Zions Bancorporation, N.A. Q3 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

Key Takeaways

  • In Q3, Zions reported 16% year-over-year deposit growth and a 24% jump in noninterest-bearing balances, enabling them to increase their securities portfolio by $2.3 B (12% QoQ) and fuel promotional loan campaigns.
  • Credit quality continued to improve with net loan recoveries, a 29% decline in special-mention loans, gross charge-offs of just 7 bps of average non-PPP loans, and a $45 M release of loan loss reserves.
  • The PPP program generated ~$380 M in revenue (with $83 M deferred), added ~20 K new small-business customers, and contributed $6 B in deposits and $550 M in new non-PPP loans from those relationships.
  • Excluding PPP, they expect net interest income to increase over the next year as loan growth and deployment of excess liquidity into securities offset margin compression from low-yield assets.
  • Having completed its modern loan core conversion in 2019, Zions plans to finish migrating deposit systems by 2023, reducing complexity and enabling rapid product rollouts and improved digital services.
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Earnings Conference Call
Zions Bancorporation, N.A. Q3 2021
00:00 / 00:00

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Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Zions Bancorporation's third quarter 2021 earnings results webcast. At this time, all participants are on listen-only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you may need to press star then one on your telephone. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. If you require any further assistance, please press star then zero. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Mr. James Abbott, you may begin.

James Abbott
James Abbott
SVP and Director of Investor Relations at Zions Bancorporation

Thank you, Tawanda, and good evening, everyone. We welcome you to this conference call to discuss our 2021 third quarter earnings. I would like to remind you that during this call, we will be making forward-looking statements, although actual results may differ materially. We encourage you to review the disclaimer in the press release or the slide deck on slide two, dealing with non-GAAP measures, which apply equally to statements made during this call. A copy of the earnings release as well as the slide deck are available at zionsbancorporation.com. For our agenda today, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Harris Simmons will provide opening remarks, followed by comments from Scott McLean, our President and Chief Operating Officer. Paul Burdiss, our Chief Financial Officer, will conclude by providing additional detail on Zions financial condition.

James Abbott
James Abbott
SVP and Director of Investor Relations at Zions Bancorporation

With us also today are Keith Maio, our Chief Risk Officer, and Michael Morris, our Chief Credit Officer. We intend to limit the length of this call to one hour. During the question-and-answer section of the call, we request that you limit your questions to one primary and one follow-up question to enable other participants to ask questions. With that, I will turn the time over to Harris.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

Thanks very much, James. We want to welcome all of you to our call. Beginning on slide three, the themes that are particularly applicable to Zions, both recently as well as we believe in the near-term horizon are listed here. We are seeing continued strong deposit growth continued in the third quarter. This positions Zions well relative to many of our peers to be able to invest in securities and offer promotions on loan products to core customer segments. Secondly, for more than a decade, we worked to position the company to perform very well during an economic downturn. We're really pleased with the results which you see in our credit outcomes again this quarter. Third, we along with most in the industry, have experienced net attrition of loan balances excluding PPP loans.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

Over the last quarter, we started to see some new commercial loan growth, and our strong deposit growth enabled us again to launch some promotional campaigns in June that have resulted in favorable initial results. These customers are coming from other banks, and we've also seen new demand from existing customers. All of it is accretive to net interest income relative to leaving the liquidity and money market accounts, and all of it is helpful to our goal of generating positive operating leverage. We're well positioned for rising interest rates, which is helped by strong deposit growth, but also reflects the careful deployment of liquidity during earlier, more uncertain points in time. As the outlook becomes more certain, we have begun to deploy the liquidity into higher yielding assets.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

The final item on this slide refers to our ongoing significant investment in technology, which is designed to enable Zions to remain very competitive in the future, both relative to the largest U.S. banks, the fintechs, and to well-established community banks. Turning to slide four, we are pleased with the results on most fronts. Our campaigns on owner-occupied commercial loans as well as consumer home equity lines of credit resulted in strong growth in both categories, each increasing at an annualized rate exceeding 10% relative to the prior quarter. Excluding PPP loans, our period-end loans in total increased an annualized 5.6%. Deposit growth remained very strong, up an annualized 9.3%, moderately outpacing the growth in the industry, which includes all domestic commercial banks. Over the prior year, deposit growth was 16%, which compares to the industry's rate of 12%.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

It is particularly notable that credit quality continued to improve, again, reporting net loan recoveries and a nearly 30% decline in special mention loans from the prior quarter. These, along with other factors, led to a further release of loan loss reserves. We indicated last quarter that we would continue to increase the size of the securities portfolio at a rate greater than what we did in 2020, and in the third quarter, we increased the size of the securities portfolio by nearly $2.3 billion or 12%. That's not annualized, that's relative to the prior quarter. Diluted earnings per share decreased to $1.45 per share from $2.08 in the prior quarter. There were two primary factors that accounted for the decline.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

The change in the provision expense and the change in the gains and losses on securities. Combined, those two contributed about $0.76 per share less in the third quarter as compared to the second. One way we, and perhaps some of you look at our earnings is to look at adjusted pre-provision net revenue, which excludes securities gains and losses, and subtracting from that actual net charge-offs. On that basis, it was unchanged relative to the prior quarter at $290 million. Turning to slide five, at the top left is a chart of our recent earnings per share results. The chart on the bottom left shows the per share amount for the provision for credit losses during that same period.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

The provision's effect on earnings per share was quite variable throughout the pandemic and is a major factor in the linked quarter decline in earnings per share. On the right side are some notable items that may be of interest. As previously noted, unrealized losses from securities less a partial offset from a reduced success fee accrual to the SBIC fund manager equaled $0.12 per share as compared to unrealized gains of $0.25 per share in the prior quarter. Most of the recent gains and losses on securities are attributable to an investment in Small Business Investment Company fund. One of the companies within the fund successfully completed an IPO in April, which we described in our first quarter 10-Q, with a strong unrealized gain in the second quarter, followed by a partial retracement in the third quarter. On slide six, we highlight the balance sheet profitability metrics.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

The healthy results were attributable to items that I've previously described. As previously noted, another significant highlight for the quarter was the credit quality of the loan portfolio, as illustrated on slide seven. Relative to the prior quarter, we saw further improvement in problem loans. Using the broadest definition of problem loans, criticized and classified loans dropped more than 17%, although not shown, relative to the prior quarter, special mention loans declined at 29% and classified loans declined 10%. Many of you have seen our slide in the past showing our average net charge-off ratio relative to average non-performing assets, plus 90 plus days past due loans, which is an indicator of loss severity. A chart of this metric relative to our peers can be seen in the appendix. During the five years ending 2020, our average annual loss severity was 15%, while the peer median was 32%.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

Over the last 12 months, that ratio for Zions is just 6%. We experienced net credit recoveries on loans, which was also true of the prior quarter. Perhaps one of the more interesting credit measures to highlight this quarter is that gross charge-offs were a very low $8 million, or just 7 basis points annualized of average non-PPP loans. Shown in the chart on the bottom right, one can see the volatility of the provision contrasted with the relative stability of net charge-offs. This is mostly the result of changing economic forecasts. Our capital position is depicted on slide eight. We increased our share buyback to $325 million in the third quarter and have indicated that ultimately, we expect to target a Common Equity Tier 1 ratio at a level moderately above the peer median.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

We expect to announce any capital actions for the fourth quarter in conjunction with our regularly scheduled board meeting this coming Friday. Next, Scott McLean, our President and Chief Operating Officer, is going to provide an update on the PPP program and our technology initiatives. Scott?

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

Thank you, Harris. Turning to slide nine, our third quarter adjusted pre-provision net revenue was $290 million, net of the effects of the previously noted IPO. The PPNR bars are split into two portions. The bottom portion represents what we think of as generally recurring income, while the top portion denotes the PPNR we've received from PPP loans. During the course of the Paycheck Protection Program, our performance of producing on a relative basis 3x more than the industry average will result in approximately $460 million in additional income to the company, which represents capital that ultimately benefits all shareholders. To be specific, PPP-related revenue has equaled $380 million, and there remains $83 million in capitalized income, net of origination costs, that will be recognized over time.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

Although PPP-related revenue will decline, we're enthusiastic about the longer-term benefit of adding approximately 20,000 small business customers and strengthening relationships with 57,000 existing customers. Turning to slide 10, reflects some of the highlights from our 3x performance that I noted earlier. Regarding forgiveness, we've received $7.9 billion of applications, or nearly 80% of the total volume. $6.7 billion has been approved for forgiveness by the SBA, and $3.1 billion of PPP loans remain on our balance sheet at quarter end. Turning to slide 11. This slide illustrates the longer-term benefit of this activity. Specifically, as a result of our outreach, you see growing relationships with many of the 77,000 PPP participating customers. These customers collectively have contributed approximately $6 billion of our deposit growth, and new non-PPP loan balances exceed $550 million to this collection of customers.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

More specifically, of the PPP 2020 vintage, the spring 2020 vintage, 14,000 new-to-bank customers, approximately 54%, appear to be utilizing us for their primary operating accounts. This percentage, as we've noted previously, has been growing nicely each quarter. We are seeing similar growth trends with the PPP 2021 vintage of 5,000 new to bank customers, which started earlier this year. Turning to slide 12, recall that in our investor presentations, we provide a detailed slide of our major technology projects. Today, we want to just highlight two. Many of you may recall in April, FDIC Chair Jelena McWilliams, was quoted as saying that her number one concern for the banking industry was its reliance on aging core loan and deposit systems. Where do we stand on this topic?

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

As of February 2019, you'll recall that we completed the replacement of our three legacy core loan systems and now have virtually all of our loans on our new modern core. In 2023, we expect to complete the final phase of our core modernization journey with a conversion from our legacy deposit systems to our new enterprise core system. To put this in perspective, a Big Four accounting firm recently reported that of the top 100 banks in the United States, 93 remain on one or more older first-generation cores. Six are utilizing a modern core on only a portion of their loan and deposit ecosystem. Zions is the only bank approaching the ability to utilize a modern core for the entire enterprise. Interestingly, you are starting to hear about some digital first core systems.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

While these provide the most advanced architectural elements available, and were generally designed for digital only banks, none have yet to be proven usable on a scale or complexity required by the largest banks. Why does this matter? At a high level, implementation of one core solution across all lines of business, all products, and all geographies greatly reduces complexity, enhances our resiliency, and creates adaptability for a rapidly changing technology environment that lies ahead. More specifically, the architecture is, as noted on this slide, parameter driven, meaning we can quickly turn off and on, or adjust features without reprogramming or testing for months. It utilizes one data model, a huge advantage in the digital world, and it is natively real-time and API enabled. This collection of characteristics and others will greatly reduce the time it takes to introduce new products and capabilities.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

As an example, our new core was an important contributor to producing PPP revenue exceeding $460 million. Within a matter of days, we were able to introduce the PPP product and increase the number of business-related loans on our system from approximately 40,000 to over 95,000, with loan boarding occurring in minutes. Most would agree this represents a significant early return on our core replacement investment. As you talk to other banks, they will say that their older first generation core loan and deposit systems have been adapted to mimic real time, utilize APIs, and synthesize dozens of data models. Well, we were doing that as well in our loan systems and continue to do that in our deposit system until we convert. All of these technology gymnastics that take place generally in what is referred to as middleware, absolutely introduce complexity, risk, and cost.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

Regarding one additional highlight, I'd like to note that our core system's seven-day processing capability. Most of the world outside of the U.S. operates on seven-day processing. When we implemented the loan portion of our new core, we adopted seven-day processing. However, as the U.S. deposit market has still not adopted seven-day processing, we chose to convert back to five-day processing in advance of our 2023 deposit conversion. The point is that we were literally able to turn this global capability off over a weekend in August and can turn it back on when the U.S. adopts seven-day processing. This slide also conveys numerous other customer and employee facing benefits, which I'd be happy to expand on in Q&A. Turning to slide 13, my last slide.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

While we have been highly focused on our industry-leading work regarding core modernization, I wanted to highlight one of our numerous new customer facing capabilities. Earlier in the year, we converted 610,000 consumers to our new online mobile platform. While time does not allow us to review all the details of this new platform, we are gratified with the early acceptance by consumers as measured by ratings in the Apple App Store and Google Play Store. You can see that we are on par with the largest U.S. banks and are top-tier with our peers. The rollout of this new online mobile system to approximately 150,000 small business clients will occur in 2022. With this client base, we are already perceived to be on par with or superior to our global competitors.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

With that, I'll turn the remainder of the time over to Paul Burdiss, our Chief Financial Officer.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Thank you, Scott, good evening, everyone, and thanks for joining us. More than three quarters of our revenue is in the form of net interest income, which is significantly influenced by loan and deposit growth and associated interest rates. As such, I'll begin my comments on slide 14 with a review of these results. Although the average total loans were down in the third quarter by 3.7% when compared to the second quarter, we experienced average loan growth when excluding PPP loans. On a period end basis, that growth was $661 million, or 1.4%. The strongest linked quarter growth was in commercial construction at nearly $270 million. This is the result of increased construction activity on previously established lines of credit. We reported strength in commercial and industrial loans, which increased more than $280 million, or 2%.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

We ran promotions during the quarter on owner-occupied and home equity loans, which increased $215 million and $107 million, respectively. Declines were reported in PPP loans, down $1.4 billion, as Scott previously noted, and term commercial real estate, which declined more than $220 million. In the third quarter, we reported a more modest decline in residential mortgage balances than we have in recent quarters, down nearly $130 million. With a strong helpful investment pipeline of mortgages, we may see some further stabilization or possibly growth in residential mortgages in the near term. One final note on loan growth. Relative to periods prior to the pandemic, revolving line of credit utilization has declined several percentage points. Using the third quarter of 2019 as the benchmark quarter, our revolving line utilization rate was 39.5%, as compared to 33.7% in the third quarter of 2021, which was essentially from the prior quarter.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Although revolving loan balances did increase from the prior quarter, up about $200 million, the lending commitments increased about $700 million. As I've noted in the past, deposits have been and remain the driver of balance sheet growth over the past several quarters and in the third quarter. On the right side of this page, average deposits increased 3.7% from the prior quarter. Relative to the year-ago period, average deposits increased 16%. Average non-interest-bearing deposits increased 4.9% over the prior quarter and 24% compared to the prior year period. Our non-interest-bearing deposits make up one-half of average total deposits. The yield on average total loans increased slightly from the prior quarter, which is attributable to the 6.7% yield on the PPP loan portfolio. Excluding PPP loans, the yield declined 8 basis points to 3.59% from 3.67%. Deposit costs remain low.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Our cost of total deposits fell to 3 basis points in the third quarter. Moving to slide 15, we show our securities and money market investment portfolios over the last five quarters. The size of the period end securities portfolio increased by nearly $6 billion over the past year to $21 billion, while money market investments increased more than $7.5 billion to $11.9 billion. The combination of securities and money market investments has risen to nearly 40% of total earning assets at period end, which compares to an average level in 2019, prior to the pandemic, of 26%. We continue to exercise caution regarding duration extension risk by purchasing bonds with relatively short duration, both in the current and in an upward rate shock scenario. The $3.6 billion of security purchases for the quarter had an average yield of 1.53%.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Slide 16 is an overview of net interest income and the net interest margin. The chart on the left shows the recent five-quarter trend for both. The net interest margin, in the white boxes, has declined over the past year, reflecting the rise in excess liquidity as described on the prior page. For the third quarter, this growth in excess liquidity is referenced in the chart on the right as the strong growth of deposits has impacted the composition of earning assets through a larger concentration in lower yielding money market and securities investments. The weighted average yield of our securities and money market investments is just 1.07%, and with that concentration increasing by four percentage points in the quarter, it weighed on the net interest margin.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

In fact, I estimate that the increase in money market investments has accounted for 33 of the 45 basis point net interest margin compression over the past year. Slide 17 shows information about our interest rate sensitivity. Focusing on the upper left quadrant as a general statement, our asset sensitivity has increased as deposits have been invested in short-term money market assets. This increase in estimated rate sensitivity assumes that the incremental deposits have modestly shorter duration characteristics when compared to deposits on our balance sheet prior to the recent deposit surge. We are continuing to deploy deposit-driven cash into securities, which helps to moderate the natural asset sensitivity.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

However, with continued strong deposit growth and higher prepayment rates on mortgage loans and securities, our estimated interest rate sensitivity was similar to the second quarter level, such that in an interest rate environment that is shocked immediately 100 basis points higher than the current level, our net interest income at the 12-month horizon is estimated to be higher by 12%. As previously noted, we may continue to add interest rate swaps, including forward-starting swaps, which would help to temper our natural asset sensitivity. On slide 18, building on a good second quarter, customer-related fees increased an additional 9% in the third quarter to $151 million. Notably, activity-based fees such as card fees, merchant services, and retail and business banking fees remain strong and have grown to the level of two years ago, prior to the pandemic.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

This improvement added to continued strength in loan-related capital markets and wealth management revenues. Non-interest expenses on slide 19 were essentially unchanged from the prior quarter at $429 million. Adjusted non-interest expense increased 3% or $13 million to $432 million. The linked quarter increase in adjusted non-interest expense was primarily due to employee compensation. The increase was associated with higher base salaries and profitability-driven long and short-term compensation. Other non-interest expense includes a $4 million success fee reversal associated with the mark-to-market loss in our SBIC, as compared to the $9 million success fee accrual recognized in the second quarter. Slide 20 details our allowance for credit losses or ACL.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

In the upper left, we show the recent declining trend in the ACL to $529 million at the end of the third quarter or 1.11% of non-PPP loans. The chart on the lower right side of this page shows the three broad categories that resulted in a decline of $45 million. More than 60% of the change was attributable to changes in the portfolio mix and composition. Our updated outlook is found on slide 21. As a reminder, this is our outlook for financial performance in the third quarter of 2022 as compared to the actual results reported for the third quarter of 2021. The quarters in between are subject to normal seasonality.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

My comments are subject to our earlier reference to forward-looking statements found on slide two. Due to the degree of uncertainty on the timing of customers submitting requests and the SBA approving those requests, our outlook for loan growth excludes PPP loans. We are more optimistic about loan growth now than we were in July. As such, we are increasing our outlook to moderately increasing from slightly to moderately increasing, led by C&I, including our promotional owner-occupied loan product.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

We expect net interest income, also excluding PPP loan revenue, to increase over the next year as compression of loan and security deals will be more than offset by continued deployment of cash into term securities and our more favorable outlook for growth in non-PPP loans. The current quarter's customer-related fees are the highest we have reported. Building on such a strong third quarter, we are reducing our outlook for customer-related fees one year from now to be stable to slightly increasing from moderately increasing. We are adjusting our expectation for adjusted non-interest expense to be moderately increasing from slightly increasing. We remain disciplined on expense control. However, increased business activity, emerging inflationary trends, and continued investment in enabling technologies will place upward pressure on non-interest expense over the near term.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Finally, with respect to capital management, we remain comfortable that our philosophy of lower-than-average risk, combined with stronger than median capital, is the right formula for creating long-term shareholder value. Our capital, measured by common equity Tier 1 relative to risk-weighted assets, remains well above the peer median. As we consider the balance between capital ratios and our risk profile, we believe that we have capacity for continued active capital management in the near to medium term, so long as the current macroeconomic and credit trends continue to be favorable. This concludes our prepared remarks. Tawanda, please open the line for questions.

Operator

Thank you. As a reminder, ladies and gentlemen, you will need to press star then one on your telephone. To withdraw your question, press the pound key. Again, that's star one to ask the question. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Ebrahim Poonawala with Bank of America. Your line is open.

Ebrahim Poonawala
Ebrahim Poonawala
Analyst at Bank of America

Hey, good afternoon. I was wondering, Paul, if you could just unpack the NII guide a little bit. Just help us understand in terms of what are you assuming in terms of how much cash you expect to deploy into securities over the next 12 months, where you see that liquidity levels going, and does the increasing imply 4%-6% or somewhat higher in the high single-digit range when we think about the growth year-over-year? Thanks.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah. Sorry, I missed the second part of your question on 4%-6%. What was that question?

Ebrahim Poonawala
Ebrahim Poonawala
Analyst at Bank of America

Increasing, does that imply mid-single digits or high single digits NII growth?

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Oh, right. Sorry. First let me talk about deposits because that's really the driver here, right?

Ebrahim Poonawala
Ebrahim Poonawala
Analyst at Bank of America

Sure.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Deposits across the industry are up. I think we have been able to garner more than our fair share of deposits. As we are analyzing these deposits over time, what we're finding is a year ago, I would have thought that these deposits were more transitory, to borrow a word from the Fed, than they're proving to be. What we're actually observing is that many of these new deposit accounts are being used in an operating nature, which history tells us means that they're more sticky than they otherwise would be. This is what's giving us confidence to be, I don't want to say aggressive, but certainly buying more securities than we might otherwise would, i.e., putting those deposit dollars to work. As we're thinking about our net interest income outlook next year, and again, remember, this excludes PPP loans, right?

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Taking them out of the base and not considering them going forward. We have increased confidence that loan growth will pick up. We're going to use part of the cash that way. As that cash continues to prove to be somewhat stable, that is, the deposits continue to prove to be somewhat stable, we will continue to deploy that in investment securities. Our asset sensitive position is such that we can afford to continue to add duration on the asset side for some time to come without really adversely impacting our risk profile. In fact, I would argue it kind of improves our risk profile as we reduce volatility. It's those key factors. It's the continued deployment of securities and growth in loans that we believe will ultimately drive growth in net interest income over the course of the next year, excluding PPP.

Ebrahim Poonawala
Ebrahim Poonawala
Analyst at Bank of America

That was helpful. Does that imply mid-single digits or high single-digit NII growth?

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Well, we have a tendency to not try to put dollars on it, but generally speaking, increasing would be mid to above mid.

Ebrahim Poonawala
Ebrahim Poonawala
Analyst at Bank of America

Got it. Thanks for taking my question.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah, thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Dave Rochester with Compass Point. Your line is open.

Dave Rochester
Dave Rochester
Analyst at Compass Point

Hey, good afternoon, guys. Was just wondering on the liquidity front, what the minimum cash level you want to hold, either as a balance or percent of assets? Just trying to figure out how much excess cash you think you have that you can deploy into securities or loans.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah. Dave, hey, it depends on what we're assuming for deposits, right? Everything's centered around those.

Dave Rochester
Dave Rochester
Analyst at Compass Point

Yep.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

As we gain confidence in those deposits, that amount of sort of cash we need to hold for what I would characterize as our liquidity risk can go down. What we're seeing is that, as I said, the stability of that cash appears to be improving. If you look back over time, you can see that it would not be uncommon at all for us to run with a sort of cash position, i.e., the money market investments line on our balance sheet of kind of $2 billion-$3 billion. In fact, a year ago, that's where it was. As we gain confidence in the stability of those deposits, I should also add that there is an enormous amount of liquidity in our investment portfolio. We're investing relatively short.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

What that means is that we've got about $400 million of cash flow every month that we're continuing to reinvest. When we think about our cash position, it's not only cash on the balance sheet, but the cash flow that's churning through the investment portfolio. A long way of saying that, if you look historically, we have run with a cash position that's much, much lower than today, and over time, I would expect to get back to something closer to that.

Dave Rochester
Dave Rochester
Analyst at Compass Point

Yeah. Okay. Just switching gears to the loans on the teaser rate products. Just curious where those rates are today, what they step up to in a year or so, what your appetite is for total production there, how long you think you're going to run those. Any details there would be great. Thanks.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah. Thank you, Dave. This is Scott McLean. The home equity line of credit program we ran from June 1st to the end of August, and that rate was 90 basis points for the first year, and then it converted to 299, to the extent they renewed loans out to 10 years. Similarly, on the owner-occupied program, that also started June 1st. It's tentatively scheduled to conclude at the end of this year. That promotional rate was 90 basis points, and it converts out to 10 years from there, another nine years at 299. We will probably, depending on what happens with the rate environment, have each of our affiliates on a cycling basis keep that HELOC promotion alive.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

Likewise, if we get to the end of the year and the rate environment seems still very flat to stable, we may continue the owner-occupied program for a bit longer as well. We've been really pleased with the energy that both have generated. More than the loans that they produce, it's given all of our bankers something really exciting to talk about during a pretty challenging time. It's been a really good strategy for us.

Dave Rochester
Dave Rochester
Analyst at Compass Point

Yeah. Okay, great. Thanks for all the color. Appreciate it.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Peter Winter with Wedbush Securities. Your line is open.

Peter Winter
Analyst at Wedbush Securities

Thanks. I wanted to ask just two questions on the asset sensitivity. Can you just remind us what percentage of loans have floors and how many Fed rate hikes you need to go above those loan floors?

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

James, do we still have that on the slide? Off the top of my head, I think we may have to check on the percentage. Do you have it handy, James?

James Abbott
James Abbott
SVP and Director of Investor Relations at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah, I'll get it by the end of the call, Peter. It's at $6 or $7 billion, as I recall. Let me find the number really quickly.

Peter Winter
Analyst at Wedbush Securities

Okay.

James Abbott
James Abbott
SVP and Director of Investor Relations at Zions Bancorporation

It's only about 50 basis points or so in the money, so it's not a huge group. I guess my final thought on that would be is that it is incorporated in our interest rate sensitivity outlook. As we think about an up 100 scenario, that is incorporated in that.

Peter Winter
Analyst at Wedbush Securities

Got it. I'm just wondering about the deposit betas. I saw on the slide what your forecast is. I'm just wondering if the deposit betas come in lower. I'm just wondering if there's any type of sensitivity analysis, just given how much growth you've had in non-interest bearing deposits.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah. Well, we certainly do a lot of sensitivity analysis, and I think we have some that we publish quarterly in our 10-Q. I think that there's a couple of key assumptions in there. One is that the duration of the deposits that we've recently put on is actually a little shorter than the duration of what I might call the heritage portfolio of deposits. That's one point. The other point is there's so much liquidity in the market that we believe that when rates start to rise, we do not believe we will need to be very aggressive in raising rates, perhaps less than historically, perhaps. That feeds into our asset sensitivity.

Peter Winter
Analyst at Wedbush Securities

Got it.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

On the question about loans with floors, we have about $35 billion±, in variable rate loans and about $24 billion. These numbers are not exactly at September 30, but about $24 billion have floors, and the floors are generally at zero or rates, say, 100 basis points higher than that.

Peter Winter
Analyst at Wedbush Securities

Okay. Thanks, Scott. Thanks for taking my questions.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jennifer Demba with Truist Securities. Your line is open.

Jennifer Demba
Jennifer Demba
Senior Equity Analyst at Truist Securities

Thank you. Good evening. A question on the loan loss reserve now down to 122 basis points of non-PPP loans. Just wondering, given the economy should continue to improve and sounds like you're pretty confident your loan losses are going to stay pretty low, how much lower could that go?

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Hi, Jennifer. Oh, go ahead, Harris.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

It sounds like a game of limbo. How low can you go? I think the very nature of CECL is everything that we think about the future of that reserve is incorporated into it. I don't think that what we're seeing right now in terms of credit quality with, you mentioned gross charge-offs coming in at 7 basis points is probably a sustainable or even where we should be. If we found that losses are not materializing, then it will continue, I presume, to come lower. I don't think there's any sort of arbitrary limit or threshold or anything of the sort. We're just doing our best every quarter to try to understand what future losses inherent in that portfolio can look like over the life of the underlying loans. I think it's a tough question to answer. In theory, I think it can come lower.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

I'm not sure I would really expect it, again, just given the nature of the portfolio and the times we're in.

Jennifer Demba
Jennifer Demba
Senior Equity Analyst at Truist Securities

Thank you. Second question is on your lending pipeline. Could you just talk about the pipeline outside the promotions that you had during the quarter and what you're seeing in terms of demand right now?

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

Sure, Jennifer. This is Scott. You think about the categories, Paul noted our utilization rate on revolving credits. I think it's reasonable to expect, and that's just generally C&I credits, principally, but it has some consumer and some CRE related to it. I think our general thought is over the next 12 months, we'll see revolving usage start to go up again. I don't think we have to work through all this cash. If you go back to 2008, 2009, the monetary easing then, that liquidity fundamentally stayed in the system and utilization rates, we're not overly burdened by that. Customers just got used to dealing with a higher level of liquidity. Secondly, I would say that our municipal finance business is continuing to go nicely. We're seeing increases in other C&I pipelines related to larger transactions, syndications, et cetera.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

CRE in general, I wouldn't look for CRE to grow faster than our portfolio grows, but CRE in general has been growing nicely. Finally, one of the places where we've seen the most decreases in our portfolio has been in one to four family mortgages. Based on the mix of that pipeline, we should start to see one to four family growing again. If you look back over the last five or six years before the pandemic, one to four family mortgage products were generally about 20%-25% of our growth. I don't think it's unreasonable to think that that will return as well.

Jennifer Demba
Jennifer Demba
Senior Equity Analyst at Truist Securities

Thanks, Scott.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ken Usdin with Jefferies. Your line is open.

Ken Usdin
Ken Usdin
Analyst at Jefferies

Hi. Thanks. Good evening. I just want to ask on capital. This quarter, you guys did that extra step up and still had room to grow loans. You've talked to us about trying to get your CET1 ratio down over time, closer to peers and directionally. I guess, what's the trade-off now if you're starting to see a little bit better loan growth with regards to how fast the pace of capital return could be and that kind of waiting or hoping or expecting the loan growth to come back in terms of RWA usage?

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

I'll start with that, Ken. The fact is we reported an estimated CET1 at 10.9% this quarter. I think you know that we have a list of peers which we publish, and we compare our CET1 to those of peers, and we remain sort of significantly above that median peer level. Over time, as we have said, we expect to have lower than average risk and slightly better than median capitalization. Therefore, we've got some room to go on that ratio. My point of saying that is that we can absolutely absorb accelerating loan growth and continued share repurchases. As a reminder, as Harris noted, that capital activity is subject to board approval.

Ken Usdin
Ken Usdin
Analyst at Jefferies

Okay. Scott, another good update on FutureCore and the timing, I guess we're still all waiting for that time period when you get that double spend out of the way. How much closer are we to starting to sunset some of the older stuff? Are you still expecting cost to go up? I'm just wondering the ins and outs in terms of the moderately increasing cost base you're still expecting from here versus when do we really start to see some of those synergies from the platform. Thanks.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

Thank you for that question. Pretty similar to what we said during the third quarter and earlier in the year. The FutureCore related P&L cost will actually be kind of flat to down a little bit next year. It should increase in 2023 by about $7 million-$10 million over our current run rate just because that is the implementation year, and you'll generally see expenses go up because of accounting treatment there. Then in 2024, it'll drop about $10 million. To kind of put a fine point on your question. I would, however, note that when you think about overall technology spend, and we've said this for a long time, I don't know that it's going to abate for many reasons.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

The investments that all banks need to make in cyber protection, the investments you have to make to be cloud ready and utilize the benefits of cloud, the investments you need to make around data, et cetera. I don't know that that's where you'll see it. Where I think you'll see it will be in operational expenses. As we continue to see the benefits of the system, it'll come in operational expenses, not necessarily in technology spend.

Ken Usdin
Ken Usdin
Analyst at Jefferies

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Steven Alexopoulos with JPMorgan. Your line is open.

Steven Alexopoulos
Steven Alexopoulos
Analyst at JPMorgan

Hey, everybody. In terms of my first question, Scott, responding to Jennifer's question, the one area that you didn't really touch on was energy, which I'd imagine you could probably get good risk-adjusted returns given most banks are still restricting exposure there. Question, do you guys have an appetite for energy lending here, and are you seeing increased demand just given the surge in energy prices overall?

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

The answer is yes and yes, if I can say that without being politically insensitive. Our energy loans outstanding are about $1.9 billion right now. You'll recall that we got down to about this level after the 2015-2016 energy price volatility period, and then we were able to grow back up to about $2.5 billion, and now we've run back down to about $1.9 billion. At these prices, which were predictable for both oil and natural gas, we will start to see drilling increase, and you will see line utilization going up, and there are far fewer players today. In the market, pricing has gone up on reserve-based loans, and credit quality structures have improved.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

They were not bad before, but they've become more conservative as the number of banks globally, and particularly in the U.S., has shrunk by probably half that will do energy financing today, from kind of 25%-30% down to sort of the mid-teens. We'll continue to see basically, the portfolio is about 40%, 45% upstream reserve-based loans, which is what we specialize in, about a similar position of about 40% for midstream, and a smaller percentage, around 15%, for oil field service. Steven, you're absolutely right. We will see growth there. We anticipate it. We're feeling it. To go back to $2.5 billion or slightly higher would not be an unreasonable expectation over the next 1.5 years.

Steven Alexopoulos
Steven Alexopoulos
Analyst at JPMorgan

Okay. That's really helpful color. Separately, if I look at slide 13, Scott, can you give more color on what customers responded to so favorably that drove the increase in the App Store ratings? Thanks.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah. That's a great question. When you look at it, well, first of all, our ratings were not very favorable before. They may be reacting to, "Hey, it just is a whole lot better." They're ranking us on a level, as I said, very close to the global banks, which are clearly terrific in this regard, and top tier for our peer banks. It really is the items noted there. We have a unified platform for online and mobile. That may sound kind of simple, but a lot don't, and it means that you have to constantly be synchronizing your online and mobile product. It's one platform for us now. The alerts option, particularly, are attractive when you think about fraud and the increase of fraud in our environment. I would also note that this is just the start for us.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

We can now push upgrades, new capabilities daily if we want. Okay? That's a huge difference from where we were. We can now push daily if we like, and we have a really tight punch list of enhancements that we didn't make part of the initial offering that we'll roll out over the next 12 months, which we think will do nothing but support these favorable ratings and possibly increase them.

Steven Alexopoulos
Steven Alexopoulos
Analyst at JPMorgan

Yeah, we looked. It is pretty high across all of the sub banks too. Pretty consistent there. Thanks for all the color.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah. Thank you. Yeah, it's basically an average. I don't think it's a weighted average. I think it's just an arithmetic average. It's a little artistic, as you can imagine.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of John Pancari with Evercore. Your line is open.

John Pancari
John Pancari
Analyst at Evercore

Good afternoon, guys. On the calling effort, I mean, on the promotions effort around the home equity and the commercial real estate, are there similar promotions or a similar sales push that, given the success of these promotions, that you can focus on in other products, in either small business or on other parts of C&I? Is there any consideration around, you mentioned that syndicated lending has been picking up. Have you been evaluating your hold levels on that front? Just looking at different ways that you can capitalize on some of this improvement in demand that you're mentioning. Thanks.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

I'll just give you a quick answer.

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

Sorry. Guys, go ahead. Yeah.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

John, I'd say that we're not going to allow it to get into our thinking about hold limits. Let me start there. I think that's really an important kind of risk management consideration, not one that we're going to let revenue drive. I'm comfortable with where our limits are, but I don't want to conflate how we use this liquidity to justify taking on a lot more risk. I think we may find ourselves looking at other opportunities, in terms of how we use promotional pricing. I think that a big consideration is just systemically how we can support products where we introduce pricing, and some are simply easier because of the nature of a fixed rate or a term deal where you know that it's going to be outstanding for a period of time.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

You can have a teaser rate for the first portion, but you're pretty confident that you're going to get a sizable annuity in the out years. That's not always true with some other loan types, which can be shorter term in nature and a little more challenging to manage in terms of making sure that ultimately this is going to provide some really solid benefit for us. So anyway, I appreciate the comment. Something we should think about, but I think the couple of products that we've focused this on are probably the right ones at the present time.

John Pancari
John Pancari
Analyst at Evercore

Got it. No, that's helpful. And then separately, Harris, you've been discussing your capital optionality, and I just wanted to see if we can get your updated thoughts around M&A, we've seen a number of your bank peers complete deals, and there's been a bit of a race here to gain scale in what's clearly a highly competitive space. Curious of your thoughts there as you look at potential M&A, either bank or non-bank as well. Thanks.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah, I think our thinking hasn't really changed relative to bank M&A. I don't think that you can win this race by just getting larger. Bigger isn't better. Better is better is absolutely the way we think about this. There could be deals that make sense. There are a lot of deals that probably don't. We continue to be.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

I think pretty cautious about any activity given all the internal focus we have on getting this FutureCore project behind us. As we emerge from that, I think we'll have certainly an opportunity to do things that would be appealing to customers, and that will provide some capabilities that might be incrementally enticing to sellers. At the end of the day, we just want to get through that project, clear our minds, and then look at the economics of what's out there. If they make sense, particularly in market consolidation that improves incrementally economics, that's something we'd certainly look at. It's not going to be a driver. Strategically it's not something that's front burner for us.

John Pancari
John Pancari
Analyst at Evercore

Got it. All right. Thanks, Harris. Appreciate the color.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Gary Tenner with D.A. Davidson. Your line is open.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Hi, Gary.

Gary Tenner
Gary Tenner
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

Yep, sorry. Can you hear me now?

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah. We got you now, Gary. Go ahead.

Gary Tenner
Gary Tenner
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

All right. I apologize. My first question, just a quick one on PPP. Looks like about a third of the remaining balances have forgiveness applications already in. Could you ballpark where you think the year-end level could be given that there's still a sizable amount of fees to be collected split between the Fourth Quarter and next year?

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah, Gary, this is Paul. It's pretty speculative. It's not up to us, right? The clients need to submit for it, and then the SBA needs to act on it. My expectation is largely that PPP loans, it's going to have probably a half-life aspect to it. I'd say the vast majority of our loans are going to be gone by the middle of next year, is my personal estimate. Again, it's pretty speculative.

Gary Tenner
Gary Tenner
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

Okay, great. Then, Scott, if I heard your answer to the question on rate sensitivity and floors correctly, it was $35 billion in variable rate loans, 24 of which have floors. Did you say that the floors were generally in the money by less than 100 basis points, or was that a different figure?

Scott McLean
Scott McLean
President and COO at Zions Bancorporation

James made the comment about in the money. What I failed to say was the LIBOR floors were generally at 1%, some as low as zero. The prime floors are at three and a quarter to 4%. That was the guidance. I think James made a comment about what was in the money.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Could I clarify that just a little bit, Scott? The number of loans with floors in the money is $5.6 billion. The average in the money, moneyness we call it, is just over 50 basis points. It's about 60 basis points. As Scott correctly pointed out, we have a lot of loans with floors that are kind of out of the money. I think your question is really about the in the money floors, and it's that $5.6 billion and about 60 basis points.

Gary Tenner
Gary Tenner
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

Okay, great, guys. Thank you.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Chris McGratty with KBW. Your line is open.

Chris McGratty
Chris McGratty
Analyst at KBW

Oh, great. Thanks for the question. Just want to make sure I understand the remixing strategy that has the potential to unfold. I guess the question is what is the level of securities earning assets that you would anticipate? As the money comes out of cash, how does it flow into the loans versus securities, I guess is the question proportionally?

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Well, look, I want to grow, and I think we all want to grow loans first and foremost, and we're all very focused on that. That loan growth is going to be the driver, and that's our anchor, right? Everything around that is how we invest our deposits into earning assets. First and foremost is loans, and then second priority would be securities. Again, it's relatively short-term. To the extent these deposits stay sticky, the answer is first we'll fund the loans and then whatever is left over, leaving a storehouse of cash for immediate liquidity will over time be invested into longer-term securities. I hope that helps. I know it's not precise, but that's the thought process, as you're thinking about the balance sheet and modeling it, I would encourage you to use that sort of thought process.

Chris McGratty
Chris McGratty
Analyst at KBW

Okay. That's helpful. Maybe I could just ask one in terms of the guidance. I want to make sure I understand the outlook. Could you just maybe provide a key or a little bit more guidance on each of the outlook, moderate, increasing. I know you don't tend to give specifics. Just stack rank and ranges would be helpful for us. Thanks.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Well, I think James typically does that. He's got a whole lexicon and Rubik's Cube that we use to interpret them. As it relates to our outlook, we're being intentional around not applying specific percentages around these numbers. If we wanted to apply percentages, we would just put them out there, right? The language is intended to convey relative measures from slight to moderate to increasing without being overly specific on the percentage changes.

Chris McGratty
Chris McGratty
Analyst at KBW

Okay, great. Thanks.

James Abbott
James Abbott
SVP and Director of Investor Relations at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah. Go ahead, Harris.

Harris Simmons
Harris Simmons
Chairman and CEO at Zions Bancorporation

I say especially because we're likely to be wrong. This is an outlook. It's not a crystal ball. There are so many factors that can influence all of this. I know everybody's looking for precision. You're looking in the wrong quarter if you're coming to us. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Tim Coffey with Janney. Your line is open.

Tim Coffey
Tim Coffey
Analyst at Janney

Great. Thank you. I just want to ask a question about the liquidity that you've got on the balance sheet. Relative to your size, you've operated at kind of higher levels of liquidity in previous years. If I look back to 2015, again, on a relative basis, you were able to bring that liquidity down about four to six quarters. Given the comments on today's conference call regarding the deposit stickiness, the opportunities for loan growth across the franchise, I'm wondering, do you think the allocation of liquidity could occur faster this time?

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Well, yeah. If we go back in time, you may recall, we had about, round numbers, at the beginning of 2015, about $8 billion of cash equivalents. You're right, over the ensuing kind of six-ish to eight-ish quarters, we've brought that down. You think about the pace with which we are buying today. Not only are we reinvesting all that cash flow, and remember, portfolio's putting off cash flow of about $400 million a month. We're adding $1 billion-$2 billion a quarter. There is a natural, I would say, limit in terms of how much positioning we want to be in any given quarter because that quarter or that vintage of purchases is defined by the rate environment in that quarter. We're trying to be measured as we were then.

James Abbott
James Abbott
SVP and Director of Investor Relations at Zions Bancorporation

We're trying to be measured in the deployment of the liquidity. Perhaps we could accelerate it a little bit, but just like we said back then, we don't want to take a very large position in the rate environment in any given quarter, which is why we're sort of legging into the position as opposed to putting all of our chips on red, if you will.

Tim Coffey
Tim Coffey
Analyst at Janney

Right. That was my question. Thank you very much.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, due to the interest of time, our final question comes from the line of Brock Vandervliet with UBS. Your line is open.

Brock Vandervliet
Brock Vandervliet
Analyst at UBS

All right. Thanks for the question. This is an advantage being at the end of the call. Just going back to the question two before in terms of an answer key around the descriptives. I think a number of us are kind of struggling with specifically NII and expense guidance, and I'm worried whether I'm a little ahead of my skis on numbers, and I'm just looking for, I guess one on NII, just clarification. We should be growing off of the $499 number that is ex-PPP and low, I'm thinking low single digit kind of growth on that.

James Abbott
James Abbott
SVP and Director of Investor Relations at Zions Bancorporation

Yeah. Brock, this is James. What we've tried to convey in the past is like slightly increasing is kind of low single digits, moderately increasing is mid-single digits. We've never had to use a high, like a rapid growth sort of situation, at least not in a while. Just increasing would be pretty healthy, robust growth in net interest income, which is fundamentally driven by pretty strong securities growth, which Paul just discussed, the improved outlook on loan growth and somewhat maybe a little bit of offset on price on the loans as the front book/back book dynamic plays out. That one's a little hard to gauge because that's a competitive environment situation.

Brock Vandervliet
Brock Vandervliet
Analyst at UBS

Okay.

James Abbott
James Abbott
SVP and Director of Investor Relations at Zions Bancorporation

Does that help a little bit?

Brock Vandervliet
Brock Vandervliet
Analyst at UBS

Yeah, it is. It does, James. On expenses, it's guiding off of $432, the adjusted total, and that's moderately increasing.

James Abbott
James Abbott
SVP and Director of Investor Relations at Zions Bancorporation

Correct.

Brock Vandervliet
Brock Vandervliet
Analyst at UBS

that again is-

James Abbott
James Abbott
SVP and Director of Investor Relations at Zions Bancorporation

That pertains to kind of this recognition that there is inflationary pressures in the environment and also the technology expenditure that Scott referenced earlier in the call.

Brock Vandervliet
Brock Vandervliet
Analyst at UBS

Got it. Okay. All right. Thank you. That's helpful.

Paul Burdiss
CFO at Zions Bancorporation

If I could, I would say, note the color code on that page 21. I don't think it's a stretch to say increasing is a bigger number than moderately increasing, which is a bigger number than stable or slightly increasing. Right? That's sort of the nomenclature and the way to think about this. Therefore, you could see net interest income is showing up clearly in the increasing camp, and that is because, again, excluding PPP, we see the opportunity to invest, continue to grow the size of the portfolio, and increasing confidence about the loan outlook as key drivers. On top of all of that, while we're not expecting any increases in short-term rates in 2022, it is an opportunity for Zions Bancorporation due to the, again, deposit-driven asset sensitivity on our balance sheet.

Brock Vandervliet
Brock Vandervliet
Analyst at UBS

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. I would now like to turn the call back over to Mr. James Abbott for closing remarks.

James Abbott
James Abbott
SVP and Director of Investor Relations at Zions Bancorporation

Thank you very much. I appreciate that, Tawanda. Thank you all for joining us today. If you do have any additional questions, please contact me at either my email or phone number listed on our website. Look forward to connecting with you throughout the coming months, and thank you again for your interest in Zions Bancorporation. With that, this concludes our call.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.

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