Primis Financial Corp. (FRST) CEO Dennis Zember on Q2 2022 Results – Earnings Call Transcript

Primis Financial Corp. (NASDAQ:FRST) Q2 2022 Earnings Conference Call July 29, 2022 10:00 AM ET

Company Participants

Matt Switzer – CFO

Dennis Zember – President and CEO

Conference Call Participants

Andrew Terrell – Stephens

Christopher Marinac – Janney Montgomery Scott

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the Primis Financial Corp. 2022 Second Quarter Earnings Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] Please note, this event is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to Matt Switzer. Please go ahead.

Matt Switzer

Good morning, and thank you for joining us for Primis Financial Corp.’s second quarter webcast and conference call. Before we begin, please note that many of our comments during this call will be forward-looking statements, which involve risks and uncertainties. There are many factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the anticipated results or other expectations expressed in the forward-looking statements. Further discussion of the company’s risk factors and other important information regarding our forward-looking statements are part of our recent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including our recently filed earnings release, which has also been posted to the Investor Relations section of our corporate website, primisbank.com. We undertake no obligation to update or revise forward-looking statements to reflect changed assumptions, the occurrence of unanticipated events or changes to future operating results over time.

In addition, some of the financial measures that we may discuss this morning are non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of the non-GAAP measures to the most comparable GAAP measures can be found in our earnings release.

I will now turn the call over to our President and Chief Executive Officer, Dennis Zember.

Dennis Zember

Thank you, Matt. And thank you to all of you that have joined our second quarter conference call.

We’re very excited to see the momentum in several areas of the company and really believe this sets us up well for the rest of this year and for next year. I’ll highlight a few of the items here, and then Matt cans share some more insight into the numbers for the quarter.

It was right before COVID in 2020 that we started to restructure the company. Right out of the gate, we identified some key areas that were material drags on our market value. First was the ability to grow both sides of the balance sheet reliably. We strengthened our commercial banker team with new hires first, and then we were crafted with some strategies that we believe will cement our reputation as a growth-oriented company.

On the loan side, we’ve seen four quarters now of loan growth, each with a little more momentum and from all areas of the bank. Our results this quarter alone were pretty notable. And while that toward pace of growth, it may not be our long-term pace, it does set us up nicely for the rest of this year.

On the funding side, we’ve transitioned away from CDs as our main focus in funding source, and we work to build momentum in checking accounts and other low-cost deposits. We’ve moved our cost of deposits down aggressively, very close to our peers, but in a zone that supports the growth we need for our ISS [ph] strategies.

This quarter, checking balances moved nicely to about 24% of total deposits. And while we know there’s more work to do here, this extends to date and the momentum we are building is very encouraging about the future.

Our mortgage solution is brand new, and I believe the timing on our decision is pretty ideal. Our price was small, I mean, really negligible. And while the market activity is slowing because of higher rates, I’ve been around this business long enough to know that volumes will return.

Right now, large mortgage companies are shedding support, eliminating marketing resources, trimming assistant positions and looking to reset for today’s reality. That’s put a lot more volume – that’s put a lot more really good teams and originators in play than were a year ago. Simply could the market for mortgages have slowed, but the market for originators and good teams is noticeably better.

One last thing weighing on our market value is our operating performance. Incremental improvement here, like you saw this quarter is critical. And so I’m looking for signs that the discipline and the desire to achieve it is present. Our internal communication aligns with this unquestionably.

What we celebrate at Primis and what we are incenting is also aligned. I see positive mood in the net interest margin, in checking accounts, in pipeline. I see the core revenues has grown twice as fast as core expenses. So while I want the operating performance at our company to be wow, right now, I am confident that we are doing what is necessary and that we are just a few quarters away from putting that value overhang to bed as well. Matt’s going to be more specific about where the growth came from this quarter.

But let me say something about the lines of the business. These businesses are meant to augment our core bank. Our growth rates, our credit quality, our profitability, they’re not designed or meant to guide t it or replace it. I mean, an honest review of this industry would say that the industry has changed, any its still changing. And I’d I challenge anybody to show me a community banking strategy that can punch out 150 ROAs with good credit quality and with reliable growth. I just mathematically don’t think it’s possible. I feel like you have to augment what you’re doing with something new and create it.

Finding that balance in a small bank is not easy, you know, where to invest, where to pull back, how to transition, how fast. But let me illustrate the power of this concept. Our company was founded in 2005. Since then, we’ve done everything that good community banks are supposed to do. We build relationships with professionals in our market. We’ve built branches. We’ve hired bankers, we’ve bought other banks, integrated them. We’ve advertised aggressively. We’ve negotiated, we’ve been downright street fighters to build our company and build our brand.

But right now, a review of all of our customer data and relationships shows that we’re banking 50% more doctors than depth and dense [ph] in our footprint through the Panacea franchise than we do in our core bank after 17 years. Panacea is only 18 months old, barely 18 months old. They’re fairly breakeven right now, and we’re investing hard in that business with the founders to continue harvesting this easy opportunity.

The point here is not that the core bank is unsuccessful because it’s not. The point here is instead to illustrate that we are more than twice as present in the pockets of doctors [indiscernible] in Virginia, Maryland and D.C. as we were 18 months ago. And that we got here with a resource-like strategy with seemingly unlimited scale. The power on a community bank with something like that is fantastic.

And with that good news, I’ll turn it back to Matt for some details.

Matt Switzer

Thank you, Dennis.

As a reminder, a full description of our second quarter results can be found in our earnings release and second quarter earnings presentation, both of which can be found on our website.

Earnings from continuing operations for the second quarter were $5 million [ph] or $0.20 per basic and diluted share versus $4.6 million or $0.19 per basic and diluted share in the first quarter. Excluding onetime items, earnings in the second quarter were $6 million or $0.24 per diluted versus $4.7 million or $0.19 per diluted share in the first quarter.

Total assets were $3.24 billion at June 30, up slightly from March 31, excluding PPP loans and loans held for sale, total loan balances grew 10.5% linked quarter or approximately 42% annualized.

Growth came from all parts of the organization in the second quarter, including almost 20% annualized growth in the core bank, while Panacea and Life premium finance both had growth accelerating from Q1. We have a lot of momentum currently and anticipating the approximately 31% loan growth rate for the first half of ’22 to continue for the rest of the year.

Deposits were essentially flat in Q2, while the mix continues improve. Non-interest-bearing deposits were 24.3% at quarter end and continue to be a focus, while CDs have declined to 12.3% of total deposits.

Cost of deposits were flat at 35 basis points from the second quarter and cost of funds increased one basis point from Q1. As expected, our robust business lines have consumed the excess liquidity we were carrying through last year. Growing low-cost core deposits is a significant focus of the bank as we look at this fund growth going forward.

Net interest income saw strong growth in the quarter, increasing to $24.6 million from $22.9 million in Q1 or 7.7% linked quarter. Our reported margin was 3.33% for the second quarter or 3.35%, excluding the effects of PPP, up 37 basis points and 39 basis points, respectively, from the first quarter, driven by strong loan growth and a better earning asset mix.

Non-interest income increased to $2.6 million from $2.1 million linked quarter due to the addition of Primis Mortgage Company late in the quarter. Primis originated $27 million in June, down slightly from May as the company transitioned to Primis.

As previously discussed, our goals for Primis Mortgage in ’22 are to grow production and invest in talent versus a meaningful contribution to earnings this year. We expect the mortgage to be a more meaningful contributor to earnings in 2023.

Non-interest expense included a number of items this quarter, including branch closure costs, merger-related expenses and the addition of one month of expenses from Primis Mortgage. Excluding these items and recovery or expense for unfunded commitments, non-interest expense was down slightly to $18.5 million from $18.6 million last quarter.

The provision for credit losses was $422,000 in Q2 versus $99,000 in Q1, combined with net recoveries of $408,000 in Q2, the allowance increased by $830,000 for the quarter.

While economic outlook weakened, loan growth in the quarter was concentrated in categories with lower model reserve requirements. As a result, the allowance for credit losses to gross loans, excluding PPP balances and loans held for sale decreased to 1.16% at June 30 versus 1.24% at March 31.

Non-performing assets net of SBA guarantees increased $5 million in Q2, primarily due to one $8.5 million relationship on a residential property that has struggled to service the debt, but offset by the payoff of a non-accrual development loan of $4.6 million. The LTV on the residential property is less than 50%, and we aren’t expecting any losses.

As mentioned previously, we had net recoveries in the quarter and have now had recoveries in four of the last five quarters. Our operating efficiency ratio was approximately 70% in the second down meaningfully from 76% in Q1.

Panacea and Life Premium Finance continue to experience substantial revenue growth and increasing operating leverage as profitability of those business lines accelerates. We consolidated six branches late in Q2 branches with another two branches planned to consolidate in Q3.

We’ve also identified several opportunities that could generate $3 million to $4 million of additional savings on an annual basis that we are pursuing. Combined with continued revenue growth, we believe we could drive the operating efficiency ratio to the low 60s as we finish 2022.

Pretax pre-provision operating ROA was 100 basis points in Q2. If you exclude PPP fee income, which was a temporary source of revenue, pretax pre-provision ROA is at the highest level since Q3 of 2020. Over that time period, we’ve invested heavily in new business lines and offerings and are starting to see the returns from those investments. Similar to the efficiency ratio discussion, we are confident pretax pre-provision ROA will continue to see meaningful improvement in the near future.

We are pleased with the progress we have made and are excited by our momentum. We are confident that profitability will continue to improve in the near future as we drive towards top quartile results.

With that, operator, we can now open the line for Q&A.

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Andrew Terrell with Stephens. Please go ahead with your question.

Andrew Terrell

Hey. Good morning, Dennis. Good morning, Matt.

Dennis Zember

Morning.

Matt Switzer

Morning.

Andrew Terrell

Maybe just to start, I think it was really good to see the deposit growth come in this quarter. It seems like you were able to buck kind of a more negative trend across the industry. I was hoping you could just speak to kind of pipeline on the deposit side and just expectations for deposit growth in the back half of the year.

And then as part of that, I saw you went live with the digital bank this quarter, just deposit growth expectations within that division specifically? And then can you remind us, do you have any kind of deposit account opening goals or any kind of metrics that you’re targeting for that business?

Dennis Zember

I’ll start from the back of that question. I think our metrics are – what we’d really like to see is checking accounts keep moving higher up to the 30% range. Now I mean is that that’s probably of all the goals we have around here, the ratios that we measure and sort of answer to the board on, that’s clearly the hardest. And I think especially in the current environment it’s not going to be easy, but I think I mean, its critical. I think that’s where our whole franchise value comes from. So we’re focused there.

As far as the strategies to get there, I mean, I would tell you, yes, the digital bank no question about it, is something we’re hoping is going to move us there. The digital bank is named Primis Bank, it offers the exact same products and services that the core bank offers, so there’s really no differentiation there.

But when we market it in our core footprint and really beyond, it’s easy to market it as the most convenient solution out there. We marketed that as we’re going to market that is not run by box and that there’s still access to bankers.

Now when we start marketing that outside of our footprint, clearly, that market or that idea will change. But that concept, that digital bank concept in our footprint will make us a better bank here in our footprint.

The – outside of that, I think we’re – internally, we’re focused on changing incentives or enhancing incentives, were already paying the biggest incentive we pay here is still on a checking account. I think on the deposit pricing, you know, we have, like I said, we’ve moved cost of funds, our cost of deposits down aggressively. I think we probably could have gone a little further.

But just knowing what the pipelines look like on the asset side and the opportunity, we’ve sort of stayed a little aggressive, and I think we would continue to stay aggressive there. That really drives home why the checking account strategy is so important sorted to augment or make the growth a little more reasonably priced. Did that answer all the questions there?

Andrew Terrell

Yeah. No, that’s helpful. Just overall kind of net kind of deposit growth expectations for the back half, if you have them?

Dennis Zember

I would answer it this way, Andrew. I mean at our loan-to-deposit ratio that’s about as high as we want to take it. So we’re looking to fund dollar for dollar the loan growth for the rest of the year. So that will be call it $300 million of growth, we’re going to need to have on the other side.

Andrew Terrell

Got it. Okay. That’s perfect, thank you. Maybe just Matt, I think it was good to see in the release, and then I think you discussed it briefly in the commentary the $3 million to $4 million of potential cost savings that you discussed, that was really good to see.

Can you just elaborate a little bit more on kind of where those saves are coming from? And then is it fair to think the time line for recognition is kind of fully loaded in the back half run rate? And then just overall expectations for expenses in 3Q?

Matt Switzer

Sure. It will come from a variety of areas, branch consolidation, some of which we’ve talked about, some additional ones. So additional ones above what we’ve talked about would be in that number, some back office restructuring and consolidation of some positions that we can have some visibility to and then some other operating efficiencies contracts and stuff that we can renegotiate that we see some opportunities to reduce costs.

In terms run rate, I would say, so this is going to be excluding any onetime costs related to branch closures, et cetera, and excluding Primis Mortgage. So it’s apples-to-apples with what we’ve reported in the last couple of quarters. So we were at $18.5 million this quarter. That should be probably closer to $18 million in Q3, give or take.

Andrew Terrell

Okay. Got it. And then for this $3 million to $4 million kind of saves that you’ve identified, kind of once we were to past through the back half of this year, do you think there’s kind of any more potential cost-cutting efforts as you look into 2023 or is it more just going to be on kind of tweaking things here and there and reinvesting in the franchise?

Matt Switzer

I think it’s going to be – I mean we’re always looking for efficiencies, but I think it will be more tweaking things here and there. And look, we still – and that’s kind of the net number, right? We still have some investments we need to make in Panacea and Life Premium Finance, maybe some more to do on the digital side. So it’s really trying to reallocate resources.

Andrew Terrell

Yeah. Okay. And if I could sneak just one more in for Dennis. I heard some of your comments on kind of dislocation in the mortgage market and maybe that provides you an opportunity to kind of capitalize from a talent perspective.

Can you just discuss your outlook for hiring within the mortgage division? And then I know the mortgage backdrops changed quite a bit over the past few months. What do you think is kind of an achievable target for mortgage production in 2023?

Dennis Zember

I think the 30-year mortgage is now kind of 6%, maybe come off that just a touch. I mean yeah…

Matt Switzer

Last year…

Dennis Zember

Yeah. That’s going to slow, mortgage have volumes have slowed, cash flow mortgage volumes. I mean, it will reset and the mindset of the American homeowner mindset will reset and volumes will come in at some level. Right now, there’s just so many mortgage companies, and I’m not faulting anybody. I mean the volumes were mine blowing, and you just had to step up and now that reset is sort of changing the day-to-day for a lot of originators.

I remember when we started looking at this and we were looking at some other strategies, I mean, we talked to some DCI [ph] teams that wanted $1 million to make the move. And you could probably – I mean, back then, you probably could have justified it. I mean we’re doing enough volume, a couple of hundred million dollars of volume, you’re maybe paying them six months of bottom line profitability. That’s changed right now.

So that’s – I mean, again, for us, that’s good because I think even bags in. I don’t think, Matt and I wanted to be cutting a lot of million-dollar checks for new teams given you really only have one month of sight [ph] on what mortgage will do. So I think that’s a very – that’s a positive for us.

There are teams out there. There are definitely things out there that maybe the culture where they are isn’t good, the enthusiasm for mortgage to feel different in their company. And the enthusiasm for mortgage here is very hard, steeper pitch [ph] Its – Matt and I both know this business. And I think that sort of helps too when we start talking to the bankers.

I think as far as what we can expect, I’d say probably, I think comfortably, I would say maybe $500 million, just what I know now. I think we bought probably $300 million. I’d say comfortably, I can say $500 million knowing that there is kind of – even at these levels, there will be a reset. There will be some activity, and there’ll be some recruiting.

I think if we can get, I probably wont say lucky, I don’t know what the word is, but if we can be successful on some of the recruiting that we’re doing, if we can get some reasonably priced teams and negotiate well and exploit our position here being kind of one of the few offensive mortgage companies, maybe we can get that to $1 billion.

Matt Switzer

And I’ll just add to that. I mean the Primis Mortgage was a purchase focus shop. They were not refi heavy at all. And the markets that they’re in are still seeing robust purchase activity. And then you combine that with – which should continue. I mean there’s still a lot of housing demand even at these mortgage rates.

And then we highlighted in the release of a gentleman that joined us as a regional executive, came from a much larger shop and ran a very large region and he is excited about the team that Primis Mortgage is building, and he’s already hit the ground running on the recruiting side. And he gives it – I mean we’re looking for teams that are purchase-oriented not refi-oriented. So they can still generate volume in this market. So we’re highly confident we’re going to get volume going into ’23.

Andrew Terrell

Great. Okay. I’ll step back. I appreciate you guys taking my question. And congrats on a great quarter.

Matt Switzer

Thanks, Andrew.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Christopher Marinac with Janney Montgomery Scott. Please go ahead with your question.

Christopher Marinac

Hey, thanks. Good morning. Dennis and Matt, I wanted to kind of start with credit. The information you gave in the release in tact was very helpful. So I just kind of wanted to extend beyond the one loan that you talked about. What other credit indicators are you seeing on classified and criticized? Any early warning things at this point of the cycle?

Dennis Zember

I mean early warning signs, weaknesses in credit or underwriting terms coming through that I don’t think we’re seeing that. I think we are anything that exhibits a little bit of weakness. We are probably moving hard around right now, I will tell you that.

But I don’t there – is that is that wholesale across the footprint now. I mean I think the values, this is one thing I would say, the values of anything that shows up a little weak. The collateral values are strong and resolvable, I think they’re at resolvable levels. That’s probably something that’s different. You know, where we are right now people want to know what’s different now than back in 2007 and ’08, I think that is a big difference.

Collateral values right now are resolvable on credit. Credit, it might exhibit a little bit of cash flow weakness, but the collateral values are there. I think the one loan that Matt was talking about that went no-accrual, I mean we’re – we’re at like a 40-something percent loan-to-value.

There are two or three mortgages behind us. I mean there’s no loss in that. It kind of contaminates your asset quality story, but there’s just no loss there, its just a cash flow problem person, and this is a famous person, has just – they just don’t have the cash flow to support the mortgage.

And I think we probably could have worked with them like this or worked with them like that or – but I just think right now it’s not in our best interest to push off any kind of credit problem, especially right now when asset values are resolvable. It’s just – I think it’s in our be interest to deal with something. I don’t know.

Christopher Marinac

That’s very helpful.

Dennis Zember

I mean we see stuff moving around, but nothing that we would characterize as systemic, just kind of you know, its here in the businesses, allocating risk, some stuffs going to go bad. So we’ve had some movements in and out, but nothing or shattering at this point.

Christopher Marinac

Great. And then I had a related question on Tennessee, just to sort of remind us on kind of how the business is being built from a guardrail perspective and just how you sort of think of credit as you expand and as they continue to have success/

Dennis Zember

I mean, their offerings are – each quarter, the offerings are a little more varied. The – I mean commercial is probably worth commercial. I mean in commercial right now, 60% to 70% of the volume production…

Matt Switzer

85…

Dennis Zember

85, okay. I mean the commercial production its so right so down the line. I mean, the commercial production what we’re doing in the bank underwriting style if it were to come to the bank versus coming through Panacea, there’s really no difference there, not at all.

In fact, our commercial production, the people doing our commercial production – that are doing the commercial production, reviewing the commercial production, approving it, are all Wells Fargo, TD Bank, big bank. I mean that’s – our strategy is back.

On the consumer side, which is what really got us started here and I think what differentiates us I mean, we’re banking fourth – were year medical students, residents fellows. I mean the fact is, I think a lot of those don’t have the proven credit background as you look. I mean, if you’re trying to bank those doctors on a 750 beacon, you’re probably going to – or a beacon, you’re probably going to – that’s just not how you bank those doctors. Most of them don’t have established credit. They might be 30 years old. They just don’t have established credit yet.

And that doesn’t mean – absolutely, it does not mean that we’re swinging consumer credit to unqualified borrowers period. I mean, our credit trends there are fantastic. There’s nothing has gone wrong in Panacea. We’ve got 2,000 doctors and I would tell you the past due ratios, the charge-off ratios, the losses, the credit problem indicators there are fine ph and maybe as good is what we expected or better.

Matt Switzer

I mean on the consumer side, we’re not – what I know is there’s a focus right now, given the economic outlook. I mean we’re not offering consumer loans to technicians for nurses or its doctors, you know, that’s Dennis [ph] These are folks that or are at the upper end of the income bracket when they get out of school. So these are bridge loans basically to very high earning people, and that’s how they’re underwritten.

Christopher Marinac

Great. And then I guess one more question for me, this it goes back to slide 12. The deposits you have been driving in at LPF and Panacea, is there anything unique you have to do on rates for those deposits as we move through this environment in the next couple of quarters?

Matt Switzer

I would say not. Those deposits probably are maybe more reasonably priced than the rest of the bank.

Dennis Zember

I mean like Life Premium Finance, it’s immaterial at this point, they only have, I think, less than 3 million deposits tied to like premium demand [ph]. And then for Panacea, I think it’s $10 million or $11 million and a lot of that’s coming on the commercial side.

So when we make a loan to own practice or what have you, we require an operating account. Some of its consumer for our consumer borrowers, but I think most of the dollars are tied to those operating accounts. So its again, low interest rate.

Matt Switzer

We probably have a – we do have room to be more aggressive. On the price side, pricing those deposits and probably sort of move the deposit flows up in those businesses, so…

Christopher Marinac

Right. And I presume you can Matt, you can do that within kind of how you want your betas data’s to look as you bring in new money, if that all makes sense.

Matt Switzer

Exactly.

Christopher Marinac

Great. And then I guess, I know you covered a lot on expenses on the prior question, but just curious if you had any kind of longer-term goals about where you’d like to see the expense ratio to assets or efficiency in general, it’s not a guide for next quarter as much as it is just kind of big picture goals for the organization?

Dennis Zember

I mean, we won’t – we had board meeting yesterday. And we told the board, look, right now, the goal is to get to the low 60s as fast as possible. The ROA – our ROA that Matt and I won’t – probably 135 range and moving higher, but 135 probably short term, I mean, efficiency ratio in the low 60s and moving lower and margin being driven by good yields and good deposits is critical as well.

So I think the first goal I would tell you, Chris, is to see low 60s. And then as we do that, let these lines of business that I think both are going to operate with, I mean, I didn’t say in my comments, but I think both of these lines of business are going to ultimately operate probably 20s and 30s in the efficiency ratio, sort of let them pull us down a little lower into the 50s.

Christopher Marinac

Great. Dennis, thank you for all the background this morning. We appreciate it.

Dennis Zember

All right. Thank you, Chris.

Matt Switzer

Thanks, Chris.

Operator

This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Dennis Zember for any closing remarks.

Dennis Zember

All right. Thank you. I appreciate everybody on the call today. If you have any questions or comments, feel free to reach out to me or Matt at any time. We appreciate it. Have a good weekend.

Operator

The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.

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