Central Pacific Financial Corp. (NYSE:CPF) Q1 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

Central Pacific Financial Corp. (NYSE:CPF) Q1 2025 Earnings Call Transcript April 23, 2025

Central Pacific Financial Corp. beats earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $0.65, expectations were $0.63.

Operator: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by and welcome to the Central Pacific Financial Corp. First Quarter 2025 Conference Call. During today’s presentation, all parties will Following the presentation, the conference will be open for questions. This call is being recorded and will be available for replay shortly after its completion on the company’s website at www.cpb.bank. I’d like to turn the call over to Dayna Matsumoto, EVP Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.

Dayna Matsumoto: Thank you, Kate, and thank you all for joining us as we review the financial results of the first quarter of 2025 for Central Pacific Financial Corp. With me this morning are Arnold Martinez, Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer; David Morimoto, Vice Chairman and Chief Operating Officer; Ralph Mesick, Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Risk Officer; and Anna Hu, Executive Vice President and Chief Credit Officer. We have prepared a supplemental slide presentation that provides additional details on our earnings release and is available in the Investor Relations section of our website at cpb.bank. During the course of today’s call, management may make forward-looking statements. While we believe these statements are based on reasonable assumptions, they involve risks that may cause actual results to differ materially from those projected.

For a complete discussion of the risks related to our forward-looking statements, please refer to slide two of our presentation. And now I’ll turn the call over to our Chairman, President, and CEO, Arnold Martinez.

Arnold Martinez: Thank you, Dayna, and aloha, everyone. We appreciate your interest in Central Pacific Financial Corp. and we are pleased to share our latest updates and results with you. Before I provide a market update for the state of Hawaii, and we dive into our results, let me start with sharing our recent leadership appointments that went into effect on March 1. David Morimoto has been appointed as Vice Chairman and Chief Operating Officer. David has been with us for over thirty years and has broad extensive experience in the banking industry. In his new role, David will oversee all frontline revenue areas. With that change, Dayna Matsumoto has been appointed Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, taking David’s previous role.

Dayna has been with us for nearly twenty years with prior leadership in our treasury and controller areas. These planned transitions recognize the valuable contributions David and Dayna have made while aligning our executive team to the bank’s future strategic, financial, and business objectives. Our financial Q1 results were solid across the board and continue to trend favorably. We achieved meaningful NIM and net interest income expansion. We maintained strong capital, liquidity, and asset quality, which positions us well for any economic challenges that may occur in the future. All of these results reflect our focus on optimizing our balance sheet and executing on our strategies. We know we are in a time of market and economic uncertainty, but we are confident that we will be able to effectively navigate through the changes that impact our industry and our customers and remain focused on delivering strong results regardless of external factors.

The Hawaii construction industry continues to grow and is being led by residential and government construction. The total value of construction in 2024 for the first ten months of the year increased an impressive 20.3% compared to the same period in 2023 and is forecasted to exceed $14 billion, a substantial increase from the prior year’s high of $11.8 billion. On the tourism front, through February, average daily census statewide visitor arrivals were up 1.9% from the prior year and down 4.3% from 2019. Total visitor spending per day was up 6.3% from the same period the prior year and up 20.5% from 2019. The recovery of visitors from Japan remains slow and has continued to be offset by the strength of domestic travel. Travel to Maui showed signs of improvement year over year, with an increase of 13.3% for average daily census visitor arrivals but is still recovering from the 2023 Maui wildfires.

Hawaii’s statewide seasonally adjusted unemployment rate remained very low at 2.9% in March and continued to outperform the national unemployment rate of 4.2%. In the area of Hawaii real estate, the market remained strong overall in the first quarter despite some mixed trends. Single-family home prices on Oahu reached a new record high in February and remained at similar levels in March at $1,160,000 median sales price. Home sales for the month of March dipped 10.4% for single-family homes but went up 7.3% for condos compared to the same month of the prior year. Active inventory of housing listings is starting to build, which bodes well for the industry and state. The state’s economy has proven to be resilient in the past and was forecasted earlier this year to grow modestly.

However, we continue to monitor the potential impacts from the policies of the current administration and are prepared to navigate any uncertainties in the operating environment. I’ll now turn the call over to David.

David Morimoto: Thank you, Arnold. Starting off the year, I’m excited to share CPB once again was honored by the Small Business Administration as the SBA lender of the year category two, marking our sixteenth year receiving this award. CPB was founded on the principle of helping all of Hawaii’s people achieve their financial aspirations, and we continue to honor our beginnings with a focus on small businesses. I am proud of our employees who are committed to helping our customers succeed each and every day. Driving revenue growth is a key focus for us, and we remain cautiously optimistic for the remainder of 2025. We will continue to focus on growing our CPB market share in Hawaii and supplementing that with targeted lending opportunities in Mainland markets.

A row of sophisticated full-service ATMs in an airport lounge, ready to serve customers.

We have a strong team of relationship bankers and continue to successfully add talent that will help us drive revenue growth in Hawaii and The Mainland. In the first quarter, our loan portfolio increased by $1.7 billion sequential quarter, which was the first quarterly increase in two years. First quarter growth was led by Mainland and Hawaii commercial mortgage and Hawaii construction lending. Our team continues to concentrate on building a healthy loan pipeline and serving our clients’ needs as they continue to navigate the current market environment. We are optimistic that net loan growth will continue to pick up this year. However, we remain nimble as we learn how the macro environment impacts national and local economies. Our total deposits at the end of the first quarter declined by $48 million from the prior quarter.

On an average balance basis, total deposits increased by $14 million, with an increase in average non-time deposits of $78 million quarter over quarter. Despite some volatility impacting period ends, overall, we continue to grow our deposit relationship and average balances. I’ll now turn the call over to Dayna, who will provide an update on our financials.

Dayna Matsumoto: Thanks, David. Turning to our earnings results, we are pleased to share that our performance metrics continue to trend positively and towards our financial targets. Net income for the first quarter was $17.8 million, or 65¢ per diluted share. Return on average assets was 0.96%, and return on average equity was 13.04%. Our efficiency ratio was 61.2%, which is the best we posted since the fourth quarter of 2022. Net interest income for the first quarter was $57.7 million, which increased by $1.9 million or 3.5% from the prior quarter. Net interest margin was 3.31% in the first quarter, up 14 basis points on a sequential quarter basis. Our NIM has expanded every quarter for the last four quarters, which reflects our continued disciplined approach to pricing and balance sheet management.

The net interest income and NIM expansions were primarily driven by a reduction in our funding costs from deposits combined with a higher average yield earned on investment securities. Total cost of deposits decreased by 13 basis points from the prior quarter to 1.08% in the first quarter. The higher average yield on investment securities can be attributed to our investment portfolio repositioning we completed last quarter. Total other operating income was $11.1 million, and total other operating expense was $42.1 million in the first quarter. Due to market volatility, our BOLI income and our deferred compensation expenses decreased during the quarter. To the extent market volatility continues, we’ll continue to have some variability in these line items.

Additionally, as we continue our focus on efficiencies, we are in the process of consolidating our office space into our main headquarters in Downtown Honolulu. With this move, we anticipate that we will exit our current Operations Center Building and recognize a one-time pretax write-off of $2 to $2.5 million in the second or third quarter. Going forward, we expect to realize total annual savings from reduced lease operating and maintenance expenses of approximately $1 million. Our effective tax rate was 21.2% in the first quarter, which is in the range that we communicated on our last call and consistent with historical trends. During the first quarter, we repurchased about 77,000 shares of common stock at a total cost of $2.1 million or $27.09 per share.

Additionally, in the second quarter to date, through April 16, we have repurchased approximately 86,000 shares at an average price of $24.70 per share. Finally, our board of directors declared a quarterly cash dividend of 27¢ per share, which will be payable on June 16 to shareholders of record on May 30. I’ll now turn the call over to Ralph.

Ralph Mesick: Our asset quality remained healthy in the first quarter. Net charge-offs were $2.6 million or 20 basis points annualized on average loans. This represents a nine basis point decrease from the prior quarter. The decrease came from lower charge-offs on the consumer and C&I loans. Nonperforming assets were $11.1 million or 15 basis points of total assets at quarter end, flat from the prior quarter. Criticized loans also remain near cyclical low levels, at 82 basis points of total loans, up 20 basis points quarter on quarter. Past due loans, ninety plus days, were flat compared to the prior quarter, just one basis point of total loans. Our allowance for credit loss was $60.5 million or 1.13% of outstanding loans, up two basis points.

The provision expense was $4.2 million in the quarter. We added $3.9 million to the allowance and an additional $300,000 to the reserve for unfunded commitments. The higher allowance was primarily driven by a more conservative macroeconomic outlook. Supporting this allowance, we also maintain a strong level of capital. Total risk-based capital was 15.6% at the end of the first quarter. At these levels, the bank can readily absorb the financial impacts resulting from a period of prolonged stress. Looking ahead, we’ll continue to rely on a well-tested management approach that considers risks through a cycle, anticipates a range of outcomes, and builds a margin of safety to deal with adverse conditions. With that, let me turn the call back to Arnold.

Arnold Martinez: Thank you, Ralph. In summary, we had a solid first quarter to kick off 2025. We are focused on supporting our clients and the community and driving value to our shareholders. We are prepared to navigate through these uncertain times, and we thank all of you for your continued support and confidence in our organization. At this time, we will be happy to address any questions you may have.

Operator: At this time, I would like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press star then the number one on your telephone keypad. Your first question comes from the line of David Pfister with Raymond James. Please go ahead.

Q&A Session

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David Pfister: Hey, good morning, everybody.

Arnold Martinez: Hi, David.

David Pfister: Obviously, there’s a lot of volatility and uncertainty in the market today. I wanted to just start on the loan growth side. I mean, obviously, again, there’s a lot of chaos out there. Curious how your clients are responding to that. How is the pipeline trending? And just, you know, it sounds like you’re optimistic about growth. Just maybe where do you see most opportunity to drive growth?

Arnold Martinez: David, you wanna take that call? I mean, that question.

David Morimoto: Yeah. Sure. Hey, David. Yeah. Obviously, there is a lot of uncertainty. We’re in touch with all of our large borrowers and, you know, potential borrowers in our pipeline. And while there remains a lot of volatility, you know, certain transactions are likely to get postponed. We remain cautiously optimistic about the future. And, you know, we are reiterating our full-year loan guidance of low to mid-single-digit loan growth for the full year. That growth, David, I’m sorry, David. That growth is likely to be focused in the commercial areas. So it’s gonna be C&I and commercial mortgage, and also construction. Those are probably the growth areas for the next several quarters.

David Pfister: Okay. Okay. That’s terrific. And then I know this is a hard question to but, you know, look. I’m just curious how you think about potential impacts on your clients from these trade wars, the tariffs, in Doge. As you dig into the book, what segments are you expecting to be most impacted? And, you know, just kinda how are you approaching this at this point? I mean, it’s maybe it’s kind of a wait-and-see approach, but I’m just kinda curious your thoughts. Ralph, you wanna take that question?

Ralph Mesick: Sure. Hi, David. You know what? I think the outlook really has shifted this quarter, but when we look at our portfolio, you know, talking with and first off, looking at industries that probably are more impacted, they probably represent about 10% of our total loan book. So we’re talking about, you know, accommodation, restaurant, wholesale, and retail trades. And I think our perspective today, you know, we believe that our customers are going to be able to deal with some level of short-term turbulence in the marketplace. We know the policy actions, you know, these are discretionary actions, and we do believe that they’re not intended to damage the economy. So we think that there’s gonna be some turbulence in the short term, but, you know, we believe that our customers are gonna be able to sort of deal with that.

And I think over the longer term, you know, we do have a playbook for stress events. And, you know, we’ve kinda pulled out that playbook. We’ve looked at the portfolio. We’re pretty confident we can deal with a large level of stress. And, you know, we are having these conversations with clients and we will calibrate to, you know, events as they develop.

David Pfister: Okay. That’s helpful. And then last one for me, you know, deposit performance, you guys have done a great job on the deposit side. Could you touch on maybe the competitive landscape for funding on the islands, your ability to drive core deposit growth going forward? And, I mean, look. You’re sitting here at, you know, just barely over a hundred basis points of deposit cost. I mean, is there much deposit cost leverage to drive that margin expansion? Or is it primarily going to be loan growth and repricing there that’s gonna be driving it?

Arnold Martinez: Dayna can answer that question.

Dayna Matsumoto: Hi, David. Thanks for the question. On the deposit side, I’d say we’re very pleased with our performance. Our average balances were up for the quarter, with a favorable mix shift as we grew average core deposits, including demand deposits, while we let some CDs run off. Our teams have been doing a really good job and remain very focused on growing core deposits. As far as the cost, you know, we’re also pleased with the deposit cost trend down. And my expectation is that our funding cost should continue to trend down but more gradually if the Fed is on hold. The market for deposit pricing here continues to be very rational. Our deposit pricing betas have been generally as expected. And I’d say that our pricing strategies and continued discipline have worked very well.

David Pfister: Got it. That’s helpful. Thanks, everybody.

Arnold Martinez: Thanks, David.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Andrew Liesch with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.

Andrew Liesch: Hi. Good morning, everyone. Just thinking on the margin here. I’m curious if you had what the margin was in the month of March.

Dayna Matsumoto: Hi, Andrew. Yes. For the month of March, our margin was 3.37%.

Andrew Liesch: Okay. So, I mean, you’re just starting off here in the second quarter. Six basis points higher. Is that a good jumping-off point? Or are there some other puts and takes that may make that not generate that much expansion?

Dayna Matsumoto: Yeah. Andrew, I’d say, you know, overall, we’re quite pleased with our continued NIM expansion, which was driven by our lowering our funding costs, the investment securities repositioning, as well as overall favorable mix shift and positive fixed asset repricing. Going forward, our NIM, I would expect it to continue to expand. Our guidance is for an increase of approximately four to seven basis points next quarter. This assumes that the Fed is on hold in May, and we continue to have a relatively flat yield curve. To the extent we get additional Fed cuts later this year, those will benefit our NIM further, as our deposits still have some downward repricing ability. And then, as always, a steeper yield curve will be helpful as well.

Andrew Liesch: Certainly. Do you have handy what the average yield on new loan production was during the quarter?

Dayna Matsumoto: Yes, I do. It was about 7.2%. This is a new loan yield in the first quarter.

Andrew Liesch: Got it. Very helpful. And, obviously, you have, like, the couple one-time items, the market adjustments that hit BOLI and compensation costs. But do you would you expect that those line items kinda rightsize themselves to be in line with your prior guidance ahead of on the expense side the cost saves from the rationalization of the real estate?

Dayna Matsumoto: Yes, Andrew. So that’s correct. We had some volatility this quarter with the BOLI and our deferred compensation expense. But on the expense side overall, you know, our objective continues to be driving positive operating leverage. And we believe we’ll be successful at that this year. So our guidance remains the same. For the near term, our quarterly other operating expense guide continues to be $42.5 to $43.5 million per quarter.

Andrew Liesch: Got it. And then the cost saves from that real estate rationalization, are those gonna be reinvested into the franchise somewhere? Or should that result in a slightly lower run rate?

Dayna Matsumoto: We are continuing to make some investments in our people and our technology. And those things will create efficiencies throughout our processes. So with that said, we may see some expenses rise slightly in the short term, and that would be offsetting the savings from the office consolidation.

Andrew Liesch: Awesome. That you covered everything that I had to. Thanks so much. I’ll step back.

Arnold Martinez: Thanks, Andrew.

Operator: Again, if you would like to ask a question, press 1 on your telephone keypad. Your next question comes from the line of David Fisher with Raymond James. Please go ahead.

David Fisher: Hi. Just wanted to follow-up maybe on the capital side. I mean, we bought some stock back in the first quarter. Obviously, been active here in the second quarter. You guys kind of bottom picked. You guys have done a great job. Curious, just how do you think about capital priorities today? I mean, obviously, the stock’s still attractive. You know, potential securities restructurings. Just kinda curious how do you think about the opportunities that lie ahead?

David Morimoto: Hey, David. Overall, our capital position continues to be strong and healthy. And we have flexibility. As we noted previously, we are on the higher end of our target ranges for our capital ratios. So we are evaluating how we can best optimize capital and deploy capital while continuing to monitor the economic outlook and adjusting as appropriate. So our capital priorities include continuing to pay our quarterly cash dividend with about a 40% payout ratio. After that, we plan to use capital for organic balance sheet growth and share repurchases also continue to make sense. As we noted, we have resumed repurchases. And with the overall market being down, we view it as an opportunity. But with that said, we’ll continue to evaluate the operating environment, especially with the recent heightened uncertainty and volatility, and we will make our capital decisions based on the outlook.

David Fisher: Okay. Alright. That’s helpful. Thanks, everybody.

Arnold Martinez: Thanks, David.

Operator: I will turn the call back over to Dayna Matsumoto for closing remarks.

Dayna Matsumoto: Thank you very much for participating in our earnings call for the first quarter of 2025. We look forward to sharing our progress with you next quarter. Thank you.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today’s call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.

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