Hanmi Financial Corporation (HAFC)
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Earnings Call: Q4 2021

Jan 25, 2022

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Hanmi Financial Corporation's fourth quarter 2021 conference call. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded for replay purposes. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. I would now like to turn the call over to Moira Conlon, Investor Relations for Hanmi Financial. Please go ahead.

Moira Conlon
Founder and CEO, Financial Profiles

Thank you, Kyle, and thank you all for joining us today to discuss Hanmi Financial's fourth quarter and full year 2021 results. This afternoon, Hanmi issued its earnings release and quarterly supplemental slide presentation to accompany today's call. Both documents are available in the IR section of the company's website at hanmi.com. I'm here today with Bonnie Lee, President and Chief Executive Officer of Hanmi Financial Corporation, Anthony Kim, Chief Banking Officer, and Ron Santarosa, Chief Financial Officer. Bonnie Lee will begin today's call with an overview of Hanmi's 2021 accomplishments. Anthony Kim will discuss loan and deposit activities. Ron Santarosa will provide details on our financial performance, and then Bonnie Lee will provide closing comments before we open the call up to your questions. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that today's comments may include forward-looking statements under the federal securities laws.

Forward-looking statements are based on current plans, expectations, events, and financial industry trends that may affect the Company's future operating results and financial performance. Our actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by our forward-looking statements, which involve risks and uncertainties. Discussion of the factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements can be found in our SEC filings, including our reports on Forms 10-K and 10-Q. In particular, we direct you to the discussion of certain risk factors affecting our business contained in our earnings release, our investor presentation, and in our Form 10-K. With that, I would now like to turn the call over to Bonnie Lee. Bonnie, please go ahead.

Bonnie Lee
President and CEO, Hanmi Bank

Thank you, Moira. Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us today to discuss our 2021 fourth quarter and year-end results. 2021 was a very eventful year, with the continuation of a global pandemic, political and social volatility, and shifting economic macros. Each of these factors presented challenges as well as opportunities for Hanmi, and our team executed exceptionally well. During the year, we focused on meeting the banking needs of the multi-ethnic communities we serve across our markets. Guided by our strategic growth plan, we expanded our products and services offerings. We grew and diversified our loan and deposit portfolios. By working closely with our customers, we further strengthened our portfolio and asset quality metrics. As a result of a consistent execution throughout 2021, we delivered strong results, meeting and even exceeding the objectives we laid out a year ago.

Today, we are better positioned than ever to meet the evolving needs of tomorrow's customers while continuing to be a trusted community partner to customers who have banked with us for nearly 40 years. This foundation will enable us to deliver sustained growth and profitability over the long term. As I outlined at the beginning of last year, we focused on several strategic growth initiatives in 2021. These included growing our residential mortgage platform, investing in our digital banking platform, expanding our Corporate Korea I nitiative, and adding to our talented team of relationship managers. I am pleased to report our success on all fronts. Let me share a few details. First, 2021 marked the first full year of production from our residential mortgage platform. Through this platform, we originate non-qualified residential loans and mortgage warehouse lines.

This business is an effective way to diversify our loan portfolio by adding a lower risk asset class that we can grow profitably for years to come. We are pleased to report that our residential mortgage production ramped meaningfully in 2021, reaching 11% of total loan production for the year. Second, we made meaningful investments in talent and technology to ensure we meet our customers' digital banking needs and expectations. Our digital platform enables us to efficiently scale services for both existing and new customers across our markets and business lines. Importantly, we're improving the customer's experience, providing more convenient and seamless interactions. Third, we made substantial progress in growing our Corporate Korea Initiative, which represented 14% of our total loan production in 2021. We launched this initiative in 2019 to develop and expand relationships with the Korean companies domiciled in the United States.

We have a dedicated team of bankers in this business who provide our clients with the lines of credit, real estate investment lending, equipment financing, asset-based lending, and other services. They deliver service in both Korean and English, bridging language divides for these unique companies in major California markets, as well as key metropolitan areas such as New York, New Jersey, Georgia, Alabama, and Texas. It is important to note that as we increase lending with our corporate Korea customers, we are also developing new deposit relationships that tend to be sticky. These relationships provide Hanmi with a substantial low cost liquidity to fund both short and long-term growth. To that end, fourth quarter deposits increased 10% year-over-year. Non-interest bearing DDAs increased 36% for the year, and now account for 44.5% of our total deposits, up from 36% a year earlier.

These strategic growth initiatives, along with a strong momentum across our diverse business lines, fueled growth in our loan and lease production in 2021, culminating with a record $625.1 million in production for the fourth quarter. Our multi-lending and leasing businesses were solid contributors to this performance, complementing strength in our commercial real estate and commercial and industrial lending businesses. Our record loan production trend in 2021 demonstrate that our growth strategies are working. Hanmi's strategic footprint in major markets across the country places us in many of the most populous, diverse and economically vibrant markets. We are pleased that as we have continued to grow and expand our footprint and production product portfolio, we have been able to successfully attract top talent with a growth mindset.

In 2021, we added 12 senior relationship managers across our markets, so we are well-positioned to serve more customers as the economy continues to gain momentum in 2022. Our comprehensive approach to our credit management, including our ability to secure payments and payoffs, as well as our relationship banking model, led to improved trends in asset quality last year. Nonperforming loans declined 84% year-over-year, and at the end of 2021, accounted for just 26 basis points of total loans. Our $16.0 million recovery of a credit loss expense in the fourth quarter included a $9.1 million recovery from a first quarter 2020 loan charge-off. While we anticipate additional recoveries in this relationship over time, we expect future recoveries to be smaller in magnitude.

Our allowance for loan losses is strong at 1.41% of loans, and we are confident in our ability to effectively manage credit quality going forward. As I said earlier, solid execution across our platform and markets enable us to deliver strong earnings for the year. We reported a full year 2021 net income of $98.7 million or $3.22 per diluted share, up from $42.2 million or $1.38 per diluted share in 2020. These results demonstrate both the earnings power and the ongoing potential of our bank. Looking ahead, we are well positioned for another successful year in 2022. To deliver growth, profitability, and shareholder returns in 2022 and beyond, we will focus on executing against the following strategic priorities this year.

Ramping up our successful residential mortgage business to contribute 10%-15% of 2022 loan production. Further diversifying our loan portfolio by first increasing multifamily and SBA loans, and second, by expanding our Corporate Korea Initiative with the goal of generating 10%-15% of our total loans and a growing percentage of our deposits from this program. Increasing our focus on corporate clients to drive meaningful growth in loans and both a source of stable, low-cost deposits. Seeking out and evaluating opportunities in new high-growth and deposit-rich verticals that need relationship banking partners like Hanmi. With that, I'll turn the call over to Anthony Kim, our Chief Banking Officer, to discuss fourth quarter loan production and deposit gathering in more detail.

Anthony Kim
Chief Banking Officer, Hanmi Bank

Thank you, Bonnie. I'll start off with some additional color on our loan and lease production. We grew our fourth quarter production volumes 25% from the prior quarter to a record $625 million, or almost double our fourth quarter production a year ago. We generated sequential quarter growth in all major loan categories with a notable strength in commercial real estate and residential mortgages. With record loan production, our loans receivable balance for the fourth quarter was $5.15 billion, up 6% from the prior quarter. Payoffs moderated to $152 million for the fourth quarter from $292 million for the prior quarter. Excluding PPP loans, our loans receivable balance grew 6.4% quarter-over-quarter and 12.3% year-over-year.

In commercial real estate production, loans to clients with a mixed use, industrial and warehouse properties helped drive quarter-over-quarter improvement. Our new relationship managers and our long tenured bankers continued to generate new business, and their collective efforts resulted in a healthy pipeline as we enter 2022. As Bonnie noted, our residential mortgage platform is making meaningful contributions to our results. Accounting for 11% of total originations excluding PPP loans for the year, and 14% for the fourth quarter. Lending activity on this platform for the fourth quarter included $85 million of residential mortgages, along with $50 million of warehouse lines. Our fourth quarter commercial and industrial loan production increased 2% sequentially. Commitments under commercial lines of credit increased by $90 million or 13% from the prior quarter to $773 million.

However, balances on these lines were relatively stable, resulting in a fourth quarter utilization rate of 39% compared with 44% for the third quarter. Loans and leases originated in the fourth quarter had a weighted average rate of 3.91% in line with the prior quarter. Although payoff activity moderated in the fourth quarter, the average rate on payoffs of 4.02% increased 84 basis points from the third quarter. Let me pivot now to the considerable progress we've made on our Corporate Korea Initiative. We now have a corporate Korea desk in seven strategically located branches across our footprint. As Bonnie explained, more than 14% of our total 2021 loan production, excluding PPP loans, was from our corporate Korea growth initiative.

Notably, it capped off 2021 in exceptionally strong fashion, contributing more than 18% to our record fourth quarter loan production. This helped us to comfortably meet our double-digit total loan production growth goal for 2021. At year-end, the Corporate Korea Initiative represented more than 12% of our total loans and 6% of total deposits. With an expanding customer base, we anticipate continued growth from this important initiative in 2022. We remain committed to disciplined underwriting as evidenced by our weighted average loan to value and weighted average debt service coverage ratios for our commercial real estate loan portfolio of 49.2% and 1.9x respectively at end of fourth quarter. Both metrics were essentially unchanged throughout 2021. As we have said many times, further diversifying our loan portfolio by industry, geography and loan type remains a priority.

At year-end, hospitality loans represented about 15% of our loan portfolio, a decline of more than 1% from the previous quarter and 16% since the end of 2020. Importantly, we have only one hospitality loan on non-accrual totaling under $32,000, and it is collateralized by a property in a metro location in Texas. Total deposits were $5.79 billion at the end of fourth quarter, up 1% from the preceding quarter and 9.7% from year-end 2020. Fourth quarter deposit growth was driven primarily by a $66 million increase in money market and savings deposits and $26 million increase in non-interest bearing demand deposits. These increases were partially offset by a $42 million decrease in time deposits.

As Bonnie noted earlier, DDAs represented 44.5% of our total deposits at the end of 2021, up from 36% at year-end 2020. The substantial improvement in our deposit franchise positions us well for the expected rise in the federal funds rate later this year. With that, I'll turn the call over to Ron Santarosa, our Chief Financial Officer, for more details on our fourth quarter financial results.

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

Thank you, Anthony. Our fourth quarter net interest income decreased 1% from the prior quarter to $49.5 million, and our net interest margin decreased 11 basis points to 2.96%. Interest income on PPP loans was only $100,000 for the fourth quarter, down from $1.6 million for the prior quarter. Adjusting for the effects of PPP loans, our net interest margin contracted 4 basis points sequentially as the benefit of lower cost interest-bearing deposits was more than offset by lower yield on interest-earning assets. However, our net interest income, again excluding the effects of PPP loans, increased 2% sequentially due primarily to a higher volume of interest-earning assets and the benefit of lower cost interest-bearing deposits.

An important takeaway here is that we now have more than replaced our transient PPP loan portfolio with our own loans originated through our relationship-based banking teams. To illustrate, loans at year-end 2020 were $4.58 billion when excluding the $296 million of PPP loans at that time. For 2021, loans reached $5.15 billion and PPP loans were only $3 million at year-end. Accordingly, for 2021, we increased loans by $564 million or 12%. Another important takeaway is the improving mix of interest-earning assets arising from the decline in excess liquidity.

To illustrate this, you will see that for the fourth quarter, our average interest-bearing deposits in other banks declined 8% sequentially to $802.9 million. However, this lower-yielding liquid asset ended the 2021 year at $564.7 million, nearly 30% below the average for the fourth quarter. The shift away from lower-yielding liquid earning assets into higher-yielding loans, combined with the $100 million on 5.45% notes redeemable at the end of the 2022 first quarter, should benefit our net interest income and net interest margin in future quarters. Our growth in non-interest-bearing demand accounts moderated to 1% quarter-over-quarter, while quarterly average balances grew 5% sequentially to $2.56 billion.

Interest-bearing deposits increased 1% or $30.8 million, while their cost decreased 2 basis points quarter-over-quarter to 28 basis points for the fourth quarter. Our fourth quarter non-interest income decreased to $9.3 million from $12.5 million for the third quarter, primarily due to a $2.1 million dollar decrease in gains on the sale of SBA loans. The volume of SBA loans sold in the fourth quarter decreased 24% to $36.6 million while trade premiums also declined to 10.98% for the fourth quarter compared with 11.85% for the third quarter. Notably, while service charges, fees, and other income declined sequentially, such fees increased 7.5% from the year-ago quarter, driven by the change in our fee schedules mentioned on our last call.

We expect these changes, along with management practices over the deposit account service charge activity, to continue to benefit our non-interest income in future quarters. Non-interest expense decreased to $31.6 million for the fourth quarter from $32.5 million for the prior quarter, primarily due to a $1.1 million decline in other operating expenses, largely from lower insurance premiums. Salaries and benefit expense remained about the same quarter to quarter, reflecting commissions and incentives on higher loan production. Our efficiency ratio increased to 53.81% for the fourth quarter from 52.01% for the prior quarter, due primarily to lower interest income on PPP loans and lower fee income due to the decrease in gains on sales of SBA loans.

We posted a credit loss expense recovery of $16 million for the fourth quarter, which included a $9.1 million recovery from a first quarter 2020 loan charge-off. Breaking this down further, we posted a $13.4 million negative provision for loan losses, a $2.3 million negative provision for off-balance sheet items, and a $300,000 negative provision for the allowance for losses on accrued interest receivable for current or previously modified loans. With the precipitous decline in modified loans and the lack of any meaningful adverse credit charges for these loans, the $300,000 negative provision brought to an end this particular allowance.

Our allowance for credit losses was 1.41% or $72.6 million at year-end, while the allowance for losses on off-balance sheet items was $2.6 billion. We believe our allowance for credit losses adequately reflects various economic forecasts as well as the continued near term uncertainty caused by the lingering effects of the pandemic. We continue to closely monitor and evaluate this evolving environment, and we'll update our loss methodology accordingly. Income tax expense for the fourth quarter included a $2.7 million benefit from the reduction of our deferred tax asset valuation allowance for state net operating loss carryforwards because of recent changes in state income tax regulations that extended their expiration dates.

Our effective tax rate for 2021, inclusive of this benefit, was 27.2%, while for 2020, our effective tax rate was 29.1%. Finally, our return on average assets and our return on average equity for the fourth quarter were 1.93% and 20.89%, respectively. For the full year, our return on average assets was 1.51%, and our return on average equity was 16.27%. Finally, our tangible book value increased to $20.79 per share at the end of the fourth quarter, and our tangible common equity ratio remains strong at 9.23%. With that, I'll turn it back to Bonnie.

Bonnie Lee
President and CEO, Hanmi Bank

Thank you, Ron. I am very pleased with our loan production trends, improving asset quality metrics, and strong earnings performance in 2021. I would like to thank the entire Hanmi family for their continued dedication and hard work in making our success possible. Hanmi was founded 40 years ago to serve the underbanked minority immigrant community in Los Angeles. Today, we serve multiethnic communities across 9 states with an expanding array of products and services. While we are proud of our past, we are even more excited about our future. We are a community bank that believes long-term corporate value is derived by investing in the communities we serve. That means being a responsible corporate citizen and serving the best interests of all our stakeholders.

To support this, we issued our inaugural environmental, social, and governance report in 2021 to highlight how these commitments to our stakeholders and to hold ourselves accountable for facilitating financial inclusion while carefully managing risk. You can find the report on our investor relations website, and I encourage you to check it out. With that, we will open the call for your questions. Operator, please open the lines up to the questions.

Operator

At this time, we will be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you'd like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we pull for questions. Our first question is from Matthew Clark with Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your question.

Matthew Clark
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Hey, good afternoon.

Bonnie Lee
President and CEO, Hanmi Bank

Good afternoon.

Matthew Clark
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Maybe a question for Ron to start. Looks like you have some tailwinds from the strong loan growth on an end of period basis relative to the averages should drive, I would think, some favorable remix in your earning assets and maybe also some lift in the NIM. If you're willing to maybe take a stab at your thoughts around the kind of the near-term NIM outlook.

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

Sure. As you observed, Matthew, loans on a spot basis were about 5% higher than the fourth quarter average. Of course, that's a much larger contributor to our net interest income and our NIM. I would anticipate that we'll be in what I would characterize again as kind of the low threes, you know, before introducing any Fed action that might occur in 2022.

Matthew Clark
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Okay. Great. Well, I'll stick with the loans. Payoffs, you know, slowed pretty dramatically this quarter. Can you speak to what was driving that and, you know, what your expectations are for payoffs going forward? I know they're hard to forecast, but just curious if that's unusually low or not.

Anthony Kim
Chief Banking Officer, Hanmi Bank

Excluding PPP forgiveness last quarter, payoff level in third quarter compared to fourth quarter is in line. Actually, fourth quarter payoff is not relatively lower, but not significantly lower. We do expect similar level of a payoff in year 2022.

Matthew Clark
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Okay. Thank you. On expenses, Ron, I think there was some modest, I guess it was credit-related kind of expenses in there, but looked like a pretty clean run rate. What are your thoughts around expense growth this year with wage inflation and all the other kind of investment needs you might have internally?

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

I think, you know, we are as perhaps anxious as everyone else to understand where interest rates will go and then just the general demand for labor and the cost of that labor. That said, I think, you know, I would envision, you know, maybe starting the year at about that $32 million per quarter run rate. Then I guess the choice is what kind of inflationary factor to apply to that. It could be anywhere from, you know, let's say 3%-7%. 7% on the outside relative to being weighted more for wages, 3% on the inside if wages and things of that sort, you know, don't come in as strong.

Our 2021 expense rate does include higher levels of incentive pay, commission pay relative to loan production. I'm looking at Anthony, I'm not sure if he's gonna set another record here for 2022. There could be some relief in that number if production were to, you know, come in at about the same or maybe a little bit less. Those would be some of the factors I would think about as I look to an expense run rate.

Matthew Clark
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Okay. On the tax rate, a little low this quarter. Should we continue to use 30% for the outlook?

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

Yeah. I think 29% might be better in 2022.

Matthew Clark
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Okay. Lastly, on buybacks, did you guys buy back any stock this quarter? I didn't see them on the release.

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

A very small amount at the top of the quarter, so about 24,000 shares. You know, the price back then was probably about $20 a share.

Matthew Clark
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Okay, great. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question is from Gary Tenner with D.A. Davidson. Please proceed with your question.

Gary Tenner
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Thanks. Good afternoon. Just to follow up on that, buyback question to start, just kind of follow up on some expectations around how active you might be in the buyback now that you've, you know, obviously had a very strong quarter, built tangible book. You know, where do you think the level of activity might be early in 2023 or early in 2022, excuse me.

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

Given the volatility that we've all seen here over the last couple days, my hope, which would be, I guess counter to a buyback, is that we would see a return to normalcy and, you know, the share price continues to be relatively attractive in the marketplace. However, if we continue to be in these doldrums where we can see some great volatility, I could see entering into the marketplace to acquire something at a pretty low multiple to tangible book.

Gary Tenner
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Okay, thanks. In terms of SBA, you know, and kind of the outlook for 2022, you know, do you have any kind of budget levels of production and sale that would be helpful to be thinking about going into the year?

Bonnie Lee
President and CEO, Hanmi Bank

Sure. You know, at any given year, I think last couple of quarters, we arrange from, you know, $25 million-$30 million to $35 million and certain quarters around $40 million. You know, going forward in 2022, I think that we are comfortable with providing a range of about $35 million-$40 million in any given quarter.

Gary Tenner
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Okay. Thank you. Last question on my end. Actually, just on the service charge income line. Ron, you I think pointed out in your prepared remarks that it declined, although it was still well above the year-over-year number. If I recall correctly, you had changed some of your kind of fee levels earlier in 2021 that helped drive that line item a bit higher. Have you seen any change in customer behavior as a result that kind of negatively impacted the fourth quarter or just less activity just generally?

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

No.

Gary Tenner
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, D.A. Davidson

What was the difference there?

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

Yes, it'd be more to business customer activity. Nothing, you know, negative in that. I look at that, you know, what we posted for the fourth quarter, not only for that line, but you just kind of look at the aggregate for everything outside of gain on sale for SBA. That's probably a pretty good picture of where our line might be in 2022, with perhaps growth coming from some of the business growth that we might get from certain depositors and the activities that they might get. I feel pretty good about that contribution.

Gary Tenner
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Okay, thank you. Then just last question for me. On slide 10, you break out the personal versus business deposit mix at the end of the year. Just wondering if you have the comparable number from the year prior.

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

I don't have a specific number, Gary, but it would probably be a little bit more even, you know, 50/50. The increasing of business is more from some of the efforts that we described earlier, which is kind of taking root here in 2021.

Gary Tenner
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Okay, thank you.

Operator

Our next question is from Kelly Motta with KBW. Please proceed with your question.

Kelly Motta
Managing Director, KBW

Hi. Thank you. Thanks so much for the question. Ron, maybe a question for you. I believe in your prepared remarks you mentioned potentially redeeming some notes at the end of 1Q 2022. Is this something we should build into our models or is it still something you're toying with as we look to next year?

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

We haven't made the final decision, but you know, given the outlook for where interest rates may be, and given what our capital position is, that is probably a likely outcome. I don't see the need in the current marketplace where subdebt could be 3.5-3.75. Why we continue at 5.45, even though it prices down with to LIBOR.

Kelly Motta
Managing Director, KBW

Got it. I appreciate the kind of commentary you gave around NIM. Just wondering with rate hikes, you know, likely on the horizon, how we should be thinking about how your balance sheet performs in the, you know, with the first couple of hikes, given that, you know, the deposit base looks quite a bit different than it did going in last cycle.

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

Quarterly we do a net interest income simulation when we disclose those shocks in our 10-Qs, 10-Ks. We've been in that 5%-6% range over a 12-month horizon, given a 100 basis point shock. If I were to break that down into how liabilities might behave over 90-day periods, the inclination that we have now looking back at the last cycle that we went through when we started raising rates, we noticed that the first 50 basis points coming off a zero interest rate policy, there was pretty much no effect on our deposits. There were really no movement. We did capture that safety notion relative to our loan book.

We can debate whether it was 100% or 90%. I would expect, given the excess liquidity that most institutions have, that we are likely to behave in that way. We have to see when we get there, one. Two, if you remember the last rate cycle, as we went past the first 50, the markets became very anxious that rates were gonna continue to move up rapidly. A number of institutions were, in my words, bidding up the price to capture today a lower cost than they might get in the next 90-day period. That came about rather quickly as we moved into that next group. The betas really started to run up faster than normal. Our beta over that whole cycle was about 30%.

Kelly Motta
Managing Director, KBW

Got it. Thank you. Thank you. I appreciate all the color, Ron.

Operator

Our next question is from Jason Stewart with JonesTrading. Please proceed with your question.

Jason Stewart
Managing Director, JonesTrading

Hi, thanks for the question. Nice quarter on the origination side. I was hoping you could give us a little bit more color on the commercial real estate origination. I think you mentioned mixed use and industrial strength. Those tend to be the smaller parts of the portfolio. Any color on the rest of the segment in terms of what drove growth there?

Anthony Kim
Chief Banking Officer, Hanmi Bank

Yeah. Other than mixed use and industrial warehouse, we produced about $33 million-$34 million in multifamily, which will be our focus for the year 2022.

Jason Stewart
Managing Director, JonesTrading

Okay. In that 33, 16 of that is warehouse. Is that correct?

Anthony Kim
Chief Banking Officer, Hanmi Bank

No, I was talking about multifamily. Warehouse line is tied to the mortgage.

Jason Stewart
Managing Director, JonesTrading

Okay. That's reported in the $86 million segment.

Anthony Kim
Chief Banking Officer, Hanmi Bank

Correct.

Jason Stewart
Managing Director, JonesTrading

Gotcha. Then when you're thinking about non-QM loans, how do you think about the duration of those, and remind us the overall size of the portfolio that you're targeting there?

Anthony Kim
Chief Banking Officer, Hanmi Bank

Based on my experience and with the historical numbers, the years probably average about 3.5 years. With the interest rate environment, we don't expect demand is gonna decrease. The non-QM market is still out there. We expect to see a constant demand.

Jason Stewart
Managing Director, JonesTrading

Great. Just remind us, if you don't mind, the overall size of the non-QM portfolio that you're targeting?

Anthony Kim
Chief Banking Officer, Hanmi Bank

As Bonnie noted, we're targeting 10%-15% of the production coming from the mortgage. non-QM consists of 80%-90% of the production.

Jason Stewart
Managing Director, JonesTrading

Got it. Okay. Thanks for taking the questions.

Operator

Our next question is from Tim Coffey with Janney. Please proceed with your question.

Tim Coffey
Director of Equity Research, Janney

Great. Thanks. Afternoon, everybody. Bonnie, I had a question on kind of the loan growth for this year. Can you describe some of the headwinds that would prevent you from duplicating what you did this past year?

Bonnie Lee
President and CEO, Hanmi Bank

Sure. I mean, 2020 was a great year, much better than we anticipated at the beginning of last year. We built the momentum, and we have the platform, we have the relationship managers, we identified target markets. We are you know fairly confident going into 2022. However, we still have the environment where you know we still have the supply chain issues and then the labor challenges and whatnot. Conservatively, I think that you know we are projecting about a mid- to high-single-digit loan growth. In terms of just what everybody else, all the community banks are experiencing.

other than that, I think, we're in a good spot for this year.

Tim Coffey
Director of Equity Research, Janney

Okay, great. I was wondering on the commercial lines of credit if you had the utilization rates?

Bonnie Lee
President and CEO, Hanmi Bank

Yeah. This quarter-

Anthony Kim
Chief Banking Officer, Hanmi Bank

It was 39%, compared to 44% last quarter. We averaged anywhere between 35%-45%.

Tim Coffey
Director of Equity Research, Janney

Okay. You don't have the year ago utilization rate, do you?

Bonnie Lee
President and CEO, Hanmi Bank

Fourth quarter 2020 utilization was at 42.7%.

Tim Coffey
Director of Equity Research, Janney

Okay. Thank you, Bonnie. Ron, kind of similar to loans, your cash and equivalents, the spot rate or spot number was lower than the average. Do you feel comfortable with the deposits, that they're gonna be sticky, and that you could start to invest some of that cash into securities as you've already, you know, have been doing in the fourth quarter?

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

On the deposit side, I would say yes. We explore the composition of our deposits, you know, the type, the reasons, et cetera, you know, monthly, at our management ALCO. We do think that there is some staying power there. Going then to the investment side of that, my first thought is we'd like to see the excess liquidity go to true loans, rather than to the securities portfolio. We will add to the securities portfolio, but it shouldn't be much larger than about, you know, let's say $1 billion just to round. We're looking more towards the higher yielding loan growth rather than, let's say, you know, middle yielding securities portfolio.

Tim Coffey
Director of Equity Research, Janney

Okay. Yeah, to suspect and based on your commentary that would be a measured approach then if you did get into the securities portfolio.

Ron Santarosa
Senior EVP and CFO, Hanmi Bank

Correct.

Tim Coffey
Director of Equity Research, Janney

Great. Okay. Those are my questions. Thank you very much.

Bonnie Lee
President and CEO, Hanmi Bank

Sure.

Operator

We have reached the end of the question and answer session, and I will now turn the call over to Bonnie Lee for closing remarks.

Bonnie Lee
President and CEO, Hanmi Bank

Thank you for participating in our call today. We appreciate your interest in Hanmi and look forward to sharing our continued progress with you throughout the year.

Operator

This concludes today's conference, and you may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.

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