Jill M. Rice
Thank you, Mark, and good morning, everyone. As reflected in our earnings release, loan originations were strong. We reported solid loan growth across multiple product lines and Banner's credit metrics remained stable. Loan originations increased 80% when compared to the linked quarter, with commercial real estate up 484%, C&I originations up 96% and construction and land development increasing 43%, respectively, all while commercial and commercial real estate pipelines continue to build. This level of activity reflects a certain amount of business confidence in spite of the continuing higher rate environment and yet to be finalized trade negotiations. Loan outstandings grew by $252 million in the quarter or 9% on an annualized basis and are up 5% year-over-year, in line with our year-to-date expectations. The primary drivers of the growth were owner-occupied commercial real estate up $104 million, C&I loans up $65 million and the construction and development book with one-to-four-family construction up $48 million, land development up $21 million, commercial construction up $13 million, partially offset by expected payoffs in the multifamily construction portfolio. The growth in owner-occupied commercial real estate is a mix of new middle market clients, expansion of existing relationships and continued solid performance in new small business generation. The C&I story is similar with growth coming from the expansion of existing relationship, increased land utilization and meaningful small business origination. The residential construction portfolio at 5% of total loan continue to be diversified across market and product mix and the level of complete and unsold inventory remains below historical norms as builders have become more cautious with replacement starts in this extended high rate environment. The increase in land and land development reflects the builders need to replenish finished lot inventory with land development financing reserves for the strongest vertically integrated clients within the portfolio, aggregating all business lines in the construction portfolio, the total remains balanced at 15% of total loans. Agricultural loans increased 3% in the quarter as both the size of operating lines and line utilization increased to cover higher operating costs and normal seasonal activity and the growth in consumer one-to- four-family secured loans reflects the strong home equity promotion that occurred in the second quarter. Circling back to Banner's credit metrics, delinquent loans declined to 0.41% of total loans as compared to 0.63% last quarter and 0.29% as of June 30, 2024. Adversely classified loans also declined in quarter-over-quarter, down $8.3 million and represent 1.62% of total loans, an 11 basis point decrease when compared to March 31. In spite of the $7 million increase in the quarter, nonperforming assets remained modest at 0.30% of total assets. Nonperforming loans totaled $43 million, the majority of which are consumer related primarily residential mortgage loans, which involve prolonged resolution time lines given consumer protection regulations. REO balances totaled $6.8 million, up $3.3 million in the quarter as we completed the foreclosure on an industrial property and 2 small single-family properties during the quarter. Loan losses in the quarter totaled $1.7 million and were offset in part by recoveries totaling $600,000. The net provision for credit losses for the quarter was $4.8 million, including a $4.2 million provision for loan losses and a $588,000 provision related to unfunded loan commitments. The provision was largely driven by the strong loan growth with the reserve for credit losses providing coverage of 1.37% of total loans, which compares to 1.38% as of the linked quarter and 1.37% as of June 30, 2024. Last quarter, I noted that the level of economic uncertainty, coupled with the myriad of policy changes that were being implemented created a potential headwind that could negatively impact our clients and communities. To date, that has largely not materialized, evidenced by the strong loan originations and growth in the quarter as the implementation of international tariffs were paused. With those policy changes again being suggested as imminent, I am compelled to reiterate that if adopted, they will almost certainly have a negative impact on the West Coast economies with the majority of the burden borne by the small business sector and further stressing the consumer. Still, in these uncertain times, Banner's super community delivery model, coupled with a consistent approach to underwriting credit has enabled us to expand existing and grow new relationships while maintaining our moderate risk profile. Our strong balance sheet, robust capital base and solid reserve for loan losses continue to serve us well. With that, I will hand the microphone over to Rob for his comments. Rob?