Operator:
Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the Pinnacle Financial Partnersā Third Quarter 2019 Earnings Conference Call. Hosting the call today from Pinnacle Financial Partners is Mr. Terry Turner, Chief Executive Officer; and Mr. Harold Carpenter, Chief Financial Officer.Please note, Pinnacleās earnings release and this morningās presentation are available on the Investor Relations page of their website at www.pnfp.com. Todayās call is being recorded and will be available for replay on Pinnacleās website for the next 90 days.At this time, all participants have been placed in a listen-only mode. The floor will be opened for your questions following the presentation. [Operator Instructions]Before we begin, Pinnacle does not provide earnings guidance or forecast. During this presentation, we may make comments, which may constitute forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and other facts that may cause actual results, performance or achievements of Pinnacle Financial to differ materially from any results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements.Many of such factors are beyond Pinnacle Financialsā ability to control or predict, and listeners are cautioned not to put undue reliance on such forward-looking statements. A more detailed description of these and other risks is contained in Pinnacle Financialās most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K. Pinnacle Financial disclaims any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements contained in this presentation, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.In addition, these remarks may include certain non-GAAP financial measures, as defined by SEC Regulation G. A presentation of the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures and a reconciliation of the non-GAAP measures to the comparable GAAP measures will be available on Pinnacleās Financial website at www.pnfp.com.With that, Iām now going to turn the presentation over to Mr. Terry Turner, Pinnacleās President and CEO.
Michael
Michael Terry Turner:
Thanks, Joelle. Good morning. As we always do, Iāll begin with this dashboard. As a reminder, itās focused on revenue growth, earnings growth and asset quality, because we believe that theyāre the three most highly correlated metrics to long-term shareholder returns. Consequently, thatās what we focus on quarter in and quarter out.As you can see, Q3 was an extraordinary quarter for our firm with 15.6% year-over-year growth in revenue, 19% year-over-year growth in EPS and outstanding asset quality metrics. With all the noise and adjustments, primarily in previous periods, in many cases, the non-GAAP measure better illustrates the relative performance of our firm.As a reminder, the reason we begin each quarterly earnings call with that as it goes back to 1Q 2014 is because, as you can see, any impact from M&A, high deposit betas, outsized CRE payoffs or any number of other hot buttons that have come and gone over the last five years, our balance sheet grow, and more importantly, our growth in revenue and EPS have been remarkably rapid and reliable. And Q3 2019 is a continuation of the same.When you look at the slope on any of those growth metrics there, weāve got a 34% five-year CAGR for revenues, a 22% five-year CAGR for EPS, a 16% five-year CAGR for tangible book value, a 34% five-year CAGR for loans, a 32% five-year CAGR for deposits, and ROTCE now north of 18% and pristine asset quality metrics quarter in and quarter out.One of Peter Druckerās more famous quotes that Iāve used a number of times on these calls is the Culture Eats Strategy for Lunch. The folks at Gallup and the Great Place to Work Institute subsequently developed the empirical data that proves exactly that, specifically the companies that have higher levels of employee engagement produce better sales results, lower employee turnover, which frankly is or should be a critical success criterion for most everybody, better productivity and better profitability.So in my opinion, our obsession with culture is the explanation for the reliable slope on all those charts we just looked at on the previous slide. On this slide, you see a list of the workplace recognitions that weāve received just in the last 12 months. And the ones in green, the green-shaded area there are the ones that weāve received during the third quarter.We had two major sizes. Number one, we moved into Memphis in 2015 and quickly were recognized as the best place to work among smaller and midsized companies in that market. Now weāre recognized as literally the best place to work among the largest employers in Memphis.And number two, last year, immediately following our system conversion associated with the BNC integration, we were still ranked as the 19th Best Bank in America to Work For and the only bank in the top 50 anywhere near our size. This year, we climbed another three spots up to number 16.So why is this important? It appears to me that weāre headed into a slightly operating environment. Thereās an old saying that you canāt tell whoās swimming until the time goes out. Having such a highly engaged workforce not only produces better outcomes in the good times, itās even more critical to performance in the difficult times.I know by now, everyone is familiar with the business case that we made for the BNC acquisition. The plan was to continue the high-growth CRE platforms BNC had and bolt-on to that a C&I platform, which is the principal strength of our firm. The critical path to make that happen was to lever our ongoing recruitment confidence in order to attract and retain the best C&I and private bankers in the market. Specifically, when we announced the merger, we said we would hire 65 C&I and private bankers over a five-year period of time.As you can see, Rick Callicutt and his team surpassed the hiring target for C&I and private bankers in less than half that time. The environment for looking at great bankers in the Carolinas and Virginia has only gotten better since we lost our transaction there. And so we expect to continue to hire at a rapid pace there.Why is this making a difference? Number one, itās an indication that weāre diligent about hitting our targets. But more importantly, number two, given all the turmoil in the industry, and particularly in the South Asian markets that we target, thereās an unprecedented opportunity to acquire talents from larger and more vulnerable banks, and weāre arguably best positioned to seize it.And number three, it should lay figures that our rapid hiring will restore our efficiency. At the time we announced this deal, our efficiency ratio as adjusted was 49.65%. And today, weāre at 47.58%, a meaningful improvement during the period when we have been doing the rapid hiring.With that backdrop, I will turn it over to Harold to review the quarter in greater detail.
Harold Carpenter:
Thanks, Terry. Good morning, everybody. Weāve updated our revenue per share slide for third quarter results. We believe one of the best measurements of whether we are winning or losing is shown on the slide.As you can see, we continue to experience double-digit revenue per share growth since the second quarter of last year. Secondly, the red dotted line represents the peer groupās year-over-year growth. As shown on the slide, we outpaced our peers on revenue per share growth by a wide margin.Keeping in mind, this is during a time of significant internal focus around the integration of the Bank of North Carolina and more recently managing and strategizing around inverted yield curves. That said, our relationship managers have remained focused on gathering clients and generating incremental revenues for our firm. Obviously, BHGās outsized performance has had a meaningful influence on these results.We donāt apologize for that at all. It has afforded us opportunities to invest in our franchise by keeping the foot on the accelerator on hiring, accruing for enhanced incentives to motivate our workforce, as well as allowing us to better position our franchise for future growth.Additionally, BHG has provided our outsized tangible book value accretion, all of which benefits our franchise and its shareholders. There remained a lot of positive energy in our franchise right now. We remain on offense 24/7. Itās all about winning. Our associates are engaged, focused and excited about our opportunities for the remainder of this year and going into 2020.Now comparing the third quarter of 2019 average loans to the third quarter of 2018 average loans, our annualized growth was more than a 11%. We continue to believe that our loan growth in 2019 will be low double digits in comparison to 2018. At this time, we have no reason to believe that our loan growth outlook for 2020 will be any different.Weāre in the midst of constructing our 2020 plan and are managed to believe that low double digits is still a reasonable target. We can only make this statement because of the robustness of our hiring platform and the continued success we anticipate over the next several quarters. Impacting our volumes in the third quarter was the acquisition of Advocate Capital.Weāre excited about the opportunities that Advocate provides us, including access to a vast network of attorneys, where we can offer commercial banking products with emphasis initially on gathering deposits. Advocate has built their franchise on delivering great service and enjoys significant depth in their client relationships.During the third quarter, Advocate added approximately $155 million in loan balances with a weighted average yield of 8%, plus other fees for the services they provide to their client base. Iāll speak to rates ā loan rates in a second.Weāve shown this chart for several quarters now. We also provided information in the small chart regarding the granularity of our loan book by loan type. This small chart details the average commitment of our current loan book at origination compared to March 2015, the only outlier being construction. Construction has increased to an average commitment of almost $1.3 million, which we believe is very reasonable amount for that part of our portfolio. We offer this information, so that you can better appreciate that weāre not relying on extra large ticket sizes to hit our growth goals.The chart on the right details impacted discount accretion on net interest income. As you can see by the gold line, discount accretion continues to be less impactful to our results at 5.7% of our net interest income in the third quarter and we believe weāll continue to be less impactful in the future.We all knew that headwinds to our GAAP revenue growth for 2019 was an impact of less and less discount accretion and the primary way weāre going to overcome it was through balance sheet growth.Anyway, the blue bars on the chart on the right are obviously where our attention is. And growing those blue bars is key to our ability to deliver increased value to our shareholders. That said, hopefully, in the not too distant future, we can stop showing this chart once purchase accounting is even more so in the rearview mirror.Next, hereās another slide weāve been showing for several quarters. Itās an update on our loan portfolio by rate index. Our loan mix averages approximately 50% to 55% LIBOR and Prime, which substantially all of LIBOR credit being tied to 30-day LIBOR and about 40% fixed rates, with commercial real estate being the primary contributor.The quarter-over-quarter weighted average coupons for LIBOR and prime-based credits for loan book decreased by 24 basis points for LIBOR and 43 basis points for Prime, which is somewhat of a victory given we experienced 50 basis points in rate cuts. So the spread in these categories actually widened compared to quarter-end to quarter-end after considering the rate decrease.Of increased significance is a spread on fixed rate credit as a proxy for fixed rate spread performance and to keep it simple, we traditionally use the five-year treasury as the benchmark. The five-year treasury dropped 21 basis points during the quarter on an average ā while our weighted average fixed rate loan rate dropped only 6 basis points. Keeping the coupon on fixed rate loans near these levels would be a nice win for us in an anticipated down rate environment.Now to deposits. Perhaps the most anticipated slide in the deck today, average deposit balances were up $1.7 billion year-over-year, our average deposit costs remain the same in the third quarter of 2019 from the second quarter and currently stand at 1.25%Letās go back to wholesale bank assets. We donāt usually discuss the bond book or liquidity in our quarterly conference calls, but weāre today primarily, because itās relevant to margin performance in the third quarter and going forward. These two areas probably have the biggest downside impact on our NIM performance in the quarter.Bond yield decreased by 20 basis points linked-quarter, this is by no means unexpected. We donāt have the peer data yet, but we believe peer yields will see decrease in this quarter as well. About 50% of the decline was due to reinvested cash flows, while the other 50% was valuation of the book. So as rate declined, the value of the book increased reducing the yield.We anticipate additional yield contraction in 4Q. But as the middle chart indicates, weāve added more fixed rate assets to the bond book, which will help stabilize our yield performance going into next year.As to liquidity, we maintain more this quarter than any quarter in recent memory. Most of this was timing and that we just completed a $300 million sub-debt offering in the second quarter of September, which added to our cash balances and we acquired a large deposit from a longtime client of a similar amount.Regarding the offering, $180 million was injected into the bank, while $90 million is earmarked for sub-debt reductions at the holding company in January. Most of the client deposit will find its way to our wealth management unit in the fourth quarter, while the remainder will be with us until early next year when that depositor pays their taxes. Liquidity will likely be back within a small range in the fourth quarter.In any event, both of these matters pressured our third quarter margin performance. There is a point when NIM trumps net interest income and we will pay attention. Currently, we will work with our clients to create as much credit income as we can and grow net interest income. As a wise buy-side investor once said, āThereās value in vendor customers, especially those that transition to relationship based on service and advice.ā So as a result, we remain focused on growing our client base by hiring the best bankers in our markets.Now to deposits. Most of our firmās focus for the third quarter was on the table on the left, which looks at end-of-period rates. Our relationship managers, we believe, did a bang-up job on managing our deposit cost in this rate environment. In negotiated rate bucket, weāve achieved a 17 basis point decline.At this point in the rate cycle, our target would be a 50 basis point beta or a 50% beta or a 25 basis point reduction, so weāre very much pleased on where we are, given the most recent rate decreases were late in the quarter. We do think we are getting close to the 25 basis point reduction here in mid-October in that particular rate category.Our relationship manager is very much in tune with the rate environment and are prepared to have more discussions with our client base should rates decrease further. Here is our challenge. We have to reduce deposit rates, while at the same increasing our deposit book to fund loan growth and reduce our dependency on the more expensive wholesale funding. Our ability to accomplish this rests primarily with our new hires and continue to gather deposits from their client base.More on deposit rates. We donāt normally provide monthly information during our quarter conference calls, but I wanted to emphasize the positive work our relationship managers are accomplishing with respect to lowering rates on our interest-bearing transaction accounts.Several may believe that this is merely pushing a button in our deposit systems. Granted we have those accounts, those are the rates youād account on the previous slide, the 65% of our interest-bearing transaction accounts are negotiated, which means that the only person that can authorize or change that rate is the relationship manager. It is part of our brain.All banks have rate sheet accounts and all banks have negotiated rate accounts. We believe our approach is much different and much more intentional. Itās really at the core of relationship banking, the bankās treasury, namely me and a fewer other number of countries who would love to call up deposit ops and tell them to lower rates and the deed would be done.At Pinnacle, these bean-counter types have to be able to convince the relationship manager or better said, their supervisors, by calling ā to call their client to lower their rate and itās not only a good idea, but a fair idea. So far so good. Canāt tell you where we think weāll be at the end of October, but we are optimistic that we will experience continued progress on reducing rates on our interest-bearing transaction accounts.Our goal is a 50% beta for our interest-bearing deposit book. So weāve got a ways to go to achieve our targets, but weāre off to a great start. It will take us a while on CDs. Our CD book is split about 60% customer and 40% wholesale. The wholesale CDs will roll down fairly quickly, giving us an average duration of slightly more than six months, while the customer book will take a little longer as this average duration is approximately 10 months.When rates were rising, we took our fair share of criticism regarding increasing our deposit rates. As we enter the front part of what could be an extended down rate cycle, we like our odds. We will be proactive with our clients and not hide behind a curtain to surprise them. We sincerely appreciate our client base and we will leverage the depth of our relationships to accomplish our objectives.With the inverted yield curve in place now for several months, the speculation of a credit cycle change should a recession occur has been on investorsā minds for quite sometime. We believe weāve got the best relationship bankers in the business. We also believe we have the best credit officers. This is not their first rodeo, they can sense when storm clouds are beginning to form..Right now, as far as credit risk is concerned, based on our credit metrics and what Harvey White and his team tell me, accounts remain pretty darn good. Weāve shown these charts before, the chart provides us even more comfort that weāre not booking the very large commercial real estate projects. Credit remains at the forefront of our mind, so I hope we never appear complacent when we talk about credit.For the third quarter, we experienced relatively small increase in our net charge-off ratio, while nonperforming assets and classified asset ratios decreased. So we believe that as the credit in the third quarter were steady as she goes and agree with other bankers that were not seeing any systemic issues that will cause us to change our perspectives about credit in 2019 or into 2020.Now concerning CECL. How much will our allowance increase? Weāre in the final stages of validating the various models we will use to determine the allowance account each quarter. Preliminary, we believe that the allowance account could be in the range of 70 basis points to 80 basis points, up from the 48 current. This amount includes a meaningful amount of purchase credit impaired reserves, which will transfer into loan accounts ā transfer from loan accounts into allowance account without an impact to capital. At September 30, that amount was about 6 ā was slightly over $6 million, which approximates to 3 basis points of the loan portfolio.Now turning to fees. Fees totaled more than $82.6 million, up more than 60% over the third quarter of 2018. As Terry mentioned, BHG had another phenomenal quarter. Their contribution was up $18 million or greater than 126% year-over-year. More on BHG in a second.Our fee businesses have ā are having a strong 2019 with residential mortgage leading the way up approximately 80% annualized this year over last year. Theyāve had a great first nine months of 2019, correlating not only with drops in long-term rates, but also with increases in the number of mortgage originators. Also, again, great markets are helpful with this line of business, so we anticipate mortgage to finish this year strong. Additionally, deposit fees and wealth management are having mid double-digit growth figures, which we consider to be excellent.Concerning BHG, during the third quarter, we participated in BHGās Analyst Day in New York with several members of their executive team on hand to provide more detailed perspective on BHGās business model. We feel that a lot of great information was provided during the session, so we wonāt go through or repeat here. But if you like to hear what was said, Iāll direct you to our website www.pnfp.com, where a recording of that will be available for replay for, call it, another two months.BHG is having a phenomenal year period. Originations are at an all-time high and the business model continues to outperform. That said, BHG will likely being to keep more of their credit on their balance sheet, thus realizing more interest income rather than realize significantly on gain on sale.They believe the funding, which will allow them to warehouse this loan should be in place within the next few weeks. So we expect fee revenues from BHG in the fourth quarter will be less than what has been reported in the second and third quarters, with it being more consistent with the amounts reported in the first quarter.The green line on the chart on the right details the recourse accrual they record on their books for substitution prepayment and other losses associated with hiring and substitution cost for banks that have purchased credit from Bankers Healthcare Group. Theyāve been keeping the resource accrual at about 4.5% of total credits outstanding over the last few years, the cost or the actual loss rates in relation to total volume of credit outstanding on the books of all the banks doing business with Bankers Healthcare Group. The column include not only the credit loss, primarily substitution losses, but also the prepayment loss associated with reimbursement of the early payoff of these credits.Weāve had a lot of conversations with BHG about their credit profiles. Their credit models are sophisticated and subject to continued analysis by our analytics group. We believe that our business model is top shelf in identifying potential clients who have the credit profile to be a good borrower for BHG, where the BHG keeps the loan on its balance sheet or shelf loan into its network of community banks. Approximately 67% of Bankers Healthcare Group revenue base has historically been made up of gain on sale revenues..However, BHG also generated interest income from loans that were either held on BHGās balance sheet permanently or being held on the balance sheet prior to being released at auction platform. Since the second-half of 2018, BHG has been building their balance sheet with on balance sheet loans of approximately $307 million of loans currently held on balance sheet, compared to $146 million as of the end of September 2018. Theyāve been able to generate the operating cash required to be able to fund this loan growth.The green bars on the left chart represent originations and ramped up with more loans being funded, which is the result of enhanced analytics and more sophisticated marketing platforms. The blue bars are the loans on which gain on sale has been reported as these loans were placed with bankers with gain on sale revenues being generated. The blue bars have ramped up with more placements either through option or one-off sales. The gold bar represents the loans held by BHG on its balance sheet, which BHG will collect interest income.As weāve mentioned on the previous slide, BHG is anticipated to increasing their balance sheet loans. Weāre all in agreement that by balance sheeting loans, this will provide a more reliable income stream for BHG in the future through a more diverse business model. It will take many quarters for BHG to max the gain on sale revenue with interest income, but that said, we all believe itās a good idea.As to credit risk, given BHG has been honoring the substitution clause for sub-loans, any incremental credit risk associated with keeping more loans on its balance sheet should be minimal. Even with all this change, we still believe that BHG should see 10% growth in earnings in 2020 from what they anticipate realizing in 2019.So now briefly to expenses, most significant run rate matters to discuss over on incentives. As we mentioned in the press release, we increased our incentive accrual in the third quarter, but donāt expect our fourth quarter accruals to be nearly as large. Weāre also pleased to report that retention rates continue to increase certainly in two important things for us.Our clients can count on consistent service and employee turnover continues to shrink and our workforce engagement initiatives are taking hold in our newer markets as those associates are buying into our culture. For the last two years, our expense to average asset ratio, excluding merger expenses, has been in the 1.9% range. We donāt see that changing materially as we head into 2020.Lastly, yesterday, our Board of Directors approved an additional $100 million share repurchase authorization for open market purchases of our common stock. This authorization extends through December 2020 and begins upon the exhaustion of our current authorization, which has approximately $30 million of remaining funds available for common stock repurchases. We intend to use every bit of this authorization, but we will do it rationally over the next 15 months.With that, I will turn it back over to Terry.
Michael Terry Turner:
Thanks, Harold. As Harold discussed on last quarterās call, we modified our longer-term operating ranges. Our previous metrics were put in place in 2012 and we believe the granularity that were provided by those previous measurements were important at that time and has served its purpose. But now, weāre opting to go with a higher level of guidance with operating ranges for ROAA, ROTCE and tangible equity as our current guideposts.For ROAA, weāre targeting a 145% to 165% range. As you can see from the third quarter, weāre operating high in that range at 1.62%. Weāve also introduced ROTCE and tangible equity ratio as two new measures that weāll continue to highlight for you going forward. As you can see, weāre in the range on ROTCE and itās at higher levels with the tangible equity ratio. Our goal is to maintain these ratios in the top quartile of our peer group over time..And finally, weāve shown this chart before, we continue to believe that weāre in top quartile grower of EPS and tangible book value within our peer group. Weāre laser-focused on rapid, reliable growth in EPS and tangible book value. Our tangible book value is up by more than $5 a share in the last year, or slightly over 20%. And as you know, our incentive systems are designed to take every person and focus them tightly on EPS growth.As Iāve mentioned a number of times before, I believe the banks that can rapidly and reliably grow EPS and tangible book value over time will produce best shareholder returns. As you can see on this chart, growth here has been both rapid and reliable.The slide that youāre looking at here is the same slide that I used to close the quarterly earnings call in January and use it to try to set expectations for 2019. In the third quarter, I think, we hit the bullās-eye.To the first bullet point, we had a 14.5% linked-quarter annualized rate of growth for core deposits and took our cost of deposits down 11 basis points during the quarter.To the second bullet point, we had an 11.3% linked-quarter annualized rate of growth for loans.To the third bullet point, we had year-over-year growth rate for adjusted EPS of 19.8%.To the fourth bullet point, weāve exceeded our aggressive hiring plan of C&I and private bankers in conjunction with BNC merger. Weāve also had several success across the entire footprint, and considering all types of revenue producers, including not only the relationship managers, but other revenue producers like brokers, mortgage originators, insurance agents and so forth, weāre hired 67 year-to-date, while not damaging the EPS growth rate or the efficiency ratio. That speaks to the fifth bullet point as well.And to the last bullet point, we continue to grow tangible book value up 20.6% year-over-year.So, Joelle, weāll stop there and take questions.
Operator:
Thank you, Mr. Turner. The floor is now open for your questions. [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from Jared Shaw with Wells Fargo Securities. Your line is now open.
Jared Shaw:
Hi, good morning, guys
Michael Terry Turner:
Hi, Jared.
Harold Carpenter:
Hi, Jared.
Jared Shaw:
So maybe if I could start with on the deposit side, thereās another quarter, where you are able to see deposit growth outpace the loan growth. Do you think that weāve turned the corner now? And if we look at, whether itās year-over-year average deposit growth, or quarterly deposit growth outpacing loan growth? Should we expect to start to see that loan to deposit ratio come down? And do you feel like youāve gotten sort of permanent traction there, or is there still going to be some more quarterly fluctuation?
Harold Carpenter:
Yes. I donāt think weāll see the loan to deposit ratio go down. We should expect to see deposit growth through natural swell in the fourth quarter. I know Iāve got some ā like we were talking about on the call, Iāve got that one large deposit or whose balances will come down some in the fourth quarter. Heās transferring much of that deposit into our wealth management unit. So weāll have those kind of fluctuations.But as far as will we see deposits outstrip loans in the fourth quarter? I canāt really speak to that. I think weāve got a lot of energy around deposit growth. I think our folks are focused on it. So we anticipate fourth quarter having us well done.
Jared Shaw:
Okay. And then on BHG, thatās great color and obviously was good color on the Investor Day as well. Can you remind us as we look into 2020 with the ā with portfolio more on the balance sheet, I guess, a couple of questions. One, where do you think that reserve, I know they donāt necessarily call it the reserve, but the ā their recourse accrual, where does that ultimately go as they build out that balance sheet as they stay in that 4.5% range, or should we expect to see that grow? And then where does the revenue split between gain on sale and net interest income sort of flow by the end of 2021, also those funding lines are in place?
Michael Terry Turner:
Yes. I think for gain on sale to match interest income, thatās going to take at least all of 2020 and probably into 2021 before we get like a 50-50 split. But I think I was talking about on the Analyst Day. As to the recourse accrual, recourse obligation at 4.5%, some of that amount is tied up in prepayment losses.So I doubt with the on balance sheet numbers, you donāt necessarily need to create a reserve for prepayments, because those revenues hadnāt been recognized yet. So theyāre at 45%, I donāt know for the on-balance sheet loans, whether or not youāll need to be that elevated. Does that make sense?
Jared Shaw:
Yep. Okay. That sounds, good color. Thanks. And then just finally on the incentive comp, so are you close to accruing it sort of 100%, based on goals, or could we continue to see that drift up as we go through the end of the year?
Harold Carpenter:
Yes, weāre at 115% of our target at the end of September. We think weāve got a good shot at maintaining that number here in the fourth quarter. As far as what the fourth quarter accrual looks like, itāll look a lot like what we accrued in the second quarter going into the fourth quarter, we believe right now.
Jared Shaw:
Okay, great. Thanks. Thanks for the questions.
Operator:
Thank you. And your next question comes from Jennifer Demba with SunTrust. Your line is now open.
Jennifer Demba:
Thank you. Good morning.
Michael Terry Turner:
Thank you, Jennifer.
Jennifer Demba:
Hi. A couple of questions. Harold, you had a pretty steep increase in other fee income from second quarter, third quarter, anything unusual in there? And is that a good run rate going forward, or is it more like second quarter?
Harold Carpenter:
I think itāll be a decent run rate going forward. We have some swap revenues that we booked this quarter over the second quarter. So Iām not anticipating a big drop going into the fourth quarter.
Jennifer Demba:
Okay. And, Terry, could you talk about the rationale for acquiring Advocate Capital and what you like about the business model and your interest in other types of specialty lending company? Thanks.
Michael Terry Turner:
Yes. So Advocate Capital is a targeted financier for client attorneys. It is a great business and great business model. As you can see, they originate high-quality loans and higher yields, not dissimilar to the way BHG does, itās a value-added approach. In their case, the value add is that they provide accounting software that enables plaintiffās attorneys to recapture the interest expense in the settlement proceeds.And so thatās the thing that requires a specialized accounting mechanism to get done. Thatās the value that they had. And so as a result of doing that, theyāre able to capture the financing, specifically for cases, however, they have blanket liens on all the receivables of the firm.So, again, itās a value-added approach to produce a higher yield from a high-quality borrower. We, as you know, we like those kinds of businesses. The feel is that itās a business we understand. We know how to underwrite those loans, not that weāre the experts; they are, but again, itās just a business that we understand. And our approach is always make sure you get some value-add, not compete on price. And so thatās what this business does.I think part of the honey for us on this transaction is, theyāve only been providing lending products, but we believe that we can perhaps enhance some of their lending products. But more importantly, we sell the full suite of treasury services. And weāve got issues underway right now to initiate gathering deposits through that client set. So, on a standalone basis, we feel like itās asset transaction. And then when you add the revenue synergies that weāve been able to get out of it, itās a very excellent transaction.
Jennifer Demba:
Well, the leadership team stay in place there, Terry? And are they locked up for a certain period of time?
Michael Terry Turner:
Yes, leadership team does stay in place and they are locked up, Harold, I believe for three years. Three years. Yes.
Jennifer Demba:
Thank you very much.
Operator:
Thank you. Your next question comes from Stephen Scouten with Sandler OāNeill. Your line is now open.
Stephen Scouten:
Hey, good morning, guys.
Michael Terry Turner:
Hi, Steve.
Stephen Scouten:
Nice quarter. Nice quarter as usual, it seems. Iām curious what youāre seeing in terms of growth trends in your market. I know, to hit your targets, you donāt really depend on the underlying growth of the markets, you depend more on your hiring activities. But Iām curious kind of how that Dynamic will play out in terms of if youāre expecting to see, or are seeing still overall market growth or more of your growth is truly dependent today on the new hires?
Michael Terry Turner:
Yes. Steve, let me make sure Iām clear. I donāt have detailed information where I can say, okay, hereās the percentage, hereās how it breaks down and so forth. But I donāt mind to give you what my gut feel is for how that works. I think over time, always the biggest portion of our loan and deposit generation is a function of market share takeaway. And so that is tied to hiring great bankers and having them move their books of business.As you know that, our belief is that it takes probably four years time on average for them to consolidate that book of business. And so, again, the people that have been hired, say, over the last four years, are still in the process of consolidating their books, taking market share. And that would be the biggest part of the growth, both loans and deposits by far.I think if youāre looking for what is just the market condition, I think, our relationship managers would tell you that just the volume growth is probably slower today than it would have been several quarters ago. I donāt think itās dramatically slower, but I do think it would be modestly slower than three quarters ago just in terms of pure economic loan growth, pure economic demand.
Stephen Scouten:
Okay, perfect. Very helpful. Thanks. And then maybe, Harold, if weāre looking at the core NIM, it looked like that was helped slightly obviously by Advocate Capital, but may have been down maybe in the 10 basis point sort of range x that. And with the detail you give in the slide deck around new loan yields, it looks like those were pressured down maybe 35 basis points are so quarter-over-quarter on new yields. So how much downside, I guess, do you think we have from here in that core NIM based on what youāre seeing on new loan yields and continued expectations for Fed cuts?
Harold Carpenter:
Yes. Assuming weāve got one Fed cut built in our model for December. That ā we believe that our margin, the GAAP margin is pretty close to getting stabilized. Thereās probably some more dilution to go here in the fourth quarter. But I think, bond yields will stabilize. If we get two more rate cuts next year, then weāll probably have some lags, but we think that weāll be able to drag these deposits down to help offset that. So assume one rate cut in December, weāve probably got anywhere from, call it, 10 to 15 basis points of NIM contraction at a GAAP level. And with that, our purchase accounting will obviously be less impactful.
Stephen Scouten:
Okay. And then you ā I know youāve got the $38 million estimate for 2019 accretion. Are you discussing at all yet the what you expect to see in 2020 from an integration standpoint?
Harold Carpenter:
We havenāt gotten to that yet. It will probably coming out pretty quickly. We went from 64 down to 39. So thereāll be another probably meaningful drop. You can kind of guess where that might hit.
Stephen Scouten:
Okay. And one last clarifying question, if I could. On the expense run rate, I mean, you are more like $133 million or so this quarter. If we took out the 7.5 of where you think the accrual rate will revert back to 2Q levels, is it fair to assume you think expenses will be in that kind of mid to high $120 million level in 4Q?
Harold Carpenter:
Yes, I think thatās a fair number.
Stephen Scouten:
Great. Well, thanks for the time, guys. I appreciate it.
Operator:
Thank you. Your next question comes from Brett Rabatin with Piper Jaffray. Your line is now open.
Brett Rabatin:
Hey, guys, good morning.
Michael Terry Turner:
Hey, Brett.
Harold Carpenter:
Hi, Brett.
Brett Rabatin:
Wanted to go back to deposits and just talk about the pace of lowering the deposit costs and I know the CD book part of its wholesale. Can you just talk about with the pace in the fourth quarter be 5 or 6 basis points on interest bearing cost basis, and then possibly higher as we go into the first quarter. Can you just give us, I know you have the magnitude of as you roll the CD book and grow the core deposits as well kind of what youāre expecting on that?
Harold Carpenter:
Yes. I think we should realize some meaningful decrease in average deposit rates going into the fourth quarter or for the fourth quarter. We were at 1.25% in the third quarter in average deposit rates. We probably will be maybe as much as, call it, 10 to 12 basis points for that for the fourth quarter, and then thatāll extend into the first quarter of next year. So weāre thinking weāve got anywhere from 15 to 25 basis points of deposit cost reduction here over the next, call it, six months.
Brett Rabatin:
Okay, thatās good color. And then the other question I have was just, Terry, you talked early in the call about the sloppy environment. Iām just curious if there are things that youāre straying away from or you think is risk in the environment? And as we think about 2020, in particular, do we see balanced growth in CRE and C&I, or can you give us maybe a color on what ā some color on what youāre more emphasizing given the current environment?
Michael Terry Turner:
Yes. I think, I would say that if you just ā if you were at the Monday morning meetings where we meet with all our sales force, the messages that you would hear would primarily be around deposit acquisition and lowering the cost of funds on the existing both. So thatās where most of the energy and emphasis is.When you think about the credit risk and so forth in there, I think, we communicated in the past broad areas of concerns, which would be hospitality, in particular, and to a lesser extent, multi-family in urban core. But, again, we donāt have a hard stop on anything with exception of hospitality. And that I would say is primarily just because weāre at ā weāve got all of that we want. Itās not because we think the credits are necessarily difficult, but just from a portfolio management standpoint, we are at or above our concentration guideline.So thatās the only thing that has got a hard stop on it. Again, I think, if you ā just to maybe help you with some insight for us, Iād just go back to the way we grow our loan book is to hire people. And so people are moving their books. And thatās where the loan growth comes from. And so itās ā it ā thereās certainly times when we were saying, āOkay, weāre not taking any more of this asset class or that asset class, but itās really more driven by the books that the various relationship managers that we hire our control.ā
Brett Rabatin:
Okay. Appreciate all the color.
Michael Terry Turner:
All right. Thanks, Brett.
Operator:
Thank you. And your next question comes from Tyler Stafford with Stephens. Your line is now open.
Tyler Stafford:
Hey, good morning, guys.
Michael Terry Turner:
Good morning.
Tyler Stafford:
Hey, I wanted to circle back on, I think, Jaredās earlier question just around the incentive comp. Did you say youāre currently accruing at 115% or 150%, 150% or 115%?
Tyler Stafford:
Okay. Soā¦
Harold Carpenter:
We have a ā just for your information, we have a cap at 125, so we canāt go any higher than that.
Tyler Stafford:
Okay. So I guess that would put you guys at around kind of a $41 million expense ā incentive comp expense at the baseline. And then just trying to think about 2020 what that number could look like. Is that ā should that kind of grow in mid-teens kind of range off of a 100% accrual, just given the higher?
Harold Carpenter:
I think so.
Harold Carpenter:
I think your math is good. So it ā thatās probably not a bad number.
Tyler Stafford:
Okay, perfect. I appreciate the spot deposit cost at the end of the quarter of 1.17. I was just wondering, Harold, if youād be willing to share the spot margin at the end of the quarter at 9.30%?
Harold Carpenter:
Yes, wish I could. I donāt know, necessarily know if Iāve got it. I can probably calculate up, calculate a spread. But we still believe going into the fourth quarter, weāve got some dilution in the margin coming. So Iāll just leave it at that.
Tyler Stafford:
Okay, thatās fair. Maybe just a minor one with ā within the margin. Just geographically, where are the market index deposits located? My assumption was, it was all in the CDs for some reason. But Iām just curious if you could share where those are just across deposit product types where those are at?
Harold Carpenter:
Yes. I think, theyāre all over the place. I think their interest bearing checking accounts, I think, their money market accounts, I donāt think thereās ā theyāre not ā theyāre to the larger depositors by and large. Iām not saying thereās not some smaller depositors in there, but theyāre primarily bigger than the larger depositor.
Tyler Stafford:
Okay, thanks. And just lastly, just given the transition of BHG over the next several quarters from the gain on sale to the balance sheet, do you think you can maintain your profitability targets within that range over the near-term, as you kind of digest that transition at BHG?
Harold Carpenter:
Say that one more time, Tyler.
Tyler Stafford:
So Iām just wondering what the transition of BHG and the revenue outlook you gave there with the step down coming in the fourth quarter and then the year-over-year 10% growth 2020 versus 2019? Iām just wondering if you can still maintain ROA and ROE within the range that youāve given just over the near-term as you digest that transition?
Harold Carpenter:
Yes. Iām not running those calculations for them specifically. But it seems like the profitability metrics will be more difficult given the size of the balance sheet of ROE numbers probably not so much. Theyāre probably be fairly consistent. But with the ROA numbers, Iām not sure.
Tyler Stafford:
Okay. All right. Thanks, Harold.
Operator:
Thank you. And your next question comes from Steven Alexopoulos with JPMorgan. Your line is now open.
Anthony Elian:
Hey, guys, this is Anthony Elian on for Steve.
Michael Terry Turner:
Hey, Anthony.
Harold Carpenter:
Hi, Tony.
Anthony Elian:
Hello. So just a follow-up for me on CECL. So I appreciate the color you provided for the allowance account on a go-forward basis. Have you calculated what your estimate is for the day one impact your reserve levels?
Harold Carpenter:
Yes. I think the day one impact will be that, call it, getting into that 70 to 80 basis point threshold. So weāll probably be somewhere close to where we are at the end of the third quarter as of the end of the fourth quarter barring any unforeseen challenges the fourth quarter presents. But itās looking like that day one adjustment will be the delta between the 48 that weāre at and, call it, 70 to 80 that we think weāll be in.
Harold Carpenter:
Yes, after-tax.
Anthony Elian:
After tax, yes. And next for me on expenses. So came a little bit higher because of the incentives this quarter. Would you still expect to improve the efficiency ratio for full-year 2019 versus 2018, inclusive of the incentives in the third quarter?
Harold Carpenter:
Give me a second. I think, theyāre probably ā what weāre looking at there going into 2020 is, we donāt plan for an outsized incentive accrual. So weāll have that savings in the plan weāre looking at. We still think weāve got some operating leverage to create a lower efficiency ratio, but it wonāt ā I donāt think itāll be meaningful. I donāt think itāll be a head turner, Iāll just ā Iāll put it like that.
Anthony Elian:
Got it. And finally, for me, your expectation for GAAP NIM to decline 10 to 15 basis points for the December rate cut. Is that decline for the fourth quarter specifically or is that the full impact from the December rate cut, so sometime in early 2020?
Harold Carpenter:
That would be for the December rate cut in the fourth quarter. I donāt ā weāre not planning on absent any rate cuts in 2020. And we just not done the sensitivity analysis around additional rate cuts in 2020. But going into that once, we think the fourth quarter will be fairly close to the bottom on our margin ā on our GAAP margin.If we get more rate cuts in 2020, which is, Iām not naĆÆve. I think thereās a strong likelihood to that, then weāll have to go through and recap where we think our margins will go with those. We just hadnāt gone through that sensitivity analysis or we have, Iām just not ready to talk about it too much right now.
Anthony Elian:
Okay. Thank you.
Operator:
Thank you. Your next question comes from Stuart Lotz with KBW. Your line is now open.
Stuart Lotz:
Hey, guys, good morning. Howās it going?
Michael Terry Turner:
Hi, Stuart.
Stuart Lotz:
Most of my questions have been answered already. But I guess, just one follow-up on the expenses. I appreciate the color on the incentive comp and kind of where you see that run rate going forward? But just looking at this quarter, marketing expenses were down about $3.5 million. Anything one-time in there? And is that kind of the run rate, we can expect going into 4Q?
Harold Carpenter:
Now, we had the write-off in the second quarter of those ā we had some branch assets, some other assets that we charged off in the second quarter. So that was primarily the reason for the reduction.
Stuart Lotz:
Okay, got it. I appreciate the color. And then just one, in terms of capital, now with the increased buyback authorization, youāve got $30 million left before year-end. You expect to eat through that before we get to the $100 million in 2020? And in terms of, do you have a plan in place? Is that kind of how to ā how should we kind of model that utilizing that buyback in 2020?
Harold Carpenter:
Yes. I think you should probably not a big perk, just assume that weāve got $130 million left and I got five quarter to spend it and I fully intend to spend it.
Stuart Lotz:
So that $30 million, is that expire at year-end?
Harold Carpenter:
The $30 million expires in the first quarter of next year.
Harold Carpenter:
Now the share price will dictate a lot of that.
Harold Carpenter:
ā¦and a lot of people ask us questions about what those share prices might be for us to do the buyback. And to be honest with you, will ā I think the overriding statement here is that, weāre going to spend the money.
Stuart Lotz:
Got it. I will take that at face value. All right, thatās it for me. Thanks for the color.
Harold Carpenter:
All right.
Operator:
Thank you. And your final question comes from Brian Martin with Janney Montgomery. Your line is now open.
Michael Terry Turner:
Hey, Brian.
Brian Martin:
Hey, Harold, just a few clarifying points. The comment on BHG with the step down in 4Q to a more normalized level, if you go back to the first quarter level and youāre kind of in the low-90s, your expectation when you were talking earlier is if we look at that full-year number in 10%-plus growth in 2020, is how to think about BHG, even with this transition in the model. Is that correct?
Harold Carpenter:
I think so. I think thatās right.
Brian Martin:
Okay. I just want to make sure I heard what you said. And then just as it relates, I think, you made comments about the GAAP margin and given that accretion was a little bit higher this quarter. When you look at fourth quarter and the core margin in your impact, I guess, how you think about the core margin, which is, what, maybe kind of the mid-320s, this quarter. How do you see the core margin in the fourth quarter playing out with the rate cuts and in your outlook for one more in December?
Harold Carpenter:
Well, if I get 10 to 15 basis points in contraction, my GAAP margin, just call it, as we sit here today, that the core margin shouldnāt contract that much, because weāre not anticipating as large of a purchase accounting again for our contribution in the fourth quarter. We were at a $11 million here in the third quarter. We were at $8 million in the second quarter. So we get ā we just ā we think the fourth quarter is going to be less than the $8 million.
Brian Martin:
Okay. From an accretion standpoint?
Brian Martin:
I got it. Okay. And the impact from each ā when you guys look at it today based on what youāve seen with your relationship managers, I mean, your expectation, Harold, from ā for each 25 basis point rate cut, I guess, what do you see as the impact to the margin, as you look forward, I guess, if we look to 2020 and potentially seeing more rate decreases out there?
Harold Carpenter:
Yes. I think, as we see more rate decreases out there, we will get closer to what we were doing back, call it, two years ago. Weāll find our way back to deposit rates that were significantly lower than where they are today.
Brian Martin:
I got you. Okay. And then just your last comment ā your earlier comment about the efficiency ratio. I guess, I just want to make sure that was ā you were talking about 2020 versus 2019 as far as kind of maybe holding its own or staying flattish full-year to full-year?
Harold Carpenter:
Thatās correct.
Brian Martin:
Right. Okay. All right. And then just final thing for me was just on M&A. I guess, you guys have talked about this in the past year, youāve outlined it. Any changes in kind of what youāre seeing on the M&A front today following the position of Advocate here? Any other non-bank things youāre looking at, or is it more banks specific today?
Michael Terry Turner:
I would say ā so let me just sort of recap what I think what I hope weāve said before. I think as what the record would show, which is we sort of communicated the markets we want to be in. Weāve communicated kind of what our M&A criteria are. We have said there not very many deals that will meet that threshold. And so as we ā and I think that is deeply exacerbated by relatively low share prices. Our currency is not as strong as it has been in other periods of acquisition.We said weāll go to these expanded markets, which have changed either by acquisition or de novo basis. And I think we said on the de novo basis probably has more appeal today than at any time in our history because of just the tremendous volume of people and talent that are in play. And so thatās sort of what we think about bank M&A. I wouldnāt just give you a hard stop. No, never. But again, I just think de novo expansion might be the best route for our company today.I think in terms of non-bank deals, to be very honest with you, those are a little more opportunistic, again, in the case Advocate Capital as a company that weāve known over a very long period of time. We participated in their credit over an extended period of time. And so, again, when we can find companies that have some value-add in terms of financial services declines, those are the ones that have appeal to us and again, with an emphasis on their ability to grow at a rate commensurate with us.
Brian Martin:
Okay, thatās help. I appreciate it, Terry. Thanks.
Michael Terry Turner:
All right.
Operator:
Thank you. Your next question is a follow-up question from Stuart Lotz with KBW. Your line is now open.
Stuart Lotz:
Iām actually good. Sorry about that, guys.
Michael Terry Turner:
All right. Thanks, sir.
Operator:
Thank you. And your next question is a follow-up question from Tyler Stafford with Stephens. Your line is now open.
Tyler Stafford:
Hey, sorry about this, guy. Thanks for taking the follow-up. I just want to make sure Iām understanding the cadence of the margin expectations. And, Harold, Iām not trying to pin you down, but just, I guess, thinking about that loud, so the margin should have been lower following the September cut. Then youāve got the 10 to 15 basis points hit from the December cut that you kind of expected to see. And then thereās some accretion headwinds in 2020. Iām just trying to flip that to the expectation that the margin should bottom in the fourth quarter. Can you just ā am I understanding that correctly? Can you walk through the ā just the cadence of that?
Harold Carpenter:
Yes. I think thatās right. I think we believe, right now barring any additional rate cuts in 2020, we think the margin will kind of flatten out in the fourth quarter, thatās going to be ā weāre going to have to get serious on ā more serious on deposit cost reductions. I think we can do that. And we think our fixed rate loans will likely not see other, call it, reduction in deposit in their loan yields. So right now, thatās how ā thatās where weāre modeling.
Tyler Stafford:
Okay. But the 10 to 15, that is from the December cut, is that right in terms of what youāre assuming internally?
Harold Carpenter:
Well, I think most of the 10 to 15 come from the September cut, and we think weāll be able to cover a lot of the rate cut in ā from December going into 2020.
Tyler Stafford:
Got it. Okay. That clears it up. Thanks so much. I appreciate it.
Harold Carpenter:
All right. Thank you.
Operator:
Thank you. Iām not showing any further questions at this time. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes todayās conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.