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Earnings Call: Q4 2022

Jan 26, 2023

Travis Lan
SVP and Head of Corporate Finance and M&A, Valley National Bancorp

Good morning, and welcome to Valley's fourth 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 the comments made during this call may contain forward-looking statements related 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.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Thank you, Travis, and welcome to those of you on the call. I have a few comments to make this morning, then we'll ask Tom to provide insight on the quarter's loan and deposit results. Mike will discuss the financial results in more detail. In the fourth quarter of 2022, Valley reported net income of $178 million, earnings per share of $0.34, and an annualized ROA of 1.25%. Exclusive of non-core charges, adjusted net income, EPS, and ROA were $183 million, $0.35, and 1.29% respectively. In 2022, we generated net income of $569 million and adjusted net income of $650 million.

This represents a significant increase from 2021 as a result of strong organic loan growth, the acquisition of Bank Leumi USA, and the benefits of higher interest rates that were realized for the majority of the year. I am extremely proud of Valley's consistent financial performance throughout my tenure as CEO. Our profitability metrics and earnings per share have increased steadily across a variety of economic and competitive backdrops. Despite the negative impact of interest rates on equity in 2022 and completing the largest acquisition in our company's history, our focus on tangible book value resulted in year-over-year growth. In fact, our stated tangible book value has increased 36% since 2017. This compares to a 14% increase for our proxy peers over the same period and a 14% increase for Valley between 2012 and 2017.

Our value creation as measured by tangible book value, plus the dividends we have paid, has totaled 72% since 2017. This is over 1.5x our proxy peer median of 47%. We have generated real franchise value on both an absolute and relative basis. Within the context of our sustained financial success, I want to focus this morning on what I see as our key accomplishments over the last five years and how the evolution of our company positions us for the years ahead. From a balance sheet perspective, we have done a tremendous job diversifying our funding base. At the end of 2017, approximately 92% of our deposits were held in retail branches. By focusing on commercial relationships and both niche and digital deposit channels, only 70% of our deposits are from the branch network today.

From a geographic perspective, 78% of our total deposits were in New Jersey or New York branches in 2017. Today, that number is down to just 48% of total deposits. Despite a challenging few quarters, CDs and borrowings comprise just 23% of funding today versus 31% five years ago. Our focus on geographic diversity and a holistic approach to commercial relationships has benefited the asset side of our business as well. In 2017, 78% of our loan portfolio was in New York and New Jersey. Currently, less than 60% of our loan portfolio is in these states. The ongoing addition of higher yielding and increasingly adjustable loans has helped to better align our asset and liability betas. In our view, this increased balance should help to reduce the net interest margin volatility that we have experienced in prior cycles.

Ultimately, our sustained credit excellence provides a stable foundation upon which the aforementioned transformation could occur. Our premier asset quality will continue to be the hallmark of our organization. This credit strength is the result of both stringent underwriting criteria and a focus on holistic relationships with wealthy and sophisticated commercial clients. Heading into 2023, we have not identified any underlying trends which would indicate meaningful stress on the loan portfolio. In any event, we believe that our experience during the height of the pandemic indicates the exceptional resilience of our borrower base. In aggregate, the balance sheet transformation that we've undergone has been the direct result of our company's strategic evolution and targeted M&A activity. We have focused on business and geographic diversification, premier customer service, and establishing a sustainable organic growth engine.

Our hiring efforts and tactical initiatives have aligned with these outcomes, we feel well positioned to navigate the near-term operating environment headwinds that we face today. Over the long term, we will continue to focus on diversification and sustainable growth. We believe the progress made over the last five years will drive our continued success and ultimately benefit our associates, customers, and external stakeholders. With that, I will turn the call over to Tom and Mike to discuss the quarter's growth and financial results.

Tom Iadanza
President, Valley National Bancorp

Thank you, Ira. Slide six illustrates the quarter's 15% annualized loan growth. While quarterly loan originations remain below peak levels, net growth continues to benefit from slower payoffs and more sustained activity on the residential and consumer side. Our commercial loan growth remains well-diversified across asset classes and geographies. We continue to experience significant repeat business from our long-standing and sophisticated commercial borrowers. Legacy Leumi customers have also benefited from the utilization of our more robust product set and balance sheet resources. We anticipate that customer demand will wane somewhat in 2023, largely due to the impact of higher interest rates. We are well-positioned from a competitive perspective to capture high single-digit loan growth for the year. Our continued focus on attracting and retaining top talent and preserving service excellence positions us well despite a potentially more challenging backdrop.

On slide six, you can also see the 99 basis point increase in average new origination yields to 6.2% during the quarter. We remain successful in passing rate hikes through to our customers and anticipate further expansion in origination yields in the near term. As a reminder, approximately 40% of our loan portfolio is fixed and another 20% reprices over a period beyond 30 days. These buckets should provide a repricing tailwind that will continue to support increasing portfolio yields as rate hikes slow. Before moving on to the deposit side, I wanted to provide some additional color on the quarter's net charge loss. Approximately $21 million of the quarter's charge loss were related to a single C&I loan. Both Legacy Valley and Leumi had participated in this larger syndicated credit.

Our combined loan exposure had previously been classified as non-accrual, and the remaining exposure is fully reserved for as of 12/31/2022. This is a discrete credit event and the vast majority of our portfolio continues to perform extremely well. As Ira mentioned, our underlying credit trends remain very strong. Turning to slide seven, you can see that deposits grew at an annualized rate of approximately 21% during the quarter. While the quarter's net growth was largely funded by brokered alternatives, we are pleased with our ability to effectively defend our traditional deposit base in this challenging environment. While we saw non-interest deposit pressure across business lines, the largest single driver of the quarter's reduction occurred in our technology deposit area.

Despite the volatility of this business, which has been exacerbated by certain environmental challenges, we continue to add customers and accounts and anticipate above-average growth over time. As a reminder, our technology deposits contribute approximately 5% of our total balances. As we indicated last quarter, we are experiencing competition for deposit sources across the franchise. Specifically, on the commercial side, the same wealthy and sophisticated customer base that supports our strong and consistent credit performance has been actively requesting competitive deposit rates. This has incrementally pressured our betas and deposit costs. Our retail network has been responsive to our CD offerings and both digital and cannabis deposits saw a solid growth during the quarter. We are keenly aware of the price competition that we face to defend and grow our deposit balances.

A variety of channels remain available to us, and we will do our best to take advantage of the most cost-effective alternatives to support our continued loan growth. With that, I will turn the call over to Michael Hagedorn to provide more insight on the quarter's financials.

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Thank you, Tom. Slide eight illustrates Valley's recent quarterly net interest income and margin trends. Net interest income increased approximately $12 million or 3% from the linked quarter. This reflects continued loan growth and expanding loan yields, which were partially offset by more robust interest-bearing deposit growth and funding cost pressures. While our fourth quarter fully tax-equivalent net interest margin declined 3 basis points to 3.57% from the third quarter of 2022, our PPP-adjusted margin remains 47 basis points above the fourth quarter of 2021. During the quarter, a 69 basis point expansion in our asset yield was more than offset by a 78 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. During the quarter, we funded loan growth and our non-interest-bearing deposit runoff primarily with higher cost time deposits. As you saw on slide seven, we calculate a cumulative year-to-date deposit beta of approximately 34%. As we noted last quarter, deposit competition has accelerated rapidly, and we have had to offer higher rates to attract funds to support our significant loan growth. While we continue to benefit from asset repricing, this is likely to be more than offset by higher funding costs in 2023. Moving to slide nine. We generated just under $53 million of non-interest income for the quarter, as compared to $56.2 million in the third quarter. The reduction was primarily the result of lower swap income.

This was partially offset by stronger revenues from our trust, wealth, and insurance businesses. We anticipate that our 2023 fee income could grow at a mid to high single-digit pace using the fourth quarter annualized number as a starting point. On slide 10, you can see that our non-interest expenses were approximately $266 million for the quarter, or approximately $256 million on an adjusted basis. Most expense lines were well controlled during the quarter, and the modest increase from the third quarter levels was partially the result of higher counterparty collateral fees related to certain hedging activities. Continued revenue growth helped drive our efficiency ratio to 49.3% from 49.8% in the third quarter.

We anticipate sustaining a sub 50% efficiency ratio in 2023 and believe there will be opportunities to drive efficiency lower from our current level. Turning to slide 11, you can see our asset quality trends for the last five quarters. Tom detailed the single loan relationship that drove the spike in net charge-offs for the quarter. We believe this was an isolated incident and are pleased with our aggregate 5 basis point net charge-offs to average loan rate for 2022. As a result of continued improvement in our underlying credit metrics and stability in the economic forecast, our allowance for credit losses as a percent of total loans declined to 1.03% at December 31st from 1.10% at September 30th.

As a percentage of non-accrual loans, the allowance increased to 170% from 162% at September 30 and 150% one year ago. On slide 12, you can see that tangible book value increased approximately 3.4% for the quarter. This was the result of our strong earnings and a modest improvement in the OCI impact associated with our available-for-sale securities portfolio. Tangible common equity to tangible assets improved slightly as a result of the same factors. Our regulatory capital ratios declined modestly during the quarter as a result of our strong loan growth. We anticipate that growth will moderate in 2023, resulting in higher regulatory capital levels a year from now. We lay out additional 2023 guidance items on slide 13.

For simplicity, we based our forecasts on 2022 full year results, which only included three-quarters of impact from Bank Leumi. Based on our current pipeline and expectations for a modest pullback in demand, we anticipate 2023 loan growth of 7%-9%. This would result in net interest income growth of 16%-18%. We anticipate approximately 10.5%-12.5% growth in expenses using 2022 reported less merger charges as the starting point. This would imply a full year efficiency ratio at or below the mid 49% level posted this quarter. With that, I'll turn the call back to the operator to begin Q&A. Thank you.

Operator

As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Michael Perito with KBW. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Michael Perito
Managing Director, KBW

Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Good morning, Mike.

Michael Perito
Managing Director, KBW

I wanted to start drilling down on the margin a little bit. you know, appreciate the, the guide and the outlook and obviously a strong kind of end to the year. I'm just curious though, I mean, I imagine you guys are assuming some more beta pressure on the funding side in the first half of the year. As we think about the, the thought process around a relatively stable NIM for 2023 and asset yield improvements being offset by funding improvements, are you guys also factoring in continued outflow on the non-interest-bearing side? How are you guys thinking about mix? you know, obviously, Ira, your point's well taken about how much the business has structurally changed, but is there still some kind of normalization to be had just from the environment that we're coming out of?

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

I think it's a good question, and I'll turn some of the mechanics over to Mike. You know, I do wanna re-highlight once again the macro change that we have in the funding base today, and especially just out of that retail footprint. I know historically the Northeast has been high on an absolute basis as well as high on a beta basis. To now have 48% of our deposits just sitting in the New York, Jersey region v ersus 78% before is dramatically going to change what the overall beta performance is. Mike, you've had some more details, I believe.

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Yeah. I think the thing to really keep in mind is, you know, we saw $900 million roughly rotate out of non-interest bearing into interest bearing between third and fourth quarter. Our expectation right now as we look into 2023 is that that will continue and hopefully it bottoms out into the high 20s, you know, type range. The reason that we think that is, you know, we bank a fairly sophisticated wealthy customer base, and obviously we've passed the line where they're gonna leave excess deposits in non-interest bearing. Also keep in mind that with that $900 million that rotated, we also had about $700 million of excess, put that in quotation marks, deposits that we put on in the fourth quarter in anticipation of the Fed's two additional Fed actions increases in the first half of 2023.

We're getting out ahead of that a little bit, and obviously those have a higher beta attached to them.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

I do wanna, you know, really just add to, you know, one of the things that we have done is continue to grow the commercial book as well. If you look at a year-over-year basis, we've seen business checking accounts increase 11%. Obviously those have a lot of operating accounts associated with them. There really isn't as much excess deposits in some of those. While there is pressure, I do believe some of the changes and focuses that we've had in the strategic areas are really gonna inure to the benefit throughout 2023.

Michael Perito
Managing Director, KBW

Great. Taking that kind of all into context, I mean, it's fair to say that at this point, when you guys are kind of guiding towards the stable-ish NIM, you know, you're kind of conservatively assuming that some of the headwinds that occurred in the fourth quarter continue to occur in 2023.

Travis Lan
SVP and Head of Corporate Finance and M&A, Valley National Bancorp

Mike, I think when you think about. This is Travis. When you think about our 7%-9% loan growth guide and, you know, when you kind of take the fourth quarter run rate on NII and you figure out where the guide that we're giving you is for 2023, you'll see kind of closer to 4% NII growth. We're anticipating some amount of margin compression. Don't forget too, the first quarter obviously will have additional headwinds, like the day count issue is gonna cost us a couple of basis points there.

Michael Perito
Managing Director, KBW

Correct. Yeah.

Travis Lan
SVP and Head of Corporate Finance and M&A, Valley National Bancorp

As well. I don't think we're guiding necessarily to a stable margin. I would say that, you know, if you, if you factor it all together, there's a little bit of pressure that's baked in here, and it's because of the factors that we've talked about.

Michael Perito
Managing Director, KBW

Perfect. Okay, great. Thanks, Travis. Secondly, Ira, on the efficiency ratio and, you know, I guess just kind of a philosophical question, but I mean, do you think sub 50 is kind of the new table stakes? I mean, as you guys try to manage your business from an investment standpoint and an ROI standpoint on, you know, in terms of like incremental margins on new business customers and stuff, I mean, You know, I guess the question is this kind of this the way we should be thinking about your business kind of base case moving forward, you know, kind of irregardless of where rates are? Yeah, I guess I'll just leave it there. I'm curious what your thoughts are.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

I mean, clearly we should not be disappointed if we run above 50% on a, on a consistent basis. I believe even our forecast for this year continues to invest in strategic initiatives that are really gonna continue to drive franchise value for us. You know, I think we focus on expenses probably too much in certain areas. If you go back to when I took over as CEO, we had 3,325 employees and $29 billion of assets the first quarter thereafter. Today, we're sitting with $57 billion of assets, 3,826 employees. We've added 501 employees over the five years and grown the bank $28 billion.

There's tremendous focus here on efficiencies, process, and making sure that we're getting the most out of every single dollar that we spend on the expense side. I think to your point, we have to build franchise value. We are investing in our future in certain businesses that we think are going to continue to really grow, and so outsized performance. It is a balance for us. Managing the macro number I think is something that's really important to everyone here within the organization.

Michael Perito
Managing Director, KBW

Helpful perspective. Just think one last one, and then I'll drop back. Just the trust and investment fees were stronger than I was looking for, at least in the quarter. I was just curious if you could maybe remind us, you know, what the fee structures there look like and, you know, depending like, are they market dependent or are they more fixed? Just any color there would be great just so we have an idea of what to expect once we make some assumptions for next year.

Travis Lan
SVP and Head of Corporate Finance and M&A, Valley National Bancorp

Mike, I think the fourth quarter pickup was partially related to Dudley, which has some seasonally backloaded revenues. That flows through that trust investment insurance line for their advisory fees. I do think our forecast for 2023, you know, we assume that there's some continued improvement in that line in total because, you know, should the equity and debt markets normalize, I think we would look for some improvement in our market-based revenues. I think that's reasonable, but, you know, we don't anticipate. Obviously, we're guiding to, you know, mid to high single-digit growth on the fee side, so it's not astronomical.

Michael Perito
Managing Director, KBW

Okay. The Dudley, is that seasonal revenue something that you would expect to occur kind of on an annual basis towards the end of the year?

Travis Lan
SVP and Head of Corporate Finance and M&A, Valley National Bancorp

That's correct.

Michael Perito
Managing Director, KBW

Okay. Great, guys. Thanks.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Thank you, Mike.

Operator

Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Steve Moss with Raymond James. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Steve Moss
Managing Director, Raymond James

Good morning.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Good morning, Steve.

Maybe just following up on... Morning. Maybe just following up on Mike's question here, just going a little further into the weeds. Curious, you know, where is loan pricing these days?

Tom Iadanza
President, Valley National Bancorp

It's Tom Iadanza, Steve Moss. When you look at our yield in the fourth quarter, we increased that 100 basis points to 6.2%. On a monthly basis, we were just under 6.5% for the month of December. We continue to push our spreads up to counter the cost of our deposits. It's really will differ by asset classes, more so than anything else. As Ira Robbins mentioned earlier, we're 60% adjustable, so we'll continue to benefit by the rise in short-term rates on that 40% of our portfolio tied to SOFR prime and LIBOR.

Steve Moss
Managing Director, Raymond James

Okay. That's helpful. Just on the deposit side, you mentioned growth in, I think tech and cannabis here. Just kind of curious, you give a little more color on, you know, the trends there, you know, maybe size it up and, you know, how much is maybe non-interest bearing versus interest bearing?

Tom Iadanza
President, Valley National Bancorp

Yeah. Again, you know, just it's a deposit driven business for us. We are focusing on the multi-state operators. We now do business with 10 of them. We grow accounts, you know, in double digits on a quarter to quarter basis. I don't have it exactly, but we're primarily non-interest bearing on our deposit accounts.

Steve Moss
Managing Director, Raymond James

Okay. Great.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

One thing, Steve.

Steve Moss
Managing Director, Raymond James

One last one.

Travis Lan
SVP and Head of Corporate Finance and M&A, Valley National Bancorp

This is Travis. Just we lump cannabis in with a couple of other niche deposit businesses. For us, that'll be cannabis, HOA, national deposits and digital. Those four businesses in aggregate added $900 million in deposits during the quarter, which helped offset, you know, some of the other traditional kind of commercial deposit runoff. You know, that goes back to, you know, Ira's conversation about the transformation of the bank. I mean, absent those businesses which are relatively new to Valley, you know, we'd be looking at a different deposit picture.

Steve Moss
Managing Director, Raymond James

Okay, that's helpful. Then last question for me here, just curious, any color you can give on the construction loan that was moved to non-performing status, you know, type, geography, things of that nature?

Tom Iadanza
President, Valley National Bancorp

Yeah, sure. It's Tom again, Steve. It's a single loan, based in New York City. It's a for sale construction project. Six units, three are contracted to be sold, that we're awaiting the TCO to close those sales. Upon the three sales, we will be paid in full.

Steve Moss
Managing Director, Raymond James

Okay. Appreciate the color. Thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Jon Arfstrom with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Jon Arfstrom
Managing Director of US Research, RBC Capital Markets

Thanks. Good morning, guys.

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Morning, Jon.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Morning, Jon.

Jon Arfstrom
Managing Director of US Research, RBC Capital Markets

Question for you on the CD growth during the quarter. You know, Ira, you mentioned it used to be, I think, 31% five years ago. Do you guys see any limits to that CD growth? Should we expect more of the same in the next quarter or two?

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

I think you will see slightly higher levels, assuming that we have loan growth that's in excess of what our expectations are in the guidance. The brokered CD market is very liquid for us, and we'll use it as a tool to fund up the balance sheet and manage our loan to deposit ratio. As Travis commented earlier, you know, what's really important is the growth we're seeing in these other niche sectors, along with the fact that we did do another CD promotion in the fourth quarter that raised just about $1 billion as well. While those are higher cost deposits, as I said earlier, trying to link it back to my earlier comment, we expect those deposits will become cheaper assuming that the Fed's expected rate increases occur in the first half of 2023.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

John, I mean, I just can't reiterate enough the different levers that we have today that we never historically had. When we talk about where we used to generate funding income, you all used to have to come out of the branches. It came out of the FHLB or it came out of the brokered CD market. Those were the three choices we had. You know, today, to support the 15% loan growth, we have a litany of additional levers today, and we have the flexibility that if we wanted to go to the retail CD market because we think that's attractive, then that's where a portion of it could come from. We have the ability to extend duration on certain things that we never had before.

The flexibility that we have today is astronomical compared to where we were before. I do believe over a period of time on a relative basis that that's going to help us manage our funding costs to a much better degree than what we're historically able to. When you look at the asset side of the balance sheet, which they should be looked at in conjunction, and the floating rate assets that we've been able to put on really helps dictate the types of funding that we want to do across the entire organization. We don't necessarily look at one side of the balance sheet just in isolation.

Jon Arfstrom
Managing Director of US Research, RBC Capital Markets

Yeah. Yep, that makes sense. I mean, it's a unique period, Ira, right? We're in a period of maximum deposit pricing pressure right now, and, I understand that.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Keep in mind, you know, I think as Mike was alluding to, we had 60+ basis point runoff early, right? Because of the asset sensitivity. You know, there was an expectation here that we're going to see some increase in the funding costs to come along with that. Like you said, Jon, it's unique. It's interesting right now, but there's massive franchise value that we're able to build by adding 50% loan growth and be able to find the funds to really support that.

Jon Arfstrom
Managing Director of US Research, RBC Capital Markets

Yeah. Okay. Just one quick one on this topic, and then I have one other one. You mentioned the tech vertical, the decline in deposits there. Was that a surprise? What drove that? Was that simply making a decision on rate, or was that something else in there? What was the magnitude of that?

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

I won't give you the magnitude of it, but I will tell you what caused it. What caused it was one customer in their portfolio that went IPO. As a result of that, the bank that took them IPO received the deposits that we previously had. That should come as no surprise. That is the life cycle of what happens inside of that tech business. Overall, our tech balances from the time we started to now are basically flat when you've seen most everybody else in that space have declines.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Which I think is a good thing. I mean, if you think about what you've seen from an industry perspective, you've seen tech deposits come down because of cash burn and needs at the overall individual portfolio companies. This is a great event if you think about it from a client perspective, that they were able to go IPO and really still, even in this market, generate some sizable returns from an investor base. I think it demonstrates the differentiation of what our tech business looks like maybe versus what some of the others do from an industry perspective.

Jon Arfstrom
Managing Director of US Research, RBC Capital Markets

Yeah. Okay, good. I maybe this is for you, Mike, I'm not sure. Buried in the release, there's a comment about talking about reserves, a lower quantitative factor in the reserves, and I'm just curious what was behind that. Was that related to the charge-off, or was that something else that drove that? Just if you could give us some thoughts on the provision as well, that would be helpful. Thanks.

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Yeah, you're really in the weeds on that one. The quantitative, for the most part, the quantitative adjustment was not an adjustment based upon economic assumptions because we kept those the same. That's probably what you really wanted to get at.

Jon Arfstrom
Managing Director of US Research, RBC Capital Markets

Yeah.

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

It's more a function around nuances in various loan pools that we use, kind of management overlays is the way to think about it. If that's good, on the provision question, you know, all else being equal, we definitely believe that we will be able to, you know, all else being equal, we'll be able to maintain our current allowance coverage ratio of 1.03%. It's also important to note that from the time that we did CECL to where we're at now, we're actually up 14 basis points. We started CECL at 89 basis points. We're at 103 today. By our math, the peer group is roughly down 20 basis points. While you've seen massive releases and reductions, you know, we've done the exact opposite.

Clearly we could have done that if we chose to in the fourth quarter, and we chose not to because I think it's prudent going into this economic environment to try to preserve, you know, our allowance or our provision as best we can.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Maybe just following up on that, I mean, just to put it in simplest terms, we didn't bleed the reserve. Many of our peers did. It's not unlikely that we're not gonna have to provide as much if the economy does go into recession compared to where the peers were.

Jon Arfstrom
Managing Director of US Research, RBC Capital Markets

Mm-hmm. Just it doesn't feel like you guys are... You're being cautious, but you're not necessarily seeing the erosion that, you know, maybe we're all fearing is coming later.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

I think we were being cautious for the last, you know, five to six quarters, where our economic conditions still had a much more significant weighting towards a recession than what everybody else did. I find it unfathomable that people would drain their reserve 20 basis points below CECL for the last coming out of a pandemic and put it down to 15. It makes no sense to me. Now where I think that we've been more conservative, you know, it's absolutely more likely that we're not gonna have to build to the level that everybody else is. They should have never dropped down below CECL from my individual perspective.

Jon Arfstrom
Managing Director of US Research, RBC Capital Markets

Okay. All right. Thanks for the help, guys.

Operator

Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Steven Alexopoulos with JPMorgan. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

Hey, good morning, everyone.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Morning, Steven.

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Morning.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

I want to start, so first following up on the NII guide, the up 16%-18% in 2023. Within that guidance, what is the deposit beta assumption by the end of 2023?

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Our through the cycle all the way through the end of 2023 is a cumulative deposit beta of 50%.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

50%. Perfect. does that-

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

So, so-

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

Do you assume rate cuts in there, by the way?

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Hold on a second.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Sorry. I just want to clarify, like, when you look and just for simplistic terms, because Mike said it absolutely right. For simplistic terms, like we wanted to give you know, the metric that would be comparable to the way we present the deposit beta in our investor deck.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

Yeah.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

If you look at that and you rolled that forward to the fourth quarter of 2023 based on our rate assumptions, you know, that cumulative deposit beta would be 50%.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

Yep. Got it. Do you assume rate cuts in that scenario t o get there? What's the underlying rate assumption there?

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

There is one rate cut, but it's very late in fourth quarter, so I don't think it'll be very impactful.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

Okay. Got it.

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

that's.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

And then-

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

That's based off of... Go ahead.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

No, no. Go ahead.

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Yeah, it's just based off of the current expectation for Fed action. It's not ours, it's a market-based assumption.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

Got it. Okay. In terms of the funding strategy, in terms of funding the loan growth in 2023, I'm hearing somewhat mixed messages, right? You have these lower cost niches which helped this quarter, but you're relying more on brokered CDs and other CDs. How do you see the mix evolving through 2023? Is it going to skew materially towards these higher costs, or do you think you could keep, you know, about the same mix, but because of the growth you'll get out of the lower cost verticals?

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

In our comments, we made a comment around non-interest-bearing rotation that could possibly reduce that number as a percentage of total deposits down to something in the high 20. I think the answer to your question is yes, we expect a further rotation out of non-interest-bearing. I think that we expect a continued growth in those niches based upon different aspects that happen with interest rates throughout the year that will help fuel the loan growth that we expect and fund that loan growth. To the extent that those are shortfalls and we don't have enough funding, I think brokerage is probably the first, you know, place that we'll go. And we've been doing that. I think it's just a continuation of demonstrating what we've been doing.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

If we put this together and think about the NIM being under pressure, at this point from the 4Q NIM, do you think, you know, it's sort of down fairly consistently quarter-over-quarter through the year? Is it more pronounced in the first half, then you get to some level of stability in the second half?

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Yeah. I think the pressure right now, and nobody has a crystal ball. This is really hard to try.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

Yeah

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

to figure this out. I think the pressure will be more pronounced. There may be some lag, but I think it'll be more pronounced in the first half of the year, and then you'll see a plateauing, hopefully. If in fact the future rate curve is actually realized, and then you'll see a plateauing and then maybe later, as we said earlier, later in the fourth quarter, you get a slight reduction that won't be meaningful because of the timing of that cut.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

Yeah, we recognize how uncertain it is. That's why we're asking so many questions.

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Yeah.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

Just.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

I do think, Steve, but just keep in mind, if you're looking at it on a relative basis, right? I think the day count's really gonna impact where we are from 4Q going into 1Q. You know, I think our comments are acknowledging that when you think about the pressure we're gonna see just in the first quarter. Not all the pressure is really from a funding base but just really that day count piece as well.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

Got it. Just one separate question on credit. There's obviously a lot of market concern on commercial real estate given the rise in cap rates. I'm just curious, looking at the detail that you could provide on slide 15 of the deck. You know, one, do you share the market's concern over commercial real estate more broad? Maybe could you drill down if you are concerned, is it a particular geography or product? I'd love to hear your commentary on that. Thank you.

Tom Iadanza
President, Valley National Bancorp

Yeah. Steve, it's Tom. You know, we certainly, you know, share the concern of segments of the markets in real estate. We still continue to see, you know, robust growth of people moving into the southern markets, especially Florida. A lot of our real estate growth is coming down in that Florida market to support that migration of people down there. As you well know, we are a very diverse, granular, you know, book of business. We don't have a sizable, you know, concentration in any segment. You know, looking at our real estate portfolio, our weighted average loan to value is 62%. Our debt service coverage is 1.75. We, you know, we do look at this very closely.

Our cap rates, we've always stressed at higher cap rates than our competitors. Our average cap rate is around 6.42%, but you'll go through different categories and asset classes. As an example, when multifamily cap rates were in that 3%-4% range, we were stressing at 5.5%. That allows us to obtain what it will consider lower leverage growth in our markets and keeps down that weighted average LTV and debt service coverage. We underwrite to cash flow. We don't underwrite to collateral value.

Steven Alexopoulos
Equity Analyst, JPMorgan

Got it. Okay. Thanks for all the color.

Tom Iadanza
President, Valley National Bancorp

Thanks, Steve.

Operator

Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Manan Gosalia with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Manan Gosalia
Equity Research Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Hi, good morning. Had a question on CDs. You noted that customers have been responsive to your CD offerings. Can you expand on what terms you're putting on? I mean, I know you were terming them out in the past. Has there been any change in the duration mix given that we're closer to the Fed holding rate steady or potentially cutting? If you could also help us with how much of the CD portfolio is likely to reprice in the next couple of quarters.

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

This is Mike. Our retail CD promotions, that basically started in the middle part of 2022, and continued into the fourth quarter, have all been around 12 or 18-month duration. We're not going out long on the curve because obviously related to the answers we gave to earlier questions around our expectation for rates is that we do expect rates to come down in the very, very end of 2023 and obviously spill over into 2024. We're also trying to build, you know, a fairly flat maturity schedule so that we don't have any one quarter where you have a lot coming due. Generally 12 to 18 months. And we've been very fortuitous on those offerings so that while at the time they might have been a little bit on the high side, the high beta side.

When you look back now where we are with rates after the 425 basis points of Fed increases, you now look at those as being fairly good funding for us, actually fairly cheap in some cases. The one we did in the fourth quarter was obviously on the more expensive side of that. That, and that's public, so I can definitely tell you where that was at. That was at 4.5 %, and it raised just under $1 billion.

Manan Gosalia
Equity Research Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Got it. Very, very helpful. Apologies if I missed this, but I think last quarter, it sounded like you were tightening lending standards a little bit. Can you talk about what you're doing this quarter and how you feel about credit, you know, going in?

Tom Iadanza
President, Valley National Bancorp

Oh, yeah. Yeah. I'm sorry. I did. We consistently look at our lending standards and our criteria, and we began tightening those standards early on in the pandemic. To remind everyone, 70% of our business is our existing customer base that have been through the ups and downs of the economic cycles. So we manage our, you know, we never compromise standards to grow. We maintain our standards. As we talked about before, we typically use higher cap rates to evaluate our loans and values.

Manan Gosalia
Equity Research Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Great. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Matthew Breese with Stephens. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Matthew Breese
Managing Director, Stephens

Good morning, everybody.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Hi, Matt.

Matthew Breese
Managing Director, Stephens

A couple quick ones. First, what was the accretable yield for the quarter, and what's the outlook for accretable yield in 23?

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Yes. Matt, we said the third quarter was eight and a half million on the loan side. That ticked up about $3 million this quarter. We anticipate I think we said that $8 m illion-$10 million is a good run rate on a quarterly basis, that remains kind of our guidance.

Matthew Breese
Managing Director, Stephens

Okay. Just give us some outlook for the securities portfolio, in 2023, and whether or not you see much of any growth or should it match kind of, you know, overall balance sheet composition stay the same?

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Yeah. As a reminder, you know, it represents a little less than 10% of our earning assets, so it's not a material driver of income. Nevertheless, that portfolio is very high quality. And remember, the majority of that is held in, or held for maturity. 75%-ish is held there. 25% is only held in the AFS portfolio. I don't really expect a lot of changes. I guess the biggest change you've seen probably this is an industry change, has been that any kind of payoffs have ground to a halt. You have very little coming due that way. What we will add is in the highest quality ranges and probably in the lowest risk-weighted asset ranges. We'll keep pace, obviously.

As a reminder, we have a lot of public fund money, in this bank as well, and government banking as a niche for us is an important niche. We do have to have collateral for that business. We will continue to maintain it at a minimum what we have.

Matthew Breese
Managing Director, Stephens

Got it. Okay. Ira, just would love your thoughts in 2023 around M&A. You know, previously the message was, you know, "Look, we got a ton of stuff to do organically. There's plenty of opportunity on that front." Felt like M&A would have to be, you know, incredibly spectacular for you to do it, but my read was probably not. Just wanted some updated thoughts there.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

I would probably say you could copy and paste back into the comments for this quarter as well. I think we're very fortunate that we are likely an acquirer of choice, a partner of choice for many people that are out there today, which is wonderful, I think, based on the experience and successes that we've had. You know, maximizing and focusing on tangible book value is something that I've always talked about from day one when I became CEO, and that really continues. Today, when you look at the economic environment, I think it's very difficult to do an M&A transaction that isn't nec essarily just a resource drain, but really drains the tangible book value as well, and that's not something that I'm comfortable with doing.

Outside of that, you know, I do believe that we have such tremendous opportunities on an organic basis that we should continue to focus on those resources. We still need to continue to convert and get some of the synergies associated with Bank Leumi USA, and there's tremendous opportunities with that. Like I said, probably copy and paste, Matt.

Matthew Breese
Managing Director, Stephens

Understood. Lastly, just thank you for adding the expense guide, for 2023. Appreciate that addition to guidance. That's all I had. Thank you.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Anything for you.

Operator

Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Frank Schiraldi with Piper Sandler. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Frank Schiraldi
Managing Director, Piper Sandler

Hi, guys.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Hey, Frank. How are you?

Frank Schiraldi
Managing Director, Piper Sandler

Good. Good. Thanks. Just on the niche businesses. I think, Tom, you talked about you sort of the way you approach that, you lump in, you know, the cannabis, the HOA, the national deposits. You mentioned a growth rate in the quarter. Just wondering as we, you know, as we think about those businesses maybe ramping up, I'd assume that, you know, we could see greater contribution on a quarterly basis going forward. Then just also curious, is that largely low to no cost deposits within that umbrella?

Tom Iadanza
President, Valley National Bancorp

When you look at the individual components, you know, certainly we've been ramping up the HOA, that's largely non-interest-bearing deposits. We talked about the national deposits business. That's primarily an interest-bearing program and process there. The tech will have a large portion of non-interest-bearing, but we'll have interest-bearing mixed in there also. The plan on tech is really to broaden the users and to have reliance in addition to domestic VCs, it'll go along with the Israeli VCs that we're doing business with today. There are other... You know, cannabis, again, will be multi-state operators, primarily a non-interest-bearing program. The plan is to ramp up our specialty, our niche businesses, focusing on the deposit side of it.

Frank Schiraldi
Managing Director, Piper Sandler

Then on the technology deposits, you know, you mentioned there's been some volatility there, but overall, I guess it's sort of flattish with where you acquired the business in terms of balances, sounds like. So you know, can you give any or put any parameters around how volatile it has been? You know, I think you said 5% deposits right now, and where that's gotten to over the last couple of quarters. Do you see it just continuing to be volatile here in the short term?

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

That's a great question. Other than the IPO event, the very discrete event that we talked about, it's not actually been that volatile for us. We know from talking and listening to industry folks that in other portfolios it can be incredibly volatile, but ours has not been. Granted, we've only had three-fourths of a year of experience with it, so you gotta take that for what it's worth.

Frank Schiraldi
Managing Director, Piper Sandler

Okay. Do you lump in there, is that like a Bank Leumi umbrella? I mean, do you lump the private banking that you got from that acquisition in with those technology deposits or, you know, how has that growth rate been for you guys?

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

No. The private banking, both international and domestic, is not included in technology.

Frank Schiraldi
Managing Director, Piper Sandler

Okay. Have you seen a contraction in that business or do you have any, you know, the size, the relative size of that business at this point?

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Yeah. I think we've said this before. The international business is from a deposit perspective, is larger than the domestic business. The domestic business is gonna grow. This is one of the synergies that we identified as part of the Leumi acquisition will grow because of the private banking business that we have on our side, the legacy side of the business, I should say. The international private banking business has had some reduction in deposits. The good news is, remember, that's both a deposit and an AUM business. For the most part, their value add has been structured notes and obviously the market has not been conducive to that. We've been able to retain those clients by moving a vast majority of them into Treasury securities.

In a different interest rate environment, I would expect some of those, as they mature, to come back on balance sheet.

Tom Iadanza
President, Valley National Bancorp

Just one thing to add. In the last six months, we've had over $250 million of referrals from the Legacy Valley customers into the domestic private bank for assets to manage. It's a constant flow of consumer loan business that comes out of that private bank portfolio into Valley.

Frank Schiraldi
Managing Director, Piper Sandler

Okay. Then just lastly, sorry if I missed it, but did you give any more color on the participation? I thought I heard you mention that you weren't the lead and I think you mentioned Leumi in there as well, but just wanted to make sure I heard right. With the partial charge off?

Tom Iadanza
President, Valley National Bancorp

Yeah. Yeah, certainly. This is a customer that began banking with us in 2006, almost 17 years. We began with a $7.5 million share in a total $25 million credit facility or 30%. Company performed well over the years. The credit facility grew to $160 million since that 2006 inception. We, you know, we always manage our exposures and we increased our exposure from 7.5% to 19% but reduced our overall from 30% to 12%. The company sells cardboard boxes for shipping produce. Their customer's customer had a concentration to Russian entities. The embargo has put a very big strain on their customer's ability to pay them. We saw that early on, took early action.

We put this on non-accrual early in 2022, and we reserved 100% of the loan during 2022. This represents about a 50% charge-off of our outstanding loans. Isolated, we do constant reviews of all of our receivable-backed loans to see if there's any stretching of payments on those. As Ira mentioned earlier, our credit metrics remain strong.

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

It's probably important to note that Leumi had a piece of this as well. The combined number is a little different because they had a piece.

Frank Schiraldi
Managing Director, Piper Sandler

Okay. I'm sorry. Leumi, the Bank Leumi USA had a piece and so you're saying it's larger, your total?

Michael Hagedorn
CFO, Valley National Bancorp

Correct.

Frank Schiraldi
Managing Director, Piper Sandler

Okay.

Tom Iadanza
President, Valley National Bancorp

Yeah. Yeah, I was referring to the, you know, management of the Valley total over those 16, 17 years. When we acquired Leumi, they were also a participant in the bank group. The cha rge-off and the reserve represents both banks' shares.

Frank Schiraldi
Managing Director, Piper Sandler

Gotcha. Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. I'm showing no further questions and I would like to turn the conference over to CEO Ira Robbins for any further remarks.

Ira Robbins
CEO, Valley National Bancorp

Well, I want to thank everyone for taking the time and the interest in Valley today, and we look forward to showing you our performance for 2023.

Operator

This concludes today's conference. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

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