Good morning, and welcome to the Raymond James Financial's Third Quarter Fiscal 2022 Earnings Call. This call is being recorded and will be available for replay on the company's investor relations website. Now I will turn it over to Kristie Waugh, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations at Raymond James Financial.
Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. We appreciate your time and interest in Raymond James Financial. With us on the call today are Paul Reilly, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, and Paul Shoukry, Chief Financial Officer. The presentation being reviewed this morning is available on Raymond James Investor Relations website. Following the prepared remarks, the operator will open the line for questions. Calling your attention to slide two. Please note certain statements made during this call may constitute forward-looking statements. These statements include, but are not limited to, information concerning future strategic objectives, business prospects, financial results, anticipated timing and benefits of our acquisitions, our level of success in integrating acquired businesses, divestitures, anticipated results of litigation and regulatory developments, impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic or general economic conditions.
In addition, words such as may, will, should, could, plans, intends, anticipates, expects, or believes, or negatives of such terms or other comparable terminology, as well as any other statement that necessarily depends on future events, are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Please note that there can be no assurance that actual results will not differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements. We urge you to consider the risks described in our most recent Form 10-K and subsequent Forms 10-Q and Forms 8-K, which are available on our investor relations website. During today's call, we will also use certain non-GAAP financial measures to provide information pertinent to our management's view of ongoing business performance. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to the most comparable GAAP measures may be found in the schedules accompanying our press release and presentation.
Now I'm happy to turn the call over to Chair and CEO, Paul Reilly. Paul.
Good morning, and thank you for joining us today. I know with our recent acquisitions, the numbers are a little more complicated, but I am pleased with our results for the fiscal third quarter and the first nine months of the fiscal year. Despite challenging market conditions, we have continued to invest in our business, our people and technology to help drive growth across all of our businesses. In the Private Client Group, excellent retention and recruiting of financial advisors contributed to industry-leading growth with domestic net new assets of 9.4% over the trailing 12-month period. In the Capital Markets business, while investment banking revenues were negatively impacted by continued market volatility during the quarter, we continue to see strong pipelines as the expertise we have added both organically and through niche acquisitions has performed very well.
In Fixed Income, we completed the acquisition of SumRidge Partners just after the quarter on July 1, which will enhance our platform with technology-driven capabilities and a fantastic team with extensive experience in dealing with corporates. In June, we completed the acquisition of TriState Capital Holdings, including TriState Capital Bank and Chartwell Investment Partners, adding $11.8 billion of loans and $9.4 billion in financial assets under management. In addition to TriState's contribution to our loan portfolio, Raymond James Bank grew loans at an impressive 8% during the quarter, reflecting attractive growth across almost all loan categories. As we always do in any market cycle, we continue to invest for the long term, always putting the client first.
While the decrease in fee-based assets from the equity market declines during the quarter will negatively impact asset management and related administrative fees in the fourth quarter, we are well positioned for increases in short-term rates given our attractive growth of earning assets, the majority which float with the short end of the curve. Furthermore, we have maintained a flexible balance sheet with solid capital ratios well in excess of regulatory requirements. Turning to results on slide four. I fully appreciate there were a lot of moving parts this quarter, which Paul Shoukry will explain in more detail. In the fiscal third quarter, the firm reported net revenues of $2.72 billion and net income available to common shareholders of $299 million, or earnings per diluted share of $1.38.
Year-over-year and sequential revenue growth reflects primarily the benefit of higher short-term interest rates on both RJBDP fees from third-party banks and net interest income, which more than offset the declines in total brokerage revenues and investment banking revenues resulting from the challenging market environment. The decline in net income available to common shareholders was primarily attributable to increased business development expenses and a higher bank loan provision for credit losses during the current quarter, which reflects the strong growth at Raymond James Bank, a weaker macroeconomic outlook, and the $26 million initial provision for the credit losses on loans acquired from TriState Capital Bank, as Paul will discuss in more detail. Excluding $65 million of expenses related to acquisitions, quarterly adjusted income available to common shareholders was $348 million, or $1.61 per diluted share.
Annualized return on equity for the quarter was 13.3%, and adjusted annualized return on tangible common equity was 18.1%. An impressive result, especially given the challenging market environment and our strong capital position. Moving to slide five. Sharp equity market declines in the quarter, including a 16% sequential decline in the S&P 500 index, negatively impacted client asset levels. We entered the quarter with a total client assets under administration of $1.13 trillion and PCG assets and fee-based accounts of $607 billion. Financial assets under management of $182 billion, which includes Chartwell Investment Partners, decreased 6% sequentially as a decline in equity markets more than offset net inflows and the acquired assets during the quarter.
We entered the quarter with 8,616 financial advisors, a net increase of 203 over the prior year period and a decrease of 114 compared to the preceding quarter. Results this quarter reflect the transfer of 188 advisors, primarily from one firm, to our RIA and Custody Services division, or RCS, during the quarter. While transfers to RCS impact the advisor count, the client assets typically remain custodied at the firm. Excluding these transfers, the number of financial advisors increased 74 from the preceding quarter, reflecting our continued low credible attrition and strong recruiting. Our focus on supporting advisors and their clients, especially during volatile markets, has led to strong results in terms of advisor retention as well as our recruiting of experienced advisors to the Raymond James platforms through our multiple affiliation options.
Over the trailing 12-month period ending June 30, 2022, we recruited to our domestic independent contract and employee channels financial advisors with approximately $300 million of trailing 12 production and approximately $47 billion of client assets at their previous firms. In highlighting our industry-leading growth, we generated domestic PCG net new assets of nearly $98 billion over the four quarters ending June 30, 2022, representing 9.4% of domestic PCG assets at the beginning of the period. Third quarter domestic PCG net new asset growth was 5.4% annualized, a strong result given the impact of client tax payments in the quarter. Bank loan growth continues to be strong. Raymond James Bank generated impressive loan growth of 26% year-over-year and 8% sequentially to a record $30.1 billion.
Additionally, TriState Capital Bank brought over $11.8 billion of loans this quarter, which represents a record for them as they have continued to generate very attractive loan growth across their portfolios. Moving on to segment results on slide six. The Private Client Group generated record results with quarterly net revenues of $1.96 billion and pre-tax income of $251 million. While asset-based revenues declined, the segment results were lifted by the benefit from higher short-term interest rates. The Capital Markets segment generated quarterly net revenues of $383 million and pre-tax income of $61 million. Capital Markets revenues declined 14% over the prior year period and 7% sequentially, mostly driven by lower fixed income brokerage revenues and equity underwriting revenues due to the volatile and uncertain markets.
The Asset Management segment generated net revenues of $228 million and pre-tax income of $93 million. The sequential decline in revenues and pre-tax income in the Asset Management segment were primarily attributable to the negative impact on financial assets under management from the decline in equity markets. The Bank segment, which now includes Raymond James Bank and TriState Capital Bank, generated quarterly net revenues of $276 million, which is a record result, and pre-tax income of $74 million. Remember, we closed on TriState Capital on June first, so this quarter only reflects one month of their results. Net revenue growth was mainly due to higher loan balances and significant expansion of the bank's net interest margin to 2.41% for the quarter, up 40 basis points from the preceding quarter.
Despite revenue growth, the bank segment's pre-tax income declined primarily due to the aforementioned higher bank loan loss provisions in the quarter. Looking at the fiscal year-to-date results on slide seven, we generated record net revenues of $8.17 billion during the first nine months of fiscal 2022, up 16% over the same period a year ago. Record earnings per diluted share of $4.99 increased 8% compared to the first nine months of fiscal 2021. Additionally, we generated strong annualized return on common equity of 16.3% and annualized adjusted return on tangible common equity of 20.1% for the nine-month period. Moving to the fiscal year-to-date segment results on slide eight.
All four core operating segments generated record net revenues, and the Private Client Group, Capital Markets, and Asset Management segments generated record pre-tax income during the first nine months of the fiscal year. Again, reinforcing the value of our diverse and complementary businesses. Now for a more detailed view of the third quarter and year-to-date results, I will turn the call over to Paul Shoukry. Paul?
Thank you, Paul. Starting with consolidated revenues on slide 10. Quarterly net revenues of $2.72 billion grew 10% year-over-year and 2% sequentially. Asset Management fees grew 13% over the prior year's fiscal third quarter and declined 3% compared to the preceding quarter, in line with the guidance we provided on last quarter's call. As a result of the steep declines in the equity markets during the quarter, Private Client Group assets and fee-based accounts ended the fiscal third quarter down 11% compared to March 2022, creating a significant headwind for Asset Management revenues in the fiscal fourth quarter. Brokerage revenues of $513 million declined 7% compared to the prior year's fiscal third quarter and 9% compared to the preceding quarter.
The decline in brokerage revenues was largely due to lower asset-based trail revenues in the Private Client Group, as well as decreased brokerage revenues in the Capital Markets segment. I know some other financial services firms posted year-over-year increases in institutional fixed income brokerage revenues. Remember, we intentionally do not have a meaningful presence in the much more volatile interest rate, commodities, and currency trading businesses, which benefited many of those larger firms this quarter. I'll discuss account and service fees and net interest income shortly. Investment banking revenues of $223 million declined 5% compared to the preceding quarter. While our pipelines are strong, there's a lot of uncertainty given the heightened market volatility. Given the market environment, we are really pleased with the investment banking result this quarter.
Our best guess right now is that we could achieve a similar result in the fiscal fourth quarter if the markets remain relatively resilient over the next couple of months. Moving to slide 11. Clients' domestic cash sweep balances ended the quarter at $75.8 billion, down 1% compared to the preceding quarter and representing 7.8% of domestic PCG client assets. As of this week, these balances have declined to approximately $73 billion, reflecting the quarterly fee payments, which were paid in July and comprise of roughly half the decline this month, as well as some continued cash sorting activity during the month. Turning to slide 12.
Combined net interest income and RJBDP fees from third-party banks was $370 million, up an astounding 102% over the prior year's fiscal third quarter and 65% from the preceding quarter. This revenue growth is largely a result of higher loan balances in the bank segment, as well as higher short-term interest rates, which really reinforces our long-standing approach of taking limited duration risk with a high concentration of floating-rate assets. You can see on the bottom left portion of the slide, the bank segment's net interest margin increases a substantial 40 basis points sequentially to 2.41% for the quarter. The average yield on RJBDP balances with third-party banks increased to 88 basis points in the quarter.
Both the NIM and the average yield from third-party banks are expected to increase further from the recent and anticipated rate increases. For the fiscal fourth quarter, factoring in the rate increase this week and some assumptions around deposit beta and other variables, we would expect the average yield on RJBDP from third-party banks for the fiscal fourth quarter to average around 1.7%. As for the bank segment's NIM, we expect it to average around 2.7% for the fiscal fourth quarter, which would reflect around two months of this week's interest rate increase, and a full quarter of TriState Capital's contribution. These projections will obviously be impacted by the actual deposit beta we experience. We will continue to put clients first and focus on staying on the more generous end of the spectrum for our clients.
So far, our cumulative deposit beta since the Fed started increasing rates in March has been around 20%, but that has accelerated with each subsequent increase to about 30% with the June increase. We would expect the deposit beta to continue increasing with each incremental rate increase. Moving to consolidated expenses on slide 13. Let me point out a significant change we made this quarter to our presentation of expenses. Namely, we eliminated the acquisition-related expense line item and now are including all the expenses in their respective line items. At the same time, we are now capturing more acquisition-related expenses in our non-GAAP adjustments, including items such as amortization of acquired identifiable intangible assets, acquisition-related retention, and a bank loan provision item I will discuss in more detail shortly. For example, this quarter, $65 million of expenses related to acquisitions are included in the non-GAAP adjustments.
As detailed on the reconciliation table on slide 21, which provides the amount of associated expense per line item as well as a five-quarter history. We hope these refinements, which I know have been very common across many of our peers, are responsive to many of your requests and help you gain a better understanding of our operating results. As always, we will emphasize our GAAP results alongside any adjusted results we disclose. Turning to our largest expense, compensation. The total compensation ratio for the quarter was 67.5%, which decreased from 69.3% in the preceding quarter. We also introduced an adjusted total compensation ratio this quarter, which adjusts for acquisition-related retention and compensation, as outlined on slide 23. The adjusted compensation ratio was 66.8% during the quarter.
The sequential decline in the compensation ratio largely reflects the benefit from higher net interest income and RJBDP fees from third-party banks. Non-compensation expenses of $469 million, which includes $47 million of acquisition-related expenses included in our non-GAAP earnings adjustments, increased 21% sequentially. Business development expenses increased to $58 million, reflecting the advisor recognition events and conferences, as well as increased pent-up travel during the quarter. To put this in perspective, prior to COVID, the fiscal third quarter was typically the high watermark for this line item. In the fiscal third quarters of both 2018 and 2019, this line item totaled $57 million. Since then, our business and revenues have grown substantially, including through several acquisitions. The bank loan provision for credit losses increased considerably to $56 million.
A big portion of this increase was a $26 million initial provision associated with TriState Capital acquisition, where purchase accounting requires us to establish an initial allowance for loan losses associated with the acquired loans, as the pre-closing allowance does not transfer over. To help you with comparability to prior periods, we did adjust for this portion of the bank loan provision in our non-GAAP results. The remaining portion of the bank loan provision during the quarter, around $30 million, was primarily associated with the 8% sequential loan growth at Raymond James Bank and a weaker macroeconomic outlook. Other expenses increased to $85 million for the quarter. The majority of the sequential increase was attributable to increased expenses associated with acquisitions during the quarter, which are included in the non-GAAP adjustments.
I know there's been a lot of noise over the past couple of quarters with the Charles Stanley and TriState Capital acquisitions, but the main takeaway on expenses is we remain focused on the disciplined management of all compensation and non-compensation related expenses while still investing heavily in growth and ensuring high service levels for advisors and their clients. Slide 14 shows the pre-tax margin trend over the past five quarters. In the fiscal third quarter, we generated a pre-tax margin of 15.3% and an adjusted pre-tax margin of 17.7%. While the market environment has certainly become more challenging since our Analyst and Investor Day in May, we still believe the 19%-20% pre-tax margin target we laid out is appropriate given the significant benefits of higher short-term interest rates, assuming the market stays relatively resilient at current levels.
On slide 15, at the end of the quarter, total assets were $86.1 billion, an 18% sequential increase reflecting the addition of TriState Capital as well as solid growth of loans at Raymond James Bank. Liquidity and capital remained very strong. RJF corporate cash at the parent ended the quarter at $2 billion, well above the $1.2 billion target. The Tier 1 leverage ratio of 10.8% and the total capital ratio of 21.4% are both more than double the regulatory requirements to be well capitalized, providing significant flexibility to continue being opportunistic and invest in growth. Also, I would note that the Tier 1 leverage ratio includes just one month of TriState Capital assets and doesn't yet reflect the assets from SumRidge, which closed on July first.
The spot Tier 1 leverage ratio following the SumRidge acquisition is below 10%, still well above the 5% regulatory requirement. As I said on the last quarter's call, we don't view the client cash we are accommodating on the balance sheet at the broker-dealer in the client interest program, which ended the quarter at $13.7 billion, the same as our other balance sheet assets. We still have ample balance sheet flexibility after adjusting for those excess cash balances on the balance sheet. I am very pleased with the progress we have made deploying capital over the past two years since we first disclosed our capital targets. Really reinforcing our priority to utilize capital to invest in long-term growth across all of our businesses and deliver attractive returns to our shareholders.
The effective tax rate for the quarter increased to 27.5%, up from 25.4% in the preceding quarter, primarily due to higher nondeductible losses on the corporate-owned life insurance portfolio. Slide 16 provides a summary of our capital actions over the past five quarters. Following the closing of the TriState Capital acquisition on June 1st, we began repurchasing common shares under our board authorization. We repurchased approximately 1.14 million common shares for $100 million, or approximately $88 per share. As of July 27, 2022, approximately $900 million remained available under the board-approved share repurchase authorization.
As we explained on prior calls and at Analyst Investor Day in May, our current plan is to offset the share issuance associated with the acquisition of TriState Capital over the next few quarters, and I believe our action in June demonstrates this commitment. We will continue to closely monitor market conditions and other capital needs as we evaluate further repurchases over the coming quarters. Lastly, on slide 17, we provide key credit metrics for our bank segment. Remember, these metrics reflect our newly formed bank segments, which includes Raymond James Bank and TriState Capital Bank. The credit quality of the loan portfolio remains strong, and most trends continue to improve.
Criticized loans as a percent of total loans held for investment ended the quarter at 1.63%, down from 4.07% at June 2021 and 2.63% at March 2022. Now I'll turn the call back over to Paul Reilly to discuss our outlook. Paul?
Thank you, Paul. As I said at the start of our call, I'm pleased with our results, and while there are many uncertainties, I believe we are well positioned to drive growth across all of our businesses. In the Private Client Group, next quarter results will be negatively impacted by the expected 11% sequential decline of asset management and related administrative fees that Paul described earlier. However, focusing more long term, our recruiting pipelines remain strong and combined with solid retention, I'm optimistic we will continue to deliver industry-leading growth as advisors are attracted to our client-focused values and leading technology platform. The segment will also continue to benefit from higher short-term interest rates. In the Capital Markets segment, the M&A pipeline remains robust, but the pace and timing of closings will heavily be influenced on market conditions.
Over the long term, I am confident we are well positioned for growth as the significant investments we made over the past five years strengthen our platform and increased our team and productive capacity. In the fixed income space, we expect SumRidge Partners to enhance our current position in the rapidly evolving fixed income and trading technology marketplace. In Asset Management segment, while financial assets under management are starting the fiscal fourth quarter lower due to equity markets, we are confident the strong growth of assets in fee-based accounts in the Private Client Group segment will drive long-term growth of financial assets under management. In addition, we expect Carillon Tower Advisers, with its new addition of Chartwell Investment Partners, to help drive further growth through increased scale, distribution, and operational and marketing synergies.
The bank segment is well positioned for rising short-term interest rates as we have ample funding and capital to grow the balance sheet prudently. Most importantly, the credit quality of the bank segment's loan portfolio remains strong. As always, I want to thank our advisors and all of our associates for their perseverance and dedication to providing excellent service to their clients each and every day. With that, operator, I'm going to open it up for questions. Thank you.
Thank you. If you would like to register a question or comment, please press the one followed by the four on your telephone. You will hear a three-tone prompt to acknowledge your request. If your question has been answered and you would like to withdraw your registration, please press the one followed by the three. One moment please. The first question comes from Gerald O'Hara of Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Great, thanks, and good morning. I was hoping you might be able to just help unpack a little bit of the comments around the cash sorting in the quarter and just sort of maybe give us a sense of what you saw and perhaps what we might expect in that dynamic. Thank you.
Thanks, Gerry. How are you? Good morning. Yeah, actually, the cash balances in the quarter stayed relatively resilient, as you saw, only down about 1% for the quarter. Now, in the month of July, we have seen a decline in client cash balances. We're at about $73 billion now. Almost half of that was from the quarterly fee billings, which all come out in the first month of the quarter.
The other portion kind of reflects the cash sorting that we've been expecting for quite some time now as rates start to increase. You know, just to put it into context, just a year ago, we were at $63 billion of total client cash balances, which were elevated from the pre-COVID days. I don't think it should be surprising to see some cash sorting as rates increase going forward.
Great. Thanks. Maybe just a follow-up on expenses, Paul. I appreciate the sort of commentary around the growth of the business and the quarter being typically something of a high watermark. Can you maybe help us just sort of think about how that might trend on a run rate basis over the next couple quarters, given obviously sort of increased TNE and some of the other sort of normalization expense pressures that we're seeing? Apologies if I missed it, but I think that'd be helpful.
Yeah. Certainly business development expenses were much higher this quarter. You know, last quarter, you know, it seems like an eternity, but we were still dealing with Omicron, so people really weren't traveling at the beginning of the quarter. This quarter, we have our biggest advisor conference for the independent advisor business. That's and this is a quarter we've had it historically even pre-COVID, which is why it usually is the high watermark quarter. People are starting to travel again. There's a lot of pent-up travel out there, you know, people wanting to see each other in person again. I think when you look at just stepping back and looking at non-compensation expense in the aggregate, on a GAAP basis, it ended at $469 million for the quarter.
Now about $47 million of that were non-GAAP adjustments related to acquisitions. That gets us down to, on an adjusted basis for non-GAAP, non-compensation expenses, about $422 million. You know, we still have two more months of TriState Capital to reflect there. That's about $10 million if you look at their $15 million run rate. Some of the expenses this quarter were elevated. Maybe a good sort of jumping off point, ± a few million dollars as we look at the next couple of quarters.
I know the line item is higher than people maybe anticipated, but I think you also have to remember, if you compare it to the 2019 and 2020 numbers, that was about 3% of revenue in those, in that quarter. It's about 2% of revenue this time. I mean, we've grown significantly. I think we're managing the costs very well. Just based on those percentages, I don't think we're back to where we were. You can see we're managing expenses. But our big conferences and, you know, our biggest advisor events have occurred in this quarter, and it's not atypical.
Understood. Thanks for taking my questions this morning.
Thanks, Gerry.
Thank you. The next question comes from Alexander Blostein of Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Hey, guys, this is Michael on for Alex. I think we kind of want an update on the timing and size of how you're thinking about swapping TriState's deposits with RJ's deposits. Any updated color you can give us there would be great. Thanks.
First I'll let Paul talk about that, but I think you guys, we can deploy cash in either bank. You know, it's really almost irrelevant whether it's in TriState or Raymond James Bank, you know, versus the sweep. We have a lot of options and flexibility to maximize the earnings on cash as banks are looking for bank sweeps again where they weren't before. You know, it's a question I know you all keep asking. You know, we've already made some progress on that, but part of it really depends on TriState's, you know, clients. They're operating for their clients, and they have depository relationships there too. We're making progress. Paul, I'll let you get into a little more of the detail.
I think strategically, as you go forward, you should look at how much is deployed and not necessarily in what, you know, which franchise. Paul.
I think you covered it very well, Paul. You know, we've already supplemented their deposit base with about $1 billion of our deposits, and we have plans to supplement with another $1 billion. As Paul said, they're running an independent business. They have their clients. We want to certainly honor their relationships with their clients. Frankly, over the next few years, those deposits and those diversified funding sources could be very valuable to us as an organization overall. We're not focused on the short-term accretion of a standalone business. We're really focused on, you know, maximizing flexibility and earnings for the organization overall.
Great. Thanks. It sounds like the kind of initial commentary you guys gave when the acquisition was closed is kind of what we can still expect.
I'd say the
Yeah
... the trend is that way, right? We could change based on, you know, where we can deploy the cash and what they need. But you know, so far we're on kind of the plan.
All right, great. Maybe one quick follow-up. You guys gave us the guidance for the fiscal fourth firm-wide NIM. Maybe you can help us think about, like, a good jumping off point for NII and flesh that out a little bit. Thanks.
Yeah, I mean, we gave you kind of the biggest component with the NIM average for the quarter. For the fiscal fourth quarter, we're expecting it to be about 2.7%, which would be, you know, almost 30 basis points higher than the 2.4% that it averaged this particular quarter. We've had some nice growth in earning assets, both from Raymond James Bank on a standalone basis, which grew 8% sequentially, and then of course, adding on TriState. I think those kind of give you the main inputs to calculate net interest income. Then the RJBDP fees, which are substantial as well. They averaged 88 basis points this quarter.
The cash that swept over to third-party banks, and we said that with the rate increase that was announced yesterday and some assumptions around deposit beta, that we expect that to increase to 1.7% on average for next quarter. Really significant tailwinds coming from net interest income and RJBDP fees from third-party banks. I think the important thing here is, you know, we've been criticized for quite some time for not taking more duration. I know a lot of our peers have done that, but our long-standing approach of staying flexible and not trying to time the rates, the markets and the bond curves, you know, is going to serve us very well in this rising rate environment.
Great. Thank you, guys.
Thank you. The next question comes from Steven Chubak of Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Hey, Paul. Since you ended on that response talking about your decision to manage the bank in such a way where you have more short-end gearing, I know that's serving you quite well, certainly in this upcoming tightening cycle. At the same time, the market is starting to price in rate cuts beginning in 2023. In the last Fed easing cycle, the decision to maintain that sensitivity did create a fair amount of earnings volatility. You cited some peers that have overextended themselves, taking on too much duration. I happen to agree with that statement, and I think that they're getting punished as a result in this type of environment. There's also a balance that could be struck where you maintain some healthy mix of fixed versus floating rate assets.
Curious if that's something you'd be amenable to protect that earnings or NII downside if and when the Fed begins easing?
Yeah. Steven, you remember this well because you're very close to it. 2015, we had no securities at all on the bank's balance sheet. We have been more balanced and diversified in that regard, and I think we plan on continuing to be more balanced and diversified. Almost all of our deposits are floating rate deposits. To take on much more duration would essentially be making a bet on a mismatch between the assets and the deposits. Our focus is to your point, be more diversified, and we are much more diversified than we were just five or six years ago with our securities portfolio.
We also have jumbo mortgages on the balance sheet that has some duration to it, tax-exempt loans, et cetera. I think you should expect us to continue to be more exposed to the short end of the curve, just given the nature of our deposit base, which is floating.
A really helpful color, Paul. For my follow-up, just on some of the deposit beta commentary. If I think about how you guys manage deposit costs last cycle, you trended more in line with the industry in terms of overall beta. So far, you've been running a little bit ahead of peers. I believe the word that you used on the call was you'd be generous with deposit rates. What beta should we be modeling beyond the fiscal third quarter? What's driving the decision to be more competitive on pricing this cycle? Is that reflective of some of the cash sorting headwinds you cited or something else?
Yeah, I just think that, look, we knew a bunch of rate increases were coming, right? A lot of people, you can take two approaches. You can maximize your return. But our belief when everybody was talking about how much cash and there was too much cash is that as businesses grew and, you know, rates went up and you can see what's happened in the public markets where people haven't had access, there would be more demand for cash. And we're seeing that in the bank sweep program. Even the biggest banks are, you know, coming back into the bank sweep program, which tells you everyone's looking to liquidity. Our view was we could be more aggressive.
We'd have chances on further increases to modify, or not to be as aggressive if we could see it cooling down or going the other way. It is to make sure that we first treated clients fairly, but we did a good job of retaining cash balances. I mean, we've lived through cycles when cash was really tight in the industry and some people are already putting out high yield savings and other CDs and deposits to fund now, right? Their sweep rates may be lower, but they're also adding higher cost deposits. We're just trying to look long term on it, take care of clients. Yet we know in rising rates, if they keep rising, we always had time to adjust.
Paul, I don't know if you want to comment on changing beta or not, but it's hard to tell until we have our rate setting committee. It'll certainly be what it was at least, you know, historically. It may be a little higher.
I think you covered it well, Paul.
Thanks, Paul and Paul. Appreciate you taking my questions.
Thanks, Steve.
Thank you. The next question comes from Kyle Voigt, KBW. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. Maybe first question is on PCG segment expenses. You know, total segment revenues were up 15%. Compensable revenues I think were up 10%. When you look at the PCG administrative comp expenses, they were up 22% year-over-year. I know some of that may be related to inorganic growth. I guess when you look year-over-year, do you happen to have the organic growth rate for those expenses? Any more color as to kind of what's driving that level of growth, both year-over-year or even the $17 million sequential increase we saw in that line item. Thank you.
Yeah. That was actually a good catch because what we haven't specifically drawn out in the numbers is that we've all been concerned, you know, about our associates and the impact of inflation in this environment. A number of firms have done kind of across the board comp adjustments or comp across the board salary adjustments. We decided to take a different course, which we did this quarter, is to give really just a off-cycle bonus to our lower paying associates to help them cope with the inflationary costs of gasoline, housing, and everything else, and not do an automatic salary adjustment, really for two reasons. You know, salaries are forever.
More importantly is we wanted to do it thoughtfully across all of our associates in our year-end process, which is actually a number of months, is to make sure that, you know, people are rewarded accordingly and that the salaries are benchmarked to market. Instead of just doing a raise now, that it's hard to do an un-raise for those who shouldn't have. We gave kind of a one-time bonus, and that really, hit the segment. But it really is, taking care of our associates doing an unbelievable job, who have been great. Our turnover's certainly been up, but it's been lower than the industry. They've been doing a good job for us, and we felt we owed them to do this, which should take them to the year-end until we get to our normal cycle adjustments.
Paul, I don't know if you want to go through any more in terms of numbers or anything else, but that was the biggest impact in that number.
Yeah. I mean, I guess could you quantify the impact of that bonus, Paul?
Yeah. In total for the firm is about just under $15 million for the firm. PCG takes the majority of it just because they're by far the largest business and have the most associates.
Got it. That's helpful. My follow-up is just on the advisor count. You noted that there was a switch of 188 advisors, with most of them from one firm moving to your RIA division. Can you just help us understand how large those switches were from an AUM standpoint? Any more color on the switch, can you kind of remind us of the change in economics when migrations like that happen? Thank you.
Well, first strategically, you know, we've set up and really bolstered our RIA offering just because it was, you know, and it has been the fastest growing segment in the industry. The good news is when people have switched to RIA, they haven't gone to any of our custodian competitors. They've almost virtually 100% have stayed at Raymond James. It's been a good retention tool. This was really one big firm whose business model has changed. We knew it was coming. We've been planning on it for a year. The good news is, again, they stayed with Raymond James. Their assets are custodied with us. In the RIA model, they're not FINRA licensed, and the way we count advisors are producing advisors who have a FINRA license.
Well, once they go into the RIA space, we can't count that anymore. If you look at it, since really a year and a half, it's been about 250 advisors. There was a big group that moved at the end of the year, relatively big, but it's usually three or four advisors a quarter. This was a one-off movement that really focused on kind of a changing business strategy for them. You know, I think it's not certainly business as usual. It's one of the largest firms on the platform that went RIA, and we don't see people will continue to move, but it's not any different than the movement between the rest of our channels.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Jim Mitchell, Seaport Research. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning. Paul, maybe just on the TriState deal now that it's closed. I think since you announced the deal, obviously rates are a lot higher. You've had looks like better loan growth at TriState. Is there any way to think, can you at least give us maybe a sense of accretion benefits? Is it more than you expected? And is the timing sooner? Is that the way to think about it? Or if there's any kind of greater specificity, that would be helpful.
Yeah. I think you're right, Jim. Some of the major factors, including interest rates, which is a significant factor, are increasing much faster than we originally anticipated, which is a great tailwind. Most importantly is that TriState has been doing a fantastic job serving their clients through the announcement and through the closing and integration. They have been able to continue growing their business nicely with their clients. We're, you know, frankly, a lot of our efforts are staying out of their way because they're doing such a great job with their client relationships. You know, they're handling a lot of change all at once, you know, dealing with their clients.
That's been all more positive than we originally anticipated and a great kudos to the TriState Capital team for being able to pull that off. Now with that being said, our earnings base is gonna be higher in a higher rate environment as well. You know, the accretion dilution analysis is you know, a function of both the numerator and the denominator being our earnings base. You know, it's hard to compare apples to apples. Frankly, Paul and I aren't really concerned about short-term accretion. You know, we're looking at this, we determine the success of a transaction over the next five-10 years. What that really entails is keeping their franchise and their client relationships intact, which is going extremely well.
It's great to have the interest rate tailwinds, and it's great to see the growth that they're having. Again, we're not overly focused on what the near-term accretion is going to be. We're extremely excited by the success that they've had thus far in early innings.
Oh, go ahead.
It is better, and we're pleased.
Great.
A little blessed, yeah.
Right. It sounds like you're saying there's no real negative surprises on the expense side or anything that the upside in revenues is flowing to the bottom line.
Yep, that's correct.
Okay. On the buyback, is that you said the few quarters, is that the right pace that you think you can do, say, the next three or four quarters, you can kind of offset the dilution, or the issuance?
I think we're gonna be.
Go ahead.
We're gonna be patient. Yeah, we're gonna be patient. That sounds like a reasonable timeline, but depending on other capital needs, balance sheet growth, other factors, we could do it faster or slower than that. We're gonna be, as I said from the start, and as Paul said from the start, we're not gonna be in a rush to buy it back. It kind of gets us to the same place a year from now, whether we do it, you know, quickly or we do it in a more deliberate manner.
Sure.
I think the plan is around your timeframe. Again, you know, deploying capital, if you had big bank growth that was very profitable, you had an acquisition, you had something else, you could redeploy some of that capital. The plan right now is. There's no plans on any of that right now. I mean, the plan would be kind of stick to that course. We'll watch. If the economy really turns down sharply, then you may slow it down, you know. I think everything being equal, that's the plan.
Right. Makes sense. Thank you.
Yeah.
Thank you. The next question comes from Devin Ryan, JMP Securities. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning, guys. How are you?
Great, Devin.
Hey, Devin.
Hey. Most have been asked here, but I do wanna dig in a little bit more on advisor recruiting. You know, you've heard, you know, kind of the pipeline remains strong. But there's been a lot of change in the environment. I'd love to just get a little more context on some of the trends you guys are seeing there. On one hand you have markets down, you know, so I'm assuming production down, but, you know, higher interest rates makes the businesses more profitable, you know, at the firm level. You know, what are you guys, I guess, seeing or what are expectations shifting at all on the advisor side? You know, competitively, what are you seeing?
The fact that markets are choppy and sometimes it's hard for advisors to leave, you know, when they're, you know, inundated, you know, talking to clients. I'm just curious kind of thematically how the advisor recruiting pipeline is evolving and what you guys are seeing competitively in the market.
Yeah, Devin, I think that, you know, first it's always been competitive. If you look at our record growth, it's probably not all and it's not really just an advisor count, but it's the size of the businesses that have been joining our platform. We have some very, very large teams. One, just a few years ago, we would never see. It's kind of a testament to, you know, the platform that was built in the high net worth and ultra-high net worth space. I think then, when Alex. Brown joined us, they brought kind of a lot of knowledge and focus to us on building the platform for the entire firm. The recruiting's going very well. You know, it goes in cycles. The independent channel was kind of, you know, on fire.
The employee channel's been the one this year that's doing, you know, really, really well. I think that's more the sign of the economy, is where people are joining and the risks they're taking. We have not seen a slowdown. We thought we would see more people. Typically, when advisors commit in the pipeline, you know, it'll slip. We thought we'd see a lot more slippage, and we haven't really. Maybe a little more. Advisors are still coming. You know, once they make that decision, we rarely see them decide not to leave their firm. The pace is still very, very good. It's competitive. It's always been competitive. We always seem to have in certain spaces, certain competitors really jump out in the market.
I think we pay a fair transition assistance, and can't say it's the highest in the market, but we compete very well because of the value proposition. So far so good. You know, if we had any concerns about it still looks very, very solid right now.
Great. Thanks, Paul. As a follow-up here, I wanna come back to something we talked about in late May at your Analyst Day, and you guys spoke about kind of a focus on new non-compensable revenues and expanding those. I think, you know, admin extension being one in pilot, the business consulting group, and I know there's others. You know, interesting opportunity it feels like from the outside. But love to just get some thoughts around, you know, I guess, one, how these are going in their early days. And then two, could these actually become material financial contributors, you know, a few years out? I appreciate you have to scale them, and there has to be adoption.
is the goal to have them become meaningful revenue drivers, or is it more just around kind of the differentiation of the platform, adding more service and creating kind of more the stickiness to the advisor relationship?
I think it's more almost the latter than the former. I think that strengthening the platform by offering those services, it makes the platform more attractive and people easier to transition. The uptake on the services has been much better than we thought. Even existing advisors who have big businesses, whether, you know, they're having like everyone, you know, the war on talent or someone gets sick and like, you know, has to be out of the office or, you know. We're finding an uptake of those services, and they're very, very happy with them. We're in the early scaling days, and I doubt it's going to be a line item like brokerage revenue, but it's going to be, you know, something that certainly is going to positively impact the margins, you know, for those businesses. It's early.
We're still scaling them, but so far it's very, very good. You know, we're just a few quarters really into it, so. The reception even of existing advisors is higher than we thought.
Yeah. Appreciate that. I know it's early, but thanks for the color, and I'll leave it there. Thanks, guys.
Thank you. Our final question comes from Manan Gosalia of Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning. I apologize if you've already covered this. My question is on third-party bank deposits. You know, what we're seeing from other banks this quarter is that deposit growth is slowing and even shrinking in certain cases. That would mean that the demand for your deposits from third-party banks is likely to increase even further from your. You know, can you talk about how you're thinking about that and also the $14 billion or so you have in the CIP program? You know, I recognize that you have a need for those deposits for your own business now, but I was wondering how nimble you can be between CIP, third-party bank deposits and your own bank.
Great question, Manan. We can be very flexible with the deposits. To your point, the CIP balances on the balance sheet are really overflow balances for when we weren't able to sweep the third-party banks because they didn't have the demand. As that demand picks up, which it has been picking up, still early days, but we're definitely seeing a change in tone even from the big banks who historically have not been as eager to get those type of deposits. We're starting to see significant demand from those banks as well. As we start seeing that demand pick up, we would be able to sweep more from CIP to those third-party banks, all else being equal. We do have a lot of flexibility.
It's great to see the demand come back. We knew the demand would eventually come back. That's why we wanted to stay flexible with those deposits.
Could you also be flexible between third-party bank deposits and your own bank, depending on what level of loan growth you're seeing at your own bank?
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, the $25 billion, that's with third-party banks now and the $14 billion that's with client interest program and programs. That has declined somewhat since the beginning of July, as I said in the comments. A very large portion of those deposits over time could be used to fund the balance sheet growth, to the extent that we find a good risk-adjusted returns on the balance sheet and to the extent that we can grow loans to our Private Client Group clients, et cetera. Yeah. Again, we have a lot of flexibility and a lot of capacity.
Okay, great. My second question is just, you know, how are you thinking about SBL loan growth? You have your own offering and now also TriState, which you're managing as a separate business, but it still gives you exposure to a similar loan product. As we see this pressure and volatility across both equity and fixed income markets, how should we think about loan growth in that segment? You know, given that rates are moving higher, and that loan book has a low credit risk. Is the plan to meet all the demand you have for that portfolio and maybe slow some of the growth in C&I and CRE as recession risks rise or?
You know, I just wanted to get a sense of like how you're prioritizing loan growth in this environment and what you're seeing in terms of demand?
Well, first, you know, it's a good question. If you look at what's going to happen in rising rates, I think that it's still a cheaper source of borrowing for most clients. We anticipate that, you know, rates get higher and higher and higher, and maybe people don't borrow. In this environment, it's still, you know, a very effective way of and low cost way to borrow. From our standpoint, we love two things about SBLs. One is the liquidity because it's callable. Secondly, it's very secured and it's low risk, and it has, frankly, the best spreads right now. But also it supports clients. We continue to focus on that segment. We can speed up in, you know, any part of the loan segment. We've done it before.
I think we're one of the few banks that sold a lot of COVID loans to reduce risk on the balance sheet. There are times we have taken different parts of the portfolio and slowed it down for a while. Most of the portfolio, even C&I has a very liquid portion in the Term Loan B. We do manage the balance sheet. We're very happy that SBL loans are in demand and growing, and we plan to support that. We'll look at the relative contribution of each item depending on where we see the risk-return trade-offs long-term in the market. You know, if the market starts offering risky credit only, then you slow down that segment. Yeah. The TriState Capital market's very different from ours.
Our market's internal, their market's external to other firms. Those are very separate, run separately. We like the SBL loans in both banks and have the capital and the cash to fund them too, which is important. We have a lot of flexibility in funding.
Great. Thanks for taking my questions.
That was our final question. I'll turn the call back over to our speakers for any closing remarks.
Yeah. I want to thank everybody for attending. I know the numbers were a little bit more difficult with a lot of the acquisition-related expenses and changes. I appreciate the effort. I know by the questions and the write-ups, you put a lot of time into it. I want to thank you. Again, as always, thank our advisors and associates for all they've done to generate these numbers. It's easy to present them when they're doing such a great job. Thank you, and we'll talk to you next call.
Thank you. This does conclude the conference for today. We thank you for your participation and ask that you please disconnect your lines. Thank you and have a good day.