NASDAQ:SBCF Seacoast Banking Co. of Florida Q3 2024 Earnings Report $24.48 +0.52 (+2.17%) Closing price 05/2/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$24.47 -0.01 (-0.04%) As of 05/2/2025 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 Seacoast Banking Co. of Florida EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.36Consensus EPS $0.36Beat/MissMet ExpectationsOne Year Ago EPS$0.37Seacoast Banking Co. of Florida Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$130.30 millionExpected Revenue$129.20 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$1.10 millionYoY Revenue Growth+5.50%Seacoast Banking Co. of Florida Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2024Date10/24/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateFriday, October 25, 2024Conference Call Time10:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Seacoast Banking Co. of Florida Q3 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 25, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 9 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Welcome to the Seacoast Banking Corporation's Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. My name is JL, and I will be your operator. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. Before we begin, I have been asked to direct your attention to the statement at the end of the company's press release regarding forward looking statements. Operator00:00:31Seacoast will be discussing issues that constitute forward looking statements within the meaning of the Securities and Exchange Act and its comments today are intended to be covered within the meaning of that act. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I'll now turn the call over to Chuck Schafer, Chairman and CEO of Seacoast Bank. Mr. Schaeffer, you may begin. Speaker 100:00:52All right. Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Before we start, I want to express our sympathy for all those affected by the hurricanes. Speaker 200:01:00Our hearts go out to Speaker 100:01:01all those who lost loved ones or experienced catastrophic losses. I also want to express my sincere appreciation for our associates, who with unwavering resilience valiantly reacted to both hurricanes, securing our facilities while preparing their homes and families and quickly focusing on supporting our customers and communities before and after the storm. I'm incredibly impressed and proud of our entire team. And Tracy will provide a few further thoughts on the hurricanes here shortly. As we turn to the quarter, we will refer to the 3rd quarter earnings slide deck, is at ccosbanking.com. Speaker 100:01:37And I'm here with Tracy Dexter, our CFO Michael Young, Treasurer and Director of Investor Relations James Stallings, our Chief Credit Officer. The CECOS team produced an excellent quarter. The results this quarter evidence the inflection in growth and the start of margin expansion that we expected to materialize in the second half of twenty twenty four. We continue to see our investments in banker talent, marketing and customer focused culture paying off producing annualized loan growth of 7% and annualized customer deposit growth of 7%. And of note, loan originations were up 22% quarter over quarter and commercial non interest bearing demand deposits grew by $67,000,000 Importantly, this quarter also generated annualized growth in tangible book value per share of 20% to $16.20 And additionally, net interest income, non interest income, pre tax pre provision earnings and the NIM excluding accretion on acquired loans, all improved sequentially. Speaker 100:02:39This quarter showcases the strength of the banking team we've been intently building over the last few years. And while completing our acquisitions in late 2022 and 2023, we also recruited an exceptional commercial banking team, credit team and retail banking talent with additions in all markets. This quarter, we continued this expansion with further investments in bankers in Fort Lauderdale, Gainesville and Tampa. And importantly, as we transformed our frontline, we've also made all the necessary governance and enterprise risk investments to be a well functioning compliant midsized bank. So in summary, this quarter demonstrated several proof points of our operating strategy. Speaker 100:03:19First, organic growth was substantial compared to the industry, driven by the investment in talented banking teams across the state over the last 24 months. And secondly, we saw growth in net interest income and the core net interest margin, which aligned with our previous guidance. Expenses were well controlled and non interest income was up over 30% from 1 year ago. The combination of an expanding margin into 2025 with strong organic growth will support earnings improvements as we move into the coming year. And just to remind you, we are unwavering in our commitment to maintaining our conservative balance sheet principles. Speaker 100:03:54This commitment is the cornerstone of our strategy and a key factor to ensuring our long term success. We remain steadfast in our mission to establish Seacoast as the leading player in Florida. Now I'll pass the call to Traci to talk about our financial results. Speaker 300:04:08Thank you, Chuck. Good morning, everyone. Directing your attention to Q3 results, beginning with Slide 4. Seacoast reported net income of $30,700,000 or $0.36 per share in the Q3. Pretax pre provision earnings on an adjusted basis increased nearly $2,000,000 quarter over quarter benefiting from growing revenue sources and well controlled expenses. Speaker 300:04:31Tangible book value per share increased 20% annualized to $16.20 Loan production was strong with growth in balances of 6.6 percent on an annualized basis and the pipeline for future production remains robust. Growth in customer deposits was also strong. Total deposits grew 4.2% annualized, which includes a decline in brokered deposits. Excluding brokered, customer deposits grew 6.6% annualized and non interest bearing accounts grew over 5% annualized. On the net interest margin, consistent with the guidance we provided last quarter, the margin excluding accretion and purchase discount on acquired loans has begun to expand, increasing 3 basis points during the quarter to 2.90%. Speaker 300:05:20In addition, we saw 2% growth in net interest income consistent with our expectations. Non interest income increased 7% from the prior quarter and 33% from the prior year quarter with continued success in deepening customer relationships through services including wealth management, treasury management and insurance. And we continue to grow the team with additional investments in talent in key markets. Our capital position continues to be very strong. CECO's Tier 1 capital ratio is 14.8% and the ratio of tangible common equity to tangible assets is 9.6%. Speaker 300:05:58Also notable, if all held to maturity securities were presented at fair value, the TCE to TA ratio would still be over 9%. Turning to slide 5. Net interest income expanded by $2,300,000 during the quarter, with growth in loans and securities along with growing non interest bearing deposits outpacing a 3 basis point increase in deposit costs. Core net interest margin expanded 3 basis points to 2.90%. In the securities portfolio, yields increased 6 basis points to 3.75 percent benefiting from recent purchases. Speaker 300:06:37Loan yields excluding accretion also increased 6 basis points to 5.58%. Accretion of purchase discounts on acquired loans was lower by $1,000,000 compared to the prior quarter. The cost of deposits increased to 2.34%, but with exit rates in September beginning to more fully reflect rate declines. Looking ahead to the Q4, we expect continued expansion of net interest income and expect the core net interest margin to expand in a range of 5 to 10 basis points, driven by continued loan and deposit growth and declining deposit costs. Our expectations include 2 25 basis point rate cuts in the 4th quarter. Speaker 300:07:20Moving to slide 6. Non interest income excluding securities activity increased $1,300,000 in the 3rd quarter to 23,500,000 Service charges increased with continued expansion of our commercial treasury management offerings and new customer acquisition. Wealth and insurance agency income continue to grow. Other income was higher by $1,500,000 including higher SBIC income and higher loan swap fees. Looking ahead, we continue to focus on growing non interest income and we expect 4th quarter non interest income in a range from $22,000,000 to $23,000,000 Moving to Slide 7. Speaker 300:08:02Assets under management have increased 16% year to date to just under $2,000,000,000 and have increased at a compound annual growth rate of 26% in the last 5 years. Wealth Management revenues year to date reached $11,100,000 up 17% from the corresponding period in the prior year. Moving to Slide 8. Non interest expense for the quarter was $84,800,000 consistent with the guidance we provided last quarter. Recent expense reduction initiatives are benefiting nearly every category with the increase from the prior quarter reflecting continued investments in revenue producing talent. Speaker 300:08:41Expenses are well controlled and the efficiency ratio improved to 59.8%. Discipline around expenses will continue to be a focus. And in the Q4, we expect core non interest expense to again be between $84,000,000 $86,000,000 Turning to slide 9. Loan outstandings increased at an annualized rate of 6.6% and average loan yields excluding accretion on acquired loans increased 6 basis points to 5.58%. The pipeline remains strong and looking forward, we expect mid single digit loan growth in the coming quarter. Speaker 300:09:21Turning to slide 10. Portfolio diversification in terms of asset mix, industry and loan type has been a critical element of the company's lending strategy. Exposure is broadly distributed and we continue to be vigilant in maintaining our disciplined conservative credit culture. Non owner occupied commercial real estate loans represent 35% of all loans and are distributed across industries and collateral types. As we have for many years, we consistently manage our portfolio to keep construction and land development loans and commercial real estate loans well below regulatory guidance. Speaker 300:09:58These measures are significantly below the peer group at 34% and 2 27% of consolidated risk based capital respectively. We've managed our loan portfolio with diverse distribution across categories and retaining granularity to manage risk. Moving on to credit topics on Slide 11. The allowance for credit losses totaled $140,500,000 or 1.38 percent of total loans compared to 1.41 percent in the prior quarter. The allowance for credit losses combined with the $142,000,000 remaining unrecognized discount on acquired loans totaled $282,000,000 or 2.8 percent of total loans that's available to cover potential losses, providing substantial loss absorption capacity. Speaker 300:10:45As we move into the Q4, we're continuing to assess the potential impact of Hurricane Milton on our customers and whether and to what extent that may result in future credit losses. That may result in the need for a build and allowance in the Q4 and based on our work to date that may be in a range between $5,000,000 $10,000,000 Moving to Slide 12, looking at quarterly trends in credit metrics. Our credit metrics remain strong. Charge offs included the resolution of a small number of individually evaluated credits with previously established specific reserves and the continued runoff of isolated acquired portfolios. Non performing loans represented 0.79 percent of total loans. Speaker 300:11:30Additions to non accrual loans in the 3rd quarter included a small number of credits delinquent on payments, but for which no loss is expected as collateral values are well in excess of the loan balances. The level of criticized and classified loans to total loans remained flat at 2.59%. Moving to slide 13 in the investment securities portfolio. The average yield on securities has benefited from purchases in recent quarters at higher yields with the portfolio yield increasing during the Q3 to 3.75%. Changes in the rate environment positively impacted portfolio values and as a result, the overall unrealized loss position improved by $83,000,000 In October, we took advantage of favorable market conditions and have repositioned a portion of the available for sale portfolio. Speaker 300:12:22We sold securities with proceeds of approximately $113,000,000 yielding an average 2.8%, resulting in a pre tax loss of approximately $8,000,000 impacting 4th quarter results. The proceeds were reinvested in agency mortgage backed securities with a book yield of approximately 5.4% for an estimated earn back of less than 3 years. Turning to Slide 14 and the deposit portfolio. Total deposits increased by $127,500,000 with an increase in customer deposits of nearly $196,000,000 partially offset by a decline in brokered balances. The cost of deposits increased this quarter only 3 basis points to 2.34%, a slower pace of increase than in previous periods consistent with our expectations. Speaker 300:13:12In September, based on actions we've taken in the portfolio, rates began to decline. Looking forward to the Q4, we expect continued growth in core deposits and a continued decline in deposit costs, And we remain very encouraged about the continued activity and focus across the franchise on deposit gathering. On Slide 15, CECOS continues to benefit from a diverse deposit base. Customer transaction accounts represent 49% of total deposits, which continues to highlight our long standing relationship focused approach. Our customers are highly engaged and have a long history with us and low average balances reflect the granular relationship nature of our franchise. Speaker 300:13:59And finally, on slide 16, our capital position continues to be very strong and we're committed to maintaining our fortress balance sheet. Tangible book value per share increased to $16.20 and the ratio of tangible common equity to tangible assets remains exceptionally strong at 9.6%. Our risk based Tier 1 capital ratios are among the highest in the industry. In summary, we remain steadfastly committed to driving shareholder value and our consistent disciplined expense management positions us well as we continue to build Florida's leading regional bank. Chuck, I'll turn the call back to you. Speaker 100:14:38Thank you, Tracy. And operator, we're ready for Q and A. Operator00:14:43Thank Your first question comes from the line of Russell Gunther of Stephens. Your line is open. Speaker 400:15:08Hi, good morning guys. Speaker 500:15:10Good morning, Russell. Good morning. Speaker 400:15:12Good morning. I wanted to start with the margin. Appreciate all the color that you guys shared, particularly the piece on where deposit costs were for September. Wondering first if you could talk to how the margin shook out in September as well. And then as we think about the guide for core expansion of 5 bps to 10 bps in 4Q, can you just help triangulate that to where you'd expect the reported margin to head as well? Speaker 600:15:43Sure, Russell. This is Michael. So maybe we'll start with the deposit cost side. A couple of questions kind of were embedded in there. On the deposit costs, I think just from a high level perspective, if you zoom out over the whole cycle, we had about a 45% deposit beta on the way up. Speaker 600:16:03We would expect a similar level of performance on the way down. We have an acceleration of that beta later in the cycle. We also we still think we have a very strong deposit base. And we were very customer friendly during a liquidity tight environment and we think we'll be able to move pretty quickly on the way down. As a reminder, our deposits are mainly in exception tiers. Speaker 600:16:25So we have the ability to flex those as we need. You saw the deposit costs in September that stepped down pretty materially. And we expect continued benefits into October from a full run rate of those reductions. So we would expect the margin expansion that Tracy guided to in the Q4 when you take into account the amount of deposit reductions there plus we do assume 2 additional rate cuts although 1 in November, 1 in December, the one in December obviously though not being that impactful for the quarter. Speaker 100:17:01Thanks, Speaker 400:17:01Michael. And then maybe switching gears to loan growth, really strong quarter, pipelines look good, appreciate thoughts on the coming quarter. How should we think about into 2025 given some of the hires mentioned, strength of your markets, but also considering potential impact of pay downs? Speaker 100:17:26Yes. And maybe Michael can kind of follow-up on the growth, but I'll just sort of reiterate what I had in my opening comments. Really proud of the team we're building. I think they're exceptionally strong. I think the growth you saw this quarter is the outcome of the investments in talent we've made over the last 24 months. Speaker 100:17:43And as you see kind of coming in here in the Q4, the pipeline remains strong. So I think our guide here for Q4 is mid single digits. In the long run, we'd like it to be a little north of that as we move into late in the next year assuming the economy and everything plays out. But I think just generally mid single digit type guide is a way to think about at least over the next few quarters dependent on the economy and rates and how things play out here. But feel very good about the team we have, feel very good about the volume we saw this quarter and expect a similar production quarter here coming into Q4. Speaker 100:18:19Michael, anything you'd add to that? Speaker 600:18:20Yes. Just Russell, obviously, we had the 2 hurricanes, late September October, and that probably impacts growth a little bit in Q4, which is why maybe a slight step down in the growth quarter to quarter plus a little higher maturities in Q4. But we still see the momentum in the pipeline and the customer conversations just a slight probably lag at the beginning of the quarter here. Speaker 400:18:45Got it. Okay, great. Thank you both. And then just maybe tying it all together, last one for me. So it sounds like we've got the expanding NIM, we've got growth inflecting higher. Speaker 400:18:55How are you guys thinking about an ROA target for 2025? Speaker 100:19:00Yes. We don't have anything out there, but obviously we want to be north of 1 as we move through time and we're very keenly focused on profitability. I'd say as we look over the next coming quarters and into next year that is our primary objective right now. We made a lot of really solid investments in talent around the company over the last 12, like I said earlier 12 to 24 months. But over the coming quarters, our goal right now is to drive profitability north and more solidly deliver a better profitability profile. Speaker 100:19:33And so that is our objective coming into the year. Speaker 700:19:37Got it. Thanks, Travis. Speaker 400:19:38Thanks, Travis. Speaker 700:19:39Thank you. Go ahead, Michael. Speaker 500:19:41I was just going Speaker 600:19:42to add on that if you look back historically, our net interest margin is significantly higher than where we are today. I think with our kind of fixed rate balance sheet and low cost deposit franchise that we look to kind of re evidence, you'll see the margin expansion coming forward that will kind of get us back to a profitability level that we're happy with. Speaker 100:20:04Yes. And I'll just one more just the yes, thank you, Russell. The momentum is strong and with the strong momentum inflection in margin that all sets up a good coming year. Operator00:20:19Your next question comes from the line of Woody Lay of KBW. Your line is open. Speaker 700:20:25Hey, good morning guys. Speaker 500:20:26Hey, Woody. Good morning. Speaker 700:20:28Well, I wanted to just touch on the small Speaker 600:20:45Hey, Woody, this is Michael. We did reinvest the proceeds of that restructure into new securities. So it's not necessarily something we did to fund loan growth. We're seeing quite frankly strong deposit growth as well as you saw this quarter on a core customer basis. So it's not really a liquidity play so much as just our focus on kind of the math and the earn back and when we find opportunities where it's reasonable with kind of the rates moving higher here recently and less convexity in terms of what we would reinvest into, it made sense to go ahead and take the opportunity to do a small reposition on a select group of the book. Speaker 600:21:25So we'll just keep doing that. If the opportunities present themselves and we'll stay away from it if it doesn't make sense. Speaker 700:21:35Got it. And then one of the hit on accretable yield real quick. It was a little bit of a headwind in the Q3. Just any kind of guide you could give for the next couple of quarters? Do you think the $9,000,000 is a good run rate? Speaker 700:21:49Or does it take a further step down from here? Speaker 300:21:53Hey, this is Tracy. Yes, that's going to continue to be difficult to predict, but you might expect and if you look back over the last few quarters, you can see as we get further out from the periods of acquisition, that level of accretion starts to taper off. So I think it's difficult to put a specific number on around timing. That's obviously just uncertainty around timing over the next few years. But maybe the trend that you've seen in the last few quarters could be a good indication of where accretion goes in the next few quarters. Speaker 600:22:29Yes. If you think about Speaker 100:22:30the portfolios burning off at a pretty stable rate at this point given where rates are. And so you could just trend it out from where it's gone in the last few quarters, it probably gives you a good sense of where it's headed into the coming year. Speaker 600:22:41And maybe one other sorry, this is Michael. One other thing to tack on there, Woody, just as you think about it in aggregate, we do have the CDI amortization as well that's headed down. So, those will both be moving lower with time. So the net impact is a little more marginal than just the purchase accounting accretion by itself. Speaker 700:23:02Got it. Appreciate that color. And then maybe just last for me shifting over to the non interest bearing deposits. I mean the growth was great to see in the quarter. It feels like trends are strong there. Speaker 700:23:16Do you think balances can continue to march higher from here just given the new client on onboarding? Speaker 100:23:23Yes. I mean, I was really encouraged about that myself and I do think it is 100% because of the new client onboarding. So yes, I think as we move through time, we can continue to move kind of at the pace we have. It's a key focus of ours. And on the C and I side of the business, we are 100% focused on full relationships. Speaker 100:23:39So when we're lending to these clients, we're expecting the client to move basically the entire banking relationship and we're seeing that fairly consistently. So I was encouraged to see that and expect that Speaker 800:23:53to continue. Speaker 100:23:53Great. Thanks for taking my questions. Thank you, Wood. Operator00:23:58Your next question comes from the line of David Feaster of Raymond James. Your line is open. Speaker 200:24:04Hi, good morning everybody. Speaker 600:24:06Hi David. Good morning. Speaker 200:24:08I wanted to start on the organic growth side. I mean it was great to see what we've been talking about for a while come to fruition and it's also good to see the stability in the pipeline, which again supports that this is sustainable. I'm just kind of curious how you think about the complexion of the pipeline. Obviously, growth in this quarter was driven by CRE. I know we've had a notable focus on trying to drive C and I growth that obviously takes time to bring over relationships. Speaker 200:24:35But I'm just curious how you think about the complexion of the pipeline and drivers of growth going forward? Do you still expect it to be CRE heavy near term? And when do you think we can start seeing more of a C and I contribution? Speaker 100:24:49Yes. And I would say, David, it's somewhat just dependent upon where fundings happen and what's termed at versus not. But if you were to look at the production in the quarter, it's about fifty-fifty CRE C and I. I think that probably continues in the coming quarters. And that's about what our run rate has been. Speaker 100:25:07That's about kind of where things have been now for a while. So I do think over time, you can see if you look owner occupied CRE was up and non owner occupied CRE was up a little more as you mentioned. But I expect it to be pretty balanced as we move through the coming quarters. And as I said, it's about fifty-fifty. Speaker 200:25:28Okay. Okay. And then maybe touching on the deposit front. I mean, you talked about starting to reprice deposits lower. I'm curious, how's reception been with your clients so far? Speaker 200:25:45And as you think about trying to find that point where you can start where you can push deposit costs lower without losing a relationship or losing the deposits, like how are those conversations going? And where are you able to drive like what rates are on a blended basis are you able Speaker 500:26:03to drive new core deposit growth today? Speaker 100:26:06Yes. And I'll let Michael take the second part of that question around the sort of new deposits coming on. But just in terms of client reaction, we really didn't see any push back at all. It's gone pretty well. The clients accepted it and we've seen the competition move down. Speaker 100:26:20So that's been kind of the good news and that was the thing that we had to watch carefully as where does the competition go. And as Michael mentioned earlier, as we went through the prior year, obviously coming on the backside of the banking crisis in mid-twenty early 2023 with the bank failures, we were very client friendly and we moved things up pretty rapidly there and we wanted to protect client relationships and maintain liquidity in the balance sheet, maintain our core deposit franchise. As you know, over our history, we continue to maintain a very customer focused non transactional funding base. And so we protected that. And as rates come down on the other side, I think it gives us a lot of ability to move rates down. Speaker 100:27:08So as the market moves, we're going to move. And so I think that is a bit of benefit to our balance sheet given that kind of hurt us on the way up, the heavy level of fixed rate in the loan book, it'll help us on the way down. And I think we'll have a little more flexibility than probably a lot of others on the deposit side. So I think that's a benefit we see out ahead for us. And then Michael, I don't know if you want to take them on on what the new add on rate for deposits was? Speaker 600:27:33Yes, David. New add on rate on a blended basis, we were kind of in the low 3s, generally across the quarter. We've pretty typically been around 200 basis points below Fed funds through the cycle. So as rates head lower, we would expect to be adding on at incrementally lower rates. Speaker 200:27:53Okay. And then last one for me, just kind of maybe a high level question for you all. Speaker 700:27:59I just want to get Speaker 200:28:00your thoughts on the Florida economy especially post hurricanes, right? I mean you talked about it. I mean, these storms can be catastrophic, right? Insurance costs have already been an issue in the state. I'm curious, you got to imagine that premiums are probably going to continue to increase, maybe some insurers leave the state. Speaker 200:28:18I'm curious, how do you think about how does that impact the Florida economy, especially the coastal ones and impacts on CRE from these trends? Just curious how you think about some of the impacts on the broader economy from this? Speaker 100:28:33Great question. Really hard to answer, David. I think our initial reaction is we've been through a lot of hurricanes in the state and things are always challenging at the outset, but we work our way through it. And I think the state will work their way through this. The insurance premiums are certainly an issue here. Speaker 100:28:56We started to see, we kind of look back over the last couple of years, we saw a big run up, then we got some tort reform. We saw insurance premiums start to stabilize and arguably start to come down a little bit as insurance companies started to reenter the market. My hope is that continues to happen. I think in terms of the storm impact, I think it was focused on the Tampa, St. Pete kind of West Coast markets and particularly the barrier islands. Speaker 100:29:23But when you get beyond that, the rest of the state, I think, is pretty much 100% backup of business. So I think the impact will be limited and I know the state goes through these things. We always come out the other side, okay. And so I still feel very confident in the economy, very confident in Florida. And yes, we probably will see insurance premiums continue to be a bit of a challenge. Speaker 200:29:43Okay. That's helpful. Appreciate it all. Speaker 100:29:46Appreciate it, Dave. Operator00:29:54Your next question comes from the line of David Bishop of the Hovde Group. Your line is open. Speaker 500:30:01Yes, good morning, Chuck. Speaker 800:30:03Hey, David. Speaker 100:30:05Hey, a question. We've had a lot Speaker 500:30:08of your peers talk about lot of headwinds from loan payoffs this quarter as maybe there's some clarity or taking some profits off the table to maybe reinvest in new projects. Just curious how the payoffs loan payoffs this quarter versus the recent trends? Michael, you want to take that one? I think you got payoff Speaker 600:30:26numbers there. Yes. David, this is Michael. Honestly, it was actually a positive for us. We saw lower levels of payoffs this quarter. Speaker 600:30:35I think, again, if you kind of zoom back out, we were a little more cautious in late 2022 and mid 2023 and had less construction fundings and things that were maturing. So I think that's just all equal a little less of a headwind for us and then just having stability kind of post the M and A environment. I think you're just seeing lower levels of payoffs and we're able to achieve greater levels of net growth. So it wasn't really much of an issue for us in the quarter. Speaker 500:31:07Got it. As you look ahead, anything running from a larger payoff or not really? Speaker 400:31:12No. I think we're seeing more stability in Speaker 600:31:14the book. Obviously, lower rates, you could see higher prepayment speeds across the portfolio, but we haven't seen that yet at least with just a 50 basis point cut. And then we do have a little higher as we talked about earlier, a little higher level of maturities in the 4th quarter, which is why we're kind of thinking the net growth between the hurricane and that could be at more mid single digit levels as opposed to where we were this quarter, but nothing else that's really idiosyncratic to call out. Speaker 500:31:48Got it. And then I wasn't sure if I heard correctly during the preamble. The uptick in non accrual loans that I hear that you guys are well reserved or not expecting much in the way of loss content given appraised values? Speaker 100:32:02Yes, we don't yes, go ahead, Tracey. Speaker 300:32:03That's right, David. We did see a little bit of an uplift in non performing loans this quarter, really a handful of loans and those have sufficient collateral, no losses expected there. Speaker 100:32:19Yes, those were already they were already graded in the crack CRIC classified assets and just moved to NPL. They're just going through the natural cycle. Speaker 500:32:29Okay, got it. And then Chuck, you noted as well, it's been pretty stellar growth on the wealth management side of the business. Just curious, I don't know if there's a way Speaker 100:32:41to reframe it in terms Speaker 500:32:42of like new account growth versus sort of market appreciation. And is this an area where you could dip your toe in and look to acquire additional RAs or really add more aggressively in that front? Thanks. Speaker 100:32:56Yes. It's a business we really like. The return on capital and the Wealth Management business is exceptionally strong. And as we bank Wealth Management clients, both on the bank side and the wealth side, they tend to be clients for life. And so we think very highly the business is a business we're very focused on. Speaker 100:33:16We looked at wealth management acquisition opportunities. We will look at them over time. We've not done one to date, but it is something that we could do if something was unique that came along. But we really like the business as we've talked about in the past and we think it's a really solid business for us. And I think our business is deeply interconnected to our commercial banking franchise. Speaker 100:33:40And we see very often when our commercial banking clients liquidate companies, we oftentimes get the opportunity to manage the assets and help those families out. And so it's a phenomenal business for us. We love the business and it's something we'll continue to focus on. Speaker 500:33:59Great. Thank you for the color. Speaker 600:34:02Thank you. Operator00:34:04Your next question comes from the line of Stephen Scouten of Piper Sandler. Your line is open. Speaker 800:34:10Hey, good morning everyone. Appreciate the time. Curious, Chuck, you talked about getting back to that 1% ROA in time. I assume that would primarily be driven by kind of loan growth balance sheet mix and improving NIM. Is that fair to say or would you think there's like another driving force there that's worth noting as well that'd be more impactful? Speaker 100:34:33Yes. I think at a very high level, our expense base is well invested in. I think we've got the team to drive growth over time. And when you kind of sort of think that we've got a lot of those investments made and then you look at kind of the growth that we've seen in our focus on non interest income, the investments in commercial bankers, investments in treasury management talent, investments in wealth, what you're seeing is the operating leverage start to pull through. And so when you think about the coming year, the combination of decent to strong organic growth combined with potential for margin expansion, particularly as rates come down, when you kind of put the 2 of those together, it starts to really drive some profitability improvement. Speaker 100:35:19And then you can see that in the model. And so we've got a really great team that's really focused on growth and they are consistently onboarding new clients. And so it gives me some confidence that that in combination with getting past the margin headwinds that we've been faced over the last year or so, it really starts to set us up to see solid profitability improvement. Speaker 800:35:44Yes. Okay. That's super helpful. That's great to hear. And then I guess as I think about the margin expansion, and you guys talked about kind of trends continuing to improve there and return maybe closer to historical levels. Speaker 800:35:58If I look at the core NIM and I don't know if that's how you guys think about it, but it was in the like $306,000,000 range back in 1Q 'twenty two before we started the rate hike cycle. Is that kind of where you would think it could get back to? Or is there anything that's changed around the balance sheet that would allow that core NIM to be above that level? Or how can you kind of frame up the potential for the core NIM, the core earnings power from that perspective? Speaker 600:36:25Hey, Steve. It's Michael. We're not going to give any guidance for 2025 on where we think that's going to get to. Obviously, I think everyone's expectations around the number of Fed cuts is going to be sort of a determining factor as we move through next year as well as kind of shape of the yield curve. So those caveats out there, I think we do expect margin expansion per rate cut, maybe 2 to 4 basis points could be a little better, could be a little worse depending on the shape of the curve, etcetera. Speaker 600:36:57But we expect that to come through. And so if you think about the moving pieces into next year, between now and the end of next year, we've got $450,000,000 of securities cash flow at about a 3.3% rate that's going to reprice up into a higher rate environment. We've got another $750,000,000 plus of fixed rate cash flows off the loan book that are going to reprice from around kind of high 4s into the current environment. Those provide some pretty steady tailwinds regardless of what happens with rates and the number of cuts. And then the cuts themselves are just very additive given our fixed rate nature of our loan book and the adjustable rates even on our loan book don't reprice really until 26, 27. Speaker 600:37:42So we've got pretty stable asset yields with improving deposit costs that I think are going to drive the margin expansion. So we feel comfortable with the direction and pace of that going forward into next year, but the number of cuts will have some output impact in terms of where that goes and how high and how quickly. Speaker 800:38:05Yes, that's extremely helpful color, Michael. And just to clarify, when you talk about the 2 to 4 bps per rate cut, are you thinking about that on a core basis or on a GAAP basis? Speaker 600:38:16Yes, core basis, I think that's what we can manage. The GAAP basis around accretion will depend on just the pace of repayments there. So really talking about the core. And I do think given our sort of friendliness with clients early on their deposit rates, I think there's more opportunity to move a little more quickly on the front end, but that will obviously start to decelerate a little bit on the back end of kind of the rate cycle. So just like we saw on the way up. Speaker 800:38:47Yes, makes sense. And then last thing for me, just you guys obviously have created a ton of excess shareholder value since 2014 by M and A. The environment has not really been maybe set up for that in the last year or so, but with rates coming down, are you seeing a pickup at all in conversations? Or you think there's a greater likelihood of something manifesting here in the near medium term and kind of continue in that path? Speaker 100:39:13Just kind of give you a flat, I don't think anything's really changed in terms of the level of conversations. There's certainly conversations out there. We have relationships throughout the state that we continue to chat with. We'll be disciplined. It's going to have to make sense from a earn back perspective and it's going to have to make a lot of sense from a return perspective because I think our organic story is so strong. Speaker 100:39:37So we'll be really thoughtful if we do anything, but there are conversations happening. Speaker 800:39:46Got it. Very good. Thanks, Chuck. Thanks, Michael and Tracy. Appreciate the time. Speaker 600:39:51Thanks, Steve. Operator00:39:53With no further questions, this concludes our Q and A session. Would now like to turn the conference back over to Chuck Schafer for closing remarks. Speaker 500:40:02All right. Speaker 100:40:02Well, thank you all for joining us this morning. And just again to reiterate my great appreciation for our associates that worked so hard to get us through the 2 hurricanes. It was a lot of work and it's a lot over a few weeks and you all did a phenomenal job both getting the bank prepared and taking care of our clients. So just thank you to all our SECO associates for that. And I appreciate everybody joining the call. Speaker 100:40:23Thank you. That will wrap us up. Operator00:40:26This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallSeacoast Banking Co. of Florida Q3 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Seacoast Banking Co. of Florida Earnings HeadlinesKeefe, Bruyette & Woods Cuts Seacoast Banking Co. of Florida (NASDAQ:SBCF) Price Target to $31.00May 3 at 3:39 AM | americanbankingnews.comSeacoast Banking Co. of Florida (NASDAQ:SBCF) Downgraded to Sell Rating by StockNews.comApril 27, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comAltucher: Turn $900 into $108,000 in just 12 months?We are entering the final Trump Bump of our lives. But the biggest returns will not be in the stock market.May 4, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)Piper Sandler Sticks to Their Hold Rating for Seacoast Banking Of Florida (SBCF)April 26, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comKBW Remains a Buy on Seacoast Banking Of Florida (SBCF)April 26, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comSeacoast Banking Corporation of Florida (NASDAQ:SBCF) Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptApril 26, 2025 | msn.comSee More Seacoast Banking Co. of Florida Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Seacoast Banking Co. of Florida? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Seacoast Banking Co. of Florida and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Seacoast Banking Co. of FloridaSeacoast Banking Corp. of Florida is a financial holding company, which engages in the provision of integrated financial services. It provides banking and investment services to businesses and consumers, including personal and business deposit products, Internet and mobile banking, personal, commercial and mortgage loans, wealth management services, and treasury management solutions. 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There are 9 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Welcome to the Seacoast Banking Corporation's Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. My name is JL, and I will be your operator. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. Before we begin, I have been asked to direct your attention to the statement at the end of the company's press release regarding forward looking statements. Operator00:00:31Seacoast will be discussing issues that constitute forward looking statements within the meaning of the Securities and Exchange Act and its comments today are intended to be covered within the meaning of that act. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I'll now turn the call over to Chuck Schafer, Chairman and CEO of Seacoast Bank. Mr. Schaeffer, you may begin. Speaker 100:00:52All right. Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Before we start, I want to express our sympathy for all those affected by the hurricanes. Speaker 200:01:00Our hearts go out to Speaker 100:01:01all those who lost loved ones or experienced catastrophic losses. I also want to express my sincere appreciation for our associates, who with unwavering resilience valiantly reacted to both hurricanes, securing our facilities while preparing their homes and families and quickly focusing on supporting our customers and communities before and after the storm. I'm incredibly impressed and proud of our entire team. And Tracy will provide a few further thoughts on the hurricanes here shortly. As we turn to the quarter, we will refer to the 3rd quarter earnings slide deck, is at ccosbanking.com. Speaker 100:01:37And I'm here with Tracy Dexter, our CFO Michael Young, Treasurer and Director of Investor Relations James Stallings, our Chief Credit Officer. The CECOS team produced an excellent quarter. The results this quarter evidence the inflection in growth and the start of margin expansion that we expected to materialize in the second half of twenty twenty four. We continue to see our investments in banker talent, marketing and customer focused culture paying off producing annualized loan growth of 7% and annualized customer deposit growth of 7%. And of note, loan originations were up 22% quarter over quarter and commercial non interest bearing demand deposits grew by $67,000,000 Importantly, this quarter also generated annualized growth in tangible book value per share of 20% to $16.20 And additionally, net interest income, non interest income, pre tax pre provision earnings and the NIM excluding accretion on acquired loans, all improved sequentially. Speaker 100:02:39This quarter showcases the strength of the banking team we've been intently building over the last few years. And while completing our acquisitions in late 2022 and 2023, we also recruited an exceptional commercial banking team, credit team and retail banking talent with additions in all markets. This quarter, we continued this expansion with further investments in bankers in Fort Lauderdale, Gainesville and Tampa. And importantly, as we transformed our frontline, we've also made all the necessary governance and enterprise risk investments to be a well functioning compliant midsized bank. So in summary, this quarter demonstrated several proof points of our operating strategy. Speaker 100:03:19First, organic growth was substantial compared to the industry, driven by the investment in talented banking teams across the state over the last 24 months. And secondly, we saw growth in net interest income and the core net interest margin, which aligned with our previous guidance. Expenses were well controlled and non interest income was up over 30% from 1 year ago. The combination of an expanding margin into 2025 with strong organic growth will support earnings improvements as we move into the coming year. And just to remind you, we are unwavering in our commitment to maintaining our conservative balance sheet principles. Speaker 100:03:54This commitment is the cornerstone of our strategy and a key factor to ensuring our long term success. We remain steadfast in our mission to establish Seacoast as the leading player in Florida. Now I'll pass the call to Traci to talk about our financial results. Speaker 300:04:08Thank you, Chuck. Good morning, everyone. Directing your attention to Q3 results, beginning with Slide 4. Seacoast reported net income of $30,700,000 or $0.36 per share in the Q3. Pretax pre provision earnings on an adjusted basis increased nearly $2,000,000 quarter over quarter benefiting from growing revenue sources and well controlled expenses. Speaker 300:04:31Tangible book value per share increased 20% annualized to $16.20 Loan production was strong with growth in balances of 6.6 percent on an annualized basis and the pipeline for future production remains robust. Growth in customer deposits was also strong. Total deposits grew 4.2% annualized, which includes a decline in brokered deposits. Excluding brokered, customer deposits grew 6.6% annualized and non interest bearing accounts grew over 5% annualized. On the net interest margin, consistent with the guidance we provided last quarter, the margin excluding accretion and purchase discount on acquired loans has begun to expand, increasing 3 basis points during the quarter to 2.90%. Speaker 300:05:20In addition, we saw 2% growth in net interest income consistent with our expectations. Non interest income increased 7% from the prior quarter and 33% from the prior year quarter with continued success in deepening customer relationships through services including wealth management, treasury management and insurance. And we continue to grow the team with additional investments in talent in key markets. Our capital position continues to be very strong. CECO's Tier 1 capital ratio is 14.8% and the ratio of tangible common equity to tangible assets is 9.6%. Speaker 300:05:58Also notable, if all held to maturity securities were presented at fair value, the TCE to TA ratio would still be over 9%. Turning to slide 5. Net interest income expanded by $2,300,000 during the quarter, with growth in loans and securities along with growing non interest bearing deposits outpacing a 3 basis point increase in deposit costs. Core net interest margin expanded 3 basis points to 2.90%. In the securities portfolio, yields increased 6 basis points to 3.75 percent benefiting from recent purchases. Speaker 300:06:37Loan yields excluding accretion also increased 6 basis points to 5.58%. Accretion of purchase discounts on acquired loans was lower by $1,000,000 compared to the prior quarter. The cost of deposits increased to 2.34%, but with exit rates in September beginning to more fully reflect rate declines. Looking ahead to the Q4, we expect continued expansion of net interest income and expect the core net interest margin to expand in a range of 5 to 10 basis points, driven by continued loan and deposit growth and declining deposit costs. Our expectations include 2 25 basis point rate cuts in the 4th quarter. Speaker 300:07:20Moving to slide 6. Non interest income excluding securities activity increased $1,300,000 in the 3rd quarter to 23,500,000 Service charges increased with continued expansion of our commercial treasury management offerings and new customer acquisition. Wealth and insurance agency income continue to grow. Other income was higher by $1,500,000 including higher SBIC income and higher loan swap fees. Looking ahead, we continue to focus on growing non interest income and we expect 4th quarter non interest income in a range from $22,000,000 to $23,000,000 Moving to Slide 7. Speaker 300:08:02Assets under management have increased 16% year to date to just under $2,000,000,000 and have increased at a compound annual growth rate of 26% in the last 5 years. Wealth Management revenues year to date reached $11,100,000 up 17% from the corresponding period in the prior year. Moving to Slide 8. Non interest expense for the quarter was $84,800,000 consistent with the guidance we provided last quarter. Recent expense reduction initiatives are benefiting nearly every category with the increase from the prior quarter reflecting continued investments in revenue producing talent. Speaker 300:08:41Expenses are well controlled and the efficiency ratio improved to 59.8%. Discipline around expenses will continue to be a focus. And in the Q4, we expect core non interest expense to again be between $84,000,000 $86,000,000 Turning to slide 9. Loan outstandings increased at an annualized rate of 6.6% and average loan yields excluding accretion on acquired loans increased 6 basis points to 5.58%. The pipeline remains strong and looking forward, we expect mid single digit loan growth in the coming quarter. Speaker 300:09:21Turning to slide 10. Portfolio diversification in terms of asset mix, industry and loan type has been a critical element of the company's lending strategy. Exposure is broadly distributed and we continue to be vigilant in maintaining our disciplined conservative credit culture. Non owner occupied commercial real estate loans represent 35% of all loans and are distributed across industries and collateral types. As we have for many years, we consistently manage our portfolio to keep construction and land development loans and commercial real estate loans well below regulatory guidance. Speaker 300:09:58These measures are significantly below the peer group at 34% and 2 27% of consolidated risk based capital respectively. We've managed our loan portfolio with diverse distribution across categories and retaining granularity to manage risk. Moving on to credit topics on Slide 11. The allowance for credit losses totaled $140,500,000 or 1.38 percent of total loans compared to 1.41 percent in the prior quarter. The allowance for credit losses combined with the $142,000,000 remaining unrecognized discount on acquired loans totaled $282,000,000 or 2.8 percent of total loans that's available to cover potential losses, providing substantial loss absorption capacity. Speaker 300:10:45As we move into the Q4, we're continuing to assess the potential impact of Hurricane Milton on our customers and whether and to what extent that may result in future credit losses. That may result in the need for a build and allowance in the Q4 and based on our work to date that may be in a range between $5,000,000 $10,000,000 Moving to Slide 12, looking at quarterly trends in credit metrics. Our credit metrics remain strong. Charge offs included the resolution of a small number of individually evaluated credits with previously established specific reserves and the continued runoff of isolated acquired portfolios. Non performing loans represented 0.79 percent of total loans. Speaker 300:11:30Additions to non accrual loans in the 3rd quarter included a small number of credits delinquent on payments, but for which no loss is expected as collateral values are well in excess of the loan balances. The level of criticized and classified loans to total loans remained flat at 2.59%. Moving to slide 13 in the investment securities portfolio. The average yield on securities has benefited from purchases in recent quarters at higher yields with the portfolio yield increasing during the Q3 to 3.75%. Changes in the rate environment positively impacted portfolio values and as a result, the overall unrealized loss position improved by $83,000,000 In October, we took advantage of favorable market conditions and have repositioned a portion of the available for sale portfolio. Speaker 300:12:22We sold securities with proceeds of approximately $113,000,000 yielding an average 2.8%, resulting in a pre tax loss of approximately $8,000,000 impacting 4th quarter results. The proceeds were reinvested in agency mortgage backed securities with a book yield of approximately 5.4% for an estimated earn back of less than 3 years. Turning to Slide 14 and the deposit portfolio. Total deposits increased by $127,500,000 with an increase in customer deposits of nearly $196,000,000 partially offset by a decline in brokered balances. The cost of deposits increased this quarter only 3 basis points to 2.34%, a slower pace of increase than in previous periods consistent with our expectations. Speaker 300:13:12In September, based on actions we've taken in the portfolio, rates began to decline. Looking forward to the Q4, we expect continued growth in core deposits and a continued decline in deposit costs, And we remain very encouraged about the continued activity and focus across the franchise on deposit gathering. On Slide 15, CECOS continues to benefit from a diverse deposit base. Customer transaction accounts represent 49% of total deposits, which continues to highlight our long standing relationship focused approach. Our customers are highly engaged and have a long history with us and low average balances reflect the granular relationship nature of our franchise. Speaker 300:13:59And finally, on slide 16, our capital position continues to be very strong and we're committed to maintaining our fortress balance sheet. Tangible book value per share increased to $16.20 and the ratio of tangible common equity to tangible assets remains exceptionally strong at 9.6%. Our risk based Tier 1 capital ratios are among the highest in the industry. In summary, we remain steadfastly committed to driving shareholder value and our consistent disciplined expense management positions us well as we continue to build Florida's leading regional bank. Chuck, I'll turn the call back to you. Speaker 100:14:38Thank you, Tracy. And operator, we're ready for Q and A. Operator00:14:43Thank Your first question comes from the line of Russell Gunther of Stephens. Your line is open. Speaker 400:15:08Hi, good morning guys. Speaker 500:15:10Good morning, Russell. Good morning. Speaker 400:15:12Good morning. I wanted to start with the margin. Appreciate all the color that you guys shared, particularly the piece on where deposit costs were for September. Wondering first if you could talk to how the margin shook out in September as well. And then as we think about the guide for core expansion of 5 bps to 10 bps in 4Q, can you just help triangulate that to where you'd expect the reported margin to head as well? Speaker 600:15:43Sure, Russell. This is Michael. So maybe we'll start with the deposit cost side. A couple of questions kind of were embedded in there. On the deposit costs, I think just from a high level perspective, if you zoom out over the whole cycle, we had about a 45% deposit beta on the way up. Speaker 600:16:03We would expect a similar level of performance on the way down. We have an acceleration of that beta later in the cycle. We also we still think we have a very strong deposit base. And we were very customer friendly during a liquidity tight environment and we think we'll be able to move pretty quickly on the way down. As a reminder, our deposits are mainly in exception tiers. Speaker 600:16:25So we have the ability to flex those as we need. You saw the deposit costs in September that stepped down pretty materially. And we expect continued benefits into October from a full run rate of those reductions. So we would expect the margin expansion that Tracy guided to in the Q4 when you take into account the amount of deposit reductions there plus we do assume 2 additional rate cuts although 1 in November, 1 in December, the one in December obviously though not being that impactful for the quarter. Speaker 100:17:01Thanks, Speaker 400:17:01Michael. And then maybe switching gears to loan growth, really strong quarter, pipelines look good, appreciate thoughts on the coming quarter. How should we think about into 2025 given some of the hires mentioned, strength of your markets, but also considering potential impact of pay downs? Speaker 100:17:26Yes. And maybe Michael can kind of follow-up on the growth, but I'll just sort of reiterate what I had in my opening comments. Really proud of the team we're building. I think they're exceptionally strong. I think the growth you saw this quarter is the outcome of the investments in talent we've made over the last 24 months. Speaker 100:17:43And as you see kind of coming in here in the Q4, the pipeline remains strong. So I think our guide here for Q4 is mid single digits. In the long run, we'd like it to be a little north of that as we move into late in the next year assuming the economy and everything plays out. But I think just generally mid single digit type guide is a way to think about at least over the next few quarters dependent on the economy and rates and how things play out here. But feel very good about the team we have, feel very good about the volume we saw this quarter and expect a similar production quarter here coming into Q4. Speaker 100:18:19Michael, anything you'd add to that? Speaker 600:18:20Yes. Just Russell, obviously, we had the 2 hurricanes, late September October, and that probably impacts growth a little bit in Q4, which is why maybe a slight step down in the growth quarter to quarter plus a little higher maturities in Q4. But we still see the momentum in the pipeline and the customer conversations just a slight probably lag at the beginning of the quarter here. Speaker 400:18:45Got it. Okay, great. Thank you both. And then just maybe tying it all together, last one for me. So it sounds like we've got the expanding NIM, we've got growth inflecting higher. Speaker 400:18:55How are you guys thinking about an ROA target for 2025? Speaker 100:19:00Yes. We don't have anything out there, but obviously we want to be north of 1 as we move through time and we're very keenly focused on profitability. I'd say as we look over the next coming quarters and into next year that is our primary objective right now. We made a lot of really solid investments in talent around the company over the last 12, like I said earlier 12 to 24 months. But over the coming quarters, our goal right now is to drive profitability north and more solidly deliver a better profitability profile. Speaker 100:19:33And so that is our objective coming into the year. Speaker 700:19:37Got it. Thanks, Travis. Speaker 400:19:38Thanks, Travis. Speaker 700:19:39Thank you. Go ahead, Michael. Speaker 500:19:41I was just going Speaker 600:19:42to add on that if you look back historically, our net interest margin is significantly higher than where we are today. I think with our kind of fixed rate balance sheet and low cost deposit franchise that we look to kind of re evidence, you'll see the margin expansion coming forward that will kind of get us back to a profitability level that we're happy with. Speaker 100:20:04Yes. And I'll just one more just the yes, thank you, Russell. The momentum is strong and with the strong momentum inflection in margin that all sets up a good coming year. Operator00:20:19Your next question comes from the line of Woody Lay of KBW. Your line is open. Speaker 700:20:25Hey, good morning guys. Speaker 500:20:26Hey, Woody. Good morning. Speaker 700:20:28Well, I wanted to just touch on the small Speaker 600:20:45Hey, Woody, this is Michael. We did reinvest the proceeds of that restructure into new securities. So it's not necessarily something we did to fund loan growth. We're seeing quite frankly strong deposit growth as well as you saw this quarter on a core customer basis. So it's not really a liquidity play so much as just our focus on kind of the math and the earn back and when we find opportunities where it's reasonable with kind of the rates moving higher here recently and less convexity in terms of what we would reinvest into, it made sense to go ahead and take the opportunity to do a small reposition on a select group of the book. Speaker 600:21:25So we'll just keep doing that. If the opportunities present themselves and we'll stay away from it if it doesn't make sense. Speaker 700:21:35Got it. And then one of the hit on accretable yield real quick. It was a little bit of a headwind in the Q3. Just any kind of guide you could give for the next couple of quarters? Do you think the $9,000,000 is a good run rate? Speaker 700:21:49Or does it take a further step down from here? Speaker 300:21:53Hey, this is Tracy. Yes, that's going to continue to be difficult to predict, but you might expect and if you look back over the last few quarters, you can see as we get further out from the periods of acquisition, that level of accretion starts to taper off. So I think it's difficult to put a specific number on around timing. That's obviously just uncertainty around timing over the next few years. But maybe the trend that you've seen in the last few quarters could be a good indication of where accretion goes in the next few quarters. Speaker 600:22:29Yes. If you think about Speaker 100:22:30the portfolios burning off at a pretty stable rate at this point given where rates are. And so you could just trend it out from where it's gone in the last few quarters, it probably gives you a good sense of where it's headed into the coming year. Speaker 600:22:41And maybe one other sorry, this is Michael. One other thing to tack on there, Woody, just as you think about it in aggregate, we do have the CDI amortization as well that's headed down. So, those will both be moving lower with time. So the net impact is a little more marginal than just the purchase accounting accretion by itself. Speaker 700:23:02Got it. Appreciate that color. And then maybe just last for me shifting over to the non interest bearing deposits. I mean the growth was great to see in the quarter. It feels like trends are strong there. Speaker 700:23:16Do you think balances can continue to march higher from here just given the new client on onboarding? Speaker 100:23:23Yes. I mean, I was really encouraged about that myself and I do think it is 100% because of the new client onboarding. So yes, I think as we move through time, we can continue to move kind of at the pace we have. It's a key focus of ours. And on the C and I side of the business, we are 100% focused on full relationships. Speaker 100:23:39So when we're lending to these clients, we're expecting the client to move basically the entire banking relationship and we're seeing that fairly consistently. So I was encouraged to see that and expect that Speaker 800:23:53to continue. Speaker 100:23:53Great. Thanks for taking my questions. Thank you, Wood. Operator00:23:58Your next question comes from the line of David Feaster of Raymond James. Your line is open. Speaker 200:24:04Hi, good morning everybody. Speaker 600:24:06Hi David. Good morning. Speaker 200:24:08I wanted to start on the organic growth side. I mean it was great to see what we've been talking about for a while come to fruition and it's also good to see the stability in the pipeline, which again supports that this is sustainable. I'm just kind of curious how you think about the complexion of the pipeline. Obviously, growth in this quarter was driven by CRE. I know we've had a notable focus on trying to drive C and I growth that obviously takes time to bring over relationships. Speaker 200:24:35But I'm just curious how you think about the complexion of the pipeline and drivers of growth going forward? Do you still expect it to be CRE heavy near term? And when do you think we can start seeing more of a C and I contribution? Speaker 100:24:49Yes. And I would say, David, it's somewhat just dependent upon where fundings happen and what's termed at versus not. But if you were to look at the production in the quarter, it's about fifty-fifty CRE C and I. I think that probably continues in the coming quarters. And that's about what our run rate has been. Speaker 100:25:07That's about kind of where things have been now for a while. So I do think over time, you can see if you look owner occupied CRE was up and non owner occupied CRE was up a little more as you mentioned. But I expect it to be pretty balanced as we move through the coming quarters. And as I said, it's about fifty-fifty. Speaker 200:25:28Okay. Okay. And then maybe touching on the deposit front. I mean, you talked about starting to reprice deposits lower. I'm curious, how's reception been with your clients so far? Speaker 200:25:45And as you think about trying to find that point where you can start where you can push deposit costs lower without losing a relationship or losing the deposits, like how are those conversations going? And where are you able to drive like what rates are on a blended basis are you able Speaker 500:26:03to drive new core deposit growth today? Speaker 100:26:06Yes. And I'll let Michael take the second part of that question around the sort of new deposits coming on. But just in terms of client reaction, we really didn't see any push back at all. It's gone pretty well. The clients accepted it and we've seen the competition move down. Speaker 100:26:20So that's been kind of the good news and that was the thing that we had to watch carefully as where does the competition go. And as Michael mentioned earlier, as we went through the prior year, obviously coming on the backside of the banking crisis in mid-twenty early 2023 with the bank failures, we were very client friendly and we moved things up pretty rapidly there and we wanted to protect client relationships and maintain liquidity in the balance sheet, maintain our core deposit franchise. As you know, over our history, we continue to maintain a very customer focused non transactional funding base. And so we protected that. And as rates come down on the other side, I think it gives us a lot of ability to move rates down. Speaker 100:27:08So as the market moves, we're going to move. And so I think that is a bit of benefit to our balance sheet given that kind of hurt us on the way up, the heavy level of fixed rate in the loan book, it'll help us on the way down. And I think we'll have a little more flexibility than probably a lot of others on the deposit side. So I think that's a benefit we see out ahead for us. And then Michael, I don't know if you want to take them on on what the new add on rate for deposits was? Speaker 600:27:33Yes, David. New add on rate on a blended basis, we were kind of in the low 3s, generally across the quarter. We've pretty typically been around 200 basis points below Fed funds through the cycle. So as rates head lower, we would expect to be adding on at incrementally lower rates. Speaker 200:27:53Okay. And then last one for me, just kind of maybe a high level question for you all. Speaker 700:27:59I just want to get Speaker 200:28:00your thoughts on the Florida economy especially post hurricanes, right? I mean you talked about it. I mean, these storms can be catastrophic, right? Insurance costs have already been an issue in the state. I'm curious, you got to imagine that premiums are probably going to continue to increase, maybe some insurers leave the state. Speaker 200:28:18I'm curious, how do you think about how does that impact the Florida economy, especially the coastal ones and impacts on CRE from these trends? Just curious how you think about some of the impacts on the broader economy from this? Speaker 100:28:33Great question. Really hard to answer, David. I think our initial reaction is we've been through a lot of hurricanes in the state and things are always challenging at the outset, but we work our way through it. And I think the state will work their way through this. The insurance premiums are certainly an issue here. Speaker 100:28:56We started to see, we kind of look back over the last couple of years, we saw a big run up, then we got some tort reform. We saw insurance premiums start to stabilize and arguably start to come down a little bit as insurance companies started to reenter the market. My hope is that continues to happen. I think in terms of the storm impact, I think it was focused on the Tampa, St. Pete kind of West Coast markets and particularly the barrier islands. Speaker 100:29:23But when you get beyond that, the rest of the state, I think, is pretty much 100% backup of business. So I think the impact will be limited and I know the state goes through these things. We always come out the other side, okay. And so I still feel very confident in the economy, very confident in Florida. And yes, we probably will see insurance premiums continue to be a bit of a challenge. Speaker 200:29:43Okay. That's helpful. Appreciate it all. Speaker 100:29:46Appreciate it, Dave. Operator00:29:54Your next question comes from the line of David Bishop of the Hovde Group. Your line is open. Speaker 500:30:01Yes, good morning, Chuck. Speaker 800:30:03Hey, David. Speaker 100:30:05Hey, a question. We've had a lot Speaker 500:30:08of your peers talk about lot of headwinds from loan payoffs this quarter as maybe there's some clarity or taking some profits off the table to maybe reinvest in new projects. Just curious how the payoffs loan payoffs this quarter versus the recent trends? Michael, you want to take that one? I think you got payoff Speaker 600:30:26numbers there. Yes. David, this is Michael. Honestly, it was actually a positive for us. We saw lower levels of payoffs this quarter. Speaker 600:30:35I think, again, if you kind of zoom back out, we were a little more cautious in late 2022 and mid 2023 and had less construction fundings and things that were maturing. So I think that's just all equal a little less of a headwind for us and then just having stability kind of post the M and A environment. I think you're just seeing lower levels of payoffs and we're able to achieve greater levels of net growth. So it wasn't really much of an issue for us in the quarter. Speaker 500:31:07Got it. As you look ahead, anything running from a larger payoff or not really? Speaker 400:31:12No. I think we're seeing more stability in Speaker 600:31:14the book. Obviously, lower rates, you could see higher prepayment speeds across the portfolio, but we haven't seen that yet at least with just a 50 basis point cut. And then we do have a little higher as we talked about earlier, a little higher level of maturities in the 4th quarter, which is why we're kind of thinking the net growth between the hurricane and that could be at more mid single digit levels as opposed to where we were this quarter, but nothing else that's really idiosyncratic to call out. Speaker 500:31:48Got it. And then I wasn't sure if I heard correctly during the preamble. The uptick in non accrual loans that I hear that you guys are well reserved or not expecting much in the way of loss content given appraised values? Speaker 100:32:02Yes, we don't yes, go ahead, Tracey. Speaker 300:32:03That's right, David. We did see a little bit of an uplift in non performing loans this quarter, really a handful of loans and those have sufficient collateral, no losses expected there. Speaker 100:32:19Yes, those were already they were already graded in the crack CRIC classified assets and just moved to NPL. They're just going through the natural cycle. Speaker 500:32:29Okay, got it. And then Chuck, you noted as well, it's been pretty stellar growth on the wealth management side of the business. Just curious, I don't know if there's a way Speaker 100:32:41to reframe it in terms Speaker 500:32:42of like new account growth versus sort of market appreciation. And is this an area where you could dip your toe in and look to acquire additional RAs or really add more aggressively in that front? Thanks. Speaker 100:32:56Yes. It's a business we really like. The return on capital and the Wealth Management business is exceptionally strong. And as we bank Wealth Management clients, both on the bank side and the wealth side, they tend to be clients for life. And so we think very highly the business is a business we're very focused on. Speaker 100:33:16We looked at wealth management acquisition opportunities. We will look at them over time. We've not done one to date, but it is something that we could do if something was unique that came along. But we really like the business as we've talked about in the past and we think it's a really solid business for us. And I think our business is deeply interconnected to our commercial banking franchise. Speaker 100:33:40And we see very often when our commercial banking clients liquidate companies, we oftentimes get the opportunity to manage the assets and help those families out. And so it's a phenomenal business for us. We love the business and it's something we'll continue to focus on. Speaker 500:33:59Great. Thank you for the color. Speaker 600:34:02Thank you. Operator00:34:04Your next question comes from the line of Stephen Scouten of Piper Sandler. Your line is open. Speaker 800:34:10Hey, good morning everyone. Appreciate the time. Curious, Chuck, you talked about getting back to that 1% ROA in time. I assume that would primarily be driven by kind of loan growth balance sheet mix and improving NIM. Is that fair to say or would you think there's like another driving force there that's worth noting as well that'd be more impactful? Speaker 100:34:33Yes. I think at a very high level, our expense base is well invested in. I think we've got the team to drive growth over time. And when you kind of sort of think that we've got a lot of those investments made and then you look at kind of the growth that we've seen in our focus on non interest income, the investments in commercial bankers, investments in treasury management talent, investments in wealth, what you're seeing is the operating leverage start to pull through. And so when you think about the coming year, the combination of decent to strong organic growth combined with potential for margin expansion, particularly as rates come down, when you kind of put the 2 of those together, it starts to really drive some profitability improvement. Speaker 100:35:19And then you can see that in the model. And so we've got a really great team that's really focused on growth and they are consistently onboarding new clients. And so it gives me some confidence that that in combination with getting past the margin headwinds that we've been faced over the last year or so, it really starts to set us up to see solid profitability improvement. Speaker 800:35:44Yes. Okay. That's super helpful. That's great to hear. And then I guess as I think about the margin expansion, and you guys talked about kind of trends continuing to improve there and return maybe closer to historical levels. Speaker 800:35:58If I look at the core NIM and I don't know if that's how you guys think about it, but it was in the like $306,000,000 range back in 1Q 'twenty two before we started the rate hike cycle. Is that kind of where you would think it could get back to? Or is there anything that's changed around the balance sheet that would allow that core NIM to be above that level? Or how can you kind of frame up the potential for the core NIM, the core earnings power from that perspective? Speaker 600:36:25Hey, Steve. It's Michael. We're not going to give any guidance for 2025 on where we think that's going to get to. Obviously, I think everyone's expectations around the number of Fed cuts is going to be sort of a determining factor as we move through next year as well as kind of shape of the yield curve. So those caveats out there, I think we do expect margin expansion per rate cut, maybe 2 to 4 basis points could be a little better, could be a little worse depending on the shape of the curve, etcetera. Speaker 600:36:57But we expect that to come through. And so if you think about the moving pieces into next year, between now and the end of next year, we've got $450,000,000 of securities cash flow at about a 3.3% rate that's going to reprice up into a higher rate environment. We've got another $750,000,000 plus of fixed rate cash flows off the loan book that are going to reprice from around kind of high 4s into the current environment. Those provide some pretty steady tailwinds regardless of what happens with rates and the number of cuts. And then the cuts themselves are just very additive given our fixed rate nature of our loan book and the adjustable rates even on our loan book don't reprice really until 26, 27. Speaker 600:37:42So we've got pretty stable asset yields with improving deposit costs that I think are going to drive the margin expansion. So we feel comfortable with the direction and pace of that going forward into next year, but the number of cuts will have some output impact in terms of where that goes and how high and how quickly. Speaker 800:38:05Yes, that's extremely helpful color, Michael. And just to clarify, when you talk about the 2 to 4 bps per rate cut, are you thinking about that on a core basis or on a GAAP basis? Speaker 600:38:16Yes, core basis, I think that's what we can manage. The GAAP basis around accretion will depend on just the pace of repayments there. So really talking about the core. And I do think given our sort of friendliness with clients early on their deposit rates, I think there's more opportunity to move a little more quickly on the front end, but that will obviously start to decelerate a little bit on the back end of kind of the rate cycle. So just like we saw on the way up. Speaker 800:38:47Yes, makes sense. And then last thing for me, just you guys obviously have created a ton of excess shareholder value since 2014 by M and A. The environment has not really been maybe set up for that in the last year or so, but with rates coming down, are you seeing a pickup at all in conversations? Or you think there's a greater likelihood of something manifesting here in the near medium term and kind of continue in that path? Speaker 100:39:13Just kind of give you a flat, I don't think anything's really changed in terms of the level of conversations. There's certainly conversations out there. We have relationships throughout the state that we continue to chat with. We'll be disciplined. It's going to have to make sense from a earn back perspective and it's going to have to make a lot of sense from a return perspective because I think our organic story is so strong. Speaker 100:39:37So we'll be really thoughtful if we do anything, but there are conversations happening. Speaker 800:39:46Got it. Very good. Thanks, Chuck. Thanks, Michael and Tracy. Appreciate the time. Speaker 600:39:51Thanks, Steve. Operator00:39:53With no further questions, this concludes our Q and A session. Would now like to turn the conference back over to Chuck Schafer for closing remarks. Speaker 500:40:02All right. Speaker 100:40:02Well, thank you all for joining us this morning. And just again to reiterate my great appreciation for our associates that worked so hard to get us through the 2 hurricanes. It was a lot of work and it's a lot over a few weeks and you all did a phenomenal job both getting the bank prepared and taking care of our clients. So just thank you to all our SECO associates for that. And I appreciate everybody joining the call. Speaker 100:40:23Thank you. That will wrap us up. Operator00:40:26This concludes today's conference call. 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