Alan A. Villalon
Thanks, Katie. Turning to Page 11 of our investor deck that is posted in the Investor Relations part of our website. On a reported basis, net interest income increased 4.6% over the prior quarter, while fee income increased 15%. The increase in net interest income was primarily driven by remixing of maturing loans being replaced by organic loan growth at higher spreads, while interest expense remained relatively stable. Our fee income remains over 40% of revenues and well above the industry average of 19%. Let's dive into the drivers of net interest income on the next slide. Turning to Page 12. In the second quarter, net interest income continued to reach new heights at $43 million, and our reported net interest margin increased another 10 basis points to 3.51%. Our net interest margin continues to show improvement. Our total cost of funds remained stable at 2.33%. We had 45 basis points of purchase accounting accretion in the quarter. Of those 45 basis points, 9 basis points were from early payoffs. We remain disciplined in pricing as we continue to not price on the version of the yield curve for loans. In the second quarter, we continue to see strong spreads, which contributed to core net interest margin expansion, as average rate on loan portfolio during the quarter increased 8 basis points from the quarter -- from the end of the first quarter. Let's turn to Page 13 to talk about our earning assets. At the end of the second quarter we either sold, or classified as held for sale over $60 million of hospitality loans. Net gain from the sale of all these loans was over $2 million. Excluding the loan sale and reclassification, loan growth was approximately 0.5% over the prior quarter, with the most growth in C&I and owner-occupied CRE. We remain focused on full relationships within the middle market and business banking space. For the remainder of 2025, we expect over $271 million of loan contractual maturities, which is almost 7% of total loans. Our Investment portfolio declined to $807 million, or just around 16% of earning assets. AOCI improved an unrealized loss of under $60 million. For the remainder of 2025, we expect over $45 million, or close to 6% of the total portfolio, of principal paydowns with a yield in the low 2% range. We will continue to let the balance sheet remix from low-yielding investments to higher-yielding loans. Turning to Page 14. On a period-ending basis, our deposits shrank 3.3% as we saw expected seasonal outflow from public funds, and our clients using liquidity to meet tax obligations. Since 2010, the median decrease in deposits from 1Q to 2Q has been over 5%. We do expect the seasonal volatility to continue to increase as our average deposit account size has grown over 20% since the end of 2019, due to our focused efforts to grow in the commercial space. Lastly, since the close of the acquisition of Home Federal, our net retention rate remains close to 97%. Turning to Page 15. I'll now talk about our banking segment, which also includes our Mortgage business. Our focus on the fee income components now since net interest income was previously discussed. Overall, noninterest income from banking was $8.4 million for the second quarter. The quarter included a $2.1 million gain related to the sale of hospitality loans. Mortgage revenues also improved $2.1 million from the first quarter as we saw our seasonal uptick in the business. We also saw very little swap income this quarter, which tend to be lumpy from quarter-to-quarter. On Page 16, I'll provide some highlights on our Retirement business. Total revenue from their business was relatively stable at over $16 million. Retirement services continues to be a stable and reliable source of fee income and is not a capital-intensive segment. Assets under administration and management increased 6.3%, mainly due to market performance. We continue to see solid new business production with over -- through the first half of 2025. Turning to Page 17, you can see highlights for our Wealth Management business. On a linked quarter basis, revenues increased 6.6%, while end-of-quarter assets under management increased 2.5%, mainly due to market performance. During the quarter, we transitioned to a new platform that will deliver a better experience for both clients and financial advisers. With a new and highly regarded system, we not only provide the unique value proposition to our clients, but we also are able to differentiate ourselves, and our recruiting efforts, to add more wealth advisers. Page 18 provides an overview of our noninterest expense. During the quarter, noninterest expense decreased 3.8% due to the seasonal decrease in benefits, less acquisition expenses in the quarter on a reported basis, and due to an insurance reimbursement. Our adjusted efficiency ratio was 62.4%, versus 66.9% in the prior quarter. Most of the improvement in our adjusted efficiency ratio was driven by both core expense and revenue improvements. Turning to Page 19, you can see our credit metrics. During the quarter, adjusted net charge-offs were only 7 basis points, which excludes the impact of the hospitality loan sale. Nonperforming assets remained stable at 98 basis points compared to the prior quarter. We continue to have close to $7.8 million in reserves related to the CECL double count, and approximately $50 million of fair value marks related to the Home Federal acquisition. I'll discuss our capital liquidity on Page 20. We continue to remain well capitalized as our common equity Tier 1 capital ratio to risk- weighted assets is at 10.5%, our tangible common equity ratio improved 44 basis points to 7.87%. On the bottom right, you'll see a breakdown in sources of $2.7 billion in potential liquidity. We did utilize some broker deposits in the quarter to optimize our funding structure. Although we continue to remain well positioned from both a liquidity and capital standpoint to support future growth. Turning to Page 29 -- 21, I will now update you on our guidance for 2025. Our guidance for the year remains consistent with prior quarters and has not materially changed. While we continue to make improvement, given the seasonality we experienced in our businesses, improvement is never linear from quarter-to-quarter. We are still expecting loan growth of mid-single digits for 2025, excluding the loans moved to held for sale. Deposit growth of low single digits remains the same. For the third quarter, though, we will see continued seasonal deposit outflows from our public funds. Net interest margin of 3.25% to 3.35%. Within this guidance, we're assuming several things. First, we are expecting less purchase accounting accretion in the back half of the year. We're expecting less in purchase accounting accretion for the remaining quarter due to accelerated payoffs already recognized. Currently, we're expecting 27 basis points of purchase accounting accretion in the third quarter, which is an 18 basis point reduction compared to the second quarter. For the fourth quarter, we had only expected 22 basis points of accretion. Both accretion numbers are based on contractual payoff data. Second, we are not expecting any early payoffs, which has averaged over 8 basis points over the past 3 quarters since the closing of the Home Federal acquisition. Lastly, we're expecting an increase in deposit costs by 8 to 10 basis points due to mix shift in deposits and continued competition. We expect our noninterest income for the year to be up low single digits now on a reported basis due to the gain on loan sale recognized in the first half. On the mortgage side, we expect mortgage to ease a little in the third quarter and had a seasonal downturn in the fourth quarter. We expect our adjusted efficiency ratio, excluding onetime items to be below 68% for the 2025 as we continue to realize cost saves from Home Federal. In the upcoming third quarter, we expect our core expenses to be around $49 million to $50 million as we recognize investments made in our core business lines in talent and technology. Summarized on Page 22, we continue to build on the momentum we saw in the first quarter. Adjusted pre-provision net revenue grew 23.2% over the prior quarter. Our current adjusted ROA of 1.41%, and adjusted ROTCE of over 21% are definitely in the top quartile of the banking industry. We see this as another solid quarter in the line of more to come. With that, I will now open up for Q&A.