NASDAQ:HBCP Home Bancorp Q2 2024 Earnings Report $63.18 +0.81 (+1.30%) As of 10:15 AM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Home Bancorp EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.02Consensus EPS $0.98Beat/MissBeat by +$0.04One Year Ago EPS$1.21Home Bancorp Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$49.21 millionExpected Revenue$31.90 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$17.31 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AHome Bancorp Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date7/17/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, July 18, 2024Conference Call Time11:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsHome Bancorp's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Monday, July 20, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Tuesday, July 21, 2026 at 11:30 AM 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 Home Bancorp Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 18, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Net interest margin stabilized at 3.66% (up 2 bps QoQ) and management expects further margin expansion as loan yields rise and funding costs level off, even without Fed rate cuts. Loan originations totaled $39.7 million in Q2, driving a 6% annualized growth rate, and the bank maintains full-year loan growth guidance of 4–6%. Nonperforming loans fell by $3.5 million to 0.63% of total loans, with $8.4 million of troubled credits worked out without principal loss and confidence in current reserve levels. Core deposit balances increased, including $12.6 million of new core deposits in Houston and a $4.3 million gain in noninterest-bearing deposits, easing funding cost pressures. The loan pipeline has weakened under the prolonged high-rate environment, suggesting near-term loan demand may dip unless forecasted rate cuts occur. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallHome Bancorp Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Home Bancorp Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Home Bancorp's Chairman, President, and CEO, John Bordelon, and Chief Financial Officer, David Kirkley. Mr. Kirkley, please go ahead. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:00:47Thank you, Kenneth. Good morning, and welcome to Home Bank's second quarter 2024 earnings call. Our earnings release and investor presentation are available on our website. I ask that everyone please refer to the disclaimer regarding forward-looking statements in the investor presentation and our SEC filings. Now I'll hand it over to John to make a few comments about the second quarter. John? John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:01:10Thanks, David. Good morning, and thank you for joining Home Bancorp's earnings call today. We appreciate your interest in Home Bancorp as we discuss our results, expectations for the future, and our approach to creating long-term shareholder value. We reported second quarter net income of $8.1 million, or $1.02 per share, and most importantly, a slight improvement in our net interest margin, which appears to have stabilized. The NIM came in at 3.66%, which was two basis points higher than the first quarter. We're cautiously optimistic that continued steady increases in asset yields and stabilization in our cost of funds will continue to support net interest income growth and improving margins, even without any Fed rate cuts. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:01:57We added $39.7 million of loans in the second quarter, with growth in all sectors except for construction and land loans, which declined slightly. Given the strong loan growth we had in the first half of the year, we're still anticipating that 2024 loan growth will be between 4% and 6%. The duration of higher rates appears to now be negatively impacting our loan pipeline, but we're optimistic that if forecasted rate cuts occur, we could see loan demand pick back up. Deposits, including demand deposits, were stable from the last quarter after very strong growth in the fourth and first quarters. We were pleased to see $12.6 million of core deposit growth in our Houston market as our teams there brought over the operating accounts of a number of new clients. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:02:46We relocated another one of our Houston branches and continue to look for opportunities to improve our coverage of the markets we serve by adding brick-and-mortar and talent. Despite all the negative headlines, we here at Home Bank are actually seeing improvements in credit. In the past few months, we have had a $5 million construction loan go from non-performing to performing with interest reserves after we worked with the borrower, who we've known for years, to manage through some delays and cost overruns. We also recently resolved a non-performing $3.4 million multifamily loan without any principal loss. We feel very good about a non-performing $4.7 million lending relationship that has about $2 million of equity behind it. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:03:32A year ago, David and I were in New York, and we were both struck by the number of high-rise buildings with empty floors. We just don't have that same problem in our markets, and I know most of our colleagues at other community banks feel the same way. We lend to people we know in markets we know. We're not making the loans that are being written about in the financial press. Community banking is about providing our shareholders with an attractive, risk-adjusted return. We are not in the business of making loans that could result in huge losses on relationships that aren't the right fit. Finally, before I turn it back over to David, I'd like to welcome Mark Herpin to the Home Bank team, where he joins as Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Operations Officer. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:04:14Mark has had a long and successful career in community banking, and we look forward to his contributions at Home Bank. I'd also like to congratulate Natalie Lemoine, our Chief Administrative Officer, and John Zollinger, our Chief Banking Officer, on their promotions to Senior Executive Vice Presidents of the bank. With that, I'll turn it back over to David. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:04:35Thanks, John. Net interest income totaled $29.4 million in Q2, up $492,000 from the previous quarter. Loan growth continued at a 6% annualized pace during the quarter, with new loans coming in at a rate of 8.25%, compared to the 6.28% we earned on our total loan portfolio in Q2. Deposits were essentially flat quarter-over-quarter, which increased our loan-to-deposit ratio to 97.7%. The pace of deposit migration has definitely slowed, and noninterest-bearing deposits actually increased by $4.3 million in the second quarter. We did experience declines in interest-bearing checking accounts and savings accounts, which were down about $25 million combined. This outflow is offset by an increase in money market and CD balances of $21 million. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:05:28The outflows that we did see mostly occurred in April, coinciding with taxes. The impact of the slowing deposit migration can be seen in the slower increases in the rates we are paying on our interest-bearing deposits, which increased by 17 basis points in the second quarter, after having increased by 28 basis points in the first quarter, 40 basis points in the fourth quarter, and 54 basis points in the third quarter last year. Pages 11 and 12 of our investor presentation provide some additional detail on credit, which John has already covered. Non-performing loans did decrease by $3.5 million in the second quarter to $16.8 million, or 0.63% of total loans. Provision expense for the quarter was $1.3 million, up $1.1 million from the prior quarter. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:06:18Our allowance for loan loss ratio increased 1 basis point to 1.21% in the second quarter. There were no changes in our qualitative factors during the quarter, and we feel confident in our reserve levels. We did have $510,000, or 8 basis points annualized in net charge-offs in the second quarter. These charge-offs were very much customer specific issues and not industry related. Slide 16 has some detail on our historic NIM and its components. As John mentioned, we're cautiously optimistic that NIM has bottomed out and should start to slowly increase from here. Loan yields have been steadily increasing due to a combination of loan growth and loan repricing, and with the reduced pace of increases in liability costs, our NIM has increased each month this quarter. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:07:08We have approximately $490 million of CDs maturing in the next six months. The majority of these CDs are in specials at rates a little north of 5%. So if rates and deposit mix remain unchanged, we could see flat to marginal declines in CD costs. We have opportunities for more meaningful cost reductions if we do see rate cuts. Slide 18 of the presentation has some additional details on noninterest income and expenses. Noninterest income increased by about $200,000 to $3.8 million and should be between $3.6 million and $3.8 million in the third and fourth quarters. Noninterest expense increased by $904,000 to $21.8 million, due primarily to annual salary increases that took effect April first. This was at the low end of our expectations. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:07:58We expect core non-interest expense to be between $22 million and $22.5 million in the third and fourth quarters. We were a little more aggressive with the buyback and repurchased about 77,000 shares at an average price of $37 per share in the second quarter, which equates to 92% of tangible book value, excluding AOCI. Slide 19 summarizes the impact of our capital management strategy has had on Home Bank over the last few years. We've grown adjusted tangible book value per share by 58% since 2018, increased our dividend by 67% since 2016, and repurchased 14% of our shares, all while maintaining robust capital ratios, which positions us to be successful in any economic environment and take advantage of opportunities as they arise. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:08:50With that, operator, please open the line for Q&A. Operator00:08:55Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press the star key, then one on your touch tone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press the star key, then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. The first question comes from Feddie Strickland with Hovde Group. Please go ahead. Feddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde Group00:09:34Hey, good morning, John and David. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:09:35Good morning. Feddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde Group00:09:36John, you touched on this in your opening comments a little bit. I was just wondering if you can talk through a little bit more of the non-interest-bearing deposits. Obviously, a positive to see those grow. Is that really just success on the C&I side in Houston, or was that more footprint wide? John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:09:53Well, I, I think that, you know, what we're referring to there was mostly in Houston. We, we pulled out a team at the beginning of the year from another bank, and a lot of the efforts that happened in Houston came from that team. They're in a loan production office in the northwest section of Houston, and they've done a very good job of attracting new customers and our focus has been on the deposit side, so they've attracted some that are loan and deposit and some that are just deposit. So that was what we were highlighting there, was the success of that new team. We've also seen some growth in, Feddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde Group00:10:30Got it. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:10:30We've also seen some growth in the DDA space and the Acadiana market, as that market has been focused more heavily on the C&I business as well. Feddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde Group00:10:44Along those same lines, I mean, as we think about the type of loan growth you're looking for going forward, it sounds like, you know, you're focused on bringing in more C&I, just given that it's more likely to come with deposits, correct? John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:10:57Absolutely. Feddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde Group00:10:59Got it. And one last question from me. Just on share repurchases, I mean, do you think we'll see that potentially slow down a little bit if, you know, the share price kind of keeps moving upwards here? Or do you think that, you know, you'll still have some level of repurchases going forward and just keep in mind some dry powder? David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:11:22We'd probably slow it down at the elevated or the higher prices that we've experienced over the last week, and keep the dry powder. Feddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde Group00:11:32Got it. Thanks for taking the questions. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:11:35Thank you. Thanks. Operator00:11:40Again, if you have a question, please press the star key, then one. The next question comes from Joe Yanchunis with Raymond James. Please go ahead, sir. Joe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond James00:11:55Good morning. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:11:57Morning. Hey, Joe. Joe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond James00:11:59So with the NIM expansion, you know, appearing to occur, you know, a little bit ahead of schedule, can you provide some of the puts and takes on what will drive the NIM in the second half of the year? David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:12:11... So one of the driving factors is, of course, loan growth and loan repricings. You can see on our slide deck on Slide 16, we've been consistently raising our loan yield by about 10 basis points each quarter, and still expect that to continue as we still have, you know, a weighted average rate of our loan portfolio at 6.28%, compared to what we're bringing on loans at 8.25%. So that's one component of it. Second component of it is you're really seeing a slowdown in opportunities for deposits to reprice higher. There is still some deposit migration, but the vast majority of our CD portfolio has already repriced higher. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:12:55We touched up on it a little bit on the call when we said, you know, the CDs are already a little bit north of 5%, and our CD special rates are actually a little bit lower in some cases. So there's not as much repricing opportunities to occur on the CD and deposit space. So we think that the pace of loan yield increases is gonna more than offset deposit cost increases. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:13:22Not to mention, any movement by the Fed this year will contribute to the ability to bring on these deposits or maintain these deposits at a little bit lower rate. So, we feel very comfortable in the fact that our CD rates should stabilize or head downward based upon what the Fed does. Joe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond James00:13:48Understood. And, you know, we've heard from your peers, noting some increased competition on deposits. Is that something you've experienced? And kind of how should we think about the near-term trajectory of deposit costs? John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:14:04We haven't seen that much pressure. There are some one-offs here or there, that we obviously, take care of. But for the most part, most everyone in our market, I think there was one bank in the Houston market that, was in the, you know, 5.25, 5.375, area. But for the most part, we have not, had any problem attracting deposits. Joe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond James00:14:32Okay. And then if I could just sneak in one more here. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:14:36Yep. Joe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond James00:14:37So asset quality metrics improved, you know, pretty nicely in the quarter, though you elected to increase your reserve ratio. Can you discuss what really drove this thought process? And secondly, perhaps it's too early to call, but, you know, if we get a couple rate cuts and the economy doesn't deteriorate, would it be fair to say that, you know, criticized NPAs might have already peaked? David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:15:01Let me take the CECL question first. We really didn't decide to increase our allowance. It's just a mixture of the mix change in our loan portfolio quarter-over-quarter and the duration perhaps of new loans. That's really it. Then we didn't change any qualitative factors. We didn't adjust or make any adjustments with regards to any industry-specific qualitative factors. So it's just a function, really, of our loan portfolio changing. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:15:39As it relates to the remainder of the year, I'm very optimistic that there could be a little bit of issues as far as credit, but we're not really seeing it in any one particular industry or just individually. We've had a couple of one-offs here and there that have gone bad. It had really nothing to do with the economy, it had more to do with the operators themselves. So we're feeling as though the economy is going to actually improve, possibly in 2025, because of a lower rate environment. Joe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond James00:16:20All right. Well, thank you for taking my questions. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:16:22Thank you. Operator00:16:26This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to John for any closing remarks. Please go ahead. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:16:36Once again, thank you all for joining us today. Very excited about the position the bank has gotten to at this point, and look forward to the rest of the year and speaking to many of you in the next day or so. Thank you very much for attending. Have a good day. Operator00:16:54The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDavid KirkleyCFOJohn BordelonChairman, President and CEOAnalystsFeddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde GroupJoe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond JamesPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Home Bancorp Earnings HeadlinesHome Bancorp Shareholders Back Board, Pay and AuditorMay 14, 2026 | tipranks.comHow The Home Bancorp (HBCP) Investment Story Is Shifting With Mixed Analyst SignalsApril 27, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comLouis Navellier: My #1 AI stock for 2026 (name & ticker inside)Louis Navellier's Stock Grader system helped him flag Nvidia before its 82,000% run and has identified the top S&P 500 stock for 12 years running—and today, he's giving away his #1 AI stock pick for 2026, free. This company's sales are up 28% year over year, it holds over 30,000 patents in wireless and video technology, and it just earned an A-rating in his proprietary Stock Grader system that has cost him $9 million to build and maintain.May 19 at 1:00 AM | InvestorPlace (Ad)Piper Sandler downgrades Home Bancorp over lack of loan growthApril 24, 2026 | seekingalpha.comHome Bancorp Inc (HBCP) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Highlights: Record Net Interest Income and ...April 24, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comHome Bancorp, Inc. (HBCP) Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptApril 21, 2026 | seekingalpha.comSee More Home Bancorp Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Home Bancorp? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Home Bancorp and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Home BancorpHome Bancorp (NASDAQ:HBCP) is the bank holding company for The Home National Bank, a full-service financial institution headquartered in Lafayette, Louisiana. The company operates as a regional commercial bank serving individuals, small businesses and municipalities across Louisiana and East Texas. Through its network of branches and digital banking platforms, Home Bancorp offers a range of deposit and lending solutions designed to meet the needs of its local markets. The company’s core offerings include retail deposit products such as checking, savings and money market accounts, as well as a variety of commercial and consumer lending services. Home Bancorp provides commercial real estate lending, construction financing, small business loans and mortgage services. In addition to traditional banking services, the company supports clients with treasury and cash management, merchant services and online banking capabilities to facilitate seamless financial operations. Committed to community banking principles, Home Bancorp emphasizes personalized service and local decision-making. Its leadership maintains a community-focused strategy, aiming to foster long-term relationships with customers, support economic development initiatives and contribute to the growth of the regions it serves. The company continues to invest in technology and service enhancements to improve customer experience and expand its presence in key markets within Louisiana and Southeast Texas.View Home 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 Latest Articles Dillard’s Posted a Huge Earnings Beat—So Why Did the Rally Fade?Why Applied Optoelectronics Stock May Be Near a Turning PointIs Everspin Technologies the Next AI Edge Breakout?Peloton Stock Gives Back Gains After Upbeat Earnings ReportDatavault Gains Traction: 5 Reasons to Sell NowTMC Stock: Why This Pre-Revenue Miner Is Worth WatchingRobinhood, SoFi, and Webull Are Telling Very Different Stories Upcoming Earnings Analog Devices (5/20/2026)Intuit (5/20/2026)NVIDIA (5/20/2026)Lowe's Companies (5/20/2026)Medtronic (5/20/2026)Target (5/20/2026)TJX Companies (5/20/2026)NetEase (5/21/2026)Ross Stores (5/21/2026)Walmart (5/21/2026) 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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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Home Bancorp Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Home Bancorp's Chairman, President, and CEO, John Bordelon, and Chief Financial Officer, David Kirkley. Mr. Kirkley, please go ahead. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:00:47Thank you, Kenneth. Good morning, and welcome to Home Bank's second quarter 2024 earnings call. Our earnings release and investor presentation are available on our website. I ask that everyone please refer to the disclaimer regarding forward-looking statements in the investor presentation and our SEC filings. Now I'll hand it over to John to make a few comments about the second quarter. John? John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:01:10Thanks, David. Good morning, and thank you for joining Home Bancorp's earnings call today. We appreciate your interest in Home Bancorp as we discuss our results, expectations for the future, and our approach to creating long-term shareholder value. We reported second quarter net income of $8.1 million, or $1.02 per share, and most importantly, a slight improvement in our net interest margin, which appears to have stabilized. The NIM came in at 3.66%, which was two basis points higher than the first quarter. We're cautiously optimistic that continued steady increases in asset yields and stabilization in our cost of funds will continue to support net interest income growth and improving margins, even without any Fed rate cuts. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:01:57We added $39.7 million of loans in the second quarter, with growth in all sectors except for construction and land loans, which declined slightly. Given the strong loan growth we had in the first half of the year, we're still anticipating that 2024 loan growth will be between 4% and 6%. The duration of higher rates appears to now be negatively impacting our loan pipeline, but we're optimistic that if forecasted rate cuts occur, we could see loan demand pick back up. Deposits, including demand deposits, were stable from the last quarter after very strong growth in the fourth and first quarters. We were pleased to see $12.6 million of core deposit growth in our Houston market as our teams there brought over the operating accounts of a number of new clients. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:02:46We relocated another one of our Houston branches and continue to look for opportunities to improve our coverage of the markets we serve by adding brick-and-mortar and talent. Despite all the negative headlines, we here at Home Bank are actually seeing improvements in credit. In the past few months, we have had a $5 million construction loan go from non-performing to performing with interest reserves after we worked with the borrower, who we've known for years, to manage through some delays and cost overruns. We also recently resolved a non-performing $3.4 million multifamily loan without any principal loss. We feel very good about a non-performing $4.7 million lending relationship that has about $2 million of equity behind it. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:03:32A year ago, David and I were in New York, and we were both struck by the number of high-rise buildings with empty floors. We just don't have that same problem in our markets, and I know most of our colleagues at other community banks feel the same way. We lend to people we know in markets we know. We're not making the loans that are being written about in the financial press. Community banking is about providing our shareholders with an attractive, risk-adjusted return. We are not in the business of making loans that could result in huge losses on relationships that aren't the right fit. Finally, before I turn it back over to David, I'd like to welcome Mark Herpin to the Home Bank team, where he joins as Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Operations Officer. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:04:14Mark has had a long and successful career in community banking, and we look forward to his contributions at Home Bank. I'd also like to congratulate Natalie Lemoine, our Chief Administrative Officer, and John Zollinger, our Chief Banking Officer, on their promotions to Senior Executive Vice Presidents of the bank. With that, I'll turn it back over to David. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:04:35Thanks, John. Net interest income totaled $29.4 million in Q2, up $492,000 from the previous quarter. Loan growth continued at a 6% annualized pace during the quarter, with new loans coming in at a rate of 8.25%, compared to the 6.28% we earned on our total loan portfolio in Q2. Deposits were essentially flat quarter-over-quarter, which increased our loan-to-deposit ratio to 97.7%. The pace of deposit migration has definitely slowed, and noninterest-bearing deposits actually increased by $4.3 million in the second quarter. We did experience declines in interest-bearing checking accounts and savings accounts, which were down about $25 million combined. This outflow is offset by an increase in money market and CD balances of $21 million. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:05:28The outflows that we did see mostly occurred in April, coinciding with taxes. The impact of the slowing deposit migration can be seen in the slower increases in the rates we are paying on our interest-bearing deposits, which increased by 17 basis points in the second quarter, after having increased by 28 basis points in the first quarter, 40 basis points in the fourth quarter, and 54 basis points in the third quarter last year. Pages 11 and 12 of our investor presentation provide some additional detail on credit, which John has already covered. Non-performing loans did decrease by $3.5 million in the second quarter to $16.8 million, or 0.63% of total loans. Provision expense for the quarter was $1.3 million, up $1.1 million from the prior quarter. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:06:18Our allowance for loan loss ratio increased 1 basis point to 1.21% in the second quarter. There were no changes in our qualitative factors during the quarter, and we feel confident in our reserve levels. We did have $510,000, or 8 basis points annualized in net charge-offs in the second quarter. These charge-offs were very much customer specific issues and not industry related. Slide 16 has some detail on our historic NIM and its components. As John mentioned, we're cautiously optimistic that NIM has bottomed out and should start to slowly increase from here. Loan yields have been steadily increasing due to a combination of loan growth and loan repricing, and with the reduced pace of increases in liability costs, our NIM has increased each month this quarter. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:07:08We have approximately $490 million of CDs maturing in the next six months. The majority of these CDs are in specials at rates a little north of 5%. So if rates and deposit mix remain unchanged, we could see flat to marginal declines in CD costs. We have opportunities for more meaningful cost reductions if we do see rate cuts. Slide 18 of the presentation has some additional details on noninterest income and expenses. Noninterest income increased by about $200,000 to $3.8 million and should be between $3.6 million and $3.8 million in the third and fourth quarters. Noninterest expense increased by $904,000 to $21.8 million, due primarily to annual salary increases that took effect April first. This was at the low end of our expectations. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:07:58We expect core non-interest expense to be between $22 million and $22.5 million in the third and fourth quarters. We were a little more aggressive with the buyback and repurchased about 77,000 shares at an average price of $37 per share in the second quarter, which equates to 92% of tangible book value, excluding AOCI. Slide 19 summarizes the impact of our capital management strategy has had on Home Bank over the last few years. We've grown adjusted tangible book value per share by 58% since 2018, increased our dividend by 67% since 2016, and repurchased 14% of our shares, all while maintaining robust capital ratios, which positions us to be successful in any economic environment and take advantage of opportunities as they arise. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:08:50With that, operator, please open the line for Q&A. Operator00:08:55Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press the star key, then one on your touch tone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press the star key, then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. The first question comes from Feddie Strickland with Hovde Group. Please go ahead. Feddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde Group00:09:34Hey, good morning, John and David. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:09:35Good morning. Feddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde Group00:09:36John, you touched on this in your opening comments a little bit. I was just wondering if you can talk through a little bit more of the non-interest-bearing deposits. Obviously, a positive to see those grow. Is that really just success on the C&I side in Houston, or was that more footprint wide? John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:09:53Well, I, I think that, you know, what we're referring to there was mostly in Houston. We, we pulled out a team at the beginning of the year from another bank, and a lot of the efforts that happened in Houston came from that team. They're in a loan production office in the northwest section of Houston, and they've done a very good job of attracting new customers and our focus has been on the deposit side, so they've attracted some that are loan and deposit and some that are just deposit. So that was what we were highlighting there, was the success of that new team. We've also seen some growth in, Feddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde Group00:10:30Got it. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:10:30We've also seen some growth in the DDA space and the Acadiana market, as that market has been focused more heavily on the C&I business as well. Feddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde Group00:10:44Along those same lines, I mean, as we think about the type of loan growth you're looking for going forward, it sounds like, you know, you're focused on bringing in more C&I, just given that it's more likely to come with deposits, correct? John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:10:57Absolutely. Feddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde Group00:10:59Got it. And one last question from me. Just on share repurchases, I mean, do you think we'll see that potentially slow down a little bit if, you know, the share price kind of keeps moving upwards here? Or do you think that, you know, you'll still have some level of repurchases going forward and just keep in mind some dry powder? David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:11:22We'd probably slow it down at the elevated or the higher prices that we've experienced over the last week, and keep the dry powder. Feddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde Group00:11:32Got it. Thanks for taking the questions. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:11:35Thank you. Thanks. Operator00:11:40Again, if you have a question, please press the star key, then one. The next question comes from Joe Yanchunis with Raymond James. Please go ahead, sir. Joe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond James00:11:55Good morning. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:11:57Morning. Hey, Joe. Joe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond James00:11:59So with the NIM expansion, you know, appearing to occur, you know, a little bit ahead of schedule, can you provide some of the puts and takes on what will drive the NIM in the second half of the year? David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:12:11... So one of the driving factors is, of course, loan growth and loan repricings. You can see on our slide deck on Slide 16, we've been consistently raising our loan yield by about 10 basis points each quarter, and still expect that to continue as we still have, you know, a weighted average rate of our loan portfolio at 6.28%, compared to what we're bringing on loans at 8.25%. So that's one component of it. Second component of it is you're really seeing a slowdown in opportunities for deposits to reprice higher. There is still some deposit migration, but the vast majority of our CD portfolio has already repriced higher. David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:12:55We touched up on it a little bit on the call when we said, you know, the CDs are already a little bit north of 5%, and our CD special rates are actually a little bit lower in some cases. So there's not as much repricing opportunities to occur on the CD and deposit space. So we think that the pace of loan yield increases is gonna more than offset deposit cost increases. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:13:22Not to mention, any movement by the Fed this year will contribute to the ability to bring on these deposits or maintain these deposits at a little bit lower rate. So, we feel very comfortable in the fact that our CD rates should stabilize or head downward based upon what the Fed does. Joe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond James00:13:48Understood. And, you know, we've heard from your peers, noting some increased competition on deposits. Is that something you've experienced? And kind of how should we think about the near-term trajectory of deposit costs? John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:14:04We haven't seen that much pressure. There are some one-offs here or there, that we obviously, take care of. But for the most part, most everyone in our market, I think there was one bank in the Houston market that, was in the, you know, 5.25, 5.375, area. But for the most part, we have not, had any problem attracting deposits. Joe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond James00:14:32Okay. And then if I could just sneak in one more here. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:14:36Yep. Joe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond James00:14:37So asset quality metrics improved, you know, pretty nicely in the quarter, though you elected to increase your reserve ratio. Can you discuss what really drove this thought process? And secondly, perhaps it's too early to call, but, you know, if we get a couple rate cuts and the economy doesn't deteriorate, would it be fair to say that, you know, criticized NPAs might have already peaked? David KirkleyCFO at Home Bancorp00:15:01Let me take the CECL question first. We really didn't decide to increase our allowance. It's just a mixture of the mix change in our loan portfolio quarter-over-quarter and the duration perhaps of new loans. That's really it. Then we didn't change any qualitative factors. We didn't adjust or make any adjustments with regards to any industry-specific qualitative factors. So it's just a function, really, of our loan portfolio changing. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:15:39As it relates to the remainder of the year, I'm very optimistic that there could be a little bit of issues as far as credit, but we're not really seeing it in any one particular industry or just individually. We've had a couple of one-offs here and there that have gone bad. It had really nothing to do with the economy, it had more to do with the operators themselves. So we're feeling as though the economy is going to actually improve, possibly in 2025, because of a lower rate environment. Joe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond James00:16:20All right. Well, thank you for taking my questions. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:16:22Thank you. Operator00:16:26This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to John for any closing remarks. Please go ahead. John BordelonChairman, President and CEO at Home Bancorp00:16:36Once again, thank you all for joining us today. Very excited about the position the bank has gotten to at this point, and look forward to the rest of the year and speaking to many of you in the next day or so. Thank you very much for attending. Have a good day. Operator00:16:54The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDavid KirkleyCFOJohn BordelonChairman, President and CEOAnalystsFeddie StricklandDirector of Equity Research at Hovde GroupJoe YanchunisEquity Research at Raymond JamesPowered by