West Bancorporation, Inc. (NASDAQ:WTBA) Q2 2024 Earnings Call Transcript July 25, 2024
West Bancorporation, Inc. misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $ EPS, expectations were $0.32.
Operator: Hello, and welcome to West Bancorporation, Inc. Q2 2024 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to the company’s Chief Financial Officer, Jane Funk. Please go ahead.
Jane Funk: Thank you, and welcome, everybody. Thank you for joining us today on our second quarter earnings call. I’ve got with me today Dave Nelson, our CEO; Harlee Olafson, our Chief Risk Officer; Brad Winterbottom, our Bank President; and Brad Peters, our Minnesota Group President. We’ll start off the call today. I’ll turn it over to Dave Nelson.
Dave Nelson: Thank you, Jane, and good afternoon, everyone.
Jane Funk: Sorry, I got to go back, I got to read the fair value disclosure. Sorry about that. I got ahead of myself. I’ll read the fair disclosure statement. During today’s conference call, we may make projections or other forward-looking statements within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 regarding future events or the future financial performance of the company. We caution that such statements are predictions and that actual results may differ materially. Please see the forward-looking statement disclosure in our 2024 second quarter earnings release for more information about risks and uncertainties, which may affect us. The information we will provide today is accurate as of June 30, 2024, and we undertake no duty to update the information. Now I’ll turn it over to Dave Nelson.
Dave Nelson: Thank you, Jane. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Also, thank you for your interest in our company. I have some general overview comments and others will provide more detail. Our first quarter really went as we expected. Our loan growth was essentially flat during the quarter, and we had good deposit growth during the quarter and also our yields are improving net interest income is increasing, and we believe our margin has stabilized. Our credit quality remains pristine, and we have no credit problems. We opened our new headquarter building in West Des Moines during April, and it feels like we’re now really getting settled in. Yesterday, we declared a $0.25 per common share dividend payable August 21 to owners of record as of August 7. Those are the extent of my prepared remarks, and I’d now like to turn the call over to our Chief Risk Officer, Mr. Harlee Olafson.
Harlee Olafson: Thanks, Dave. Commercial real estate is what everyone seems to want to talk about today when assessing the quality of the loan portfolio. We have no past dues in our commercial real estate portfolio. I attribute this to our strong seasoned customer base. We look to provide credit to borrowers that have significant net worth liquidity and multiple sources of income. We quarterly stress test our commercial real estate portfolio to see if we have trends that concern us. In our last stress test, we have looked at all of the different types of commercial real estate and have the lowest loan to value we have experienced and very strong and consistent net service coverages. Our watch list on our total portfolio stands at 0.03%.
Here are some statistics on our commercial real estate portfolio by type. Multifamily, we have $621 million outstanding with an average loan-to-value of 69% and a debt service coverage of 1.35, warehouse properties, we have $303 million outstanding with a loan-to-value of 67% and an average debt service coverage of 1.9. Our office properties totaled $188 million with an average loan-to-value of 67% and a debt service coverage of 1.38, mixed use type properties stand at $103 million, with a loan-to-value of 65% and a debt service coverage of 1.95. Our hotel properties totaled $278 million with a loan-to-value of 64% and an average debt service coverage of 1.37. Our medical office properties totaled $178 million with an average loan-to-value of 58% and an average debt service coverage of 2.49.
Our senior care facilities totaled $108 million with a 64% average loan to value and our debt service coverage average of 1.38. Office property has come under a great deal of scrutiny due to many cities having in downtown office and other retail crisis with the work from home, leaving those downtown cores devastated. We have no significant downtown office, multi-tenant properties in our portfolio. About 40% of our office properties are owner occupied. Another area that concerns me as senior care facilities due to the high cost of operations, although we have seen this cost coming down since the end of the pandemic. We have passed on doing more of this type of lending, not due to the market need, but due to the high cost of operations. The economy in our regional markets has remained strong.
Our bankers have been focusing on building both sides of our balance sheet and had numerous deposit successes. At the end of our prepared remarks, I will be available for questions. And with that, I will turn it over to our bank President, Brad Winterbottom.
Brad Winterbottom: Thank you, Harlee. For the quarter ended June 30, ’24, our loan portfolio was relatively flat when compared to the first quarter ended 3/31. Out-standings were just under $3 billion. For the first six months of ’24, our loan portfolio grew $71 million or 2.43% driven primarily on vertical construction loan commitments. We have slightly over $123 million in unfunded commitments on vertical construction draws that should occur over the next 12 months. Deposit gathering sales efforts continue to be an emphasis in a highly competitive environment in the markets we serve, and we’re winning our fair share of battles. We have and continue to see good opportunities in markets we grow — we serve, excuse me, to grow our market share but remain selective in our loan opportunities. We remain confident in our abilities to create and maintain positive relationships with our customers and prospects that we’re pursuing. With that, I’ll turn it over to Mr. Peters.
Brad Peters: Thanks, Brad. Good afternoon, everyone. I’m going to provide a brief update on our progress in Minnesota. We continue to build new business in each of our Minnesota regional centers. We are focused on C&I and high-value retail deposits. Our team is actively calling on and consistently winning new business. We continue to navigate through a challenging environment due to the rapid rise in interest rates. These challenges have created new opportunities for our team. the quality of our bankers and our relationship-based approach has set us apart from our competition. We have built facilities designed with relationship building in mind. We are leveraging these facilities to have high-quality one-on-one discussions that lead to opportunities to grow our business.
The new facility in our Owatonna market is under construction and we anticipate we’ll be occupying the new bank late in the fourth quarter of this year. Those are the end of my comments. I will now turn the call back over to Jane.
A – Jane Funk: Thanks, Brad. Our net income this quarter was $5.2 million compared to $5.8 million in the first quarter of 2024 and $5.8 million in the second quarter of ’23. There was no provision for credit losses recorded in the second quarter. As previously mentioned, our credit quality remains pristine. Our net interest margin has stabilized the last few quarters. Net interest income was up $480,000 in the second quarter compared to the first quarter of 2024, which is the second straight quarter of an increase in net interest income. Noninterest expenses have increased as expected with the occupancy of our new corporate headquarters. As mentioned earlier, our loan growth was about 2.4%, primarily due to funding of construction loans.
And our deposit balances at June 30 include a large deposit from a municipal customer that we expect to draw down over the next 12 to 18 months for a construction project. Excluding those funds and any broker deposit activity, the core deposits have increased 1.9% year-to-date. Those are the highlights I was going to cover. That’s the end of our prepared comments, and now we’ll open it for questions.
Q&A Session
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Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Andrew Liesch from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Andrew Liesch: Hi. Good afternoon, everyone. I just want to stick with the loan growth here, some of the pretty good pipeline of construction. How is that looking here for the third quarter? Are there any large payoffs that you see coming down the pipe?
Brad Winterbottom: We have a few payoffs scheduled probably in the — maybe the $20 million, $25 million range that will get replaced with, funded commitments, you can get surprised with, “Hey, we sold this property and it’s going to close in 60 days. But the ones that we are aware of are roughly around $25 million. We have been very selective in adding new projects based upon where we stand with CRE and our liquidity position.
Andrew Liesch: Got it. That’s very helpful. Then on the funding side, great to get that win from the municipality. It sounds like there are some other potential commercial customers. Where do those stand? And any timing of some potential deposit trends of larger deposits?
Brad Winterbottom: Well, we have roughly 30 commercial bankers and about 15 principal bankers, and that’s their job daily, they go out and find those deposits. So we’re chasing any and all. It’s very competitive. We’re seeing CDs that might be six months that are north of 5%, but we’re competing. We’re chasing the lower-priced type deposits as well as noninterest-bearing deposits. I’m not answering your question very well, but we’re out hunting every day.
Andrew Liesch: No, that’s very helpful. Very good information. Thank you. Jane, on the expense front going forward, higher on the occupancy like you mentioned and as was expected. Is this like $13.2 million number a good run rate until maybe the next branch in office in Minnesota hits expenses?
Jane Funk: It’s probably pretty close. I mean I think we would have had a full quarter of occupancy in the new headquarters in this quarter. And there was — we had some onetime costs in there with the move-in stuff, but it’s probably a reasonable assumption.
Andrew Liesch: Got it. And then a little bit of an uptick once the new Minnesota office comes in there?
Jane Funk: Yes, that will be probably December, January. And that’s a smaller building that we’ve constructed. So that will be on a smaller scale.
Andrew Liesch: Okay. Very helpful. And then, Harlee, the increase in the watch list. Any commentary behind that? Like what drove that increase this quarter?
Harlee Olafson: We just have a couple of commercial customers that had a weaker operating performance that they’re well capitalized, well secured. We expect them to meet their projections for this next year. And come through it and continue to be good commercial customers. And again, like I said, the I almost get embarrassed talking about our watch list because it’s so low at 0.03% of our total portfolio. We have we have a couple of non-accruals, that have been with us for a while that we expect will pay off in the next — well, I think they’ll all be gone before the end of the year, but there are some closings that are scheduled from sale or refinance of those.
Andrew Liesch: Got it. That’s really helpful and some good trends to hear. And then I guess, towards the end of my question, the deposits that came on, it looks like you — that was used to fund some payoffs of some brokered funding. Just if you have handy, what was the rate that the deposits came on versus the brokers that were paid off to set spread?
Jane Funk: They were very similar.
Andrew Liesch: Okay.
Jane Funk: Yes. There wasn’t much of a difference.
Andrew Liesch: Okay. So it really does seem like the margin stabilized here. Do you think that you need rate cuts for it to start moving higher?
Jane Funk: We do — we probably don’t. I mean we’re seeing good improvement on the loan yields and our cost of deposits is really kind of stabilizing probably one of the challenges that we’ll see in the net interest margin is we do have a couple of fixed rate interest rate swaps, that will be maturing in the second half of the year. And a couple of those have rates below 2%. So we’ll be refinancing resetting rates on those. So — but I think we are seeing yield improvement on loans that’s a little bit in excess of what we had expected, so.
Andrew Liesch: Great. It’s a little bit of margin expansion then we get some rate cuts and help a little bit after that, then – that sound reasonable?
Jane Funk: We hope so.
Andrew Liesch: That covers all my questions. Thanks so much. I’ll step back.
Jane Funk: Thanks, Andrew.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] We have no further questions. I would like to turn the call back over to Jane Funk for any closing remarks.
Jane Funk: All right. Thank you. We just want to thank everybody for joining us today, and we look forward to talking to you again next quarter. Thank you.
Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.