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Financial Services - Banks - Regional - NASDAQ - US
$ 26.71
0.0374 %
$ 572 M
Market Cap
11.61
P/E
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2018 - Q3
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Operator

Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Midland States Bancorp's Third Quarter Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session and instructions will follow at that time. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded.

I would now like to introduce your host for today's conference, Allyson Pooley. Ma'am, you may begin..

Allyson Pooley

Thank you, Ashley. And thanks everyone for joining us today for the Midland States Bancorp's third quarter 2018 earnings call. Joining us from Midland's management team are Leon Holschbach, Chief Executive Officer; Jeff Ludwig, President; and Steve Erickson, Chief Financial Officer.

We will be using a slide presentation as part of our presentation this morning. If you haven't done so already, please visit the Webcasts and Presentations page of the Investor Relations website to download a copy of the presentation. The management team will discuss the third quarter results and then we will open the call for questions.

Before we begin, I would like to remind you that this conference call contains forward-looking statements with respect to the future performance and financial condition of Midland States Bancorp that involve risks and uncertainties.

Various factors could cause actual results to be materially different from any future results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. These factors are discussed in the company's SEC filings, which are available on the company's website.

The company disclaims any obligation to update any forward-looking statements made during the call. Additionally, management may refer to non-GAAP measures, which are intended to supplement, but not substitute the most directly comparable GAAP measures.

The press release available on the website contains the financial and other quantitative information to be discussed today as well as the reconciliation of the GAAP to non-GAAP measures. And with that, I will turn the call over to Leon..

Leon Holschbach

Thanks Allyson. Good morning, everyone, welcome to Midland. Slide 3 summarizes the highlights of the third quarter. As you can see, we executed well in the quarter and delivered a strong increase in our adjusted earnings per share relative to the prior quarter.

On an adjusted basis excluding integration and acquisition expenses, we generated $0.64 in earnings per share up from $0.59 in the prior quarter. Moving to our balance sheet trends, we continue to implement a prudent approach to loan production and deposit gathering that we've adopted this year.

It continues to be a challenging environment for deposit pricing and we believe our approach to balance sheet management is serving us well.

As we try to closely match loan and deposit growth we are focusing our new loan production around those areas that produce the most attractive risk adjusted yields, most notably equipment finance and consumer lending.

Our average rate on new and renewed loans increased 15 basis points to 5.49% from the prior quarter reflecting our ongoing shift in the mix of new loan production. The focus on the portfolios will be more attractive risk adjusted yield helped up to keep our net interest margin relatively stable in the quarter excluding the impact of accretion income.

One of the key factors in our earnings growth is the improved efficiencies we are seeing as a result of the alpine acquisition. We completed the conversion during the third quarter and realized additional cost savings resulting in our efficiency ratio improving to 63% in the third quarter.

Another driver of our earnings growth was a return to a more normalized level of commercial FHA banking revenue consistent with our expectations. Commercial FHA revenue is back within the expect range of $3 million to $5 million.

And with the changes that we have made in the business lines cost structure is now operating more profitably at this level of revenue. Finally, as you saw last week, we announced the next step in our CEO succession plan.

I will be retiring from the CEO position at the end of this year, but will remain involved in the company as Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors. Jeff Ludwig, who has been by my side as we've built the Midland franchise over the past decade will become the new CEO of Midland States Bancorp upon my retirement.

The Board put a lot of thought into the succession plan over the past few years including Jeff's promotions to President of the company and CEO of the bank where he has demonstrated great leadership and capability in each role.

We believe the succession plan has paved the way for a seamless, well coordinated transition that will serve the company, our employees, and our shareholders well. And I'd like to extend my congratulations to you Mr. Ludwig on that promotion and I'll turn the call over to you now, but I'm not going to call you Mr. Ludwig all days, that was it.

I hope you enjoyed that..

Jeffrey Ludwig President, Chief Executive Officer & Vice Chairman

Thanks Leon and thanks for your kind words. It has been a great experience to work with you to build Midland into one of the largest community banks in Illinois. I am excited to lead the continued growth of our company.

We have a very clear strategic plan that has helped us build a strong franchise based around our core Community Bank and wealth management operations. And through the continued execution of that strategic plan, I'm confident that we can continue to enhance the value of our franchise.

Now turning back to our financial results, I'm going to start with our loan portfolio on Slide 4. Our total loans outstanding increased $61 million from the end of the prior quarter which represents an annualized growth rate of 5.9%. The strongest growth in the portfolio came in our commercial loan and leases and consumer lending areas.

Our equipment finance group continues to perform well and our total outstanding balances increased by $46 million or 17% from the end of the prior quarter. On a year-to-date basis through September 30, this portfolio was up $106 million or $51 percent.

The biggest contributor to our consumer loan growth was our loan program with GreenSky which continues to produce loans with attractive risk-adjusted yields and excellent credit quality. With the shift in focus in new loan production, we have deemphasized the origination of residential mortgage loans that we retain on our balance sheet.

Accordingly we saw a decline in this portfolio during the third quarter that is likely to continue for this foreseeable future. Turning to deposits on Slide 5, total deposits were $4.14 billion at the end of the third quarter, a decline of approximately $17 million from the end of the prior quarter.

The decline came across all our deposit categories with the exception of interest bearing checking accounts which increased by $23 million. The decline in deposits was primarily attributable to expected attrition in the Alpine deposit base following the system conversion.

We also continue to focus on managing our deposit cost which contributed to some of the decline during the quarter. Turning to wealth management on Slide 6, at the end of the quarter our assets under administration were $3.2 billion up approximately $29 million from the end of the prior quarter.

As expected wealth management is providing a very consistent source of reoccurring revenue, increasing from the prior quarter to $5.5 million. On a year-over-year basis our wealth management revenue increased 57%.

Measuring the organic growth on a year-over-year basis, excluding assets added from Alpine, our total assets under administration increased by 7% as of September 30. Now I'm going to turn the call over to Steve to walk through some additional details on our financial results..

Stephen Erickson

Thank you, Jeff. Starting with our net interest income and net interest margin on Slide 7, our net interest income decreased by 6.6% from the second quarter. This was the result of a decline in accretion income which was $3.8 million lower than in the prior quarter.

Excluding accretion income net interest income increased $600,000 which is a 5.6% annualized increase from the prior quarter. During the third quarter we finalized the purchase accounting adjustments for the Alpine acquisition.

We expect scheduled accretion income to be approximately $2 million to $2.5 million for the fourth quarter and approximately $7 million to $7.5 million for the full year 2019, although there will be some volatility caused by prepayment activity.

The decrease in accretion income was also the main driver of the decline in our reported net interest margin. Excluding the impact of accretion income our net interest margin declined 2 basis points as the increase in our cost of interest-bearing liabilities was slightly higher than the increase we saw on earning asset yields.

As we have indicated over the past few quarters we continue to expect our net interest margin to be relatively flat going forward excluding the impact of accretion income. Moving to our non-interest income on Slide 8, our total non-interest income increased 15.3% from the prior quarter.

This increase was primarily due to the rebound in commercial FHA revenue. This was offset in part by decline in residential mortgage banking revenue. Consistent with the trends across the mortgage industry we are seeing lower demand.

We anticipate that our residential mortgage banking revenue will remain at this lower level for the foreseeable future, although there will continue to be some variances in quarterly revenue due to seasonality in this business.

As Jeff mentioned, our wealth management revenue increased to $5.5 million in the third quarter and following the Alpine acquisition it remains our largest single contributor to non-interest income.

Turning to our expanses and efficiency ratio on Slide 9, we incurred $9.6 million in integration and acquisition expense in the third quarter and approximately $300,000 in loss on mortgage servicing rights held for sale. Excluding these expenses our non-interest expense decreased by 8.5% on a linked quarter basis.

A portion of the decrease was driven by the realization of additional cost savings from the Alpine acquisition following the system conversion.

We’ve also realised cost savings from the previously announced expense reductions taken at Love Funding as well as from back office reductions made in our residential mortgage banking business to reflect the lower level production that we are seeing.

Compared to the prior quarter we also have lower variable compensation and lower professional fees contributing to the overall decline in expenses. As a result of the lower expense levels our efficiency ratio improved to 63% from 67.8%.

We expect that our quarterly run-rate for operating expenses in 2019 will still be in the $43 million range that we guided to previously. Moving to Slide 10, we’ll look at our asset quality.

Our nonperforming loans increased by approximately $10 million which is primarily attributable to the down grade of two commercial loans and one commercial real estate loan. However, we continue to experience a very low level of credit losses which is 7 basis points from net charge-offs in the quarter.

We reported provision for loan losses of $2.1 million which exceeded the company’s net charge-offs of $700,000. This provision increased our allowance to 47 basis points of total loans as of September 30, and our credit marks accounted for another 59 basis points. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Leon.

Leon?.

Leon Holschbach

Thank you, Steve. We’ll wrap up on Slide 11 with some comments on our outlook. Now that we have substantially completed the Alpine integration we expect our improved our earnings power to be more apparent in our reported results going forward.

For the foreseeable future our formula for driving earnings growth will continue to be prudent balance sheet management, protecting our net interest margin, growing our recurring sources of non-interest income, and continue to drive more operating leverage from the increase and scale resulting from our recent acquisitions.

We are comfortable growing loans in the low to mid single digits with a continued focus on higher risk adjusted yield and strong credit quality. As we continue to harvest the synergies from our recent acquisitions, we believe the greater operating efficiencies will enable us to drive higher profitability as we go forward.

And as this will be my last earnings call I’d like to take a moment to thank our shareholders who have invested in our company.

It has been gratifying to lead Midland from a company that had 6 branches and a relatively local shareholder base 10 years ago to a company that has almost 100 locations today and a close to 150 institutional investors across the country. I’ve enjoyed the opportunity to meet and engage with our analysts and our shareholders across the country.

If you ever find yourself in Effingham, stop by. Meanwhile I’ll be watching from the boardroom and the shareholder meetings. With that, we’ll be happy to answer any questions that you might have. Operator, please open up the call lines..

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And the first question comes from the line of Michael Perito KBW. Your line is now open..

Michael Perito

Hey, good morning guys..

Stephen Erickson

Good morning..

Leon Holschbach

Good morning Mike..

Michael Perito

A couple of questions, one is to start may be on the credit side, so you know, you had mentioned going forward the growth will be tilted it seems towards equipment finance and consumer lending, with the residential mortgage portfolio shrinking.

And I guess my question is how do you kind of expect that to impact provisioning going forward and the reserve, I mean, should we expect the reserve to continue to build as my guess is the reserve on those two growing asset classes is a bit higher than the shrinking one?.

Stephen Erickson

Yes, I think that is right. I mean I think this quarter is a quarter that would look like quarters going forward as we described on the call and so that level of provisioning seems to be about right as we look forward..

Michael Perito

Okay. And then on capital so, would the balance sheet grow at low to mid single-digits and the return profile improving here, I mean honestly not necessarily today, but in the near future you guys will be accreting capital and those levels will be building.

I am just curious how we should be thinking about Midland’s capital deployment going forward? You know obviously organic growth is up there and you guys have had a steady track record on the dividend, but beyond that I mean, has there been any change or any updated views that we should be thinking about as you guys think about how to kind of manage those capital levels and not let them build you know to, to excessive levels going forward?.

Jeffery Ludwig

Yes, I’ll be....

Leon Holschbach

Well, I’ll be happy to, Jeff, you jump on that, but Mike this is Leon, I’ll be very happy to be challenged with having a little more capital than we need, but we are going to do some capital building. Go ahead Jeff..

Jeffery Ludwig

Yes, I think our TC [ph] ratio is just over 7 at the end of the quarter, you know as we look forward we’ll be pushing, we should be pushing the 8% as get to the back part of 2019. Yes, I think this is probably a bigger conversation as we get into 2020 probably Mike.

I think we are, we believe we need to build some capital and build the TC [ph] level up after doing only two fairly large acquisitions over the last couple years. So, that would be the focus and at least in the short term meaning the next 12 to 18 months..

Michael Perito

Okay, and then just lastly in wealth funding, can you talk about the, what you see in this wealth and some of the adjustments to the expense infrastructure and leadership you've made I think last quarter and then also just how that pipeline looks as we head into year end and then into 2019?.

Jeffery Ludwig

Yes, so think the leadership adjustments that we made are working really well. Jon Camps who we promoted into the position as President is doing a really nice job leading the team. The team is rallying around Jon and doing a lot of the right things. The pipeline is I think maybe growing slightly. It is not decreasing, not growing rapidly.

It's pretty stable and in a good position to deliver the range of results that we've talked about, that $3 million to $5 million a quarter type of revenue range we still feel real good about going into 2019 and frankly into the fourth quarter so....

Michael Perito

Yes, got it. Helpful guys thank you, and good luck to Leon and thanks for the help over the past year plus, I appreciate it..

Leon Holschbach

Yes, thanks Mike..

Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Terry McEvoy with Stephens. Your line is now open..

Terry McEvoy

Good morning everyone..

Leon Holschbach

Good morning Terry..

Terry McEvoy

Just start may be with a question on expenses, if I adjust the 3Q expense rate down by the $9.6 million up at around 40, kind of 40.5 to 41, could you just talk about that step up to the $43 million and specifically where that increase is going to come from?.

Stephen Erickson

Hi, Terry this is Steve. So in the third quarter, I mean the biggest impact was in variable compensation along with some professional fees. We're not anticipating that in the fourth quarter that variable comp or professional fees that we see a similar type decline in those items. So that's why we're staying right at that $43 million expected amount..

Terry McEvoy

Okay, thank you.

And then on the deposit flows just kind of post the conversion, was that more a reflection of just an adjustment in rates or was there some customer disruption in connection with that process, just want to make sure I understand that statement?.

Jeffrey Ludwig President, Chief Executive Officer & Vice Chairman

Yes, Terry, this is Jeff, it's probably a little bit, it’s a little bit of both.

When we go through conversion there's a fair amount of customer disruption as we're moving customers from one system to another, changing debit cards, changing lots of things for them and so there's some disruption and we typically see some customer attrition that then those timeframe, so there's some of that and then we've been at this point not aggressive in rates in the markets at this point.

So in that CD money market area we probably have seen some accounts migrate away so a combination of both..

Terry McEvoy

And then just lastly, if I look to residential mortgage business, the expense base has been right sized for a rising rate environment and just slowing industry volumes or is there some work to be done there?.

Jeffrey Ludwig President, Chief Executive Officer & Vice Chairman

Yes, so we've we made those adjustments. I think is the work today is can we bring some additional revenue, how can we grow the revenue base to enhance profitability. I think we're for the most part through the bulk of that expense reduction and looking now to try to build some revenue back into the business..

Terry McEvoy

Okay great and Leon I've enjoyed working with you over the past few years and best of luck. Thank you..

Leon Holschbach

Yes, thanks Terry..

Operator

Thank you and our next question comes from the line of Kevin Reevey with D.A. Davidson. Your line is now open..

Kevin Reevey

Good morning..

Leon Holschbach

Good morning Kevin..

Kevin Reevey

Leon, congratulations on your retirement, enjoyed working with you and Jeff congratulations on your a well deserved promotion..

Leon Holschbach

Thank you..

Jeffrey Ludwig President, Chief Executive Officer & Vice Chairman

Thanks..

Kevin Reevey

So my first question is the decline in the core operating expenses in the third quarter from the second quarter what was the split between the cost saves from Alpine versus the efficiency enhancements that you've implemented?.

Stephen Erickson

As far as, and this is Steve, I’m sorry. As far as the cost saves from Alpine there were probably just a handful of additional employees that were there through part of the quarter, so that was not an overly material amount of that decline.

It was primarily the reduction in the professional fees and the variable comp that caused that drop from second to third..

Kevin Reevey

Got it and then over the last twelve months your asset size has grown considerably, do you feel like that, you have made enough investment in the operational infrastructure to grow, continue to grow from here?.

Stephen Erickson

Yes, I think we've made the investments and I think I personally feel pretty good about where we're at with systems.

I think where we're going to spend some time in the next 12 months is looking at, we've gotten to be a much larger company in the last two years and I think there's some scale opportunities to continue to look at process, procedures, how we do things and drive more operating leverage to do that through the P&L..

Jeffrey Ludwig President, Chief Executive Officer & Vice Chairman

Sure, in the last 15 months and I appreciate you saying two years, it was exactly in the last 15 months that we've added over $2 billion to the balance sheet and increased wealth management by 50% and you guys know the story around those is very powerful for us.

So yes, there is opportunity now and this will be as I suggested that one of our main focuses as we go forward is now to harvest the value out of that and we will have some time to do that and that will be our focus..

Kevin Reevey

And then lastly, a lot of the other banks that I cover, they are also focusing on growing their consumer loan balances, can you talk about the competitive landscape in consumer lending today?.

Jeffrey Ludwig President, Chief Executive Officer & Vice Chairman

Yes, so in markets in branches it's competitive right, customers are not coming into the branch to get their consumer loan, to get their auto loan or home improvement loan or those types of loans.

We're growing our balance through our GreenSky relationship which is point us right, the consumer lending is going to the point of sale and they have a great point of sale program that we're participating in.

So that's where we're getting our consumer flow, not necessarily through our branches which we think from a cost point of view is a real economic win for us right, we don't need to go out in the market and market a lot of dollars to get people to come in our branches to try to drive consumer lending..

Stephen Erickson

Sure, that's going to be such a competitive advantage as we go forward just to reiterate from previous conversations. We don't have origination costs, we don't have marketing costs, we don't have collection costs.

We have a bit of backroom finance cost and a relatively lower provision because of the credit enhancements that is inherent in the deal with the waterfall of the payments that flow to the participating banks. And as a result of that looking at mainly regarding GreenSky it looks good.

Looking at pretax on to that looked significantly better and that is going to be a competitive advantage for us as we've talked a little bit about before as we go forward..

Kevin Reevey

Excellent, thank you very much..

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And our next question comes from the line of Andrew Liesch with Sandler O'Neill. Your line is now open..

Andrew Liesch

Good morning guys..

Leon Holschbach

Good morning Andrew..

Andrew Liesch

Just some questions on the new non-performers here, is there anything that's consistent between the three loans, are they in some other locations or just any other clarity you can provide surrounding these?.

Stephen Erickson

Yep Andrew, this is Steve. They're about is completely independent from each other as they can be, so out of three one is a hotel property, one is a straight C&I deal and the other is basically a tag loan production type company.

They are all three in different geographies and as I said all three in completely different industries, so nothing systematic at all..

Andrew Liesch

Okay and then just you guided towards maybe a stable card margin here, certainly it seems like funding cost may be rising, what are some things that you can do here on the asset side to keep the margin stable?.

Stephen Erickson

Yes and I think we come out of that our remarks if the equipment finance business which grew $46 million within the quarter at yields ahead of where I think we said our new and renewed loans in the quarter we're 546, 549 and the least production to quarter is closer to 6%, so that helps and that's probably the biggest driver.

And as we are bringing new loans and renewing loans there is a bigger focus internally on the yields of those loans, so we are seeing nice lifts in loan yields as we're bringing in new and renewed loans..

Andrew Liesch

Okay, you’ve covered my other questions. I’ll step back..

Operator

Thank you. And I am not showing any further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back over to management for any closing remarks..

Leon Holschbach

No, thank you. That’s all we have. Thanks for joining us everyone and Mr. Ludwig and Steve will be sharing the next quarterly update with you later this year. Thanks..

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating in today's conference. This does conclude today's program and you may all disconnect. Everyone have a wonderful day..

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