Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by, welcome to the Central Pacific Financial Corp First Quarter 2023 Conference Call. During today's presentation, all parties will be in a listen-only mode. Following the presentation, the conference will be open for questions. This call is being recorded and will be available for replay shortly after its completion on the company's website at www.cpb.bank. I'd like to turn the call over to Mr. David Morimoto, Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.
Thank you all for joining us as we review the financial results for the first quarter of 2023 for Central Pacific Financial Corp. With me this morning are Arnold Martines, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Anna Hu, Executive Vice President and Chief Credit Officer. We have prepared a supplemental slide presentation that provides additional details on our release and is available in the investor relations section of our website at cpb.bank. During the course of today's call, management may make forward-looking statements. While we believe these statements are based on reasonable assumptions, they involve risks that may cause actual results to differ materially from those projected. For a complete discussion of the risks related to our forward-looking statements, please refer to Slide two of our presentation. Now I'll turn the call over to our President and CEO, Arnold Martines.
Thank you, David. Aloha, good morning, everyone. We appreciate your interest in Central Pacific Financial Corp. As we normally do, I'll start with an update on the Hawaii market, then I'll turn it over to the team to provide additional detail and insights on our financial and credit metrics, as well as other key updates. The Hawaii tourism industry is performing well, with year-to-date visitor arrivals at pre-pandemic levels, indicating the recovery continues. The majority of visitors continue to be from the U.S. mainland. Japanese visitor arrivals are increasing modestly but remained at only about a quarter of pre-pandemic levels. We anticipate that as this year progresses, we'll see continued improvement in the international visitor markets, which will help to offset an expected slight decline in U.S. arrivals.
Hawaii visitor spending is robust, totaling $1.64 billion in February, an increase of 18% compared to the same month in 2019. Hotels in Hawaii continue to perform well, with total statewide hotel occupancy in February at 76%, up 5% from a year ago, and an average daily rate of $387, up 10% from a year ago. Hawaii's employment and housing sectors remain solid and stable. Our statewide seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was at 3.6% in February, which was in line with the national unemployment rate. Year-over-year, non-farm payrolls statewide increased by 24,000 jobs or 4%. Labor market conditions overall have normalized despite certain sectors of our service industry still dealing with a shortage of workers.
Housing prices in Hawaii remain very strong, with the Oahu median single-family home price back up to $1.1 million, and the median condo sales price setting a new record of $536,000 in March. Home sales volumes improved month-over-month in March, but fell short compared to 2022. While we continue to experience some moderation in sales activity and prices, the Hawaii housing market remains very healthy with continued strong demand and low inventory. Overall, while we continue to monitor potential impacts of a slowdown in the U.S. mainland, the Hawaii market has a healthier outlook compared to the nation as a whole, which gives us optimism for the rest of this year. Given the industry events that occurred last month impacting a few large regional banks, I want to reiterate that CPF has strong liquidity, capital, and credit.
Our deposit portfolio is diversified and long-tenured. Our business model is based on longer-term customer relationships that are sticky and less rate sensitive. CPB has $6.7 billion in relationship deposits, with approximately 50% of our customers having been with CPB for more than 10 years. Additionally, 66% of our deposits are FDIC insured or collateralized, and we've experienced a modest net inflow of deposits since March as customers look to diversify their deposit portfolios. As the industry situation continues to settle down, we remain focused on liquidity while carefully and prudently making asset growth decisions. Going forward, we will remain nimble and continue to focus on our strategic pillars while taking steps to manage any emerging risks.
Finally, our leadership transition has gone smoothly, and I'm proud of our exceptional team of employees who continue to step up every day to serve our customers and the community. I'll now turn the call over to David Morimoto, our Chief Financial Officer. David?
Thank you, Arnold. Turning to our earnings results. Net income for the first quarter was $16.2 million or $0.60 per diluted share. Return on average assets was 0.87%. Return on average equity was 13.97%. Our efficiency ratio was 64.58%. Our loan and deposit balances remained relatively stable in the first quarter. On the lending side, we are more selective and thoughtful about the loans we put on balance sheet, ensuring appropriate pricing and structure. We also continue to let the mainland unsecured consumer loan portfolio run off as a prudent measure until the national economic outlook improves. Overall, we plan to continue to moderate loan growth in 2023, and our new guidance for the full year loan growth is in the low single-digit % range.
Having said that, we will remain nimble and look to take advantage of opportunities as the operating environment evolves. We were successful in keeping deposit balances stable in the first quarter despite some early quarter seasonal outflows where total deposits declined by roughly $100 million in the month of January. Importantly, total deposits increased by a net $111 million during the month of March, with total deposit growth of $150 million since March 9th. CPB continues to benefit from a granular and stable core deposit portfolio that was built upon many years of relationships. We continue to execute upon strategies to gain a larger market share of core deposits to further enhance our funding and liquidity position.
Net interest income for the first quarter was $54.2 million and decreased by $2.1 million from the prior quarter, primarily due to higher funding costs. The net interest margin was 3.08% in the first quarter, a decline of 9 basis points sequential quarter. Excluding non-recurring interest recoveries in the prior quarter, the net interest margin declined by 6 basis points. Our total cost of deposits increased to 61 basis points in the first quarter. While deposit pricing is starting to put some pressure on our net interest margin, our cycle to date interest-bearing deposit repricing beta has been managed to a reasonable 19%. First quarter other operating income was $11 million, which decreased by $0.6 million from the prior quarter, primarily due to the fourth quarter, including greater amount of non-recurring BOLI benefits.
Other operating expenses totaled $42.1 million in the first quarter, an increase of $1.7 million from the prior quarter. The prior quarter included one-time lower occupancy and advertising costs totaling approximately $1 million. Additionally, the current quarter included higher computer software expenses and FDIC insurance assessments. Our effective tax rate declined to 23.8% in the first quarter as a result of discrete stock compensation adjustments. Going forward, we expect the effective tax rate to be in the 24%-25% range. Our capital position remains strong, and during the first quarter, we repurchased 101,760 shares at a total cost of $2.2 million, or an average cost per share of $21.67. In mid-March, we temporarily suspended share repurchases due to the evolving operating environment.
Finally, our board of directors declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.26 per share, which will be payable on June 15th to shareholders of record on May 31st. Now I'll turn the call over to Anna Hu, our Chief Credit Officer. Anna.
Thank you, David. Our asset quality remained solid in the first quarter, with non-performing assets unchanged at just 7 basis points of total assets and criticized loans decreasing to 1.3% of total loans. Delinquencies also remain low at 3 basis points of total loans. Our loan portfolio is well diversified by loan type and industry sector, with low exposure to the U.S. mainland at 17% of total loans and construction at just 3% of total loans. The total mainland consumer portfolio is 8% of total loans and roughly evenly split between auto, home improvement, and unsecured loans. Over 75% of the loan portfolio is real estate secured with a weighted average loan-to-value of 63%. Our commercial real estate portfolio is diversified by sector with low office exposure at 3.5% of total loans.
The office portfolio has a weighted average loan-to-value of 55% and 70 weighted average months to maturity. We continue with our conservative underwriting policies, including tight loan-to-value and concentration standards, and are being more selective in the loans we make. Our net charge-offs were $2.3 million for the first quarter, which equates to 16 basis points annualized as a % of average loans. The slight increase in net charge-offs came primarily from our mainland unsecured consumer portfolio due to normal seasoning of the portfolio to loss levels that we had expected and built into the return. The mainland unsecured consumer portfolio decreased by $18 million in the first quarter as we let the portfolio run off and did not add significant new purchases. Our allowance for credit losses was $63.1 million, or 1.14% of outstanding loans.
In the first quarter, we recorded a $1.6 million provision for credit losses on loans primarily due to net charge-offs. We recorded a $0.3 million provision for unfunded commitments for a total provision for credit losses of $1.9 million during the quarter. The strong risk management culture that we have maintained for many years now positions us to sustain and continue to perform well despite external challenges that may come. I'll turn the call back to Arnold. Arnold?
Thank you, Anna. In summary, Central Pacific continues to have solid liquidity, capital, and credit. Our balance sheet is well-positioned, and our experienced leadership team will maintain our commitment to our customers and the community as we continue to navigate the current environment and create more shareholder value for our investors. Mahalo for your continued support and confidence in our organization. At this time, we will be happy to address any questions you may have. Thank you.
We will now begin the question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If for any reason you would like to remove that question, please press star followed by two. Again, to ask a question, please press star one. As a reminder, if you're using a speakerphone, please remember to pick up your handset before asking your question. We will pause here briefly as questions are registered. Our first question comes from the line of David Feaster with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning, everybody.
Hey, David. Morning, David.
Morning. I just wanted to start maybe on some of the deposit flows. Obviously, we saw some of the migration in the quarter. You know, it sounds like you saw pretty good growth throughout March. You know, like, looking at, like, non-interest-bearing average versus period end, it looks like a lot of the flows kind of happened throughout the quarter. I'm just curious, maybe you could walk through kind of what you're seeing in the deposit portfolio. Have you seen continued migration or some stabilization or even continued growth, and just kind of other trends that you're expecting to see as this all plays out?
Yeah, David, I'm gonna let David Morimoto respond to your question.
Good morning, David. As we touched on in the prepared remarks, on a total deposit basis, we saw roughly $100 million in outflows during the month of January, and that's the normal seasonal outflows coming off of year-end. There were additional outflows during February and early March, you know, roughly another $40 million. Importantly, since March 9th, the day before the Silicon Valley failure, deposits, total deposits grew by $150 million, and I think that's the important number here. As far as the mix shift, I think what we're seeing is what you're seeing at other institutions. Obviously, there is a mix shift that's occurring out of non-interest-bearing DDA into higher interest-bearing products, and we're accommodating our customers there wherever possible.
I think the way we're thinking about the deposit mix shift, David, is, if you go back to pre-pandemic, DDA as a percent of deposits at the end of 2019 was 28%. At the end of 3/31, it was 30%. There's still some room for continued deposit mix shift. That 2% is maybe another $130 million in decline. We're hoping that it's going to be less than that because of the success we had during the pandemic with the PPP loan program, but that's kind of how we're thinking about the mix shift.
Okay. Okay. It's really just migration from account versus outflows outside of the bank or going to the bond market or anything like that. It's. Is that a fair characterization?
I would say the majority of it is mix shift, right? you know, as we've discussed, pretty much throughout this rate environment, you know, We're doing the product segmentation, customer segmentation strategy, providing options for customers that are looking for higher yielding, deposit options. The strategy is kind of the same strategy that we utilized during the last rising rate environment. I think it was 2015 to 2018. Our deposit pricing strategies during that cycle were successful, and we expect similar results here.
Okay. That's helpful. Maybe could you just switching gears to the loan side, could you just talk about the competitive landscape for deposits on the islands, how demand's trending and maybe the pulse of your clients at this point? You know, you talked about pushing higher new loan yields, and that's slowing growth. I guess, you know, could you talk about where new loan yields are at this point? What segments are you still seeing good risk-adjusted returns that can support, you know, kind of that low single-digit growth?
Yeah. David, this is Arnold. Maybe I'll start, and David can talk a little bit about the yields. You know, we are being more selective in our loan origination decisions given the current economic environment outlook. Obviously, you know, we're ensuring that loans we make have an appropriate risk-adjusted return, and we continue to be focused on our existing relationships. You know, with that said, you know, we do still see loan demand in Hawaii. We see the CRE space being opportunities for the next few quarters. Construction here is still pretty robust, so we're pretty optimistic about that.
Of course, you know, our focus on small business, you know, continues to be an area that we see further growth in the future. You know, I think what you're seeing with our results in the first quarter is really the reason for that is because of our focus on small business. I mean, that market tends to be very relationship based, as well as, you know, from a from a risk-adjusted perspective, over time, a good space to be in. Let me ask David to maybe comment on on yields.
Yeah. Thanks, Arnold. David, during the fourth quarter, the weighted average new loan yield was just about 6.25%. It is increasing along with market interest rates and obviously deposit rates. We actually are expecting it to continue to increase, right? We're continuing to look, as Arnold mentioned, we're continuing to look for appropriate risk-adjusted returns in the current operating environment.
Okay. That's helpful. Then maybe just touching on the asset quality front. I mean, you know, more broadly, things are still relatively benign. I'm just curious if you could touch on the broader outlook for credit, you know, and how you're, you know, tightening standards or anything like that, anything that you're watching closely. Maybe also specifically honing in on the consumer segment. You know, charge-offs were elevated. You talked about some of the seasoning in the portfolio, but we also did see, you know, an increase in delinquent consumer loans and upticking consumer non-accruals. I'm just curious if you could maybe elaborate on some of the asset quality dynamics more broadly, and then again, specifically honing in on that consumer.
Yeah. David, this is Arnold. I'll just say that, you know, overall, we're very pleased with, you know, the continuation of strong asset quality. Let me have Anna respond to some of your specific questions.
Hi, David. You're right. We are continuing to focus specifically on the consumer market and to a smaller extent, the small business market, where we are seeing a pickup in delinquencies and then, of course, the charge-offs. You do see in first quarter, the elevated charge-offs are really due to the mainland consumer unsecured portfolio. I did want to note too there that it is expected. During our underwriting, we did price out and have a certain level of charge-off expectations, and we are well within those expectations. It has not exceeded our underwriting conservative underwriting standards.
On a go-forward basis, we continue to stick to our conservative underwriting standards, our concentration limits, loan-to-value requirements for commercial real estate, just staying very disciplined and as Arnold spoke to, being very selective in terms of the loans that we're looking at doing.
That's helpful. Thank you.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Liesch with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning. I am just curious here, the size of the securities portfolio going forward, if loan growth is not going to be as strong, is there a plan to, I think maybe you'll invest more in securities or maybe just also not be as competitive on the deposit front, given that you may not need that funding for loan growth?
Andrew, let me have David respond to your question.
Hey Andrew. You know, the investment portfolio is roughly, I think 18% of total assets. It's likely to stay in the 15%-20% of asset range. The investment portfolio currently in near term is likely in runoff, largely runoff mode, cash flow of roughly $30 million a quarter. We'll be using that to fund higher yielding loan opportunities. Having said that, the investment portfolio strategy will always be nimble, and it'll be a function of what we're seeing with, you know, flows on the deposit and loan side. To the extent that there's some variances in loan and deposit cash flows, the investment strategy will be the buffer for that.
Got it. All right. That's helpful. Then just rolling that all through into the margin, core base is down about 6 basis points. Do you think that compression is gonna accelerate this quarter, or is that kind of the right number to be thinking about?
Right, right now we're guiding to 2.95% to 3.05% on net interest margin. We are guiding to a slight continuation of compression on the net interest margin. I think what's important there is our balance sheet. As we've consistently stated, our balance sheet is relatively well matched from an interest rate risk standpoint. We don't have the large swings in net interest margin. We did see some, you know, rise in the net interest margin last year. It wasn't as significant as maybe we saw at some other institutions. Similarly on the downside, I don't anticipate the same type of magnitude of declines.
Got it. That's very helpful. Thanks for taking the questions. I'll step back.
Thanks, Andrew.
Thank you. There are no additional questions waiting at this time. I would like to pass the conference back to Arnold Martines, President and CEO for any... Apologies. We do have a follow-up question from the line of David Feaster with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Right. I just wanted to maybe ask one more question on the expense side. You know, obviously this quarter is a seasonally higher quarter, but just curious, you know, if we exclude some of the seasonal impacts, you know, what do you think is a good core run rate? Just how do you think about expense save opportunities, just given some of the revenue challenges? I know you guys cut a few branches in the middle of the pandemic and, you know, you've realized a lot of tech spend, just given your build-out. I'm just curious how you think about expenses going forward and, you know, again, potential expense saving opportunities just given the, you know, inflationary and challenging operating environment.
Yeah. Yeah, David, it's David, I'll take that question. You know, the other operating expense, total other operating expense quarterly, we're guiding to $41 million-$43 million. As you said, we're cognizant of the operating environment and management is taking a hard look at efficiency opportunities. We'll see how that plays out in the coming quarters. To the extent that revenue challenges persist, we will need to, you know, look for efficiency opportunities and hopefully keep the other operating expense on the lower end of that range.
Okay. You know, it was nice to see the capital build. You touched on it in the prepared remarks about temporarily pausing the buyback program. Are repurchases still on pause or maybe as things have seemingly settled down, it seems like, you know, the fears, the real liquidity fears, especially for y'all are, you know, alleviated? Are you interested in repurchases again? Just overall thoughts on capital return at this point.
Yeah. Yeah, David. Obviously we're the ultimate insider and the stock, like all bank stocks look cheap, look relatively cheap right now. The buyback is on pause through our earnings blackout, and then management will evaluate the operating environment, the situation at the time, and we'll make the appropriate decisions. But it's a challenging operating environment and I think balance sheet strength and stability is paramount right now. You know, what we're gonna do is we're gonna ensure that our balance sheet is strong such that we're able to assist the community and our customers through what may be a difficult operating environment.
Once we're comfortable that we have the balance sheet strength that we need, you know, then we'll take a look at our options for capital de-deployment beyond the quarterly cash dividend.
Okay. Maybe just the last one, you know, just wanted to get a quick update on the Swell initiative. You know, last time we talked, you were still planning on expanding the program. Not a huge contribution obviously in the short run, but just could you give us an update on that and any changes to the thought process with that just given, you know, the broader environment?
Sure. Sure, David. Swell continues to work on its business model. It's actually out in the public today. You know, it is, you know, trying different strategies, different marketing strategies to, you know, generate customer acquisition. As we've discussed previously, it's profitable customer acquisition. But it hasn't found its sweet spot yet, so it's still immaterial to our results. We're continuing to work with them on the, you know, their go forward strategy. You know, we're hopeful that at some point, you know, their environment will be conducive, and they'll find their sweet spot such that we can grow Swell and CPB as the sponsor bank can grow.
Until that, you know, until we find those things, you know, it's gonna be very slow going because of the operating environment. I think that's the prudent thing to do.
Okay. Yeah, that makes sense. Then you touched on the BOLI side, and some of the movements there obviously is, you know, fees were another good quarter. Just curious how you think about kind of a core fee income run rate?
Total other operating income is gonna be roughly, you know, $11 million a quarter.
Okay.
More specifically on the BOLI line. That line has just been volatile because of the deferred comp programs. You know, we have corporate-owned life insurance that acts as a hedge for our director deferred comp and employee deferred comp programs. That piece, the COLI piece, goes up and down with the equity markets. I would say the core BOLI quarterly number is probably about $800,000, and it'll deviate from that based on equity market performance and potential death benefits.
Okay. That's helpful. Thanks, everybody.
Thanks, David.
Yeah. Thanks, David, for the additional questions. Appreciate it.
Thank you. That concludes the question and answer session. I would now like to pass the conference back to Arnold Martines, President and CEO, for any closing remarks.
Thank you very much for participating in our earnings call for the first quarter of 2023. We look forward to future opportunities to update you on our progress.
That concludes the Central Pacific Financial Corp First Quarter 2023 Conference Call. I hope you all enjoy the rest of your day. You may now disconnect your line.