Flushing Financial Corporation (NASDAQ:FFIC) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

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Flushing Financial Corporation (NASDAQ:FFIC) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript April 24, 2024

Flushing Financial Corporation isn’t one of the 30 most popular stocks among hedge funds at the end of the third quarter (see the details here).

Operator: Good day, and welcome to the Flushing Financial Corporation’s First Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Hosting the call today are John Buran, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Ms. Susan Cullen, Senior Executive Vice President, and Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer. Today’s call is being recorded. [Operator Instructions]. A copy of the earnings press release and slide presentation that the company will be referencing today is available on its Investor Relations website at flushingbank.com. Before we begin, the company would like to remind you that discussions during this call may contain forward-looking statements made under the Safe Harbor Provisions of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.

Such statements are subject to risks, uncertainties, and other factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any such statements, including as set forth in the company’s filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, to which we refer you. During this call, references may be made to non-GAAP financial measures as supplemental measures to review and assess operating performance. These non-GAAP financial measures are not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the financial information prepared and presented in accordance with U.S. GAAP. For information about these non-GAAP measures and for any reconciliation to GAAP, please refer to the earnings release and/or to this presentation.

I would now like to introduce John Buran, President and Chief Executive Officer, who will provide an overview of the strategies and results. Please go ahead, sir.

John Buran: Thank you, operator. Good morning, and thank you for joining us for our first quarter 2024 earnings call. The operating environment in the first quarter was dominated by three events, rising yields on the long end of the curve due to changing expectations of the Fed lowering rates, weak loan demand due to the lack of applications that meet our underwriting and return criteria, and the negative activity around one of our largest competitors. With regard to that competitor, we see its situation as largely unique to that institution, with opportunities that may be available to us as a result of the stated contraction in their business. Against this backdrop, the company reported first quarter 2024 GAAP EPS of $0.12 and core EPS of $0.14.

Despite largely benign credit trends for community banks, concerns about commercial real estate lending exposure in office and multifamily persist. Consistent with our history, we posted strong credit results for the quarter and continue to manage a low-risk portfolio that has been the hallmark of our company. Turning to Slide four. We’re proud of our credit culture, which has produced excellent results over the long term, and the results in the first quarter support this. Net charge-offs for the quarter were only $4,000 or less than 1 basis point of loans. Non-performing assets were flat quarter-over-quarter, and totaled 53 basis points. Our future credit quality indicators show no issues. 30 to 89-day loan delinquencies were only 24 basis points, and criticized and classified loans stand at 87 basis points, down 23% quarter-over-quarter.

There are several reasons behind these excellent metrics. We’re a conservative underwriter. We originate loans with low loan-to-value ratios and high cash flows. We have a long history with our borrowers, and our credits have strong sponsor support. We believe the results speak for themselves, but on the next couple of slides, let me show you how we compare versus the industry and peers. Slide five shows the results of our underwriting over time. Both our net charge-offs and non-current loans have historically been significantly better than the industry. Our underwriting includes a stress test of higher rates at origination. In fact, stressing our portfolio with a 200 basis point increase in rates and a 10% increase in operating expenses yields a pro forma debt coverage rate of 1.3 times.

At quarter end, we have less than 1% of loans that had an LTV of 75% or more, and about a quarter of these loans have mortgage insurance. The low loss history conservative underwriting, strong LTVs, and debt coverage ratios further demonstrate our low risk profile. Slide six, shows some credit metrics compared to peers. We had quarter-over-quarter improvements in non-performing assets to assets, and criticized and classified loans to gross loans. Our criticized and classified loans to gross loans are expected to continue to remain below peer levels. 30 to 89 day delinquencies remain low, while the peer median is similar to our performance. Three peers have ratios over 50 basis points. Our allowance for credit losses is presented by loan segment in the bottom right chart.

Overall, the allowance for credit losses to loans ratio increased slightly to 60 basis points during the quarter. We’re particularly comfortable with our credit risk profile, especially over key industry concerns. Slide seven, shows a summary of these portfolio segments and key potential risk metrics. A multifamily portfolio is the largest portfolio, but it’s very granular, with an average loan size of $1.2 million. This portfolio has a weighted average LTV of 45% with a debt coverage ratio of 1.8 times. There are minimal credit issues with low non-performing loans, delinquencies, and criticized and classified loans. Investor commercial real estate is our next largest portfolio and shares similar characteristics like small average loan size, low LTVs, high debt coverage ratios, and excellent credit performance.

We have zero non-performers in this portfolio. Our office portfolio is less than 4% of loans. Less than 1% of loans are Manhattan office buildings, none of which are non-performing. This portfolio has a weighted average LTV of 49%, debt coverage ratios of two times, and low levels of criticized and classified loans. We believe these metrics provide a clear overview of our low risk and strong credit culture that has performed well over time. I want to go a step deeper on our multifamily portfolio. Slide eight, outlines our key credit quality statistics compared to peers. As of year-end, our criticized and classified multifamily loans were 27 basis points of total multifamily loans, which is at the lower end of the peer group. At the end of the first quarter, this ratio was 54 basis points, which would still rank at the lower end of the peer group.

We use a quantitative model to risk rate our real estate loans. This model has been in use for many years and has proven its value through several credit cycles. The model has four main inputs, property condition, current DCR, current LTV, and loan payment history. The DCR and LTV account for 70% of the rating, and the rating cannot be upgraded for any qualitative factors. It can only be downgraded. At year end, the multifamily reserve to criticize and classified multifamily loans was 147%, or at the high end of the peer group. At quarter end, this ratio was 73%, which would still put us at the high end of the peer group. Given these metrics, we see limited risk on the horizon. I’ll now turn it over to Susan, to provide more detail on our other financial metrics.

Susan?

A close up of a stack of financial documents with a pen and calculator as props to represent financial planning.

Susan Cullen : Thank you, John. Slide nine outlines the net interest income and margin trends. The gap in core net interest margins declined 23 and 25 basis points respectively to 2.06% during the first quarter. Absent episodic items, the NIM declined 13 basis points quarter-over-quarter to 2.01%. The NIM decrease in the quarter was about 10 basis points for episodic items, CD growth, and repricing, and a seasonal increase in cash. Going forward, the primary factors impacting the NIM are loan originations, loan repricing, and CD repricing. While the market determines its rates will remain higher for longer if the Federal begin to cut rates, the long end of the curve has increased. This has dampened loan demand, and we remain committed to our pricing and underwriting standards.

We did purchase a residential mortgage pool of approximately $50 million of loans towards the end of the quarter, which has helped the NIM in the second quarter along with the continued loan repricing. The timing of the purchase was at the end of the quarter, so the full quarterly income benefit will occur in the second quarter. While the balance sheet is relatively neutral to 100 basis point change of interest rates, I wanted to spend a minute to talk about the nuances in the model. We assume a conservative deposit beta is the model for reduction of rates, and we expect we will have opportunities to reduce rates faster than what is assumed in the model for certain products. This should lead to NIM expansion, all else being equal. Taking all this into account, we feel the NIM is close to the bottom and should start to expand.

Our deposit portfolio is on Slide 10. Average deposits increased 4% year-over-year and 3% quarter-over-quarter. The quarterly increase was partially attributable to seasonality and growth in CDs. Average CDs increased 3% quarter-over-quarter to $2.4 billion. Average non-interest bearing deposits decreased 4% quarter-over-quarter. Checking account openings were down 21% year-over-year as 2023 was elevated due to promotional activity. Despite these challenges in non-interest bearing deposits, this is a focus for all of our product groups as incentive plans are heavily weighted to checking accounts. Our loan-to-deposit ratio has improved to 94% from 102% a year ago. Slide 11 provides more detail on our CD portfolio. Total CDs are $2.5 billion, or 35% of total deposits at quarter end.

About $1.7 billion of non-swap CDs are expected to mature over the next year at a weighted average rate of 4.56%. Historically, we retain about 80% of the retail CDs that mature, and our current rates range from 3.75% to 4.25%. With approximately $450 million of CDs maturing in the second quarter, the level these CDs reprice will have a significant impact on our net interest margin. For CDs that are repricing in the second half of 2024, the increase in expected repricing rates should be minimal. This should help in stabilizing funding costs. Slide 12 provides more detail on the contractual repricing of the loan portfolio. Approximately $1.2 billion, or 18% of our loans, are repriced to short-term indices. Our interest rate hedge position on these loans increases this percentage to 25%.

For the remainder of 2024, $583 million of loans are due to reprice at 212 basis points higher than the current yield. These rates are based on the underlying index at March 31, 2024, and I do not consider any future rate moves, including the approximately 40 to 50 basis point move in the five-year Federal Home Loan Banking Rate since the end of the quarter. This repricing should drive net interest margin expansion once funding costs stabilize. Slide 13 outlines our interest rate hedging portfolio. We have $1.7 billion of interest rate hedges split between asset hedges of approximately $900 million and funding hedges of $777 million. The combined benefit on these asset yields is about 24 basis points, and benefit on the funding side is about 35 basis points.

The portfolio does not have any significant maturities in 2024. These hedges moved the balance sheet to an effective neutral interest rate position with the 100 basis point change in rates. The interest rate hedges helped mitigate NIM compression from rising rates and provided immediate income. Our capital position is shown on slide 14. Book value and tangible book value per share increased year-over-year. The tangible common equity ratio decreased by 24 basis points quarter-over-quarter to 7.4%. The decline is primarily due to the $300 million increase in securities. During the quarter, we purchased $393 million of floating rate securities as we invested some of our $438 million of deposit growth. Overall, we view our capital base as a source of strength and a vital component of our conservative balance sheet.

On Slide 15, we discuss our Asian markets, which account for a third of our branches. We have over $1.3 billion of deposits and $746 million of loans in these markets. These deposits are 18% of our total deposits, and while we only have a 3% market share of the $41 billion market, there is substantial room for growth. Our approach to this market is supported by our multilingual staff, our Asian advisory board, and support of cultural activities through participation and corporate sponsorships. This market continues to be an important opportunity for us and one that we believe will drive our success in the future. On slide 16, you can see community involvement as a key part of our strategy beyond just our Asian franchise, as outlined previously.

During the first quarter, we participated in numerous local events to strengthen our ties to our customer base. Some of our recent highlights include the Lunar New Year Parade in Flushing and our very popular Lunar New Year Tote Bag Giveaway. Participating in these types of initiatives has served us as a great way to further integrate ourselves within our local communities while driving customer loyalty. Slide 17 provides our outlook where we share a high-level perspective on performance in the current environment. We continue to expect stable loan balances. As is typical, we expect certain deposits to experience normal seasonality in the winter months and decline in the summer. In terms of the NIM, the two big factors are loan originations and the repricing of CDs. We feel the NIM is close to the bottom and should start to expand in the second half of 2024.

Non-interest income should primarily be driven by the fees earned from back-to-back swap loan closings. We expect non-interest expenses to follow normal seasonal patterns with a sequential quarter decline in the second quarter and the full year growth of low to mid-single digits remains intact as this remains one of our top priorities for 2024. While tax rates can fluctuate, we expect a mid-20s effective tax rate for 2024. I will now turn it back over to John.

John Buran: Thank you, Susan. Turning to Slide 18, I wanted to share how we think about long-term success and what that means for profitability. Clearly, our profitability levels are pressured and this is largely a function of net interest margin. The impact on the margin can be separated into areas we control and the market impact. We control lending spreads on new production and we’re working to improve results. We’re prepared to sacrifice volume to ensure we’re getting favorable spreads. Loans will be priced higher through the year according to their contractual terms. We’re also focused on funding costs as we’ve taken a harder look at CD rates and are incentivizing sales of non-interest bearing checking accounts. The return of the normal positively sloped yield curve should help widen the spread between our assets and funding yields.

Despite our neutral balance sheet position and 100 basis point moving rates, a reduction in rates will help reduce pressure on funding costs and we’ll have opportunities to shift the funding mix. Bending the expense curve is one of our four areas of focus and we’ll continue to evaluate all expenses. Lastly, we believe our strong underwriting and conservative risk profile should keep credit costs low. Taking all these factors into account, we expect the NIM should trend to 3% plus with a double digit return on average equity over time. While we control some of these factors, we need a positively sloped yield curve and a more certain rate environment. On Slide 19, I’ll wrap up our key takeaways. We’re concentrating on four areas of focus in this environment.

Looking to increase our NIM and reduce volatility and we expect to see progress during 2024. We’re maintaining our credit discipline and our low risk credit profile. Capital and liquidity are strong and are expected to remain that way. Lastly, we are looking to bend the expense curve and expect lower expense growth in 2024. While the environment remains challenging, we’re controlling what we can control and setting the foundation for improving profitability over the long term. Operator, I’ll turn it over to you to open the lines for questions.

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Q&A Session

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Operator: [Operator Instructions] The first question will come from Mark Fitzgibbon with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.

Mark Fitzgibbon: Hey guys, good morning.

Susan Cullen : Good morning, Mark.

Mark Fitzgibbon: Susan, just to clarify, you mentioned you had grown security this quarter with some of the excess liquidity and I think you had mentioned they were floating rate securities. What sort of initial yield are on those?

Susan Cullen: Around 670. The floating rate, they have a pretty high coupon right now.

Mark Fitzgibbon: Okay, great. And then secondly, do you happen to have your March net interest margin?

Susan Cullen: Obviously, we do. I don’t have it right at there, 205.

Mark Fitzgibbon: Okay. So, am I reading the tea leaves correctly? You’re suggesting that you think the margin will be flat in the second quarter and then it starts to expand a little bit in the back half of the year?

Susan Cullen: That’s been what we have shown, yes.

Mark Fitzgibbon: Okay. And then sort of a bigger picture. I guess I’m curious, are you trying to shrink the rent regulated multifamily portfolio? Is that sort of the plan over time?

John Buran: So, I think we want to do there is clearly improve the spreads on that portfolio. And we obviously want to be sure that we stick with our long-standing excellent credit metrics in that area. Clearly, this particular quarter has caused us not to grow loans significantly at all. But we still think it’s a viable category, we think we will continue to be lending in that category, but we also want to be sure that we’re getting spreads that make sense for us and credit quality that we can count on.

Mark Fitzgibbon: Okay. John, I’m curious. I think you have like $246 million of these kinds of loans coming due between now and the end of the year. Do those borrowers have anywhere else they can go, or is it a situation where all the banks are basically being forced to roll their own paper because there’s nowhere else to go for those borrowers?

Susan Cullen: Those are repricing marks, not maturing.

Mark Fitzgibbon: Got you. Just on loans that are maturing, then.

Operator: The next question will come from Steve Moss with Raymond James.

John Buran: Wait, wait. I don’t think we have an answer for your maturing off the top of our heads. I’m sure we have it someplace in the numbers, but I can’t recall what it is at this point.

Mark Fitzgibbon: Okay. And then one other question, I guess. I’m sorry. Can you hear me?

Susan Cullen: Yeah. Mark, if you look at slide 12 of the presentation, we’re showing that we have $583 million worth of loans to reprice and or mature. And if you look at the number, the relationship of what’s maturing is a very small number. It’s the gray bar, if you see that.

Mark Fitzgibbon: Got it. Thank you. And then one last question, if I could. With the stock trading at about 50% of book value, I guess I wonder if it makes sense to grow at all to do any lending, would it make sense to kind of dramatically shrink the balance sheet, build capital and buyback a lot of stock at these levels.

John Buran: We have been planning and we’ve been talking about pretty much maintaining the level of lending in not only the multifamily space but pretty much across the board. Banks are continuing to refinance our loans maybe pricing us being a little bit more aggressive in their pricing. But as I said, we’re going to stick with our pricing at this point in time. We budgeted in order to maintain credit levels throughout this period, kind of waiting for a better opportunity to grow the loan portfolio. So in this particular quarter, for example, we put on some floating rate securities that obviously could be available in the event of a better market for lending.

Mark Fitzgibbon: Right. I guess I’m just suggesting if you think you’re going to go from a 2% ROE to a double-digit ROE and you can buy the stock back today at half the tangible book value, it’s hard to imagine there’s any other investment opportunities for a dollar of capital that are better than the buyback.

John Buran: It’s a valid point.

Mark Fitzgibbon: Okay. Thank you.

Operator: The next question will come from Steve Moss with Raymond James. Please go ahead.

Steve Moss: Good morning.

Susan Cullen: Good morning, Steve.

Steve Moss: Maybe on the fee income side of things, just curious here about the pace of swap activity and your expectations there for the upcoming quarter or two?

Susan Cullen: Our loan pipeline is — I’m sorry, my allergies are acting up today. About $174 million of which 22% is related to the swap program of the $174 million. Our normal pull-through rate is between 70% and 80%, so we would expect that continued pull-through rate and just straight line everything.

Steve Moss: Okay. Great. That’s helpful. And then in terms of the residential mortgage pool that was purchased late in the quarter, what was the yield on that portfolio?

Susan Cullen: After the discount its about 580 — 635. I’m sorry.

Steve Moss: Was that 15-year fixed or 30-year fixed? How do we think about the structure?

John Buran: They’re adjustables.

Steve Moss: Okay. And do you guys anticipate any additional purchases along those lines going forward?

John Buran: We look at this opportunistically.

Steve Moss: Okay. Appreciate that. And then in terms of the expenses, I realize there’s a $1.6 million of seasonality here. Is it fair to assume $38.3 million is a good run rate here?

Susan Cullen: Yes. It should be — pull out the $1.6. That would be a good run rate.

Steve Moss: Okay. Perfect. Most of my questions have been answered here, so I’ll step back.

Operator: The next question will come from Manuel Navas with DA Davidson. Please go ahead.

John Buran: Good morning, Manuel.

Susan Cullen: Good morning, Manuel.

Manuel Navas: Hey, good morning. Any thoughts on if rates stay the same and you start seeing that NIM expansion the back half of the year, what type of pace it would be?

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