Good morning, and welcome to Valley's third quarter 2022 earnings conference call. Presenting on behalf of Valley today are CEO Ira Robbins, President Tom Iadanza, and Chief Financial Officer Mike Hagedorn. Before we begin, I would like to make everyone aware that our quarterly earnings release and supporting documents can be found on our company website at valley.com. When discussing our results, we refer to non-GAAP measures, which exclude certain items from reported results. Please refer to today's earnings release for reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures. Additionally, I would like to highlight slide two of our earnings presentation and remind you that comments made during this call may contain forward-looking statements relating to Valley National Bancorp and the banking industry. Valley encourages all participants to refer to our SEC filings, including those found on Forms 8-K, 10-Q, and 10-K, for a complete discussion of forward-looking statements.
With that, I'll turn the call over to Ira Robbins.
Thank you, Travis, and welcome to those of you on the call today. I have a few comments to make this morning, and then we'll ask Tom to provide insight on the quarter's loan and deposit results. Mike will then discuss the financial results in more detail. In the third quarter of 2022, Valley reported net income of $178 million, earnings per share of $0.34, and an annualized ROA of 1.30%. Exclusive of non-core charges, adjusted net income, EPS, and ROA were $182 million, $0.35, and 1.32% respectively. These exceptional results reflect the benefits of our asset-sensitive balance sheet and our consistently strong credit results. As you are aware, Valley has undergone a meaningful evolution over the last few years.
By expanding in terms of both size and capability, we have uniquely positioned ourselves as one of the premier service-oriented commercial banks in the entire country. From a size perspective, we sit in an incredibly strong position with only a handful of nationwide peers. Our customers have access to the robust suite of products and services that was found at a large bank, but with Valley's exceptional responsiveness and high-touch approach. This combination has accelerated our brand awareness and enabled us to selectively add top-level talent and desirable clients. This unique approach also positions us to capitalize on market disruption that may occur as a result of future economic volatility. While we remain selective with regards to how and when we grow, we believe that times of stress can create exceptional customer acquisition opportunities.
As the pool of banks that look like Valley continue to shrink, we are prepared to maintain our momentum and maximize our competitive advantages. One of Valley's distinguishing characteristics is our positioning in some of the country's most attractive commercial markets, including Metro New York, Florida, and California. We believe these markets will weather economic downturns while providing unique opportunities for diversified loan and deposit growth. Our results this quarter reflect the benefits of our diversified business model and the economic strength of our targeted markets of operations. Before I turn the call over to Tom, I want to briefly update you on the guidance we had previously provided. On page four of the deck, we compare selected third quarter results to last quarter's guidance.
While we are not formally adjusting our near-term guidance, we believe that the loan growth and net interest income is likely to exceed our prior expectations. Meanwhile, the guidance for our efficiency ratio and tax rates remain unchanged. With that, I would turn the call over to Tom Iadanza and Mike Hagedorn to discuss this quarter's growth and financial results.
Thank you, Ira. Slide 5 illustrates the quarter's 15% annualized loan growth, which is below the mid-20% organic growth rate from the second quarter. While loan origination slowed during the third quarter, net growth is above the high end of our anticipated range as a result of two key factors. First, as interest rates have increased faster than anticipated, payoffs have slowed dramatically. Second, contributions from the residential and consumer portfolios exceeded expectations, partially as a result of cross-sell to legacy Leumi customers. On the commercial side, our growth remains well diversified across asset classes and geographies. We have selectively tightened underwriting standards, which led to lower loan-to-value and higher debt service coverage on originations during the quarter. We also continue to see a significant amount of loan production to repeat customers.
These borrowers are sophisticated and well-known to Valley and come back to us time and again to benefit from our responsiveness and strong execution. As Ira mentioned, we have continued to add talented commercial bankers across our footprint. This is consistent with our proven ability to enhance our franchise, particularly in times of disruption around us. These efforts should help us offset a broader slowdown in demand and be additive to our loan and deposit production in 2023 and beyond. Finally, on slide five, you can see the 113 basis point increase in average new origination yields to 5.21% during the quarter. As you would expect, origination yields increased each month as market rates moved higher. This is a positive indicator that we are able to pass through higher rates to our borrowers, and we anticipate that origination yields will continue to ascend.
Turning to slide 6, you can see that deposits grew at an annualized rate of approximately 13% during the quarter. As we have previously discussed, we have devoted significant resources to diversifying our deposit gathering channels over the last few years. While certain of our funding sources have become more competitive, and we've been able to tap other customer segments and business lines to fund our loan growth. As an example, we have seen private banking customers take advantage of higher rates by redeploying deposits into the Treasury securities market. To offset this and support growth, we rolled out retail CD promotions over the summer, which generated over $1 billion of new deposits. These promotions were timed in advance of Fed hikes and have added duration at rates that are extremely attractive in retrospect.
We continue to focus on the deposit side and acknowledge that each Fed hike brings more pricing and competition. We are tactically managing our business lines to ensure that we generate deposits in the most cost-effective manner to support our loan growth. With that, I will turn the call over to Michael Hagedorn to provide more insight on the quarter's financials.
Thank you, Tom. Slide seven illustrates Valley's recent quarterly net interest income and margin trends. Net interest income increased over $35 million or over 8% from the linked quarter. The increase reflects continued loan growth and the benefits of our asset-sensitive balance sheet in a rising interest rate environment. These factors more than offset a sequential reduction in PPP income and PCD accretion, which fell to $8.5 million and $12.1 million in the second quarter. This was primarily the result of slower acquired loan payoffs. Our third quarter fully taxable equivalent net interest margin increased 17 basis points to 3.60% from the second quarter of 2022. Asset yields expanded 54 basis points during the quarter, which more than offset a 40 basis point increase in total funding costs.
The asset yield increase was driven by both the repricing of our floating-rate loans and a significant increase in the yields on newly originated loans. As you saw on slide six, we calculate a cumulative year-to-date deposit beta of approximately 20%. This is running better than modeled so far, but as Tom noted, we acknowledge the competitive landscape and are working hard to ensure this trend continues. Using the implied forward curve at September 30, we anticipate net interest margin will increase further in both the fourth quarter of 2022 and the first quarter of 2023. Net interest margin results beyond that point will be more dependent on our ability to accurately manage future deposit betas. Moving to slide eight, we generated over $56.2 million of non-interest income for the quarter as compared to $58.5 million in the second quarter.
The reduction was driven by lower gain on sale income resulting from a decline in conforming residential loan production. Swap and other market-based revenues were generally stable during the quarter. On the swap side, we anticipate that revenue could revert from $11 million this quarter to the high single-digit level in the fourth quarter should loan origination activity decline further. On slide nine, you can see that our total non-interest expenses were approximately $262 million for the quarter or approximately $254 million on an adjusted basis. The quarter's adjusted expenses included $2 million charitable contribution and higher incentive compensation accruals related to our strong financial performance. Outside of these discrete costs, additional expense increases generally reflect the inflationary environment and the competitive talent market.
The quarter's strong revenue growth helped drive our efficiency ratio to 49.8% from the second quarter's 50.8% level. As Ira said, we remain confident in our previous sub 50% efficiency ratio guidance for the second half of 2022. Turning to slide 10, you can see our asset quality trends for the last five quarters. Our allowance for credit losses as a percentage of total loans declined to 1.10% at September 30 from 1.13% at June 30. We assessed our portfolio in the wake of Hurricane Ian and determined there was no significant impact to our required reserves at September 30. We continue to support our impacted customers and employees as they recover from the storm.
As a reminder, our reserve coverage remains well above the 0.89% day one reserve we established upon the adoption of CECL in 2020. Neither our earnings nor capital levels have benefited from reserve releases, which differentiates us from many of our peers. During the quarter, we experienced the positive resolution of certain non-accrual credits. This resulted in nearly $6 million of net recoveries and a sequential reduction in non-accrual loans as compared to June 30. Relative to non-accrual loans, the reserve increased to 162% from 150% at June 30. On slide 11, you can see that tangible book value increased approximately 2% for the quarter. This was the result of our strong earnings and a modest negative OCI impact associated with our available for sale securities portfolio.
Relative to peers, our OCI headwind remains manageable as a result of our smaller securities portfolio and modest AFS exposure, which reflects our continued focus on tangible book value preservation. Tangible common equity to tangible assets declined slightly as a result of our loan growth.
Our Tier 1 ratios were stable during the quarter and total risk-based increased as a result of our successful subordinated debt offering in September. With that, I will turn the call back to the operator to begin Q&A. Thank you.
The floor is now open for your questions. To ask a question at this time, please press star one on your telephone keypad. We will take a moment to render our roster. Our first question comes from Michael Perito from KBW. Please proceed.
Hey, guys. Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions.
Good morning.
I wanted to start on the deposit side. You know, I guess you kind of have a tale of two tapes here. Obviously, in the quarter itself, the betas were pretty reasonable. You know, you had the nice NIM expansion, but obviously, you know, just on a dollar basis, the mix of growth was very CD and brokered CD heavy. You know, some of the rate hikes were a little later in the quarter. I guess I'm just curious, you know, as we look to next quarter here, how do you guys expect the mix of deposit growth to trend? I mean, is it going to continue to be very CD and brokered CD heavy? Is there room for other kind of verticals or areas to contribute more?
you know, I guess as a follow-up to that, I mean, depending on where you answer there, I mean, can betas accelerate pretty meaningfully next quarter? Do you think there's still room to kind of keep those at reasonable rates? Or how are you guys thinking about that dynamic?
Hey, hey, Michael, it's Tom. You know, we have, over these past few years, built a number of verticals that are growing at rates that are a little bit higher than what our traditional core deposits are growing. That's, you know, those of HOA, cannabis, national deposit groups, as well as an emphasis on our Valley Direct product. We will continue to see growth in those areas that will outpace our traditional core. Equally important is that our relationship-driven commercial model results in net increases in business accounts each and every quarter. Those accounts tend to be 61% non-interest-bearing deposits. We will continue to focus. We don't have a reliance on any single niche. We'll continue to focus on these niches. The average deposit costs, total deposit costs for September was 73 basis points.
I'll just remind everyone, our loan yields for that same month of September were approaching 6%. We have a number of levers, a number of verticals that we'll continue to push.
As it relates to the betas, Mike, our modeling on a forward basis shows that we're going to have margin expansion. Our expectation is that we'll have margin expansion in both the fourth quarter and the first quarter of 2023. Our modeling also includes a very wide range of deposit betas for those incremental costs. Even with that, we're still showing net interest income growth, full year 2022 to full year 2023. We feel pretty good about where we sit right now.
I just want to clarify on Tom's comment on the loan origination yields approaching 6% on the origination side.
All helpful, guys. Thanks for running through that. I guess just as a follow-up, I mean, why I guess, is it the range of outcomes that keeps the NII guide from changing here? I mean, it sounds like that just based on what you laid out, it would be a reasonably confident statement to say that you'll be above that $900 million, but obviously you guys didn't formally change that. Is that just uncertainty over the next three months, or is there any other dynamic that we should be thinking about as we model kind of the near term NII trajectory?
Mike, this is Travis. No, there's confidence that the NII is going to continue to grow in the fourth quarter. I mean, as Mike said, you know, we anticipate the margin will go higher in the fourth quarter and again in the first quarter. NII will continue to expand. We just didn't formally update the guidance because it was only one quarter. You know, I think everyone's going to be waiting to see what the 2023 guidance looks like in January. It was more a formality than anything else. As you saw, I mean, we were on pace with the third quarter NII to be ahead of that $900 million guide, and we're growing from there.
Perfect. Yeah, that's what I figured. I just wanted to double-check. Then just lastly, maybe a question for Mike. Any thoughts? I mean, the efficiency ratio guidance is unchanged. You guys were just under 50% this quarter. You know, quarter-over-quarter, though, the expense rate stepped up a bit. I mean, just anything you'd flag out there and as you guys continue to invest to grow the business and the diversity of the business, I mean, any initial budgeting thoughts on growth rate on the OpEx side for next year, even if it's just kind of qualitative commentary?
Hey, Michael, this is Ira. I think just high level, you know, we're really focused on generating positive operating leverage. If you see for the quarter, we were at 1.6 x, which we think is really trending in the right direction for us and consistent with where we've been over the last few years of how we think about growth and balancing that with the expenses across the entire organization. As Tom mentioned, though, you know, we think there is going to be significant opportunity for us based on the economic environment. We hired 20+ frontline bankers last year on the commercial side, and we've done the same thing so far this year.
The expense guide, or as you see the expenses increase, you know, for us, it's really in relation to what we're seeing on the asset side of the balance sheet as well. We try not to manage any one individual component of the financial statement in sort of independently, but rather much more so in the aggregate. We're really seeing the benefits of that today.
Great. I'll let someone else come in, but thank you guys for taking my questions. Appreciate it.
Thanks.
Our next question comes from Frank Schiraldi from Piper Sandler. Please proceed.
Thanks. Good morning.
Hi, Frank. Good morning, Frank.
I wondered if just to follow up on the deposit kind of story line. I don't know, you might even have mentioned, but I would think it's fair to assume that just given the environment that the Bank Leumi technology-focused deposits would have been down quarter-over-quarter. If that's the case, just wondering your thoughts there on trend. Could those, you know, perhaps have stabilized, which would lead to less dependence on CD growth, you know, in 4Q?
On the venture tech side at Leumi, the deposits were stable for the quarter. We do expect a little bit more volatility going into the fourth quarter, but we're optimistic, and we're very proud of the long-term prospects of that business. We expect it to be a long-term deposit growth opportunity for us.
Frank, this is Travis. I mean, interestingly, you know, acquired Leumi business where we saw the most pressure on the deposit side was on the private banking area, and Tom mentioned that in his prepared remarks. You know, folks that were sitting there with deposits and no yield alternatives for multiple years, and then you turn around and get Treasuries in the 4% area. You know, we saw them take deposits out and invest in the Treasury market, you know, which they do through our broker-dealer, so we preserve the customer relationship and get benefit, you know, economically there. That's actually the area that saw the pressure candidly across the organization from a deposit perspective.
Gotcha. Okay. Are you still seeing kind of that story play out, here in, you know, in the fourth quarter?
I think there'll be near-term volatility in those portfolios as rates rise and such. Again, long-term, it's still a very important and solid business for us.
Yeah. I would just add to that even though you see the rotation out of non-interest bearing, which many of the peers have experienced as well, the stability of the other verticals that we've built have really, you know, weathered the storm for us on that rotation. That goes back to Travis's comments in the wealth space as well, that, you know, money that was at zero is, you know, no longer sleepy and is gonna start earning some rate of interest. The thing we're most excited about is through the cycle right now for total deposits, our beta's only 20%. I mean, I'm not saying it's gonna be 20% in the fourth quarter. Please don't make that jump.
20% through the cycle right now, considering the history of our company when we had a different balance sheet mix, I think is pretty doggone good performance at this point.
Well, thinking about, you know, the CD promotions, I think they were correct me if I'm wrong, but sort of done at a opportune time earlier in the third quarter. Just kind of curious if you could talk about are there any sort of similar promotions going on currently? Kind of what's the pricing there that you're seeing?
Yeah. We have a promotion now for 19 months, 3.5% on the CD, and we're seeing a lot of positive activity. Began a little over a week ago. We also have a Valley Direct product, a high-yield savings at around 3.01%. In the last quarter, we opened up over 1,000 new accounts there. We are seeing traction at rates that give us a little more duration and that will be attractive rates.
Frank, as a reminder to your comment around what we've done opportunistically before Fed increases. We've raised over $1 billion on two other CD promotions at rates less than 2.5%. That's one of those things that's really been helping to buoy our overall deposit beta.
Great. Okay. If I just could sneak in one last one on the expense side as well. Is there any reason to sort of, as we look at the fourth quarter, I know you provided your guide and under 50%, you're very confident in terms of the efficiency ratio. Just wondering if there's you know, any reason to think some of those accruals in the quarter might have been a little bit front-loaded. Is there you know, I guess the 3Q a pretty good run rate expectation, all else equal, for the, as we go into the fourth quarter here?
Sure. Appreciate the question. I'm gonna direct everybody's attention on the call to slide 9 in the deck. As a reminder, the adjusted expenses are $254 million for the quarter. If you back out the $2 million that we talked about for the charitable contribution, which obviously we don't expect that to continue in the fourth quarter, you start to look at the other increases. The good news, I think from our perspective, it goes back to the comments that Tom made earlier about hiring new producers within our company. The majority of that cost increase is in the salary and compensation related lines. To the extent that there's recessionary pressure there, which I think everybody's experiencing, I think it's fair to say that that's right.
I think a kind of base rate going forward, at least for the fourth quarter expenses, is $250 million, and then you can build your growth on top of that relative to a sub 50% efficiency ratio.
Great. Okay. Thank you.
Thanks, Frank.
Our next question comes from David Bishop from Hovde Group. Please proceed.
Good morning, gentlemen. How are you?
Hey, David. How are you?
Good. Hey, I was just curious, you know, with the Leumi acquisition behind you, just the appetite for share buybacks here.
I think there's so much opportunity for us to really continue the growth trajectory of the organization. I think the best use of our capital is to continue to leverage it into the balance sheet and provide capital for the loan originations internally. I think that's probably more likely than a share repurchase at this point.
Got it. You know, overall credit looks fine, but any color you guys can provide on the rise in the early-stage delinquencies of the construction commercial real estate credits? Thanks.
Yeah. There was a single construction loan that moved into the nonaccrual bucket. Yeah, the collateral is fine. We have guarantees on it. We don't expect any loss there. In total our nonaccruals declined from 72 basis points to 65, and that was all due to positive resolution of some older, you know, loans that we had on the books with primarily full repayment on each of them.
Got it. Thanks.
Our next question comes from Steven Alexopoulos from JP Morgan. Please proceed.
Hey, good morning, everyone.
Good morning, Steven.
Morning.
I want to start and dive a little deeper into the non-interest-bearing deposit outflows in the quarter. If I look prior to the pandemic, you were about mid-20% mix of non-interest-bearing. Now it's about mid-30s. Where do you see this level normalizing to? And could we go below 30%?
You know, as a reminder, in September of 2021, I believe we were around 34%, give or take. 32%, sorry. We peaked in the prior quarter at just under 37%, and now we're at 34%. We feel pretty good about the retention that we've seen here. I think what you're seeing in our numbers and you're probably seeing in other banks' numbers is at some point on the interest rate cycle, especially in this cycle, there's a place where people are no longer going to leave as much in non-interest bearing as they did before. It's about effective use of their capital. Mostly relates back to the commercial space. We feel pretty good about how we've been able to hold our own in that space.
In any event, if some of that money moves to us, we're not losing those accounts. As Tom mentioned earlier, our account count basis in the commercial space has gone up.
I think just from a more broad perspective, Steven, in the composition of the balance sheet has changed dramatically since then. Much more focused on the commercial deposit versus the consumer deposits. As you know, those carry higher non-interest bearing deposits from an operating account and payroll account perspective, as well as just the shift in bringing in Leumi and what their funding base look like as well. I don't anticipate that at all going back down to those levels.
Can we read into this that you think you could maintain about mid-30s, about where you are now, so the mix doesn't change that much moving forward?
I think there's a lot of pressure, you know, externally. You know, you saw $200 billion flow out of the banking space. I think there is gonna be some pressure. I think the diversified funding mix that we've created here is really providing us the ability to continue the growth without having to look to the borrowings marketplace. That said, you know, I think the betas are gonna be much less than what they were last time. You know, Steve, if you look at, you know, we had 20% impact in beta this quarter just because of the growth that we put on. I think on a core basis, as Tom was referring to, we are getting the real benefit of the diversified funding book.
You know, the retail branches are doing well all across the individual geographies. The focus on the commercial customer versus maybe the CRE customer is really supporting balances as well. You know, our commercial customers give us between 25% and 35% balances that come along with that growth. You know, if you look back to when we had, I think as you were referencing earlier, when we were in the mid-20s, 60% of the balance sheet was now sitting with fixed and 40% on the adjustable side. That was really switched from where we were before. We've seen significant. Did I get that wrong?
You got it wrong.
The other way, right?
60% is adjustable, 40% is fixed. Within the adjustable portion, 40% of that would reprice in the next three months.
Right. That massive shift.
Sort of the total portfolio. Yes.
That massive shift in asset base, you know, reflects the change in the deposit composition as well that really comes along with it. On a macro basis, it's a much more asset-sensitive balance sheet, and the funding structure looks much better as well.
Ira, if we put this together, what should we assume for the through the cycle deposit beta for you guys?
I don't think I want to give guidance on that specific, but I think it's gonna be much better than what we were historically, Steven.
Okay.
We won't give guidance, but I will say this, Steven. On the low end of our modeling at 27% beta to the high end in our modeling of 87, and we have all kinds of points in between there, our net interest income still grows on a year-over-year basis. We feel very confident right now that we're gonna continue to grow margin in the fourth quarter and the first quarter. As we said in our prepared remarks, gets a little murkier after that. On a net interest income perspective, the numbers look solid.
Okay. One final one for me. Just given the inverted curve and rising deposit costs, how should we think about, you know, holding residential mortgage loans beyond this year? Should we expect that to continue?
No, Steven, just, you know, point of reference, we're only holding jumbo mortgages in portfolio. There was a small portion of conforming that closed too late in the third quarter, about $20 million to be sold in the third quarter. They'll be sold in the fourth quarter. We continue to only hold jumbos, not conforming.
Not conforming. Okay. Thanks for taking my questions.
Thanks, Steven.
Our next question comes from Matthew Breese from Stephens Inc. Please proceed.
Good morning.
Morning.
I was hoping for a little bit more guidance on accretable yield that came down this quarter, I think to $8.5 million. I'm just curious what we should be using on a run rate basis there.
Yeah, Matt, this is Travis. We were at $12 million last quarter, $8.5 million this quarter. The reduction is because payoffs slowed dramatically. I mean, I think anywhere in that range is reasonable. If you want to pick the midpoint, I think that's fine. You know, with where rates are, maybe you use the $8.5 million, you know, for the next few quarters. I don't anticipate that it would move significantly lower than this.
Okay. You know, thinking back historically, you know, Valley has operated more or less in a kind of interest rate neutral position. Curious over time, you know, will you look to go back to that kind of interest rate position, perhaps lock in some of these the margin gains you've had more recently? Or do you expect to maintain the asset sensitive position?
That's Mike. Thanks for the question, Matt. Yes, we are currently exploring some options to lock in some of that, as you said, new interest income or some of that margin that we've gained during this upward rate environment. We are looking at that. I do think over time, you would see us migrate back to a somewhat more neutral balance sheet position.
Okay. Just tying two thoughts together, right? You had mentioned NIM expansion through the early part of 2023, plus perhaps locking some of this in. You know, to what extent, you know, we see some NIM pressure on the back of the Fed stopping hikes, you know, to what extent might we see that pressure? Or do you expect it to be more of a stabilizing point versus real pressure?
Yeah, Matt, this is Travis. I mean, our margins at 3.60% this quarter, right? We're up from about 3.15% or so two quarters ago, right? That's significant increase in the last two quarters. We're gonna grow for another two quarters, although likely at, I think, a slower pace than what you've seen so far. But then even when you see the pressure, right, I think we all believe that we're going to see our margin, you know, even out somewhere, you know, well above kind of that low 3% level. You know, so maybe it's not the 3.60% area that we would ultimately level out following the conclusion of the Fed hikes. But you know, I think the margin's going to stabilize at a higher level than what you've seen historically for this company.
Okay. I'm sorry. Was there a number in there like a 3.50 or 3.60 number you think it'll stabilize at?
I was just using this quarter's 360 as like the reference point. We're gonna grow for two more quarters, and then at some point, if you see the pressure, I mean, I think you're going to normalize in this kind of mid-3% level.
Got it. Okay. Last one for me, just on fee income, you know, any sort of guidance there? I know there's a number of different business lines now kind of working. Curious if that kind of $55 million-$56 million range is a good one going forward.
Yeah. We feel pretty good about that range right now. I mean, obviously the resi mortgage business is gonna continue to be challenged as it was in the quarter. Yeah, we think that's probably in the ballpark.
Great. Okay. That's all I had. Thanks for taking my questions.
Thanks, Matt.
Our next question comes from Jon Arfstrom from RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed.
Thanks. Good morning, everyone.
Morning, Jon.
Morning.
Just a couple of follow-ups. Ira, a question for you. In your early in your prepared comments, I think you used the term times of stress, give you opportunities to grow. Does this feel like a time of stress, for you? You know, it sounds like you've got some opportunities to grow, but help us understand that word stress.
I think it's beginning to feel like it. You're seeing definitely some contraction in GDP overall. I think there's still an inflationary pressures that are being addressed, obviously, by the Fed. You look at the balance sheets, right, and people are migrating deposits outside of traditional financial banks, which is impacting obviously the ability to fund. That said, I think for us specifically, the credit quality is holding up. You know, I keep on going back to what our performance was in the beginning of COVID. You know, we had a significantly $30+ billion balance sheet, and we only had to modify $40 million of our loans during that time period. Really demonstrates to me the way that we underwrote day one and the ability of our borrowers to continue to perform in a challenging economic environment.
For us, I feel really good about our opportunities to continue to grow, our opportunity to support our customers and to add new customers. For others, I'd be a bit concerned.
Okay, that's helpful. On your loan growth pace, help us understand just kind of environmental versus market share gains. You still had a good growth quarter, and I know we talked a little bit last quarter about some of your new markets, but you know, is the environment healthy, and is that providing opportunities, or are these market share gains? Just help us think through how you view 2023 in terms of.
Yeah, I think as Tom.
Trying to grow by opportunity to help. Yeah.
Yeah. You know, what we're most proud of is that our growth is very balanced across regions, types of businesses, types of product, types of collateral. We continue with that balanced growth, and we're seeing accelerated growth in our newer Florida market, more so than the stable markets up here in the Mid-Atlantic, and we're seeing growth in California. We entered new markets, Philadelphia, Nashville, Atlanta. We continue to see opportunities there and growth there. We have added, you know, Ira mentioned we added 25
Front-end people, including three in our venture business, two in New York, one in Palo Alto. We're getting lift through these added people through the new markets that we're entering and staffing into those new markets. I just wanna, you know, stress we've done this without compromising any credit standards. We've tightened our underwriting standards. Our weighted average loan-to-value is around 60% on our new production. Our weighted average debt service coverage is over 1.6. On the C&I side, it's even higher. It's over two times on that debt service coverage, you know, calculation that we have. Seventy percent overall of our business is to our existing customer base. On the construction side, it's closer to 80% to existing customer base.
The balance of that growth, utilizing our existing customers, Leumi and The Westchester Bank are benefiting from a much larger balance sheet. You know, Leumi's growth is 30% annualized, and 75% is coming from existing customer base. We'll continue to see the benefit of that. We'll guide. You know, our guidance is 8%-10% growth for the fourth quarter, and high single digits for 2023.
Yep. Okay, that's helpful. Mike, just one for you. You know, you've got a lot of questions on deposits and growth, obviously. Any cap on your loan-to-deposit ratio when you guys think through it? You've operated above 100% in the past, but how do you think about the loan-to-deposit ratio, or is that just not a concern or a limitation for you? Thanks.
You know, we don't provide, like, specific guidance, but I think that when you look at us relative to the mid-size bank peers in the $50 billion-$100 billion range, I think it's advantageous for us to the extent we can do this in a cost-effective way and also not turn away any growth. One of the things we wanna make sure that we never do is be in a position where we can't fund the good loan growth that Tom's team puts on, you know, day in and day out. That typically means that we'd like to keep it at 100 or less. If it came up a little bit above 100, it's been much higher historically. A little bit above 100 I think would be okay. You know, there's not a goal to necessarily keep it there.
Assuming we can do it cost effectively, we'd like to be less than 100.
Okay. All right. Thanks for the help. I appreciate it.
Thanks, Jon.
Our next question comes from Michael Perito from KBW. Please proceed.
Hey, guys. Thanks. Sorry, just one last quick follow-up. Just the tax rate, Michael, has been creeping up a little bit. Just wondering if you could just give us a little guidance there on where you think that'll shake out in the fourth quarter and maybe initial range for next year would be helpful. Thank you.
Yeah, we think that the 27.7% is the same rate that'll be that you should use in your models for the fourth quarter. Remember, there are some things throughout the year, the way taxes are collected, et cetera, that can give it some kinda seasonality. It tends to be lighter in the first half and then accelerate a little bit in the second half. That's what you're seeing.
At this point, no expectations for major changes year-over-year, in terms of, like, any tax credit or muni bond purchases, anything, like, dramatic or no?
No. No.
Okay. Great. Thank you, guys.
Yep, thanks.
Thanks, Mike.
That does conclude today's questions. I will now turn the call over to Ira Robbins for closing remarks.
Just wanna once again thank everyone for joining today. Thank our employees for such an unbelievable performance this quarter, and we look forward to talking to you next quarter. Thank you, and have a nice day.
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This does conclude today's call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.