Skip to main content

10-Q

First Bancorp /Pr/ (FBP)

10-Q 2023-05-10 For: 2023-03-31
View Original
Added on April 07, 2026

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C.

20549

____________

FORM

10-Q

(Mark One)

[X]

QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the quarterly period ended

March 31, 2023

or

[ ]

TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES

EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the transition period from ___________________ to

___________________

COMMISSION FILE NUMBER

001-14793

FIRST BANCORP

.

(EXACT NAME OF REGISTRANT AS SPECIFIED

IN ITS CHARTER)

Puerto Rico

66-0561882

(State or other jurisdiction of

incorporation or organization)

(I.R.S. Employer

Identification No.)

1519 Ponce de León Avenue

,

Stop 23

San Juan

,

Puerto Rico

(Address of principal executive offices)

00908

(Zip Code)

(

787

)

729-8200

(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)

Not applicable

(Former name, former address and former fiscal year, if changed since last report)

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

Title of each class

Trading Symbol(s)

Name of each exchange on which registered

Common Stock ($0.10 par value per share)

FBP

New York Stock Exchange

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed

all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities

Exchange Act of 1934 during the

preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant

was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject

to such filing requirements for the past 90

days.

Yes

No

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted

electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted

pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T

(§ 232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for

such shorter period that the registrant was required

to submit such files).

Yes

No

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated

filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging

growth company.

See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company,” and “emerging growth company” in

Rule 12b-2 of

the Exchange Act.

Large accelerated filer

Accelerated filer

Non-accelerated filer

Smaller reporting company

Emerging growth company

If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to

use the extended transition period for complying with any

new or revised

financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a)

of the Exchange Act.

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company

(as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).

Yes

No

Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the

issuer’s classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date.

Common stock:

179,788,698

shares outstanding as of May 1, 2023.

2

FIRST BANCORP.

INDEX PAGE

PART

I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION

PAGE

Item 1. Financial Statements:

Consolidated

Statements

of

Financial

Condition

(Unaudited)

as

of

March

31,

2023

and

December

31,

2022

5

Consolidated Statements of Income (Unaudited) – Quarters ended

March 31, 2023 and 2022

6

Consolidated Statements of

Comprehensive Income (Loss)

(Unaudited) – Quarters

ended March 31, 2023

and 2022

7

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows (Unaudited) – Quarters ended

March 31, 2023 and 2022

8

Consolidated

Statements

of

Changes

in

Stockholders’

Equity

(Unaudited)

Quarters

ended

March

31,

2023 and 2022

9

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements (Unaudited)

10

Item 2. Management’s Discussion

and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations

73

Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk

121

Item 4. Controls and Procedures

121

PART

II. OTHER INFORMATION

Item 1.

Legal Proceedings

122

Item 1A. Risk Factors

122

Item 2.

Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds

124

Item 6.

Exhibits

125

SIGNATURES

3

Forward-Looking Statements

This Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q

(“Form 10-Q”) contains forward-looking statements

within the meaning of Section 27A

of the

Securities Act

of 1933,

as amended (the

“Securities Act”),

and Section

21E of

the Securities

Exchange Act

of 1934,

as amended (the

“Exchange Act”), which are subject

to the safe harbor created by

such sections. When used in this

Form 10-Q or future filings by

First

BanCorp.

(the

“Corporation,”

“we,”

“us,”

or

“our”)

with

the

U.S.

Securities

and

Exchange

Commission

(the

“SEC”),

in

the

Corporation’s press

releases or in other public or

stockholder communications made by

the Corporation, or in oral statements

made on

behalf of the Corporation by,

or with the approval of, an

authorized executive officer,

the words or phrases “would,” “intends,”

“will,”

“expect,” “should,”

“plans,” “forecast,”

“anticipate,” “look forward,”

“believes,” and other

terms of similar

meaning or import,

or the

negatives of

these terms

or variations

of them,

in connection

with any

discussion of

future operating,

financial or

other performance

are meant to identify “forward-looking statements.”

The Corporation cautions readers

not to place undue reliance on

any such “forward-looking statements,” which

speak only as of the

date

made,

and

advises

readers

that

these

forward-looking

statements

are

not

guarantees

of

future

performance

and

involve

certain

risks,

uncertainties,

estimates,

and

assumptions

by

us

that

are

difficult

to

predict.

Various

factors,

some

of

which

are

beyond

our

control, could cause actual results to differ materially from

those expressed in, or implied by,

such forward-looking statements.

Factors that could

cause results to

differ from

those expressed in

the Corporation’s

forward-looking statements

include, but

are not

limited to, risks

described or

referenced in

Part I, Item

1A, “Risk Factors,”

in the Corporation’s

Annual Report

on Form 10-K

for the

year ended December 31, 2022 (the “2022 Annual Report on Form 10-K”)

and the following:

the impacts of rising interest

rates and inflation on

the Corporation, including a

decrease in demand for new

loan originations

and refinancings,

increased competition

for borrowers,

attrition in deposits,

a reduction

in the fair

value of the

Corporation’s

debt

securities portfolio,

and an

increase

in non-interest

expenses which

would impact

the Corporation’s

earnings and

may

adversely impact origination volumes, liquidity,

and financial performance;

volatility in the

financial services industry,

including failures or

rumored failures of

other depository institutions,

and actions

taken

by

governmental

agencies

to

stabilize

the

financial

system,

which

could

result

in,

among

other

things,

bank

deposit

runoffs and liquidity constraints;

the

effect

of

continued

changes

in

the

fiscal

and

monetary

policies

and

regulations

of

the

United

States

(“U.S.”)

federal

government,

the Puerto

Rico government

and other governments,

including those

determined by

the Board

of the Governors

of the Federal Reserve System (the

“Federal Reserve Board”),

the Federal Reserve Bank of New York

(the “New York

FED”

or

the

“FED”),

the

Federal

Deposit

Insurance

Corporation

(the

“FDIC”),

government-sponsored

housing

agencies

and

regulators in Puerto Rico, the U.S., and the U.S. Virgin

Islands (the “USVI) and British Virgin

Islands (the “BVI”);

uncertainty as

to the

ability of

the Corporation’s

banking subsidiary,

FirstBank Puerto

Rico (“FirstBank”

or the

“Bank”), to

retain its core

deposits and

generate sufficient

cash flow through

its wholesale funding

sources, such as

securities sold

under

agreements

to

repurchase,

Federal

Home

Loan

Bank

(“FHLB”)

advances,

and

brokered

certificates

of

deposit

(“brokered

CDs”),

which

in

turn

affects

its

ability

to

make

dividend

payments

to

the

Corporation

and

could

result

in

selling

certain

investment securities portfolio at a loss;

adverse

changes

in general

economic

conditions

in Puerto

Rico, the

U.S., and

the USVI

and

BVI, including

in the

interest

rate

environment,

unemployment

rates,

market

liquidity,

housing

absorption

rates,

real

estate

markets,

and

U.S.

capital

markets,

which

may

affect

funding

sources,

loan

portfolio

performance

and

credit

quality,

market

prices

of

investment

securities,

and

demand

for

the Corporation’s

products

and services,

and which

may

reduce

the

Corporation’s

revenues and

earnings and the value of the Corporation’s

assets;

the impact

of government

financial assistance

for hurricane

recovery and

other disaster

relief on

economic activity

in Puerto

Rico, and the timing and pace of disbursements of funds earmarked for disaster

relief;

the

long-term

economic

and

other

effects

of

the

COVID-19

pandemic

and

their

impact

on

the

Corporation’s

business,

operations, and financial condition;

the ability

of the

Corporation,

FirstBank,

and

third-party

service providers

to identify

and prevent

cyber-security

incidents,

such

as

data

security

breaches,

ransomware,

malware,

“denial

of

service”

attacks,

“hacking,”

identity

theft,

and

state-

sponsored cyberthreats, and

the occurrence of and

response to any,

such as a recent security

incident at one of our

third-party

vendors, which may

result in misuse

or misappropriation of

confidential or proprietary

information, disruption,

or damage to

our systems or those of third-party service providers, increased costs and

losses or an adverse effect to our reputation;

4

general competitive

factors and other

market risks as

well as the

implementation of

strategic growth opportunities,

including

risks, uncertainties, and other factors or events related to any business acquisitions

or dispositions;

uncertainty as

to the

implementation of

the debt

restructuring plan

of Puerto

Rico (“Plan

of Adjustment”

or “PoA”)

and the

fiscal plan

for Puerto

Rico as

certified

on April

3, 2023

(the “2023

Fiscal Plan”)

by the

oversight

board established

by the

Puerto Rico

Oversight, Management,

and Economic

Stability Act

(“PROMESA”),

or any

revisions to

it, on

our clients

and

loan portfolios, and any potential impact from future economic or political

developments and tax regulations in Puerto Rico;

the

impact

of

changes

in

accounting

standards,

or

assumptions

in

applying

those

standards,

on

forecasts

of

economic

variables considered for the determination of the allowance for credit

losses (“ACL”);

the ability of FirstBank to realize the benefits of its net deferred tax assets;

environmental, social, and governance matters, including our climate-related

initiatives and commitments;

the impacts

of natural

or man-made

disasters, widespread

health emergencies,

geopolitical conflicts

(including

the ongoing

conflict

in

Ukraine),

terrorist

attacks,

or

other

catastrophic

external

events,

including

impacts

of

such

events

on

general

economic conditions and on the Corporation’s

assumptions regarding forecasts of economic variables;

the effect

of changes

in the

interest rate

environment,

including uncertainty

about the

effect

of the

cessation of

the London

Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”);

any adverse change

in the Corporation’s

ability to attract

and retain clients

and gain acceptance

from current and

prospective

customers for new products and services, including those related to the

offering of digital banking and financial services;

the

risk

that

additional

portions

of

the

unrealized

losses in

the

Corporation’s

debt

securities portfolio

are

determined

to

be

credit-related,

resulting

in

additional

charges

to

the

provision

for

credit

losses

on

the

Corporation’s

available-for-sale

debt

securities portfolio;

the impacts of applicable legislative, tax, or regulatory changes on

the Corporation’s financial condition

or performance;

the

risk

of

possible

failure

or

circumvention

of

the

Corporation’s

internal

controls

and

procedures

and

the

risk

that

the

Corporation’s risk management

policies may not be adequate;

the

risk

that

the

FDIC

may

further

increase

the

deposit

insurance

premium

and/or

require

special

assessments,

causing

an

additional increase in the Corporation’s

non-interest expenses;

any need to recognize impairments on the Corporation’s

financial instruments, goodwill, and other intangible assets;

the risk

that the

impact

of the

occurrence

of any

of these

uncertainties on

the Corporation’s

capital would

preclude

further

growth of FirstBank and preclude the Corporation’s

Board of Directors (the “Board”) from declaring dividends; and

uncertainty as

to whether

FirstBank will

be able

to continue

to satisfy

its regulators

regarding,

among other

things, its

asset

quality,

liquidity

plans,

maintenance

of

capital

levels,

and

compliance

with

applicable

laws,

regulations

and

related

requirements.

The Corporation does not undertake, and

specifically disclaims any obligation to update any

“forward-looking statements” to reflect

occurrences

or

unanticipated

events

or

circumstances

after

the

date

of

such

statements,

except

as

required

by

the

federal

securities

laws.

5

FIRST BANCORP.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2023

December 31, 2022

(In thousands, except for share information)

ASSETS

Cash and due from banks

$

822,542

$

478,480

Money market investments:

Time deposits with other financial institutions

300

300

Other short-term investments

759

1,725

Total money market investments

1,059

2,025

Available-for-sale debt securities, at fair value:

Securities pledged with creditors’ rights to repledge

181,009

81,103

Other available-for-sale debt securities

5,408,247

5,518,417

Total available-for-sale debt securities, at fair value (amortized cost of $

6,300,696

as of March 31, 2023, and

$

6,398,197

as of December 31, 2022; ACL of $

449

as of March 31, 2023 and $

458

as of December 31, 2022)

5,589,256

5,599,520

Held-to-maturity debt securities, at amortized cost, net of ACL

of $

7,646

as of March 31, 2023 and $

8,286

as of December 31, 2022 (fair value of $

419,752

as of March 31, 2023 and $

427,115

as of December 31, 2022)

423,749

429,251

Equity securities

66,714

55,289

Total investment securities

6,079,719

6,084,060

Loans, net of ACL of $

265,567

as of March 31, 2023 and

$

260,464

as of December 31, 2022

11,312,418

11,292,361

Mortgage loans held for sale, at lower of cost or market

15,183

12,306

Total loans, net

11,327,601

11,304,667

Accrued interest receivable on loans and investments

63,841

69,730

Premises and equipment, net

137,580

142,935

Other real estate owned (“OREO”)

32,862

31,641

Deferred tax asset, net

154,780

155,584

Goodwill

38,611

38,611

Other intangible assets

19,073

21,118

Other assets

299,446

305,633

Total assets

$

18,977,114

$

18,634,484

LIABILITIES

Non-interest-bearing deposits

$

6,024,304

$

6,112,884

Interest-bearing deposits

10,027,661

10,030,583

Total deposits

16,051,965

16,143,467

Short-term securities sold under agreements to repurchase

172,982

75,133

Advances from the FHLB:

Short-term

425,000

475,000

Long-term

500,000

200,000

Total advances from the FHLB

925,000

675,000

Other long-term borrowings

183,762

183,762

Accounts payable and other liabilities

237,812

231,582

Total liabilities

17,571,521

17,308,944

Commitments and contingencies (See Note 22)

(nil)

(nil)

STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY

Common stock, $

0.10

par value,

2,000,000,000

shares authorized;

223,663,116

shares issued;

179,788,698

shares outstanding as of March 31, 2023

and

182,709,059

as of December 31, 2022

22,366

22,366

Additional paid-in capital

959,912

970,722

Retained earnings, includes legal surplus reserve of $

168,484

1,688,176

1,644,209

Treasury stock (at cost) of

43,874,418

shares as of March 31, 2023 and

40,954,057

shares as of December 31, 2022

(547,311)

(506,979)

Accumulated other comprehensive loss, net of tax of $

8,468

(717,550)

(804,778)

Total stockholders’ equity

1,405,593

1,325,540

Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity

$

18,977,114

$

18,634,484

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

6

FIRST BANCORP.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME

(Unaudited)

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands, except per share information)

Interest and dividend income:

Loans

$

210,636

$

173,787

Investment securities

27,110

23,247

Money market investments and interest-bearing cash accounts

4,650

820

Total interest and dividend income

242,396

197,854

Interest expense:

Deposits

29,885

7,652

Securities sold under agreements to repurchase:

Short-term

1,069

-

Long-term

-

2,182

Advances from the FHLB:

Short-term

4,341

-

Long-term

2,835

1,063

Other long-term borrowings

3,381

1,333

Total interest expense

41,511

12,230

Net interest income

200,885

185,624

Provision for credit losses - expense (benefit):

Loans and finance leases

16,256

(16,989)

Unfunded loan commitments

(105)

(178)

Debt securities

(649)

3,365

Provision for credit losses - expense (benefit)

15,502

(13,802)

Net interest income after provision for credit losses

185,383

199,426

Non-interest income:

Service charges and fees on deposit accounts

9,541

9,363

Mortgage banking activities

2,812

5,206

Insurance commission income

4,847

5,275

Card and processing income

10,918

9,681

Other non-interest income

4,400

3,333

Total non-interest income

32,518

32,858

Non-interest expenses:

Employees’ compensation and benefits

56,422

49,554

Occupancy and equipment

21,186

22,386

Business promotion

3,975

3,463

Professional service fees

11,973

10,594

Taxes, other than

income taxes

5,112

5,018

FDIC deposit insurance

2,133

1,673

Net gain on OREO operations

(1,996)

(720)

Credit and debit card processing expenses

5,318

4,121

Communications

2,216

2,151

Other non-interest expenses

8,929

8,419

Total non-interest expenses

115,268

106,659

Income before income taxes

102,633

125,625

Income tax expense

31,935

43,025

Net income

$

70,698

$

82,600

Net income attributable to common stockholders

$

70,698

$

82,600

Net income per common share:

Basic

$

0.39

$

0.42

Diluted

$

0.39

$

0.41

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

7

FIRST BANCORP.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME

(LOSS)

(Unaudited)

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Net income

$

70,698

$

82,600

Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax:

Available-for-sale debt securities:

Net unrealized holding gains (losses) on debt securities

87,228

(331,834)

Other comprehensive income (loss) for the period, net of tax

87,228

(331,834)

Total comprehensive income (loss)

$

157,926

$

(249,234)

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

8

FIRST BANCORP.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

(Unaudited)

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Cash flows from operating activities:

Net income

$

70,698

$

82,600

Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating

activities:

Depreciation and amortization

5,080

5,872

Amortization of intangible assets

2,045

2,286

Provision for credit losses - expense (benefit)

15,502

(13,802)

Deferred income tax expense

1,564

31,707

Stock-based compensation

2,075

1,182

Unrealized loss (gain) on derivative instruments

3

(618)

Net gain on disposals or sales, and impairments of premises and

equipment and other assets

(8)

(26)

Net gain on sales of loans and valuation adjustments

(766)

(2,461)

Net amortization of discounts, premiums, and deferred loan fees

and costs

283

(2,933)

Originations and purchases of loans held for sale

(38,500)

(86,802)

Sales and repayments of loans held for sale

34,836

93,739

Amortization of broker placement fees

44

35

Net amortization of premiums and discounts on investment securities

630

1,690

Decrease in accrued interest receivable

8,566

3,919

Increase (decrease) in accrued interest payable

3,752

(906)

(Increase) decrease in other assets

168

352

Increase (decrease) increase in other liabilities

9,443

(1,000)

Net cash provided by operating activities

115,415

114,834

Cash flows from investing activities:

Net disbursements on loans held for investment

(71,193)

(48,370)

Proceeds from sales of loans held for investment

2,552

1,306

Proceeds from sales of repossessed assets

12,347

9,361

Purchases of available-for-sale debt securities

-

(497,327)

Proceeds from principal repayments and maturities of available-for-sale

debt securities

113,218

208,397

Proceeds from principal repayments and maturities of held-to-maturity

debt securities

6,652

400

Additions to premises and equipment

(1,689)

(6,764)

Proceeds from sales of premises and equipment and other assets

8

26

Net purchases of other investments securities

(11,360)

(21)

Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities

50,535

(332,992)

Cash flows from financing activities:

Net decrease in deposits

(92,354)

(456,211)

Net proceeds from short-term borrowings

47,849

-

Repayments of long-term borrowings

-

(100,000)

Proceeds from long-term borrowings

300,000

-

Repurchase of outstanding common stock

(53,217)

(52,713)

Dividends paid on common stock

(25,132)

(19,727)

Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities

177,146

(628,651)

Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents

343,096

(846,809)

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year

480,505

2,543,058

Cash and cash equivalents at end of period

$

823,601

$

1,696,249

Cash and cash equivalents include:

Cash and due from banks

$

822,542

$

1,694,066

Money market investments

1,059

2,183

$

823,601

$

1,696,249

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

9

FIRST BANCORP.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS’

EQUITY

(Unaudited)

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands, except per share information)

Common Stock

$

22,366

$

22,366

Additional Paid-In Capital:

Balance at beginning of period

970,722

972,547

Stock-based compensation expense

2,075

1,182

Common stock reissued under stock-based compensation plan

(13,139)

(6,980)

Restricted stock forfeited

254

22

Balance at end of period

959,912

966,771

Retained Earnings:

Balance at beginning of period

1,644,209

1,427,295

Impact of adoption of Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”)

2022-02 (See Note 1)

(1,357)

-

Net income

70,698

82,600

Dividends on common stock (2023 - $

0.14

per share; 2022 - $

0.10

per share)

(25,374)

(19,900)

Balance at end of period

1,688,176

1,489,995

Treasury Stock (at cost)

(See Note 1)

:

Balance at beginning of period

(506,979)

(236,442)

Common stock repurchases (See Note 14)

(53,217)

(52,713)

Common stock reissued under stock-based compensation plan

13,139

6,980

Restricted stock forfeited

(254)

(22)

Balance at end of period

(547,311)

(282,197)

Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss, net of tax:

Balance at beginning of period

(804,778)

(83,999)

Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax

87,228

(331,834)

Balance at end of period

(717,550)

(415,833)

Total stockholders’ equity

$

1,405,593

$

1,781,102

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

10

FIRST BANCORP.

INDEX TO NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

PAGE

Note 1 –

Basis of Presentation and Significant Accounting Policies

11

Note 2 –

Debt Securities

13

Note 3 –

Loans Held for Investment

23

Note 4

Allowance for Credit Losses for Loans and Finance Leases

40

Note 5 –

Other Real Estate Owned

42

Note 6

Goodwill and Other Intangibles

43

Note 7 –

Non-Consolidated Variable Interest Entities (“VIEs”) and Servicing Assets

44

Note 8 –

Deposits

48

Note 9 –

Securities Sold Under Agreements to Repurchase (Repurchase Agreements)

49

Note 10 –

Advances from the Federal Home Loan Bank (“FHLB”)

50

Note 11 –

Other Long-Term Borrowings

50

Note 12 –

Earnings per Common Share

51

Note 13 –

Stock-Based Compensation

52

Note 14 –

Stockholders’ Equity

55

Note 15 –

Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss

57

Note 16 –

Employee Benefit Plans

57

Note 17 –

Income Taxes

58

Note 18

Fair Value

60

Note 19

Revenue from Contracts with Customers

64

Note 20 –

Segment Information

66

Note 21 –

Supplemental Statement of Cash Flows Information

68

Note 22 –

Regulatory Matters, Commitments, and Contingencies

69

Note 23 –

First BanCorp. (Holding Company Only) Financial Information

72

11

NOTE 1 – BASIS

OF PRESENTATION AND

SIGNIFICANT

ACCOUNTING

POLICIES

The

Consolidated Financial

Statements (unaudited)

for

the

quarter

ended

March

31,

2023

(the

“unaudited consolidated

financial

statements”)

of

First

BanCorp.

(the

“Corporation”)

have

been

prepared

in

conformity

with

the

accounting

policies

stated

in

the

Corporation’s Audited

Consolidated

Financial

Statements

for the fiscal

year ended December

31, 2022 (the

“audited consolidated

financial

statements”)

included

in the 2022

Annual Report

on Form

10-K, as

updated

by the information

contained

in this

report.

Certain information

and note disclosures

normally included

in the financial

statements

prepared in accordance

with generally

accepted accounting

principles

in

the United States

of America

(“GAAP”)

have been condensed

or omitted

from these statements

pursuant to

the rules and

regulations

of the

SEC and, accordingly, these financial statements

should be read in conjunction with the audited consolidated

financial statements,

which

are included in the 2022 Annual Report on Form 10-K. All adjustments

(consisting only of normal

recurring adjustments)

that are, in the

opinion of management,

necessary for

a fair presentation

of the statement

of financial

position, results

of operations

and cash flows for

the

interim

periods

have been

reflected.

All significant

intercompany

accounts

and transactions

have been

eliminated

in consolidation.

The results of operations

for the quarter ended

March 31, 2023

are not necessarily

indicative

of the results to be expected

for the entire

year.

Adoption

of New Accounting

Requirements

Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”) 2022-02, “Financial Instruments

– Credit

Losses (Topic 326):

Troubled Debt

Restructurings

and Vintage Disclosures”

Effective

January

1,

2023,

the

Corporation

adopted

ASU

2022-02,

which

removed

the

existing

measurement

and

disclosure

requirements

for Troubled

Debt Restructured

(“TDR”) loans,

added additional

disclosure

requirements

related to

modifications

provided

to

borrowers experiencing

financial difficulty

regardless of whether

the refinancing

is accounted for as a new loan,

and amends the guidance

on vintage

disclosures

to require

disclosure

of gross

charge-offs by

year of

origination.

Prior to

adoption,

a change

in contractual

terms of

a

loan where a borrower

was experiencing

financial difficulty

and received

a concession

not available

through other

sources was required

to

be disclosed

as a TDR, whereas

now a borrower

that is experiencing

financial

difficulty

and there

has been a direct

change to the

timing or

amount of contractual

cash flows in the form of principal

forgiveness, interest

rate reduction,

an other-than-insignificant

payment delay, a

term extension,

or any combination

of these types of loan modifications

in the current period

needs to be disclosed. ASU

2022-02 did not

amend the

definition

of financial

difficulty.

Modifications

of receivables are within the scope of ASU 2022-02 if they are accounted for in accordance with Accounting

Standards

Codification (“ASC”)

310-20.

As

such,

finance

leases

are

not

within

the

scope

of

ASU

2022-02.

Such

modifications are

evaluated

following the requirements in

ASC 310-20

to determine whether

they should

be accounted

for as

a

new loan

or

a

continuation of the

existing

loan.

ASU 2022-02 also eliminated

the requirement

to use a discounted cash flow method

for TDRs for the determination

of the ACL, and

allows

the

option

of

a

non-discounted cash

flow

portfolio-based approach

for

modified

loans

to

borrowers

experiencing

financial

difficulties.

The

Corporation

elected

to

apply

a

non-discounted

cash

flow,

portfolio-based ACL

approach

for

modified

loans

to

borrowers

experiencing

financial

difficulties

for all

portfolios,

using a modified

retrospective

transition

method.

The adoption

resulted

in a net

increase

to

the ACL

of

approximately $

2.1

million and

a

decrease to

retained earnings of

approximately $

1.3

million, after tax,

predominantly

driven by residential

mortgage

loans. The

amount of

defined modifications

given to borrowers

experiencing

financial

difficulty

is disclosed

in Note

3 – Loans

Held for

Investment,

along with

the financial

impact of

those modifications.

The Corporation

was not

impacted

by the adoption

of the following

ASUs during

the first

quarter of

2023:

ASU 2022-01,

“Derivatives

and Hedging

(Topic 815): Fair

Value Hedging – Portfolio

Layer Method”

ASU 2021-08, “Business

Combinations

(Topic 805): Accounting for Contract

Assets and Contract Liabilities

From Contracts

With Customers”

12

Recently Issued Accounting Standards Not Yet

Effective or Not Yet

Adopted

Standard

Description

Effective Date

Effect on the financial statements

ASU 2023-02, "Investments -

Equity Method and Joint Ventures

(Topic 323): Accounting for

Investments in Tax Credit

Structures Using the Proportional

Amortization Method"

In March 2023, the FASB issued

ASU 2023-02 which, among other

things, allows tax equity

investments, regardless of the tax

credit program from which the

income tax credits are received, to

be accounted for using the

proportional amortization method if

certain conditions are met and

requires specific disclosures of

such investments. The election

needs to be made on a tax-credit-

program-by-tax-credit-program

basis.

January 1, 2024. Early adoption is

permitted in any interim period.

The Corporation does not expect to

be impacted by the amendments of

this ASU since it does not hold tax

equity investments.

ASU 2023-01, "Leases (Topic

842): Common Control

Arrangements"

In March 2023, the FASB issued

ASU 2023-01 which, among other

things, generally requires a lessee

in a common-control lease

arrangement to amortize leasehold

improvements over the useful life

regardless of the lease term, subject

to certain exceptions. In addition, a

lessee that no longer controls the

use of the underlying asset will

account for the transfer of the

underlying asset as an adjustment

to equity.

January 1, 2024. Early adoption is

permitted for both interim and

annual financial statements that

have not yet been made available

for issuance.

The Corporation is evaluating the

impact that this ASU will have on its

financial statements. The

Corporation does not expect to be

materially impacted by the adoption

of this ASU during the first quarter

of 2024.

For

other

issued

accounting

standards

not

yet

effective

or

not

yet

adopted,

see

Note

1

Nature

of

Business

and

Summary

of

Significant Accounting Policies, to the audited consolidated financial

statements included in the 2022 Annual Report on Form 10-K.

13

NOTE 2 – DEBT SECURITIES

Available-for-Sale

Debt Securities

The amortized

cost, gross

unrealized gains

and losses,

ACL, estimated

fair value,

and weighted-average

yield of

available-for-sale

debt securities by contractual maturities as of March 31, 2023 were as follows:

March 31, 2023

Amortized cost

(1)

Gross

ACL

Fair value

Unrealized

Weighted-

Gains

Losses

average yield%

(Dollars in thousands)

U.S. Treasury securities:

Due within one year

$

27,744

$

-

$

890

$

-

$

26,854

0.61

After 1 to 5 years

120,916

-

7,348

-

113,568

0.69

U.S. government-sponsored entities (“GSEs”) obligations:

Due within one year

189,174

-

5,100

-

184,074

0.42

After 1 to 5 years

2,349,522

22

190,986

-

2,158,558

0.84

After 5 to 10 years

41,916

8

4,998

-

36,926

1.64

After 10 years

11,625

27

-

-

11,652

5.15

Puerto Rico government obligations:

After 10 years

(2)

3,302

-

733

366

2,203

-

United States and Puerto Rico government obligations

2,744,199

57

210,055

366

2,533,835

0.83

Mortgage-backed securities (“MBS”):

Residential MBS:

Freddie Mac (“FHLMC”) certificates:

After 1 to 5 years

10,023

-

454

-

9,569

1.98

After 5 to 10 years

187,007

-

15,912

-

171,095

1.56

After 10 years

1,068,680

-

170,021

-

898,659

1.41

1,265,710

-

186,387

-

1,079,323

1.44

Ginnie Mae (“GNMA”) certificates:

Due within one year

3

-

-

-

3

2.42

After 1 to 5 years

23,293

-

1,253

-

22,040

1.31

After 5 to 10 years

33,939

-

2,720

-

31,219

1.69

After 10 years

225,680

119

24,080

-

201,719

2.58

282,915

119

28,053

-

254,981

2.37

Fannie Mae (“FNMA”) certificates:

After 1 to 5 years

24,446

-

1,249

-

23,197

1.72

After 5 to 10 years

353,397

-

28,963

-

324,434

1.74

After 10 years

1,133,757

104

168,025

-

965,836

1.37

1,511,600

104

198,237

-

1,313,467

1.47

Collateralized mortgage obligations issued or

guaranteed by the FHLMC, FNMA and

GNMA (“CMOs”):

After 10 years

296,022

-

52,540

-

243,482

1.49

Private label:

After 10 years

7,695

-

2,210

83

5,402

7.25

Total Residential MBS

3,363,942

223

467,427

83

2,896,655

1.55

Commercial MBS:

After 1 to 5 years

27,584

7

4,551

-

23,040

2.27

After 5 to 10 years

44,584

-

4,929

-

39,655

1.90

After 10 years

120,387

-

24,316

-

96,071

1.23

Total Commercial MBS

192,555

7

33,796

-

158,766

1.53

Total MBS

3,556,497

230

501,223

83

3,055,421

1.54

Total available-for-sale debt securities

$

6,300,696

$

287

$

711,278

$

449

$

5,589,256

1.23

(1)

Excludes accrued interest receivable on available-for-sale debt securities that totaled $

10.7

million as of March 31, 2023 reported as part of accrued interest receivable on loans and investment securities in the

consolidated statements of financial condition, and excluded from the estimate of credit losses.

(2)

Consists of a residential pass-through MBS issued by the Puerto Rico Housing Finance Authority (“PRHFA”) that is collateralized by certain second mortgages originated under a program launched by the Puerto Rico

government in 2010 and is in nonaccrual status based on the delinquency status of the underlying second mortgage loans collateral.

14

The amortized

cost, gross

unrealized gains

and losses,

ACL, estimated

fair value,

and weighted-average

yield of

available-for-sale

debt securities by contractual maturities as of December 31, 2022

were as follows:

December 31, 2022

Amortized cost

(1)

Gross

ACL

Fair value

Unrealized

Weighted-

Gains

Losses

average yield%

(Dollars in thousands)

U.S. Treasury securities:

Due within one year

$

7,493

$

-

$

309

$

-

$

7,184

0.22

After 1 to 5 years

141,366

-

9,675

-

131,691

0.70

U.S. GSEs’ obligations:

Due within one year

129,018

-

4,036

-

124,982

0.32

After 1 to 5 years

2,395,273

22

227,724

-

2,167,571

0.83

After 5 to 10 years

56,251

13

7,670

-

48,594

1.54

After 10 years

12,170

36

-

-

12,206

4.62

Puerto Rico government obligations:

After 10 years

(2)

3,331

-

755

375

2,201

-

United States and Puerto Rico government obligations

2,744,902

71

250,169

375

2,494,429

0.83

MBS:

Residential MBS:

FHLMC certificates:

After 1 to 5 years

4,235

-

169

-

4,066

2.33

After 5 to 10 years

201,072

-

18,709

-

182,363

1.55

After 10 years

1,092,289

-

186,558

-

905,731

1.38

1,297,596

-

205,436

-

1,092,160

1.41

GNMA certificates:

Due within one year

5

-

-

-

5

1.73

After 1 to 5 years

15,508

-

622

-

14,886

2.00

After 5 to 10 years

45,322

1

3,809

-

41,514

1.31

After 10 years

232,632

51

27,169

-

205,514

2.47

293,467

52

31,600

-

261,919

2.27

FNMA certificates:

After 1 to 5 years

9,685

-

521

-

9,164

1.76

After 5 to 10 years

358,346

-

31,620

-

326,726

1.68

After 10 years

1,186,635

124

186,757

-

1,000,002

1.38

1,554,666

124

218,898

-

1,335,892

1.45

CMOs:

After 10 years

302,232

-

56,539

-

245,693

1.44

Private label:

After 10 years

7,903

-

2,026

83

5,794

6.83

Total Residential MBS

3,455,864

176

514,499

83

2,941,458

1.52

Commercial MBS:

After 1 to 5 years

30,578

-

4,463

-

26,115

2.43

After 5 to 10 years

44,889

-

5,603

-

39,286

1.89

After 10 years

121,464

-

23,732

-

97,732

1.23

Total Commercial MBS

196,931

-

33,798

-

163,133

1.56

Total MBS

3,652,795

176

548,297

83

3,104,591

1.52

Other

Due within one year

500

-

-

-

500

0.84

Total available-for-sale debt securities

$

6,398,197

$

247

$

798,466

458

$

5,599,520

1.22

(1)

Excludes accrued interest receivable on available-for-sale debt securities that totaled $

11.1

million as of December 31, 2022 reported as part of accrued interest receivable on loans and investment securities in the

consolidated statements of financial condition, and excluded from the estimate of credit losses.

(2)

Consists of a residential pass-through MBS issued by the PRHFA that is collateralized by certain second mortgages originated under a program launched by the Puerto Rico government in 2010 and is in nonaccrual

status based on the delinquency status of the underlying second mortgage loans collateral.

15

Maturities

of

available-for-sale

debt

securities

are

based

on

the

period

of

final

contractual

maturity.

Expected

maturities

might

differ

from

contractual

maturities

because

they

may

be

subject

to

prepayments

and/or

call

options.

The

weighted-average

yield

on

available-for-sale

debt

securities

is

based

on

amortized

cost

and,

therefore,

does

not

give

effect

to

changes

in

fair

value.

The

net

unrealized

gain

or

loss

on

available-for-sale

debt

securities

is

presented

as

part

of

other

comprehensive

loss

in

the

consolidated

statements of financial condition.

The

following

tables

present

the

fair

value

and

gross

unrealized

losses

of

the

Corporation’s

available-for-sale

debt

securities,

aggregated by

investment category

and length of

time that individual

securities have

been in a

continuous unrealized

loss position, as

of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022. The tables also include debt securities for

which an ACL was recorded.

As of March 31, 2023

Less than 12 months

12 months or more

Total

Unrealized

Unrealized

Unrealized

Fair Value

Losses

Fair Value

Losses

Fair Value

Losses

(In thousands)

Debt securities:

U.S. Treasury and U.S. GSEs’

obligations

$

17,615

$

611

$

2,496,925

$

208,711

$

2,514,540

$

209,322

Puerto Rico government obligations

-

-

2,203

733

(1)

2,203

733

MBS:

Residential MBS:

FHLMC

21,354

710

1,057,950

185,677

1,079,304

186,387

GNMA

45,949

868

197,581

27,185

243,530

28,053

FNMA

41,186

1,741

1,262,700

196,496

1,303,886

198,237

CMOs

10,596

117

232,886

52,423

243,482

52,540

Private label

-

-

5,402

2,210

(1)

5,402

2,210

Commercial MBS

3,833

220

148,640

33,576

152,473

33,796

$

140,533

$

4,267

$

5,404,287

$

707,011

$

5,544,820

$

711,278

7923

(1)

Unrealized losses do not include the credit loss component recorded

as part of the ACL. As of March 31, 2023, the

PRHFA bond and private label MBS

had an ACL of $

0.4

million and

$

0.1

million, respectively.

As of December 31, 2022

Less than 12 months

12 months or more

Total

Unrealized

Unrealized

Unrealized

Fair Value

Losses

Fair Value

Losses

Fair Value

Losses

(In thousands)

Debt securities:

U.S. Treasury and U.S. GSEs’

obligations

$

298,313

$

18,057

$

2,174,724

$

231,357

$

2,473,037

$

249,414

Puerto Rico government obligations

-

-

2,201

755

(1)

2,201

755

MBS:

Residential MBS:

FHLMC

260,524

45,424

831,637

160,012

1,092,161

205,436

GNMA

74,829

3,433

179,854

28,167

254,683

31,600

FNMA

405,977

49,479

920,200

169,419

1,326,177

218,898

CMOs

45,370

6,735

200,323

49,804

245,693

56,539

Private label

-

-

5,794

2,026

(1)

5,794

2,026

Commercial MBS

30,179

2,215

132,953

31,583

163,132

33,798

$

1,115,192

$

125,343

$

4,447,686

$

673,123

$

5,562,878

$

798,466

(1)

Unrealized losses do not include the credit loss component recorded

as part of the ACL. As of December 31, 2022, the

PRHFA bond and private label MBS

had an ACL of $

0.4

million

and $

0.1

million, respectively.

16

Assessment for Credit Losses

Debt securities

issued by

U.S. government

agencies,

U.S. GSEs,

and

the U.S.

Treasury,

including

notes and

MBS, accounted

for

substantially

all of

the total

available-for-sale

portfolio

as of

March 31,

2023, and

the Corporation

expects no

credit losses

on these

securities,

given

the

explicit

and

implicit

guarantees

provided

by

the

U.S.

federal

government.

Because

the

decline

in

fair

value

is

attributable to

changes in

interest rates, and

not credit

quality,

and because

the Corporation

does not have

the intent to

sell these

U.S.

government

and

agencies

debt

securities

and

it

is

likely

that

it

will

not

be

required

to

sell

the

securities

before

their

anticipated

recovery,

the

Corporation

does

not

consider

impairments

on

these

securities

to

be

credit

related

as

of

March

31,

2023.

The

Corporation’s

credit loss

assessment was

concentrated mainly

on private

label MBS

and on

Puerto Rico

government debt

securities,

for which credit losses are evaluated on a quarterly basis.

The

Corporation’s

available-for-sale

MBS

portfolio

included

private

label

MBS

with

a

fair

value

of

$

5.4

million,

which

had

unrealized losses

of approximately

$

2.3

million as

of March

31, 2023,

of which

$

0.1

million is

due to

credit deterioration

and is

part

of

the

ACL.

The interest rate on these private-label MBS is variable, tied to 3-month LIBOR, and limited to the weighted-average

coupon on the underlying collateral.

Following the

provisions of

the Adjustable

Interest Rate Act

(the “LIBOR

Act”) and

Regulation

ZZ,

the

LIBOR

reference

on

these

contracts

will

automatically

transition

by

operation

of

law

to

3-month

CME

Term

Secured

Overnight Financing

Rate (“SOFR”),

plus a

spread adjustment

of 0.26161%

on the

first reset

date after

U.S. dollar

(“USD”) LIBOR

ceases publication

in June

2023.

The underlying collateral is fixed-rate, single-family residential mortgage loans in the United States

with original FICO scores over 700 and moderate loan-to-value ratios (under 80%), as well as moderate delinquency levels.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation

did

not

have

the

intent

to

sell

these

securities

and

determined

that

it

is

likely

that

it

will

not

be

required to sell the securities before

anticipated recovery.

The Corporation determined the ACL

for private label MBS based on

a risk-

adjusted

discounted

cash

flow

methodology

that

considers

the

structure

and

terms

of

the

instruments.

The

Corporation

utilized

probability of

default (“PDs”)

and loss

given default

(“LGDs”) that

considered, among

other things,

historical payment

performance,

loan-to-value attributes, and relevant

current and forward-looking macroeconomic

variables, such as regional unemployment

rates and

the housing price

index. Under this approach,

expected cash flows (interest

and principal) were discounted

at the Treasury

yield curve

as of the reporting date. Significant assumptions in the valuation of

the private label MBS were as follows:

As of

As of

March 31, 2023

December 31, 2022

Weighted

Range

Weighted

Range

Average

Minimum

Maximum

Average

Minimum

Maximum

Discount rate

16.0%

16.0%

16.0%

16.2%

16.2%

16.2%

Prepayment rate

9.2%

1.6%

12.6%

11.8%

1.5%

15.2%

Projected cumulative loss rate

5.2%

0.2%

14.9%

5.6%

0.3%

15.6%

The Corporation

evaluates if

a credit

loss exists,

primarily

by monitoring

adverse variances

in the

present value

of expected

cash

flows. As of each of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022, the

ACL for these private label MBS was $

0.1

million.

17

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation’s

available-for-sale debt

securities portfolio

also included

a residential

pass-through

MBS

issued by

the PRHFA,

collateralized by

certain second

mortgages, with

a fair

value of

$

2.2

million, which

had an

unrealized loss

of

approximately

$

1.1

million.

Approximately

$

0.4

million

of

the

unrealized

losses

was

due

to

credit

deterioration

and

is

part

of

the

ACL. The underlying

second mortgage loans

were originated under

a program launched by

the Puerto Rico government

in 2010. This

residential pass-through

MBS was structured

as a zero-coupon

bond for the

first ten years

(until July 2019).

The underlying source

of

repayment on this

residential pass-through

MBS are second mortgage

loans in Puerto Rico.

PRHFA, not

the Puerto Rico

government,

provides

a

guarantee

in

the

event

of

default

and

subsequent

foreclosure

of

the

properties

underlying

the

second

mortgage

loans.

During

2021,

the Corporation

placed

this instrument

in

nonaccrual

status based

on

the delinquency

status of

the

underlying

second

mortgage loans collateral.

The Corporation determined

the ACL on this

instrument based on a

discounted cash flow methodology

that

considered the

structure and

terms of

the debt

security.

The Corporation

utilized PDs and

LGDs that

considered, among

other things,

historical payment

performance, loan-to-value

attributes,

and relevant

current and

forward-looking macroeconomic

variables, such

as

regional

unemployment

rates,

the

housing

price

index,

and

expected

recovery

from

the

PRHFA

guarantee.

Under

this

approach,

expected

cash

flows

(interest

and

principal)

were

discounted

at

the

Treasury

yield

curve

plus

a

spread

as

of

the

reporting

date

and

compared

to

the

amortized

cost.

In

the

event

that

the

second

mortgage

loans

default

and

the

collateral

is

insufficient

to

satisfy

the

outstanding

balance

of

this

residential

pass-through

MBS,

PRHFA’s

ability

to

honor

its

insurance

will

depend

on,

among

other

factors,

the

financial

condition

of

PRHFA

at

the

time

such

obligation

becomes

due

and

payable.

Deterioration

of

the

Puerto

Rico

economy or fiscal health of

the PRHFA

could impact the value of

these securities, resulting in additional

losses to the Corporation.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

the Corporation

did

not have

the

intent to

sell this

security

and

determined

that

it was

likely that

it will

not

be

required to sell the security before its anticipated recovery.

The following tables

present a roll-forward

by major security

type for the

quarters ended March

31, 2023 and

2022 of the

ACL on

available-for-sale debt securities:

Quarter Ended March 31, 2023

Private label MBS

Puerto Rico

Government

Obligations

Total

(In thousands)

Beginning balance

$

83

$

375

$

458

Provision for credit losses - benefit

-

(9)

(9)

ACL on available-for-sale debt securities

$

83

$

366

$

449

Quarter Ended March 31, 2022

Private label MBS

Puerto Rico

Government

Obligations

Total

(In thousands)

Beginning balance

$

797

$

308

$

1,105

Provision for credit losses - benefit

(388)

-

(388)

Net charge-offs

(6)

-

(6)

ACL on available-for-sale debt securities

$

403

$

308

$

711

18

Held-to-Maturity Debt Securities

The

amortized

cost,

gross

unrecognized

gains

and

losses,

estimated

fair

value,

ACL,

weighted-average

yield

and

contractual

maturities of held-to-maturity debt securities as of March 31, 2023 and

December 31, 2022 were as follows

:

March 31, 2023

Amortized cost

(1)

Gross Unrecognized

Fair value

Weighted-

Gains

Losses

ACL

average yield%

(Dollars in thousands)

Puerto Rico municipal bonds:

Due within one year

$

1,204

$

-

$

10

$

1,194

$

24

5.70

After 1 to 5 years

42,633

679

1,001

42,311

659

6.74

After 5 to 10 years

55,940

1,482

603

56,819

2,918

7.10

After 10 years

66,023

-

1,804

64,219

4,045

8.12

Total Puerto Rico municipal bonds

165,800

2,161

3,418

164,543

7,646

7.40

MBS:

Residential MBS:

FHLMC certificates:

After 5 to 10 years

$

20,129

$

-

$

762

$

19,367

$

-

3.03

After 10 years

19,176

-

596

18,580

-

4.30

39,305

-

1,358

37,947

-

3.65

GNMA certificates:

`

After 10 years

18,502

-

795

17,707

-

3.31

FNMA certificates:

After 10 years

71,258

-

2,190

69,068

-

4.16

CMOs:

After 10 years

32,522

-

1,154

31,368

-

3.49

Total Residential MBS

161,587

-

5,497

156,090

-

3.81

Commercial MBS:

After 1 to 5 years

9,576

-

348

9,228

-

3.48

After 10 years

94,432

-

4,541

89,891

-

3.15

Total Commercial MBS

104,008

-

4,889

99,119

-

3.18

Total MBS

265,595

-

10,386

255,209

-

3.56

Total held-to-maturity debt securities

$

431,395

$

2,161

$

13,804

$

419,752

$

7,646

5.04

(1)

Excludes accrued interest receivable on held-to-maturity debt securities that totaled $

3.7

million as of March 31, 2023, was reported as part of accrued interest receivable on loans and investment securities in the

consolidated statements of financial condition, and is excluded from the estimate of credit losses.

19

December 31, 2022

Amortized cost

(1)

Gross Unrecognized

Fair value

Weighted-

Gains

Losses

ACL

average yield%

(Dollars in thousands)

Puerto Rico municipal bonds:

Due within one year

$

1,202

$

-

$

15

$

1,187

$

2

5.20

After 1 to 5 years

42,530

886

1,076

42,340

656

6.34

After 5 to 10 years

55,956

3,182

360

58,778

3,243

6.29

After 10 years

66,022

-

1,318

64,704

4,385

7.10

Total held-to-maturity debt securities

$

165,710

$

4,068

$

2,769

$

167,009

$

8,286

6.62

MBS:

Residential MBS:

FHLMC certificates:

After 5 to 10 years

$

21,443

$

-

$

746

$

20,697

$

-

3.03

After 10 years

19,362

-

888

18,474

-

4.21

40,805

-

1,634

39,171

-

3.59

GNMA certificates:

`

After 10 years

19,131

-

943

18,188

-

3.35

FNMA certificates:

After 10 years

72,347

-

3,155

69,192

-

4.14

CMOs:

After 10 years

34,456

-

1,424

33,032

-

3.49

Total Residential MBS

166,739

-

7,156

159,583

-

3.78

Commercial MBS:

After 1 to 5 years

9,621

-

396

9,225

-

3.48

After 10 years

95,467

-

4,169

91,298

-

3.15

Total Commercial MBS

105,088

-

4,565

100,523

-

3.18

Total MBS

271,827

-

11,721

260,106

-

3.55

Total held-to-maturity debt securities

$

437,537

$

4,068

$

14,490

$

427,115

$

8,286

4.71

(1)

Excludes accrued interest receivable on held-to-maturity debt securities that totaled $

5.5

million as of December 31, 2022, was reported as part of accrued interest receivable on loans and investment securities in the

consolidated statements of financial condition, and is excluded from the estimate of credit losses.

20

The

following

tables

present

the

Corporation’s

held-to-maturity

debt

securities’

fair

value

and

gross

unrecognized

losses,

aggregated by

category and length

of time that

individual securities had

been in a

continuous unrecognized

loss position, as

of March

31, 2023 and December 31, 2022, including debt securities for which

an ACL was recorded:

As of March 31, 2023

Less than 12 months

12 months or more

Total

Unrecognized

Unrecognized

Unrecognized

Fair Value

Losses

Fair Value

Losses

Fair Value

Losses

(In thousands)

Debt securities:

Puerto Rico municipal bonds

$

-

$

-

$

108,266

$

3,418

$

108,266

$

3,418

MBS:

Residential MBS:

FHLMC certificates

37,947

1,358

-

-

37,947

1,358

GNMA certificates

17,707

795

-

-

17,707

795

FNMA certificates

69,068

2,190

-

-

69,068

2,190

CMOs

31,368

1,154

-

-

31,368

1,154

Commercial MBS

99,119

4,889

-

-

99,119

4,889

Total held-to-maturity debt securities

$

255,209

$

10,386

$

108,266

$

3,418

$

363,475

$

13,804

As of December 31, 2022

Less than 12 months

12 months or more

Total

Unrecognized

Unrecognized

Unrecognized

Fair Value

Losses

Fair Value

Losses

Fair Value

Losses

(In thousands)

Debt securities:

Puerto Rico municipal bonds

$

-

$

-

$

98,797

$

2,769

$

98,797

$

2,769

MBS:

Residential MBS:

FHLMC certificates

39,171

1,634

-

-

39,171

1,634

GNMA certificates

18,188

943

-

-

18,188

943

FNMA certificates

69,192

3,155

-

-

69,192

3,155

CMOs

33,032

1,424

-

-

33,032

1,424

Commercial MBS

100,523

4,565

-

-

100,523

4,565

Total held-to-maturity debt securities

$

260,106

$

11,721

$

98,797

$

2,769

$

358,903

$

14,490

21

The

Corporation

classifies

the

held-to-maturity

debt

securities

portfolio

into

the

following

major

security

types:

MBS

issued

by

GSEs

and

Puerto

Rico

municipal

bonds.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

all

of

the

MBS

included

in

the

held-to-maturity

debt

securities

portfolio were

issued by

GSEs. The

Corporation does

not recognize

an ACL

for these

securities since

they are

highly rated

by major

rating agencies and have a

long history of no credit losses. In

the case of Puerto Rico

municipal bonds, the Corporation determines

the

ACL based on

the product of

a cumulative PD

and LGD, and

the amortized cost

basis of the

bonds over their

remaining expected

life

as described

in Note

1 –

Nature of

Business and

Summary

of Significant

Accounting Policies,

to the

audited

consolidated

financial

statements included in the 2022 Annual Report on Form 10-K.

The Corporation

performs periodic

credit quality

reviews on

these issuers.

All of

the Puerto

Rico municipal

bonds were

current as

to scheduled

contractual payments

as of

March 31, 2023.

A security

is considered

to be past

due once

it is 30

days contractually

past

due under the

terms of the agreement.

The Puerto Rico

municipal bonds had

an ACL of $

7.6

million as of

March 31, 2023,

compared

to $

8.3

million as of

December 31, 2022,

mostly related to

a reduction in

qualitative reserves driven

by updated financial

information

of certain bond issuers received during the first quarter of 2023.

The

following

table

presents

the

activity

in

the

ACL

for

held-to-maturity

debt

securities

by

major

security

type

for

the

quarters

ended March 31, 2023 and 2022:

Puerto Rico Municipal Bonds

Quarter Ended

March 31, 2023

March 31, 2022

(In thousands)

Beginning Balance

$

8,286

$

8,571

Provision for credit losses - (benefit) expense

(640)

3,753

ACL on held-to-maturity debt securities

$

7,646

$

12,324

During the

second quarter

of 2019,

the oversight

board established

by PROMESA

announced

the designation

of Puerto

Rico’s

78

municipalities

as

covered

instrumentalities

under

PROMESA.

Municipalities

may

be

affected

by

the

negative

economic

and

other

effects

resulting

from

expense,

revenue,

or

cash

management

measures

taken

by

the

Puerto

Rico

government

to

address

its

fiscal

situation, or measures included

in its fiscal plan or

fiscal plans of other

government entities. Given the inherent

uncertainties about the

fiscal

situation

of

the

Puerto

Rico

central

government,

the

COVID-19

pandemic,

and

the

measures

taken,

or

to

be

taken,

by

other

government entities in

response to economic

and fiscal challenges on

municipalities, the Corporation

cannot be certain whether

future

charges to the ACL on these securities will be required.

From

time

to

time,

the

Corporation

has

securities

held

to

maturity

with

an

original

maturity

of

three

months

or

less

that

are

considered

cash

and

cash

equivalents

and

are

classified

as

money

market

investments

in

the

consolidated

statements

of

financial

condition. As

of

March

31,

2023

and

December

31,

2022,

the

Corporation

had

no

outstanding

securities

held

to maturity

that

were

classified as cash and cash equivalents.

22

Credit Quality Indicators:

The held-to-maturity debt securities

portfolio consisted of GSEs

MBS and financing arrangements

with Puerto Rico municipalities

issued in

bond form.

As previously

mentioned,

the Corporation

expects

no credit

losses on

GSEs MBS.

The Puerto

Rico municipal

bonds

are

accounted

for

as

securities

but

are

underwritten

as

loans

with

features

that

are

typically

found

in

commercial

loans.

Accordingly, the

Corporation monitors the credit quality of these municipal bonds through the

use of internal credit-risk ratings, which

are generally updated

on a quarterly basis.

The Corporation considers

a municipal bond

as a criticized asset

if its risk rating

is Special

Mention,

Substandard,

Doubtful,

or

Loss.

Puerto

Rico

municipal

bonds

that

do

not

meet

the

criteria

for

classification

as

criticized

assets are considered

to be Pass-rated

securities. For the

definitions of

the internal

credit-risk ratings, see

Note 3 –

Debt Securities, to

the audited consolidated financial statements included in the 2022 Annual

Report on Form 10-K.

The

Corporation

periodically

reviews

its Puerto

Rico

municipal

bonds

to

evaluate

if

they are

properly

classified,

and to

measure

credit losses on

these securities. The

frequency of these

reviews will depend

on the amount

of the aggregate

outstanding debt, and

the

risk rating classification of the obligor.

The

Corporation

has

a

Loan

Review

Group

that

reports

directly

to

the

Corporation’s

Risk

Management

Committee

and

administratively

to

the

Chief

Risk

Officer.

The

Loan

Review

Group

performs

annual

comprehensive

credit

process

reviews

of

the

Bank’s

commercial

loan

portfolios,

including

the

above-mentioned

Puerto

Rico

municipal

bonds

accounted

for

as

held-to-maturity

debt

securities.

The objective

of

these

loan

reviews is

to

assess accuracy

of the

Bank’s

determination

and

maintenance

of

loan

risk

rating

and

its

adherence

to

lending

policies,

practices

and

procedures.

The

monitoring

performed

by

this

group

contributes

to

the

assessment

of

compliance

with

credit

policies

and

underwriting

standards,

the

determination

of

the

current

level

of

credit

risk,

the

evaluation of

the effectiveness

of the credit

management process,

and the identification

of any deficiency

that may arise

in the credit-

granting process. Based

on its findings, the

Loan Review Group recommends

corrective actions, if

necessary,

that help in maintaining

a sound credit process. The Loan Review Group reports the results of the credit

process reviews to the Risk Management Committee.

As of

March 31,

2023 and

December 31,

2022,

all Puerto

Rico

municipal

bonds

classified

as held-to-maturity

were

classified as

Pass.

23

NOTE 3 – LOANS HELD FOR INVESTMENT

The

following table

provides information

about

the

loan

portfolio held

for

investment by

portfolio segment

and

disaggregated by

geographic locations

as of the indicated

dates:

As of March 31,

As of December 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Puerto Rico and Virgin Islands region:

Residential mortgage loans, mainly secured by first mortgages

$

2,381,782

$

2,417,900

Construction loans

48,195

34,772

Commercial mortgage loans

1,829,173

1,834,204

Commercial and Industrial ("C&I") loans

1,941,228

1,860,109

Consumer loans

3,398,245

3,317,489

Loans held for investment

$

9,598,623

$

9,464,474

Florida region:

Residential mortgage loans, mainly secured by first mortgages

$

429,746

$

429,390

Construction loans

95,469

98,181

Commercial mortgage loans

524,486

524,647

C&I loans

920,961

1,026,154

Consumer loans

8,700

9,979

Loans held for investment

$

1,979,362

$

2,088,351

Total:

Residential mortgage loans, mainly secured by first mortgages

$

2,811,528

$

2,847,290

Construction loans

143,664

132,953

Commercial mortgage loans

2,353,659

2,358,851

C&I loans

(1)

2,862,189

2,886,263

Consumer loans

3,406,945

3,327,468

Loans held for investment

(2)

11,577,985

11,552,825

ACL on loans and finance leases

(265,567)

(260,464)

Loans held for investment, net

$

11,312,418

$

11,292,361

(1)

As of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022, includes $

837.8

million and $

838.5

million, respectively, of commercial loans that were secured by real estate and

the primary source of repayment at origination was not dependent

upon the real estate.

(2)

Includes accretable fair value net purchase discounts of $

28.3

million and $

29.3

million as of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively.

24

The Corporation’s

aging of

the loan

portfolio held

for investment,

as well

as information

about nonaccrual

loans with

no ACL,

by

portfolio classes as of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022 are as follows:

As of March 31, 2023

Days Past Due and Accruing

Current

30-59

60-89

90+

(1) (2) (3)

Nonaccrual

(4)

Total loans held

for investment

Nonaccrual

Loans with no

ACL

(5)

(In thousands)

Residential mortgage loans, mainly secured by first mortgages:

FHA/VA government-guaranteed

loans

(1) (3) (6)

$

67,977

$

-

$

1,869

$

41,723

$

-

$

111,569

$

-

Conventional residential mortgage loans

(2) (6)

2,626,542

-

23,367

13,640

36,410

2,699,959

2,250

Commercial loans:

Construction loans

141,870

-

-

-

1,794

143,664

972

Commercial mortgage loans

(2) (6)

2,323,116

509

507

7,929

21,598

2,353,659

15,787

C&I loans

2,840,568

1,438

424

6,355

13,404

2,862,189

1,858

Consumer loans:

Auto loans

1,780,593

34,754

6,380

-

11,138

1,832,865

3,342

Finance leases

743,656

8,056

1,562

-

2,208

755,482

344

Personal loans

353,214

4,160

2,098

-

1,263

360,735

-

Credit cards

299,387

3,989

2,518

4,733

-

310,627

-

Other consumer loans

143,035

1,916

958

-

1,327

147,236

21

Total loans held for investment

$

11,319,958

$

54,822

$

39,683

$

74,380

$

89,142

$

11,577,985

$

24,574

(1)

It is the Corporation's policy to report delinquent Federal Housing Authority (“FHA”)/Veterans Affairs (“VA”)

government-guaranteed residential mortgage loans as past-due loans 90 days and still accruing as opposed

to nonaccrual loans. The Corporation continues accruing interest on these loans until they have passed the 15 months delinquency mark, taking into consideration the FHA interest curtailment process. These balances

include $

25.9

million of residential mortgage loans guaranteed by the FHA that were over 15 months delinquent.

(2)

Includes purchased credit deteriorated ("PCD") loans previously accounted for under ASC Subtopic 310-30, "Loans and Debt Securities Acquired with Deteriorated Credit Quality" ("ASC Subtopic 310-30") for which

the Corporation made the accounting policy election of maintaining pools of loans as “units of account” both at the time of adoption of CECL on January 1, 2020 and on an ongoing basis for credit loss measurement.

These loans will continue to be excluded from nonaccrual loan statistics as long as the Corporation can reasonably estimate the timing and amount of cash flows expected to be collected on the loan pools. The portion of

such loans contractually past due 90 days or more, amounting to $

10.4

million as of March 31, 2023 ($

9.4

million conventional residential mortgage loans and $

1.0

million commercial mortgage loans), is presented in

the loans past due 90 days or more and still accruing category in the table above.

(3)

Include rebooked loans, which were previously pooled into GNMA securities, amounting to $

7.1

million as of March 31, 2023. Under the GNMA program, the Corporation has the option but not the obligation to

repurchase loans that meet GNMA’s

specified delinquency criteria. For accounting purposes, these loans subject to the repurchase option are required to be reflected on the financial statements with an offsetting

liability.

(4)

Nonaccrual loans in the Florida region amounted to $

15.2

million as of March 31, 2023, primarily nonaccrual residential mortgage loans and C&I loans.

(5)

Includes $

0.3

million of nonaccrual C&I loans with no ACL in the Florida region as of March 31, 2023.

(6)

According to the Corporation's delinquency policy and consistent with the instructions for the preparation of the Consolidated Financial Statements for Bank Holding Companies (FR Y-9C) required

by the Federal

Reserve Board, residential mortgage, commercial mortgage, and construction loans are considered past due when the borrower is in arrears on two or more monthly payments. FHA/VA

government-guaranteed loans,

conventional residential mortgage loans, and commercial mortgage loans past due 30-59 days, but less than two payments in arrears, as of March 31, 2023 amounted to $

5.3

million, $

60.7

million, and $

1.1

million,

respectively.

25

As of December 31, 2022

Days Past Due and Accruing

Current

30-59

60-89

90+

(1)(2)(3)

Nonaccrual

(4)

Total loans held

for investment

Nonaccrual

Loans with no

ACL

(5)

(In thousands)

Residential mortgage loans, mainly secured by first mortgages:

FHA/VA government-guaranteed

loans

(1) (3) (6)

$

67,116

$

-

$

2,586

$

48,456

$

-

$

118,158

$

-

Conventional residential mortgage loans

(2) (6)

2,643,909

-

25,630

16,821

42,772

2,729,132

2,292

Commercial loans:

Construction loans

130,617

-

-

128

2,208

132,953

977

Commercial mortgage loans

(2) (6)

2,330,094

300

2,367

3,771

22,319

2,358,851

15,991

C&I loans

2,868,989

1,984

1,128

6,332

7,830

2,886,263

3,300

Consumer loans:

Auto loans

1,740,271

40,039

7,089

-

10,672

1,798,071

2,136

Finance leases

707,646

7,148

1,791

-

1,645

718,230

330

Personal loans

346,366

3,738

1,894

-

1,248

353,246

-

Credit cards

301,013

3,705

2,238

4,775

-

311,731

-

Other consumer loans

141,687

1,804

1,458

-

1,241

146,190

-

Total loans held for investment

$

11,277,708

$

58,718

$

46,181

$

80,283

$

89,935

$

11,552,825

$

25,026

(1)

It is the Corporation's policy to report delinquent FHA/VA government-guaranteed residential mortgage loans as past-due loans 90 days and still accruing as opposed to

nonaccrual loans. The Corporation continues

accruing interest on these loans until they have passed the 15 months delinquency mark, taking into consideration the FHA interest curtailment process. These balances include $

28.2

million of residential mortgage loans

guaranteed by the FHA that were over 15 months delinquent.

(2)

Includes PCD loans previously accounted for under ASC Subtopic 310-30 for which the Corporation made the accounting policy election of maintaining pools of loans as “units of account” both at the time of adoption

of CECL on January 1, 2020 and on an ongoing basis for credit loss measurement. These loans will continue to be excluded from nonaccrual loan statistics as long as the Corporation can reasonably estimate the timing

and amount of cash flows expected to be collected on the loan pools. The portion of such loans contractually past due 90 days or more, amounting to $

12.0

million as of December 31, 2022 ($

11.0

million conventional

residential mortgage loans and $

1.0

million commercial mortgage loans), is presented in the loans past due 90 days or more and still accruing category in the table above.

(3)

Include rebooked loans, which were previously pooled into GNMA securities, amounting to $

10.3

million as of December 31, 2022. Under the GNMA program, the Corporation has the option but not the obligation to

repurchase loans that meet GNMA’s

specified delinquency criteria. For accounting purposes, these loans subject to the repurchase option are required to be reflected on the financial statements with an offsetting

liability.

(4)

Nonaccrual loans in the Florida region amounted to $

8.3

million as of December 31, 2022, primarily nonaccrual residential mortgage loans.

(5)

Includes $

0.3

million of nonaccrual C&I loans with no ACL in the Florida region as of December 31, 2022.

(6)

According to the Corporation's delinquency policy and consistent with the instructions for the preparation of the Consolidated Financial Statements for Bank Holding Companies (FR Y-9C) required

by the Federal

Reserve Board, residential mortgage, commercial mortgage, and construction loans are considered past due when the borrower is in arrears on two or more monthly payments. FHA/VA

government-guaranteed loans,

conventional residential mortgage loans, and commercial mortgage loans past due 30-59 days, but less than two payments in arrears, as of December 31, 2022 amounted to $

6.1

million, $

65.2

million, and $

1.6

million,

respectively.

When a

loan

is placed

on nonaccrual

status, any

accrued but

uncollected

interest income

is reversed

and

charged

against interest

income

and the

amortization of

any net

deferred fees

is suspended.

The amount

of accrued

interest reversed

against interest

income

totaled $

0.6

million and $

0.4

million for the

quarters ended March

31, 2023 and

2022, respectively.

For the quarters

ended March 31,

2023 and 2022, the cash interest income recognized on nonaccrual loans

amounted to $

0.5

million and $

0.4

million, respectively.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

recorded investment

on residential

mortgage loans

collateralized by

residential real

estate property

that

were in

the process

of foreclosure

amounted to

$

62.6

million, including

$

27.2

million of

FHA/VA

government-guaranteed

mortgage

loans, and

$

8.8

million of

PCD loans

acquired prior

to the

adoption, on

January 1,

2020, of

CECL.

The Corporation

commences the

foreclosure

process

on

residential

real

estate

loans

when

a

borrower

becomes

120

days

delinquent.

Foreclosure

procedures

and

timelines

vary

depending

on

whether

the

property

is

located

in

a

judicial

or

non-judicial

state.

Occasionally,

foreclosures

may

be

delayed due to, among other reasons, mandatory mediations, bankruptcy,

court delays, and title issues.

Credit Quality Indicators:

The Corporation

categorizes loans

into risk

categories based

on relevant

information

about the

ability of

the borrowers

to service

their debt

such as

current financial

information, historical

payment experience,

credit documentation,

public information,

and current

economic

trends,

among

other

factors.

The

Corporation

analyzes

non-homogeneous

loans,

such

as commercial

mortgage,

C&I,

and

construction

loans

individually

to

classify

the

loans’

credit

risk.

As

mentioned

above,

the

Corporation

periodically

reviews

its

commercial

and

construction

loans

to

evaluate

if

they

are

properly

classified.

The

frequency

of

these

reviews

will

depend

on

the

amount of

the aggregate

outstanding debt,

and the

risk rating

classification of

the obligor.

In addition,

during the

renewal and

annual

review process of

applicable credit facilities, the

Corporation evaluates the

corresponding loan grades.

The Corporation uses the

same

definition

for

risk

ratings

as

those

described

for

Puerto

Rico

municipal

bonds

accounted

for

as

held-to-maturity

debt

securities,

as

discussed in

Note 3

– Debt

Securities, to

the audited

consolidated financial

statements included

in the

2022 Annual

Report on

Form

10-K.

For residential mortgage and consumer loans, the Corporation also evaluates credit

quality based on its interest accrual status.

26

Based on

the most

recent analysis

performed, the

amortized cost

of commercial

and construction

loans by portfolio

classes and by

origination year based

on the internal credit-risk

category as of March

31, 2023, the gross charge

-offs for the quarter

ended March 31,

2023 by

portfolio

classes and

by origination

year,

and the

amortized

cost of

commercial and

construction loans

by portfolio

classes

based on the internal credit-risk category as of December 31, 2022, was as follows:

As of March 31,

2023

Puerto Rico and Virgin Islands region

Term Loans

As of December 31, 2022

Amortized Cost Basis by Origination Year

(1)

2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

Prior

Revolving

Loans

Amortized

Cost Basis

Total

Total

(In thousands)

CONSTRUCTION

Risk Ratings:

Pass

$

6,479

$

16,509

$

18,842

$

-

$

-

$

3,885

$

-

$

45,715

$

31,879

Criticized:

Special Mention

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Substandard

-

-

-

-

-

2,480

-

2,480

2,893

Doubtful

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Loss

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total construction loans

$

6,479

$

16,509

$

18,842

$

-

$

-

$

6,365

$

-

$

48,195

$

34,772

Charge-offs on construction loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE

Risk Ratings:

Pass

$

67,469

$

391,295

$

139,536

$

325,141

$

301,638

$

400,794

$

478

$

1,626,351

$

1,655,728

Criticized:

Special Mention

-

1,177

-

36,546

75

131,350

-

169,148

145,415

Substandard

-

132

-

-

2,797

30,745

-

33,674

33,061

Doubtful

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Loss

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total commercial mortgage loans

$

67,469

$

392,604

$

139,536

$

361,687

$

304,510

$

562,889

$

478

$

1,829,173

$

1,834,204

Charge-offs on commercial mortgage loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

18

$

-

$

18

C&I

Risk Ratings:

Pass

$

70,739

$

303,603

$

188,155

$

181,284

$

308,225

$

254,283

$

565,758

$

1,872,047

$

1,789,572

Criticized:

Special Mention

-

132

839

-

1,029

12,885

32,322

47,207

43,224

Substandard

-

-

396

652

13,430

7,117

379

21,974

27,313

Doubtful

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Loss

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total C&I loans

$

70,739

$

303,735

$

189,390

$

181,936

$

322,684

$

274,285

$

598,459

$

1,941,228

$

1,860,109

Charge-offs on C&I loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

63

$

55

$

118

(1) Excludes accrued interest receivable.

27

As of March 31,

2023

Term Loans

As of December 31, 2022

Florida region

Amortized Cost Basis by Origination Year

(1)

2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

Prior

Revolving

Loans

Amortized

Cost Basis

Total

Total

(In thousands)

CONSTRUCTION

Risk Ratings:

Pass

$

107

$

50,019

$

42,867

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

2,476

$

95,469

$

98,181

Criticized:

Special Mention

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Substandard

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Doubtful

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Loss

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total construction loans

$

107

$

50,019

$

42,867

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

2,476

$

95,469

$

98,181

Charge-offs on construction loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE

Risk Ratings:

Pass

$

3,529

$

177,392

$

70,147

$

41,024

$

51,320

$

140,177

$

19,551

$

503,140

$

503,184

Criticized:

Special Mention

-

-

-

6,947

13,231

-

-

20,178

20,295

Substandard

-

-

-

1,168

-

-

-

1,168

1,168

Doubtful

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Loss

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total commercial mortgage loans

$

3,529

$

177,392

$

70,147

$

49,139

$

64,551

$

140,177

$

19,551

$

524,486

$

524,647

Charge-offs on commercial mortgage loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

C&I

Risk Ratings:

Pass

$

36,642

$

276,868

$

134,512

$

75,953

$

183,443

$

72,650

$

92,816

$

872,884

$

979,151

Criticized:

Special Mention

-

-

19,677

-

5,974

11,725

-

37,376

17,905

Substandard

-

-

-

264

195

2,854

300

3,613

29,098

Doubtful

-

-

-

-

-

7,088

-

7,088

-

Loss

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total C&I loans

$

36,642

$

276,868

$

154,189

$

76,217

$

189,612

$

94,317

$

93,116

$

920,961

$

1,026,154

Charge-offs on C&I loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

(1) Excludes accrued interest receivable.

28

As of March 31,

2023

Total

Term Loans

As of December 31, 2022

Amortized Cost Basis by Origination Year (1)

2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

Prior

Revolving

Loans

Amortized

Cost Basis

Total

Total

(In thousands)

CONSTRUCTION

Risk Ratings:

Pass

$

6,586

$

66,528

$

61,709

$

-

$

-

$

3,885

$

2,476

$

141,184

$

130,060

Criticized:

Special Mention

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Substandard

-

-

-

-

-

2,480

-

2,480

2,893

Doubtful

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Loss

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total construction loans

$

6,586

$

66,528

$

61,709

$

-

$

-

$

6,365

$

2,476

$

143,664

$

132,953

Charge-offs on construction loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE

Risk Ratings:

Pass

$

70,998

$

568,687

$

209,683

$

366,165

$

352,958

$

540,971

$

20,029

$

2,129,491

$

2,158,912

Criticized:

Special Mention

-

1,177

-

43,493

13,306

131,350

-

189,326

165,710

Substandard

-

132

-

1,168

2,797

30,745

-

34,842

34,229

Doubtful

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Loss

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total commercial mortgage loans

$

70,998

$

569,996

$

209,683

$

410,826

$

369,061

$

703,066

$

20,029

$

2,353,659

$

2,358,851

Charge-offs on commercial mortgage loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

18

$

-

$

18

C&I

Risk Ratings:

Pass

$

107,381

$

580,471

$

322,667

$

257,237

$

491,668

$

326,933

$

658,574

$

2,744,931

$

2,768,723

Criticized:

Special Mention

-

132

20,516

-

7,003

24,610

32,322

84,583

61,129

Substandard

-

-

396

916

13,625

9,971

679

25,587

56,411

Doubtful

-

-

-

-

-

7,088

-

7,088

-

Loss

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total C&I loans

$

107,381

$

580,603

$

343,579

$

258,153

$

512,296

$

368,602

$

691,575

$

2,862,189

$

2,886,263

Charge-offs on C&I loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

63

$

55

$

118

(1) Excludes accrued interest receivable.

29

The following

tables present the

amortized cost of

residential mortgage

loans by portfolio

classes and by

origination year

based on

accrual status as of March 31, 2023,

the gross charge-offs for the quarter

ended March 31, 2023 by portfolio classes and by origination

year, and the amortized cost of residential mortgage

loans by portfolio classes based on accrual status as of December 31, 2022:

As of March 31,

2023

As of

December 31,

2022

Term Loans

Amortized Cost Basis by Origination Year

(1)

2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

Prior

Revolving

Loans

Amortized

Cost Basis

Total

Total

(In thousands)

Puerto Rico and Virgin Islands Region:

FHA/VA government-guaranteed loans

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

-

$

696

$

448

$

765

$

1,557

$

107,368

$

-

$

110,834

$

117,416

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total FHA/VA

government-guaranteed loans

$

-

$

696

$

448

$

765

$

1,557

$

107,368

$

-

$

110,834

$

117,416

Conventional residential mortgage loans:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

24,859

$

171,599

$

74,692

$

31,497

$

47,705

$

1,891,603

$

-

$

2,241,955

$

2,265,013

Non-Performing

-

-

35

-

-

28,958

-

28,993

35,471

Total conventional residential mortgage loans

$

24,859

$

171,599

$

74,727

$

31,497

$

47,705

$

1,920,561

$

-

$

2,270,948

$

2,300,484

Total:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

24,859

$

172,295

$

75,140

$

32,262

$

49,262

$

1,998,971

$

-

$

2,352,789

$

2,382,429

Non-Performing

-

-

35

-

-

28,958

-

28,993

35,471

Total residential mortgage loans in Puerto Rico

and Virgin Islands Region

$

24,859

$

172,295

$

75,175

$

32,262

$

49,262

$

2,027,929

$

-

$

2,381,782

$

2,417,900

Charge-offs on residential mortgage loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

3

$

-

$

980

$

-

$

983

(1)

Excludes accrued interest receivable.

As of March 31,

2023

As of

December 31,

2022

Term Loans

Amortized Cost Basis by Origination Year

(1)

2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

Prior

Revolving

Loans

Amortized

Cost Basis

Total

Total

(In thousands)

Florida Region:

FHA/VA government-guaranteed loans

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

735

$

-

$

735

$

742

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total FHA/VA

government-guaranteed loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

735

$

-

$

735

$

742

Conventional residential mortgage loans:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

13,232

$

81,619

$

48,991

$

31,157

$

29,403

$

217,192

$

-

$

421,594

$

421,347

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

265

7,152

-

7,417

7,301

Total conventional residential mortgage loans

$

13,232

$

81,619

$

48,991

$

31,157

$

29,668

$

224,344

$

-

$

429,011

$

428,648

Total:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

13,232

$

81,619

$

48,991

$

31,157

$

29,403

$

217,927

$

-

$

422,329

$

422,089

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

265

7,152

-

7,417

7,301

Total residential mortgage loans in Florida region

$

13,232

$

81,619

$

48,991

$

31,157

$

29,668

$

225,079

$

-

$

429,746

$

429,390

Charge-offs on residential mortgage loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

(1)

Excludes accrued interest receivable.

30

As of March 31,

2023

As of

December 31,

2022

Term Loans

Amortized Cost Basis by Origination Year

(1)

2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

Prior

Revolving

Loans

Amortized

Cost Basis

Total

Total

(In thousands)

Total:

FHA/VA government-guaranteed loans

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

-

$

696

$

448

$

765

$

1,557

$

108,103

$

-

$

111,569

$

118,158

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total FHA/VA

government-guaranteed loans

$

-

$

696

$

448

$

765

$

1,557

$

108,103

$

-

$

111,569

$

118,158

Conventional residential mortgage loans:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

38,091

$

253,218

$

123,683

$

62,654

$

77,108

$

2,108,795

$

-

$

2,663,549

$

2,686,360

Non-Performing

-

-

35

-

265

36,110

-

36,410

42,772

Total conventional residential mortgage loans

$

38,091

$

253,218

$

123,718

$

62,654

$

77,373

$

2,144,905

$

-

$

2,699,959

$

2,729,132

Total:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

38,091

$

253,914

$

124,131

$

63,419

$

78,665

$

2,216,898

$

-

$

2,775,118

$

2,804,518

Non-Performing

-

-

35

-

265

36,110

-

36,410

42,772

Total residential mortgage loans

$

38,091

$

253,914

$

124,166

$

63,419

$

78,930

$

2,253,008

$

-

$

2,811,528

$

2,847,290

Charge-offs on residential mortgage loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

3

$

-

$

980

$

-

$

983

(1)

Excludes accrued interest receivable.

31

The

following

tables present

the

amortized

cost

of

consumer

loans

by

portfolio

classes

and

by origination

year

based on

accrual

status as

of March

31, 2023,

the gross

charge-offs

for the

quarter ended

March 31,

2023 by

portfolio classes

and by

origination, and

the amortized cost of consumer loans by portfolio classes based on accrual status as of

December 31, 2022:

As of March 31,

2023

As of

December 31,

2022

Term Loans

Amortized Cost Basis by Origination Year

(1)

2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

Prior

Revolving

Loans

Amortized

Cost Basis

Total

Total

(In thousands)

Puerto Rico and Virgin Islands Regions:

Auto loans:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

165,925

$

638,402

$

478,373

$

234,358

$

186,331

$

115,561

$

-

$

1,818,950

$

1,783,782

Non-Performing

-

2,419

2,243

1,347

2,708

2,399

-

11,116

10,596

Total auto loans

$

165,925

$

640,821

$

480,616

$

235,705

$

189,039

$

117,960

$

-

$

1,830,066

$

1,794,378

Charge-offs on auto loans

$

19

$

1,827

$

1,210

$

467

$

632

$

365

$

-

$

4,520

Finance leases:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

78,870

$

282,486

$

183,061

$

82,206

$

74,421

$

52,230

$

-

$

753,274

$

716,585

Non-Performing

-

551

222

433

376

626

-

2,208

1,645

Total finance leases

$

78,870

$

283,037

$

183,283

$

82,639

$

74,797

$

52,856

$

-

$

755,482

$

718,230

Charge-offs on finance leases

$

-

$

227

$

270

$

97

$

185

$

200

$

-

$

979

Personal loans:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

44,647

$

163,311

$

49,275

$

25,703

$

46,765

$

29,411

$

-

$

359,112

$

351,664

Non-Performing

-

490

188

117

229

239

-

1,263

1,248

Total personal loans

$

44,647

$

163,801

$

49,463

$

25,820

$

46,994

$

29,650

$

-

$

360,375

$

352,912

Charge-offs on personal loans

$

-

$

1,517

$

840

$

279

$

680

$

384

$

-

$

3,700

Credit cards:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

310,627

$

310,627

$

311,731

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total credit cards

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

310,627

$

310,627

$

311,731

Charge-offs on credit cards

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

4,057

$

4,057

Other consumer loans:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

23,413

$

66,230

$

17,612

$

8,219

$

9,851

$

6,468

$

8,700

$

140,493

$

139,116

Non-Performing

-

540

171

59

104

230

98

1,202

1,122

Total other consumer loans

$

23,413

$

66,770

$

17,783

$

8,278

$

9,955

$

6,698

$

8,798

$

141,695

$

140,238

Charge-offs on other consumer loans

$

14

$

1,842

$

762

$

174

$

326

$

178

$

91

$

3,387

Total:

Performing

$

312,855

$

1,150,429

$

728,321

$

350,486

$

317,368

$

203,670

$

319,327

$

3,382,456

$

3,302,878

Non-Performing

-

4,000

2,824

1,956

3,417

3,494

98

15,789

14,611

Total consumer loans in Puerto Rico and Virgin

Islands region

$

312,855

$

1,154,429

$

731,145

$

352,442

$

320,785

$

207,164

$

319,425

$

3,398,245

$

3,317,489

Charge-offs on total consumer loans

$

33

$

5,413

$

3,082

$

1,017

$

1,823

$

1,127

$

4,148

$

16,643

(1)

Excludes accrued interest receivable.

32

As of March 31,

2023

As of

December 31,

2022

Term Loans

Amortized Cost Basis by Origination Year

(1)

2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

Prior

Revolving

Loans

Amortized

Cost Basis

Total

Total

(In thousands)

Florida Region:

Auto loans:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

259

$

2,518

$

-

$

2,777

$

3,617

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

-

22

-

22

76

Total auto loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

259

$

2,540

$

-

$

2,799

$

3,693

Charge-offs on auto loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

8

$

147

$

-

$

155

Finance leases:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total finance leases

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

Charge-offs on finance leases

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

Personal loans:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

274

$

8

$

71

$

7

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

360

$

334

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total personal loans

$

274

$

8

$

71

$

7

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

360

$

334

Charge-offs on personal loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

Credit cards:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total credit cards

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

Charge-offs on credit cards

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

Other consumer loans:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

-

$

49

$

229

$

460

$

-

$

2,455

$

2,223

$

5,416

$

5,833

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

-

21

104

125

119

Total other consumer loans

$

-

$

49

$

229

$

460

$

-

$

2,476

$

2,327

$

5,541

$

5,952

Charge-offs on other consumer loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

Total:

Performing

$

274

$

57

$

300

$

467

$

259

$

4,973

$

2,223

$

8,553

$

9,784

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

-

43

104

147

195

Total consumer loans in Florida region

$

274

$

57

$

300

$

467

$

259

$

5,016

$

2,327

$

8,700

$

9,979

Charge-offs on total consumer loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

8

$

147

$

-

$

155

(1)

Excludes accrued interest receivable.

33

As of March 31,

2023

As of

December 31,

2022

Term Loans

Amortized Cost Basis by Origination Year

(1)

2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

Prior

Revolving

Loans

Amortized

Cost Basis

Total

Total

(In thousands)

Total:

Auto loans:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

165,925

$

638,402

$

478,373

$

234,358

$

186,590

$

118,079

$

-

$

1,821,727

$

1,787,399

Non-Performing

-

2,419

2,243

1,347

2,708

2,421

-

11,138

10,672

Total auto loans

$

165,925

$

640,821

$

480,616

$

235,705

$

189,298

$

120,500

$

-

$

1,832,865

$

1,798,071

Charge-offs on auto loans

$

19

$

1,827

$

1,210

$

467

$

640

$

512

$

-

$

4,675

Finance leases:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

78,870

$

282,486

$

183,061

$

82,206

$

74,421

$

52,230

$

-

$

753,274

$

716,585

Non-Performing

-

551

222

433

376

626

-

2,208

1,645

Total finance leases

$

78,870

$

283,037

$

183,283

$

82,639

$

74,797

$

52,856

$

-

$

755,482

$

718,230

Charge-offs on finance leases

$

-

$

227

$

270

$

97

$

185

$

200

$

-

$

979

Personal loans:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

44,921

$

163,319

$

49,346

$

25,710

$

46,765

$

29,411

$

-

$

359,472

$

351,998

Non-Performing

-

490

188

117

229

239

-

1,263

1,248

Total personal loans

$

44,921

$

163,809

$

49,534

$

25,827

$

46,994

$

29,650

$

-

$

360,735

$

353,246

Charge-offs on personal loans

$

-

$

1,517

$

840

$

279

$

680

$

384

$

-

$

3,700

Credit cards:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

310,627

$

310,627

$

311,731

Non-Performing

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Total credit cards

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

310,627

$

310,627

$

311,731

Charge-offs on credit cards

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

4,057

$

4,057

Other consumer loans:

Accrual Status:

Performing

$

23,413

$

66,279

$

17,841

$

8,679

$

9,851

$

8,923

$

10,923

$

145,909

$

144,949

Non-Performing

-

540

171

59

104

251

202

1,327

1,241

Total other consumer loans

$

23,413

$

66,819

$

18,012

$

8,738

$

9,955

$

9,174

$

11,125

$

147,236

$

146,190

Charge-offs on other consumer loans

$

14

$

1,842

$

762

$

174

$

326

$

178

$

91

$

3,387

Total:

Performing

$

313,129

$

1,150,486

$

728,621

$

350,953

$

317,627

$

208,643

$

321,550

$

3,391,009

$

3,312,662

Non-Performing

-

4,000

2,824

1,956

3,417

3,537

202

15,936

14,806

Total consumer loans

$

313,129

$

1,154,486

$

731,445

$

352,909

$

321,044

$

212,180

$

321,752

$

3,406,945

$

3,327,468

Charge-offs on total consumer loans

$

33

$

5,413

$

3,082

$

1,017

$

1,831

$

1,274

$

4,148

$

16,798

(1)

Excludes accrued interest receivable.

Accrued

interest

receivable

on

loans

totaled

$

49.4

million

as

of

March

31,

2023

($

53.1

million

as

of

December

31,

2022),

was

reported as

part of accrued

interest receivable on

loans and investment

securities in the

consolidated statements

of financial condition

and is excluded from the estimate of credit losses.

34

The

following

tables

present

information

about

collateral

dependent

loans

that

were

individually

evaluated

for

purposes

of

determining the ACL as of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022

:

As of March 31, 2023

Collateral Dependent Loans -

With Allowance

Collateral Dependent

Loans - With No

Related Allowance

Collateral Dependent Loans - Total

Amortized Cost

Related

Allowance

Amortized Cost

Amortized Cost

Related

Allowance

(In thousands)

Residential mortgage loans:

Conventional residential mortgage loans

$

34,257

$

2,410

$

152

$

34,409

$

2,410

Commercial loans:

Construction loans

-

-

956

956

-

Commercial mortgage loans

2,449

896

61,851

64,300

896

C&I loans

1,789

347

13,331

15,120

347

Consumer loans:

Personal loans

55

1

-

55

1

Other consumer loans

-

-

-

-

-

$

38,550

$

3,654

$

76,290

$

114,840

$

3,654

As of December 31, 2022

Collateral Dependent Loans -

With Allowance

Collateral Dependent

Loans - With No

Related Allowance

Collateral Dependent Loans - Total

Amortized Cost

Related

Allowance

Amortized Cost

Amortized Cost

Related

Allowance

(In thousands)

Residential mortgage loans:

Conventional residential mortgage loans

$

36,206

$

2,571

$

-

$

36,206

$

2,571

Commercial loans:

Construction loans

-

-

956

956

-

Commercial mortgage loans

2,466

897

62,453

64,919

897

C&I loans

1,513

322

17,590

19,103

322

Consumer loans:

Personal loans

56

1

64

120

1

Other consumer loans

207

29

-

207

29

$

40,448

$

3,820

$

81,063

$

121,511

$

3,820

The allowance related

to collateral dependent loans

reported in the tables

above includes qualitative

adjustments applied to

the loan

portfolio

that

consider

possible

changes

in

circumstances

that

could

ultimately

impact

credit

losses

and

might

not

be

reflected

in

historical

data

or

forecasted

data

incorporated

in

the

quantitative

models.

The

underlying

collateral

for

residential

mortgage

and

consumer

collateral

dependent

loans

consisted

of

single-family

residential

properties,

and

for

commercial

and

construction

loans

consisted

primarily

of

office

buildings,

multifamily

residential

properties,

and

retail

establishments.

The

weighted-average

loan-to-

value coverage for

collateral dependent loans

as of March

31, 2023 was

69

%, compared to

70

% as of December

31, 2022, which

was

not considered a significant change in the extent to which collateral secured these

loans.

35

Purchases and Sales of Loans

In

the

ordinary

course

of

business,

the

Corporation

enters

into

securitization

transactions

and

whole

loan

sales

with

GNMA

and

GSEs, such as FNMA and FHLMC. During the quarters ended March

31, 2023 and 2022, loans pooled into GNMA MBS amounted

to

approximately $

29.4

million and

$

41.5

million, respectively,

for which

the Corporation

recognized a

net gain

on sale

of $

0.9

million

and

$

1.3

million,

respectively.

Also,

during

the

quarter

ended

March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation

sold

approximately

$

8.0

million

of

performing residential

mortgage loans

to FNMA, of

which the

Corporation recognized

a net gain

on sale of

$

0.2

million. In addition,

during the quarter ended March 31,

2022, the Corporation sold approximately

$

50.0

million and $

2.4

million of performing residential

mortgage loans to

FNMA and FHLMC,

respectively,

of which the

Corporation recognized

a net gain

on sale of

$

2.1

million and $

0.1

million, respectively.

The Corporation’s continuing

involvement with the loans that it

sells consists primarily of servicing

the loans. In

addition,

the

Corporation

agrees

to

repurchase

loans

if

it

breaches

any

of

the

representations

and

warranties

included

in

the

sale

agreement. These

representations and

warranties are consistent

with the GSEs’

selling and servicing

guidelines (i.e.,

ensuring that the

mortgage was properly underwritten according to established guidelines).

For loans

pooled into

GNMA MBS,

the Corporation,

as servicer,

holds an

option to

repurchase individual

delinquent loans

issued

on or

after January 1,

2003 when certain

delinquency criteria are

met. This option

gives the Corporation

the unilateral ability,

but not

the obligation, to

repurchase the delinquent

loans at par without

prior authorization from

GNMA. Since the

Corporation is considered

to

have

regained

effective

control

over

the

loans,

it

is

required

to

recognize

the

loans

and

a

corresponding

repurchase

liability

regardless of its

intent to repurchase

the loans. As

of March 31, 2023

and December 31, 2022,

rebooked GNMA delinquent

loans that

were included in the residential mortgage loan portfolio amounted

to $

7.1

million and $

10.4

million, respectively.

During

the

quarters

ended

March

31,

2023

and

2022,

the

Corporation

repurchased,

pursuant

to

the

aforementioned

repurchase

option, $

1.5

million and $

0.5

million, respectively,

of loans previously pooled

into GNMA MBS. The

principal balance of these

loans

is fully

guaranteed,

and the

risk of

loss related

to the

repurchased loans

is generally

limited to

the difference

between the

delinquent

interest payment

advanced

to GNMA,

which

is computed

at the

loan’s

interest

rate, and

the interest

payments

reimbursed

by FHA,

which are

computed at

a pre-determined

debenture

rate. Repurchases

of GNMA

loans allow

the Corporation,

among other

things, to

maintain acceptable delinquency

rates on outstanding GNMA

pools and remain as

a seller and servicer

in good standing with

GNMA.

Historically, losses

on these repurchases of

GNMA delinquent loans have

been immaterial and no provision has

been made at the time

of sale.

Loan sales to FNMA and FHLMC are without recourse in relation

to the future performance of the loans.

The Corporation’s risk of

loss

with

respect

to

these

loans

is

also

minimal

as

these

repurchased

loans

are

generally

performing

loans

with

documentation

deficiencies.

No

significant

purchases

of

loans

were

executed

during

the

first

quarter

of

2023.

During

the

quarter

ended

March

31,

2022,

the

Corporation purchased certain C&I loan participations in the Florida region

totaling $

46.4

million.

36

Loan Portfolio Concentration

The Corporation’s

primary

lending area

is Puerto

Rico. The

Corporation’s

banking subsidiary,

FirstBank, also

lends in

the USVI

and BVI markets

and in the

United States (principally

in the state of

Florida). Of the

total gross loans

held for investment

portfolio of

$

11.6

billion as

of March

31, 2023,

credit risk

concentration was

approximately

80

% in Puerto

Rico,

17

% in the

U.S., and

3

% in

the

USVI and BVI.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation

had

$

170.9

million

outstanding

in

loans

extended

to

the

Puerto

Rico

government,

its

municipalities and

public corporations,

compared to

$

169.8

million as

of December

31, 2022.

As of

March 31,

2023, approximately

$

102.7

million

consisted

of

loans

extended

to

municipalities

in

Puerto

Rico

that

are

general

obligations

supported

by

assigned

property

tax

revenues,

and $

28.0

million

of

loans which

are supported

by one

or

more

specific sources

of municipal

revenues. The

vast

majority

of

revenues

of the

municipalities

included

in

the

Corporation’s

loan

portfolio

are

independent

of

budgetary

subsidies

provided

by

the

Puerto

Rico

central

government.

These

municipalities

are

required

by

law

to

levy

special

property

taxes

in

such

amounts

as

are

required

to

satisfy

the

payment

of

all

of

their

respective

general

obligation

bonds

and

notes.

In

addition

to

loans

extended to municipalities,

the Corporation’s

exposure to the Puerto

Rico government as of

March 31, 2023 included

$

10.2

million in

loans granted

to an affiliate

of the

Puerto

Rico Electric

Power Authority

(“PREPA”)

and $

30.0

million in loans

to agencies or

public

corporations of the Puerto Rico government.

In addition,

as of March

31, 2023, the

Corporation had

$

82.9

million in exposure

to residential mortgage

loans that are

guaranteed

by

the

PRHFA,

a

government

instrumentality

that

has

been

designated

as

a

covered

entity

under

PROMESA,

compared

to

$

84.7

million as of

December 31, 2022.

Residential mortgage

loans guaranteed by

the PRHFA

are secured by

the underlying properties

and

the guarantees serve to cover shortfalls in collateral in the event of a borrower default.

The Corporation also has credit exposure

to USVI government entities. As of

March 31, 2023, the Corporation had

$

38.7

million in

loans to USVI

government public corporations,

compared to $

38.0

million as of

December 31, 2022.

As of March

31, 2023, all

loans

were currently performing and up to date on principal and interest payments.

37

Loss Mitigation Program for Borrowers Experiencing

Financial Difficulty

The Corporation

provides

homeownership

preservation

assistance to

its customers

through

a loss

mitigation

program.

Depending

upon the nature

of a borrower’s financial

condition, restructurings or

loan modifications through

this program are provided,

as well as

other restructurings of

individual C&I, commercial

mortgage, construction, and

residential mortgage

loans. The Corporation

may also

modify

contractual

terms

to

comply

with

regulations

regarding

the

treatment

of

certain

bankruptcy

filings

and

discharge

situations.

See Note 1 – Basis of Presentation and Significant

Accounting Policies, for additional information related to

the accounting policies of

loan modifications granted to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty.

The

loan

modifications

granted

to

borrowers

experiencing

financial

difficulty

that

are

associated

to

payment

delays

typically

include the following:

-

Forbearance plans –

Payments of either interest

and/or principal are

deferred for a pre-established

period of time, generally

not

exceeding

six

months

in

any

given

year.

The

deferred

interest

and/or

principal

is

repaid

as

either

a

lump

sum

payment

at

maturity date or by extending the loan’s

maturity date by the number of forbearance months granted.

-

Payment

plans

Borrowers

are

allowed

to

pay

the

regular

monthly

payment

plus

the

pre-established

delinquent

amounts

during a period generally not exceeding

six months.

At the end of the payment plan, the

borrower is required to resume making

its regularly scheduled loan payments.

-

Trial modifications

– These types of loan

modifications are granted for

residential mortgage loans. Borrower

s

continue making

reduced monthly payments during

the trial period, which

is generally of up to

six months. The reduced

payments that are made

by the

borrower during

the trial

period will

result in

a payment

delay with

respect to

the original

contractual terms

of the loan

since

the

loan

has

not

yet

been

contractually

modified.

After

successful

completion

of

the

trial

period,

the

mortgage

loan

is

contractually modified.

Modifications

in

the

form

of

a

reduction

in

interest

rate,

term

extension,

an

other-than-insignificant

payment

delay,

or

any

combination

of

these

types

of

loan

modifications

that

have

occurred

in

the

current

reporting

period

to

a

borrower

experiencing

financial difficulty are disclosed in the tables below.

The

below

disclosures

relate

to

loan

modifications

granted

to

borrowers

experiencing

financial

difficulty

in

which

there

was

a

change

in

the

timing

and/or

amount

of

contractual

cash

flows

in

the

form

of

any

of

the

aforementioned

types

of

modifications,

including

restructurings

that

resulted

in

a

more-than-insignificant

payment

delay.

These

disclosures

exclude

$

0.9

million

in

restructured

residential

mortgage

loans that

are government

-guaranteed

(e.g., FHA/VA

loans)

and

were modified

during

the quarter

ended March 31, 2023.

The following table presents the amortized cost basis as of March 31, 2023 of loans modified

to borrowers experiencing financial

difficulty during the quarter ended March 31, 2023, by portfolio

classes and type of modification granted, and the percentage of these

modified loans relative to the total period-end amortized cost basis of receivables

in the portfolio class:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

Payment Delay Only

Forbearance

Payment

Plan

Trial

Modification

Interest

Rate

Reduction

Term

Extension

Combination of

Interest Rate

Reduction and

Term Extension

Forgiveness

of principal

and/or

interest

Other

Total

Percentage of

Total by

Portfolio

Classes

(In thousands)

Conventional residential mortgage loans

$

-

$

-

$

332

$

-

$

433

$

115

$

-

$

-

$

880

0.03%

Construction loans

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Commercial mortgage loans

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

C&I loans

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

40

(1)

40

0.00%

Consumer loans:

Auto loans

-

-

-

-

89

38

-

584

(1)

711

0.04%

Personal loans

-

-

-

-

28

14

-

-

42

0.01%

Credit cards

-

-

-

289

(2)

-

-

-

-

289

0.09%

Other consumer loans

-

-

-

-

132

60

-

26

(1)

218

0.15%

Total modifications

$

-

$

-

$

332

$

289

$

682

$

227

$

-

$

650

$

2,180

(1)

Modification consists of court mandated reduction to 0% interest rate for remaining loan term to borrowers in bankruptcy proceedings unless dismissal occurs.

(2)

Modification consists of reduction in interest rate and revocation of revolving line privileges.

38

The following table presents the financial effects of the modifications

granted to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty

during the quarter ended March 31, 2023, by portfolio classes, other

than those associated to payment delay.

The qualitative financial

effects of the modifications associated to payment delay were discussed

above, and as such, were excluded from the table below:

Quarter Ended March 31, 2023

Combination of Interest Rate Reduction

and Term Extension

Weighted-Average

Interest Rate

Reduction (%)

Weighted-Average

Term Extension (in

months)

Weighted-Average

Interest Rate

Reduction (%)

Weighted-Average

Term Extension (in

months)

Weighted-Average

Forgiveness of

Principal and/or

Interest

(In thousands)

Conventional residential mortgage loans

-

98

2.11%

141

$

-

Construction loans

-

-

-

-

-

Commercial mortgage loans

-

-

-

-

-

C&I loans

-

-

-

-

-

Consumer loans:

Auto loans

-

22

2.88%

28

-

Personal loans

-

30

3.36%

12

-

Credit cards

16.04%

-

-

-

-

Other consumer loans

-

27

1.96%

26

-

The following table presents the performance of loans modified during the quarter

ended March 31,

2023 that were granted to

borrowers experiencing financial difficulty,

by portfolio classes:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

30-59

60-89

90+

Total

Delinquency

Current

Total

(In thousands)

Conventional residential mortgage loans

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

-

$

880

$

880

Construction loans

-

-

-

-

-

-

Commercial mortgage loans

-

-

-

-

-

-

C&I loans

-

-

-

-

40

40

Consumer loans:

Auto loans

44

138

-

182

529

711

Personal loans

-

-

-

-

42

42

Credit cards

103

89

-

192

97

289

Other consumer loans

-

-

-

-

218

218

Total modifications

$

147

$

227

$

-

$

374

$

1,806

$

2,180

There

were

no

loans

modified

to

borrowers

experiencing

financial

difficulty

on

or

after

January

1,

2023,

which

had

a

payment

default

(failure

by

the

borrower

to

make

payments

of

either principal,

interest,

or both

for

a

period

of

90 days

or more)

during

the

quarter ended March 31, 2023.

39

Troubled Debt

Restructuring (“TDR”) Disclosures Prior to Adoption

of ASU 2022-02

Prior

to

the

adoption

of

ASU

2022-02,

a

restructuring

of

a

loan

constituted

a

TDR

if

the

creditor,

for

economic

or

legal

reason

related

to the

borrower’s

financial difficulties,

grants a

concession to

the borrower

that it

would not

otherwise consider.

See Note

1

“Nature of

Business and

Summary of

Significant Accounting

Policies” and

Note 4

“Loans Held

for Investment”

to the

Consolidated

Financial Statements

in the 2022

Annual Report

on Form

10-K for

additional discussion

of TDRs. The

following tables

present TDR

loans completed during the quarter ended March 31, 2022:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2022

Interest rate

below market

Maturity or

term extension

Combination of

reduction in

interest rate and

extension of

maturity

Forgiveness of

principal and/or

interest

Other

(1)

Total

(In thousands)

Conventional residential mortgage loans

$

215

$

731

$

190

$

-

$

1,857

$

2,993

Construction loans

-

-

-

-

-

-

Commercial mortgage loans

-

-

-

-

-

-

C&I loans

-

-

-

-

5

5

Consumer loans:

Auto loans

792

54

147

-

-

993

Finance leases

-

246

-

-

18

264

Personal loans

-

60

18

-

-

78

Credit cards

(2)

189

-

-

-

-

189

Other consumer loans

33

106

-

9

-

148

Total TDRs

$

1,229

$

1,197

$

355

$

9

$

1,880

$

4,670

(1)

Other concessions granted by the Corporation include payment

plans under judicial stipulation or loss mitigation programs, or

a combination of two or more of the concessions listed

in

the table. Amounts included in Other that represent a combination

of concessions are excluded from the amounts reported in

the column for such individual concessions.

(2)

Concession consists of reduction in interest rate and revocation

of revolving line privileges.

Quarter Ended March 31, 2022

Number of contracts

Pre-modification Amortized

Cost

Post-modification Amortized

Cost

(Dollars in thousands)

Conventional residential mortgage loans

23

$

2,996

$

2,993

Construction loans

-

-

-

Commercial mortgage loans

-

-

-

C&I loans

1

5

5

Consumer loans:

Auto loans

51

995

993

Finance leases

13

264

264

Personal loans

5

78

78

Credit Cards

44

189

189

Other consumer loans

27

146

148

Total TDRs

164

$

4,673

$

4,670

Loan modifications

considered TDR loans

that defaulted (failure

by the borrower

to make payments

of either principal,

interest, or

both

for

a period

of 90

days or

more)

during the

quarter

ended March

31, 2022,

and had

become

TDR loans

during

the 12-months

preceding the default date, were as follows:

Quarter Ended March 31, 2022

Number of contracts

Amortized Cost

(Dollars in thousands)

Conventional residential mortgage loans

3

$

389

Construction loans

-

-

Commercial mortgage loans

-

-

C&I loans

-

-

Consumer loans:

Auto loans

24

522

Finance leases

1

16

Personal loans

-

-

Credit cards

11

79

Other consumer loans

2

11

Total TDRs

41

$

1,017

40

NOTE 4 – ALLOWANCE

FOR CREDIT LOSSES FOR LOANS AND FINANCE LEASES

The following tables present the activity in the ACL on loans and finance leases by portfolio

segment for the indicated periods:

Residential Mortgage

Loans

Construction

Loans

Commercial

Mortgage

Commercial &

Industrial Loans

Consumer Loans

Total

Quarter Ended March 31, 2023

(In thousands)

ACL:

Beginning balance

$

62,760

$

2,308

$

35,064

$

32,906

$

127,426

$

260,464

Impact of adoption of ASU 2022-02

2,056

-

-

7

53

2,116

Provision for credit losses - expense (benefit)

73

860

1,246

(1,650)

15,727

16,256

Charge-offs

(983)

-

(18)

(118)

(16,798)

(17,917)

Recoveries

497

63

168

90

3,830

4,648

Ending balance

$

64,403

$

3,231

$

36,460

$

31,235

$

130,238

$

265,567

Residential Mortgage

Loans

Construction

Loans

Commercial

Mortgage

Commercial &

Industrial Loans

Consumer Loans

Total

Quarter Ended March 31,

2022

(In thousands)

ACL:

Beginning balance

$

74,837

$

4,048

$

52,771

$

34,284

$

103,090

$

269,030

Provision for credit losses - (benefit) expense

(4,871)

(2,214)

(22,640)

1,755

10,981

(16,989)

Charge-offs

(2,528)

(44)

(37)

(290)

(9,816)

(12,715)

Recoveries

1,382

52

44

1,035

3,608

6,121

Ending balance

$

68,820

$

1,842

$

30,138

$

36,784

$

107,863

$

245,447

The

Corporation

estimates

the

ACL

following

the

methodologies

described

in

Note

1

Nature

of

Business

and

Summary

of

Significant Accounting

Policies, to

the audited

consolidated financial

statements included

in the

2022 Annual

Report on

Form 10-K,

for each portfolio segment.

The Corporation applie

s

probability weights to

the baseline and

alternative downside economic

scenarios

to estimate the ACL

with

the

baseline

scenario

carrying

the

highest

weight.

The

economic

scenarios

used

in

the

ACL

determination

contained

assumptions

related

to economic

uncertainties associated

with geopolitical

instability,

high

inflation levels,

and

the expected

path

of interest

rate

increases by the FED.

As of March 31, 2023, the ACL for loans and finance leases was $

265.6

million, an increase of $

5.1

million, from $

260.5

million as

of

December

31,

2022.

The

ACL

for

commercial

and

construction

loans

remained

relatively

flat

when

compared

to

the

previous

quarter as a result of

the following offsetting factors:

reserve increases of $

5.0

million for a new nonaccrual

commercial and industrial

loan in the Florida region in the power generation industry; and $

1.1

million due to a less favorable economic outlook in the projection

of certain forecasted

macroeconomic variables, such

as the commercial

real estate price index

(“CRE price index”);

partially offset by

reserve decreases

of $

6.1

million associated

with the receipt

of updated

financial information

of certain borrowers

and the repayment

of a $

24.3

million adversely classified

commercial and industrial

participated loan in

the Florida region.

The ACL for consumer

loans

increased by $

2.9

million, primarily reflecting

the effect of

the increase in

the size of the

consumer loan

portfolios and the

increase in

historical charge-off levels. The ACL for

residential mortgage loans increased by $

1.6

million, in part due to a $

2.1

million cumulative

increase in

the ACL,

due to

the adoption

of ASU

2022-02, for

which the

Corporation elected

to discontinue

the use

of a

discounted

cash

flow

methodology

for

restructured

accruing

loans.

This

adjustment

had

a

corresponding

decrease,

net

of

applicable

taxes,

in

beginning

retained

earnings

as

of

January

1,

2023.

See

Note

1

Basis

of

Presentation

and

Significant

Accounting

Policies

for

information related to the adoption of ASU 2022-02 during the first quarter

of 2023.

Total

net charge-offs

increased by $

6.7

million to $

13.3

million during the first

quarter of 2023, when

compared to the same

period

in 2022. The variance consisted of a $

6.8

million increase in net charge-offs on

consumer and finance leases, reflected across all major

portfolio classes, and

a $

0.6

million decrease in net

recoveries in the commercial

and construction loan portfolios,

partially offset by

a

$

0.7

million decrease in net charge-offs on residential mortgage

loans.

41

The tables below

present the ACL

related to loans

and finance leases

and the carrying

values of loans

by portfolio segment

as of

March 31,

2023 and December 31, 2022:

As of March 31,

2023

Residential Mortgage

Loans

Construction

Loans

Commercial Mortgage

Loans

Commercial and

Industrial Loans

Consumer Loans

Total

(Dollars in thousands)

Total loans held for investment:

Amortized cost of loans

$

2,811,528

$

143,664

$

2,353,659

$

2,862,189

$

3,406,945

$

11,577,985

Allowance for credit losses

64,403

3,231

36,460

31,235

130,238

265,567

Allowance for credit losses to

amortized cost

2.29

%

2.25

%

1.55

%

1.09

%

3.82

%

2.29

%

As of December 31, 2022

Residential Mortgage

Loans

Construction

Loans

Commercial Mortgage

Loans

Commercial and

Industrial Loans

Consumer Loans

Total

(Dollars in thousands)

Total loans held for investment:

Amortized cost of loans

$

2,847,290

$

132,953

$

2,358,851

$

2,886,263

$

3,327,468

$

11,552,825

Allowance for credit losses

62,760

2,308

35,064

32,906

127,426

260,464

Allowance for credit losses to

amortized cost

2.20

%

1.74

%

1.49

%

1.14

%

3.83

%

2.25

%

In

addition,

the

Corporation

estimates

expected

credit

losses

over

the

contractual

period

in

which

the

Corporation

is

exposed

to

credit

risk

via

a

contractual

obligation

to

extend

credit,

such

as

unfunded

loan

commitments

and

standby

letters

of

credit

for

commercial and construction

loans, unless the

obligation is unconditionally

cancellable by the Corporation.

See Note 22 –

Regulatory

Matters,

Commitments,

and Contingencies

for

information

on off

-balance

sheet exposures

as of

March 31,

2023 and

December

31,

2022.

The

Corporation

estimates

the

ACL

for

these

off-balance

sheet

exposures

following

the

methodology

described

in

Note

1

Nature of Business and Summary of Accounting Policies,

to the audited consolidated financial statements included in the

2022 Annual

Report

on Form

10-K.

As of

March

31, 2023,

the ACL

for off-balance

sheet

credit exposures

decreased

to $

4.2

million,

from

$

4.3

million as of December 31, 2022.

The following

table presents

the activity

in the

ACL for

unfunded loan

commitments and

standby letters

of credit

for the

quarters

ended March 31, 2023 and 2022:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Beginning Balance

$

4,273

$

1,537

Provision for credit losses - (benefit)

(105)

(178)

Ending balance

$

4,168

$

1,359

42

NOTE 5

OTHER REAL ESTATE

OWNED

The following table presents the OREO inventory as of the indicated dates:

March 31, 2023

December 31, 2022

(In thousands)

OREO balances, carrying value:

Residential

(1)

$

24,984

$

24,025

Commercial

6,114

5,852

Construction

1,764

1,764

Total

$

32,862

$

31,641

(1)

Excludes $

22.6

million and $

23.5

million as of March 31,

2023 and December 31,

2022, respectively,

of foreclosures that met

the conditions of ASC

Subtopic 310-40 “Reclassification

of

Residential Real

Estate Collateralized

Consumer Mortgage

Loans upon

Foreclosure,” and

are presented

as a

receivable as

part of

other assets

in the

consolidated statements

of financial

condition.

See Note 18

  • Fair Value

for information

on write-downs

recorded on OREO

properties during

the quarters ended

March 31, 2023

and 2022.

43

NOTE 6 – GOODWILL AND OTHER INTANGIBLES

Goodwill

Goodwill as

of each

of March

31, 2023

and December

31, 2022

amounted to

$

38.6

million.

The Corporation’s policy is to assess

goodwill and other intangibles for impairment on an annual basis during the fourth quarter of each year, and more frequently if events

or circumstances lead management to believe that the values of goodwill or other intangibles may be impaired. During the fourth

quarter of 2022, management performed a qualitative analysis over the carrying amount of each relevant reporting units’ goodwill and

concluded that it is more-likely-than-not that the fair value of the reporting units exceeded their carrying value. This assessment

involved identifying the inputs and assumptions that most affect fair value, including evaluating significant and relevant events

impacting each reporting entity, and evaluating such factors to determine if a positive assertion can be made that it is more-likely-

than-not that the fair value of the reporting units exceeded their carrying amount. As of December 31, 2022, the Corporation

concluded that it is more-likely-than-not that the fair value of the reporting units exceeded their carrying value. The Corporation

determined that there have been no significant events since the last annual assessment that could indicate potential goodwill

impairment on reporting units for which the goodwill is allocated. As a result, no impairment charges for goodwill were recorded

during the quarter ended March 31, 2023.

There were

no

changes in the carrying amount of goodwill during the quarter ended March

31, 2022.

Other Intangible Assets

The

following

table

presents

the

gross

amount

and

accumulated

amortization

of

the

Corporation’s

intangible

assets

subject

to

amortization as of the indicated dates:

As of

As of

March 31,

December 31,

2023

2022

(Dollars in thousands)

Core deposit intangible:

Gross amount

$

87,544

$

87,544

Accumulated amortization

(68,557)

(66,644)

Net carrying amount

$

18,987

$

20,900

Remaining amortization period (in years)

6.8

7.0

Purchased credit card relationship intangible:

Gross amount

$

3,800

$

3,800

Accumulated amortization

(3,714)

(3,595)

Net carrying amount

$

86

$

205

Remaining amortization period (in years)

0.4

0.7

Insurance customer relationship intangible:

Gross amount

$

-

$

1,067

Accumulated amortization

-

(1,054)

Net carrying amount

$

-

$

13

Remaining amortization period (in years)

-

0.1

During

the

quarters

ended

March

31,

2023

and

2022,

the

Corporation

recognized

$

2.0

million

and

$

2.3

million,

respectively,

in

amortization expense on its other intangibles subject to amortization.

44

The Corporation amortizes core deposit intangibles and customer relationship intangible based on the projected useful lives of the

related deposits in the case of core deposit intangibles, and over the projected useful lives of the related client relationships in the case

of the customer relationship intangible. The Corporation analyzes core deposit intangibles and the customer relationship intangible

annually for impairment, or sooner if events and circumstances indicate possible impairment. Factors that may suggest impairment

include customer attrition and run-off. Management is unaware of any events and/or circumstances that would indicate a possible

impairment to the core deposit intangibles or the customer relationship intangible as of March 31, 2023.

The estimated

aggregate annual

amortization expense

related to the

intangible assets

subject to amortization

for future periods

was

as follows as of March 31, 2023:

(In thousands)

2023

$

5,691

2024

6,416

2025

3,509

2026

872

2027

872

2028 and after

1,713

NOTE 7 – NON-CONSOLIDATED

VARIABLE

INTEREST ENTITIES (“VIEs”) AND SERVICING

ASSETS

The Corporation

transfers residential

mortgage loans

in sale

or securitization

transactions in

which it

has continuing

involvement,

including

servicing

responsibilities

and

guarantee

arrangements.

All

such

transfers

have

been

accounted

for

as

sales

as

required

by

applicable accounting guidance.

When

evaluating

the

need

to

consolidate

counterparties

to

which

the

Corporation

has

transferred

assets,

or

with

which

the

Corporation has

entered into

other transactions,

the Corporation

first determines

if the

counterparty is

an entity

for which

a variable

interest

exists.

If

no

scope

exception

is

applicable

and

a

variable

interest

exists,

the

Corporation

then

evaluates

whether

it

is

the

primary beneficiary of the VIE and whether the entity should be consolidated

or not.

Below is a summary of transactions with VIEs for which the Corporation has retained

some level of continuing involvement:

Trust-Preferred

Securities (“TRuPs”)

In April 2004,

FBP Statutory Trust

I, a financing

trust that is wholly

owned by the

Corporation, sold to

institutional investors $

100

million of its variable

-rate TRuPs. FBP Statutory

Trust I used

the proceeds of the

issuance, together with the

proceeds of the purchase

by

the

Corporation

of

$

3.1

million

of

FBP

Statutory

Trust

I

variable-rate

common

securities, to

purchase

$

103.1

million

aggregate

principal

amount

of

the

Corporation’s

Junior

Subordinated

Deferrable

Debentures.

In

September

2004,

FBP

Statutory

Trust

II,

a

financing

trust that

is wholly

owned by

the Corporation,

sold to

institutional investors

$

125

million of

its variable-rate

TRuPs. FBP

Statutory Trust

II used

the proceeds of

the issuance,

together with

the proceeds of

the purchase by

the Corporation

of $

3.9

million of

FBP Statutory

Trust

II variable-rate

common securities,

to purchase

$

128.9

million aggregate

principal amount

of the

Corporation’s

Junior

Subordinated

Deferrable

Debentures.

The

debentures,

net

of

related

issuance

costs,

are

presented

in

the

Corporation’s

consolidated

statements

of financial

condition as

other long-term

borrowings. The

variable-rate TRuPs

are fully

and unconditionally

guaranteed

by the

Corporation.

The Junior Subordinated Deferrable Debentures mature on June 17, 2034, and September 20, 2034,

respectively; however, under certain circumstances, the maturity of Junior Subordinated Deferrable Debentures may be shortened

(such shortening would result in a mandatory redemption of the variable-rate TRuPs).

As of

each of

March 31,

2023 and

December

31, 2022, these Junior Subordinated Deferrable Debentures amounted

to $

183.8

million.

Under the

indentures, the

Corporation has

the right,

from time

to time,

and without

causing an

event of

default, to

defer payments

of interest

on the

Junior Subordinated

Deferrable Debentures

by extending

the interest

payment period

at any

time and

from time

to

time

during

the

term

of

the

subordinated

debentures

for

up

to

twenty

consecutive

quarterly

periods.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation was current on all interest payments due on its subordinated

debt.

45

Private Label MBS

During

2004

and

2005,

an unaffiliated

party,

referred

to in

this subsection

as the

seller,

established

a

series of

statutory

trusts

to

effect

the

securitization

of

mortgage

loans

and

the

sale

of

trust

certificates

(“private

label

MBS”).

The

seller

initially

provided

the

servicing for

a fee, which

is senior to

the obligations to

pay private label

MBS holders. The

seller then entered

into a sales

agreement

through

which

it sold

and

issued

the

private

label

MBS in

favor

of

the

Corporation’s

banking

subsidiary,

FirstBank.

Currently,

the

Bank is

the sole

owner of

these private

label MBS;

the servicing

of the

underlying

residential mortgages

that generate

the principal

and interest

cash flows is

performed by

another third

party,

which receives

a servicing

fee. These private

label MBS are

variable-rate

securities indexed

to

3-month LIBOR

plus a spread.

As mentioned above

in Note 2,

Debt Securities, pursuant

to the provisions

of the

LIBOR Act and

Regulation ZZ, the

LIBOR reference of

these private label

MBS shall be

replaced by

the 3-month CME

Term

SOFR

rate

plus

a

spread

adjustment

of

0.26161%

on the

first

reset

date

after

USD LIBOR

ceases publication

in

June 2023.

The

principal

payments from

the underlying loans

are remitted to

a paying agent

(servicer), who then

remits interest to

the Bank. Interest

income is

shared to

a certain

extent with

the FDIC,

which has

an interest

only strip

(“IO”) tied

to the

cash flows

of the

underlying loans

and is

entitled

to

receive

the

excess

of

the

interest

income

less

a

servicing

fee

over

the

variable

rate

income

that

the

Bank

earns

on

the

securities. This

IO is

limited to

the weighted-average

coupon on

the mortgage

loans. The

FDIC became

the owner

of the IO

upon its

intervention of the seller,

a failed financial institution.

No recourse agreement exists, and

the Bank, as the sole

holder of the securities,

absorbs all risks from losses on non-accruing loans and

repossessed collateral. As of March 31, 2023, the amortized

cost and fair value

of these private

label MBS amounted

to $

7.7

million and $

5.4

million, respectively,

with a weighted average

yield of

7.25

%, which is

included as part of

the Corporation’s

available-for-sale debt securities portfolio.

As described in Note 2

– Debt Securities, the ACL on

these private label MBS amounted to $

0.1

million as of March 31, 2023.

Servicing Assets (MSRs)

The

Corporation

typically

transfers

first

lien

residential

mortgage

loans in

conjunction

with

GNMA

securitization

transactions

in

which the

loans are

exchanged for

cash or

securities that

are readily

redeemed for

cash proceeds

and servicing

rights. The

securities

issued

through

these

transactions

are

guaranteed

by

GNMA

and,

under

seller/servicer

agreements,

the

Corporation

is

required

to

service the

loans in

accordance with

the issuers’

servicing guidelines

and standards.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation serviced

loans

securitized

through

GNMA

with

a

principal

balance

of

$

2.1

billion.

Also,

certain

conventional

conforming

loans

are

sold

to

FNMA

or

FHLMC

with

servicing

retained.

The

Corporation

recognizes

as

separate

assets

the

rights

to

service

loans

for

others,

whether those servicing

assets are originated or

purchased. MSRs are included

as part of other

assets in the consolidated

statements of

financial condition.

The changes in MSRs are shown below for the indicated periods:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Balance at beginning of year

$

29,037

$

30,986

Capitalization of servicing assets

532

1,130

Amortization

(1,128)

(1,330)

Temporary impairment

recoveries

4

55

Other

(1)

(14)

(88)

Balance at end of period

$

28,431

$

30,753

(1)

Mainly represents adjustments related to the repurchase

of loans serviced for others.

Impairment

charges

are

recognized

through

a

valuation

allowance

for

each

individual

stratum

of

servicing

assets.

The

valuation

allowance

is adjusted

to reflect

the amount,

if any,

by which

the cost

basis of

the servicing

asset for

a given

stratum of

loans being

serviced exceeds its fair value. Any fair value in excess of the cost basis of the servicing

asset for a given stratum is not recognized.

46

Changes in the impairment allowance were as follows for the indicated periods:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Balance at beginning of year

$

12

$

78

Recoveries

(4)

(55)

Balance at end of period

$

8

$

23

The components

of net servicing

income, included as

part of mortgage

banking activities in

the consolidated statements

of income,

are shown below for the indicated periods:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Servicing fees

$

2,718

$

2,819

Late charges and prepayment penalties

199

194

Adjustment for loans repurchased

(14)

(88)

Servicing income, gross

2,903

2,925

Amortization and impairment of servicing assets

(1,124)

(1,275)

Servicing income, net

$

1,779

$

1,650

The Corporation’s

MSRs are subject

to prepayment

and interest rate

risks. Key economic

assumptions used

in determining

the fair

value at the time of sale of the related mortgages for the indicated periods

ranged as follows:

Weighted Average

Maximum

Minimum

Quarter Ended March 31, 2023

Constant prepayment rate:

Government-guaranteed mortgage loans

6.7

%

11.6

%

4.8

%

Conventional conforming mortgage loans

7.7

%

16.0

%

3.8

%

Conventional non-conforming mortgage loans

5.7

%

7.0

%

2.1

%

Discount rate:

Government-guaranteed mortgage loans

11.5

%

11.5

%

11.5

%

Conventional conforming mortgage loans

9.5

%

9.5

%

9.5

%

Conventional non-conforming mortgage loans

12.8

%

14.0

%

11.5

%

Quarter Ended March 31, 2022

Constant prepayment rate:

Government-guaranteed mortgage loans

6.7

%

18.3

%

4.8

%

Conventional conforming mortgage loans

6.6

%

18.4

%

3.4

%

Conventional non-conforming mortgage loans

6.6

%

21.9

%

4.9

%

Discount rate:

Government-guaranteed mortgage loans

12.0

%

12.0

%

12.0

%

Conventional conforming mortgage loans

10.0

%

10.0

%

10.0

%

Conventional non-conforming mortgage loans

12.3

%

14.5

%

12.0

%

47

The weighted

averages of the

key economic

assumptions that the

Corporation used

in its valuation

model and the

sensitivity of the

current

fair

value

to

immediate

10

% and

20

% adverse

changes

in

those

assumptions

for

mortgage

loans

as of

March

31,

2023

and

December 31, 2022 were as follows:

March 31,

December 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Carrying amount of servicing assets

$

28,431

$

29,037

Fair value

$

45,270

$

44,710

Weighted-average

expected life (in years)

7.80

7.80

Constant prepayment rate (weighted-average annual

rate)

6.34

%

6.40

%

Decrease in fair value due to 10% adverse change

$

1,040

$

1,048

Decrease in fair value due to 20% adverse change

$

2,036

$

2,054

Discount rate (weighted-average annual rate)

10.70

%

10.69

%

Decrease in fair value due to 10% adverse change

$

1,960

$

1,925

Decrease in fair value due to 20% adverse change

$

3,770

$

3,704

These sensitivities are hypothetical and should be used with caution. As the figures indicate, changes in fair value based on a 10%

variation in assumptions generally cannot be extrapolated because the relationship between the change in assumption and the change

in fair value may not be linear. Also, in this table, the effect of a variation in a particular assumption on the fair value of the MSR is

calculated without changing any other assumption. In reality, changes in one factor may result in changes in another (for example,

increases in market interest rates may result in lower prepayments), which may magnify or counteract the sensitivities

.

48

NOTE 8 – DEPOSITS

The following table summarizes deposit balances as of the indicated dates:

March 31, 2023

December 31, 2022

(In thousands)

Type of account and interest rate:

Non-interest-bearing deposit accounts

$

6,024,304

$

6,112,884

Interest-bearing saving accounts

3,808,182

3,902,888

Interest-bearing checking accounts

3,547,963

3,770,993

Certificates of deposit (“CDs”)

2,418,611

2,250,876

Brokered CDs

252,905

105,826

Total

$

16,051,965

$

16,143,467

The following table presents the contractual maturities of CDs, including brokered CDs, as of March 31,

2023:

Total

(In thousands)

Three months or less

$

499,307

Over three months to six months

361,274

Over six months to one year

732,933

Over one year to two years

751,913

Over two years to three years

155,590

Over three years to four years

46,748

Over four years to five years

117,009

Over five years

6,742

Total

$

2,671,516

The following were the components of interest expense on deposits for the

indicated periods:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Interest expense on deposits

$

29,924

$

7,817

Accretion of premiums from acquisitions

(83)

(200)

Amortization of broker placement fees

44

35

Total

$

29,885

$

7,652

Total

U.S. time

deposits with

balances of

more than

$250,000 amounted

to $

1.1

billion and

$

1.0

billion as

of March

31, 2023

and

December 31,

2022, respectively.

This amount does

not include brokered

CDs that are

generally participated

out by brokers

in shares

of less than the FDIC

insurance limit. As of March

31, 2023 and December

31, 2022, unamortized broker

placement fees amounted to

$

0.4

million and

$

0.3

million, respectively,

which are

amortized over

the contractual

maturity of

the brokered

CDs under

the interest

method.

49

NOTE 9 – SECURITIES SOLD UNDER AGREEMENTS TO

REPURCHASE (REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS)

Repurchase agreements as of the indicated dates consisted of the following:

March 31, 2023

December 31, 2022

(In thousands)

Short-term Fixed-rate repurchase agreements

(1)

$

172,982

$

75,133

(1)

Weighted-average interest rate

of

5.08

% and

4.55

% as of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022.

The $

75.1

million in repurchase

agreements outstanding

as of December

31, 2022 matured

and were repaid

during the first

quarter

of

2023.

In

addition,

the

Corporation

added

$

173.0

million

in

short-term

repurchase

agreements

reflecting

precautionary

measures

taken by management in light of recent instability in the banking sector.

Repurchase agreements mature as follows as of the indicated date:

March 31,

2023

(In thousands)

Within one month

$

172,982

As of March

31, 2023 and

December 31, 2022,

the securities underlying

such agreements were

delivered to the

dealers with which

the repurchase

agreements were transacted.

In accordance with

the master agreements,

in the

event of

default, repurchase agreements

have a right

of set-off

against the other

party for amounts owed

under the related

agreement and any

other amount or

obligation owed

with

respect

to

any

other

agreement

or

transaction

between

them.

As

of

March

31,

2023

and

December

31,

2022,

repurchase

agreements were fully collateralized and not offset in the consolidated

statements of financial condition.

Repurchase agreements as of March 31, 2023, grouped by counterparty,

were as follows:

Weighted-Average

Counterparty

Amount

Maturity (In Months)

(Dollars in thousands)

JP Morgan Chase

$

172,982

1

50

NOTE 10 – ADVANCES

FROM THE FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK (“FHLB

”)

The following is a summary of the advances from the FHLB as of the indicated dates:

March 31,

December 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Short-term

Fixed

-rate advances from the FHLB

(1)

$

425,000

$

475,000

Long-term

Fixed

-rate advances from the FHLB

(2)

500,000

200,000

$

925,000

$

675,000

(1)

Weighted-average interest rate of

5.04

% and

4.56

% as of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively.

(2)

Weighted-average interest rate of

4.45

% and

4.25

% as of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively.

Advances from the FHLB mature as follows as of the indicated date:

March 31, 2023

(In thousands)

Within one month

$

425,000

Over one to five years

500,000

Total

$

925,000

During the

first quarter

of 2023,

the Corporation

added $

425.0

million of

short-term FHLB

advances at

an average

cost of

5.04

%

and $

300.0

million of

long-term FHLB

advances at

an average cost

of

4.59

%, and repaid

upon maturity

$

475.0

million of

short-term

FHLB advances at an average cost of

4.56

%.

NOTE 11 – OTHER LONG-TERM

BORROWINGS

Junior Subordinated Debentures

Junior subordinated debentures, as of the indicated dates, consisted of:

March 31,

December 31,

(In thousands)

2023

2022

Floating rate junior subordinated debentures (FBP Statutory Trust

I)

(1)

(3)

(4)

$

65,205

$

65,205

Floating rate junior subordinated debentures (FBP Statutory Trust

II)

(2) (3)

(4)

118,557

118,557

$

183,762

$

183,762

(1)

Amount represents junior subordinated interest-bearing debentures

due in 2034 with a floating interest rate of

2.75

% over

3-month LIBOR

(

7.66

% as of March 31, 2023 and

7.49

% as of

December 31, 2022).

(2)

Amount represents junior subordinated interest-bearing debentures

due in 2034 with a floating interest rate of

2.50

% over

3-month LIBOR

(

7.46

% as of March 31, 2023 and

7.25

% as of

December 31, 2022).

(3)

Following the provisions of the LIBOR Act and Regulation

ZZ, the LIBOR reference on these contracts will automatically transition

by operation of law to three-month CME Term

SOFR, plus a spread adjustment of 0.26161% on the first reset

date after USD LIBOR ceases publication in June 2023.

(4)

See Note 7 - Non-Consolidated Variable

Interest Entities

("VIEs") and Servicing Assets, for additional information on the nature

and terms of these debentures.

51

NOTE 12 – EARNINGS PER COMMON

.

SHARE

The calculations of earnings per common share for the quarters ended March 31, 2023

and 2022 are as follows:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands, except per share information)

Net income attributable to common stockholders

$

70,698

$

82,600

Weighted-Average

Shares:

Average common

shares outstanding

180,215

198,130

Average potential

dilutive common shares

1,021

1,407

Average common

shares outstanding - assuming dilution

181,236

199,537

Earnings per common share:

Basic

$

0.39

$

0.42

Diluted

$

0.39

$

0.41

Earnings

per

common

share

is

computed

by

dividing

net

income

attributable

to

common

stockholders

by

the

weighted-average

number of common shares issued and outstanding. Net income attributable

to common stockholders represents net income adjusted for

any preferred

stock dividends,

including any

dividends declared

but not

yet paid,

and any cumulative

dividends related

to the

current

dividend period

that have

not been

declared as

of the

end of

the period.

Basic weighted-average

common shares

outstanding exclude

unvested shares of restricted stock that do not contain non-forfeitable

dividend rights.

Potential dilutive

common

shares consist

of unvested

shares of

restricted

stock and

performance

units (if

any

of the

performance

conditions

are

met

as of

the end

of

the reporting

period),

that

do

not contain

non-forfeitable

dividend

or dividend

equivalent

rights

using the

treasury stock

method. This

method assumes

that proceeds

equal to

the amount

of compensation

cost attributable

to future

services

is

used

to

repurchase

shares

on

the

open

market

at

the

average

market

price

for

the

period.

The

difference

between

the

number

of

potential

dilutive

shares

issued

and

the

shares

purchased

is

added

as

incremental

shares

to

the

actual

number

of

shares

outstanding

to

compute

diluted

earnings

per

share.

Unvested

shares

of

restricted

stock

outstanding

during

the

period

that

result

in

lower potentially

dilutive shares issued

than shares purchased

under the

treasury stock method

are not included

in the computation

of

dilutive

earnings

per

share

since

their

inclusion

would

have an

antidilutive

effect

on

earnings

per

share.

There

were

no

antidilutive

shares of common stock during the quarters ended March 31, 2023 and

2022.

52

NOTE 13 – STOCK-BASED

.

COMPENSATION

The First Bancorp

Omnibus Incentive

Plan (the “Omnibus

Plan”), which is

effective until

May 24, 2026,

provides for equity-based

and non

equity-based compensation

incentives (the

“awards”). The

Omnibus Plan

authorizes the

issuance of

up to

14,169,807

shares

of common

stock, subject

to adjustments

for stock

splits, reorganizations

and other

similar events.

As of

March 31,

2023, there

were

3,142,813

authorized

shares

of

common

stock

available

for

issuance

under

the

Omnibus

Plan.

The

Board,

based

on

the

recommendation of

the Compensation

and Benefits

Committee of

the Board,

has the

power and

authority to

determine those

eligible

to receive

awards and

to establish the

terms and conditions

of any

awards, subject to

various limits and

vesting restrictions

that apply

to individual and aggregate awards.

Restricted Stock

Under the

Omnibus Plan,

the Corporation

may grant

restricted stock

to plan

participants, subject

to forfeiture

upon the

occurrence

of certain

events until

the dates

specified in

the participant’s

award agreement.

While the

restricted stock

is subject

to forfeiture

and

does

not

contain

non-forfeitable

dividend

rights,

participants

may

exercise

full

voting

rights

with

respect

to

the

shares

of

restricted

stock

granted

to

them.

The

fair

value

of

the

shares

of

restricted

stock

granted

was

based

on

the

market

price

of

the

Corporation’s

common

stock on

the date

of the

respective grant.

The shares

of restricted

stocks granted

to employees

are subject

to the

following

vesting period:

fifty percent

(

50

%) of

those shares

vest on

the

two-year

anniversary of

the grant

date and

the remaining

50

% vest

on

the

three-year

anniversary of

the grant

date. The

shares of

restricted stock

granted to

directors are

generally subject

to vesting

on the

one-year

anniversary of the grant

date. The Corporation issued

495,891

shares during the quarter

ended March 31, 2023

in connection

with restricted stock awards, which were reissued from treasury shares.

The following table summarizes the restricted stock activity under the Omnibus

Plan during the quarters ended March 31, 2023

and 2022:

Quarter ended

Quarter ended

March 31,

2023

March 31,

2022

Number of

Weighted-

Number of

Weighted-

shares of

Average

shares of

Average

restricted

Grant Date

restricted

Grant Date

stock

Fair Value

stock

Fair Value

Unvested shares outstanding at beginning of year

938,491

$

9.14

1,148,775

$

6.61

Granted

(1)

495,891

11.99

299,440

13.15

Forfeited

(25,415)

9.98

(3,092)

6.69

Vested

(481,536)

5.93

(487,198)

5.72

Unvested shares outstanding at end of period

927,431

$

12.32

957,925

$

9.10

(1)

For the quarter ended March 31, 2023, includes

3,502

shares of restricted stock awarded to independent directors and

492,389

shares of restricted stock awarded to employees, of which

33,718

shares were granted to retirement-eligible employees and thus

charged to earnings as of the grant date. Includes

for the quarter ended March 31, 2022,

3,048

shares of restricted

stock awarded to independent directors and

296,392

shares of restricted stock awarded to employees, of which

6,084

shares were granted to retirement-eligible employees and thus

charged to earnings as of the grant date.

For the quarters

ended March 31,

2023 and 2022,

the Corporation recognized

$

1.6

million and $

0.9

million, respectively,

of stock-

based compensation

expense related

to restricted

stock awards.

As of

March 31,

2023,

there was

$

7.8

million

of total

unrecognized

compensation

cost

related

to unvested

shares

of

restricted

stock

that

the

Corporation

expects

to

recognize

over

a

weighted

average

period of

2.1

years.

53

Performance Units

Under the Omnibus Plan, the Corporation may award

performance units to participants, with each unit representing

the value of one

share

of

the

Corporation’s

common

stock.

These awards, which are granted to executives, do not contain non-forfeitable rights to

dividend equivalent amounts and can only be settled in shares of the Corporation’s common stock.

On March 16, 2023, the Corporation granted 216,876 performance units to executives. Performance units granted on or after March

16, 2023 will vest on the third anniversary of the effective date of the award based on actual achievement of two performance metrics

weighted equally: relative total shareholder return (“Relative TSR”), compared to companies that comprise the KBW Nasdaq

Regional Banking Index, and the achievement of a tangible book value per share (“TBVPS”) goal, which is measured based upon the

growth in the tangible book value during the performance cycle, adjusted for certain allowable non-recurring transactions. The

participant may earn 50% of their target opportunity for threshold-level performance and up to 150% of their target opportunity for

maximum-level performance, based on the achievement of the performance goals during a three-year performance cycle. Amounts

between threshold, target and maximum performance will vest on a proportional amount. Performance units granted prior to March

16, 2023 vest subject only to achievement of a TBVPS goal. In addition, the participant may earn only up to 100% of their target

opportunity.

The following

table summarizes

the performance

units activity under

the Omnibus

Plan during

the quarters

ended March

31, 2023

and 2022:

Quarter ended

Quarter ended

March 31,

2023

March 31,

2022

Number

Weighted -

Number

Weighted -

of

Average

of

Average

Performance

Grant Date

Performance

Grant Date

Units

Fair Value

Units

Fair Value

Performance units at beginning of year

791,923

7.36

814,899

7.06

Additions

(1)

216,876

12.24

166,669

13.15

Vested

(2)

(474,538)

4.08

(189,645)

11.16

Performance units at end of period

534,261

12.25

791,923

7.36

(1)

Units granted during the quarter ended March 31, 2023

are based on the achievement of the Relative TSR and TBVPS

performance goals during a three-year performance cycle beginning

January 1, 2023 and ending on December 31, 2025. Units

granted during the quarter ended March 31, 2022 are based

on the TBVPS achievement of the performance goal during a three-

year performance cycle beginning January 1, 2022 and ending

on December 31, 2024.

(2)

Units vested during the quarter ended March 31, 2023 are

related to performance units granted in 2020 that met the pre-established

target and were settled with shares of common stock

reissued from treasury shares. Units vested during the quarter ended

March 31, 2022 are related to performance units granted in 2019

that met the pre-established target and were settled

with shares of common stock reissued from treasury shares.

The fair value of the performance units awarded during the quarter ended March 31, 2023 and 2022, that was based on the TBVPS

goal component, was calculated based on the market price of the Corporation’s common stock on the respective date of the grant and

assuming attainment of 100% of target opportunity. As of March 31, 2023, there have been no changes on management’s assessment

of the probability that the pre-established TBVPS goal will be achieved; as such, no cumulative adjustment to compensation expense

has been recognized. The fair value of the performance units awarded during the quarter ended March 31, 2023, that was based on the

Relative TSR component, was calculated using a Monte Carlo simulation. Since the Relative TSR component is considered a market

condition, the fair value of the portion of the award based on Relative TSR is not revised subsequent to grant date based on actual

performance.

For the quarters

ended March 31,

2023 and 2022,

the Corporation recognized

$

0.5

million and $

0.3

million, respectively,

of stock-

based

compensation

expense

related

to

performance

units.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

there

was

$

4.7

million

of

total

unrecognized

compensation cost

related to unvested

performance units

that the Corporation

expects to recognize

over a weighted

average period

of

2.4

years.

54

The following

table summarizes

the valuation

assumptions used

to calculate

the fair

value of

the Relative

TSR component

of the

performance units granted under the Omnibus Plan during the quarter

ended March 31, 2023:

Quarter Ended

March 31,

2023

Risk-free interest rate

(1)

3.98

%

Correlation coefficient

77.16

Expected dividend yield

(2)

-

Expected volatility

(3)

41.37

Expected life (in years)

2.79

(1)

Based on the yield on zero-coupon U.S. Treasury

STRIPS as of the grant date.

(2)

Assumes that dividends are reinvested at each ex-dividend date.

(3)

Calculated based on the historical volatility of each company's

stock price with a look-back period equal to the simulation term

using daily stock prices.

Shares withheld

During the

first quarter

of 2023,

the Corporation

withheld

287,835

shares (first

quarter of

2022 –

201,930

shares) of

the restricted

stock

that

vested

during

such

period

to

cover

the

officers’

payroll

and

income

tax

withholding

liabilities;

these

shares

are

held

as

treasury shares. The

Corporation paid

in cash any

fractional share of

salary stock to

which an officer

was entitled. In

the consolidated

financial statements, the Corporation presents shares withheld for

tax purposes as common stock repurchases.

55

NOTE 14 –

STOCKHOLDERS’

EQUITY

Stock Repurchase Programs

On April

27, 2022,

the Corporation

announced that

its Board

approved a

stock repurchase

program,

under which

the Corporation

may repurchase

up to

$

350

million of

its outstanding

common stock,

which commenced

in the

second quarter

of 2022.

Repurchases

under

the

program

may

be

executed

through

open

market

purchases,

accelerated

share

repurchases

and/or

privately

negotiated

transactions

or

plans,

including

plans

complying

with

Rule

10b5-1

under

the

Exchange

Act.

The

Corporation’s

common

stock

repurchase

program

is

subject

to

various

factors,

including

the

Corporation’s

capital

position,

liquidity,

financial

performance

and

alternative uses

of capital,

stock trading

price, and

general market

conditions. The

repurchase program

may be

modified, suspended,

or

terminated

at

any

time

at

the

Corporation’s

discretion.

The

program

does

not

obligate

the

Corporation

to

acquire

any

specific

number of shares and does

not have an expiration

date. During the first quarter

of 2023, the Corporation

repurchased

3,577,540

shares

of common stock through

open market transactions at

an average purchase price

of $

13.98

per share for a total

price of approximately

$

50

million. As of

March 31, 2023,

the Corporation has

remaining authorization to

repurchase approximately $

75

million of common

stock.

Considering

the

industry-wide

uncertain

environment,

the

Corporation

decided

to

pause

share

buybacks

during

the

second

quarter of 2023 and it expects to resume shares repurchases during the third quarter

of 2023 subject to factors mentioned above.

During

the

first

quarter

of

2022,

the

Corporation

completed

a

previously

publicly-announced

$

300

million

stock

repurchase

program approved by the Board

on April 26, 2021 by purchasing through

open market transactions

3,409,697

shares of common stock

at an average price of $

14.66

for a total purchase price of approximately $

50

million.

Common Stock

The following table shows the change in shares of common stock outstanding for

the quarters ended March 31, 2023, and 2022:

Total

Number of Shares

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

Common stock outstanding, beginning balance

182,709,059

201,826,505

Common stock repurchased

(1)

(3,865,375)

(3,611,627)

Common stock reissued under stock-based compensation plan

970,429

489,085

Restricted stock forfeited

(25,415)

(3,092)

Common stock outstanding, ending balances

179,788,698

198,700,871

(1)

For the quarters ended March 31,

2023 and 2022

includes

287,835

and

201,930

shares, respectively, of common stock

surrendered to cover officers' payroll and income taxes.

For

the

quarters

ended

March

31,

2023

and

2022,

total

cash

dividends

declared

on

shares

of

common

stock

amounted

to

$

25.4

million

and

$

19.9

million,

respectively.

On

April 27, 2023

, the

Corporation

announced

that its

Board

had

declared

a quarterly

cash

dividend of $

0.14

per common share payable

on

June 9, 2023

to shareholders of record

at the close of

business on

May 24, 2023

. The

Corporation intends

to continue

to pay

quarterly dividends

on common

stock. However,

the Corporation’s

common stock

dividends,

including the

declaration, timing,

and amount,

remain subject

to consideration

and approval

by the

Corporation’s

Board Directors

at

the relevant times.

56

Preferred Stock

The

Corporation

has

50,000,000

authorized

shares

of

preferred

stock

with

a

par value

of $

1.00

,

redeemable

at

the

Corporation’s

option, subject to certain terms. This stock may be issued in series and

the shares of each series have such rights and preferences

as are

fixed by

the Board when

authorizing the issuance

of that particular

series.

No

shares of preferred

stock were outstanding

as of March

31, 2023 and December 31, 2022.

Treasury Stock

The following table shows the change in shares of treasury stock for the quarters ended

March 31,

2023 and 2022.

Total

Number of Shares

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

Treasury stock, beginning balance

40,954,057

21,836,611

Common stock repurchased

(1)

3,865,375

3,611,627

Common stock reissued under stock-based compensation plan

(970,429)

(489,085)

Restricted stock forfeited

25,415

3,092

Treasury stock, ending balances

43,874,418

24,962,245

(1)

For the quarters ended March 31,

2023 and 2022 includes

287,835

and

201,930

shares, respectively, of common stock

surrendered to cover officers' payroll and income taxes.

FirstBank Statutory Reserve (Legal Surplus)

The

Puerto

Rico

Banking

Law

of

1933,

as

amended

(the

“Puerto

Rico

Banking

Law”),

requires

that

a

minimum

of

10

%

of

FirstBank’s

net income

for

the year

be transferred

to a

legal surplus

reserve

until such

surplus

equals the

total of

paid-in-capital

on

common and preferred

stock. Amounts transferred

to the legal surplus

reserve from retained

earnings are not available

for distribution

to the Corporation without the

prior consent of the Puerto

Rico Commissioner of Financial Institutions.

The Puerto Rico Banking Law

provides that, when the expenditures of a Puerto Rico commercial bank are greater than receipts, the excess of the expenditures over

receipts must be charged against the undistributed profits of the bank, and the balance, if any, must be charged against the legal

surplus reserve, as a reduction thereof. If the legal surplus reserve is not sufficient to cover such balance in whole or in part, the

outstanding amount must be charged against the capital account and the Bank cannot pay dividends until it can replenish the legal

surplus reserve to an amount of at least 20% of the original capital contributed.

FirstBank’s

legal surplus

reserve, included

as part

of

retained

earnings in

the Corporation’s

consolidated

statements of

financial

condition,

amounted

to $

168.5

million

as of

each March

31, 2023 and December 31, 2022.

There were

no

transfers to the legal surplus reserve during the quarter ended March 31, 2023.

57

NOTE 15 – ACCUMULATED

OTHER COMPREHENSIVE LOSS

The following table presents the changes in accumulated other comprehensive

loss for the quarters ended March 31, 2023 and

2022:

Changes in Accumulated Other Comprehensive

Loss by Component

(1)

Quarter ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Unrealized net holding losses on available-for-sale

debt securities:

Beginning balance

$

(805,972)

$

(87,390)

Other comprehensive income (loss)

87,228

(331,834)

Ending balance

$

(718,744)

$

(419,224)

Adjustment of pension and postretirement

benefit plans:

Beginning balance

$

1,194

$

3,391

Other comprehensive income (loss)

-

-

Ending balance

$

1,194

$

3,391

____________________

(1) All amounts presented are net of tax.

NOTE 16 – EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS

The Corporation

maintains two frozen

qualified noncontributory

defined benefit pension

plans (the “Pension

Plans”), and

a related

complementary

post-retirement

benefit

plan

(the

“Postretirement

Benefit

Plan”)

covering

medical

benefits

and

life

insurance

after

retirement

that

it

obtained

in

the

Banco

Santander

Puerto

Rico

(“BSPR”)

acquisition

on

September

1,

2020.

One

defined

benefit

pension

plan covers

substantially all

of BSPR’s

former

employees who

were active

before January

1, 2007,

while

the other

defined

benefit pension plan covers personnel of an institution previously acquired

by BSPR. Benefits are based on salary and years of service.

The accrual of benefits under the Pension Plans is frozen to all participants.

The

Corporation

requires

recognition

of

a

plan’s

overfunded

and

underfunded

status

as

an

asset

or

liability

with

an

offsetting

adjustment to accumulated other comprehensive loss pursuant to

the ASC Topic 715, “Compensation-Retirement

Benefits.”

The following table presents the components of net periodic cost (benefit) for

the indicated periods:

Affected Line Item

in the Consolidated

Quarter Ended

Statements of Income

March 31, 2023

March 31, 2022

(In thousands)

Net periodic cost (benefit), pension plans:

Interest cost

Other expenses

$

950

$

654

Expected return on plan assets

Other expenses

(886)

(1,039)

Net periodic cost (benefit), pension plans

64

(385)

Net periodic cost, postretirement plan

Other expenses

6

1

Net periodic cost (benefit)

$

70

$

(384)

58

NOTE 17 –

INCOME TAXES

Income

tax

expense

includes

Puerto

Rico

and

USVI

income

taxes,

as

well

as

applicable

U.S.

federal

and

state

taxes.

The

Corporation is subject

to Puerto Rico income

tax on its income

from all sources.

As a Puerto Rico

corporation, FirstBank is

treated as

a foreign corporation for U.S. and

USVI income tax purposes and, accordingly,

is generally subject to U.S. and USVI

income tax only

on its income from

sources within the U.S.

and USVI or income

effectively connected with

the conduct of a

trade or business in

those

jurisdictions. Any

such tax

paid in

the U.S.

and USVI

is also

creditable against

the Corporation’s

Puerto Rico

tax liability,

subject to

certain conditions and limitations.

Under the Puerto Rico

Internal Revenue Code of

2011 PR (the

“2011 PR Code”),

the Corporation and its subsidiaries

are treated as

separate

taxable

entities

and

are

not

entitled

to

file

consolidated

tax

returns

and,

thus,

the

Corporation

is

generally

not

entitled

to

utilize

losses

from

one

subsidiary

to

offset

gains

in

another

subsidiary.

Accordingly,

in

order

to

obtain

a

tax

benefit

from

a

net

operating

loss

(“NOL”),

a

particular

subsidiary

must

be

able

to

demonstrate

sufficient

taxable

income

within

the

applicable

NOL

carry-forward

period.

Pursuant

to

the

2011

PR

Code,

the

carry-forward

period

for

NOLs

incurred

during

taxable

years

that

commenced

after

December

31,

2004

and

ended

before

January

1,

2013

is

12

years;

for

NOLs

incurred

during

taxable

years

commencing after December 31,

2012, the carryover period is

10 years. The 2011

PR Code provides a dividend

received deduction of

100

% on

dividends

received

from

“controlled”

subsidiaries

subject

to

taxation

in

Puerto

Rico

and

85

% on

dividends

received

from

other taxable domestic corporations.

The

Corporation

has

maintained

an

effective

tax

rate

lower

than

the

Puerto

Rico

maximum

statutory

rate

of

37.5

%

mainly

by

investing

in

government

obligations

and

MBS

exempt

from

U.S.

and

Puerto

Rico

income

taxes

and

by

doing

business

through

an

international banking

entity (an

“IBE”) unit

of the

Bank, and

through the

Bank’s

subsidiary,

FirstBank Overseas

Corporation, whose

interest income

and gains

on sales

are exempt

from Puerto

Rico income

taxation. The

IBE unit

and FirstBank

Overseas Corporation

were created

under the

International Banking

Entity

Act of

Puerto

Rico, which

provides for

total Puerto

Rico tax

exemption on

net

income derived by

IBEs operating in

Puerto Rico on the

specific activities identified

in the IBE Act.

An IBE that operates

as a unit of

a bank

pays income

taxes at

the corporate

standard rates

to the

extent that

the IBE’s

net income

exceeds

20

% of

the bank’s

total net

taxable income.

For the

first quarter

of 2023,

the Corporation

recorded

an income

tax expense

of $

31.9

million

compared

to $

43.0

million in

the

first quarter of 2022.

The variance was primarily

related to lower pre-tax

income and a lower estimated

effective tax rate

as a result of

a

higher

proportion

of

exempt

to

taxable

income

when

compared

to

the

same

period

in

2022.

The

Corporation’s

estimated

annual

effective tax

rate, excluding

entities with pre-tax

losses from which

a tax benefit

cannot be recognized

and discrete items,

was

31.2

%

for the first quarter of 2023, compared to

32.9

% for the first quarter of 2022.

The net

deferred tax

asset of

the Corporation’s

banking subsidiary,

FirstBank, amounted

to $

154.8

million as

of March

31, 2023,

net of a valuation

allowance of $

139.1

million, compared to

a net deferred

tax asset of $

155.6

million, net of

a valuation allowance

of

$

149.5

million, as

of December

31, 2022.

The Corporation

maintains a

full valuation

allowance for

its deferred

tax assets

associated

with capital

losses carry

forward and

unrealized losses

of available-for-sale

debt securities.

The reduction

in the

valuation allowance

was related to

the change in

the market value

of available-for-sale

debt securities,

which resulted in

a change in

the deferred tax

asset

and an equal change in the valuation allowance without impacting earnings.

59

In

2017,

the

Corporation

completed

a

formal

ownership

change

analysis

within

the

meaning

of

Section

382

of

the

U.S.

Internal

Revenue Code

(“Section 382”)

covering a

comprehensive period

and concluded

that an

ownership

change had

occurred during

such

period.

The

Section

382

limitation

has

resulted

in

higher

U.S.

and

USVI

income

tax

liabilities

that

we

would

have

incurred

in

the

absence of such limitation. The Corporation has mitigated

to an extent the adverse effects associated with the

Section 382 limitation as

any

such

tax

paid

in

the

U.S.

or

USVI

can

be

creditable

against

Puerto

Rico

tax

liabilities

or

taken

as

a

deduction

against

taxable

income. However,

our ability

to reduce

our Puerto

Rico tax

liability through

such a

credit or

deduction depends

on our

tax profile

at

each annual

taxable period,

which is

dependent on

various factors.

For the

first quarters

of 2023

and 2022,

the Corporation

incurred

current income tax expense

of approximately $

2.5

million and $

1.6

million, respectively,

related to its U.S. operations.

The limitation

did not impact the USVI operations in the first quarters of 2023 and 2022, respectively

.

The Corporation

accounts for uncertain

tax positions under

the provisions of

ASC Topic

  1. The Corporation’s

policy is to

report

interest and

penalties related

to unrecognized

tax positions

in income

tax expense.

As of

March 31,

2023,

the Corporation

had $

0.2

million of

accrued interest

and penalties

related to

uncertain tax

positions in

the amount

of $

1.0

million that

it acquired

from BSPR,

which,

if recognized,

would decrease

the

effective

income tax

rate in

future

periods.

The amount

of unrecognized

tax benefits

may

increase

or

decrease

in

the

future

for

various

reasons,

including

adding

amounts

for

current

tax

year

positions,

expiration

of

open

income

tax returns

due

to the

statute of

limitations,

changes

in management’s

judgment about

the level

of uncertainty,

the status

of

examinations,

litigation

and

legislative activity,

and

the addition

or elimination

of uncertain

tax positions.

The statute

of

limitations

under the 2011

PR Code is four

years after a

tax return is

due or filed,

whichever is later;

the statute of

limitations for U.S.

and USVI

income

tax

purposes

is

three

years

after

a

tax

return

is

due

or

filed,

whichever

is

later.

The

completion

of

an

audit

by

the

taxing

authorities

or

the

expiration

of

the

statute

of

limitations

for

a

given

audit

period

could

result

in

an

adjustment

to

the Corporation’s

liability for

income taxes. Any

such adjustment could

be material to

the results of

operations for any

given quarterly

or annual period

based, in part, upon

the results of operations

for the given period.

For U.S. and USVI

income tax purposes, all

tax years subsequent

to

2018 remain open to examination. For Puerto Rico tax purposes, all tax years

subsequent to 2017 remain open to examination.

60

NOTE 18 –

FAIR VALUE

Fair Value

Measurement

ASC Topic

820, “Fair

Value

Measurement,”

defines fair

value as

the exchange

price that

would be

received for

an asset

or paid

to

transfer

a

liability

(an

exit

price)

in

the

principal

or

most

advantageous

market

for

the

asset

or

liability

in

an

orderly

transaction

between market

participants on

the measurement

date. This

guidance also

establishes a

fair value

hierarchy for

classifying assets

and

liabilities, which is based on

whether the inputs to

the valuation techniques used

to measure fair value are

observable or unobservable.

One of three levels of inputs may be used to measure fair value:

Level 1

Valuations

of

Level

1

assets

and

liabilities

are

obtained

from

readily-available

pricing

sources

for

market

transactions involving identical assets or liabilities in active markets.

Level 2

Va

luations of

Level 2 assets

and liabilities

are based on

observable inputs

other than Level

1 prices, such

as quoted

prices for similar assets or liabilities, or other inputs that are

observable or can be corroborated by observable market

data for substantially the full term of the assets or liabilities.

Level 3

Va

luations of Level 3 assets and

liabilities are based on unobservable

inputs that are supported by

little or no market

activity and

are significant to

the fair value

of the assets

or liabilities. Level

3 assets and

liabilities include financial

instruments

whose value

is determined

by using

pricing models

for

which

the determination

of fair

value

requires

significant management judgment as to the estimation.

See Note 25

– Fair Value

,

to the audited

consolidated financial

statements included

in the 2022

Annual Report

on Form

10-K for

a

description of the valuation methodologies used to measure financial

instruments at fair value on a recurring basis.

Assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis are summarized below as of

March 31, 2023 and December 31,

2022:

As of March 31, 2023

As of December 31, 2022

Fair Value Measurements Using

Fair Value Measurements Using

Level 1

Level 2

Level 3

Total

Level 1

Level 2

Level 3

Total

(In thousands)

Assets:

Debt securities available for sale:

U.S. Treasury securities

$

140,422

$

-

$

-

$

140,422

$

138,875

$

-

$

-

$

138,875

Noncallable U.S. agencies debt securities

-

428,675

-

428,675

-

389,787

-

389,787

Callable U.S. agencies debt securities

-

1,962,535

-

1,962,535

-

1,963,566

-

1,963,566

MBS

-

3,050,019

5,402

(1)

3,055,421

-

3,098,797

5,794

(1)

3,104,591

Puerto Rico government obligations

-

-

2,203

2,203

-

-

2,201

2,201

Other investments

-

-

-

-

-

-

500

500

Equity securities

4,926

-

-

4,926

4,861

-

-

4,861

Derivative assets

-

628

-

628

-

633

-

633

Liabilities:

Derivative liabilities

-

645

-

645

-

476

-

476

(1) Related to private label MBS.

61

The table

below presents

a reconciliation

of the

beginning and

ending balances

of all

assets measured

at fair

value on

a recurring

basis using significant unobservable inputs (Level 3) for the quarters

ended March 31, 2023 and 2022:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

Level 3 Instruments Only

Securities Available for Sale

(1)

Securities Available for Sale

(1)

(In thousands)

Beginning balance

$

8,495

$

11,084

Total gains (losses):

Included in other comprehensive loss (unrealized)

(162)

(287)

Included in earnings (unrealized)

(2)

9

388

Principal repayments and amortization

(3)

(737)

(538)

Ending balance

$

7,605

$

10,647

___________________

(1)

Amounts mostly related to private label MBS.

(2)

Changes in unrealized gains included in earnings were recognized within

provision for credit losses - expense (benefit) and

relate to assets still held as of the reporting date.

(3)

Includes the $

0.5

million repayment of a matured debt security.

The tables below present quantitative information for significant assets measured at fair

value on a recurring basis using significant

unobservable inputs (Level 3) as of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022:

March 31, 2023

Fair Value

Valuation Technique

Unobservable Input

Range

Weighted

Average

Minimum

Maximum

(Dollars in thousands)

Available-for-sale

debt securities:

Private label MBS

$

5,402

Discounted cash flows

Discount rate

16.0%

16.0%

16.0%

Prepayment rate

1.6%

12.6%

9.2%

Projected cumulative loss rate

0.2%

14.9%

5.2%

Puerto Rico government obligations

$

2,203

Discounted cash flows

Discount rate

12.8%

12.8%

12.8%

Projected cumulative loss rate

19.0%

19.0%

19.0%

December 31, 2022

Fair Value

Valuation Technique

Unobservable Input

Range

Weighted

Average

Minimum

Maximum

(Dollars in thousands)

Available-for-sale

debt securities:

Private label MBS

$

5,794

Discounted cash flows

Discount rate

16.2%

16.2%

16.2%

Prepayment rate

1.5%

15.2%

11.8%

Projected cumulative loss rate

0.3%

15.6%

5.6%

Puerto Rico government obligations

$

2,201

Discounted cash flows

Discount rate

12.9%

12.9%

12.9%

Projected cumulative loss rate

19.3%

19.3%

19.3%

Information about Sensitivity to Changes in Significant Unobservable Inputs

Private label

MBS: The

significant unobservable

inputs in

the valuation

include probability

of default,

the loss

severity

assumption,

and prepayment

rates. Shifts

in those

inputs would

result in different

fair value

measurements. Increases

in the probability

of default,

loss

severity

assumptions,

and

prepayment

rates

in

isolation

would

generally

result

in

an

adverse

effect

on

the

fair

value

of

the

instruments. The Corporation modeled meaningful and possible

shifts of each input to assess the effect on the fair value estimation.

Puerto Rico

Government Obligations:

The significant

unobservable input

used in

the fair value

measurement is

the assumed

loss rate

of the

underlying

residential

mortgage

loans that

collateralize

these obligations,

which

are guaranteed

by the

PRHFA.

A significant

increase (decrease) in

the assumed rate

would lead to

a (lower) higher

fair value estimate.

The fair value

of these bonds

was based on

a

discounted

cash

flow

methodology

that

considers

the

structure

and

terms

of

the

debt

security.

The

Corporation

utilizes

PDs

and

LGDs that

consider,

among other

things, historical

payment performance,

loan-to value

attributes,

and relevant

current and

forward-

looking

macroeconomic

variables,

such

as

regional

unemployment

rates,

the

housing

price

index,

and

expected

recovery

of

the

PRHFA

guarantee. Under

this approach, expected

cash flows (interest and

principal) are discounted

at the Treasury

yield curve plus a

spread as of the reporting date and compared to the amortized cost.

62

Additionally, fair value

is used on a nonrecurring basis to evaluate certain assets in accordance with GAAP.

As of March 31, 2023, the Corporation recorded losses or valuation adjustments

for assets recognized at fair value on a non-

recurring basis and still held at March 31, 2023, as shown in the following table:

Carrying value as of March 31,

Related to losses recorded for the Quarter Ended

March 31,

2023

2022

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Level 3:

Loans receivable

(1)

$

3,486

$

25,951

$

(60)

$

(3,539)

OREO

(2)

814

1,432

(33)

(73)

(1)

Consists mainly of

collateral dependent

commercial and construction

loans. The

Corporation generally

measured losses

based on the

fair value of

the collateral.

The Corporation derived

the fair values from

external appraisals that

took into consideration

prices in observed

transactions involving similar

assets in similar locations

but adjusted for

specific characteristics

and

assumptions of the collateral (e.g., absorption rates), which are

not market observable.

(2)

The Corporation

derived the

fair values

from appraisals

that took

into consideration

prices in

observed transactions

involving similar

assets in

similar locations

but adjusted

for specific

characteristics and assumptions of

the properties (e.g., absorption

rates and net operating

income of income producing

properties), which are not

market observable. Losses

were related to

market valuation adjustments after the transfer of the loans to the

OREO portfolio.

See Note 25 – Fair Value,

to the audited consolidated financial

statements to the audited

consolidated financial statements included

in

the

2022

Annual

Report

on

Form

10-K

for

qualitative

information

regarding

the

fair

value

measurements

for

Level

3

financial

instruments measured at fair value on nonrecurring basis.

The following tables present the carrying value, estimated fair value and estimated

fair value level of the hierarchy of financial

instruments as of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022:

Total Carrying Amount

in Statement of

Financial Condition as

of March 31, 2023

Fair Value Estimate as

of

March 31, 2023

Level 1

Level 2

Level 3

(In thousands)

Assets:

Cash and due from banks and money market investments

(amortized cost)

$

823,601

$

823,601

$

823,601

$

-

$

-

Available-for-sale debt

securities (fair value)

5,589,256

5,589,256

140,422

5,441,229

7,605

Held-to-maturity debt securities (amortized cost)

431,395

Less: ACL on held-to-maturity debt securities

(7,646)

Held-to-maturity debt securities, net of ACL

$

423,749

419,752

-

255,209

164,543

Equity securities (amortized cost)

61,788

61,788

-

61,788

(1)

-

Other equity securities (fair value)

4,926

4,926

4,926

-

-

Loans held for sale (lower of cost or market)

15,183

15,214

-

15,214

-

Loans held for investment (amortized cost)

11,577,985

Less: ACL for loans and finance leases

(265,567)

Loans held for investment, net of ACL

$

11,312,418

11,030,421

-

-

11,030,421

MSRs (amortized cost)

28,431

45,270

-

-

45,270

Derivative assets (fair value)

(2)

628

628

-

628

-

Liabilities:

Deposits (amortized cost)

$

16,051,965

$

16,039,550

$

-

$

16,039,550

$

-

Short-term securities sold under agreements to repurchase (amortized

cost)

172,982

173,936

-

173,936

-

Advances from the FHLB (amortized cost):

Short-term

425,000

426,665

-

426,665

-

Long-term

500,000

501,990

-

501,990

-

Other long-term borrowings (amortized cost)

183,762

187,183

-

-

187,183

Derivative liabilities (fair value)

(2)

645

645

-

645

-

(1) Includes FHLB stock with a carrying value of $

54.2

million, which are considered restricted.

(2) Includes interest rate swap agreements, interest rate caps, forward contracts, interest rate lock commitments, and forward loan sales commitments.

63

Total Carrying

Amount in Statement

of Financial Condition

as of December 31,

2022

Fair Value Estimate as

of

December 31, 2022

Level 1

Level 2

Level 3

(In thousands)

Assets:

Cash and due from banks and money market investments (amortized

cost)

$

480,505

$

480,505

$

480,505

$

-

$

-

Available-for-sale debt

securities (fair value)

5,599,520

5,599,520

138,875

5,452,150

8,495

Held-to-maturity debt securities (amortized cost)

437,537

Less: ACL on held-to-maturity debt securities

(8,286)

Held-to-maturity debt securities, net of ACL

$

429,251

427,115

-

260,106

167,009

Equity securities (amortized cost)

50,428

50,428

-

50,428

(1)

-

Other equity securities (fair value)

4,861

4,861

4,861

-

-

Loans held for sale (lower of cost or market)

12,306

12,306

-

12,306

-

Loans held for investment (amortized cost)

11,552,825

Less: ACL for loans and finance leases

(260,464)

Loans held for investment, net of ACL

$

11,292,361

11,106,809

-

-

11,106,809

MSRs (amortized cost)

29,037

44,710

-

-

44,710

Derivative assets (fair value)

(2)

633

633

-

633

-

Liabilities:

Deposits (amortized cost)

$

16,143,467

$

16,139,937

$

-

$

16,139,937

$

-

Short-term securities sold under agreements to repurchase (amortized

cost)

75,133

75,230

-

75,230

-

Advances from the FHLB (amortized cost)

Short-term

475,000

474,731

-

474,731

-

Long-term

200,000

199,865

-

199,865

-

Other long-term borrowings (amortized cost)

183,762

187,246

-

-

187,246

Derivative liabilities (fair value)

(2)

476

476

-

476

-

(1) Includes FHLB stock with a carrying value of $

42.9

million, which are considered restricted.

(2) Includes interest rate swap agreements, interest rate caps, forward contracts, interest rate lock commitments, and forward loan sales commitments.

The short-term nature

of certain assets and

liabilities result in their

carrying value approximating

fair value. These include

cash and

cash

due

from

banks

and

other

short-term

assets,

such

as

FHLB

stock.

Certain

assets,

the

most

significant

being

premises

and

equipment,

goodwill

and

other

intangible

assets, are

not

considered

financial

instruments

and

are

not

included

above. Accordingly,

this fair

value

information

is not

intended

to, and

does not,

represent

the Corporation’s

underlying

value.

Many of

these assets

and

liabilities that

are subject

to the

disclosure requirements

are not

actively traded,

requiring management

to estimate

fair values.

These

estimates

necessarily

involve

the

use

of

assumptions

and

judgment

about

a

wide

variety

of

factors,

including

but

not

limited

to,

relevancy of market prices of comparable instruments, expected future cash flows,

and appropriate discount rates.

64

NOTE 19 – REVENUE FROM CONTRACTS WITH CUSTOMERS

Revenue Recognition

In accordance with

ASC Topic

606, “Revenue from

Contracts with Customers” (“ASC

Topic

606”), revenues are

recognized when

control

of

promised

goods

or

services

is

transferred

to

customers

and

in

an

amount

that

reflects

the

consideration

to

which

the

Corporation expects to be

entitled in exchange for those

goods or services. At contract

inception, once the contract

is determined to be

within the

scope of

ASC Topic

606, the

Corporation assesses

the goods

or services

that are

promised within

each contract,

identifies

the

respective

performance

obligations,

and

assesses

whether

each

promised

good

or

service

is

distinct.

The

Corporation

then

recognizes

as revenue

the amount

of the

transaction price

that is

allocated to

the respective

performance obligation

when (or

as) the

performance obligation is satisfied.

Disaggregation of Revenue

The following

tables summarize

the Corporation’s

revenue, which

includes net

interest income

on financial

instruments and

non-

interest income, disaggregated by type of service and business segment for

the quarters ended March 31, 2023 and 2022:

Quarter ended March 31, 2023

Mortgage

Banking

Consumer

(Retail)

Banking

Commercial

and Corporate

Treasury and

Investments

United States

Operations

Virgin Islands

Operations

Total

(In thousands)

Net interest income

(1)

$

21,788

$

137,744

$

14,940

$

(658)

$

20,930

$

6,141

$

200,885

Service charges and fees on deposit accounts

-

5,486

3,154

-

165

736

9,541

Insurance commissions

-

4,640

-

-

28

179

4,847

Merchant-related income

-

2,263

-

-

29

468

2,760

Credit and debit card fees

-

7,638

22

-

2

496

8,158

Other service charges and fees

161

1,152

854

-

583

344

3,094

Not in scope of ASC Topic

606

(1)

2,913

855

145

160

40

5

4,118

Total non-interest income

3,074

22,034

4,175

160

847

2,228

32,518

Total Revenue

$

24,862

$

159,778

$

19,115

$

(498)

$

21,777

$

8,369

$

233,403

Quarter ended March 31, 2022

Mortgage

Banking

Consumer

(Retail)

Banking

Commercial

and Corporate

Treasury and

Investments

United States

Operations

Virgin Islands

Operations

Total

(In thousands)

Net interest income

(1)

$

25,779

$

89,546

$

40,415

$

7,409

$

16,482

$

5,993

$

185,624

Service charges and fees on deposit accounts

-

5,539

2,976

-

138

710

9,363

Insurance commissions

-

4,967

-

-

29

279

5,275

Merchant-related income

-

1,822

373

-

5

389

2,589

Credit and debit card fees

-

6,671

16

-

(7)

410

7,090

Other service charges and fees

143

1,110

1,113

-

499

157

3,022

Not in scope of ASC Topic

606

(1)

5,109

354

76

(112)

80

12

5,519

Total non-interest

income

5,252

20,463

4,554

(112)

744

1,957

32,858

Total Revenue

$

31,031

$

110,009

$

44,969

$

7,297

$

17,226

$

7,950

$

218,482

(1)

Most of the Corporation's revenue is not within the scope of ASC Topic 606. The guidance

explicitly excludes net interest income from financial assets and

liabilities, as well as other non-interest income from loans, leases, investment

securities and derivative

financial instruments.

65

For

the

quarters

ended

March

31,

2023

and

2022,

most

of

the

Corporation’s

revenue

within

the

scope

of

ASC

Topic

606

was

related to performance obligations satisfied at a point in time.

See

Note

26

Revenue

from

Contracts

with

Customers,

to

the

audited

consolidated

financial

statements

included

in

the

2022

Annual Report on Form 10-K for a discussion of major revenue streams under

the scope of ASC Topic 606.

Contract Balances

A

contract

liability

is

an

entity’s

obligation

to

transfer

goods

or

services

to

a

customer

in

exchange

for

consideration

from

the

customer.

FirstBank

participates

in

a

merchant

revenue-sharing

agreement

with

another

entity

to

which

the

Bank

sold

its

merchant

contracts portfolio and related point-of-sale terminals,

and a growth agreement with an international

card service association to expand

the

customer

base

and

enhance

product

offerings.

FirstBank

recognizes

the

revenue

under

these

agreements

over

time, as

the

Bank

completes its performance obligations.

The following table shows the activity of contract liabilities for the quarters

ended March 31, 2023 and 2022:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Beginning Balance

$

841

$

1,443

Less:

Revenue recognized

(81)

(289)

Ending balance

$

760

$

1,154

As of March 31, 2023 and 2022, there were no contract assets recorded on

the Corporation’s consolidated

financial statements.

Other

Except for the contract liabilities noted above, the Corporation did not have

any significant performance obligations as of March 31,

2023.

The

Corporation

also

did

not

have

any

material contract

acquisition

costs

and

did

not

make

any

significant

judgments

or

estimates in recognizing revenue for financial reporting purposes.

66

NOTE 20 – SEGMENT INFORMATION

Based upon

the Corporation’s

organizational

structure and

the information

provided to

the Chief

Executive

Officer,

the operating

segments

are

based

primarily

on

the

Corporation’s

lines

of

business

for

its

operations

in

Puerto

Rico,

the

Corporation’s

principal

market, and

by geographic

areas for

its operations

outside of

Puerto Rico.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation had

six

reportable

segments:

Mortgage

Banking;

Consumer

(Retail)

Banking;

Commercial

and

Corporate

Banking;

Treasury

and

Investments;

United

States

Operations;

and

Virgin

Islands

Operations.

Management

determined

the

reportable

segments

based

on

the

internal

structure

used to

evaluate performance

and to

assess where

to allocate

resources. Other

factors, such

as the

Corporation’s

organizational chart,

nature

of

the

products,

distribution

channels,

and

the

economic

characteristics

of

the

products,

were

also

considered

in

the

determination of the reportable segments.

The

Mortgage

Banking

segment

consists

of

the

origination,

sale,

and

servicing

of

a

variety

of

residential

mortgage

loans.

The

Mortgage Banking

segment also

acquires and

sells mortgages

in the

secondary markets.

In addition,

the Mortgage

Banking segment

includes mortgage loans purchased from

other local banks and mortgage bankers.

The Consumer (Retail) Banking segment

consists of

the Corporation’s

consumer lending

and deposit-taking

activities conducted

mainly through

its branch

network and

loan centers.

The

Commercial and

Corporate Banking

segment consists of

the Corporation’s

lending and other

services for

large customers

represented

by specialized

and middle-market

clients and

the public

sector.

The Commercial

and Corporate

Banking segment

offers commercial

loans,

including

commercial

real

estate

and

construction

loans,

and

floor

plan

financings,

as

well

as

other

products,

such

as

cash

management

and

business

management

services.

The

Treasury

and

Investments

segment

is

responsible

for

the

Corporation’s

investment

portfolio

and

treasury

functions

that

are

executed

to

manage

and

enhance

liquidity.

This

segment

lends

funds

to

the

Commercial

and

Corporate

Banking,

the

Mortgage

Banking,

the

Consumer

(Retail)

Banking,

and

the

United

States

Operations

segments

to

finance

their

lending

activities

and

borrows

from

those

segments.

The

Consumer

(Retail)

Banking

segment

also

lends

funds to

other segments.

The interest

rates charged

or credited

by the

Treasury

and Investments

and the

Consumer (Retail)

Banking

segments are

allocated based

on market

rates. The

difference between

the allocated

interest income

or expense

and the Corporation’s

actual

net

interest income

from

centralized

management

of funding

costs is

reported

in the

Treasury

and Investments

segment.

The

United States

Operations segment

consists of

all banking

activities conducted

by FirstBank

in the

United States

mainland,

including

commercial and consumer banking

services. The Virgin

Islands Operations segment consists of

all banking activities conducted by the

Corporation in the USVI and BVI, including commercial and consumer banking

services.

The

accounting

policies

of

the

segments

are

the

same

as

those

referred

to

in

Note

1

Nature

of

Business

and

Summary

of

Significant Accounting Policies, to the audited consolidated financial

statements included in the 2022 Annual Report on Form 10-K.

The

Corporation

evaluates

the

performance

of

the

segments

based

on

net

interest

income,

the

provision

for

credit

losses,

non-

interest

income

and

direct

non-interest

expenses.

The

segments

are

also

evaluated

based

on

the

average

volume

of

their

interest-

earning assets less the ACL.

67

The following tables present information about the reportable segments for

the indicated periods:

Mortgage

Banking

Consumer

(Retail) Banking

Commercial and

Corporate

Banking

Treasury and

Investments

United States

Operations

Virgin Islands

Operations

Total

(In thousands)

For the quarter ended March 31, 2023:

Interest income

$

31,907

$

83,174

$

62,343

$

27,466

$

31,114

$

6,392

$

242,396

Net (charge) credit for transfer of funds

(10,119)

77,735

(47,403)

(19,539)

(674)

-

-

Interest expense

-

(23,165)

-

(8,585)

(9,510)

(251)

(41,511)

Net interest income (loss)

21,788

137,744

14,940

(658)

20,930

6,141

200,885

Provision for credit losses - (benefit) expense

(506)

15,224

(2,536)

(9)

4,655

(1,326)

15,502

Non-interest income

3,074

22,034

4,175

160

847

2,228

32,518

Direct non-interest expenses

5,087

41,627

9,365

947

8,304

6,825

72,155

Segment income (loss)

$

20,281

$

102,927

$

12,286

$

(1,436)

$

8,818

$

2,870

$

145,746

Average earnings assets

$

2,171,061

$

3,174,150

$

3,713,633

$

6,216,498

$

2,067,848

$

366,338

$

17,709,528

Mortgage

Banking

Consumer

(Retail) Banking

Commercial and

Corporate

Banking

Treasury and

Investments

United States

Operations

Virgin Islands

Operations

Total

(In thousands)

For the quarter ended March 31, 2022:

Interest income

$

33,071

$

70,437

$

47,027

$

22,184

$

18,857

$

6,278

$

197,854

Net (charge) credit for transfer of funds

(7,292)

24,282

(6,612)

(9,949)

(429)

-

-

Interest expense

-

(5,173)

-

(4,826)

(1,946)

(285)

(12,230)

Net interest income

25,779

89,546

40,415

7,409

16,482

5,993

185,624

Provision for credit losses - (benefit) expense

(3,703)

11,144

(16,622)

(388)

(3,547)

(686)

(13,802)

Non-interest income (loss)

5,252

20,463

4,554

(112)

744

1,957

32,858

Direct non-interest expenses

6,906

39,271

8,859

885

8,479

6,973

71,373

Segment income

$

27,828

$

59,594

$

52,732

$

6,800

$

12,294

$

1,663

$

160,911

Average earnings assets

$

2,293,648

$

2,759,482

$

3,664,104

$

8,145,949

$

2,065,638

$

378,169

$

19,306,990

The following table presents a reconciliation of the reportable segment financial information to the consolidated totals for the indicated periods:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Net income:

Total income for segments

$

145,746

$

160,911

Other operating expenses

(1)

43,113

35,286

Income before income taxes

102,633

125,625

Income tax expense

31,935

43,025

Total consolidated net income

$

70,698

$

82,600

Average assets:

Total average earning assets for segments

$

17,709,528

$

19,306,990

Average non-earning assets

847,628

947,011

Total consolidated average assets

$

18,557,156

$

20,254,001

(1)

Expenses pertaining to corporate administrative functions that support

the operating segment, but are not specifically attributable

to or managed by any segment, are not included in the

reported financial results of the operating segments. The

unallocated corporate expenses include certain general and administrative

expenses and related depreciation and amortization

expenses.

68

NOTE 21 – SUPPLEMENTAL

STATEMENT

OF CASH FLOWS INFORMATION

Supplemental statement of cash flows information is as follows for the indicated

periods:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Cash paid for:

Interest on borrowings

$

37,798

$

13,300

Income tax

10,926

2,598

Operating cash flow from operating leases

4,316

4,751

Non-cash investing and financing activities:

Additions to OREO

6,414

6,770

Additions to auto and other repossessed assets

15,356

10,772

Capitalization of servicing assets

532

1,130

Loan securitizations

28,736

40,823

Loans held for investment transferred to held for sale

2,345

1,176

Payable related to unsettled purchases of available-for-sale debt securities

-

15,000

ROU assets obtained in exchange for operating lease liabilities

1,630

2,791

69

NOTE 22 – REGULATORY

MATTERS, COMMITMENTS,

AND CONTINGENCIES

Regulatory Matters

The

Corporation

and

FirstBank

are

each

subject

to

various

regulatory

capital

requirements

imposed

by

the

U.S.

federal

banking

agencies. Failure

to meet

minimum capital

requirements can

result in

certain mandatory

and possibly

additional discretionary

actions

by regulators

that, if

undertaken, could

have a

direct material

adverse effect

on the

Corporation’s

financial statements

and activities.

Under

capital

adequacy

guidelines

and

the

regulatory

framework

for

prompt

corrective

action,

the

Corporation

must

meet

specific

capital

guidelines

that

involve

quantitative

measures

of

the Corporation’s

and

FirstBank’s

assets,

liabilities,

and

certain

off-balance

sheet items

as calculated

under regulatory

accounting practices.

The Corporation’s

capital amounts

and classification

are also

subject

to qualitative judgments and

adjustment by the regulators with respect

to minimum capital requirements, components,

risk weightings,

and

other factors.

As of

March 31,

2023 and

December 31,

2022,

the Corporation

and FirstBank

exceeded

the minimum

regulatory

capital

ratios

for

capital

adequacy

purposes

and

FirstBank

exceeded

the

minimum

regulatory

capital

ratios

to

be

considered

a

well

capitalized

institution

under

the

regulatory

framework

for

prompt

corrective

action.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

management

does

not

believe that any condition has changed or event has occurred that would have

changed the institution’s status.

The Corporation and FirstBank

compute risk-weighted assets

using the standardized approach

required by the U.S.

Basel III capital

rules (“Basel III rules”).

The

Basel

III

rules

require

the

Corporation

to

maintain

an

additional

capital

conservation

buffer

of

2.5

%

on

certain

regulatory

capital

ratios

to

avoid

limitations

on

both

(i)

capital

distributions

(

e.g.

,

repurchases

of

capital

instruments,

dividends

and

interest

payments on capital instruments) and (ii) discretionary bonus payments

to executive officers and heads of major business lines.

As part

of its

response to

the impact

of COVID-19,

on March

31, 2020,

the federal

banking agencies

issued an

interim final

rule

that

provided

the

option

to

temporarily

delay

the

effects

of

CECL

on

regulatory

capital

for

two

years,

followed

by

a

three-year

transition

period.

The

interim

final

rule

provides

that,

at

the

election

of

a

qualified

banking

organization,

the

day

one

impact

to

retained earnings plus

25

% of the change in

the ACL (as defined

in the final rule) from

January 1, 2020 to

December 31, 2021 will

be

delayed

for

two

years

and

phased-in

at

25

%

per

year

beginning

on

January

1,

2022

over

a

three-year

period,

resulting

in

a

total

transition

period

of

five

years.

Accordingly,

as

of

March

31,

2023,

the

capital

measures

of

the

Corporation

and

the

Bank

included

$

32.4

million associated

with the

CECL day

one impact

to retained

earnings plus

25

% of

the increase

in the

ACL (as

defined in

the

interim

final

rule)

from

January

1,

2020

to

December

31,

2021,

and

$

32.4

million

remains

excluded

to

be

phase-in

during

the

remainder of

the three-year

transition period.

The federal

financial regulatory

agencies may

take other

measures affecting

regulatory

capital

to

address

the

COVID-19

pandemic

and

related

macroeconomic

conditions,

although

the

nature

and

impact

of

such

actions

cannot be predicted at this time.

70

The regulatory

capital position

of the

Corporation and

the FirstBank as

of March

31, 2023

and December

31, 2022,

which reflects

the delay in the full effect of CECL on regulatory capital, were

as follows:

Regulatory Requirements

Actual

For Capital Adequacy Purposes

To be Well

-Capitalized

Thresholds

Amount

Ratio

Amount

Ratio

Amount

Ratio

(Dollars in thousands)

As of March 31, 2023

Total Capital (to Risk-Weighted

Assets)

First BanCorp.

$

2,366,591

19.02

%

$

995,597

8.0

%

N/A

N/A

%

FirstBank

$

2,327,600

18.71

%

$

995,452

8.0

%

$

1,244,315

10.0

%

CET1 Capital (to Risk-Weighted Assets)

First BanCorp.

$

2,032,369

16.33

%

$

560,023

4.5

%

N/A

N/A

%

FirstBank

$

2,071,650

16.65

%

$

559,942

4.5

%

$

808,805

6.5

%

Tier I Capital (to Risk-Weighted

Assets)

First BanCorp.

$

2,032,369

16.33

%

$

746,697

6.0

%

N/A

N/A

%

FirstBank

$

2,171,650

17.45

%

$

746,589

6.0

%

$

995,452

8.0

%

Leverage ratio

First BanCorp.

$

2,032,369

10.57

%

$

769,399

4.0

%

N/A

N/A

%

FirstBank

$

2,171,650

11.29

%

$

769,102

4.0

%

$

961,378

5.0

%

As of December 31, 2022

Total Capital (to Risk-Weighted

Assets)

First BanCorp.

$

2,385,866

19.21

%

$

993,405

8.0

%

N/A

N/A

%

FirstBank

$

2,346,093

18.90

%

$

993,264

8.0

%

$

1,241,580

10.0

%

CET1 Capital (to Risk-Weighted Assets)

First BanCorp.

$

2,052,333

16.53

%

$

558,790

4.5

%

N/A

N/A

%

FirstBank

$

2,090,832

16.84

%

$

558,711

4.5

%

$

807,027

6.5

%

Tier I Capital (to Risk-Weighted

Assets)

First BanCorp.

$

2,052,333

16.53

%

$

745,054

6.0

%

N/A

N/A

%

FirstBank

$

2,190,832

17.65

%

$

744,948

6.0

%

$

993,264

8.0

%

Leverage ratio

First BanCorp.

$

2,052,333

10.70

%

$

767,075

4.0

%

N/A

N/A

%

FirstBank

$

2,190,832

11.43

%

$

766,714

4.0

%

$

958,392

5.0

%

71

Commitments

The Corporation enters

into financial instruments

with off-balance sheet

risk in the normal

course of business to

meet the financing

needs

of

its

customers.

These

financial

instruments

may

include

commitments

to

extend

credit

and

standby

letters

of

credit.

Commitments to extend credit are agreements

to lend to a customer as long

as there is no violation of any conditions

established in the

contract. Commitments

generally have fixed

expiration dates or

other termination clauses.

Since certain commitments

are expected

to

expire without

being drawn

upon, the

total commitment

amount does

not necessarily

represent future

cash requirements.

For most

of

the

commercial

lines

of

credit,

the

Corporation

has

the

option

to

reevaluate

the

agreement

prior

to

additional

disbursements.

In

the

case of credit cards and personal lines of credit, the Corporation can

cancel the unused credit facility at any time and without cause.

As

of March 31, 2023,

commitments to extend

credit amounted to approximately

$

2.0

billion, of which $

0.9

billion relates to retail

credit

card

loans.

In

addition,

commercial

and

financial

standby

letters

of

credit

as

of

March

31,

2023

amounted

to

approximately

$

93.6

million.

Contingencies

As

of

March

31,

2023,

First

BanCorp.

and

its

subsidiaries

were

defendants

in

various

legal

proceedings,

claims

and

other

loss

contingencies

arising

in

the

ordinary

course

of

business.

On

at

least

a

quarterly

basis,

the

Corporation

assesses

its

liabilities

and

contingencies in connection

with threatened and

outstanding legal proceedings,

claims and other

loss contingencies utilizing

the latest

information

available. For

legal proceedings,

claims and

other loss

contingencies

where it

is both

probable that

the Corporation

will

incur

a

loss

and

the

amount

can

be

reasonably

estimated,

the

Corporation

establishes

an

accrual

for

the

loss.

Once

established,

the

accrual

is

adjusted

as

appropriate

to

reflect

any

relevant

developments.

For

legal

proceedings,

claims

and

other

loss

contingencies

where a loss is not probable or the amount of the loss cannot be estimated, no accrual

is established.

Any estimate

involves significant

judgment, given

the varying

stages of

the proceedings

(including the

fact that

some of

them are

currently in

preliminary stages),

the existence

in some

of the

current proceedings

of multiple

defendants whose

share of

liability has

yet

to

be

determined,

the

numerous

unresolved

issues

in

the

proceedings,

and

the

inherent

uncertainty

of

the

various

potential

outcomes of such

proceedings. Accordingly,

the Corporation’s

estimate will change

from time to time,

and actual losses

may be more

or less than the current estimate.

While

the

final

outcome

of

legal

proceedings,

claims,

and

other

loss

contingencies

is

inherently

uncertain,

based

on

information

currently

available,

management

believes

that

the

final

disposition

of

the

Corporation’s

legal

proceedings,

claims

and

other

loss

contingencies,

to

the

extent

not

previously

provided

for,

will

not

have

a

material

adverse

effect

on

the

Corporation’s

consolidated

financial position as a whole.

If management believes that, based on available information,

it is at least reasonably possible that a material loss (or material

loss in

excess

of

any

accrual)

will

be

incurred

in

connection

with

any

legal

contingencies,

the

Corporation

discloses

an

estimate

of

the

possible loss or

range of loss,

either individually or

in the aggregate,

as appropriate, if

such an estimate can

be made, or

discloses that

an estimate cannot be made. Based on the Corporation’s

assessment as of March 31, 2023, no such disclosures were necessary.

72

NOTE 23- FIRST BANCORP.

(HOLDING COMPANY

ONLY) FINANCIAL

INFORMATION

The following

condensed financial information

presents the financial

position of

First BanCorp.

at the holding

company level only

as of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022, and the results of its operations

for the quarters ended March 31, 2023 and 2022:

Statements of Financial Condition

As of March 31,

As of December 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Assets

Cash and due from banks

$

13,981

$

19,279

Other investment securities

735

735

Investment in First Bank Puerto Rico, at equity

1,544,874

1,464,026

Investment in First Bank Insurance Agency,

at equity

32,374

28,770

Investment in FBP Statutory Trust I

1,951

1,951

Investment in FBP Statutory Trust II

3,561

3,561

Dividends receivable

637

624

Other assets

426

430

Total assets

$

1,598,539

$

1,519,376

Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity

Liabilities:

Long-term borrowings

$

183,762

$

183,762

Accounts payable and other liabilities

9,184

10,074

Total liabilities

192,946

193,836

Stockholders’ equity

1,405,593

1,325,540

Total liabilities and stockholders’

equity

$

1,598,539

$

1,519,376

Statements of Income

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Income

Interest income on money market investments

$

53

$

4

Dividend income from banking subsidiaries

78,870

63,593

Other income

102

40

Total income

79,025

63,637

Expense

Other borrowings

3,381

1,333

Other operating expenses

410

439

Total expense

3,791

1,772

Income before income taxes and equity in undistributed

earnings of subsidiaries

75,234

61,865

Income tax expense

1,078

1,106

Equity in undistributed earnings of subsidiaries (distribution in excess of

earnings)

(3,458)

21,841

Net income

$

70,698

$

82,600

Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax

87,228

(331,834)

Comprehensive income (loss)

$

157,926

$

(249,234)

73

ITEM

2.

MANAGEMENT’S

DISCUSSION

AND

ANALYSIS

OF

FINANCIAL

CONDITION

AND

RESULTS

OF

OPERATIONS (“MD&A”)

The

following

MD&A

relates

to

the

accompanying

unaudited

consolidated

financial

statements

of

First

BanCorp.

(the

“Corporation,” “we,” “us,”

“our,” or “First

BanCorp.”) and should be

read in conjunction with

such financial statements and

the notes

thereto,

and our Annual Report on

Form 10-K for the year

ended December 31, 2022 (the “2022

Annual Report on Form 10-K”).

This

section also

presents certain

financial measures

that are not

based on

generally accepted

accounting principles

in the

United States

of

America

(“GAAP”).

See

“Non-GAAP

Financial

Measures

and

Reconciliations”

below

for

information

about

why

non-GAAP

financial

measures

are

presented

and

references

to

reconciliations

of

non-GAAP

financial

measures

to

the

most

comparable

GAAP

financial measures.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

First BanCorp.

is a diversified

financial holding

company headquartered

in San Juan,

Puerto Rico offering

a full range

of financial

products to

consumers and

commercial customers

through various

subsidiaries. First

BanCorp.

is the

holding company

of FirstBank

Puerto

Rico

(“FirstBank”

or the

“Bank”)

and

FirstBank

Insurance

Agency.

Through

its wholly

-owned

subsidiaries,

the Corporation

operates

in

Puerto

Rico,

the

United

States

Virgin

Islands

(“USVI”),

the

British

Virgin

Islands

(“BVI”),

and

the

state

of

Florida,

concentrating on

commercial banking,

residential mortgage loans,

credit cards, personal

loans, small loans,

auto loans and

leases, and

insurance agency activities.

Recent Developments

Economy and Market Volatility

Growth

in

economic

activity

and

demand

for

goods

and

services,

alongside

labor

shortages,

supply

chain

complications

and

geopolitical

matters,

have

contributed

to

rising

inflation.

In

response,

the

Federal

Reserve

has

raised

interest

rates

and

has

begun

reducing the

size of

its balance

sheet. In

March and

May 2023,

certain large

U.S. regional

banks with

assets over

$100 billion

were

closed

and

placed

into

receivership

with

the

FDIC.

The

closures

of

those

banks

and

adverse

developments

affecting

other

banks

resulted

in

heightened

levels

of

market

volatility

that

has

negatively

impacted

customer

confidence

in

the

safety

and

soundness

of

financial

institutions.

These developments

have resulted

in certain

regional banks

experiencing

higher than

normal deposit

outflows

and

an

elevated

level

of

competition

for

available

deposits

in

the

market.

The

impact

of

market

volatility

from

the

adverse

developments

in

the

banking

industry,

along

with

continued

high

inflation

and

rising

interest

rates

on

our

business

and

related

financial results, will depend on future developments, which are

highly uncertain and difficult to predict.

Our results

this quarter

reflect continued

discipline expense

management,

stable credit

quality metrics,

a sound

liquidity position,

and solid capital levels, despite

the market disruption.

With our disciplined

and proactive approach, the

Corporation is well positioned

to manage

through the

uncertain economic

outlook on

the horizon.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation had

approximately

$5.5

billion of

unused available

liquidity,

representing 114%

of total

estimated uninsured

deposits, excluding

fully collateralized

deposits,

of $4.8 billion, and a strong capital position with a common equity tier 1 (“CET1”)

ratio of 16.33%.

In the aftermath of the recent bank failures, the

banking agencies could propose certain actions that may

impact capital ratios or the

FDIC deposit insurance premium.

See “Risk Management – Liquidity Risk” below for additional information

about the Corporation’s funding

sources and strategy.

Return of Capital to Shareholders

In

the

first

quarter

of 2023,

the Corporation

returned

approximately

$75.1

million,

or

106%

of

first

quarter

2023

earnings, to

its

shareholders

through $50.0

million

in repurchases

of common

stock and

the payment

of $25.1

million

in

common

stock dividends,

which reflects an

increase in the

common stock dividend

by 17%,

from $0.12 for

the fourth quarter

of 2022 to

$0.14 per share

for the

first quarter of 2023.

As of March 31, 2023, the Corporation has remaining authorization to

repurchase approximately $75 million of common stock. Due

to recent

market events,

the Corporation

intends to

temporarily pause

common stock

repurchases

during the

second quarter

of 2023

and expects to

resume such repurchases

during the third quarter

of 2023 subject

to various factors,

including the Corporation’s

capital

position, liquidity, financial

performance and alternative uses of capital, stock trading price, and general

market conditions.

74

London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”)

Transition

On January 1, 2022,

the publication of certain

U.S. Dollar (“USD”) LIBOR

settings ceased. The

publication of the most

commonly

used

overnight,

one-month,

three-month,

six-month

and

twelve-month

USD

LIBOR

will

cease

immediately

after

June

30,

2023,

except that

per the

UK Financial

Conduct Authority

(the “FCA”)

proposal, the

one-, three-,

and six-month

tenors will

continue to

be

published on a “non-representative,” synthetic basis until September

30, 2024.

The Adjustable

Interest Rate

Act (the

“LIBOR Act”),

that was

enacted in

March 2022,

provides

a statutory

framework to

replace

USD LIBOR

for

contracts

governed

by

U.S.

law

that

do

not have

clear

and

practicable

provisions

for

replacing

USD LIBOR

after

June

30,

2023

(“tough

legacy

contracts”).

On

December

16,

2022,

the

FED

adopted

Regulation

ZZ,

which

identifies

replacement

benchmark rates

based on

the Secured

Overnight Financing

Rate (“SOFR”)

to replace

the aforementioned

USD LIBOR

settings that

will cease

after June

30, 2023 in

contracts subject

to the

LIBOR Act. Under

Regulation ZZ,

tough legacy

contracts will

be converted

by operation of law

to various forms of SOFR,

along with a spread

adjustment, upon a LIBOR replacement

date (i.e., the first London

banking day

after June

30, 2023).

The spread

adjustment was

designed to

compensate for

USD LIBOR

being higher

than SOFR

in

two regards.

First, USD

LIBOR is

an unsecured

rate while

SOFR is

a secured

rate. Second,

USD LIBOR

includes

term premia.

In

addition, Regulation

ZZ codifies

safe harbor

protections for

selection or

use of

SOFR as

a replacement

benchmark and

clarifies who

would

be

considered

a

“determining

person”

able

to

elect

a

replacement

benchmark

when

USD

LIBOR

ceases

to

be

published

as

representative on June 30, 2023.

As of

March 31, 2023,

the Corporation’s

risk exposure to USD

LIBOR that mature

after June 30,

2023 consisted of

the following:

(i)

$1.2

billion

of

variable-rate

commercial

and

construction

loans

(including

unused

commitments),

(ii)

$40.7

million

of

U.S.

agencies

debt

securities

and

private

label

mortgage-backed

securities

(“MBS”)

held

as

part

of

the

available-for-sale

debt

securities

portfolio, (iii) $124.7 million of Puerto

Rico municipalities bonds held as part of

the held-to-maturity debt securities portfolio,

and (iv)

$183.8

million of

junior subordi

nated debentures

reported as

other

long-term borrowings

in the

consolidated

statements of

financial

condition.

Most of

these contracts contain

adequate features

to convert

to an alternative

interest rate;

however,

as of March

31, 2023,

contracts totaling approximately

$338.4 million do not contain

fallback language mainly consisting

of the aforementioned Puerto

Rico

municipalities

bonds held

as part

of the

held-to-maturity

debt securities

portfolio

and the

junior subordinated

debentures. Following

the provisions

of the

LIBOR Act

and Regulation

ZZ, the

LIBOR reference

on the

junior subordinated

debentures will

automatically

transition by

operation of

law to

3-month CME

Term

SOFR, plus

a spread

adjustment of

0.26161% on

the first

reset date

after USD

LIBOR ceases

publication in

June 2023.

In addition,

for the

transition of

any residual

exposure after

June 30,

2023, the

Corporation

expects to follow the provisions of the LIBOR Act and Regulation ZZ.

The

Corporation

continues

to

execute

its

LIBOR

transition

workplan.

Source

systems

have

been

updated

to

support

alternative

reference rates. At this time

alternative reference rates are predominantly

SOFR based. In addition, the

Corporation continues working

with

its

interest

rate

risk

monitoring

framework

and

a

strategy

for

managing

interest

rate

risk

during

the

transition

from

LIBOR

to

SOFR. We

continue to monitor market

developments and legislative and

regulatory updates, with additional

updates expected through

the remainder of 2023.

CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND PRACTICES

The

accounting

principles

of

the

Corporation

and

the

methods

of

applying

these

principles

conform

to

GAAP.

In

preparing

the

consolidated

financial

statements,

management

is

required

to

make

estimates,

assumptions,

and

judgments

that

affect

the

amounts

recorded for assets,

liabilities and contingent

liabilities as of

the date of

the financial statements

and the reported

amounts of revenues

and

expenses

during

the

reporting

periods.

Note

1

of

the Notes

to

Consolidated

Financial

Statements

included

in

our

2022

Annual

Report on

Form 10-K,

as supplemented

by this

report including

this MD&A,

describes the significant

accounting policies we

used in

our Consolidated Financial Statements.

Not all significant

accounting policies require

management to make

difficult, subjective

or complex judgments.

Critical accounting

estimates

are

those

estimates

made

in

accordance

with

GAAP

that

involve

a

significant

level

of

uncertainty

and

have

had

or

are

reasonably

likely

to

have

a

material

impact

on

the

Corporation’s

financial

condition

and

results

of

operations.

The

Corporation’s

critical accounting

estimates that

are particularly

susceptible

to significant

changes include,

but are

not limited

to, the

following:

(i)

the allowance for credit losses (“ACL”);

(ii) valuation of financial instruments;

and (iii) income taxes. For more

information regarding

valuation of financial

instruments and income taxes

policies, assumptions, and

judgments, see “Critical Accounting

Estimates” in Part

II,

Item

7,

“Management’s

Discussion

and

Analysis

of

Financial

Condition

and

Results

of

Operations

(“MD&A”),”

in

the

2022

Annual Report

on Form

10-K.

The “Risk

Management –

Credit Risk

Management” section

below details

the policies,

assumptions,

and

judgments

related

to

the

ACL.

Actual

results

could

differ

from

estimates

and

assumptions

if

different

outcomes

or

conditions

prevail.

75

Overview of Results of Operations

First

BanCorp.'s

results

of

operations

depend

primarily

on

its

net

interest

income,

which

is

the

difference

between

the

interest

income

earned

on

its

interest-earning

assets,

including

investment

securities

and

loans,

and

the

interest

expense

incurred

on

its

interest-bearing

liabilities,

including

deposits

and

borrowings.

Net

interest

income

is

affected

by

various

factors,

including

the

following:

(i)

the

interest

rate

environment;

(ii)

the

volumes,

mix,

and

composition

of

interest-earning

assets,

and

interest-bearing

liabilities; and

(iii) the

repricing

characteristics of

these assets

and liabilities.

The Corporation

’s

results of

operations also

depend on

the provision

for credit

losses, non-interest

expenses (such

as personnel,

occupancy,

the FDIC

deposit insurance

premium

and other

costs), non-interest

income (mainly

service charges

and fees

on deposits,

cards and

processing income,

and insurance

income), gains

(losses) on sales of investments, gains (losses) on mortgage banking activities,

and income taxes.

The

Corporation

had

net

income

of

$70.7

million,

or

$0.39

per

diluted

common

share,

for

the

quarter

ended

March

31,

2023,

compared

to

$82.6

million,

or

$0.41

per

diluted

common

share,

for

the

quarter

ended

March

31,

2022.

Other

relevant

selected

financial indicators for the periods presented are included

below:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

Key Performance Indicator:

(1)

Return on Average

Assets

(2)

1.55

%

1.65

%

Return on Average

Total Equity

(3)

21.00

16.64

Efficiency Ratio

(4)

49.39

48.82

(1)

These financial ratios are used by Management to monitor the Corporation’s

financial performance and whether it is using its assets

efficiently.

(2)

Indicates how profitable the Corporation is in relation to its total assets

and is calculated by dividing net income on an annualized basis

by its average total assets.

(3)

Measures the Corporation’s performance

based on its average stockholders’ equity and is calculated

by dividing net income on an annualized basis by its average

total stockholders’

equity.

(4)

Measures how much the Corporation incurred to generate a

dollar of revenue and is calculated by dividing non-interest expenses

by total revenue.

The key drivers

of the Corporation’s

GAAP financial results

for the quarter

ended March 31, 2023,

compared to the

first quarter of

2022, include the following:

Net interest income for

the quarter ended March 31,

2023 increased to $200.9 million,

compared to $185.6 million for

the first

quarter

of

2022,

mainly

driven

by

the

effect

in

the

commercial

loan

portfolio

of

higher

market

interest

rates

in

the

upward

repricing of variable

-rate loans and

in new loan

originations, and the

growth in consumer

loans, partially offset

by an increase

in

interest

expense

due

to

the

increase

in

borrowings

and

a

110

basis

point

increase

in

the

average

cost

of

interest-bearing

liabilities. See "Net Interest Income" below for additional information.

The provision

for credit losses

on loans,

finance leases,

unfunded loan

commitments and

debt securities for

the quarter

ended

March

31,

2023

was

an

expense

of

$15.5

million,

compared

to

a

net

benefit

of

$13.8

million

for

the

first

quarter

of

2022,

mainly due

to the

$4.7 million

increase in

the provision

for the

consumer loan

portfolios and

the net

benefit of

$23.1 million

recorded in

the first

quarter of

2022 for

the commercial

and construction

loan portfolio

as a result

of reductions

in qualitative

reserves as a result of reduced uncertainty regarding COVID-19.

Net charge-offs totaled

$13.3 million for the quarter

ended March 31, 2023, or 0.46%

of average loans on an

annualized basis,

compared

to

net

charge-offs

of

$6.6

million,

or

0.24%

of

average

loans,

for

the

first

quarter

of

2022.

The

increase

in

net

charge-offs

was mainly

in consumer

loans. See

“Provision for

Credit Losses”

and “Risk

Management” below

for analyses

of

the ACL and non-performing assets and related ratios.

The

Corporation

recorded

non-interest

income

of

$32.5

million

for

the

quarter

ended

March

31,

2023,

compared

to

$32.9

million for the first quarter of 2022. See “Non-Interest Income” below

for additional information.

Non-interest expenses

for the

quarter ended

March 31,

2023 increased

by $8.6

million to

$115.3

million, mainly

driven by

a

$6.9 million

increase in

employees’ compensation

and benefits expenses

due to

annual salary

merit increases

and an

increase

in

bonuses,

stock-based

compensation

expense

of

retirement-eligible

employees,

payroll

taxes,

and

medical

insurance

premium costs.

The efficiency

ratio for

the first

quarter of

2023 was

49.39%, as

compared to

48.82% for

the same

period in

  1. See “Non-Interest Expenses” below for additional information.

76

Income tax expense

decreased to $31.9

million for the

first quarter of

2023, compared

to $43.0 million

for the same

period in

2022 driven

by a

lower pre-tax

income.

The Corporation’s

estimated effective

tax rate,

excluding entities

with pre-tax

losses

from which a tax

benefit cannot be recognized

and discrete items, decrease to

31.2% for the first

quarter of 2023, compared

to

32.9% for the first quarter of 2022, reflecting a higher proportion

of exempt to taxable income. See “Income Taxes”

below and

Note 17 – Income Taxes

,

to the unaudited consolidated financial statements herein for additional information.

As of

March 31,

2023, total

assets were approximately

$19.0 billion,

an increase

of $342.6

million from

December 31,

2022,

primarily

due

to

a

$343.1

million

increase

in

cash

and

cash

equivalents,

which

was

mainly

attributable

to

a

$347.8

million

addition to borrowings to increase

available cash as a precautionary

measure in

light of recent instability in the

banking sector

and

a

$28.0

million

increase

in

total

loans,

partially

offset

by

the

$4.3

million

decrease

in

total

investment

securities.

See

“Financial Condition and Operating Data Analysis” below for additional information.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

total

liabilities

were

$17.6

billion,

an

increase

of

$262.5

million

from

December

31,

2022,

mainly

driven

by

the

$347.8

million

increase

in

borrowings,

partially

offset

by

an

overall

decrease

in

total

deposits.

See

“Risk

Management – Liquidity Risk” below for additional information about the Corporation’s

funding sources and strategy.

The Bank’s

primary sources

of funding

are consumer

and commercial

core deposits,

which exclude

government deposits

and

brokered CDs. As of March 31, 2023, these core deposits amounting

to $13.1 billion funded 69.17% of total assets. In addition

to approximately

$3.2 billion

in cash

and free

high quality

liquid assets,

the Bank

maintains borrowing

capacity at

the FHLB

and the

FED Discount

Window.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation had

approximately $1.4

billion available

for funding

under

the FED’s

Discount

Window

and

$882.5

million

available for

additional

borrowing

capacity

on FHLB

lines of

credit

based

on

collateral

pledged

at

these

entities.

On

a

combined

basis,

as

of

March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation

had

$5.5

billion

available

to

meet

liquidity

needs.

See

“Risk

Management

Liquidity

Risk”

below

for

additional

information

about

the

Corporation’s funding

sources and strategy.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation’s

total

stockholders’

equity

was

$1.4

billion,

an

increase

of

$80.1

million

from

December 31, 2022. The

increase was driven by an

$87.2 million increase in

the fair value of

available-for-sale debt securities

recorded as

part of

accumulated other

comprehensive loss

in the

consolidated statements

of financial

condition, as

a result

of

changes

in

market

interest

rates,

and

the

earnings

generated

during

the

first

quarter

of

2023.

These

increases

were

partially

offset

by

the

repurchase

of

approximately

3.6

million

shares

of

common

stock

for

a

total

purchase

price

of

approximately

$50.0

million

and

$25.4

million

in

dividends

declared

to

common

stock

shareholders

during

the

first

quarter

of

2023.

The

Corporation’s

CET1

capital,

tier

1

capital,

total

capital,

and

leverage

ratios

were

16.33%,

16.33%,

19.02%,

and

10.57%,

respectively,

as

of

March

31,

2023,

compared

to

CET1

capital,

tier

1

capital,

total

capital,

and

leverage

ratios

of

16.53%,

16.53%, 19.21%, and 10.70%, respectively,

as of December 31, 2022.

See “Risk Management – Capital” below

for additional

information.

Total

loan

production,

including

purchases,

refinancings,

renewals,

and

draws

from

existing

revolving

and

non-revolving

commitments,

increased by

$5.5 million

to $1.2

billion for

the quarter

ended March

31, 2023.

See “Financial

Condition and

Operating Data Analysis” below for additional information.

Total

non-performing assets

were $129.0

million as of

March 31, 2023,

a decrease of

$0.2 million,

from December

31, 2022.

The net decrease was driven by

a $6.3 million reduction in nonaccrual

residential mortgage loans, mostly

due to loans restored

to

accrual

status,

collections

and

foreclosures;

partially

offset

by

a

$4.4

million

increase

in

nonaccrual

commercial

and

construction

loans, mainly

related

to

the

inflow

of

a

$7.1 million

commercial

and

industrial

participated

loan

in

the Florida

region related

to a borrower

engaged in the

power generation industry

.

See “Risk Management

– Nonaccrual Loans

and Non-

Performing Assets” below for additional information.

Adversely

classified

commercial

and

construction

loans

decreased

by

$23.6

million

to

$70.0

million

as of

March

31, 2023,

compared to December 31, 2022, mainly driven by the payoff

of a $24.3 million commercial and industrial participated loan in

the Florida region in the leisure and hospitality industry.

77

NON-GAAP FINANCIAL MEASURES AND RECONCILIATIONS

The Corporation

has included

in this

Quarterly Report

on Form

10-Q (“Form

10-Q”) the

following financial

measures that

are not

recognized under GAAP,

which are referred to as non-GAAP financial measures:

Net Interest Income,

Interest Rate Spread,

and Net Interest

Margin, Excluding Valuations

,

and on a Tax

-Equivalent Basis

Net interest

income, interest

rate spread,

and net

interest margin,

excluding the

changes in

the fair

value of

derivative instruments

and on

a tax-equivalent

basis, are

reported in

order to

provide to

investors additional

information about

the Corporation’s

net interest

income

that management

uses and

believes should

facilitate comparability and

analysis of

the periods

presented.

The changes

in the

fair value

of derivative

instruments have

no effect

on interest

due or

interest earned

on interest-bearing

liabilities or

interest-earning

assets, respectively.

The tax-equivalent

adjustment to

net interest

income recognizes

the income

tax savings

when comparing

taxable

and

tax-exempt

assets

and

assumes

a

marginal

income

tax

rate.

Income

from

tax-exempt

earning

assets

is

increased

by

an

amount

equivalent to

the taxes

that would

have been

paid if

this income

had been

taxable at

statutory rates.

Management believes

that it

is a

standard

practice

in

the banking

industry

to

present

net

interest

income,

interest

rate

spread,

and

net

interest

margin

on

a

fully

tax-

equivalent basis. This adjustment

puts all earning assets, most notably

tax-exempt securities and tax-exempt

loans, on a common basis

that facilitates comparison of results to the results of peers.

See “Result of Operations

– Net Interest Income”

below, for

the table that reconciles

net interest income

in accordance with GAAP

to

the

non-GAAP

financial

measure

of

net

interest

income,

excluding

valuations,

and

on

a

tax-equivalent

basis

for

the

indicated

periods. The table also reconciles

net interest spread and

net interest margin on

a GAAP basis to these items

excluding valuations, and

on a tax-equivalent basis.

Tangible

Common Equity Ratio and Tangible

Book Value

Per Common Share

The tangible

common equity

ratio and

tangible book

value per

common share

are non-GAAP

financial measures

that management

believes are generally

used by the financial

community to evaluate

capital adequacy.

Tangible

common equity is total

common equity

less

goodwill

and

other

intangibles.

Similarly,

tangible

assets

are

total

assets

less

goodwill

and

other

intangibles.

Management

and

many

stock

analysts

use

the

tangible

common

equity

ratio

and

tangible

book

value

per

common

share

in

conjunction

with

more

traditional bank capital

ratios to compare

the capital adequacy

of banking organizations

with significant

amounts of goodwill

or other

intangible assets,

typically stemming

from the

use of

the purchase

method of

accounting for

mergers

and acquisitions.

Accordingly,

the Corporation

believes that

disclosures of

these financial

measures may

be useful to

investors. Neither

tangible common

equity nor

tangible assets, or the related measures,

should be considered in isolation or

as a substitute for stockholders’ equity,

total assets, or any

other measure

calculated in

accordance with

GAAP.

Moreover,

the manner

in which

the Corporation

calculates its

tangible common

equity, tangible assets, and

any other related measures may differ from that of other companies reporting

measures with similar names.

See “Risk

Management –

Capital” below

for the

table that

reconciles the

Corporation’s

total equity

and total

assets in

accordance

with GAAP to the tangible

common equity and tangible assets

figures used to calculate the

non-GAAP financial measures of

Tangible

Common Equity Ratio and Tangible

Book Value

per Common Share.

78

RESULTS

OF OPERATIONS

Net Interest Income

Net interest

income is

the excess of

interest earned

by First BanCorp.

on its interest-earning

assets over

the interest

incurred on its

interest-bearing

liabilities.

First

BanCorp.’s

net

interest

income

is

subject

to

interest

rate

risk

due

to

the

repricing

and

maturity

mismatch

of

the

Corporation’s

assets

and

liabilities.

In

addition,

variable

sources

of

interest

income,

such

as

loan

fees,

periodic

dividends, and collection of interest on nonaccrual loans, can fluctuate

from period to period. Net interest income for the quarter

ended

March 31, 2023 was $200.9 million,

compared to $185.6 million for the

first quarter of 2022.

On a tax-equivalent basis and excluding

the changes

in the

fair value

of derivative

instruments, net

interest income

for the

quarter ended

March 31,

2023 was

$207.2 million

compared to $192.8 million for the quarter ended March 31, 2022.

The

following

tables

include a

detailed

analysis

of net

interest income

for

the indicated

periods.

Part I

presents

average volumes

(based

on

the

average

daily

balance)

and

rates

on

an

adjusted

tax-equivalent

basis

and

Part

II

presents,

also

on

an

adjusted

tax-

equivalent basis,

the extent

to which

changes in

interest rates

and changes

in the

volume of

interest-related assets

and liabilities

have

affected

the Corporation’s

net intere

st income.

For each

category of

interest-earning

assets and

interest-bearing

liabilities, the

tables

provide

information

on

changes

in

(i)

volume

(changes

in

volume

multiplied

by

prior

period

rates),

and

(ii)

rate

(changes

in

rate

multiplied by

prior period

volumes). The

Corporation has

allocated rate-volume

variances (changes

in rate

multiplied by

changes in

volume) to either the changes in volume or the changes in rate based upon the

effect of each factor on the combined totals.

Net

interest

income

on

an

adjusted

tax

equivalent

basis and

excluding

the

change

in

the fair

value

of derivative

instruments

is a

non-GAAP

financial

measure.

For

the

definition

of

this

non-GAAP

financial

measure,

refer

to

the

discussion

in

“Non-GAAP

Measures and Reconciliations” above.

79

Part I

Average volume

Interest income

(1)

/ expense

Average rate

(1)

Quarter ended March 31,

2023

2022

2023

2022

2023

2022

(Dollars in thousands)

Interest-earning assets:

Money market and other short-term investments

$

404,249

$

1,835,766

$

4,650

$

820

4.67

%

0.18

%

Government obligations

(2)

2,909,976

2,736,095

10,765

8,232

1.50

%

1.22

%

MBS

3,864,145

4,041,975

19,396

19,420

2.04

%

1.95

%

FHLB stock

40,838

21,465

421

287

4.18

%

5.42

%

Other investments

13,139

11,786

139

21

4.29

%

0.72

%

Total investments

(3)

7,232,347

8,647,087

35,371

28,780

1.98

%

1.35

%

Residential mortgage loans

2,835,240

2,961,456

39,794

40,687

5.69

%

5.57

%

Construction loans

146,041

114,732

2,676

1,524

7.43

%

5.39

%

Commercial and industrial ("C&I") and commercial mortgage loans

5,167,727

5,103,870

85,885

62,004

6.74

%

4.93

%

Finance leases

735,500

588,200

13,809

10,912

7.61

%

7.52

%

Consumer loans

2,634,891

2,338,597

71,214

61,151

10.96

%

10.60

%

Total loans

(4)(5)

11,519,399

11,106,855

213,378

176,278

7.51

%

6.44

%

Total interest-earning assets

$

18,751,746

$

19,753,942

$

248,749

$

205,058

5.38

%

4.21

%

Interest-bearing liabilities:

Time deposits

$

2,342,360

$

2,363,045

$

10,782

$

4,421

1.87

%

0.76

%

Brokered certificates of deposit ("CDs")

166,698

91,713

1,587

477

3.86

%

2.11

%

Other interest-bearing deposits

7,544,901

8,132,149

17,516

2,754

0.94

%

0.14

%

Securities sold under agreements to repurchase

91,004

241,111

1,069

2,182

4.76

%

3.67

%

Advances from the FHLB

629,167

200,000

7,176

1,063

4.63

%

2.16

%

Other long-term borrowings

183,762

183,762

3,381

1,333

7.46

%

2.94

%

Total interest-bearing liabilities

$

10,957,892

$

11,211,780

$

41,511

$

12,230

1.54

%

0.44

%

Net interest income on a tax-equivalent basis and excluding

valuations

$

207,238

$

192,828

Interest rate spread

3.84

%

3.77

%

Net interest margin

4.48

%

3.96

%

(1)

On an adjusted tax-equivalent basis. The Corporation estimated the

adjusted tax-equivalent yield by dividing the interest rate

spread on exempt assets by 1 less the Puerto Rico statutory tax

rate of 37.5% and adding to it the cost of interest-bearing liabilities.

The tax-equivalent adjustment recognizes the income tax savings

when comparing taxable and tax-exempt assets.

Management believes that it is a standard practice in the banking industry

to present net interest income, interest rate spread and net

interest margin on a fully tax-equivalent basis.

Therefore, management believes these measures provide useful information

to investors by allowing them to make peer comparisons.

The Corporation excludes changes in the fair value of

derivatives from interest income and interest expense

because the changes in valuation do not affect interest received

or paid. See “Non-GAAP Measures and Reconciliations”

above.

(2)

Government obligations include debt issued by government-sponsored

agencies.

(3)

Unrealized gains and losses on available-for-sale debt securities

are excluded from the average volumes.

(4)

Average loan balances include

the average of nonaccrual loans.

(5)

Interest income on loans includes $3.1 million and $2.6 million for

the quarters ended March 31, 2023 and 2022, respectively,

of income from prepayment penalties and late fees related to

the Corporation’s loan portfolio.

80

Part II

Quarter ended March 31,

2023 compared to 2022

Variance due to:

Volume

Rate

Total

(In thousands)

Interest income on interest-earning assets:

Money market and other short-term investments

$

(8,698)

$

12,528

$

3,830

Government obligations

549

1,984

2,533

MBS

(885)

861

(24)

FHLB stock

232

(98)

134

Other investments

3

115

118

Total investments

(8,799)

15,390

6,591

Residential mortgage loans

(1,771)

878

(893)

Construction loans

482

670

1,152

C&l and commercial mortgage loans

785

23,096

23,881

Finance leases

2,764

133

2,897

Consumer loans

7,953

2,110

10,063

Total loans

10,213

26,887

37,100

Total interest income

$

1,414

$

42,277

$

43,691

Interest expense on interest-bearing liabilities:

Time deposits

$

(67)

$

6,428

$

6,361

Brokered CDs

551

559

1,110

Other interest-bearing deposits

(573)

15,335

14,762

Securities sold under agreements to repurchase

(1,561)

448

(1,113)

Advances from the FHLB

3,985

2,128

6,113

Other borrowings

-

2,048

2,048

Total interest expense

2,335

26,946

29,281

Change in net interest income

$

(921)

$

15,331

$

14,410

Portions of the Corporation’s

interest-earning assets, mostly investments

in obligations of some U.S.

government agencies and U.S.

government-sponsored

entities (“GSEs”),

generate interest

that is

exempt from

income tax,

principally in

Puerto Rico.

Also, interest

and gains

on sales of

investments held by

the Corporation’s

international banking

entities (“IBEs”) are

tax-exempt under

Puerto Rico

tax

law

(see

Note

17

-

Income

Taxes,

to

the

unaudited

consolidated

financial

statements

herein

for

additional

information).

Management

believes

that

the

presentation

of

interest

income

on

an

adjusted

tax-equivalent

basis

facilitates

the

comparison

of

all

interest data

related to

these assets. The

Corporation estimated

the tax

equivalent yield

by dividing

the interest

rate spread

on exempt

assets

by

1

less

the

Puerto

Rico

statutory

tax

rate

(37.5%)

and

adding

to

it

the

average

cost

of

interest-bearing

liabilities.

The

computation considers the interest expense disallowance required

by Puerto Rico tax law.

Management

believes

that

the

presentation

of

net

interest

income,

excluding

the

effects

of

the

changes

in

the

fair

value

of

the

derivative

instruments,

provides additional

information about

the Corporation’s

net interest

income and

facilitates comparability

and

analysis from

period to

period. The

changes in

the fair

value of

the derivative

instruments have

no effect

on interest

due on

interest-

bearing liabilities or interest earned on interest-earning assets.

81

The following

table reconciles

net interest

income in

accordance with

GAAP to

net interest

income, excluding

valuations, and

net

interest

income

on

an

adjusted

tax-equivalent

basis

for

the

indicated

periods.

The

table

also

reconciles

net

interest

spread

and

net

interest margin on a GAAP basis to these items excluding valuations, and

on an adjusted tax-equivalent basis:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(Dollars in thousands)

Interest income - GAAP

$

242,396

$

197,854

Unrealized loss (gain) on derivative instruments

6

(15)

Interest income excluding valuations

242,402

197,839

Tax-equivalent adjustment

6,347

7,219

Interest income on a tax-equivalent basis

and excluding valuations

$

248,749

$

205,058

Interest expense - GAAP

$

41,511

$

12,230

Net interest income - GAAP

$

200,885

$

185,624

Net interest income excluding valuations

$

200,891

$

185,609

Net interest income on a tax-equivalent basis

and excluding valuations

$

207,238

$

192,828

Average Balances

Loans and leases

$

11,519,399

$

11,106,855

Total securities, other short-term investments and interest-bearing

cash balances

7,232,347

8,647,087

Average Interest-Earning Assets

$

18,751,746

$

19,753,942

Average Interest-Bearing Liabilities

$

10,957,892

$

11,211,780

Average Yield/Rate

Average yield on interest-earning assets - GAAP

5.24%

4.06%

Average rate on interest-bearing liabilities - GAAP

1.54%

0.44%

Net interest spread - GAAP

3.70%

3.62%

Net interest margin - GAAP

4.34%

3.81%

Average yield on interest-earning assets excluding valuations

5.24%

4.06%

Average rate on interest-bearing liabilities

1.54%

0.44%

Net interest spread excluding valuations

3.70%

3.62%

Net interest margin excluding valuations

4.34%

3.81%

Average yield on interest-earning assets on a tax-equivalent

basis and excluding valuations

5.38%

4.21%

Average rate on interest-bearing liabilities

1.54%

0.44%

Net interest spread on a tax-equivalent basis

and excluding valuations

3.84%

3.77%

Net interest margin on a tax-equivalent basis and excluding

valuations

4.48%

3.96%

82

Net

interest

income

amounted

to

$200.9

million

for

the

quarter

ended

March

31,

2023,

an

increase

of

$15.3

million,

when

compared to $185.6 million for same period in 2022. The $15.3 million

increase in net interest income was primarily due to:

A $36.9 million increase in interest income on loans including:

-

A $24.6 million increase in

interest income on commercial and

construction loans, of which approximately

$25.1 million

was related

to

the effect

of higher

market

interest

rates

in the

upward repricing

of variable-rate

loans

and

in new

loan

originations,

and

approximately

$2.5

million

was

related

to

the

$210.9

million

increase

in

the

average

balance

of

this

portfolio (excluding

Small Business Administration

Paycheck Protection

Program (“SBA PPP”)

loans). These

variances

were partially

offset by

a reduction

in interest

income from

SBA PPP

loans. The

interest income

recognized from

SBA

PPP loans for the quarters ended March 31, 2023 and 2022 amounted to $0.2

million and $3.2 million, respectively.

The interest rate on approximately 55% of the Corporation’s

commercial and construction loans is variable, 42% is based

upon

LIBOR, SOFR

and

other

indexes

and

13% is

based upon

the Prime

rate index.

For the

first quarter

of 2023,

the

average one-month

LIBOR increased

439 basis

points, the

average three-month

LIBOR increased

440 basis

points, the

average Prime rate

increased 440 basis

points, and

the average three-month

SOFR increased 444

basis points, compared

to the average rates for such indexes during the first quarter of 2022.

-

A $13.0 million increase in interest

income on consumer loans and finance

leases, primarily driven by the $443.6

million

increase

in the

average

balance of

this portfolio,

which

increased interest

income

by approximately

$10.5

million,

and

approximately $2.5

million increase in interest income associated to the positive

effects

of higher market interest rates on

the consumer portfolio yields,

primarily in the credit cards portfolio.

-

A

$0.7

million

decrease

in

the

residential

mortgage

loans

portfolio

interest

income,

primarily

related

to

the

$126.2

million reduction

in the

average balance

of this

portfolio, which

resulted in

an approximate

decrease of

$1.7 million

in

interest income, partially offset by the positive effect

of new loan originations at higher current market interest rates.

A $3.8

million

increase

in interest

income

from

interest-bearing

cash balances,

which

consisted primarily

of

cash balances

deposited at the Federal Reserve Bank (“FED”), mainly due to the

effect of higher market interest rates, partially offset

by the

$1.4 billion decrease in the average balance of interest-bearing cash.

A $3.8 million increase in interest income on investment securities, mainly driven

by:

-

A $1.3

million

increase

in

interest income

on

U.S. government

and

agencies

debt

securities,

mainly

driven

by

higher-

yielding securities purchased in the first quarter of 2022.

-

A

$1.3

million

increase

in

interest

income

on

Puerto

Rico

municipal

bonds,

mainly

due

to

the

upward

repricing

of

variable-rate bonds.

-

A

$1.0

million

increase

in

interest

income

on

U.S.

agencies

MBS,

mainly

driven

by

a

decrease

in

the

premium

amortization

expense

associated

with

lower

prepayments

and

the

positive

effects

from

higher-yielding

U.S.

agencies

MBS purchased

in the second

quarter of

  1. These variances

were partially

offset by

a $177.8

million decrease

in the

average balance of this portfolio, which resulted in an approximate reduction

of $0.9 million in interest income.

83

Partially offset by:

A $22.2 million increase in interest expense on interest-bearing deposits, including

:

-

A $14.7

million increase

in interest

expense on

interest-bearing checking

and saving

accounts, driven

by an

increase of

$15.3

million in average

rates paid in

the first quarter

of 2023 as

a result of

the overall

higher interest rate

environment,

partially offset

by a reduction

of $587.2 million

in the average

balance of these

deposits, which resulted

in a decrease

of

approximately $0.6 million in interest expense.

-

A

$6.4

million

increase

in

interest

expense

on

time

deposits,

excluding

brokered

CDs,

mainly

associated

with

higher

rates being

paid in

the first

quarter of

2023 on

new issuances

and renewals

also associated

with the

higher interest

rate

environment.

The average cost of time

deposits in the first quarter

of 2023, excluding brokered

CDs, increased 111

basis

points to 1.87% when compared to the same period in 2022.

-

A $1.1

million increase

in interest

expense on

brokered CDs,

driven by

new issuances

at current

higher market

interest

rates that resulted

in an increase

of $75.0 million

in the average balance,

which resulted in

additional interest expense

of

approximately $0.5 million.

A

$7.0 million net increase in interest expense on borrowings,

including:

-

A

$6.1

million

increase

in

interest

expense

on

advances

from

the

FHLB

mainly

associated

with

an

increase

in

the

average

balance

of

$429.2

million

to

increase

available

cash,

which

resulted

in

additional

interest

expense

of

approximately $4.0

million, and

the effect

of approximately

$2.1 million

associated with

new FHLB

advances at

higher

interest rates.

-

A

$2.0

million

increase

in

interest

expense

on

other

long-term

borrowings,

driven

by

the

upward

repricing

of

junior

subordinated debentures tied to the increase in the three-month LIBOR index.

-

A

$1.1

million

decrease

in

interest

expense

on

repurchase

agreements,

mainly

driven

by

a

reduction

in

the

average

balance of $150.1 million.

Net

interest

margin

for

the

first

quarter

of

2023

increased

to

4.34%,

compared

to

3.81%

for

the

same

period

in

2022,

reflecting,

among other

things, the

upward repricing

of variable-rate

commercial loans,

the growth

in higher

yielding loans,

primarily consumer

loans, and

the change

in asset mix,

reflecting an

increase of higher

-yielding assets. These

factors were

partially offset

by the increase

in borrowings in the first quarter of 2023 and a 11

0

basis points increase in the average cost of interest-bearing liabilities.

84

Provision for Credit Losses

The provision

for credit

losses consists of

provisions for

credit losses on

loans and

finance leases,

unfunded loan

commitments, as

well as the debt securities portfolio. The principal changes in the provision for

credit losses by main categories follow:

Provision for credit losses for

loans and finance leases

The provision for

credit losses for

loans and finance

leases was an expense

of $16.3 million

for the first

quarter of 2023,

compared

to a net benefit of $17.0 million for the first quarter of 2022. The variances

by major portfolio category were as follows:

Provision for credit

losses for the commercial

and construction loan

portfolio was an expense

of $0.5 million

the first quarter

of

2023,

compared

to

a

net

benefit

of

$23.1

million

for

the

first

quarter

of

2022.

The

expense

recognized

during

the

first

quarter of

2023 was

impacted by

the following

factors: reserve

increases of

$5.0 million

for a

new nonacccrual

commercial

and industrial participated loan in the Florida region in the power generation

industry, and $1.1 million due

to a less favorable

economic outlook

in the

projection of

certain forecasted

macroeconomic

variables, such

as the

commercial real

estate price

index

(“CRE

price

index”);

partially

offset

by

reserve

decreases

of

$6.1

million

associated

with

the

receipt

of

updated

financial

information

of

certain

borrowers.

Meanwhile,

the net

benefit

recorded

in the

first quarter

of

2022

mainly

reflects

reductions

in

qualitative

reserves

mostly

associated

with

a

continued

positive

long-term

outlook

of

forecasted

macroeconomic variables, primarily

in the commercial real estate price

index, as a result of the reduced

uncertainty regarding

COVID-19,

particularly

on

loans

in

the

hotel,

transportation

and

entertainment

industries

and,

to

a

lesser

extent,

improvements in updated financial information received from borrowers

during the first quarter of 2022.

Provision for

credit losses

for the

residential mortgage

loan portfolio

was an

expense of

$0.1 million

for the

first quarter

of

2023,

compared to

a net benefit

of $4.9

million for

the first

quarter of

  1. The

net benefit

recorded for

the first

quarter of

2022

was

primarily

related

to

the

overall

decrease

in

the

size

of

the

residential

mortgage

loan

portfolio

and

continued

improvements in the long-term outlook of forecasted macroeconomic

variables, such as the housing price index.

Provision for credit

losses for the consumer

loans and finance leases

portfolio was $15.7

million for the first

quarter of 2023,

compared

to

$11.0

million

for

the

first

quarter

of

2022.

The

increase

primarily

reflects

the

increase

in

the

size

of

the

consumer loan portfolios and the increase in historical charge-off

levels in all major portfolio classes.

Provision for credit losses for

unfunded loan commitments

The provision for

credit losses for

unfunded commercial and

construction loan commitments

and standby letters

of credit was a

net

benefit of $0.1 million for each of the first quarters of 2023 and 2022.

Provision for credit

losses for held-to-maturity and available-for-sale

debt securities

The

provision

for

credit

losses

for

held-to-maturity

securities

was

a

net

benefit

of

$0.6

million

for

the

first

quarter

of

2023,

compared

to an

expense

of

$3.7

million

for

the

first

quarter

of

2022.

The net

benefit

recorded

during

the

first

quarter

of

2023

was

mostly related to a reduction in qualitative reserves driven by updated financial information

of certain bond issuers.

85

Non-Interest Income

Non-interest income amounted to $32.5 million for the

first quarter of 2023, compared to $32.9 million for

the same period in 2022.

The $0.4 million decrease in non-interest income

was primarily due to:

A $2.4 million

decrease in revenues

from mortgage banking

activities, mainly driven

by a decrease in

net realized gain

on

sales of residential mortgage loans in the secondary market mainly

due to a lower volume of sales. During the first quarters

of

2023

and

2022,

net

gains

of

$1.1

million

and

$3.5

million,

respectively,

were

recognized

as

a

result

of

GNMA

securitization transactions and whole loan sales to U.S. GSEs amounting

to $37.4 million and $93.9 million, respectively.

A $0.4 million decrease in insurance commission income,

mainly in contingent commissions.

Partially offset by:

A $1.2

million increase

in card

and processing

income mainly

related to

higher interchange

income and

merchant-related

referral fees received during the first quarter of 2023.

A

$1.1

million

increase

in

other

sources

of

non-interest

income

including:

(i)

a

$0.3

million

increase

related

to

higher

unused commitment

fees; (ii)

a $0.2

million increase

related to

higher benefit

recognized in

relation to

purchased income

tax credits realized; (iii) a

$0.2 million increase in

unrealized gains on marketable

equity securities; and (iii) a

$0.2

million

increase in fees and commissions from insurance referrals.

Non-Interest Expenses

Non-interest expenses

for the quarter

ended March 31,

2023 amounted to

$115.3 million,

compared to

$106.7 million for

the same

period in

  1. The

efficiency ratio

for the

first quarter

of 2023

was 49.39%,

compared to

48.82% for

the first

quarter of

  1. The

$8.6 million increase in non-interest expenses was primarily due

to:

A

$6.9 million increase in employees’

compensation and benefits expenses, mainly driven

by annual salary merit increases

and

an

increase

in

bonuses,

stock-based

compensation

expense

of

retirement-eligible

employees,

payroll

taxes,

and

medical insurance premium costs.

A

$1.4 million

increase in

professional service

fees, driven

by a

$1.2 million

increase in

outsourcing

technology

service

fees.

A

$1.2 million increase in credit and debit card processing fees.

A

$0.5

million

increase

in

business promotion

expenses,

mainly

related

to

a

$0.7

million

increase

in

credit

card

loyalty

rewards expense,

partially offset by a $0.3 million decrease in sponsorship

activities.

A

$0.5 million

increase in FDI

C

deposit insurance

cost, driven

by the two

basis points increase

on the initial

base deposit

insurance assessment rate that came into effect during the first quarter

of 2023.

Partially offset by:

A

$1.3 million increase in net gains

on OREO operations, mainly driven

by a $1.4 million increase in

net realized gains on

sales of OREO properties, primarily residential properties in the Puerto

Rico region.

A

$1.2

million

decrease

in

occupancy

and

equipment

expenses,

primarily

related

to

a

reduction

in

rental

expenses

and

equipment-related depreciation charges.

86

Income Taxes

For the

first quarter

of 2023,

the Corporation

recorded an

income tax

expense of

$31.9 million

compared to

$43.0 million

for the

same

period

in

2022.

The

decrease

in

income

tax

expense

was

mainly

related

to

lower

pre-tax

income

and

a

higher

proportion

of

exempt to taxable income resulting in a lower effective tax rate.

The Corporation’s

estimated annual effective tax

rate in the first quarter of

2023, excluding entities from

which a tax benefit cannot

be recognized

and discrete

items, was

31.2%,

compared

to 32.9%

for the

first quarter

of 2022.

See Note

17 -

Income Taxes,

to the

unaudited consolidated financial statements herein for additional

information.

FINANCIAL CONDITION AND OPERATING

ANALYSIS

Assets

The Corporation’s total assets

were $19.0 billion as of March 31, 2023, an increase

of $342.6 million from December 31, 2022. The

increase

was

primarily

related

to

a

$343.1

million

increase

in

cash

and

cash

equivalents

mainly

attributable

to

the

$347.8

million

increase

in

borrowings

to

enhance

available

cash

as

a

precautionary

measure

in

light

of

recent

instability

in

the

banking

sector.

In

addition,

as further

discussed

below,

total

loans

increased

by

$28.0

million.

These

variances

were

partially

offset

by a

$4.3

million

decrease in total investment securities.

Loans Receivable, including Loans Held for Sale

As of March 31, 2023, the Corporation’s

total loan portfolio before the ACL amounted to $11.6

billion, an increase of $28.0 million

compared

to

December

31,

2022.

The

increase

consisted

of

a

$141.5

million

growth

in

the

Puerto

Rico

region,

partially

offset

by

decreases

of

$108.6

million

in

the

Florida

region

and

$4.9

million

in

the

Virgin

Islands

region.

On

a

portfolio

basis,

the

increase

consisted

of

a

$79.5

million

growth

in

consumer

loans,

including

a

$72.0

million

increase

in

auto

and

leases,

partially

offset

by

decreases

of $32.9 million in residential mortgage loans and $18.6 million

in commercial and construction loans.

As of

March

31,

2023,

the

loans held

for

the

Corporation’s

investment

portfolio

was comprised

of

commercial

and

construction

loans

(46%),

residential

real

estate

loans

(24%),

and

consumer

and

finance

leases

(30%).

Of

the

total

gross

loan

portfolio

held

for

investment of

$11.6

billion as

of March

31, 2023,

the Corporation

had credit

risk concentration

of approximately

80% in

the Puerto

Rico region,

17% in

the United

States region

(mainly

in the

state of

Florida),

and

3% in

the Virgin

Islands region,

as shown

in the

following table:

87

As of March 31, 2023

Puerto Rico

Virgin Islands

United States

Total

(In thousands)

Residential mortgage loans

$

2,205,659

$

176,123

$

429,746

$

2,811,528

Construction loans

44,297

3,898

95,469

143,664

Commercial mortgage loans

1,766,479

62,694

524,486

2,353,659

Commercial and Industrial loans

1,872,215

69,013

920,961

2,862,189

Total commercial

loans

3,682,991

135,605

1,540,916

5,359,512

Consumer loans and finance leases

3,335,014

63,231

8,700

3,406,945

Total loans held

for investment, gross

$

9,223,664

$

374,959

$

1,979,362

$

11,577,985

Loans held for sale

14,830

-

353

15,183

Total loans, gross

$

9,238,494

$

374,959

$

1,979,715

$

11,593,168

As of December 31, 2022

Puerto Rico

Virgin Islands

United States

Total

(In thousands)

Residential mortgage loans

$

2,237,983

$

179,917

$

429,390

$

2,847,290

Construction loans

30,529

4,243

98,181

132,953

Commercial mortgage loans

1,768,890

65,314

524,647

2,358,851

Commercial and Industrial loans

1,791,235

68,874

1,026,154

2,886,263

Total commercial

loans

3,590,654

138,431

1,648,982

5,378,067

Consumer loans and finance leases

3,256,070

61,419

9,979

3,327,468

Total loans held

for investment, gross

$

9,084,707

$

379,767

$

2,088,351

$

11,552,825

Loans held for sale

12,306

-

-

12,306

Total loans, gross

$

9,097,013

$

379,767

$

2,088,351

$

11,565,131

88

Residential Real Estate Loans

As of March 31,

2023, the Corporation’s

total residential mortgage loan

portfolio, including loans

held for sale, decreased

by $32.9

million, as compared

to the balance as

of December 31, 2022.

The decline in the

residential mortgage loan portfolio

reflects decreases

of $29.8 million

in the Puerto Rico

region and $3.8

million in the Virgin

Islands region, partially

offset by an

increase of $0.7 million

in the Florida region.

The decline was driven by

repayments, foreclosures, and charge

-offs, which more

than offset the volume

of new

loan originations kept on the balance sheet.

The

majority

of

the

Corporation’s

outstanding

balance

of

residential

mortgage

loans

in

the

Puerto

Rico

and

the

Virgin

Islands

regions as of

March 31,

2023 consisted of

fixed-rate loans

that traditionally

carry higher yields

than residential

mortgage loans

in the

Florida region. In

the Florida region,

approximately 44% of

the residential mortgage

loan portfolio consisted

of hybrid adjustable-rate

mortgages. In

accordance with

the Corporation’s

underwriting guidelines,

residential mortgage

loans are

primarily fully

documented

loans, and the Corporation does not originate negative amortization loans.

Commercial and Construction Loans

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation’s

commercial and

construction loan

portfolio decreased

by $18.6

million, as

compared to

the balance as of December 31, 2022.

In the Florida

region, commercial and

construction loans decreased

by $108.1 million,

as compared to

the balance as

of December

31, 2022. This decrease

reflected $93.3 million in

payoffs and paydowns of

five commercial and industrial

relationships in the Florida

region, each in excess of $10 million,

including the payoff of a $24.3

million commercial and industrial participated

loan in the leisure

and hospitality industry.

In

the

Virgin

Islands

region,

commercial

and

construction

loans

decreased

by

$2.8

million,

as

compared

to

the

balance

as

of

December 31, 2022.

In

the

Puerto

Rico

region,

commercial

and

construction

loans

increased

by

$92.3

million,

as

compared

to

the

balance

as

of

December

31,

2022.

This

increase

was

driven

by

the

origination

of

several

loans,

including

four

commercial

relationships,

each

in

excess of $10 million, that increased the portfolio amount by $54.2 million.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation

had

$170.9

million

outstanding

in

loans

extended

to

the

Puerto

Rico

government,

its

municipalities,

and

public

corporations,

compared

to

$169.8

million

as

of

December

31,

2022.

See

“Exposure

to

Puerto

Rico

Government” below for additional information.

The Corporation

also has

credit exposure

to USVI

government entities.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation had

$38.7 million

in

loans

to

USVI

government

public

corporations,

compared

to

$38.0

million

as

of

December

31,

2022.

See

“Exposure

to

USVI

Government”

below for additional information.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation’s

total commercial

mortgage loan

exposure amounted

to $2.4

billion, or

44% of

the total

commercial

loan portfolio.

Of this

total, $379

million and

$38 million

is in

office real

estate in

the Puerto

Rico and

Florida regions,

respectively.

Total office

real estate maturing during the remainder of 2023 and 2024 amounted

to $107 million.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation’s

total exposure

to shared

national credit

(“SNC”) loans

(including unused

commitments)

amounted to $1.1

billion as of

each of March

31, 2023 and

December 31, 2022.

As of March

31, 2023, approximately

$207.6 million

of the SNC exposure is related to the portfolio in Puerto Rico and $858.3 million

is related to the portfolio in the Florida region.

Consumer Loans and Finance Leases

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation’s

consumer loan

and finance

lease portfolio

increased by

$79.5 million

to $3.4

billion, as

compared

to

the

portfolio

balance

of

$3.3

billion

as

of

December

31,

2022.

This

increase

was

mainly

related

to

increases

of

$34.8

million

and

$37.2

million

in

the

auto

loans

and

finance

leases

portfolios,

respectively.

The

growth

in

consumer

loans

is

mainly

reflected in the Puerto Rico region across all portfolio classes.

89

Loan Production

First

BanCorp.

relies

primarily

on

its

retail

network

of

branches

to

originate

residential

and

consumer

loans.

The

Corporation

may

supplement

its residential

mortgage originations

with wholesale

servicing released

mortgage loan

purchases from

mortgage bankers.

The

Corporation

manages

its

construction

and

commercial

loan

originations

through

centralized

units

and

most

of

its

originations

come

from

existing

customers,

as

well

as

through

referrals

and

direct

solicitations.

Auto

loans

and

finance

leases

originations

rely

primarily on relationships with auto dealers and dedicated sales professionals who

serve selected locations to facilitate originations.

The

following

table

provides

a

breakdown

of

First

BanCorp.’s

loan

production,

including

purchases,

refinancings,

renewals

and

draws from existing revolving and non-revolving commitments, for

the indicated periods:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Residential mortgage

$

77,302

$

122,513

Construction

35,499

19,986

Commercial mortgage

88,692

127,985

Commercial and Industrial

555,882

490,296

Consumer

435,318

426,467

Total loan production

$

1,192,693

$

1,187,247

During

the

quarter

ended

March

31,

2023,

total

loan

originations,

including

purchases,

refinancings,

and

draws

from

existing

revolving and non-revolving

commitments, amounted

to approximately $1.2

billion, an increase

of $5.5 million,

compared to the

first

quarter of 2022.

Residential

mortgage

loan

originations

for

the

quarter

ended

March

31,

2023

amounted

to

$77.3

million,

compared

to

$122.5

million for the first quarter of 2022. The decrease of $45.2 million

in the first quarter of 2023, as compared to the same period

in 2022,

reflects

declines of

$42.2 million

in the

Puerto Rico

region,

$2.5 million

in the

Florida region,

and $0.5

million in

the Virgin

Islands

region.

Approximately

60%

of

the

$61.5

million

residential

mortgage

loan

originations

in

the

Puerto

Rico

region

during

the

first

quarter of

2023 were

of conforming

loans, compared

to 67%

of $103.7

million for

the first

quarter of

  1. The

decrease during

the

first quarter of 2023

is related to a

lower volume of conforming

loan originations and refinancings,

in part due to a

higher interest rate

environment.

Commercial

and

construction

loan

originations

(excluding government

loans)

for the

quarter ended

March 31,

2023 amounted

to

$672.8

million,

compared

to $633.8

million

for

the

first

quarter

of

2022.

The

increase

of

$39.0

million

in

the

first

quarter

of

2023

consisted of increases of $93.7

million and $0.5 million in

the Puerto Rico and the Virgin

Islands regions, respectively,

partially offset

by a decrease of $55.2 million in the Florida region.

Government

loan

originations

for

the

quarter

ended

March

31,

2023

amounted

to

$7.2

million,

an

increase

of

$2.8

million,

compared

to

$4.4

million

for

the

first

quarter

of

2022.

Government

loan

originations

during

the

first

quarter

of

2023

were

mainly

related to the origination

of a loan to an

agency of the Puerto Rico

government for a low-income

housing project and the utilization

of

an arranged

overdraft line of

credit of

a government entity

in the Virgin

Islands region. Government

loan originations during

the first

quarter

of

2022

were

related

to

the

utilization

of

an

arranged

overdraft

line

of

credit

of

a

government

entity

in

the

Virgin

Islands

region.

Originations of

auto loans

(including finance

leases) for

the quarter

ended March

31, 2023

amounted to

$245.1 million,

compared

to

$261.3

million

for

the first

quarter

of

2022.

The

decrease

in

the

first

quarter

of

2023,

as compared

to

the

same

quarter

of

2022,

consisted of a $17.5

million decrease in the

Puerto Rico region, partially

offset by a

$1.3 million increase in

the Virgin

Islands region.

Other consumer loan

originations, other than credit

cards, for the quarter

ended March 31, 2023

amounted to $71.9

million, compared

to $55.7

million for the

first quarter of

  1. Most of

the increase in

other consumer

loan originations for

the first quarter

of 2023, as

compared with the same

period in 2022, was in

the Puerto Rico region.

The utilization activity on

the outstanding credit card portfolio

for the quarter ended March 31, 2023 amounted to $118.4

million, compared to $109.5 million for the same period in 2022.

90

Investment Activities

As

part

of

its

liquidity,

revenue

diversification,

and

interest

rate

risk

management

strategies,

First

BanCorp.

maintains

a

debt

securities portfolio classified as available for sale or held to maturity.

The Corporation’s

total available-for-sale

debt securities

portfolio as

of March

31, 2023

amounted to

$5.6 billion,

a $10.3

million

decrease from

December 31,

2022.

The decrease

was mainly

driven by

repayments of

approximately $95.9

million of

U.S. agencies

and MBS,

partially offset

by an

$87.2 million

increase in

fair value

attributable to

changes in

market interest

rates. As

of March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation

had

a

net

unrealized

loss

on

available-for-sale

debt

securities

of

$711.0

million.

This

unrealized

loss

is

attributable to

instruments on book

s

carrying a lower

interest rate than

market rates. The

Corporation expects

that this unrealized

loss

will reverse

over

time.

The Corporation

expects

the

portfolio

to

continue

to

decrease

as repayments

are received

over

the

next

two

years

and

further

expects

that the

accumulated

other

comprehensive

loss will

decrease

accordingly,

excluding

the impact

of

market

interest rates.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

substantially

all

of

the

Corporation’s

available-for-sale

debt

securities

portfolio

was

invested

in

U.S.

government

and

agencies

debentures

and

fixed-rate

GSEs’

MBS.

In

addition,

as

of

March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation

held

a

bond

issued

by

the

PRHFA,

classified

as available

for

sale,

specifically

a

residential

pass-through

MBS in

the

aggregate

amount

of $3.3

million

(fair

value

-

$2.2

million).

This

residential

pass-through

MBS

issued

by

the

PRHFA

is

collateralized

by

certain

second

mortgages originated

under a program

launched by the

Puerto Rico government

in 2010 and

had an unrealized

loss of $1.1

million as

of

March

31,

2023,

of

which

$0.4

million

is

due

to

credit

deterioration.

During

2021,

the

Corporation

placed

this

instrument

in

nonaccrual status based on the delinquency status of the underlying

second mortgage loans collateral.

As of

March 31,

2023,

the Corporation’s

held-to-maturity

debt

securities portfolio,

before the

ACL, decreased

to $431.4

million,

compared

to

$437.5

million

as

of

December

31,

2022.

Held-to-maturity

debt

securities

consisted

of

fixed-rate

GSEs’

MBS

and

financing

arrangements

with

Puerto

Rico

municipalities

issued

in

bond

form,

which

the

Corporation

accounts

for

as securities,

but

which were

underwritten as

loans with

features that

are typically

found in

commercial loans.

Puerto Rico

municipal bonds

typically

are not

issued in

bearer

form, are

not registered

with the

Securities and

Exchange

Commission, and

are not

rated by

external

credit

agencies.

These

bonds

have

seniority

to

the

payment

of

operating

costs

and

expenses

of

the

municipality

and,

in

most

cases,

are

supported

by

assigned

property

tax

revenues.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

approximately

74%

of

the

Corporation’s

municipality

bonds

consisted

of

obligations

issued

by

four

of

the

largest

municipalities

in

Puerto

Rico.

The

municipalities

are

required

by

law

to

levy

special property

taxes in

such amounts

as are

required for

the payment

of all

of their

respective general

obligation bonds

and loans.

Given the uncertainties as to

the effects that the fiscal

position of the Puerto Rico central government,

and the measures taken, or

to be

taken, by other

government entities may

have on municipalities,

the Corporation

cannot be certain

whether future charges

to the ACL

on these securities will be required.

As of March 31, 2023, the ACL

for held-to-maturity debt securities was

$7.6 million, compared to

$8.3 million as of December 31, 2022.

See

“Risk

Management

Exposure

to Puerto

Rico

Government”

below

for

information

and

details

about

the Corporation’s

total

direct

exposure

to

the

Puerto

Rico

government,

including

municipalities

and

“Credit

Risk

Management”

below

for

the

ACL

of

the

exposure to Puerto Rico municipal bonds.

91

The following table presents the carrying values of investments as of the indicated dates:

March 31, 2023

December 31, 2022

(In thousands)

Money market investments

$

1,059

$

2,025

Available-for-sale

debt securities, at fair value:

U.S. government and agencies obligations

2,531,632

2,492,228

Puerto Rico government obligations

2,203

2,201

MBS:

Residential

2,896,655

2,941,458

Commercial

158,766

163,133

Other

-

500

Total available-for-sale

debt securities, at fair value

5,589,256

5,599,520

Held-to-maturity debt securities, at amortized cost:

MBS:

Residential

161,587

166,739

Commercial

104,008

105,088

Puerto Rico municipal bonds

165,800

165,710

ACL for held-to-maturity Puerto Rico municipal bonds

(7,646)

(8,286)

Total held-to-maturity

debt securities

423,749

429,251

Equity securities, including $54.2 million and $42.9 million of FHLB stock

as of March 31,

2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively

66,714

55,289

Total money market

investments and investment securities

$

6,080,778

$

6,086,085

The carrying values of debt securities as of March 31, 2023 by contractual maturity

(excluding MBS), are shown below:

Carrying Amount

Weighted-Average

Yield %

(Dollars in thousands)

U.S. government and agencies obligations:

Due within one year

$

210,928

0.44

Due after one year through five years

2,272,126

0.83

Due after five years through ten years

36,926

1.64

Due after ten years

11,652

5.15

2,531,632

0.83

Puerto Rico government and municipalities obligations:

Due within one year

1,204

5.70

Due after one year through five years

42,633

6.74

Due after five years through ten years

55,940

7.10

Due after ten years

68,226

7.73

168,003

7.26

MBS

3,321,016

1.68

ACL on held-to-maturity debt securities

(7,646)

-

Total debt securities

$

6,013,005

1.48

92

Net

interest

income

in

future

periods

could

be

affected

by

prepayments

of

MBS.

Any

acceleration

in

the

prepayments

of

MBS

purchased

at

a

premium

would

lower

yields

on

these

securities,

since

the

amortization

of

premiums

paid

upon

acquisition

would

accelerate. Conversely,

acceleration of the

prepayments of MBS would

increase yields on

securities purchased at

a discount, since

the

amortization

of

the

discount

would

accelerate.

These

risks

are

directly

linked

to

future

period

market

interest

rate

fluctuations.

Net

interest income

in future periods

might also be

affected by

the Corporation’s

investment in

callable securities. As

of March

31, 2023,

the

Corporation

had

approximately

$2.0

billion

in

callable

debt

securities

(U.S.

agencies

debt

securities)

with

an

average

yield

of

0.84%, of

which approximately

59% were

purchased at

a discount

and 5%

at a

premium.

See “Risk

Management” below

for further

analysis

of

the

effects

of

changing

interest

rates

on

the

Corporation’s

net

interest

income

and

the

Corporation’s

interest

rate

risk

management strategies. Also,

refer to Note 2

– Debt Securities to

the unaudited consolidated

financial statements herein for

additional

information regarding the Corporation’s

debt securities portfolio.

RISK MANAGEMENT

General

Risks

are

inherent

in

virtually

all

aspects

of

the

Corporation’s

business

activities

and

operations.

Consequently,

effective

risk

management

is

fundamental

to

the

success

of

the

Corporation.

The

primary

goals

of

risk

management

are

to

ensure

that

the

Corporation’s risk-taking

activities are consistent with

the Corporation’s

objectives and risk

tolerance, and that

there is an appropriate

balance between risks and rewards in order to maximize stockholder value.

The

Corporation

has

in

place

a

risk

management

framework

to

monitor,

evaluate

and

manage

the

principal

risks

assumed

in

conducting its activities. First BanCorp.’s

business is subject to eleven

broad categories of risks: (i) liquidity

risk; (ii) interest rate risk;

(iii) market risk; (iv)

credit risk; (v) operational

risk; (vi) legal and

regulatory risk; (vii)

reputational risk; (viii) model

risk; (ix) capital

risk; (x)

strategic risk;

and (xi)

information technology

risk. First

BanCorp. has

adopted policies

and procedures

designed to

identify

and manage the risks to which the Corporation is exposed.

The

Corporation’s

risk

management

policies

are

described

below,

as

well

as

in

Part

II,

Item

7,

“Management’s

Discussion

and

Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations,” in the 2022 Annual

Report on Form 10-K.

Liquidity Risk

Liquidity

risk

involves

the

ongoing

ability

to

accommodate

liability

maturities

and

deposit

withdrawals,

fund

asset growth

and

business operations,

and meet

contractual obligations

through unconstrained

access to funding

at reasonable

market rates. Liquidity

management

involves

forecasting

funding

requirements

and

maintaining

sufficient

capacity

to

meet

liquidity

needs

and

accommodate

fluctuations

in

asset

and

liability

levels

due

to

changes

in

the

Corporation’s

business

operations

or

unanticipated

events.

The Corporation

manages liquidity

at two

levels. The

first is

the liquidity

of the

parent company,

or First

Bancorp., which

is the

holding

company

that

owns

the

banking

and

non-banking

subsidiaries.

The

second

is

the

liquidity

of

the

banking

subsidiary,

or

FirstBank.

The Asset

and Liability

Committee of

the Board

is responsible

for overseeing

management’s

establishment of

the Corporation’s

liquidity

policy,

as

well

as

approving

operating

and

contingency

procedures

and

monitoring

liquidity

on

an

ongoing

basis.

The

Management’s

Investment

and

Asset

Liability

Committee

(“MIALCO”),

which

reports

to

the

Board’s

Asset

and

Liability

Committee,

uses

measures

of

liquidity

developed

by

management

that

involve

the

use

of

several

assumptions

to

review

the

Corporation’s

liquidity

position

on

a

monthly

basis.

The

MIALCO

oversees

liquidity

management,

interest

rate

risk,

market

risk,

and other related matters.

The MIALCO is composed of

senior management officers, including

the Chief Executive Officer,

the Chief Financial Officer,

the

Chief Risk

Officer,

the Corporate

Strategic and

Business Development

Director,

the Treasury

and

Investments

Risk Manager,

the

Financial

Planning

and

Asset

and

Liability

Management

(“ALM”)

Director,

and

the

Treasurer.

The

Treasury

and

Investments

Division is responsible for planning

and executing the Corporation’s

funding activities and strategy,

monitoring liquidity availability

on a daily basis, and reviewing

liquidity measures on a weekly basis.

The Treasury and Investments

Accounting and Operations area

of

the

Corporate

Controller’s

Department

is

responsible

for

calculating

the

liquidity

measurements

used

by

the

Treasury

and

Investment Division to

review the Corporation’s

liquidity position on

a monthly basis. The

Financial Planning and

ALM Division is

responsible to estimate the liquidity gap for longer periods.

93

To

ensure

adequate liquidity

through the

full range

of potential

operating

environments and

market conditions,

the Corporation

conducts

its

liquidity

management

and

business

activities

in

a

manner

that

is

intended

to

preserve

and

enhance

funding

stability,

flexibility,

and

diversity.

Key

components

of

this

operating

strategy

include

a

strong

focus

on

the

continued

development

of

customer-based

funding, the

maintenance

of direct

relationships with

wholesale

market funding

providers, and

the maintenance

of

the ability to liquidate certain assets when, and if, requirements warrant.

The

Corporation

develops

and

maintains

contingency

funding

plans.

These

plans

evaluate

the

Corporation’s

liquidity

position

under various

operating circumstances

and are

designed to

help ensure

that the

Corporation will

be able

to operate

through periods

of stress when

access to normal

sources of funds

is constrained. The

plans project funding

requirements during

a potential period

of

stress, specify and quantify sources of liquidity,

outline actions and procedures for effectively managing liquidity

through a period of

stress, and

define roles

and responsibilities

for the

Corporation’s

employees. Under

the contingency

funding plans,

the Corporation

stresses the

balance sheet

and the liquidity

position to

critical levels

that mimic

difficulties in

generating funds

or even

maintaining

the current

funding position

of the

Corporation and

the Bank

and are

designed to

help ensure

the ability

of the

Corporation and

the

Bank to honor

their respective commitments.

The Corporation has

established liquidity

triggers that the

MIALCO monitors

in order

to

maintain

the

ordinary

funding

of

the

banking

business.

The

MIALCO

developed

contingency

funding

plans

for

the

following

three

scenarios:

a

credit rating

downgrade,

an

economic

cycle downturn

event,

and

a

concentration

event.

The

Board’s

Asset and

Liability Committee reviews and approves these plans on an annual basis.

The

Corporation

manages

its

liquidity

in

a

proactive

manner

and

in

an

effort

to

maintain

a

sound

liquidity

position.

It

uses

multiple measures

to monitor

its liquidity

position, including

core liquidity,

basic liquidity,

and time-based

reserve measures.

Cash

and cash equivalents

amounted to $823.6

million as of

March 31, 2023,

compared to $480.5

million as of

December 31, 2022.

Free

high-quality

liquid

securities

that

could

be

liquidated

or

pledged

within

one

day

amounted

to

$2.4

billion

as

of

March

31,

2023,

compared to $3.1

billion as of

December 31, 2022.

As of March

31, 2023, the

estimated core liquidity

reserve (which includes

cash

and

free

high

quality

liquid

assets such

as U.S.

government

and

GSEs obligations

that

could

be

liquidated

or

pledged

within

one

day) was

$3.2 billion,

or 16.77%

of total

assets, compared

to $3.5

billion, or

19.02% of

total assets

as of

December 31,

  1. The

basic liquidity ratio (which adds available secured lines of credit to the

core liquidity) was approximately 21.42% of total assets as of

March 31, 2023, compared to 22.48% of total assets as of December 31,

2022.

As of

March 31,

2023,

in addition

to the

aforementioned $3.2

billion in

cash and

free high

quality liquid

assets, the

Corporation

had $882.5 million available for

credit with the

FHLB based on the value of collateral

pledged with the FHLB. The Corporation

also

maintains borrowing

capacity at

the FED

Discount Window.

The Corporation

does not

consider borrowing

capacity from

the FED

Discount

Window

as a

primary

source

of liquidity

but had

approximately

$1.4

billion

available

for

funding under

the FED’s

BIC

Program

as of

March

31,

2023 as

an

additional

contingent

source

of liquidity.

Total

loans pledged

to

the

FED

Discount

Window

amounted to $2.3 billion as of March 31, 2023. The Corporation

also does not rely on uncommitted inter-bank lines of

credit (federal

funds lines)

to fund

its operations

and does

not include

them in

the basic

liquidity measure.

On a

combined basis,

as of

March 31,

2023, the Corporation had $5.5 billion available to meet liquidity needs

,

while maintaining a strong capital position.

The Bank had $252.9 million in brokered

CDs as of March 31, 2023, of which

approximately $180.9 million mature over

the next

twelve months.

Liquidity at

the Bank level

is highly dependent

on bank deposits,

which fund

84.9% of the

Bank’s assets

(or 83.5%

excluding brokered

CDs). Historically,

the use

of brokered

CDs has

been an

additional source

of funding

for the

Corporation as

it

provides

an additional

efficient channel

for funding

diversification and

can be

obtained faster

than regular

retail deposits.

Funding

through brokered CDs may continue to increase the overall cost of funding for the

Corporation and impact the net interest margin.

In addition, as further discussed

below, the

Corporation maintain a large,

stable core deposit base and a

diversified base of readily

available wholesale

funding sources,

including advances

from the FHLB

through pledged

borrowing capacity,

securities sold

under

agreements

to

repurchase,

and

access

to

certificates

of

deposit

issued

through

brokers.

Funding

through

wholesale

funding

may

continue to increase the overall cost of funding for the Corporation and impact the net

interest margin.

Over the

last year,

the FED’s

policies to

control the

inflationary economic

environment, including

repeated market

interest rate

increases,

have

resulted

in

excess

liquidity

gradually

tapering

off

and

impacting

the

Corporation’s

core

deposit

balances

as

customers

have

allocated

cash

into

higher

yielding

options.

During

the

first

quarter

of

2023,

the

banking

industry

in

the

U.S.

mainland experienced

deposit runoff

that led to

the collapse of

certain financial

institutions. As a

precautionary measure,

during the

first quarter of

2023, the Corporation

increased the use of

advances from the FHLB,

repurchase agreements, and

other sources, such

as wholesale funding brokers,

to increase cash and cash

equivalents. Increased use of long-term

FHLB advances has been part

of the

Corporation’s

interest rate risk

management strategy

to mitigate

the impact of

market interest rate

increases. The

additional use

and

future levels of these sources of

funding are dependent on factors such

as the loan portfolio future pipeline

and customers continuing

to

allocate

more

cash

into

higher

yielding

alternatives,

among

other

factors.

The

Corporation

believes

that

as

uncertainty

in

the

banking industry eases certain short-term borrowings will be repaid and

not renewed.

94

As

a

provider

of

financial

services,

the

Corporation

routinely

enters

into

commitments

with

off-balance

sheet

risk

to

meet

the

financial

needs

of

its

customers.

These

financial

instruments

may

include

loan

commitments

and

standby

letters

of

credit.

These

commitments

are

subject

to

the

same

credit

policies

and

approval

processes

used

for

on-balance

sheet

instruments.

These

instruments involve, to varying degrees,

elements of credit and interest rate risk

in excess of the amount recognized in the

statements

of

financial

condition.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation’s

commitments

to

extend

credit

amounted

to

approximately

$2.0

billion.

Commitments

to

extend

credit

are

agreements

to

lend

to

a

customer

as

long

as

there

is

no

violation

of

any

condition

established

in

the

contract.

Since

certain

commitments

are

expected

to

expire

without

being

drawn

upon,

the

total

commitment

amount does

not necessarily

represent future

cash requirements. For

most of the

commercial lines of

credit, the

Corporation has

the

option

to

reevaluate

the

agreement

prior

to

additional

disbursements.

There

have

been

no

significant

or

unexpected

draws

on

existing commitments. In the case of

credit cards and personal lines

of credit, the Corporation can

cancel the unused credit facility

at

any time and without cause.

The following table summarizes commitments to extend credit and standby letters of

credit as of the indicated dates:

March 31,

2023

December 31, 2022

(In thousands)

Financial instruments whose contract amounts represent credit risk:

Commitments to extend credit:

Construction undisbursed funds

$

200,105

$

170,639

Unused credit card lines

949,701

936,231

Unused personal lines of credit

41,639

41,988

Commercial lines of credit

772,240

761,634

Letters of credit:

Commercial letters of credit

84,724

68,647

Standby letters of credit

8,886

9,160

The

Corporation

engages

in

the ordinary

course

of business

in

other

financial

transactions

that

are not

recorded

on the

balance

sheet,

or

may

be

recorded

on

the

balance

sheet

in

amounts

that

are

different

from

the

full

contract

or

notional

amount

of

the

transaction

and, thus,

affect

the Corporation’s

liquidity position.

These transactions

are designed

to (i)

meet the

financial needs

of

customers, (ii) manage the

Corporation’s credit,

market and liquidity risks, (iii)

diversify the Corporation’s

funding sources, and (iv)

optimize capital.

In addition to the

aforementioned off-balance

sheet debt obligations

and unfunded commitments

to extend credit, the

Corporation

has obligations and commitments to make future payments

under contracts, amounting to approximately $4.0

billion as of March 31,

2023.

Our

material

cash

requirements

comprise

primarily

of

contractual

obligations

to

make

future

payments

related

to

time

deposits,

short-term

borrowings,

long-term

debt,

and

operating

lease

obligations.

We

also

have

other

contractual

cash

obligations

related

to

certain

binding

agreements

we

have

entered

into

for

services

including

outsourcing

of

technology

services,

security,

advertising and

other services

which are

not material

to our

liquidity needs.

We

currently anticipate

that our

available funds,

credit

facilities, and cash flows from operations will be sufficient to

meet our operational cash needs for the foreseeable future.

Off-balance sheet

transactions are continuously

monitored to consider

their potential impact

to our liquidity

position and changes

are applied to the balance between sources and uses of funds, as deemed appropriate,

to maintain a sound liquidity position.

Sources of Funding

The

Corporation

utilizes

different

sources

of

funding

to

help

ensure

that

adequate

levels

of

liquidity

are

available

when

needed.

Diversification of

funding sources is

of great importance

to protect the

Corporation’s

liquidity from market

disruptions. The

principal

sources of

short-term

funds are

deposits, including

brokered CDs.

Additional funding

is provided

by short-

and long-term

securities

sold under agreements

to repurchase and

lines of credit with

the FHLB. Consistent with

its strategy,

the Corporation has been

seeking

to add core deposits.

The

Asset and

Liability

Committee

reviews

credit availability

on a

regular basis.

The

Corporation

also

sells mortgage

loans

as a

supplementary source of

funding and has obtained

long-term funding in the past

through the issuance of

notes and long-term brokered

CDs. In

addition, the

Corporation also

maintains as

additional contingent

sources borrowing

capacity at

the FED’s

BIC Program

and

recently enrolled in the FED’s Bank

Term Funding

Program (“BTFP”).

95

While

liquidity

is

an

ongoing

challenge

for

all

financial

institutions,

management

believes

that

the

Corporation’s

available

borrowing capacity and

efforts to grow

core deposits will be

adequate to provide

the necessary funding

for the Corporation’s

business

plans in the foreseeable future.

The Corporation’s principal

sources of funding are discussed below:

Retail core

deposits

– The

Corporation’s

deposit products

include regular

savings accounts,

demand deposit

accounts, money

market

accounts,

and retail

CDs. As

of March

31, 2023,

the Corporation’s

core deposits,

which exclude

government

deposits and

brokered

CDs, decreased by

$142.7 million to

$13.1 billion from

$13.3 billion as

of December 31,

  1. The decrease

was primarily related

to

saving and

checking accounts

in the

Florida region

used for

loan repayments,

as well

as customers

continuing to

reallocate cash

into

higher-yielding alternatives.

Notwithstanding, these

reductions were

partially offset

by an

increase in

time deposits,

including

a shift

from

non-interest

bearing

or

low-interest

bearing

products

to

time

deposits,

driven

by

higher

rates

offered,

as

well

as

certain

large

commercial deposit inflows in the Puerto Rico region. The average balance per retail

core deposit account is $26 thousand.

Government deposits

– As

of March

31, 2023,

the Corporation

had $2.2

billion of

Puerto Rico

public sector

deposits ($2.0

billion in

transactional

accounts

and

$161.9

million

in

time

deposits),

compared

to

$2.3

billion

as

of

December

31,

2022.

The

decrease

was

primarily related

to reductions in

the balance

of operational accounts

of a public

corporation. These

deposits are insured

by the FDIC

up to

the applicable

limits and

the uninsured

portions is

fully

collateralized.

Approximately

25% of

the public

sector deposits

as of

March 31,

2023 were

from municipalities

and municipal

agencies in

Puerto Rico

and 75% were

from public

corporations, the

central

government and agencies, and U.S. federal government agencies in Puerto Rico.

In

addition,

as

of

March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation

had

$462.0

million

of

government

deposits

in

the

Virgin

Islands

region

(December 31, 2022 - $442.8 million) and $11.3

million in the Florida region (December 31, 2022 - $11.6

million).

The uninsured portions

of government deposits

were collateralized by

securities and loans with

an amortized cost

of $3.1 billion

as

of each

of March

31, 2023

and December

31, 2022,

and an

estimated market

value of

$2.8 billion

and $2.7

billion, respectively.

In

addition to

securities and loans,

as of each

of March

31, 2023 and

December 31, 2022,

the Corporation

used $200.0 million

in letters

of credit issued by the FHLB as pledges for public deposits in the Virgin

Islands.

Estimate

of

Uninsured

Deposits

As

of

March

31,

2023

and

December

31,

2022,

the

estimated

amount

of

uninsured

deposits

totaled

$7.2

billion

and

$7.6 billion,

respectively,

generally

representing

the portion

of deposits

in

domestic

offices

that

exceed

the

FDIC insurance

limit of $250,000

and amounts in

any other uninsured

deposit account.

The balances presented

as of March

31, 2023

and December 31, 2022, include the uninsured

portion of government deposits, which are fully collateralized

as previously mentioned.

Excluding

fully

collateralized

deposits,

$4.8

billion

of

these

deposits

are

uninsured,

which

represent

30.13%

of

total

deposits,

excluding brokered

CDs, as of

March 31,

2023, compared

to $4.9 billion,

or 30.65% of

total deposits,

excluding brokered

CDs, as of

December 31,

  1. The

amount of

uninsured deposits

is calculated

based on

the same

methodologies and

assumptions used

for our

bank regulatory reporting requirements adjusted for cash held by wholly-owned

subsidiaries at the Bank.

The following table presents by contractual maturities the amount of U.S. time deposits in

excess of FDIC insurance limits (over

$250,000) and other time deposits that are otherwise uninsured as of March

31, 2023:

(In thousands)

3 months or

less

3 months to

6 months

6 months to

1 year

Over 1 year

Total

U.S. time deposits in excess of FDIC insurance

limits

$

125,162

$

84,861

$

217,846

$

341,507

$

769,376

Other uninsured time deposits

$

18,814

$

10,058

$

9,864

$

5,647

$

44,383

Brokered

CDs

– Total

brokered CDs increased by

$147.1 million to $252.9

million as of March 31,

2023, compared to $105.8

million

as of December

31, 2022.

The increase reflects

the effect

of new issuances

amounting to

$189.7 million

with an all-in

cost of 4.70%,

partially offset

by approximately

$42.6 million

of maturing

brokered CDs,

with an

all-in cost

of 4.06%,

that were

paid off

during the

first quarter of 2023.

The average remaining term to maturity of the brokered CDs outstanding

as of March 31, 2023 was approximately 1.1 years.

The use of

brokered CDs provides

an efficient channel

for funding diversification

and interest rate management.

Brokered CDs are

insured by the FDIC up to regulatory limits and can be obtained faster than regular

retail deposits.

Refer to

“Net Interest

Income” above

for information

about average

balances of

interest-bearing deposits

and the

average interest

rate paid on deposits, for the quarters ended March 31, 2023 and 2022.

96

Securities

sold

under

agreements

to

repurchase

-

The

Corporation’s

investment

portfolio

is

funded

in

part

with

repurchase

agreements. The

Corporation’s

outstanding short-term

securities sold

under repurchase

agreements amounted

to $173.0

million as

of

March 31, 2023,

compared to $75.1

million as of

December 31, 2022.

During the first

quarter of 2023,

the Corporation added

$173.0

million of

short-term repurchase

agreements at

an average

cost of

5.08% reflecting

precautionary measures

taken by

management in

light

of

recent

instability

in

the

banking

sector,

and

repaid

upon

maturity

$75.1

million

of

short-term

repurchase

agreements

at

an

average cost of 4.55%.

In addition to these repurchase

agreements, the Corporation has

been able to maintain access

to credit by using

cost-effective

sources

such

as

FHLB

advances.

See

Note

9

Securities

Sold

Under

Agreements

to

Repurchase

(Repurchase

Agreements) to

the unaudited consolidated

financial statements

herein for

further details about

repurchase agreements

outstanding by

counterparty and maturities.

Under the Corporation’s

repurchase agreements, as

is the case with

derivative contracts, the

Corporation is required

to pledge cash

or qualifying securities to meet margin requirements.

To the extent that the value of

securities previously pledged as collateral declines

due to changes in interest

rates, a liquidity crisis or

any other factor, the

Corporation is required to deposit

additional cash or securities

to meet

its margin

requirements, thereby

adversely affecting

its liquidity.

Given the

quality of

the collateral

pledged, the

Corporation

has not experienced margin calls from counterparties

arising from credit-quality-related write-downs in valuations.

Advances from

the FHLB –

The Bank is

a member of

the FHLB system

and obtains advances

to fund its

operations under a

collateral

agreement with the FHLB that requires the Bank to maintain qualifying

mortgages and/or investments as collateral for advances taken.

As of

March 31,

2023,

the outstanding

balance of

fixed-rate FHLB

advances

was $925.0

million, compared

to $675.0

million as

of

December

31,

2022.

During

the

first

quarter

of

2023,

the

Corporation

added

$425.0

million

of

short-term

FHLB

advances

at

an

average cost of 5.04%

and $300.0 million of

long-term FHLB advances

at an average cost of

4.59%, and repaid upon

maturity $475.0

million of

short-term

FHLB advances

at an

average cost

of 4.56%.

Of the

$925.0 million

in FHLB

advances

as of

March 31,

2023,

$700.0 million were

pledged with investment

securities and $225.0

million were pledged with

mortgage loans. As of

March 31, 2023,

the Corporation had

$882.5 million available

for additional credit

on FHLB lines of

credit based on

collateral pledged at the

FHLB of

New York.

Trust Preferred

Securities –

In 2004, FBP

Statutory Trusts

I and II,

statutory trusts that

are wholly-owned by

the Corporation and

not

consolidated

in

the

Corporation’s

financial

statements,

sold

to

institutional

investors

variable-rate

TRuPs

and

used

the

proceeds

of

these issuances, together

with the proceeds

of the purchases by

the Corporation of

variable rate common

securities, to purchase

junior

subordinated

deferrable

debentures.

The

subordinated

debentures

are

presented

in

the

Corporation’s

consolidated

statements

of

financial

condition

as

other

long-term

borrowings.

As

of

each

of

March

31,

2023

and

December

31,

2022,

the

Corporation

had

subordinated

debentures

outstanding

in

the

aggregate

amount

of

$183.8

million

with

maturity

dates

from

June

17,

2034

through

September 20, 2034. Under the indentures, the Corporation has the right,

from time to time, and without causing an event of default, to

defer payments of interest on

the Junior Subordinated Deferrable

Debentures by extending the interest

payment period at any time

and

from

time

to

time

during

the term

of

the

subordinated

debentures

for

up

to

twenty

consecutive

quarterly

periods.

As of

March

31,

2023,

the Corporation was

current on all

interest payments due

on its subordinated

debt. See Note

11 –

Other Long-Term

Borrowings

and

Note

7

Non-Consolidated

Var

iable

Interest

Entities

(“VIEs”)

and

Servicing

Assets

to

unaudited

consolidated

financial

statements herein for additional information.

Other Sources

of Funds

and Liquidity

  • The

Corporation’s

principal uses

of funds

are for

the origination

of loans,

the repayment

of

maturing deposits

and borrowings,

and deposits

withdrawals. In

connection with

its mortgage

banking activities,

the Corporation

has

invested in technology and personnel to enhance the Corporation’s

secondary mortgage market capabilities.

The enhanced

capabilities improve

the Corporation’s

liquidity profile

as they

allow the

Corporation to

derive liquidity,

if needed,

from the sale

of mortgage loans

in the secondary

market. The U.S. (including

Puerto Rico) secondary

mortgage market is

still highly-

liquid, in

large part

because of

the sale

of mortgages

through guarantee

programs of

the FHA,

VA,

U.S. Department

of Housing

and

Urban

Development

(“HUD”),

FNMA

and

FHLMC.

During

the

first

quarter

of

2023,

loans pooled

into GNMA

MBS amounted

to

approximately

$29.4

million.

Also,

during

the

first

quarter of

2023,

the

Corporation

sold approx

imately

$8.0 million

of

performing

residential mortgage loans to FNMA.

The

FED

Discount

Window

is

a

cost-efficient

contingent

source

of

funding

for

the

Corporation

in

highly-volatile

market

conditions.

As previously

mentioned,

although

currently

not in

use,

as of

March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation

had

approximately

$1.4

billion available for funding under the FED’s

Discount Window based on collateral pledged at the

FED.

The FED’s

BTFP was

established

by the

Federal Reserve

Board in

March 2023

as an

additional source

of funding

for depository

institutions

to

borrow

up

to

the

par

value

of

eligible

collateral

for

terms

of

up

to

one

year.

The

BTFP

eliminates

the

need

for

depository

institutions

to

sell their

debt

securities

in

times

of

stress. Eligible

collateral

includes

high-quality

securities such

as U.S.

Treasuries,

U.S.

agency

securities,

and

U.S.

agency

MBS.

Borrowers

that

are

eligible

for

primary

credit

under

the

Borrower-in-

Custody Program

(“BIC”) are

eligible to

borrow under

the BTFP.

In addition,

any eligible

collateral pledged

to the

discount window

can be

used under

the BTFP.

The rate

for term

advances will

be the

one-year overnight

index swap

rate plus

10 basis points

and will

97

be fixed

for the term

of the advance

on the day

the advance is

made. As previously

mentioned, the

Corporation enrolled

in the BTF

P

during the first quarter of 2023 to further diversify its contingency funding

sources.

Effect of Credit Ratings on Access to Liquidity

The

Corporation’s

liquidity

is

contingent

upon

its

ability

to

obtain

external

sources

of

funding

to

finance

its

operations.

The

Corporation’s

current credit

ratings and any

downgrade in credit

ratings can hinder

the Corporation’s

access to new

forms of external

funding

and/or

cause

external

funding

to

be

more

expensive,

which

could,

in

turn,

adversely

affect

its

results

of

operations.

Also,

changes in

credit ratings

may further

affect the

fair value

of unsecured

derivatives whose

value takes

into account

the Corporation’s

own credit risk.

The Corporation

does not

have any

outstanding debt

or derivative

agreements that

would be

affected by

credit rating

downgrades.

Furthermore, given the Corporation’s

non-reliance on corporate debt or

other instruments directly linked in

terms of pricing or volume

to credit

ratings, the

liquidity of

the Corporation

has not been

affected in

any material

way by downgrades.

The Corporation’s

ability

to access new non-deposit sources of funding, however,

could be adversely affected by credit downgrades.

As of

the date

hereof, the

Corporation’s

credit as

a long-term

issuer is

rated BB+

by S&P

and BB

by Fitch.

As of

the date

hereof,

FirstBank’s

credit

ratings

as

a

long-term

issuer

are

BB+

by

S&P,

one

notch

below

S&P’s

minimum

BBB-

level

required

to

be

considered investment

grade; and BB by

Fitch, two notches

below Fitch’s

minimum BBB- level

required to be

considered investment

grade.

The

Corporation’s

credit

ratings

are

dependent

on

a

number

of

factors,

both

quantitative

and

qualitative,

and

are

subject

to

change

at any

time. The

disclosure of

credit ratings

is not

a recommendation

to buy,

sell or

hold

the Corporation’s

securities. Each

rating should be evaluated independently of any other rating.

98

Cash Flows

Cash and

cash equivalents

were $823.6

million as

of March

31, 2023,

an increase

of $343.1

million when

compared to

December

31, 2022.

The following

discussion highlights

the major

activities and

transactions that

affected

the Corporation’s

cash flows

during

the first quarters

of 2023 and 2022:

Cash Flows from Operating Activities

First BanCorp.’s

operating assets and

liabilities vary significantly

in the normal course

of business due to

the amount and timing

of

cash flows.

Management believes

that cash

flows from

operations, available

cash balances,

and the

Corporation’s

ability to

generate

cash through

short and long-term

borrowings will be

sufficient to

fund the Corporation’s

operating liquidity

needs for the

foreseeable

future.

For

the

first

quarters

of

2023

and

2022,

net

cash

provided

by

operating

activities

was

$115.4

million

and

$114.8

million,

respectively.

Net cash

generated from

operating activities

was higher

than reported

net income

largely as

a result

of adjustments

for

non-cash items such

as depreciation and

amortization, deferred income

tax expense and the

provision for credit

losses, as well as cash

generated from sales of loans held for sale.

Cash Flows from Investing Activities

The Corporation’s

investing activities primarily

relate to originating

loans to be

held for investment,

as well as

purchasing, selling,

and

repaying

available-for-sale

and

held-to-maturity

debt

securities.

For

the

first

quarter

of

2023,

net

cash

provided

by

investing

activities was

$50.5

million, primarily

due to

repayments of

U.S. agencies

MBS, partially

offset

by net

disbursements on

loans held

for investment.

For the

first quarter

of 2022,

net cash

used in

investing activities

was $333.0

million, primarily

due to

purchases of

U.S. agencies

and MBS, and net disbursements on loans held for investment, partially offset

by repayments of U.S. agencies and MBS.

Cash Flows from Financing Activities

The Corporation’s

financing activities

primarily

include the

receipt of

deposits and

the issuance

of brokered

CDs, the

issuance of

and payments

on long-term

debt, the

issuance of

equity instruments,

return of

capital, and

activities related

to its

short-term funding.

For the quarter

ended March 31, 2023,

net cash provided by

financing activities was

$177.1 million, mainly

reflecting net proceeds

of

$347.8 million from borrowings,

partially offset by a decrease in total deposits and capital returned

to stockholders.

For the

first quarter

of 2022,

net cash

used in

financing activities

was $628.7

million, mainly

reflecting a

decrease in

government

deposits, the repayment at maturity of a $100 million repurchase agreement

and capital returned to stockholders.

99

Capital

As of

March

31,

2023,

the Corporation’s

stockholders’

equity was

$1.4

billion,

an

increase of

$80.1

million

from

December

31,

2022.

The growth

was driven

by the

$87.2

million

increase in

the fair

value

of available-for-sale

debt securities

recorded

as part

of

accumulated other

comprehensive loss

in the

consolidated statements

of financial

condition, as

a result

of changes

in market

interest

rates, and the

earnings generated in

the first quarter

of 2023, partially

offset by

the repurchase of

3.6 million shares

of common

stock

for a total

purchase price of

approximately $50.0 million,

common stock dividends

declared in the

first quarter of

2023 totaling $25.4

million or

$0.14 per

common share,

and the $1.3

million impact

to retained

earnings related

to the adoption

of Accounting

Standards

Update

(“ASU”)

2022-02,

“Financial

Instruments

Credit

Losses

(Topic

326):

Troubled

Debt

Restructurings

and

Vintage

Disclosures.” See

Note 1

– Basis

of Presentation

and Significant

Accounting Policies

and Note

4 –

Allowance for

Credit Losses

for

Loans and Finance Leases, for additional information related to the

adoption of ASU 2022-02.

On April 27, 2023, the

Corporation’s Board

declared a quarterly cash dividend

of $0.14 per common share

payable on June 9, 2023

to shareholders of

record at the close

of business on May

24, 2023. The Corporation

intends to continue to

pay quarterly dividends

on

common

stock.

The

Corporation’s

common

stock

dividends,

including

the

declaration,

timing

and

amount,

remain

subject

to

the

consideration and approval by the Corporation’s

Board at the relevant times.

On April

27, 2022,

the Corporation

announced that

its Board

approved a

stock repurchase

program, under

which the

Corporation

may

repurchase

up

to

$350

million

of

its

outstanding

common

stock,

which

commenced

in

the

second

quarter

of

2022.

The

Corporation’s

stock repurchase program

does not obligate

it to acquire

any specific number

of shares and

does not have

an expiration

date. As of

March 31, 2023,

the Corporation has

repurchased approximately

19.6 million shares of

common stock for

a total purchase

price

of

$275

million

under

this stock

repurchase

program.

Considering

the

industry-wide

uncertain

environment,

the Corporation

decided

to

pause

share

buybacks

during

the

second

quarter

of

2023

and

it

expects

to

resume

shares

repurchases

during

the

third

quarter

of

2023.

The

Parent

Company

has

no

operations

and

depends

on

dividends,

distributions

and

other

payments

from

its

subsidiaries to fund dividend payments, stock repurchases, and to

fund all payments on its obligations, including debt obligations.

The tangible common

equity ratio and

tangible book value

per common share

are non-GAAP financial

measures generally used

by

the

financial

community

to

evaluate

capital

adequacy.

Tangible

common

equity

is

total

common

equity

less

goodwill

and

other

intangible

assets.

Tangible

assets

are

total

assets

less

the

previously

mentioned

intangible

assets.

See

“Non-GAAP

Financial

Measures and Reconciliations”

above for additional information.

100

The

following

table

is

a

reconciliation

of

the

Corporation’s

tangible

common

equity

and

tangible

assets,

non-GAAP

financial

measures, to total equity and total assets, respectively,

as of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively:

March 31,

2023

December 31, 2022

(In thousands, except ratios and per share information)

Total equity

  • GAAP

$

1,405,593

$

1,325,540

Goodwill

(38,611)

(38,611)

Purchased credit card relationship intangible

(86)

(205)

Core deposit intangible

(18,987)

(20,900)

Insurance customer relationship intangible

-

(13)

Tangible common

equity

$

1,347,909

$

1,265,811

Total assets - GAAP

$

18,977,114

$

18,634,484

Goodwill

(38,611)

(38,611)

Purchased credit card relationship intangible

(86)

(205)

Core deposit intangible

(18,987)

(20,900)

Insurance customer relationship intangible

-

(13)

Tangible assets

$

18,919,430

$

18,574,755

Common shares outstanding

179,789

182,709

Tangible common

equity ratio

7.12%

6.81%

Tangible book

value per common share

$

7.50

$

6.93

See Note

22 -

Regulatory Matters,

Commitments and

Contingencies, to

the unaudited

consolidated financial

statements herein

for

the regulatory capital positions of the Corporation and FirstBank as of March

31, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively.

The Banking Law

of the Commonwealth

of Puerto Rico requires

that a minimum of

10% of FirstBank’s

net income for the

year be

transferred

to a

legal surplus

reserve

until such

surplus

equals the

total of

paid-in-capital

on common

and preferred

stock. Amounts

transferred

to the

legal surplus

reserve

from

retained

earnings are

not available

for distribution

to

the Corporation

without

the prior

consent

of

the

Puerto

Rico

Commissioner

of

Financial

Institutions.

The

Puerto

Rico

Banking

Law

provides

that,

when

the

expenditures of a

Puerto Rico commercial

bank are greater than

receipts, the excess of

the expenditures over

receipts must be

charged

against the undistributed

profits of the

bank, and

the balance, if

any,

must be charged

against the legal

surplus reserve,

as a reduction

thereof. If the legal

surplus reserve is not sufficient

to cover such balance

in whole or in part,

the outstanding amount must

be charged

against the

capital account

and the

Bank cannot

pay dividends

until it

can replenish

the legal

surplus reserve

to an

amount of

at least

20% of

the original

capital contributed.

FirstBank’s

legal

surplus

reserve,

included

as part

of retained

earnings in

the Corporation’s

consolidated

statements

of

financial

condition,

amounted

to

$168.5

million

as of

each

of

March

31,

2023

and

December

31,

2022,

respectively. There were

no transfers to the legal surplus reserve during the first quarter of 2023.

101

Interest Rate Risk Management

First

BanCorp

manages

its

asset/liability

position

to

limit

the

effects

of

changes

in

interest

rates

on

net

interest

income

and

to

maintain stability

of profitability

under varying

interest rate

scenarios. The

MIALCO oversees

interest rate

risk and

monitors, among

other things, current

and expected conditions

in global financial

markets, competition

and prevailing rates

in the local

deposit market,

liquidity,

loan

originations

pipeline,

securities

market

values,

recent

or

proposed

changes

to

the

investment

portfolio,

alternative

funding sources

and related costs,

hedging and the

possible purchase of

derivatives such as

swaps and caps,

and any tax

or regulatory

issues which may be

pertinent to these areas.

The MIALCO approves funding

decisions in light of

the Corporation’s

overall strategies

and objectives.

On at least a quarterly basis, the Corporation performs a

consolidated net interest income simulation analysis to estimate the

potential

change

in

future

earnings

from

projected

changes

in

interest

rates.

These

simulations

are

carried

out

over

a

one-to-five-year

time

horizon,

assuming upward and downward

yield curve shifts. The rate

scenarios considered in these

simulations reflect gradual

upward

and

downward

interest

rate

movements

of

200

basis

points

(“bps”)

during

a

twelve-month

period.

The

Corporation

carries

out

the

simulations in two ways:

(1) Using a static balance sheet, as the Corporation had on the simulation date, and

(2) Using a dynamic balance sheet based on recent patterns and current strategies.

The balance

sheet is

divided into

groups of

assets and

liabilities by

maturity or

re-pricing structure

and their

corresponding interest

yields and

costs. As interest

rates rise or

fall, these

simulations incorporate

expected future

lending rates,

current and

expected future

funding sources

and costs,

the possible

exercise of

options, changes

in prepayment

rates, deposit

decay and

other factors,

which may

be important in projecting net interest income.

The Corporation uses

a simulation model

to project future movements

in the Corporation’s

balance sheet and

income statement. The

starting point of the projections

corresponds to the actual

values on the balance sheet

on the date of the simulations.

These simulations

are

highly

complex

and

are

based

on

many

assumptions

that

are

intended

to

reflect

the

general

behavior

of

the

balance

sheet

components over

the modeled

periods. It

is unlikely

that actual

events will

match these

assumptions in

all cases.

For this

reason, the

results

of

these

forward-looking

computations

are

only

approximations

of

the

true

sensitivity

of

net

interest

income

to

changes

in

market interest rates. Several benchmark

and market rate curves were used

in the modeling process, primarily the

LIBOR/Swap curve,

SOFR curve, Prime

Rate, U.S. Treasury

yield curve,

FHLB rates, brokered

CDs rates, repurchase

agreements rates,

and the mortgage

commitment rate of 30 years.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation forecasted

the 12-month

net interest

income assuming

March 31,

2023 interest

rate curves

remain

constant.

Then,

net

interest

income

was

estimated

under

rising

and

falling

rates

scenarios.

For

the

rising

rate

scenario,

a

gradual

(ramp)

parallel

upward

shift

of

the

yield

curve

is

assumed

during

the

first

twelve

months

(the

“+200

ramp”

scenario).

Conversely,

for the falling rate scenario,

a gradual (ramp) parallel downward shift

of the yield curve is assumed

during the first twelve

months (the “-200 ramp” scenario).

The LIBOR/Swap

rates for

March 31,

2023, as

compared to

the January

31, 2023,

rates used

for the

December 31,

2022 sensitivity

analysis, reflected

an increase

in the

short-term

sector of

the curve,

or between

one to

twelve months,

of 18

basis points

(“bps”) on

average; while market rates decreased in the medium-term

sector of the curve, or between 2 to 5 years, by 37 bps,

and in the long-term

sector of the curve, or

over 5-year maturities, by 36

bps. A similar increase in market

rates changes were observed in

the Treasury and

the SOFR curve of 29

and 13 bps in the short

-term sector, respectively;

while market rates decreased

in the medium-term sector

by 38

and 40 bps, respectively,

and by 36 and 37 bps in the long-term sector, respectively.

102

The following table presents the results of the simulations as of March 31,

2023 and December 31, 2022.

Consistent with prior

years, these exclude non-cash changes in the fair value of derivatives:

March 31, 2023

December 31, 2022

Net Interest Income Risk

Net Interest Income Risk

(Projected for the next 12 months)

(Projected for the next 12 months)

Static Simulation

Growing Balance Sheet

Static Simulation

Growing Balance Sheet

(Dollars in millions)

$ Change

% Change

$ Change

% Change

$ Change

% Change

$ Change

% Change

  • 200 bps ramp

$

9.4

1.15

%

$

9.7

1.14

%

$

7.8

0.96

%

$

11.5

1.37

%

  • 200 bps ramp

$

(12.6)

(1.54)

%

$

(12.7)

(1.49)

%

$

(13.1)

(1.61)

%

$

(17.0)

(2.03)

%

The Corporation

continues to

manage its

balance sheet

structure to

control and

limit the

overall interest

rate risk

by managing

its

asset composition

while maintaining

a sound

liquidity position.

See “Risk

Management

– Liquidity

Risk” above

for liquidity

ratios.

As

of

March

31,

2023

and

December

31,

2022,

the

simulations

showed

that

the

Corporation

continues

to

have

an

asset-sensitive

position.

As of March

31, 2023, the

net interest income

for the next

twelve months under

a non-static balance

sheet scenario is

estimated to

increase by

$9.7 million

in the

rising rate

scenario, when

compared against

the base

simulation. The

decrease in

net interest

income

sensitivity

for

the

+200

bps

ramp

scenario,

as

compared

to

December

31,

2022,

is

primarily

driven

by

the

changes

in

the

overall

funding

mix,

including

decreases

in

average

non-interest

deposits

to

total

deposits

and

customers

reallocating

to

higher

yielding

alternatives, partially offset

by decreases in lower yielding

assets, such as the investment

portfolio being repaid, and being

replaced by

higher yielding assets due to the growth on the loan portfolio.

As of March

31, 2023, under a

falling rate, non-static

balance sheet scenario,

the net interest

income is estimated

to decrease by

$12.7

million,

when

compared

against

the

base

simulation.

The

change

in

net

interest

income

sensitivity

for

the

-200

bps

ramp

scenario, when

compared to

December 31,

2022, was

driven by

a higher

deposit beta

assumed in

the March

31, 2023

simulation for

non-maturity deposits, which under the falling rate scenario would

reprice and consequently impact net interest income at

a faster pace

than the previous simulation.

Credit Risk Management

First BanCorp.

is subject

to

credit

risk

mainly

with

respect to

its portfolio

of loans

receivable

and

off-balance-sheet

instruments,

principally

loan

commitments.

Loans

receivable

represents

loans

that

First

BanCorp.

holds

for

investment

and,

therefore,

First

BanCorp. is at risk for

the term of the loan.

Loan commitments represent commitments

to extend credit, subject

to specific conditions,

for specific amounts

and maturities. These

commitments may expose

the Corporation to

credit risk and are

subject to the same

review

and

approval

process

as

for

loans

made

by

the

Bank.

See

“Liquidity

Risk”

above

for

further

details.

The

Corporation

manages

its

credit risk through its credit policy,

underwriting, monitoring of loan concentrations and

related credit quality,

counterparty credit risk,

economic and

market conditions, and

legislative or regulatory

mandates. The Corporation

also performs independent

loan review

and

quality

control

procedures,

statistical

analysis,

comprehensive

financial

analysis,

established

management

committees,

and

employs

proactive collection

and loss

mitigation efforts.

Furthermore, personnel

performing structured

loan workout

functions are

responsible

for

mitigating

defaults

and

minimizing

losses

upon

default

within

each

region

and

for

each

business

segment.

In

the

case

of

the

commercial

and

industrial,

commercial

mortgage

and

construction

loan

portfolios,

the

Special

Asset

Group

(“SAG”)

focuses

on

strategies for the

accelerated reduction of

non-performing assets through

note sales, short sales,

loss mitigation programs,

and sales of

OREO. In addition to

the management of the

resolution process for problem

loans, the SAG oversees collection

efforts for all

loans to

prevent migration to the nonaccrual and/or adversely classified

status. The SAG utilizes relationship officers,

collection specialists and

attorneys.

The

Corporation

may

also

have

risk

of

default

in

the

securities

portfolio.

The

securities

held

by

the

Corporation

are

principally

fixed-rate U.S. agencies

MBS and U.S. Treasury

and agencies securities. Thus,

a substantial portion

of these instruments is

backed by

mortgages, a guarantee of a U.S. GSE or the full faith and credit of the U.S. government.

Management, consisting of the

Corporation’s Commercial

Credit Risk Officer,

Retail Credit Risk Officer,

Chief Credit Officer,

and

other

senior

executives,

has

the

primary

responsibility

for

setting

strategies

to

achieve

the

Corporation’s

credit

risk

goals

and

objectives. Management has documented these goals and objectives in the Corporation’s

Credit Policy.

103

Allowance for Credit Losses and Non-performing Assets

Allowance for Credit Losses for Loans and

Finance Leases

The ACL

for loans

and finance

leases represents

the estimate

of the

level of

reserves appropriate

to absorb

expected credit

losses

over the estimated life of the

loans. The amount of the allowance

is determined using relevant available

information, from internal and

external sources, relating

to past events, current

conditions, and reasonable

and supportable forecasts.

Historical credit loss experience

is

a

significant

input

for

the

estimation

of

expected

credit

losses,

as

well

as

adjustments

to

historical

loss

information

made

for

differences in current loan-specific

risk characteristics, such as differences

in underwriting standards, portfolio mix,

delinquency level,

or

term.

Additionally,

the

Corporation’s

assessment

involves

evaluating

key

factors,

which

include

credit

and

macroeconomic

indicators,

such as

changes in

unemployment

rates, property

values, and

other relevant

factors to

account for

current and

forecasted

market conditions

that are

likely to

cause estimated

credit losses over

the life

of the

loans to differ

from historical

credit losses.

Such

factors are

subject to

regular review

and may

change to

reflect updated

performance trends

and expectations,

particularly in

times of

severe

stress.

The

process

includes

judgments

and

quantitative

elements

that

may

be

subject

to

significant

change.

Further,

the

Corporation periodically considers the need for qualitative

reserves to the ACL. Qualitative adjustments may be related

to and include,

but are

not limited

to, factors

such as

the following:

(i) management’s

assessment of

economic forecasts

used in

the model

and how

those

forecasts

align

with

management’s

overall

evaluation

of

current

and

expected

economic

conditions;

(ii)

organization

specific

risks such

as credit

concentrations,

collateral

specific risks,

nature

and

size of

the portfolio

and

external

factors that

may

ultimately

impact credit quality,

and (iii) other

limitations associated with

factors such as

changes in underwriting

and loan resolution

strategies,

among others.

The ACL

for loans

and finance

leases is

reviewed at

least on

a quarterly

basis as

part of

the Corporation’s

continued

evaluation of its asset quality.

The Corporation applie

s

probability weights to

the baseline and

alternative downside economic

scenarios to estimate

the ACL with

the

baseline

scenario

carrying

the

highest

weight.

The

economic

scenarios

used

in

the

ACL

determination

contained

assumptions

related

to economic

uncertainties associated

with geopolitical

instability,

high

inflation levels,

and

the expected

path

of interest

rate

increases by

the FED.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation’s

ACL model

considered the

following assumptions

for key

economic

variables in the probability-weighted economic scenarios:

Average

Commercial

Real

Estate

(“CRE”)

Price

Index

at

the

national

level

is

forecasted

to

contract

by

2.55%

for

the

remainder of 2023 and grow by 0.74% for 2024.

Average

Regional

Home

Price

Index

forecasts

in

Puerto

Rico

and

Florida

(purchase

only

prices)

are

expected

to

remain

relatively flat for the remainder of 2023 and 2024.

Average

regional

unemployment

in

Puerto

Rico

of

7.53%

for

the

remainder

of

2023

and

8.57%

for

2024.

For

the

Florida

region and the

U.S. mainland, average

unemployment rate of

3.59% and 4.19%,

respectively,

for the remainder

of 2023, and

4.23% and 4.62%, respectively,

for 2024.

Average

annualized change in real

gross domestic product (“GDP”)

in the U.S. mainland

of 0.89% for the

remainder of 2023

and 1.52% for 2024.

It is difficult to estimate how potential changes

in one factor or input might affect the overall ACL because

management considers a

wide variety of

factors and inputs in

estimating the ACL.

Changes in the

factors and inputs considered

may not occur

at the same rate

and may not be consistent

across all geographies or product

types, and changes in factors

and inputs may be directionally

inconsistent,

such that improvement

in one factor

or input may

offset deterioration

in others. However,

to demonstrate the

sensitivity of credit

loss

estimates

to

macroeconomic

forecasts

as

of

March

31,

2023,

management

compared

the

modeled

estimates

under

the

probability-

weighted

economic

scenarios

against

a

more

adverse

scenario.

Under

this

more

adverse

scenario,

as

an

example,

average

unemployment rate

for the Puerto

Rico region

increases to 8.04%

for the

remainder of

2023, compared

to 7.53%

for the same

period

on the probability-weighted economic scenario projections.

104

To

demonstrate

the

sensitivity

to

key

economic

parameters

used

in

the

calculation

of

the

ACL

at

March

31,

2023,

management

calculated

the

difference

between

the

quantitative

ACL

and

this

more

adverse

scenario.

Excluding

consideration

of

qualitative

adjustments,

this sensitivity

analysis

would

result in

a hypothetic

al increase

in the

ACL of

approximately

$34

million at

March

31,

2023.

This analysis

relates only

to the

modeled credit

loss estimates

and is

not intended

to estimate

changes in

the overall

ACL as

it

does

not

reflect

any

potential

changes

in

other

adjustments

to

the

qualitative

calculation,

which

would

also

be

influenced

by

the

judgment

management

applies

to

the

modeled

lifetime

loss

estimates

to

reflect

the

uncertainty

and

imprecision

of

these

estimates

based

on

current

circumstances

and

conditions.

Recognizing

that

forecasts

of

macroeconomic

conditions

are

inherently

uncertain,

particularly in

light of

recent economic

conditions and

challenges, which

continue to

evolve, management

believes that

its process

to

consider the

available information

and associated

risks and

uncertainties is

appropriately governed

and that

its estimates

of expected

credit losses were reasonable and appropriate for the quarter ended

March 31, 2023.

As of March 31, 2023,

the ACL for loans and finance

leases was $265.6 million, an

increase of $5.1 million from

$260.5 million as

of

December

31,

2022.

The

ACL

for

commercial

and

construction

loans

remained

relatively

flat

when

compared

to

the

previous

quarter as a result of

the following offsetting factors:

reserve increases of $5.0 million

for a new nonaccrual commercial

and industrial

loan in the Florida region in the power generation industry; and $1.1

million due to a less favorable economic outlook in the projection

of

certain

forecasted

macroeconomic

variables,

such

as

the

CRE

price

index;

partially

offset

by

reserve

decreases

of

$6.1

million

associated

with

the

receipt

of

updated

financial

information

of

certain

borrowers

and

the

repayment

of

a

$24.3

million

adversely

classified commercial

and industrial

participated

loan in

the Florida

region. The

ACL for

consumer loans

increased by

$2.9 million,

primarily reflecting the effect of the increase in

the size of the consumer loan portfolios and the increase

in historical charge-off levels.

The ACL for residential

mortgage loans increased

by $1.6 million, in

part to a $2.1 million

cumulative increase in the

ACL due to the

adoption

of

ASU

2022-02,

for

which

the

Corporation

elected

to

discontinue

the

use

of

a

discounted

cash

flow

methodology

for

restructured accruing

loans. This

adjustment had

a corresponding

decrease, net

of applicable

taxes, in

beginning retained

earnings as

of January

1, 2023.

See Note

1

– Basis

of Presentation

and Significant

Accounting

Policies, to

the unaudited

consolidated

financial

statements herein for information related to the adoption of ASU 2022

-02 during the first quarter of 2023.

The

ratio

of

the

ACL

for

loans

and

finance

leases

to

total

loans

held

for

investment

increased

to

2.29%

as

of

March

31,

2023,

compared to 2.25% as of December 31, 2022. An explanation for the change

for each portfolio follows:

The

ACL

to

total

loans

ratio

for

the

residential

mortgage

portfolio

increased

from

2.20%

as

of

December

31,

2022

to

2.29% as of

March 31, 2023,

primarily due

to the aforementioned

$2.1 million cumulative

increase in the

ACL due to

the

adoption of ASU 2022-02 during the first quarter of 2023.

The ACL

to total

loans ratio

for the

construction loan

portfolio increased

from 1.74%

as of

December 31,

2022 to

2.25%

as of March

31, 2023 as a

result of new

loan originations which

have a longer duration

and ultimately result in

higher loss

rates.

The

ACL

to

total

loans

ratio for

the

commercial

mortgage

portfolio

increased

from

1.49%

as

of

December

31,

2022

to

1.55% as of

March 31, 2023,

primarily reflecting

a less favorable

economic outlook in

the projection of

certain forecasted

macroeconomic variables,

such as the

CRE price index,

partially offset

by reserve decreases

associated with the

receipt of

updated financial information of certain borrowers.

The ACL to total loans ratio

for the commercial and industrial portfolio

decreased from 1.14% as of December

31, 2022 to

1.09% as of

March 31, 2023,

mainly due

to reserve decreases

associated with

the receipt of

updated financial

information

of certain borrowers

and the repayment

of a $24.3 million

adversely classified commercial

and industrial participated

loan

in

the

Florida

region,

partially

offset

by

the

aforementioned

reserve

increase

of

$5.0

million

for

a

new

nonaccrual

commercial and industrial participated loan in the Florida region

in the power generation industry.

The ACL

to total

loans ratio

for the

consumer loan

portfolio was

3.82% as

of March

31, 2023,

compared to

3.83% as

of

December 31, 2022.

The ratio of the

total ACL for loans

and finance leases to

nonaccrual loans held

for investment was

297.91% as of March

31, 2023,

compared to 289.61% as of December 31, 2022.

Substantially all of

the Corporation’s

loan portfolio is

located within the

boundaries of the

U.S. economy.

Whether the collateral

is

located in

Puerto Rico,

the U.S.

and British

Virgin

Islands, or

the U.S.

mainland (mainly

in the

state of

Florida), the

performance of

the Corporation’s

loan portfolio and

the value of

the collateral supporting

the transactions are

dependent upon the

performance of and

conditions

within each

specific area’s

real estate

market. The

Corporation believes

it sets

adequate loan-to-value

ratios following

its

regulatory and credit policy standards.

105

As shown in the following tables,

the ACL for loans and finance leases

amounted to $265.6 million as of

March 31, 2023, or 2.29%

of total loans, compared with $260.5 million, or 2.25%

of total loans, as of December 31, 2022. See “Results of Operations

  • Provision

for Credit Losses” above for additional information.

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(Dollars in thousands)

ACL for loans and finance leases, beginning of year

$

260,464

$

269,030

Impact of adoption of ASU 2022-02

2,116

-

Provision for credit losses - expense (benefit):

Residential mortgage

73

(4,871)

Construction

860

(2,214)

Commercial mortgage

1,246

(22,640)

Commercial and industrial

(1,650)

1,755

Consumer and finance leases

15,727

10,981

Total provision for credit losses

  • expense (benefit)

16,256

(16,989)

Charge-offs:

Residential mortgage

(983)

(2,528)

Construction

-

(44)

Commercial mortgage

(18)

(37)

Commercial and industrial

(118)

(290)

Consumer and finance leases

(16,798)

(9,816)

Total charge offs

(17,917)

(12,715)

Recoveries:

Residential mortgage

497

1,382

Construction

63

52

Commercial mortgage

168

44

Commercial and industrial

90

1,035

Consumer and finance leases

3,830

3,608

Total recoveries

4,648

6,121

Net charge-offs

(13,269)

(6,594)

ACL for loans and finance leases, end of period

$

265,567

$

245,447

ACL for loans and finance leases to period-end total loans

held for investment

2.29%

2.21%

Net charge-offs (annualized) to average loans

outstanding during the period

0.46%

0.24%

Provision for credit losses - expense (benefit) for loans and finance

leases to net charge-offs during the period

1.23x

-2.58x

106

The following tables set forth information concerning the composition of the

Corporation's loan portfolio and related ACL by

loan category, and the percentage

of loan balances in each category to the total as such loans as of the indicated dates:

As of March 31,

2023

Residential

Mortgage

Loans

Commercial

Mortgage

Loans

C&I Loans

Consumer and

Finance

Leases

Construction

Loans

(Dollars in thousands)

Total

Total loans held for investment:

Amortized cost of loans

$

2,811,528

$

143,664

$

2,353,659

$

2,862,189

$

3,406,945

$

11,577,985

Percent of loans in each category to total loans

24

%

1

%

20

%

25

%

30

%

100

%

Allowance for credit losses

64,403

3,231

36,460

31,235

130,238

265,567

Allowance for credit losses to amortized cost

2.29

%

2.25

%

1.55

%

1.09

%

3.82

%

2.29

%

As of December 31, 2022

Residential

Mortgage

Loans

Commercial

Mortgage

Loans

C&I Loans

Consumer and

Finance Leases

Construction

Loans

(Dollars in thousands)

Total

Total loans held for investment:

Amortized cost of loans

$

2,847,290

$

132,953

$

2,358,851

$

2,886,263

%

$

3,327,468

$

11,552,825

Percent of loans in each category to total loans

25

%

1

%

20

%

25

%

29

%

100

%

Allowance for credit losses

62,760

2,308

35,064

32,906

127,426

260,464

Allowance for credit losses to amortized cost

2.20

%

1.74

%

1.49

%

1.14

%

3.83

%

2.25

%

Allowance for Credit Losses for Unfunded Loan

Commitments

The Corporation estimates

expected credit losses

over the contractual

period in which

the Corporation is

exposed to credit

risk as a

result

of

a

contractual

obligation

to

extend

credit,

such as

pursuant

to unfunded

loan

commitments

and

standby

letters of

credit

for

commercial and

construction loans,

unless the

obligation is

unconditionally cancellable

by the

Corporation. The

ACL for

off-balance

sheet credit

exposures is

adjusted as

a provision

for credit

loss expense.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

ACL for

off-balance

sheet credit

exposures decreased by $0.1 million to $4.2 million, when compared

to December 31, 2022.

Allowance for Credit Losses for Held-to-Maturity

Debt Securities

As of March

31, 2023, the

ACL for held-to-maturity

securities portfolio was

entirely related to

financing arrangements with

Puerto

Rico municipalities

issued in bond

form, which

the Corporation accounts

for as securities,

but which

were underwritten as

loans with

features

that are

typically found

in commercial

loans.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

ACL for

held-to-maturity debt

securities was

$7.6

million, compared to $8.3

million as of December 31, 2022.

Allowance for Credit Losses for Available

-for-Sale Debt Securities

The

ACL

for

available-for-sale

debt

securities,

which

is

associated

with

private

label

MBS

and

a

residential

pass-through

MBS

issued by the PRHFA, was $0.4

million as of March 31, 2023, compared to $0.5 million as of December 31, 2022.

107

Nonaccrual Loans and Non-performing Assets

Total

non-performing

assets

consist

of

nonaccrual

loans

(generally

loans

held

for

investment

or

loans

held

for

sale

in

which

the

recognition of

interest income

was discontinued

when the

loan became

90 days

past due

or earlier

if the

full and

timely collection

of

interest or principal

is uncertain), foreclosed

real estate and

other repossessed

properties, and non-performing

investment securities, if

any.

When a

loan is placed

in nonaccrual

status, any

interest previously

recognized and

not collected

is reversed

and charged

against

interest

income.

Cash

payments

received

are

recognized

when

collected

in

accordance

with

the

contractual

terms

of

the

loans.

The

principal

portion

of the

payment is

used to

reduce

the principal

balance

of the

loan,

whereas the

interest portion

is recognized

on a

cash basis

(when collected).

However,

when management

believes that

the ultimate

collectability of

principal is

in doubt,

the interest

portion

is

applied

to

the

outstanding

principal.

The

risk

exposure

of

this

portfolio

is

diversified

as

to

individual

borrowers

and

industries, among other factors. In addition, a large portion

is secured with real estate collateral.

Nonaccrual Loans Policy

Residential Real Estate Loans

— The Corporation generally classifies real estate loans in nonaccrual

status when it has not received

interest and principal for a period of 90 days or more.

Commercial

and

Construction

Loans

The

Corporation

classifies

commercial

loans

(including

commercial

real

estate

and

construction loans) in nonaccrual

status when it has not

received interest and principal

for a period of 90

days or more or when

it does

not expect to collect all of the principal or interest due to deterioration in the financial

condition of the borrower.

Finance Leases

— The Corporation

classifies finance leases

in nonaccrual status

when it has not

received interest and

principal for

a period of 90 days or more.

Consumer Loans

— The Corporation

classifies consumer

loans in nonaccrual

status when it

has not received

interest and

principal

for a period of 90 days or more. Credit card loans continue to accrue finance

charges and fees until charged-off at 180

days delinquent.

Purchased

Credit Deteriorated

Loans (“PCD”)

— For

PCD loans,

the nonaccrual

status is

determined in

the same

manner as

for

other loans,

except for

PCD loans

that prior

to the

adoption of

CECL were

classified as

purchased credit

impaired (“PCI”)

loans and

accounted

for

under

ASC

Subtopic

310-30,

“Receivables

Loans

and

Debt

Securities

Acquired

with

Deteriorated

Credit

Quality”

(ASC Subtopic 310

-30). As allowed

by CECL, the

Corporation elected

to maintain pools

of loans accounted

for under ASC

Subtopic

310-30 as “units of accounts,” conceptually treating

each pool as a single asset. Regarding interest income

recognition, the prospective

transition approach for PCD loans was applied at a pool level, which

froze the effective interest rate of the pools as of January

1, 2020.

According

to

regulatory

guidance,

the

determination

of

nonaccrual

or

accrual

status

for

PCD

loans

with

respect

to

which

the

Corporation

has

made

a

policy

election

to

maintain

previously

existing

pools

upon

adoption

of

CECL

should

be

made

at

the

pool

level,

not

the

individual

asset

level.

In

addition,

the

guidance

provides

that

the

Corporation

can

continue

accruing

interest

and

not

report

the PCD

loans as

being

in nonaccrual

status if

the following

criteria are

met: (i)

the Corporation

can reasonably

estimate

the

timing and amounts of

cash flows expected to

be collected; and (ii)

the Corporation did not

acquire the asset primarily

for the rewards

of ownership

of the

underlying collateral,

such as

the use

in operations

or improving

the collateral

for resale.

Thus, the

Corporation

continues to exclude these pools of PCD loans from nonaccrual loan statistics.

Other Real Estate Owned

OREO

acquired

in

settlement

of

loans

is

carried

at

fair

value

less

estimated

costs

to

sell

the

real

estate

acquired.

Appraisals

are

obtained periodically,

generally on an annual basis.

Other Repossessed Property

The

other

repossessed

property

category

generally

includes

repossessed

boats

and

autos

acquired

in

settlement

of

loans.

Repossessed boats and autos are recorded at the lower of cost or estimated fair value.

Other Non-Performing Assets

This

category

consisted

of a

residential

pass-through

MBS

issued

by

the

PRHFA placed

in

non-performing

status

in

the

second

quarter of 2021 based on the delinquency status of the underlying second

mortgage loans.

108

Loans Past-Due 90 Days and Still Accruing

These are accruing loans

that are contractually delinquent

90 days or more. These

past-due loans are either

current as to interest but

delinquent as to the

payment of principal (i.e.,

well secured and in process

of collection) or are

insured or guaranteed under

applicable

FHA,

VA,

or

other

government-guaranteed

programs

for

residential

mortgage

loans.

Furthermore,

as

required

by

instructions

in

regulatory

reports,

loans

past

due

90

days

and

still

accruing

include

loans

previously

pooled

into

GNMA

securities

for

which

the

Corporation

has

the

option

but

not

the

obligation

to

repurchase

loans

that

meet

GNMA’s

specified

delinquency

criteria

(e.g.,

borrowers

fail

to

make

any

payment

for

three

consecutive

months).

For

accounting

purposes,

these

GNMA

loans

subject

to

the

repurchase

option

are required

to

be

reflected

on

the

financial statements

with

an

offsetting

liability.

In

addition,

loans past

due

90

days

and

still accruing

include

PCD loans,

as mentioned

above, and

credit cards

that continue

accruing

interest until

charged-off

at

180 days.

The following table presents non-performing assets as of the indicated dates:

March 31, 2023

December 31, 2022

(Dollars in thousands)

Nonaccrual loans held for investment:

Residential mortgage

$

36,410

$

42,772

Construction

1,794

2,208

Commercial mortgage

21,598

22,319

Commercial and Industrial

13,404

7,830

Consumer and finance leases

15,936

14,806

Total nonaccrual loans held for investment

89,142

89,935

OREO

32,862

31,641

Other repossessed property

4,743

5,380

Other assets

(1)

2,203

2,202

Total non-performing assets

$

128,950

$

129,158

Past due loans 90 days and still accruing

(2) (3) (4)

$

74,380

$

80,517

Non-performing assets to total assets

0.68

%

0.69

%

Nonaccrual loans held for investment to total loans held for investment

0.77

%

0.78

%

ACL for loans and finance leases

$

265,567

$

260,464

ACL for loans and finance leases to total nonaccrual loans held

for investment

297.91

%

289.61

%

ACL for loans and finance leases to total nonaccrual loans held

for investment, excluding residential real estate loans

503.62

%

552.26

%

(1)

Residential pass-through MBS issued by the PRHFA

held as part of the available-for-sale debt securities

portfolio.

(2)

Includes PCD loans previously accounted for under ASC Subtopic 310-30

for which the Corporation made the accounting policy

election of maintaining pools of loans as “units of

account” both at the time of adoption of CECL on January

1, 2020 and on an ongoing basis for credit loss measurement.

These loans will continue to be excluded from nonaccrual loan

statistics as long as the Corporation can reasonably estimate the

timing and amount of cash flows expected to be collected

on the loan pools. The portion of such loans contractually past due

90 days or more amounted to $10.4 million and $12.0 million as

of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively.

(3)

Includes FHA/VA

government-guaranteed residential mortgage as

loans past-due 90 days and still accruing as opposed

to nonaccrual loans. The Corporation continues accruing interest on

these loans until they have passed the 15 months delinquency mark,

taking into consideration the FHA interest curtailment process.

These balances include $25.9 million and $28.2 million

of FHA government guaranteed residential mortgage loans that were

over 15 months delinquent as of March 31, 2023 and December

31, 2022, respectively.

(4)

Includes rebooked loans, which were previously pooled into

GNMA securities, amounting to $7.1 million and $10.3 million as

of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively.

Under the GNMA program, the Corporation has the option but not

the obligation to repurchase loans that meet GNMA’s

specified delinquency criteria. For accounting purposes,

the loans

subject to the repurchase option are required to be reflected

on the financial statements with an offsetting liability.

109

Total

nonaccrual loans were

$89.1 million as

of March 31,

2023.

This represents a

net decrease of

$0.8 million from

$89.9 million

as of December

31, 2022. The net

decrease was primarily

related to a $6.3

million reduction in nonaccrual

residential mortgage loans,

partially

offset

by

increases

of

$4.4

million

and

$1.1

million

in

nonaccrual

commercial

and

construction

loans

and

nonaccrual

consumer loans, respectively.

The following table shows non-performing assets by geographic segment

as of the indicated dates:

March 31, 2023

December 31, 2022

(In thousands)

Puerto Rico:

Nonaccrual loans held for investment:

Residential mortgage

$

22,924

$

28,857

Construction

737

831

Commercial mortgage

13,677

14,341

Commercial and Industrial

4,589

5,859

Consumer and finance leases

15,483

14,142

Total nonaccrual loans held for investment

57,410

64,030

OREO

28,323

28,135

Other repossessed property

4,620

5,275

Other assets

2,203

2,202

Total non-performing assets

$

92,556

$

99,642

Past due loans 90 days and still accruing

$

72,000

$

76,417

Virgin Islands:

Nonaccrual loans held for investment:

Residential mortgage

$

6,069

$

6,614

Construction

1,057

1,377

Commercial mortgage

7,921

7,978

Commercial and Industrial

1,163

1,179

Consumer

306

469

Total nonaccrual loans held for investment

16,516

17,617

OREO

4,539

3,475

Other repossessed property

112

76

Total non-performing assets

$

21,167

$

21,168

Past due loans 90 days and still accruing

$

2,380

$

4,100

United States:

Nonaccrual loans held for investment:

Residential mortgage

$

7,417

$

7,301

Commercial and Industrial

7,652

792

Consumer

147

195

Total nonaccrual loans held for investment

15,216

8,288

OREO

-

31

Other repossessed property

11

29

Total non-performing assets

$

15,227

$

8,348

110

Nonaccrual commercial

and industrial loans

increased by $5.6

million to $13.4

million as of

March 31, 2023,

from $7.8 million

as

of

December

31,

2022.

The

increase

was

primarily

driven

by

the

migration

to

nonaccrual

status

of

a

$7.1

million

commercial

and

industrial

participated

loan

in the

Florida

region

related

to a

borrower

engaged

in

the power

generation

industry,

partially

offset

by

collections,

including

the

payoff

of

an

individual

commercial

and

industrial

loan

of

approximately

$1.0

million

in

the

Puerto

Rico

region.

Nonaccrual commercial

mortgage loans decreased

by $0.8 million

to $21.5 million

as of March

31, 2023, from

$22.3 million as

of

December 31, 2022.

Nonaccrual construction

loans decreased

by $0.4

million to

$1.8 million

as of

March 31,

2023, from

$2.2 million

as of

December

31, 2022.

The following tables present the activity of commercial and construction

nonaccrual loans held for investment for the indicated

periods:

Construction

Commercial

Mortgage

Commercial &

Industrial

Total

(In thousands)

Quarter Ended March 31, 2023

Beginning balance

$

2,208

$

22,319

$

7,830

$

32,357

Plus:

Additions to nonaccrual

127

544

7,470

8,141

Less:

Loans returned to accrual status

-

(361)

(152)

(513)

Nonaccrual loans transferred to OREO

(332)

(162)

(183)

(677)

Nonaccrual loans charge-offs

-

(18)

(118)

(136)

Loan collections

(209)

(730)

(1,443)

(2,382)

Reclassification

-

6

-

6

Ending balance

$

1,794

$

21,598

$

13,404

$

36,796

Construction

Commercial

Mortgage

Commercial &

Industrial

Total

(In thousands)

Quarter Ended March 31, 2022

Beginning balance

$

2,664

$

25,337

$

17,135

$

45,136

Plus:

Additions to nonaccrual

-

2,881

1,579

4,460

Less:

Loans returned to accrual status

-

(201)

(209)

(410)

Nonaccrual loans transferred to OREO

(13)

(461)

-

(474)

Nonaccrual loans charge-offs

(40)

(37)

(290)

(367)

Loan collections

(68)

(541)

(488)

(1,097)

Reclassification

-

(402)

402

-

Ending balance

$

2,543

$

26,576

$

18,129

$

47,248

111

Nonaccrual residential mortgage

loans decreased by $6.3

million to $36.5 million

as of March 31,

2023, compared to

$42.8 million

as of

December

31,

2022.

The decrease

was primarily

related

to

$3.9 million

loans restored

to accrual

status,

$2.7

million

of

loans

transferred to OREO, and $1.6 million in collections, partially offset

by inflows of $2.1 million.

The following table presents the activity of residential nonaccrual loans held for investment

for the indicated periods:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

(In thousands)

Beginning balance

$

42,772

$

55,127

Plus:

Additions to nonaccrual

2,081

5,328

Less:

Loans returned to accrual status

(3,937)

(3,449)

Nonaccrual loans transferred to OREO

(2,710)

(937)

Nonaccrual loans charge-offs

(220)

(435)

Loan collections

(1,570)

(6,816)

Reclassification

(6)

-

Ending balance

$

36,410

$

48,818

The

amount

of

nonaccrual

consumer

loans,

including

finance leases,

increased

by

$1.1

million

to

$15.9

million

as of

March

31,

2023,

compared

to

$14.8

million

as of

December

31,

2022.

The

increase

was mainly

reflected

in

the

auto

loans

and

finance

leases

portfolio.

As

of

March

31,

2023,

approximately

$22.7

million

of

the

loans

placed

in

nonaccrual

status,

mainly

commercial

loans,

and

residential

loans,

were

current,

or

had

delinquencies

of

less

than

90

days

in

their

interest

payments.

Collections

on

these

loans

are

being recorded on a cash basis through earnings, or on a cost-recovery basis, as conditions

warrant.

During the quarter ended March 31, 2023,

interest income of approximately $0.1 million related to

nonaccrual loans with a carrying

value of

$29.5 million

as of

March 31,

2023, mainly

nonaccrual commercial

and construction

loans, was

applied against

the related

principal balances under the cost-recovery method.

Total

loans in early

delinquency (

i.e.

, 30-89 days past

due loans, as

defined in regulatory

reporting instructions) amounted

to $94.5

million as

of March

31, 2023,

a decrease

of $10.4

million, compared

to $104.9

million as

of December

31, 2022.

The variances

by

major portfolio categories are as follows:

Consumer loans in early delinquency decreased by $4.5 million to

$66.4 million, mainly in the auto loans portfolio.

Residential mortgage loans in early delinquency decreased by $3.0

million to $25.2 million.

Commercial and

construction loans

in early

delinquency decreased

by $2.9

million, mainly

due to

the migration

to past

due

90 days

and still

accruing of

a $2.3

million commercial

mortgage loan

that matured

and is

in the

process of

renewal but

for

which the Corporation continues to receive interest and principal payments

from the borrower.

In addition,

the Corporation

provides

homeownership

preservation

assistance to

its customers

through

a loss

mitigation

program.

Depending

upon

the

nature

of

a

borrower’s

financial

condition,

restructurings

or

loan

modifications

through

this

program

are

provided,

as well

as other

restructurings

of individual

C&I, commercial

mortgage, construction,

and residential

mortgage loans.

See

Note

1

Basis

of

Presentation

and

Significant

Accounting

Policies,

to

the

unaudited

consolidated

financial

statements

herein

for

additional information

related to

the accounting

policies of

loan modifications

granted to

borrowers experiencing

financial difficulty.

In

addition,

see

Note

3

-

Loans

Held

for

Investment,

to

the

unaudited

consolidated

financial

statements

herein

for

additional

information and statistics about the Corporation’s

modified loans.

112

The OREO

portfolio, which

is part of

non-performing assets,

increased to

$32.9 million

as of

March 31,

2023, compared

to $31.6

million

as

of

December

31,

2022.

The

following

tables

show

the

composition

of

the

OREO

portfolio

as

of

March

31,

2023

and

December 31, 2022, as well as the activity of the OREO portfolio by geographic

area during the quarter ended March 31, 2023:

OREO Composition by Region

As of March 31, 2023

(In thousands)

Puerto Rico

Virgin Islands

Florida

Consolidated

Residential

$

23,314

$

1,670

$

-

$

24,984

Construction

1,705

59

-

1,764

Commercial

3,304

2,810

-

6,114

$

28,323

$

4,539

$

-

$

32,862

As of December 31, 2022

(In thousands)

Puerto Rico

Virgin Islands

Florida

Consolidated

Residential

$

23,388

$

606

$

31

$

24,025

Construction

1,705

59

-

1,764

Commercial

3,042

2,810

-

5,852

$

28,135

$

3,475

$

31

$

31,641

OREO Activity by Region

Quarter Ended March 31, 2023

(In thousands)

Puerto Rico

Virgin Islands

Florida

Consolidated

Beginning Balance

$

28,135

$

3,475

$

31

$

31,641

Additions

5,351

1,064

-

6,415

Sales

(4,409)

-

(31)

(4,440)

Write-downs and other adjustments

(754)

-

-

(754)

Ending Balance

$

28,323

$

4,539

$

-

$

32,862

113

Net Charge-offs and Total

Credit Losses

Net charge-offs

totaled $13.3

million for

the first quarter

of 2023,

or 0.46%

of average

loans on an

annualized basis,

compared to

$6.6 million, or an annualized 0.24%

of average loans for the first quarter of 2022.

Residential

mortgage

loans

net

charge-offs

for

the

first

quarter

of

2023

were

$0.5

million,

or

an

annualized

0.07%

of

related

average loans, compared to

$1.2 million, or an annualized

0.15% of related average loans,

for the first quarter of

  1. Approximately

$0.2

million

in

charge-offs

recorded

during

the

first

quarter

of

2023

resulted

from

valuations

of

collateral

dependent

residential

mortgage loans,

compared to

$0.4 million

in for

the same

period in

  1. Net

charge-offs

on residential

mortgage loans

for the

first

quarter of

2023 also

included $0.5

million related

to foreclosures

recorded during

the first

quarter of

2023, compared

to $1.3

million

recorded for the same period in 2022.

Construction loans

net recoveries

for the

first quarter

of 2023

were $0.1

million, or

an annualized

0.17% of

related average

loans,

compared to $8 thousand, or an annualized 0.03% of related average

loans, for the same period in 2022.

Commercial

mortgage

loans

net

recoveries

for

the

first

quarter

of

2023

were

$0.1

million,

or

an

annualized

0.03%

of

average

commercial mortgage loans, compared to $7 thousand for the first quarter

of 2022.

Commercial and industrial loans

net charge-offs

for the first quarter of 2023

were $28 thousand, compared

to net recoveries of $0.8

million,

or

an

annualized

0.10%

of

related

average

loans

for

the

first

quarter

of

2022.

For

the

first

quarter

of

2022,

a

$0.9

million

recovery was recorded in the Puerto Rico region in connection with a nonaccrual commercial

loan that was paid off during the quarter.

Net charge-offs

of consumer

loans and

finance leases

for the

first quarter

of 2023

were $13.0

million, or

1.54% of

related average

loans,

compared to $6.1 million, or 0.85% of related average

loans, for the first quarter of 2022.

The following table presents annualized net charge-offs

(recoveries) to average loans held-in-portfolio for the indicated periods:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

Residential mortgage

0.07

%

0.15

%

Construction

(0.17)

%

(0.03)

%

Commercial mortgage

(0.03)

%

-

%

Commercial and industrial

-

%

(0.10)

%

Consumer loans and finance leases

1.54

%

0.85

%

Total loans

0.46

%

0.24

%

114

The following table presents net charge-offs (recoveries)

to average loans held in various portfolios by geographic segment for the

indicated periods:

Quarter Ended March 31,

2023

2022

PUERTO RICO:

Residential mortgage

0.10

%

0.19

%

Construction

(0.47)

%

0.08

%

Commercial mortgage

-

%

0.01

%

Commercial and industrial

0.01

%

(0.16)

%

Consumer and finance leases

1.53

%

0.83

%

Total loans

0.58

%

0.29

%

VIRGIN ISLANDS:

Residential mortgage

(0.08)

%

0.10

%

Commercial mortgage

(0.21)

%

(0.22)

%

Commercial and industrial

(0.01)

%

(0.01)

%

Consumer and finance leases

2.19

%

1.78

%

Total loans

0.29

%

0.25

%

FLORIDA:

Construction

(0.05)

%

(0.09)

%

Commercial mortgage

(0.09)

%

-

%

Consumer and finance leases

0.17

%

1.31

%

Total loans

(0.03)

%

0.01

%

The above ratios are

based on annualized charge

-offs and are not

necessarily indicative of the

results expected for the

entire year or

in subsequent periods.

Total net charge

-offs plus gains on OREO operations for the first quarter

of 2023 amounted to $11.3 million,

or a loss rate of 0.37%

on

an

annualized

basis

of

average

loans

and

repossessed

assets,

compared

to

losses

of

$5.9

million,

or

a

loss

rate

of

0.21%

on

an

annualized basis, for the first quarter of 2022.

115

The following table presents information about the OREO inventory

and credit losses for the indicated periods:

Quarter ended March 31,

2023

2022

(Dollars in thousands)

OREO

OREO balances, carrying value:

Residential

$

24,984

$

32,208

Construction

1,764

3,458

Commercial

6,114

7,228

Total

$

32,862

$

42,894

OREO activity (number of properties):

Beginning property inventory

344

418

Properties acquired

59

68

Properties disposed

(59)

(44)

Ending property inventory

344

442

Average holding

period (in days)

Residential

533

656

Construction

2,266

1,979

Commercial

2,468

2,011

Total average holding

period (in days)

986

991

OREO operations gain (loss):

Market adjustments and gains (losses) on sale:

Residential

$

2,490

$

992

Construction

40

103

Commercial

(67)

(17)

Total net gain

2,463

1,078

Other OREO operations expenses

(467)

(358)

Net Gain on OREO operations

$

1,996

$

720

(CHARGE-OFFS) RECOVERIES

Residential charge-offs, net

$

(486)

$

(1,146)

Construction recoveries, net

63

8

Commercial recoveries, net

122

752

Consumer and finance leases charge-offs, net

(12,968)

(6,208)

Total charge

-offs, net

(13,269)

(6,594)

TOTAL CREDIT

LOSSES

(1)

$

(11,273)

$

(5,874)

LOSS RATIO PER CATEGORY

(2)

Residential

(0.28)

%

0.02

%

Construction

(0.28)

%

(0.37)

%

Commercial

-

%

(0.06)

%

Consumer

1.54

%

0.85

%

TOTAL CREDIT

LOSS RATIO

(3)

0.37

%

0.21

%

(1)

Equal to net gain on OREO operations plus charge-offs,

net.

(2)

Calculated as net charge-offs plus market adjustment

and gains (losses) on sale of OREO divided by average loans and

repossessed assets.

(3)

Calculated as net charge-offs plus net gain on OREO

operations divided by average loans and repossessed

assets.

116

Operational Risk

The

Corporation

faces

ongoing

and

emerging

risk

and

regulatory

pressure

related

to

the

activities

that

surround

the

delivery

of

banking

and

financial

products.

Coupled

with

external

influences,

such

as

market

conditions,

security

risks,

and

legal

risks,

the

potential for

operational and

reputational loss

has increased.

To

mitigate and

control operational

risk, the

Corporation has

developed,

and continues

to enhance, specific

internal controls,

policies and procedures

that are designed

to identify and

manage operational

risk

at

appropriate

levels

throughout

the

organization.

The

purpose

of

these

mechanisms

is

to

provide

reasonable

assurance

that

the

Corporation’s business operations

are functioning within the policies and limits established by management.

The

Corporation

classifies operational

risk

into

two

major

categories:

business-specific

and

corporate-wide

affecting

all business

lines.

For

business

specific

risks,

a

risk

assessment

group

works

with

the

various

business

units

to

ensure

consistency

in

policies,

processes

and

assessments.

With

respect

to

corporate-wide

risks,

such

as

information

security,

business

recovery,

and

legal

and

compliance, the

Corporation has specialized

groups, such

as the Legal

Department, Information

Security,

Corporate Compliance,

and

Operations. These groups

assist the lines of

business in the

development and implementation

of risk management

practices specific to

the needs of the business groups.

Legal and Compliance Risk

Legal and compliance risk includes

the risk of noncompliance with applicable

legal and regulatory requirements,

the risk of adverse

legal

judgments

against

the

Corporation,

and

the

risk

that

a

counterparty’s

performance

obligations

will

be

unenforceable.

The

Corporation

is

subject

to

extensive

regulation

in

the

different

jurisdictions

in

which

it

conducts

its

business,

and

this

regulatory

scrutiny has

been significantly

increasing over

the years.

The Corporation

has established,

and continues

to enhance,

procedures that

are designed

to ensure

compliance with

all applicable

statutory,

regulatory

and any

other legal

requirements.

The Corporation

has a

Compliance

Director

who

reports

to

the

Chief

Risk

Officer

and

is

responsible

for

the

oversight

of

regulatory

compliance

and

implementation

of an

enterprise-wide compliance

risk assessment

process.

The Compliance

division

has officer

roles in

each major

business area with direct reporting responsibilities to the Corporate Compliance

Group.

Concentration Risk

The Corporation conducts

its operations in

a geographically concentrated

area, as its main

market is Puerto

Rico. Of the total

gross

loan portfolio

held for investment

of $11.6

billion as of

March 31, 2023,

the Corporation had

credit risk of

approximately 80% in

the

Puerto Rico region, 17% in the United States region, and 3% in the Virgin

Islands region.

117

Update on the Puerto Rico Fiscal and Economic Situation

A significant

portion of

the Corporation’s

business activities

and credit

exposure is

concentrated in

the Commonwealth

of Puerto

Rico, which

has experienced

economic and

fiscal distress

over the

last decade.

Since declaring

bankruptcy and

benefitting from

the

enactment of the federal Puerto

Rico Oversight, Management and

Economic Stability Act (“PROMESA”) in

2016, the Government of

Puerto

Rico

has

made

progress

on

fiscal

matters

primarily

by

restructuring

a

large

portion

of

its

outstanding

public

debt

and

identifying funding sources for its unfunded pension system.

Economic Indicators

On

November

10,

2022,

the

Puerto

Rico

Planning

Board

(“PRPB”)

presented

the

Economic

Report

to

the

Governor,

which

provides

an

analysis

of

Puerto

Rico’s

economy

during

fiscal

year

2021

and

a

short-term

forecast

for

fiscal

years

2022

and

2023.

According to the

PRPB, Puerto Rico’s

real gross national

product (“GNP”) expanded

by 1.0% in fiscal

year 2021, significantly

above

the PRPB’s

original

baseline projection

of a

2.0%

contraction. According

to the

report, real

GNP growth

was primarily

driven by

a

sharp increase

in personal

consumption expenditures

reflecting the

relaxation of

COVID-related restrictions,

as well

as the

impact of

the

substantial

disaster

relief funding

deployed

over

the period.

To

a

lesser extent,

growth

in

fiscal

year

2021

was also

driven

by a

higher level of

investments in machinery,

equipment, and construction.

These favorable variances

were partially

offset by

an increase

in imports,

a reduction in

exports, and a

negative change

in the level

of inventories.

Although no official

GNP data has

been released

to date for fiscal year 2022, the 2023 Fiscal Plan model estimates that Puerto Rico’s

real GNP expanded by 2.0% in fiscal year 2022.

There

are

other

indicators

that

gauge

economic

activity

and

are

published

with

greater

frequency,

for

example,

the

Economic

Development

Bank

for

Puerto

Rico’s

Economic

Activity

Index

(“EDB-EAI”).

Although

not

a

direct

measure

of

Puerto

Rico’s

real

GNP,

the

EDB-EAI

is

correlated

to

Puerto

Rico’s

real

GNP.

For

February

2023,

preliminary

estimates

showed

that

the

EDB-EAI

increased

0.3%

on

a

month-over-month;

however,

it

stood

0.2%

lower

on

a

year-over-year

basis.

Over

the

12-month

period

ended

February 28, 2023, the EDB-EAI averaged 124.5, approximately 0.9%

above the comparable figure a year earlier.

Fiscal Plan

On April

3, 2023,

the PROMESA

oversight board

certified the

2023 Fiscal

Plan for

Puerto Rico

(the “2023

Fiscal Plan”).

Unlike

previous versions

of the

fiscal plan,

the PROMESA

oversight board

segregated the

2023 Fiscal Plan

into three

different volumes.

As

the first fiscal plan

certified in a post-bankruptcy

environment, Volume

1 presents a

Transformation Plan

that highlights priority

areas

to cement fiscal responsibility,

accelerate economic growth in a sustainable manner,

and restore market access to Puerto Rico. Volume

2 provides additional details

on economic trends and

financial projections, and Volume

3 maps out the supplementary

implementation

details to

guide

the government’s

implementation

of the

requirements

of the

2023 Fiscal

Plan, as

well as

additional

initiatives

from

prior fiscal plans which remain mandatory and are still pending to be implemented.

The

2023

Fiscal

Plan

prioritizes

resource

allocation

across

three

major

pillars:

(i)

entrenching

a

legacy

of

strong

financial

management

through

the

implementation

of

a

comprehensive

financial

management

agenda,

(ii)

instilling

a

culture

of public

-sector

performance

and

excellence

in

order

to

properly

deliver

quality

public

services,

and

(iii)

investing

for

economic

growth

to

ensure

sufficient

revenues are

generated to

support the

delivery of

services. According

to the

Transformation

Plan, the

fiscal and

economic

turnaround

of

Puerto

Rico

cannot

be

accomplished

without

the

implementation

of

structural

economic

reforms

that

promote

sustainable

economic

development.

These

reforms

include

the

power/energy

sector

reform

to

improve

availability,

reliability

and

affordability of energy,

the K-12 and higher

education reform to expand

opportunity and prepare

the workforce to

compete for jobs of

the future,

and an

infrastructure reform

aimed at

improving the

efficiency of

the economy

and facilitate

investment. The

2023 Fiscal

Plan projects that

these reforms, if implemented

successfully, will

contribute 0.75% in

GNP growth by

fiscal year 2026.

Additionally,

the

2023

Fiscal

Plan

provides

a

roadmap

for

a

tax

reform

directed

towards

establishing

a

tax

regime

that

is

more

competitive

for

investors and more equitable for individuals.

The

2023

Fiscal

Plan

notes

that

Puerto

Rico

has

had

a

strong

recovery

in

the

aftermath

of

the

pandemic

crisis

with

labor

participation

trending

positively

and

unemployment

at

historically

low

levels.

However,

it

recognizes

that

such

recovery

has

been

primarily

fueled

by

the

unprecedented

influx

of

federal

funds,

which

have

an

outsized

and

temporary

impact

that

may

mask

underlying structural

weaknesses in

the economy.

As such,

the 2023

Fiscal Plan

projects a

0.7% decline

in real

GNP for

the current

fiscal

year

2023,

followed

by a

period

of near-zero

real

growth in

the coming

fiscal years

2024

through 2026.

Also,

the fiscal

plan

projects that

Puerto Rico’s

population will

continue the

long-term trend

of steady

decline. Notwithstanding,

the Transformation

Plan

depicts

that,

if

managed

properly,

these

non-recurring

federal

funds

can

be

leveraged

into

sustainable

longer-term

growth

and

opportunity.

118

The 2023

Fiscal Plan projects

that approximately

$81 billion in

total disaster relief

funding, from

federal and

private sources,

will

be disbursed

as part

of the

reconstruction

efforts over

a span

of 18

years (fiscal

years 2018

through 2035).

These funds

will benefit

individuals,

the public

(e.g., reconstruction

of major

infrastructure,

roads,

and schools),

and

will cover

part of

the Commonwealth’s

share of

the cost

of disaster

relief funding.

Also, the

2023 Fiscal

Plan projects

accelerated

deployment

of the

remaining

COVID-19

relief

funds

in

fiscal

year

2023

through

2025,

with

approximately

$9.3

billion

expected

to

be

disbursed,

compared

to

$4.5

billion

projected in the previous

fiscal plan. Additionally,

the 2023 Fiscal Plan continues

to account for $2.3

billion in federal funds

to Puerto

Rico

from

the

Bipartisan

Infrastructure

Law

directed

towards

improving

the

Island’s

infrastructure

over

fiscal

years

2022

through

2026.

Debt Restructuring

Over

80%

of

Puerto

Rico’s

outstanding

debt

has

been

restructured

to

date.

On

March

15,

2022,

the

Plan

of

Adjustment

of

the

central

government’s

debt

became

effective

through

the

exchange

of more

than

$33

billion

of

existing

bonds

and

other

claims

into

approximately

$7

billion

of

new

bonds,

saving

Puerto

Rico

more

than

$50

billion

in

debt

payments

to

creditors.

Also,

the

restructurings

of

the

Puerto

Rico

Sales

Tax

Financing

Corporation

(“COFINA”),

the

Highways

and

Transportation

Authority

(“HTA”),

and

the

Puerto

Rico

Aqueducts

and

Sewers

Authority

(“PRASA”)

are

expected

to

yield

savings

of

approximately

$17.5

billion, $3.0

billion, and

$400 million,

respectively,

in future

debt service

payments. The

main restructurings

pending include

that of

the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority (“PREPA”)

and the Puerto Rico Industrial Company (“PRIDCO”).

According

to

the

PROMESA

oversight

board,

the

filed

PREPA

Plan

of

Adjustment

(“PREPA-POA”)

reduces

PREPA’s

legacy

financial and

general unsecured

debt by

approximately 40%

as it

contemplates the

issuance of

$5.7 billion

in new

bonds that

will be

exchanged for the discharge

of approximately $10.0 billion

in outstanding debt. The

new bonds are expected to

be paid from revenues

generated

by

a

“Legacy

Charge”,

which

consists

of

a

fixed

and

volumetric

charge

on

customers’

bills

that

will

vary

based

on

the

category of customer and

level of usage. This Legacy

Charge is expected to

generate sufficient revenue

to pay down the new

bonds in

35 years based

on the projections

presented in PREPA’s

2022 certified fiscal

plan. For pensions,

the PREPA

-POA provides PREPA’s

pension

system with

treatment substantially

similar to

the treatment

of the

Commonwealth’s

pensions.

The PREPA

-POA closes

the

pension system to new

entrants, preserves the benefits

of current retirees, eliminates

any future cost of living

adjustments, and ensures

all benefits accrued to date by active participants are protected.

On

March

23,

2022,

the

Title

III

Court

issued

a

ruling

that

upholds

the

PROMESA

oversight

board’s

position

that

PREPA

bondholders’

collateral

security

is

limited

to

the

money

PREPA

deposits

in

accounts

established

pursuant

to

the

trust

agreement

governing the issuance

of the bonds.

The court also

rejected the bondholders’

contention that they

have a general

unsecured claim for

the full amount of their principal

and interest. As such, the court

limited their unsecured claim to

future net revenues for the

remainder

of the

terms of

the bonds.

According

to the

PROMESA oversight

board,

this decision

of the

court

was a

significant

win

for

Puerto

Rico and its path to reliable electricity and economic growth.

Although PREPA’s

overall mediation process has been

slower than expected, PREPA’s

Title III confirmation process

is underway,

a confirmation

hearing has

been set

for mid-July

2023 and, according

to the

2023 Fiscal

Plan, the

plan is

expected to

go effective

by

the second quarter of 2024.

Other Developments

Notable

progress

continues

to

be

made

as

part

of

the

ongoing

efforts

of

prioritizing

the

restoration,

improvement,

and

modernization

of

Puerto

Rico’s

infrastructure.

According

to

the

Central

Office

for

Recovery,

Reconstruction,

and

Resiliency

(“COR3”),

progress

is

evidenced

by

the

significant

increase

in

permanent

work

projects

that

have

already

started

executing

the

reconstruction

efforts

with

FEMA

obligated

funding.

As of

December

31,

2022,

there were

a

total

of 6,286

active

permanent

work

projects reported, more than twice the comparable amount reported

as of December 31, 2021, of 2,650 projects.

119

Exposure to Puerto Rico Government

As of March 31,

2023, the Corporation

had $340.0 million of

direct exposure to the

Puerto Rico government,

its municipalities and

public corporations, compared to $338.9 million

as of December 31, 2022. As of March 31, 2023,

approximately $183.4 million of the

exposure consisted

of loans and

obligations of municipalities

in Puerto Rico

that are supported

by assigned property

tax revenues

and

for which,

in most

cases, the

good faith,

credit and

unlimited taxing

power of

the applicable

municipality have

been pledged

to their

repayment, and

$113.1

million of

loans and

obligations which

are supported

by one

or more

specific sources

of municipal

revenues.

Approximately

72%

of

the

Corporation’s

exposure

to

Puerto

Rico

municipalities

consisted

primarily

of

senior

priority

loans

and

obligations

concentrated

in four

of

the largest

municipalities

in

Puerto

Rico.

The

municipalities

are

required

by law

to

levy

special

property

taxes

in

such

amounts

as

are

required

for

the

payment

of

all

of

their

respective

general

obligation

bonds

and

notes.

Furthermore,

municipalities

are

also

likely

to

be

affected

by

the

negative

economic

and

other

effects

resulting

from

as

expense,

revenue, or cash management measures taken to address

the Puerto Rico government’s

fiscal problems and measures included in fiscal

plans of

other government

entities. In

addition to

municipalities, the

total direct

exposure also

included $10.2

million in

loans to

an

affiliate

of PREPA,

$30.0

million in

loans to

agencies or

public corporations

of the

Puerto Rico

government,

and obligations

of the

Puerto Rico

government,

specifically a

residential pass-through

MBS issued

by the

PRHFA,

at an

amortized

cost of

$3.3 million

as

part of its available-for-sale debt securities portfolio (fair

value of $2.2 million as of March 31, 2023).

The

following

table

details

the

Corporation’s

total

direct

exposure

to

Puerto

Rico

government

obligations

according

to

their

maturities:

As of March 31, 2023

Investment

Portfolio

Total

(Amortized

cost)

Loans

Exposure

(In thousands)

Puerto Rico Housing Finance Authority:

After 10 years

$

3,302

$

-

$

3,302

Total

Puerto Rico Housing Finance Authority

3,302

-

3,302

Agencies and public corporation of the Puerto Rico government:

After 1 to 5 years

-

3,313

3,313

After 5 to 10 years

-

26,671

26,671

Total agencies and public

corporation of the Puerto Rico government

-

29,984

29,984

Affiliate of the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority:

Due within one year

-

10,184

10,184

Total Puerto Rico government

affiliate

-

10,184

10,184

Total

Puerto Rico public corporations and government affiliate

-

40,168

40,168

Municipalities:

Due within one year

1,204

18,148

19,352

After 1 to 5 years

42,633

55,905

98,538

After 5 to 10 years

55,940

56,652

112,592

After 10 years

66,023

-

66,023

Total

Municipalities

165,800

130,705

296,505

Total

Direct Government Exposure

$

169,102

$

170,873

$

339,975

120

In addition,

as of March

31, 2023, the

Corporation had

$82.9 million

in exposure

to residential mortgage

loans that are

guaranteed

by the PRHFA,

a governmental instrumentality

that has been

designated as a

covered entity under

PROMESA (December

31, 2022 –

$84.7

million).

Residential

mortgage

loans

guaranteed

by

the

PRHFA

are

secured

by

the

underlying

properties

and

the

guarantees

serve to

cover shortfalls

in collateral in

the event

of a borrower

default. The

Puerto Rico government

guarantees up

to $75 million

of

the

principal

for

all

loans

under

the

mortgage

loan

insurance

program.

According

to

the

most

recently

released

audited

financial

statements of the PRHFA,

as of June 30, 2021, the PRHFA’s

mortgage loans insurance program covered

loans in an aggregate amount

of approximately $473 million. The regulations adopted by

the PRHFA require the establishment

of adequate reserves to guarantee the

solvency of the mortgage

loans insurance program. As

of June 30, 2021,

the most recent date

as of which information

is available, the

PRHFA had a liability

of approximately $5 million as an estimate of the losses inherent in the portfolio.

As of

March

31,

2023,

the

Corporation

had

$2.2

billion

of public

sector

deposits

in

Puerto

Rico,

compared

to

$2.3

billion

as

of

December 31,

  1. Approximately

25% of

the public

sector deposits

as of

March 31,

2023 were

from municipalities

and municipal

agencies in

Puerto Rico

and 75%

were from

public corporations,

the Puerto

Rico central

government and

agencies, and

U.S. federal

government agencies in Puerto Rico.

Exposure to USVI Government

The Corporation has operations in the USVI and has credit exposure

to USVI government entities.

For

many

years,

the

USVI

has

been

experiencing

a

number

of

fiscal

and

economic

challenges

that

have

deteriorated

the

overall

financial

and

economic

conditions

in

the

area.

On

March

4,

2022,

the

United

States

Bureau

of

Economic

Analysis

(the

“BEA”)

released

its

estimates

of

GDP

for

2020.

According

to

the

BEA,

the

USVI’s

real

GDP

decreased

2.2%.

Also,

the

BEA

revised

its

previously published real

GDP growth estimate for

2019 from 2.2% to

2.8%. According to the

BEA, the decline in

real GDP for 2020

reflected

decreases

in

exports

of

services,

private

fixed

investment,

personal

consumption

expenditures,

and

government

spending

primarily

as

a

result

of

the

effects

of

the

COVID-19

pandemic.

These

decreases

were

partially

offset

by

an

increase

in

private

inventory investment,

reflecting an

increase in crude

oil and other

petroleum products

imported and

stored in the

islands. In addition,

there

were

reductions

in

imports

of

goods

including

consumer

goods

and

equipment,

and

in

imports

of

services.

According

to

the

BEA, expenditures

funded by

the various

federal grants

and transfer

payments are

reflected in

the GDP

estimates; however,

the full

effects of the

pandemic cannot be quantified

in the GDP statistics for

the USVI because the

impacts are generally embedded

in source

data and cannot be separately identified.

Nonetheless,

over

the

past

two

years,

the

USVI

has

been

recovering

from

the

adverse

impact

caused

by

COVID-19

and

has

continued to make progress

on its rebuilding efforts

related to Hurricanes Irma

and Maria in 2017.

According to data published

by the

government,

over

$1.4

billion

in

disaster

recovery

funds

were

disbursed

during

2021

and

2022,

up 22%

from

the

preceding

2-year

period. On the fiscal front, revenues have trended positively

and the USVI Government successfully completed

the restructuring of the

government employee

retirement system. Although

no official

GDP data has

been released

for 2021

and/or 2022, the

aforementioned

developments,

as

well

as

the

positive

trend

reflected

by

key

economic

indicators

such

as

visitor

arrivals,

non-farm

payrolls

and

unemployment rate potentially indicate that the territory has experienced

an overall economic recovery since 2020.

PROMESA

does

not

apply

to the

USVI

and,

as such,

there

is currently

no federal

legislation

permitting

the restructuring

of

the

debts of

the USVI

and

its public

corporations

and instrumentalities.

To

the extent

that the

fiscal condition

of the

USVI government

continues to

deteriorate, the

U.S. Congress

or the government

of the

USVI may enact

legislation allowing

for the restructuring

of the

financial

obligations

of

the

USVI

government

entities

or

imposing

a

stay

on

creditor

remedies,

including

by

making

PROMESA

applicable to the USVI.

As of

March 31,

2023, the

Corporation had

$38.7

million in

loans to

USVI public

corporations,

compared to

$38.0 million

as of

December 31, 2022. As of March 31, 2023, all loans were currently performing

and up to date on principal and interest payments.

121

ITEM 3. QUANTITATIVE

AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES

ABOUT MARKET

RISK

For

information

regarding

market

risk

to

which

the

Corporation

is

exposed,

see

the

information

contained

in

Part

I,

Item

2.

“Management’s

Discussion

and

Analysis

of

Financial

Condition

and

Results of

Operations

— Risk

Management”

in

this Quarterly

Report on Form 10-Q.

ITEM 4.

CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

Disclosure Controls and Procedures

First

BanCorp.’s

management,

including

its

Chief

Executive

Officer

and

Chief

Financial

Officer,

evaluated

the

effectiveness

of

First

BanCorp.’s

disclosure

controls

and

procedures

(as

defined

in

Rules

13a-15(e)

and

15d-15(e)

under

the

Exchange

Act)

as

of

March

31,

2023.

Based

on

this

evaluation

as

of

the

end

of

the

period

covered

by

this

Quarterly

Report

on

Form

10-Q,

the

Chief

Executive Officer

and Chief Financial

Officer concluded

that the Corporation’s

disclosure controls and

procedures were effective

and

provide reasonable

assurance that

the information

required to

be disclosed

by the

Corporation in

reports that

the Corporation

files or

submits under

the Exchange

Act is recorded,

processed, summarized

and reported

within the

time periods

specified in

SEC rules

and

forms

and is

accumulated

and reported

to the

Corporation’s

management,

including

the Chief

Executive

Office

and Chief

Financial

Officer, as appropriate,

to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosures.

Internal Control over Financial Reporting

There were

no changes

to the

Corporation’s

internal control

over financial

reporting (as

defined

in Rules

13a-15(f) and

15d-15(f)

under the

Exchange Act) during

our most recent

quarter ended

March 31, 2023

that have materially

affected, or

are reasonably

likely

to materially affect, the Corporation’s

internal control over financial reporting.

122

PART II - OTHER INFORMATION

In accordance

with the instructions

to Part II, the

other specified

items in this part

have been omitted

because they

are not applicable,

or the

information

has been

previously

reported.

ITEM 1.

LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

For

a

discussion of

legal proceedings, see

Note 22

Regulatory Matters, Commitments and

Contingencies, to unaudited

consolidated

financial

statements

herein, which is incorporated by reference in this Item 1.

ITEM 1A.

RISK FACTORS

The Corporation’s

business,

operating

results

and/or the

market price

of our common

stock may

be significantly

affected by

a number of

factors. A detailed discussion

of certain risk factors that could

affect the Corporation’s future

operations, financial

condition or results for

future periods

is set forth

in Part

I, Item

1A., “Risk

Factors,”

in the

2022 Annual

Report on

Form 10-K.

These risk

factors,

and others,

could

cause actual results to differ materially from historical

results or the results contemplated by the forward-looking

statements contained

in

this report. Also, refer to the discussion

in “Forward Looking

Statements” and Part

I, Item 2. “Management’s Discussion

and Analysis of

Financial Condition

and Results of Operations,”

in this Quarterly

Report on Form 10-Q

for additional

information

that may supplement

or

update the

discussion

of risk

factors

in the

2022 Annual

Report

on Form

10-K.

Other than

as described

below, there

have been

no material

changes

from those

risk factors

previously

disclosed

in Part

I, Item 1A.

“Risk

Factors,”

in the

2022 Annual

Report

on Form

10-K.

Cyber-attacks,

system risks

and data

protection breaches

to our

computer systems

and networks

or those

of third-party

service

providers could

adversely affect

our ability to

conduct business, manage

our exposure to

risk or expand

our business, result

in the

disclosure

or

misuse

of

confidential

or

proprietary

information,

increase

our

costs

to

maintain

and

update

our

operational

and

security systems and infrastructure, and present significant reputational, legal

and regulatory costs

.

Our

business

is

highly

dependent

on

the

security,

controls

and

efficacy

of

our

infrastructure,

computer

and

data

management

systems,

as

well

as

those

of

our

customers,

suppliers,

and

other

third

parties.

To

access

our

network,

products

and

services,

our

employees,

customers, suppliers,

and other

third parties,

including downstream

service providers,

the financial

services industry

and

financial

data

aggregators,

with

whom

we

interact,

on

whom

we

rely

or

who

have

access

to

our

customers

personal

or

account

information, increasingly

use personal mobile

devices or computing

devices that are

outside of our

network and control

environments

and

are

subject

to

their

own

cybersecurity

risks.

Our

business

relies

on

effective

access

management

and

the

secure

collection,

processing,

transmission,

storage and

retrieval

of confidential,

proprietary,

personal

and other

information

in our

computer

and data

management systems and networks, and in the computer and data management

systems and networks of third parties.

Information

security

risks

for

financial

institutions

have

significantly

increased

in

recent

years,

especially

given

the

increasing

sophistication and activities

of organized

computer criminals, hackers,

and terrorists and

our expansion of

online and digital

customer

services to

better meet

our

customer’s

needs.

These threats

may

derive

from fraud

or malice

on the

part of

our employees

or third-

party

providers

or

may

result

from

human

error

or

accidental

technological

failure.

These

threats

include

cyber-attacks,

such

as

computer viruses,

malicious or

destructive code,

phishing attacks,

denial of

service attacks,

or other

security breach

tactics that

could

result

in

the

unauthorized

release,

gathering,

monitoring,

misuse,

loss,

destruction,

or

theft

of

confidential,

proprietary,

and

other

information, including

intellectual property,

of ours, our

employees, our

customers, or third

parties, damages to

systems, or otherwise

material

disruption

to

our

or

our

customers’

or

other

third

parties’

network

access

or

business

operations,

both

domestically

and

internationally.

While

we

maintain

an

Information

Security

Program

that

continuously

monitors

cyber-related

risks

and

ultimately

ensures

protection

for

the

processing,

transmission,

and

storage

of confidential,

proprietary,

and other

information

in our

computer

systems

and networks, as

well as a vendor

management program to

oversee third party

and vendor risks, there

is no guarantee

that we will not

be exposed to

or be affected

by a cybersecurity

incident. For example,

we recently learned

that one of our

third-party vendors was

the

victim

of

a

security

incident

in

April

2023

involving

a

set

of

data

that

included

some

information

on

FirstBank’s

mortgage

loan

business. In

response to learning

of the incident,

we promptly launched

our own internal

investigation, which

confirmed that our

own

systems were

not

compromised,

and

any operational

and

financial impact

was minimal.

We

are working

with cybersecurity

experts

and legal counsel

to fully assess

the impact of

the security incident

reported by our

third-party vendor and

any required disclosures

to

the applicable regulatory authorities

and impacted customers. Our

vendor has indicated (and

we have no evidence

to the contrary) that

to date

there is

no evidence

that there

has been

any actual

or attempted

misuse of

information. We

may incur

expenses related

to the

123

incident, including

expenses to

remediate and

investigate this

matter.

Additionally,

we remain

subject to

risks and

uncertainties as

a

result of the incident, including legal, reputational and financial risks.

Cyber threats are rapidly

changing, and future attacks or

breaches could lead to

other security breaches of

the networks, systems, or

devices that

our customers

use to

access our

integrated products

and services,

which, in

turn, could

result in

unauthorized disclosure,

release, gathering,

monitoring, misuse,

loss or

destruction of

confidential, proprietary,

and other

information (including

account data

information) or

data security

compromises. As

cyber threats

continue to

evolve, we

may be

required to

expend significant

additional

resources

to

modify

or

enhance

our

protective

measures,

investigate,

and

remediate

any

information

security

vulnerabilities

or

incidents

and

develop

our

capabilities

to

respond

and

recover.

The

full

extent

of

a

particular

cyberattack,

and

the

steps

that

the

Corporation may

need to take

to investigate

such attack, may

not be immediately

clear, and

it could take

considerable additional time

for

us

to

determine

the complete

scope

of information

compromised,

at which

time

the impact

on the

Corporation

and

measures

to

recover and restore to

a business-as-usual state may

be difficult to assess.

These factors may also

inhibit our ability to provide

full and

reliable information about the cyberattack to our customers, third-party

vendors, regulators, and the public.

A successful penetration or circumvention of our system security,

or the systems of our customers, suppliers, and other third parties,

could cause us serious negative consequences, including significant

operational, reputational, legal, and regulatory costs and concerns.

Any of these

adverse consequences could

adversely impact our

results of operations,

liquidity,

and financial condition.

In addition,

our

insurance

policies

may

not

be

adequate

to

compensate

us

for

the

potential

costs

and

other

losses

arising

from

cyber-attacks,

failures of

information technology

systems, or

security breaches,

and such

insurance policies

may not

be available

to us in

the future

on

economically

reasonable

terms, or

at

all.

Insurers

may

also

deny

us

coverage

as to

any

future

claim.

Any of

these

results

could

harm our growth prospects, financial condition, business, and reputation.

The

volatility

in

the

financial

services

industry,

including

failures

or

rumored

failures

of

other

depository

institutions,

and

actions taken by

governmental agencies to

stabilize the financial

system, could result

in, among other

things, bank deposit

runoffs

and liquidity constraints.

The closure and placement

into receivership

with the FDIC of certain large U.S.

regional banks with

assets over $100 billion

in March

and May 2023, and adverse developments affecting

other banks, resulted in heightened

levels of market volatility and consequently

have

negatively

impacted customer

confidence

in the safety

and soundness

of financial

institutions.

These developments

have resulted

in certain

regional banks

experiencing

higher than normal

deposit outflows

and an elevated

level of competition

for available

deposits in the market.

Although we have not been materially impacted by these recent bank failures, the resulting speed at which news, including

social media

outlets, led depositors to withdraw funds from these and

other financial institutions,

as well as

the volatile impact to stock

prices, could

have a material effect on

operations. The impact of market volatility from the adverse developments

in the banking industry, along with

continued high inflation

and rising interest rates on our business and related financial

results, will depend on future developments,

which

are highly

uncertain

and difficult

to predict.

In the aftermath of these recent bank failures, the banking agencies could propose

certain actions that may impact capital ratios

or the

FDIC deposit

insurance

premium.

124

ITEM 2.

UNREGISTERED

SALES OF

EQUITY SECURITIES

AND USE OF

PROCEEDS

The Corporation

did not

have any

unregistered

sales of

equity

securities

during the

quarter

ended March

31, 2023.

Issuer Purchases

of Equity

Securities

The following table provides information in relation to

the Corporation’s purchases of shares of

its common stock during the

quarter

ended March 31, 2023:

Period

Total Number of Shares

Purchased

Average Price

Paid per Share

Total Number of

Shares Purchased as

Part of Publicly

Announced Plans or

Programs

Approximate Dollar Value

of Shares That May Yet

be

Purchased Under These

Plans or Programs (In

thousands)

(1)

January 1, 2023 - January 31, 2023

306,106

$

13.25

306,106

$

120,944

February 1, 2023 - February 28, 2023

2,282,608

14.24

2,282,608

88,429

March 1, 2023 - March 31, 2023

1,276,661

13.04

988,826

75,000

Total

3,865,375

(2)(3)

3,577,540

(1)

As of March 31, 2023,

the Corporation was authorized

to purchase up to

$350 million of its

common stock under the

stock repurchase program, that

was publicly announced

on April 27,

2022, of which $275.0 million had

been utilized. The remaining $75.0 million

in the table represents the remaining amount

authorized under the stock repurchase

program as of March 31,

  1. The

stock repurchase

program does

not obligate

the Corporation

to acquire

any specific

number of

shares, does

not have

an expiration

date and

may be

modified, suspended,

or

terminated at

any time

at the

Corporation's

discretion. Under

the stock

repurchase program,

shares may

be repurchased

through open

market purchases,

accelerated share

repurchases

and/or privately negotiated transactions, including under plans

complying with Rule 10b5-1 under the Exchange Act.

(2)

Includes 3,577,540

shares of common stock repurchased in the open market at an average

price of $13.98 for a total purchase price of approximately $50.0

million.

(3)

Includes 287,835

shares of

common stock

withheld by

the Corporation

to cover

minimum tax

withholding obligations

upon the

vesting of

restricted stock

and performance

units. The

Corporation

intends

to

continue

to

satisfy

statutory

tax

withholding

obligations

in

connection

with

the

vesting

of

outstanding

restricted

stock

and

performance

units

through

the

withholding of shares.

125

ITEM 6.

EXHIBITS

See the

Exhibit Index

below, which

is incorporated

by reference

herein:

EXHIBIT INDEX

Exhibit No.

Description

10.1*

Form of First BanCorp Long-Term Equity Incentive Award Agreement

31.1

CEO

Certification pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

31.2

CFO Certification pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

32.1

CEO Certification pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of

2002

32.2

CFO Certification pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of

2002

101.INS

Inline XBRL Instance Document, filed herewith. The

instance document does not appear in the interactive data file

because

its XBRL tags are embedded within the inline XBRL

document.

101.SCH

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document, filed herewith

101.CAL

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document, filed herewith

101.LAB

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document, filed herewith

101.PRE

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document, filed herewith

101.DEF

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definitions Linkbase Document, filed herewith

104

The cover page of First BanCorp. Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q

for the quarter ended March 31, 2023, formatted in

Inline XBRL (included within the Exhibit 101 attachments)

*Management contract or compensatory plan or agreement.

126

SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the

Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the

Corporation has duly caused this report to

be signed on

its

behalf by

the undersigned

hereunto

duly authorized:

First BanCorp.

Registrant

Date:

May 10,

2023

By:

/s/ Aurelio

Alemán

Aurelio Alemán

President

and Chief

Executive

Officer

Date: May

10,

2023

By:

/s/ Orlando

Berges

Orlando

Berges

Executive

Vice President

and Chief

Financial

Officer

exhibit101

1

EXHIBIT

10.1

FIRST BANCORP

LONG-TERM EQUITY

INCENTIVE AWARD

AGREEMENT

THIS AGREEMENT

is entered

into as

of the

____ day

of _______,

and effective

as of

the ___

day of

_____ (the

“Effective

Date”), by and between First BanCorp. (the "Corporation"), and __________

(the "Participant").

The Corporation,

pursuant

to

its First

BanCorp

Omnibus

Incentive

Plan,

as amended

(the

"Plan"),

hereby

grants

a

Long-Term

Equity

Incentive

Award

consisting

of

time-vested

Restricted

Stock

(the

“Restricted

Stock”)

and

Performance

Shares

(the

“Performance Shares”

and, together with

the Restricted Stock,

the “Award”)

to the Participant,

which award

shall have the

terms and

conditions set forth in this Agreement:

1.

Definitions

All capitalized

terms used herein

and not otherwise

specifically defined

herein shall

have the

meanings ascribed

to such

terms in

the Plan.

2.

Award

(a)

Restricted

Stock

.

The

Corporation,

as

of

the

Effective

Date,

hereby

grants

to

the

Participant

a

Restricted

Stock

award

of

________

shares

of

common

stock,

par

value

$0.10

per

share,

of

the

Corporation

(the

"Common

Stock"),

subject

to

the

terms

and

conditions set

forth herein

and subject

to the

terms and

conditions of

the Plan

which is

incorporated herein

by reference

and made

a

part hereof for all purposes.

(b) Performance

Shares

.

The Corporation,

as of

the Effective

Date, hereby

grants to

the Participant

a Performance

Shares award

of ______ shares of

Common Stock, subject

to the terms and

conditions set forth herein

and subject to the

terms and conditions

of the

Plan,

which

is

incorporated

herein

by

reference

and

made

part

hereof

for

all

purposes.

The

Performance

Shares

vest

based

on

the

achievement

of

two

performance

metrics

weighted

equally:

(i)

the

Corporation’s

Relative

Total

Shareholder

Return

(the

“Relative

TSR

Performance

Goal”)

as

compared

to

the

Corporation’s

Peer

Group

(as

defined

in

Appendix

A),

and

(ii)

the

achievement

of

a

tangible book

value per

share goal

(the “TBVPS

Performance Goal”,

and, collectively

with the

Relative TSR

Performance Goal,

the

“Performance

Goals”).

Details

of

the

Performance

Goals

are

specified

in

Appendix

A.

The

performance

cycle

is

a

three-year

performance period defined as January 1, ____ through December 31,

____ (the “Performance Cycle”).

The Participant may

earn ___% of

its target opportunity

for threshold-level performance

up to ___%

of its target

opportunity for

maximum-level performance, which is measured

based upon the achievement of the Performance

Goals during the Performance Cycle

as detailed in

Appendix A.

Amounts between

threshold, target

and maximum

performance will be

interpolated to

reward incremental

achievement, and no amounts are paid for results on a particular performance metric

if actual results are below threshold.

The Award

will vest as set forth below.

3.

Vesting

(a) Restricted

Stock Vesting.

Subject to

the terms

and conditions

of this

Agreement, the

Restricted Stock

shall vest

solely on

the

basis

of

the

passage

of

time

over

a

three-year

period

(the

“Restricted

Stock

Vesting

Date”),

as

follows:

fifty

percent

(50%)

of

the

shares shall vest on

the second anniversary date

of the Effective

Date of the award

and the remaining fifty

percent (50%) shall vest

on

the third anniversary date

of the Effective Date

of the award. Notwithstanding

the foregoing, and subject

to earlier vesting as provided

in Section 7 hereof, Restricted Stock

may vest more quickly in the event of

death, Disability,

Retirement, a Change in Control or

other

specified permitted vesting events.

(b) Performance

Shares Vesting.

Subject to the

terms and conditions

of this Agreement,

the Performance Shares

shall vest on

the

third

anniversary

of

the

Effective

Date

of

the

award,

subject

to

the

achievement

of

the

Performance

Goals

established

by

the

Committee

during

the Performance

Cycle (the

“Performance

Shares Vesting

Date”, and,

together

with the

Restricted

Stock Vesting

Date, the “Vesting

Date”). Notwithstanding the

foregoing, and subject

to earlier vesting

as provided in

Section 7 hereof,

Performance

2

Shares may vest more quickly in the event of death, Disability,

a Change in Control or other specified permitted vesting events.

4.

Restriction on Transfer

(a) Until the shares of the Award

vest pursuant to Section 3 hereof,

none of the shares may be sold, assigned,

transferred, pledged,

hypothecated or otherwise encumbered,

and no attempt to transfer the

shares, whether voluntary or involuntary,

by operation of law or

otherwise, shall vest the transferee with any interest or right in or with respect to the Award.

(b) Notwithstanding

the foregoing

(and assuming

that the

Participant has

not made

an accelerated

income tax

inclusion election

with respect

to the

Award),

at any

time beginning

with the

date upon

which any

shares of

the Award

become vested

and ending

on

December 31

of the

calendar year

including that

date, a

portion of

such shares

may be

transferred as

may reasonably

be required

to

pay the federal, state, local, or

foreign taxes that are anticipated to

apply to the income recognized due

to this vesting, and the

amounts

made transferrable for this purposes shall not count toward the percentages

in the schedule above.

5.

Issuance and Custody

(a)

Shares

of

Common

Stock

underlying

an

Award

shall

be

issued

in

book-entry

form

only

and

shall

not

be

represented

by

a

certificate, and shall be registered in the name of the Participant. Each

such book-entry shall bear the following legend:

“THE SALE, TRANSFER OR ASSIGNMENT OF THE SECURITIES

REPRESENTED BY THIS BOOK-ENTRY

FORM

ARE

SUBJECT

TO

THE

TERMS

AND

CONDITIONS

OF

A

CERTAIN

LONG-TERM

INCENTIVE

AWARD

AGREEMENT EFFECTIVE

AS OF

_____, ____,

AS AMENDED

FROM TIME

TO TIME,

AND THE

FIRST

BANCORP

OMNIBUS

INCENTIVE

PLAN,

AS

AMENDED.

COPIES

OF

SUCH

AGREEMENT

AND

PLAN MAY

BE OBTAINED

AT

NO COST BY WRITTEN

REQUEST MADE BY THE

HOLDER OF RECORD

OF THIS BOOK-ENTRY FORM TO

THE SECRETARY

OF THE CORPORATION.”

(b) Participant

shall execute

stock powers

relating to

the Award

and deliver

the same

to the

Corporation.

The Corporation

shall

use such stock powers only for the purpose of canceling any unvested Award

that is forfeited.

(c) Each

book-entry

form issued

pursuant

to Section 5(a)

hereof,

together with

the stock

powers relating

to the

Award,

shall be

deposited

by

the

Corporation

with

the

Secretary

of

the

Board

of

Directors

(the

“Secretary”)

of

the

Corporation

or

a

custodian

designated by the

Secretary.

Unless otherwise determined

by the Committee,

delivery of the Award

will be by book-entry

credit to an

account maintained

by the registrar and

transfer agent of

the shares with the

applicable restrictions

on transferability imposed

on such

Award

by this Award

Agreement. Upon vesting of

the Award

in accordance with this Award

Agreement, the Corporation will instruct

the transfer agent to electronically

transfer the Participant’s

shares to a brokerage or other

account on the Participant’s

behalf (or make

such other arrangements for the delivery of the shares as Corporation reasonably

determines).

(d) After any

Restricted Stock or Performance

Shares vest pursuant

to Section 3 hereof and

there exists no restrictions

on transfer

pursuant to Section 4 hereof, the Corporation shall promptly

issue a book-entry form evidencing such vested Award,

free of the legend

provided in section 5(a) hereof, and shall be delivered to the Participant

or the Participant's legal representatives, beneficiaries or heirs.

6.

Distributions and Adjustments

(a)

If

all

or

any

portion

of

the

Award

vest

subsequent

to

any

change

in

the

number

or

character

of

shares

of

Common

Stock

(through

stock

dividend,

recapitalization,

stock

split,

reverse

stock

split,

reorganization,

merger,

consolidation,

split-up,

spin-off,

combination, repurchase

or exchange of

shares of Common Stock

or other securities

of the Corporation,

issuance of warrants

or other

rights

to

purchase

shares

of

Common

Stock

or

other

securities

of

the

Corporation

or

other

similar

corporate

transaction

or

event

affecting the shares

such that an adjustment

is determined by the

Compensation and Benefit

Committee of the

Board of Directors (the

"Committee") to

be appropriate in

order to prevent

dilution or enlargement

of the interest

represented by

the shares),

Participant shall

then receive

upon such

vesting the

number and

type of

securities or

other consideration

which he

would have

received if

the Award

had vested prior to the event changing the number or character of outstanding shares of

Common Stock.

(b)

Any

additional

shares

of

Common

Stock,

any

other

securities

of

the

Corporation

and

any

other

property

(except

for

cash

dividends)

distributed

with

respect

to

the

Award

prior

to

the

Vesting

Date

shall

be

subject

to

the

same

restrictions,

terms

and

conditions as the Award.

3

(c) Any

additional shares

of Common

Stock,

any securities

and

any

other property

(except for

cash dividends)

distributed

with

respect

to

the

Award

prior

to

the

Vesting

Date

shall

be

promptly

deposited

with

the

Secretary

or

the

custodian

designated

by

the

Secretary to be held in custody in accordance with Section 5(c) hereof.

(d) The

Restricted Stock

shall have

the rights

to dividends

or dividend

equivalents, as

applicable, during

the Restriction

Period.

Such dividends or dividend equivalents

will accrue during the Restriction Period,

but not be paid until restrictions

lapse. Subject to the

aforementioned

and

issuance

of

dividends

or

dividend

equivalents

on

the

Corporation’s

Common

Stock,

dividends

will

be

paid

in

cash.

(e)

Performance

Shares

shall

have

the

right

to

receive

dividend

equivalents.

Such

dividend

equivalents

will

accrue

during

the

Performance Cycle and be paid at

the Performance Shares Vesting

Date based upon achievement of the

Performance Goals. Subject to

the aforementioned

and issuance of

dividends or

dividend equivalents on

the Corporation’s

Common Stock,

dividends will be

paid in

cash.

(f) In the case of Restricted Stock, the Participant will have the right to vote the shares.

7.

Forfeiture; Termination

of Services; Change in Control

(a) In

the event

of the

death of

the Participant

while employed

by the

Corporation, the

Award

held by

the Participant

which has

not vested, shall vest

irrespective of whether the

vesting period has been

completed. In the case

of Performance Shares, the

number of

shares will be calculated as if the target number of the Performance

Goals had in fact been earned.

(b) In the event

the Participant’s

employment is terminated

by reason of Disability,

the Award

held by such participant

which has

not vested, shall vest

irrespective of whether the

vesting period has been

completed. In the case

of Performance Shares, the

number of

shares will be calculated as if the target number of the Performance

Goals had in fact been earned.

(c) In

the event

the Participant’s

employment is

terminated by

the Corporation

or any

Affiliate for

Cause, the

Award

held by

the

Participant which has not vested shall be forfeited and canceled upon such

termination.

(d) Unless otherwise

determined by the Committee,

in the event the

Participant’s employment

ends as a result

of the Participant’s

resignation

from

the

Corporation

or

an

Affiliate,

any

Award

held

by

such

Participant

which

has

not

vested,

shall

be

forfeited

and

canceled upon such termination.

(e) In the

event the Participant’s

employment is involuntarily

terminated within one

year after a Change

in Control, if

any Award

held

by

the

Participant

is

not

assumed

by

the

successor

entity

it

shall

vest

irrespective

of

whether

the

vesting

period

has

been

completed.

In

the

case

of

Performance

Shares,

the

number

of

shares

will

be

calculated

as

if

the

target

number

of

the

Performance

Goals had in fact been earned.

(f)

In

the

event

of

the

Participant’s

Retirement:

(1)

Restricted

Stock

held

by

Participant

which

have

not

vested,

shall

vest

irrespective of whether the vesting

period has been completed; and

(2) outstanding Performance Shares

shall continue outstanding and

vest

in

full

on

the

Performance

Shares

Vesting

Date

in

accordance

with

the

actual

results

of

the

Performance

Goals

during

the

Performance Cycle.

(g)

Based

on

particular

circumstances

evaluated

by

the

Committee

as

they

may

relate

to

the

termination

of

a

Participant,

the

Board may,

with the

recommendation of

the Committee,

grant the

full vesting

of the

Award

held by

the Participant

upon termination

of employment.

(h)

If

awards

are

accelerated

for

reasons

other

than

death,

disability,

retirement,

or

change

in

control,

those

discretionarily

accelerated shares will be limited to 10% of the total number of shares authorized

under Section 5(a) of the Plan.

8.

Taxes

The Corporation

is authorized to

withhold from

any Award

granted, any

payment relating

to an Award

under the

Plan, including

from a

distribution of

shares of

Common Stock,

or any

payroll or

other payment

to a

participant, amounts

of withholding

and other

taxes

due

or

potentially

payable

in

connection

with

any

transaction

involving

an

Award,

and

to

take

such

other

action

as

the

Committee may deem

advisable to enable

the Corporation and

participants to satisfy obligations

for the payment

of withholding taxes

and other tax obligations

relating to any Award.

This authority shall include

authority to withhold or

receive shares of Common

Stock

or other

property and

to make

cash payments

in respect

thereof in

satisfaction of

a participant’s

withholding obligations,

either on

a

mandatory or

elective basis

in the

discretion of

the Committee,

or in

satisfaction of

other tax

obligations if

such withholding

will not

4

result in additional accounting expense

to the Corporation. Notwithstanding other provisions

of the Plan, only the minimum amount

of

shares

of

Common

Stock

deliverable

in

connection

with

an

Award

necessary

to

satisfy

statutory

withholding

requirements

will

be

withheld, unless withholding

of any additional

amount of shares of

Common Stock will

not result in

additional accounting expense

to

the Corporation.

9.

Miscellaneous

(a) This Agreement

is issued pursuant to

the Plan and is subject

to its terms. In

the event of any

conflicts between this Agreement

and the

Plan, the

terms and

conditions

of the

Plan shall

prevail. Participant

hereby

acknowledges receipt

of a

copy of

the Plan.

The

Plan is also available for inspection during business hours at the principal office

of the Corporation.

(b) This Agreement

shall not confer on

the Participant any right

with respect to continuance

of employment of

the Corporation or

any of its Affiliates.

(c) This

Agreement shall

be governed

by and

construed under

the laws of

the Commonwealth

of Puerto

Rico, without

regard for

conflicts of laws principles thereof.

5

IN WITNESS WHEREOF

, the parties hereto have caused this Agreement to be duly

executed, and the corporate seal affixed, by

its officers thereunto duly authorized, and the Participant has

hereunto set his hand, all on the day and year first above written.

Corporate Seal

FIRST BANCORP

PARTICIPANT

By:

By:

6

Appendix A

Performance Shares

Total Target

Number of Performance Shares: _______

(Relative TSR Performance Goal: ____; and TBVPS Performance Goal:____)

I.

TBVPS Performance Goal:

__%

of

the

Performance

Shares

vest

based

on

the

achievement

of

the

TBVPS

Performance

Goal

of

$____

at

the

end

of

the

Performance Cycle. The Participant

may earn __% of its targe

t

opportunity for threshold-level performance

(__% performance) which

is measured

based upon

the growth

in the TBVPS

during the

Performance Cycle

up to the

TBVPS Performance

Goal (from $______

to

$______).

The

Participant

may

earn

up

to

___%

of

its

target

opportunity

for

maximum

level

performance

(___%

performance),

which is measured

based upon the

growth of TBVPS

during the Performance

Cycle in excess

of the TBVPS

Performance Goal (from

$_____

to

$_____).

Amounts

between

threshold,

target

and

maximum

are

interpolated

to

reward

incremental

achievement,

and

no

amounts are paid for results on a particular performance metric if actual results are below

threshold.

TBVPS Performance at the

Performance Shares Vesting

Date

TBVPS Performance Goal

for Each of the Categories

Award Payout

Threshold:

at

__%

of

target

performance

$____

__%

of

target

payout

(minimum payout)

Target:

at ___% of target performance

$____

___% of target payout

Maximum:

at

___%

of

target

performance

$____

___%

of

target

payout

(maximum payout)

II.

Relative TSR Performance Goal:

__% of the Performance Shares vest based on the achievement

of the Relative TSR Performance Goal, as detailed in the below table

at

the end of the Performance Cycle.

Relative TSR

Percentile Rank among Peer

Group

Award Payout

Opening Price =

__

th

Percentile (threshold)

__%

of

target

payout

(minimum

payout)

__

th

Percentile (target)

___% of target payout

__

th

Percentile (maximum)

___%

of

target

payout

(maximum

payout)

The TSR for a company (including the Corporation) shall be computed

based on the fifteen (15) days average closing price of the

company’s common stock

immediately preceding the beginning and end of the Performance Cycle, and it assumes

any dividends paid

during the Performance Cycle are reinvested in additional shares of the

underlying stock on the ex-dividend date.

The Corporation’s “Peer Group” shall

mean _________________________. If the Corporation’s

relative TSR is negative, payout will

be limited to a maximum of 100% of target, subject to the above

detailed performance levels. For avoidance of doubt, if the

Corporation’s relative negative

TSR was at the __

th

percentile (maximum) or above of the Peer Group, payout will be limited to 100%.

exhibit311

1

EXHIBIT

31.1

I, Aurelio Alemán, certify that:

1.

I have reviewed this Form 10-Q of First BanCorp.;

2.

Based on

my knowledge,

this report

does not

contain any

untrue statement

of a

material fact

or omit

to state

a material

fact

necessary to make the statements made, in light of the

circumstances under which such statements were made, not

misleading

with respect to the period covered by this report;

3.

Based on my

knowledge, the financial

statements, and other

financial information included

in this report,

fairly present in all

material

respects

the

financial

condition,

results

of

operations

and

cash

flows

of

the

registrant

as

of,

and

for,

the

periods

presented in this report;

4.

The

registrant's

other

certifying

officer

and

I

are

responsible

for

establishing

and

maintaining

disclosure

controls

and

procedures

(as

defined

in

Exchange

Act

Rules

13a-15(e)

and

15d-15(e))

and

internal

control

over

financial

reporting

(as

defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have:

(a)

Designed such disclosure

controls and procedures,

or caused such disclosure

controls and procedures

to be designed

under

our

supervision,

to

ensure

that

material

information

relating

to

the

registrant,

including

its

consolidated

subsidiaries, is

made known

to us by

others within

those entities, particularly

during the

period in

which this

report

is being prepared;

(b)

Designed such internal control over

financial reporting, or caused such

internal control over financial reporting to

be

designed under our supervision, to

provide reasonable assurance regarding

the reliability of financial

reporting and the

preparation of financial statements

for external purposes in accordance

with generally accepted accounting

principles;

(c)

Evaluated

the

effectiveness

of

the

registrant's

disclosure

controls

and

procedures,

and

presented

in

this

report

our

conclusions about the

effectiveness of the

disclosure controls and

procedures, as of the

end of the period

covered by

this report based on such evaluation; and

(d)

Disclosed in

this report

any change

in the

registrant’s

internal control

over financial

reporting that

occurred during

the registrant’s

most recent

fiscal quarter

(the registrant’s

fourth

fiscal quarter

in the

case of

an annual

report) that

has

materially

affected,

or

is

reasonably

likely

to

materially

affect,

the

registrant’s

internal

control

over

financial

reporting; and

5.

The

registrant's

other

certifying

officer

and

I

have

disclosed,

based

on

our

most

recent

evaluation

of

internal

control

over

financial

reporting,

to

the

registrant's

auditors

and

the

audit

committee

of

the

registrant's

board

of

directors

(or

persons

performing the equivalent functions):

(a)

All

significant

deficiencies

and

material

weaknesses

in

the

design

or

operation

of

internal

control

over

financial

reporting

which

are reasonably

likely

to

adversely

affect

the registrant's

ability

to

record,

process,

summarize

and

report financial information; and

(b)

Any fraud, whether

or not material, that

involves management or other

employees who have

a significant role in

the

registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

Date: May 10, 2023

By:

/s/ Aurelio Alemán

Aurelio Alemán

President and Chief Executive Officer

exhibit312

1

EXHIBIT

31.2

I, Orlando Berges, certify that:

1.

I have reviewed this Form 10-Q of First BanCorp.;

2.

Based on

my knowledge,

this report

does not

contain any

untrue statement

of a

material fact

or omit

to state

a material

fact

necessary to make the statements made, in light of the

circumstances under which such statements were made, not

misleading

with respect to the period covered by this report;

3.

Based on my

knowledge, the financial

statements, and other

financial information included

in this report,

fairly present in all

material

respects

the

financial

condition,

results

of

operations

and

cash

flows

of

the

registrant

as

of,

and

for,

the

periods

presented in this report;

4.

The

registrant's

other

certifying

officer

and

I

are

responsible

for

establishing

and

maintaining

disclosure

controls

and

procedures

(as

defined

in

Exchange

Act

Rules

13a-15(e)

and

15d-15(e))

and

internal

control

over

financial

reporting

(as

defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have:

(a)

Designed such disclosure

controls and procedures,

or caused such disclosure

controls and procedures

to be designed

under

our

supervision,

to

ensure

that

material

information

relating

to

the

registrant,

including

its

consolidated

subsidiaries, is

made known

to us by

others within

those entities, particularly

during the

period in

which this

report

is being prepared;

(b)

Designed such internal control over

financial reporting, or caused such

internal control over financial reporting to

be

designed under our supervision, to

provide reasonable assurance regarding

the reliability of financial

reporting and the

preparation of financial statements

for external purposes in accordance

with generally accepted accounting

principles;

(c)

Evaluated

the

effectiveness

of

the

registrant's

disclosure

controls

and

procedures,

and

presented

in

this

report

our

conclusions about the

effectiveness of the

disclosure controls and

procedures, as of the

end of the period

covered by

this report based on such evaluation; and

(d)

Disclosed in

this report

any change

in the

registrant’s

internal control

over financial

reporting that

occurred during

the

registrant’s

most

recent

fiscal

quarter

(the

registrant’s

fourth

quarter

in

the

case

of

an

annual

report)

that

has

materially

affected,

or

is

reasonably

likely

to

materially

affect,

the

registrant’s

internal

control

over

financial

reporting; and

5.

The

registrant's

other

certifying

officer

and

I

have

disclosed,

based

on

our

most

recent

evaluation

of

internal

control

over

financial

reporting,

to

the

registrant's

auditors

and

the

audit

committee

of

the

registrant's

board

of

directors

(or

persons

performing the equivalent functions):

(a)

All

significant

deficiencies

and

material

weaknesses

in

the

design

or

operation

of

internal

control

over

financial

reporting

which

are reasonably

likely

to

adversely

affect

the registrant's

ability

to

record,

process,

summarize

and

report financial information; and

(b)

Any fraud, whether

or not material, that

involves management or other

employees who have a

significant role in the

registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

Date: May 10, 2023

By:

/s/ Orlando Berges

Orlando Berges

Executive Vice President

and

Chief Financial Officer

exhibit321

1

EXHIBIT

32.1

CERTIFICATION

Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

(Subsections (a) and (b) of Section 1350, Chapter 63 Title 18,

United States Code)

Pursuant to

Section 906 of

the Sarbanes-Oxley

Act of 2002

(subsections (a) and

(b) of Section

1350, Chapter 63

of Title

18,

United

States Code),

the undersigned

officer

of First

BanCorp.,

a Puerto

Rico corporation

(the “Company”),

does hereby

certify,

to

such officer’s knowledge, that:

The Quarterly Report

on Form 10-Q for

the quarter ended March

31, 2023 (the “Form

l0-Q”) of the Company

fully complies

with the

requirements of

section l3(a)

or 15(d)

of the

Securities Exchange

Act of

1934 and

information contained

in the

Form 10-Q

fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of

operations of the Company.

Date: May 10, 2023

/s/ Aurelio Alemán

Name: Aurelio Alemán

Title: President and Chief Executive Officer

exhibit322

1

EXHIBIT

32.2

CERTIFICATION

Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

(Subsections (a) and (b) of Section 1350, Chapter 63 Title 18,

United States Code)

Pursuant to

Section 906 of

the Sarbanes-Oxley

Act of 2002

(subsections (a) and

(b) of Section

1350, Chapter 63

of Title

18,

United

States Code),

the undersigned

officer

of First

BanCorp.,

a Puerto

Rico corporation

(the “Company”),

does hereby

certify,

to

such officer’s knowledge, that:

The Quarterly Report

on Form 10-Q for

the quarter ended March

31, 2023 (the “Form

l0-Q”) of the Company

fully complies

with the

requirements of

section l3(a)

or 15(d)

of the

Securities Exchange

Act of

1934 and

information contained

in the

Form 10-Q

fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results

of operations of the Company.

Date: May 10, 2023

/s/ Orlando Berges

Name: Orlando Berges

Title: Executive Vice

President and Chief Financial Officer