Martin K. Birmingham
Thank you, Kate. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Our financial performance for the second quarter of 2025 was marked by growing revenue that supported a 4% increase in net income available to common shareholders to $17.2 million and a 5% increase in diluted earnings per share as compared to the linked quarter. Our results continue to benefit from our prudent balance sheet stewardship, which translated into continued net interest margin expansion, up 14 and 62 basis points from the linked and year ago quarter, respectively, and net interest income growth up approximately 5% and 19%. Complementing NII growth was durable noninterest income of $10.6 million, up 2.4% from $10.4 million in the first quarter. Second quarter 2024 noninterest income of $24 million included a $13.5 million gain associated with the sale of our former insurance business. Excluding this gain, noninterest income was $10.5 million. We continue to deliver from a profitability standpoint, achieving an annualized return on average assets of 113 basis points, up 3 basis points from the first quarter and an efficiency ratio of just below 60%. At the midpoint of 2025, we remain solidly on track to achieve the targets we laid out at the start of this year and are affirming our full year 2025 guidance today. Total loans at period end of $4.54 billion were fairly consistent with March 31 as commercial business lending growth was more than offset by a reduction in consumer indirect balances. However, I would note that average loans were up $47.9 million or 1% from the first quarter, driven by both commercial business and commercial mortgage loans. On a year-over-year basis, total and average loans are each up about 2%. Total commercial loans of $2.94 billion were flat with March 31, 2025, and up 5% from June 30, 2024. With respect to commercial business loans, we experienced a 2.4% increase during the quarter, which reflected both new originations and increased line utilization and balances in this category were up modestly year-over- year. Commercial mortgage loans were flat with March 31, 2025, and up 6% year-over-year, driven by growth in our upstate New York markets. Our overall commercial loan portfolio remains healthy. Nonperforming commercial loans declined by $7 million from March 31 to June 30 of this year. And while we did report $2.5 million of commercial net charge-offs in the quarter, the higher charge-off this quarter related to 1 of the 2 commercial relationships that have made up the majority of our nonperformers for some time. As we have shared with you, one of these is a commercial relationship made up of multiple credit facilities to a CRE sponsor in our Southern tier region. In the second quarter, the multibank group foreclosed on the related property and the associated assets were moved into a joint limited liability corporation. Given this, the related assets are no longer reflected in nonperforming loans. A $580,000 charge-off was recorded in the second quarter related to this specific loan that was part of the overall credit relationship. We also charged off a portion of another credit facility associated with this relationship for which we have a specific reserve in place, driven by a change in the current appraised value of the underlying real estate serving as collateral. As of June 30, our remaining credit exposure to this borrower totaled $7.1 million, and we have a $2.9 million specific reserve associated with the relationship. The remaining mortgage loan and line of credit are secured by property in the Tompkins County, Ithaca area, and we continue to actively manage this situation in pursuit of resolution. Given our existing commercial pipelines and our strong first quarter loan growth, we continue to expect to achieve full year loan growth of between 1% and 3%. The pipeline is largely supported by commercial lending in our upstate New York markets, where we have seen momentum in our Rochester region in particular. Loan growth is tapered in the Mid-Atlantic region given high competition from lenders and increased refinance activity for construction loans, which is a testament to the high quality of the sponsors we are working with. Looking out further, we believe that we'll see stronger lending opportunities in early 2026, with activity stimulated by the recently passed tax bill and pent-up demand that would be accelerated by potential rate cuts. Residential lending was up modestly from the end of the linked quarter and flat with a year ago, with credit metrics remaining solid and favorable. While national housing inventory is up notably, it continues to be very tight in our upstate New York markets, particularly in Rochester as we continue to face high competition. Home equity lending remains a bright spot as homeowners opting to stay in their homes focus on home improvement or debt consolidation. Year-to-date closed home equity loans and lines of credit are up 44% from the comparable period in 2024, while year- to-date application volume is up 19%. Consumer indirect balances were down 2.3% from March 31 and 7% year-over-year to $833.5 million at June 30. Consistent with much of the industry, many of the new car dealers we work with saw a jump in sales in March as many consumers who were contemplating car purchases opted to do so before auto tariffs went into effect. Reduced consumer demand translated to a slowdown in production through much of the second quarter, coupled with our spread discipline that did not follow dramatic pricing reductions observed from competitors. However, purchase activity experienced a rebound in June that has continued in July, boding well for third quarter production. Credit metrics for this asset class improved in the second quarter. Our consumer indirect net charge-off ratio was 45 basis points, down from 103 basis points in the first quarter and nonperforming loans fell 12% on a linked-quarter basis. As a reminder, this is a prime lending operation and one in which we have a demonstrated track record through multiple economic cycles. With a yield of 6.6% in the most recent quarter and newly originated loans coming on at more than 8% as well as the small average loan sizes and short duration supporting steady cash flow, this portfolio provides us with very attractive risk-adjusted returns. Overall, net charge-offs were 36 basis points of average loans in the second quarter and 29 basis points for the first half of 2025, and our full year expectations of between 25 to 35 basis points are unchanged. Period-end total deposits were down about 4% from March 31, 2025, reflective of typical seasonality within our public deposit portfolio as well as the continued outflow of Banking-as-a-Service or BaaS deposits. As a reminder, public deposits sourced through the more than 300 municipalities that we serve throughout Upstate New York peak in the first and third quarters. Total deposits were relatively flat with June 30, 2024, as an increase in broker deposits offset BaaS deposit outflows and a decrease in reciprocal deposits. Average deposits were relatively flat as compared to both the linked and year ago quarters. As a reminder, we are planning for flat deposits year-over-year in 2025, given the wind down of our BaaS offering, which had approximately $100 million of associated deposits at year-end 2024. At the end of the second quarter, just $7 million of BaaS-related deposits remained on our balance sheet. We are in the process of migrating our final live BaaS client to its new banking partner and expect that to be completed late in the third quarter. It's now my pleasure to turn the call over to Jack for additional commentary on our performance and our outlook for the second half of the year.