John C. Asbury
Thank you, Bill. And thanks to all for joining us today. Atlantic Union Bankshares is off to a strong start in 2022. On the last quarterly earnings call, I noted that we were set up to start the year better than at any point in my 5-plus years at the company and that we did, tipping into low double-digit annualized loan growth, excluding PPP and what has traditionally been a slow growth quarter for us. This point shows we have momentum and points for the organic growth potential of our franchise. As I've consistently stated, our operating philosophy of soundness, profitability, and growth in that order of priority serves us well as we navigate the challenges of operating not just through a pandemic, but now through generationally high inflation, rising interest rates, and geopolitical uncertainty. While we recognize the pandemic is not yet over, restrictions at our markets have eased and we're all becoming accustomed to the new normal of living with COVID-19. Our corporate office face teams have returned to our buildings, and while some roles are now completely virtual, most work at a hybrid arrangement. Our team succeeded and arguably excelled over the course of this disruption, we're even better when we're physically together, what we do and how we do it is really all about our culture and our people, and we're committed to workplace flexibility as an opportunity to attract and retain talent. We'll continue to take a progressive view toward the changing nature of workplace expectations, and we'll adjust based on our actual experiences. In scanning the horizon, we're incrementally more cautious about the implications of surprisingly high inflation, rapidly rising interest rates, and geopolitical uncertainties such as the tragedy in Ukraine. While this will likely mute economic growth to some extent, as seen in the changes in Moody's forecast since last quarter, for the time being we still don't see it derailing the fundamental positive trends of a growing economy, low unemployment, and the benign credit environment. We continue to believe that the Federal Reserve having already raised short-term rates and signaling multiple short-term rate hikes to follow throughout 2022, is a positive for us as we remain fairly asset sensitive. As a result, our net interest margin should expand from here. In addition to inflation and the consequences of the war in Ukraine, we still face headwinds from supply chain disruption and business clients challenged to fill open positions. While we've said before, we expected that to improve as the year goes on; now, we're not so sure. Despite all of this from our vantage point, we think American businesses have proven their resiliency and that all of this is manageable. Despite the headwinds and uncertainties, Atlantic Union has now had two consecutive quarters of low double-digit loan growth with the first quarter coming in point-to-point at approximately 10.8% annualized, excluding PPP. Average loans on a linked-quarter annualized basis grew 12.8%, excluding PPP. First quarter loan production is typically our seasonal low point, but this year's first quarter was different. Production, while not as high as the traditionally peak of fourth quarter, was still higher than every other quarter over the last two years. While Ralph was down from Q4 it was still higher than the first quarter of last year. So loan growth remains mostly a production story for Atlantic Union Bank. New construction loan originations remained strong and based on our unfunded construction loan commitments and funding schedules, this should be a tailwind for balances this year, just as it was for Q1. We were also encouraged to see C&I line utilization tick up each month of the quarter ending the period at 30%, which is still well below our pre -pandemic levels. It is good to see this trend and committed levels growth. We have a lot of upside here as sales and working capital needs among our client base increased. Our pipelines remain strong, solid, well-balanced between CRE and C&I. They're significantly higher than they were at this point in 2021 and also higher than at the end of the fourth quarter, which means that our strong Q1 growth did not drain the pipeline. We are encouraged by our competitive positioning, the market dynamics, and economic strength in our footprint. All of that plus our expanded lending capabilities continue to lead us to expect upper-single-digit loan growth for 2022. While some quarters may be better than others, one quarter does not a year make. And with so much uncertainty remaining, will want to see more calendar behind us in 2022 before we consider moving off of our full-year expectation of upper-single-digit loan growth. Having said that, I would note we continue to believe we have a long runway ahead of us to grow both organically and through takeaway from our larger competitors to dominate market share here in our home state of Virginia. And this is supplemented by our operations in Maryland, North Carolina, and our specialized lending capabilities in government contract finance and equipment finance. Our asset quality continued to impress, and once again, the credit headline for the quarter was the absence of credit problems. Charge-offs, net of recoveries for the quarter came in at plus $4000 a net recovery for 0 basis points annualized. That's a slight improvement from last quarter's two basis points of net charge-offs, but back in line with the effectively 0 base in last year's Q3 and Q2, quarter-after-quarter, these are levels I have never seen in my nearly 35-year career. At some point, credit losses are going to normalize. The -- given all the liquidity that remains in the system, the low unemployment rate, and a still fundamentally strong economy, we have yet to see any sign of a systemic inflection point. This day will come, we just don't know when. In the meantime, I do enjoy the absence of heads-up phone calls from our Chief Credit Officer. Back to macroeconomics. While the outlook may not be quite as good as last year, it's still good. And overall, we remain optimistic at this time. Here in our home state of Virginia, March unemployment came in at 3%, down from 3.4% in November, and that was the latest number that we had shared when we announced Q4 earnings, and this is better than the national average of 3.6% for the same time period. Having just, again, looked at the unemployment data for the country, there is no more populous state in America than Virginia with such a low unemployment rate. What has not changed is the challenge and businesses to fill their open jobs and this will likely not resolve until we see more people return to the workforce. One would think that higher-cost due to inflation and improved COVID-19 conditions may motivate more people to return to work. We'll see. Rob will talk through the provision for credit losses in our CECL modeling as we posted an increase in the provision instead of releasing for the first time in a few quarters. As Rob will explain, this was due to strong loan growth, incrementally lower economic growth expectations and the geopolitical and economic outlook uncertainties I mentioned before. Turning to expenses, we did still have some noise from one-time charges remaining from December's expense actions, but lesser than last quarter. We closed 16 branches at the beginning of March, and that was 12% of our current branch network. Since the start of the pandemic, we will have reduced our retail branch network by approximately 25% or 35 branches. This reflects our recognition of changing consumer behaviors, never better analytics on customer usage of the branch network and alternative delivery channels and our need to continue to invest in our digital products and technology in order to respond to wage inflation pressures as well. Regarding expenses, Rob will take you deeper into the details in his comments, but we continue to expect that we will hold operating non-interest expense growth to 2% in 2020 following our usual seasonally higher expenses in Q1. our expense management actions combined with upper single-digit loan growth expectations and our asset sensitivity do give us confidence in our ability to generate positive operating leverage and differentiated financial performance while meeting our top-tier financial targets for 2022. From my perspective, with all of the uncertainties and challenges acknowledged, we are looking at a recipe for what could be the best organic growth footing I've seen in my 5-1/2 years with the company. The powerful combination of a growth footing plus asset sensitivity in a rising rate environment plus expense actions already taken plus benign credit should equal top-tier financial performance. As we think about the future of our company and our industry, we want to more rapidly diversify our income streams, both in terms of net interest income and non-interest income. While it has never been a large component of our non-interest income, as I mentioned in the last call, we are making consumer-friendly changes to our non-sufficient funds and overdraft policies in Q3 that we expect to reduce our non-interest income by approximately $4.5 million to $6.5 million on an annualized run rate basis. Examples of coming actions include the elimination of non-sufficient fund fees for consumer accounts, fee-free overdraft transfers, lower overdraft caps, the establishment of a no-overdraft bank on certified checking product, and 2-day advance direct deposit payroll for ACH credits, allowing our customers to get paid two days early. With a rising rate environment, we expect to more than offset these lost fees with increases in net interest income. We are investing in new value added ways to serve our clients to generate additional non-interest revenue over time. We will say more about these plans as they develop at our upcoming Investor Day. One area beyond our core banking operations that we are focusing on is the digital asset ecosystem. As I mentioned in the last call, we began investing in Fintech funds a few years ago. We've added to our position this year and we're using those to inform our digital offerings, and to vet and identify opportunities to enhance those offerings. We're also interested in new and emerging opportunities such as block chain, which we think proved disruptive to existing payment systems and infrastructure. To reiterate our growth strategies at a very high level, they are in order of priority, 1. Driving the organic growth and performance of our core banking franchise, 2. Leveraging financial technology and Fintech partnerships to drive transformation, generate new sources of income and new capabilities and, 3. Selectively considering M&A as a supplemental tertiary strategy, this is an option we will preserve and consider under the right circumstances. As I've said before, we've come out on the other side of the pandemic as a stronger and more capable organization. We've learned to work differently, and our customers have learned to bank differently. And this has enabled us to consolidate 25% of our branches since the pandemic began with better-than-expected customer experience -- acceptance. Despite the branch consolidations, we continue to grow our net consumer households. We continue to work on new projects and improve the omnichannel customer experience with quarterly releases and upgrades to our product offerings. We look forward to sharing what we've accomplished when we provide additional details at our upcoming Investor Day. Our goal remains to achieve and maintain top tier financial performance regardless of the operating environment. We continue to work on ways to make the company more efficient and scalable, while improving and automating processes, and the customer experience. All of this provides room for operating leverage improvements. As we turn the page on the first quarter, I remain confident in what the future holds for us, and the potential we have to deliver a long-term, sustainable performance for our customers, communities, teammates, and shareholders. I'll now close as I always do by reminding the -- that Atlantic Union Bankshares remains a uniquely valuable franchise, dense, and compact in great markets with a story unlike any other in our region. We're scalable with the right capabilities, the right markets, and the right team to deliver high performance even in the most trying of times. I will now turn the call over to Rob to cover the financial results for the quarter. Rob.