NASDAQ:FHB First Hawaiian Q2 2023 Earnings Report $23.26 +0.31 (+1.35%) Closing price 05/2/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$23.24 -0.02 (-0.06%) As of 05/2/2025 04:20 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 First Hawaiian EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.49Consensus EPS $0.50Beat/MissMissed by -$0.01One Year Ago EPS$0.46First Hawaiian Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$276.55 millionExpected Revenue$211.99 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$64.56 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AFirst Hawaiian Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2023Date7/28/2023TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateFriday, July 28, 2023Conference Call Time1:00PM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by First Hawaiian Q2 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 28, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 9 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the First Hawaiian Inc. 2nd Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Operator00:00:26Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Kevin Hasayama, Investor Relations Manager. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:36Thank you, Shannon, and thank you everyone for joining us as we review our financial results for the Q2 of 2023. With me today are Bob Harrison, Chairman, President and CEO Jamie Moses, Chief Financial Officer and Lee Nakamura, Chief Risk Officer. We have prepared a slide presentation that we will refer to in our remarks today. The presentation is available for downloading and viewing on our website at fhb.com in the Investor Relations section. During today's call, we will be making forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:11So please refer to Slide 1 for our Safe Harbor statement. We may also discuss certain non GAAP financial measures. The appendix to this presentation contains reconciliations of these non GAAP financial measurements to the most directly comparable GAAP measurements. And now I'll turn Speaker 200:01:30the call over to Bob. Good morning, everyone. I'm pleased to welcome Lee Nakamura. Lee was recently promoted to Chief Risk Officer after holding a variety of positions in the bank, including Deputy Chief Risk Officer and Treasurer. Leigh has over 30 years of banking experience, and I'm confident she'll be great in her new role. Speaker 200:01:51I'll start with an overview of the local economy. The Hawaii economy continues to do well. The statewide Seasonally adjusted unemployment rate in June was 3%, which is lower than the national rate of 3.6%. Total visitor arrivals were 802,000 in May, just 5.4% the May 2019 arrival number. Japanese visitor arrivals at 34,000 was 70% below the May 2019 levels. Speaker 200:02:24Visitor spend in March was $1,700,000,000 19% higher than May 2019. The housing market has remained stable. In June, the median sales price for a single family home on Oahu was 1,100,000 or 4.5% June of last year. The median sales price for condos on Oahu was 510,000 4.5% below 2022. Turning to Slide 2, I'll give an overview of our 2nd quarter results. Speaker 200:03:00Net income was $62,400,000 or $0.49 per share. As loans grew, we continued to grow capital Our return on average tangible assets was 1.05% And our return on average tangible common equity was 18.57%. We continue to maintain strong capital levels with the CET1 ratio of 12.05 and total capital of 13.17%. The Board maintained the quarterly dividend at $0.26 Turning to Slide 3, Our balance sheet remains solid. In the Q2, we brought down our excess liquidity by a little over $300,000,000 as the recent disruption in the banking industry calmed down. Speaker 200:03:55This enabled us to reduce some higher cost short term borrowings. We continue to have a strong liquidity position. As of June 30, our total available liquidity was $8,600,000,000 which was over 100 percent of uninsured non public deposits. The duration of our investment portfolio remains stable at 5.5 years and cash flows from the portfolio were about $60,000,000 per month as we had expected. Turning to Slide 4, Period end loans and leases were $14,400,000,000 an increase of $142,000,000 or 1% from the end of Q1. Speaker 200:04:44In the Q2, about $130,000,000 of completed construction loans were converted to CRE. And during the quarter, we also exited approximately 55,000,000 of non relationship shared national credits. We continue to believe that full year loan growth will be in the low to mid single digit range. Now I'll turn it over to Jamie. Speaker 300:05:11Thanks, Bob, and good morning, everyone. Turning to slide 5, total deposit balances decreased by $203,000,000 or 1 percent to $21,100,000,000 at quarter end. The retail and commercial deposits declined by $664,000,000 or 3.4 percent in the 2nd quarter. Commercial deposits declined by about 4 $4,000,000 or 4.9 percent. Public deposit balances increased by $461,000,000 in the quarter as public Time deposit balances grew by $555,000,000 which was partially offset by a decline in public operating balances. Speaker 300:05:59Our total cost of deposits was 111 basis points in the 2nd quarter, an increase of 29 basis points linked quarter due to higher rates paid and the shift in mix to higher rate deposit accounts. Turning to Slide 6, net interest income declined by $7,300,000 from the prior quarter to $159,900,000 The decrease was primarily due to higher funding costs, partially offset by higher asset yields. Similarly, the net interest margin declined by 20 basis points to 2.91%. Throughout the end of the Q2, the cumulative betas were 34.5% on interest bearing deposits and 21% on total deposits. Looking forward, we anticipate that the NIM will decline by 15 to 20 basis points in the Q3 due to continued repricing and deposit migration. Speaker 300:06:51On Slide 7, non interest income was $47,300,000 this quarter, a $1,700,000 decline from the prior quarter. The decline was primarily due to lower BOLI income along with lower credit and debit card fee income. 1st quarter BOLI income included a $2,000,000 death Expenses were $120,900,000 $2,300,000 or 2% higher than the prior quarter. The increase in expenses was driven by a $1,900,000 increase in salaries and benefits, which included $2,900,000 of separation and severance payments. We expect our overall annual expenses to be in line with our original outlook. Speaker 300:07:33Now, I'll turn it over to Leigh. Speaker 400:07:35Thank you, Jamie. Moving to Slide 8, the bank maintained its strong credit performance and healthy credit metrics in the 2nd quarter. Ulan's quarter 2 charge off rate was 10 basis points, 1 basis point higher than in quarter 1. Nonperforming assets and loans 90 days or more past due were 11 basis points at the end of quarter 2, down 2 basis points from the prior quarter. Criticized assets increased to 93 basis points with special mention assets at 52 basis points and classified assets at 41 basis points of total loans and leases. Speaker 400:08:11The bank recorded a $5,000,000 provision for the quarter. Loans 30 days to 89 days past due were $40,800,000 or 28 basis points of total loans and leases at the end of quarter 2, unchanged from the prior quarter. Moving to Slide 9. We have a roll forward of the allowance for the quarter by disclosure segment. The reserve increased marginally this quarter resulting from offsetting factors including loan growth and improved economic outlook and an increase in the qualitative overlay on construction and home equity. Speaker 400:08:45The allowance for credit loss increased $1,500,000 to $148,600,000 This level equates to 1.03 percent of total loans and leases. The reserve for unfunded commitments was unchanged at $36,200,000 The allowance anticipates cyclical losses consistent with the recession and includes a qualitative overlay for potential macroeconomic impacts not captured in our base model. Turning to Slide 10, We provide a snapshot of our CRE exposure. CRE represents about 30% of our total loan portfolio outstanding. The overall credit portfolio sorry, excuse me, the overall credit quality of this portfolio remains very good. Speaker 400:09:31The increase in criticized office loans in the 2nd quarter was primarily due to 2 loans. One loan consists of a handful of small office properties in Downtown Honolulu and is being actively resolved. This loan is current and we are comfortable with the plan. The other loan is located in Downtown Los Angeles and is going through the sales process. We expect a full recovery on that loan. Speaker 400:09:55We continue to closely monitor this segment given the implications of higher rates, Operator00:10:27Our first question comes from the line of Steven Alexopoulos with JPMorgan. Your line is now open. Speaker 200:10:33Hi, everyone. Good morning, Steve. Hey, Steve. Speaker 500:10:37I want to start, so on the non interest bearing deposits, there was another quarter where you and the industry saw strong outflows. But I'm curious, how did this trend through the quarter? And are there any signs of the pace of outflows abating? Speaker 300:10:54It's kind of hard to say for sure. I would suggest The way that we look at the data, we think that it is abating somewhat. And what I mean by that is, so far what we've seen this Quarter has been on a relative basis less outflow than what we saw through the 3 months in Q2. I think if you're drawing if you're looking at a graph of where deposits have been going and you're drawing a trend line, I think you start to see that flatten out. Speaker 600:11:25At least so far Speaker 300:11:25in the quarter, that's what we've seen. Speaker 500:11:28Okay. That's helpful. And on the margin then, So you're down 20 basis points this quarter, a little bit worse than what we thought coming into the quarter. Now you're saying down 15 to 20. But I'm curious, I know you don't give longer term guidance, but do you feel like we're getting pretty close to the bottom once we roll through? Speaker 500:11:47I know it's going to be contingent on what You just talked about, but if that trend line is starting to flat on the NIB outflows, do you think we might get some stability after the Q3? Speaker 300:11:57I do think that, right? And obviously, Steve, that's entirely contingent upon what happens with the Fed and rates and all that. But we do see that sort of the bottom of our guidance. We think that's probably about where it bottoms out given sort of a stable forward outlook At this point and that's probably like somewhere in the Q4 for us. So that's kind of how we're thinking about and how we're planning going forward. Speaker 500:12:26That sounds good. And then just on loan growth. So I heard you, Bob, reiterating the low to mid single digit, which I'm a little surprised because you're running about Higher, that's year over year. I know the comps are tougher because you had a very strong second half. But you're not expecting you've had good momentum, good conversions to CRE. Speaker 500:12:43You're not expecting more momentum to continue. I'm surprised you're not at least pointing to mid single digit growth. Thanks. Speaker 200:12:50Yes. It's a tough one, Steve. We have A number of commercial real estate projects that are completing and going to get paid off. So a little bit we're swimming upstream on that. And origination to your point has still been fine, but we are seeing in the next quarter to a fair number this quarter, Meaning Q3 and Q4, a fair number of commercial real estate payoffs. Speaker 200:13:15And so there is a balance there. Speaker 500:13:17Got it. And I saw your called out that you saw a good growth in the dealer. Where do dealer balances sit now versus historical? Just wondering how much room there might be For still an improvement there. Speaker 200:13:31I have that here somewhere, but I know we're still several 100,000,000 below the 2019 year end, I think it was 8.50 give or take at 2019 and where we are today, Jamie? Speaker 300:13:45I think it's just under just it might be around right around $700,000,000 just under $700,000,000 So yes, Steve, I think we have I think there's probably a good As Bob said, right, I think there's probably at least a couple of $100,000,000 worth of room there, given historicals. Speaker 200:14:01The question is, Does it go back to the way it was before? Yes. And you probably saw an article on The Wall Street Journal yesterday saying probably not. I tend to agree with that. The Industry has changed, but I do feel that the new number is Given that we don't have a huge difference in the amount of lines and availability to our customers, It's higher than where we are today, but it's probably not where we ended 2019. Speaker 200:14:34Thanks for answering my questions. Operator00:14:37Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of David Feaster with Raymond James. Your line is now open. Speaker 600:14:45Hi, good morning everybody. Hey Dave. Good morning. Maybe just following up on your commentary about The upcoming maturities and stuff, I'm just curious, could you quantify that for us? How much You have expected to roll off maybe in the next 6 to 12 months, where roll off rates are and then where Maybe repricing tends to be or as well as new loan yield add on rates. Speaker 300:15:16So Dave, just to clarify, are you talking about securities or loans? Speaker 600:15:20Loans. Speaker 300:15:23Got it. Okay. Yes. So I mean, so I think what you're really asking is essentially a NIM question here, right? That's what you're trying to get at, right? Speaker 300:15:33So I appreciate you trying to ask it a different way. But so I think the NIM guidance is the NIM guidance. We're seeing We'll call it like adds to the portfolio in totality. We're seeing sort of on the commercial side a little Higher in sort of the low 7s. On the we're still adding to very few amount of residential mortgages. Speaker 300:16:00Those are sort of high 6s now versus Where they've been in the past. But those are sort of the roll on rates at the moment. And to be fair to all that, we're seeing in general, we're seeing a better ability for us To dictate pricing, structure and credit today than we were in the past, right? A Speaker 200:16:25Little bit more Speaker 300:16:25of a buyer's market rather than a seller's market today. Speaker 600:16:28That's terrific. And ultimately what I'm trying to figure out is kind of where does the Core NIM stabilized like as we look forward. So maybe on the other side of the coin, I guess on the deposit front, How is new account growth going? Where are you seeing good opportunities to take share and acquire new clients? And then just any thoughts on on core deposit growth going forward, the strategy to continue to drive that and where new money yields are on Speaker 200:17:03Yes, a number of questions in there, Dave. So let me pick off a couple of them. First of all, on new accounts, new deposit accounts, like I think most banks in your coverage, we're very actively going after new accounts. That's been successful. We are trying to do that in a number of different ways, not just marketing, but more value to the customer. Speaker 200:17:25We're upgrading Our mobile offering this month, later this month or next actually next month in August. And so all those things, I think that's Been successful. So really trying to grow that core operating account type of On the lending side, it's very interesting. To Jamie's point, it's being much more disciplined On how we're going after business, we've seen rates and terms move back to what I think is more Sustainable levels, people with being very aggressive and low rates for long periods of time, That's kind of gone now as liquidity is more dear and we're really seeing more of a balance. For example, we have not been very active in indirect lending for the last, gosh, 4 plus years. Speaker 200:18:24That line item was down almost exactly $300,000,000 over that period. We just didn't see it being accretive at the time. We love the business. It's We've been in it for a long time, but it just didn't make sense there for a while. Now you're starting to see that and especially to Jamie's point on the Commercial side, a more reasonable market out there. Speaker 700:18:49That's Speaker 600:18:51and then just where are you seeing, I guess new deposit interest bearing deposit costs coming on. Speaker 300:19:05So it's a tough question because that it's sort of they come on at different rates for different types of customers that we have. In general, Dave, what we're trying to do is, right, we are trying every day, we're trying to go out and grab new customers. And that's not at the moment, that's not really through some promotional offer that we're really offering on especially on liquid side of things, right? And so this is Part of the reason why you've seen the runoff and balances that we have, right? So every day, we're focused on acquiring new customers and turning those And then taking care of the existing relationships that we have, on our balance sheet. Speaker 300:19:42And so to the extent that it's not a relationship It has been here for a while. We're kind of thinking sort of letting some of that some of those deposits kind of run off the balance sheet while taking care of our core So it's kind of a it's a tough question that they're being some customers obviously Our best customers are getting, say, higher exception rates and yields in their liquid portfolios. Our less best customers are getting lower rates. And of course, that's dependent upon account size and things of that nature in there as well. It's kind of a continued management of managing the entire balance sheet and managing the relationships that we have both on the acquisition side and the current relationships that we have. Speaker 200:20:32We talked about this starting a year ago, Dave, that For our larger balance, commercial and personal customers, we really started taking care of them Early and now it's just kind of going through the rest of knowledge. We're getting to the earlier question from Steve, we're getting close to the end on that I think. Speaker 600:20:51That's great. But maybe following up on some of your commentary on the loan side, Bob, I'm just curious, where are With liquidity being paramount and some other folks pulling back and you still being open for business, where are you seeing good risk adjusted Returns, where how is demand from your clients? Where are you seeing opportunities? And I guess if you had to peg, how much of your growth would you expect to come from the Mainland versus Hawaii? Speaker 200:21:25Yes. I'll start maybe with the end of that question. We're right about 24% of our loans on the Mainland now. As we've talked about in previous calls, we assume that would go up a little bit sooner than the Hawaii loans, although it is keeping pace a percentage point or so. We are seeing the dealer balances because the portfolio is larger on the mainland, that will be a little bit stronger on the mainland than Here in Hawaii, but we do see that coming back. Speaker 200:21:56Up in California a couple of weeks ago, the domestic manufacturers seem to be Ahead of the foreign manufacturers on bringing back supply. So I think that's been helpful. I think the other All the manufacturers by year end will be closer to where they want to be on that. So that will rebalance to whatever The new normal is by year end as far as floor plan outstandings. On the commercial real estate side, To Jamie's point, better pricing, better structure, that's both here in Hawaii as well as on the mainland. Speaker 200:22:33So if you're open for business, Which we are, we're going to be more particular, but you really can't get a better structured transaction At higher pricing and so we're looking at that. Where it's going to be slow, not surprisingly, is residential Home equity, I think, will slow down a bit. Credit cards on balance should hold its own. But the consumer side, I think, will be a bit slower than the commercial side. Speaker 500:23:03That's helpful. Thank you. Operator00:23:07Thank you. Our next Question comes from the line of Kelly Motta with KBW. Your line is now open. Speaker 800:23:15Hi, thanks for the question. I apologize, I'm joining a little bit late, so I apologize if this has been already asked. But, it seems like you're doing a Pretty bang up job with expenses that have been really within the range you've been looking for. But just with the challenging Headwinds for margin that you've been discussing, at least near term, is there any additional room on the I know you're already directing a lot of attention there. And as we look ahead, is this still a good range and So looking for the same kind of level of expenses that you have at this point? Speaker 800:23:58Thanks. Speaker 200:24:01Hey, Kelly, this is Bob. Yes, we're always focused on expenses. We have been investing more clearly in our technology and our people, Getting good people like many other places has been a challenge. So we have made adjustments there. That we think is really a long term investment much like our technology. Speaker 200:24:23So now that we've kind of Got it. I think we're closer to being more of a status quo on our salary and benefits type expenses. But on a broader level, maybe I'll turn that over to Jamie. Speaker 300:24:38Yes. Thanks, Kelly. I mean, I think the way to think about it for the rest of this year is that coming into 2023, We knew that we had to make certain investments to improve our digital offerings to improve things on that side of the operational efficiency that sort of stuff On in the house. And whether or not the NIM is going to be lower or in the back half of the year, we still feel like we need to make those investments for this So our guide on the year that we gave upfront is still we still think that's where we're going to be. As Bob said, we are always looking at But we were pretty tight this year on how we were managing those what I would call expenses that are sort of Non strategic, so we're feeling strongly that we need to continue the trend that we were on from an expense perspective this year. Speaker 300:25:31And then after that, we're heading into budgeting season and things right now. So we'll obviously be looking at that, but not ready to give any guidance sort of into 2024 at the moment. Speaker 800:25:42Got it. And maybe a final question for me. I think in your prepared remarks, you said something about exiting some SICs or Mainland kind of club deals. As we as you look ahead To where loan growth is going to be coming from, what's the appetite for continued growth on the Mainland? Speaker 200:26:07Yes. Kelly, this is really I look at that as almost 2 different questions. I think there is Clearly, why we exited those relationships, well, they weren't relationships, they were just credit only deals. And really as we look at The scarcity and value of liquidity and capital, we really wanted to focus on relationships and whether those relationships are here in Hawaii, which Our home and we want to do as much of that as we possibly can. And we also have relationships with the U. Speaker 200:26:37S. Mainland. So it really is more of a focus on Where we can add value and where there's more than maybe just a credit relationship as opposed to where the domicile is. Speaker 800:26:52Got it. Appreciate it. Thanks so much. Operator00:26:57Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Liesch with Sandler O'Neill. Your line is now open. Speaker 300:27:08Hi, everyone. Just a couple housekeeping items for me. The non interest income is like $47,000,000 to 48,000,000 Still the right range to be thinking about? You got it. Got it. Speaker 300:27:21And then, the tax rate for a couple Quarter was slightly below where I was forecasting. What should we be using on that front? I think 24% to 24.5% is a good number on the tax rate. Got you. Thank you. Speaker 300:27:36You've covered everything else I wanted to ask about. All right, Andrew. Thank you, Andrew. Operator00:27:48Our next question comes from the line of Jared Shaw with Wells Fargo Securities. Your line is now open. Speaker 700:27:55Hey, everybody. Thanks for Taking the questions. Maybe starting with going back to the Shared National Credit discussion. The exits that you talked about this quarter, were those sales or were those natural runoffs? And if there were sales, was there a loss On that? Speaker 200:28:16They were good question, Jared. They were sales, but at par. Speaker 700:28:23Okay. And then in the commentary you talked about the office criticized loans, and I think you had said that they were One of them was Downtown LA, but I thought last quarter we talked or you'd said that your LA office was More West LA and not Downtown. Can you just give an update on what your non Hawaii office Current office exposure looks like geographically? Speaker 200:28:54Connecting what we said last quarter to what we said right now, they were both correct. We have one loan in Downtown LA and The majority of the rest are in West LA. So what's really being resolved is this one loan in Downtown LA. As far as broader office, it really hasn't changed from what we talked about last time. Primarily those gateway cities on the West Coast, Several of which are credit tenants and so the lease is set up to be It's a lull, but it really is tied into a specific credit tenant. Speaker 200:29:31And we're very comfortable with that or a couple that are To very high net worth individuals that have shown strong support in the past. So we're very comfortable with the rest of the office portfolio. These 2 popped up and they're being addressed. Speaker 700:29:47Okay. Thanks. And then when I look at Slide 9 and the growth in the provision for Construction and home equity, I don't know, I guess, how does that square with what you were talking about in terms of Very good employment trends and very strong valuations. And it seems like construction projects and residential, There would be very little, I guess, lost content in Hawaii at this point. What's driving the higher the need for higher provision in those Speaker 400:30:22So I can answer that. This is Lee. So with respect to construction, What we did in both the Q1 and the Q2 is we took a deep dive into our investor CRE and construction portfolios. And in the Q2, we actually re underwrote the portfolios based on current NOIs and interest rates and cap rates. And it really was with respect to construction, it really was more about the Mainland multi Family, where they're still under construction and the metrics are still good today, but we have a little bit of uncertainty as to what the market would look like in a year or 18 months. Speaker 400:31:03And then with respect to home equity, it was about we looked at the portfolio and we looked at the pool, the sub pool where there was very large utilization and they were coming off of the teaser rates. And so there's just a little bit of concern about The increase in the interest expense that these particular loans will be facing. So it's not a specific I don't think it's in contrast to anything we've said before about the economy. It's just these sub pockets. Speaker 200:31:40Yes. And Lee brings up an excellent point. I forgot to mention earlier, Jared, that We re underwrote the entire CRE investor CRE portfolio over Anything over $5,000,000 in balance during the quarter, during the Q2, current interest rates, current cap rates, really looking at You know what the risks are and the stresses and we didn't re grade anything. Speaker 400:32:05Right. Speaker 200:32:08We did that basically 2 quarters in a row, just to make ourselves feel comfortable. Speaker 700:32:14Great. Thanks. And then on the construction loans that are rolling on to permanent, are those rates negotiated from prior Yes, so prior before the rate hikes, are those coming on at lower rates or are those coming on at current market rates when they go to permanent? Speaker 200:32:32Most all the construction loans, I can't think of any that are fixed rates. So they're all floating rates. Now the difference in those floating rates from when they were put on Versus something that would be put on today is my earlier comments is a little more spread today than there was 12 or 18 months ago, but all those are at floating rates. Speaker 700:32:54Okay. And then finally for me, and I appreciate you taking the questions. When we look at sort of terminal beta on interest bearing deposits, it's 45% sort of a good ballpark to be looking at? Speaker 300:33:08I think that's okay, Jared. Part of the issue with that is, it really depends on what happens with Deposits, right? To the extent that we're funding the balance sheet with either borrowings or deposits, right, that beta sort of It can change, right, depending on how that looks. So, I think that's an okay number to use. I think that's an okay number to use for now and we're going to see how that moves as we go And again that's good or sorry quarter and back half of the year and that's just going to be sort of dependent upon again right what how we end up funding the balance sheet. Speaker 700:33:48Great. Thanks very much. Operator00:33:52Thank you. And I'm currently showing no further questions at Time, I'd like to hand the call back over to Kevin Hasayama for closing remarks. Speaker 200:34:00I have one last comment. This Bob, I'd like to wish Jamie a happy birthday today and welcome to the 2nd earnings call and all that. But Kevin? Speaker 100:34:11Thanks everyone. We appreciate your interest in First Hawaiian and please feel free to contact me if you have any additional questions. Thanks again for joining us and enjoy the rest of your day. Operator00:34:22This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallFirst Hawaiian Q2 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) First Hawaiian Earnings HeadlinesFirst Hawaiian, Inc. (NASDAQ:FHB) Given Consensus Recommendation of "Reduce" by BrokeragesApril 28, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comKBW Reaffirms Their Hold Rating on First Hawaiian (FHB)April 25, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comWatch This Robotics Demo Before July 23rdJeff Brown, the tech legend who picked shares of Nvidia in 2016 before they jumped by more than 22,000%... Just did a demo of what Nvidia’s CEO said will be "the first multitrillion-dollar robotics industry."May 4, 2025 | Brownstone Research (Ad)Barclays Sticks to Its Hold Rating for First Hawaiian (FHB)April 25, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comQ1 2025 First Hawaiian Inc Earnings CallApril 24, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comFirst Hawaiian Inc (FHB) Q1 2025 Earnings Call Highlights: Navigating Growth Amid Market UncertaintyApril 24, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comSee More First Hawaiian Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like First Hawaiian? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on First Hawaiian and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About First HawaiianFirst Hawaiian (NASDAQ:FHB) operates as a bank holding company for First Hawaiian Bank that provides a range of banking products and services to consumer and commercial customers in the United States. It operates in three segments: Retail Banking, Commercial Banking, and Treasury and Other. The company offers various deposit products, including checking, savings, and time deposit accounts, and other deposit accounts. It also provides residential and commercial mortgage loans, home equity lines of credit and loans, automobile loans and leases, secured and unsecured lines of credit, installment loans, small business loans and leases, and construction lending, as well as commercial lease and auto dealer financing. In addition, the company offers wealth management, personal installment, individual investment and financial planning, insurance protection, trust and estate, private banking, investment management, retirement planning, and merchant processing services, as well as consumer and commercial credit cards. The company was formerly known as BancWest Corporation and changed its name to First Hawaiian, Inc. in April 2016. 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There are 9 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the First Hawaiian Inc. 2nd Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Operator00:00:26Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Kevin Hasayama, Investor Relations Manager. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:36Thank you, Shannon, and thank you everyone for joining us as we review our financial results for the Q2 of 2023. With me today are Bob Harrison, Chairman, President and CEO Jamie Moses, Chief Financial Officer and Lee Nakamura, Chief Risk Officer. We have prepared a slide presentation that we will refer to in our remarks today. The presentation is available for downloading and viewing on our website at fhb.com in the Investor Relations section. During today's call, we will be making forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:11So please refer to Slide 1 for our Safe Harbor statement. We may also discuss certain non GAAP financial measures. The appendix to this presentation contains reconciliations of these non GAAP financial measurements to the most directly comparable GAAP measurements. And now I'll turn Speaker 200:01:30the call over to Bob. Good morning, everyone. I'm pleased to welcome Lee Nakamura. Lee was recently promoted to Chief Risk Officer after holding a variety of positions in the bank, including Deputy Chief Risk Officer and Treasurer. Leigh has over 30 years of banking experience, and I'm confident she'll be great in her new role. Speaker 200:01:51I'll start with an overview of the local economy. The Hawaii economy continues to do well. The statewide Seasonally adjusted unemployment rate in June was 3%, which is lower than the national rate of 3.6%. Total visitor arrivals were 802,000 in May, just 5.4% the May 2019 arrival number. Japanese visitor arrivals at 34,000 was 70% below the May 2019 levels. Speaker 200:02:24Visitor spend in March was $1,700,000,000 19% higher than May 2019. The housing market has remained stable. In June, the median sales price for a single family home on Oahu was 1,100,000 or 4.5% June of last year. The median sales price for condos on Oahu was 510,000 4.5% below 2022. Turning to Slide 2, I'll give an overview of our 2nd quarter results. Speaker 200:03:00Net income was $62,400,000 or $0.49 per share. As loans grew, we continued to grow capital Our return on average tangible assets was 1.05% And our return on average tangible common equity was 18.57%. We continue to maintain strong capital levels with the CET1 ratio of 12.05 and total capital of 13.17%. The Board maintained the quarterly dividend at $0.26 Turning to Slide 3, Our balance sheet remains solid. In the Q2, we brought down our excess liquidity by a little over $300,000,000 as the recent disruption in the banking industry calmed down. Speaker 200:03:55This enabled us to reduce some higher cost short term borrowings. We continue to have a strong liquidity position. As of June 30, our total available liquidity was $8,600,000,000 which was over 100 percent of uninsured non public deposits. The duration of our investment portfolio remains stable at 5.5 years and cash flows from the portfolio were about $60,000,000 per month as we had expected. Turning to Slide 4, Period end loans and leases were $14,400,000,000 an increase of $142,000,000 or 1% from the end of Q1. Speaker 200:04:44In the Q2, about $130,000,000 of completed construction loans were converted to CRE. And during the quarter, we also exited approximately 55,000,000 of non relationship shared national credits. We continue to believe that full year loan growth will be in the low to mid single digit range. Now I'll turn it over to Jamie. Speaker 300:05:11Thanks, Bob, and good morning, everyone. Turning to slide 5, total deposit balances decreased by $203,000,000 or 1 percent to $21,100,000,000 at quarter end. The retail and commercial deposits declined by $664,000,000 or 3.4 percent in the 2nd quarter. Commercial deposits declined by about 4 $4,000,000 or 4.9 percent. Public deposit balances increased by $461,000,000 in the quarter as public Time deposit balances grew by $555,000,000 which was partially offset by a decline in public operating balances. Speaker 300:05:59Our total cost of deposits was 111 basis points in the 2nd quarter, an increase of 29 basis points linked quarter due to higher rates paid and the shift in mix to higher rate deposit accounts. Turning to Slide 6, net interest income declined by $7,300,000 from the prior quarter to $159,900,000 The decrease was primarily due to higher funding costs, partially offset by higher asset yields. Similarly, the net interest margin declined by 20 basis points to 2.91%. Throughout the end of the Q2, the cumulative betas were 34.5% on interest bearing deposits and 21% on total deposits. Looking forward, we anticipate that the NIM will decline by 15 to 20 basis points in the Q3 due to continued repricing and deposit migration. Speaker 300:06:51On Slide 7, non interest income was $47,300,000 this quarter, a $1,700,000 decline from the prior quarter. The decline was primarily due to lower BOLI income along with lower credit and debit card fee income. 1st quarter BOLI income included a $2,000,000 death Expenses were $120,900,000 $2,300,000 or 2% higher than the prior quarter. The increase in expenses was driven by a $1,900,000 increase in salaries and benefits, which included $2,900,000 of separation and severance payments. We expect our overall annual expenses to be in line with our original outlook. Speaker 300:07:33Now, I'll turn it over to Leigh. Speaker 400:07:35Thank you, Jamie. Moving to Slide 8, the bank maintained its strong credit performance and healthy credit metrics in the 2nd quarter. Ulan's quarter 2 charge off rate was 10 basis points, 1 basis point higher than in quarter 1. Nonperforming assets and loans 90 days or more past due were 11 basis points at the end of quarter 2, down 2 basis points from the prior quarter. Criticized assets increased to 93 basis points with special mention assets at 52 basis points and classified assets at 41 basis points of total loans and leases. Speaker 400:08:11The bank recorded a $5,000,000 provision for the quarter. Loans 30 days to 89 days past due were $40,800,000 or 28 basis points of total loans and leases at the end of quarter 2, unchanged from the prior quarter. Moving to Slide 9. We have a roll forward of the allowance for the quarter by disclosure segment. The reserve increased marginally this quarter resulting from offsetting factors including loan growth and improved economic outlook and an increase in the qualitative overlay on construction and home equity. Speaker 400:08:45The allowance for credit loss increased $1,500,000 to $148,600,000 This level equates to 1.03 percent of total loans and leases. The reserve for unfunded commitments was unchanged at $36,200,000 The allowance anticipates cyclical losses consistent with the recession and includes a qualitative overlay for potential macroeconomic impacts not captured in our base model. Turning to Slide 10, We provide a snapshot of our CRE exposure. CRE represents about 30% of our total loan portfolio outstanding. The overall credit portfolio sorry, excuse me, the overall credit quality of this portfolio remains very good. Speaker 400:09:31The increase in criticized office loans in the 2nd quarter was primarily due to 2 loans. One loan consists of a handful of small office properties in Downtown Honolulu and is being actively resolved. This loan is current and we are comfortable with the plan. The other loan is located in Downtown Los Angeles and is going through the sales process. We expect a full recovery on that loan. Speaker 400:09:55We continue to closely monitor this segment given the implications of higher rates, Operator00:10:27Our first question comes from the line of Steven Alexopoulos with JPMorgan. Your line is now open. Speaker 200:10:33Hi, everyone. Good morning, Steve. Hey, Steve. Speaker 500:10:37I want to start, so on the non interest bearing deposits, there was another quarter where you and the industry saw strong outflows. But I'm curious, how did this trend through the quarter? And are there any signs of the pace of outflows abating? Speaker 300:10:54It's kind of hard to say for sure. I would suggest The way that we look at the data, we think that it is abating somewhat. And what I mean by that is, so far what we've seen this Quarter has been on a relative basis less outflow than what we saw through the 3 months in Q2. I think if you're drawing if you're looking at a graph of where deposits have been going and you're drawing a trend line, I think you start to see that flatten out. Speaker 600:11:25At least so far Speaker 300:11:25in the quarter, that's what we've seen. Speaker 500:11:28Okay. That's helpful. And on the margin then, So you're down 20 basis points this quarter, a little bit worse than what we thought coming into the quarter. Now you're saying down 15 to 20. But I'm curious, I know you don't give longer term guidance, but do you feel like we're getting pretty close to the bottom once we roll through? Speaker 500:11:47I know it's going to be contingent on what You just talked about, but if that trend line is starting to flat on the NIB outflows, do you think we might get some stability after the Q3? Speaker 300:11:57I do think that, right? And obviously, Steve, that's entirely contingent upon what happens with the Fed and rates and all that. But we do see that sort of the bottom of our guidance. We think that's probably about where it bottoms out given sort of a stable forward outlook At this point and that's probably like somewhere in the Q4 for us. So that's kind of how we're thinking about and how we're planning going forward. Speaker 500:12:26That sounds good. And then just on loan growth. So I heard you, Bob, reiterating the low to mid single digit, which I'm a little surprised because you're running about Higher, that's year over year. I know the comps are tougher because you had a very strong second half. But you're not expecting you've had good momentum, good conversions to CRE. Speaker 500:12:43You're not expecting more momentum to continue. I'm surprised you're not at least pointing to mid single digit growth. Thanks. Speaker 200:12:50Yes. It's a tough one, Steve. We have A number of commercial real estate projects that are completing and going to get paid off. So a little bit we're swimming upstream on that. And origination to your point has still been fine, but we are seeing in the next quarter to a fair number this quarter, Meaning Q3 and Q4, a fair number of commercial real estate payoffs. Speaker 200:13:15And so there is a balance there. Speaker 500:13:17Got it. And I saw your called out that you saw a good growth in the dealer. Where do dealer balances sit now versus historical? Just wondering how much room there might be For still an improvement there. Speaker 200:13:31I have that here somewhere, but I know we're still several 100,000,000 below the 2019 year end, I think it was 8.50 give or take at 2019 and where we are today, Jamie? Speaker 300:13:45I think it's just under just it might be around right around $700,000,000 just under $700,000,000 So yes, Steve, I think we have I think there's probably a good As Bob said, right, I think there's probably at least a couple of $100,000,000 worth of room there, given historicals. Speaker 200:14:01The question is, Does it go back to the way it was before? Yes. And you probably saw an article on The Wall Street Journal yesterday saying probably not. I tend to agree with that. The Industry has changed, but I do feel that the new number is Given that we don't have a huge difference in the amount of lines and availability to our customers, It's higher than where we are today, but it's probably not where we ended 2019. Speaker 200:14:34Thanks for answering my questions. Operator00:14:37Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of David Feaster with Raymond James. Your line is now open. Speaker 600:14:45Hi, good morning everybody. Hey Dave. Good morning. Maybe just following up on your commentary about The upcoming maturities and stuff, I'm just curious, could you quantify that for us? How much You have expected to roll off maybe in the next 6 to 12 months, where roll off rates are and then where Maybe repricing tends to be or as well as new loan yield add on rates. Speaker 300:15:16So Dave, just to clarify, are you talking about securities or loans? Speaker 600:15:20Loans. Speaker 300:15:23Got it. Okay. Yes. So I mean, so I think what you're really asking is essentially a NIM question here, right? That's what you're trying to get at, right? Speaker 300:15:33So I appreciate you trying to ask it a different way. But so I think the NIM guidance is the NIM guidance. We're seeing We'll call it like adds to the portfolio in totality. We're seeing sort of on the commercial side a little Higher in sort of the low 7s. On the we're still adding to very few amount of residential mortgages. Speaker 300:16:00Those are sort of high 6s now versus Where they've been in the past. But those are sort of the roll on rates at the moment. And to be fair to all that, we're seeing in general, we're seeing a better ability for us To dictate pricing, structure and credit today than we were in the past, right? A Speaker 200:16:25Little bit more Speaker 300:16:25of a buyer's market rather than a seller's market today. Speaker 600:16:28That's terrific. And ultimately what I'm trying to figure out is kind of where does the Core NIM stabilized like as we look forward. So maybe on the other side of the coin, I guess on the deposit front, How is new account growth going? Where are you seeing good opportunities to take share and acquire new clients? And then just any thoughts on on core deposit growth going forward, the strategy to continue to drive that and where new money yields are on Speaker 200:17:03Yes, a number of questions in there, Dave. So let me pick off a couple of them. First of all, on new accounts, new deposit accounts, like I think most banks in your coverage, we're very actively going after new accounts. That's been successful. We are trying to do that in a number of different ways, not just marketing, but more value to the customer. Speaker 200:17:25We're upgrading Our mobile offering this month, later this month or next actually next month in August. And so all those things, I think that's Been successful. So really trying to grow that core operating account type of On the lending side, it's very interesting. To Jamie's point, it's being much more disciplined On how we're going after business, we've seen rates and terms move back to what I think is more Sustainable levels, people with being very aggressive and low rates for long periods of time, That's kind of gone now as liquidity is more dear and we're really seeing more of a balance. For example, we have not been very active in indirect lending for the last, gosh, 4 plus years. Speaker 200:18:24That line item was down almost exactly $300,000,000 over that period. We just didn't see it being accretive at the time. We love the business. It's We've been in it for a long time, but it just didn't make sense there for a while. Now you're starting to see that and especially to Jamie's point on the Commercial side, a more reasonable market out there. Speaker 700:18:49That's Speaker 600:18:51and then just where are you seeing, I guess new deposit interest bearing deposit costs coming on. Speaker 300:19:05So it's a tough question because that it's sort of they come on at different rates for different types of customers that we have. In general, Dave, what we're trying to do is, right, we are trying every day, we're trying to go out and grab new customers. And that's not at the moment, that's not really through some promotional offer that we're really offering on especially on liquid side of things, right? And so this is Part of the reason why you've seen the runoff and balances that we have, right? So every day, we're focused on acquiring new customers and turning those And then taking care of the existing relationships that we have, on our balance sheet. Speaker 300:19:42And so to the extent that it's not a relationship It has been here for a while. We're kind of thinking sort of letting some of that some of those deposits kind of run off the balance sheet while taking care of our core So it's kind of a it's a tough question that they're being some customers obviously Our best customers are getting, say, higher exception rates and yields in their liquid portfolios. Our less best customers are getting lower rates. And of course, that's dependent upon account size and things of that nature in there as well. It's kind of a continued management of managing the entire balance sheet and managing the relationships that we have both on the acquisition side and the current relationships that we have. Speaker 200:20:32We talked about this starting a year ago, Dave, that For our larger balance, commercial and personal customers, we really started taking care of them Early and now it's just kind of going through the rest of knowledge. We're getting to the earlier question from Steve, we're getting close to the end on that I think. Speaker 600:20:51That's great. But maybe following up on some of your commentary on the loan side, Bob, I'm just curious, where are With liquidity being paramount and some other folks pulling back and you still being open for business, where are you seeing good risk adjusted Returns, where how is demand from your clients? Where are you seeing opportunities? And I guess if you had to peg, how much of your growth would you expect to come from the Mainland versus Hawaii? Speaker 200:21:25Yes. I'll start maybe with the end of that question. We're right about 24% of our loans on the Mainland now. As we've talked about in previous calls, we assume that would go up a little bit sooner than the Hawaii loans, although it is keeping pace a percentage point or so. We are seeing the dealer balances because the portfolio is larger on the mainland, that will be a little bit stronger on the mainland than Here in Hawaii, but we do see that coming back. Speaker 200:21:56Up in California a couple of weeks ago, the domestic manufacturers seem to be Ahead of the foreign manufacturers on bringing back supply. So I think that's been helpful. I think the other All the manufacturers by year end will be closer to where they want to be on that. So that will rebalance to whatever The new normal is by year end as far as floor plan outstandings. On the commercial real estate side, To Jamie's point, better pricing, better structure, that's both here in Hawaii as well as on the mainland. Speaker 200:22:33So if you're open for business, Which we are, we're going to be more particular, but you really can't get a better structured transaction At higher pricing and so we're looking at that. Where it's going to be slow, not surprisingly, is residential Home equity, I think, will slow down a bit. Credit cards on balance should hold its own. But the consumer side, I think, will be a bit slower than the commercial side. Speaker 500:23:03That's helpful. Thank you. Operator00:23:07Thank you. Our next Question comes from the line of Kelly Motta with KBW. Your line is now open. Speaker 800:23:15Hi, thanks for the question. I apologize, I'm joining a little bit late, so I apologize if this has been already asked. But, it seems like you're doing a Pretty bang up job with expenses that have been really within the range you've been looking for. But just with the challenging Headwinds for margin that you've been discussing, at least near term, is there any additional room on the I know you're already directing a lot of attention there. And as we look ahead, is this still a good range and So looking for the same kind of level of expenses that you have at this point? Speaker 800:23:58Thanks. Speaker 200:24:01Hey, Kelly, this is Bob. Yes, we're always focused on expenses. We have been investing more clearly in our technology and our people, Getting good people like many other places has been a challenge. So we have made adjustments there. That we think is really a long term investment much like our technology. Speaker 200:24:23So now that we've kind of Got it. I think we're closer to being more of a status quo on our salary and benefits type expenses. But on a broader level, maybe I'll turn that over to Jamie. Speaker 300:24:38Yes. Thanks, Kelly. I mean, I think the way to think about it for the rest of this year is that coming into 2023, We knew that we had to make certain investments to improve our digital offerings to improve things on that side of the operational efficiency that sort of stuff On in the house. And whether or not the NIM is going to be lower or in the back half of the year, we still feel like we need to make those investments for this So our guide on the year that we gave upfront is still we still think that's where we're going to be. As Bob said, we are always looking at But we were pretty tight this year on how we were managing those what I would call expenses that are sort of Non strategic, so we're feeling strongly that we need to continue the trend that we were on from an expense perspective this year. Speaker 300:25:31And then after that, we're heading into budgeting season and things right now. So we'll obviously be looking at that, but not ready to give any guidance sort of into 2024 at the moment. Speaker 800:25:42Got it. And maybe a final question for me. I think in your prepared remarks, you said something about exiting some SICs or Mainland kind of club deals. As we as you look ahead To where loan growth is going to be coming from, what's the appetite for continued growth on the Mainland? Speaker 200:26:07Yes. Kelly, this is really I look at that as almost 2 different questions. I think there is Clearly, why we exited those relationships, well, they weren't relationships, they were just credit only deals. And really as we look at The scarcity and value of liquidity and capital, we really wanted to focus on relationships and whether those relationships are here in Hawaii, which Our home and we want to do as much of that as we possibly can. And we also have relationships with the U. Speaker 200:26:37S. Mainland. So it really is more of a focus on Where we can add value and where there's more than maybe just a credit relationship as opposed to where the domicile is. Speaker 800:26:52Got it. Appreciate it. Thanks so much. Operator00:26:57Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Liesch with Sandler O'Neill. Your line is now open. Speaker 300:27:08Hi, everyone. Just a couple housekeeping items for me. The non interest income is like $47,000,000 to 48,000,000 Still the right range to be thinking about? You got it. Got it. Speaker 300:27:21And then, the tax rate for a couple Quarter was slightly below where I was forecasting. What should we be using on that front? I think 24% to 24.5% is a good number on the tax rate. Got you. Thank you. Speaker 300:27:36You've covered everything else I wanted to ask about. All right, Andrew. Thank you, Andrew. Operator00:27:48Our next question comes from the line of Jared Shaw with Wells Fargo Securities. Your line is now open. Speaker 700:27:55Hey, everybody. Thanks for Taking the questions. Maybe starting with going back to the Shared National Credit discussion. The exits that you talked about this quarter, were those sales or were those natural runoffs? And if there were sales, was there a loss On that? Speaker 200:28:16They were good question, Jared. They were sales, but at par. Speaker 700:28:23Okay. And then in the commentary you talked about the office criticized loans, and I think you had said that they were One of them was Downtown LA, but I thought last quarter we talked or you'd said that your LA office was More West LA and not Downtown. Can you just give an update on what your non Hawaii office Current office exposure looks like geographically? Speaker 200:28:54Connecting what we said last quarter to what we said right now, they were both correct. We have one loan in Downtown LA and The majority of the rest are in West LA. So what's really being resolved is this one loan in Downtown LA. As far as broader office, it really hasn't changed from what we talked about last time. Primarily those gateway cities on the West Coast, Several of which are credit tenants and so the lease is set up to be It's a lull, but it really is tied into a specific credit tenant. Speaker 200:29:31And we're very comfortable with that or a couple that are To very high net worth individuals that have shown strong support in the past. So we're very comfortable with the rest of the office portfolio. These 2 popped up and they're being addressed. Speaker 700:29:47Okay. Thanks. And then when I look at Slide 9 and the growth in the provision for Construction and home equity, I don't know, I guess, how does that square with what you were talking about in terms of Very good employment trends and very strong valuations. And it seems like construction projects and residential, There would be very little, I guess, lost content in Hawaii at this point. What's driving the higher the need for higher provision in those Speaker 400:30:22So I can answer that. This is Lee. So with respect to construction, What we did in both the Q1 and the Q2 is we took a deep dive into our investor CRE and construction portfolios. And in the Q2, we actually re underwrote the portfolios based on current NOIs and interest rates and cap rates. And it really was with respect to construction, it really was more about the Mainland multi Family, where they're still under construction and the metrics are still good today, but we have a little bit of uncertainty as to what the market would look like in a year or 18 months. Speaker 400:31:03And then with respect to home equity, it was about we looked at the portfolio and we looked at the pool, the sub pool where there was very large utilization and they were coming off of the teaser rates. And so there's just a little bit of concern about The increase in the interest expense that these particular loans will be facing. So it's not a specific I don't think it's in contrast to anything we've said before about the economy. It's just these sub pockets. Speaker 200:31:40Yes. And Lee brings up an excellent point. I forgot to mention earlier, Jared, that We re underwrote the entire CRE investor CRE portfolio over Anything over $5,000,000 in balance during the quarter, during the Q2, current interest rates, current cap rates, really looking at You know what the risks are and the stresses and we didn't re grade anything. Speaker 400:32:05Right. Speaker 200:32:08We did that basically 2 quarters in a row, just to make ourselves feel comfortable. Speaker 700:32:14Great. Thanks. And then on the construction loans that are rolling on to permanent, are those rates negotiated from prior Yes, so prior before the rate hikes, are those coming on at lower rates or are those coming on at current market rates when they go to permanent? Speaker 200:32:32Most all the construction loans, I can't think of any that are fixed rates. So they're all floating rates. Now the difference in those floating rates from when they were put on Versus something that would be put on today is my earlier comments is a little more spread today than there was 12 or 18 months ago, but all those are at floating rates. Speaker 700:32:54Okay. And then finally for me, and I appreciate you taking the questions. When we look at sort of terminal beta on interest bearing deposits, it's 45% sort of a good ballpark to be looking at? Speaker 300:33:08I think that's okay, Jared. Part of the issue with that is, it really depends on what happens with Deposits, right? To the extent that we're funding the balance sheet with either borrowings or deposits, right, that beta sort of It can change, right, depending on how that looks. So, I think that's an okay number to use. I think that's an okay number to use for now and we're going to see how that moves as we go And again that's good or sorry quarter and back half of the year and that's just going to be sort of dependent upon again right what how we end up funding the balance sheet. Speaker 700:33:48Great. Thanks very much. Operator00:33:52Thank you. And I'm currently showing no further questions at Time, I'd like to hand the call back over to Kevin Hasayama for closing remarks. Speaker 200:34:00I have one last comment. This Bob, I'd like to wish Jamie a happy birthday today and welcome to the 2nd earnings call and all that. But Kevin? Speaker 100:34:11Thanks everyone. We appreciate your interest in First Hawaiian and please feel free to contact me if you have any additional questions. Thanks again for joining us and enjoy the rest of your day. Operator00:34:22This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by