Julie N. Shamburger
Thank you, Keith. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our second quarter call. For the second quarter, we reported net income of $21.8 million, an increase of $306,000 or 1.4% compared to the first quarter and diluted earnings per share of $0.72 for the second quarter, an increase of $0.01 per share linked quarter. As of June 30, loans were $4.60 billion, a linked quarter increase of $34.7 million or 0.8%. The linked quarter increase was primarily driven by an increase of $28.8 million in commercial real estate loans, $12.3 million in construction loans and $9 million in commercial loans, partially offset by a decrease of $7.5 million in municipal loans and $5.3 million in 1-4 family residential loans. The average rate of loans funded during the second quarter was approximately 6.9%. As of June 30, our loans with oil and gas industry exposure were $53.8 million or 1.2% of total loans compared to $111 million or 2.4% linked quarter. The decrease occurred primarily due to the payoff of a large loan relationship of approximately $50 million. Nonperforming assets remained low at 0.39% of total assets as of June 30. Our allowance for credit losses decreased to $48.3 million for the linked quarter from $48.5 million on March 31, and our allowance for loan losses as a percentage of total loans decreased slightly to 0.97% compared to 0.98% at March 31. Our securities portfolio was $2.73 billion at June 30, a decrease of $6.2 million or 0.02% from $2.74 billion last quarter. The decrease was driven primarily by maturities and principal payments. As of June 30, we had a net unrealized loss in the AFS securities portfolio of $60.4 million, an increase of $9.2 million compared to $51.2 million last quarter. There were no transfers of AFS securities during the second quarter. On June 30, the unrealized gain on the fair value hedges on municipal and mortgage-backed securities was approximately $5.2 million compared to $8.6 million linked quarter. The unrealized gain or this unrealized gain partially offset the unrealized losses in the AFS securities portfolio. As of June 30, the duration of the total securities portfolio was 8.4 years and the duration of the AFS portfolio was 6.2 years, a decrease from 9 and 7 years, respectively, as of March 31. At quarter end, our mix of loans and securities was 63% and 37%, respectively, consistent with last quarter. Deposits increased $41.1 million or 0.6% on a linked-quarter basis due to an increase in broker deposits of $61 million and a $90.1 million increase in commercial and retail deposits, partially offset by a decrease in public fund deposits of $109.9 million. The increase in commercial deposits was due to an account that increases for a short period at this time each year and is expected to exit the bank in the third quarter. Our capital ratios remain strong with all capital ratios well above the threshold for capital adequacy and well capitalized. Liquidity resources remained solid with $2.33 billion in liquidity lines available as of June 30. We repurchased 424,435 shares of our common stock at an average price of $28.13 during the second quarter. Since quarter end and through July 23, we have repurchased 2,443 shares at an average price of $30.29 per share. We have approximately 156,000 shares remaining in the current repurchase authorization. Our tax equivalent net interest margin increased 9 basis points on a linked-quarter basis to 2.95% from 2.86%. The tax equivalent net interest spread increased for the same period by 7 basis points to 2.27% up from 2.20%. For the 3 months ended June 30, we had an increase in net interest income of $414,000 or 0.8% compared to the linked quarter. Noninterest income, excluding net loss on the sales of AFS securities increased $1.4 million or 12.7% for the linked quarter, primarily due to an increase in swap fee income and deposit services income. Noninterest expense was $39.3 million for the second quarter, an increase of $2.2 million or 5.8% on a linked-quarter basis, primarily driven by the $1.2 million write-off and demolition of an existing branch that was replaced with a new building. As certain items in our budget continue to materialize, we expect to be in the $39 million range for the remaining quarters this year. Our fully taxable equivalent efficiency ratio decreased to 53.7% as of June 30 from 55.04% as of March 31, primarily due to an increase in total revenue. We recorded income tax expense of $4.7 million, consistent with the prior quarter. Our effective tax rate was 17.8% for the second quarter, a decrease compared to 18% last quarter. We are currently estimating an annual effective tax rate of 18% for 2025. Thank you for joining us today. This concludes our comments, and we will open the line for your questions.