NASDAQ:FRME First Merchants Q3 2024 Earnings Report $37.16 +0.35 (+0.96%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$37.17 +0.01 (+0.03%) As of 04:05 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 Merchants EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.84Consensus EPS $0.90Beat/MissMissed by -$0.06One Year Ago EPS$0.94First Merchants Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$265.95 millionExpected Revenue$160.55 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$105.40 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AFirst Merchants Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2024Date10/24/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateThursday, October 24, 2024Conference Call Time11:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsFirst Merchants' Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, July 24, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 12:30 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by First Merchants Q3 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 24, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the First Merchants Corporation Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Before we begin, management would like to remind you that today's call contains forward looking statements with respect to the future performance and financial condition of First Merchants Corporation that involves risks and uncertainties. Further information is contained within the press release, which we encourage you to review. Additionally, management may refer to non GAAP measures, which are intended to supplement, but not substitute for the most directly comparable GAAP measures. The press release available on the website contains financial and other quantitative information to be discussed today as well as a reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP measures. Operator00:00:51As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to Mr. Mark Hardwick, CEO. Mr. Hardwick, you may begin. Speaker 100:01:03Good morning, and welcome to First Merchants' Q3 2024 Conference Call. Thanks for the introductions and for covering the forward looking statement on Page 2. We released our earnings today at approximately 8 am Eastern Time, and you can access the slides by following the link on the 3rd page of our earnings release. On Page 3 of our slides, you will see today's presenters and our bios, including President, Mike Stewart Chief Credit Officer, John Martin and Chief Financial Officer, Michelle Kebielski. We are pleased with our 3rd quarter results and the focused momentum that we are building. Speaker 100:01:43The pending sale of 5 non core Illinois branches, restructuring of the securities portfolio and successful completion of our 4 major technology initiatives provide us with the opportunity to reprioritize our core markets and introduce innovative customer acquisition strategies. We are well positioned for organic growth in 2025 and any well priced inorganic growth opportunity that may be available in the future. On page 4, we have a few financial highlights for the quarter, including $18,300,000,000 of total assets, dollars 12,700,000,000 of total loans, dollars 14,400,000,000 of total deposits and $5,600,000,000 of assets under advisement. Our map also highlights the 5 Chicago area branches we announced we were selling in August. We expect that transaction to close in December of this year and we now have regulatory approval. Speaker 100:02:46On Slide 5, you can see earnings per share for the quarter totaled $0.84 or $0.95 per share after adjusting for a $9,100,000 loss we recorded from a 3rd quarter sale of securities. We are anticipating a $20,000,000 to $25,000,000 gain on the sale of our Chicagoland branches in the 4th quarter and we took advantage of favorable market conditions to restructure a small portion of the securities portfolio. We plan to use the remainder of the gain in the 4th quarter to support additional balance sheet restructuring that we believe will position us for higher earnings in the future. Our tangible book our tangible common equity ratio has continued to build and is now 8.76%. 3rd quarter tangible book value per share, which is reported on Slide 11, was $26.64 per share and has increased by $4.21 per share or 19% over the last 12 months and $7.38 per share or 38% over the last 2 years. Speaker 100:03:54Adjusted net interest margin also improved by 7 basis points Q3 over Q2 and helped drive PP and R growth, which supported a sub-fifty 5 percent efficiency ratio for the quarter. Earnings per share for the 9 months ended September 30, 2024 totaled $2.31 per share or $2.48 per share when adjusted for the loss from the sale of securities. Now Mike Stewart will discuss our line of business momentum. Mike? Speaker 200:04:23Yes. Thank you, Mark, and good morning to all. Our business strategy summarized on slide 6 remains unchanged. We are a commercially focused organization across all these business segments and our primary markets of Indiana, Michigan and Ohio. Throughout 2024, we have remained focused on building earnings momentum by executing our strategic imperatives of organic loan, deposit, fee income growth and increasing market share by engaging, rewarding and retaining our teammates and investing in the technology platforms of our delivery channel. Speaker 200:05:00And as Mark noted on the prior slide, we have now completed all 4 of our major technology initiatives. We have upgraded our digital channels in our consumer, commercial and private wealth segments, which is essentially touching our entire client base. Therefore, we have improved client experiences and enhanced tools for our sales teams to leverage as we grow the fee based businesses and compete for a larger share of wallet. So let's turn to Slide 7. The 3rd quarter continues the choppy trend of loan growth we have experienced the past year. Speaker 200:05:38Total loans grew 0.5% on an annualized basis during the quarter, which followed last quarter's 6% growth. Year to date, total loans have grown at an annualized rate of 1.9%. The $9,600,000,000 commercial segment was essentially flat during the Q3, but within this segment, the C and I portfolio continues to be the primary driver of our growth growing 1%. Last quarter, the C and I portfolio grew at nearly 13% and year to date C and I has grown over $250,000,000 or nearly 4.5 percent annualized. The C and I growth has been shared across all the regions with Indiana, Michigan and our sponsor teams driving the bulk of the increase. Speaker 200:06:28The strong C and I growth has been offset by the contraction within the investment real estate portfolio. The stabilization of construction projects has continued and our clients have chosen to either sell their projects, which is taking advantage of attractive cap rates or they've refinanced their projects into the permanent market, they can take advantage of the low long term interest rates. The investment real estate portfolio has declined over 11% throughout 2024, which is nearly $150,000,000 During the Q3, the decline slowed to just over $20,000,000 And as I highlighted last quarter, I believe the investment real estate portfolio is close to or at its bottom of footings. Why? Because new project financings are at healthy levels. Speaker 200:07:16The investment real estate team continues to win mandates for future multifamily, industrial and warehouse construction projects and our clients continue to appreciate our consistent approach to underwriting through cycles and our record of successful syndications. Our commercial focus has always been the primary driver of our balance sheet growth and the commercial and industrial sector is our largest portfolio. C and I comprises 50% of our total loan portfolio and 2 thirds of our commercial portfolio. The business owners within our markets continue to execute their operating plans with growing working capital, equipment or acquisition needs. And our commercial bankers continue to support these companies not only with capital solutions, but also with treasury solutions. Speaker 200:08:08Overall, we continue to gain market share with existing and new clients. Those two attributes, organic growth and market share growth, are the primary drivers of our balance sheet. Continued growth expectations are supported by the 4th bullet point, strong pipelines for both C and I and investment real estate ending at very strong levels. The consumer portfolio is comprised of residential, mortgage, HELOC, installment and private banking relationships. During the Q3, the consumer portfolio grew more than 1.5% with the private banking and HELOC portfolios as the primary drivers of that increase. Speaker 200:08:50As noted, the consumer loan pipeline remains strong heading into the 4th quarter with mortgage up over 15% at the end of June and more than double from the beginning of the year. Let's turn to Slide 8 and a few comments on deposits. The story of this slide is mix and managing deposit costs. Michelle will be reviewing the improvement of our net interest margin and this slide represents the work our teams have accomplished in managing and building core deposit relationships while reducing deposit cost on public funds and time deposit categories. For the quarter, total deposits grew at a 2.3% annualized rate, while for the full year, our total deposits have declined by only 1.5%. Speaker 200:09:40The Commercial segment grew deposits during the quarter after a reduction of over $170,000,000 of public fund balances. Public funds are one of our highest cost depository categories and have been a focus of our efforts to both balance relationship strategy with our pricing tiers. Overall, I am pleased with the growth of the non public fund balances within the commercial segment, which is approximately $255,000,000 We also continued our pricing discipline within our consumer segment, specifically time deposits. We began to reduce our money markets and CD specials, while reducing the tenors of new CDs earlier this year. The consumer deposit decline during the quarter was primarily within the time deposit category. Speaker 200:10:28And as noted by the last bullet point, we expect 50% of the time deposits that will reprice in the Q4 to be at lower rates than the current weighted average rate. So for the year, total consumer deposit balances are essentially flat. Overall, I am pleased with the active management our teams are having with their clients. Stable loan yields and reducing deposit cost should continue to build the earnings momentum of our balance sheet. I will turn the call over to you, Michelle, and you can review more in detail the composition of our balance sheet and the drivers of our income statement. Speaker 300:11:07Thanks, Mike. Slide 9 covers our 3rd quarter performance. Net interest income on line 11 has grown for the 2nd straight quarter with an increase of $2,500,000 sequentially. Non interest income on line 13 was reduced by the $9,100,000 loss on bond sales that Mark mentioned earlier and when normalized for that loss totaled $34,000,000 also reflecting an increase for the 2nd straight quarter. As a result, pre tax pre provision earnings grew linked quarter by nearly $2,000,000 totaling $70,500,000 reflecting strong core franchise performance. Speaker 300:11:47Slide 10 shows year to date results with pre tax pre provision earnings totaling $199,300,000 Tangible book value per share of $26.64 benefited from strong earnings and AOCI recapture resulting in an increase of $4.21 or 19% compared to the same period of prior year and an increase of $7.38 over the same period of 2022. Slide 11 shows details of our investment portfolio. The available for sale securities we sold had a book value of $158,900,000 and were sold for a loss of $9,100,000 The bonds had a weighted average yield of 2.85% and an average life of 5.6 years. We took the opportunity to reposition the securities portfolio in anticipation of the gain expected in the Q4 from the sale of our Illinois branches expected to close in December. Expected cash flows from scheduled principal, interest payments and bond maturities in the next 12 months totals $298,000,000 with a roll off yield of approximately 2.28%, which will have a positive impact on our overall portfolio yield along with the sale of lower yielding securities. Speaker 300:13:13Slide 12 shows some details of our loan portfolio. The loan portfolio yield increased meaningfully by 14 basis points to 6.86 percent. New and renewed loans, albeit a little lower than last quarter, were still at a respectable 7.7% yield. The bottom right shows that 2 thirds of our loan portfolio is variable rate. As the Fed cuts rates, the repricing of our variable rate portfolio is certainly a headwind, but the new loan yield along with the fixed rate loan repricing should help offset the impact in the near term. Speaker 300:13:51The allowance for credit losses is shown on Slide 13. This quarter we recorded net charge offs of $6,700,000 which was offset by provision for credit losses on loans of 5,000,000 resulting in a reserve at quarter end of $187,800,000 with a coverage ratio of 1.48%. In addition to the ACL, we have $18,800,000 of remaining fair value marks on acquired loans. When including those marks, our coverage ratio is 1.63%. Overall, we are still more than adequately reserved for our allowance and it remains well above peer levels. Speaker 300:14:32Slide 14 shows details of our deposit portfolio. The total cost of deposits was relatively flat increasing by just 3 basis points to 2.69% this quarter. Deposits included in the sale of the Illinois branches of $287,700,000 were reclassed to held for sale causing the decline in total deposits given they are not reflected in the total deposit balance at quarter end. When normalizing for the reclass, deposits grew organically $83,700,000 or 2.3% annualized linked quarter. Slide 15, net interest income on a fully tax equivalent basis of $137,000,000 increased $2,600,000 from prior quarter. Speaker 300:15:21This was driven by earning asset yields shown on line 4, which increased 13 basis points linked quarter outpacing funding costs on line 5, which increased 6 basis points. The result was a meaningful expansion of stated net interest margin of 7 basis points and an increase of 13 basis points from the Q1. Next, Slide 16 shows the details of non interest income. Non interest income totaled $24,900,000 and when normalized for the realized loss on securities was $34,000,000 an increase of $2,600,000 or 8.4 percent over prior quarter. Customer related fees increased $2,000,000 primarily reflecting higher gains on sales of mortgage loans. Speaker 300:16:11Mortgage production was slightly lower than last quarter, but produced more saleable loans driving the increase in mortgage gains. We expect mortgage gains to be lower in Q4 due to seasonality given activity tends to slow a bit around the holidays. Included in non customer related income was a $1,500,000 BOLI claim. Even when excluding that BOLI gain, our non interest income results were slightly above the guidance we provided last quarter. Moving to Slide 17, non interest expense for the quarter totaled $94,600,000 an increase of $3,200,000 over prior quarter. Speaker 300:16:49Workforce costs increased driven by higher incentive accruals due to better quarterly performance. Slide 18 shows our capital ratios. We continue to have a strong capital position with common equity Tier 1 climbing to 11.25% this quarter. The tangible common equity ratio increased 49 basis points due to strong earnings and improvement in the valuation of the available for sale securities portfolio reflected in AOCI. That concludes my remarks and I will now turn it over to our Chief Credit Officer, John Martin to discuss asset quality. Speaker 400:17:25Thanks, Michelle and good morning. My remarks start on Slide 19. I'll begin by highlighting loan portfolio growth, touch on the updated insight slides, review asset quality and the non performing asset roll forward before turning the call back over to Mark. Turning to Slide 19, we had continued strong commercial and industrial loan growth shown on lines 12 that was offset by the continued decline in construction and CRE, non owner occupied or investment real estate on lines 45. Our C and I growth came primarily from new loans rather than increased line utilization. Speaker 400:18:06This quarter, we saw some leveling of the construction portfolio on line 4 with the mini perm and permanent portfolio on line 5 down $70,000,000 As mentioned on prior calls, our investment real estate strategy is to provide construction finance through stabilization with many perm financing options. This can lead to changes between the two categories. We continue to remain well below 2021 are intended to provide transparency into the portfolio. As mentioned on prior calls, the C and I classification shown on slide 20 includes sponsor finance as well as owner occupied CRE. 21% of our C and I loans support manufacturing businesses. Speaker 400:19:01Our current line utilization decreased for the quarter after 3 consecutive quarters of increase from 45.3% to 45%, although balances still increased roughly $15,000,000 on higher commitments of roughly $65,000,000 We participate in roughly $887,000,000 of shared national credits across various industries. These are generally relationships where we have access to management and revenue opportunities that go beyond the credit exposure. In the sponsor finance portfolio, I've highlighted key credit portfolio metrics. There are 89 platform companies with 51 active sponsors in assortment of industries, 66% have a fixed charge coverage ratio of greater than 1.5 times on Q2 borrower information. This portfolio generally consists of single bank deals for platform companies of private equity firms as opposed to large widely syndicated leveraged loans from money center bank trading desks. Speaker 400:20:04We review the individual relationships quarterly for changes in borrower condition, including leverage and cash flow. On Slide 21, we break out the investment or non owner occupied commercial real estate portfolio. Our office loans are detailed on the bottom half of the slide and represent only 2.1% of total loans with the highest concentration outside of general office in the medical office space. The wheel chart on the bottom right details office portfolio maturities, loans maturing in less than a year represent 14.4% of the portfolio or $37,500,000 The office portfolio is well diversified by tenant type and geographic mix. We continue to periodically review our larger office borrowers and view the exposure as reasonably mitigated through a combination of loan to value guarantees, tenant mix and other considerations. Speaker 400:21:02On Slide 22, I highlight this quarter's asset quality trends and position. Non accrual loans were down $2,800,000 while 90 days past due loans saw a significant increase resulting from a $13,000,000 matured relationship. The relationship was renewed shortly after quarter end bringing $13,000,000 of the $14,100,000 90 days past due current. Net charge offs were $6,700,000 for the quarter, resulting largely from a $5,600,000 charge off related to the 2nd quarter trucking company loss. We continue to liquidate the remaining exposure and expect to have the relationship largely resolved by the end of the Q4. Speaker 400:21:47Then moving to Slide 23, I've again rolled forward to mitigate our migration of non performing loans, charge offs ORE and 90 days past due. For the quarter, we added non accrual loans on line 2 of $13,200,000 a reduction from payoffs or changes in accrual status of $7,900,000 on line 3 and a reduction from gross charge offs of $7,600,000 Dropping down to Line 11, 90 day delinquent loans increased $12,400,000 Speaker 500:22:20due Speaker 400:22:20to the matured and renewed relationship resulting in NPAs and 90 day delinquent loans ending the quarter at 78 $400,000 So to summarize, C and I growth was good for the quarter. Commercial real estate continues to refinance and pay off with construction lending balances leveling and asset quality stabilizing after further digesting last quarter's loss. I appreciate your attention. I'll turn the call back over to Mark Hardwick. Speaker 100:22:47Thanks, John. Turning to Slide 24, the 10 year compound annual growth rate of our earnings per share totals 10.2% and has helped support the 8.7% growth rate that we've seen at tangible book value per share. Slide 25 shows our total asset CAGR of 12% during the last 10 years and highlights meaningful acquisitions that have materially added to our footprint and fuel our growth. There are no changes in Slide 26 as we continue to live out both our vision and strategic imperatives. So in summary, we're very pleased with the growth that we've seen in capital and tangible book value per share, which has resumed to its historical trajectory of up and to the right. Speaker 100:23:32We're also optimistic about the momentum we're seeing in our performance, Thanks in part to active deposit and interest rate management. Our net interest margin is expanding and we feel we have the opportunity to outperform expectations into the foreseeable future. Thanks for your attention and your investment in First Merchants. And at this point, we're happy to take questions. Operator00:23:57Certainly. And our first question comes from the line of Terry McEvoy with Stephens. Speaker 600:24:20Hi. Good morning, everybody. Maybe if I could start with a question for Michelle. When you think about 2025 in net interest income, do you think the positive impact from the security sales, both that just occurred in the one you talked about in the Q4, will that offset the impact of lower interest rates in terms of keeping net interest income flat to possibly higher next year? Speaker 300:24:46Well, we're still doing our budgeting for 2025. And so I'll be able to give you some better guidance on the January call for 2025. But even though, aside from the restructuring, the portfolio restructuring, as we've talked about in a declining rate environment, we historically do see a few basis points of margin compression for each quarter point reduction that the Fed is from the Fed, given that we're asset sensitive. But in the down rate environment, we stay focused on growing net interest income and keeping that momentum going even if net interest margin declines. Our loan yields have always demonstrated, I think, some good pricing discipline. Speaker 300:25:25And regardless of the environment, we think we'll be able to continue to deliver on that performance. The bond restructuring, it certainly does help margin, although we've got some we're selling some deposits that have a lower rate. The bonds that we've sold had a yield of $2.85 and so that certainly will have a positive impact on margin. It does put a bit of pressure on net interest income. But when you look at the sale as a whole, we also have some cost savings from it. Speaker 300:25:55And so I think overall financially, it's really pretty the sale is pretty neutral. I think from looking at line to line, there's some puts and takes. But really when we decided to sell those branches, that wasn't really just a short term financial play. It was really more a long term strategic decision. Speaker 500:26:14Yes. Michelle, Speaker 100:26:15I would love to just add, Terry, that the bond sale that we actually did was really late in the quarter. So, I was proud of the margin enhancement that we saw this quarter that came from actions that we've really have been taking inside the existing book. And so, I'm just pleased that all the efforts that we're putting into deposit pricing and loan yields has resulted 2 quarters in a row and an increasing margin. And then just the longer term strategy of being out of Illinois, I feel like you have to be you have to have significant share to make a difference. And it was a market where we felt like we were just some scale and we had to kind of go one direction or the other. Speaker 100:27:04And so really pleased that we found a great partner and we're able to liquidate those locations and deposits in a way that I think will be good for them and good for First Merchants. Speaker 600:27:16Agreed. And maybe, Mark, could you just expand on your the comment in the release and you mentioned earlier on the completion of the technology initiatives, reprioritization of core markets and new kind of customer acquisition strategies. What areas of banks are you talking about? And maybe as an outsider, what type of metrics can we look at over the next several years to kind of see that progression and growth that you're hinting at there? Speaker 100:27:44Yes. Thanks for asking. Mike touched on some of it because it's already happening in his comments. But if you think about the rollout of Terafina, which was an in branch account opening platform, where we reduced our time to open an account from, call it, 45 minutes to about 10 minutes or less. And the deployment of Q2 where we have better online and mobile technology for our customers, we're just reprioritizing and refocusing primacy and making sure that we are that we're growing core deposit accounts. Speaker 100:28:21And when you think about core accounts, they're typically less expensive because they're it's more of their operating account than excess funds that where people are trying to get the best yield possible. And so, we're kind of de prioritizing and reprioritizing the focus on our lesser expensive deposit categories, seems kind of logical, but not spending as much time in the public fund space or on CDs and specials around money markets. What we're really trying to drive this business towards and forward with our real core primacy deposit accounts. And then the so those are 3 of the 4 digital technologies that we rolled out, Q2 for both consumer and commercial. So, we're calling that 2, Terafina for in branch and the last item is the SS and C platform that we purchased, which is called InnoTrust and Black Diamond for our private wealth business. Speaker 100:29:25And we just think our private wealth business still has significant upside growth potential where we can look for parity across all markets. And we have a really significant presence in our Indiana marketplace with our private wealth business, not as much in Detroit. In the Detroit MSA, Level 1 didn't have a private wealth business, Monroe Bank did, which we're trying to leverage into the entire Michigan market and in Columbus, Ohio as well. So, we feel like we now have a tech platform that really customers are demanding in 2024. And so we're excited about the ability to continue to grow that fee income and reprioritizing the business in a way that's a little bit different because we have something better to sell. Speaker 600:30:22Great. Thanks for all that, Mark. And John, just a real quick one for you. The liquidation of the trucking relationship in the Q4, any sense for what that charge off could look like just to kind of frame up expectations when we're all talking 3 months from now? Speaker 400:30:39Yes. We've got less than $4,000,000 still outstanding related to the relationship. And we've got a specific reserve assigned to that relationship at the end of the quarter of roughly $1,000,000 We continue to work through auctions and the sale process, it will be somewhere probably between that $1,000,000 $2,000,000 mark. Speaker 100:31:05And I would just add because I know we've had separate conversations with investors that in last quarter, we really felt like we had the loss behind us. And as we were working through the liquidation process, we've just have not been able to achieve the valuations that we were originally expecting. Speaker 600:31:25Understood. Thanks everyone. Speaker 100:31:28Thanks, Terry. Operator00:31:30Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Nathan Race with Piper Sandler. Speaker 500:31:36Hi, everyone. Good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Speaker 100:31:40Hi, Nate. Speaker 500:31:42Question for Mike or John perhaps. Just curious how you guys are thinking about loan growth the Q4. Mike, I think you mentioned the C and I and investor commercial real estate pipelines are strong heading into 4Q. But just curious how you think all that's going to translate into kind of loan growth into 4Q and just any maybe initial thoughts on loan growth expectations in 2025? Sure. Speaker 200:32:06Yes, Mike. Yes, I think Speaker 700:32:07when you when I'm looking at the pipeline reports and as Speaker 200:32:09a matter of fact, I'm looking at results through October already, it continued to see the positive side of my comment around choppiness. So growth is in the C and I. So I think that's going to be in the Q4 in a solid outcome that mid single digits. Investment real estate, our production is still really strong, but the production are on new projects, right? New projects are typically construction and the equity goes in 1st. Speaker 200:32:42So the draws come in later. So that's what I'm trying to forecast or really get my hand around is when is the footings really going to be at its bottom as payoffs from really good projects hit the secondary market that we originated 2, 2.5 years ago. So I think that we're going to continue to see a little bit more decline in our outstandings of real estate offset by growth within the commercial C and I segment continuing in the 4th. And then in 2025, I really feel like the outlook still should be in that mid digits. Is that helpful? Speaker 200:33:19I mean, the mortgage portfolio probably stays pretty flat growing because of the activity goes on there because we do use our balance sheet on construction and purchases when they make sense with our private wealth group. So Speaker 100:33:36Nate, we have historically said mid to high single digits and over the last quarter or 2 have been talking about more mid single digits like 5% or 6%, mostly as Mike mentioned because of some of the investment real estate pay downs. It's has made it a little more difficult for us to be as bullish when you start thinking about trying to get to a 7%, 8% or 9% level. Speaker 500:34:02Got it. That's helpful and understandable. Michelle, maybe just thinking about the margin outlook for the Q4, obviously, a number of dynamics that play with the securities portfolio repositioning and perhaps maybe we get 2 more 25 basis point Fed cuts. So just curious how you're thinking about the margin trajectory in the 4Q, particularly just given that you guys really manage deposit costs well in the Q3? Speaker 300:34:30Yes. Hi, Nate. Yes, we do plan to be continue to be proactive at managing our deposit costs as the Fed cuts rates with the intention of really driving stability in the NIM. So a stable NIM is internally what we're expecting and I think that bond sale will be supportive of that as well. Speaker 200:34:47And some of those CD pricing, that's a big part of our portfolio. Speaker 500:34:53Yes. And perhaps assuming we get maybe more of a gradual Fed cutting cycle into next year, do you think some of the kind of static impacts to your balance sheet from a margin perspective can be offset by just continued growth as we discussed previously just now? Speaker 100:35:12I do. Yes, and I'm really hopeful that the Fed takes a more measured approach. The more measured or I guess time they put in between rate cuts certainly helps us manage margin. The more aggressive they are kind of 1 back to back to back, it makes it a little more difficult to manage the deposit costs. But if things settle in where we do have rate cuts, but they're not quite as aggressive as we were thinking a couple of months ago, it does help us. Speaker 500:35:49Okay, perfect. And then maybe a question for John. I was just curious if you can shed any more light on the increase in classified loans? Speaker 400:35:58Yes, sure. Nate, I did an analysis, obviously, it was up for the quarter. And we were at a historical low point for us anyway. When you look at some of the results we've had kind of leading into the run up in interest rates, the areas that it really came into was the investment real estate area. We've got a couple of larger projects, dollars $10,000,000 $15,000,000 that have been impacted by the higher rates. Speaker 400:36:32And honestly, it's distributed between that and some pressure with in the C and I portfolio as well with higher rates. We've got a number of names that have come in for the quarter and then it's just a lot of smaller names that are being affected. So, it's from my perspective, I look at it and I feel good about where that level is at this point. It's just higher rates have slowed things down. Speaker 500:37:07Got it. Maybe one last one for me. I was a little surprised to see the Shared National credit balance is up about 7% compared to last quarter. I'm curious if those are deals that you guys are agenting or just any other color on that growth in 3Q? Speaker 400:37:23Yes, we don't agent many Shared National Credits. Those are generally the relationships that we're picking up in our footprint that have locations that we participate with a lead bank and are trying to get at other ancillary revenue. Speaker 200:37:44I might add into that, Nathan. We really formalized a dedicated team we called upper middle market that's focusing on that segment in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan. So we have direct calling efforts on companies of size where we can have access to the management and then look at their capital structure and then what John said didn't backfill with other relationship strategy. So it's direct calling and active in our markets. Speaker 500:38:12Okay, great. Very helpful. Thank you for all the color. I'll step back. Speaker 300:38:18Thanks, Nate. Operator00:38:21Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Damon DelMonte with KBW. Speaker 800:38:27Hey, good morning, everyone. Hope you're all doing well today. Just wanted to start off with good morning, Mark. Start off with a question probably for Michelle on expenses and kind of the outlook here going into the Q4 and kind of how 25% is shaping up. Any guidance here what to expect during the Q4? Speaker 300:38:47I think for the Q4, I would expect this quarter's expense level probably to be a good rate to use. For 2025, like I mentioned to Terry, we're in our planning right now. And so we'll probably be able to give you a little bit more guidance on what to expect for 2025 in our January call. Speaker 800:39:08Got you. Okay. And then, similarly on the fee income side, if you back out the securities loss and the BOLI gain, I think you're kind of close to $32,500,000 on an operating basis. Obviously, you commented mortgage banking will probably come down a little bit for seasonality. But outside of that, do you feel comfortable with the other trends? Speaker 300:39:30Yes, I do. I think the different pieces that you've highlighted to back off of are the right ones. And so I think in last quarter, the guidance that I gave for the back half of twenty twenty four was that it would be somewhere between that 30% to 32% range. And I think that's still probably a reasonable expectation and that sounds like that's where you're landing. Speaker 800:39:51Okay, great. And then just lastly, just to circle back on the credit in the trucking relationship. So it sounds like you'll need to provide a little bit more for the remaining charge offs there. Was that what I should take away from that, John? Speaker 400:40:06I don't know about I'm not going to speak to the provision expense because it'll depend on what happens within the portfolio and other relationships on their names. I'm just simply saying that we've got specific reserve in $1,000,000 and depending on where we end the quarter, we'll drive whether we need to replace that or not. Speaker 100:40:25And that specific assumes that we're going to cover whatever loss we have and it's already provided for. So, we'll learn more, but what do you think we're in a good spot? And Damon, I wanted to jump in just a minute about the expense level as well. It's just on my mind how focused we are on delivering high performance growth, growth in high performance in 2025. And I look at our company post VERIP, we had a voluntary early retirement that we did in the Q4 of last year. Speaker 100:41:01That's got about a year's worth of age on it and we've done some restructuring of the company because of it. That has all settled in. We've completed these 4 major tech initiatives and the focus of our executive management team is about driving results from here. We had a handful of items we wanted to do that we thought were worth the investment that would make First Merchants a better company and they have been incredibly distracting. They are or they require a ton of time and energy, but our customers deserve it and the future of the bank deserves it. Speaker 100:41:37But as we're putting together our plan for next year, Michelle talks about sharing more information later and expectations that this quarter is a good run rate to think about. And our focus is on maintaining this expense level and driving results into 2025. Speaker 800:41:53Got it. Appreciate that color. That's all that I had. Thank you. Speaker 300:41:58Thanks Damon. Operator00:42:01Our next question comes from the line of Daniel Tamayo with Raymond James. Speaker 900:42:08Thank you for the questions. Good afternoon everyone. Maybe just a question on capital. Obviously, you have the impact from the restructuring in the Q3 and then potentially in the Q4 as well. But I think you were considering a sub debt redemption in January. Speaker 900:42:28Just curious kind of how you're thinking about any potential deployment here in the near term of capital? Speaker 100:42:37Yes. Our sub debt has been fully redeemed. Speaker 300:42:42We do have a piece of sub debt that we got from Level 1 from the Level 1 acquisition. Yes, that is still outstanding. Speaker 100:42:54Our view is to we're not in a capital building mode. Our view is to make sure we're optimizing our capital. Really glad to see that it's increased from the kind of mid-7s to over 8%. And we want to deploy the capital and growth in our balance sheet and ideally some cash that may be involved in M and A if the right transaction comes our way. And if not, then I'd like to be active in buybacks and make sure that we're putting the capital to work versus sitting on it into the future. Speaker 900:43:34Is there a line in terms of from a buyback perspective in terms of valuation that you wouldn't go over or it just you'd rather run Speaker 100:43:44at a reasonable capital level? No, I just think about historical trading levels. I mean, it's interesting today and I'll show a little frustration that we're a growing business. We produced our return on assets that adjusted for the one time sale of bonds were at a 1.23 and we're trading at less than 10 times, slightly less than 10 times forward earnings and 1.35 a book. And those levels are materially below our historical averages. Speaker 100:44:17And if that's the case, then I want to be active in supporting the purchase of our shares. It isn't our highest priority. I'd rather use the capital to grow our balance sheet and to add customers to our company. And I'd love to think about cash in an acquisition that we would be excited about that was appropriately priced. But if it isn't, we're going to be active in supporting the stock when we're trading at these kind of levels. Speaker 100:44:47So just and being above 8% TCE is the number that I'm the most focused on. Speaker 900:44:56Okay. Well, thanks for all that color. All my other questions have been answered. Speaker 100:45:02Thanks, Danny. Operator00:45:05And our next question comes from the line of Brendan Nosal with Hovde Group. Speaker 1000:45:11Hey, good morning folks. Hope you're doing well. Thanks, Brendan. Just one for me here. Most of those have been asked and answered. Speaker 1000:45:20Just on the M and A question, it clearly sounds like there's an appetite and ability to do deals with capital where it is today. Just kind of curious what your read of the environment is today, the pace of conversations? And then just refresh us on what you're seeking in a potential partner, whether it's geography, size range, financial metrics, things like that? Thank you. Yes. Speaker 100:45:43I've said this multiple times, so it's probably going to sound like a repeat. I'm interested in banks that are in Indiana, Ohio, Michigan that are less than 25% of our assets. Most of the time they're challenged as it relates to growth and efficiency and they may have an executive that is looking forward or looking towards retirement. And I'm interested if we're trading at a level that allows us to win that transaction and to solve all three of those challenges where post consolidation we have enough cost takeout that it becomes highly efficient, that I feel like it's a market we can add resources to start growing the bank mostly on the commercial and private wealth side, and where we think we have the leadership to either leverage the existing leadership in the bank, number 2 or number 3, or we feel like we have someone inside our company that can step in and help provide the leadership in that marketplace. So, that tends to be our focus. Speaker 100:46:51I'm very aware that with our stock at the levels I just mentioned, it makes M and A more challenging. And so, today's comments about M and A and capital use isn't as if we have something already lined up. That is not the case. But we are positioned for our next acquisition. Speaker 900:47:13We have Speaker 100:47:14all of our tech projects behind us. We have a really capable talented team and we have a number of banks that we're interested in and we'll see if those happen or not. If they don't, we're going to stay focused on performing organically. Speaker 1000:47:28All right. Cool. That's great color, Mark. Thanks for taking the question. Speaker 100:47:33Thank you, Brendan. Operator00:47:35Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Nathan Race with Piper Sandler. Speaker 500:47:41Yes. Thank you for taking the follow ups. Just a couple of housekeeping questions. Michelle, can you help us with the impacts intangibles with the branch sale planned in the Q4? Speaker 300:47:55If you're referring to any impact on goodwill, we don't have any impact. Speaker 500:48:01Okay, great. And then just any thoughts on the tax rate going forward? Speaker 300:48:07Yes. In fact, this quarter's tax rate, I think I would expect it to be between 13%, 14% on a go forward basis. Speaker 500:48:17Perfect. Thank you for taking the follow ups. Speaker 300:48:20All right. You're welcome. Operator00:48:23Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Brian Martin with Janney. Speaker 800:48:29Hey, good afternoon, everyone. Speaker 900:48:32Hey, Brian. Hey, Brian. Hey, Brian. Speaker 700:48:33Hey, maybe just a question for Mike. Maybe you mentioned this earlier, Mike, but in terms of with the rate, just the rate down move here, have you in talking about the real estate, have you seen any pickup in the pipeline on that because of the rates going down and the outlook that they there's more rate cuts coming here? And if you said that, I apologize, but Speaker 200:48:55Well, I didn't associate it with rate cuts. If you will call it, our production of new real estate opportunities are typically in the construction. So and that and what's been happening through the course of the year, this is a very high level of production for us. So when we work with our Tier 1 developers and they're primarily focused on multifamily affordable housing, warehouse, etcetera, they've built out their capital stacks at the prevailing rates, with understanding their cost structure. So those are moving through. Speaker 200:49:27And therefore, a rate reduction that just happened might put projects that worked penciling out, so to speak, back into play and we might continue to see good activity if it makes sense. A rate reduction also probably helps some real estate and or C and I where John talked about some assets that might be struggling with some rate increases, that rate reduction would help those assets perform through a cycle. So it's both. Is that helpful? Speaker 700:50:01Yes. No, that's perfect. So I guess, see that they I guess screen shoots if you're seeing a couple of banks that kind of mentioned that, that we're seeing that. So okay. And then secondly, maybe just, Michelle, you mentioned on the margin or dollars of NII. Speaker 700:50:16Did you mention, I guess, what was your expectation that NII is up in 'twenty five versus 'twenty four? Did you not say that? Maybe I missed what you were saying there. Speaker 300:50:26Yes. We're expecting to grow net interest income on a go forward basis. Speaker 700:50:30In 2025. Okay. Yes, that's what I thought. Yes. Thank you. Speaker 700:50:33And then maybe just one last one for John. John, I know you mentioned the substandard or the classified levels. Any indication of what you're seeing in special mention in terms of directionally in the quarter? Was that consistent with a decline, an increase? Speaker 400:50:56Yes. So it was the criticizing classifieds, they have a tendency to move somewhat in tandem. It did move up, but at a slower rate. Speaker 700:51:06Got you. Okay. All right. And then maybe just the last one, Mark, you alluded to the fact, I mean, it's the first time I've heard you talk about M and A in a long time on the I guess in your opening remarks. But just in terms of the dialogue today, I guess, I understand your comments about the stock price and where the benefits are in terms of buying back stock. Speaker 700:51:27But I guess, would you characterize this year as being more likely that you're given all the technology projects, the building capital that it's more likely the next 12 to 18 months that we'd see First Merchants be able to execute on something based on the conversations or is that unfair read based on what we're hearing today? Speaker 100:51:47Yes, I don't know. It takes a willing seller and we are in a great position internally to tackle an acquisition like I described. Sellers seems like the conversations are healthy and active, but my take is that most feel they're better off waiting until the Fed has completed their rate reduction cycle. And I think some of that is they'd love to get whatever accretion back into their capital numbers that will just naturally come out of rate reductions. And so, I would anticipate there's a little more activity post rate post Fed rate reductions. Speaker 200:52:34Got you. Okay. Speaker 800:52:35Well, it's good to see you guys in Speaker 700:52:36a great position and congrats on a nice quarter guys. Thanks. Speaker 300:52:40Thank you, Brian. Speaker 100:52:41Thank you. Operator00:52:43Thank you. And I'm showing no further questions. So with that, I'll hand the call back over to CEO, Mark Hardwick for any closing remarks. Speaker 100:52:52Well, thank you. I enjoyed Q and A today. You guys ask great questions and it gives us a chance to share our passion for the business beyond just our written comments. So, thank you for your investment. We're excited about the future and we've got a team 2,100 people strong that are actively getting after our vision statement of enhancing the financial wellness of the diverse communities we serve and our tagline of helping you prosper and we're making a difference in our communities. Speaker 100:53:24We're excited about it. So, thank you for your investment. Operator00:53:29This concludes today's conference. Thank you for your participation and have a great day. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallFirst Merchants Q3 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) First Merchants Earnings HeadlinesAnalysts Set First Merchants Co. (NASDAQ:FRME) Target Price at $46.40May 3, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comPiper Sandler Cuts First Merchants (NASDAQ:FRME) Price Target to $49.00April 30, 2025 | americanbankingnews.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 7, 2025 | Brownstone Research (Ad)6FRME : Deep Dive Into First Merchants Stock: Analyst Perspectives...April 30, 2025 | benzinga.comFirst Merchants reports Q1 EPS 94c, consensus 91cApril 26, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comFirst Merchants price target lowered to $49 from $52 at Keefe BruyetteApril 26, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comSee More First Merchants Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like First Merchants? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on First Merchants and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About First MerchantsFirst Merchants (NASDAQ:FRME) operates as the financial holding company for First Merchants Bank that provides community banking services. The company offers a range of financial services, including time, savings, and demand deposits; and consumer, commercial, agri-business, public finance, and real estate mortgage loans. It also provides personal and corporate trust; brokerage and private wealth management; and letters of credit, repurchase agreements, and other corporate services. The company operates banking locations in Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, and Michigan counties. It also offers its services through electronic and mobile delivery channels. 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There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the First Merchants Corporation Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Before we begin, management would like to remind you that today's call contains forward looking statements with respect to the future performance and financial condition of First Merchants Corporation that involves risks and uncertainties. Further information is contained within the press release, which we encourage you to review. Additionally, management may refer to non GAAP measures, which are intended to supplement, but not substitute for the most directly comparable GAAP measures. The press release available on the website contains financial and other quantitative information to be discussed today as well as a reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP measures. Operator00:00:51As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to Mr. Mark Hardwick, CEO. Mr. Hardwick, you may begin. Speaker 100:01:03Good morning, and welcome to First Merchants' Q3 2024 Conference Call. Thanks for the introductions and for covering the forward looking statement on Page 2. We released our earnings today at approximately 8 am Eastern Time, and you can access the slides by following the link on the 3rd page of our earnings release. On Page 3 of our slides, you will see today's presenters and our bios, including President, Mike Stewart Chief Credit Officer, John Martin and Chief Financial Officer, Michelle Kebielski. We are pleased with our 3rd quarter results and the focused momentum that we are building. Speaker 100:01:43The pending sale of 5 non core Illinois branches, restructuring of the securities portfolio and successful completion of our 4 major technology initiatives provide us with the opportunity to reprioritize our core markets and introduce innovative customer acquisition strategies. We are well positioned for organic growth in 2025 and any well priced inorganic growth opportunity that may be available in the future. On page 4, we have a few financial highlights for the quarter, including $18,300,000,000 of total assets, dollars 12,700,000,000 of total loans, dollars 14,400,000,000 of total deposits and $5,600,000,000 of assets under advisement. Our map also highlights the 5 Chicago area branches we announced we were selling in August. We expect that transaction to close in December of this year and we now have regulatory approval. Speaker 100:02:46On Slide 5, you can see earnings per share for the quarter totaled $0.84 or $0.95 per share after adjusting for a $9,100,000 loss we recorded from a 3rd quarter sale of securities. We are anticipating a $20,000,000 to $25,000,000 gain on the sale of our Chicagoland branches in the 4th quarter and we took advantage of favorable market conditions to restructure a small portion of the securities portfolio. We plan to use the remainder of the gain in the 4th quarter to support additional balance sheet restructuring that we believe will position us for higher earnings in the future. Our tangible book our tangible common equity ratio has continued to build and is now 8.76%. 3rd quarter tangible book value per share, which is reported on Slide 11, was $26.64 per share and has increased by $4.21 per share or 19% over the last 12 months and $7.38 per share or 38% over the last 2 years. Speaker 100:03:54Adjusted net interest margin also improved by 7 basis points Q3 over Q2 and helped drive PP and R growth, which supported a sub-fifty 5 percent efficiency ratio for the quarter. Earnings per share for the 9 months ended September 30, 2024 totaled $2.31 per share or $2.48 per share when adjusted for the loss from the sale of securities. Now Mike Stewart will discuss our line of business momentum. Mike? Speaker 200:04:23Yes. Thank you, Mark, and good morning to all. Our business strategy summarized on slide 6 remains unchanged. We are a commercially focused organization across all these business segments and our primary markets of Indiana, Michigan and Ohio. Throughout 2024, we have remained focused on building earnings momentum by executing our strategic imperatives of organic loan, deposit, fee income growth and increasing market share by engaging, rewarding and retaining our teammates and investing in the technology platforms of our delivery channel. Speaker 200:05:00And as Mark noted on the prior slide, we have now completed all 4 of our major technology initiatives. We have upgraded our digital channels in our consumer, commercial and private wealth segments, which is essentially touching our entire client base. Therefore, we have improved client experiences and enhanced tools for our sales teams to leverage as we grow the fee based businesses and compete for a larger share of wallet. So let's turn to Slide 7. The 3rd quarter continues the choppy trend of loan growth we have experienced the past year. Speaker 200:05:38Total loans grew 0.5% on an annualized basis during the quarter, which followed last quarter's 6% growth. Year to date, total loans have grown at an annualized rate of 1.9%. The $9,600,000,000 commercial segment was essentially flat during the Q3, but within this segment, the C and I portfolio continues to be the primary driver of our growth growing 1%. Last quarter, the C and I portfolio grew at nearly 13% and year to date C and I has grown over $250,000,000 or nearly 4.5 percent annualized. The C and I growth has been shared across all the regions with Indiana, Michigan and our sponsor teams driving the bulk of the increase. Speaker 200:06:28The strong C and I growth has been offset by the contraction within the investment real estate portfolio. The stabilization of construction projects has continued and our clients have chosen to either sell their projects, which is taking advantage of attractive cap rates or they've refinanced their projects into the permanent market, they can take advantage of the low long term interest rates. The investment real estate portfolio has declined over 11% throughout 2024, which is nearly $150,000,000 During the Q3, the decline slowed to just over $20,000,000 And as I highlighted last quarter, I believe the investment real estate portfolio is close to or at its bottom of footings. Why? Because new project financings are at healthy levels. Speaker 200:07:16The investment real estate team continues to win mandates for future multifamily, industrial and warehouse construction projects and our clients continue to appreciate our consistent approach to underwriting through cycles and our record of successful syndications. Our commercial focus has always been the primary driver of our balance sheet growth and the commercial and industrial sector is our largest portfolio. C and I comprises 50% of our total loan portfolio and 2 thirds of our commercial portfolio. The business owners within our markets continue to execute their operating plans with growing working capital, equipment or acquisition needs. And our commercial bankers continue to support these companies not only with capital solutions, but also with treasury solutions. Speaker 200:08:08Overall, we continue to gain market share with existing and new clients. Those two attributes, organic growth and market share growth, are the primary drivers of our balance sheet. Continued growth expectations are supported by the 4th bullet point, strong pipelines for both C and I and investment real estate ending at very strong levels. The consumer portfolio is comprised of residential, mortgage, HELOC, installment and private banking relationships. During the Q3, the consumer portfolio grew more than 1.5% with the private banking and HELOC portfolios as the primary drivers of that increase. Speaker 200:08:50As noted, the consumer loan pipeline remains strong heading into the 4th quarter with mortgage up over 15% at the end of June and more than double from the beginning of the year. Let's turn to Slide 8 and a few comments on deposits. The story of this slide is mix and managing deposit costs. Michelle will be reviewing the improvement of our net interest margin and this slide represents the work our teams have accomplished in managing and building core deposit relationships while reducing deposit cost on public funds and time deposit categories. For the quarter, total deposits grew at a 2.3% annualized rate, while for the full year, our total deposits have declined by only 1.5%. Speaker 200:09:40The Commercial segment grew deposits during the quarter after a reduction of over $170,000,000 of public fund balances. Public funds are one of our highest cost depository categories and have been a focus of our efforts to both balance relationship strategy with our pricing tiers. Overall, I am pleased with the growth of the non public fund balances within the commercial segment, which is approximately $255,000,000 We also continued our pricing discipline within our consumer segment, specifically time deposits. We began to reduce our money markets and CD specials, while reducing the tenors of new CDs earlier this year. The consumer deposit decline during the quarter was primarily within the time deposit category. Speaker 200:10:28And as noted by the last bullet point, we expect 50% of the time deposits that will reprice in the Q4 to be at lower rates than the current weighted average rate. So for the year, total consumer deposit balances are essentially flat. Overall, I am pleased with the active management our teams are having with their clients. Stable loan yields and reducing deposit cost should continue to build the earnings momentum of our balance sheet. I will turn the call over to you, Michelle, and you can review more in detail the composition of our balance sheet and the drivers of our income statement. Speaker 300:11:07Thanks, Mike. Slide 9 covers our 3rd quarter performance. Net interest income on line 11 has grown for the 2nd straight quarter with an increase of $2,500,000 sequentially. Non interest income on line 13 was reduced by the $9,100,000 loss on bond sales that Mark mentioned earlier and when normalized for that loss totaled $34,000,000 also reflecting an increase for the 2nd straight quarter. As a result, pre tax pre provision earnings grew linked quarter by nearly $2,000,000 totaling $70,500,000 reflecting strong core franchise performance. Speaker 300:11:47Slide 10 shows year to date results with pre tax pre provision earnings totaling $199,300,000 Tangible book value per share of $26.64 benefited from strong earnings and AOCI recapture resulting in an increase of $4.21 or 19% compared to the same period of prior year and an increase of $7.38 over the same period of 2022. Slide 11 shows details of our investment portfolio. The available for sale securities we sold had a book value of $158,900,000 and were sold for a loss of $9,100,000 The bonds had a weighted average yield of 2.85% and an average life of 5.6 years. We took the opportunity to reposition the securities portfolio in anticipation of the gain expected in the Q4 from the sale of our Illinois branches expected to close in December. Expected cash flows from scheduled principal, interest payments and bond maturities in the next 12 months totals $298,000,000 with a roll off yield of approximately 2.28%, which will have a positive impact on our overall portfolio yield along with the sale of lower yielding securities. Speaker 300:13:13Slide 12 shows some details of our loan portfolio. The loan portfolio yield increased meaningfully by 14 basis points to 6.86 percent. New and renewed loans, albeit a little lower than last quarter, were still at a respectable 7.7% yield. The bottom right shows that 2 thirds of our loan portfolio is variable rate. As the Fed cuts rates, the repricing of our variable rate portfolio is certainly a headwind, but the new loan yield along with the fixed rate loan repricing should help offset the impact in the near term. Speaker 300:13:51The allowance for credit losses is shown on Slide 13. This quarter we recorded net charge offs of $6,700,000 which was offset by provision for credit losses on loans of 5,000,000 resulting in a reserve at quarter end of $187,800,000 with a coverage ratio of 1.48%. In addition to the ACL, we have $18,800,000 of remaining fair value marks on acquired loans. When including those marks, our coverage ratio is 1.63%. Overall, we are still more than adequately reserved for our allowance and it remains well above peer levels. Speaker 300:14:32Slide 14 shows details of our deposit portfolio. The total cost of deposits was relatively flat increasing by just 3 basis points to 2.69% this quarter. Deposits included in the sale of the Illinois branches of $287,700,000 were reclassed to held for sale causing the decline in total deposits given they are not reflected in the total deposit balance at quarter end. When normalizing for the reclass, deposits grew organically $83,700,000 or 2.3% annualized linked quarter. Slide 15, net interest income on a fully tax equivalent basis of $137,000,000 increased $2,600,000 from prior quarter. Speaker 300:15:21This was driven by earning asset yields shown on line 4, which increased 13 basis points linked quarter outpacing funding costs on line 5, which increased 6 basis points. The result was a meaningful expansion of stated net interest margin of 7 basis points and an increase of 13 basis points from the Q1. Next, Slide 16 shows the details of non interest income. Non interest income totaled $24,900,000 and when normalized for the realized loss on securities was $34,000,000 an increase of $2,600,000 or 8.4 percent over prior quarter. Customer related fees increased $2,000,000 primarily reflecting higher gains on sales of mortgage loans. Speaker 300:16:11Mortgage production was slightly lower than last quarter, but produced more saleable loans driving the increase in mortgage gains. We expect mortgage gains to be lower in Q4 due to seasonality given activity tends to slow a bit around the holidays. Included in non customer related income was a $1,500,000 BOLI claim. Even when excluding that BOLI gain, our non interest income results were slightly above the guidance we provided last quarter. Moving to Slide 17, non interest expense for the quarter totaled $94,600,000 an increase of $3,200,000 over prior quarter. Speaker 300:16:49Workforce costs increased driven by higher incentive accruals due to better quarterly performance. Slide 18 shows our capital ratios. We continue to have a strong capital position with common equity Tier 1 climbing to 11.25% this quarter. The tangible common equity ratio increased 49 basis points due to strong earnings and improvement in the valuation of the available for sale securities portfolio reflected in AOCI. That concludes my remarks and I will now turn it over to our Chief Credit Officer, John Martin to discuss asset quality. Speaker 400:17:25Thanks, Michelle and good morning. My remarks start on Slide 19. I'll begin by highlighting loan portfolio growth, touch on the updated insight slides, review asset quality and the non performing asset roll forward before turning the call back over to Mark. Turning to Slide 19, we had continued strong commercial and industrial loan growth shown on lines 12 that was offset by the continued decline in construction and CRE, non owner occupied or investment real estate on lines 45. Our C and I growth came primarily from new loans rather than increased line utilization. Speaker 400:18:06This quarter, we saw some leveling of the construction portfolio on line 4 with the mini perm and permanent portfolio on line 5 down $70,000,000 As mentioned on prior calls, our investment real estate strategy is to provide construction finance through stabilization with many perm financing options. This can lead to changes between the two categories. We continue to remain well below 2021 are intended to provide transparency into the portfolio. As mentioned on prior calls, the C and I classification shown on slide 20 includes sponsor finance as well as owner occupied CRE. 21% of our C and I loans support manufacturing businesses. Speaker 400:19:01Our current line utilization decreased for the quarter after 3 consecutive quarters of increase from 45.3% to 45%, although balances still increased roughly $15,000,000 on higher commitments of roughly $65,000,000 We participate in roughly $887,000,000 of shared national credits across various industries. These are generally relationships where we have access to management and revenue opportunities that go beyond the credit exposure. In the sponsor finance portfolio, I've highlighted key credit portfolio metrics. There are 89 platform companies with 51 active sponsors in assortment of industries, 66% have a fixed charge coverage ratio of greater than 1.5 times on Q2 borrower information. This portfolio generally consists of single bank deals for platform companies of private equity firms as opposed to large widely syndicated leveraged loans from money center bank trading desks. Speaker 400:20:04We review the individual relationships quarterly for changes in borrower condition, including leverage and cash flow. On Slide 21, we break out the investment or non owner occupied commercial real estate portfolio. Our office loans are detailed on the bottom half of the slide and represent only 2.1% of total loans with the highest concentration outside of general office in the medical office space. The wheel chart on the bottom right details office portfolio maturities, loans maturing in less than a year represent 14.4% of the portfolio or $37,500,000 The office portfolio is well diversified by tenant type and geographic mix. We continue to periodically review our larger office borrowers and view the exposure as reasonably mitigated through a combination of loan to value guarantees, tenant mix and other considerations. Speaker 400:21:02On Slide 22, I highlight this quarter's asset quality trends and position. Non accrual loans were down $2,800,000 while 90 days past due loans saw a significant increase resulting from a $13,000,000 matured relationship. The relationship was renewed shortly after quarter end bringing $13,000,000 of the $14,100,000 90 days past due current. Net charge offs were $6,700,000 for the quarter, resulting largely from a $5,600,000 charge off related to the 2nd quarter trucking company loss. We continue to liquidate the remaining exposure and expect to have the relationship largely resolved by the end of the Q4. Speaker 400:21:47Then moving to Slide 23, I've again rolled forward to mitigate our migration of non performing loans, charge offs ORE and 90 days past due. For the quarter, we added non accrual loans on line 2 of $13,200,000 a reduction from payoffs or changes in accrual status of $7,900,000 on line 3 and a reduction from gross charge offs of $7,600,000 Dropping down to Line 11, 90 day delinquent loans increased $12,400,000 Speaker 500:22:20due Speaker 400:22:20to the matured and renewed relationship resulting in NPAs and 90 day delinquent loans ending the quarter at 78 $400,000 So to summarize, C and I growth was good for the quarter. Commercial real estate continues to refinance and pay off with construction lending balances leveling and asset quality stabilizing after further digesting last quarter's loss. I appreciate your attention. I'll turn the call back over to Mark Hardwick. Speaker 100:22:47Thanks, John. Turning to Slide 24, the 10 year compound annual growth rate of our earnings per share totals 10.2% and has helped support the 8.7% growth rate that we've seen at tangible book value per share. Slide 25 shows our total asset CAGR of 12% during the last 10 years and highlights meaningful acquisitions that have materially added to our footprint and fuel our growth. There are no changes in Slide 26 as we continue to live out both our vision and strategic imperatives. So in summary, we're very pleased with the growth that we've seen in capital and tangible book value per share, which has resumed to its historical trajectory of up and to the right. Speaker 100:23:32We're also optimistic about the momentum we're seeing in our performance, Thanks in part to active deposit and interest rate management. Our net interest margin is expanding and we feel we have the opportunity to outperform expectations into the foreseeable future. Thanks for your attention and your investment in First Merchants. And at this point, we're happy to take questions. Operator00:23:57Certainly. And our first question comes from the line of Terry McEvoy with Stephens. Speaker 600:24:20Hi. Good morning, everybody. Maybe if I could start with a question for Michelle. When you think about 2025 in net interest income, do you think the positive impact from the security sales, both that just occurred in the one you talked about in the Q4, will that offset the impact of lower interest rates in terms of keeping net interest income flat to possibly higher next year? Speaker 300:24:46Well, we're still doing our budgeting for 2025. And so I'll be able to give you some better guidance on the January call for 2025. But even though, aside from the restructuring, the portfolio restructuring, as we've talked about in a declining rate environment, we historically do see a few basis points of margin compression for each quarter point reduction that the Fed is from the Fed, given that we're asset sensitive. But in the down rate environment, we stay focused on growing net interest income and keeping that momentum going even if net interest margin declines. Our loan yields have always demonstrated, I think, some good pricing discipline. Speaker 300:25:25And regardless of the environment, we think we'll be able to continue to deliver on that performance. The bond restructuring, it certainly does help margin, although we've got some we're selling some deposits that have a lower rate. The bonds that we've sold had a yield of $2.85 and so that certainly will have a positive impact on margin. It does put a bit of pressure on net interest income. But when you look at the sale as a whole, we also have some cost savings from it. Speaker 300:25:55And so I think overall financially, it's really pretty the sale is pretty neutral. I think from looking at line to line, there's some puts and takes. But really when we decided to sell those branches, that wasn't really just a short term financial play. It was really more a long term strategic decision. Speaker 500:26:14Yes. Michelle, Speaker 100:26:15I would love to just add, Terry, that the bond sale that we actually did was really late in the quarter. So, I was proud of the margin enhancement that we saw this quarter that came from actions that we've really have been taking inside the existing book. And so, I'm just pleased that all the efforts that we're putting into deposit pricing and loan yields has resulted 2 quarters in a row and an increasing margin. And then just the longer term strategy of being out of Illinois, I feel like you have to be you have to have significant share to make a difference. And it was a market where we felt like we were just some scale and we had to kind of go one direction or the other. Speaker 100:27:04And so really pleased that we found a great partner and we're able to liquidate those locations and deposits in a way that I think will be good for them and good for First Merchants. Speaker 600:27:16Agreed. And maybe, Mark, could you just expand on your the comment in the release and you mentioned earlier on the completion of the technology initiatives, reprioritization of core markets and new kind of customer acquisition strategies. What areas of banks are you talking about? And maybe as an outsider, what type of metrics can we look at over the next several years to kind of see that progression and growth that you're hinting at there? Speaker 100:27:44Yes. Thanks for asking. Mike touched on some of it because it's already happening in his comments. But if you think about the rollout of Terafina, which was an in branch account opening platform, where we reduced our time to open an account from, call it, 45 minutes to about 10 minutes or less. And the deployment of Q2 where we have better online and mobile technology for our customers, we're just reprioritizing and refocusing primacy and making sure that we are that we're growing core deposit accounts. Speaker 100:28:21And when you think about core accounts, they're typically less expensive because they're it's more of their operating account than excess funds that where people are trying to get the best yield possible. And so, we're kind of de prioritizing and reprioritizing the focus on our lesser expensive deposit categories, seems kind of logical, but not spending as much time in the public fund space or on CDs and specials around money markets. What we're really trying to drive this business towards and forward with our real core primacy deposit accounts. And then the so those are 3 of the 4 digital technologies that we rolled out, Q2 for both consumer and commercial. So, we're calling that 2, Terafina for in branch and the last item is the SS and C platform that we purchased, which is called InnoTrust and Black Diamond for our private wealth business. Speaker 100:29:25And we just think our private wealth business still has significant upside growth potential where we can look for parity across all markets. And we have a really significant presence in our Indiana marketplace with our private wealth business, not as much in Detroit. In the Detroit MSA, Level 1 didn't have a private wealth business, Monroe Bank did, which we're trying to leverage into the entire Michigan market and in Columbus, Ohio as well. So, we feel like we now have a tech platform that really customers are demanding in 2024. And so we're excited about the ability to continue to grow that fee income and reprioritizing the business in a way that's a little bit different because we have something better to sell. Speaker 600:30:22Great. Thanks for all that, Mark. And John, just a real quick one for you. The liquidation of the trucking relationship in the Q4, any sense for what that charge off could look like just to kind of frame up expectations when we're all talking 3 months from now? Speaker 400:30:39Yes. We've got less than $4,000,000 still outstanding related to the relationship. And we've got a specific reserve assigned to that relationship at the end of the quarter of roughly $1,000,000 We continue to work through auctions and the sale process, it will be somewhere probably between that $1,000,000 $2,000,000 mark. Speaker 100:31:05And I would just add because I know we've had separate conversations with investors that in last quarter, we really felt like we had the loss behind us. And as we were working through the liquidation process, we've just have not been able to achieve the valuations that we were originally expecting. Speaker 600:31:25Understood. Thanks everyone. Speaker 100:31:28Thanks, Terry. Operator00:31:30Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Nathan Race with Piper Sandler. Speaker 500:31:36Hi, everyone. Good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Speaker 100:31:40Hi, Nate. Speaker 500:31:42Question for Mike or John perhaps. Just curious how you guys are thinking about loan growth the Q4. Mike, I think you mentioned the C and I and investor commercial real estate pipelines are strong heading into 4Q. But just curious how you think all that's going to translate into kind of loan growth into 4Q and just any maybe initial thoughts on loan growth expectations in 2025? Sure. Speaker 200:32:06Yes, Mike. Yes, I think Speaker 700:32:07when you when I'm looking at the pipeline reports and as Speaker 200:32:09a matter of fact, I'm looking at results through October already, it continued to see the positive side of my comment around choppiness. So growth is in the C and I. So I think that's going to be in the Q4 in a solid outcome that mid single digits. Investment real estate, our production is still really strong, but the production are on new projects, right? New projects are typically construction and the equity goes in 1st. Speaker 200:32:42So the draws come in later. So that's what I'm trying to forecast or really get my hand around is when is the footings really going to be at its bottom as payoffs from really good projects hit the secondary market that we originated 2, 2.5 years ago. So I think that we're going to continue to see a little bit more decline in our outstandings of real estate offset by growth within the commercial C and I segment continuing in the 4th. And then in 2025, I really feel like the outlook still should be in that mid digits. Is that helpful? Speaker 200:33:19I mean, the mortgage portfolio probably stays pretty flat growing because of the activity goes on there because we do use our balance sheet on construction and purchases when they make sense with our private wealth group. So Speaker 100:33:36Nate, we have historically said mid to high single digits and over the last quarter or 2 have been talking about more mid single digits like 5% or 6%, mostly as Mike mentioned because of some of the investment real estate pay downs. It's has made it a little more difficult for us to be as bullish when you start thinking about trying to get to a 7%, 8% or 9% level. Speaker 500:34:02Got it. That's helpful and understandable. Michelle, maybe just thinking about the margin outlook for the Q4, obviously, a number of dynamics that play with the securities portfolio repositioning and perhaps maybe we get 2 more 25 basis point Fed cuts. So just curious how you're thinking about the margin trajectory in the 4Q, particularly just given that you guys really manage deposit costs well in the Q3? Speaker 300:34:30Yes. Hi, Nate. Yes, we do plan to be continue to be proactive at managing our deposit costs as the Fed cuts rates with the intention of really driving stability in the NIM. So a stable NIM is internally what we're expecting and I think that bond sale will be supportive of that as well. Speaker 200:34:47And some of those CD pricing, that's a big part of our portfolio. Speaker 500:34:53Yes. And perhaps assuming we get maybe more of a gradual Fed cutting cycle into next year, do you think some of the kind of static impacts to your balance sheet from a margin perspective can be offset by just continued growth as we discussed previously just now? Speaker 100:35:12I do. Yes, and I'm really hopeful that the Fed takes a more measured approach. The more measured or I guess time they put in between rate cuts certainly helps us manage margin. The more aggressive they are kind of 1 back to back to back, it makes it a little more difficult to manage the deposit costs. But if things settle in where we do have rate cuts, but they're not quite as aggressive as we were thinking a couple of months ago, it does help us. Speaker 500:35:49Okay, perfect. And then maybe a question for John. I was just curious if you can shed any more light on the increase in classified loans? Speaker 400:35:58Yes, sure. Nate, I did an analysis, obviously, it was up for the quarter. And we were at a historical low point for us anyway. When you look at some of the results we've had kind of leading into the run up in interest rates, the areas that it really came into was the investment real estate area. We've got a couple of larger projects, dollars $10,000,000 $15,000,000 that have been impacted by the higher rates. Speaker 400:36:32And honestly, it's distributed between that and some pressure with in the C and I portfolio as well with higher rates. We've got a number of names that have come in for the quarter and then it's just a lot of smaller names that are being affected. So, it's from my perspective, I look at it and I feel good about where that level is at this point. It's just higher rates have slowed things down. Speaker 500:37:07Got it. Maybe one last one for me. I was a little surprised to see the Shared National credit balance is up about 7% compared to last quarter. I'm curious if those are deals that you guys are agenting or just any other color on that growth in 3Q? Speaker 400:37:23Yes, we don't agent many Shared National Credits. Those are generally the relationships that we're picking up in our footprint that have locations that we participate with a lead bank and are trying to get at other ancillary revenue. Speaker 200:37:44I might add into that, Nathan. We really formalized a dedicated team we called upper middle market that's focusing on that segment in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan. So we have direct calling efforts on companies of size where we can have access to the management and then look at their capital structure and then what John said didn't backfill with other relationship strategy. So it's direct calling and active in our markets. Speaker 500:38:12Okay, great. Very helpful. Thank you for all the color. I'll step back. Speaker 300:38:18Thanks, Nate. Operator00:38:21Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Damon DelMonte with KBW. Speaker 800:38:27Hey, good morning, everyone. Hope you're all doing well today. Just wanted to start off with good morning, Mark. Start off with a question probably for Michelle on expenses and kind of the outlook here going into the Q4 and kind of how 25% is shaping up. Any guidance here what to expect during the Q4? Speaker 300:38:47I think for the Q4, I would expect this quarter's expense level probably to be a good rate to use. For 2025, like I mentioned to Terry, we're in our planning right now. And so we'll probably be able to give you a little bit more guidance on what to expect for 2025 in our January call. Speaker 800:39:08Got you. Okay. And then, similarly on the fee income side, if you back out the securities loss and the BOLI gain, I think you're kind of close to $32,500,000 on an operating basis. Obviously, you commented mortgage banking will probably come down a little bit for seasonality. But outside of that, do you feel comfortable with the other trends? Speaker 300:39:30Yes, I do. I think the different pieces that you've highlighted to back off of are the right ones. And so I think in last quarter, the guidance that I gave for the back half of twenty twenty four was that it would be somewhere between that 30% to 32% range. And I think that's still probably a reasonable expectation and that sounds like that's where you're landing. Speaker 800:39:51Okay, great. And then just lastly, just to circle back on the credit in the trucking relationship. So it sounds like you'll need to provide a little bit more for the remaining charge offs there. Was that what I should take away from that, John? Speaker 400:40:06I don't know about I'm not going to speak to the provision expense because it'll depend on what happens within the portfolio and other relationships on their names. I'm just simply saying that we've got specific reserve in $1,000,000 and depending on where we end the quarter, we'll drive whether we need to replace that or not. Speaker 100:40:25And that specific assumes that we're going to cover whatever loss we have and it's already provided for. So, we'll learn more, but what do you think we're in a good spot? And Damon, I wanted to jump in just a minute about the expense level as well. It's just on my mind how focused we are on delivering high performance growth, growth in high performance in 2025. And I look at our company post VERIP, we had a voluntary early retirement that we did in the Q4 of last year. Speaker 100:41:01That's got about a year's worth of age on it and we've done some restructuring of the company because of it. That has all settled in. We've completed these 4 major tech initiatives and the focus of our executive management team is about driving results from here. We had a handful of items we wanted to do that we thought were worth the investment that would make First Merchants a better company and they have been incredibly distracting. They are or they require a ton of time and energy, but our customers deserve it and the future of the bank deserves it. Speaker 100:41:37But as we're putting together our plan for next year, Michelle talks about sharing more information later and expectations that this quarter is a good run rate to think about. And our focus is on maintaining this expense level and driving results into 2025. Speaker 800:41:53Got it. Appreciate that color. That's all that I had. Thank you. Speaker 300:41:58Thanks Damon. Operator00:42:01Our next question comes from the line of Daniel Tamayo with Raymond James. Speaker 900:42:08Thank you for the questions. Good afternoon everyone. Maybe just a question on capital. Obviously, you have the impact from the restructuring in the Q3 and then potentially in the Q4 as well. But I think you were considering a sub debt redemption in January. Speaker 900:42:28Just curious kind of how you're thinking about any potential deployment here in the near term of capital? Speaker 100:42:37Yes. Our sub debt has been fully redeemed. Speaker 300:42:42We do have a piece of sub debt that we got from Level 1 from the Level 1 acquisition. Yes, that is still outstanding. Speaker 100:42:54Our view is to we're not in a capital building mode. Our view is to make sure we're optimizing our capital. Really glad to see that it's increased from the kind of mid-7s to over 8%. And we want to deploy the capital and growth in our balance sheet and ideally some cash that may be involved in M and A if the right transaction comes our way. And if not, then I'd like to be active in buybacks and make sure that we're putting the capital to work versus sitting on it into the future. Speaker 900:43:34Is there a line in terms of from a buyback perspective in terms of valuation that you wouldn't go over or it just you'd rather run Speaker 100:43:44at a reasonable capital level? No, I just think about historical trading levels. I mean, it's interesting today and I'll show a little frustration that we're a growing business. We produced our return on assets that adjusted for the one time sale of bonds were at a 1.23 and we're trading at less than 10 times, slightly less than 10 times forward earnings and 1.35 a book. And those levels are materially below our historical averages. Speaker 100:44:17And if that's the case, then I want to be active in supporting the purchase of our shares. It isn't our highest priority. I'd rather use the capital to grow our balance sheet and to add customers to our company. And I'd love to think about cash in an acquisition that we would be excited about that was appropriately priced. But if it isn't, we're going to be active in supporting the stock when we're trading at these kind of levels. Speaker 100:44:47So just and being above 8% TCE is the number that I'm the most focused on. Speaker 900:44:56Okay. Well, thanks for all that color. All my other questions have been answered. Speaker 100:45:02Thanks, Danny. Operator00:45:05And our next question comes from the line of Brendan Nosal with Hovde Group. Speaker 1000:45:11Hey, good morning folks. Hope you're doing well. Thanks, Brendan. Just one for me here. Most of those have been asked and answered. Speaker 1000:45:20Just on the M and A question, it clearly sounds like there's an appetite and ability to do deals with capital where it is today. Just kind of curious what your read of the environment is today, the pace of conversations? And then just refresh us on what you're seeking in a potential partner, whether it's geography, size range, financial metrics, things like that? Thank you. Yes. Speaker 100:45:43I've said this multiple times, so it's probably going to sound like a repeat. I'm interested in banks that are in Indiana, Ohio, Michigan that are less than 25% of our assets. Most of the time they're challenged as it relates to growth and efficiency and they may have an executive that is looking forward or looking towards retirement. And I'm interested if we're trading at a level that allows us to win that transaction and to solve all three of those challenges where post consolidation we have enough cost takeout that it becomes highly efficient, that I feel like it's a market we can add resources to start growing the bank mostly on the commercial and private wealth side, and where we think we have the leadership to either leverage the existing leadership in the bank, number 2 or number 3, or we feel like we have someone inside our company that can step in and help provide the leadership in that marketplace. So, that tends to be our focus. Speaker 100:46:51I'm very aware that with our stock at the levels I just mentioned, it makes M and A more challenging. And so, today's comments about M and A and capital use isn't as if we have something already lined up. That is not the case. But we are positioned for our next acquisition. Speaker 900:47:13We have Speaker 100:47:14all of our tech projects behind us. We have a really capable talented team and we have a number of banks that we're interested in and we'll see if those happen or not. If they don't, we're going to stay focused on performing organically. Speaker 1000:47:28All right. Cool. That's great color, Mark. Thanks for taking the question. Speaker 100:47:33Thank you, Brendan. Operator00:47:35Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Nathan Race with Piper Sandler. Speaker 500:47:41Yes. Thank you for taking the follow ups. Just a couple of housekeeping questions. Michelle, can you help us with the impacts intangibles with the branch sale planned in the Q4? Speaker 300:47:55If you're referring to any impact on goodwill, we don't have any impact. Speaker 500:48:01Okay, great. And then just any thoughts on the tax rate going forward? Speaker 300:48:07Yes. In fact, this quarter's tax rate, I think I would expect it to be between 13%, 14% on a go forward basis. Speaker 500:48:17Perfect. Thank you for taking the follow ups. Speaker 300:48:20All right. You're welcome. Operator00:48:23Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Brian Martin with Janney. Speaker 800:48:29Hey, good afternoon, everyone. Speaker 900:48:32Hey, Brian. Hey, Brian. Hey, Brian. Speaker 700:48:33Hey, maybe just a question for Mike. Maybe you mentioned this earlier, Mike, but in terms of with the rate, just the rate down move here, have you in talking about the real estate, have you seen any pickup in the pipeline on that because of the rates going down and the outlook that they there's more rate cuts coming here? And if you said that, I apologize, but Speaker 200:48:55Well, I didn't associate it with rate cuts. If you will call it, our production of new real estate opportunities are typically in the construction. So and that and what's been happening through the course of the year, this is a very high level of production for us. So when we work with our Tier 1 developers and they're primarily focused on multifamily affordable housing, warehouse, etcetera, they've built out their capital stacks at the prevailing rates, with understanding their cost structure. So those are moving through. Speaker 200:49:27And therefore, a rate reduction that just happened might put projects that worked penciling out, so to speak, back into play and we might continue to see good activity if it makes sense. A rate reduction also probably helps some real estate and or C and I where John talked about some assets that might be struggling with some rate increases, that rate reduction would help those assets perform through a cycle. So it's both. Is that helpful? Speaker 700:50:01Yes. No, that's perfect. So I guess, see that they I guess screen shoots if you're seeing a couple of banks that kind of mentioned that, that we're seeing that. So okay. And then secondly, maybe just, Michelle, you mentioned on the margin or dollars of NII. Speaker 700:50:16Did you mention, I guess, what was your expectation that NII is up in 'twenty five versus 'twenty four? Did you not say that? Maybe I missed what you were saying there. Speaker 300:50:26Yes. We're expecting to grow net interest income on a go forward basis. Speaker 700:50:30In 2025. Okay. Yes, that's what I thought. Yes. Thank you. Speaker 700:50:33And then maybe just one last one for John. John, I know you mentioned the substandard or the classified levels. Any indication of what you're seeing in special mention in terms of directionally in the quarter? Was that consistent with a decline, an increase? Speaker 400:50:56Yes. So it was the criticizing classifieds, they have a tendency to move somewhat in tandem. It did move up, but at a slower rate. Speaker 700:51:06Got you. Okay. All right. And then maybe just the last one, Mark, you alluded to the fact, I mean, it's the first time I've heard you talk about M and A in a long time on the I guess in your opening remarks. But just in terms of the dialogue today, I guess, I understand your comments about the stock price and where the benefits are in terms of buying back stock. Speaker 700:51:27But I guess, would you characterize this year as being more likely that you're given all the technology projects, the building capital that it's more likely the next 12 to 18 months that we'd see First Merchants be able to execute on something based on the conversations or is that unfair read based on what we're hearing today? Speaker 100:51:47Yes, I don't know. It takes a willing seller and we are in a great position internally to tackle an acquisition like I described. Sellers seems like the conversations are healthy and active, but my take is that most feel they're better off waiting until the Fed has completed their rate reduction cycle. And I think some of that is they'd love to get whatever accretion back into their capital numbers that will just naturally come out of rate reductions. And so, I would anticipate there's a little more activity post rate post Fed rate reductions. Speaker 200:52:34Got you. Okay. Speaker 800:52:35Well, it's good to see you guys in Speaker 700:52:36a great position and congrats on a nice quarter guys. Thanks. Speaker 300:52:40Thank you, Brian. Speaker 100:52:41Thank you. Operator00:52:43Thank you. And I'm showing no further questions. So with that, I'll hand the call back over to CEO, Mark Hardwick for any closing remarks. Speaker 100:52:52Well, thank you. I enjoyed Q and A today. You guys ask great questions and it gives us a chance to share our passion for the business beyond just our written comments. So, thank you for your investment. We're excited about the future and we've got a team 2,100 people strong that are actively getting after our vision statement of enhancing the financial wellness of the diverse communities we serve and our tagline of helping you prosper and we're making a difference in our communities. Speaker 100:53:24We're excited about it. So, thank you for your investment. Operator00:53:29This concludes today's conference. Thank you for your participation and have a great day. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by