Simmons First National Corporation (SFNC)
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M&A Announcement

Nov 19, 2021

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the Simmons First National Corporation acquisition of Spirit of Texas Bancshares, Inc. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there'll be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star then one on your touchtone telephone. If anyone should require assistance during the conference, please press star then zero to reach an operator. As a reminder, this call may be recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Ed Bilek, Director of Investor Relations. You may begin.

Ed Bilek
Director of Investor Relations, Simmons First National Corporation

Good morning, and thank you for joining Simmons First National Corporation's conference call. My name is Ed Bilek, Director of Investor Relations at Simmons. Joining me on the call today are George Makris, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Bob Fehlman, President and Chief Operating Officer, Jay Brogdon, Chief Financial Officer, Steve Massanelli, Chief Administrative Officer, Jena Compton, Chief People and Corporate Strategy Officer, and Matt Reddin, Chief Banking Officer. The purpose of our call today is to review the announcement we made this morning concerning our entrance into a definitive agreement to acquire Texas-based Spirit of Texas Bancshares Inc. We have invited certain institutional investors and analysts from the equity firms that provide research on Simmons to participate in the call. All other guests are in a listen-only mode.

A recording of today's call will be posted on our website, simmonsbank.com, under the Investor Relations tab for at least 60 days. We have also posted supplemental materials on our website, also under the Investor Relations tab. During today's call, we will make forward-looking statements about our future plans, goals, expectations, estimates, projections, and outlook. I'd remind you that actual results could differ materially from those projected or implied by the forward-looking statements due to a variety of factors.

Additional information concerning some of these factors is contained in our SEC filings, including, without limitation, the description of certain risk factors contained in our Form 10-K for the year ended December 31st, 2020, and the forward-looking statements section of our press release announcing the Spirit of Texas Bancshares, Inc. acquisition that we issued this morning. Simmons assumes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements or other information. I'll now turn the call over to George Makris.

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Thanks, Ed. We appreciate everyone joining us on the call today. Given that it's Friday before the Thanksgiving holiday week, we'll try to keep our prepared remarks brief, so we can address any questions you may have about the transaction. First, we're very excited about the opportunity to join forces with a well-respected and high-performing bank like Spirit of Texas. We've enjoyed a strong, mutual relationship with the management team at Spirit dating back to 2013 and hold them in high regard. As we noted in our press release, that relationship will continue after the closing of the transaction. While Dean Bass, Chairman and CEO of Spirit, will retire at closing, we're very happy that he's expected to join the Simmons holding company and bank boards as an independent director shortly thereafter.

In addition, Spirit's President and Chief Lending Officer, David McGuire, will join the Simmons Bank team as a key Texas executive. Under their leadership, Spirit has enjoyed tremendous growth, both in terms of assets and market expansion, and we're glad to have them lend their expertise and insight to ensure we meet the needs of our customers and communities we serve in Texas.

Strengthening our franchise in Texas is a strategic priority for us, and to partner with Spirit not only adds scale to our current footprint, but also establishes a platform for growth in Houston, Austin, San Antonio, College Station, Tyler, among others. These markets have been among the fastest-growing in the nation in terms of population and economic activity, and projections call for this trend to continue. In 2019, we made an intentional decision to restructure our loan portfolio.

At that time, we had concentrations of credit in CRE and construction, which were in excess of regulatory guidance. Much of that portfolio was comprised of transactional and purchase loans from previous acquisitions. Our plan included exiting many of those credits in other specialty areas such as energy lending, which will give us the capacity to rebuild our portfolio with customers with whom we have deeper relationships.

Strategically, the increase in our lending capacity and the growth potential of the markets served by Spirit translate into a great opportunity, one which would not have had the same value before our restructuring. As you may remember, we sold our San Antonio and Austin portfolios to Spirit as part of that restructuring. We're especially pleased to welcome back Clay Jett and his team at a time where we're ready and able to invest in the growth in those markets.

This transaction also meets financial standards that we've talked about many times. It's expected to be accretive to earnings per share in the first full year of operation. The anticipated internal rate of return exceeds 20%. While it will be slightly dilutive to tangible book value, the estimated earn back period is within our guideline of three years. Capital ratios at the conclusion of the merger should continue to significantly exceed well-capitalized guidelines.

Spirit has a loan portfolio very similar to Simmons and has done a great job generating loan production. They bring a strong deposit base, with demand deposits representing approximately half of their total deposits as of September 30th, 2021. Which are extremely valuable during a period of rising rates. Even though the Street isn't asking too many questions about asset quality, Spirit has maintained very strong credit quality metrics and underwriting standards.

Before we move to the Q&A, I'd like to take a minute to talk about the meaningful geographic transformation that's taken place this year as a result of our M&A efforts. As we entered 2021, Tennessee represented approximately 14% of our total deposits. Including our acquisitions of Landmark Community Bank and Triumph Bancshares, which closed in October 2021, Tennessee today represents approximately 19% of our total deposits.

Texas represented approximately 13% of our total deposits at June 30 of this year. Including Spirit on a pro forma basis, Texas will represent approximately 21% of our total deposits after closing of the acquisition. In addition, we've significantly enhanced our growth profile. On a pro forma basis, our markets are expected to exceed the national average in terms of population growth over the next five years.

A remarkable transformation brought about by the dedication of our amazing team at Simmons and their commitment to building long-term value for our shareholders. In closing, I would encourage you to review the materials we posted on our website at simmonsbank.com under the Investor Relations tab. We look forward to working with our teammates at Spirit over the next few months to complete the integration process and hit the ground running. With that, I'll turn the call back to the operator to begin the Q&A session.

Operator

Our first question comes from Brady Gailey with KBW. Your line is open.

Brady Gailey
Managing Director, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods

Hey, thanks. Good morning, guys.

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Hi, Brady.

Brady Gailey
Managing Director, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods

Congrats on another deal.

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Thank you.

Brady Gailey
Managing Director, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods

I wanted to start with the cost savings number, 35%. I know you guys have some overlap in DFW, but you know, no overlap in San Antonio, Austin, and the Houston areas. Matt, can you give us a little more detail on how you're thinking about where those cost savings will be coming from?

Jay Brogdon
CFO, Simmons First National Corporation

Hey, Brady, this is Jay. I'll take a first shot at that, and then George and Bob can fill in. You know, first thing I'd point out to you is both companies are on a Jack Henry core. There's gonna be the redundancies in that that there would be in any deal. I do think it's important to point out that we're on the same core. We've got a lot of familiarity with how to think about the cost saves potential as it relates to that piece of this. You know, another point in here is both companies are public, so there's a lot of public company costs and other redundancies that we'll be able to remove. You mentioned branches, and there's definitely some overlap in DFW.

I think as you look at you know, Spirit's network of branches, there'll be some additional opportunities there. Not where we're exiting any markets, but where you know, our ability to deliver to those communities, whether it's through our digital offerings, et cetera, you'll have some real opportunities, I think, to rationalize the branch footprint as it relates to that. I do think there's a lot of cost savings opportunities that we've built up to get to that number.

Maybe my last comment would just be you know, in the face of all of that, this is kind of a buy and build mentality. We're entering some really good markets here throughout Texas, expanding in DFW. While I think all those cost saves are achievable, it's really not at the expense of, you know, sort of that theme of this merger of being able to enter these markets, further penetrate those markets and grow the business across all of Texas.

Brady Gailey
Managing Director, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods

Okay. All right. Then, you know, I know you mentioned the idea of some revenue synergies here. You know, I know probably with Spirit of Texas having a larger legal lending limit will help. But what are some of the other revenue synergy opportunities? I know they're not included in the deal math, but what could we potentially see over time?

Matt Reddin
Chief Banking Officer, Simmons Bank

Well, hey, Brady, this is Matt. You know, I'll take that first stab. I think that the key that we get to offer Spirit at our size and scale, they already have a billion-dollar pipeline that we know that we can get that closed out now with David joining our team and his key leaders joining our team. They've been aggressively recruiting in the Texas market. We wanna continue to complement that so they can continue to do that.

I would say as far as other synergies we see that we can help them with, they also have a foreign national business in Houston for home lending. That's something that they've done well, but it may have been limited to with our size and scale and back office help. I think we can even support that more. Really it's just doing more of what they're doing now, just with a bigger balance sheet.

Jay Brogdon
CFO, Simmons First National Corporation

Brady, I'll jump in with one other comment just on the deposit side. George mentioned in his remarks 50% demand deposits at Spirit, but they also on the interest-bearing side have about 12 basis points higher cost of interest-bearing deposits, and I think we'll have some opportunities there, you know, over time. It'll take a couple of quarters to achieve some of that, but there'll be some real opportunity on the deposit side as well.

Matt Reddin
Chief Banking Officer, Simmons Bank

Brady, one last thing. I'd be remiss not to, you know, well, Spirit has been very focused on the lending front, but they have not had a chance to build out a wealth, you know, platform. We have that platform. We already have a nice beachhead there in DFW. I have no doubt we'll be successful pushing it into all the markets in Texas.

Brady Gailey
Managing Director, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods

All right. That's helpful. Finally, for me, you're not necessarily related to this transaction, but I know during earnings last month, you know, we talked about you guys potentially seeing some better loan growth. I know loan balances have been under pressure in the last couple of years as you all have strategically exited, you know, some certain pockets in your loan book. Maybe just a, you know, update on how you guys are feeling about, you know, loan growth going forward.

Matt Reddin
Chief Banking Officer, Simmons Bank

Brady, you know, it wasn't that long ago, we're on the call, and we're talking about the fourth quarter and where that's gonna shake out. What I can tell you right now is our pipeline's over $2 billion, and so that's continuing to grow quarter-over-quarter, month-over-month, and our production's growing month-over-month. We think we'll have a great fourth quarter in production. Now, is that gonna be the inflection point on net loan growth? That remains to be seen, but it is very encouraging as we now look at 2022, especially layering in what Spirit can also bring to the table.

Brady Gailey
Managing Director, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods

Yep. All right, great. Well, thanks and congrats.

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Thanks, Brady.

Operator

Our next question comes from Thomas Wendler with Stephens. Your line is open.

Thomas Wendler
Equity Analyst, Stephens

Hey. Congratulations, guys.

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Good morning.

Jay Brogdon
CFO, Simmons First National Corporation

Thanks. Morning.

Thomas Wendler
Equity Analyst, Stephens

Yeah. I just have a couple of quick questions here. I might have missed it, but on the release, I don't think I saw the exchange ratio. Can you also give me an idea if there's any cash component in the deal?

Jay Brogdon
CFO, Simmons First National Corporation

Tommy, I'll take a shot at that. The way to think about the transaction is the economics are fixed at 18.325 million shares. It's all stock from that point of view. However, to the extent there are any unexercised options or warrants at the time we close, those would be cashed out. That's the only cash element in the deal. If you took sorta numbers where they are today, you know, you'd be at about a 1.02 times exchange ratio if you did the math on that. That number will move as options or warrants get exercised.

Thomas Wendler
Equity Analyst, Stephens

All right. Thank you. That's great. Are you guys kinda handcuffed now with any further transactions? Or are you still looking to do further M&A?

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Well, Thomas, I don't think I would term it as handcuffed. Our priorities are certainly to make the most of these opportunities in the Texas market. Our focus is gonna be working with David McGuire, his team, Dean Bass, to make sure that we provide the resources they need to be successful. You know, when we take a look at those markets in Texas, DFW, Metroplex, Houston by itself, both of those markets have a population twice the size of the state of Arkansas.

We've got plenty of opportunity ahead of us to maximize our potential in those markets. Matt mentioned earlier, we've had great success in building out our teams in Texas. David has had a great success rate doing the same. We will expect that going forward. Now, that doesn't mean we're not going to have meaningful discussions with other potential partners, but our focus squarely today is to make sure that we maximize the benefit of this new partnership with Spirit of Texas.

Thomas Wendler
Equity Analyst, Stephens

All right. That's great. Thanks. I'll hop back in the queue.

Jay Brogdon
CFO, Simmons First National Corporation

Thanks.

Operator

Our next question comes from Stephen Scouten with Piper Sandler. Your line is open.

Stephen Scouten
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Hey, good morning, everyone. Thanks for the time.

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Good morning, Stephen.

Stephen Scouten
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

I wanted to get a little more detail on this foreign national loan program. I know, Matt, you mentioned it that you might have the ability to scale it up somewhat. Is that, I guess, a business that you guys feel comfortable with? Is there incremental BSA, AML sort of risk around that or compliance that you have to you know kinda implement before you can expand that or any detail there would be helpful.

Matt Reddin
Chief Banking Officer, Simmons Bank

Yeah. Stephen, great question. No. A couple things you need to know about at a high level. This is still home loan lending in Houston, north of Houston in the Woodlands, Conroe area that Spirit and others have been in that business for many years. Yes, we will put it through the rigor of our compliance, risk management, what we call a go forward. I have confidence we'll get through that. Honestly, we'll probably make this platform even better with the resources we have on our side that Spirit, just to their size, has not been able to do. It is home loan lending in the U.S. to foreign nationals that may have a business in another country, but primary residence is in the U.S.

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Stephen, this is George. Let me also mention that in our diligence program, we took a really good look at the risk management program at Spirit with regard to this foreign national program. We didn't see any weakness, so it's not like we're having to step in and correct anything. We just believe that they have a really good base of that business, and not only in that market, but maybe some other markets that we serve. That might be a product that we can roll out.

Matt Reddin
Chief Banking Officer, Simmons Bank

Yeah. Stephen, just to kind of follow up, too. This is still just the mortgage business, which we think we do pretty well. You know, we did 5,500 loans for $1.3 billion in 2020. We'll do over $1 billion this year. We think it's really a nice complement to our home loan lending business as it is. This is also low leverage home loan lending. That's another point to make.

Stephen Scouten
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

That was my question. I'd assume these are, what? Like a sub 70% LTV and probably higher yields given the complexity there.

Matt Reddin
Chief Banking Officer, Simmons Bank

Well, 70%-75%. I can't guarantee on the higher yield in this environment, but that would always be the hope.

Stephen Scouten
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Got you. Yeah, no, fair enough. Okay. Then you guys talked about, I think the verbiage was buy and build mentality, which I like. When you think about those 35% cost savings, is that a net number that you think about including incremental investments? Or is that kind of, hey, 35% is what we're going to get on the deal, and the investments are just going to come opportunistically over time as we see fit?

Jay Brogdon
CFO, Simmons First National Corporation

Well, I think, you know, I think you've got to break those apart and think about them a little bit separately. I definitely think that, you know, we look at a net synergy number of what we think is achievable in the business, sort of standalone, but on our platform. You know, to the extent there are opportunities and we expect to pursue those opportunities to grow expenses by hiring revenue producers, you know, we'll do that, and we think this platform will help us do that. That's sort of the opportunity on the backside of the deal. We feel good about that net 35 number, just sort of as the status quo, go-forward number here.

Stephen Scouten
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Got it. That's helpful.

Jay Brogdon
CFO, Simmons First National Corporation

You know, Stephen, I think a good example is when we purchased Southwest Bank in Texas. We had projected savings of 30%-35%. By the time we closed, there was $1 billion extra in loans, and so we didn't achieve the 30%-35%, maybe in the 28%, but we definitely achieved it based on the revenue growth. We're, as Clay said, the net is 35%. It could come in revenue, it could come in expenses, but we'd prefer it to come in revenue, quite frankly.

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

That's right.

Stephen Scouten
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Sure. Got it. No, that makes sense. Maybe the last thing, as you just referenced kind of producers and incremental investments there, I imagine everybody's going to be shooting for these people as well. I mean, that seems to be a big narrative across the spectrum is team lift outs and dislocation. I'm wondering what you guys have in place to kind of protect these lenders from this acquisition, if there's a lot of, you know, lockups in place or kind of how you feel about, you know, pro forma growth in 2022 from the Spirit team.

Matt Reddin
Chief Banking Officer, Simmons Bank

Hey, Stephen Scouten, it's Matt Reddin again. Another really, really good question. Yes, we're on this one. We're very deliberate because what we saw in Spirit, and we've known them for a long time, you know, we knew that they had a really great team. We went a lot deeper on the front end with retention agreements and got them signed up before, like, as of today. We feel we're very confident. Now, there's other key producers we're going to be touching, you know, next week. With Thanksgiving, we're going to give them a break, after that, they can get to meet us all in person on the 29th and 30th. We do feel confident on the front end. We've got a lot of people under the hood now and signed up.

Stephen Scouten
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Perfect. Great. Thanks, guys. I appreciate the color and the time. Congrats.

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Thanks.

Operator

Our next question comes from David Feaster with Raymond James. Your line is open.

David Feaster
Managing Director, Raymond James

Hey, good morning, everybody.

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Good morning, David.

David Feaster
Managing Director, Raymond James

Texas is obviously a great market, and this deepens your footprint in the state, but you know, you'll still be relatively small in some of the South Texas markets. Just wanted to get a sense of whether your appetite from an M&A perspective would be deepening in those markets near term. Then, I guess, at a high level, your pace of M&A going forward. I mean, you know, you're obviously a proven acquirer, and the simultaneous closing, conversion, and integration is a huge benefit. Is, you know, you just closed those deals about a month ago, call it six months until this deal closes. Is that really the right amount of time for you to fully absorb an acquisition and get your team ready to go for another one, just given the bolt-on nature of these?

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Well, David, I would say that this merger is a little bit different because we're entering markets where Simmons does not have a legacy footprint. We need to be very attentive to David and his team and what they need from us during that period of time. I would tell you until we're all really comfortable with where we are in that transition, our focus is going to be on helping David and the Spirit of Texas folks become more successful in that market. Any other meaningful discussions during that time would be somewhat of a distraction.

I guess what I'm telling you now is that between now and April, we're going to be focused on Spirit of Texas. Not to say that we won't begin discussions or continue discussions during that period of time, but we're saturated with regard to our priorities between now and April and probably for a short period of time after that. We will continue down that road. Texas is a great market. If we found another partner that fit well, we would certainly have a high interest, but not between now and April.

David Feaster
Managing Director, Raymond James

Okay. That's good color. Thank you. Just wanted to get a sense of the history of your new corporate finance team that they have in Texas and maybe how they could play into some accelerating growth in the state through that expertise.

Matt Reddin
Chief Banking Officer, Simmons Bank

Hey, Dave, it's Matt. Are you talking about our commercial finance team, Simmons Commercial Finance?

David Feaster
Managing Director, Raymond James

Yeah. The new team that you guys just hired.

Matt Reddin
Chief Banking Officer, Simmons Bank

Just want to make sure because the Spirit of Texas also has a corporate banking team that's in DFW, not equipment finance like we have, but I just want to make sure I understood the question. No, we definitely think anytime we can increase our market share and more customer bases, those ancillary products, especially our commercial finance team, can complement that customer base for sure.

David Feaster
Managing Director, Raymond James

Okay. Just wanted to touch on energy. You know, we've had some issues in the past with that segment. It's obviously, you know, evolving and critical business. We're working that portfolio down. Just given the deeper presence in the state and in some more energy-centric markets, whether your appetite for energy might have changed, is that still, you know, or is that something that you're still gonna try and continue to work down?

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Hey, David, this is George. No, our appetite hadn't changed. You know, we're not energy production lenders. There are some people who do that really, really well in the marketplace. We're not one of them. I was happy to read in your report, actually, this morning, that the economy of Texas is only 8.6% dependent on oil and gas these days. So there's plenty of other business for us to go after without having to be in the oil and gas production lending business. Now, you know, obviously, because it is still significant, we'll have ancillary exposure, but not direct exposure.

Matt Reddin
Chief Banking Officer, Simmons Bank

Yeah, David, this is Matt. Just to tag onto that. Yeah, there's definitely ancillary business at the Spirit of Texas, but if you even look back at when we had some challenges with our energy book, our ancillary book of business held up wonderfully. We had no issues out of that, no downgrades, and that's good core business. It's really that production business that is not in our wheelhouse.

David Feaster
Managing Director, Raymond James

Terrific. Thanks, everybody.

Matt Reddin
Chief Banking Officer, Simmons Bank

Thanks, David.

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Thank you.

Operator

There are no further questions at this time. Please proceed with any closing remarks.

George Makris
Chairman and CEO, Simmons First National Corporation

Okay. Well, thanks to everyone for joining today. I was thinking back this morning about where we were in 2013 when we first met Dean and David and their team. You know, both Spirit of Texas and Simmons Bank are seven times larger today than we were in 2013. Both organizations have done, in my opinion, an excellent job of taking advantage of growth opportunities, both organically and through M&A. When I take a look at the Simmons franchise back then, we had about a 60% loan-to-deposit ratio, we had a lot of liquidity, we had a lot of capital, we had an efficiency ratio in the mid-70s. Today, we have a 60% loan-to-deposit ratio, we have a lot of capital, we have a lot of liquidity, and our efficiency ratio is 20 percentage points lower.

I say that because I think we're set up for history to repeat itself. We are in a great position to take advantage of growth in the markets that we serve, and we couldn't be more optimistic about what this merger means to our combined shareholder base, and to the markets that we serve. Thanks very much for participating this morning, and I hope everyone has an enjoyable Thanksgiving holiday.

Operator

This concludes the program. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.

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