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Columbia Banking System, Inc.

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Q1 2012 · Earnings Call Transcript

Apr 26, 2012

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to Columbia Banking System’s first quarter 2012 conference call.

[Operator Instructions]. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded.

Operator

I would now like to turn the call over to your host, Melanie Dressel, President and Chief Executive Officer of Columbia Banking System. Please go ahead.

Melanie Dressel

Thank you Rob. Good afternoon everyone, and thank you for joining us on today’s call to discuss our first quarter results and I hope that you’ve all had a chance to review our earnings release, which we issued yesterday just prior to our annual meeting and which is also available on our website, columbiabank.com.

Melanie Dressel

With me on the call today are Gary Schminkey our Chief Financial Officer and Andy McDonald our Chief Credit Officer, Mark Nelson our Chief Operating Officer will also be available for questions following our formal presentation.

Melanie Dressel

Gary will being our call by providing details of our earnings performance for the quarter and the year, including the financial benefits of our FDIC assisted transactions, our capital position, net interest margins, and core deposits. Andy will review our credit quality information, including trends in our loan mix, allowance for loan losses, and our charge up.

And I will conclude by giving our thoughts on the economy here in the Pacific Northwest and giving you a brief outline of our strategies as we move forward. We will then be happy to answer an questions you might have.

Melanie Dressel

And as always, I need to remind you that we will be making some forward-looking statements today which are subject to economic and other factors. And for our full discussion of the risks and uncertainties associated for the forward-looking statements, please to refer to our Securities fillings and in particular our form 10-K filed with the SEC for the year of 2011.

Melanie Dressel

Now I’ll turn the call over to Gary to talk about our financial performance.

Gary Schminkey

Thanks Melanie. Yesterday we announced first quarter earnings of $8.9 million for $0.22 per diluted common share.

This compares to $5.8 million for the same quarter of 2011 or $0.15 per diluted common share.

Gary Schminkey

While our earnings increased 54% over the same quarter last year, a few items made an impact to the results of the first quarter as compared to the fourth quarter of 2011. We provided additional information related to OREO and OPPO in the financial statistics section of the earnings release.

The information schedule provides a breakout of covered versus non-covered OREO and OPPO.

Gary Schminkey

The net cost of non-covered OREO in the first quarter was $2.7 million as compared to $923,000 in the fourth quarter. The net change in the quarter being about $1.8 million.

Gary Schminkey

Covered OREO typically produces a gain on sales since these assets are recorded at fair value at time of acquisition. Also impacting the first quarter was cost of non-covered OPPO, increasing by $2.2 million due to a one-time write down of a single asset.

The OPPO charge is reported in other non-interest expense on the income statement.

Gary Schminkey

Andy will provide more detail on this a little later. We provided a table in our earnings release showing the impact of certain accounting entries associated with our acquired loan portfolios.

The net effect of our acquired loan accounting resulted in additional pretax income of about $5.1 million for the current quarter. This compares to additional pretax income from acquired loans of about $8.6 million where the quarter ended December 31 2011.

Gary Schminkey

When we last discussed the fourth quarter results, we mentioned the Bank of Whitman discount amortizations would materially decline in 2012 as the unamortized amount was about $11 million. The discount amortization recorded in the fourth quarter of 2011 was $9.2 million for this portfolio and declined to $3.1 million for the first quarter of 2012.

If the incremental accretion from the discounted loan portfolio for Bank of Whitman is removed from the total, the net effect of the acquired loan accounting increased by about $2.6 million in the first quarter 2012 as compared to the fourth quarter of 2011 including the provision from loss on uncovered loans.

Gary Schminkey

The Bank of Whitman unamortized discount is about $8 million at the end of March.

Gary Schminkey

We had originally reported fourth quarter operating margin at 4.68% but during the first quarter we discovered a component of addition accretion income that should not have been included in the operating net interest margin. So the fourth quarter operating net interest margin should have been reported at 4.58% rather than at 4.68%.

Gary Schminkey

Our tax equivalent net interest margin for the first quarter was 6.67% up from 5.8% for the same quarter last year. The margin was positively impacted by 218 basis points as a result of the additional accretion of income related to our acquired loan portfolios.

The net interest margin excluding the additional accretion income was 4.49% for the first quarter as compared to 4.58% for the fourth quarter of 2011. About half of the 9 basis point decline in the margin is related to change in interest reversals on non-accrual loans and one less day accrual in the first quarter of this year.

The other half of the change is from rate compression.

Gary Schminkey

Average interest earning asset yields decreased 49 basis points to 6.93% in the first quarter of this year from 7.42% for the fourth quarter of last year. The decreased yield is due to an additional accretion income over the stated loan rate offset by lower prevailing loan origination rates and investment yields.

Also comparing the first quarter to the fourth quarter of last year, average interest-bearing liability costs have decreased three basis points to 38 basis points, as core deposit costs have declined in the quarter to about 27 basis points.

Gary Schminkey

Turning to non-interest income, after removing the effects of the change in the FDIC loss sharing asset, noninterest income for the first quarter 2012 showed an increase of $1.9 million or 20.2% due to increased volume and service charges on deposit accounts and merchant services fees, when compared to the same period last year.

Gary Schminkey

The line item, other noninterest income, increased by $345,000 as compared to the first quarter of last year, primarily due to increases in mortgage banking fees of $194,000 and interest rate spot fees of $69,000.

Gary Schminkey

Last quarter we recorded a $2.95 million impairment charge on investment securities related to a single municipal obligation which went into default on December 1 2011. Earlier this month voters approved a reasonable tax measure to repay the bond holders.

If all goes as planned, new bonds will be issued in about six to eight months and existing bond holders will be paid.

Gary Schminkey

After removing the impact of OREO and OPPO from noninterest expense, noninterest expense declined $605,000 or 1.41% for the first quarter as compared to the fourth quarter 2011.

Gary Schminkey

Data processing costs were lower during the quarter and we incurred minimal fall back expense.

Gary Schminkey

At the end of the first quarter, core deposits were up $81.2 million from December 31 of last year. The increase in core deposits is coming from interest bearing demand accounts increasing $58.8 million during the quarter.

Our ratio of core deposits to total deposits has increased from 92% at year-end 2011 to 93% at March 31 of this year.

Gary Schminkey

Our tangible common equity to tangible assets at March 31 was 13.2% as compared to 13.4% at December 31 of last year.

Gary Schminkey

At this point I’d like to turn over the call to Andy McDonald our chief credit officer. Andy.

Andrew McDonald

Thanks Gary. During the quarter our non-covered loan portfolio increased approximately $23 million.

Growth was centered in commercial business loans, which increased a little over $47 million.

Andrew McDonald

Growth in this segment was broad based, lead by agricultural and fishing, and healthcare, wholesalers and then manufacturing. Of course, agriculture and fishing benefited from seasonal draw down.

Andrew McDonald

The growth in business loans was, however, offset by contraction in other portfolios, most notably our consumer portfolio which declined $13 million. Most of this decline was in our home equity portfolios, which contracted a little over $10 million as utilization rates fell between 4 and 5% during the quarter.

So the commitments remained even but the usage declined.

Andrew McDonald

The covered portfolio contracted as well, declining over $51 million before discounts and loan loss provision. Most of this decline was due to the resolution of problem loans within these portfolios as we continue address the issues associated with loans acquired through the FDIC assisted transactions.

Andrew McDonald

Looking at our nonperforming assets, we continue to see these decline and they now represent about 1.84% of our non-covered assets as of March 31 2012, down from 2.02% as of last quarter and 2.87% as of this time last year.

Andrew McDonald

As detailed in the press release, we had inflows of $14.7 million into the nonperforming category and then outflows of approximately $21.1 million. Certainly the pace of resolution is slowed but it’s commensurate with the size of the NPA portfolio.

Andrew McDonald

For the quarter, we had a modest increase in nonperforming loans in both our commercial business and term commercial real estate portfolio. Within the term commercial real estate portfolio, the increase was primarily driven by two loans; a hotel property and a mixed-use property.

At this time it appears the hotel property will end up as a TDR, while the mixed-use property is currently listed for sale.

Andrew McDonald

Within the commercial business segment, we have three relationships which caused a negative migration; a commercial contractor, a building supply retailer, and a restaurant operator. The first two are indicative of the economic cycle, which has negatively affected construction activity.

The latter has more to do with the industry than the economy.

Andrew McDonald

For the most part, NPA’s, the loans, and OREO and OPPO for the quarter was modestly improved, declining from 3.6% to 3.3%.

Andrew McDonald

As for each of the portfolio segments they are as followed. The one-to-four family perm pool saw no change with NPA’s accounting for 4.5% of that portfolio.

The commercial perm pool was up a modest 0.6% of a percent from 2.8% to 3.4%. One-to-four family construction NPA’s were down 6%, moving from 33.9% to 27.9% and commercial construction was also down about 5.1% moving from 19.2% to 14.1%.

Andrew McDonald

The commercial business pool potentially was unchanged for the quarter with 1.9% of that portfolio being nonperforming and the consumer portfolio declined 2.5% from 3.8% to 1.3%.

Andrew McDonald

For the quarter, the company made a provision of $4.5 million down slightly from the $4.75 million that we put in last quarter. The provision was primarily driven by approximately $75 million in originated loan growth and of course the level of charge offs during the quarter.

Andrew McDonald

I want to apologize to those of you who read our press release yesterday, which incorrectly referenced only the originated loan growth. That was the primary driver last quarter and the sentence was not updated appropriately.

So again, sorry for that confusion.

Andrew McDonald

Net charge offs for the quarter were $5.2 million, so as you can see our provisioning is more closely approximating our charge offs, which again is consistent with the guidance we have given before and where we would expect to be at this point in the cycle.

Andrew McDonald

For the quarter, we lost approximately $910,000 on OREO when looking at it on a covered and uncovered basis combined. For the past several quarters we have made or lost about $200,000 to $500,000 per quarter, so for this quarter the loss was a bit higher than the range we had typically been in.

Andrew McDonald

Most of this has to do with a large charge down associated with a lot development project in Southwest Oregon. The market that this project is in is very depressed and evidenced by the fact that only five homes were sold in that market this past year and there is currently a 68-month supply of lots in this area.

So given these trends, it was not surprising when we received a new appraisal the value had declined significantly, necessitating a $1 million charge down.

Andrew McDonald

I would characterize the overall performance of the loan portfolio as modestly improved compared to the fourth quarter last year. The disappointing part about the quarter was clearly the write down in OPPO, which I would like to spend a moment discussing.

Andrew McDonald

The asset is a note receivable secured by an apartment complex, which explains why it’s OPPO not OREO, in that we own the note not the apartment complex. Unfortunately, the owner of the apartment complex was not cooperative in allowing us access to the building or in allowing an appraiser to gain access to the building, so when we booked it into OPPO we based the value on a qualified appraisal.

It was the best information we had at the time.

Andrew McDonald

After appropriate legal action, we are able to get a receiver appointed, which provided us access to the property and we discovered significant deferred maintenance as well as apartment units which had been stripped of appliances, countertops, and fixtures, and in a few cases, the units had been stripped to bare studs. This, of course, negatively impacted value and we recognized that impact in the first quarter of this year based on the appraisal we received in March.

Andrew McDonald

This is a highly unusual situation and we are currently carrying the asset on our books. Adjusted for customary selling cost at its as-is value with no value given to repairing the units and getting them back online.

With that I would like to turn over the discussion to Melanie Dressel.

Melanie Dressel

Thanks Andy. We agree with most economists who are still predicting slow growth here in the Pacific Northwest.

We’ve recently seen some very encouraging signs of improvement in our diversified region. Of course, major concerns remain.

Unemployment rates, while declining, are still high, the housing sector’s challenging, and the state and local governments continue to cut expenses and employment as revenues fall.

Melanie Dressel

On the positive side the outlook for Boeing, our region’s largest private employer, is very good, they have a seven-year back log of commercial orders to fill and are continuing to hire in their contract with Machinist Union ensures that the 737 Max will be built in in Renton, Washington.

Melanie Dressel

In fact, manufacturing has propelled Washington’s job growth. The state’s manufacturing sector added almost 15,000 jobs over the last 12 months ending in March, leading all other sectors.

Boeing and other aerospace firms account for about half of those new jobs, the rest are in other types of manufacturing such as fabricated metal, machines, food products, electronics, and industrial equipment. And these tend to be high-paying jobs that have a stronger economic impact.

Melanie Dressel

We’re also happy to have Costco, Microsoft, Amazon, and REI headquartered here. They were all ranked by Consumer Reports among the top ten companies with the best consumer policies in customer service.

Melanie Dressel

Just this morning our local media announced that Joint Base Lewis McChord is expected to form a new division headquarters, which would mean more soldiers and officers at the base. The base has doubled in size in the last decade and it’s one of the largest Army bases in the U.S.

without a division headquarters.

Melanie Dressel

The Pacific Northwest is also the top area in the country for international exports and imports. Last month the Grand Alliance Shipping Lines announced they selected Tacoma as it’s Northwest port of call, which could boost the port’s container volume by 25 to 30% and add additional high-paying jobs in our area.

Melanie Dressel

The agricultural sector in our region is doing very well, for example, Oregon farmers posted a new record for agricultural sales in 2011 with farmers, ranchers, and the fishing industry accounting for over $5 billion in sales last year.

Melanie Dressel

Local economists believe the housing market is stabilizing, even the home prices have continued to fall. We’ve seen a significant number of sales of distressed properties through foreclosures and short sales, which has lowered the average home price.

Melanie Dressel

In Washington State, unemployment rates are coming down gradually. The jobless rate was 8.3% in March, the same as the national rate, basically unchanged from February but down from 9.2% a year ago.

The areas that saw the most growth were manufacturing, education and health services, aerospace and the transportation, warehousing, and utilities sector. Sectors with job losses included professional and business services, retail trade, hospitality and leisure, construction, and government.

Melanie Dressel

Oregon’s economy has been growing more slowly and it’s total number of jobs has remained relatively flat for almost of the year. However, the jobless rate is improving and was 8.6% in March, down from 8.9% in December and 10% a year ago.

Melanie Dressel

Interestingly the Tacoma-Seattle-Bellevue region has seen the largest salary growth in the country since this time last year with a 3.2% overall salary growth compared to 1.4% nationwide. It’s also interesting to note that despite our relatively high unemployment rate the past couple of years, the Northwest continues to be a draw for people moving here from other parts of the country, bringing new money and job skills.

Melanie Dressel

In the past three years, while the region’s population growth has slowed, it has still remained positive. In fact, the census Bureau reports more than half of everyone living in Washington and Oregon were born somewhere else.

Melanie Dressel

While the slowness of the economic recovery has been challenging, we’re continuing to make strides in our organic loan growth. During the first quarter, new loan production was almost $130 million in the non-covered portfolio.

This however, was offset by declines in overall consumer and commercial line utilization. Our new business pipeline continued to grow at the end of the first quarter, an indication of the strength of our marketing efforts across business lines and throughout our footprint.

Melanie Dressel

Obviously, we were disappointed in the charge offs related to OREO and OPPO this quarter. We don’t, however, want to send a signal that credit quality is deteriorating.

We would characterize the loan portfolio to be modestly improving quarter over quarter.

Melanie Dressel

As Andy mentioned, we continued our methodical progress in resolving problem assets in both covered and non-covered loan portfolios. As progress is made, we will be able to decrease our overall credit expenses.

In turn, this should result in a lower efficiency rate. Now that the last of the five conversions over the last two years related to our FDIC acquisitions have been successfully completed we will turn our attention to ensuring that our cost of operations is find tuned.

Melanie Dressel

Additionally, we will continue our efforts to ensure that all of our products and services are introduced to our new areas in our footprint. We are already seeing success in this area, particularly in merchant processing, Visa cards and cash management products.

Melanie Dressel

You can see from dividend payout that we do not see the need to accumulate capital at this time. We have seen a little bit of an uptake in M&A activity and we’re continually considering acquisition opportunities and other ways to effectively manage our capital.

Melanie Dressel

With that, this concludes our prepared comments this afternoon. As a reminder, Gary Schminkey our Chief Financial Officer, Andy McDonald, our Chief Credit Officer, and Mark Nelson our Chief Operating Officer are with me to answer your questions.

Melanie Dressel

And now Rob, would you open the call for questions?

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. Your first question come from the line of Joe Morford from RBC Capital Markets, your line is now open.

Joe Morford

Hi good afternoon everyone. I guess first question was for Gary on the margins.

You talked about half the decline coming from for the compression and loan yields, if you could just talk about the outlook margin going forward and maybe the pricing environment for loans in general.

Gary Schminkey

Well I think we still have - the competition is still strong on the lending side and Mark may have some [inaudible] as well but the loans that we booked in the fourth quarter are certainly influenced our first quarter results. We calculated about four basis points, 4 plus or minus on the margin compression for loans and securities deals.

We have roughly, I’d say $150 million plus coming in from securities portfolio this year that will be re-priced downward and so I’m still predicting that we would be in 4 to 4.5 range for the year if this trend would continue, I think it wouldn’t be unreasonable to expect that same trend to continue into the 4 to 6 basis points a quarter just as an estimate.

Joe Morford

Okay that’s helpful, and I guess the other question is for Melanie on the acquisition front you pay activities may be picking up a little. We’ve also seen a handful of banks announce deals for our specially finance companies leasing or [inaudible] is that of interest to you at all at this point?

Melanie Dressel

Yes, I mean I would say that we’re very open minded about looking at other lines of business but I would feel that M&A activity in the banking world is probably where we would focus majority of our attention.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Rulis with D. A.

Davidson, you’re line is now open.

Jeff Rulis

Thank you, good afternoon, Melanie maybe just a question on sort of your wrap up comments there regarding the conversions are all complete and kind of a focus on expense control. If you could hazard a guess out or a statement on noninterest expense what’s a good core figure, I mean if you were to sort of strip out the write downs and real estate owned cost.

Is there a base where you’re at today, you’re comfortable with an expense level on a quarterly basis, say in the $41 million range?

Melanie Dressel

You know we really have not disclosed a number, Jeff and I don’t mean to be difficult about that but because we’ve done, you know, 5 FDIC acquisitions it’s difficult to project when we’ll be through dealing with all of those loans and when we might see more normalized levels or what the new normal would be in credit expense. And it is hard to break out all of our credit expenses just related to FDIC acquisitions because have folks that are working on both the covered and the non-covered portfolios.

Jeff Rulis

How about just a core efficiency ratio, I mean this could be a little broader - quarters out but as the dust settles how does it feel in terms of an efficiency ratio what the company could do?

Melanie Dressel

Well our goal is 55% over time and we’ve been talking about that for quite a while and we’ve done 7 acquisitions over the last 5 years, which has slowed our progress down with that. You know we just plan to walk it down.

Gary Schminkey

Jeff, on the efficiency ratio we have acquired a new footprint where we really need to grow into and maybe it makes sense to define how we calculate the efficiency ratio because there is some differences in what you might see on published reports. When we look at it we reported an efficiency ratio of what about 70 - slightly over 70%.

We do not include any gains or losses, we don’t include any of the acquisition accounting numbers for the accretion or demfication [ph] asset. We certainly don’t include the OREO, OPPO expenses in that calculation so we try to get to just the base operating number we can manage from.

That isn’t subject to all the variations and if we were to take that number and gradually walk that down this year, certainly it wouldn’t be unreasonable to think it would be somewhere in the 65% to 68% range, potentially, if that helps.

Jeff Rulis

No that does, I appreciate just the attempt to disclose some of that and then maybe, Andy just a quick one on the - you made a comment on sort of the correlation on the provision versus net charge outs. Is it safe to assume this year that charge offs would exceed - continue to exceed the provision for the non-covered loans?

Andrew McDonald

No, I think they’re more closely align to each other, which is kind of what’s been happening. As I talked about before, we were able to release a lot last year but that trend just kind of continued to narrow and I could actually see the provision being greater than charge offs but that would be more of a function of the loan growth.

So we’re kind of getting down to a provision level that we would want to run at given this current economic environment. So I would not expect us to release a lot.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Brian Zabora from Stifel, Nicolaus, your line is now open.

Brian Zabora

Thanks for taking my question. A question on the Bank of Whitman portfolio, do you have with it what the balance is as of first quarter versus fourth quarter?

Gary Schminkey

The balance of the portfolio?

Brian Zabora

What the loan balance is? Did you break that out?

Andrew McDonald

Yes, in -

Melanie Dressel

Andy’s calculating that, Brian.

Andrew McDonald

About $151 million this quarter and my recollection there was about $160 million, $165 million last quarter.

Brian Zabora

Okay, great and then classified loans, do you have either directionally or how much that changed this quarter?

Andrew McDonald

Our watch has continued to decline in the quarter and it’s been declining now for, I don’t know, about seven or eight quarters. I didn’t calculate a percentage change.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your next question comes from the line of Aaron Deer from Sandler O'Neill & Partners, your line is now open.

Aaron Deer

Hi, good afternoon everyone, question and pardon me I had to jump on the call a little late so I might’ve missed this but Mark can you give an update in terms of what the loan pipeline looks like and what your outlook is for the next couple of quarters anyway.

Mark Nelson

As we talked about the last time, we’ve really got our close targeted on close conversion reaching out to our client base and our prospect base. I recently traveled throughout the whole footprint, I think we’ve got some great momentum going in spite of pretty considerable loan growth our pipelines are still building and we’re feeling pretty good about the quality of loans in there.

Clearly middle market, CNI, and commercial real estate are the largest numbers but our professional lending in the wealth management area are generating some pretty good numbers and we’re starting to see a bit of turn around, I think, in the small business side, certainly from our existing client bases, as we reach out to them. So I guess in summary our pipelines are building and pretty much driven by mostly by the activities of our folks getting really focused on our outreach.

Aaron Deer

Okay, so it sounds like the pipeline relative to where it stood at yearend is up.

Mark Nelson

Yes, in spite of the fact that we closed a lot of that stuff that was in the pipeline during first quarter.

Melanie Dressel

I was just trying to say that last year we made about a half a billion dollars in new loans and this quarter it was $130 so we’re still feeling good about the pipeline and new production.

Aaron Deer

That’s great, and then one last one. What was your accruing restructured loan total at March 31?

Gary Schminkey

I will tell you in just a minute here.

Mark Nelson

While Gary’s looking that up, in response to Brian’s question our watchlist declined 10.4% during the quarter.

Gary Schminkey

The accruing structured loans at the end of March were $6.739 million, I’m sorry I’m looking at the wrong side. At the end of March of 2012 $8.349 million, I apologize.

Operator

And there are no further questions at this time, I’ll turn the call back over to your presenters.

Melanie Dressel

Okay, well thanks very much for joining us this afternoon and we’ll talk to you next quarter.

Operator

And this concludes today’s conference call, you may now disconnect.

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