Our delinquency improved this quarter and the portion of our loan portfolio considered current at June 30 was 98.8 percent, up from 98.7% at March 31. We're confident in our commercial loan concentrations with our exposure to non owner occupied office space at less than 2% of our total loan portfolio balance at June 30. Our exposure declined compared to the linked quarter end as we successfully exited an $8,000,000 classified office loan. Our hospitality and assisted living facilities were each around 2.5 percent of our total balances. At the same time, our multifamily loan balances were 557,000,000 dollars a $35,000,000 increase compared to the linked quarter end. Speaker 100:08:02We continue to have strong sponsor support and economic metrics with the deals we have chosen in this segment and we'll continue to be diligent in our underwriting of these loans. We see rents on multifamily loans holding up and in our 7 metro markets we are still experiencing average rental growth of 3.2% compared to the national average of 0.9%. Compared to the linked quarter end, our total loan portfolio grew $123,000,000 or 8% annualized. Our premium finance balances contributed $54,000,000 of growth compared to the linked quarter end. Increases in our commercial and industrial portfolio of $43,000,000 mostly offset declines of $48,000,000 in our commercial real estate portfolio. Speaker 100:08:52But as I mentioned earlier, a meaningful portion of the credits that paid down this quarter were part of our criticized and classified assets, which we view as a positive. Consumer loans contributed $39,000,000 of growth driven by higher consumer indirect balances. At quarter end, our commercial real estate loans comprised 35% of total loans, nearly 40% of which were owner occupied, while the remainder were investment real estate. At the same time, our total consumer loans, which include residential real estate and home equity lines of credit were 29% of total loans, commercial and industrial loans were 20%, leases totaled 7%, construction loans were 5% and premium finance was 4% of total loans. At quarter end, 47% of our total loans were fixed rate with the remaining 53% at a variable rate. Speaker 100:09:51We continue to actively assess market conditions on our commercial real estate book, including the impact of higher interest rates on upcoming loans repricing or maturing. We are comfortable with our ability to handle the repricing of our loan portfolio and only have $289,000,000 repricing or maturing during the last half of twenty twenty four and another $396,000,000 during 2025. I will now turn the call over to Katie for a discussion of our financial performance. Speaker 200:10:22Thanks, Tyler. Our net interest income was stable compared to the Q1, while our net interest margin was 4.18% compared to 4.26 percent. Nearly half of the reduction in net interest margin compared to the linked quarter was lower accretion income, net of amortization expense, which only added 28 basis points this quarter compared to 32 basis points last quarter. The remainder of the decline was mostly due to higher borrowing costs incurred during the second quarter, which offset higher earning asset yields. For the first half of twenty twenty four, our net interest income grew 10%, while our net interest margin declined 31 basis points to 4.22%. Speaker 200:11:07Our earning asset yields improved to 6.32% for the 1st 6 months of 2024 compared to 5.49 percent for 2023, while higher funding costs more than offset the improvement. Accretion income, net of amortization expense, added 31 basis points to net interest margin for the first half of twenty twenty four compared to 19 basis points for 2023. Moving on to our fee based income. Excluding our annual performance based insurance commission of $2,200,000 we received in the 1st quarter, fee based income grew compared to the linked quarter. We typically recognize the performance based insurance commission during the Q1 of each year. Speaker 200:11:56Additionally, for the Q2, growth in electronic banking income and trust and investment income offset declines in bank owned life insurance and lease income. For the first half of twenty twenty four, our fee based income grew 15% with increases in all lines, primarily due to the Limestone merger that occurred on April 30, 2023. As it relates to our noninterest expenses, they were relatively flat compared to the Q1 of 2024 as our other noninterest expense was impacted by a onetime prior period true up of corporate expenses. For the first half of twenty twenty four, non interest expense was up 8% as higher operating costs from the additional footprint from Limestone was partially offset by lower acquisition related expenses during 2024. For the 2nd quarter, both our reported efficiency ratio and our efficiency ratio adjusted for non core expenses was 59.2%. Speaker 200:13:04Our reported and adjusted efficiency ratio increased compared to the linked quarter and was related to lower fee based income compared to the linked quarter. For the first half of twenty twenty four, the reported efficiency ratio was 58.6%, a decline from 2023. The adjusted efficiency ratio for the 1st 6 months of 2024 was 58.7%, an increase from 2023 due to higher non interest expenses. Moving on to the balance sheet. Our investment securities portfolio continued to comprise 20% of total assets at June 30, while our loan to deposit ratio increased to 87%. Speaker 200:13:47During the quarter, we were able to gain additional governmental deposits and repurchase agreements with our customers to insured cash sweep products, which allowed us to free up some previously pledged investment securities. From a deposit perspective, our total deposits declined $29,000,000 from the linked quarter end, which was mostly due to reductions in brokered CDs and seasonal declines in governmental deposits, which are typically higher during the 1st and third quarters of each year. Excluding brokered CDs, our deposits were up $42,000,000 compared to the linked quarter end. Our retail CDs grew $132,000,000 while we were able to reduce our brokered CDs by $71,000,000 For the Q2, our deposit costs only increased by 9 basis points compared to the linked quarter. Our retail CD promotions have been for a 5% CD over a relatively short term, and our entire retail CD portfolio had an average remaining life of 5 months at June 30. Speaker 200:14:58Our demand deposits as a percent of total deposits were flat compared to the linked quarter end and remained at 35% at June 30, while our non interest bearing deposits were 20% of total deposits. At quarter end, our deposit composition was 78% in retail deposit balances, which included small businesses and 22% in commercial deposit balances. Our average retail customer deposit relationship was $25,000 at quarter end, while our median was nearly $3,000 Moving on to our capital position. Our capital ratios improved compared to the linked quarter and benefited from earnings outpacing dividends. At quarter end, our common equity Tier 1 capital ratio was 11.8%. Speaker 200:15:52Our total risk based capital ratio was 13.5%. Our leverage ratio was 9.7% and our tangible equity to tangible assets ratio improved to 7.6% compared to 7.4% at quarter end. As it relates to our capital deployment, we did not repurchase shares this quarter. We do provide an attractive dividend as part of our capital usage, which has a current yield of 4.89%. Our dividend payout ratio stood at 48.9% for the 2nd quarter. Speaker 200:16:30Finally, I will turn the call over to Tyler for his closing comments. Speaker 100:16:34Thank you, Katie. During the first half of twenty twenty four, we made strides in improving our technology as we rolled out a new customer relationship management system that integrates referrals, opportunities and client information between our lines of business, enhancing our ability to execute by making it easier for us to connect with and serve our clients. We also implemented a new software system for our insurance groups and began utilizing more functionality with our implementation of Microsoft products as we continue to look to replace legacy systems. We are also well on our way to implementing a new business loan origination system that will be in place starting in 2025. As we mentioned software upgrades, I would also like to note that the CrowdStrike outage from last week had nominal impact on our systems and any impact has been resolved at this point. Speaker 100:17:29We place high importance on our employee satisfaction in workplace. We are proud that our company's culture is being recognized in the marketplace. During the first half of twenty twenty four, we were recognized by U. S. News and World Report as a best company to work for in banking and by Newsweek as one of America's greatest workplaces. Speaker 100:17:49As we look to the second half of twenty twenty four, we currently anticipate net interest income to benefit from the full year impact of the Limestone merger. We continue to expect our quarterly net interest margin to be between 4.1% and 4.3% assuming that there are no significant short term interest rate changes in the remainder of 2024. We believe our fee based income growth will be between 6% 8% compared to 2023. Our quarterly total non interest expense forecast remains unchanged at between $67,000,000 $69,000,000 for the 3rd 4th quarters of 2024. We're lowering our 2024 loan growth guidance to 5% to 7% compared to our previous guidance of 6% to 8%. Speaker 100:18:41This slight adjustment in our estimate is partly a result of the paydowns received and expected paydowns we noted on criticized and classified loans, which will offset some of our anticipated loan production. We also expect some reduction from our leasing business due to recent credit quality and net charge off trends. Based on current information, we expect our provision for credit losses for the 3rd and 4th quarters to be relatively consistent with the amounts recognized during the 1st 2 quarters of 2024. We anticipate a full year net charge off rate of around 25 to 30 basis points, primarily driven by trends in small ticket leasing and indirect charge offs expected for the remainder of the year. We are pleased to bring our shareholders solid consistent performance, while also improving our product offerings, infrastructure, technology and aligning our business to grow. Speaker 100:19:36This concludes our commentary and we will open the call for questions. Once again, this is Tyler Wilcox and joining me for the Q and A session is Katie Bailey, our Chief Financial Officer. I will now turn this call back into the hands of our call facilitator. Thank you. Operator00:19:52Thank you. And we will now begin the question and answer session. And our first question today will come from Daniel Tamayo with Raymond James. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:20:19Go ahead. Hi, Danny. Speaker 300:20:20Thank you. Hey, good morning. Good morning. Maybe we start just on the margin. I know you appreciate the guidance for you provided, but just wondering if you could get a little more detail given the restructuring benefit in the Q3 and then deposit competition, anything else, just how you're thinking about the magnitude of margin compression in the back half of the year? Speaker 200:20:49So, Danny, you referenced a restructuring in the Q3. I'm not sure what specifically you're talking about there. We did not do we did not reposition our investment portfolio during the Q2, or really the Q1 in any meaningful way. So I think the guidance that you see us give is largely consistent with what we've been giving all year. I think there will continue to be slight compression in margin, more a function of accretion income as that continues to trail off. Speaker 200:21:27Again, we printed 28 basis points of accretion benefit in the 2nd quarter. We expect maybe 2 to 4 basis points of continued compression in each quarter thereafter, to get us for the year in the 25 to 30 basis points benefit of accretion, but the latter half is will come down from the 28%. So I think that's what we expect as we proceed through the year. I think the core margin ex accretion is largely going to be stable to where we were for the Q2. Speaker 300:22:02Got it. Okay. Yes, sorry. That was a misspeak. My apologies on the restructuring, but yes, the accretion is what I was thinking of. Speaker 300:22:10And then I guess just a follow-up on just the small ticket leasing business. You talked about it a lot in the prepared remarks and in the release. But just curious if you are seeing an uptick in those loss rates. I mean, you saw classifieds come down. I guess, if you could just talk a little bit about the drivers of the lower classifieds, but also kind of the continued elevated net charge offs related to leasing business. Speaker 300:22:44That'd be great. Speaker 100:22:45Sure, Danny. Thanks. I guess I'll separate those out a bit. Very optimistic kind of as we talked about last quarter and as we talked about and reiterated again on the core commercial, I think there's a great story to tell there. The decline was upgrades and payoffs by and large. Speaker 100:23:05We continue to work the core book as well as the book of business that we picked up from Limestone. And I think the positives there are delinquency has declined in the core commercial book. I'm proud of the fact that we've built a book that is relatively underweight to the industry and peers with respect to commercial real estate. And so just that core book and just a word as well on that is that during the first half of this year, we saw some nice balance mix away from CRE and into C and I. So the pay downs were just about 60% in the commercial real estate and the production was about 60% on the commercial and industrial side. Speaker 100:23:54So there's kind of a natural rebalancing going on there. So as far as the it's a bit of a tale of 2 portfolios, but the core which represents 90 plus percent of our loan portfolio is very strong. On the 2 kind of primary drivers, the small ticket leasing, the inherent nature of that business is in the higher risk segments. It's in hospitality, restaurants, startups of less than 3 years, breweries, transportation, all of those mission critical equipment. And we've said when we bought that the business that we were pricing for about 4.5% charge offs. Speaker 100:24:41And we based that on about a 22 year history of prior to when we bought it, the records of where the historical charge offs were. We saw during 2021 2022 less than 1% charge offs. And so we've received the benefit of that from the pricing side and we're seeing a return to normalization. And I think those higher risk areas with the higher pricing leads us to continue to be satisfied with kind of the risk adjusted return of that business. But we are seeing an increase there. Speaker 100:25:20That was helpful. Speaker 300:25:21Thanks, Tyler. I appreciate it. And that's all for me. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 100:25:25Thanks, Danny. Thanks. Operator00:25:28And our next question will come from Brendan Nacional with Hovde Group. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:25:35Hey, good morning folks. Hope you're doing well. Speaker 100:25:37Hey, Brendan. Good, thanks. Speaker 400:25:39I just wanted to circle back to the charge off guide and the leasing piece. What are you embedding for these charge offs into that overall guidance for the back half of the year? And then what do you view as I guess you said the normalized rate is 4.5%, but like it feels like there's still a way to go to get there. So curious how you view today's normalization versus that 4.5% you laid out? Speaker 100:26:06Well, I think the 3rd Q4 will be relatively consistent from a charge off standpoint with the small ticket leasing specifically. There is the delinquency in that portfolio has ticked up. We've obviously, as we referenced, done some tightening of the portfolio there. But as far as the outlook specifically with those leases, that guide is going to be consistent from a charge off standpoint. I don't know if I answered your question. Speaker 400:26:43Yes, yes, that's helpful. Maybe one more from me, just pivoting. Can you provide some color on the overall M and A environment, and whether you're expecting any change in that environment now that bank multiples have firmed up as much as they have over the past few weeks? Speaker 100:26:59Sure. I would say there is a lot of discussion going on from an M and A perspective. But from what I see, I think there are a lot of management teams and boards that are playing a little bit of a wait and see, wait and see what happens with rates, wait and see what happens with the election. I'm not suggesting either of those are magic bullets at all. But as we have conversations, which we continue to have, I think there is there are a lot of banks that are considering their options for the future and we're continuing to be part of those conversations. Speaker 100:27:37So I would expect more M and A activity next year than this year, But that's about as far as my crystal ball goes. I'm more focused on what opportunities we see for ourselves out there in the coming year. And we think it's promising that we'll have some of the conversations that we've been having for a long time will hopefully bear fruit in the future. Speaker 400:28:04Yes, yes. Okay. Thank you for taking the questions. Speaker 100:28:07Thank you. Thank you. Operator00:28:10And our next question comes from Terry McEvoy with Stephens. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:28:18Hi, good morning. Operator00:28:19Hi, Terry. Speaker 200:28:19Good morning, Terry. Speaker 500:28:21Just looking at the average balance sheet, the CRE and C and I average yields both declined quarter over quarter and it's kind of half your loan portfolio. So can you just talk about the quarter over quarter decline and within the margin outlook for the back half of this year, where do you see loan yields or those portfolios trending? Speaker 200:28:41Yes. I think you're seeing the accretion on those portfolios diminish quarter over quarter as we've stated. That's where the large marks come when we acquired the books, predominantly limestone most recently. So again, I think we'll continue to see slight compression in accretion quarter to quarter. I think I previously said 2 to 4 basis points that might go down in the quarter. Speaker 200:29:08So again, as that book continues to pay down, pay off, That's why we see less accretion there. So I think it will be relatively stable with the caveat that accretion will go down slightly. Speaker 500:29:23Perfect. That's what I assumed it was, but wanted to ask. And then Tyler, you talked about some technology investments, infrastructure investments. How is that kind of built into your expense outlook? And maybe talk about some of the efficiency gains that you foresee because of those investments? Speaker 100:29:42Sure. Thanks, Terry. With respect to the expense guide, I would say we've talked for a few quarters now about how that expense is baked in. So our guide for the forward is remainder of the year and into next year should be relatively consistent because we implemented the customer relationship management software, began to pay for it last year and has been implemented this year. From an efficiency standpoint, it's been giving us a couple of pieces of efficiency even this early on. Speaker 100:30:17It's helped us have a unified system for some of our operational aspects. We've had a few processes that in integrating them into that unified system have allowed us to cut kind of internal service times on certain processes down from multiple hours to minutes, which we're very pleased with. It's given us some efficiency in eliminating some additional third party systems that are now integrated into a single system. On a go forward, my expectation is that we have a broad diversified group of businesses. And one of our primary goals is always and I think strengths has always been getting those businesses to work together. Speaker 100:31:02This system will allow us to kind of mine our client data and push opportunities for our clients between the businesses in a much more efficient way that will hopefully improve our revenue results at the end of the day. So that's the expectation on that system and pretty excited about it. But it represents a kind of a long term fundamental investment and fundamental change in what we're doing from an operational standpoint. Speaker 500:31:33Maybe one small one. The tax $1,100,000 tax benefit that was cited in the press release, what's the outlook for the tax rate in the back half Speaker 100:31:43of the year? Thanks again. Speaker 200:31:44I think the tax rate in the back half will be consistent with the Q1. I think if you adjust the Q1 our Q2 amount for the 1.1 we quoted, I think you'd get something closer to 22,000,000 to 22.5%, and I think that can be the expectation for the back half of 20 4. Operator00:32:08And our next question will come from Tim Switzer with KBW. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:32:14Hey there. Thank you for taking my questions. I have a quick follow-up on some of the commentary around the leasing charge offs. Could you talk about how maybe a change in the macro environment along with lower interest rates could maybe improve that the credit trends you're seeing in that sector right now? Yes. Speaker 100:32:38Thanks, Tim. I think the a decline in the interest rates would certainly help with the outlook and help alleviate some of the pressure that we're seeing in some of these businesses. And I think the expectation there is that though again, you look at the pre pandemic era when the average it would go up and down, but the average has historically been about 4.5%. And at the end of the day that the borrowers are going to this outlet because they are higher risk industries. And so they're going outside the traditional banking services. Speaker 100:33:17So and those loans are fixed rate just to be clear. But as interest rates fall, additional debt may they may find relief elsewhere. So I don't think it will be a meaningful sea change, but it can't hurt. And again, those there's short duration on those leases as well generally. So they tend to burn off pretty more quickly than the average portfolio as well. Speaker 100:33:48Okay, that's helpful. And you guys have always had a good amount of non interest income, higher percentage of revenue than most peers. So it's come down a little bit over time, partially due to acquisition. Is there a range you'd like to bring that back up to, or like do you have a target of fee income as a percent of total? And are there any specific businesses you'd like to get a little bit more scale in? Speaker 100:34:16Yes. Historically, we were up in the 30% and boy, I would love to be back there. And you're correct. The acquisitions by and large, both bank acquisitions and then some of the specialty finance businesses have continued that trend. We love our fee businesses. Speaker 100:34:37I'll say it that way. From an insurance perspective, we've continued to grow that. It just hasn't grown at the same pace of the bank. We should be somewhere around $20,000,000 in revenue annually this year and into the future. And we've done some continue to do some smaller acquisitions in that area and we'll continue to do so. Speaker 100:34:55We have a large appetite for that. And we think a good home for insurance owners who are looking for a exit strategy. Trust and investments as well, we have $3,600,000,000 in assets under management. We have continued to grow that business organically at a nice pace, expanded some of the lines of business within that business. And we'll continue to look for acquisitions both of books of business and more meaningfully sized in that business. Speaker 100:35:25So I didn't give you an exact target, but more would be my goal. Great. Thank you. That's all for me. Thank you. Speaker 100:35:37Thank Operator00:35:45Our next question will come from Manuel Nammos with D. A. Davidson. Go ahead. Speaker 600:35:51Hey, good morning. Speaker 100:35:53Hey, good morning, Manuel. Could Speaker 600:35:59on leasing, just wondering what extent are you going to see balance declines there? Is this the normal kind of cyclical trends there that on small ticket leasing you'll pull back when you've seen that charge offs rise a little bit and you'll still get that higher through the cycle risk adjusted return metrics. Just trying to clarify those movements. Speaker 100:36:25Yes. Thanks, Manuel. So first I would say, we've had this business for a few years now. This is our first kind of credit increase from where we were and when we bought it. As I mentioned, we were at a low point from a charge off perspective. Speaker 100:36:42So we're not we're certainly not panicking. We're making adjustments to the verticals within that business. But I don't believe we'll see a decline in balances in the small ticket leasing. There continues to be production in the core. So and if there were a decline, it would be very nominal and we have a lot of confidence in our ability to continue to grow that business. Speaker 100:37:08But in a rising environment, we're required and have an expectation to take a good look at what's performing well and make those adjustments. Speaker 600:37:20There would be a feeling that if rates came down, Speaker 100:37:23I don't Speaker 600:37:23know, 100 basis points middle of next year, you'd be right back in some of these verticals or would you be still cautious? Speaker 100:37:31No, I think we'll could we've grown that business from $80,000,000 on the balance sheet to over $220,000,000 As we've grown it, we've expanded the capabilities, we've expanded the nationwide reach. And so we're all in on the business. From a pre tax standpoint, it's putting off over a 2 ROA. And so it's very profitable for us even with the higher loss rates and again because we priced it at this rate. So we look to continue to invest into it and notwithstanding the kind of the steepness of the increase recently. Speaker 100:38:12Again, we're just trying to actively manage the business and continue to grow it over the long term because it's very viable and very profitable and that we think it's a great it's 3.4% of our total loan portfolio for perspective. So it has the ability to make a nice impact, but it's a very small portion of the pie. Speaker 600:38:35That's a great point. I'm shifting over to NIM. Can you discuss kind of thoughts on deposit costs, where could they potentially peak and how would they kind of in the whole NIM and deposit costs react to rate cuts? Speaker 200:38:54Yes. So, I think the deposit cost you saw some increase this quarter compared to last quarter as we had a little bit continued reshifting in the mix of our deposit portfolio to a slower extent than what we saw in the prior quarter. I think we're close to the peak on that rate. We are continuing to see a little bit more mix shift. We're continuing to see growth in the retail CDs, but I think it's slowing a bit. Speaker 200:39:23And I think to the extent rate cuts transpire as they are being projected to happen later this year in this quarter, we'll see some benefit. As we mentioned, we've kind of used a short term promotional product that had at 6.30 a 5 month average life remaining. So I think we can take the benefit of rate cuts in pretty short order on the funding cost side. Speaker 600:39:51And can you talk about balancing you made the comment that less of your securities book is now pledged because of some movements on the deposit side. Can you just talk about that flexibility that adds? We see more securities run offs to pay down broker, to pay down other kind of higher costs, areas of the liability side? Or just kind of talk about that balance that you're getting based on that comment. Speaker 200:40:19Yes. So what you saw last quarter was an increase in kind of cash and cash equivalents on our balance sheet, which you saw this quarter and the second quarter relative to Q1 was a reduction in that cash and cash equivalents because we didn't have to hold as much cash to have kind of readily available liquidity because we had unpledged securities that could quickly be sold if we had need for the immediate liquidity. So that was the trade off we were trying to describe there. The reduction in cash and cash equivalents in the quarter was, because we were able to have unpledged securities available for liquidity if or when needed. Not that we think they're needed, but Speaker 100:40:58just per our policies and Speaker 200:40:58guidance that we have internally. Got it. Speaker 600:41:04Equivalents. Thank you for clarifying for me. Yes. And does that mean that the current level is probably where you'll run at a little bit going forward, kind of cash flow tighter, securities balances probably stay in similar range or similar level? Speaker 200:41:23Yes, I think that's right. I think over time, we've said we like our investment portfolio to be something between 18% 20%. We're currently sitting at 20%, so it's in the range. And again, I would say we're not actively buying much in that portfolio investment portfolio given rates and the like. So I'd expect it to be relatively stable. Speaker 600:41:45Okay. I appreciate it. Thank you guys for the commentary. Speaker 100:41:48Yes. Thank you. Operator00:41:52And at this time, there are no further questions. Sir, do you have any closing remarks? Speaker 100:41:58Yes. I want to thank everyone for joining our call this morning. Please remember that our earnings release and webcast of this call, including our earnings conference call presentation will be archived at peoplesbancorp.com under the Investor Relations section. Thank you for your time and have a great day. Operator00:42:18The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallPeoples Bancorp Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Peoples Bancorp Earnings HeadlinesPeoples Bancorp (PEBO) Expected to Announce Quarterly Earnings on TuesdayApril 20 at 2:02 AM | americanbankingnews.comPEOPLES BANCORP INC. 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Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Peoples Bancorp and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Peoples BancorpPeoples Bancorp (NASDAQ:PEBO) operates as the holding company for Peoples Bank that provides commercial and consumer banking products and services. The company accepts various deposit products, including demand deposit accounts, savings accounts, money market accounts, certificates of deposit, and governmental deposits; and provides commercial and industrial, commercial real estate, construction, finance, residential real estate, and consumer indirect and direct loans, as well as home equity lines of credit and overdrafts. It also offers debit and automated teller machine (ATM) cards; safe deposit rental facilities; money orders and cashier's checks; and telephone, mobile, and online banking services. In addition, the company provides various life, health, and property and casualty insurance products; third-party insurance administration; interactive teller machines; insurance premium financing; check deposit and alert notification; commercial and technology equipment leasing; fiduciary and trust; underwriting, origination, and servicing of equipment leases, and equipment financing agreements; and asset management and administration services, as well as employee benefit, retirement, and health care plan administration services. Further, it offers brokerage services through an unaffiliated registered broker-dealers; insurance premium finance lending and leasing; and credit cards to individuals and businesses, as well as provides merchant credit card transaction processing, and person-to-person payment processing services. 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There are 7 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to the Peoples Bancorp, Inc. Conference Call. My name is Cole, and I'll be your conference facilitator. Today's call will cover a discussion of the results of operations for the 3 6 months ended June 30, 2024. Please be advised that all lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. Operator00:00:20After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer period. This call is also being recorded. If you object to the recording, please disconnect at this time. Please be advised that the commentary in this call will contain projections or other forward looking statements regarding people's future financial performance or future events. These statements are based on management's current expectations. Operator00:00:57The statements in this call, which are not historical facts, are forward looking statements and involve a number of risks and uncertainties detailed in the Peoples' Security and Exchange Commission's filings. Management believes that the forward looking statements made during this call are based on reasonable assumptions within the bounds of their knowledge of Peoples Business and Operations. However, it is possible actual results may differ materially from those from these forward looking statements. Peoples disclaims any responsibility to update these forward looking statements after this call, except as may be required by applicable legal requirements. Peoples' Q2 2024 earnings release conference call presentation were issued this morning and are available under the peoplesbancorp.com under Investor Relations. Operator00:01:45A reconciliation of the non general accepted accounting or GAAP financial measures discussed during this call to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is included at the end of the earnings release. This call will include about 15 to 20 minutes of prepared commentary, followed by a question and answer period, which I will facilitate. An archived webcast of this call will be available on the peoplesbancorp.com in the Investor Relations section for 1 year. Participants in the call today will be Tyler Wilcox, President and Chief Executive Officer and Katie Bailey, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, and each will be available for questions following opening statements. Mr. Operator00:02:27Wilcox, you may begin your conference. Speaker 100:02:30Thank you, Cole. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our call today. This quarter, we're providing an earnings conference call presentation, which we filed as part of our Form 8 ks this morning with our earnings release and is also posted on our website with this webcast. We are pleased to bring another quarter of consistent results for our shareholders. And for the Q2, diluted earnings per share were $0.82 compared to $0.84 for the linked quarter. Speaker 100:02:57For the first half of twenty twenty four, diluted EPS were 1.66 dollars compared to $1.56 for 2023. And positives for the 2nd quarter included loan growth of 8% annualized compared to the linked quarter, improvements in our criticized and classified loans, which declined 6% 19% respectively compared to the linked quarter end. While our total deposits declined 29,000,000 dollars our core deposits grew by $42,000,000 for the quarter, which excludes brokered CDs. Our brokered CDs continue to decline as we generate customer deposits. Our book value increased from $29.93 at the linked quarter end to $30.36 at June 30, while our tangible book value per share grew to 18.91, a 3% increase from March 31. Speaker 100:03:53Our tangible equity to tangible assets ratio improved 24 basis points to 7.6%. Our regulatory capital ratios improved by double digit percentages compared to the linked quarter end. Our return on average assets for the 2nd quarter was 1.3%. We had a decline in our provision for credit losses compared to the linked quarter and we generated improvements in our fee based income excluding the annual performance based insurance commissions we recognized last quarter. As it relates to our credit quality, we had many improvements this quarter, including a reduction in our criticized and classified loans, which were down $17,000,000 $27,000,000 respectively compared to the linked quarter end. Speaker 100:04:41This was driven by pay downs on some loans that we downgraded last quarter as we diligently work those credits. We noted last quarter in our call that we did not believe the downgrades at that time were indicative of core portfolio issues and this is shown to be the case. We continue to receive pay downs on these loans and have received additional funds in July including another $8,000,000 We also had upgrades of 2 classified credits totaling $5,000,000 to watch status and one upgrade of $2,500,000 from criticized to fair. Our allowance for credit losses remained at 1.05 percent of total loans at quarter end consistent with the linked quarter end. Our provision for credit losses for the quarter was driven by net charge offs, higher reserves on individually annualized leases and loan growth. Speaker 100:05:33Our annualized net charge off rate for the quarter increased to 27 basis points compared to 22 basis points for the Q1. Combined, our leasing and consumer indirect net charge offs contributed 21 of the 27 basis points of our annualized net charge off rate for the Q2. We continue to see elevated net charge offs in small ticket leases from our North Star division, which contributed 14 of the 27 basis points to our annualized net charge off rate. These charge off levels are similar to pre pandemic rates or the rates we expected to see when we acquired the business. We continuously evaluate the various lending verticals in the small ticket leasing area and adjust our appetite based on performance. Speaker 100:06:20For the Q2, the yield on our small ticket leasing balances was over 14% and we continue to be very satisfied with return on our core small ticket leasing business. Our net charge offs have grown in consumer indirect loans adding 7 basis points to our annualized net charge off rate for the Q2, we are seeing a national trend of increased delinquency in auto lending leading to higher surrender rates. When combined with the previous spike in used values, the dollar value of our net charge offs has increased. We remain disciplined in our lending practices with weighted average FICO scores at over 750 on our production and remain optimistic about the business. Non performing assets increased 2,400,000 dollars which was mostly due to higher non accrual leasing balances. Speaker 100:07:12Our delinquency improved this quarter and the portion of our loan portfolio considered current at June 30 was 98.8 percent, up from 98.7% at March 31. We're confident in our commercial loan concentrations with our exposure to non owner occupied office space at less than 2% of our total loan portfolio balance at June 30. Our exposure declined compared to the linked quarter end as we successfully exited an $8,000,000 classified office loan. Our hospitality and assisted living facilities were each around 2.5 percent of our total balances. At the same time, our multifamily loan balances were 557,000,000 dollars a $35,000,000 increase compared to the linked quarter end. Speaker 100:08:02We continue to have strong sponsor support and economic metrics with the deals we have chosen in this segment and we'll continue to be diligent in our underwriting of these loans. We see rents on multifamily loans holding up and in our 7 metro markets we are still experiencing average rental growth of 3.2% compared to the national average of 0.9%. Compared to the linked quarter end, our total loan portfolio grew $123,000,000 or 8% annualized. Our premium finance balances contributed $54,000,000 of growth compared to the linked quarter end. Increases in our commercial and industrial portfolio of $43,000,000 mostly offset declines of $48,000,000 in our commercial real estate portfolio. Speaker 100:08:52But as I mentioned earlier, a meaningful portion of the credits that paid down this quarter were part of our criticized and classified assets, which we view as a positive. Consumer loans contributed $39,000,000 of growth driven by higher consumer indirect balances. At quarter end, our commercial real estate loans comprised 35% of total loans, nearly 40% of which were owner occupied, while the remainder were investment real estate. At the same time, our total consumer loans, which include residential real estate and home equity lines of credit were 29% of total loans, commercial and industrial loans were 20%, leases totaled 7%, construction loans were 5% and premium finance was 4% of total loans. At quarter end, 47% of our total loans were fixed rate with the remaining 53% at a variable rate. Speaker 100:09:51We continue to actively assess market conditions on our commercial real estate book, including the impact of higher interest rates on upcoming loans repricing or maturing. We are comfortable with our ability to handle the repricing of our loan portfolio and only have $289,000,000 repricing or maturing during the last half of twenty twenty four and another $396,000,000 during 2025. I will now turn the call over to Katie for a discussion of our financial performance. Speaker 200:10:22Thanks, Tyler. Our net interest income was stable compared to the Q1, while our net interest margin was 4.18% compared to 4.26 percent. Nearly half of the reduction in net interest margin compared to the linked quarter was lower accretion income, net of amortization expense, which only added 28 basis points this quarter compared to 32 basis points last quarter. The remainder of the decline was mostly due to higher borrowing costs incurred during the second quarter, which offset higher earning asset yields. For the first half of twenty twenty four, our net interest income grew 10%, while our net interest margin declined 31 basis points to 4.22%. Speaker 200:11:07Our earning asset yields improved to 6.32% for the 1st 6 months of 2024 compared to 5.49 percent for 2023, while higher funding costs more than offset the improvement. Accretion income, net of amortization expense, added 31 basis points to net interest margin for the first half of twenty twenty four compared to 19 basis points for 2023. Moving on to our fee based income. Excluding our annual performance based insurance commission of $2,200,000 we received in the 1st quarter, fee based income grew compared to the linked quarter. We typically recognize the performance based insurance commission during the Q1 of each year. Speaker 200:11:56Additionally, for the Q2, growth in electronic banking income and trust and investment income offset declines in bank owned life insurance and lease income. For the first half of twenty twenty four, our fee based income grew 15% with increases in all lines, primarily due to the Limestone merger that occurred on April 30, 2023. As it relates to our noninterest expenses, they were relatively flat compared to the Q1 of 2024 as our other noninterest expense was impacted by a onetime prior period true up of corporate expenses. For the first half of twenty twenty four, non interest expense was up 8% as higher operating costs from the additional footprint from Limestone was partially offset by lower acquisition related expenses during 2024. For the 2nd quarter, both our reported efficiency ratio and our efficiency ratio adjusted for non core expenses was 59.2%. Speaker 200:13:04Our reported and adjusted efficiency ratio increased compared to the linked quarter and was related to lower fee based income compared to the linked quarter. For the first half of twenty twenty four, the reported efficiency ratio was 58.6%, a decline from 2023. The adjusted efficiency ratio for the 1st 6 months of 2024 was 58.7%, an increase from 2023 due to higher non interest expenses. Moving on to the balance sheet. Our investment securities portfolio continued to comprise 20% of total assets at June 30, while our loan to deposit ratio increased to 87%. Speaker 200:13:47During the quarter, we were able to gain additional governmental deposits and repurchase agreements with our customers to insured cash sweep products, which allowed us to free up some previously pledged investment securities. From a deposit perspective, our total deposits declined $29,000,000 from the linked quarter end, which was mostly due to reductions in brokered CDs and seasonal declines in governmental deposits, which are typically higher during the 1st and third quarters of each year. Excluding brokered CDs, our deposits were up $42,000,000 compared to the linked quarter end. Our retail CDs grew $132,000,000 while we were able to reduce our brokered CDs by $71,000,000 For the Q2, our deposit costs only increased by 9 basis points compared to the linked quarter. Our retail CD promotions have been for a 5% CD over a relatively short term, and our entire retail CD portfolio had an average remaining life of 5 months at June 30. Speaker 200:14:58Our demand deposits as a percent of total deposits were flat compared to the linked quarter end and remained at 35% at June 30, while our non interest bearing deposits were 20% of total deposits. At quarter end, our deposit composition was 78% in retail deposit balances, which included small businesses and 22% in commercial deposit balances. Our average retail customer deposit relationship was $25,000 at quarter end, while our median was nearly $3,000 Moving on to our capital position. Our capital ratios improved compared to the linked quarter and benefited from earnings outpacing dividends. At quarter end, our common equity Tier 1 capital ratio was 11.8%. Speaker 200:15:52Our total risk based capital ratio was 13.5%. Our leverage ratio was 9.7% and our tangible equity to tangible assets ratio improved to 7.6% compared to 7.4% at quarter end. As it relates to our capital deployment, we did not repurchase shares this quarter. We do provide an attractive dividend as part of our capital usage, which has a current yield of 4.89%. Our dividend payout ratio stood at 48.9% for the 2nd quarter. Speaker 200:16:30Finally, I will turn the call over to Tyler for his closing comments. Speaker 100:16:34Thank you, Katie. During the first half of twenty twenty four, we made strides in improving our technology as we rolled out a new customer relationship management system that integrates referrals, opportunities and client information between our lines of business, enhancing our ability to execute by making it easier for us to connect with and serve our clients. We also implemented a new software system for our insurance groups and began utilizing more functionality with our implementation of Microsoft products as we continue to look to replace legacy systems. We are also well on our way to implementing a new business loan origination system that will be in place starting in 2025. As we mentioned software upgrades, I would also like to note that the CrowdStrike outage from last week had nominal impact on our systems and any impact has been resolved at this point. Speaker 100:17:29We place high importance on our employee satisfaction in workplace. We are proud that our company's culture is being recognized in the marketplace. During the first half of twenty twenty four, we were recognized by U. S. News and World Report as a best company to work for in banking and by Newsweek as one of America's greatest workplaces. Speaker 100:17:49As we look to the second half of twenty twenty four, we currently anticipate net interest income to benefit from the full year impact of the Limestone merger. We continue to expect our quarterly net interest margin to be between 4.1% and 4.3% assuming that there are no significant short term interest rate changes in the remainder of 2024. We believe our fee based income growth will be between 6% 8% compared to 2023. Our quarterly total non interest expense forecast remains unchanged at between $67,000,000 $69,000,000 for the 3rd 4th quarters of 2024. We're lowering our 2024 loan growth guidance to 5% to 7% compared to our previous guidance of 6% to 8%. Speaker 100:18:41This slight adjustment in our estimate is partly a result of the paydowns received and expected paydowns we noted on criticized and classified loans, which will offset some of our anticipated loan production. We also expect some reduction from our leasing business due to recent credit quality and net charge off trends. Based on current information, we expect our provision for credit losses for the 3rd and 4th quarters to be relatively consistent with the amounts recognized during the 1st 2 quarters of 2024. We anticipate a full year net charge off rate of around 25 to 30 basis points, primarily driven by trends in small ticket leasing and indirect charge offs expected for the remainder of the year. We are pleased to bring our shareholders solid consistent performance, while also improving our product offerings, infrastructure, technology and aligning our business to grow. Speaker 100:19:36This concludes our commentary and we will open the call for questions. Once again, this is Tyler Wilcox and joining me for the Q and A session is Katie Bailey, our Chief Financial Officer. I will now turn this call back into the hands of our call facilitator. Thank you. Operator00:19:52Thank you. And we will now begin the question and answer session. And our first question today will come from Daniel Tamayo with Raymond James. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:20:19Go ahead. Hi, Danny. Speaker 300:20:20Thank you. Hey, good morning. Good morning. Maybe we start just on the margin. I know you appreciate the guidance for you provided, but just wondering if you could get a little more detail given the restructuring benefit in the Q3 and then deposit competition, anything else, just how you're thinking about the magnitude of margin compression in the back half of the year? Speaker 200:20:49So, Danny, you referenced a restructuring in the Q3. I'm not sure what specifically you're talking about there. We did not do we did not reposition our investment portfolio during the Q2, or really the Q1 in any meaningful way. So I think the guidance that you see us give is largely consistent with what we've been giving all year. I think there will continue to be slight compression in margin, more a function of accretion income as that continues to trail off. Speaker 200:21:27Again, we printed 28 basis points of accretion benefit in the 2nd quarter. We expect maybe 2 to 4 basis points of continued compression in each quarter thereafter, to get us for the year in the 25 to 30 basis points benefit of accretion, but the latter half is will come down from the 28%. So I think that's what we expect as we proceed through the year. I think the core margin ex accretion is largely going to be stable to where we were for the Q2. Speaker 300:22:02Got it. Okay. Yes, sorry. That was a misspeak. My apologies on the restructuring, but yes, the accretion is what I was thinking of. Speaker 300:22:10And then I guess just a follow-up on just the small ticket leasing business. You talked about it a lot in the prepared remarks and in the release. But just curious if you are seeing an uptick in those loss rates. I mean, you saw classifieds come down. I guess, if you could just talk a little bit about the drivers of the lower classifieds, but also kind of the continued elevated net charge offs related to leasing business. Speaker 300:22:44That'd be great. Speaker 100:22:45Sure, Danny. Thanks. I guess I'll separate those out a bit. Very optimistic kind of as we talked about last quarter and as we talked about and reiterated again on the core commercial, I think there's a great story to tell there. The decline was upgrades and payoffs by and large. Speaker 100:23:05We continue to work the core book as well as the book of business that we picked up from Limestone. And I think the positives there are delinquency has declined in the core commercial book. I'm proud of the fact that we've built a book that is relatively underweight to the industry and peers with respect to commercial real estate. And so just that core book and just a word as well on that is that during the first half of this year, we saw some nice balance mix away from CRE and into C and I. So the pay downs were just about 60% in the commercial real estate and the production was about 60% on the commercial and industrial side. Speaker 100:23:54So there's kind of a natural rebalancing going on there. So as far as the it's a bit of a tale of 2 portfolios, but the core which represents 90 plus percent of our loan portfolio is very strong. On the 2 kind of primary drivers, the small ticket leasing, the inherent nature of that business is in the higher risk segments. It's in hospitality, restaurants, startups of less than 3 years, breweries, transportation, all of those mission critical equipment. And we've said when we bought that the business that we were pricing for about 4.5% charge offs. Speaker 100:24:41And we based that on about a 22 year history of prior to when we bought it, the records of where the historical charge offs were. We saw during 2021 2022 less than 1% charge offs. And so we've received the benefit of that from the pricing side and we're seeing a return to normalization. And I think those higher risk areas with the higher pricing leads us to continue to be satisfied with kind of the risk adjusted return of that business. But we are seeing an increase there. Speaker 100:25:20That was helpful. Speaker 300:25:21Thanks, Tyler. I appreciate it. And that's all for me. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 100:25:25Thanks, Danny. Thanks. Operator00:25:28And our next question will come from Brendan Nacional with Hovde Group. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:25:35Hey, good morning folks. Hope you're doing well. Speaker 100:25:37Hey, Brendan. Good, thanks. Speaker 400:25:39I just wanted to circle back to the charge off guide and the leasing piece. What are you embedding for these charge offs into that overall guidance for the back half of the year? And then what do you view as I guess you said the normalized rate is 4.5%, but like it feels like there's still a way to go to get there. So curious how you view today's normalization versus that 4.5% you laid out? Speaker 100:26:06Well, I think the 3rd Q4 will be relatively consistent from a charge off standpoint with the small ticket leasing specifically. There is the delinquency in that portfolio has ticked up. We've obviously, as we referenced, done some tightening of the portfolio there. But as far as the outlook specifically with those leases, that guide is going to be consistent from a charge off standpoint. I don't know if I answered your question. Speaker 400:26:43Yes, yes, that's helpful. Maybe one more from me, just pivoting. Can you provide some color on the overall M and A environment, and whether you're expecting any change in that environment now that bank multiples have firmed up as much as they have over the past few weeks? Speaker 100:26:59Sure. I would say there is a lot of discussion going on from an M and A perspective. But from what I see, I think there are a lot of management teams and boards that are playing a little bit of a wait and see, wait and see what happens with rates, wait and see what happens with the election. I'm not suggesting either of those are magic bullets at all. But as we have conversations, which we continue to have, I think there is there are a lot of banks that are considering their options for the future and we're continuing to be part of those conversations. Speaker 100:27:37So I would expect more M and A activity next year than this year, But that's about as far as my crystal ball goes. I'm more focused on what opportunities we see for ourselves out there in the coming year. And we think it's promising that we'll have some of the conversations that we've been having for a long time will hopefully bear fruit in the future. Speaker 400:28:04Yes, yes. Okay. Thank you for taking the questions. Speaker 100:28:07Thank you. Thank you. Operator00:28:10And our next question comes from Terry McEvoy with Stephens. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:28:18Hi, good morning. Operator00:28:19Hi, Terry. Speaker 200:28:19Good morning, Terry. Speaker 500:28:21Just looking at the average balance sheet, the CRE and C and I average yields both declined quarter over quarter and it's kind of half your loan portfolio. So can you just talk about the quarter over quarter decline and within the margin outlook for the back half of this year, where do you see loan yields or those portfolios trending? Speaker 200:28:41Yes. I think you're seeing the accretion on those portfolios diminish quarter over quarter as we've stated. That's where the large marks come when we acquired the books, predominantly limestone most recently. So again, I think we'll continue to see slight compression in accretion quarter to quarter. I think I previously said 2 to 4 basis points that might go down in the quarter. Speaker 200:29:08So again, as that book continues to pay down, pay off, That's why we see less accretion there. So I think it will be relatively stable with the caveat that accretion will go down slightly. Speaker 500:29:23Perfect. That's what I assumed it was, but wanted to ask. And then Tyler, you talked about some technology investments, infrastructure investments. How is that kind of built into your expense outlook? And maybe talk about some of the efficiency gains that you foresee because of those investments? Speaker 100:29:42Sure. Thanks, Terry. With respect to the expense guide, I would say we've talked for a few quarters now about how that expense is baked in. So our guide for the forward is remainder of the year and into next year should be relatively consistent because we implemented the customer relationship management software, began to pay for it last year and has been implemented this year. From an efficiency standpoint, it's been giving us a couple of pieces of efficiency even this early on. Speaker 100:30:17It's helped us have a unified system for some of our operational aspects. We've had a few processes that in integrating them into that unified system have allowed us to cut kind of internal service times on certain processes down from multiple hours to minutes, which we're very pleased with. It's given us some efficiency in eliminating some additional third party systems that are now integrated into a single system. On a go forward, my expectation is that we have a broad diversified group of businesses. And one of our primary goals is always and I think strengths has always been getting those businesses to work together. Speaker 100:31:02This system will allow us to kind of mine our client data and push opportunities for our clients between the businesses in a much more efficient way that will hopefully improve our revenue results at the end of the day. So that's the expectation on that system and pretty excited about it. But it represents a kind of a long term fundamental investment and fundamental change in what we're doing from an operational standpoint. Speaker 500:31:33Maybe one small one. The tax $1,100,000 tax benefit that was cited in the press release, what's the outlook for the tax rate in the back half Speaker 100:31:43of the year? Thanks again. Speaker 200:31:44I think the tax rate in the back half will be consistent with the Q1. I think if you adjust the Q1 our Q2 amount for the 1.1 we quoted, I think you'd get something closer to 22,000,000 to 22.5%, and I think that can be the expectation for the back half of 20 4. Operator00:32:08And our next question will come from Tim Switzer with KBW. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:32:14Hey there. Thank you for taking my questions. I have a quick follow-up on some of the commentary around the leasing charge offs. Could you talk about how maybe a change in the macro environment along with lower interest rates could maybe improve that the credit trends you're seeing in that sector right now? Yes. Speaker 100:32:38Thanks, Tim. I think the a decline in the interest rates would certainly help with the outlook and help alleviate some of the pressure that we're seeing in some of these businesses. And I think the expectation there is that though again, you look at the pre pandemic era when the average it would go up and down, but the average has historically been about 4.5%. And at the end of the day that the borrowers are going to this outlet because they are higher risk industries. And so they're going outside the traditional banking services. Speaker 100:33:17So and those loans are fixed rate just to be clear. But as interest rates fall, additional debt may they may find relief elsewhere. So I don't think it will be a meaningful sea change, but it can't hurt. And again, those there's short duration on those leases as well generally. So they tend to burn off pretty more quickly than the average portfolio as well. Speaker 100:33:48Okay, that's helpful. And you guys have always had a good amount of non interest income, higher percentage of revenue than most peers. So it's come down a little bit over time, partially due to acquisition. Is there a range you'd like to bring that back up to, or like do you have a target of fee income as a percent of total? And are there any specific businesses you'd like to get a little bit more scale in? Speaker 100:34:16Yes. Historically, we were up in the 30% and boy, I would love to be back there. And you're correct. The acquisitions by and large, both bank acquisitions and then some of the specialty finance businesses have continued that trend. We love our fee businesses. Speaker 100:34:37I'll say it that way. From an insurance perspective, we've continued to grow that. It just hasn't grown at the same pace of the bank. We should be somewhere around $20,000,000 in revenue annually this year and into the future. And we've done some continue to do some smaller acquisitions in that area and we'll continue to do so. Speaker 100:34:55We have a large appetite for that. And we think a good home for insurance owners who are looking for a exit strategy. Trust and investments as well, we have $3,600,000,000 in assets under management. We have continued to grow that business organically at a nice pace, expanded some of the lines of business within that business. And we'll continue to look for acquisitions both of books of business and more meaningfully sized in that business. Speaker 100:35:25So I didn't give you an exact target, but more would be my goal. Great. Thank you. That's all for me. Thank you. Speaker 100:35:37Thank Operator00:35:45Our next question will come from Manuel Nammos with D. A. Davidson. Go ahead. Speaker 600:35:51Hey, good morning. Speaker 100:35:53Hey, good morning, Manuel. Could Speaker 600:35:59on leasing, just wondering what extent are you going to see balance declines there? Is this the normal kind of cyclical trends there that on small ticket leasing you'll pull back when you've seen that charge offs rise a little bit and you'll still get that higher through the cycle risk adjusted return metrics. Just trying to clarify those movements. Speaker 100:36:25Yes. Thanks, Manuel. So first I would say, we've had this business for a few years now. This is our first kind of credit increase from where we were and when we bought it. As I mentioned, we were at a low point from a charge off perspective. Speaker 100:36:42So we're not we're certainly not panicking. We're making adjustments to the verticals within that business. But I don't believe we'll see a decline in balances in the small ticket leasing. There continues to be production in the core. So and if there were a decline, it would be very nominal and we have a lot of confidence in our ability to continue to grow that business. Speaker 100:37:08But in a rising environment, we're required and have an expectation to take a good look at what's performing well and make those adjustments. Speaker 600:37:20There would be a feeling that if rates came down, Speaker 100:37:23I don't Speaker 600:37:23know, 100 basis points middle of next year, you'd be right back in some of these verticals or would you be still cautious? Speaker 100:37:31No, I think we'll could we've grown that business from $80,000,000 on the balance sheet to over $220,000,000 As we've grown it, we've expanded the capabilities, we've expanded the nationwide reach. And so we're all in on the business. From a pre tax standpoint, it's putting off over a 2 ROA. And so it's very profitable for us even with the higher loss rates and again because we priced it at this rate. So we look to continue to invest into it and notwithstanding the kind of the steepness of the increase recently. Speaker 100:38:12Again, we're just trying to actively manage the business and continue to grow it over the long term because it's very viable and very profitable and that we think it's a great it's 3.4% of our total loan portfolio for perspective. So it has the ability to make a nice impact, but it's a very small portion of the pie. Speaker 600:38:35That's a great point. I'm shifting over to NIM. Can you discuss kind of thoughts on deposit costs, where could they potentially peak and how would they kind of in the whole NIM and deposit costs react to rate cuts? Speaker 200:38:54Yes. So, I think the deposit cost you saw some increase this quarter compared to last quarter as we had a little bit continued reshifting in the mix of our deposit portfolio to a slower extent than what we saw in the prior quarter. I think we're close to the peak on that rate. We are continuing to see a little bit more mix shift. We're continuing to see growth in the retail CDs, but I think it's slowing a bit. Speaker 200:39:23And I think to the extent rate cuts transpire as they are being projected to happen later this year in this quarter, we'll see some benefit. As we mentioned, we've kind of used a short term promotional product that had at 6.30 a 5 month average life remaining. So I think we can take the benefit of rate cuts in pretty short order on the funding cost side. Speaker 600:39:51And can you talk about balancing you made the comment that less of your securities book is now pledged because of some movements on the deposit side. Can you just talk about that flexibility that adds? We see more securities run offs to pay down broker, to pay down other kind of higher costs, areas of the liability side? Or just kind of talk about that balance that you're getting based on that comment. Speaker 200:40:19Yes. So what you saw last quarter was an increase in kind of cash and cash equivalents on our balance sheet, which you saw this quarter and the second quarter relative to Q1 was a reduction in that cash and cash equivalents because we didn't have to hold as much cash to have kind of readily available liquidity because we had unpledged securities that could quickly be sold if we had need for the immediate liquidity. So that was the trade off we were trying to describe there. The reduction in cash and cash equivalents in the quarter was, because we were able to have unpledged securities available for liquidity if or when needed. Not that we think they're needed, but Speaker 100:40:58just per our policies and Speaker 200:40:58guidance that we have internally. Got it. Speaker 600:41:04Equivalents. Thank you for clarifying for me. Yes. And does that mean that the current level is probably where you'll run at a little bit going forward, kind of cash flow tighter, securities balances probably stay in similar range or similar level? Speaker 200:41:23Yes, I think that's right. I think over time, we've said we like our investment portfolio to be something between 18% 20%. We're currently sitting at 20%, so it's in the range. And again, I would say we're not actively buying much in that portfolio investment portfolio given rates and the like. So I'd expect it to be relatively stable. Speaker 600:41:45Okay. I appreciate it. Thank you guys for the commentary. Speaker 100:41:48Yes. Thank you. Operator00:41:52And at this time, there are no further questions. Sir, do you have any closing remarks? Speaker 100:41:58Yes. I want to thank everyone for joining our call this morning. Please remember that our earnings release and webcast of this call, including our earnings conference call presentation will be archived at peoplesbancorp.com under the Investor Relations section. Thank you for your time and have a great day. Operator00:42:18The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation.Read morePowered by