NASDAQ:BRKL Brookline Bancorp Q1 2024 Earnings Report $10.74 +0.26 (+2.48%) Closing price 05/2/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$10.74 -0.01 (-0.05%) As of 04:19 AM 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 Brookline Bancorp EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.16Consensus EPS $0.22Beat/MissMissed by -$0.06One Year Ago EPSN/ABrookline Bancorp Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$87.87 millionExpected Revenue$91.77 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$3.90 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/ABrookline Bancorp Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date4/24/2024TimeN/AConference Call DateThursday, April 25, 2024Conference Call Time1:30PM ETUpcoming EarningsBrookline Bancorp's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Wednesday, July 23, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 4:00 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)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Brookline Bancorp Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrApril 25, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good afternoon, and welcome to Brookline Bancorp Inc. 1st Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen only mode. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note this event is being recorded. Operator00:00:16I would now like to turn the conference over to Brookline Bancorp's Attorney, Laura Vaughan. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:23Thank you, Emily, and good afternoon, everyone. Yesterday, we issued our earnings release and presentation, which is available on the Investor Relations page of our website, brooklanebancorp.com, and has been filed with the SEC. This afternoon's call will be hosted by Paul A. Perrault and Carl M. Carlson. Speaker 100:00:42This call may contain forward looking statements with respect to the financial condition, results of operations and business of Brookline Bancorp. Please refer to page 2 of our earnings presentation for our forward looking statement disclaimer. Also, please refer to our other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which contain risk factors that require actual results to differ materially from these forward looking statements. Any references made during this presentation to non GAAP measures are only made to assist you in understanding Brookline Bancorp's results and performance trends and should not be relied on as financial measures of actual results or future predictions. For a comparison and reconciliation to GAAP earnings, please see our earnings release. Speaker 100:01:30I'm pleased to introduce Brookline Bancorp's Chairman and CEO, Paul Perrault. Speaker 200:01:35Thanks, Laura. Good afternoon and thank you for joining us on today's earnings call. At the start of the year, prevailing market sentiment suggested inflation was well contained and the Federal Reserve would implement substantial rate cuts, potentially up to 6 to 7 reductions throughout 2024. However, the economic landscape remains dynamic. Unemployment rates persist at historically low levels, consumer spending remains steady and overall economic vitality endures as inflation remains a persistent concern. Speaker 200:02:11Within a matter of months, the market now anticipates only one rate cut for the year, with some even speculating no cuts at all. The 5 year and 10 year treasury rates have surged over 80 basis points since the end of last year. Unfortunately, the prolonged period of higher interest rates continues to hinder the anticipated improvement in net interest margins. We remain vigilant in our efforts to navigate this challenging environment. While the New England and New York Economies continue to perform well, the impact of rising interest rates on loan demand is evident. Speaker 200:02:48Our deposit composition and funding costs further contribute to the strain on the net interest margins and overall revenues. Our goal is to provide boutique commercial banking services to our valued customers efficiently, Careful investments in our team of bankers, technology and locations play a pivotal role in achieving this objective. This quarter, we celebrated the grand opening of our relocated PCSB branch in Mount Vernon, New York. Additionally, our newest Bank Rhode Island branches in Cranston and Newport, Rhode Island are off to a very promising start. I will now turn you over to Carl, who will review the company's Q1 results. Speaker 300:03:30Thank you, Paul. Yesterday, we reported net income for the quarter of $14,700,000 equivalent to $0.16 per share. During the quarter, total assets grew approximately $161,000,000 driven by the growth in cash and equivalents of $169,000,000 with modest loan growth of $13,000,000 distributed across C and I, equipment finance and consumer, as commercial real estate experienced a decline of $10,000,000 In the Q1, we had loan originations and draws of 435,000,000 dollars at a weighted average coupon of 7.79 basis points. The weighted average coupon on the loan portfolio rose 4 basis points to 5.96 basis points, with the quarterly yield on the portfolio increasing 2 basis points for the quarter. On the funding side, customer deposits grew $81,000,000 broker deposits increased $90,000,000 and borrowings declined 15,000,000 dollars Deposit growth centered around higher rate savings and time deposits, offset by decreases in demand deposits and money market products. Speaker 300:04:37Funding costs increased 19 basis points in the quarter. Consequently, our net interest margin compressed 9 basis points to 3.06 percent, resulting in net interest income of $81,600,000 a decline of $2,000,000 from Q4. Non interest income was $6,300,000 reflecting a decrease of $1,700,000 compared to the prior quarter. Factors contributing to this change include lower loan level derivative activity, gains on participated loans and a swing in the mark to market adjustment on derivatives, which is reflected in other non interest income. Notably, due to the sharp increase in interest rates, the mark to market adjustment shifted from a positive adjustment of $447,000 in Q4 to a negative adjustment of $358,000 in Q1. Speaker 300:05:30Expenses were $61,000,000 for the quarter, up $1,800,000 from Q4 due to the seasonality of compensation and benefits and weather related occupancy costs. The provision for credit losses was $7,400,000 for the quarter, an increase of $3,600,000 from the 4th quarter. The increase is driven by net charge offs and reserve build. Net charge offs were $8,800,000 driven by $4,700,000 in C and I charge offs previously specifically reserved for $3,500,000 associated with equipment finance and $600,000 associated with exiting 2 office credits. Non accrual loans experienced a modest decline in the quarter and our reserve coverage ratio increased to 124 basis points. Speaker 300:06:20Over the past few weeks, the outlook for 2024 Federal Reserve rate cuts has significantly shifted. Longer term rates have risen notably, Client behavior and industry responses continue to adapt to this evolving environment. We face renewed pressure on our deposit mix and funding costs. While the economy remains robust, loan demand has softened. Consequently, we now anticipate our margin and net interest income for the full year to be lower than initially projected. Speaker 300:06:48We expect overall loan growth of 1% to 4%, primarily driven by C and I and Equipment Finance. Although there appears to be market opportunity in non owner occupied commercial real estate, our focus remains on serving relationship customers. Hence, we anticipate only slight growth in this segment. Our cash and securities portfolio remains stable, representing 9% to 12% of total assets. On the deposit side, we anticipate growth of 4% to 5%. Speaker 300:07:17Given prevailing interest rates, the migration of demand deposit accounts and other lower cost deposits may persist. Our Q2 margin is currently projected to fall within the range of 300 basis points to 3 0 5 basis points and then improve throughout the year. However, this is dependent upon deposit flows. Non interest income is projected to be in the range of $6,000,000 to $7,000,000 per quarter, although components may vary significantly. We continue to manage operating expenses at $240,000,000 for the full year. Speaker 300:07:49However, we are actively reviewing investment plans and evaluating potential cost savings opportunities. Currently, our effective tax rate is expected to be around 24.7% for the balance of the year. Yesterday, the Board approved maintaining our quarterly dividend at $0.135 per share to be paid on May 24 to stockholders of record on May 10. On an annualized basis, our dividend payout approximates the yield of approximately 6.5%. This concludes my formal comments. Speaker 300:08:19And I will turn it back to Paul. Speaker 200:08:22Thanks, Karl. And we will now open it up for questions. Operator00:08:30Thank The first question today comes from Mark Fitzgibbon with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:08:53Good afternoon, gentlemen. Speaker 200:08:55Hi, Mark. Speaker 300:08:56Hi, Mark. Speaker 400:08:57Carl, just to follow-up on your tax guidance. Do you plan to replace those tax credits that expired this quarter or it sounds like maybe not? Speaker 300:09:09We're always looking at those opportunities, but I don't have any visibility into so I don't have a pipeline, let's say. Speaker 200:09:16If we came across, we would do them. Speaker 400:09:20Okay. And then it looked like cash balances were up quite a bit this quarter, which I assume is a function of some deposit flows. But that I would assume is probably weighing on the margin a little bit. How should we think about cash balances moving forward? Speaker 300:09:37I think it will be fairly stable in that range of 10%. Speaker 500:09:44Okay. Speaker 300:09:46Between 10% and with securities, cash and securities around 10% of the balance sheet. It's kind of where we target. Speaker 400:09:56Okay. And then in your press release, you kind of mentioned the fact that there's been an uptick in expected losses in the equipment finance business. I guess I'm curious which segment of the equipment finance business is kind of driving that? Speaker 200:10:11Mark, the biggest single category would be related to transport things. They finance trucks for contractors for the big package companies like FedEx, UPS and stuff like that. And what's been happening is that a lot of those guys were carrying stuff for Amazon and Amazon has developed their own delivery systems. So they lose some of that business and these are small entrepreneurs that don't have a lot of places to turn to. That's been the single biggest element The trucks are not in repair. Speaker 200:10:53And it's not a huge portfolio. So I expect there will be some more dribbling in the next couple of quarters, but it's not a waterfall or anything like that. Speaker 400:11:07Okay. And then lastly, I know you guys didn't buy back any stock this quarter And given the environment, maybe you don't want to. But given the pullback in your stock price today, do you feel like buybacks make some sense here trading comfortably below tangible book? Speaker 300:11:27We'll continue to evaluate that, but we have no expectation to do anything near term. Thank you. Thanks, Mark. Operator00:11:42The next question comes from the line of Steve Moss with Raymond James. Steve, please go ahead. Speaker 500:11:49Good afternoon. Speaker 200:11:51Hi, Steve. Speaker 500:11:52Hi, Steve. Maybe Carl just starting off hey Paul, Carl, just hopefully maybe just starting off on the office portfolio here, the 2 credits that were charged off, were those resolved, sold liquidated in the quarter? Or was that just a charge off ahead of an expected sale? Speaker 300:12:12No, those were 2 note sales, which one was on our balance sheet at the end of the quarter as a loan held for sale and was subsequently closed. Speaker 200:12:25Okay. They were sold a little bit under par, which is what created that small loss, but we got rid of a couple of properties that were a bit troubled. Speaker 500:12:36Got it. And you guys mentioned in the deck, only 2 loans maturing of about $23,000,000 represent criticizing classified within office. Those are separate of those loan sales, I take it? Speaker 300:12:55They were not part of those numbers. Speaker 500:12:59Okay. And just in terms of like I realize it's small, but just curious like what type of properties are they, kind of geographically where are they located? Speaker 300:13:10They're Boston based. The Boston based and Speaker 200:13:13one of them that I'm aware of was retail and commercial on the upper floors. Okay, got it. Speaker 500:13:25And then just turning to the margin here, with the 3% to 3.05% guide, just maybe bottoming out, just curious like what do you think gives you comfort here that margin could bottom in the second quarter? And just what if we stay in the higher for longer, how you guys think about the margin beyond the second quarter? Speaker 300:13:52No, it's a great question. And comfort is tough word to come by. I think we model a lot of deposit migration. I think in the Q1, we saw more deposit migration than we anticipated. I do anticipate that it's going to go down. Speaker 300:14:10All everything suggests that the positive migration is not going to continue. Our models right now are coming in around the 303 range of for a margin that we're going to try to be precise. And that was before the rate just the recent rate increases. We're using more like March 31 numbers for and so we get a little bit of bump with the repricing of loans throughout the quarter from where the 5 year is now. It's over 80 basis points higher, almost 90 basis points higher than where it was at the end of the year. Speaker 300:14:45I'm not sure exactly how much higher it is from March 31, but it's helpful. To have 50 basis points just in the last couple of weeks. So that's helpful. Speaker 500:14:59Right. Okay. That's good color for me. Appreciate all that. I'll step back in the queue here. Speaker 500:15:06Thanks. Speaker 200:15:08Thanks, Steve. Operator00:15:12The next question comes from the line of Laurie Hunsicker with Seaport Research. Laurie, please go ahead. Speaker 600:15:20Yes. Hi. Thanks. Good afternoon. Thanks for all the detail on the real estate that you guys added. Speaker 600:15:26That's super helpful. But I actually I wanted to go back to the equipment finance section and I'm looking at page 14 of your deck. Can you just help us think about the $3,500,000 in charge off? So the specialty vehicle category, it looks like you have tow trucks. It wasn't bad. Speaker 600:15:44It wasn't a heavy tow. Are you saying it came from sort of that FedEx category of $40,000,000 or the other vehicle category? Or just how should we think about that? I guess that's sort of my first question around equipment finance. What's the segment that's coming from? Speaker 300:16:02Sure. So to get you break that down a little bit. So we have about $3,500,000 of net charge offs in the Eastern Funding segment overall. And as we said, as Paul was mentioning, dollars 1,600,000 of that was just basically in the FedEx. Transport. Speaker 300:16:22Yes, transport. In this category, when you look at Page 14, it's probably mostly in the FedEx and maybe in the other vehicle categories. We have about $800,000 in charge offs on the tote, dollars 600 in laundry and about $600,000 in fitness. And then we've got some net some recoveries that are sprinkled throughout. Speaker 200:16:44For the entire equipment finance portfolio far and away the vast majority of it as you can probably see there is laundromats, which performed exceptionally. Got it. Got it. Speaker 600:16:57Yes. So Speaker 200:16:58we're going to do more laundromats. Speaker 600:17:01Yes, makes sense. Makes a lot of sense. Okay. And so just thinking about equipment finance, I mean, directionally, the categories that you mentioned are very, very small. Directionally, there's nothing there that thinking, hey, we should pull back. Speaker 600:17:15We've seen a change. You're still Speaker 200:17:20They are working on yes, we're feeling good about it. But the guys who run Eastern Funding are sort of reevaluating their strategic direction in all of this as we speak. Speaker 300:17:34Yes. I think the difficulty of getting when we talk about recoveries, I think they're very comfortable how they underwrite and things of that nature. But when things do go bad, you have to recover these vehicles. And I think it's becoming a little bit more difficult, taking a lot more time. And so they're rethinking about some of that. Speaker 200:17:52Some of those loans are pretty small and they become very expensive. The trucks are in bad repair and it's not a wonderful picture and it's not something that they've done forever either. Speaker 300:18:06Nice thing about the laundry for me, it's not going anywhere. Speaker 200:18:12Right. Yes. And so I mean And so when Speaker 300:18:15you think Speaker 600:18:18right. Speaker 200:18:18Go ahead, Lauren. Speaker 600:18:18So I guess when you think about that specialty vehicle bucket then, I mean, would you potentially look to sell those loans or get out of that? Or how do you think about that? Does not grow them further? Speaker 200:18:31Well, there are meetings concurrent to now that are considering all of those things. Speaker 600:18:38Okay. Okay. And then one other question here on the equipment finance. You've got a category, it's ES CRE, so equipment finance CRE. What is that? Speaker 600:18:48That's 166,000,000 Speaker 200:18:51dollars If Speaker 600:18:51you don't know, I can follow-up with you. Speaker 200:18:54That's when the laundromat owner acquires the building that the laundromat is in. And in a lot of cases, it might be a little strip mall. For example, that the guy wants to own, but it's always attached to a laundry. There's always a laundromat involved. Speaker 600:19:11Okay. Got you. Okay. And then one more question and Mark sort of already asked this, but I am just so curious. It would seem you guys have such a plethora of capital that buybacks here in the high 70s percentage of book, would just be absolutely top of mind. Speaker 600:19:31I mean, at what point do you say, oh my gosh, we have to pivot and get excited about this? Speaker 300:19:44Well, right now in this environment, I would say still in this environment, we still think capital is very precious. And it certainly is attractive to buy the stock at this level. There's no question. But I also think it's very important to keep the capital that you have and continue to use that capital to support the balance sheet and opportunities that present themselves. So that's kind of where we are Speaker 500:20:08on it. Speaker 600:20:10Okay, great. I'll leave it there. Thanks. Speaker 300:20:13Sure. Speaker 200:20:13Thanks, Laurie. Operator00:20:17Our next question comes from the line of Chris O'Connor with KBW. Please go ahead, Chris. Speaker 700:20:25Hey, good afternoon. Speaker 200:20:27Hi, Chris. Speaker 700:20:30Staying on the credit front, can you just remind us about the non equipment finance portion, the $4,700,000 that was had some partial reserves for it previously? Speaker 300:20:48Sure, Chris. So those were fully reserved. They had specific reserves on those. One had to and we talked about this in the past. One was the it was construction firm that we took the charge off on as well as a Speaker 200:21:04medical group. And these are loans that have been dogging us. We've pretty well wrapped them up now. But for the past couple of quarters, you've heard us say those 2 loans that were being worked out. Speaker 300:21:18Got it. Speaker 700:21:22And on the CRE front, I mean, outside of the office, as you're looking at the rest of the maturities throughout 2024, I mean, how do you feel about kind of the core CRE or the ex office and the credit quality there as these maturities come through over the course of the year? Speaker 300:21:45Yes. So far, we feel very good about it, not only the maturities, but the repricings. As you can imagine, we have a lot of our commercial real estate, particularly multifamily space and other things that reprice. They may not mature, but they will reprice after 5 years. They may have a 10 year final bloom. Speaker 300:22:03And so they may be repricing up 200 basis 280 basis points compared to 5 years ago. And so right now, those debt service coverage, things of that nature are just fine. Rents have gone up significantly more than that. So we're in good shape there. I don't think there's any issues on that. Speaker 300:22:25I think the office even office is doing well. I think it's just the inside of certain properties in certain places that we have to work with our customers on. Speaker 700:22:41Got it. And has the recent increase in rates, has that tempered demand or even just the timing of potential pipeline closings in the CRE book? Speaker 300:23:01Probably. It certainly has tempered demand. I don't know if it's stopped closings at all. If it did, they're probably regretting it. Speaker 200:23:10Yes. There's just not a lot of trades going on in our markets in real estate. There's not a lot of buyers, not a lot of sellers. Got it. And it's probably due to rates, but it's also probably due to the views on occupancy as an investor particularly. Speaker 700:23:32Yes. And the demand that you're seeing for loan growth, you mentioned C and I and equipment finance kind of leading that. In the C and I segment, what's the type of loans that you're seeing the most attractive demand for? Speaker 200:23:53Well, industrial has been strong. Import export stuff has been strong. Law firms, little of everything, there's not a particular expertise. Some particularly in our New York operation, things like private schools and nonprofits have been doing quite well and Brookline has gotten involved in some of that as well. So they tend to be very well established low leverage organizations that have great cash flow and are doing something, might be building a gym or something. Speaker 700:24:37Got it. And I know last quarter pretty light on the M and A discussions. I mean has there been any pickup at all in kind of your general market or discussions since then? Speaker 200:24:57Maybe a little bit, but it's not too strong because it's so difficult. I mean, everybody pushes the stuff around and you get these capital holes. Speaker 300:25:11The holes are just way too big to fill from a capital perspective at the moment. Speaker 200:25:16Part of the problem is that the investment bankers have nothing to do, so they come up with all these great ideas. Got it. Speaker 700:25:33And just in general, I guess, going forward, I mean, where are you guys thinking about in terms of normalized charge off rate in this type of environment? Speaker 200:25:47Certainly less than we saw in Q1 is where I plan to be headed. It's a little bit difficult early in the cycle here to try to pick a number. But if you look at our charge off behavior in our past, that was a lot more comfortable. So that's where we're going to try to get to. Speaker 700:26:11Great. That's all I had. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 300:26:15Thanks, Chris. Operator00:26:20This concludes our question and answer session. I'd like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Perrault for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:26:28Thank you, Emily, and thank you all for joining us this afternoon, and we will look forward to talking with you again in the next quarter. Have a good day.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallBrookline Bancorp Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Brookline Bancorp Earnings HeadlinesBrookline Bancorp: Dividends Are Interesting, But The Share Price Has Stagnated For DecadesMay 1, 2025 | seekingalpha.comBrookline Bancorp, Inc. (NASDAQ:BRKL) Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptApril 26, 2025 | insidermonkey.comShocking AI play that’s beats Nvidia by a country mileYou’ve seen the headlines about Nvidia. Now Tim Sykes is sounding the alarm — because what CEO Jensen Huang is about to announce could change the AI market once again. Experts already predict the total addressable market could climb past $20 trillion. But Sykes believes most investors have missed what’s coming next. He’s tracking a new shift — and says the biggest gains are still ahead.May 5, 2025 | Timothy Sykes (Ad)Brookline Bancorp (NASDAQ:BRKL) Shares Gap Down Following Weak EarningsApril 26, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comQ1 2025 Brookline Bancorp Inc Earnings CallApril 25, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comQ1 2025 Brookline Bancorp Inc Earnings Call TranscriptApril 25, 2025 | gurufocus.comSee More Brookline Bancorp Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Brookline Bancorp? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Brookline Bancorp and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Brookline BancorpBrookline Bancorp (NASDAQ:BRKL) operates as a bank holding company for the Brookline Bank that provide commercial, business, and retail banking services to corporate, municipal, and retail customers in the United States. Its deposit products include demand checking, NOW, money market, and savings accounts. The company's loan portfolio primarily comprises first mortgage loans secured by commercial, multi-family, and residential real estate properties; loans to business entities comprising commercial lines of credit; loans to condominium associations; loans and leases used to finance equipment for small businesses; financing for construction and development projects; and home equity and other consumer loans. It provides credit, term loans, letters of credit, foreign exchange, cash management, consumer and residential loans, wealth and investment advisory, and online and mobile banking services, as well as invests in debt and equity securities. The company was founded in 1871 and is headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts.View Brookline Bancorp ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Amazon Earnings: 2 Reasons to Love It, 1 Reason to Be CautiousMeta Takes A Bow With Q1 Earnings - Watch For Tariff Impact in Q2Palantir Earnings: 1 Bullish Signal and 1 Area of ConcernVisa Q2 Earnings Top Forecasts, Adds $30B Buyback PlanMicrosoft Crushes Earnings, What’s Next for MSFT Stock?Qualcomm's Earnings: 2 Reasons to Buy, 1 to Stay AwayAMD Stock Signals Strong Buy Ahead of Earnings Upcoming Earnings Advanced Micro Devices (5/6/2025)American Electric Power (5/6/2025)Constellation Energy (5/6/2025)Marriott International (5/6/2025)Energy Transfer (5/6/2025)Mplx (5/6/2025)Brookfield Asset Management (5/6/2025)Arista Networks (5/6/2025)Duke Energy (5/6/2025)Zoetis (5/6/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good afternoon, and welcome to Brookline Bancorp Inc. 1st Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen only mode. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note this event is being recorded. Operator00:00:16I would now like to turn the conference over to Brookline Bancorp's Attorney, Laura Vaughan. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:23Thank you, Emily, and good afternoon, everyone. Yesterday, we issued our earnings release and presentation, which is available on the Investor Relations page of our website, brooklanebancorp.com, and has been filed with the SEC. This afternoon's call will be hosted by Paul A. Perrault and Carl M. Carlson. Speaker 100:00:42This call may contain forward looking statements with respect to the financial condition, results of operations and business of Brookline Bancorp. Please refer to page 2 of our earnings presentation for our forward looking statement disclaimer. Also, please refer to our other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which contain risk factors that require actual results to differ materially from these forward looking statements. Any references made during this presentation to non GAAP measures are only made to assist you in understanding Brookline Bancorp's results and performance trends and should not be relied on as financial measures of actual results or future predictions. For a comparison and reconciliation to GAAP earnings, please see our earnings release. Speaker 100:01:30I'm pleased to introduce Brookline Bancorp's Chairman and CEO, Paul Perrault. Speaker 200:01:35Thanks, Laura. Good afternoon and thank you for joining us on today's earnings call. At the start of the year, prevailing market sentiment suggested inflation was well contained and the Federal Reserve would implement substantial rate cuts, potentially up to 6 to 7 reductions throughout 2024. However, the economic landscape remains dynamic. Unemployment rates persist at historically low levels, consumer spending remains steady and overall economic vitality endures as inflation remains a persistent concern. Speaker 200:02:11Within a matter of months, the market now anticipates only one rate cut for the year, with some even speculating no cuts at all. The 5 year and 10 year treasury rates have surged over 80 basis points since the end of last year. Unfortunately, the prolonged period of higher interest rates continues to hinder the anticipated improvement in net interest margins. We remain vigilant in our efforts to navigate this challenging environment. While the New England and New York Economies continue to perform well, the impact of rising interest rates on loan demand is evident. Speaker 200:02:48Our deposit composition and funding costs further contribute to the strain on the net interest margins and overall revenues. Our goal is to provide boutique commercial banking services to our valued customers efficiently, Careful investments in our team of bankers, technology and locations play a pivotal role in achieving this objective. This quarter, we celebrated the grand opening of our relocated PCSB branch in Mount Vernon, New York. Additionally, our newest Bank Rhode Island branches in Cranston and Newport, Rhode Island are off to a very promising start. I will now turn you over to Carl, who will review the company's Q1 results. Speaker 300:03:30Thank you, Paul. Yesterday, we reported net income for the quarter of $14,700,000 equivalent to $0.16 per share. During the quarter, total assets grew approximately $161,000,000 driven by the growth in cash and equivalents of $169,000,000 with modest loan growth of $13,000,000 distributed across C and I, equipment finance and consumer, as commercial real estate experienced a decline of $10,000,000 In the Q1, we had loan originations and draws of 435,000,000 dollars at a weighted average coupon of 7.79 basis points. The weighted average coupon on the loan portfolio rose 4 basis points to 5.96 basis points, with the quarterly yield on the portfolio increasing 2 basis points for the quarter. On the funding side, customer deposits grew $81,000,000 broker deposits increased $90,000,000 and borrowings declined 15,000,000 dollars Deposit growth centered around higher rate savings and time deposits, offset by decreases in demand deposits and money market products. Speaker 300:04:37Funding costs increased 19 basis points in the quarter. Consequently, our net interest margin compressed 9 basis points to 3.06 percent, resulting in net interest income of $81,600,000 a decline of $2,000,000 from Q4. Non interest income was $6,300,000 reflecting a decrease of $1,700,000 compared to the prior quarter. Factors contributing to this change include lower loan level derivative activity, gains on participated loans and a swing in the mark to market adjustment on derivatives, which is reflected in other non interest income. Notably, due to the sharp increase in interest rates, the mark to market adjustment shifted from a positive adjustment of $447,000 in Q4 to a negative adjustment of $358,000 in Q1. Speaker 300:05:30Expenses were $61,000,000 for the quarter, up $1,800,000 from Q4 due to the seasonality of compensation and benefits and weather related occupancy costs. The provision for credit losses was $7,400,000 for the quarter, an increase of $3,600,000 from the 4th quarter. The increase is driven by net charge offs and reserve build. Net charge offs were $8,800,000 driven by $4,700,000 in C and I charge offs previously specifically reserved for $3,500,000 associated with equipment finance and $600,000 associated with exiting 2 office credits. Non accrual loans experienced a modest decline in the quarter and our reserve coverage ratio increased to 124 basis points. Speaker 300:06:20Over the past few weeks, the outlook for 2024 Federal Reserve rate cuts has significantly shifted. Longer term rates have risen notably, Client behavior and industry responses continue to adapt to this evolving environment. We face renewed pressure on our deposit mix and funding costs. While the economy remains robust, loan demand has softened. Consequently, we now anticipate our margin and net interest income for the full year to be lower than initially projected. Speaker 300:06:48We expect overall loan growth of 1% to 4%, primarily driven by C and I and Equipment Finance. Although there appears to be market opportunity in non owner occupied commercial real estate, our focus remains on serving relationship customers. Hence, we anticipate only slight growth in this segment. Our cash and securities portfolio remains stable, representing 9% to 12% of total assets. On the deposit side, we anticipate growth of 4% to 5%. Speaker 300:07:17Given prevailing interest rates, the migration of demand deposit accounts and other lower cost deposits may persist. Our Q2 margin is currently projected to fall within the range of 300 basis points to 3 0 5 basis points and then improve throughout the year. However, this is dependent upon deposit flows. Non interest income is projected to be in the range of $6,000,000 to $7,000,000 per quarter, although components may vary significantly. We continue to manage operating expenses at $240,000,000 for the full year. Speaker 300:07:49However, we are actively reviewing investment plans and evaluating potential cost savings opportunities. Currently, our effective tax rate is expected to be around 24.7% for the balance of the year. Yesterday, the Board approved maintaining our quarterly dividend at $0.135 per share to be paid on May 24 to stockholders of record on May 10. On an annualized basis, our dividend payout approximates the yield of approximately 6.5%. This concludes my formal comments. Speaker 300:08:19And I will turn it back to Paul. Speaker 200:08:22Thanks, Karl. And we will now open it up for questions. Operator00:08:30Thank The first question today comes from Mark Fitzgibbon with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:08:53Good afternoon, gentlemen. Speaker 200:08:55Hi, Mark. Speaker 300:08:56Hi, Mark. Speaker 400:08:57Carl, just to follow-up on your tax guidance. Do you plan to replace those tax credits that expired this quarter or it sounds like maybe not? Speaker 300:09:09We're always looking at those opportunities, but I don't have any visibility into so I don't have a pipeline, let's say. Speaker 200:09:16If we came across, we would do them. Speaker 400:09:20Okay. And then it looked like cash balances were up quite a bit this quarter, which I assume is a function of some deposit flows. But that I would assume is probably weighing on the margin a little bit. How should we think about cash balances moving forward? Speaker 300:09:37I think it will be fairly stable in that range of 10%. Speaker 500:09:44Okay. Speaker 300:09:46Between 10% and with securities, cash and securities around 10% of the balance sheet. It's kind of where we target. Speaker 400:09:56Okay. And then in your press release, you kind of mentioned the fact that there's been an uptick in expected losses in the equipment finance business. I guess I'm curious which segment of the equipment finance business is kind of driving that? Speaker 200:10:11Mark, the biggest single category would be related to transport things. They finance trucks for contractors for the big package companies like FedEx, UPS and stuff like that. And what's been happening is that a lot of those guys were carrying stuff for Amazon and Amazon has developed their own delivery systems. So they lose some of that business and these are small entrepreneurs that don't have a lot of places to turn to. That's been the single biggest element The trucks are not in repair. Speaker 200:10:53And it's not a huge portfolio. So I expect there will be some more dribbling in the next couple of quarters, but it's not a waterfall or anything like that. Speaker 400:11:07Okay. And then lastly, I know you guys didn't buy back any stock this quarter And given the environment, maybe you don't want to. But given the pullback in your stock price today, do you feel like buybacks make some sense here trading comfortably below tangible book? Speaker 300:11:27We'll continue to evaluate that, but we have no expectation to do anything near term. Thank you. Thanks, Mark. Operator00:11:42The next question comes from the line of Steve Moss with Raymond James. Steve, please go ahead. Speaker 500:11:49Good afternoon. Speaker 200:11:51Hi, Steve. Speaker 500:11:52Hi, Steve. Maybe Carl just starting off hey Paul, Carl, just hopefully maybe just starting off on the office portfolio here, the 2 credits that were charged off, were those resolved, sold liquidated in the quarter? Or was that just a charge off ahead of an expected sale? Speaker 300:12:12No, those were 2 note sales, which one was on our balance sheet at the end of the quarter as a loan held for sale and was subsequently closed. Speaker 200:12:25Okay. They were sold a little bit under par, which is what created that small loss, but we got rid of a couple of properties that were a bit troubled. Speaker 500:12:36Got it. And you guys mentioned in the deck, only 2 loans maturing of about $23,000,000 represent criticizing classified within office. Those are separate of those loan sales, I take it? Speaker 300:12:55They were not part of those numbers. Speaker 500:12:59Okay. And just in terms of like I realize it's small, but just curious like what type of properties are they, kind of geographically where are they located? Speaker 300:13:10They're Boston based. The Boston based and Speaker 200:13:13one of them that I'm aware of was retail and commercial on the upper floors. Okay, got it. Speaker 500:13:25And then just turning to the margin here, with the 3% to 3.05% guide, just maybe bottoming out, just curious like what do you think gives you comfort here that margin could bottom in the second quarter? And just what if we stay in the higher for longer, how you guys think about the margin beyond the second quarter? Speaker 300:13:52No, it's a great question. And comfort is tough word to come by. I think we model a lot of deposit migration. I think in the Q1, we saw more deposit migration than we anticipated. I do anticipate that it's going to go down. Speaker 300:14:10All everything suggests that the positive migration is not going to continue. Our models right now are coming in around the 303 range of for a margin that we're going to try to be precise. And that was before the rate just the recent rate increases. We're using more like March 31 numbers for and so we get a little bit of bump with the repricing of loans throughout the quarter from where the 5 year is now. It's over 80 basis points higher, almost 90 basis points higher than where it was at the end of the year. Speaker 300:14:45I'm not sure exactly how much higher it is from March 31, but it's helpful. To have 50 basis points just in the last couple of weeks. So that's helpful. Speaker 500:14:59Right. Okay. That's good color for me. Appreciate all that. I'll step back in the queue here. Speaker 500:15:06Thanks. Speaker 200:15:08Thanks, Steve. Operator00:15:12The next question comes from the line of Laurie Hunsicker with Seaport Research. Laurie, please go ahead. Speaker 600:15:20Yes. Hi. Thanks. Good afternoon. Thanks for all the detail on the real estate that you guys added. Speaker 600:15:26That's super helpful. But I actually I wanted to go back to the equipment finance section and I'm looking at page 14 of your deck. Can you just help us think about the $3,500,000 in charge off? So the specialty vehicle category, it looks like you have tow trucks. It wasn't bad. Speaker 600:15:44It wasn't a heavy tow. Are you saying it came from sort of that FedEx category of $40,000,000 or the other vehicle category? Or just how should we think about that? I guess that's sort of my first question around equipment finance. What's the segment that's coming from? Speaker 300:16:02Sure. So to get you break that down a little bit. So we have about $3,500,000 of net charge offs in the Eastern Funding segment overall. And as we said, as Paul was mentioning, dollars 1,600,000 of that was just basically in the FedEx. Transport. Speaker 300:16:22Yes, transport. In this category, when you look at Page 14, it's probably mostly in the FedEx and maybe in the other vehicle categories. We have about $800,000 in charge offs on the tote, dollars 600 in laundry and about $600,000 in fitness. And then we've got some net some recoveries that are sprinkled throughout. Speaker 200:16:44For the entire equipment finance portfolio far and away the vast majority of it as you can probably see there is laundromats, which performed exceptionally. Got it. Got it. Speaker 600:16:57Yes. So Speaker 200:16:58we're going to do more laundromats. Speaker 600:17:01Yes, makes sense. Makes a lot of sense. Okay. And so just thinking about equipment finance, I mean, directionally, the categories that you mentioned are very, very small. Directionally, there's nothing there that thinking, hey, we should pull back. Speaker 600:17:15We've seen a change. You're still Speaker 200:17:20They are working on yes, we're feeling good about it. But the guys who run Eastern Funding are sort of reevaluating their strategic direction in all of this as we speak. Speaker 300:17:34Yes. I think the difficulty of getting when we talk about recoveries, I think they're very comfortable how they underwrite and things of that nature. But when things do go bad, you have to recover these vehicles. And I think it's becoming a little bit more difficult, taking a lot more time. And so they're rethinking about some of that. Speaker 200:17:52Some of those loans are pretty small and they become very expensive. The trucks are in bad repair and it's not a wonderful picture and it's not something that they've done forever either. Speaker 300:18:06Nice thing about the laundry for me, it's not going anywhere. Speaker 200:18:12Right. Yes. And so I mean And so when Speaker 300:18:15you think Speaker 600:18:18right. Speaker 200:18:18Go ahead, Lauren. Speaker 600:18:18So I guess when you think about that specialty vehicle bucket then, I mean, would you potentially look to sell those loans or get out of that? Or how do you think about that? Does not grow them further? Speaker 200:18:31Well, there are meetings concurrent to now that are considering all of those things. Speaker 600:18:38Okay. Okay. And then one other question here on the equipment finance. You've got a category, it's ES CRE, so equipment finance CRE. What is that? Speaker 600:18:48That's 166,000,000 Speaker 200:18:51dollars If Speaker 600:18:51you don't know, I can follow-up with you. Speaker 200:18:54That's when the laundromat owner acquires the building that the laundromat is in. And in a lot of cases, it might be a little strip mall. For example, that the guy wants to own, but it's always attached to a laundry. There's always a laundromat involved. Speaker 600:19:11Okay. Got you. Okay. And then one more question and Mark sort of already asked this, but I am just so curious. It would seem you guys have such a plethora of capital that buybacks here in the high 70s percentage of book, would just be absolutely top of mind. Speaker 600:19:31I mean, at what point do you say, oh my gosh, we have to pivot and get excited about this? Speaker 300:19:44Well, right now in this environment, I would say still in this environment, we still think capital is very precious. And it certainly is attractive to buy the stock at this level. There's no question. But I also think it's very important to keep the capital that you have and continue to use that capital to support the balance sheet and opportunities that present themselves. So that's kind of where we are Speaker 500:20:08on it. Speaker 600:20:10Okay, great. I'll leave it there. Thanks. Speaker 300:20:13Sure. Speaker 200:20:13Thanks, Laurie. Operator00:20:17Our next question comes from the line of Chris O'Connor with KBW. Please go ahead, Chris. Speaker 700:20:25Hey, good afternoon. Speaker 200:20:27Hi, Chris. Speaker 700:20:30Staying on the credit front, can you just remind us about the non equipment finance portion, the $4,700,000 that was had some partial reserves for it previously? Speaker 300:20:48Sure, Chris. So those were fully reserved. They had specific reserves on those. One had to and we talked about this in the past. One was the it was construction firm that we took the charge off on as well as a Speaker 200:21:04medical group. And these are loans that have been dogging us. We've pretty well wrapped them up now. But for the past couple of quarters, you've heard us say those 2 loans that were being worked out. Speaker 300:21:18Got it. Speaker 700:21:22And on the CRE front, I mean, outside of the office, as you're looking at the rest of the maturities throughout 2024, I mean, how do you feel about kind of the core CRE or the ex office and the credit quality there as these maturities come through over the course of the year? Speaker 300:21:45Yes. So far, we feel very good about it, not only the maturities, but the repricings. As you can imagine, we have a lot of our commercial real estate, particularly multifamily space and other things that reprice. They may not mature, but they will reprice after 5 years. They may have a 10 year final bloom. Speaker 300:22:03And so they may be repricing up 200 basis 280 basis points compared to 5 years ago. And so right now, those debt service coverage, things of that nature are just fine. Rents have gone up significantly more than that. So we're in good shape there. I don't think there's any issues on that. Speaker 300:22:25I think the office even office is doing well. I think it's just the inside of certain properties in certain places that we have to work with our customers on. Speaker 700:22:41Got it. And has the recent increase in rates, has that tempered demand or even just the timing of potential pipeline closings in the CRE book? Speaker 300:23:01Probably. It certainly has tempered demand. I don't know if it's stopped closings at all. If it did, they're probably regretting it. Speaker 200:23:10Yes. There's just not a lot of trades going on in our markets in real estate. There's not a lot of buyers, not a lot of sellers. Got it. And it's probably due to rates, but it's also probably due to the views on occupancy as an investor particularly. Speaker 700:23:32Yes. And the demand that you're seeing for loan growth, you mentioned C and I and equipment finance kind of leading that. In the C and I segment, what's the type of loans that you're seeing the most attractive demand for? Speaker 200:23:53Well, industrial has been strong. Import export stuff has been strong. Law firms, little of everything, there's not a particular expertise. Some particularly in our New York operation, things like private schools and nonprofits have been doing quite well and Brookline has gotten involved in some of that as well. So they tend to be very well established low leverage organizations that have great cash flow and are doing something, might be building a gym or something. Speaker 700:24:37Got it. And I know last quarter pretty light on the M and A discussions. I mean has there been any pickup at all in kind of your general market or discussions since then? Speaker 200:24:57Maybe a little bit, but it's not too strong because it's so difficult. I mean, everybody pushes the stuff around and you get these capital holes. Speaker 300:25:11The holes are just way too big to fill from a capital perspective at the moment. Speaker 200:25:16Part of the problem is that the investment bankers have nothing to do, so they come up with all these great ideas. Got it. Speaker 700:25:33And just in general, I guess, going forward, I mean, where are you guys thinking about in terms of normalized charge off rate in this type of environment? Speaker 200:25:47Certainly less than we saw in Q1 is where I plan to be headed. It's a little bit difficult early in the cycle here to try to pick a number. But if you look at our charge off behavior in our past, that was a lot more comfortable. So that's where we're going to try to get to. Speaker 700:26:11Great. That's all I had. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 300:26:15Thanks, Chris. Operator00:26:20This concludes our question and answer session. I'd like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Perrault for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:26:28Thank you, Emily, and thank you all for joining us this afternoon, and we will look forward to talking with you again in the next quarter. Have a good day.Read morePowered by