Earnings Call Transcript
UNIVEST FINANCIAL Corp (UVSP)
Earnings Call Transcript - UVSP Q4 2023
Operator, Operator
Good morning, everyone, and welcome. My name is Drew, and I'll be your operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Univest Financial Corporation Fourth Quarter 2023 Earnings Call. I will now turn the call over to your host, Jeff Schweitzer, President and CEO of Univest Financial Corporation. Please go ahead.
Jeffrey Schweitzer, President and CEO
Thank you, Drew, and good morning. And thank you to all of our listeners for joining us. Joining me on the call this morning is Mike Keim, our Chief Operating Officer and President of Univest Bank and Trust; and Brian Richardson, our Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone of the forward-looking statements disclaimer. Please be advised that during the course of this conference call, management may make forward-looking statements that express management's intentions, beliefs, or expectations within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Univest's actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by these forward-looking statements. I will refer you to the forward-looking cautionary statements in our earnings release and in our SEC filings. Hopefully, everyone had a chance to review our earnings release from yesterday. If not, it can be found on our website at univest.net under the Investor Relations tab. We reported net income of $16.3 million during the fourth quarter or $0.55 per share. During the quarter, we started to see stabilization in the shift in the mix of deposits along with the cost of deposits. While loans declined slightly during the quarter due to the higher rate environment, the payoff of some potential problem credits and a general slowdown in economic activity, we continue to have solid pipelines as we enter 2024. We continue to focus on full relationship customers and prospects. Brian will provide additional guidance for 2024 in his comments. Before I pass it over to Brian, I would just like to thank the entire Univest family for the great work that they do every day and their continued efforts serving our customers, our communities, and each other. I'll now turn it over to Brian for further discussion on our results.
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Jeff, and I would also like to thank everyone for joining us today. I would like to start by touching on six items from the earnings release. First, during the quarter, we saw signs of NIM stabilization. Reported NIM of 2.84% declined 12 basis points from 2.96% in the third quarter. This compares to an 18 basis point decline during the third quarter. Additionally, core NIM which excludes excess liquidity of 2.94% declined 6 basis points compared to the third quarter. This compares to a 14 basis point decline during the last quarter. Second, as it relates to our loan and deposit activity, loans contracted by $7.7 million during the quarter and grew $444 million or 7.3% during 2023. Deposits contracted by $63.4 million in the quarter and grew by $462.3 million, or 7.8% during 2023. The $63.4 million decrease in the fourth quarter included a $57.5 million reduction in brokered CDs. During the fourth quarter, we saw signs of stabilization as it relates to non-interest-bearing deposits, which increased by $35.8 million compared to a decrease of $150 million last quarter. As of December 31st, non-interest-bearing deposits represented 23% of total deposits, compared to 22.2% at September 30th. Third, during the quarter, we recorded a provision for credit losses of $1.9 million. Our coverage ratio was 1.3% at December 31st, compared to 1.28% at September 30th. Net charge-offs for the quarter totaled $1.1 million or 6 basis points annualized. Fourth, non-interest income decreased $1.8 million, or 9% compared to the fourth quarter of 2022. This was primarily driven by decreases in wealth management revenue, BOLI income and swap-related fees. These decreases were driven by a $1.2 million adjustment for previously unrecorded wealth management revenue and $526,000 of BOLI death benefits, both of which were recognized during the fourth quarter of 2022. Interest rate swap income also decreased $1.5 million, compared to the fourth quarter of 2022. Fifth, non-interest expense increased $1.7 million, or 3.6% compared to the fourth quarter of 2022. This includes $642,000 of incremental FDIC expense, which is primarily driven by the industry-wide increased assessment rate. Lastly, during the fourth quarter, we repurchased 26,485 shares of stock and plan to opportunistically repurchase shares in 2024. I believe the remainder of the earnings release was straightforward and I would now like to focus on five items as it relates to 2024 guidance. First, for 2023, net interest income totaled $220 million. For 2024, we expect loan growth of approximately 4% to 5% and we expect net interest income to be flat to down 3%. This assumes a stable rate environment and NIM bottoming out in the first half of the year and inclining thereafter as we start to see stability on the liability side coupled with continued repricing of assets. Second, the provision for credit losses will continue to be driven by changes in economic forecasts and the credit performance of the portfolio. At this time, we expect the provision for 2024 to be approximately $11 million to $13 million. Third, 2023 non-interest income totaled $26.8 million. For 2024, we expect non-interest income growth of approximately 4% to 6% off the $76.8 million base. Fourth, we reported non-interest expense of $197.4 million for 2023. For 2024, we expect growth of approximately 3% to 5%. Lastly, as it relates to income taxes, we expect our effective tax rate to be approximately 20% to 20.5%, based on current statutory rates. That concludes my prepared remarks. We will be happy to answer any questions. Drew, would you please begin the question-and-answer session?
Operator, Operator
Our first question today comes from Tim Switzer from KBW. Please go ahead.
Tim Switzer, Analyst
Hi, guys. Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions.
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
Good morning, Tim.
Jeffrey Schweitzer, President and CEO
Good morning, Tim.
Tim Switzer, Analyst
Thank you for the guidance. Appreciate it. I think the first question I have is your NII guide, assuming stable rates, could you talk about maybe what the impact of a rate cut or two would be, if we get some in the back half of the year? So after the NIM has bottomed, assuming maybe deposit competition has moderated a little bit, what's the impact you expect from just a couple of rate cuts? And then does that impact change if we get deeper into the cut cycle, say, into like 2025, and the Fed has cut, say, 4 times to 5 times or more?
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
Okay. This is Brian. I'll take that one. So a little bit of it, I mean, the rate environment and forward rates has certainly got an impact on things, but it's really customer expectations and customer behavior, coupled with that really of competition on the liability side. So that said, we would really expect the first couple based on kind of forward expectations right now on Fed actions and the like, we have seen some abatement on deposit cost pressures. I do think the first couple will have an impact, but be relatively minimal because we do have variable rate loans that will automatically reprice, as well as deposits of variable funding that will also automatically reprice. We have about $1.1 billion of variable rate deposits, which is largely public funds driven, which will reprice instantly. So that's a natural offset. And I think the first couple of moves will be pretty minimal impact on our financials.
Jeffrey Schweitzer, President and CEO
Yes. As Brian pointed out, competition, Tim, is going to have a huge impact on this. Everybody's looking for deposits, so I'm not so sure that the first 25 basis points or 50 basis points is really going to cause a lot of movement when it comes to the competition side of things. Everyone's looking for deposits right now and any type of lower-cost deposits. So it's still a very, very competitive market when it comes to the funding side of things.
Tim Switzer, Analyst
Yes, that makes a lot of sense, and that's kind of what I was expecting. So the second part of my question is, if we start to get four to five or more rate cuts, I know this is looking far down the line, but given the makeup of your balance sheet now, how would you then expect that to impact your NII?
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
So coming into this rising rate cycle, we were asset-sensitive as we had modeled it. Clearly, the behaviors across the industry were a little bit different than that. And we have flipped to liability sensitive. So if things would continue to hold, you'd expect there to be a benefit. As rates continue to decline, you'd start to see that flow through. But again, it really gets back to what customer behavior and competitive pressures are at that point in time.
Tim Switzer, Analyst
Okay. And you'd mentioned $1.1 billion of variable rate deposits. Can you talk about what you have on the asset side that would be variable rate kind of instantly?
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Effectively, it's about 29% of our loan book would reprice effectively immediately. It's slightly higher than that on a notional basis. But we do have a pay variable receive fixed swap that we had done a couple of years ago, which brings that down ever so slightly, like I said, to the 29% range of our loan book, instantly reprices, we have another 32% that's adjustable. That's a little bit more elongated, but the instant variables in that 29% range.
Tim Switzer, Analyst
Okay. I got you. Do you have maybe the adjustable - well, yes, that makes sense. Yes, the last question I have then is your CD maturity schedule. What does that look like?
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
We have some tranches coming through in 2024. In total, probably $100 million in the first half of the year. That would be anything that was kind of non-promotional rates. The promotional rate stuff would backfill at a similar rate and quite honestly, at a lower rate because we were doing seven-month promotional rates at 5% to 5.25%, which will start to roll off. And in the current environment, we'd expect those to come on at a lower level. So there'll be some pressure from CD maturities. But at this point, I don't expect that to be overly impactful.
Tim Switzer, Analyst
Okay, great. I'll get back in the queue. Thank you, guys.
Jeffrey Schweitzer, President and CEO
Thanks, Tim.
Operator, Operator
Our next question today comes from Frank Schiraldi from Piper Sandler. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Frank Schiraldi, Analyst
Good morning.
Jeffrey Schweitzer, President and CEO
Good morning, Frank.
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
Good morning, Frank.
Frank Schiraldi, Analyst
Curious on the - Brian, on the fee income guide. So I think, yes, you said a flat rate environment as far as the NII guide. Just curious what the driver is of the fee income growth. If we do see rates down, does that imply some growth in mortgage banking, or is that sort of on the come if we do have lower rates - in the rate cuts in the back half of the year?
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. So there's a couple of components that play into that. Of course, in our insurance and wealth businesses, we expect kind of mid to high single-digit to low double-digit growth in those businesses in a stable environment. And on the mortgage banking side, we do expect some level of increase. While production is expected to be less year-over-year, we have a larger focus on saleable production, which will generate more gain on sale income and benefit the non-interest income line.
Frank Schiraldi, Analyst
Okay. But the driver is more outside of the mortgage banking, I guess, in terms of the growth year-over-year, it sounds like.
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
The mortgage is a component of it, but it's the kind of the diversified businesses that we have. All of them will be contributors to the growth.
Frank Schiraldi, Analyst
Okay. And then can you - I'm sorry, if I missed just in terms of - it sounds like the core NIM is approaching stabilization. I don't know if you said, do you expect to get there in early 2024, but also just curious about reported NIM if you - if maybe that takes a little bit longer to inflect in terms of do you assume some continued build the liquidity here, maybe as loan growth is a little bit more measured in the near term?
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
No, I think both - again, this is Brian, Frank. I think both of those will continue to move in line with each other. As we kind of see some runoff of public funds and the like. I would actually expect that excess liquidity to diminish in the near term and kind of reported and core will start to converge as well. But I do expect both of those to bottom out in the first half of the year and then see increases thereafter.
Frank Schiraldi, Analyst
Okay. And then just - you mentioned the variable rate piece of the loan book that will reprice immediately. If you can just maybe talk a little bit about the longer duration book, the Cree book, is it fair to just basically assume 20% reprices a year? And just curious what the pickup in rates you're seeing currently in terms of that renewal.
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
Yes, I mean, we've definitely seen a slowdown. I would say, historically, 20% to 25% would have been a reasonable kind of churn number. We see that slowing down a little bit in the current environment in the back half of 2023, but somewhere in that 15% to 20% range is what you could reasonably expect there. And as far as rates, our current commercial portfolio yield is just below 6%. It's at 5.93%. For the fourth quarter, commercial production kind of core production was at 770, and that now was up 20 basis points, 25 basis points from last quarter. So again, there's an opportunity there as all those assets reprice, and there is churn. You get lift there as well.
Frank Schiraldi, Analyst
Okay, great. And then if I could just sneak in one last one just on, I'm not sure if I didn't see it, maybe it's somewhere in the release. But in terms of loan modifications that you are making or have made on the rate or term side, do you guys disclose that? And just curious, what sort of level of modifications you guys have made on the rate side in the Cree book?
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
We disclose it in our 10-Q and 10-K in our loan footnote. It will be ultimately disclosed there, but I will say there has not been substantial modifications, rate, or structure that would be included in that disclosure.
Frank Schiraldi, Analyst
Okay, great. I appreciate the color. Thanks.
Jeffrey Schweitzer, President and CEO
Thank you.
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Frank.
Operator, Operator
We have no further questions at this time, so I will now hand you back over to Jeff Schweitzer for any final remarks.
Jeffrey Schweitzer, President and CEO
Thank you, Drew, and thank you, everybody for listening in today. While it was a challenging year in 2023 for the industry, I feel we've made a lot of good progress and pulled a lot of good levers to position us as we head into '24 and beyond. As Brian noted, we feel that there'll be some wind at our backs as we get into the second half of the year. And we're optimistic about what we have in place, the team we have in place, and the markets we're in. So we look forward to talking to everybody at the end of the first quarter. Thanks a lot.
Operator, Operator
That concludes today's Univest Financial Corporation fourth quarter 2023 earnings call. You may now disconnect your line.