ServisFirst Bancshares, Inc. (NYSE:SFBS) Q4 2023 Earnings Call Transcript January 29, 2024
ServisFirst Bancshares, Inc. misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $0.77 EPS, expectations were $0.87. SFBS isn’t one of the 30 most popular stocks among hedge funds at the end of the third quarter (see the details here).
Operator: Greetings, and welcome to the ServisFirst Bancshares Fourth Quarter and Full Year Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Davis Mange, Director of Investor Relations. Thank you, Davis. You may begin.
Davis Mange: Good afternoon, and welcome to our fourth quarter earnings call. Today’s speakers will cover some highlights in 2023, and then take questions. We’ll have Tom Broughton, our CEO; Rodney Rushing, our Chief Operating Officer; Henry Abbott, our Chief Credit Officer; Bud Foshee, our CFO; and Kirk Pressley, who will be taking over as CFO after Bud retires later this quarter. I’ll now cover our forward-looking statements disclosure. Some of the discussion in today’s earnings call may include forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ from any projections shared today due to factors described in our most recent 10-K and 10-Q filings. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made and ServisFirst assumes no duty to update it. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Tom.
Tom Broughton: Thank you, Davis. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining our fourth quarter earnings call. 2023 was not what we expected to be when the year began, but we are pleased with the results of the hard work by our bankers, who I think are the best in the industry and where we ended up the year. Bud will go into more detail on, but we certainly were pleased to see the net interest income not only stabilize but to improve in the fourth quarter. And what found over the years in banking, you can cut expenses to improve profitability, but you cannot reach prosperity without the net interest margin reaching acceptable levels. We do expect some tailwinds from the margin in both this year and 2025, we’ll hear more about that as we move through our speakers.
We are pleased to announce that Joel Smith has joined us as President of Memphis, Tennessee market, and we’ll certainly provide more information on the team and our location there soon. So it is a great market. Total deposits on Memphis were $41 billion, and we think we have a great opportunity there. As we have commented in prior calls, once we saw the run-up in treasury rates in mid-’22, we pivoted deposit gathering, which proved to be great time and given the events of March 2023. Our results in 2023 exceeded expectations with year-over-year deposit growth of 15%. New commercial accounts were up 15% over 2022, and the total new accounts including retail accounts were up 12% year-over-year. We are one of the few banks our size, who has no broker deposits or Federal Home loan advances.
This will certainly serve us well if the regulators announced new liquidity standards, as expected. Rodney Rushing will discuss a little bit more about the correspondent division after I finished my remarks. Loans grew slightly in the fourth quarter. We did have loan growth in five of the last seven months of the year. C&I line utilization has really not improved since it’s been pretty flat in June 30, 2022. Certainly, that was after effects of the PPP program. And then as rates moved higher, that also has reduced borrowings more than you would see otherwise. And of course, most of this reduction and the borrowers on the C&I side was funded with non-interest bearing deposits. So you really have the worst of both worlds there, when you’re taking money out of non-interest bearing accounts to pay down lines of credit.
So we do think most of that is in the rearview mirror at this point. The back story of the quarter is we had $178 million of loans that paid-off early in the quarter at an average rate of 4.3%. So that — getting those loan payoffs was a good thing and improved profitability. We are growing increasingly optimistic that as activity is picking up, we will see more normalized loan growth this year. Our loan pipeline has increased 50% since last quarter in, which has improved substantially from 2023 levels. We certainly not at the blistering pace of 2022, but that year was certainly way above normal and loan activity and will not be a typical year. We think the pipeline is very robust at this point and we do see loan activity picking up on a weekly basis, and certainly activity in a new market like Memphis will help carry us, give us some momentum later in the year.
On production side, we hired seven new producers in the fourth quarter up a net of three, a total of 143. Even though, we are adding the team in Memphis, we do expect to improve the efficiency of some of our other markets over time. And maybe our head count will end up more balanced as we go through the end of the year. Credit quality does remain strong and I think most of us in the industry and all investors have been waiting for recession since 2019. But we do not see any early signs of difficulties emerging. And Henry Abbott will discuss it in a few minutes in more detail. So in this time I’m going to turn it over to Rodney to talk about the correspondent division.
Rodney Rushing : Thank you, Tom. Correspondent banking had a strong second half of 2023 and fourth quarter, both deposit growth and new relationships. As I reported last quarter, that correspondent balances grew, they continued expanding with just over $280 million or a 15% increase during the second half of the year. During the fourth quarter, we opened nine new correspondent banking relationships with a total of 28 for 2023. Three new agent bank credit card issuers, which where we had 14 new issuers for the entire year. Eight new settlement banks during the fourth quarter, 15 for the year. Most new account activity came from our newly expanded Texas market, while new agent credit card issuers were spread across the U.S.. As we looked to continue this momentum into 2024, our focus has shifted some from deposit growth and toward improving liability costs.
We are specifically optimistic about this outlook and correspondent banking. If interest rate futures markets are accurate and we are in a declining rate environment, correspondent banking should benefit from these falling rates, as rates decline, our correspondent liability costs will decline step for step with a beta of one. In addition, at the same time, funds will migrate from interest-bearing deposits to non-interest bearing accounts. The only other topic I’d like to mention, Tom, is that we’ve completed the credit card system conversion and we have worked through the changes and have the benefits and extra features it provides both us and our agent banks. Because of that, we are optimistic about the credit card’s revenue contributions in 2024.
With that, I’ll turn it over to Henry Abbott for comments who has a short report, I believe, and short usually means good news coming from our Chief Credit Officer. Henry?
Henry Abbott : Thank you, Rodney. I pleased with the bank’s performance in 2023 and more specifically in the fourth quarter. The bank’s loan portfolio continued to perform at an exceptional level in a unique environment with rising interest rates that we experienced in 2023. New — Tom covered pipelines and loan outlook for 2024, but I will also add that we brought on some strong teams in North Carolina and Virginia in 2023. The bulk of the past year we had them focusing on deposits and not loans, so we are well-positioned for loan growth in 2024 and beyond, as we will have some good tailwinds in these new markets. These bankers are now focusing their efforts on lending. Some of these markets are having disruptions due to bank mergers and other changes, create an opportunity for ServisFirst to attract and retain high quality customers.
Our asset quality continues to remain strong and our core key credit metrics were all generally stable or improving. Our charge-offs for the quarter were only nine basis points when annualized, and that is down from the annualized 15 basis points in the third quarter, which is roughly a 40% reduction quarter-over-quarter in charge-offs. Our ALLL total loans went from 1.31%, so 1.32% for the quarter. Non-performing assets decreased in dollars and NPAs to total assets from 15 basis points in the third quarter to only 14 basis points in the fourth quarter. Our asset quality continues to remain strong. Also note, we started the year with AD&C loans as a percent of risk-based capital being at 100% and over the course of the year, that has come down to 90%.
We don’t see any issues within our portfolio and problematic asset classes such as office space. Our commercial real estate portfolio continues to perform at a very high level. Feel good about our loan portfolio and how it performed in 2023, how we’re positioned for 2024 and beyond. With that, I’ll hand it over to Bud.
Bud Foshee : Thank you, Henry. Good afternoon. We are very pleased with the progress the bank has made in the fourth quarter with liquidity, credit quality, capital, improving loan pipelines and net interest margin stabilized. Our non-interest bearing deposits were stable in the fourth quarter. Our total deposits grew by $132 million. As Tom mentioned, we saw net loan growth in five of the last seven months of 2023. The key to improving earnings per share is loan growth, and our team is focused on a more balanced approach to loan and deposit growth in 2024. Our 2023 focus on deposits worked, as our liquidity remained strong at $2.1 billion. Our adjusted loan-to-deposit ratio at year-end was 80.2%. This ratio includes the correspondent Fed funds purchase.
Our loan repricing initiative will contribute to net income in 2024, as we don’t anticipate increasing deposit costs. Examples of our repricing effort. $525 million year-to-date of loans where the rate has been restructured. Loans paid-off early were $185 million. We have $154 million pending in loan repricing. Loan repricing is best opportunity to improve profitability combined with loan growth. Loans at repriced or paid-off in the fourth quarter were $212 million, which combined with loan paydowns on fixed rate loans, totals to $2 billion on an annualized run rate. The cumulative effects of this repricing will improve margin and earnings per share over time. We have low rate investment securities of $347 million maturing in 2024. We would improve the margin by $8 million on an annualized basis by reinvesting short-term treasuries or overnight funds.
Net interest margin increased in the quarter, $102 million in the fourth quarter versus $100 million in the third quarter. Variable rate loan originations made up 69% of the total production in the fourth quarter at a rate of 8.3%. 82% of these loans have a floor rate. 36% of the production had a floor rate of 5%, and 18% had a floor rate of 5.5%. About 42% of total loans are floating rate today. Deposit costs stabilized in December. We have begun rationalizing higher deposit costs in the first quarter, so we expect higher cost excess funds to decline, in addition to normal seasonal declines in first quarter excess cash. Credit card income in the fourth quarter was impacted by a billing issue with one vendor that was not timely passing through certain expenses.
We anticipate this income returning to normalized levels in 2024. In discussing non-interest expense, we made an effort to hold the line on expense growth in 2023. The incentive payouts for 2023 were more than we anticipated as we focus on deposit growth for the entire year. The focus on 2024 incentive plans is to enhance earnings per share. We anticipate new additions for the Memphis market will be offset by production officer attrition in 2024. We have several non-recurring expenses in the fourth quarter, which are detailed in the earnings release. Our teams are performing quite well and have grown new accounts 12% year-over-year. We continued our growth in book value per share. Our CET1 ratio was 10.91%, and our Tier 1 capital leverage ratio was 9.12%.
Our capital continues to be a strength. I’m retiring next month, so will not be here for the first quarter of 2024. Kirk Pressley will be the next CFO, and I will turn the program over to him, and to comment on 2024.
Kirk Pressley: Thank you, Bud. Tom has given some good color on the business. I’ll give some color on the earnings side. I’m optimistic about 2024. As a reminder, like most other banks, Q4 2023 was significantly different than Q1 2023, so I’ll focus my comments on the run rates from the fourth quarter versus year-over-year. The good news is that we feel good about where we’re going. We expect the margin to grow from here, not only due to loan growth but also from the repricing of fixed rate loans and securities, as Bud discussed. We think our deposits repriced quicker than most of our peer banks. So we’re probably a little farther along on overcoming increases in funding costs. We think our dollar margin bottomed out in the third quarter of 2023, and it will continue to grow from here.
We expect Q1 2024 to be higher than Q4 2023 despite there being one less day. We think the margin expansion will accelerate from there due to both the fixed rate loans and security cash flows and growth in the loan book. Non-interest income should do well this year. But as you know, that is a smaller part of our business. We do expect growth in low-double-digits. Non-interest expense is a little more of a challenge to explain, but as you all know, we keep a firm grip on expenses. The fourth quarter had a lot of noise primarily due to the non-GAAP adjusting items noted in the press release, which are the FDIC special assessment, duplicate privilege tax and expense and the termination of our EDP contract. In addition to those items, we also had elevated expenses related to historic tax credits.
If you strip out the unusual or infrequent items, we think our fourth quarter core non-interest expense run rate was closer to $44 million. We expect expenses to grow slowly from here. Year-over-year, we expect expenses to grow mid-single-digits from the 2023 reported numbers. This would be closer to 10% after taking out the infrequent and unusual items from Q4. The increases are due to normalized incentives for the full year, the investments in the Memphis team and their facilities, merit increases and continued investments in technology and back office. We expect nice progression in the income statement in the first quarter as well as loan growth. We expect EPS for the quarter to be up modestly when compared to the adjusted fourth quarter of $0.91.
However, the funding of the allowance for credit losses for the loan growth is expected to limit the growth in the net income and EPS. The good news is the extra margin from the loan growth will go to the bottom line in subsequent quarters. Let me turn it over to Tom for some final thoughts.
Tom Broughton : Thank you, Kirk. We previously announced that Bud’s is going to retire after year-end. So this will be his last earnings call. Bud was here for the formation of the bank in 2005. He handled all back office functions, cash management, HR, in addition to his finance duties. So when Bud came on Board, I said, Bud, two things. I said I hired a head of deposit operations. She’s great. And I said bought a phone system. And I didn’t think the deposit ops person was really all that good and sure enough, she resigned two weeks before we opened the bank. And he threw the phone system on the trash and got a new one. So after that, I can’t tell Bud how to do anything in the back office anymore. I’ll let him handle that. He’s done a great job.
Because obviously, the stock price is still depressed at current level, but — we started it was $1.66 a share in 2005 and it’s in the 60s today. So Bud’s clearly done an outstanding job. Bud thank you for all you’ve done for the company. So with that, we’ll turn it open it up for questions now.
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Q&A Session
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Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Graham Dick with Piper Sandler.
Graham Dick: Just wanted to start on the loan side of things. I know we talked little — last quarter, you talked about just a bit just now. But I think things are a little slower than I expected this quarter on the loan growth side, and I had some payoffs. But we had talked about that $1.5 billion of liquidity you wanted to deploy. Just trying to get a sense for I guess, a better sense for how much loan growth you expect in 2023, whether that be a dollar amount or a percentage growth number, something to just set the bar at going forward? And then I guess also in tandem with that, is this — do you think you’ll just have this elevated liquidity position for a bit longer than you thought last quarter? Basically, how are things looking on that front, I’d say, relative to where you were three months ago?
Tom Broughton: Graham, this is Tom. We’re quite optimistic as I just said in the prepared comments, in terms of loan demand has picked up markedly. The pipelines double where it was, and we expect those loans, and that’s a 90-day pipeline. So we kind of know what the next 90 looks like, and there could be a little drag on that. It could take 120 days to close the amount in that pipeline. But that kind of funding will give us a nice number at the end of the year, and we don’t — I’m anticipating high-single-digits for the year, is kind of what we’re in our internal budgets that we’re budgeting. So we think that the loan demand is clearly coming back in terms of — and maybe we’re doing a better job of getting out and marketing. We were marketing deposits for the last 18 months, and we obviously flipped and we’re obviously marketed both loans and deposits, but we’re certainly got a real key on loans right now compared to where we were before, Graham.
Graham Dick: Okay. That’s helpful. And I guess as you look at loan growth, it sounded like C&I lines are pretty much just staying where they are, I guess, at a percentage basis, where do you think the growth is going to come from your customer base? And what segment? Are we talking CRE here or construction? What are the main areas that you’re seeing demand pick up in, I guess?
Tom Broughton: Honestly, CRE, but in a lot of — there’s a lot of different things. I mean, whether it’s Marina or in Florida or whatever else, we’re seeing — there’s some construction out there. Obviously, Florida is continuing to see very nice growth with the population inflows that we have there. So — and certainly, we hope that C&I is going to pick up compared to where it’s been. And I think if we get some lower rates towards the back half of the year, hopefully, we can see some C&I growth. But we — our pipeline today includes some C&I, we’re optimistic that we’ll grow everything. But we don’t — we’ve got room, certainly, we’ve got room to grow CRE, we’ve got some room to grow construction as well. We’ve got room in our bucket. So we feel good about — we’re not having — we don’t feel like we’ll have to constrict any one segment during the year, Graham.
Graham Dick: Okay. That’s helpful. And then Bud or Kirk, whoever wants to take this. On expenses, I think you said that there is some — obviously, there’s some one-timers called out in the release and then a higher write-down of the tax credit investment. But I guess just — and specifically in that accrual that was booked this quarter. So at the end of the day, was that a $1.9 million net benefit to the bottom-line? Because in the release, it looked like there was a tax benefit directly tied to that accrual of what was it, $4.1 million? Is that the right way to think about that, that I was — at the end of the day, even though it hurt expenses by a little bit, it was actually a $1.9 million benefit to the bottom-line?
Bud Foshee: Well, you had $4.1 million in tax credit and the tax expense related to that was $3.3 million. So if you look at it something else – from…
Graham Dick: No, no, that makes sense. I thought that $2.15 million that was called out in the non-GAAP was…
Bud Foshee: Oh, no, that’s totally different. Yes, that’s privilege tax.
Graham Dick: Okay. Okay. And so — but the run rate essentially at the end of the day, was $44 million, like you said, and mid-single-digit from here?
Kirk Pressley: Yes.
Graham Dick: Okay. All right. That makes sense. And then I guess just the last one for me would be on the margin, specifically just deposit costs. It sounds like the end of quarter, cost of interest-bearing deposits was actually lower than the average rate if the average was 4.06% in the period, 4.04%. Are you starting to see some actual relief in the cost of deposits move lower on the interest-bearing side? Or is that just more stabilization at this point than anything?
Tom Broughton: We’re working at it, Graham. I guess, it takes effort. It doesn’t happen without effort on our part, obviously, but we’re trying to rationalize the higher cost deposits as we said. So we’re trying to reduce — we’re reducing certain deposit rates. We obviously have a — we’re in a good position from a liquidity standpoint. And we need to improve margins. So we’re working hard at that. None of us are naive enough to think our charge-offs are going to stay at 10 basis points for the rest of my career. There’s going to be times they’re going to be higher than 10 basis points a year. So we need to have higher margins in order to absorb the loan losses from that as well. So yes, we’ve got to improve margins, and that’s certainly a focus that we have for the whole year.