Good day, and welcome to the Hope Bancorp's 2023 Q3 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Angie Yang, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Marlise. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for the Hope Bancorp 2023 Q3 investor conference call. As usual, we will be using a slide presentation to accompany our discussion this morning, which is available in the Presentations page of our investor relations website. Beginning on slide 2, let me begin with a brief statement regarding forward-looking remarks. The call today may contain forward-looking projections regarding the future financial performance of the company and future events. These statements may differ materially from actual results due to certain risks and uncertainties. In addition, some of the information referenced on this call today are non-GAAP financial measures.
For a more detailed description of the risk factors and a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures, please refer to the company's filings with the SEC, as well as the safe harbor statement in our press release issued yesterday. Hope Bancorp assumes no obligation to revise any forward-looking projections that may be made on today's call. Now, we have allotted one hour for this call. Presenting from the management side today will be Kevin Kim, Hope Bancorp's Chairman, President, and CEO, and Julianna Balicka, our Chief Financial Officer. Peter Koh, our Chief Operating Officer, is also here with us as usual and will be available for the Q&A session. With that, let me turn the call over to Kevin Kim.
Thank you, Angie. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Now, let's begin on slide 3 with a brief overview of the quarter. For the Q3 of 2023, our net income was $30 million or $0.25 per diluted share. Highlights of our Q3 results include net interest margin expansion of 13 basis points quarter-over-quarter, which led to a 4% linked-quarter growth in net interest income. We maintained disciplined expense control, resulting in a 1% decline in non-interest expenses compared with the preceding quarter. However, the provision for credit losses increased to $17 million for the Q3, and certain one-time gains in non-interest income from the Q2 did not reoccur. As a result, our net income decreased on a linked-quarter basis.
During the Q3, we continued to strengthen our balance sheet, which positions us well to take advantage of profitable growth opportunities going forward. Total deposits grew 1% quarter-over-quarter, reflecting stronger customer deposit growth of 3%, partially offset by a planned reduction of brokered time deposits. All regulatory capital ratios expanded. Our liquidity continues to be ample. Continuing to Slide 4 for a more detailed review of our capital. Our capital ratios are strong and all regulatory capital ratios expanded quarter-over-quarter. As of September 30, our Common Equity Tier 1 ratio was 11.67%, up 62 basis points from June 30, and our total capital ratio was 13.23%, up 59 basis points quarter-over-quarter. Adjusting for the allowance for credit losses and including hypothetical adjustments for investment security marks, all our capital ratios remain high.
Our board of directors declared a quarterly common stock dividend of $0.14 per share, payable on November 16 to stockholders of record as of November 2, 2023. Moving on to slide 5. At September 30, our cash and cash equivalents were $2.5 billion, up from $2.3 billion at June 30. At the end of the Q3, our available borrowing capacity, together with cash and cash equivalents and unpledged investment securities, increased to $8.3 billion or 53% of our deposits and well exceeding our uninsured deposit balances. Continuing to slide 6.
At September 30, our total deposits were $15.7 billion, an increase of 1% quarter-over-quarter, reflecting linked-quarter growth of 3% in customer deposits, primarily in money market and savings accounts, partially offset by a $368 million reduction of brokered time deposits. Increasing core deposits is a key priority for the company, and we saw excellent results from our front lines efforts during the Q3... Our gross loan-to-deposit ratio was 91% as of September 30, down from 95% at the end of the prior quarter and down from 100% at the end of the year-ago quarter. Moving on to slide 7.
At September 30, our loan portfolio was $14.3 billion, a decrease of 4% quarter-over-quarter, reflecting our prudent approach to loan growth and an intentional decrease in mortgage warehouse lending. Mortgage warehouse lines declined $126 million in the Q3 to $65 million at September 30, 2023. We are in the process of winding down this business. In addition, payoffs and pay downs in a high-interest rate environment continued to hamper loan growth. On slides 8 and 9, we provide more details on our commercial real estate loans, which are well-diversified by property type and granular in size. The loan to values for these CRE properties are low across all segments, and the vast majority of these loans have full recourse with personal guarantees.
The weighted average LTV of our total CRE portfolio was 45% as of September 30, 2023. Office commercial real estate of $455 million represented just 3% of total loans, with no central business district exposure. With that, I will ask Julianna to provide the additional details on our financial performance for the Q3. Julianna?
Thank you, Kevin. Beginning with slide 10, our net interest income totaled $135 million for the Q3 of 2023, up 4% from the Q2, driven by a 13-basis point expansion in our net interest margin to 2.83%. The linked quarter increase in our net interest income and expansion of our net interest margin was driven by higher yields on interest-earning assets, a reduction in average borrowings and debt, and an increase in the average volume of interest-earning cash and deposits at other banks, partially offset by a higher cost of interest-bearing deposits and a reduction in average loan balances. In the Q3, we executed on $1 billion of 1-year forward start, receive fixed, pay float swaps that have a 3-year term, and will go into effect mid-year next year and continuing on after that.
Moving on to slide 11. Our average loans of $14.6 billion decreased 4% linked quarter. The average yield on our loan portfolio increased to 6.27%, up 28 basis points in Q3. Our average deposits of $15.7 billion were essentially stable, decreasing by only $45 million in the quarter. The average cost of deposits increased to 2.98%, up 19 basis points from the Q2. The rate of change in the cost of deposits decelerated from the Q2. Moving on to slide 12. Our non-interest income was $8 million for the Q3, compared with $17 million in the Q2 of 2023.
Last quarter's non-interest income included a one-time $6 million cash distribution related to an investment in an affordable housing partnership and $2 million of gains on SBA loan sales. In the Q3, we elected to retain SBA 7(a) production on balance sheet. Excluding these two Q2 gains, non-interest income decreased $1 million quarter-over-quarter. Moving on to slide 13. We continue to maintain expense discipline. Our non-interest expense of $87 million decreased 1% quarter-over-quarter, and salaries and benefits expense of $51 million decreased 2%. Our efficiency ratio was 60.5% as of September 30, up slightly from 59.1% as of June 30. The change in the efficiency ratio was primarily due to the decrease in non-interest income. Now, moving on to slide 14, I will review our asset quality.
Our non-performing assets at September 30, 2023, decreased 20% quarter-over-quarter to $62 million or 31 basis points of total assets. The linked quarter decrease reflects charge-offs of non-accrual loans, payoffs and workouts, partially offset by new inflows. Net charge-offs for the 2023 Q3 totaled $31 million, which included an idiosyncratic full charge-off of $23.4 million related to a borrower that entered Chapter 7 liquidation in August 2023. As of June 30, 2023, we have recorded $9.6 million in impairment reserves related to this credit. For the Q3, our provision for credit losses was $17 million, reflecting the increase in charge-offs. At September 30, 2023, our allowance for credit losses was $159 million, representing 111 basis points of loans receivable.
The allowance coverage as of June 30 was 116 basis points. However, excluding the $9.6 million of impairment reserves related to the idiosyncratic charge-off, the allowance coverage as of June 30 was 110 basis points. Year-over-year, our allowance coverage is up from 104 basis points at September 30, 2022. Special mention loans at September 30, 2023, decreased quarter-over-quarter to $187 million. Substandard loans increased to $174 million during the same period. $21 million of the linked-quarter increase in our substandard loans were completed multifamily residential projects. These projects are well secured and are awaiting the issuance of temporary certificates of occupancy by their local jurisdictions. Overall, we are not seeing any broader systemic issues within the loan portfolio.
With that, let me turn the call back to Kevin.
Thank you. Thank you, Julianna. Moving on to slide 5. Today, we announced a strategic reorganization that is designed to enhance shareholder value over the long term. Accordingly, the company realigned its structure around lines of business and product delivery channels, optimized its production capacity, and reduced headcount. Since its inception, Bank of Hope has made great progress in growing from a traditional community bank into a diversified regional bank. However, our industry continues to undergo secular changes, and adapting our business model to meet these challenges is essential to long-term success. With this reorganization, we will have four distinct business groups instead of our prior region-based structure, namely, retail banking, commercial banking, corporate and institutional banking, and a fee-based business group. This will enable us to expand our client relationships, empower deposit growth, enhance revenue generation, and run our bank more efficiently.
As part of this transformation, we are planning to rationalize our branch network over the next six months, subject to customary notices and approvals, and are winding down certain non-core businesses. We understand this action has a human component, and thus, we have not made this decision lightly. We are making every effort to support those employees affected by the reorganization. These decisions are never easy, and we deeply value their contributions to our franchise. We believe these changes will benefit customers, employees, and shareholders in many ways over the long term and allow us to sustainably expand our profitability. Up front, we expect to realize more than $40 million in estimated annualized cost savings, largely related to the staffing reduction, the branch rationalization, and operational process improvements.
Related to the reorganization, we expect to recognize one-time charges of approximately $12 million in the Q4 of 2023. In light of the organizational restructuring, we will dispense providing you with an outlook for the remaining two months of the year, and we will provide a full year outlook for 2024 when we report earnings in January. With that, we would be happy to take your questions and add any additional color as requested. Operator, please open up the call.
Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press Star, then one on your touchtone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press Star, then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Our first question comes from Chris McGratty from KBW. Chris, please, please go ahead.
Oh, good morning. Hey, Kevin. Hey, Julianna. Kevin, I wanted to start with the strategic reorganization. In the past, you've talked about managing the company to an expense asset ratio. I'm interested kind of what, what the bogey will be for judging success. Will it be that metric? Will it be the ROE, the efficiency ratio, which has its limitations cause of rates? I'm trying to understand how we should be thinking about capturing this $40 million into the numbers.
Well, you know, the main purpose of this restructuring is obviously to obtain sustainable profitability on a longer-term basis. And we have been really trying to operate and run this company with the existing structures that we inherited from the predecessor organizations, and which turn out to be vulnerable in an economic situation where you know interest rates were fluctuating very rapidly at an unexpected pace. And we really took time to reassess the whole structure how we can be a more profitable more sustainable organization. And obviously, ROE and ROA and profitability, efficiency ratio, all those metrics are very relevant.
But the baseline is how we can provide better services to customers, how we can motivate our employees for a better opportunity in their career, and how we will have a better return to our shareholders. It's all stakeholder consideration, and this is a very painful process in that we have to let go, you know, the certain level of people much higher than the level that we had in the past. But I think this is a fundamental change of this organization, which will ultimately bring to a better profitability over long term in a very sustainable manner.
... Thank you for that. That's good color. If I could ask a follow-up on the metric. Is this, given the environmental pressures you spoke about, to capture, you know, certain metrics, whether it's expense to asset or efficiency from moving further, you know, maybe higher? Or is it an outright reduction? I guess, is your goal to outright reduce these metrics?
No. No. Well, yeah, the reduction reflect the realignment around our business lines of business, which minimize redundancies in both frontline and back-office support staff. In our prior region-based structure, a lot of resources have been fragmented, and we have redundancies because the regions were kind of independent in their operations. And so, as a result of this alignment, I think we will be a lot more effective bankers providing our customers with a more consistent level of excellence in service. So, this is not just a cost savings measure. This is a more fundamental change in how we do our business, and how we drive our profits from our businesses.
Maybe if I could, if I could get one more on, on capital. Kevin, we ask you every quarter about how you're thinking about capital return. Certainly, shrinking some of these businesses that are not core will free up some capital. How are you thinking about, you know, buybacks, given the value of the stock and the outlook for 2024?
Yeah. We believe capital preservation and capital expansion; they are very important in this current environment. In terms of shareholder return, I think we are maintaining a strong dividend payout ratio. And eventually, our robust capital base will give us opportunities to more effectively take advantage of growth opportunities going forward. So, if you are asking more specifically whether we will be beginning to repurchase our shares, I think that is not likely.
Okay. That's exactly. Thanks. Thanks, Kevin, for the color.
Our next question comes from Matthew Clark from Piper Sandler. Matthew, please go ahead.
Hey, good morning, everyone.
Good morning.
First one for me around the reorg, and that $40 million of savings you expect to extract. Can you give us a sense for the realization or timing of those savings and whether or not there might be some reinvestment necessary to realign these businesses? Trying to get a sense for whether or not that $40 million will fall to the bottom line or not.
Hi, Matt, this is Julianna. Thank you for that question. A substantial amount of the cost savings that we are expecting of that $40 million, namely $34 million of that, is going to come from the staff reduction that we executed last week. So that is already in place and will start to manifest itself in our operating results beginning now. Then in the next six months, we have plans to consolidate some branches, and the cost savings from that will roll in over the H1 of the year. And then lastly, some cost savings from process improvements will continue and be phased in throughout the whole of the next twelve months. So, then the $40 million that we are providing to you in slide 15, that's the fully loaded number.
That being said, near-term actions around operational process improvements will continue to generate benefits that are not yet necessarily identified and quantified. That's an important consideration to think about when you are reorganizing an organization and removing redundancies and streamlining operations for more efficient, simpler banking. And in terms of how much of this is going to drop to the bottom line, the second part of your question needs to be considered is that this organizational restructuring was designed to position our bank for high quality, well-balanced growth, regardless of cycle, and to promote total relationship banking through collaboration between our business groups and the expansion of our fee-based business products.
To succeed, we need to continue to invest in our franchise, and we've talked to you in the past, so this isn't anything new, about investments that we've been making in Treasury Management Solutions. For example, we recently opened a new branch in Bellevue, Washington. Investing in people, processes, and technology to strengthen our bank is going to be ongoing. However, what is important to point out is that the investments that we have been making have not caused large fluctuations in our expenses because we do practice disciplined expense management, and we do not expect that approach to change. So, to state firmly, the restructuring was not designed to extract cost savings just so we could redeploy into some new, large scale, not yet unveiled project. That's not the case.
However, one thing that I would say for your modeling purposes is that the cost savings are improvement to your existing 2024 baseline, and we will share our outlook in January. And, you know, your 2024 baselines will naturally have assumptions around typical business as usual expense growth in an organization, and so that's where the cost savings would be applied to.
... Got it. Great. And then on the mortgage warehouse business, just remind us of the balance there at the end of the quarter. And then, I think I can answer the question myself, but just the rationale to exit that business.
Yeah, this is Peter. Matt, the balance is actually $65 million, and we've been continuing to wind that down. I think, as you know, the mortgage business has had a big slowdown, and overall, I think pricing and risk profile of that line of business, we felt that winding down that business made more sense for us at this point.
Okay. And then, your SNC exposure, can you just update us there on the size of that portfolio and whether or not you went through a recent exam, and whether or not there are any upgrades or any downgrades there?
There were downgrades related to the Shared National Credit exam and, the syndicated lending portfolio that we have, the Term Loan B type portfolio. It's approximately $300 million, and that's down from approximately $600 million at the beginning of the year.
Okay. Just last one for me on the deposits, deposit costs, and if you have the spot rate at the end of September?
One second. Let me get you the spot rate. 3.10 was the spot rate. That's for total deposits, just to be clear.
We would like to just remind everyone that if you would like to ask a question, you may press star one, and also, please limit yourself to two questions at a time. You may always come back into the question queue. Thank you. For our next question, we have Gary Tenner from D.A. Davidson. Gary, please go ahead.
Thanks. Good morning. A couple of questions. First, in terms of the loan yields in the quarter, is there anything unusual, that kind of drove some of that loan yield expansion this quarter, or is it more of a mix change, quarter to quarter?
It's a combination of three things, a mix change quarter over to quarter, the accumulation of interest rate increases and interest rates moving higher on our variable loan portfolio and interest rate interest income recoveries. And one thing I'd like to add to Matt's prior question, I was into my answer. Our spot rate on deposits was 3.10 at the end of the quarter, up from 2.97 at the end of the prior quarter. So, the spot moved 13 basis points quarter over quarter.
Julianna, the interest income recoveries that you, that you just mentioned, could you quantify that, I guess, maybe relative to the prior quarter? How much of an impact that was?
This quarter, the interest income recoveries were $3 million.
Versus any meaningful amount in the Q2?
There wasn't a meaningful amount in the Q2.
Okay. Thank you. And then, in terms of the-
To your question, in terms of kind of our net interest margin expansion, even with the net interest income recovery, when we backed that out, our net interest margin still expanded from the improvement on the liability side.
Okay, appreciate that. And on the swaps, you mentioned, what is the received fixed rate on those?
367 over SOFR.
Thank you.
We do have one more question from Chris McGratty from KBW. Please go ahead, Chris.
Just maybe, Julianna, coming back to the margin, net interest income comments. Normalizing for the recoveries, I guess maybe a little help on the trajectory of net interest income. Feels like a smaller balance sheet, but more profitable, but interested in your comments about whether the trough might be in on NII.
I think in terms of our net interest income expectations and net interest margin expectations, obviously, we will talk about 2024 in January. But and we are pleased with the improvement that we saw this quarter, even outside of the interest income recovery. One thing I will remind you all about is that we do have some $1.8 billion of CDs maturing in the Q4 from a promotion that we ran last year. So that will put some downward pressure, or upward pressure rather, on the cost of deposits in the Q4. So, in terms of the trough in the NII and NIM, we'll talk about that in January. It's kind of curve dependent, right? Higher for longer-
- versus when the interest rate cuts will be coming in. But we're pleased with what happened this quarter, and our front line continues to execute excellently under growing customer deposits, which gives us the flexibility to run off higher cost funding. And net , positions us to have a more profitable balance sheet. And then on my prior answer just now, the fixed rate is 367. I said over SOFR, but I should have just left it at 367.
Okay.
Thanks for your clarification.
The $1.8 billion, Julianna, that's coming up for renewal, what was that rate that was put on, I guess, probably last year sometime?
It was put on last year in the Q4 because these were twelve-month CDs when it was put on. So, the average rate that that was put on was 4.43.
Okay. And then maybe the last one, the SBA loan sale comments. I mean, thoughts on retaining versus selling, near term?
At the moment, it is more profitable, more economically profitable to gain SBA loans.
To maintain them, is that what you said?
Yeah. Yeah, to maintain-
Okay
... them balance sheet. So we evaluate that from a perspective of profitability.
Okay. Helpful. Thank you.
Our next question comes from David Chiaverini from Wedbush Securities. David, you may proceed.
Hi, thanks. So, wanted to follow up, I guess, indirectly on the NII question. In terms of balance sheet growth and loan growth, any kind of figures or, or, you know, informal guidance, in that regard?
No informal guidance at this time. We will provide guidance and outlook for 2024 in January. As you can imagine, we're going through our budgeting process, and we are going through a reorganization.
Yep, understood. And then, shifting gears over to credit quality. Any other kind of areas... You mentioned that you're not seeing any systemic risk, which is, which is great, but can you comment on, you know, any areas that you're paying any more particular attention to? You, I like the slide you laid out with the commercial real estate exposure and the low LTVs, but any other areas that you're focusing in on?
No, this actually, as you may know, we went through a pretty substantial de-risking process over the last couple of years, particularly related to some of our CRE concentrations in hotel areas. So, at this time, you know, outside of sort of the one-off case that we had seen this quarter, really, we're not seeing anything systemic.
Got it. And that one-off case, I'm assuming, that it was the Shared National Credit related to an, you know, oil company. But can you confirm what that was related to?
It was that participation. I think it was generally covered with Lead Bank. We did have a participation in that credit, and it was related to-
Mountain Oil
... Get Mountain Oil. Gas, gas industry. Yes.
Thank you. Just a reminder again, if you would like to answer the question queue, press star one. Right now, we have a follow-up question by Matthew Clark from Piper Sandler. Please, Matt, go ahead.
Thanks. I just wanted to follow up on the office CRE portfolio and get an update on the reserve that you have against that portfolio and what amount is criticized?
We'll look at the reserve level right now, but as you know, we have a very small office CRE portfolio. So, I think over 99% of our portfolio, or around 99% of it is pass graded. We do not have any central business district exposure, and most of ours is really Class B in office properties in metropolitan areas. So, we do understand the concern and from an industry perspective, but really within our portfolio, we're not seeing any signs of concern at the moment. And do we have any reserves?
So, the reserves in our total book are 111 basis points, and that covers all of our portfolios. Office is very small, so the reserves that we have specifically on office is not a meaningful number. 111 basis point coverage.
Great. Thank you.
It's what I would go with for the... Thank you.
Yep. Yep.
At this time, we have no further questions, and this will conclude this session. I would like to turn the conference back over to management for some closing remarks. Thank you.
Thank you. I am confident that our strategic reorganization announced today will enable us to better serve our customers, expand customer relationships, and operate our bank more efficiently, benefiting all our stakeholders through sustainably improved profitability. Once again, thank you all for joining us today, and we look forward to speaking with you next quarter.
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect. Have a good day.