NASDAQ:OCFC OceanFirst Financial Q2 2023 Earnings Report $16.96 -0.43 (-2.47%) Closing price 05/21/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$16.96 +0.00 (+0.03%) As of 05/21/2025 07:03 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast OceanFirst Financial EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.46Consensus EPS $0.49Beat/MissMissed by -$0.03One Year Ago EPSN/AOceanFirst Financial Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$101.04 millionExpected Revenue$101.20 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$160.00 thousandYoY Revenue GrowthN/AOceanFirst Financial Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2023Date7/20/2023TimeN/AConference Call DateFriday, July 21, 2023Conference Call Time11:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsOceanFirst Financial's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, July 17, 2025Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by OceanFirst Financial Q2 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 21, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the OceanFirst Financial Corporation Second Quarter 2023 Earnings Release. My name is Glenn, and I'll be the operator of today's call. I will now Pass you over to your host, Alfred Guin, Corporate Development and Investor Relations. Alfred, please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:24Thank you, Glenn. Good morning, and welcome to the OceanFirst's Q2 2023 earnings call. I'm Alfred Goon, SVP of Corporate Development and Investor Relations. Before we kick off our call, we'd like to remind everyone that our quarterly earnings release and related earnings supplement can be found on the company website, oceanfirst.com. Our remarks today may contain forward looking statements and may refer to non GAAP financial measures. Speaker 100:00:47All participants should refer to our CC filings, including those found on Forms 8 ks, 10Q, 10 ks for a complete discussion of forward looking statements and any factors that could cause actual results to differ from those statements. Thank you. And now I will turn the call over to Christopher Marr, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Speaker 200:01:08Thank you, Alfred. Good morning, and thank you to all who've been able to join in on our Q2 2023 earnings conference call. This morning, I'm joined by our President, Joe Labelle and our Chief Financial Officer, Pat Barrett. We appreciate your interest in our performance and this opportunity to discuss our results with you. This morning, we will provide brief remarks about the financial and operating performance for the quarter and some color regarding the outlook for our business. Speaker 200:01:35We may refer to the slides filed in connection with the earnings release throughout the call. After our discussion, we look forward to taking your questions. Our financial results for the Q2 included GAAP diluted earnings per share of $0.45 Our earnings reflect net interest income of $92,100,000 which while down from the prior linked quarter Has increased $1,300,000 or 1.4 percent as compared to the prior year. Our second quarter results were impacted by industry pressures on deposit costs, increasing our deposit betas to 29%, which we believe will outperform our peer group over the cycle. Advancing a more competitive pricing strategy has protected our deposit base, which increased to $10,200,000,000 Our balance sheet continues to remain solid with non performing loans and criticized classified assets representing just 17 basis points And 80 basis points of total assets, respectively. Speaker 200:02:36We continue to build capital, ending the period with a tangible book value per share $17.72 and the common equity Tier 1 ratio of 10.2%. Turning to capital management, The Board approved a quarterly cash dividend of $0.20 per common share. This is the company's 106th consecutive quarterly cash dividend It represents a 44% of core earnings. The company did not repurchase any shares in the 2nd quarter. At this point, I'll turn the call over to Joe to provide some more details regarding our progress during the quarter. Speaker 300:03:14Thanks, Chris. Deposit growth for the quarter totaled 165,200,000 We have maintained a thoughtful approach to deposit pricing and have paid particular attention to our valued clients, The last of which were repriced in Q2. We are laser focused on retaining our existing clients while actively attracting new clients in a profitable manner. Slowing loan growth coupled with deposit growth in both Q1 and Q2 has allowed us to reduce the loan to deposit ratio to 99.3%. You will notice a small increase in net gain on sale this quarter as we begin to focus residential originations for sale to the secondary market. Speaker 300:03:59Loan growth in the quarter has been muted as clients are reluctant to incur the increased cost to borrow and demand in Certain asset classes other than residential and multifamily construction has slowed. Regarding asset quality, Delinquencies remain low and we continue to maintain our credit discipline, which has served us well. Net charge offs were effectively 0 as a percentage of total loans on an annualized basis. Nonperforming loans are less than 0.23 percent of the loan book. The maturity wall on investor CRE continues to be modest with $119,000,000 $344,000,000 Set to mature in 2023 2024 respectively at an average rate of 5.72%. Speaker 300:04:51With that, I'll turn the call over to Pat to review margin, expenses and outlook. Speaker 400:04:57Thanks, Joe. Net interest income and margin were $92,000,000 3.02 percent respectively, Reflecting higher funding costs and to a lesser extent the impact of excess liquidity compared to the prior quarter. Funding costs reflected cycle to date deposit betas of 29% as Chris mentioned and we're seeing some stabilization in our cost of deposits at period end. Additionally, with rates expected to be higher for longer, we did term out a portion of our FHLB borrowings. While we believe our 3rd quarter margin may stabilize, we could We'll see further modest compression in Q4 as time deposits rollover, but expect the impact to be much lower than in the past two quarters. Speaker 400:05:42We continued to maintain excess cash during the Q2 due to the stressed liquidity environment combined with continuing uncertainties around monetary policy. As those risks ease and the banking sector continues to stabilize, we expect to normalize cash levels, which We'll have a modest but positive impact on net interest margins and capital ratios in the 3rd quarter. Speaker 500:06:05Core non interest Speaker 400:06:06expense Increased to just under $63,000,000 compared to the prior quarter. This increase includes $1,000,000 of non recurring charges related to Corporate real estate and recruiting expenses. Excluding these charges, core non interest expense is right in line with the prior quarter. Our effective tax rate for the quarter of 24% remains in line with prior periods and our guidance, and we expect to remain in this range going forward. Speaker 200:06:35During last quarter's earnings call, we Speaker 400:06:36briefly introduced the bank wide project aimed at evaluating internal processes relative to benchmarks and While some of these initiatives will require additional costs, which will be self funded by the project, We believe quarterly operating expenses will decline to the $58,000,000 to $59,000,000 range by the Q4 of this year. This does not include the potential one time cost of the proposed FDIC special assessment, which has not been finalized, but it's expected to be Approximately $3,000,000 based on the initial proposed guidance. We're hopeful it could be lower, but worst case scenario, we think it's approximately $3,000,000 on a one We continue to work through additional opportunities to further improve operating leverage both on expenses and revenues as we move into 2024. And finally, we expect capital levels to remain strong through the remainder of the year And our CET1 ratio to remain above 10% and grow modestly with earnings over the course of the second half. At this point, we'll begin the Q and A portion of the call. Operator00:08:05Thank you. We have our first question comes from Daniel Tamayo from Raymond James. Daniel, your line is now open. Speaker 600:08:29Hey, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 200:08:32Good morning, Daniel. Speaker 600:08:35Yes, good morning. First, I guess for Pat on the margin, on the excess liquidity in particular, what was the impact in the second quarter? And then I think you said that, but just to confirm, that will fully be Kind of backed out in the Q3, is that right? Speaker 400:08:56That's right. Yes. It had a single digit basis Point impact on the quarterly margin. We're maintaining levels that are probably 8 or 9 times the cash that we normally Wood's kind of pre bank failures through February. We've already started to reduce that And expect that to get back to normal operating levels at some point during the quarter. Speaker 400:09:24We're going to wait and see how earnings season goes. But We expect that to be, call it, a 2 or 3 basis point improvement in and of itself To the overall margin trajectory. Speaker 600:09:40Okay. So As we think about the relatively stable guidance for the margin in the 3rd quarter, You've got the offset from liquidity, as you mentioned. And but if you're still kind of expecting further compression in the 4th quarter, What's the ex liquidity compression that we should be thinking about in the 3rd quarter? I'm just trying to reconcile this Speaker 400:10:11Ex liquidity compression, I would say maybe 2 Speaker 200:10:14or 3 basis points lower. Speaker 400:10:17So, look, we've got internal debates about whether we're going to be plusminus3% margin that we printed this quarter For each of the next two quarters. And frankly, I never like talking about forward expectations of margin. But right now, With the unpredictability of deposits and around loan growth being as stable Flat as it is, loan demand being as low as it is. It really kind of makes it an exercise in trying to carve out Decimal points rather than broad brush trends. So think stable for the second half of the year, But don't get angry if we're 5 basis points, plus or minus, higher or lower. Speaker 600:11:06I got it. I will not. And that range contemplates what in terms of non interest bearing concentration from 18%, you're right. Speaker 400:11:18Pretty stable. We have not seen a lot of movement in that mix since, I guess, COVID hit. I think we were low 20s pre COVID, which was definitely Reflective of some excess liquidity for customers, surge deposits, whatever you want to call them. And that has slowly Moved down over the last 3 years, a little bit of an acceleration in that runoff over the last 6 months, But it's gotten it's stabilized pretty nicely. And look, that's reflective of the very granular nature Of our deposit base, we have lots and lots of low balance accounts that are operating accounts. Speaker 400:12:01You saw an investor presentation slide for us That flagged that our deposit base turns over approximately 10 times a year. So people are actually spending the money every day, every month and So these are not accounts that chase rate. So we're hopeful that that will remain stable and 18% will be how We finished the year. I would love for it to be higher. It's just an incredibly tough environment for non interest bearing deposit growth. Speaker 600:12:35Okay. I appreciate that color. And then I guess one more kind of high level question for Chris. On the loan growth side, you've obviously tightened the reins significantly this year given the environment. Just curious When it becomes a better environment for growth, how quickly you're able to ramp that back up? Speaker 600:12:58Have you Had to reduce the number of lenders at all? Or would you anticipate having to hire more people? Just curious how that process would work. Speaker 200:13:07Yes, we could ramp up pretty quickly. We have made some staff reductions, but not among the folks that have the strongest Client relationships, obviously. So, I think we would be able to turn very quickly. Part of the way we look at the world now is We're building a little bit of excess capital, and we'll just kind of lean into that when the time is right. But I think we could turn as soon as the market turns. Speaker 200:13:29And we're watching it. Maybe that's late this year, maybe it's deeper into 2024, but when that time comes, we'll be ready. Speaker 700:13:39Okay. Speaker 100:13:39Daniel, Joe, Speaker 300:13:40I'd ask one more thing. We've added We've hired 7 new C and I bankers already this year and 5 new residential lenders. So we're not standing pat. We're planning for the future at the same Speaker 600:13:57All right, great. That's helpful. Thank you, guys. Operator00:14:02Thank you, Daniel. Our next question comes from David Bishop from Hoth Group. David, your line is now open. Speaker 800:14:12Yes. Good morning, gentlemen. Speaker 200:14:14Good morning, Dave. Good morning, Dave. Speaker 800:14:17Hey, Pat, just circling back to Daniel's question just in terms of the excess liquidity. Just from our edification purposes, how is that measured? Is that sort of the level of cash and securities percent of assets? Curious how should we think of that sort of normalizing? Is that cash coming down, also use or is that investment securities coming down as well or a combination of those? Speaker 400:14:40Right. That's purely on balance sheet liquidity. It's not securities driven. So we typically will keep expected cash flows that we need For a period of days, but not weeks on hand, generally less than $100,000,000 We have ramped that up to I think it peaked out at nearly $600,000,000 early on kind of in the liquidity Stress period, that's dropped down to about $450,000,000 and that will continue to come down. It's obviously a focus point for regulators and for all banks, not just for us. Speaker 400:15:27And so we've actually kind of tightened that up a little bit and are looking to reduce that gradually. We don't want to be in a big hurry to do it. And I guess the benefit of the environment rate environment that we're in is we leave that money parked at our Federal Reserve account And are getting pretty competitive rates on an overnight basis. So the earnings hit is not Nearly as significant as it would have been back in the days of kind of a 25 basis point effective Fed funds rate. Speaker 800:16:02Got it. And then appreciate the continued disclosures on the maturation of The retail CDs, the broker CDs, just curious if you have the average rate bifurcated between those two classes That could be priced upon maturation or lower. Speaker 400:16:23So The brokered CDs have an average rate of about 4.5%. The CDs are primarily retail, And we've put the majority of those on the books this year and they have a weighted average rate a little closer to 5. I think our current best offer rate is at 5.15. Speaker 200:16:51But again, it's Speaker 400:16:52promotional, not a rack rate. Speaker 100:16:54Yes. Speaker 800:16:56Promotional being new money? Speaker 300:16:58New Money? Correct. Speaker 700:17:01Got it. Got it. And then Joe, maybe circling Speaker 800:17:04the credit, the supply in terms The maturation of Waterfall and CRE and that's 90% of the population, debt service over one time. Does that still hold true in terms The assumptions you had, as those last quarter, we really hadn't factored in market rates, the rental rates rising into that calculation. Speaker 300:17:25Yes, it still does. And we're pretty happy about that as you would expect. But it's evident really to a certain extent David, if you look at the weighted average rate of the actual underlying loans at the moment, right? So the stuff that's maturing has got a weighted average rate of 5.70. So The market rate, I'll use the word stress or shock that we're putting on these loans as they get closer to maturity is not significantly different than when the loans were booked. Speaker 300:17:51And in many instances, the And in many instances, the underlying rents, especially in the multifamily space, are markedly higher. Speaker 800:18:04Got it. And then one final question. I know it's sort of early in the season, but Any early read into the tourism season and the business health in terms of the Jersey Shore tourism, what you're hearing from your customers? Speaker 700:18:19Yes. I mean, Speaker 200:18:20I can tell you we're hearing really positive things. So the early on indicators of occupancy I've been quite strong, so people kind of renting houses and hotel rooms and all that. And then if you think the next question is, will they spend the money when they're in town? And so far, we're hearing they are. So it's all positive. Speaker 800:18:44Good to hear. Operator00:18:55Thank you. Our next question comes from Matthew Breese from Stephens Inc. Matthew, your line is now open. Speaker 900:19:05Hi, good morning. Speaker 200:19:06Good morning, Matt. Speaker 900:19:10Chris or Pat, I was just curious, how did the margin progress through the quarter? And perhaps, can you give us The month of June NIM or the end of June NIM, just to give us some sense for how things kind of progressed through the quarter? Speaker 200:19:24Well, I'd tell you, Matt, that it was certainly more acute in the beginning of the quarter. So for the month of April, for example, we were carrying forward all the rate changes We made in response to the events in late March. So it was much more acute in April May. June was flatter, but not flat. So just a slight compression in June. Speaker 200:19:45So it was certainly front ended. And we think we've seen a lot of signs of stabilization as We were talking earlier about the non interest bearing accounts, but those don't seem to be changing in any great degree. And although we are pricing up when CDs renew, We also have loans maturing and repricing. So they're not exactly in equilibrium, but they're not far off that. I don't know, Pat, if you have any numbers, feel free to share them. Speaker 200:20:11But I don't think we're managing that margin on a monthly basis. Speaker 400:20:15Yes. So if you look at the quarters being 30 basis points of compression, I'd say 3 quarters of that came in April and the rest of it was spread not necessarily evenly across The last 2 months of the quarter. And one important thing to note, and Joe referred to it in his prepared remarks a little bit, we did programmatically reprice A sector of our commercial account, primarily the municipals, as of It's the 1st week of April. And so that had a pretty dramatic impact immediately because it's 20% of our deposit base. And then after that, as Chris said, it's really just kind of the rolling effect of things that are maturing and rolling over New promotional money that's coming in largely offset by loans that are rolling. Speaker 400:21:13And I would say that we expect that to continue. And you didn't ask the question, but I'll answer it anyway. I think The impact of Fed rate hikes on all of that is not expected to be material for the same dynamic The assets and liabilities are really kind of on the similar cycle of repricing. So if we do get another rate hike in September, I wouldn't expect that to have more than a basis point or 2 impact on margin well under $1,000,000 Speaker 900:21:53Okay, great. I appreciate all that color. In the presentation, you noted that it's more likely that we see the expense benefits from the cost cutting plan in early 2024 versus Late 2023 before. I was curious, has the amount changed? I believe in the mid June presentation, it was outlined that it could be a 5% 10% decline. Speaker 900:22:18Is the amount of the decline still intact? And when do you expect it to be kind of fully baked? Speaker 400:22:24Sure. It is intact and we hedged a little bit with our outlook and took the low end of the range And what we have line of sight on in the short term, which is absolutely a reduction of about 5% as we migrate through the 3rd quarter, Which results in the decline of $3,000,000 to $4,000,000 of quarterly expense run rate, Which we expect to print in the Q4. So exactly 6 months from now we'll be having the call and Hopefully talking about a $58,000,000 or $59,000,000 expense quarter. The other 5%, so the 5% to 10% range, We still feel very good about that. The timing is a little bit, broader and harder to pinpoint and it's also the result A fairly large number of small initiatives that add up and so I think those will kind of bleed in pretty steadily Throughout the first and second quarter, I wouldn't rule out the possibility of a little bit stretching into the 3rd quarter, but the first half of next year, We do think that we'll be able to further reduce. Speaker 400:23:34Now I will caveat that against it's a little early for us to think about what kind of inflationary increases we may have to incur for staff costs. That will address as we get closer to year Right now, we don't envision it being at all material. Got it. Speaker 900:23:54Okay. Thank you for that. The last 2 for me just really around credit. The first one is, at this point, the footprint and the geographies you touch, Pretty diverse markets across the Northeast and Mid Atlantic. As you think about the commercial real estate market across those markets, Are there any areas where the valuation movements have been more pronounced? Speaker 900:24:15And if you could provide some color maybe on what categories you're seeing there? Speaker 200:24:21Sure. Well, a couple of things, Matt. First, I would say that not surprisingly, the Northeast tends to be a lot more stable in valuations than in other parts of the That's good and bad. We don't tend to go up as much and we don't tend to fall as much. So we're not seeing anything across the footprint that would give us any concern at all. Speaker 200:24:39And all the indications out of the Bone portfolio are that there's none of those classes in the Northeast are really under pressure. That said, they're very different markets as you point out. Probably the strongest overall market, I would say, would be the markets in New Jersey and Boston for two reasons. New Jersey continues Benefit from some of the out migration from the cities, Jersey Shore is doing well and there has been a lack of certain properties in New Jersey. So the inventory has Even around stuff like suburban office, we're seeing the same kind of metrics up in Boston, a very strong market kind of across the board, all asset Obviously, in New York, you would be looking at office, although we don't have much there. Speaker 200:25:24And in Philadelphia, I think it's a little bit more spotty. But I'd ask Joe to maybe make some comments about some of those markets and areas where you're just being asked for questions. Speaker 300:25:35I think we've been pretty clear about our concerns about Central Business District loans. We don't have many. I think that number is somewhere around $60,000,000 if you carve out the medical office and some lab space in Boston. But I think Chris pretty much on point. The interesting thing and we've seen it a lot. Speaker 300:25:56The vacancy Numbers are ridiculously near all time lows in New York relative to multifamily. So people are in the city. So The other asset classes that you might be concerned about outside of office, whether it be some retail or other areas, really haven't been adversely affected. I think the downtown Philadelphia market is a little softer than the vast majority of stuff we have is performing admirably. I think the biggest challenge and the thing I think the industry is all questioning is when is there any kind of normalization? Speaker 300:26:31Asset quality has been so good for everyone with the exception of what you'd refer to as these one off events which have been In the line of non recurrence when you hear other folks, we're not even close to what you consider a normalized environment. So With the rate increases, you do expect that there may be some stress down the road, but nobody's seeing it yet. We definitely aren't. Speaker 900:26:57Right. And the follow-up and Speaker 1000:26:59along those Speaker 900:27:00lines earlier, in June, we had inter agency guidance from the Fed, the FDIC, the OCC Outlining that the banks can work with CRE customers, provide combinations, I was curious What do you think that all looks like? What are the tools at your disposal? And how does it ultimately end up being disclosed? Speaker 200:27:23Look, I think that's just more of a reminder than anything, Matt. The tools that we would have used in normal times, Yes. We use them, for example, during when Hurricane Sandy hit our market to kind of restructure loans and work with borrowers, put people on forbearance. We all used them, the whole industry used them during COVID. I don't think we're talking anything like that, but I think it's just a reminder that And we have the new disclosure rules. Speaker 200:27:55So TDRs are gone. But I think if you've got the credit that is going to be stressed and you're restructuring, You're going to be disclosing that. So that said, one of the interesting things we've seen is our credits that have rolled thus far this year Have not required any of that. So we're seeing folks maybe having a little their cash flows may support a little lower debt service, But we're not seeing loans rolling that are rolling into stress situations, generally speaking. Speaker 900:28:27And last one for me, just a follow-up. Are you seeing willingness from borrowers to provide a cash in refund if that's in fact necessary to support LTVs? Speaker 300:28:38Yes. In a very limited basis so far, Matt, we've asked a few borrowers to right size a loan and they've done it Without reservation, which is an attribute, I think there are the sophisticated borrowers that we tend to deal with are also Very cognizant of the fact that they have a relationship with the bank in this environment looking for other outside new relationships may not be the best So even if it's something that they may not want to do day 1, they understand that we're operating from a perspective of good faith We want to continue those relationships. So we've not had any of those adverse impacts so far. Speaker 900:29:19Great. I appreciate taking all my questions. Thank you. Speaker 700:29:22Thanks, Matt. Operator00:29:28Thank When preparing for your questions, please ensure that your phone is unmuted locally. With our next question comes from Christopher Marinette from Jenny Montgomery Scott. Christopher, your line is now open. Speaker 1000:29:51Thanks very much. Good morning. Just want to follow-up on Matt's Question, can you give us an update on sort of how the regulators are looking at commercial real estate concentration in terms of these old tests From years years ago, has anything really changed in your mind? Speaker 200:30:07I don't know that anything has changed, Chris. I think there's just a reminder that the same discipline they would have In particular, when things change and markets are questionable like this, They're going to be looking to make sure you're proactively stress testing your portfolio, that you're looking at what has changed. The most important thing Is being able to demonstrate that you have a handle on your risk positions, whatever those are. And look, sometimes your risk position will shift a little bit in one direction or another. I think the discussion of the maturity wall is one that there would be rather high regulatory expectations around banks having done their homework, Looking at individual loans, making sure they know which ones are higher risk early enough so that you can see where your portfolio might be going And this is in the existing guidance, but the way that you fund the loans is important. Speaker 200:31:03So liquidity It does relate to risks like investor CRE risk because they're going to look to make sure that liquidity wouldn't cause an issue. And ultimately, you fold into capital plans. So we were talking earlier about loans rolling in 2023 2024, and we're now actively looking at the loans rolling in 2025. That if you know you might have stress a year or 2 out that you're taking the right courses of action to put the bank So I don't think the expectations are new, but the focus level will certainly be new, meaning that you're going to get a lot more questions. In some cases, you may have to do more reporting. Speaker 200:31:41The reporting intervals may change. So, I do know in some cases, there are certain You may have to report quarterly or monthly that you wouldn't have reported before, but it strikes me that's more of a Sentinel or monitoring process, Not a change in expectations. We're just expecting you to do exactly what the guidance says. Speaker 1000:32:03Great, Chris. That's helpful. And I guess when you stress test these CRE loans, it's not just about going up on interest rate. It is more liquidity and other factors as you mentioned. Speaker 200:32:12Yes. When you think about it, they're looking at if we're, for example, relying upon the guarantor, they're They're going to want to see that we've done our homework around the guarantor. The guarantor's position hasn't changed. We're verifying liquidity in that case. They're going to want to make sure that as we're rolling any loans over that we're stressing the cash flows. Speaker 200:32:34And look, one of the challenges we're all going to have is that cap rates are a little hard to figure out right now. I think everybody feels like they should have increased given the environment, But there are not a lot of transactions in some markets, so you don't have a rich history of cap rates you can pull into appraisals. So they're going to look Speaker 1000:32:59Great. And my follow-up just has to do with the disclosure you made in the slides about the sort of long term sort of customer relationships. I think 8 years was one of the numbers that was in the slide. As we hopefully are sooner to the end on kind of resetting deposit rates, what's the best way to sort of think through that relationship time as we You look at kind of valuing your deposit base going forward given the funding advantage that you have. Speaker 200:33:24Yes. I think one of the keys to our deposit base And it was substantially built through acquisition, is we were very thoughtful in the companies we acquired, Each of which had a very long history of having served their communities. And several of the banks that we acquired were around for more than 100 years. So when we went in, in due diligence, we were particularly impressed by these multi generational relationships with that institution. We have held The vast majority of those relationships and that kind of folds over into the quality of our deposit base. Speaker 200:33:58Second thing we think about is we have a little bit of a split deposit base. We do have deposits in the metro markets. So we have deposits in New York and Philadelphia and in the more densely populated parts of New Jersey. But we have a lot of deposits in areas in New Jersey that I would characterize as rural, and there's a little different flavor to those markets as well. So I think when you see the longevity of our deposit base, it reflects the fact that we were very thoughtful in which deposits we chose To acquire that we kept those relationships intact and that our service levels have allowed our customers to value what Pat was referring to, I mean, most of these accounts turn over all their dollars up to 10 times a year. Speaker 200:34:41We're doing a heck of a lot of ACH and Wire and Zelle and Venmo and Visa Debit and that's what they're with us for and I think that's what's helped produce the beta. Speaker 1000:34:54Great, Chris. Thanks for taking all of our questions this morning. Speaker 200:34:57All right. Thanks, Chris. Operator00:35:01Thank you, Chris. Our next question comes from Manuel Lab, D. A. Davidson. Manuel, your line is now open. Speaker 500:35:13Hey, good morning. Speaker 200:35:14Good morning. Speaker 500:35:17I understand that liquidity deployment benefit to potential liquidity deployment benefit to NIM. In the slide deck, you talk about that it could potentially offer upside to loan growth. Is that kind of contemplated in the low single digit guide and just kind of towards the high end of the range? Or It's like demand not justifying that type of benefit. Any clarification would be great. Speaker 300:35:49So I'll start and say that it's evident that demand has slowed a bit on both sides, right. So I think the This is C and I borrower has seen borrowing costs double those that run profitable companies that just I'd say they wouldn't cancel activity. I think they're delaying some So that's impacting loan demand at C and I. Speaker 200:36:11On the CRE side Speaker 300:36:12of the house, I think valuations are the most important thing. If If you're a buyer, you're wanting to really be fully vetted on, is this the bottom, is this an opportunity to buy. If you're a seller, you're still trying to adjust to what may be And we're normal with higher rates. So the good news for us is that the loans that we are doing, we're doing at yields that have got a markedly We're happy with that. So that's a good news. Speaker 300:36:37I don't know if we'd like the actual volume Today on a quarterly basis, I think we'd like it to be higher, but you just do the good loans that you can do and put them in perspective. Speaker 400:36:50So I'll take the supply side answer. Joe just gave you the demand side answer. If you think about How our liquidity has moved over the course of this year, we brought our loan to deposit ratio down pretty meaningfully from 4th quarter heights and we like where we are. We have come through Arguably one of the most rapid and severe shocks to the banking system that any of us have seen Without seeing for the most part any behavioral change in our deposit base And so we're at a point where we're not just going to keep driving our liquidity higher for the sake of printing a lower loan deposit ratio if We don't see a need to. We're not going to change our risk appetite and go out and try and find loans, but We think that we're very well positioned to kick start things and resume higher Speaker 500:38:04In thinking about the right type of demand, I noticed your origination yields were pretty close to what you have in pipeline. Can you comment on if that's the pipeline yields have improved so far this month? Is that a question of mix? I would have liked pipeline yields to be a little bit higher. Speaker 300:38:24Look, you always want pipeline yields To be a little higher, I'm happy with how fast origination yields have come up. I think there's always that dichotomy between customer relationship On one end of it and of course on the other end of it the fact that we're funding costs have gone up substantially. But if you look at Even just 6 months ago, we were talking about origination yields in the low 6s and now you're in the pushing the higher 7s. I will tell you that where we see a lot of activity in the construction book for us, those yields are 9% plus. So I think as we bleed through the remainder as we have bled through the remainder of stuff that was in the pipe, Older stuff that was in the pipe that may have had treasury spreads below where we're quoting today, you'll see those yields continue to rise. Speaker 500:39:23Is there any color on kind of the construction line utilization? We've been talking about that for a couple of quarters. I know it's not in the pipeline per se. Like how much has been added from that From what was available, how much is still to come? Speaker 300:39:41Yes, I don't have the exact on what's still to come, but I would tell you from utilization It's a little bit better than C and I. C and I borrowers tend to utilize about 40% of their availability, on average 40%, 42% of their availability. The construction book for us is typically pushing 50% of availability. And of course, some of that has to do with the fact Those that are at the end of projects tend to be converting to perm, those that are construction in multi or any other kind of stuff and the for sale stuff tends to as they Finish, they're paying you off because they're selling properties. So on average exposures maybe 50%, a little over 50%. Speaker 200:40:23Okay. One of the aspects to that construction book is that properties are moving very quickly. So it's not surprising at the rates The construction loans cost, folks are saying, look, I want to finish this project as quickly as possible because ironically, the perm rate, right, It's a lot lower than the construction rate. So there is a rush to get things done. And this lack of inventory throughout our markets in the Northeast Means that if you can finish it, whether it's for sale or for rent, you can get it stabilized. Speaker 200:40:56So we have seen the duration come And you know what, from a credit perspective, I'm not upset about that. I'd love to see projects kind of finish early, get sold out faster than you think, but It does have a little bit of an impact on you. Speaker 500:41:12I appreciate that. And my last question is on Just going to touch on the resi mortgage trends and if there's any other fee initiatives that Can be started this year. I know those are more as part of the full kind of operating leverage strategy, but just if you can update any of the Speaker 1100:41:33The Speaker 500:41:33side of that plan, especially in light of the newer resi mortgage trends? Speaker 300:41:41Look, I think we have a, as we've mentioned, an opportunity to try to drive activity. We want to Originate the sale as best as we can. That's really driven by the availability of inventory, Especially in our marketplace, I mean, the lack of inventory in the residential space is really in a good news perspective, it's propped up valuations. In a bad news Perspective, those folks have 3.5% more each or at least for the time being aren't actively looking to sell them and turn that into something else. I do think that as we go through our initiatives and the way we run our business, the opportunity for us to drive additional fee revenue from treasury management, We have a significant amount of our clients in the corporate banks that are treasury clients, but we're trying to deepen those relationships. Speaker 300:42:331 One of the opportunities we have now when loan demand is a little bit lower is to take our commercial bankers and treasury management consultants and be out, Have conversations with clients about how we can best help them monetize and maximize their cash and use of cash. And that if they choose to use our treasury products will help generate fee income for us. And I think we'll start to see more and more of that as we deepen that wallet share as Operator00:43:10Thank you. Our next question comes from Frank Schiraldi from Piper Sandler. Frank, your line is now open. Speaker 700:43:20Good morning. Speaker 200:43:21Good morning, Frank. Hi, Frank. Just on Speaker 700:43:25the Just talking about loan growth, it seems like the pullback in growth is just, I don't know, just as much as a demand issue as it is Speaker 100:43:35Funding. Speaker 700:43:35But Pat, you mentioned the loan deposit ratio under 100% and being comfortable there. Is that kind of do you expect to see that do you expect that to be a governor though from here? Is it to remain below 100% On that ratio? Speaker 200:43:53Yes, I think it's Speaker 400:43:57Sorry, go ahead, Chris. Speaker 200:43:59Well, Frank, what I'd say is that 100 It has always been an area where we're comfortable, where we're fully lent. So we don't get all hung up on whether it's 101 or 99. But given the events of this year, we thought better to favor being under 100%. So we'll watch it as this liquidity situation eases. We might occasionally get up to 100% or show like a 101 quarter, but we've never been a company that wanted to drive that much above 100 So we're just going to be a little bit on our conservative end. Speaker 200:44:33We haven't really changed our overall outlook. Speaker 700:44:38Okay. And then given you mentioned you do have the ability to ramp up loan growth quickly if it makes sense. Is that more likely to come on the C and I side and therefore reducing exposure And what do you think kind of what would you say the main driver could be to see growth ramp back up again to sort of more normalized level? Is it as simple as having comfort that the Fed is done raising rates? Do you think that brings a lot more demand back into the system? Speaker 700:45:11Or Kind of what are your thoughts on levered to see loan growth ramp up for last year? Speaker 200:45:20And maybe Joe, why don't you walk through Speaker 300:45:23Yes. Frank, I would tell you the absolute understanding if the Fed is finished raising, I'm not I'm worried about when and if they lower. If the corporate client feels that Certainty and the economic conditions sort of they see it's a little bit more clarity. I think Chris made the same comment about deposits, Loans and deposits, if you're comfortable with your deposit franchise and its stability, Yes, whether it's 99 loan to deposit, 1 or 2 loan to deposit, I don't think it matters. It's more around what your comfort factor is there. Speaker 300:46:02I think the same with the corporate Corporate borrowers are telling us at least they're not shelving projects, they're just putting stuff on hold for the time being. They want to see where things shake out. And it's not all rate driven, which I think is fascinating. I haven't had a lot of corporate borrowers tell me that they're adversely Affected solely on rates. I think a lot of our corporate borrowers have said, look, we knew rates were too low for too long. Speaker 300:46:26We benefited by that. It's not intimidating bias. They're looking at it from the other end, which is if they do these projects, what's the end game? Can they see that result in revenue? So I do think that we'll see increased borrowings in the C and I space if we can get some certainty. Speaker 300:46:45I also think we have the opportunity to see more in the residential construction space. I think there's Recently some articles about new home builders starting to benefit a bit just because there's a lack of inventory. I also think there's an opportunity for them to do more if they get more clarity around rates Because they're really driven typically off the 10 year treasury if you get a little bit more or a little bit less volatility. Even in mortgage rates end up in the High fives, 06s, I think if that rate is stable, I think we'll see more activity. Speaker 700:47:27Great. That's great color. Thanks, Joe. And then, Pat, since you mentioned you don't like talking about forward curve for the NIM, I figured I'd About 2024. If we get the 1 or 2 rate hikes from the Fed, You talked about your kind of expectations through the end of the year. Speaker 700:47:50I mean, I would imagine that you do have an inflection point then Early in 2024. And if we get sort of a rate environment stays where it is, just kind Curious where you think a more normalized NIM could be as that loan book continues to reprice higher? Speaker 400:48:10Yes. It's impossible to know, so thank you very much for framing it that way. I actually would expect that margin behaviors are going to be as much influenced by deposit stability and deposit trends As they are by Fed rate hikes. The forward curve is already telling us where the Street thinks rates are going to go and it's going to be lower. We have a pretty good operating history of operating somewhere between 3% and 3.5% for margin. Speaker 400:48:48So I wouldn't be surprised if we can revert back to something in that range, kind of midpoint of that range. But the timing of that is just really hard to say how fast that could happen and how much of it's going to be dependent on changes in rate Expectations versus deposit behaviors. We are leveraged and so we do have to go out and fund incrementally more than we did back when we had $2,000,000,000 $3,000,000,000 of Speaker 700:49:28I appreciate that color. I know it's obviously A tough question, but lastly, just on the repurchase front, I would imagine it seems like stock repurchases are kind of at At the lower end of priorities, and is that kind of just the way to think about it at least through the near term here? Speaker 200:49:50Yes. I think that's the right way to think about it, Frank. We're not we're going to watch how the market unfolds before we would even consider that. We have An opportunity to deploy that capital over time in organic growth and other things. So it's not on our radar right now. Speaker 200:50:05Obviously, we'll watch things As the market unfolds in the next couple of quarters. Speaker 700:50:11Great. All right. Thanks, guys. Operator00:50:17Thank you, Frank. We have our next question comes from Michael Pareto from KWB. Michael, your line is now open. Speaker 1100:50:28KWB, I like that. That's good. Good morning, guys. How are you? Speaker 200:50:31Good morning, Mike. How are you? Good. Speaker 1100:50:35Just two quick ones. Obviously, you guys covered a lot, so appreciate all the color. To backtrack to, I think, 2 or 3 questions ago about the fees. Pat, is this fair to think, I know you guys didn't provide guidance on this specifically, but The first half of this year, is this kind of theoretically a low point on fees for you guys with the mortgage business possibly picking up a little on the gain on sale side and then hopefully maybe And swap income coming back if rates stabilize? Speaker 400:51:02Yes. I think that's a very fair assumption. So everything was depressed or suppressed. Speaker 1100:51:10Got it. And then just secondly, to kind of pull together a few of your answers to other questions here. I mean, There's obviously a few moving variables to this and the NIM is probably the largest one. But are you guys willing to kind of provide Any updated context around you guys are making these expense initiatives, and if the NIM does If we forget about the when for a second, but if the NIM does eventually come back into that range, Pat, that you were speaking to, what the kind of Efficiency ratio of the bank might look like or what you guys think you could reach or aspire to. I mean, I know before all of this, there was talk of getting into the low 50s. Speaker 1100:51:49Is that still kind of how you guys are managing the bank assuming normalized margins over a period of time? Or any updated context there would be great. Speaker 200:51:57Mike, it's obviously a hard question to answer given we don't know when things might change. But I would say this, we're trying to improve operating leverage in all environments. So if the NIM came back to the more historical 3.25% to 3.5% rate, we would expect to be Get the efficiency ratio down to 50 or even possibly below 50. Speaker 1100:52:21Perfect. Speaker 200:52:22Well, thank you guys. Speaker 400:52:23Maybe think about it a little more Mike, maybe think about it a little more in terms of overhead ratio, Kind of take the revenue volatility and the impact of NIM and rate changes out of the equation. So we're in the 1.8% range as a percentage of assets, total expenses Speaker 700:52:46as a Speaker 400:52:46percentage of assets. And we think that we can bring continue to bring that down further, maybe into the low 17s And keep working on it. Speaker 1100:53:00Yes. No, that's helpful perspective as well, and it makes sense. Appreciate it, guys. Thanks for all the color this morning. Speaker 100:53:08Thanks, Mike. Speaker 400:53:11Thank you, Mike. Operator00:53:11Thank you, and apologies, Michael. We have our last question comes from Manuel Knabos from D. A. Davidson. Manuel, your line is now open. Speaker 500:53:24Hey, I jumped back on and some of my questions have been answered. But I do have Speaker 400:53:29a smaller question. What were the In Speaker 500:53:32terms of the term out of FHLB, can you give any details on that? And just kind of how you're thinking about wholesale borrowings and Broker deposits across the back half of the year. Speaker 400:53:45Sure. So we termed out about 50% of our FHLB borrowings across a range of 2, 3 and 4 year maturities, And we did it early in the year, earlier in the year. So those will be maturing starting late 24, then 25, 26. Interestingly, the rate differential between overnight 2, 3 and 4 was only like 15 basis points. So if you take the higher for longer assumption, we kind of locked in All of that, just below 5%. Speaker 400:54:32We're comfortable we'll need that level of wholesale borrowing for at least the next couple of years. Okay. That's helpful. Speaker 500:54:44Any thoughts on the back half of the year or using broker deposits, thinking about seasonality? Speaker 400:54:52I think our goals are going to be through a combination of organic growth initiatives that we continue to work on And other channels of non brokered deposit, whether it's institutional or other types, to Be able to chip away at the brokered CD levels that we have today, which is about 1,000,000,000 And over time get that back down to 0, which is where we were the Q1 of last year And generally where we operate. So think of this as a high watermark for brokered CDs And we'll take those off as they roll and as other funding avenues continue to improve. Speaker 500:55:43Thank you. Appreciate that. Operator00:55:48Thank Speaker 200:55:49you. Operator00:55:50We have no further questions on the line. I will now hand back to Christopher for closing remarks. Speaker 600:55:57All right. Speaker 200:55:57Thank you. We appreciate your time today and your support of OceanFirst Financial Corp, and we look forward to speaking with you after our Q3 results are published Operator00:56:12Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's call. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect yourRead morePowered by Key Takeaways OceanFirst reported GAAP diluted EPS of $0.45 for Q2 and net interest income of $92.1 million, up 1.4% year-over-year despite elevated funding costs. The deposit base grew to $10.2 billion while managing a 29% deposit beta to protect core relationships, reducing the loan-to-deposit ratio to 99.3%. Credit metrics remained strong with nonperforming loans at 0.17% of assets and net charge-offs effectively zero, reflecting disciplined underwriting. Net interest margin was 3.02%, pressured by excess liquidity and deposit costs, and is expected to stabilize in Q3 with modest Q4 compression; a cost-efficiency program targets reducing quarterly expenses to $58–59 million by year-end. Capital levels strengthened with a tangible book value per share of $17.72 and a CET1 ratio of 10.2%, supporting the 106th consecutive quarterly dividend of $0.20 per share, while share repurchases were paused in Q2. A.I. generated. May contain errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallOceanFirst Financial Q2 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) OceanFirst Financial Earnings HeadlinesOceanFirst Financial 2025 Annual Meeting OutcomesMay 21 at 4:53 PM | tipranks.comOceanFirst adds 36 commercial bankers in bid to boost profitsMay 7, 2025 | bizjournals.comJuly 2025 Rule Change to Impact Retirement InvestorsThere's a massive change from a new rule going into effect this July. And it's one the Big Banks are already using to their advantage… It allows them to treat this new asset like actual cash.May 22, 2025 | Premier Gold Co (Ad)OceanFirst adds 36 commercial bankers in bid to boost profitsMay 7, 2025 | bizjournals.comOceanFirst Financial: 5% Yield, But We Are Not BuyersApril 28, 2025 | seekingalpha.comOceanFirst Financial (NASDAQ:OCFC) Is Paying Out A Dividend Of $0.20April 28, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comSee More OceanFirst Financial Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like OceanFirst Financial? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on OceanFirst Financial and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About OceanFirst FinancialOceanFirst Financial (NASDAQ:OCFC) operates as the bank holding company for OceanFirst Bank N.A. that provides community banking services to retail and commercial customers. It accepts money market accounts, savings accounts, interest-bearing checking accounts, non-interest-bearing accounts, and time deposits, that includes brokered deposits to retail, government, and business customers. The company also offers commercial real estate, multi-family, land loans, construction, and commercial and industrial loans; fixed-rate and adjustable-rate mortgage loans that are secured by one-to-four family residences; and consumer loans, such as home equity loans and lines of credit, student loans, overdraft line of credit, loans on savings accounts, and other consumer loans. In addition, it invests in mortgage-backed securities, securities issued by the U.S. Government and agencies, corporate securities, and other investments. Further, the company offers bankcard, trust and asset management services; and bank owned life insurance products. The company was founded in 1902 and is based in Red Bank, New Jersey.View OceanFirst Financial ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Alibaba's Earnings Just Changed Everything for the StockCisco Stock Eyes New Highs in 2025 on AI, Earnings, UpgradesSymbotic Gets Big Earnings Lift: Is the Stock Investable Again?D-Wave Pushes Back on Short Seller Case With Strong EarningsAppLovin Surges on Earnings: What's Next for This Tech Standout?Can Shopify Stock Make a Comeback After an Earnings Sell-Off?Rocket Lab: Earnings Miss But Neutron Momentum Holds Upcoming Earnings PDD (5/27/2025)AutoZone (5/27/2025)Bank of Nova Scotia (5/27/2025)NVIDIA (5/28/2025)Synopsys (5/28/2025)Bank of Montreal (5/28/2025)Salesforce (5/28/2025)Costco Wholesale (5/29/2025)Marvell Technology (5/29/2025)Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (5/29/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the OceanFirst Financial Corporation Second Quarter 2023 Earnings Release. My name is Glenn, and I'll be the operator of today's call. I will now Pass you over to your host, Alfred Guin, Corporate Development and Investor Relations. Alfred, please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:24Thank you, Glenn. Good morning, and welcome to the OceanFirst's Q2 2023 earnings call. I'm Alfred Goon, SVP of Corporate Development and Investor Relations. Before we kick off our call, we'd like to remind everyone that our quarterly earnings release and related earnings supplement can be found on the company website, oceanfirst.com. Our remarks today may contain forward looking statements and may refer to non GAAP financial measures. Speaker 100:00:47All participants should refer to our CC filings, including those found on Forms 8 ks, 10Q, 10 ks for a complete discussion of forward looking statements and any factors that could cause actual results to differ from those statements. Thank you. And now I will turn the call over to Christopher Marr, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Speaker 200:01:08Thank you, Alfred. Good morning, and thank you to all who've been able to join in on our Q2 2023 earnings conference call. This morning, I'm joined by our President, Joe Labelle and our Chief Financial Officer, Pat Barrett. We appreciate your interest in our performance and this opportunity to discuss our results with you. This morning, we will provide brief remarks about the financial and operating performance for the quarter and some color regarding the outlook for our business. Speaker 200:01:35We may refer to the slides filed in connection with the earnings release throughout the call. After our discussion, we look forward to taking your questions. Our financial results for the Q2 included GAAP diluted earnings per share of $0.45 Our earnings reflect net interest income of $92,100,000 which while down from the prior linked quarter Has increased $1,300,000 or 1.4 percent as compared to the prior year. Our second quarter results were impacted by industry pressures on deposit costs, increasing our deposit betas to 29%, which we believe will outperform our peer group over the cycle. Advancing a more competitive pricing strategy has protected our deposit base, which increased to $10,200,000,000 Our balance sheet continues to remain solid with non performing loans and criticized classified assets representing just 17 basis points And 80 basis points of total assets, respectively. Speaker 200:02:36We continue to build capital, ending the period with a tangible book value per share $17.72 and the common equity Tier 1 ratio of 10.2%. Turning to capital management, The Board approved a quarterly cash dividend of $0.20 per common share. This is the company's 106th consecutive quarterly cash dividend It represents a 44% of core earnings. The company did not repurchase any shares in the 2nd quarter. At this point, I'll turn the call over to Joe to provide some more details regarding our progress during the quarter. Speaker 300:03:14Thanks, Chris. Deposit growth for the quarter totaled 165,200,000 We have maintained a thoughtful approach to deposit pricing and have paid particular attention to our valued clients, The last of which were repriced in Q2. We are laser focused on retaining our existing clients while actively attracting new clients in a profitable manner. Slowing loan growth coupled with deposit growth in both Q1 and Q2 has allowed us to reduce the loan to deposit ratio to 99.3%. You will notice a small increase in net gain on sale this quarter as we begin to focus residential originations for sale to the secondary market. Speaker 300:03:59Loan growth in the quarter has been muted as clients are reluctant to incur the increased cost to borrow and demand in Certain asset classes other than residential and multifamily construction has slowed. Regarding asset quality, Delinquencies remain low and we continue to maintain our credit discipline, which has served us well. Net charge offs were effectively 0 as a percentage of total loans on an annualized basis. Nonperforming loans are less than 0.23 percent of the loan book. The maturity wall on investor CRE continues to be modest with $119,000,000 $344,000,000 Set to mature in 2023 2024 respectively at an average rate of 5.72%. Speaker 300:04:51With that, I'll turn the call over to Pat to review margin, expenses and outlook. Speaker 400:04:57Thanks, Joe. Net interest income and margin were $92,000,000 3.02 percent respectively, Reflecting higher funding costs and to a lesser extent the impact of excess liquidity compared to the prior quarter. Funding costs reflected cycle to date deposit betas of 29% as Chris mentioned and we're seeing some stabilization in our cost of deposits at period end. Additionally, with rates expected to be higher for longer, we did term out a portion of our FHLB borrowings. While we believe our 3rd quarter margin may stabilize, we could We'll see further modest compression in Q4 as time deposits rollover, but expect the impact to be much lower than in the past two quarters. Speaker 400:05:42We continued to maintain excess cash during the Q2 due to the stressed liquidity environment combined with continuing uncertainties around monetary policy. As those risks ease and the banking sector continues to stabilize, we expect to normalize cash levels, which We'll have a modest but positive impact on net interest margins and capital ratios in the 3rd quarter. Speaker 500:06:05Core non interest Speaker 400:06:06expense Increased to just under $63,000,000 compared to the prior quarter. This increase includes $1,000,000 of non recurring charges related to Corporate real estate and recruiting expenses. Excluding these charges, core non interest expense is right in line with the prior quarter. Our effective tax rate for the quarter of 24% remains in line with prior periods and our guidance, and we expect to remain in this range going forward. Speaker 200:06:35During last quarter's earnings call, we Speaker 400:06:36briefly introduced the bank wide project aimed at evaluating internal processes relative to benchmarks and While some of these initiatives will require additional costs, which will be self funded by the project, We believe quarterly operating expenses will decline to the $58,000,000 to $59,000,000 range by the Q4 of this year. This does not include the potential one time cost of the proposed FDIC special assessment, which has not been finalized, but it's expected to be Approximately $3,000,000 based on the initial proposed guidance. We're hopeful it could be lower, but worst case scenario, we think it's approximately $3,000,000 on a one We continue to work through additional opportunities to further improve operating leverage both on expenses and revenues as we move into 2024. And finally, we expect capital levels to remain strong through the remainder of the year And our CET1 ratio to remain above 10% and grow modestly with earnings over the course of the second half. At this point, we'll begin the Q and A portion of the call. Operator00:08:05Thank you. We have our first question comes from Daniel Tamayo from Raymond James. Daniel, your line is now open. Speaker 600:08:29Hey, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 200:08:32Good morning, Daniel. Speaker 600:08:35Yes, good morning. First, I guess for Pat on the margin, on the excess liquidity in particular, what was the impact in the second quarter? And then I think you said that, but just to confirm, that will fully be Kind of backed out in the Q3, is that right? Speaker 400:08:56That's right. Yes. It had a single digit basis Point impact on the quarterly margin. We're maintaining levels that are probably 8 or 9 times the cash that we normally Wood's kind of pre bank failures through February. We've already started to reduce that And expect that to get back to normal operating levels at some point during the quarter. Speaker 400:09:24We're going to wait and see how earnings season goes. But We expect that to be, call it, a 2 or 3 basis point improvement in and of itself To the overall margin trajectory. Speaker 600:09:40Okay. So As we think about the relatively stable guidance for the margin in the 3rd quarter, You've got the offset from liquidity, as you mentioned. And but if you're still kind of expecting further compression in the 4th quarter, What's the ex liquidity compression that we should be thinking about in the 3rd quarter? I'm just trying to reconcile this Speaker 400:10:11Ex liquidity compression, I would say maybe 2 Speaker 200:10:14or 3 basis points lower. Speaker 400:10:17So, look, we've got internal debates about whether we're going to be plusminus3% margin that we printed this quarter For each of the next two quarters. And frankly, I never like talking about forward expectations of margin. But right now, With the unpredictability of deposits and around loan growth being as stable Flat as it is, loan demand being as low as it is. It really kind of makes it an exercise in trying to carve out Decimal points rather than broad brush trends. So think stable for the second half of the year, But don't get angry if we're 5 basis points, plus or minus, higher or lower. Speaker 600:11:06I got it. I will not. And that range contemplates what in terms of non interest bearing concentration from 18%, you're right. Speaker 400:11:18Pretty stable. We have not seen a lot of movement in that mix since, I guess, COVID hit. I think we were low 20s pre COVID, which was definitely Reflective of some excess liquidity for customers, surge deposits, whatever you want to call them. And that has slowly Moved down over the last 3 years, a little bit of an acceleration in that runoff over the last 6 months, But it's gotten it's stabilized pretty nicely. And look, that's reflective of the very granular nature Of our deposit base, we have lots and lots of low balance accounts that are operating accounts. Speaker 400:12:01You saw an investor presentation slide for us That flagged that our deposit base turns over approximately 10 times a year. So people are actually spending the money every day, every month and So these are not accounts that chase rate. So we're hopeful that that will remain stable and 18% will be how We finished the year. I would love for it to be higher. It's just an incredibly tough environment for non interest bearing deposit growth. Speaker 600:12:35Okay. I appreciate that color. And then I guess one more kind of high level question for Chris. On the loan growth side, you've obviously tightened the reins significantly this year given the environment. Just curious When it becomes a better environment for growth, how quickly you're able to ramp that back up? Speaker 600:12:58Have you Had to reduce the number of lenders at all? Or would you anticipate having to hire more people? Just curious how that process would work. Speaker 200:13:07Yes, we could ramp up pretty quickly. We have made some staff reductions, but not among the folks that have the strongest Client relationships, obviously. So, I think we would be able to turn very quickly. Part of the way we look at the world now is We're building a little bit of excess capital, and we'll just kind of lean into that when the time is right. But I think we could turn as soon as the market turns. Speaker 200:13:29And we're watching it. Maybe that's late this year, maybe it's deeper into 2024, but when that time comes, we'll be ready. Speaker 700:13:39Okay. Speaker 100:13:39Daniel, Joe, Speaker 300:13:40I'd ask one more thing. We've added We've hired 7 new C and I bankers already this year and 5 new residential lenders. So we're not standing pat. We're planning for the future at the same Speaker 600:13:57All right, great. That's helpful. Thank you, guys. Operator00:14:02Thank you, Daniel. Our next question comes from David Bishop from Hoth Group. David, your line is now open. Speaker 800:14:12Yes. Good morning, gentlemen. Speaker 200:14:14Good morning, Dave. Good morning, Dave. Speaker 800:14:17Hey, Pat, just circling back to Daniel's question just in terms of the excess liquidity. Just from our edification purposes, how is that measured? Is that sort of the level of cash and securities percent of assets? Curious how should we think of that sort of normalizing? Is that cash coming down, also use or is that investment securities coming down as well or a combination of those? Speaker 400:14:40Right. That's purely on balance sheet liquidity. It's not securities driven. So we typically will keep expected cash flows that we need For a period of days, but not weeks on hand, generally less than $100,000,000 We have ramped that up to I think it peaked out at nearly $600,000,000 early on kind of in the liquidity Stress period, that's dropped down to about $450,000,000 and that will continue to come down. It's obviously a focus point for regulators and for all banks, not just for us. Speaker 400:15:27And so we've actually kind of tightened that up a little bit and are looking to reduce that gradually. We don't want to be in a big hurry to do it. And I guess the benefit of the environment rate environment that we're in is we leave that money parked at our Federal Reserve account And are getting pretty competitive rates on an overnight basis. So the earnings hit is not Nearly as significant as it would have been back in the days of kind of a 25 basis point effective Fed funds rate. Speaker 800:16:02Got it. And then appreciate the continued disclosures on the maturation of The retail CDs, the broker CDs, just curious if you have the average rate bifurcated between those two classes That could be priced upon maturation or lower. Speaker 400:16:23So The brokered CDs have an average rate of about 4.5%. The CDs are primarily retail, And we've put the majority of those on the books this year and they have a weighted average rate a little closer to 5. I think our current best offer rate is at 5.15. Speaker 200:16:51But again, it's Speaker 400:16:52promotional, not a rack rate. Speaker 100:16:54Yes. Speaker 800:16:56Promotional being new money? Speaker 300:16:58New Money? Correct. Speaker 700:17:01Got it. Got it. And then Joe, maybe circling Speaker 800:17:04the credit, the supply in terms The maturation of Waterfall and CRE and that's 90% of the population, debt service over one time. Does that still hold true in terms The assumptions you had, as those last quarter, we really hadn't factored in market rates, the rental rates rising into that calculation. Speaker 300:17:25Yes, it still does. And we're pretty happy about that as you would expect. But it's evident really to a certain extent David, if you look at the weighted average rate of the actual underlying loans at the moment, right? So the stuff that's maturing has got a weighted average rate of 5.70. So The market rate, I'll use the word stress or shock that we're putting on these loans as they get closer to maturity is not significantly different than when the loans were booked. Speaker 300:17:51And in many instances, the And in many instances, the underlying rents, especially in the multifamily space, are markedly higher. Speaker 800:18:04Got it. And then one final question. I know it's sort of early in the season, but Any early read into the tourism season and the business health in terms of the Jersey Shore tourism, what you're hearing from your customers? Speaker 700:18:19Yes. I mean, Speaker 200:18:20I can tell you we're hearing really positive things. So the early on indicators of occupancy I've been quite strong, so people kind of renting houses and hotel rooms and all that. And then if you think the next question is, will they spend the money when they're in town? And so far, we're hearing they are. So it's all positive. Speaker 800:18:44Good to hear. Operator00:18:55Thank you. Our next question comes from Matthew Breese from Stephens Inc. Matthew, your line is now open. Speaker 900:19:05Hi, good morning. Speaker 200:19:06Good morning, Matt. Speaker 900:19:10Chris or Pat, I was just curious, how did the margin progress through the quarter? And perhaps, can you give us The month of June NIM or the end of June NIM, just to give us some sense for how things kind of progressed through the quarter? Speaker 200:19:24Well, I'd tell you, Matt, that it was certainly more acute in the beginning of the quarter. So for the month of April, for example, we were carrying forward all the rate changes We made in response to the events in late March. So it was much more acute in April May. June was flatter, but not flat. So just a slight compression in June. Speaker 200:19:45So it was certainly front ended. And we think we've seen a lot of signs of stabilization as We were talking earlier about the non interest bearing accounts, but those don't seem to be changing in any great degree. And although we are pricing up when CDs renew, We also have loans maturing and repricing. So they're not exactly in equilibrium, but they're not far off that. I don't know, Pat, if you have any numbers, feel free to share them. Speaker 200:20:11But I don't think we're managing that margin on a monthly basis. Speaker 400:20:15Yes. So if you look at the quarters being 30 basis points of compression, I'd say 3 quarters of that came in April and the rest of it was spread not necessarily evenly across The last 2 months of the quarter. And one important thing to note, and Joe referred to it in his prepared remarks a little bit, we did programmatically reprice A sector of our commercial account, primarily the municipals, as of It's the 1st week of April. And so that had a pretty dramatic impact immediately because it's 20% of our deposit base. And then after that, as Chris said, it's really just kind of the rolling effect of things that are maturing and rolling over New promotional money that's coming in largely offset by loans that are rolling. Speaker 400:21:13And I would say that we expect that to continue. And you didn't ask the question, but I'll answer it anyway. I think The impact of Fed rate hikes on all of that is not expected to be material for the same dynamic The assets and liabilities are really kind of on the similar cycle of repricing. So if we do get another rate hike in September, I wouldn't expect that to have more than a basis point or 2 impact on margin well under $1,000,000 Speaker 900:21:53Okay, great. I appreciate all that color. In the presentation, you noted that it's more likely that we see the expense benefits from the cost cutting plan in early 2024 versus Late 2023 before. I was curious, has the amount changed? I believe in the mid June presentation, it was outlined that it could be a 5% 10% decline. Speaker 900:22:18Is the amount of the decline still intact? And when do you expect it to be kind of fully baked? Speaker 400:22:24Sure. It is intact and we hedged a little bit with our outlook and took the low end of the range And what we have line of sight on in the short term, which is absolutely a reduction of about 5% as we migrate through the 3rd quarter, Which results in the decline of $3,000,000 to $4,000,000 of quarterly expense run rate, Which we expect to print in the Q4. So exactly 6 months from now we'll be having the call and Hopefully talking about a $58,000,000 or $59,000,000 expense quarter. The other 5%, so the 5% to 10% range, We still feel very good about that. The timing is a little bit, broader and harder to pinpoint and it's also the result A fairly large number of small initiatives that add up and so I think those will kind of bleed in pretty steadily Throughout the first and second quarter, I wouldn't rule out the possibility of a little bit stretching into the 3rd quarter, but the first half of next year, We do think that we'll be able to further reduce. Speaker 400:23:34Now I will caveat that against it's a little early for us to think about what kind of inflationary increases we may have to incur for staff costs. That will address as we get closer to year Right now, we don't envision it being at all material. Got it. Speaker 900:23:54Okay. Thank you for that. The last 2 for me just really around credit. The first one is, at this point, the footprint and the geographies you touch, Pretty diverse markets across the Northeast and Mid Atlantic. As you think about the commercial real estate market across those markets, Are there any areas where the valuation movements have been more pronounced? Speaker 900:24:15And if you could provide some color maybe on what categories you're seeing there? Speaker 200:24:21Sure. Well, a couple of things, Matt. First, I would say that not surprisingly, the Northeast tends to be a lot more stable in valuations than in other parts of the That's good and bad. We don't tend to go up as much and we don't tend to fall as much. So we're not seeing anything across the footprint that would give us any concern at all. Speaker 200:24:39And all the indications out of the Bone portfolio are that there's none of those classes in the Northeast are really under pressure. That said, they're very different markets as you point out. Probably the strongest overall market, I would say, would be the markets in New Jersey and Boston for two reasons. New Jersey continues Benefit from some of the out migration from the cities, Jersey Shore is doing well and there has been a lack of certain properties in New Jersey. So the inventory has Even around stuff like suburban office, we're seeing the same kind of metrics up in Boston, a very strong market kind of across the board, all asset Obviously, in New York, you would be looking at office, although we don't have much there. Speaker 200:25:24And in Philadelphia, I think it's a little bit more spotty. But I'd ask Joe to maybe make some comments about some of those markets and areas where you're just being asked for questions. Speaker 300:25:35I think we've been pretty clear about our concerns about Central Business District loans. We don't have many. I think that number is somewhere around $60,000,000 if you carve out the medical office and some lab space in Boston. But I think Chris pretty much on point. The interesting thing and we've seen it a lot. Speaker 300:25:56The vacancy Numbers are ridiculously near all time lows in New York relative to multifamily. So people are in the city. So The other asset classes that you might be concerned about outside of office, whether it be some retail or other areas, really haven't been adversely affected. I think the downtown Philadelphia market is a little softer than the vast majority of stuff we have is performing admirably. I think the biggest challenge and the thing I think the industry is all questioning is when is there any kind of normalization? Speaker 300:26:31Asset quality has been so good for everyone with the exception of what you'd refer to as these one off events which have been In the line of non recurrence when you hear other folks, we're not even close to what you consider a normalized environment. So With the rate increases, you do expect that there may be some stress down the road, but nobody's seeing it yet. We definitely aren't. Speaker 900:26:57Right. And the follow-up and Speaker 1000:26:59along those Speaker 900:27:00lines earlier, in June, we had inter agency guidance from the Fed, the FDIC, the OCC Outlining that the banks can work with CRE customers, provide combinations, I was curious What do you think that all looks like? What are the tools at your disposal? And how does it ultimately end up being disclosed? Speaker 200:27:23Look, I think that's just more of a reminder than anything, Matt. The tools that we would have used in normal times, Yes. We use them, for example, during when Hurricane Sandy hit our market to kind of restructure loans and work with borrowers, put people on forbearance. We all used them, the whole industry used them during COVID. I don't think we're talking anything like that, but I think it's just a reminder that And we have the new disclosure rules. Speaker 200:27:55So TDRs are gone. But I think if you've got the credit that is going to be stressed and you're restructuring, You're going to be disclosing that. So that said, one of the interesting things we've seen is our credits that have rolled thus far this year Have not required any of that. So we're seeing folks maybe having a little their cash flows may support a little lower debt service, But we're not seeing loans rolling that are rolling into stress situations, generally speaking. Speaker 900:28:27And last one for me, just a follow-up. Are you seeing willingness from borrowers to provide a cash in refund if that's in fact necessary to support LTVs? Speaker 300:28:38Yes. In a very limited basis so far, Matt, we've asked a few borrowers to right size a loan and they've done it Without reservation, which is an attribute, I think there are the sophisticated borrowers that we tend to deal with are also Very cognizant of the fact that they have a relationship with the bank in this environment looking for other outside new relationships may not be the best So even if it's something that they may not want to do day 1, they understand that we're operating from a perspective of good faith We want to continue those relationships. So we've not had any of those adverse impacts so far. Speaker 900:29:19Great. I appreciate taking all my questions. Thank you. Speaker 700:29:22Thanks, Matt. Operator00:29:28Thank When preparing for your questions, please ensure that your phone is unmuted locally. With our next question comes from Christopher Marinette from Jenny Montgomery Scott. Christopher, your line is now open. Speaker 1000:29:51Thanks very much. Good morning. Just want to follow-up on Matt's Question, can you give us an update on sort of how the regulators are looking at commercial real estate concentration in terms of these old tests From years years ago, has anything really changed in your mind? Speaker 200:30:07I don't know that anything has changed, Chris. I think there's just a reminder that the same discipline they would have In particular, when things change and markets are questionable like this, They're going to be looking to make sure you're proactively stress testing your portfolio, that you're looking at what has changed. The most important thing Is being able to demonstrate that you have a handle on your risk positions, whatever those are. And look, sometimes your risk position will shift a little bit in one direction or another. I think the discussion of the maturity wall is one that there would be rather high regulatory expectations around banks having done their homework, Looking at individual loans, making sure they know which ones are higher risk early enough so that you can see where your portfolio might be going And this is in the existing guidance, but the way that you fund the loans is important. Speaker 200:31:03So liquidity It does relate to risks like investor CRE risk because they're going to look to make sure that liquidity wouldn't cause an issue. And ultimately, you fold into capital plans. So we were talking earlier about loans rolling in 2023 2024, and we're now actively looking at the loans rolling in 2025. That if you know you might have stress a year or 2 out that you're taking the right courses of action to put the bank So I don't think the expectations are new, but the focus level will certainly be new, meaning that you're going to get a lot more questions. In some cases, you may have to do more reporting. Speaker 200:31:41The reporting intervals may change. So, I do know in some cases, there are certain You may have to report quarterly or monthly that you wouldn't have reported before, but it strikes me that's more of a Sentinel or monitoring process, Not a change in expectations. We're just expecting you to do exactly what the guidance says. Speaker 1000:32:03Great, Chris. That's helpful. And I guess when you stress test these CRE loans, it's not just about going up on interest rate. It is more liquidity and other factors as you mentioned. Speaker 200:32:12Yes. When you think about it, they're looking at if we're, for example, relying upon the guarantor, they're They're going to want to see that we've done our homework around the guarantor. The guarantor's position hasn't changed. We're verifying liquidity in that case. They're going to want to make sure that as we're rolling any loans over that we're stressing the cash flows. Speaker 200:32:34And look, one of the challenges we're all going to have is that cap rates are a little hard to figure out right now. I think everybody feels like they should have increased given the environment, But there are not a lot of transactions in some markets, so you don't have a rich history of cap rates you can pull into appraisals. So they're going to look Speaker 1000:32:59Great. And my follow-up just has to do with the disclosure you made in the slides about the sort of long term sort of customer relationships. I think 8 years was one of the numbers that was in the slide. As we hopefully are sooner to the end on kind of resetting deposit rates, what's the best way to sort of think through that relationship time as we You look at kind of valuing your deposit base going forward given the funding advantage that you have. Speaker 200:33:24Yes. I think one of the keys to our deposit base And it was substantially built through acquisition, is we were very thoughtful in the companies we acquired, Each of which had a very long history of having served their communities. And several of the banks that we acquired were around for more than 100 years. So when we went in, in due diligence, we were particularly impressed by these multi generational relationships with that institution. We have held The vast majority of those relationships and that kind of folds over into the quality of our deposit base. Speaker 200:33:58Second thing we think about is we have a little bit of a split deposit base. We do have deposits in the metro markets. So we have deposits in New York and Philadelphia and in the more densely populated parts of New Jersey. But we have a lot of deposits in areas in New Jersey that I would characterize as rural, and there's a little different flavor to those markets as well. So I think when you see the longevity of our deposit base, it reflects the fact that we were very thoughtful in which deposits we chose To acquire that we kept those relationships intact and that our service levels have allowed our customers to value what Pat was referring to, I mean, most of these accounts turn over all their dollars up to 10 times a year. Speaker 200:34:41We're doing a heck of a lot of ACH and Wire and Zelle and Venmo and Visa Debit and that's what they're with us for and I think that's what's helped produce the beta. Speaker 1000:34:54Great, Chris. Thanks for taking all of our questions this morning. Speaker 200:34:57All right. Thanks, Chris. Operator00:35:01Thank you, Chris. Our next question comes from Manuel Lab, D. A. Davidson. Manuel, your line is now open. Speaker 500:35:13Hey, good morning. Speaker 200:35:14Good morning. Speaker 500:35:17I understand that liquidity deployment benefit to potential liquidity deployment benefit to NIM. In the slide deck, you talk about that it could potentially offer upside to loan growth. Is that kind of contemplated in the low single digit guide and just kind of towards the high end of the range? Or It's like demand not justifying that type of benefit. Any clarification would be great. Speaker 300:35:49So I'll start and say that it's evident that demand has slowed a bit on both sides, right. So I think the This is C and I borrower has seen borrowing costs double those that run profitable companies that just I'd say they wouldn't cancel activity. I think they're delaying some So that's impacting loan demand at C and I. Speaker 200:36:11On the CRE side Speaker 300:36:12of the house, I think valuations are the most important thing. If If you're a buyer, you're wanting to really be fully vetted on, is this the bottom, is this an opportunity to buy. If you're a seller, you're still trying to adjust to what may be And we're normal with higher rates. So the good news for us is that the loans that we are doing, we're doing at yields that have got a markedly We're happy with that. So that's a good news. Speaker 300:36:37I don't know if we'd like the actual volume Today on a quarterly basis, I think we'd like it to be higher, but you just do the good loans that you can do and put them in perspective. Speaker 400:36:50So I'll take the supply side answer. Joe just gave you the demand side answer. If you think about How our liquidity has moved over the course of this year, we brought our loan to deposit ratio down pretty meaningfully from 4th quarter heights and we like where we are. We have come through Arguably one of the most rapid and severe shocks to the banking system that any of us have seen Without seeing for the most part any behavioral change in our deposit base And so we're at a point where we're not just going to keep driving our liquidity higher for the sake of printing a lower loan deposit ratio if We don't see a need to. We're not going to change our risk appetite and go out and try and find loans, but We think that we're very well positioned to kick start things and resume higher Speaker 500:38:04In thinking about the right type of demand, I noticed your origination yields were pretty close to what you have in pipeline. Can you comment on if that's the pipeline yields have improved so far this month? Is that a question of mix? I would have liked pipeline yields to be a little bit higher. Speaker 300:38:24Look, you always want pipeline yields To be a little higher, I'm happy with how fast origination yields have come up. I think there's always that dichotomy between customer relationship On one end of it and of course on the other end of it the fact that we're funding costs have gone up substantially. But if you look at Even just 6 months ago, we were talking about origination yields in the low 6s and now you're in the pushing the higher 7s. I will tell you that where we see a lot of activity in the construction book for us, those yields are 9% plus. So I think as we bleed through the remainder as we have bled through the remainder of stuff that was in the pipe, Older stuff that was in the pipe that may have had treasury spreads below where we're quoting today, you'll see those yields continue to rise. Speaker 500:39:23Is there any color on kind of the construction line utilization? We've been talking about that for a couple of quarters. I know it's not in the pipeline per se. Like how much has been added from that From what was available, how much is still to come? Speaker 300:39:41Yes, I don't have the exact on what's still to come, but I would tell you from utilization It's a little bit better than C and I. C and I borrowers tend to utilize about 40% of their availability, on average 40%, 42% of their availability. The construction book for us is typically pushing 50% of availability. And of course, some of that has to do with the fact Those that are at the end of projects tend to be converting to perm, those that are construction in multi or any other kind of stuff and the for sale stuff tends to as they Finish, they're paying you off because they're selling properties. So on average exposures maybe 50%, a little over 50%. Speaker 200:40:23Okay. One of the aspects to that construction book is that properties are moving very quickly. So it's not surprising at the rates The construction loans cost, folks are saying, look, I want to finish this project as quickly as possible because ironically, the perm rate, right, It's a lot lower than the construction rate. So there is a rush to get things done. And this lack of inventory throughout our markets in the Northeast Means that if you can finish it, whether it's for sale or for rent, you can get it stabilized. Speaker 200:40:56So we have seen the duration come And you know what, from a credit perspective, I'm not upset about that. I'd love to see projects kind of finish early, get sold out faster than you think, but It does have a little bit of an impact on you. Speaker 500:41:12I appreciate that. And my last question is on Just going to touch on the resi mortgage trends and if there's any other fee initiatives that Can be started this year. I know those are more as part of the full kind of operating leverage strategy, but just if you can update any of the Speaker 1100:41:33The Speaker 500:41:33side of that plan, especially in light of the newer resi mortgage trends? Speaker 300:41:41Look, I think we have a, as we've mentioned, an opportunity to try to drive activity. We want to Originate the sale as best as we can. That's really driven by the availability of inventory, Especially in our marketplace, I mean, the lack of inventory in the residential space is really in a good news perspective, it's propped up valuations. In a bad news Perspective, those folks have 3.5% more each or at least for the time being aren't actively looking to sell them and turn that into something else. I do think that as we go through our initiatives and the way we run our business, the opportunity for us to drive additional fee revenue from treasury management, We have a significant amount of our clients in the corporate banks that are treasury clients, but we're trying to deepen those relationships. Speaker 300:42:331 One of the opportunities we have now when loan demand is a little bit lower is to take our commercial bankers and treasury management consultants and be out, Have conversations with clients about how we can best help them monetize and maximize their cash and use of cash. And that if they choose to use our treasury products will help generate fee income for us. And I think we'll start to see more and more of that as we deepen that wallet share as Operator00:43:10Thank you. Our next question comes from Frank Schiraldi from Piper Sandler. Frank, your line is now open. Speaker 700:43:20Good morning. Speaker 200:43:21Good morning, Frank. Hi, Frank. Just on Speaker 700:43:25the Just talking about loan growth, it seems like the pullback in growth is just, I don't know, just as much as a demand issue as it is Speaker 100:43:35Funding. Speaker 700:43:35But Pat, you mentioned the loan deposit ratio under 100% and being comfortable there. Is that kind of do you expect to see that do you expect that to be a governor though from here? Is it to remain below 100% On that ratio? Speaker 200:43:53Yes, I think it's Speaker 400:43:57Sorry, go ahead, Chris. Speaker 200:43:59Well, Frank, what I'd say is that 100 It has always been an area where we're comfortable, where we're fully lent. So we don't get all hung up on whether it's 101 or 99. But given the events of this year, we thought better to favor being under 100%. So we'll watch it as this liquidity situation eases. We might occasionally get up to 100% or show like a 101 quarter, but we've never been a company that wanted to drive that much above 100 So we're just going to be a little bit on our conservative end. Speaker 200:44:33We haven't really changed our overall outlook. Speaker 700:44:38Okay. And then given you mentioned you do have the ability to ramp up loan growth quickly if it makes sense. Is that more likely to come on the C and I side and therefore reducing exposure And what do you think kind of what would you say the main driver could be to see growth ramp back up again to sort of more normalized level? Is it as simple as having comfort that the Fed is done raising rates? Do you think that brings a lot more demand back into the system? Speaker 700:45:11Or Kind of what are your thoughts on levered to see loan growth ramp up for last year? Speaker 200:45:20And maybe Joe, why don't you walk through Speaker 300:45:23Yes. Frank, I would tell you the absolute understanding if the Fed is finished raising, I'm not I'm worried about when and if they lower. If the corporate client feels that Certainty and the economic conditions sort of they see it's a little bit more clarity. I think Chris made the same comment about deposits, Loans and deposits, if you're comfortable with your deposit franchise and its stability, Yes, whether it's 99 loan to deposit, 1 or 2 loan to deposit, I don't think it matters. It's more around what your comfort factor is there. Speaker 300:46:02I think the same with the corporate Corporate borrowers are telling us at least they're not shelving projects, they're just putting stuff on hold for the time being. They want to see where things shake out. And it's not all rate driven, which I think is fascinating. I haven't had a lot of corporate borrowers tell me that they're adversely Affected solely on rates. I think a lot of our corporate borrowers have said, look, we knew rates were too low for too long. Speaker 300:46:26We benefited by that. It's not intimidating bias. They're looking at it from the other end, which is if they do these projects, what's the end game? Can they see that result in revenue? So I do think that we'll see increased borrowings in the C and I space if we can get some certainty. Speaker 300:46:45I also think we have the opportunity to see more in the residential construction space. I think there's Recently some articles about new home builders starting to benefit a bit just because there's a lack of inventory. I also think there's an opportunity for them to do more if they get more clarity around rates Because they're really driven typically off the 10 year treasury if you get a little bit more or a little bit less volatility. Even in mortgage rates end up in the High fives, 06s, I think if that rate is stable, I think we'll see more activity. Speaker 700:47:27Great. That's great color. Thanks, Joe. And then, Pat, since you mentioned you don't like talking about forward curve for the NIM, I figured I'd About 2024. If we get the 1 or 2 rate hikes from the Fed, You talked about your kind of expectations through the end of the year. Speaker 700:47:50I mean, I would imagine that you do have an inflection point then Early in 2024. And if we get sort of a rate environment stays where it is, just kind Curious where you think a more normalized NIM could be as that loan book continues to reprice higher? Speaker 400:48:10Yes. It's impossible to know, so thank you very much for framing it that way. I actually would expect that margin behaviors are going to be as much influenced by deposit stability and deposit trends As they are by Fed rate hikes. The forward curve is already telling us where the Street thinks rates are going to go and it's going to be lower. We have a pretty good operating history of operating somewhere between 3% and 3.5% for margin. Speaker 400:48:48So I wouldn't be surprised if we can revert back to something in that range, kind of midpoint of that range. But the timing of that is just really hard to say how fast that could happen and how much of it's going to be dependent on changes in rate Expectations versus deposit behaviors. We are leveraged and so we do have to go out and fund incrementally more than we did back when we had $2,000,000,000 $3,000,000,000 of Speaker 700:49:28I appreciate that color. I know it's obviously A tough question, but lastly, just on the repurchase front, I would imagine it seems like stock repurchases are kind of at At the lower end of priorities, and is that kind of just the way to think about it at least through the near term here? Speaker 200:49:50Yes. I think that's the right way to think about it, Frank. We're not we're going to watch how the market unfolds before we would even consider that. We have An opportunity to deploy that capital over time in organic growth and other things. So it's not on our radar right now. Speaker 200:50:05Obviously, we'll watch things As the market unfolds in the next couple of quarters. Speaker 700:50:11Great. All right. Thanks, guys. Operator00:50:17Thank you, Frank. We have our next question comes from Michael Pareto from KWB. Michael, your line is now open. Speaker 1100:50:28KWB, I like that. That's good. Good morning, guys. How are you? Speaker 200:50:31Good morning, Mike. How are you? Good. Speaker 1100:50:35Just two quick ones. Obviously, you guys covered a lot, so appreciate all the color. To backtrack to, I think, 2 or 3 questions ago about the fees. Pat, is this fair to think, I know you guys didn't provide guidance on this specifically, but The first half of this year, is this kind of theoretically a low point on fees for you guys with the mortgage business possibly picking up a little on the gain on sale side and then hopefully maybe And swap income coming back if rates stabilize? Speaker 400:51:02Yes. I think that's a very fair assumption. So everything was depressed or suppressed. Speaker 1100:51:10Got it. And then just secondly, to kind of pull together a few of your answers to other questions here. I mean, There's obviously a few moving variables to this and the NIM is probably the largest one. But are you guys willing to kind of provide Any updated context around you guys are making these expense initiatives, and if the NIM does If we forget about the when for a second, but if the NIM does eventually come back into that range, Pat, that you were speaking to, what the kind of Efficiency ratio of the bank might look like or what you guys think you could reach or aspire to. I mean, I know before all of this, there was talk of getting into the low 50s. Speaker 1100:51:49Is that still kind of how you guys are managing the bank assuming normalized margins over a period of time? Or any updated context there would be great. Speaker 200:51:57Mike, it's obviously a hard question to answer given we don't know when things might change. But I would say this, we're trying to improve operating leverage in all environments. So if the NIM came back to the more historical 3.25% to 3.5% rate, we would expect to be Get the efficiency ratio down to 50 or even possibly below 50. Speaker 1100:52:21Perfect. Speaker 200:52:22Well, thank you guys. Speaker 400:52:23Maybe think about it a little more Mike, maybe think about it a little more in terms of overhead ratio, Kind of take the revenue volatility and the impact of NIM and rate changes out of the equation. So we're in the 1.8% range as a percentage of assets, total expenses Speaker 700:52:46as a Speaker 400:52:46percentage of assets. And we think that we can bring continue to bring that down further, maybe into the low 17s And keep working on it. Speaker 1100:53:00Yes. No, that's helpful perspective as well, and it makes sense. Appreciate it, guys. Thanks for all the color this morning. Speaker 100:53:08Thanks, Mike. Speaker 400:53:11Thank you, Mike. Operator00:53:11Thank you, and apologies, Michael. We have our last question comes from Manuel Knabos from D. A. Davidson. Manuel, your line is now open. Speaker 500:53:24Hey, I jumped back on and some of my questions have been answered. But I do have Speaker 400:53:29a smaller question. What were the In Speaker 500:53:32terms of the term out of FHLB, can you give any details on that? And just kind of how you're thinking about wholesale borrowings and Broker deposits across the back half of the year. Speaker 400:53:45Sure. So we termed out about 50% of our FHLB borrowings across a range of 2, 3 and 4 year maturities, And we did it early in the year, earlier in the year. So those will be maturing starting late 24, then 25, 26. Interestingly, the rate differential between overnight 2, 3 and 4 was only like 15 basis points. So if you take the higher for longer assumption, we kind of locked in All of that, just below 5%. Speaker 400:54:32We're comfortable we'll need that level of wholesale borrowing for at least the next couple of years. Okay. That's helpful. Speaker 500:54:44Any thoughts on the back half of the year or using broker deposits, thinking about seasonality? Speaker 400:54:52I think our goals are going to be through a combination of organic growth initiatives that we continue to work on And other channels of non brokered deposit, whether it's institutional or other types, to Be able to chip away at the brokered CD levels that we have today, which is about 1,000,000,000 And over time get that back down to 0, which is where we were the Q1 of last year And generally where we operate. So think of this as a high watermark for brokered CDs And we'll take those off as they roll and as other funding avenues continue to improve. Speaker 500:55:43Thank you. Appreciate that. Operator00:55:48Thank Speaker 200:55:49you. Operator00:55:50We have no further questions on the line. I will now hand back to Christopher for closing remarks. Speaker 600:55:57All right. Speaker 200:55:57Thank you. We appreciate your time today and your support of OceanFirst Financial Corp, and we look forward to speaking with you after our Q3 results are published Operator00:56:12Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's call. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect yourRead morePowered by