Good morning, everyone, and welcome to FB Financial Corporation's Second Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. Hosting the call today from FB Financial is Chris Holmes, President and Chief Executive Officer. He is joined by Michael Mettee, Chief Financial Officer. Please note FB Financial's earnings release, supplemental financial information and this morning's presentation are available on the Investor Relations page of the company's website at www.firstbankonline.com and on the Securities and Exchange Commission's website at www.sec.gov. Today's call is being recorded and will be available for replay on FB Financial's website approximately an hour after the conclusion of the call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. The call will open for questions after the presentation. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Robert Hoehn, Director of Corporate Finance.
Thanks, Jamie. During this presentation, FB Financial may make comments which constitute forward-looking statements under the federal securities laws. All forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties and other facts that may cause actual results and performance or achievements of FB Financial to differ materially from any results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Many of such factors are beyond FB Financial's ability to control or predict, and listeners are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements. A more detailed description of these and other risks is contained in FB Financial's periodic and current reports filed with the SEC, including FB Financial's most recent Form 10-K. Except as required by law, FB Financial disclaims any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements contained in this presentation, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
In addition, these remarks may include certain non-GAAP financial measures as defined by SEC Regulation G. A presentation of the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures and a reconciliation of the non-GAAP measures to comparable GAAP measures is available in FB Financial's earnings release, supplemental financial information, and this morning's presentation, which are available on the Investor Relations page of the company's website at www.firstbankonline.com and on the SEC's website at www.sec.gov. I would say, we've heard that the presentation up in the Chorus Call app is the prior quarter's presentation. The current presentation is available on EDGAR as well as our investor relations website. At that point, I'll now like to turn the presentation over to Chris Holmes, FB Financial's President and CEO.
All right. Thank you, Robert. Good morning, everybody. Thank you for joining us this morning. As always, we do appreciate your interest in FB Financial. For the quarter, we reported EPS of $0.41, an ROAA of 0.62%, and a return on average tangible common equity of 7.1%. Adjusted for $12.5 million of mortgage restructuring charges and $2 million of negative mark-to-market adjustment on our commercial loans held-for-sale portfolio, we delivered adjusted EPS of $0.64 a share, adjusted ROAA of 0.97%, adjusted return on average tangible common equity of 11.0%. Those returns are a little below our standard, but with some good reason.
The quarter signals some momentum that has us cautiously optimistic. We've grown our tangible book value per share, an important measure for us, excluding the impact of AOCI at a compound annual growth rate of 15.2% since our IPO in 2016. The bank had a very strong quarter of balance sheet and core profitability growth. While mortgage had a challenging quarter, they continued to adjust for expected future market conditions. There are a few items that I want to highlight for the quarter. At $619 million or 31% annualized, loan growth was historically strong. With our markets and relationship managers, asset generation is not a problem.
In the last 12 months, we've grown loans by $1.4 billion or 20% while not loosening our underwriting standards or expanding our credit box. In fact, in the second quarter, we became more selective in our credit process. In the second quarter alone, we estimate that we passed on well over $400 million in construction loan opportunities, and those were projects that we viewed as responsible credit opportunities that generally met our underwriting standards, but we passed as we managed our construction concentration down in the current economic environment. We also continued to see good activity in our non-interest-bearing deposits. Excluding our mortgage escrow-related deposits, we grew 16% linked quarter annualized. Year-over-year, excluding mortgage escrow deposits, we've grown our non-interest-bearing deposits by 19%.
Growing non-interest-bearing operating account relationships is a strong focus for us, and our relationship managers continue to execute well on that goal. While we saw another good quarter non-interest-bearing growth, we saw pressure on our interest-bearing deposits, which declined by $565 million in the quarter. Of that $565 million, we estimate that just over $200 million of that was in seasonal public funds declines that should come back into the bank as part of the annual business cycle. We had an additional $325 million in larger balances moved for higher rates that we chose not to match, and $120 million of that was also public fund relationships.
We have another $400 million in high rate public funds that we expect to exit during the second half of the year since we don't intend to renew at the current terms. We went into 2022 with the goal of growing non-interest-bearing deposits and holding our cost of deposits down, understanding it would cause our total deposit balances to move lower. We've executed on those goals. At 82%, loans held for investment to deposits at the end of the second quarter, we've right-sized the balance sheet while improving the composition of our deposit portfolio. As deposit balances have moved lower and assets, particularly loans, have grown faster than we expected, we will need to raise deposits in order to fund loan growth.
As we've historically done, we'll increase our customer relationship deposit balances and have little reliance on wholesale funding and select use of public fund relationships. Our asset quality remains strong, as our NPAs to assets and NPLs to loans HFI remained effectively flat at 46 basis points and 51 basis points respectively. Despite the lack of issues that we see in our portfolio, we do remain cautious in our outlook of future economic conditions. As a result, we maintained our 1.46% allowance for credit losses to loans held for investment. Paired with our loan growth, this resulted in a provision expense of $12.3 million for the quarter, which compares with a release of $4.2 million in the prior quarter.
That difference of $16.5 million between the two quarters accounted for a delta of $0.26 in earnings per share this quarter. We also further reduced our commercial loans held-for-sale portfolio this quarter. Our exposure is down to four relationships and $37.8 million. Each of the remaining relationships are sponsor-backed healthcare companies. Three of those four relationships are performing well, while one has been written down to 10% of par and has only $1.3 million of credit exposure remaining.
We had a negative mark-to-market of $2 million in the quarter with that one non-performer I just mentioned, accounting for a $3.6 million loss and the remainder of the portfolio delivering a $1.6 million gain for the net of $2 million for the quarter. As we're close to being completely out of this portfolio and we provided updates on it each quarter, it's important to note that since the close of the Franklin merger, we've realized gains of $12.2 million above our initial mark-to-market. Outside of the large provision expense and the mark-to-market on the commercial loans held-for-sale portfolio, profitability for the banking segment this quarter was exceptional.
We saw our year-over-year growth in adjusted banking segment PPP of 36.1%. That growth has been driven by strong loan growth and our margin benefiting from our asset sensitivity. We see those underlying trends largely continuing over the coming quarters, which should deliver continued strong loan growth and core profitability for our banking segment. Mortgage continues to face a difficult environment and delivered an adjusted operating loss of $2.7 million during the second quarter. We've materially completed the wind down of our direct-to-consumer channel and made initial structural changes to our retail channel. However, with the market conditions that we anticipate over the foreseeable future, our remaining retail channel will need to continue to make adjustments over the coming months.
Lastly, we were more active in our share repurchase this quarter than we have been historically. With our stock trading at what we believe were attractive valuations, we repurchased $26 million during the quarter. We were glad to retire those shares when we did, but with loan growth that we are experiencing and the economic uncertainty of the coming quarters, we're not likely to be active in our repurchase program in the near term. As we look to the second half of the year, we anticipate loan growth slowing from the extreme levels that we've seen in the first half of the year to a more reasonable high single-digit, low double-digit range over the last two quarters of the year.
Our local economies continue to be very strong and we see continued demand from our customers, but we intend to be disciplined on pricing given inflation and the general economic headwinds anticipated in the near term. We expect mortgage originations to decline from the already low current levels, and we're further reducing the size of our mortgage division to reflect the new market realities. We don't expect a positive net income contribution from mortgage in the second half of the year. Strategically, we continue to focus on bringing in talent that's been disrupted by the recent consolidation across our footprint. We've been able to upgrade our risk and compliance and finance and accounting teams with numerous associates that have held leadership positions at larger public banks across the Southeast that have been recently acquired or are going through the process of being acquired.
Michael and I continue to be impressed with the quality of resumes coming across our desks, and we continue to put people in place that will allow us to double or even triple the size of the company. We also continue to have positive conversations with relationship managers across our footprint that are evaluating new homes. We've hired 32 revenue producers through the first two quarters of the year, and those have been in every region across our footprint. With our younger executive team, our $12 billion asset balance sheet and strong organic growth prospects, we provide exceptional runway for relationship managers to come and spend the rest of their careers at FirstBank. As an update on M&A, right now we have too many impactful internal initiatives to distract the team with broad auction processes at this point.
with the pullback in the market and bank valuations, that activity has slowed anyway. We do continue to have dialogue with high-quality banks across our geography and contiguous geographies that have indicated they may be seeking a partner over the coming months or years. We don't control that timing, but we do have active conversations. Anything we're considering at this point would be with banks we know well and geographies that we know well. Finally, our innovations group continued to have discussions with Fintech and other technology companies. As customers, we look for vendors that can provide the standard technology benefits of improved back-office efficiencies while making sure we're up to date with table stakes for our customer experience.
As investors, we focus on areas where we have deep niche knowledge and can provide value in a partnership above and beyond what other investors would be able to provide, such as mortgage or manufactured housing. We're also interested in deposit-getting strategies that can supplement our traditional, local community bank customer base. For that, I'll now turn it over to Michael to discuss our financial results in some more detail.
Thank you, Chris, and good morning, everyone. I'll speak first to this quarter's results in our banking segment. Our baseline run rate pre-tax, pre-provision income for the banking segment was $53.9 million in the second quarter. Pointing to the segment core efficiency ratio reconciliations, which are on page 19 of the slide deck and page 19 of the financial supplement, we had $102.9 million in segment tax equivalent net interest income this quarter. Along with that $102.9 million in net interest income, we had $12.8 million in core banking segment non-interest income. Finally, we had $59.3 million in banking segment non-interest expense.
This quarter, due to our lower level of taxable income, we had a geography shift of $1.4 million as tax credits were made from a reduction in our tax expense to instead be a reduction in non-interest expense. We also had a true-up that resulted in a $1.11 million reduction in reported non-interest expense this quarter. Adjusting for those shifts, core banking segment non-interest expense would have been $61.8 million. Together, that comes to our $53.9 million in run rate segment PTPP, which has grown 30.5% over the comparable $41.3 million that we delivered in the second quarter of 2021. Moving on to our net interest margin with summary detail on page five of the slide deck.
Our net interest margin of 3.52% shows significant improvement from the 3.04% that we reported in the first quarter. Part of that improvement was due to our accretion and non-accrual collection interest returning to a de minimis impact of + 2 basis points in the quarter compared to - 7 basis points in the first quarter. Another driver with our balance sheet mix is declining deposit balances and strong loan volume led interest-bearing cash to be a smaller percentage of our balance sheet. We estimate that excess liquidity had only a 14 basis point negative impact on our margin in the second quarter compared to 29 basis points in the first quarter.
The remaining 20 or so basis points of expansion was due to assets repricing faster than our liabilities as our cost of total deposits increased by only five basis points, while our yield on loans, excluding non-accrual and purchase accounting, increased by 25 basis points. Our securities portfolio increased by 12 basis points, and our interest-bearing cash increased by 42 basis points. Looking forward, for our margin, we had a run rate margin excluding the impact of liquidity for the month of June in the 3.7% range. We have only $239 million of our approximately $4 billion in variable rate loans above their floors as of June 30th, and that $239 million should be roughly cut in half after the next rate hike later this month.
We get a pretty sizable bump in the yield on our variable rate loans on the day of a rate hike, and they get a lingering benefit as loans hit their various contractual repricing dates. As an example, for the last 75 basis point increase, we saw roughly a 30 basis point increase immediately, and from June 16th to July 7th, we saw another roughly 20 basis point increase in yields on our variable rate loans. We've also intentionally kept our securities portfolio smaller as a percentage of our overall balance sheet and have kept our duration fairly short. We have around $200 million of cash flows coming off the portfolio and available for reinvestment annually. Offsetting some of that sensitivity going forward will be higher deposit costs.
In the month of June, we had a cost of interest-bearing deposits of 41 basis points compared to 33 basis points for the quarter, and we've done a good job so far of keeping our beta low. However, we expect costs to accelerate over the second half of the year as competition for deposits increases.
For banking segment non-interest income, with the Durbin cap on interchange beginning to impact us as of July first, we expect for our banking non-interest income to be in the $10 million-$11 million range from quarter to quarter over the foreseeable future. As I mentioned earlier, we view our run rate core banking segment non-interest expense as being $61.8 million versus the reported $59.3 million, due to the $1.1 million of true-up and $1.4 million of state tax credits that were shifted above the line and reduced non-interest expense this quarter. We expect continued growth in our banking segment non-interest expenses.
As Chris mentioned, we have tremendous opportunity to add talent in both customer-facing and back-office roles, and we are continuing to build the infrastructure that will allow us to capitalize on these opportunities in front of us and achieve strong organic growth. Those opportunities have us planning to add approximately $2-$2.5 million in expense in each of the next two quarters. In addition to expected growth from the $61.8 million over the remainder of the year, we also expect our segment non-interest expense to be elevated in either the third or fourth quarter as we create enough taxable income to move the state tax credit back to the tax line. Once we hit that threshold, we would reverse the $1.4 million benefit we saw in non-interest expense this quarter.
As you would expect, that $1.4 million in movement of the tax credit was also the culprit for our higher tax rate this quarter. For the year, we expect our effective tax rate to be in the 22%-23% area. When the tax credit reverses out of non-interest expense and makes that line item higher, it will reduce our tax rate below normalized levels in the same quarter. Moving to mortgage, the environment continues to be exceptionally difficult as retail channel lock volume is down 18% in the second quarter compared to the first quarter, and is expected to be down an additional 20%-25% in the third quarter compared to the second quarter.
We have made structural changes to our remaining mortgage operations to account for lower volumes, but with a continued decline, we will need to make further changes to reposition ourselves. We do not expect a positive pre-tax contribution for mortgage in the second half of the year. Moving to our allowance for credit losses, we saw our ACL to loans decline by only four basis points this quarter after sizable releases previously. Economic forecasts for the second quarter did not move materially from those that we utilized in the first quarter. However, they did get more negative in the July release, and our optimism about our local economies is being tempered by uncertainty due to the inflation that we're experiencing and the general national narrative that we will soon enter into a recession if we're not already in one.
If conditions do not change, we would anticipate maintaining a similar level of ACL to loans held for investment over the near term. I'll close my section by speaking about our manufactured housing portfolio. For those that are unfamiliar with our manufactured housing portfolio, we acquired that business line with our Clayton Bank and Trust merger in 2017. If you recall, Clayton Bank and Trust was named for its owner, Jim Clayton, considered by many to be the father of manufactured housing and the founder of Clayton Homes, which was acquired by Berkshire Hathaway for $1.7 billion in 2003. That background to say, our manufactured housing team has a long history in the industry and learned the business from the best.
Today, our MH business has three revenue streams, and at quarter end, it had roughly $520 million in total loans, or 6% of the overall portfolio. The first line is our communities portfolio, which has $265 million of the $520 million in loans. The communities business is a strong portfolio of sophisticated operators who sometimes we refer to as multifamily investors, but with a horizontal apartment design. These are loans with significant cash equity positions, long-term seasoned operators who have been and continue to be the beneficiaries of an upward trend in affordable housing across the country. The second piece of our MH business is our portfolio of loans to the owners of the manufactured homes themselves, which we call our MH retail portfolio.
We have approximately $245 million in MH retail, or just less than 3% of our total loans. Typically, these are classified as chattel loans, and the majority of those balances sit in our consumer and other category. The average FICO for these portfolios is 663, and the average note size is about $50,000. Though the size of new origination has been increasing as manufactured homes have seen the same material cost increases as site-built homes. As you might expect, past dues and charge-offs are higher in this segment than the rest of our portfolio, with delinquencies ranging anywhere from 4%-8% in a given month. In a normal credit environment, we're accustomed to seeing annual charge-offs in the 50 basis point area. In bad markets, that can move to around 1%.
However, during the pandemic, we put a qualitative reserve of 5% on this portfolio, so we feel well protected. With yields in excess of 8%, this is a very profitable portfolio for us, and we're excited for it to grow. Our third revenue stream for MH is our servicing book, where we service the retail loans portfolios of some of our MH community customers. This is strictly a fee-based business, no balance sheet risk, no credit risk, just servicing portfolios. With that, I will turn the call back over to Chris.
All right. Thanks, Michael, for that color. We're pleased with our results for the quarter. Particularly proud of the team for the loan growth. That will conclude our prepared remarks. Operator, at this point, we'd like to take questions.
Ladies and gentlemen, at this time, we'll begin the question and answer session. To join the question queue, you may press star and then one using a touch-tone telephone. To withdraw your questions, you may press star and two. If you are using a speakerphone, we do recommend picking up your handset prior to pressing the numbers to ensure the best sound quality. Once again, that is star and then one to join the question queue. Our first question today comes from Matt Olney from Stephens. Please go ahead with your question.
Hey, good morning, guys.
Good morning, Matt.
Hey, Matt.
I wanna ask more about the construction portfolio. I think it's now around 18% of the loan mix, which would put the bank at the higher end of the range in terms of just the mix. I think you also said you passed on quite a few construction loans this quarter. So just trying to appreciate if you're trying to manage this down from this 18% or trying to prevent this from moving higher. And then I guess within that segment, would love to hear any commentary you have about which construction segment you're keeping an eye on in this environment. Thanks.
Yeah, Matt. Good morning, Chris. I'll go first. First on just managing the overall concentration. You know, we do look at the guideline or we certainly pay attention to the guideline of 100% of risk-based capital. Today, we're over that. We've been signaling that we would go over that because as you know, most of these construction loans you will make, and you might not have draws on them for quite some time. You're always trying to project where that balance is gonna be. You don't know exactly when the projects will complete either, and you'll get a certificate of occupancy, which is when they roll out of construction. It's a constant monitoring process.
We have been looking at that actually for several quarters. If you look at our availability of undistributed funds, our commitments that are not drawn on at this point, that's actually moved down for us each of the last couple of quarters. We've been monitoring what goes into that. Yeah, we monitor that. Just as a general. It's kind of difficult, and I alluded to that in my comments.
We're seeing good projects, but we just have to manage the concentration down, because we see given our geography and given the attractiveness of what's going on in the growth and the in-migration in our geography, we continue to see some good projects, but we're just managing that down to limit the concentration, is really what's happening there. You guys have comments on anything else? You did ask what are we particularly keeping an eye on. If there was anything that I've probably got the closest eye on, I'd say it's office just in the geography. I think it's still not quite known how the office segment handles COVID work. You know, we did just have an announcement.
There was a national announcement, but it was we were one of the markets that had an impact from the Amazon announcement where they said they were halting construction. I think it was on six buildings, six office buildings, where they were reconsidering the layout of the office buildings. One of those is here where they've just said, "Hey, we're continuing to bring on the people. We just wanna take a breath and look at how we're gonna reconfigure that for the new work from home, you know, work environment." That's one that we have been watching closely. I'd say the other is, you know, the others actually have been pretty good for us.
We've seen good projects and, yeah, pretty much all the segments. You guys, anything further there?
No.
Okay. Does that help?
Yeah. That's great, Chris. I appreciate that. Good color. I guess switching gears, also gonna ask more about deposit balances. I think you mentioned part of that, the deposit balance contraction in 2Q. There were some seasonal pressures there. I guess beyond seasonal pressures, we'd love to hear more about kind of what you're seeing with deposit balances. It sounds like we should anticipate additional public funds coming down again in the third quarter. I think you've mentioned that. Just would love to get your take on expectations for total deposit balances in the back half of the year, if those should contract incrementally or if you expect those to turn positive.
Yeah, sure. So on public funds, you know, there's been a lot of public funds out there, and it's been really cheap over the last couple of years as municipalities, as states, as all the government entities have just been flooded with money from our federal government. Those deposits have hit bank balance sheets. They've been cheap for banks, and so they basically have sat on the balance sheet. Sometimes, frankly, they had a loss by the time you collateralize it. We've let them sit on the balance sheet. You saw where our margin was last quarter compared to this quarter. Frankly, we knew that once rates moved up, that we weren't gonna be keeping a lot of those because we weren't interested, frankly, in keeping a lot of those.
We also had a couple of larger public funds relationships that came to us via acquisition that were not very profitable for us. Those were also ones that we said, you know, when the time was right, we would let those go. So we've been filtering through that. There's also the comment that I made in my prepared remarks about the composition of our deposit book being improved. That's where that comes from. We've still got a little bit of money sitting on the balance sheet. Say a little bit.
I mean, it's you know, it's close to $300 -$400 million that we think will probably exit, and again, it's as a result of rate. If you know, historically, if you look at our deposit amounts as we place almost no reliance on wholesale funds, and then when we do have public funds, then it's usually operating relationships that we've got at reasonable price, reasonably priced. Just some remix there is what it boils down to. Also, as noted, you know, it does come at a time that's pretty good for us in terms of where we are from a loan to deposit ratio, but you also heard me say, you know, you're gonna see slower loan growth.
Luckily for us, slower loan growth means 10% or 12%, you know. That'll allow us to sort of continue to remix and reprice on the deposit side.
Chris, that's helpful. I guess the other part of that would be just the overnight liquidity position has come down a little bit over the last few quarters. Would love to hear more commentary about how you expect to fund loan growth the back half of the year, whether it's deposit growth or excess liquidity, and then kinda longer term, where do you see that overnight liquidity position going? Thanks.
Hey, Matt, it's Michael. Morning. I mean, yes, we did see a large drop in excess liquidity due to the funding of the loan growth, $619 million, and then also the deposit runoff that Chris just mentioned. I think you'll see a little bit more pressure on liquidity. You know, Chris just mentioned some public funds rolling back out. But I would say that would normalize relative to the last couple of years. We've been running excess for a good two to three years here, and so kind of back to limits that we would have expected back in the 2019 range. You will see a focus on deposit generation. You know, Chris mentioned 10%-12% loan growth. We expect to fund via relationship deposits.
That's, you know, if you think about that, we talked about our deposit costs being relatively low, increase every quarter. I'd expect to see that accelerate. You know, our betas will be a bit higher, or possibly materially higher, you know, to kinda catch up. We've been very fortunate, as we said, it was our plan to let some of these deposits run down, keep our costs low, and take advantage of some of that excess liquidity. In the back half of the year, I think you'll see us move a bit more in line with interest rate increases to not only maintain our current deposits and to expand, but grow some as well.
Yeah. I'll add one thing to that, Matt, and that is that our traditional public funds that we have had on the balance sheet for a long time bottom out generally in the second quarter, and then they begin to build back in the third and fourth. We expect those to build back some over the third and fourth as well. We feel like when we go out with, not, I'm not talking about crazy above-market rates, but when we go out with pretty good deposit proposition, our customers and our relationship managers respond very well.
Okay, guys. Thanks for the commentary. Appreciate it.
Thanks, Matt.
Our next question comes from Brett Rabatin from Hovde Group. Please go ahead with your question.
Hey, guys. Good morning.
Good morning, Brett.
Wanted to first just talk about the loan growth, the $620 million, obviously extremely impressive. Wanted to hear any color you could give on how much of that was new versus existing clients, and then how much of that would have been fixed versus floating production.
Yeah, good questions. Strong majority of that would be existing clients. I'm not sure exactly the percentage that would be existing versus new, but a strong percentage of it would be existing relationships, a strong majority of that. Fixed versus variable is close to 50. It's right at 50/50. We're right at 50/50 in the loan portfolio and, what came on in the quarter was right at 50/50 also.
Okay. Just given, Chris Holmes, that a lot of that production was existing customers, you know, I'm curious to hear your thoughts on the, you know, perception or ability to possibly grow through a recession. There's been some talk about that, with some other larger banks about using a recession as an opportunity to gain market share, continue to grow through a recession. I think Michael mentioned, you know, are we in a recession or not? Assuming we are in a recession next year, you know, what happens to that high single digit, low double digit number? How would you change, if anything, how you're doing loan underwriting?
Yeah. If anything, we're changing on the loan underwriting, and already, I'd say it's actually already gotten a little more stringent in terms of. I don't want to send the wrong message there. It's not like we're batten down the hatches or anything like that. We're absolutely open for business, and we're continuing to do business, but we're certainly also paying attention to the economy. You ask a good question. I like your first question a lot. How much of that was the customers and how much of that was not?
You know, in times like this, you make sure that you can take care of your customers, and you can allow them to grow when they've got opportunities to grow. That's top of mind for us. Because of that makes you be a little more focused on that part of your business. We think we can continue to grow. Frankly, it's as much. I'm gonna go back to Matt's question. It's as much about growing the deposit side as it is the loan side at the same time. We gotta be able to grow both at the same time.
What we don't wanna do, and as I didn't say this expressly, but I talked about use of wholesale funds, and I talked about getting over-reliant on public funds. What we don't wanna do is become over-leveraged at a time when our economies are actually as you know as well as any of us, because you're right here, our economies are as good as any in the country. We can sometimes get blinded to the bigger picture nationally and internationally. We're keeping an eye on all that. But we don't, we're not feeling it from a business standpoint. Our customers are optimistic. Our credit continues to look really good, particularly our commercial book, you know, continues to look really good.
We're not feeling that. We're looking at balanced growth right now. We're looking at keeping strong levels of capital, which we have, and we're looking at making sure that we can continue to allow our customers to grow in this environment. Those are the things that we're focused on.
Yeah. Brett, loan growth through a recession or through the cycle, keep in mind that Chris mentioned we've added 32 revenue producers. We, you know, entered into central Alabama last year, so that team's taken off. Our North Alabama team is really starting to hit its stride. Then we have the Memphis team that came on board in the last year and a half, two years or so as well, has market share opportunity. The disruption that we talked about for bank, you know, acquisitions, mergers across our footprint provides us opportunity to kind of grow through a recession as well, if one comes.
Okay. That's helpful. One last one, if I could. You know, the only thing I've been able to get, you know, kind of geography-wise in the footprint is, you know, maybe in the Carolinas, some folks that have, I guess it's adjacent to some markets you're in, you know, some lower end manufacturing, branch or manufacturing customers, you know, orders really taking a beating here recently, or a drop off in orders. Is there been anything that you guys have seen, in any of the markets that suggest a slowdown at this point?
Brett, I think what we're kind of concentrating, we haven't seen it abroad across kind of commercial or small business, but we are worried about the consumer. Ours are, you know, healthy if we look at checking account balances prior to pandemic to today, still elevated in a strong way. So see that. But, you know, we do have, we mentioned M&A, we mentioned mortgage. You know, you see people coming off forbearance, same in the stimulus checks. Just keeping a close eye on those consumers and how their spending habits are and, you know, what they're doing on their loan payments and delinquencies. That would be where I think a lot of our kind of concern would lie, but we haven't seen broad economic slowdown.
Like Chris mentioned, really positive from most of our commercial and small business clients.
Yeah. I agree with all of that in terms of what we see on our portfolio. I will say this in talking to customers, you know, we have heard and seen in some of our markets. We're now actually seeing for sale signs.
Residential market for sale signs. Frankly, they were selling so fast, they didn't they never even got the signs in the yard. You're now seeing a few more for sale signs. I don't take that as a sign of distress. I think it, I take it as a sign of normalcy. We have heard from some particularly high-end builders that they have seen the market slow, that they have seen it again return to more of a sense of normalcy. But we've heard from some high-end builders that they've seen the market slow.
Okay. Great. Appreciate all the color. Sure.
Our next question comes from Jennifer Demba from Truist Securities. Please go ahead with your question.
Thank you. Good morning. Just curious about provision, and what your outlook is, over the next couple of quarters. I know credit quality has stayed really healthy, but, do you have any thoughts, about reserve build or going forward?
Yeah, sure. Hey, Jennifer. Good morning. It's Michael. Yeah. So for the ACL for this quarter and kinda looking out, you know, I kinda mentioned that or I did mention we're kind of expecting as loan growth continues, that the ACL to held investment will stay pretty steady. Given our current outlooks, I wouldn't expect, you know, releases. Now, the economy and outlook moves pretty quickly or has moved pretty quickly. So over the kinda second quarter versus first quarter on the quantitative side, we didn't see a huge change in our Moody's scenarios. We did see kind of a slowing GDP growth. We kept the same scenarios in the model. But due to loan growth, we saw an increase. You know, on the qualitative side, we made a couple of adjustments.
We removed our troubled industry from COVID that kinda reduced that number, but we had a bit of a kind of stagflation outlook, which was rolled into the quantitative portion. You know, what we're thinking, and it's you see it in the deck, slower GDP growth kinda picks back up in the out years, 2023, 2024, and some elevated unemployment in 2023, but CRE stays pretty stable. I would expect that that'll be pretty consistent as we look forward the next couple quarters.
I don't think that we anticipate our ACL percentage moving as a lot. I think we'd see provisioning as we see loan growth, I think Michael, and the rest of the team sitting around the table are better on the inputs of CECL than I am. I think that's probably gonna be you know, we follow the model. I'm nervous about releases right now and frankly think that at least until we can see through what has been described as the hurricane potentially on the horizon. Now, that may have been an old description, but until we can see through that, we're gonna be cautious, at least how we do things on the qualitative side.
With less loan growth in the second half than you experienced in the second quarter, it follows that you probably see a lesser amount of provisioning than you did in the second quarter, in the third and fourth quarter, assuming the outlook on the economic side doesn't change materially.
Yes, I think that's fair, Jennifer. I think you're right on.
Okay. Second question is regarding the mortgage operation. You said you're not expecting profitability in the second half of the year. Can you just talk about the overall strategy? I know you guys are still making changes on the retail side. Can you just talk about the strategy with mortgage over the long term and when you think it could return to profitability?
Mortgage, retail mortgage in particular, we feel is very important to the kinda core strength of a community bank being well-rounded. You know, we're interested in continuing to grow the business within our branch footprint and maybe right around the outsides of that, as we've traditionally done. We've had a little bit broader mortgage footprint than the bank footprint, and very likely that there's a lot of revenue producers that are available, you know, coming through the next six to 12 months as we see, you know, some consolidation or wind down of some other mortgage companies. We'll be very opportunistic in picking up loan officers that they can generate revenue. You know, at the same time, we realize that we need to create scale.
We've been working through that either via technology. Chris mentioned innovations, but just overall process overhaul. You know, there's a lot of headwinds in the mortgage industry right now. We're not immune to those. Higher rates. Chris mentioned home prices broadly normalizing. It's a good thing, but affordability is still significantly higher than where it was or significantly more challenging than where it was this time last year. We don't have a direct return to profitability number, but we do see further declines the rest of this year. Would expect first quarter next year to be challenging as well as from a seasonality perspective and have the ship righted and back on our feet.
It's important when you have revenues that fall as rapidly as they have in mortgage. If you look at the projections on mortgage originations, you know, expect to be less next year than they were this year, you know, that requires some, you know, reevaluation, really. I think Mike, we used the term structurally. We've already obviously done that with the wind down of our direct-to-consumer, where we got out of the business. Same, we've got to really make sure that on the retail side structurally that it is where it's, it returns to contribution in any market environment. A little bit more adjustment to go there in the third quarter.
Thanks so much.
All right.
Our next question comes from Kevin Fitzsimmons from DA Davidson. Please go ahead with your question.
Hey, good morning, everyone.
Morning, Kevin.
Just a few remaining questions. Most have been asked and answered already. The very strong loan growth this quarter, was it one of the sources for that, a relative absence of payoffs? We heard from another bank that there were virtually zero payoffs this quarter, but they expected those to resume in the second half, and that was part of the reason for their strong loan growth moderating likely in the back half. Just wondering if that applies to you as well.
Yeah. Actually, yeah, good observation. We probably should have pointed that out. We did expect a couple of payoffs to hit right at the end of the quarter. They did not, and so they went into the next quarter. That would have moved the number down a little bit. It's still been an extraordinary quarter no matter how you stack it, but we did expect a couple payoffs. We will see those in the second quarter. There was just an absence of payoffs, frankly, in the quarter, even compared to the first quarter, which we also had, you know, we had 21% loan growth in the first quarter, but we had pretty normal payoff activity. We just didn't have it in the second quarter.
Don't frankly know why that is, but good observation and interesting to me. I didn't know another bank said that same thing, but we did see that.
Okay. That's great. That's good to know. I just wanted to clarify that when you were discussing the margin, and where that stands, I just wanna make sure I heard it right, that I think you said about 3.70% for the month of June. Is that a good starting point, and then if we have another Fed rate hike? I definitely got the message also that the ability to lag on deposit pricing has probably gone much quicker than maybe we might have been thinking. That ability is probably gonna be less, given what we've seen on deposit levels.
That's right, Kevin. Yeah. 3.70% is kind of where we were in June, and so definitely a good starting point. That excludes that excess liquidity number I spoke to from flat 5%. Certainly expect margin to continue to expand, just not at the velocity that it has because of deposit pricing pressure. I think you said that well.
Okay, great. One last one from me is I definitely get we're at an interesting point where you aren't seeing any flashing red signals in terms of credit problems or warning signs, but you're cognizant of the national trends and expectations out there. Have you seen any changes from bank examiners or regulators in terms of things they're looking a lot closer at, whether it be certain capital levels, certain liquidity levels, certain kinds of lending they're digging into or concentrations, that's different than, say, a few quarters ago?
From a regulatory standpoint, I don't know that I've seen anything different. I'll say this, being over the $10 billion threshold, we've seen a lot of things that are different with regulators. Trying to segment those from above the $10 billion threshold into things maybe caused by the environment, I can't say that I have. Yeah, I really can't say that I have. You know, liquidity has not been an issue. I would think other than, of course, your normal regulatory rigor there, and the same on the loan portfolio.
Other than your normal regulatory rigor, I haven't seen any significant change. I will say we put our portfolio through a lot of rigor to try to see things before they happen. The portfolio is holding up really well. I'd say we have been watching closely, as Michael alluded about these areas on our just regular mortgage portfolio, particularly on our higher LTV products. We're watching, as Michael described, we've got about $245 million in manufactured housing with our made-on units. Those, you know, if you go back over the last two years, on the credit side, the fact of the matter is it's been hard. There's been so much money pumped into people's pockets.
It's been pretty hard to default over the last two years. We're now watching. You know, your past dues are artificially low. Your non-accruals are artificially low, particularly in this, you know, we don't have a big consumer segment, but all of those things are artificially low. They, you know, as they begin to move up some, which we expect, because like I said, we've got a 14-year history with the MH consumer portfolio. We watch to see how it compares to over that 14-year history. You know, we saw some past dues tick up in June, but so far it's staying within our historical bounds.
Those are the things that we're really watching for as we're watching what happens to the economy over the next months and quarters.
Okay, thanks, Chris.
All right. Thanks, Kevin.
Our next question comes from Catherine Mealor from KBW. Please go ahead with your question.
Thanks. Good morning. I just wanted to dig into the 3.70% June margin that you talked about and maybe look at it in two components, one on loan yields, maybe where you've seen loan yields move through the quarter. And then also on the deposit side, you know, where you maybe saw those for the month of June. As we think about you increasing your deposit growth in the back half of the year, what categories do you think are gonna be growing the most, interest-bearing demand or CDs? Like, where do you think we'll see most of that deposit growth come from balances? Thanks.
Hey, Catherine, it's Michael. Good morning.
Good morning.
Yes. Contractual yields, if I think about kind of April to June, we saw about a 27-28 basis point increase from around a 4.12 to 4.39 number, where we ended June. Saw some pretty decent growth there versus deposits. Total deposits, total cost of interest bearing liabilities, went from 19-30 on total deposits, so about 11 basis point increase. If you look at interest bearing, it moved up 15 from 41-26. Partially offset by that NIB growth brought down, the total cost of deposits, kind of helped balance that out. Does that make sense?
Yes.
I said a lot of different numbers right there.
No, no, those are. You said the interest-bearing deposit went from to 41, you said?
41 in June from 26 in April.
Got it. Okay, perfect.
And then-
Perfect.
If I think about where we would likely see growth?
Yeah, I would say it's gonna be in the money market, yes, out of the house. It's gonna be in money market. It will be in time also. You know, at this point, we've seen actually a little more increase in time than we have money market. So I think we'll see money market increase over the next two quarters. I think the next biggest part will come in time. Our interest-bearing demand is not one that we typically see move up a lot. We think it'll come in those two buckets.
Great. Money market looks like it hasn't moved at all, still at 20 basis points. Where do you think that moves to, just given-
Golly, man, I don't know, Catherine. I was hoping you'd tell us. You know, we've seen things. By the way, we're seeing some aggression a little bit, maybe a little bit on stated rates, but we're seeing some real aggression on large balances, large balance customers from some of our key competitors, where they're going out at, you know, 1% on money markets to keep the balances. If you go back to last quarter, just about all the banks and particularly those headquartered in Middle Tennessee, but the other parts of our geography are strong too. They all had 20% plus loan growth.
I think we're the first to report from these banks right in this general geography. I think you're gonna see really strong. We're not gonna be the only one that has really strong loan growth, I can assure you. I think that the battle's probably gonna be the toughest in the money market segment. I think it'll go. I don't know where it'll go during the quarter, but we're already seeing 75 and 80 basis points pretty regularly out there, approaches to some of our customers. I think it'll go up from there.
Yeah. Just to capture a little color there that in June, money market's 27 basis points. I've seen that start to inch higher, but as Chris mentioned, we think that that'll start to move materially more in the second half.
Sounds. All right, great. Thank you so much.
Sure.
Once again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star and then one. To withdraw your questions, you may press star and two. Our next question comes from Stephen Scouten from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead with your question.
Hey, good morning, everyone.
Good morning, Stephen.
I guess my first question, I just wanted to clarify a couple of things. One, the 5% qualitative reserve on the manufactured housing you mentioned at the start of COVID, that's still in place, still in existence?
Yes, it is.
Perfect. Just looking at some of the line items within expenses, it looks like there was a little bit of a jump in professional fees, and then advertising expense was down a good bit. I'm wondering what was driving that. If some of the advertising was mortgage lead generation costs or something with the shutdown of consumer direct or what the drivers of those movements were.
Yeah. A couple things there. First, just to clarify, when we set 5% reserve on MH, Michael talked about how that portfolio is really three revenue lines, but two of them are on the balance sheet, one of them is just a servicing line. The two from the balance sheet are MH community portfolio, which is roughly $265 -$270 million, about. The second part of that is the MH retail portfolio. Communities being loans, commercial loans on manufactured home communities, just commercial loans. The MH retail is actually loans against the manufactured home units. Again, that's about $245 million.
That's the one that has the 5% reserve that we include in our ACL calculations. On the expense side, Michael knows more than I do, but I do know just a couple things. On the professional fees, part of that comes from, as we have continued to ramp up different things that we're doing. We've outsourced some things to a couple of our partners, particularly, EY has done some things for us on the accounting and audit side, and particularly the internal audit side. They've been a helpful partner, but and they're really good, but they know it. There's been some expense related to that.
The other that I know of that I'll comment on is on advertising, and you are exactly right. With advertising, that was a heavy expense in the direct to consumer, because you're paying for leads in that business. Since we're out of business, we're no longer paying for those leads, and that led to a significant drop in advertising expense for that. Michael, any others there?
Well, I would just say part of that advertising kind of marketing line item is expected to increase in the second half of the year, as well. Obviously, we'll make up the $2 million difference quarter-over-quarter, but that's, Stephen, that was part of the $2-$2.5 million a quarter I was kind of that I pointed to in the expense growth.
Got it. Maybe drilling back into loan growth a little bit more. I know you answered Kevin's question about kind of slower pay downs, but I'm wondering if you could kind of frame that up in terms of what you've seen production-wise, like maybe first quarter to second quarter, if that was relatively flat or if that was also a big increase. Kind of note some of the movements in the unfunded loan book, how much of the growth may have been from the unfunded book funding and where that is as a total balance today.
I will say, we did see a move up in some of our fundings, again, particularly on construction. We saw some move up there in terms of the funding. I will say this, also on the production. Geographically for us, it continues to be really well dispersed. I'd like to say that we're just great at coordinating that. It just continues to work out. This quarter, you know, we had great growth out of our new Central Alabama team. They really contributed. You know, Nashville, sorry, Memphis actually was also a really nice contributor for us.
team there continues to grow in terms of people, but also continues to grow in terms of production. Our team in Northern Alabama, where we're in Florence and Huntsville, again having good results. Those were probably our strongest growth areas, and they accounted for about a third of our growth coming out of those areas right there. Which are all smaller for us in terms of balances and in terms of presence, in terms of branch presence and just number of people. They really accounted for a lot.
Got it. How big is that total unfunded book today? I would kind of imagine a lot of that growth maybe was from the legacy Franklin kind of resi construction home builder type construction. I'm just kind of curious what the breakdown there, resi versus maybe more tertiary commercial.
The total unfunded for us is about $1.5 billion in terms of totals. Let's see, about 50% of that, it's really close. About half of that is residential and about half of that is commercial.
Okay.
You're correct also in that especially on the resi side, a lot of that comes in, I'll call it Nashville and suburban Nashville, particularly strong in Williamson County and Rutherford County, which brings us quite a bit of comfort. Those are the two fastest growing counties in our entire geography.
Yeah, without a doubt. Okay, that's great. Maybe just the last thing for me. I appreciate all the color on deposits and where we could see increases there. The deposit beta this quarter looks like maybe it was only about 10% on the interest-bearing deposits given the rate moves. It looked like the cumulative loan beta was maybe only about 20% as well. I'm just kind of curious how you're thinking loan beta is moving forward. I know, Michael, you gave some color kind of throughout the quarter, and if I do that math, it looked like maybe 67% on the variable rate production, if I break that out.
I guess I'm just kind of wondering how we can think about a loan beta on the whole, you know, 50/56 floating kind of split, what you're seeing on fixed rate loan spreads.
Yeah. Stephen, that's a great question. You know, one of the things that we've experienced the first half of the year is there was a lag in competitive move up in loan pricing. Chris mentioned in his part of the discussion we expect to see kind of higher prices on new production going forward. The fixed rate part of our portfolios and new production was relatively flat in the quarter. I think you start to see as the market is now adjusting to higher rates, some of the commitments that were made 30, 60 days ago, you know, have been baked. The newer commitments are certainly coming out of that at higher rates. Competitive pressures again are still out there.
you know, you're not getting 100% beta by any means. We are seeing a little bit more, 50 and up kind of betas out is what I would expect on that going forward.
Okay. Super. That's very helpful. Thanks for all the color guys, and congrats on a great quarter.
Thank you, Stephen.
Ladies and gentlemen, with that, we'll be ending today's question-and- answer session. I'd like to turn the floor back over to Chris Holmes for any closing comments.
All right. As always, we appreciate your interest. We appreciate the questions. We appreciate your support. For other things, we certainly are available for telephone calls if people have further questions. Okay. Everybody have a great rest of your day. Thanks.
Ladies and gentlemen, with that, we'll end today's conference call and presentation. We do thank you for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.