Good morning, and thank you for attending today's OceanFirst Financial Corp Earnings Conference Call. My name is Tamia, and I will be your moderator for today. All lines will be muted during the presentation portion of the call with an opportunity for questions and answers at the end. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. It is now my pleasure to pass the conference over to your host, Jill Hewitt. Please proceed.
Good morning, and thank you all for joining us today. I'm Jill Hewitt, Senior Vice President and Investor Relations Officer at OceanFirst Financial Corp. We will begin this morning's call with our forward-looking statement disclosure. Please remember that many of our remarks today contain forward-looking statements based on current expectations. Refer to our press release and other public filings, including the risk factors in our 10-K, where you will find factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements. Thank you. Now I will turn the call over to our host today, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Christopher Maher.
Thank you, Jill, and good morning to all who've been able to join our third quarter of 2022 earnings conference call. This morning I'm joined by our president, Joe Lebel, and our chief financial officer, Pat Barrett. As always, we appreciate your interest in our performance and are pleased to discuss our results with you. This morning, we will provide brief remarks about the financial and operating performance for the quarter and provide some color regarding the outlook for our business. As a reminder, in addition to the earnings release issued last night, an investor presentation is also available on our company's website. We may refer to those slides during the call. After our discussion, we look forward to taking your questions. Our financial results for the third quarter include a GAAP diluted earnings per share of $0.64.
Earnings reflected strong loan growth, expanding margins, and benign credit conditions. Core earnings were $0.60 per share and reflect non-core items primarily related to unrealized mark-to-market valuation adjustments on equity investment positions and, to a lesser extent, charges related to branch closures and mergers. I would also note that this quarter was the first quarter in which the company was subject to the Durbin Amendment cap on interchange income, which reduced our interchange fees by $1.7 million for the quarter. This is the final material headwind we face from crossing the $10 billion regulatory threshold. Turning to capital management, the board approved a quarterly cash dividend of $0.20 per common share. This is the company's 103rd consecutive quarterly cash dividend and represents 34% of core earnings.
Tangible common equity per share increased to $16.30, reflecting earnings momentum outpacing AOCI marks related to our investment portfolio. The company did not repurchase any shares in the third quarter while we continue to await the regulatory review for the Partners Bancorp acquisition. Moving to the merger agreement with Partners Bancorp, November 4, 2022 will be the one-year anniversary of the announcement of the agreement to acquire Partners. We continue to collaborate with Partners and are working with our regulators as they review the application. As noted in the agreement, after one year, either party may, but is not obligated to, terminate the agreement without penalty. Of course, until all approvals and customary closing conditions are met, we cannot schedule the merger closing. We will publish appropriate filings when definitive information is available.
Beyond our financial performance, I'm also pleased to note that earlier this month we held a bank-wide afternoon of volunteering. That entailed closing our branches so over 750 OceanFirst employees, who we call our Wavemakers, could spend a collective 3,000+ hours at over 100 project sites to help our neighbors in 5 states. While the afternoon of October sixth is not the only volunteering that takes place at OceanFirst, it certainly was a significant opportunity for us to help the nonprofit organizations in our communities who do so much to help our neighbors every day. This commitment is a core part of how we serve our communities and build our business. At this point, I'll turn the call over to Joe to provide some color regarding our progress during the quarter.
Thanks, Chris. The loan portfolio had another solid quarter with $294 million in net growth. Total loan originations were $544 million, driven by commercial closings of $357 million. It's important to note that loan originations have slowed considerably, running 35% lower than Q2 and 47% lower than Q1. This is a natural consequence of our conservatism regarding credit risk and consumer demand following as interest rates rise. However, net loan growth remains healthy and has grown at double-digit levels as prepayments have decreased throughout the year. While originating less, the quality of our originations remains strong as our focus remains the diligent application of a consistent credit appetite for responsible loan growth in the face of uncertain economic environments.
The economic uncertainty affords us less visibility into 2023, but a modicum of continued responsible growth is expected in certain segments. While we all expect continued declines in residential lending due to rising rates affecting affordability coupled with ongoing supply constraints, multifamily demand is high as rental rates continue to outpace inflation and a constant need for housing abounds. We expect loan growth in the construction of multifamily and the conversion of existing projects to permanent amortizing loans in Q4 and into 2023. Turning to deposits, our loan-to-deposit ratio ticked up modestly to 97.6% from 95.9% in the prior linked quarter. Due to loan growth coupled with a traditional decline in the seasonality of certain deposit classes. Organic deposit growth was $128 million for the quarter.
Our total cost of deposits of 36 basis points rose 14 basis points as compared to the same prior year period, but remains remarkably below the pace of Fed increases. We expect to aggressively look for new deposits to support prudent loan growth while still anticipating modest net interest income improvements. Moving on to fee income. As Chris mentioned, this quarter is the first time we've experienced revenue reduction as a result of reduced Durbin Amendment fees. Accordingly, bank card fees related to Durbin fell $1.7 million for the quarter. With that, I'll turn the call over to Pat to provide more details on the margin, expense trends, and tax rate expectations.
Thanks, Joe. Turning to net interest income and margin. Net loan growth of $294 million and our asset-sensitive balance sheet drove another quarter of margin improvement, which expanded by 7 basis points to 3.36%. While our strengthening margin was somewhat muted by higher funding costs, it's important to note that our deposit betas so far are only about a quarter of what we saw in the last interest rate cycle. Two factors should provide further tailwinds for margins. First, quarter-end loan portfolio of nearly $10 billion was $160 million higher than the third quarter average. Second, nearly a quarter of our earning assets are floating rate, providing further opportunity for margin expansion as rates increase in the remainder of the year and into 2023.
Core non-interest expense ticked modestly upward by about $1 million to $59 million, primarily due to employee medical costs incurred in the third quarter. It's also worth noting that our effective tax rate for the quarter was just over 24%. We expect that to remain in this range in future periods. Overall, we continue to remain very disciplined around expense management. This, combined with our steady growth this year, puts us in a position to highlight that we've already outperformed the quarterly efficiency and profitability targets that we announced at last year's Investor Day. As a reminder, those target metrics were to earn $0.55 per share, meet or exceed a 1% ROA, and achieve an efficiency ratio of 55% or better. At this point, I'll turn the call back to Chris.
All right. Thanks, Pat. We'll begin the question and answer portion of the call. Give it a minute while we assemble everyone's questions.
Absolutely. As a quick reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If for any reason at all you would like to remove that question, please press star followed by two. Again, to ask a question, press star one. As a reminder, if you are using a speakerphone, please remember to pick up your handset before asking your question. We will pause here briefly as questions are registered. The first comes from Michael Perito with KBW. Your line is open.
Hey, guys. Good morning.
Morning, Mike.
Thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to a couple big picture questions maybe and I'll let others kind of drill in on the model. I guess first for starters, you know, pretty good balance sheet growth again this quarter and good NIM trends. As you guys think about your some of your more expansion type markets where I imagine kind of the core funding isn't as robust as in your legacy New Jersey, broader New York market, does it alter your appetite for expansion, you know, as those economics potentially change with deposit betas creeping up? Or how do you guys think about that dynamic as you kind of continue to try to drive loan growth outside of your legacy New Jersey footprint?
That's a good question, Mike. You know, as we open these offices, I always kind of cringe when people refer to them as loan offices or loan production offices because we think of them more as commercial banking offices. It is the case though that deposits will grow a little slower than loans will. We do expect to be raising deposits in each of these markets and over probably a period of years achieve some level of self-funding in those markets. You know, maybe I'd ask Joe to talk a little bit about our investments into treasury and cash management for our clients.
I'll echo Chris's points, Mike. I will tell you it's an interesting even a mindset for our folks because we spent, as you know, the last two years putting money to work, you know, excess liquidity, trying to put money to work, put money out on the street. Our folks have justifiably focused on one side of the balance sheet. Now we're focusing on both sides of the balance sheet. I'm not overly concerned. I spent two days in Boston last week talking to corporate clients that have excess liquidity that are excited to move dollars to us. As Chris mentioned, we've spent a lot of effort and time and product set investing in our treasury business for corporate clients.
I think we're well positioned to gain market share in deposits in what I'd consider to be the non-legacy geographies that we operate in.
You know, I'd also note that in the last.
Go ahead.
In the last month, Mike, we've released a significant upgrade to our treasury suite for our corporate clients called OFB Connect, which is a comprehensive mobile offering, which provides, you know, those corporate treasurers and CFOs on their mobile device the kinds of things they've become accustomed to on the consumer side. We've been investing heavily, and I think it'll take some time, but we do see deposit generation coming from all markets.
I guess just at a really high level, it sounds like you guys still expect to be able to outpace any increasing funding costs with higher earning asset yields at this time.
Yeah. We're pretty confident that at least over the next couple of quarters, the asset sensitivity position should persist. Funding costs will come up as we kind of compete a little bit more for deposits, but we think margins hold steady and expand even in the near term. Harder to see this back half of next year. I don't know what the yield curve is gonna look like, but.
Right. Okay. Just lastly, kind of a hypothetical here, and I realize this is somewhat challenging to talk about. You know, just the timing of the November fourth-year anniversary on the Partners deal and, you know, this call being probably the last time you guys kind of publicly speak before that. Just was curious if, hypothetically for some reason that deal doesn't happen and close, you know, can you maybe just give us a sense of, you know, what the capital priorities will be prospectively going forward as you look at the end of this year, beginning of next year?
I think as you can appreciate, Mike, we're gonna be limited in what we could answer in a hypothetical case. We appreciate the frustration, look, we share it, partner shares it about the timing and the process. Kind of setting that aside for a minute, whether that transaction closes or not, we've been investing heavily in our organic growth opportunities, and we expect to continue to do so. The most valuable thing we can do is to grow customer relationships, and that's where our focus will be. That's where our highest level of capital allocation will be. I don't know if that helps exactly, but that's, that has been-
Yeah
A theme that's happened even while we've been doing acquisitions, so.
Got it. No. I understand and appreciate you guys taking my questions. Thank you.
Thanks, Mike.
Thank you. Our next question comes from David Bishop with The Hovde Group. Please proceed.
Hey. Good morning, gentlemen.
Hey. Good morning, Dave.
Hey, Dave.
Thanks. Chris and Joe, obviously investor CRE continues to drive a lot of growth on the commercial side. Just curious, your appetite for that product. Maybe what segments are you seeing your best opportunities for growing that on a sort of a risk-adjusted basis?
Yeah. I'll let Dave, I'll let Joe talk to the segments. I will say, though, that we did see some nice growth in C&I in the last quarter on a percentage basis and continue to allocate resources to building those those kind of relationships out. In some cases, as we enter these new markets, your first transactions that you do to establish your brand are around real estate transactions. It's usually easier to build your brand that way, and then you transition more into C&I. But Joe, maybe you can talk to the segments and to the extent we're doing CRE, which property types you're focusing on.
Yeah. Hi, Dave. I will tell you that I mentioned earlier about the multifamily segment, and it is interesting because for a period of time, as you may recall, you followed us for a period of years. We're fairly conservative in the multi space just by virtue of the competitiveness on pricing. We've seen a little bit of widening in pricing spreads, which is a positive, and that continues to be a very strong asset class. As you know, last year we created a vertical in construction, which has been very successful in the space, and we continue to gain market share there, driven by Stani Karea, who runs that group for us, and his background and experience. We do see opportunities to continue to grow multi, both in construction and in the permanent end of it.
I think we're being a little thoughtful around other market segments, as you would expect. I mean, nobody's chasing urban office with the exception of select opportunities. I would easily say the same thing about the retail and hospitality. I think everybody at varying levels likes industrial, as you would expect, warehousing. But we're being thoughtful there, as evidenced by more recent pronouncements around Amazon and others that are slowing down the growth of their supply chains. So I do think that there is CRE opportunity. I think we're demonstrating we're very good at it. As Chris mentioned, we continue to put resources toward C&I where you can drive, as you know, some needed treasury and deposit growth as well.
Got it. Appreciate the color. Maybe Chris noticed in the slide deck. Always appreciate the detail there. You know, the tech spend's up about another $1 million this quarter. Was that mostly related to maybe the cash and treasury management build-out you noted? Just curious where you see those expenses trending? You know, from a holistic basis, you know, as you build out your digital mobile banking capabilities, do you view your sort of, you know, your competition as yourselves or the bigger banks like the B of A’s, the Wells Fargo, community banks? Just curious where you see, you know, where you're trying to compete most against there from that viewpoint?
Yeah. I think, you know, I'd start with the strategy that we think that a branch-like delivery model makes sense in the state of technology today. Our customers really wanna use digital. I think we've done a good job of pointing our spend to those kinds of capabilities. I mentioned OFB Connect as one example. You know, we recently launched full real-time Zelle payments. Those kinds of, that's where the dollars are going, into those kinds of capabilities. If I think about where tech spend is going, I do think that we're kind of achieving that level. That should be kind of plateauing for a bit for at least our size of business.
We've made significant investments in the infrastructure and the platform, and I think from here on out, it's gonna be more efficiency gains. The last thing that is maybe less transparent is the investment in technology to serve our own people. Most of our investment has been focused around end customer experiences. The more recent spending is focused on enhancing efficiencies internally to the folks that service our customers. We think there's an opportunity to get much better, but I don't think it's gonna require the same levels of technology investment.
Got it. One final question. Any update to the targets from the Analyst Day last summer from an ROA or efficiency standpoint at this point?
Yeah. We certainly need to update those because we think there's upside and opportunity. What we're gonna do is work through, as you can imagine, the next few weeks, the outcome on the Partners transaction, and then I think that would give us the opportunity to come back to you and our other investors and kind of share what we think the target should be going forward. Stay tuned. We will be back to update those numbers.
Great. Thanks, Chris.
Thank you. As a quick reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. The next question comes from Christopher Marinac. Your line is open.
Hey, thanks. Good morning. Chris and team.
Hey, Chris.
I wanted to ask about your thoughts about using sort of debt and wholesale to a greater extent over time, or do you think it'll stay roughly where it is now?
Look, I think that there are opportunities in the funding market, where you can do interesting things, and, you know, earlier this year, we saw an opportunity to exploit the brokered CD market, so we took advantage of that. I think historically, our level of wholesale FHLB borrowings is much lower than we typically run. We have that lever if we need it. That said, over the long run, we think the most valuable franchises have high-quality deposits. We're not a company that's gonna go over 100% loan-to-deposit ratio for long or to any great degree. We might drift over 100% if we think that's tactically the right thing to do in the interest rate environment, and we have the capacity to do so.
We've got still a very modest wholesale borrowing position. I think we're gonna be opportunistic, watching like everybody else to see where we think kind of the terminal rate might come out, you know, what the outlook might be in the back half of next year so that we don't structure funding that costs us too much down the road.
Great. Thanks for that. You know, during the last year, as you've been waiting for approval on the Partners transaction, have you had your normal kind of regulatory exam process? Has there been any sort of, I guess, you know, hot buttons or observations just from that process the last year?
Yeah. We've gone through the same kind of annual cycle that any bank would, so there's nothing unusual in terms of our cycle. In terms of themes, you know, I think each of the regulatory agencies has done a pretty good job of communicating publicly the things they're focused on, and those are the same conversations we're having with our regulators as well.
Great, Chris. Thanks again for hosting us this morning.
All right. Thanks, Chris.
Thank you. Once again, as a quick reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. The next question comes from Matthew Breese with Stephens Inc. Please proceed.
Good morning.
Good morning.
Good morning.
I was hoping for a little bit more color on the NIM outlook. Assuming we get, you know, call it another 150 basis points of Fed hikes, where do you expect the NIM to peak out? Post kind of, you know, a peak, if you will. You know, is there a fall off after that? You know, many asset-sensitive banks are discussing kind of a peak and a little bit of a fall off as deposit costs continue to increase. Just looking for some color on kind of the NIM trajectory over the next, call it, 9-12 months.
Hey, Matt. It's Pat Barrett here. I'll take a first run at that, and then Chris and/or Joe can jump in on that. Look, I think what you saw from us this quarter with kind of a mid-single-digit expansion is a decent run rate that we should expect as long as you see rates continuing to rise. It's not gonna be linear. Some quarters it might be closer to flat, some quarters it might be closer to 10 basis points, but it's not a bad proxy for the kind of rate increases we've seen, which we do expect to continue through this quarter and probably into the first quarter. I think we still remain asset sensitive with expansion upside, even when the Fed stops raising rates or when curves settle down simply by virtue of the mix of our portfolio.
I'm really hesitant to put a peak or a timeframe on that because that's essentially overlaying what I think the Fed's gonna do and what I think is gonna happen with deposit competition and pricing, both of which could kind of materially change it. Pretty comfortable you'll continue to see expansion and growth in NII, until rates start to come down.
Got it. Okay.
Maybe, Matt.
Very helpful.
Matt, I would just add to that when we reach terminal, the terminal rate and the idea that maybe the Fed would decrease rates thereafter, the shape and the speed of that decrease is gonna matter a lot in terms of what happens, I think to us and to other asset-sensitive banks. I think what we saw during COVID is this race to zero. In a race to zero, our asset sensitivity really hurt us. You saw the margins come down under 3%. If there's a slight pullback in rates, but it's not that kind of race to zero, I don't think it'd be that. It shouldn't take that big of a toll on our margin.
We should be okay if there are kind of a stable rate environment going forward, which is, you know, hopefully what we would get. You know, we shouldn't be going back down to zero unless there's a kind of an emergency out there. Let's hope we avoid one of those.
Agreed. Yeah. Maybe one for Joe. You know, I got the sense from your comments that perhaps the loan growth outlook might slow down a little bit, just being more selective to an environment worthy of a bit more cautiousness. Just curious as we think about kind of the longer term, $250 million net growth per quarter bogey out there. Is it more than likely that we come under that, at least for the near term, you know, given some of the cautiousness you talked about?
Yeah. It could be, Matt, but I think it ends up being just a little bit more, you know, choppy, right? I do think that there is. We're still seeing quality loan requests, and I think we're being a little bit more thoughtful around it. We're still seeing activity, and I do think that there is an opportunity to outperform certain quarters, and there'll be other quarters that might be a little bit more muted. I'm not uncomfortable. Listen, the capital position we have supports high digit or high single digit growth. If we can find good growth, we'll look to do it.
Got it. Okay. Then just Trident revenues were a bit lower this quarter. In the presentation, you noted that revenues will be kind of $3 million-$5 million per quarter. I'm curious, what are the factors that we should be considering when thinking about a really good quarter from Trident? You know, generating $5 million bucks versus the $3 million. Then maybe just updated thoughts on overall fee income and expense levels from here.
Yeah, I'll take.
I'll take the Trident and I'll miss something.
Okay.
You take Trident, Joe. I'll take the rest of it.
I think, Matt, listen, Trident still gets a, you know, a solid amount of bulk of the revenues from the residential business. We all know what's happened in the residential business. I do think that we'll get the opportunity to do more commercial business as our corporate clients get more and more comfortable with the fact that we have a ton of company and that there may be opportunities to do those types of businesses with us for ease of use and conformity and all that stuff. But I do think you're gonna see. I think that's the right level of where we're gonna be for the time being. I don't see any significant increases in residential activity coming in short term.
The only thing I'd add, Matt, to the outlook for fees is that when you think about swap fee income and total originations, as Joe noted, with originations down, you have fewer transactions happening, so less opportunity for swap fees. You have the, you know, swap markets themselves and the pricing on that and people thinking hard before they enter into a swap deal. We've seen a little weakness in the swap line item, which might continue for a bit. Deposit fees were off as well. That's predominantly been a story around, you know, overdraft and us being as conservative as we can given the focus on those fees. I think you've got a couple different causes here in a quarter where you're doing more transactions.
You could have a little bit of a benefit in both Trident and in swap fees. The deposit fees are probably gonna stay around where they are for a while.
Great. Okay. And then two other ones. The first one is just, you know, regardless of whether the Partners Bancorp deal goes through or doesn't go through, you know, from here, what's the message around future M&A? Has this process changed your view on the types of deals you'd like to pursue? If so, just maybe discuss your thoughts around that.
Sure. Well, look, you have to be aware of kind of trends. When I think back about the opportunity we had to grow through tactical acquisitions over the last few years, I think it's a very valuable thing for us in building a platform that I think we're going to be able to do a lot with. That said, in the seven prior transactions we were involved in, the path between announcement and closing was a lot more straightforward. The risk level of getting a transaction done was low. At least for now, the risk level seems to be heightened, as I think not just us, but various regulatory agencies kind of interpret how they want to be evaluating M&A.
The net of that, Matt, is that we really don't have any interest beyond Partners in pursuing any tactical M&A. We would be focused on the organic side. Because if you've got more risk, you know, far fewer transactions are going to meet that hurdle. Risk is up, which means our tolerance to do additional tactical acquisitions is quite low.
Great. Okay. Just last one. Look, I know TCE capital is healthy, but just looking at kind of bank-level capital ratios, one that stands out is the total risk-based capital below 12%. I just wanted to get your thoughts on that level. If there's you know, capital to hold so you could downstream or need for sub debt, anything like that.
Yeah. I think we're evaluating all of our capital options, especially in light of you know, whether or not we close partners and kind of calibrating to the growth rates that Joe talked about. As Joe mentioned that you know, high single digits approaching, say, 10% organic growth. We can handle that you know, with the capital we have on hand today. If we think there's an opportunity to grow faster than that with good quality growth and the economy were to you know, appear to have gotten through this period without you know, a significant recession, we might look at opportunities to bolster capital through. You know, the first thing we would look at is you know, sub-debt's probably the most efficient way to do that.
We had redeemed $35 million worth of sub-debt at the end of Q1, so you know, you could conceivably replace that, add to it. That's about the extent of our thought process for now. We're watching origination volumes. We're watching balance sheet growth. We're gonna get through the next few weeks of determination on the Partners transaction, and then we'll kind of calibrate things. There is also the opportunity for us to manage margins as opposed to growth, where we could slow down the growth rates a little bit but be more selective on pricing, which would allow us to boost profitability. I think we're good for a period, but depending on market conditions, we may need to evaluate that.
Great. That's all I had. Thanks for taking my questions.
Okay, Matt. Thanks.
Thank you. Our following question is from Matthew Breese with Stephens Inc. You may proceed. Excuse me about that. It's actually Manuel Navas with D.A. Davidson.
Hi. Good morning. Can I have a little bit of an update on pricing competition across your different markets and if you're still getting the increase in pipeline yields everywhere, or is there some differences out there?
I think there's always differences, not necessarily geographic, but depending on the strength and the type of transaction that you're doing. I think the larger you go upmarket, depending on the size of the transaction, obviously you have different competitors who have different price sensitivities. I would tell you on average, the C&I business tends to be a little leaner in spread, but it's offset by the ability to get deposits and treasury income, a variety of other things that you may not get in the CRE business. I wouldn't anticipate that be a significant adverse impact in any one market, and we do track that fairly closely.
As you were talking about your kind of NIM outlook, can you talk a little bit about potential, like, ways you could protect the NIM when the Fed stops and kind of your thoughts about that point in time?
I can maybe just give you a couple thoughts on that. The first is when you think about on the funding side, going into the pandemic, you know, none of us knowing that a pandemic was on the way, we had entered into a number of kind of longer range agreements with some of our commercial clients to provide them a rate on their invested balances over a period of time. What that did is that gave us less flexibility as interest rates came down, so our cost of deposits fell much more slowly than the peer group. Number one, we're being very thoughtful about the duration of the funding we're putting on the liability side.
On the asset side of the balance sheet, we continue to favor kind of floating rate instruments. We are thinking more about floors and swaps and things we could do to protect some of that floating rate asset pool from a significant decline in rates. As I said earlier, a slight pullback in rates, you know, if our terminal rate is reached sometime in the first half of 2023, and then it pulls back 25 or 50 basis points, that probably doesn't hurt us much. What had hurt us during COVID was the rates going to zero, right? That was just a dramatic shock that we weren't as prepared for.
A little better strategic approach on the pricing of deposits, and, you know, thinking as hard as we can about floors and things like that on the asset side. I hope that helps.
I appreciate that. Just kind of following up, earlier there was a question about a good run rate for operating expenses. I know that healthcare was a little bit higher in the comp line this quarter, but other than that, is this kind of a good run rate as a base level ex partners? Any commentary on that would be great.
Hey, Manuel, it's Pat. Yeah, I think this is a pretty decent run rate that we see right now. There was a little uptick in benefits through healthcare costs, but as with everyone else, we are facing pressure on wages and wage inflation. We've done some work during the year, and that probably will continue. We're being super thoughtful about incremental spending, whether it be hiring or contract new renewals or new contracts. We're gonna do everything we can to stay in front of, meaning better than, overall market inflation. I do think that as we move into compensation season into next year, we certainly will see normal increases, for whatever the market is. For now, I think it's a decent run rate.
I appreciate that. Your earlier commentary is that some of the technology spending might be leveling off, and that could offer kind of a
Help. Absolutely. Keep that cost.
Yeah
A little bit more contained. Okay.
That's actually a really good point. We don't have an overhang of a lot of incremental new spend that we have to make going forward to make sure that we have a competitive platform vis-à-vis digital product offerings for our customers. That's actually. We're very happy with the place we are in that.
Thank you for the time today.
Thanks, man.
Thank you, Manuel Navas from D.A. Davidson. The next question comes from Gerry Heffernan Please proceed.
Good morning, everybody. Thanks for hosting the call here. Hey, in regards to the.
Good morning.
Good morning. In regards to the step back in the loan production that you spoke of, I believe you used the terms just being a little bit more careful. In regards to that, could you just provide a little bit of color as to, is it being more careful and perhaps desiring higher prices? Is it being more careful about what industry the borrower may be representing, as far as, you know, what type of businesses you're willing to lend to or not? Or does it have to do with the terms that are presently being offered or competed away against in the marketplace?
I think there's always a combination. Yeah, thanks, Jerry. I think it's always a combination of factors. I'll give you an example of the term aspect. We still see competitors that have a different credit cut than we do, and it's okay. I mean, not everybody has the same credit appetite. There are still what I'd consider to be, you know, covenant-like transactions, even in this environment out in the marketplace. As much as we like to look at most anything that comes across, we've tended to be a little bit more circumspect when it comes to that.
You can't have some of the recent rate rises without adversely affecting the way you stress test, and I think that's something that's really important to us when we look at transactions. I, as I mentioned earlier, we'll use CRE as an example. I think there are certain asset classes that we've done really well with over the last few years. As a result, we're saying, and retail is probably a good example, urban offices and other, where you don't say you won't do it, I think you just are a little bit more thoughtful and careful about the ones that you end up doing. I think low leverage is your friend in this environment today with rate volatility.
Okay. As far as the loan originations go, have you seen an uptick in the renewal percentage? Right, the number of times that a loan will either renew with you or renew with a competitor.
I think I'd answer it this way. I think it's a little too early to tell to a certain extent. I think our corporate clients that are our relationship clients renew with us typically. It's very rare that we lose transactions to competition. I would say if you look at the last couple of years, where most banks have had runoff has been a combination of borrowers getting exorbitant prices for owned real estate, so they get an opportunity to sell it again.
Depending on the segment, certain borrowers refinancing to take out equity, which, that's now not going to occur in the near future. That allows prepay speeds to slow, which allows us to grow the balance sheet even with reduced originations.
Okay, okay. My final question would be on expenses. You all certainly are to be complimented on hitting your expense ratio goal already. That's great stuff. We had talked previously about the branch network, optimizing the number of branches out there, recognizing the number of people that were needed per branch, but then saying, "Hey, let's not get too carried away because we're looking to supplant personnel in some cases with technology," and that requires adding employees to the technology department, which basically are more expensive per head.
Just where do you believe you are in the positioning of the company as far as the, you know, the headcount that you need to advance your technology goals, versus the optimization of personnel in the branches, and even the total branch count, the branch network count?
Yeah. Thanks for that question. I think that kind of plays to the strength of what we've been doing over the last couple of years. We think that transformation is, I would categorize it as largely complete, and I'll give you.
Okay
One caveat on that. We've largely completed. We've consolidated 77 branches over the last six years or so and added significant personnel to our digital banking group and our IT group, and you can see, you know, where those spends have come in. I think having completed the transactions or the consolidations we did last year, we feel very good about the branch network being able to serve the communities that we're in today. In fact, we are making capital investments in a few branches here and there to make sure they're competitive and nice places for our customers to go in and visit and do business. We think we've got a good network.
We think that we've invested in the technology to be able to deliver it digitally. I think we're at a reasonable kind of status quo on that. From this point forward, I think we'll be focused on the efficiency of the back office, how we can help our folks do more faster, you know, improve customer turnaround times and those kinds of things. I think the relative spend between retail front-facing employees and technology infrastructure and digital employees is about where we think it should be, at least for the foreseeable future. The caveat I'll give is we watch this every quarter, and it depends heavily on customer appetites. If our customers need more digital, we need to be able to support that. I think we're pretty competitively positioned today.
I think that effort took us a few years to get through, and it's not easy. Our people did an extraordinary job of making that transition and retaining customers so that we've got, you know, in fact, we've got more deposits now than we did when we started the process, so.
Yes. It has been a long process, but you're complimented for keeping your eye on the ball and achieving your goals. Thank you very much.
All right. Thank you.
Thank you. There appear to be no further questions in the queue. As a quick reminder, it is star one on your telephone keypad if you would like to ask a question. As there are no further questions at this time, I will pass it back to Chris Maher for closing remarks.
All right. Thank you. For those who follow OceanFirst, you may have noticed a slightly different timing for our earnings release and conference call this quarter. Going forward in 2023, we anticipate shifting the schedule for our quarterly earnings announcement and call to be in the third week in January, April, July, and October. As always, we appreciate your time and interest in OceanFirst. We look forward to speaking with you after our fourth quarter results are published in January. For those of you celebrating holidays from now until the end of the year, we wish you and your families a safe and healthy holiday season. Thank you very much.