Thank you for standing by, welcome to the Great Southern Bancorp's Fourth Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in listen only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you'll need to press star one one on your telephone. As a reminder, today's program is being recorded. Now I'd like to introduce your host for today's program, Kelly Polonus, investor relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you Jonathan. Good afternoon and welcome. The purpose of this call is to discuss the company's results for the quarter ending December 31st, 2022. Before we begin today, I need to remind you that during this call, we may make forward-looking statements about future events and financial performance. Please do not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements which speak only as of the date they are made. Please use our forward-looking statements disclosure in our fourth quarter 2022 earnings release for more information. President and CEO, Joe Turner, and Chief Financial Officer, Rex Copeland, are on the call with me today. I'll now turn the call over to Joe.
All right. Thanks Kelly. Good afternoon to everybody. We appreciate you joining us today for our earnings call. Our fourth quarter results reflected another strong quarter for Great Southern. We benefited, of course, from rising market interest rates, and our 2022 net income and earnings per share were exceptional. On a macro basis, 2023 appears to be a year that will be marked by a great deal of uncertainty. We're focused on ensuring that our company is positioned for this uncertainty as we move forward in light of the changing interest rate environment and other macro headwinds that are forecasted for 2023. As usual, I'll provide some brief remarks about the company's performance and then turn the call over to Rex Copeland, who will get into more detail on our financial results. Of course, we'll open it up for questions.
In the fourth quarter of 2022, we earned $22.6 million or $1.84 per diluted common share, compared to $15.3 million or $1.14 per diluted common share in the same period in 2021. The 2021 period did include some large non-interest expense items, which reduced our net income and EPS. We had a few significant income and expense items during the fourth quarter of 2022 as well. First of all, legal and professional fees. We told you that, you know, for the remainder of 2022 and then probably the first three quarters of 2023, we would be having, you know, between $1.1 million-$1.3 million of quarterly expense related to pro-professional services, you know, for helping us with our conversion.
We did have actually a little more than that, $1.4 million of those expenses during the quarter. We had an investment sale loss of $168,000 during the quarter, and we had an income tax adjustment, which reduced income tax expense by $1.1 million. Although we expect going forward, our income tax expense or our income tax rate will be more similar to, you know, what it's been in previous quarters. Our earnings ratios were all strong. Our return on assets was 1.58, our return on equity was 17.34. Our net interest margin was 3.99. That improved from 3.37 in the year ago quarter and 3.96 in the third quarter of 2022.
It does look like, you know, at least a couple more times in 2023, the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates. That may help us slightly, although, you know, I think this late in the rate-rising cycle, I think, you know, any benefit from rising interest rates is gonna be pretty muted. As far as loans go, from the end of 2021, our loans grew, you know, almost $500 million, 12.5%. The growth slowed in the fourth quarter to about $10 million. Our pipeline of loan commitments was basically flat from the end of the third quarter to the end of the fourth quarter, but was up significantly, you know, from the beginning of the year. Good lending volume, although, you know, probably slowing loan volume in the fourth quarter.
Our credit quality metrics remain extremely strong. You know, very low levels of non-performing assets, $3.7 million at the end of the year. Loan delinquencies are very low. Our capital did tick up a little bit in the fourth quarter. Our TCE ratio went from 8.8%-9.2%. We paid a $0.40 dividend in the quarter, total dividends during the year of $1.56. In addition, in our efforts to enhance shareholder value, we did repurchase about 1.04 million shares of our stock during 2022 at an average price of $59.25. I think our repurchase activity did slow down in the fourth quarter, maybe about 50,000 shares repurchased. That concludes my prepared remarks. I'll turn the call over to Rex at this time.
Thank you Joe. I'll talk first a little bit about net interest income and margin. Joe mentioned some of the highlights there. I'll just give a little bit more detail. Our net interest income for the fourth quarter of 2022 increased about $10.4 million or 23.5%.
Compared to the previous year quarter, it was $54.6 million in fourth quarter 2022 versus $44.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2021. Net interest income for the third quarter of 2022 was $52.9 million, so we increased a bit from that as well. As Joe mentioned, you know, increasing market interest rates and some loan growth throughout 2022 and some investment balances growing as well contributed to the higher level of net interest income in 2022. The net interest margin 3.99%, as we said earlier, compared favorably to a year ago at 3.37%. Third quarter it was 3.96%.
You know, the average yield on loans increased about 98 basis points when you look at Q4 2022 versus Q4 2021. The rate on our interest-bearing deposits, the average rate on that increased about 89 basis points in that same time frame, so, looking back to the year ago quarter. You know, margin expansion was really kind of based on the increasing market rates and also changes in the asset mix, where we had more cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the year and changed those over into loans and investments throughout the year. As we've stated before, and as you've, you know, seen through the numbers, generally a rising interest rate environment, particularly in the short-term rates, should have a positive impact on net interest income as those, our floating rate loans reprice upward.
We anticipate this would still be the case if the Federal Reserve raises rates further. Like Joe mentioned, you know, we think that perhaps, you know, we've obviously seen significant interest rate increases throughout 2022, and the expectation at this point at least, is that we may have some more rate hikes, but not generally nearly to the magnitude that we saw in 2022. We think that, you know, there may be some benefits there, but we also will have some time deposits that are going to mature and will reprice higher that may offset some of that as we move throughout the H1 of 2023 and then, and beyond. As I mentioned, you know, 2022, the assets shifted away from cash equivalents to loans.
You know, in the latter half of 2022, we also saw some changes somewhat in our deposit mix, with non-time account balances trending lower and time deposit balances trending higher. You know, the increased time deposits are generally a mix of shorter term retail within, you know, 12 months maturities and less, some fixed rate broker deposits, which are maybe a little longer a little more intermediate term. They have some callable features, and then some variable rate broker deposits as well. From time to time, we also utilize, generally overnight Home Loan Bank, borrowings.
Just, you know, kind of to say, you know, 2022, you know, again, supported by rising rates, loan growth, and as we've said, you know, 2023, we expect that our net interest income will remain solid. Assuming no rate cuts, but we also, you know, think that it may not grow tremendously, even if the Fed raises by another, you know, 50 or 75 basis points. We do have some deposits that'll start to reprice as we get into 2023 here. We also, just a reminder, we do have a couple of interest rate swaps that we're forward starting that are not impacting anything right now, but will impact our numbers beginning, I believe in May of 2023.
If, based on where rates are today, we would be in the position where we would be making a net settlement payments to the counterparty, that would reduce our net interest income a bit on that. You know, those will change obviously as interest rates change, but they're tied to prime and SOFR rates. Based on where they are today, we would have a payment that we would owe on that. I'll move on to non-interest income. For the quarter, non-interest income was down about $1.5 million compared to the year ago quarter. Really the majority, almost all of that could be attributed to the reduced amount of gain on the sale of our mortgage loans.
Obviously 2020 and 2021, we had big years of mortgage origination of fixed rate loans, which you typically sell in the secondary market. 2022, obviously, once rates started moving higher after the first quarter, that slowed down quite a bit. Refinancing slowed down to not very much at all. Purchase was still, you know, going on, but to probably a lesser extent than what we were seeing in the previous couple of years. Those are some things that impacted the fourth quarter this year versus fourth quarter last year, and really that's impacted the entire year of 2022 for the most part.
One other thing I'll mention on non-interest income that hasn't been real material at this point, and we're not sure it's gonna be a big thing, seems like it's a little bit of a headwind, but fairly minor, relates to our point-of-sale income. There's some changes. We started seeing this in the latter half of 2022, seeing some of this change happening. There's some changes in the network settlement routing process, due to some expiring agreements that we had. So there's different places now that merchants can route their transactions, and some of those, you know, may provide a little smaller amount of fee revenue to us on those.
Also we noticed in the last half of the year of 2022 as well, that just a slight decline in overall debit card usage with our customer base. We're looking to see if that's gonna continue. We feel like perhaps some of the debit card usage that we were seeing has shifted over to credit card usage with our customers, we're monitoring that as well. Non-interest expense for the quarter, our non-interest expense decreased about $1.4 million compared to the prior year quarter. As Joe mentioned, though, we had the biggest decrease was $2.7 million net decrease from a year ago in the legal audit and professional fees.
We had about $4.1 million of kinda one-time fees related to our conversion activities in the fourth quarter last year. We had $1.4 million of related to the conversion, but not the same type of activity, but related to that again this year. We did see a decline in the expense for that. We did see an increase in salary and employee benefits of about $1.4 million from the prior year, same quarter. Some of that's related just to normal merit increases. A lot of folks are in our company are, you know, they do their merit increases at the beginning of the year, and there's others that are throughout the year.
Some of those because of the job market particularly and that kind of thing, some of those increases were maybe a little bit larger in 2022 than they have been in some previous years. We did add during the year, the Phoenix and Charlotte loan production offices, and that added some expense to 2022's numbers that were not in 2021. The Efficiency Ratio for the fourth quarter was 55.13% compared to 66.98% for the same quarter a year ago. Remember there was that extra expense in there a year ago, if you exclude that, the Efficiency Ratio would've been just a little over 57% in the fourth quarter of 2021.
You know, just to kind of conclude on non-interest expense as we saw in 2022, while we remain in an environment with higher inflation than we've seen in quite some time, the salaries and benefit costs may continue to increase a bit, due to the tight labor market. We've also got changes happening in various state, minimum wage laws where we operate. Again, annual merit increases a lot of which happen at the beginning of the year. As we especially move forward throughout 2023 with this core system conversion, we need to make sure that we retain, you know, our seasoned people, to provide assistance in a lot of these roles. Talk a little bit about Provision for Credit Losses.
You know, we continue to have some loan growth, and we recorded a provision expense. The net was about $0.8 million in the fourth quarter. $1 million of that was an expense related to our outstanding portfolio, and about $159,000 was a net reduction in provision expense related to the unfunded loan commitments. Then we had a negative provision of $1.7 million in the fourth quarter last year, $3 million negative provision on outstanding loan portfolio, and a $1.3 million provision expense related to unfunded in that fourth quarter of 2021. Net charge-offs were $281,000 in the fourth quarter 2022, compared to recoveries of $125,000 in the fourth quarter of 2021.
For the full year, I think our net charge-offs were around $274,000 or something like that. Again, pretty low charge-off year. While we do, you know, have pretty low levels of problem assets and delinquencies, we are, you know, mindful of higher market interest rates and the uncertain economy as we do begin to go into 2023 here. Last thing I want to touch on is income taxes. For the three months ended December 31, 2022, our effective tax rate was 16.6%. In the fourth quarter last year, it was 21.1%.
You know, our effective tax rate is typically, you know, lower or at or below the federal statutory rate of 21%, due to some tax credits that we have, some tax-exempt interest that we have and other things that produce that. Our tax expense and liability is also affected by the liabilities we have in various states where we operate and driven by the level of income or specific tax rates in those states. Those do tend to bump our overall tax rate up a little bit. Joe mentioned earlier, we've had a bit of an unusual adjustment in the fourth quarter of 2022.
When we finished up our Federal and various state income tax returns for the 2021 tax year in the fourth quarter of 2022, the company updated its combined tax rate applied to deferred tax items. We also made some adjustments in our taxes receivable payable balances related to some carryback claims that were, you know, put into place and filed in 2022. Those adjustments made a final reduction. We reduced our tax expense for $1.1 million in the fourth quarter. As Joe said, you know, that's not something to expect all the time. We think our effective tax rate's probably gonna be somewhere around that 21% level, give or take a little bit on either side.
Overall, we think that going forward, 21% somewhere in that ballpark would be a good number to think about. That concludes the prepared remarks that we have, I think, today. At this time, we'll turn it over for questions and ask our operator to once again remind the attendees how to queue in for questions.
Certainly. As a reminder, if you do have a question at this time, please press star one one on your telephone. One moment for our first question. Our first question comes from the line of Andrew Liesch from Piper Sandler. Your question please.
Hey everyone. Good afternoon. Question here on the margin. It sounds like there's certainly some upward pressure on funding costs. Do you think the margin is topped out here at 3.99%, or you think there might be a little more opportunities for expansion before the interest rate swaps kick in?
I'd say it's pretty close to topped out, if you want to guess. I mean, you know, obviously when the swaps kick in, you know, as Rex mentioned, that'll take it a tick down. No, I think it's kind of topped out.
Gotcha. Just my back of the envelope numbers, maybe I'm off here, but please correct me otherwise. I'm coming up with maybe 12 basis points of reduction to the margin on these swaps, or am I calculating this wrong?
I think, is it about, is it about $600,000 a month?
Yeah, something like that.
That'd be $7.2 million, and our margin was $220 million. That sounds. Oh, you're saying 12 base. That probably is about right.
Okay.
Our interest-bearing assets are how much, Rex?
Uh.
Five point.
In the fourth quarter, they were $5.4 million.
Yeah. $7 million would be about a little over 12 basis points, something like that. Yeah.
Gotcha. All right, thank you. Joe, just on your comment in the release about net interest income, plateauing or possibly declining, that sounds like the fourth quarter run rate. Is that correct? Not the full year 2022 number.
Right. Right. Yeah. Right.
Yeah.
Yeah. In the H1 of 2022, obviously our net interest income was lower than it was in the H2 because rates, you know, didn't rise immediately in the year, and so we got a lot more benefit in the third and fourth quarters last year. That's what we're talking about compared to fourth quarter.
Gotcha. All right. That covers my questions. Thanks so much. I'll step back.
All right. Thank you Andrew.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Damon DelMonte from KBW. Your question, please.
Hey, good afternoon guys. Hope you're both doing well today. Just quick question on loan growth. Can you just give a little perspective on kind of how you're feeling about your pipelines in the early part of this year and kind of what your expectations might be in the coming quarters for, like, net growth?
I mean, I think, Damon, the thing to, sort of the first part of our loan growth comes from our unfunded construction commitments, which I think were, like, $1.44 billion or something at the end of the year. That's substantially higher than they were at the end of the year. That's gonna continue to fund, and that's gonna be some loan growth. I will tell you, loan origination has definitely slowed down. I think what the Fed has done, at least as far as commercial real estate goes, there's not nearly as much activity as there was.
That's probably a little bit more of an issue, for, you know, I mean, I think what we could see is we could see the unfunded commitment line drop, you know, because we're not booking new construction loans and adding to that unfunded commitment line. We are gonna be funding loans, you know, off the commitment line. Well, again, we don't forecast. I mean, you guys have to sort of come up with your own numbers. You know, I would say this, it's not gonna be a loan growth year like we had in 2022.
Got it. Okay. Okay.
The other thing that you gotta factor in, I mean, I do think payoffs have slowed too. You know projects are staying with us longer, which is a positive thing.
Got it. Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. With respect to, you know, credit in kind of trying to figure out the provision here, you know, obviously very strong underlying credit trends, you know, minimal net charge-offs. You had a couple quarters in the middle of 2022 where, you know, you had like $2.2 million and $3.3 million for 2Q and 3Q, it kind of tailed off here in the fourth quarter. How do we kind of think about like where the reserve level is today at 139 and how are you viewing kind of the more macro picture and maybe the need to build reserves, or do you feel like you're comfortable at this level?
Well, I mean, I think we're comfortable at this level. You know, if the economy were to, you know, take a turn, we would have to address that. You know, based on what we're seeing right now, you know, we're comfortable.
I think the provision.
Okay.
The provisioning that you saw, last in 2022, early on, like the second and third quarter type time frames, was a lot of based on loan growth.
That was going on, we were adding to our reserves at that point. Now we're like Joe said, we didn't grow as much our outstanding balances in the fourth quarter. We're looking at economic factors now as we kind of move forward into 2023 to see, if it, you know, starts to look like recession, and if so, how bad and how that might impact.
Got it. Okay. Then just to circle back on the margin and the impact of the swaps, could you just repeat when do those, I know you said they were forward swaps, but when do they kick in? In May or June?
I believe May of 2023, I believe, is the first month that we would have a settlement on those.
Okay. If those were to happen, like, today, right? The margin would get hit by 12 basis points based on the math that was being thrown around.
Yeah, I think that's pretty close. I think When we calculated it then a few weeks ago, I think it was about $600,000 a month, wasn't it?
Mm-hmm. Somewhere in that ballpark.
Okay. What's the duration of those swaps?
Out to 2028.
Okay. That's all that I had. Thank you.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of John Rodis from Janney. Your question please.
Hey, guys. Good afternoon.
Hi, John.
Okay. hope you're doing well. Just, Joe, maybe just one quick question on the buyback. You guys were obviously, you know, fairly active, in 2022. You announced, you know, a new plan, but you did slow the pace in the fourth quarter. How should we sort of think about buyback activity for 2023?
You know, it sort of depends on the price. You know, we obviously, I mean, we bought stock at a higher price than where we're trading right now, so we kinda like it. You know, we think it makes sense. I don't think we'll probably be, you know, maybe quite as aggressive, but certainly still think it makes sense.
Okay. Not as aggressive, but you still think you'll probably be somewhat active?
Not as aggressive as we were in the, you know, during the full year of 2022. We definitely still think buyback makes sense, and we feel like we're, you know, well capitalized and, you know, plenty able to handle it.
Yeah. I mean, is it.
Also depends a little bit on where, which what kind of turn the economy takes obviously too. We gotta factor that in too.
Yeah.
as we look at it.
Just as far as, you know, capital management, Joe, any Rex, you know, any other, you know, other than the dividend, any other thoughts on, you know, redeploying your capital and so forth?
No, not really. I mean, it would be dividend or stock buyback.
Okay. I guess where I'm going is just M&A or anything like that, your thoughts today?
No. Nothing, nothing really on the horizon.
Okay. Okay. Thank you.
Thank you.
All right. Thanks, John.
This does conclude the question and answer session of today's program. I'd like to hand the program back to Joe Turner for any further remarks.
All right. Well, we appreciate everybody being on the call, and we'll look forward to talking to you in April. Have a good day. Thank you.
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Good day.