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Watchlist
Account
First Citizens BancShares
FCNCA
#1004
Rank
$24.58 B
Marketcap
๐บ๐ธ
United States
Country
$2,006
Share price
0.11%
Change (1 day)
-7.09%
Change (1 year)
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Annual Reports (10-K)
First Citizens BancShares
Quarterly Reports (10-Q)
Financial Year FY2015 Q2
First Citizens BancShares - 10-Q quarterly report FY2015 Q2
Text size:
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Table of Contents
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
____________________________________________________
FORM 10-Q
____________________________________________________
x
Quarterly Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
For the quarterly period ended
June 30, 2015
or
¨
Transition Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Commission File Number: 001-16715
____________________________________________________
First Citizens BancShares, Inc.
(Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)
____________________________________________________
Delaware
56-1528994
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification Number)
4300 Six Forks Road, Raleigh, North Carolina
27609
(Address of principle executive offices)
(Zip code)
(919) 716-7000
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
____________________________________________________
Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding twelve months (or for such shorter period that the Registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past ninety days. Yes
x
No
¨
Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant has submitted electronically and posted on its corporate Web site, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or such shorter period that the Registrant was required to submit and post such files) Yes
x
No
¨
Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See definition of ‘accelerated filer’ and ‘large accelerated filer’ in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act:
Large accelerated filer
x
Accelerated filer
¨
Non-accelerated filer
¨
Smaller reporting company
¨
Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes
¨
No
x
Class A Common Stock—$1 Par Value—
11,005,220
shares
Class B Common Stock—$1 Par Value—
1,005,185
shares
(Number of shares outstanding, by class, as of
August 4, 2015
)
Table of Contents
INDEX
Page No.
PART I.
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Item 1.
Financial Statements
Consolidated Balance Sheets (Unaudited)
3
Consolidated Statements of Income (Unaudited)
4
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Unaudited)
5
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareholders’ Equity (Unaudited)
6
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows (Unaudited)
7
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements (Unaudited)
8
Item 2.
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
45
Item 3.
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk
66
Item 4.
Controls and Procedures
66
PART II.
OTHER INFORMATION
Item 1.
Legal Proceedings
67
Item 1A.
Risk Factors
67
Item 2.
Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
68
Item 6.
Exhibits
68
2
Table of Contents
PART I
Item 1.
Financial Statements
First Citizens BancShares, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Balance Sheets
(Dollars in thousands, unaudited)
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
Assets
Cash and due from banks
$
514,404
$
604,182
Overnight investments
1,703,341
1,724,919
Investment securities available for sale
7,350,194
7,171,917
Investment securities held to maturity
351
518
Loans held for sale
85,040
63,696
Loans and leases
19,520,185
18,769,465
Less allowance for loan and lease losses
(208,317
)
(204,466
)
Net loans and leases
19,311,868
18,564,999
Premises and equipment
1,121,421
1,125,081
Other real estate owned:
Covered under loss share agreements
12,890
22,982
Not covered under loss share agreements
60,358
70,454
Income earned not collected
66,729
57,254
FDIC loss share receivable
5,808
28,701
Goodwill
139,773
139,773
Other intangible assets
98,998
106,610
Other assets
425,680
394,027
Total assets
$
30,896,855
$
30,075,113
Liabilities
Deposits:
Noninterest-bearing
$
8,970,056
$
8,086,784
Interest-bearing
17,541,840
17,591,793
Total deposits
26,511,896
25,678,577
Short-term borrowings
723,225
987,184
Long-term obligations
475,568
351,320
FDIC loss share payable
122,038
116,535
Other liabilities
270,238
253,903
Total liabilities
28,102,965
27,387,519
Shareholders’ equity
Common stock:
Class A - $1 par value (16,000,000 shares authorized; 11,005,220 shares issued and outstanding at June 30, 2015 and December 31, 2014)
11,005
11,005
Class B - $1 par value (2,000,000 shares authorized; 1,005,185 shares issued and outstanding at June 30, 2015 and December 31, 2014)
1,005
1,005
Surplus
658,918
658,918
Retained earnings
2,174,121
2,069,647
Accumulated other comprehensive loss
(51,159
)
(52,981
)
Total shareholders’ equity
2,793,890
2,687,594
Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity
$
30,896,855
$
30,075,113
See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
3
Table of Contents
First Citizens BancShares, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Income
Three months ended June 30
Six months ended June 30
(Dollars in thousands, except per share data, unaudited)
2015
2014
2015
2014
Interest income
Loans and leases
$
222,682
$
164,108
$
433,544
$
325,142
Investment securities and dividend income
21,806
12,447
41,116
24,195
Overnight investments
1,525
756
2,863
1,368
Total interest income
246,013
177,311
477,523
350,705
Interest expense
Deposits
5,534
6,006
11,163
12,831
Short-term borrowings
1,658
1,551
3,592
2,136
Long-term obligations
4,171
4,056
7,953
9,109
Total interest expense
11,363
11,613
22,708
24,076
Net interest income
234,650
165,698
454,815
326,629
Provision (credit) for loan and lease losses
7,719
(7,299
)
13,511
(9,202
)
Net interest income after provision (credit) for loan and lease losses
226,931
172,997
441,304
335,831
Noninterest income
Gain on acquisition
—
—
42,930
—
Cardholder services
19,214
13,257
37,615
25,089
Merchant services
22,070
15,035
40,950
28,556
Service charges on deposit accounts
22,361
15,265
44,419
29,705
Wealth management services
21,555
15,815
42,435
30,695
Fees from processing services
45
5,682
95
10,543
Securities gains
147
—
5,273
—
Other service charges and fees
5,685
4,250
11,140
8,194
Mortgage income
5,571
1,210
10,120
2,165
Insurance commissions
2,456
2,253
5,753
5,540
ATM income
1,825
1,260
3,489
2,462
Adjustments to FDIC loss share receivable
(4,553
)
(15,295
)
(5,600
)
(27,644
)
Other
(1)
11,074
7,857
19,584
13,598
Total noninterest income
107,450
66,589
258,203
128,903
Noninterest expense
Salaries and wages
110,685
81,839
217,228
161,192
Employee benefits
27,212
19,741
57,358
39,841
Occupancy expense
25,532
20,300
51,152
40,710
Equipment expense
23,296
19,581
46,837
38,354
FDIC insurance expense
4,551
2,640
8,822
5,276
Foreclosure-related expenses
1,019
3,858
3,576
9,268
Merger-related expenses
4,573
3,450
7,570
5,903
Other
67,823
47,611
130,314
89,506
Total noninterest expense
264,691
199,020
522,857
390,050
Income before income taxes
69,690
40,566
176,650
74,684
Income taxes
(1)
25,168
13,880
64,970
25,519
Net income
(1)
$
44,522
$
26,686
$
111,680
$
49,165
Average shares outstanding
12,010,405
9,618,941
12,010,405
9,618,941
Net income per share
(1)
$
3.71
$
2.77
$
9.30
$
5.11
(1)
Amounts for the 2014 period have been updated to reflect the fourth quarter 2014 adoption of Accounting Standard Update (ASU) 2014-01 related to investments in qualified affordable housing projects.
See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
4
Table of Contents
First Citizens BancShares, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
Three months ended June 30
Six months ended June 30
(Dollars in thousands, unaudited)
2015
2014
2015
2014
Net income
(1)
$
44,522
$
26,686
$
111,680
$
49,165
Other comprehensive income:
Unrealized (losses) gains on securities:
Change in unrealized securities (losses) gains arising during period
(29,226
)
31,550
1,189
43,449
Tax effect
11,352
(12,225
)
(461
)
(16,868
)
Reclassification adjustment for net gains realized and included in income before income taxes
(147
)
—
(5,273
)
—
Tax effect
74
—
2,051
—
Total change in unrealized (losses) gains on securities, net of tax
(17,947
)
19,325
(2,494
)
26,581
Change in fair value of cash flow hedges:
Change in unrecognized loss on cash flow hedges
709
568
1,285
1,287
Tax effect
(274
)
(218
)
(496
)
(496
)
Total change in unrecognized loss on cash flow hedges, net of tax
435
350
789
791
Change in pension obligation:
Amortization of actuarial losses and prior service cost
2,887
1,598
5,773
3,197
Tax effect
(1,123
)
(622
)
(2,246
)
(1,244
)
Total change in pension obligation, net of tax
1,764
976
3,527
1,953
Other comprehensive income
(15,748
)
20,651
1,822
29,325
Total comprehensive income
(1)
$
28,774
$
47,337
$
113,502
$
78,490
(1)
Amounts for 2014 period have been updated to reflect the fourth quarter 2014 adoption of ASU 2014-01 related to investments in qualified affordable housing projects.
See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
5
Table of Contents
First Citizens BancShares, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareholders’ Equity
(Dollars in thousands, unaudited)
Class A
Common Stock
Class B
Common Stock
Surplus
Retained
Earnings
Accumulated
Other
Comprehensive
(Loss) Income
Total
Shareholders’
Equity
Balance at December 31, 2013
$
8,586
$
1,033
$
143,766
$
1,943,345
$
(25,268
)
$
2,071,462
Net income
(1)
—
—
—
49,165
—
49,165
Other comprehensive income, net of tax
—
—
—
—
29,325
29,325
Cash dividends ($0.60 per share)
—
—
—
(5,771
)
—
(5,771
)
Balance at June 30, 2014
$
8,586
$
1,033
$
143,766
$
1,986,739
$
4,057
$
2,144,181
Balance at December 31, 2014
$
11,005
$
1,005
$
658,918
$
2,069,647
$
(52,981
)
$
2,687,594
Net income
—
—
—
111,680
—
111,680
Other comprehensive income, net of tax
—
—
—
—
1,822
1,822
Cash dividends ($0.60 per share)
—
—
—
(7,206
)
—
(7,206
)
Balance at June 30, 2015
$
11,005
$
1,005
$
658,918
$
2,174,121
$
(51,159
)
$
2,793,890
(1)
Amount for the 2014 period has been updated to reflect the fourth quarter 2014 adoption of ASU 2014-01 related to investments in qualified affordable housing projects.
See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
6
Table of Contents
First Citizens BancShares, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
Six months ended June 30
(Dollars in thousands, unaudited)
2015
2014
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net income
(1)
$
111,680
$
49,165
Adjustments to reconcile net income to cash provided by operating activities:
Provision (credit) for loan and lease losses
13,511
(9,202
)
Deferred tax benefit
(1)
(23,762
)
(3,640
)
Net change in current taxes
(25,261
)
5,973
Depreciation
44,312
35,455
Net change in accrued interest payable
(2,359
)
560
Net increase in income earned not collected
(9,475
)
(629
)
Gain on acquisition
(42,930
)
—
Securities gains
(5,273
)
—
Origination of loans held for sale
(355,819
)
(123,144
)
Proceeds from sale of loans held for sale
338,466
123,967
Gain on sale of loans
(3,991
)
(2,220
)
Net writedowns/losses on other real estate
3,188
6,993
Net amortization of premiums and discounts
(1)
(45,662
)
(17,288
)
Amortization of intangible assets
8,302
1,207
Reduction in FDIC receivable for loss share agreements
27,291
17,121
Increase in FDIC payable for loss share agreements
5,503
4,903
Net change in other assets
(1)
14,243
(32,693
)
Net change in other liabilities
25,085
35,033
Net cash provided by operating activities
77,049
91,561
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
Net increase in loans outstanding
(566,524
)
(57,271
)
Purchases of investment securities available for sale
(1,435,387
)
(1,409,878
)
Proceeds from maturities/calls of investment securities held to maturity
167
214
Proceeds from maturities/calls of investment securities available for sale
757,780
1,529,687
Proceeds from sales of investment securities available for sale
522,024
—
Net change in overnight investments
21,578
(259,150
)
Cash paid to the FDIC for loss share agreements
(10,890
)
(4,350
)
Proceeds from sales of other real estate
47,391
38,370
Additions to premises and equipment
(31,921
)
(39,550
)
Business acquisition, net cash acquired
123,137
18,194
Net cash used by investing activities
(572,645
)
(183,734
)
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
Net decrease in time deposits
(359,125
)
(219,297
)
Net increase in demand and other interest-bearing deposits
926,092
270,118
Net change in short-term borrowings
(269,460
)
81,716
Repayment of long-term obligations
(4,483
)
(1,240
)
Origination of long-term obligations
120,000
—
Cash dividends paid
(7,206
)
(5,771
)
Net cash provided by financing activities
405,818
125,526
Change in cash and due from banks
(89,778
)
33,353
Cash and due from banks at beginning of period
604,182
533,599
Cash and due from banks at end of period
$
514,404
$
566,952
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURE OF NONCASH INVESTING AND FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
Transfers of loans to other real estate
$
30,350
$
25,080
Dividends declared but not paid
3,603
2,886
(1)
Amounts for the 2014 period have been updated to reflect the fourth quarter 2014 adoption of ASU 2014-01 related to investments in qualified affordable housing projects.
See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
7
Table of Contents
First Citizens BancShares, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Notes to Unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements
NOTE A - ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND BASIS OF PRESENTATION
First Citizens BancShares, Inc. (BancShares) is a financial holding company organized under the laws of Delaware and conducts operations through its banking subsidiary, First-Citizens Bank & Trust Company (FCB), which is headquartered in Raleigh, North Carolina.
General
These consolidated financial statements and notes thereto are presented in accordance with instructions for Form 10-Q and Article 10 of Regulation S-X and, therefore, do not include all information and notes necessary for a complete presentation of financial position, results of operations and cash flow activity required in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (GAAP). In the opinion of management, all normal recurring adjustments necessary for a fair presentation of the consolidated financial position and consolidated results of operations have been made. The unaudited interim consolidated financial statements included in this Form 10-Q should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and footnotes included in BancShares' Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2014
.
Reclassifications
Prior period financial statements reflect the retrospective application of Accounting Standards Update (ASU) 2014-01,
Investments - Equity Method and Joint Ventures (Topic 323): Accounting for Investments Qualified Affordable Housing Projects
which was adopted effective in the fourth quarter of 2014 and did not have a material impact on our consolidated financial condition or results of operations. In certain instances other than the retrospective adoption of ASU 2014-01, amounts reported in prior years' consolidated financial statements have been reclassified to conform to the current financial statement presentation. Such reclassifications had no effect on previously reported shareholders' equity or net income.
Fair values recorded as a result of acquisitions are subject to refinement for up to one year after the closing date of the transaction as additional information regarding closing date fair values becomes available. We have increased previously reported amounts of gain on acquisition, net income and retained earnings for the six months ended June 30, 2015 by
$3.3 million
, net of tax, as a result of adjustments made to the fair value of assets acquired in the FDIC-assisted acquisition of Capitol City Bank & Trust (CCBT) of Atlanta, Georgia in the first quarter of 2015.
Use of Estimates in the Preparation of Financial Statements
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities as of the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting periods. Actual results could differ from those estimates, and different assumptions in the application of these policies could result in material changes in BancShares' consolidated financial position, the consolidated results of its operations or related disclosures. Material estimates that are particularly susceptible to significant change include:
•
Allowance for loan and lease losses
•
Fair value of financial instruments, including acquired assets and assumed liabilities
•
Pension plan assumptions
•
Cash flow estimates on purchased credit-impaired loans
•
Receivable from and payable to the FDIC for loss share agreements
•
Income tax assets, liabilities and expense
Recently Adopted Accounting Pronouncements
Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) ASU 2015-10
Technical Corrections and Improvements
The amendments in this ASU represent changes to clarify the Codification, correct unintended application of guidance and make minor improvements to the Codification that are not expected to have a significant effect on current accounting practice or create a significant administrative cost to most entities. Additionally, some of the amendments will make the Codification easier to understand and easier to apply by eliminating inconsistencies, providing needed clarifications, and improving the presentation of guidance in the Codification.
8
Table of Contents
The transition guidance varies based on the amendments in this ASU. The amendments in this ASU that require transition guidance are effective for all entities for fiscal years, and interim periods within those fiscal years, beginning after December 15, 2015. Early adoption is permitted, including adoption in an interim period. All other amendments will be effective upon the issuance. We adopted the amendments effective second quarter of 2015. The adoption did not have an impact on our consolidated financial position or consolidated results of operations.
FASB ASU 2015-08
Business Combinations (Topic 805): Pushdown Accounting - Amendments to Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Paragraphs Pursuant to Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 115
The amendments in this ASU remove references to SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin (SAB) Topic 5.J as the SEC staff previously rescinded its guidance with the issuance of SAB No. 115 when the FASB issued its own pushdown accounting guidance in ASU 2014-17, an amendment we adopted effective fourth quarter of 2014. We adopted the amendments in ASU 2015-08 effective second quarter of 2015. The adoption did not have an impact on our consolidated financial position or consolidated results of operations.
FASB ASU 2014-14,
Receivables - Troubled Debt Restructurings by Creditors (Subtopic 310-40): Classification of Certain Government-Guaranteed Mortgage Loans upon Foreclosure
This ASU requires a reporting entity to derecognize a mortgage loan and recognize a separate other receivable upon foreclosure if the following conditions are met: the loan has a government guarantee that is not separable from the loan before foreclosure; at the time of foreclosure, the creditor has the intent to convey the real estate property to the guarantor and make a claim on the guarantee, and the creditor has the ability to recover under that claim and at the time of foreclosure, any amount of the claim that is determined on the basis of the fair value of the real estate is fixed. Upon foreclosure, the separate other receivable should be measured based on the amount of the loan balance expected to be recovered from the guarantor.
The amendments in this ASU were effective for public entities for annual periods, and interim periods within those annual periods, beginning after December 15, 2014. We adopted this guidance effective first quarter of 2015. The initial adoption did not have any effect on our consolidated financial position or consolidated results of operations.
FASB ASU 2014-11,
Transfers and Servicing (Topic 860)
This ASU aligns the accounting for repurchase-to-maturity transactions and repurchase agreements executed as a repurchase financing with the accounting for other typical repurchase agreements. Going forward, these transactions would all be accounted for as secured borrowings. The guidance eliminates sale accounting for repurchase-to-maturity transactions and supersedes the guidance under which a transfer of a financial asset and a contemporaneous repurchase financing could be accounted for on a combined basis as a forward agreement, which has resulted in outcomes referred to as off-balance-sheet accounting. The ASU requires a new disclosure for transactions economically similar to repurchase agreements in which the transferor retains substantially all of the exposure to the economic return on the transferred financial assets throughout the term of the transaction. The ASU also requires expanded disclosures about the nature of collateral pledged in repurchase agreements and similar transactions accounted for as secured borrowings.
The accounting changes in this ASU were effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2014. In addition, the disclosure for certain transactions accounted for as a sale was effective for the fiscal period beginning after December 15, 2014, the disclosures for transactions accounted for as secured borrowings were required to be presented for fiscal periods beginning after December 15, 2014, and interim periods beginning after March 15, 2015. We adopted the guidance effective first quarter of 2015. The initial adoption did not have any effect on our consolidated financial position or consolidated results of operations. The new disclosures required by this ASU are included in
Note I
.
FASB ASU 2014-04,
Receivables-Troubled Debt Restructurings by Creditors (Subtopic 310-40)
This ASU clarifies that an in-substance repossession or foreclosure occurs, and a creditor is considered to have received physical possession of residential real estate property collateralizing a consumer mortgage loan, upon either (1) the creditor obtaining legal title to the residential real estate property upon completion of a foreclosure or (2) the borrower conveying all interest in the residential real estate property to the creditor to satisfy that loan through completion of a deed in lieu of foreclosure or through a similar legal agreement. Additionally, the amendments require interim and annual disclosure of both (1) the amount of foreclosed residential real estate property held by the creditor and (2) the recorded investment in consumer mortgage loans collateralized by residential real estate property that are in the process of foreclosure according to local requirements of the applicable jurisdiction.
The amendments in this ASU were effective for annual periods, and interim periods within those annual periods, beginning after December 15, 2014. We adopted the guidance effective first quarter of 2015. The initial adoption did not have any effect on our consolidated financial position or consolidated results of operations. The new disclosures required by this ASU are included in Note F.
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FASB ASU 2014-01,
Investments - Equity Method and Joint Ventures (Topic 323) - Accounting for Investments in Qualified Affordable Housing Projects
This ASU permits an accounting policy election to account for investments in qualified affordable housing projects (LIHTC) using the proportional amortization method if certain conditions are met. Under the proportional amortization method, the initial cost of the investment is amortized in proportion to the tax credits and other tax benefits received and recognize the net investment performance in the income statement as a component of income tax expense (benefit).
For those investments in qualified affordable housing projects not accounted for using the proportional amortization method, the investment should be accounted for as an equity method investment or a cost method investment in accordance with ASC 970-323.
The decision to apply the proportional amortization method of accounting will be applied consistently to all qualifying affordable housing project investments rather than a decision to be applied to individual investments.
BancShares early adopted the guidance effective in the fourth quarter of 2014. Previously, LIHTC investments were accounted for under the cost or equity method, and the amortization was recorded as a reduction to other noninterest income, with the tax credits and other benefits received recorded as a component of the provision for income taxes. BancShares believes the proportional amortization method better represents the economics of LIHTC investments and provides users with a better understanding of the returns from such investments than the cost or equity method. LIHTC investments were
$76.4 million
and
$57.1 million
at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, respectively, included in "other assets" on the Consolidated Balance Sheets.
The cumulative effect of the retrospective application of the change in amortization method was a
$2.4 million
decrease to both "other assets" and "retained earnings" on the Consolidated Balance Sheets as of January 1, 2012. Under the new amortization method of accounting, amortization expense is recognized in income tax expense in the Consolidated Statements of Income and is offset by the tax effect of tax losses and tax credits received from the investments. This change resulted in a reclassification of expense previously recorded as a reduction in other noninterest income to income tax expense along with additional amortization recognized under the new method of accounting in the Consolidated Statements of Income. An additional change resulting from the new amortization method of accounting was that a deferred tax asset or liability no longer exists as a result of these investments, thus in the retrospective application of the new method, the removal of the deferred tax asset previously reported as well as the additional amortization of the investments, both recorded in other assets, reflected in the Consolidated Balance Sheets were removed. We do not believe the impact of this change in accounting principle is material.
Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements
FASB ASU 2015-03,
Interest–Imputation of Interest (Subtopic 835-30): Simplifying the Presentation of Debt Issuance Costs
This ASU simplifies the presentation of debt issuance costs by requiring that debt issuance costs be presented in the balance sheet as a direct deduction from the carrying amount of debt liability, consistent with debt discounts or premiums. The recognition and measurement guidance for debt issuance costs are not affected by the amendments in this update.
This ASU is effective for interim and annual periods beginning after December 15, 2015 for public companies, and is to be applied retrospectively. Early adoption is permitted. We will adopt the guidance effective in the first quarter of 2016 and do not anticipate any impact on our consolidated financial position or consolidated results of operations as a result of adoption.
FASB ASU 2015-02,
Consolidation (Topic 810): Amendments to the Consolidation Analysis
This ASU improves targeted areas of consolidation guidance for reporting organizations that are required to evaluate whether they should consolidate certain legal entities. In addition to reducing the number of consolidation models from four to two, the new standard places more emphasis on risk of loss when determining a controlling financial interest, reducing the frequency of the application of related-party guidance when determining a controlling financial interest in a variable interest entity ("VIE"), and changing consolidation conclusions for public and private companies in several industries that typically make use of limited partnerships or VIEs.
The amendments in this ASU are effective for periods beginning after December 15, 2015 for public companies. Early adoption is permitted. We will adopt the guidance effective in the first quarter of 2016 and do not anticipate any significant impact on our consolidated financial position or consolidated results of operations as a result of adoption.
FASB ASU 2014-09,
Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606)
In May 2014, the FASB issued a standard on the recognition of revenue from contracts with customers with the core principle being for companies to recognize revenue to depict the transfer of goods or services to customers in amounts that reflect the consideration to which the company expects to be entitled in exchange for those goods or services. The new standard also results
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in enhanced disclosures about revenue, provides guidance for transactions that were not previously addressed comprehensively and improves guidance for multiple-element arrangements.
The ASU was deferred and is effective for fiscal periods beginning after December 15, 2017, including interim reporting periods within that reporting period. Early adoption is permitted for fiscal periods beginning after December 15, 2016. We are currently evaluating the impact of the new standard and we will adopt during the first quarter of 2018 using one of two retrospective application methods.
NOTE B - BUSINESS COMBINATIONS
Capitol City Bank & Trust Company
On February 13, 2015, FCB entered into an agreement with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), as Receiver, to purchase certain assets and assume certain liabilities of CCBT. The acquisition expanded FCB's presence in Georgia as CCBT operated eight branch locations in Atlanta, Stone Mountain, Albany, Augusta and Savannah, Georgia. In June of 2015, FCB closed one of the branches in Atlanta.
The fair value of the assets acquired recorded was
$211.9 million
, including
$154.5 million
in loans and
$690 thousand
of identifiable intangible assets. Liabilities assumed were
$272.5 million
of which
$266.4 million
were deposits. During the second quarter of 2015, adjustments were made to the acquisition fair values primarily based upon updated collateral valuations resulting in an increase of
$5.4 million
to the gain on acquisition. These adjustments were applied retroactively to the first quarter of 2015 and brought the total gain on the transaction to
$42.9 million
which is included in noninterest income in the Consolidated Statements of Income. The total after-tax impact of the gain was
$26.2 million
.
The CCBT transaction was accounted for under the acquisition method of accounting and, accordingly, assets acquired and liabilities assumed were recorded at their estimated fair values on the acquisition date. Fair values are preliminary and subject to refinement for up to one year after the closing date of the acquisition as additional information regarding closing date fair values becomes available.
The following table provides the identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed at their estimated fair values as of the acquisition date.
(Dollars in thousands)
As recorded by FCB
Assets
Cash and cash equivalents
$
19,622
Investment securities
35,413
Loans
154,496
Intangible assets
690
Other assets
1,714
Total assets acquired
211,935
Liabilities
Deposits
266,352
Short-term borrowings
5,501
Other liabilities
667
Total liabilities assumed
272,520
Fair value of net liabilities assumed
(60,585
)
Cash received from FDIC
103,515
Gain on acquisition of CCBT
$
42,930
Merger-related expenses of
$1.1 million
and
$1.3 million
were recorded in the Consolidated Statements of Income for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
, respectively. Loan-related interest income generated from CCBT was approximately
$2.4 million
for the
second quarter
of
2015
and
$3.7 million
since the acquisition date.
All loans resulting from the CCBT transaction were recorded at the acquisition date with a discount attributable, at least in part, to credit quality, and are therefore accounted for as purchased credit-impaired (PCI) loans under ASC 310-30.
First Citizens Bancorporation, Inc. and First Citizens Bank and Trust Company, Inc.
On October 1, 2014, BancShares completed the merger of First Citizens Bancorporation, Inc. (Bancorporation) with and into BancShares pursuant to an Agreement and Plan of Merger dated June 10, 2014, as amended on July 29, 2014. First Citizens Bank and Trust Company, Inc. merged with and into FCB on January 1, 2015.
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Under the terms of the Merger Agreement, each share of Bancorporation common stock was converted into the right to receive
4.00
shares of BancShares' Class A common stock and
$50.00
cash, unless the holder elected for each share to be converted into the right to receive
3.58
shares of BancShares' Class A common stock and
0.42
shares of BancShares' Class B common stock. BancShares issued
2,586,762
Class A common shares at a fair value of
$560.4 million
and
18,202
Class B common shares at a fair value of
$3.9 million
to Bancorporation shareholders. Also, cash paid to Bancorporation shareholders was
$30.4 million
. At the time of the merger, Bancorporation owned
32,042
shares of common stock in Bancorporation with an approximate fair value of
$29.6 million
. The fair value of common stock owned by BancShares in Bancorporation was considered part of the purchase price, and the shares ceased to exist after completion of the merger.
The Bancorporation transaction was accounted for under the acquisition method of accounting and, accordingly, assets acquired and liabilities assumed were recorded at their estimated fair values on the acquisition date. Fair values are preliminary and subject to refinement for up to one year after the closing date of the acquisition. Assets acquired, excluding goodwill, totaled
$8.28 billion
, including
$4.49 billion
in loans and leases,
$2.01 billion
of investment securities available for sale,
$1.28 billion
in cash and overnight investments, and
$109.4 million
of identifiable intangible assets. Liabilities assumed were
$7.66 billion
, including
$7.17 billion
of deposits. Goodwill of
$4.2 million
was recorded equaling the excess purchase price over the estimated fair value of the net assets acquired on the acquisition date.
The following unaudited pro forma financial information reflects the consolidated results of operations of BancShares. These results combine the historical results of Bancorporation in the BancShares' Consolidated Statements of Income and, while certain adjustments were made for the estimated impact of certain fair value adjustments and other acquisition-related activity, they are not indicative of what would have occurred had the acquisition taken place at the beginning of the period presented. The unaudited pro forma information has been presented for illustrative purposes only and is not necessarily indicative of the consolidated results of operations that would have been achieved or the future results of operations of BancShares.
Three months ended June 30
Six months ended June 30
(Dollars in thousands)
2014
2014
Total revenue (interest income plus noninterest income)
$
330,253
$
653,777
Net income
$
40,259
$
77,489
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NOTE C - INVESTMENTS
The amortized cost and fair value of investment securities classified as available for sale and held to maturity at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, are as follows:
June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
Cost
Gross
unrealized gains
Gross unrealized
losses
Fair
value
Investment securities available for sale
U.S. Treasury
$
2,198,027
$
8,832
$
—
$
2,206,859
Government agency
774,962
1,667
385
776,244
Mortgage-backed securities
4,372,946
11,664
17,519
4,367,091
Total investment securities available for sale
$
7,345,935
$
22,163
$
17,904
$
7,350,194
December 31, 2014
Cost
Gross
unrealized gains
Gross unrealized
losses
Fair
value
U.S. Treasury
$
2,626,900
$
2,922
$
152
$
2,629,670
Government agency
908,362
702
247
908,817
Mortgage-backed securities
3,628,187
16,964
11,847
3,633,304
Municipal securities
125
1
—
126
Total investment securities available for sale
$
7,163,574
$
20,589
$
12,246
$
7,171,917
June 30, 2015
Cost
Gross
unrealized gains
Gross unrealized
losses
Fair
value
Investment securities held to maturity
Mortgage-backed securities
$
351
$
14
$
—
$
365
December 31, 2014
Cost
Gross
unrealized gains
Gross unrealized
losses
Fair
value
Mortgage-backed securities
$
518
$
26
$
—
$
544
Investments in mortgage-backed securities primarily represent securities issued by the Government National Mortgage Association, Federal National Mortgage Association and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation.The following table provides the amortized cost and fair value by contractual maturity. Expected maturities will differ from contractual maturities on certain securities because borrowers and issuers may have the right to call or prepay obligations with or without prepayment penalties. Repayments of mortgage-backed securities are dependent on the repayments of the underlying loan balances.
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
Cost
Fair
value
Cost
Fair
value
Investment securities available for sale
Non-amortizing securities maturing in:
One year or less
$
412,357
$
412,720
$
447,866
$
447,992
One through five years
2,560,632
2,570,383
3,087,521
3,090,621
Mortgage-backed securities
4,372,946
4,367,091
3,628,187
3,633,304
Total investment securities available for sale
$
7,345,935
$
7,350,194
$
7,163,574
$
7,171,917
Investment securities held to maturity
Mortgage-backed securities held to maturity
$
351
$
365
$
518
$
544
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For each period presented, securities gains (losses) included the following:
Three months ended June 30
Six months ended June 30
(Dollars in thousands)
2015
2014
2015
2014
Gross gains on sales of investment securities available for sale
$
151
$
—
$
5,286
$
—
Gross losses on sales of investment securities available for sale
(4
)
—
(13
)
—
Total net securities gain
$
147
$
—
$
5,273
$
—
The following table provides information regarding securities with unrealized losses as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
.
June 30, 2015
Less than 12 months
12 months or more
Total
(Dollars in thousands)
Fair
value
Unrealized
losses
Fair
value
Unrealized
losses
Fair
value
Unrealized
losses
Investment securities available for sale:
Government agency
90,567
385
—
—
90,567
385
Mortgage-backed securities
1,872,344
12,736
296,170
4,783
2,168,514
17,519
Total
$
1,962,911
$
13,121
$
296,170
$
4,783
$
2,259,081
$
17,904
December 31, 2014
Less than 12 months
12 months or more
Total
Fair
value
Unrealized
losses
Fair
value
Unrealized
losses
Fair
value
Unrealized
losses
Investment securities available for sale:
U.S. Treasury
$
338,612
$
151
$
1,015
$
1
$
339,627
$
152
Government agency
261,288
247
—
—
261,288
247
Mortgage-backed securities
573,374
1,805
831,405
10,042
1,404,779
11,847
Total
$
1,173,274
$
2,203
$
832,420
$
10,043
$
2,005,694
$
12,246
Investment securities with an aggregate fair value of
$296.2 million
and
$832.4 million
had continuous unrealized losses for more than 12 months as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, respectively, with an aggregate unrealized loss of
$4.8 million
and
$10.0 million
, respectively. As of
June 30, 2015
, all
38
of these investments are government sponsored enterprise-issued mortgage-backed securities.
None
of the unrealized losses identified as of
June 30, 2015
or
December 31, 2014
relate to the marketability of the securities or the issuer’s ability to honor redemption obligations. Rather, the unrealized losses relate to changes in interest rates relative to when the investment securities were purchased. For all periods presented, BancShares had the ability and intent to retain these securities for a period of time sufficient to recover all unrealized losses. Therefore,
none
of the securities were deemed to be other than temporarily impaired.
Investment securities having an aggregate carrying value of
$4.69 billion
at
June 30, 2015
and
$4.37 billion
at
December 31, 2014
were pledged as collateral to secure public funds on deposit and certain short-term borrowings, and for other purposes as required by law.
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Table of Contents
NOTE D - LOANS AND LEASES
BancShares' accounting methods for loans and leases differ depending on whether they are purchased credit-impaired (PCI) or non-PCI. Non-PCI loans and leases include originated commercial, originated noncommercial, purchased revolving, and purchased non-impaired loans. For purchased non-impaired loans to be included as non-PCI, it must be determined that the loans that do not have a discount, due at least in part, to credit quality at the time of acquisition. Conversely, loans for which it is probable at acquisition that all required payments will not be collected in accordance with contractual terms are considered PCI loans. PCI loans are evaluated at acquisition and where a discount is required at least in part due to credit quality, the nonrevolving loans are accounted for under the guidance in ASC Topic 310-30,
Loans and Debt Securities Acquired with Deteriorated Credit Quality
. PCI loans and leases are recorded at fair value at the date of acquisition. No allowance for loan and lease losses is recorded on the acquisition date as the fair value of the acquired assets incorporates assumptions regarding credit risk. An allowance is recorded if there is additional credit deterioration after the acquisition date.
BancShares reports PCI and non-PCI loan portfolios separately, and each portfolio is further divided into commercial and non-commercial based on the type of borrower, purpose, collateral, and/or our underlying credit management processes. Additionally, loans are assigned to loan classes, which further disaggregate loans based upon common risk characteristics.
Commercial
–
Commercial loans include construction and land development, mortgage, other commercial real estate, commercial and industrial, lease financing and other.
Construction and land development
– Construction and land development consists of loans to finance land for development, investment, and use in a commercial business enterprise; multifamily apartments; and other commercial buildings that may be owner-occupied or income generating investments for the owner.
Commercial mortgage
– Commercial mortgage consists of loans to purchase or refinance owner-occupied nonresidential and investment properties. Investment properties include office buildings and other facilities that are rented or leased to unrelated parties.
Other commercial real estate
– Other commercial real estate consists of loans secured by farmland (including residential farms and other improvements) and multifamily (5 or more) residential properties.
Commercial and industrial
– Commercial and industrial consists of loans or lines of credit to finance corporate credit cards, accounts receivable, inventory and other general business purposes.
Lease financing
– Lease financing consists solely of lease financing agreements for business equipment, vehicles and other assets.
Other
– Other consists of all other commercial loans not classified in one of the preceding classes. These typically include loans to non-profit organizations such as churches, hospitals, educational and charitable organizations.
Noncommercial
–
Noncommercial consist of residential and revolving mortgage, construction and land development, and consumer loans.
Residential mortgage
– Residential real estate consists of loans to purchase, construct or refinance the borrower's primary dwelling, second residence or vacation home.
Revolving mortgage
– Revolving mortgage consists of home equity lines of credit that are secured by first or second liens on the borrower's primary residence.
Construction and land development
– Construction and land development consists of loans to construct the borrower's primary or secondary residence or vacant land upon which the owner intends to construct a dwelling at a future date.
Consumer
– Consumer loans consist of installment loans to finance purchases of vehicles, unsecured home improvements and revolving lines of credit that can be secured or unsecured, including personal credit cards.
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Table of Contents
Loans and leases outstanding included the following at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
:
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
Non-PCI loans and leases:
Commercial:
Construction and land development
$
547,151
$
493,133
Commercial mortgage
7,861,590
7,552,948
Other commercial real estate
288,214
244,875
Commercial and industrial
2,199,591
1,988,934
Lease financing
643,508
571,916
Other
338,389
353,833
Total commercial loans
11,878,443
11,205,639
Noncommercial:
Residential mortgage
2,597,064
2,493,058
Revolving mortgage
2,529,936
2,561,800
Construction and land development
227,280
205,016
Consumer
1,164,223
1,117,454
Total noncommercial loans
6,518,503
6,377,328
Total non-PCI loans and leases
18,396,946
17,582,967
PCI loans:
Commercial:
Construction and land development
48,208
78,079
Commercial mortgage
611,505
577,518
Other commercial real estate
14,353
40,193
Commercial and industrial
20,382
27,254
Other
2,597
3,079
Total commercial loans
697,045
726,123
Noncommercial:
Residential mortgage
358,307
382,340
Revolving mortgage
64,340
74,109
Construction and land development
345
912
Consumer
3,202
3,014
Total noncommercial loans
426,194
460,375
Total PCI loans
1,123,239
1,186,498
Total loans and leases
$
19,520,185
$
18,769,465
At
June 30, 2015
,
$319.7 million
of total loans and leases were covered under loss share agreements, compared to
$485.3 million
at
December 31, 2014
. At the beginning of the second quarter of 2015, loss share protection expired for non-single family residential loans acquired from Sun American Bank ("SAB") and all loans acquired from First Regional Bank ("FRB"). Loan balances at
June 30, 2015
for the expiring agreements from SAB and FRB were
$30.9 million
and
$9.0 million
, respectively. Loss share protection for Williamsburg First National Bank non-single family residential loans with a balance of
$8.2 million
at
June 30, 2015
will expire at the beginning of the fourth quarter of 2015.
At
June 30, 2015
,
$3.31 billion
in noncovered loans with a lendable collateral value of
$2.38 billion
were used to secure
$290.3 million
in Federal Home Loan Bank ("FHLB") of Atlanta advances, resulting in additional borrowing capacity of
$2.09 billion
. At
December 31, 2014
,
$3.16 billion
in noncovered loans with a lendable collateral value of
$2.20 billion
were used to secure
$240.3 million
in FHLB of Atlanta advances, resulting additional borrowing capacity of
$1.96 billion
.
The unamortized discount related to the non-PCI loans and leases acquired in the Bancorporation merger totaled
$49.3 million
and
$61.2 million
at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, respectively.
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Credit quality indicators
Loans and leases are monitored for credit quality on a recurring basis. The credit quality indicators used are dependent on the portfolio segment to which the loan relates. Commercial and noncommercial loans and leases have different credit quality indicators as a result of the unique characteristics of the loan segment being evaluated. The credit quality indicators for non-PCI and PCI commercial loans and leases are developed through a review of individual borrowers on an ongoing basis. Each commercial loan is evaluated annually with more frequent evaluation of more severely criticized loans or leases. The credit quality indicators for non-PCI and PCI noncommercial loans are based on the delinquency status of the borrower. As the borrower becomes more delinquent, the likelihood of loss increases. The indicators represent the rating for loans or leases as of the date presented based on the most recent assessment performed. These credit quality indicators are defined as follows:
Pass
– A pass rated asset is not adversely classified because it does not display any of the characteristics for adverse classification.
Special mention
– A special mention asset has potential weaknesses that deserve management’s close attention. If left uncorrected, such potential weaknesses may result in deterioration of the repayment prospects or collateral position at some future date. Special mention assets are not adversely classified and do not warrant adverse classification.
Substandard
– A substandard asset is inadequately protected by the current net worth and paying capacity of the borrower or of the collateral pledged, if any. Assets classified as substandard generally have a well-defined weakness, or weaknesses, that jeopardize the liquidation of the debt. These assets are characterized by the distinct possibility of loss if the deficiencies are not corrected.
Doubtful
– An asset classified as doubtful has all the weaknesses inherent in an asset classified substandard with the added characteristic that the weaknesses make collection or liquidation in full highly questionable and improbable on the basis of currently existing facts, conditions and values.
Loss
– Assets classified as loss are considered uncollectible and of such little value that it is inappropriate to be carried as an asset. This classification is not necessarily equivalent to no potential for recovery or salvage value, but rather that it is not appropriate to defer a full charge-off even though partial recovery may be effected in the future.
Ungraded
– Ungraded loans represent loans that are not included in the individual credit grading process due to their relatively small balances or borrower type. The majority of ungraded loans at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
relate to business credit cards. Business credit card loans are subject to automatic charge-off when they become 120 days past due in the same manner as unsecured consumer lines of credit. The remaining balance is comprised of a small amount of commercial mortgage and other commercial real estate loans.
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Non-PCI loans and leases outstanding at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
by credit quality indicator are provided below:
June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
Non-PCI commercial loans and leases
Grade:
Construction and land
development
Commercial
mortgage
Other
commercial real estate
Commercial and
industrial
Lease financing
Other
Total non-PCI commercial loans and leases
Pass
$
532,286
$
7,613,114
$
285,339
$
2,050,360
$
635,084
$
334,601
$
11,450,784
Special mention
12,385
102,773
267
17,861
4,797
1,859
139,942
Substandard
2,331
141,061
1,043
16,471
3,294
1,929
166,129
Doubtful
—
1,553
—
2,333
325
—
4,211
Ungraded
149
3,089
1,565
112,566
8
—
117,377
Total
$
547,151
$
7,861,590
$
288,214
$
2,199,591
$
643,508
$
338,389
$
11,878,443
December 31, 2014
Non-PCI commercial loans and leases
Construction and land
development
Commercial
mortgage
Other
commercial real estate
Commercial and
industrial
Lease financing
Other
Total non-PCI commercial loans and leases
Pass
$
474,374
$
7,284,714
$
242,053
$
1,859,415
$
564,319
$
349,111
$
10,773,986
Special mention
13,927
129,247
909
27,683
3,205
1,384
176,355
Substandard
4,720
134,677
1,765
8,878
3,955
3,338
157,333
Doubtful
—
2,366
—
164
365
—
2,895
Ungraded
112
1,944
148
92,794
72
—
95,070
Total
$
493,133
$
7,552,948
$
244,875
$
1,988,934
$
571,916
$
353,833
$
11,205,639
June 30, 2015
Non-PCI noncommercial loans and leases
(Dollars in thousands)
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development
Consumer
Total non-PCI noncommercial
loans and leases
Current
$
2,559,874
$
2,516,158
$
224,776
$
1,156,148
$
6,456,956
30-59 days past due
22,118
6,174
1,542
5,060
34,894
60-89 days past due
6,039
2,372
469
1,928
10,808
90 days or greater past due
9,033
5,232
493
1,087
15,845
Total
$
2,597,064
$
2,529,936
$
227,280
$
1,164,223
$
6,518,503
December 31, 2014
Non-PCI noncommercial loans and leases
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development
Consumer
Total non-PCI noncommercial
loans and leases
Current
$
2,454,797
$
2,542,807
$
202,344
$
1,110,153
$
6,310,101
30-59 days past due
23,288
11,097
1,646
4,577
40,608
60-89 days past due
6,018
2,433
824
1,619
10,894
90 days or greater past due
8,955
5,463
202
1,105
15,725
Total
$
2,493,058
$
2,561,800
$
205,016
$
1,117,454
$
6,377,328
18
Table of Contents
PCI loans and leases outstanding at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
by credit quality indicator are provided below:
June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
PCI commercial loans
Grade:
Construction
and land
development
Commercial
mortgage
Other
commercial
real estate
Commercial
and
industrial
Other
Total PCI commercial
loans
Pass
$
18,052
$
324,320
$
8,456
$
11,681
$
796
$
363,305
Special mention
2,506
100,609
13
1,934
—
105,062
Substandard
21,917
172,577
5,549
5,796
1,801
207,640
Doubtful
4,341
13,571
—
307
—
18,219
Ungraded
1,392
428
335
664
—
2,819
Total
$
48,208
$
611,505
$
14,353
$
20,382
$
2,597
$
697,045
December 31, 2014
PCI commercial loans
Construction
and land
development
Commercial
mortgage
Other
commercial
real estate
Commercial
and
industrial
Other
Total PCI commercial
loans
Pass
$
13,514
$
300,187
$
11,033
$
16,637
$
801
$
342,172
Special mention
6,063
98,724
16,271
4,137
—
125,195
Substandard
53,739
171,920
12,889
6,312
2,278
247,138
Doubtful
2,809
6,302
—
130
—
9,241
Ungraded
1,954
385
—
38
—
2,377
Total
$
78,079
$
577,518
$
40,193
$
27,254
$
3,079
$
726,123
June 30, 2015
PCI noncommercial loans
(Dollars in thousands)
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development
Consumer
Total PCI noncommercial
loans
Current
$
311,880
$
57,529
$
314
$
2,902
$
372,625
30-59 days past due
11,435
4,434
31
112
16,012
60-89 days past due
3,882
147
—
45
4,074
90 days or greater past due
31,110
2,230
—
143
33,483
Total
$
358,307
$
64,340
$
345
$
3,202
$
426,194
December 31, 2014
PCI noncommercial loans
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development
Consumer
Total PCI noncommercial
loans
Current
$
326,589
$
68,548
$
506
$
2,582
$
398,225
30-59 days past due
11,432
1,405
—
147
12,984
60-89 days past due
10,073
345
—
25
10,443
90 days or greater past due
34,246
3,811
406
260
38,723
Total
$
382,340
$
74,109
$
912
$
3,014
$
460,375
19
Table of Contents
The aging of the outstanding non-PCI loans and leases, by class, at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
is provided in the table below.
The calculation of days past due begins on the day after payment is due and includes all days through which all required interest or principal has not been paid. Loans and leases 30 days or less past due are considered current as various grace periods allow borrowers to make payments within a stated period after the due date and still remain in compliance with the loan agreement.
June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
30-59 days
past due
60-89 days
past due
90 days or greater
Total past
due
Current
Total loans
and leases
Non-PCI loans and leases:
Construction and land development - commercial
$
1,632
$
612
$
921
$
3,165
$
543,986
$
547,151
Commercial mortgage
11,903
4,896
14,676
31,475
7,830,115
7,861,590
Other commercial real estate
49
—
188
237
287,977
288,214
Commercial and industrial
6,275
1,010
1,050
8,335
2,191,256
2,199,591
Lease financing
1,161
90
308
1,559
641,949
643,508
Residential mortgage
22,118
6,039
9,033
37,190
2,559,874
2,597,064
Revolving mortgage
6,174
2,372
5,232
13,778
2,516,158
2,529,936
Construction and land development - noncommercial
1,542
469
493
2,504
224,776
227,280
Consumer
5,060
1,928
1,087
8,075
1,156,148
1,164,223
Other
338
—
210
548
337,841
338,389
Total non-PCI loans and leases
$
56,252
$
17,416
$
33,198
$
106,866
$
18,290,080
$
18,396,946
December 31, 2014
30-59 days
past due
60-89 days
past due
90 days or greater
Total past
due
Current
Total loans
and leases
Non-PCI loans and leases:
Construction and land development - commercial
$
520
$
283
$
330
$
1,133
$
492,000
$
493,133
Commercial mortgage
11,367
4,782
8,061
24,210
7,528,738
7,552,948
Other commercial real estate
206
70
102
378
244,497
244,875
Commercial and industrial
2,843
1,545
378
4,766
1,984,168
1,988,934
Lease financing
1,631
8
2
1,641
570,275
571,916
Residential mortgage
23,288
6,018
8,955
38,261
2,454,797
2,493,058
Revolving mortgage
11,097
2,433
5,463
18,993
2,542,807
2,561,800
Construction and land development - noncommercial
1,646
824
202
2,672
202,344
205,016
Consumer
4,577
1,619
1,105
7,301
1,110,153
1,117,454
Other
146
1,966
—
2,112
351,721
353,833
Total non-PCI loans and leases
$
57,321
$
19,548
$
24,598
$
101,467
$
17,481,500
$
17,582,967
20
Table of Contents
The recorded investment, by class, in loans and leases on nonaccrual status, and loans and leases greater than 90 days past due and still accruing at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
for non-PCI loans, were as follows:
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
Nonaccrual
loans and
leases
Loans and
leases > 90
days and
accruing
Nonaccrual
loans and
leases
Loans and
leases > 90
days and
accruing
Non-PCI loans and leases:
Construction and land development - commercial
$
1,401
$
102
$
343
$
56
Commercial mortgage
34,140
2,863
24,720
1,003
Other commercial real estate
588
30
619
35
Commercial and industrial
4,158
555
1,741
239
Lease financing
353
37
374
2
Residential mortgage
20,044
671
14,242
3,191
Revolving mortgage
11,765
19
—
5,463
Construction and land development - noncommercial
1
—
—
202
Consumer
852
606
—
1,059
Other
133
77
1,966
—
Total non-PCI loans and leases
$
73,435
$
4,960
$
44,005
$
11,250
Purchased credit-impaired loans (PCI) loans
The following table relates to PCI loans acquired in the CCBT acquisition and summarizes the contractually required payments, which include principal and interest, expected cash flows to be collected, and the fair value of PCI loans and leases at the acquisition date.
(Dollars in thousands)
Contractually required payments
$
247,812
Cash flows expected to be collected
$
207,688
Fair value of loans at acquisition
$
154,496
The recorded fair values of PCI loans acquired in the CCBT acquisition as of the acquisition date were as follows:
(Dollars in thousands)
Commercial:
Construction and land development
$
4,116
Commercial mortgage
129,732
Other commercial real estate
3,202
Commercial and industrial
2,844
Total commercial loans
139,894
Noncommercial:
Residential mortgage
13,251
Consumer
1,351
Total noncommercial loans
14,602
Total PCI loans and leases
$
154,496
The following table provides changes in the carrying value of all purchased credit-impaired loans during the
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
:
(Dollars in thousands)
2015
2014
Balance at January 1
$
1,186,498
$
1,029,426
Fair value of acquired loans
154,496
316,327
Accretion
59,182
60,660
Payments received and other changes, net
(276,937
)
(296,480
)
Balance at June 30
$
1,123,239
$
1,109,933
Unpaid principal balance at June 30
$
2,025,905
$
1,888,475
The carrying value of loans on the cost recovery method was
$12.2 million
at
June 30, 2015
and
$33.4 million
at
December 31, 2014
. The cost recovery method is applied to loans when the timing of future cash flows is not reasonably estimable due to
21
Table of Contents
borrower nonperformance or uncertainty in the ultimate disposition of the asset. The recorded investment of PCI loans on nonaccrual status was
$8.7 million
and
$33.4 million
at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, respectively.
For PCI loans, improved cash flow estimates and receipt of unscheduled loan payments result in the reclassification of nonaccretable difference to accretable yield. Accretable yield resulting from the improved ability to estimate future cash flows generally does not represent amounts previously identified as nonaccretable difference.
The following table documents changes to the amount of accretable yield for the first
six
months of
2015
and
2014
.
(Dollars in thousands)
2015
2014
Balance at January 1
$
418,160
$
439,990
Additions from acquisitions
53,192
84,295
Accretion
(59,182
)
(60,660
)
Reclassifications from nonaccretable difference
12,322
9,992
Changes in expected cash flows that do not affect nonaccretable difference
(45,391
)
(17,126
)
Balance at June 30
$
379,101
$
456,491
22
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NOTE E - ALLOWANCE FOR LOAN AND LEASE LOSSES ("ALLL")
The following tables present the activity in the ALLL for non-PCI loan and lease losses by loan class for the
three
months ended
June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
:
Three months ended June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
Construction
and land
development
- commercial
Commercial
mortgage
Other commercial real estate
Commercial
and industrial
Lease
financing
Other
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development
- non-
commercial
Consumer
Total
Non-PCI Loans
Allowance for loan and lease losses:
Balance at April 1
$
13,108
$
82,038
$
1,031
$
36,954
$
4,293
$
2,981
$
11,328
$
17,529
$
1,056
$
17,616
$
187,934
Provision
88
(1,878
)
(227
)
4,547
408
(1,824
)
1,162
31
74
6,613
8,994
Charge-offs
(221
)
(47
)
(9
)
(2,318
)
(6
)
—
(90
)
(616
)
—
(2,743
)
(6,050
)
Recoveries
104
323
9
209
11
31
305
346
3
630
1,971
Balance at June 30
$
13,079
$
80,436
$
804
$
39,392
$
4,706
$
1,188
$
12,705
$
17,290
$
1,133
$
22,116
$
192,849
Three months ended June 30, 2014
Construction
and land
development
- commercial
Commercial
mortgage
Other commercial real estate
Commercial
and industrial
Lease
financing
Other
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development
- non-
commercial
Consumer
Total
Balance at April 1
$
12,246
$
94,217
$
945
$
24,021
$
4,183
$
454
$
10,944
$
16,408
$
1,249
$
13,282
$
177,949
Provision
(1,135
)
(1,961
)
(155
)
3,033
176
163
(1,557
)
1,252
(323
)
2,737
2,230
Charge-offs
—
(272
)
—
(531
)
(14
)
(5
)
(234
)
(1,064
)
(23
)
(2,628
)
(4,771
)
Recoveries
5
145
16
386
20
—
148
201
2
584
1,507
Balance at June 30
$
11,116
$
92,129
$
806
$
26,909
$
4,365
$
612
$
9,301
$
16,797
$
905
$
13,975
$
176,915
Six months ended June 30, 2015
Construction
and land
development
- commercial
Commercial
mortgage
Other commercial real estate
Commercial
and industrial
Lease
financing
Other
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development
- non-
commercial
Consumer
Total
Balance at January 1
$
11,961
$
85,189
$
732
$
30,727
$
4,286
$
3,184
$
10,661
$
18,650
$
892
$
16,555
$
182,837
Provision
1,191
(5,557
)
231
12,093
419
(2,042
)
1,975
(431
)
192
9,579
17,650
Charge-offs
(239
)
(280
)
(178
)
(4,031
)
(21
)
—
(374
)
(1,409
)
(22
)
(5,526
)
(12,080
)
Recoveries
166
1,084
19
603
22
46
443
480
71
1,508
4,442
Balance at June 30
$
13,079
$
80,436
$
804
$
39,392
$
4,706
$
1,188
$
12,705
$
17,290
$
1,133
$
22,116
$
192,849
Six months ended June 30, 2014
Construction
and land
development
- commercial
Commercial
mortgage
Other commercial real estate
Commercial
and industrial
Lease
financing
Other
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development
- non-
commercial
Consumer
Total
Balance at January 1
$
10,335
$
100,257
$
1,009
$
22,362
$
4,749
$
190
$
10,511
$
16,239
$
681
$
13,541
$
179,874
Provision
750
(8,940
)
(229
)
5,009
(348
)
435
(948
)
2,605
254
4,012
2,600
Charge-offs
—
(440
)
—
(1,027
)
(72
)
(13
)
(418
)
(2,324
)
(94
)
(4,805
)
(9,193
)
Recoveries
31
1,252
26
565
36
—
156
277
64
1,227
3,634
Balance at June 30
$
11,116
$
92,129
$
806
$
26,909
$
4,365
$
612
$
9,301
$
16,797
$
905
$
13,975
$
176,915
The provision expense for commercial and industrial loans totaled
$4.5 million
and
$12.1 million
for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
, respectively, compared to
$3.0 million
and
$5.0 million
for the same respective periods of
2014
. Loan growth during 2015 was higher than the prior year causing the increases in provision expense.
The other loan class had a net provision credit of
$1.8 million
and
$2.0 million
for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
, respectively, compared to provision expense of
$163 thousand
and
$435 thousand
for the same respective periods of
2014
. The current net provision credits were the result of the reversal of previously identified impairment on individually impaired loans due to credit quality improvement.
The provision for the residential mortgage loan class totaled
$1.2 million
and
$2.0 million
for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
, respectively, compared to net provision credits of
$1.6 million
and
$948 thousand
for the same respective periods of
2014
. The increases in the provision expense were attributable to newly originated non-PCI loans and stable credit quality in the current periods. In 2014, improved credit quality trends resulted in a release of reserves for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2014
.
23
Table of Contents
Revolving mortgage loans had net provision expense of
$31 thousand
and a net provision credit of
$431 thousand
for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
, respectively, compared to net provision expense of
$1.3 million
and
$2.6 million
for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2014
, respectively. The decline in provision expense for both periods was due to lower net charge-offs and improved credit quality trends within the loan class.
The provision for consumer loans totaled
$6.6 million
and
$9.6 million
for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
, respectively. Provision expense for the
three
and
six
month periods ended
June 30, 2014
totaled
$2.7 million
and
$4.0 million
, respectively. The increase in provision expense was primarily due to higher loan growth in newly originated non-PCI loans in 2015.
The following tables present the allowance for non-PCI loan losses and the recorded investment in loans, by loan class, based on impairment method as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
:
June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
Construction
and land
development
- commercial
Commercial
mortgage
Other
commercial
real estate
Commercial and industrial
Lease
financing
Other
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development
- non-commercial
Consumer
Total
Allowance for loan and lease losses:
ALLL for loans and leases individually evaluated for impairment
$
445
$
7,744
$
101
$
1,771
$
146
$
17
$
1,623
$
168
$
—
$
577
$
12,592
ALLL for loans and leases collectively evaluated for impairment
12,634
72,692
703
37,621
4,560
1,171
11,082
17,122
1,133
21,539
180,257
Total allowance for loan and lease losses
$
13,079
$
80,436
$
804
$
39,392
$
4,706
$
1,188
$
12,705
$
17,290
$
1,133
$
22,116
$
192,849
Loans and leases:
Loans and leases individually evaluated for impairment
$
3,092
$
83,555
$
401
$
12,416
$
1,448
$
1,732
$
16,424
$
3,961
$
860
$
1,117
$
125,006
Loans and leases collectively evaluated for impairment
544,059
7,778,035
287,813
2,187,175
642,060
336,657
2,580,640
2,525,975
226,420
1,163,106
18,271,940
Total loan and leases
$
547,151
$
7,861,590
$
288,214
$
2,199,591
$
643,508
$
338,389
$
2,597,064
$
2,529,936
$
227,280
$
1,164,223
$
18,396,946
December 31, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
Construction
and land
development
- commercial
Commercial
mortgage
Other
commercial
real estate
Commercial and industrial
Lease
financing
Other
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development
- non-commercial
Consumer
Total
Allowance for loan and lease losses:
ALLL for loans and leases individually evaluated for impairment
$
92
$
8,610
$
112
$
1,743
$
150
$
1,972
$
1,360
$
1,052
$
71
$
555
$
15,717
ALLL for loans and leases collectively evaluated for impairment
11,869
76,579
620
28,984
4,136
1,212
9,301
17,598
821
16,000
167,120
Total allowance for loan and lease losses
$
11,961
$
85,189
$
732
$
30,727
$
4,286
$
3,184
$
10,661
$
18,650
$
892
$
16,555
$
182,837
Loans and leases:
Loans and leases individually evaluated for impairment
$
1,620
$
82,803
$
584
$
11,040
$
623
$
2,000
$
14,913
$
3,675
$
1,340
$
995
$
119,593
Loans and leases collectively evaluated for impairment
491,513
7,470,145
244,291
1,977,894
571,293
351,833
2,478,145
2,558,125
203,676
1,116,459
17,463,374
Total loan and leases
$
493,133
$
7,552,948
$
244,875
$
1,988,934
$
571,916
$
353,833
$
2,493,058
$
2,561,800
$
205,016
$
1,117,454
$
17,582,967
24
Table of Contents
The following tables show the activity in the allowance for PCI loan and lease losses by loan class for the
three
months and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
.
Three months ended June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
Construction
and land
development -
commercial
Commercial
mortgage
Other
commercial
real estate
Commercial
and
industrial
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development -
noncommercial
Consumer
and other
Total
PCI Loans
Allowance for loan and lease losses:
Balance at April 1
$
341
$
8,876
$
194
$
11
$
4,872
$
3,271
$
31
$
23
$
17,619
Provision
325
(2,065
)
(125
)
399
1,165
(1,112
)
(31
)
169
(1,275
)
Charge-offs
(97
)
(383
)
—
(87
)
(195
)
(108
)
—
(6
)
(876
)
Recoveries
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Balance at June 30
$
569
$
6,428
$
69
$
323
$
5,842
$
2,051
$
—
$
186
$
15,468
Three months ended June 30, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
Construction
and land
development -
commercial
Commercial
mortgage
Other
commercial
real estate
Commercial
and
industrial
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development -
noncommercial
Consumer
and other
Total
Balance at April 1
$
4,476
$
23,003
$
1,204
$
2,256
$
9,764
$
3,493
$
583
$
214
$
44,993
Provision
(77
)
(1,185
)
(797
)
(1,729
)
(2,176
)
(3,031
)
(583
)
49
(9,529
)
Charge-offs
(596
)
(4,503
)
—
(152
)
(495
)
(381
)
—
(6
)
(6,133
)
Recoveries
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Balance at June 30
$
3,803
$
17,315
$
407
$
375
$
7,093
$
81
$
—
$
257
$
29,331
Six months ended June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
Construction
and land
development -
commercial
Commercial
mortgage
Other
commercial
real estate
Commercial
and
industrial
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development -
noncommercial
Consumer
and other
Total
Balance at January 1
$
150
$
10,135
$
75
$
1,240
$
5,820
$
3,999
$
183
$
27
$
21,629
Provision
516
(2,990
)
(6
)
(632
)
302
(1,767
)
(183
)
621
(4,139
)
Charge-offs
(97
)
(717
)
—
(285
)
(280
)
(181
)
—
(462
)
(2,022
)
Recoveries
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Balance at June 30
$
569
$
6,428
$
69
$
323
$
5,842
$
2,051
$
—
$
186
$
15,468
Six months ended June 30, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
Construction
and land
development -
commercial
Commercial
mortgage
Other
commercial
real estate
Commercial
and
industrial
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development -
noncommercial
Consumer
and other
Total
Balance at January 1
$
1,320
$
29,906
$
1,354
$
5,275
$
11,802
$
2,959
$
682
$
222
$
53,520
Provision
3,278
(4,571
)
(947
)
(2,065
)
(4,476
)
(2,397
)
(682
)
58
(11,802
)
Charge-offs
(795
)
(8,020
)
—
(2,835
)
(233
)
(481
)
—
(23
)
(12,387
)
Recoveries
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Balance at June 30
$
3,803
$
17,315
$
407
$
375
$
7,093
$
81
$
—
$
257
$
29,331
25
Table of Contents
The following tables show the ending balances of PCI loans and leases and related allowance by class of loans as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
:
June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
Construction
and land
development -
commercial
Commercial
mortgage
Other
commercial
real estate
Commercial
and
industrial
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development -
noncommercial
Consumer
and other
Total
ALLL for loans and leases acquired with deteriorated credit quality
$
569
$
6,428
$
69
$
323
$
5,842
$
2,051
$
—
$
186
$
15,468
Loans and leases acquired with deteriorated credit quality
48,208
611,505
14,353
20,382
358,307
64,340
345
5,799
1,123,239
December 31, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
Construction
and land
development -
commercial
Commercial
mortgage
Other
commercial
real estate
Commercial
and
industrial
Residential
mortgage
Revolving
mortgage
Construction
and land
development -
noncommercial
Consumer
and other
Total
ALLL for loans and leases acquired with deteriorated credit quality
$
150
$
10,135
$
75
$
1,240
$
5,820
$
3,999
$
183
$
27
$
21,629
Loans and leases acquired with deteriorated credit quality
78,079
577,518
40,193
27,254
382,340
74,109
912
6,093
1,186,498
As of
June 30, 2015
, and
December 31, 2014
,
$570.6 million
and
$285.6 million
, respectively, in PCI loans experienced an adverse change in expected cash flows since the date of acquisition. The corresponding valuation reserve was
$15.5 million
and
$21.6 million
, respectively.
26
Table of Contents
The following tables provide information on non-PCI impaired loans and leases, exclusive of loans and leases evaluated collectively as a homogenous group, as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
including interest income recognized in the period during which the loans and leases were considered impaired.
June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
With a
recorded
allowance
With no
recorded
allowance
Total
Unpaid
principal
balance
Related
allowance
recorded
Non-PCI impaired loans and leases:
Construction and land development - commercial
$
2,620
$
472
$
3,092
$
8,514
$
445
Commercial mortgage
53,733
29,822
83,555
89,251
7,744
Other commercial real estate
101
300
401
848
101
Commercial and industrial
9,162
3,254
12,416
15,816
1,771
Lease financing
1,177
271
1,448
1,448
146
Other
1,732
—
1,732
1,732
17
Residential mortgage
8,760
7,664
16,424
17,118
1,623
Revolving mortgage
1,458
2,503
3,961
5,403
168
Construction and land development - noncommercial
—
860
860
860
—
Consumer
994
123
1,117
1,194
577
Total non-PCI impaired loans and leases
$
79,737
$
45,269
$
125,006
$
142,184
$
12,592
December 31, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
With a
recorded
allowance
With no
recorded
allowance
Total
Unpaid
principal
balance
Related
allowance
recorded
Non-PCI impaired loans and leases:
Construction and land development - commercial
$
996
$
624
$
1,620
$
6,945
$
92
Commercial mortgage
57,324
25,479
82,803
87,702
8,610
Other commercial real estate
112
472
584
913
112
Commercial and industrial
10,319
721
11,040
12,197
1,743
Lease financing
319
304
623
623
150
Other
2,000
—
2,000
2,000
1,972
Residential mortgage
10,198
4,715
14,913
15,746
1,360
Revolving mortgage
3,675
—
3,675
4,933
1,052
Construction and land development - noncommercial
1,077
263
1,340
1,340
71
Consumer
987
8
995
1,067
555
Total non-PCI impaired loans and leases
$
87,007
$
32,586
$
119,593
$
133,466
$
15,717
27
Table of Contents
The following tables show the average non-PCI impaired loan balance and the interest income recognized by loan class for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
:
Three months ended June 30, 2015
Three months ended June 30, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
Average
balance
Interest income recognized
Average
balance
Interest income recognized
Non-PCI impaired loans and leases:
Construction and land development - commercial
$
3,134
$
35
$
2,592
$
28
Commercial mortgage
86,253
840
87,687
799
Other commercial real estate
403
—
1,981
7
Commercial and industrial
14,088
146
11,208
113
Lease financing
1,463
16
384
4
Other
1,835
—
48
1
Residential mortgage
16,819
135
15,592
107
Revolving mortgage
4,015
23
3,779
29
Construction and land development - noncommercial
779
9
2,061
26
Consumer
1,154
20
986
17
Total non-PCI impaired loans and leases
$
129,943
$
1,224
$
126,318
$
1,131
Six months ended June 30, 2015
Six months ended June 30, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
Average
balance
Interest income recognized
Average
balance
Interest income recognized
Non-PCI impaired loans and leases:
Construction and land development - commercial
$
3,093
$
70
$
1,413
$
31
Commercial mortgage
83,115
1,602
84,359
1,716
Other commercial real estate
477
1
2,731
60
Commercial and industrial
12,220
249
15,690
353
Lease financing
1,527
34
732
21
Other
1,913
—
24
1
Residential mortgage
16,092
260
15,824
284
Revolving mortgage
3,501
39
4,262
76
Construction and land development - noncommercial
719
16
1,946
50
Consumer
1,088
39
2,058
51
Total non-PCI impaired loans and leases
$
123,745
$
2,310
$
129,039
$
2,643
28
Table of Contents
Troubled Debt Restructurings
BancShares accounts for certain loan modifications or restructurings as troubled debt restructurings ("TDRs"). In general, the modification or restructuring of a loan is considered a TDR if, for economic reasons or legal reasons related to a borrower's financial difficulties, a concession is granted to the borrower that creditors would not otherwise grant. Concessions may relate to the contractual interest rate, maturity date, payment structure or other actions. In accordance with GAAP, acquired loans accounted for under ASC 310-30,
Loans and Debt Securities Acquired with Deteriorated Credit Quality,
are not initially considered to be TDRs, but can be classified as such if a modification is made subsequent to acquisition. Subsequent modifications of a PCI loan accounted for in a pool that would otherwise meet the definition of a TDR is not reported, or accounted for, as a TDR since pooled PCI loans are excluded from the scope of TDR accounting.
The following table provides a summary of total TDRs by accrual status.
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
Accruing
Nonaccruing
Total
Accruing
Nonaccruing
Total
Commercial loans
Construction and land development -
commercial
$
3,500
$
633
$
4,133
$
2,591
$
446
$
3,037
Commercial mortgage
83,059
12,588
95,647
92,184
8,937
101,121
Other commercial real estate
1,898
401
2,299
2,374
449
2,823
Commercial and industrial
8,689
2,970
11,659
9,864
664
10,528
Lease
1,122
325
1,447
258
365
623
Other
—
—
—
34
—
34
Total commercial TDRs
98,268
16,917
115,185
107,305
10,861
118,166
Noncommercial
Residential mortgage
23,268
5,663
28,931
22,597
4,655
27,252
Revolving mortgage
2,412
1,361
3,773
3,675
—
3,675
Construction and land development -
noncommercial
860
—
860
1,391
—
1,391
Consumer and other
2,774
54
2,828
995
—
995
Total noncommercial TDRs
29,314
7,078
36,392
28,658
4,655
33,313
Total TDRs
$
127,582
$
23,995
$
151,577
$
135,963
$
15,516
$
151,479
The majority of TDRs are included in the special mention, substandard or doubtful grading categories. When a restructured loan subsequently defaults, it is evaluated and downgraded if appropriate. The more severely graded the loan, the lower the estimated expected cash flows and the greater the allowance recorded. Further, TDRs over
$500,000
and graded substandard or lower are evaluated individually for impairment through a review of collateral values.
The following table shows the accrual status of non-PCI and PCI TDRs.
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
Accruing TDRs:
PCI
$
41,355
$
44,647
Non-PCI
86,227
91,316
Total accruing TDRs
127,582
135,963
Nonaccruing TDRs:
PCI
1,975
2,225
Non-PCI
22,020
13,291
Total nonaccruing TDRs
23,995
15,516
All TDRs:
PCI
43,330
46,872
Non-PCI
108,247
104,607
Total TDRs
$
151,577
$
151,479
29
Table of Contents
The following tables provide the types of TDRs made during the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
, as well as a summary of loans that were modified as a TDR during the
twelve months ended June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
that subsequently defaulted during the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
. BancShares defines payment default as movement of the TDR to nonaccrual status, which is generally 90 days past due for TDRs, foreclosure or charge-off, whichever occurs first.
Three months ended June 30, 2015
Three months ended June 30, 2014
All restructurings
Restructurings with payment default
All restructurings
Restructurings with payment default
(Dollars in thousands)
Number of Loans
Recorded investment at period end
Number of Loans
Recorded investment at period end
Number of Loans
Recorded investment at period end
Number of Loans
Recorded investment at period end
Non-PCI loans and leases
Interest only period provided
Commercial mortgage
2
$
69
—
$
—
2
$
720
1
$
494
Other
—
—
—
—
1
46
—
—
Total interest only
2
69
—
—
3
766
1
494
Loan term extension
Construction and land development - commercial
—
—
—
—
2
191
—
—
Commercial mortgage
2
840
—
—
—
—
—
—
Commercial and industrial
—
—
—
—
4
2,069
—
—
Residential mortgage
—
—
—
—
6
260
—
—
Consumer
—
—
—
—
1
10
—
—
Total loan term extension
2
840
—
—
13
2,530
—
—
Below market interest rate
Construction and land development - commercial
3
251
—
—
—
—
—
—
Commercial mortgage
6
1,510
—
—
3
1,991
5
1,563
Commercial and industrial
4
521
1
142
—
—
—
—
Other commercial real estate
—
—
—
—
1
365
—
—
Residential mortgage
15
646
1
15
10
427
—
—
Consumer
3
40
—
—
—
—
—
—
Total below market interest rate
31
2,968
2
157
14
2,783
5
1,563
Discharged from bankruptcy
Commercial and industrial
1
17
—
—
—
—
—
—
Residential mortgage
2
35
—
—
1
13
—
—
Revolving mortgage
7
203
3
60
2
39
—
—
Consumer
3
45
—
—
2
8
—
—
Total discharged from bankruptcy
13
300
3
60
5
60
—
—
Total non-PCI restructurings
48
$
4,177
5
$
217
35
$
6,139
6
$
2,057
30
Table of Contents
Six months ended June 30, 2015
Six months ended June 30, 2014
All restructurings
Restructurings with payment default
All restructurings
Restructurings with payment default
(Dollars in thousands)
Number of Loans
Recorded investment at period end
Number of Loans
Recorded investment at period end
Number of Loans
Recorded investment at period end
Number of Loans
Recorded investment at period end
Non-PCI loans and leases
Interest only period provided
Commercial mortgage
2
$
69
—
$
—
6
$
2,600
2
$
708
Commercial and industrial
1
1,872
1
1,872
1
196
—
—
Lease financing
—
—
—
—
2
144
—
—
Other
—
—
—
—
1
46
—
—
Total interest only
3
1,941
1
1,872
10
2,986
2
708
Loan term extension
Construction and land development - commercial
1
212
1
212
2
191
—
—
Commercial mortgage
5
1,371
—
—
5
2,584
—
—
Commercial and industrial
—
—
—
—
4
2,069
—
—
Lease financing
—
—
—
—
2
224
—
—
Residential mortgage
—
—
—
—
11
593
—
—
Revolving mortgage
1
9
—
—
—
—
—
—
Consumer
1
5
—
—
3
44
—
—
Total loan term extension
8
1,597
1
212
27
5,705
—
—
Below market interest rate
Construction and land development - commercial
5
296
—
—
10
363
—
—
Commercial mortgage
16
5,226
1
498
15
6,591
6
2,011
Commercial and industrial
7
673
1
142
6
143
—
—
Other commercial real estate
—
—
—
—
1
365
—
—
Residential mortgage
42
1,698
3
58
18
820
1
140
Revolving mortgage
3
63
—
—
5
274
—
—
Construction & land development - noncommercial
2
253
—
—
8
1,248
—
—
Consumer
7
85
—
—
—
—
—
—
Other
1
1,732
—
—
—
—
—
—
Total below market interest rate
83
10,026
5
698
63
9,804
7
2,151
Discharged from bankruptcy
Commercial mortgage
1
622
—
—
1
983
—
—
Commercial and industrial
1
17
—
—
—
—
—
—
Residential mortgage
8
434
—
—
8
649
2
85
Revolving mortgage
16
632
5
158
7
442
—
—
Construction & land development - noncommercial
—
—
—
—
1
62
—
—
Consumer
4
48
—
—
3
26
—
—
Total discharged from bankruptcy
30
1,753
5
158
20
2,162
2
85
Total non-PCI restructurings
124
$
15,317
12
$
2,940
120
$
20,657
11
$
2,944
31
Table of Contents
Three months ended June 30, 2015
Three months ended June 30, 2014
All restructurings
Restructurings with payment default
All restructurings
Restructurings with payment default
(Dollars in thousands)
Number of loans
Recorded investment at period end
Number of loans
Recorded investment at period end
Number of loans
Recorded investment at period end
Number of loans
Recorded investment at period end
PCI loans
Loan term extension
Residential mortgage
—
$
—
—
$
—
1
$
53
1
$
53
Total loan term extension
—
—
—
—
1
53
1
53
Below market interest rate
Construction and land development - commercial
—
—
—
—
1
273
—
—
Commercial mortgage
—
—
—
—
5
1,811
—
—
Commercial and industrial
—
—
—
—
1
23
—
—
Residential mortgage
1
60
—
—
23
2,963
1
23
Total below market interest rate
1
60
—
—
30
5,070
1
23
Discharged from bankruptcy
Residential mortgage
—
—
—
—
26
1,828
2
94
Total discharged from bankruptcy
—
—
—
—
26
1,828
2
94
Total PCI restructurings
1
$
60
—
$
—
31
$
5,123
2
$
76
Six months ended June 30, 2015
Six months ended June 30, 2014
All restructurings
Restructurings with payment default
All restructurings
Restructurings with payment default
(Dollars in thousands)
Number of loans
Recorded investment at period end
Number of loans
Recorded investment at period end
Number of loans
Recorded investment at period end
Number of loans
Recorded investment at period end
PCI loans
Interest only period provided
Commercial mortgage
—
$
—
—
$
—
2
$
—
2
$
44
Total interest only
—
—
—
—
2
—
2
44
Loan term extension
Construction and land development - commercial
—
—
—
—
1
276
—
—
Residential mortgage
—
—
—
—
1
53
1
53
Total loan term extension
—
—
—
—
2
329
1
53
Below market interest rate
Construction and land development - commercial
—
—
—
—
2
308
—
—
Commercial mortgage
—
—
—
—
9
5,060
1
39
Commercial and industrial
—
—
—
—
1
23
—
—
Residential mortgage
8
545
—
—
25
3,066
2
23
Total below market interest rate
8
545
—
—
37
8,457
3
62
Discharged from bankruptcy
Residential mortgage
1
78
—
—
26
1,828
2
94
Total discharged from bankruptcy
1
78
—
—
26
1,828
2
94
Total PCI restructurings
9
$
623
—
$
—
67
$
10,614
8
$
253
For the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
, the recorded investment in TDRs subsequent to modification was not materially impacted by the modification since forgiveness of principal is not a restructuring option frequently used by BancShares.
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Table of Contents
NOTE F - OTHER REAL ESTATE OWNED (OREO)
The following table explains changes in other real estate owned during the
six months ended June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
.
(Dollars in thousands)
Covered
Noncovered
Total
Balance at December 31, 2013
$
47,081
$
36,898
$
83,979
Additions
16,186
8,894
25,080
Additions acquired in the 1st Financial merger
—
11,591
11,591
Sales
(18,522
)
(19,150
)
(37,672
)
Writedowns
(4,609
)
(3,082
)
(7,691
)
Balance at June 30, 2014
$
40,136
$
35,151
$
75,287
Balance at December 31, 2014
$
22,982
$
70,454
$
93,436
Additions
5,833
24,558
30,391
Sales
(12,962
)
(34,324
)
(47,286
)
Writedowns
(857
)
(2,436
)
(3,293
)
Transfers
(1)
(2,106
)
2,106
—
Balance at June 30, 2015
$
12,890
$
60,358
$
73,248
(1)
Transfers include OREO balances associated with expired loss share agreements.
At
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, BancShares had
$17.6 million
and
$29.0 million
, respectively, of foreclosed residential real estate property in OREO. The recorded investment in consumer mortgage loans collateralized by residential real estate property in the process of foreclosure totaled
$18.1 million
and
$24.8 million
at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, respectively.
NOTE G - FDIC LOSS SHARE RECEIVABLE
The following table provides changes in the receivable from the FDIC for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
.
Three months ended June 30
Six months ended June 30
(Dollars in thousands)
2015
2014
2015
2014
Beginning balance
$
21,340
$
74,784
$
28,701
$
93,397
Amortization
(1,461
)
(12,922
)
(6,492
)
(30,667
)
Net cash payments to FDIC
5,128
859
10,890
4,350
Post-acquisition adjustments
(19,199
)
(12,762
)
(27,291
)
(17,121
)
Ending balance
$
5,808
$
49,959
$
5,808
$
49,959
The receivable from the FDIC for loss share agreements is measured separately from the related covered assets and is recorded at fair value at the acquisition date using projected cash flows based on the expected reimbursements for losses and the applicable loss share percentages. See
Note L
for information related to FCB's recorded payable to the FDIC for loss share agreements.
Amortization reflects changes in the FDIC loss share receivable due to improvements in expected cash flows that are being recognized over the remaining term of the loss share agreement. Cash payments to FDIC represent the net impact of loss share loan recoveries, charge-offs and related expenses as calculated and reported in FDIC loss share certificates. Post-acquisition adjustments represent the net change in loss estimates related to acquired loans and covered OREO as a result of changes in expected cash flows and the ALLL related to those covered loans. For loans covered by loss share agreements, subsequent decreases in the amount expected to be collected from the borrower or collateral liquidation result in a provision for loan and lease losses, an increase in the ALLL and a proportional adjustment to the receivable from the FDIC for the estimated amount to be reimbursed. Subsequent increases in the amount expected to be collected from the borrower or collateral liquidation result in the reversal of some or all previously recorded provision for loan and lease losses, a decrease in the related ALLL and a proportional adjustment to the receivable from the FDIC, or prospective adjustment to the accretable yield and the related receivable from the FDIC if no provision for loan and lease losses had been recorded previously. The loss share agreements for FRB and non-single family residential loans acquired from SAB expired at the beginning of the second quarter of 2015. The loss share agreement for non-single family residential loans for Williamsburg First National Bank will expire at the beginning of the fourth quarter of 2015.
33
Table of Contents
NOTE H - MORTGAGE SERVICING RIGHTS
Our portfolio of residential mortgage loans serviced for third parties was
$2.00 billion
and
$1.95 billion
as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, respectively. These loans were originated by BancShares and sold to third parties on a non-recourse basis with servicing rights retained. These retained servicing rights are recorded as a servicing asset on the Consolidated Balance Sheets and are initially recorded at fair value.
The activity of the servicing asset for the three and six months ended
June 30
,
2015
and
2014
is presented in the following table:
Three months ended June 30
Six months ended June 30
(Dollars in thousands)
2015
2014
2015
2014
Beginning balance
$
16,436
$
—
$
16,688
$
16
Servicing rights originated
1,927
—
2,589
—
Amortization
(1,110
)
—
(1,962
)
(164
)
Servicing rights acquired in the 1st Financial merger
—
—
—
148
Valuation allowance reversal
$
909
$
—
$
847
$
—
Ending balance
$
18,162
$
—
$
18,162
$
—
The following table presents the activity in the servicing asset valuation allowance for the three and six months ended
June 30
,
2015
and
2014
:
Three months ended June 30
Six months ended June 30
(Dollars in thousands)
2015
2014
2015
2014
Beginning balance
$
912
$
—
$
850
$
—
Valuation allowance reversal
(909
)
—
(847
)
—
Ending balance
$
3
$
—
$
3
$
—
As of
June 30, 2015
, the carrying value of BancShares' mortgage servicing rights was
$18.2 million
. Contractually specified mortgage servicing fees, late fees, and ancillary fees earned for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
were
$4.2 million
and
$6.1 million
, respectively, and are included in mortgage income in the Consolidated Statements of Income. Mortgage servicing fees, late fees or ancillary fees earned for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2014
were insignificant.
The amortization expense related to mortgage servicing rights, included as a reduction of mortgage income in the Consolidated Statements of Income, was
$1.1 million
for the
three
months ended
June 30, 2015
. For the
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
and
2014
the amortization expense related to mortgage servicing rights was
$2.0 million
and
$164 thousand
, respectively. Amortization expense included a reversal of
$909 thousand
and
$847 thousand
for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
.
No
net valuation allowance impairment was recorded for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2014
.
Valuation of mortgage servicing rights is performed using a pooling methodology. Similar loans are pooled together and evaluated on a discounted earnings basis to determine the present value of future earnings. Key economic assumptions used to value mortgage servicing rights as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
were as follows:
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
Discount rate - conventional fixed loans
7.35
%
7.20
%
Discount rate - all loans excluding conventional fixed loans
9.35
%
9.20
%
Weighted average constant prepayment rate
13.24
%
14.25
%
Weighted average cost to service a loan
$
56.61
$
56.02
NOTE I
- REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS
We utilize securities sold under agreements to repurchase to facilitate the needs of our customers and secure long-term funding needs. Repurchase agreements are transactions whereby we offer to sell to a counterparty an undivided interest in an eligible security at an agreed upon purchase price, and which obligates BancShares to repurchase the security on an agreed upon date at an agreed upon repurchase price plus interest at an agreed upon rate. Securities sold under agreements to repurchase are recorded at the amount of cash received in connection with the transaction and are reflected as short-term borrowings on the Consolidated Balance Sheets.
We monitor collateral levels on a continuous basis and maintain records of each transaction specifically describing the applicable security and the counterparty’s fractional interest in that security, and we segregate the security from its general assets in accordance with regulations governing custodial holdings of securities. The primary risk with our repurchase agreements is market risk
34
Table of Contents
associated with the investments securing the transactions, as we may be required to provide additional collateral based on fair value changes of the underlying investments. Securities pledged as collateral under repurchase agreements are maintained with our safekeeping agents. The carrying value of available for sale investment securities pledged as collateral under repurchase agreements totaled
$869.0 million
and
$418.3 million
at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, respectively.
The remaining contractual maturity of the securities sold under agreements to repurchase by class of collateral pledged included in short-term borrowings in the Consolidated Balance Sheets as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
is presented in the following tables.
June 30, 2015
Remaining Contractual Maturity of the Agreements
(Dollars in thousands)
Overnight and continuous
Up to 30 Days
30-90 Days
Greater than 90 Days
Total
Repurchase agreements
U.S. Treasury
$
710,674
$
—
$
—
$
23,092
$
733,766
Government agency
—
—
—
6,908
6,908
Total borrowings
$
710,674
$
—
$
—
$
30,000
$
740,674
Gross amount of recognized liabilities for repurchase agreements
$
740,674
December 31, 2014
Remaining Contractual Maturity of the Agreements
Overnight and continuous
Up to 30 Days
30-90 Days
Greater than 90 Days
Total
Repurchase agreements
U.S. Treasury
$
162,924
$
—
$
—
$
23,086
$
186,010
Government agency
—
—
—
6,914
6,914
Mortgage-backed securities
131,501
—
—
—
131,501
Total borrowings
$
294,425
$
—
$
—
$
30,000
$
324,425
Gross amount of recognized liabilities for repurchase agreements
$
324,425
NOTE J - ESTIMATED FAIR VALUES
Fair value estimates are intended to represent the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants as of the measurement date. Where there is no active market for a financial instrument, BancShares has made estimates using discounted cash flows or other valuation techniques. Inputs to these valuation methods are subjective in nature, involve uncertainties and require significant judgment and therefore cannot be determined with precision. Accordingly, the derived fair value estimates presented below are not necessarily indicative of the amounts BancShares could realize in a current market exchange.
ASC 820,
Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures
, indicates that assets and liabilities are recorded at fair value according to a fair value hierarchy comprised of three levels. The levels are based on the markets in which the assets and liabilities are traded and the reliability of the assumptions used to determine fair value. The level within the fair value hierarchy for an asset or liability is based on the highest level of input that is significant to the fair value measurement (with level 1 considered highest and level 3 considered lowest). A brief description of each level follows:
•
Level 1 values are based on quoted prices for identical instruments in active markets.
•
Level 2 values are based on quoted prices for similar instruments in active markets, quoted prices for identical or similar instruments in markets that are not active and model-based valuation techniques for which all significant assumptions are observable in the market.
•
Level 3 values are generated from model-based techniques that use at least one significant assumption not observable in the market. These unobservable assumptions reflect estimates that market participants would use in pricing the asset or liability. Valuation techniques include the use of discounted cash flow models and similar techniques.
Valuation adjustments, such as those pertaining to counterparty and BancShares' own credit quality and liquidity, may be necessary to ensure that assets and liabilities are recorded at fair value. Credit valuation adjustments are made when market pricing does not accurately reflect the counterparty's credit quality. As determined by BancShares management, liquidity
35
Table of Contents
valuation adjustments may be made to the fair value of certain assets to reflect the uncertainty in the pricing and trading of the instruments when we are unable to observe recent market transactions for identical or similar instruments.
BancShares management reviews any changes to its valuation methodologies to ensure they are appropriate and justified, and refines valuation methodologies as more market-based data becomes available. Transfers between levels of the fair value hierarchy are recognized at the end of the reporting period.
The methodologies used to estimate the fair value of financial assets and financial liabilities are discussed below:
Investment securities available for sale
. U.S.Treasury, government agency, mortgage-backed securities, municipal securities and trust preferred securities are generally measured at fair value using a third party pricing service or recent comparable market transactions in similar or identical securities and are classified as level 2 instruments.
Loans held for sale.
Certain residential real estate loans are originated to be sold to investors, which are carried at fair value as BancShares elected the fair value option on loans held for sale in 2014. The fair value is based on quoted market prices for similar types of loans. Accordingly, the inputs used to calculate fair value of residential real estate loans held for sale are classified as level 2 inputs.
Net loans and leases (PCI and Non-PCI).
Fair value is estimated based on discounted future cash flows using the current interest rates at which loans with similar terms would be made to borrowers of similar credit quality. An additional valuation adjustment is made for liquidity. The inputs used in the fair value measurements for loans and leases are considered level 3 inputs.
FHLB stock
. The carrying amount of FHLB stock is a reasonable estimate of fair value as these securities are not readily marketable and are evaluated for impairment based on the ultimate recoverability of the par value. BancShares considers positive and negative evidence, including the profitability and asset quality of the issuer, dividend payment history and recent redemption experience, when determining the ultimate recoverability of the par value. BancShares believes its investment in FHLB stock is ultimately recoverable at par. The inputs used in the fair value measurement for the FHLB stock are considered level 2 inputs.
Preferred stock issued under the TARP program and other acquired financial assets
. Preferred securities issued under the Troubled Asset Recovery Program are recorded at cost and are evaluated quarterly for impairment based on the ultimate recoverability of the purchase price. The fair value of these securities is derived from a third-party proprietary model that is considered to be a level 3 input. Other acquired financial assets represent acquired investments in various entities for Community Reinvestment Act and correspondent banking purposes. These investments were recorded at fair value at acquisition date based on level 2 inputs.
Mortgage servicing rights.
Mortgage servicing rights are carried at the lower of amortized cost or market and are, therefore, carried at fair value only when fair value is less than the asset cost. The fair value of mortgage servicing rights is performed using a pooling methodology. Similar loans are pooled together and a model that relies on discount rates, estimates of prepayment rates and the weighted average cost to service the loans is used to determine the fair value. The inputs used in the fair value measurement for mortgage servicing rights are considered level 3 inputs.
Deposits.
For non-time deposits, carrying value is a reasonable estimate of fair value. The fair value of time deposits is estimated by discounting future cash flows using the interest rates currently offered for deposits of similar remaining maturities. The inputs used in the fair value measurement for deposits are considered level 2 inputs.
Long-term obligations.
For fixed rate trust preferred securities, the fair values are determined based on recent trades of the actual security if available. For other long-term obligations, fair values are estimated by discounting future cash flows using current interest rates for similar financial instruments. The inputs used in the fair value measurement for long-term obligations are considered level 2 inputs.
Payable to the FDIC for loss share agreements.
The fair value of the payable to the FDIC for loss share agreements is determined by the projected cash flows based on expected payments to the FDIC in accordance with the loss share agreements. Cash flows are discounted using current discount rates to reflect the timing of the estimated amounts due to the FDIC. The inputs used in the fair value measurement for the payable to the FDIC are considered level 3 inputs.
Interest rate swap
. Under the terms of the existing cash flow hedge, BancShares pays a fixed payment to the counterparty in exchange for receipt of a variable payment that is determined based on the three-month LIBOR rate. The fair value of the cash
36
Table of Contents
flow hedge is, therefore, based on projected LIBOR rates for the duration of the hedge, values that, while observable in the market, are subject to adjustment due to pricing considerations for the specific instrument. The inputs used in the fair value measurement of the interest rate swap are considered level 2 inputs.
Off-balance-sheet commitments and contingencies.
Carrying amounts are reasonable estimates of the fair values for such financial instruments. Carrying amounts include unamortized fee income and, in some cases, reserves for any credit losses from those financial instruments. These amounts are not material to BancShares' financial position.
For all other financial assets and financial liabilities, the carrying value is a reasonable estimate of the fair value as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
. The carrying value and fair value for these assets and liabilities are equivalent because they are relatively short term in nature and there is no interest rate or credit risk that would cause the fair value to differ from the carrying value.
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
Carrying value
Fair value
Carrying value
Fair value
Cash and due from banks
$
514,404
$
514,404
$
604,182
$
604,182
Overnight investments
1,703,341
1,703,341
1,724,919
1,724,919
Investment securities available for sale
7,350,194
7,350,194
7,171,917
7,171,917
Investment securities held to maturity
351
365
518
544
Loans held for sale
85,040
85,040
63,696
63,696
Net loans and leases
19,311,868
18,755,676
18,564,999
18,046,497
Receivable from the FDIC for loss share agreements
(1)
5,808
5,808
28,701
18,218
Income earned not collected
66,729
66,729
57,254
57,254
Federal Home Loan Bank stock
27,736
27,736
39,113
39,113
Preferred stock and other acquired financial assets
3,016
3,061
13,689
14,708
Mortgage servicing rights
18,162
20,078
16,688
16,736
Deposits
26,511,896
25,915,474
25,678,577
25,164,683
Short-term borrowings
723,225
723,225
987,184
987,184
Long-term obligations
475,568
493,715
351,320
367,732
Payable to the FDIC for loss share agreements
122,038
128,049
116,535
122,168
Accrued interest payable
5,835
5,835
8,194
8,194
Interest rate swap
3,052
3,052
4,337
4,337
(1)
At
June 30, 2015
, the carrying value of the FDIC receivable approximates the fair value due to the short term nature of the majority of loss share agreements. At
December 31, 2014
, the fair value of the FDIC receivable is estimated based on discounted future cash flows using current discount rates and excludes receivable related to accretable yield to be amortized in prospective periods.
Among BancShares’ assets and liabilities, investment securities available for sale, loans held for sale and interest rate swaps accounted for as cash flow hedges are reported at their fair values on a recurring basis. Certain other assets are adjusted to their fair value on a nonrecurring basis, including impaired loans, OREO, goodwill, which is periodically tested for impairment and mortgage servicing rights, which are carried at the lower of amortized cost or market. Non-impaired loans held for investment, deposits, short-term borrowings and long-term obligations are not reported at fair value.
37
Table of Contents
For assets and liabilities carried at fair value on a recurring basis, the following table provides fair value information as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
.
June 30, 2015
Fair value measurements using:
(Dollars in thousands)
Fair value
Level 1 inputs
Level 2 inputs
Level 3 inputs
Assets measured at fair value
Investment securities available for sale
U.S. Treasury
$
2,206,859
$
—
$
2,206,859
$
—
Government agency
776,244
—
776,244
—
Mortgage-backed securities
4,367,091
—
4,367,091
—
Total investment securities available for sale
7,350,194
—
7,350,194
—
Loans held for sale
85,040
—
85,040
—
Liabilities measured at fair value
Interest rate swaps accounted for as cash flow hedges
$
3,052
$
—
$
3,052
$
—
December 31, 2014
Fair value measurements using:
Fair value
Level 1 inputs
Level 2 inputs
Level 3 inputs
Assets measured at fair value
Investment securities available for sale
U.S. Treasury
$
2,629,670
$
—
$
2,629,670
$
—
Government agency
908,817
—
908,817
—
Mortgage-backed securities
3,633,304
—
3,633,304
—
Municipal securities
126
—
126
—
Total investment securities available for sale
7,171,917
—
7,171,917
—
Loans held for sale
63,696
—
63,696
—
Liabilities measured at fair value
Interest rate swaps accounted for as cash flow hedges
$
4,337
$
—
$
4,337
$
—
There were
no
transfers between levels during the
six months ended June 30, 2015
.
Fair Value Option
Beginning in the fourth quarter of 2014, BancShares elected the fair value option for residential real estate loans held for sale. This election reduces certain timing differences in the Consolidated Statement of Income and better aligns with the management of the portfolio from a business perspective.
The following table summarizes the difference between the aggregate fair value and the aggregate unpaid principal balance for residential real estate loans held for sale measured at fair value as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
.
June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
Fair Value
Aggregate Unpaid Principal Balance
Difference
Loans held for sale
$
85,040
$
84,257
$
783
December 31, 2014
Fair Value
Aggregate Unpaid Principal Balance
Difference
Loans held for sale
$
63,696
$
62,996
$
700
No loans held for sale were 90 or more days past due or on nonaccrual status as of
June 30, 2015
or
December 31, 2014
.
The changes in fair value for residential real estate loans held for sale for which we elected the fair value option are included in the table below for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
.
Three months ended June 30, 2015
Six months ended June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
Gains(Losses) From Fair Value Changes
Gains(Losses) From Fair Value Changes
Loans held for sale
$
(461
)
$
(31
)
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Table of Contents
The changes in fair value in the table above are recorded as a component of mortgage income on the Consolidated Statements of Income.
Certain other assets are adjusted to their fair value on a nonrecurring basis, including impaired loans, OREO, goodwill, which are periodically tested for impairment, and mortgage servicing rights, which are carried at the lower of amortized cost or market. Non-impaired loans held for investment, deposits, short-term borrowings and long-term obligations are not reported at fair value.
Impaired loans are deemed to be at fair value if an associated allowance or current period charge-off has been recorded. The value of impaired loans is determined by either collateral valuations or discounted present value of the expected cash flow calculations. Collateral values are determined using appraisals or other third-party value estimates of the subject property with discounts generally between 10 and 14 percent applied for estimated holding and selling costs and other external factors that may impact the marketability of the property. Impaired loans are assigned to an asset manager and monitored monthly for significant changes since the last valuation date. If significant changes are noted, the asset manager orders a new valuation or adjusts the valuation accordingly. Expected cash flows are determined using expected payment information at the individual loan level, discounted using the effective interest rate. The effective interest rate generally ranges between 2 and 16 percent.
OREO is measured and reported at fair value using collateral valuations. Collateral values are determined using appraisals or other third-party value estimates of the subject property with discounts generally between 10 and 14 percent applied for estimated holding and selling costs and other external factors that may impact the marketability of the property. Changes to the value of the assets between scheduled valuation dates are monitored through continued communication with brokers and monthly reviews by the asset manager assigned to each asset. The asset manager uses the information gathered from brokers and other market sources to identify any significant changes in the market or the subject property as they occur. Valuations are then adjusted or new appraisals are ordered to ensure the reported values reflect the most current information. OREO that has been acquired or written down in the current year is deemed to be at fair value and included in the table below.
Mortgage servicing rights are carried at the lower of cost or market and are, therefore, carried at fair value only when fair value is less than the amortized asset cost. The fair value of mortgage servicing rights is performed using a pooling methodology. Similar loans are pooled together and a discounted cash flow model, which takes into consideration discount rates, prepayment rates, and the weighted average cost to service the loans, is used to determine the fair value. See Note H for further information on the discount rates, prepayment rates and the weighted average cost to service the loans.
For financial assets and liabilities carried at fair value on a nonrecurring basis, the following table provides fair value information as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
.
June 30, 2015
Fair value measurements using:
(Dollars in thousands)
Fair value
Level 1 inputs
Level 2 inputs
Level 3 inputs
Impaired loans
$
70,446
$
—
$
—
$
70,446
Other real estate not covered under loss share agreements remeasured during current year
22,644
—
—
22,644
Other real estate covered under loss share agreements remeasured during current year
3,749
—
—
3,749
Mortgage servicing rights
221
—
—
221
December 31, 2014
Fair value measurements using:
Fair value
Level 1 inputs
Level 2 inputs
Level 3 inputs
Impaired loans
$
73,170
$
—
$
—
$
73,170
Other real estate not covered under loss share agreements remeasured during current year
40,714
—
—
40,714
Other real estate covered under loss share agreements remeasured during current year
17,664
—
—
17,664
Mortgage servicing rights
13,562
—
—
13,562
No
financial liabilities were carried at fair value on a nonrecurring basis as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
.
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Table of Contents
NOTE K - EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS
BancShares sponsors noncontributory defined benefit pension plans for its qualifying employees (BancShares Plan) and legacy Bancorporation employees (Bancorporation Plan). Net periodic benefit cost is a component of employee benefits expense.
BancShares Plan
For the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
and
2014
, the components of net periodic benefit cost are as follows:
Three months ended June 30
Six months ended June 30
(Dollars in thousands)
2015
2014
2015
2014
Service cost
$
3,603
$
2,785
$
7,203
$
6,166
Interest cost
6,750
6,251
13,498
12,807
Expected return on assets
(8,299
)
(8,340
)
(16,594
)
(16,152
)
Amortization of prior service cost
52
52
105
105
Amortization of net actuarial loss
2,835
1,546
5,668
3,092
Net periodic benefit cost
$
4,941
$
2,294
$
9,880
$
6,018
Bancorporation Plan
For the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
, the components of net periodic benefit cost are as follows:
Three months ended June 30
Six months ended June 30
(Dollars in thousands)
2015
2015
Service cost
$
932
$
1,865
Interest cost
1,627
3,255
Expected return on assets
(2,870
)
(5,739
)
Amortization of prior service cost
—
—
Amortization of net actuarial loss
—
—
Net periodic benefit cost
$
(311
)
$
(619
)
No contributions were made during the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
to the BancShares or Bancorporation pension plans. BancShares does not expect to make any contributions to either of the defined benefit pension plans during
2015
.
NOTE L
- COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
To meet the financing needs of its customers, BancShares and its subsidiaries have financial instruments with off-balance sheet risk. These financial instruments include commitments to extend credit, standby letters of credit and recourse obligations on mortgage loans sold. These instruments involve elements of credit, interest rate or liquidity risk.
Commitments to extend credit are legally binding agreements to lend to customers. Commitments generally have fixed expiration dates or other termination clauses and may require payment of fees. Since many of the commitments are expected to expire without being drawn upon, the total commitment amounts do not necessarily represent future liquidity requirements. Established credit standards control the credit risk exposure associated with these commitments. In some cases, BancShares requires that collateral be pledged to secure the commitment, including cash deposits, securities and other assets. At
June 30, 2015
, BancShares had unused commitments totaling
$7.72 billion
, compared to
$7.19 billion
at
December 31, 2014
. Total unfunded commitments relating to investments in affordable housing projects totaled
$32.9 million
and
$16.8 million
at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, respectively, and are included in other liabilities on BancShares' Consolidated Balance Sheets.
Standby letters of credit are commitments guaranteeing performance of a customer to a third party. Those commitments are primarily issued to support public and private borrowing arrangements. To mitigate its risk, BancShares’ follows its credit policies in the issuance of standby letters of credit. At
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, BancShares had standby letters of credit amounting to
$77.6 million
and
$77.4 million
, respectively. The credit risk related to the issuance of these letters of credit is essentially the same as that involved in extending loans to clients and, therefore, these letters of credit are collateralized when necessary.
Pursuant to standard representations and warranties relating to residential mortgage loan sales, contingent obligations exist for various events that may occur following the loan sale. If underwriting or documentation deficiencies are discovered at any point in the life of the loan or if the loan becomes nonperforming within
120 days
of its sale, the investor may require
40
Table of Contents
BancShares to repurchase the loan or to repay a portion of the sale proceeds. Other liabilities included reserves of
$3.1 million
and
$3.2 million
as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, respectively, for estimated losses arising from these standard representation and warranty provisions.
BancShares has recorded a receivable from the FDIC totaling
$5.8 million
and
$28.7 million
as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, respectively, for the expected reimbursement of losses on assets covered under the various loss share agreements. These loss share agreements impose certain obligations on us that, in the event of noncompliance, could result in the delay or disallowance of some or all of our rights under those agreements. Requests for reimbursement are subject to FDIC review and may be delayed or disallowed for noncompliance. The loss share agreements are subject to interpretation by both the FDIC and BancShares, and disagreements may arise regarding coverage of losses, expenses and contingencies.
The loss share agreements for five FDIC-assisted transactions include provisions related to contingent payments that may be owed to the FDIC at the termination of the agreements (clawback liability)
.
The clawback liability represents a payment by BancShares to the FDIC if actual cumulative losses on acquired covered assets are lower than the cumulative losses originally estimated by the FDIC at the time of acquisition. The clawback liability is estimated by discounting estimated future payments and is recorded in the Consolidated Balance Sheets as a payable to the FDIC under the relevant loss share agreements. As of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, the estimated clawback liability was
$122.0 million
and
$116.5 million
, respectively.
BancShares and various subsidiaries have been named as defendants in legal actions arising from their normal business activities in which damages in various amounts are claimed. BancShares is also exposed to litigation risk relating to the prior business activities of banks from which assets were acquired and liabilities assumed in the various FDIC-assisted transactions. Although the amount of any ultimate liability with respect to such matters cannot be determined, in the opinion of management, any such liability will not have a material effect on BancShares’ consolidated financial statements.
NOTE M - DERIVATIVES
41
Table of Contents
At
June 30, 2015
, BancShares had an interest rate swap entered into during 2011 that qualifies as a cash flow hedge under GAAP. For all periods presented, the fair value of the outstanding derivative is included in other liabilities in the consolidated balance sheets, and the net change in fair value is included in the consolidated statements of cash flows under the caption net change in other liabilities.
The following table provides the notional amount of the interest rate swap and the fair value of the liability as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
.
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
Notional amount
Estimated fair value of liability
Notional amount
Estimated fair value of liability
2011 interest rate swap hedging variable rate exposure on trust preferred securities 2011-2016
$
93,500
$
3,052
$
93,500
$
4,337
The interest rate swap is used for interest rate risk management purposes and converts variable-rate exposure on outstanding debt to a fixed rate. The interest rate swap has a notional amount of
$93.5 million
, representing the amount of variable rate trust preferred capital securities issued during 2006 and still outstanding at the swap inception date. The interest rate swap hedges interest payments through June 2016 and requires fixed-rate payments by BancShares at
5.50 percent
in exchange for variable-rate payments of
175
basis points above the three-month LIBOR, which is equal to the interest paid to the holders of the trust preferred capital securities. Settlement of the swap occurs quarterly. As of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, collateral with a fair value of
$2.0 million
and
$7.0 million
, respectively, was pledged to secure the existing obligation under the interest rate swap.
For cash flow hedges, the effective portion of the gain or loss due to changes in the fair value of the derivative hedging instrument is included in other comprehensive income, while the ineffective portion, representing the excess of the cumulative change in the fair value of the derivative over the cumulative change in expected future discounted cash flows on the hedged transaction, is recorded in the consolidated statement of income. BancShares’ interest rate swap has been fully effective since inception. Therefore, changes in the fair value of the interest rate swap have had no impact on net income. For the
three
months ended
June 30, 2015
and
2014
, BancShares recognized interest expense of
$830 thousand
and
$831 thousand
, respectively, resulting from incremental interest paid to the interest rate swap counterparty, none of which related to ineffectiveness. For the
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
and
2014
, BancShares recognized interest expense of
$1.7 million
during both periods, resulting from incremental interest paid to the interest swap counterparty, none of which related to ineffectiveness.
BancShares monitors the credit risk of the interest rate swap counterparty.
NOTE N - ACCUMULATED OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) included the following as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
:
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
Accumulated
other
comprehensive
income (loss)
Deferred
tax expense
(benefit)
Accumulated
other
comprehensive
income (loss),
net of tax
Accumulated
other
comprehensive
income (loss)
Deferred
tax expense
(benefit)
Accumulated
other
comprehensive
income (loss),
net of tax
Unrealized gains on investment securities available for sale, net
$
4,259
$
1,655
$
2,604
$
8,343
$
3,245
$
5,098
Unrealized loss on cash flow hedge
(3,052
)
(1,177
)
(1,875
)
(4,337
)
(1,673
)
(2,664
)
Funded status of defined benefit plan
(84,923
)
(33,035
)
(51,888
)
(90,696
)
(35,281
)
(55,415
)
Total
$
(83,716
)
$
(32,557
)
$
(51,159
)
$
(86,690
)
$
(33,709
)
$
(52,981
)
42
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The following table highlights changes in accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) by component for the
three
and
six months ended June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
:
Three months ended June 30, 2015
(Dollars in thousands)
Unrealized gains (losses) on available for sale securities
1
Gains (losses) on cash flow hedges
1
Defined benefit pension items
1
Total
Beginning balance
$
20,551
$
(2,310
)
$
(53,652
)
$
(35,411
)
Other comprehensive (loss) income before reclassifications
(17,874
)
435
—
(17,439
)
Amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
(73
)
—
1,764
1,691
Net current period other comprehensive (loss) income
(17,947
)
435
1,764
(15,748
)
Ending balance
$
2,604
$
(1,875
)
$
(51,888
)
$
(51,159
)
Three months ended June 30, 2014
Unrealized gains (losses) on available for sale securities
1
Gains (losses) on cash flow hedges
1
Defined benefit pension items
1
Total
Beginning balance
$
(2,835
)
$
(3,993
)
$
(9,766
)
$
(16,594
)
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications
19,325
350
—
19,675
Amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
—
—
976
976
Net current period other comprehensive income
19,325
350
976
20,651
Ending balance
$
16,490
$
(3,643
)
$
(8,790
)
$
4,057
Six months ended June 30, 2015
Unrealized gains (losses) on available for sale securities
1
Gains (losses) on cash flow hedges
1
Defined benefit pension items
1
Total
Beginning balance
$
5,098
$
(2,664
)
$
(55,415
)
$
(52,981
)
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications
728
789
—
1,517
Amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
(3,222
)
—
3,527
305
Net current period other comprehensive (loss) income
(2,494
)
789
3,527
1,822
Ending balance
$
2,604
$
(1,875
)
$
(51,888
)
$
(51,159
)
Six months ended June 30, 2014
Unrealized gains (losses) on available for sale securities
1
Gains (losses) on cash flow hedges
1
Defined benefit pension items
1
Total
Beginning balance
$
(10,091
)
$
(4,434
)
$
(10,743
)
$
(25,268
)
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications
26,581
791
—
27,372
Amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
—
—
1,953
1,953
Net current period other comprehensive income
26,581
791
1,953
29,325
Ending balance
$
16,490
$
(3,643
)
$
(8,790
)
$
4,057
1
All amounts are net of tax. Amounts in parentheses indicate debits.
43
Table of Contents
The following table presents the amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) and the line item affected in the statement where net income is presented for the
six months ended June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
:
(Dollars in thousands)
Three months ended June 30, 2015
Details about accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
1
Affected line item in the statement where net income is presented
Unrealized gains and losses on available for sale securities
$
147
Securities gains
(74
)
Income taxes
$
73
Net income
Amortization of defined benefit pension items
Prior service costs
$
(52
)
Employee benefits
Actuarial losses
(2,835
)
Employee benefits
(2,887
)
Employee benefits
1,123
Income taxes
$
(1,764
)
Net income
Total reclassifications for the period
$
(1,691
)
Three months ended June 30, 2014
Details about accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
1
Affected line item in the statement where net income is presented
Amortization of defined benefit pension items
Prior service costs
$
(52
)
Employee benefits
Actuarial losses
(1,546
)
Employee benefits
(1,598
)
Employee benefits
622
Income taxes
$
(976
)
Net income
Total reclassifications for the period
$
(976
)
Six months ended June 30, 2015
Details about accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
1
Affected line item in the statement where net income is presented
Unrealized gains and losses on available for sale securities
$
5,273
Securities gains
(2,051
)
Income taxes
$
3,222
Net income
Amortization of defined benefit pension items
Prior service costs
$
(105
)
Employee benefits
Actuarial losses
(5,668
)
Employee benefits
(5,773
)
Employee benefits
2,246
Income taxes
$
(3,527
)
Net income
Total reclassifications for the period
$
(305
)
Six months ended June 30, 2014
Details about accumulated other comprehensive icnome (loss)
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
1
Affected line item in the statement where net income is presented
Amortization of defined benefit pension items
Prior service costs
$
(105
)
Employee benefits
Actuarial losses
(3,092
)
Employee benefits
(3,197
)
Employee benefits
1,244
Income taxes
$
(1,953
)
Net income
Total reclassifications for the period
$
(1,953
)
1
Amounts in parentheses indicate debits to profit/loss.
44
Table of Contents
Item 2.
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
INTRODUCTION
Management’s discussion and analysis ("MD&A") of earnings and related financial data are presented to assist in understanding the financial condition and results of operations of First Citizens BancShares, Inc. and Subsidiaries (BancShares). This discussion and analysis should be read in conjunction with the unaudited consolidated financial statements and related notes presented within this report along with our financial statements and related MD&A of financial condition and results of operations included in our 2014 Annual Report on Form 10-K. In the MD&A, asset yields and net interest margin are presented on a fully taxable equivalent ("FTE") basis. Intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated. Although certain amounts for prior years have been reclassified to conform to statement presentations for
2015
, the reclassifications had no material effect on shareholders’ equity or net income as previously reported. Unless otherwise noted, the terms "we," "us" and "BancShares" refer to the consolidated financial position and consolidated results of operations for BancShares.
BancShares is a financial holding company headquartered in Raleigh, North Carolina, that offers full-service banking through its wholly-owned banking subsidiary, First-Citizens Bank & Trust Company ("FCB"). FCB is a state-chartered bank organized under the laws of the state of North Carolina. As of
August 5, 2015
, FCB operated
571
branches in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, Tennessee, Washington, California, Florida, Georgia, Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Oregon, Colorado, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, and Washington, DC.
BancShares’ earnings and cash flows are primarily derived from its commercial banking activities. We gather deposits from retail and commercial customers and also secure funding through various non-deposit sources. We invest the liquidity generated from these funding sources in interest-earning assets, including loans and leases, investment securities and overnight investments. We also invest in bank premises, hardware, software, furniture and equipment used to conduct our commercial banking business. We provide treasury services products, cardholder and merchant services, wealth management services and various other products and services typically offered by commercial banks.
EXECUTIVE OVERVIEW
Recent Economic and Industry Developments
Various external factors influence the focus of our business efforts, and the results of our operations can change significantly based on those external factors. Based on the latest real gross domestic product ("GDP") information available, the Bureau of Economic Analysis’ advance estimate of
second quarter
2015
GDP indicated
growth of 2.3 percent, up from the 0.6 percent growth during the
first
quarter of
2015
. The growth in real GDP during the
second quarter
was primarily due to consumer spending, exports, residential fixed investments, and state and local government spending, offset by negative contributions from private inventory investments, nonresidential fixed investments and government spending.
Second quarter 2015 results indicate continuing job growth as the unemployment rate fell to 5.3 percent, the lowest rate since April 2008. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, the economy added 664,000 new nonfarm payroll jobs during the second quarter of 2015 while average hourly wages remained flat. Housing activity continues to improve as a result of increased demand fueled by historically low mortgage rates and solid job growth. Purchases of homes increased to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 482,000 homes in June 2015, in comparison to the June 2014 estimate of 408,000 homes.
The Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee ("FOMC") indicated in the second quarter that economic activity has been expanding moderately after limited growth in first quarter with household spending rising moderately and the housing sector showing improvement. The FOMC stated it will maintain its target range for the federal funds rate and reiterated it would assess progress, both realized and expected, towards its objectives of maximum employment and 2.0 percent inflation. The FOMC anticipates that, even after employment and inflation are near its target objectives, economic conditions may warrant keeping the target federal funds rate below levels the FOMC views as normal in the longer run.
The trends in the banking industry are similar to those of the broader economy as shown in the latest national banking results from the
first
quarter of 2015. Strengthening loan growth helped increase revenues at most banks, as aggregate industry net income increased 6.9 percent compared to the
first
quarter of 2014. Growth in interest-earning assets contributed to an increase in net interest income compared to a year earlier, while higher trading revenue and income from sales and servicing of residential real estate loans contributed to an increase in noninterest income from the prior year. Across the industry, bank average net interest margin declined to 3.02 percent from 3.12 percent in the fourth quarter of 2014 and 3.16 percent in first quarter 2014, as higher-yielding assets matured and were replaced by lower-yielding investments in an environment of low interest rates. Despite net interest margin declines, 62.7 percent of banks reported year-over-year growth in quarterly
45
Table of Contents
earnings. Credit improvement remains key to earnings growth. Net charge-offs and delinquent loans and lease balances continue to decline, with reductions across all major loan categories except loans to commercial and industrial borrowers.
Other industry trends noted based on review of
first
quarter 2015 data, in comparison to the same quarter in 2014, unless otherwise specified, include the following:
•
Loan loss provisions increased 9.9 percent, while the quarterly net charge-offs posted a year-over-year decline for the 19th consecutive quarter. The largest improvement in net charge-offs occurred in home equity lines of credit and credit cards.
•
The amount of noncurrent loan and lease balances (90 days or more past due or in nonaccrual status) fell for the 20th quarter in a row. The percentage of loans and leases that were noncurrent at the end of the first quarter was 1.83 percent, the lowest level since the middle of 2008.
•
Loan-loss reserves fell for the 20th consecutive quarter. Despite the decline in reserves, the average coverage ratio of reserves to noncurrent loans improved for a 10th consecutive quarter as a result of the decline in noncurrent loan balances.
•
Total loan and lease balances rose by 0.6 percent, showing increases in commercial and industrial loans, real estate loans secured by non-farm nonresidential real estate properties and residential mortgage loans.
Financial Performance Highlights for Second Quarter 2015
BancShares' consolidated net income during the
second
quarter of
2015
was
$44.5 million
, or
$3.71
per share, compared to
$67.2 million
, or
$5.59
per share, in the
first
quarter of
2015
and
$26.7 million
, or
$2.77
per share in the
second
quarter of
2014
. The annualized returns on average assets and equity were
0.58 percent
and
6.42 percent
, respectively, during the
second
quarter of
2015
, compared to
0.90 percent
and
10.00 percent
during the
first
quarter of
2015
, and
0.49 percent
and
5.05 percent
during the
second
quarter of
2014
. Net interest margin for the
second
quarter of
2015
was
3.31
percent, compared to
3.18
percent for the
first
quarter of
2015
and
3.29
percent for the
second
quarter of the prior year. The impact of lending strategic initiatives and improved economic stability have contributed to organic loan growth and improved credit quality in comparison to the
first
quarter of
2015
and
second
quarter of
2014
.
For the first
six
months of
2015
, net income was
$111.7 million
, or
$9.30
per share, compared to
$49.2 million
, or
$5.11
per share, reported for the same period of
2014
. Annualized returns on average assets and average equity for the first
six
months of
2015
were
0.74 percent
and
8.19 percent
, respectively, compared to
0.45 percent
and
4.71 percent
, respectively, for the same period a year earlier.
Earnings for the first quarter of
2015
include an acquisition gain of
$42.9 million
recognized in connection with the acquisition of Capitol City Bank & Trust (CCBT) of Atlanta, Georgia. During the second quarter of 2015, adjustments were made to the CCBT gain based on additional information regarding the acquisition date fair values primarily related to updated collateral valuations. The CCBT gain originally recorded in the first quarter includes an additional $5.4 million identified during the second quarter and retroactively reported in first quarter 2015 financial results. The total after-tax impact of the gain was
$26.2 million
. For up to one year following the closing date of the CCBT acquisition, fair values are subject to refinement. The balances from the CCBT acquisition at
June 30, 2015
consisted of
$145.1 million
of loans and leases and
$137.1 million
of deposits.
When comparing net income for the quarter and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
, to the same periods of 2014, the increases were primarily driven by the impact of the First Citizens Bancorporation, Inc. (Bancorporation) merger and the FDIC-assisted acquisition of CCBT, which occurred on October 1, 2014 and February 13, 2015, respectively. The Bancorporation acquisition added
$2.01 billion
of investment securities,
$4.49 billion
of loans and leases, and
$7.17 billion
of deposits as of the acquisition date. The impact of the acquisitions is reflected in Bancshares' financial results from the respective acquisition dates. As such, the following discussion will focus on sequential quarter comparisons between the
second quarter
of
2015
and
first
quarter of
2015
, both of which include operating results from the Bancorporation and CCBT acquisitions.
Key drivers of financial performance for the
second
quarter of
2015
include:
•
Loan growth continued during the
second quarter
of
2015
, as the net increase in total loans was
$423.2 million
, reflecting strong originated portfolio growth of
$552.5 million
. Total purchased-credit impaired (PCI) loans declined, down
$129.3 million
, due to payoffs and resolution of problem assets.
•
Nonperforming assets decreased
$27.6 million
, or by
15.1 percent
, due to a
$16.7 million
decline in other real estate owned (OREO) and a
$10.9 million
decline in nonaccrual loans as credit quality continues to improve.
•
Yield on the investment portfolio continues to improve, while borrowing and deposit funding costs remain low and consistent with the prior quarter.
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Table of Contents
•
The allowance for loan and lease losses as a percentage of total loans and leases ended the quarter at
1.07 percent
, compared to
1.08 percent
at
March 31, 2015
. Credit quality improvements in the originated loan portfolio resulted in a slight decline in the allowance ratio.
•
BancShares' liquidity position was strong with
$4.15 billion
in free liquidity at
June 30, 2015
.
•
BancShares remained well-capitalized under Basel III capital requirements with a leverage capital ratio of
8.92 percent
, Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of
12.66 percent
, common equity Tier 1 ratio of
12.52
and total risk-based capital ratio of
14.10 percent
at
June 30, 2015
.
47
Table of Contents
Table 1
Selected Quarterly Data
2015
2014
Six months ended June 30
Second
First
Fourth
Third
Second
(Dollars in thousands, except share data)
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
2015
2014
SUMMARY OF OPERATIONS
Interest income
$
246,013
$
231,510
$
232,122
$
177,621
$
177,311
$
477,523
$
350,705
Interest expense
11,363
11,345
14,876
11,399
11,613
22,708
24,076
Net interest income
234,650
220,165
217,246
166,222
165,698
454,815
326,629
Provision (credit) for loan and lease losses
7,719
5,792
8,305
1,537
(7,299
)
13,511
(9,202
)
Net interest income after provision (credit) for loan and lease losses
226,931
214,373
208,941
164,685
172,997
441,304
335,831
Gains on acquisitions
—
42,930
—
—
—
42,930
—
Noninterest income excluding gains on acquisitions
(1)
107,450
107,823
132,924
78,599
66,589
215,273
128,903
Noninterest expense
264,691
258,166
254,429
201,810
199,020
522,857
390,050
Income before income taxes
(1)
69,690
106,960
87,436
41,474
40,566
176,650
74,684
Income taxes
(1)
25,168
39,802
24,540
14,973
13,880
64,970
25,519
Net income
(1)
$
44,522
$
67,158
$
62,896
$
26,501
$
26,686
$
111,680
$
49,165
Net interest income, taxable equivalent
$
236,456
$
221,452
$
218,436
$
167,150
$
166,570
$
457,907
$
328,263
PER SHARE DATA
Net income
(1)
$
3.71
$
5.59
$
5.24
$
2.76
$
2.77
$
9.30
$
5.11
Cash dividends
0.30
0.30
0.30
0.30
0.30
0.60
0.60
Market price at period end (Class A)
263.04
259.69
252.79
216.63
245.00
263.04
245.00
Book value at period end
(1)
232.62
230.53
223.77
224.75
222.91
232.62
222.91
SELECTED PERIOD AVERAGE BALANCES
Total assets
(1)
$
30,835,749
$
30,414,322
$
30,376,207
$
22,092,940
$
22,017,501
$
30,626,200
$
21,942,854
Investment securities
7,149,691
6,889,752
7,110,799
5,616,730
5,629,467
7,020,440
5,618,157
Loans and leases (PCI and non-PCI)
19,354,823
18,922,028
18,538,553
13,670,217
13,566,612
19,139,621
13,513,580
Interest-earning assets
28,660,246
28,231,922
28,064,279
20,351,369
20,304,777
28,447,268
20,222,418
Deposits
26,342,821
25,833,068
25,851,672
18,506,778
18,561,927
26,089,355
18,527,311
Long-term obligations
473,434
460,713
404,363
313,695
398,615
467,109
449,428
Interest-bearing liabilities
18,933,611
19,171,958
19,011,554
13,836,025
14,020,480
19,052,128
14,104,388
Shareholders' equity
(1)
$
2,781,648
$
2,724,719
$
2,712,905
$
2,150,119
$
2,120,275
$
2,750,964
$
2,105,569
Shares outstanding
12,010,405
12,010,405
12,010,405
9,618,941
9,618,941
12,010,405
9,618,941
SELECTED PERIOD-END BALANCES
Total assets
(1)
$
30,896,855
$
30,862,932
$
30,075,113
$
21,937,665
$
22,057,876
$
30,896,855
$
22,057,876
Investment securities
7,350,545
7,045,550
7,172,435
5,648,701
5,538,859
7,350,545
5,538,859
Loans and leases:
PCI
1,123,239
1,252,545
1,186,498
996,280
1,109,933
1,123,239
1,109,933
Non-PCI
18,396,946
17,844,414
17,582,967
12,806,511
12,415,023
18,396,946
12,415,023
Deposits
26,511,896
26,300,830
25,678,577
18,406,941
18,556,758
26,511,896
18,556,758
Long-term obligations
475,568
468,180
351,320
313,768
314,529
475,568
314,529
Shareholders' equity
(1)
$
2,793,890
$
2,768,719
$
2,687,594
$
2,161,881
$
2,144,181
$
2,793,890
$
2,144,181
Shares outstanding
12,010,405
12,010,405
12,010,405
9,618,941
9,618,941
12,010,405
9,618,941
SELECTED RATIOS AND OTHER DATA
Rate of return on average assets (annualized)
(1)
0.58
%
0.90
%
0.82
%
0.48
%
0.49
%
0.74
%
0.45
%
Rate of return on average shareholders' equity (annualized)
(1)
6.42
10.00
9.20
4.89
5.05
8.19
4.71
Net yield on interest-earning assets (taxable equivalent)
3.31
3.18
3.09
3.26
3.29
3.24
3.27
Allowance for loan and lease losses to total loans and leases:
PCI
1.38
1.41
1.82
2.59
2.64
1.38
2.64
Non-PCI
1.05
1.05
1.04
1.37
1.43
1.05
1.43
Nonperforming assets to total loans and leases and other real estate at period end:
Covered
4.70
8.42
9.84
11.98
10.97
4.70
10.97
Noncovered
0.73
0.77
0.66
0.73
0.64
0.73
0.64
Total
0.79
0.95
0.91
1.13
1.29
0.79
1.29
Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio
(1)
12.66
12.92
13.61
14.23
14.58
12.66
14.58
Tier 1 common equity ratio
12.52
12.77
N/A
N/A
N/A
12.52
N/A
Total risk-based capital ratio
(1)
14.10
14.42
14.69
15.57
15.93
14.10
15.93
Leverage capital ratio
(1)
8.92
8.90
8.91
9.77
9.69
8.92
9.69
Dividend payout ratio
(1)
8.09
5.37
5.73
10.87
10.83
6.45
11.74
Average loans and leases to average deposits
73.47
73.25
71.71
73.87
73.09
73.36
72.94
(1)
Amounts for 2014 periods have been updated to reflect the fourth quarter 2014 adoption of Accounting Standard Update (ASU) 2014-01 related to investments in qualified affordable housing projects.
48
Table of Contents
BUSINESS COMBINATIONS
Capitol City Bank & Trust Company
In February 2015, FCB entered into an agreement with the FDIC to purchase certain assets and assume certain liabilities of Capitol City Bank & Trust Company of Atlanta, Georgia (CCBT). The transaction allowed FCB to expand its presence in Georgia as CCBT operated eight branches in Atlanta, Stone Mountain, Albany, Augusta and Savannah. In June of 2015, FCB closed one of the branches in Atlanta. This is an FDIC-assisted transaction; however, it has no loss share agreement.
During the second quarter of 2015, adjustments were made to the acquisition fair values primarily based upon updated collateral valuations resulting in an increase of $5.4 million to the gain on acquisition. These adjustments were applied retroactively to the first quarter of 2015 and brought the total gain on the transaction to
$42.9 million
which is included in noninterest income on the Consolidated Statements of Income. The total after-tax impact of the gain was
$26.2 million
.
The CCBT transaction was accounted for under the acquisition method of accounting and, accordingly, assets acquired and liabilities assumed were recorded at their estimated fair values on the acquisition date. Fair values are preliminary and subject to refinement for up to one year after the closing date of the acquisition as additional information regarding closing date fair values becomes available.
The following table provides the identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed at their estimated fair values as of the acquisition date.
Table 2
Capitol City Bank & Trust Company
(Dollars in thousands)
As recorded by FCB
Assets
Cash and cash equivalents
$
19,622
Investment securities
35,413
Loans
154,496
Intangible assets
690
Other assets
1,714
Total assets acquired
211,935
Liabilities
Deposits
266,352
Short-term borrowings
5,501
Other liabilities
667
Total liabilities assumed
272,520
Fair value of net liabilities assumed
(60,585
)
Cash received from FDIC
103,515
Gain on acquisition of CCBT
$
42,930
Merger-related expenses of
$1.1 million
and
$1.3 million
were recorded in the Consolidated Statements of Income for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
. Loan-related interest income generated from CCBT was approximately
$2.4 million
for the
second quarter
of
2015
and
$3.7 million
since the acquisition date.
All loans resulting from the CCBT transaction were recognized upon acquisition date with a discount attributable, at least in part, to credit quality, and are therefore accounted for as PCI loans.
First Citizens Bancorporation, Inc and First Citizens Bank and Trust Company, Inc.
On October 1, 2014, BancShares completed the merger of Bancorporation with and into BancShares pursuant to an Agreement and Plan of Merger dated June 10, 2014, as amended on July 29, 2014. First Citizens Bank and Trust Company, Inc. merged with and into FCB on January 1, 2015.
The Bancorporation transaction was accounted for under the acquisition method of accounting and, accordingly, assets acquired and liabilities assumed were recorded at estimated fair value on the acquisition date. Fair values are preliminary and subject to refinement for up to one year after the closing date of the acquisition. Assets acquired, excluding goodwill, totaled
$8.28 billion
, including
$4.49 billion
in loans and leases,
$2.01 billion
of investment securities available for sale,
$1.28 billion
in cash and overnight investments, and
$109.4 million
of identifiable intangible assets. Liabilities assumed were
$7.66 billion
, including
$7.17 billion
of deposits. Goodwill of
$4.2 million
was recorded as result of the excess purchase price over the estimated fair value of the net assets acquired.
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Table of Contents
BancShares incurred merger-related expenses of
$3.5 million
and
$6.3 million
, respectively, for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
, and
$953 thousand
and
$1.2 million
, respectively, for the
three
and
six
months ended
June 30, 2014
. Total merger-related costs for the Bancorporation transaction are estimated to be between
$28.0 million
and
$32.0 million
of which $14.3 million has been incurred as of June 30, 2015.
FDIC-Assisted Transactions with Loss Share Agreements
We participated in six FDIC-assisted transactions that included loss share agreements between 2009 and 2011 that provided significant growth opportunities and continue to provide significant contributions to our results of operations. These transactions allowed us to increase our presence in existing markets and to expand our banking presence into adjacent markets. Also, as a result of the merger with Bancorporation, BancShares assumed three additional FDIC loss share agreements. The loss share agreements protect us from a substantial portion of the credit and asset quality risk we would otherwise incur.
Generally, losses on single family residential loans are covered for ten years. All other loans are generally covered for five years. At
June 30, 2015
,
$319.7 million
of total loans and leases remain covered under loss share agreements. The loss share protection expired for non-single family residential loans acquired from Temecula Valley Bank, Venture Bank and Georgian Bank in 2014. At the beginning of the second quarter of 2015, the loss share protection expired for non-single family residential loans acquired from Sun American Bank (SAB) and all loans acquired from First Regional Bank (FRB). The loan balances at
June 30, 2015
for the expired agreements from SAB and FRB were
$30.9 million
and
$9.0 million
, respectively. The loss share protection for non-single family residential loans, with a balance of
$8.2 million
at
June 30, 2015
, will expire at the beginning of the fourth quarter of 2015 for Williamsburg First National Bank. Protection for all other covered assets extends beyond December 31, 2015. We will process all necessary filings in accordance with the agreements before expiration to collect the earned loss share receivables. Going forward, we will continue to manage these loans and loan relationships in accordance with our standard credit administration policies and procedures.
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Table of Contents
Table 3
Consolidated Quarter-to-Date Average Taxable-Equivalent Balance Sheets
Three months ended
June 30, 2015
March 31, 2015
June 30, 2014
Interest
Interest
Interest
Average
Income/
Yield/
Average
Income/
Yield/
Average
Income/
Yield/
(Dollars in thousands)
Balance
Expense
Rate
Balance
Expense
Rate
Balance
Expense
Rate
Assets
Loans and leases
$
19,354,823
$
224,235
4.65
%
$
18,922,028
$
211,885
4.54
%
$
13,566,612
$
164,794
4.87
%
Investment securities:
U. S. Treasury
2,224,933
4,346
0.78
2,355,234
4,593
0.79
1,481,051
2,435
0.66
Government agency
915,976
2,195
0.96
938,356
1,708
0.73
1,559,337
2,160
0.55
Mortgage-backed securities
4,008,782
15,518
1.55
3,592,499
13,220
1.47
2,565,403
7,813
1.22
State, county and municipal
—
—
—
3,663
53
5.77
186
4
8.60
Other
—
—
—
—
—
—
23,490
220
3.76
Total investment securities
7,149,691
22,059
1.23
6,889,752
19,574
1.14
5,629,467
12,632
0.90
Overnight investments
2,155,732
1,525
0.28
2,420,143
1,338
0.22
1,108,698
756
0.27
Total interest-earning assets
28,660,246
$
247,819
3.47
%
28,231,923
$
232,797
3.34
%
20,304,777
$
178,182
3.52
%
Cash and due from banks
453,347
463,784
464,877
Premises and equipment
1,121,776
1,123,323
882,256
FDIC loss share receivable
20,779
28,430
67,574
Allowance for loan and lease losses
(206,463
)
(203,389
)
(216,337
)
Other real estate owned
84,057
91,729
81,074
Other assets
(1)
702,007
678,522
433,280
Total assets
(1)
$
30,835,749
$
30,414,322
$
22,017,501
Liabilities
Interest-bearing deposits:
Checking with interest
$
4,712,074
$
428
0.04
%
$
4,608,049
$
415
0.04
%
$
2,553,941
$
125
0.02
%
Savings
1,833,259
98
0.02
1,765,540
92
0.02
1,200,145
152
0.05
Money market accounts
7,666,121
1,629
0.09
7,821,438
1,641
0.09
6,182,997
1,540
0.10
Time deposits
3,414,991
3,379
0.40
3,515,525
3,481
0.40
2,999,262
4,189
0.56
Total interest-bearing deposits
17,626,445
5,534
0.13
17,710,552
5,629
0.13
12,936,345
6,006
0.19
Repurchase agreements
622,547
387
0.25
305,918
121
0.16
101,744
64
0.25
Other short-term borrowings
211,185
1,271
2.41
694,775
1,813
1.05
583,776
1,487
1.02
Long-term obligations
473,434
4,171
3.52
460,713
3,782
3.28
398,615
4,055
4.07
Total interest-bearing liabilities
18,933,611
$
11,363
0.24
%
19,171,958
$
11,345
0.24
%
14,020,480
$
11,612
0.33
%
Demand deposits
8,716,376
8,122,516
5,625,582
Other liabilities
404,114
395,129
251,164
Shareholders' equity
(1)
2,781,648
2,724,719
2,120,275
Total liabilities and shareholders'
equity
(1)
$
30,835,749
$
30,414,322
$
22,017,501
Interest rate spread
3.23
%
3.10
%
3.19
%
Net interest income and net yield on interest-earning assets
$
236,456
3.31
%
$
221,452
3.18
%
$
166,570
3.29
%
(1)
Amounts for 2014 have been updated to reflect the fourth quarter 2014 adoption of ASU 2014-01 related to investments in qualified affordable housing projects.
Loans and leases include PCI loans, non-PCI loans, nonaccrual loans and loans held for sale. Yields related to loans, leases and securities exempt from both federal and state income taxes, federal income taxes only, or state income taxes only are stated on a taxable-equivalent basis assuming statutory federal income tax rates of 35.0 percent for each period and state income tax rates of 6.0 percent, 6.0 percent and 6.2 percent for the
three months ended June 30, 2015
,
March 31, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
, respectively. The taxable-equivalent adjustment was
$1,806
,
$1,287
and
$872
for the
three months ended June 30, 2015
,
March 31, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
, respectively. The rate/volume variance is allocated equally between the changes in volume and rate.
51
Table of Contents
Table 4
Consolidated Year-to-Date Average Taxable-Equivalent Balance Sheets
Six months ended
June 30, 2015
June 30, 2014
Interest
Interest
Average
Income/
Yield/
Average
Income/
Yield/
(Dollars in thousands)
Balance
Expense
Rate
Balance
Expense
Rate
Assets
Loans and leases
$
19,139,621
$
436,120
4.59
%
$
13,513,580
$
326,430
4.87
%
Investment securities:
U.S. Treasury
2,289,724
8,938
0.79
1,131,539
3,521
0.63
Government agency
927,104
3,903
0.84
1,917,664
5,122
0.53
Mortgage-backed securities
3,801,791
28,738
1.51
2,545,457
15,576
1.22
State, county and municipal
1,821
53
5.81
186
7
7.53
Other
—
—
—
23,311
316
2.73
Total investment securities
7,020,440
41,632
1.19
5,618,157
24,542
0.87
Overnight investments
2,287,207
2,863
0.25
1,090,681
1,368
0.25
Total interest-earning assets
28,447,268
$
480,615
3.40
%
20,222,418
$
352,340
3.51
%
Cash and due from banks
458,537
471,424
Premises and equipment
1,122,545
879,849
FDIC loss share receivable
24,584
77,507
Allowance for loan and lease losses
(204,935
)
(220,714
)
Other real estate owned
87,872
85,960
Other assets
(1)
690,329
426,410
Total assets
(1)
$
30,626,200
$
21,942,854
Liabilities
Interest-bearing deposits:
Checking with interest
$
4,660,349
$
842
0.04
%
$
2,524,474
$
278
0.02
%
Savings
1,799,587
190
0.02
1,190,250
443
0.08
Money market accounts
7,743,351
3,270
0.09
6,268,862
3,429
0.11
Time deposits
3,464,981
6,861
0.40
3,056,296
8,682
0.57
Total interest-bearing deposits
17,668,268
11,163
0.13
13,039,882
12,832
0.20
Repurchase agreements
465,107
508
0.22
99,641
139
0.28
Other short-term borrowings
451,644
3,084
1.37
515,437
1,997
0.78
Long-term obligations
467,109
7,953
3.41
449,428
9,109
4.05
Total interest-bearing liabilities
19,052,128
$
22,708
0.24
%
14,104,388
$
24,077
0.34
%
Demand deposits
8,421,087
5,487,429
Other liabilities
402,021
245,468
Shareholders' equity
(1)
2,750,964
2,105,569
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity
(1)
$
30,626,200
$
21,942,854
Interest rate spread
3.16
%
3.17
%
Net interest income and net yield on interest-earning assets
$
457,907
3.24
%
$
328,263
3.27
%
(1)
Amounts for 2014 have been updated to reflect the fourth quarter 2014 adoption of ASU 2014-01 related to investments in qualified affordable housing projects.
Loans and leases include PCI loans, non-PCI loans, nonaccrual loans and loans held for sale. Yields related to loans, leases and securities exempt from both federal and state income taxes, federal income taxes only, or state income taxes only are stated on a taxable-equivalent basis assuming statutory federal income tax rates of 35.0 percent for each period and state income tax rates of 6.0 percent and 6.2 percent for the
six months ended June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
, respectively. The taxable-equivalent adjustment was
$3,092
and
$1,634
for the
six months ended June 30, 2015
and
June 30, 2014
, respectively. The rate/volume variance is allocated equally between the changes in volume and rate.
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Table of Contents
Table 5
Changes in Consolidated Taxable Equivalent Net Interest Income
Three months ended June 30, 2015
Six months ended June 30, 2015
Change from prior year period due to:
Change from prior year period due to:
(Dollars in thousands)
Volume
Yield/Rate
Total Change
Volume
Yield/Rate
Total Change
Assets
Loans and leases
$
68,580
$
(9,139
)
$
59,441
$
132,161
$
(22,471
)
$
109,690
Investment securities:
U. S. Treasury
1,346
565
1,911
4,069
1,348
5,417
Government agency
(1,224
)
1,259
35
(3,408
)
2,189
(1,219
)
Mortgage-backed securities
4,995
2,710
7,705
8,567
4,595
13,162
State, county and municipal
(4
)
—
(4
)
55
(9
)
46
Other
(220
)
—
(220
)
(316
)
—
(316
)
Total investment securities
4,893
4,534
9,427
8,967
8,123
17,090
Overnight investments
723
46
769
1,489
6
1,495
Total interest-earning assets
$
74,196
$
(4,559
)
$
69,637
$
142,617
$
(14,342
)
$
128,275
Liabilities
Interest-bearing deposits:
Checking with interest
$
142
$
161
$
303
$
263
$
301
$
564
Savings
57
(111
)
(54
)
171
(424
)
(253
)
Money market accounts
306
(217
)
89
634
(793
)
(159
)
Time deposits
483
(1,293
)
(810
)
955
(2,776
)
(1,821
)
Total interest-bearing deposits
988
(1,460
)
(472
)
2,023
(3,692
)
(1,669
)
Repurchase agreements
324
(1
)
323
453
(84
)
369
Other short-term borrowings
(1,593
)
1,377
(216
)
(334
)
1,421
1,087
Long-term obligations
713
(597
)
116
320
(1,476
)
(1,156
)
Total interest-bearing liabilities
432
(681
)
(249
)
2,462
(3,831
)
(1,369
)
Change in net interest income
$
73,764
$
(3,878
)
$
69,886
$
140,155
$
(10,511
)
$
129,644
Loans and leases include PCI loans, non-PCI loans, nonaccrual loans and loans held for sale.
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
Net Interest Income and Margin
Second Quarter 2015
The
second quarter
results reflect notable differences in net interest income, net interest margin and average-asset yields compared to the same quarter of
2014
and
first
quarter of
2015
. The most significant impact from the same quarter of
2014
resulted from the
October 1, 2014 acquisition of Bancorporation, adding
$2.01 billion
of investment securities,
$4.49 billion
of loans and leases, and
$7.17 billion
of deposits as of the acquisition date. Other significant drivers for quarterly changes are specifically noted below.
Compared to the
first
quarter of
2015
, net interest income increased
$14.5 million
, or by
6.6 percent
, to
$234.7 million
in the
second quarter
. Loan interest income was up
$11.8 million
primarily due to paydowns on the PCI loan portfolio which accelerated income recognition, higher originated loan growth, and a
$2.5 million
improvement in investment securities interest income as a result of reinvesting matured cash flows and overnight investments into higher yielding investments. Net interest income increased
$69.0 million
, or by
41.6 percent
, during the
second quarter
of
2015
, compared to the same quarter of
2014
, primarily as a result of the Bancorporation merger.
PCI loan accretion income, which is included in interest income, may be accelerated in the event of unscheduled repayments and various other post-acquisition events. During the
three
months ended
June 30, 2015
, accretion income on PCI loans equaled
$34.1 million
compared to
$30.5 million
during the
second quarter
of
2014
. The increase was due to significant paydowns on the PCI loan portfolio which accelerated income recognition.
The taxable-equivalent net interest margin for the
second
quarter of
2015
was
3.31
percent, an increase of
13
basis points from
3.18 percent
recorded in the
first
quarter of
2015
, and a
2
basis point increase from
3.29
percent recorded in the same quarter of
2014
. The margin increase was due to higher investment yields, higher interest income from originated loan growth, and additional accretion income in the PCI loan portfolio. Borrowing and deposit funding rates remained low and consistent with the prior quarter. The margin increase compared to the
second quarter
of
2014
was primarily due to organic loan growth, a
33
53
Table of Contents
basis point improvement in the investment securities yield and lower funding costs, offset by loan yield compression. The improvement in the yield on investment securities was due to reinvesting matured cash flows and overnight investments into higher yielding investments.
Average quarter-to-date interest earning assets increased by
$428.3 million
, since the
first
quarter of
2015
, which was driven by a
$432.8 million
increase in average outstanding loans and a
$259.9 million
increase in average investment securities, offset by a
$264.4 million
decline in average overnight investments. The increase in average outstanding loans from the
first
quarter of
2015
was driven by organic loan growth, which exceeded PCI loan portfolio runoff. Investment securities purchase activity increased as market interest rates recovered during the the quarter, causing total average investment securities to increase as purchases exceeded sales, maturities and paydowns during the quarter. Average quarter-to-date interest earning assets increased by
$8.36 billion
, compared to the same quarter in the prior year, primarily as a result of the Bancorporation merger.
The taxable-equivalent yield on interest-earning assets improved
13
basis points to
3.47
percent for the
second quarter
of
2015
, compared to
3.34
percent for the
first
quarter of
2015
due to improvement in the investment yield, a change in asset mix due to growth in loans and higher PCI loan interest income. The taxable-equivalent yield on interest-earning assets declined by
5
basis points from
3.52
percent for the same period of
2014
as improvements from the investment yield and loan growth were offset by a decline in the yield earned on loans. Improvement in the investment yield is driven by a shift in the mix of the portfolio to higher yielding securities. The decline in the loan yield was due to continued low interest rates and competitive loan pricing.
Average interest-bearing liabilities decreased by
$238.3 million
during the
second quarter
of
2015
, due to an
$84.1 million
decline in interest-bearing deposits and a
$167.0 million
decline in short-term borrowings primarily as a result of subordinated debt maturities totaling $200.0 million. The rate on interest-bearing liabilities of
0.24
percent remained consistent with the
first
quarter of
2015
. Average interest-bearing liabilities increased
$4.91 billion
during the
second quarter
of
2015
from the same quarter in the prior year, primarily reflecting the impact of the Bancorporation merger. The rate on interest-bearing liabilities declined by
9
basis points from
0.33
percent in the
second quarter
of
2014
due to lower borrowing costs and a
6
basis point reduction in the cost of funding deposits.
Year-to-date 2015
Similar to the quarter over quarter comparison, the year-to-date
2015
results show notable differences when compared to the same period of
2014
due to the October 1, 2014 Bancorporation merger. Other significant drivers for changes during the period are specifically noted below.
Net interest income for the first
six
months of
2015
totaled
$454.8 million
, an increase of
$128.2 million
, or
39.2 percent
, compared to the same period of
2014
. The increase was primarily due to a
$108.4 million
increase in loan interest income as a result of organic loan growth and the impact of the Bancorporation merger, coupled with a
$16.9 million
increase in investment securities interest income as a result of reinvesting matured cash flows and overnight investments into higher yielding investments and investment securities acquired in the Bancorporation merger. Accretion income on PCI loans for the first
six
months of
2015
totaled
$59.2 million
compared to
$60.7 million
during the same period of
2014
. Net interest income also benefited from decreased interest expense of
$1.4 million
in comparison to the same
six
-month period of the prior year, as additional interest expense from the Bancorporation merger was offset by movement from time deposits to demand and lower interest bearing deposit products.
The taxable-equivalent net interest margin totaled
3.24
percent, compared to
3.27
percent for the same
six
-month period in
2014
. The decrease in the year-to-date margin is predominately driven by reductions in the loan portfolio yields due to continued low interest rates and competitive loan pricing, offset by improvements in investment yields and a reduction in funding costs.
Interest-earning assets averaged
$28.45 billion
, an increase of
$8.22 billion
in comparison to the same period of
2014
primarily as a result of the Bancorporation merger. Average loans and leases increased
$5.63 billion
in comparison to the first
six
months of
2014
as a result of organic loan growth and loans acquired in the CCBT and Bancorporation acquisitions, offset by reductions in the remaining PCI loan portfolio. Average investment securities increased
$1.40 billion
in comparison to the first
six
months of
2014
, with a
32
basis point increase in the taxable-equivalent yield. The increase in average investments is primarily driven by the Bancorporation merger and redeployment of excess cash. Average overnight investments increased
$1.20 billion
compared to the year-to-date average in the prior year due to the Bancorporation merger.
Average interest-bearing liabilities totaled
$19.05 billion
, an increase of
$4.95 billion
when compared to the same period of
2014
. The year-to-date
2015
rate on interest-bearing liabilities decreased to
0.24
percent, or a
10
basis point decrease when compared to year-to-date
2014
primarily due to lower borrowing costs and a reduction in deposit funding costs. Average interest-bearing deposits totaled
$17.67 billion
, an increase of
$4.63 billion
from the same period of
2014
. This increase includes deposits acquired in the Bancorporation and CCBT acquisitions. The year-to-date
2015
rate on interest-bearing deposits decreased to
0.13
percent, or a
7
basis point decline when compared to the first
six
months of
2014
.
54
Table of Contents
Noninterest Income
Noninterest income is an essential component of our total revenue and is critical to our ability to sustain adequate profitability levels. The primary sources of noninterest income have traditionally consisted of cardholder services income, merchant services income, service charges on deposit accounts and revenues derived from wealth management services. Recoveries on PCI loans that have been previously charged-off are additional sources of noninterest income. BancShares records these recoveries as noninterest income rather than as an adjustment to the allowance for loan and lease losses since charge-offs on PCI loans are primarily recorded through the nonaccretable difference.
Table 6
Noninterest Income
Three months ended
Six months ended
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30, 2015
March 31, 2015
June 30, 2014
June 30, 2015
June 30, 2014
Gain on acquisitions
$
—
$
42,930
$
—
$
42,930
$
—
Cardholder services
19,214
18,401
13,257
37,615
25,089
Merchant services
22,070
18,880
15,035
40,950
28,556
Service charges on deposit accounts
22,361
22,058
15,265
44,419
29,705
Wealth management services
21,555
20,880
15,815
42,435
30,695
Fees from processing services
45
50
5,682
95
10,543
Securities gains
147
5,126
—
5,273
—
Other service charges and fees
5,685
5,455
4,250
11,140
8,194
Mortgage income
5,571
4,549
1,210
10,120
2,165
Insurance commissions
2,456
3,297
2,253
5,753
5,540
ATM income
1,825
1,664
1,260
3,489
2,462
Adjustments to FDIC receivable for loss share agreements
(4,553
)
(1,047
)
(15,295
)
(5,600
)
(27,644
)
Recoveries of acquired loans previously charged off
6,321
4,336
5,400
10,657
8,869
Other
(1)
4,753
4,174
2,457
8,927
4,729
Total noninterest income
(1)
$
107,450
$
150,753
$
66,589
$
258,203
$
128,903
(1)
Amounts for the 2014 periods have been updated to reflect the fourth quarter 2014 adoption of ASU 2014-01 related to investments in qualified affordable housing projects.
Noninterest income decreased by
$43.3 million
during the
second quarter
of
2015
, compared to the
first
quarter of
2015
. The decline was driven by the
$42.9 million
acquisition gain recognized as a result of the CCBT acquisition in the first quarter, a
$5.0 million
decrease in securities gains, and an unfavorable
$3.5 million
increase in adjustments to the FDIC receivable related to lower claimable OREO expenses. These decreases were offset by an increase of
$4.0 million
in merchant and cardholder income due to higher sales volume, an increase of
$1.0 million
in mortgage income due to increased production and sales of loans and a
$2.0 million
increase in recoveries of acquired loans previously charged off.
Noninterest income for the
second quarter
of
2015
and the first
six
months of
2015
totaled
$107.5 million
and
$258.2 million
, respectively, compared to
$66.6 million
and
$128.9 million
for the same periods of
2014
. The increase for both periods was primarily driven by the impact of the Bancorporation merger and favorable reductions in adjustments to the FDIC receivable resulting from lower amortization expense as five loss share agreements expired. The year-to-date increase was also attributable to the
$42.9 million
acquisition gain recognized as a result of the CCBT acquisition during 2015. The quarter-to-date and year-to-date increases were partially offset by
$5.6 million
and
$10.4 million
respective declines in fees from processing services, as substantially all fees recorded in 2014 related to payments received from Bancorporation prior to the merger.
55
Table of Contents
Noninterest Expense
The primary components of noninterest expense are salaries and related employee benefits, occupancy costs, facilities and equipment expense and merchant processing expenses.
Table 7
Noninterest Expense
Three months ended
Six months ended
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30, 2015
March 31, 2015
June 30, 2014
June 30, 2015
June 30, 2014
Salaries and wages
$
110,685
106,543
$
81,839
$
217,228
$
161,192
Employee benefits
27,212
30,146
19,741
57,358
39,841
Occupancy expense
25,532
25,620
20,300
51,152
40,710
Equipment expense
23,296
23,541
19,581
46,837
38,354
FDIC insurance expense
4,551
4,271
2,640
8,822
5,276
Foreclosure-related expenses
1,019
2,557
3,858
3,576
9,268
Merger-related expenses
4,573
2,997
3,450
7,570
5,903
Merchant processing
15,132
13,856
9,755
28,988
18,236
Processing fees paid to third parties
4,777
5,395
4,173
10,172
7,980
Card processing
4,078
3,813
3,033
7,891
5,630
Consultant
2,248
2,128
3,433
4,376
5,569
Collection
2,585
2,300
2,647
4,885
4,482
Advertising
2,324
1,913
1,568
4,237
2,664
Other
36,679
33,086
23,002
69,765
44,945
Total noninterest expense
$
264,691
$
258,166
$
199,020
$
522,857
$
390,050
Noninterest expense increased
$6.5 million
in the
second quarter
of
2015
to
$264.7 million
, compared to
$258.2 million
in the
first
quarter of
2015
. The increase was primarily due to a
$4.1 million
increase in salaries and wages due to annual merit increases effective in the
second quarter
and higher incentives, a
$1.6 million
increase in merger-related expenses due to CCBT and Bancorporation conversion costs and a
$1.5 million
increase in merchant and card processing expenses aligned to increased sales volume. These increases were partially offset by a
$2.9 million
decline in employee benefits due to lower healthcare costs and payroll taxes, and a
$1.5 million
reduction in foreclosure-related expenses resulting from higher gains on the sale of OREO.
Noninterest expense for the
second quarter
of
2015
and the first
six
months of
2015
totaled
$264.7 million
and
$522.9 million
, respectively, compared to
$199.0 million
and
$390.1 million
for the same periods of
2014
. The quarter-to-date and year-to-date respective increases of
$65.7 million
and
$132.8 million
were primarily driven by the impact of the Bancorporation merger. Excluding the impact of the Bancorporation merger, several expense categories experienced fluctuations when comparing
second quarter
of
2015
and the first
six
months of
2015
to the same periods of
2014
. Benefits expense increased due to higher pension costs as the discount rate declined in 2015. Equipment expense also increased due to depreciation of recent upgrades of our technology systems placed in service at the beginning of 2015. Foreclosure-related expenses and collection costs declined resulting from lower losses on the sale of OREO and managing fewer nonperforming assets.
Income Taxes
Income tax expense totaled
$25.2 million
,
$39.8 million
and
$13.9 million
for the
second quarter
of
2015
,
first
quarter of
2015
and
second quarter
of
2014
, respectively, representing effective tax rates of
36.1 percent
,
37.2 percent
and
34.2 percent
during the respective periods. Income tax expense totaled
$65.0 million
and
$25.5 million
for the
six months ended June 30, 2015
and
2014
, respectively, representing effective tax rates of
36.8 percent
and
34.2 percent
for the respective six month periods. The increased effective tax rate in
2015
was the result of the comparable levels of permanent differences on higher pre-tax earnings.
We monitor and evaluate the potential impact of current events on the estimates used to establish income tax expenses and income tax liabilities. On a periodic basis, we evaluate our income tax positions based on current tax law, positions taken by various tax auditors within the jurisdictions where BancShares is required to file income tax returns, as well as potential or pending audits or assessments by tax auditors.
56
Table of Contents
BALANCE SHEET ANALYSIS
BancShares focuses on maintaining high asset quality, which results in a loan and lease portfolio subjected to strenuous underwriting and monitoring procedures, and corresponding tighter margins. We avoid high-risk industry concentrations, but we do maintain a concentration of owner-occupied real estate loans to borrowers in medical and medical-related fields. The credit department actively monitors all loan concentrations to ensure potential risks are identified timely and managed accordingly. Our focus on asset quality also influences the composition of our investment securities portfolio. At
June 30, 2015
, mortgage-backed securities represented
59.4 percent
of investment securities available for sale, compared to U.S. Treasury and government agency securities, which represented
30.0 percent
and
10.6 percent
, respectively, of the portfolio. Investments in mortgage-backed securities primarily represent securities issued by government or government-sponsored entities. Overnight investments include interest-bearing deposits at the Federal Reserve Bank and other financial institutions, and federal funds sold.
Investment Securities
Investment securities available for sale equaled
$7.35 billion
at
June 30, 2015
, compared to
$7.17 billion
and
$5.54 billion
at
December 31, 2014
and
June 30, 2014
, respectively. The $1.81 billion increase in the portfolio from
June 30, 2014
to
June 30, 2015
was primarily due to the Bancorporation merger. Available for sale securities are reported at their aggregate fair value, and unrealized gains and losses are included as a component of other comprehensive income, net of deferred taxes. As of
June 30, 2015
, investment securities available for sale had a net unrealized gain of
$4.3 million
, compared to a net unrealized gain of
$8.3 million
and
$26.8 million
as of
December 31, 2014
and
June 30, 2014
, respectively. In determining whether we had any other than temporary impairment for securities with unrealized losses we consider the amount and duration of the impairment, whether the impairment is industry-wide or specific to the financial condition of the issuer, our ability to hold the investment for recovery, adverse actions by rating agencies and deferred interest payments on debt securities. Management concluded that no other than temporary impairment existed as of
June 30, 2015
.
Changes in the amount of our investment securities portfolio result from changes in our liquidity position. When inflows arising from deposit and treasury services products exceed loan and lease demand, we generally invest excess funds in the securities portfolio. Conversely, when loan demand exceeds growth in deposits and short-term borrowings, we generally allow overnight investments to decline and use proceeds from maturing securities to fund loan demand.
Table 8
Investment Securities
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
June 30, 2014
(Dollars in thousands)
Cost
Fair value
Cost
Fair value
Cost
Fair Value
Investment securities available for sale:
U.S. Treasury
$
2,198,027
$
2,206,859
$
2,626,900
$
2,629,670
$
1,623,564
$
1,625,630
Government agency
774,962
776,244
908,362
908,817
1,281,724
1,283,566
Mortgage-backed securities
4,372,946
4,367,091
3,628,187
3,633,304
2,605,333
2,596,286
Equity securities
—
—
—
—
543
32,498
Municipal securities
—
—
125
126
185
186
Total investment securities available for sale
7,345,935
7,350,194
7,163,574
7,171,917
5,511,349
5,538,166
Investment securities held to maturity:
Mortgage-backed securities
351
365
518
544
693
729
Total investment securities
$
7,346,286
$
7,350,559
$
7,164,092
$
7,172,461
$
5,512,042
$
5,538,895
Since
December 31, 2014
, proceeds from the sales, maturities and calls of U.S. Treasury and government agency securities were primarily reinvested into mortgage-backed securities at higher-yielding rates.
57
Table of Contents
Loans and Leases
BancShares' accounting methods for loans and leases differ depending on whether they are purchased credit-impaired (PCI) or non-PCI. Non-PCI loans and leases include originated commercial, originated noncommercial, purchased revolving, and purchased non-impaired loans. For purchased non-impaired loans to be included as non-PCI, it must be determined that the loans that do not have a discount, due at least in part, to credit quality at the time of acquisition. Conversely, loans for which it is probable at acquisition that all required payments will not be collected in accordance with contractual terms are considered PCI loans. PCI loans are evaluated at acquisition and where a discount is required at least in part due to credit quality, the nonrevolving loans are accounted for under the guidance in ASC Topic 310-30,
Loans and Debt Securities Acquired with Deteriorated Credit Quality
. PCI loans and leases are recorded at fair value at the date of acquisition. No allowance for loan and lease losses is recorded on the acquisition date as the fair value of the acquired assets incorporates assumptions regarding credit risk. An allowance is recorded if there is additional credit deterioration after the acquisition date.
We report our PCI and non-PCI loan portfolios separately, and each portfolio is further divided into commercial and non-commercial based on the type of borrower, purpose, collateral, and/or our underlying credit management processes. Additionally, loans are assigned to loan classes, which further disaggregate loans based upon common risk characteristics, such as commercial and industrial or residential mortgage. See Note D to the Consolidated Financial Statements, "Loans and Leases," for definitions of each loan class.
Table 9
Loans and Leases
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
June 30, 2014
Non-PCI loans and leases:
Commercial:
Construction and land development
$
547,151
$
493,133
$
342,021
Commercial mortgage
7,861,590
7,552,948
6,367,096
Other commercial real estate
288,214
244,875
178,899
Commercial and industrial
2,199,591
1,988,934
1,292,213
Lease financing
643,508
571,916
413,422
Other
338,389
353,833
131,051
Total commercial loans
11,878,443
11,205,639
8,724,702
Noncommercial:
Residential mortgage
2,597,064
2,493,058
1,071,089
Revolving mortgage
2,529,936
2,561,800
2,122,675
Construction and land development
227,280
205,016
119,420
Consumer
1,164,223
1,117,454
377,137
Total noncommercial loans
6,518,503
6,377,328
3,690,321
Total non-PCI loans and leases
18,396,946
17,582,967
12,415,023
PCI loans:
Commercial:
Construction and land development
$
48,208
$
78,079
$
80,827
Commercial mortgage
611,505
577,518
637,481
Other commercial real estate
14,353
40,193
34,688
Commercial and industrial
20,382
27,254
33,851
Other
2,597
3,079
1,270
Total commercial loans
697,045
726,123
788,117
Noncommercial:
Residential mortgage
358,307
382,340
270,688
Revolving mortgage
64,340
74,109
20,129
Construction and land development
345
912
28,759
Consumer
3,202
3,014
2,240
Total noncommercial loans
426,194
460,375
321,816
Total PCI loans
1,123,239
1,186,498
1,109,933
Total loans and leases
$
19,520,185
$
18,769,465
$
13,524,956
Loan balances increased
$750.7 million
, or
8.0 percent
annualized, since
December 31, 2014
, primarily the result of
$814.0 million
of organic growth in the non-PCI portfolio. The PCI portfolio declined over this period by
$63.3 million
reflecting
58
Table of Contents
continued loan run-off of
$208.4 million
offset by the impact of the CCBT acquisition in the first quarter of 2015 which contributed
$145.1 million
to PCI loan balances at
June 30, 2015
.
Non-PCI loans increased by
$5.98 billion
, compared to the
second quarter
of
2014
, reflecting originated loan growth and the Bancorporation contribution of $4.49 billion in loans at fair value as of the acquisition date. PCI loans increased by
$13.3 million
from the
second quarter
of
2014
, due to PCI loans acquired through the Bancorporation and CCBT acquisitions, offset by the continued reduction in the PCI loan portfolio as aligned with original forecasts.
Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses ("ALLL")
The ALLL totaled
$208.3 million
at
June 30, 2015
, representing an increase of
$3.9 million
since
December 31, 2014
primarily due to strong loan growth. The ALLL as a percentage of total loans at
June 30, 2015
was
1.07 percent
, compared to
1.09 percent
at
December 31, 2014
. At
June 30, 2015
, the ALLL allocated to non-PCI loans totaled
$192.8 million
, or
1.05 percent
of non-PCI loans and leases, compared to
$182.8 million
, or
1.04 percent
, at
December 31, 2014
. An additional ALLL of
$15.5 million
relates to PCI loans at
June 30, 2015
, compared to
$21.6 million
at
December 31, 2014
. The ALLL on the PCI loan portfolio continues to decline which aligns with the forecasted run-off of this portfolio.
The ALLL allocated to originated non-PCI loans and leases was
1.27 percent
of originated non-PCI loans and leases at
June 30, 2015
, compared to
1.33 percent
at
December 31, 2014
. The decline in the allowance ratio was related to credit improvement throughout the originated non-PCI loan portfolio. Originated non-PCI loans totaled
$15.21 billion
and
$13.72 billion
at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, respectively, and do not include purchased revolving, purchased non-impaired loans or PCI loans.
The allowance for loan and lease losses as a percentage of total loans and leases ended the quarter at
1.07 percent
, compared to
1.08 percent
at
March 31, 2015
. Credit quality improvements in the originated loan portfolio resulted in a slight decline in the allowance ratio.
BancShares recorded
$7.7 million
net provision expense for loan and lease losses during the
second
quarter of
2015
, compared to net provision expense of
$5.8 million
in the
first
quarter of
2015
. The increase in provision expense was primarily due to originated loan growth and lower impairment reversals on the PCI loan portfolio.
Non-PCI loan provision expense totaled
$9.0 million
during the
second
quarter of
2015
, an increase of
$0.3 million
from the
first
quarter of
2015
, resulting from continued loan growth and a slight increase in net charge-offs. Net charge-offs for non-PCI loans totaled
$4.1 million
during the
second
quarter of
2015
, compared to
$3.6 million
during the
first
quarter of
2015
. On an annualized basis, net charge-offs as a percentage of average loans and leases during the
second
quarter of
2015
remained consistent at
0.10 percent
when compared to the
first
quarter of
2015
.
The PCI loan net provision credit totaled
$1.3 million
during the
second
quarter of
2015
, compared to a net provision credit of
$2.9 million
for the
first
quarter of
2015
. The current quarter net provision credit resulted from reversals of prior impairment due to accelerated paydowns and credit quality improvement.
The ALLL increased by
$2.1 million
to
$208.3 million
at
June 30, 2015
compared to
June 30, 2014
as the increase in the ALLL for non-PCI loans offset the reduction in the ALLL for PCI loans. The ALLL as a percentage of total loans at
June 30, 2015
was
1.07 percent
, compared to
1.52 percent
at
June 30, 2014
. This ratio change was attributable to improved credit quality trends and the impact of non-PCI loans acquired in the Bancorporation merger. Loans acquired in the Bancorporation merger were recorded at fair value replacing the historical allowance with a fair value discount.
We recorded
$7.7 million
and
$13.5 million
net provision expense for loan and lease losses for the three and
six
months ended
June 30, 2015
, compared to net provision credits of
$7.3 million
and
$9.2 million
for the same periods of
2014
. The increases in provision expense were due primarily to originated non-PCI loan growth and lower impairment reversals on the PCI loan portfolio.
Management considers the ALLL adequate to absorb estimated inherent losses that relate to loans and leases outstanding at
June 30, 2015
, although future adjustments may be necessary based on changes in economic conditions and other factors. In addition, various regulatory agencies, as an integral part of their examination process, periodically review the ALLL. Such agencies may require adjustments to the ALLL based on information available to them at the time of their examination.
59
Table of Contents
Table 10
Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses
2015
2014
Six months ended June 30
Second
First
Fourth
Third
Second
(Dollars in thousands)
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
2015
2014
ALLL at beginning of period
$
205,553
$
204,466
$
200,905
$
206,246
$
222,942
$
204,466
$
233,394
Provision (credit) for loan and lease losses:
PCI loans
(1,275
)
(2,864
)
(2,622
)
(197
)
(9,529
)
(4,139
)
(11,802
)
Non-PCI loans
8,994
8,656
10,927
1,734
2,230
17,650
2,600
Net charge-offs of loans and leases:
Charge-offs
(6,926
)
(7,176
)
(7,469
)
(8,721
)
(10,904
)
(14,102
)
(21,580
)
Recoveries
1,971
2,471
2,725
1,843
1,507
4,442
3,634
Net charge-offs of loans and leases
(4,955
)
(4,705
)
(4,744
)
(6,878
)
(9,397
)
(9,660
)
(17,946
)
ALLL at end of period
$
208,317
$
205,553
$
204,466
$
200,905
$
206,246
$
208,317
$
206,246
ALLL at end of period allocated to loans and leases:
PCI
$
15,468
$
17,619
$
21,629
$
25,800
$
29,331
$
15,468
$
29,331
Non-PCI
192,849
187,934
182,837
175,105
176,915
192,849
176,915
ALLL at end of period
$
208,317
$
205,553
$
204,466
$
200,905
$
206,246
$
208,317
$
206,246
Net charge-offs of loans and leases:
PCI
$
876
$
1,146
$
1,549
$
3,334
$
6,133
$
2,022
$
12,387
Non-PCI
4,079
3,559
3,195
3,544
3,264
7,638
5,559
Total net charge-offs
$
4,955
$
4,705
$
4,744
$
6,878
$
9,397
$
9,660
$
17,946
Reserve for unfunded commitments
$
389
$
404
$
333
$
328
$
380
$
389
$
380
Average loans and leases:
PCI
$
1,173,105
$
1,200,484
$
1,244,910
$
1,005,045
$
1,183,464
$
1,186,719
$
1,249,989
Non-PCI
18,181,718
17,721,544
17,293,643
12,665,172
12,383,148
17,952,902
12,263,591
Loans and leases at period-end:
PCI
1,123,239
1,252,545
1,186,498
996,280
1,109,933
1,123,239
1,109,933
Non-PCI
18,396,946
17,844,414
17,582,967
12,806,511
12,415,023
18,396,946
12,415,023
Ratios
Net charge-offs (annualized) to average loans and leases:
PCI
0.30
%
0.39
%
0.49
%
1.32
%
2.08
%
0.34
%
2.00
%
Non-PCI
0.09
0.08
0.07
0.11
0.11
0.09
0.09
Total
0.10
0.10
0.10
0.20
0.28
0.10
0.27
ALLL to total loans and leases:
PCI
1.38
1.41
1.82
2.59
2.64
1.38
2.64
Non-PCI
1.05
1.05
1.04
1.37
1.43
1.05
1.43
Total
1.07
1.08
1.09
1.46
1.52
1.07
1.52
Asset Quality
Asset quality continues to be strong due to prudent underwriting standards and management of nonperforming assets. Nonperforming assets include nonaccrual loans and leases and OREO resulting from both PCI and non-PCI loans.
As of
June 30, 2015
, BancShares’ nonperforming assets amounted to
$155.4 million
, a decrease of
$15.5 million
from
$170.9 million
at
December 31, 2014
, related to an overall reduction in OREO balances. Compared to the same quarter a year ago, nonperforming assets are down
$20.5 million
from
$175.8 million
at
June 30, 2014
. Nonperforming assets as a percentage of total loans and leases plus OREO amounted to
0.79 percent
, compared to
0.91 percent
and
1.29 percent
at
December 31, 2014
and
June 30, 2014
, respectively. Of the
$155.4 million
in nonperforming assets at
June 30, 2015
,
$15.6 million
related to loans and OREO covered by loss share agreements and
$139.7 million
relates to noncovered loans and OREO. Covered nonperforming assets at
June 30, 2015
decreased
$78.6 million
, or
83.41 percent
, when compared to
June 30, 2014
related to the expiration of FDIC loss share agreements, loan resolutions and OREO dispositions. Covered nonperforming assets represent
4.70 percent
of covered loans and OREO, compared to
9.84 percent
and
10.97 percent
as of
December 31, 2014
and
June 30, 2014
, respectively. Noncovered nonperforming assets represented
0.73 percent
of noncovered loans and leases plus OREO as of
June 30, 2015
, in comparison to
0.66 percent
and
0.64 percent
as of
December 31, 2014
and
June 30, 2014
, respectively.
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Table 11
Nonperforming Assets
2015
2014
Second
First
Fourth
Third
Second
(Dollars in thousands)
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Risk Elements
Nonaccrual loans and leases:
Covered under loss share agreements
$
2,732
$
21,440
$
27,020
$
30,415
$
54,036
Not covered under loss share agreements
79,375
71,536
50,407
54,203
46,485
Other real estate:
Covered
12,890
17,302
22,982
29,272
40,136
Noncovered
60,358
72,690
70,454
43,186
35,151
Total nonperforming assets
$
155,355
$
182,968
$
170,863
$
157,076
$
175,808
Nonperforming assets:
Covered
$
15,622
$
38,742
$
50,002
$
59,687
$
94,172
Noncovered
139,733
144,226
120,861
97,389
81,636
Total nonperforming assets
$
155,355
$
182,968
$
170,863
$
157,076
$
175,808
Loans and leases:
Covered
$
319,665
$
443,055
$
485,308
$
469,038
$
818,235
Noncovered
19,200,520
18,653,904
18,284,157
13,333,753
12,706,721
Accruing loans and leases 90 days or more past due
86,015
99,130
115,680
75,227
79,532
Ratio of nonperforming assets to total loans, leases and other real estate owned:
Covered
4.70
%
8.42
%
9.84
%
11.98
%
10.97
%
Noncovered
0.73
0.77
0.66
0.73
0.64
Total
0.79
0.95
0.91
1.13
1.29
Troubled Debt Restructurings
Troubled debt restructurings ("TDRs") are selectively made to provide relief to customers experiencing liquidity challenges or other circumstances that could affect their ability to meet their debt obligations. Typical modifications include short-term deferral of interest or modification of payment terms. Nonperforming TDRs are not accruing interest and are included as nonperforming assets within nonaccrual loans and leases. TDRs which are accruing at the time of restructure and continue to perform based on the restructured terms are considered performing.
At
June 30, 2015
, accruing TDRs totaled
$127.6 million
, a decrease of
$8.4 million
and
$28.9 million
, from
$136.0 million
and
$156.5 million
at
December 31, 2014
and
June 30, 2014
, respectively. At
June 30, 2015
, nonaccruing TDRs totaled
$24.0 million
, an increase of
$8.5 million
from
December 31, 2014
and a decrease of
$15.4 million
from
June 30, 2014
. The increase in nonaccruing TDRs from
December 31, 2014
is related to
a significant loan acquired in the Bancorporation merger and certain residential and revolving mortgage loans moving to nonaccrual status from accruing past due as a result of system enhancements during the first quarter of 2015.
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Table 12
Troubled Debt Restructurings
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
June 30, 2014
Accruing TDRs:
PCI
$
41,355
$
44,647
$
62,592
Non-PCI
86,227
91,316
93,904
Total accruing TDRs
127,582
135,963
156,496
Nonaccruing TDRs:
PCI
1,975
2,225
17,861
Non-PCI
22,020
13,291
21,564
Total nonaccruing TDRs
23,995
15,516
39,425
All TDRs:
PCI
43,330
46,872
80,453
Non-PCI
108,247
104,607
115,468
Total TDRs
$
151,577
$
151,479
$
195,921
Interest-Bearing Liabilities
Interest-bearing liabilities include interest-bearing deposits, short-term borrowings and long-term obligations. Interest-bearing liabilities totaled
$18.74 billion
and
$18.93 billion
at
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, respectively. The
$189.7 million
decrease from
December 31, 2014
was due to a
$264.0 million
decrease in short term borrowings as a result of maturities of $200.0 million in subordinated debt and $70.0 million of FHLB borrowings, offset by an increase in long-term obligations as a result of a $120.0 million new Federal Home Loan Bank ("FHLB") borrowing in 2015. Interest-bearing liabilities totaled
$18.74 billion
at
June 30, 2015
, an increase of
$4.86 billion
from
June 30, 2014
primarily due to the Bancorporation merger.
Deposits
At
June 30, 2015
, total deposits equaled
$26.51 billion
, an increase of
$833.3 million
, or
3.25 percent
, when compared to
December 31, 2014
resulting from organic growth in demand and checking with interest as well as deposits acquired in the CCBT acquisition of
$137.1 million
at
June 30, 2015
. Deposits increased
$7.96 billion
, or by
42.9 percent
, when compared to
June 30, 2014
, primarily as a result of the Bancorporation merger.
Due to our focus on maintaining a strong liquidity position, core deposit retention remains a key business objective. We believe that traditional bank deposit products remain an attractive option for many customers, but as economic conditions improve, we recognize that our liquidity position could be adversely affected as bank deposits are withdrawn and invested elsewhere. Our ability to fund future loan growth is dependent on our success at retaining existing deposits and generating new deposits at a reasonable cost.
Short-Term Borrowings
At
June 30, 2015
, short-term borrowings totaled
$723.2 million
compared to
$987.2 million
and
$788.5 million
at
December 31, 2014
and
June 30, 2014
, respectively. The
$264.0 million
decline from
December 31, 2014
was due to maturities of $70.0 million in FHLB borrowings and $200.0 million in subordinated debt during 2015. Additionally, master notes declined $410.3 million while repurchase agreements increased by $416.2 million, resulting from a migration from master notes to customer repurchasing products as the master notes product was discontinued in the second quarter of 2015. The
$65.3 million
decrease from
June 30, 2014
was due to maturities of FHLB borrowings and subordinated debt of $195.0 million, FHLB borrowings of $10.0 million with maturities less than one year being reclassified from long-term obligations, and the migration from master notes to customer repurchasing products. Master notes decreased $491.5 million and repurchase agreements increased $611.2 million from
June 30, 2014
as a result of the discontinuation of the master notes product, coupled with the Bancorporation merger contribution of $218.4 million in repurchase agreements as of the October 1, 2014 acquisition date.
Long-Term Obligations
Long-term obligations equaled
$475.6 million
at
June 30, 2015
, up
$124.2 million
from
December 31, 2014
as a result of a new $120.0 million FHLB borrowing in the first quarter of 2015. Long-term obligations were up
$161.0 million
from
June 30, 2014
primarily due to $124.9 million in long-term obligations added as a result of the October 1, 2014 Bancorporation merger and a new $120.0 million FHLB borrowing in 2015, partially offset by maturities of FHLB borrowings totaling $70.0 million in first quarter 2015.
At
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
, long-term obligations included
$132.5 million
and
$132.9 million
, respectively, in junior subordinated debentures representing obligations to FCB/NC Capital Trust III, FCB/SC Capital Trust II, and SCB Capital Trust I, special purpose entities and grantor trusts for
$128.5 million
of trust preferred securities. At
June 30, 2014
long-
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term obligations included
$96.4 million
in junior subordinated debentures representing obligations to FCB/NC Capital Trust III, a special purpose entity and grantor trust for
$93.5 million
of trust preferred securities. FCB/NC Capital Trust III, FCB/SC Capital Trust II, and SCB Capital Trust I's ("the Trusts") trust preferred securities mature in 2036, 2034, and 2034, respectively, and may be redeemed at par in whole or in part at any time. FCB/SC Capital Trust II, and SCB Capital Trust I were former capital trust subsidiaries of Bancorporation. BancShares has guaranteed all obligations of the Trusts.
Shareholders' Equity and Capital Adequacy
BancShares and FCB are required to meet minimum requirements imposed by regulatory authorities. Failure to meet certain capital requirements may result in actions by regulatory agencies that could have a material impact on our consolidated financial statements.
In accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (GAAP), unrealized gains and losses on certain assets and liabilities, net of deferred taxes, are included in accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI)within shareholder's equity. These amounts are excluded from shareholders' equity in the calculation of our capital ratios. In the aggregate, these items represented a net decrease in shareholders' equity of
$51.2 million
at
June 30, 2015
, compared to a net reduction of
$53.0 million
at
December 31, 2014
and a net increase of
$4.1 million
at
June 30, 2014
. The
$1.8 million
increase in AOCI from
December 31, 2014
reflects the amortization of prior service cost and the net actuarial losses of the defined benefit plan and a decrease in unrealized gains on investment securities available for sale. The
$55.2 million
reduction in AOCI from
June 30, 2014
primarily reflects the change in the funded status of the defined benefit plan.
Table 13
Analysis of Capital Adequacy
June 30, 2015
(1)
December 31, 2014
June 30, 2014
Regulatory
minimum
(2)
Well-capitalized requirement
(2)
BancShares
Risk-based capital ratios
(3)
Tier 1 capital
12.66
%
13.61
%
14.58
%
6.00
%
8.00
%
Tier 1 common equity
(4)
12.52
N/A
N/A
4.50
6.50
Total capital
14.10
14.69
15.93
8.00
10.00
Tier 1 leverage ratio
(3)
8.92
8.91
9.69
4.00
5.00
Bank
Risk-based capital ratios
(3)
Tier 1 capital
12.61
%
13.12
%
14.58
%
6.00
%
8.00
%
Tier 1 common equity
(4)
12.61
N/A
N/A
4.50
6.50
Total capital
13.62
14.37
15.93
8.00
10.00
Tier 1 leverage ratio
(3)
8.90
9.30
9.69
4.00
5.00
(1)
June 30, 2015
calculated under Basel III guidelines, which became effective January 1, 2015.
(2)
Regulatory minimum and well-capitalized requirements are based on 2015 Basel III regulatory capital guidelines.
(3)
Amounts for the
June 30
, 2014 period have been updated to reflect the fourth quarter 2014 adoption of Accounting Standard Update (ASU) 2014-01 related to investments for qualified affordable housing projects.
(4)
Tier 1 common equity ratio requirements were established under Basel III guidelines; therefore, this ratio is not applicable for periods prior to January 1, 2015.
Bank regulatory agencies approved regulatory capital guidelines ("Basel III") aimed at strengthening existing capital requirements for banking organizations. Under the final rules, minimum requirements increase for both the quantity and quality of capital held by BancShares. The rules include a new common equity Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets minimum ratio of 4.50 percent, raise the minimum ratio of Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets from 4.00 percent to 6.00 percent, require a minimum ratio of total capital to risk-weighted assets of 8.00 percent, and require a minimum Tier 1 leverage ratio of 4.00 percent. A new capital conservation buffer, comprised of common equity Tier 1 capital, was also established above the regulatory minimum capital requirements. This capital conservation buffer will be phased in beginning January 1, 2016 at 0.625 percent of risk-weighted assets and increase each subsequent year by an additional 0.625 percent until reaching its final level of 2.50 percent on January 1, 2019. Strict eligibility criteria for regulatory capital instruments were also implemented under the final rules. The final rules also revise the definition and calculation of Tier 1 capital, total capital, and risk-weighted assets.
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Table of Contents
The phase-in period for the final rules became effective for BancShares on January 1, 2015, with full compliance of all the final rules' requirements phased in over a multi-year schedule, to be fully phased-in by January 1, 2019. As of
June 30, 2015
, BancShares continues to exceed minimum capital standards and FCB remains well-capitalized under the new rules.
The implementation of Basel III increased risk-weighted assets in comparison to December 31, 2014, resulting in a decrease in our Tier 1 capital ratio and total capital ratio at
June 30, 2015
due to the phasing out of trust preferred capital securities from Tier 1 to Tier 2 capital. Risk-weighted assets have also increased due to organic loan growth including unfunded commitments, the expiration of loss share coverage on lower risk-weighted covered loans and a shift in mix to higher risk-weighted securities from cash. As aligned with expectations and incorporated in our capital planning process, BancShares remained well capitalized with a leverage capital ratio of
8.92 percent
, Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of
12.66 percent
, common equity Tier 1 ratio of
12.52
and total risk-based capital ratio of
14.10 percent
under Basel III guidelines at
June 30, 2015
.
BancShares had
$32.1 million
of trust preferred capital securities included in Tier 1 capital at
June 30, 2015
, compared to
$128.5 million
at
December 31, 2014
. The decrease during 2015 was due to the implementation of Basel III. Effective January 1, 2015, 75 percent of our trust preferred capital securities were excluded from Tier 1 capital, with the remaining 25 percent to be phased out on January 1, 2016.
RISK MANAGEMENT
Effective risk management is critical to our success. The board of directors has established a Risk Committee that provides oversight of enterprise-wide risk management. The Risk Committee is responsible for establishing risk appetite and supporting tolerances for credit, market and operational risk and ensuring that risk is managed within those tolerances, monitoring compliance with laws and regulations, reviewing the investment securities portfolio to ensure that portfolio returns are managed within market risk tolerance and monitoring our legal activity and associated risk. With guidance from and oversight by the Risk Committee, management continually refines and enhances its risk management policies and procedures to maintain effective risk management programs and processes.
Mortgage reform rules mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act became effective in January 2014, requiring lenders to make a reasonable, good faith determination of a borrower's ability to repay any consumer credit transaction secured by a dwelling and to limit prepayment penalties. Increased risks of legal challenge, private right of action and regulatory enforcement are presented by these rules. BancShares implemented the required system, process, procedural and product changes prior to the effective date of the new rules. We have also modified our underwriting standards to ensure compliance with the ability to repay requirements and have determined that we will continue to offer both qualified and non-qualified mortgage products. Historical performance and conservative underwriting of impacted loan portfolios mitigates the risks of non-compliance.
Credit risk management.
Credit risk is the risk of not collecting payments pursuant to the contractual terms of loans, leases and investment securities. Loans and leases, other than acquired loans, were underwritten in accordance with our credit policies and procedures and are subject to periodic ongoing reviews. Acquired loans were recorded at fair value as of the acquisition date and are subject to periodic reviews to identify any further credit deterioration. Our independent credit review function conducts risk reviews and analyses of both acquired and originated loans to ensure compliance with credit policies and to monitor asset quality trends. The risk reviews include portfolio analysis by geographic location, industry, collateral type and product. We strive to identify potential problem loans as early as possible, to record charge-offs or write-downs as appropriate and to maintain an adequate ALLL that accounts for losses inherent in the loan and lease portfolio.
Interest rate risk management
. Interest rate risk (IRR) results principally from assets and liabilities maturing or repricing at different points in time, from assets and liabilities repricing at the same point in time but in different amounts and from short-term and long-term interest rates changing in different magnitudes.
We assess our short term IRR by forecasting net interest income over 24 months under various interest rate scenarios and comparing those results to forecast net interest income assuming stable rates. Rate shock scenarios represent an instantaneous and parallel shift in rates, up or down, from a base yield curve. Due to the existence of contractual floors on certain loans, competitive pressures that constrain our ability to reduce deposit interest rates and the current extraordinarily low level of interest rates, it is unlikely that the rates on most interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities can decline materially from current levels. Our shock projections incorporate assumptions of likely customer migration of low rate deposit instruments to intermediate term fixed rate instruments, such as certificates of deposit, as rates rise. Various other IRR scenarios
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Table of Contents
are modeled to supplement shock scenarios. This may include interest rate ramps, changes in the shape of the yield curve and changes in the relationships of FCB rates to market rates.
Table 14
Net Interest Income Sensitivity Simulation Analysis
This table provides the impact on net interest income over 24 months resulting from various interest rate shock scenarios as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
.
Estimated increase (decrease) in net interest income
Change in interest rate (basis point)
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
+100
2.28
%
2.90
%
+200
1.70
4.10
+300
(2.55
)
2.40
Table 15
Economic Value of Equity Modeling Analysis
Long-term interest rate risk exposure is measured using the economic value of equity ("EVE") sensitivity analysis to study the impact of long-term cash flows on earnings and capital. EVE represents the difference between the sum of the present value of all asset cash flows and the sum of the present value of the liability cash flows. EVE sensitivity analysis involves discounting cash flows of balance sheet items under different interest rate scenarios. Cash flows will vary by interest rate scenario, resulting in variations in EVE. The base-case measurement and its sensitivity to shifts in the yield curve allow management to measure longer-term repricing and option risk in the balance sheet. This table presents the EVE profile as of
June 30, 2015
and
December 31, 2014
.
Estimated increase (decrease) in EVE
Change in interest rate (basis point)
June 30, 2015
December 31, 2014
+100
3.71
%
2.80
%
+200
2.48
2.20
+300
(2.58
)
(0.90
)
We do not typically utilize interest rate swaps, floors, collars or other derivative financial instruments to attempt to hedge our overall balance sheet rate sensitivity and interest rate risk. However, we have entered into an interest rate swap to synthetically convert the variable rate on $93.5 million of junior subordinated debentures to a fixed rate of 5.50 percent through June 2016. The interest rate swap qualifies as a hedge under GAAP. See
Note M
to the Consolidated Financial Statements, "Derivatives," for additional discussion of this interest rate swap.
Liquidity risk management.
Liquidity risk is the risk that an institution will be unable to generate or obtain sufficient cash or its equivalents on a cost-effective basis to meet commitments as they fall due. The most common sources of liquidity risk arise from mismatches in the timing and value of on-balance sheet and off-balance sheet cash inflows and outflows. In general, on-balance sheet mismatches generate liquidity risk when the effective maturity of assets exceeds the effective maturity of liabilities. A commonly cited example of a balance sheet liquidity mismatch is when long-term loans (assets) are funded with short-term deposits (liabilities). Other forms of liquidity risk include market constraints on the ability to convert assets into cash at expected levels, an inability to access funding sources at sufficient levels at a reasonable cost, and changes in economic conditions or exposure to credit, market, operation, legal and reputation risks that can affect an institution’s liquidity risk profile.
We utilize various limit-based measures to monitor, measure and control liquidity risk across three different types of liquidity:
•
Tactical liquidity measures the risk of a negative cash flow position whereby cash outflows exceed cash inflows over a short-term horizon out to nine weeks;
•
Structural liquidity measures the amount by which illiquid assets are supported by long-term funding; and
•
Contingent liquidity utilizes cash flow stress testing across three crisis scenarios to determine the adequacy of our liquidity.
We aim to maintain a diverse mix of liquidity sources to support the liquidity management function, while aiming to avoid funding concentrations by diversifying our external funding with respect to maturities, counterparties and nature. Our primary source of liquidity is our retail deposit book due to the generally stable balances and low cost it offers. Other primary sources of liquidity include cash in excess of our reserve requirement at the Federal Reserve Bank and various other corresponding bank
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Table of Contents
accounts as well as unencumbered securities. This free liquidity totaled
$4.15 billion
at
June 30, 2015
compared to
$4.29 billion
at
December 31, 2014
. Another principal source of available liquidity is advances from the FHLB of Atlanta. Outstanding FHLB advances equaled
$300.3 million
as of
June 30, 2015
, and we had sufficient collateral pledged to secure
$2.09 billion
of additional borrowings. Additionally, we maintain Federal Funds lines and other borrowing facilities that totaled
$740.0 million
at
June 30, 2015
.
CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES
There have been no significant changes in our Critical Accounting Policies as described in our 2014 Annual Report on Form 10-K.
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
Statements in this Report and exhibits relating to plans, strategies, economic performance and trends, projections of results of specific activities or investments, expectations or beliefs about future events or results and other statements that are not descriptions of historical facts may be forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Forward-looking statements may be identified by terms such as “may,” “will,” “should,” “could,” “expects,” “plans,” “intends,” “anticipates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “predicts,” “forecasts,” “projects,” “potential” or “continue,” or similar terms or the negative of these terms, or other statements concerning opinions or judgments of BancShares’ management about future events.
Forward-looking information is inherently subject to risks and uncertainties, and actual results could differ materially from those currently anticipated due to a number of factors which include, but are not limited to, factors discussed in our Annual Report on Form 10-K and in other documents filed by us from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Factors that could influence the accuracy of those forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, the financial success or changing strategies of our customers, customer acceptance of our services, products and fee structure, the competitive nature of the financial services industry, our ability to compete effectively against other financial institutions in our banking markets, actions of government regulators, the level of market interest rates and our ability to manage our interest rate risk, changes in general economic conditions that affect our loan and lease portfolio, the abilities of our borrowers to repay their loans and leases, the values of real estate and other collateral, the impact of the FDIC-assisted transactions and other developments or changes in our business that we do not expect.
Actual results may differ materially from those expressed in or implied by any forward-looking statements. Except to the extent required by applicable law or regulation, BancShares undertakes no obligation to revise or update publicly any forward-looking statements for any reason.
Item 3.
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk
Market risk is the potential economic loss resulting from changes in market prices and interest rates. This risk can either result in diminished current fair values of financial instruments or reduced net interest income in future periods. As of
June 30, 2015
, BancShares’ market risk profile has not changed significantly from
December 31, 2014
, as discussed in the Form 10-K. Changes in fair value that result from movement in market rates cannot be predicted with any degree of certainty. Therefore, the impact that future changes in market rates will have on the fair values of financial instruments is uncertain.
Item 4.
Controls and Procedures
BancShares' management, with the participation of its Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, has evaluated the effectiveness of the design and operation of BancShares' disclosure controls and procedures as of the end of the period covered by this Quarterly Report, in accordance with Rule 13a-15 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act). Based upon that evaluation, as of the end of the period covered by this report, the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer concluded that BancShares' disclosure controls and procedures were effective to provide reasonable assurance that it is able to record, process, summarize and report in a timely manner the information required to be disclosed in the reports it files under the Exchange Act.
No change in BancShares' internal control over financial reporting occurred during the
second quarter
of
2015
that had materially affected or is reasonably likely to materially affect, BancShares' internal control over financial reporting.
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PART II
Item 1. Legal Proceedings
BancShares and various subsidiaries have been named as defendants in various legal actions arising from our normal business activities in which damages in various amounts are claimed. Although the amount of any ultimate liability with respect to those other matters cannot be determined, in the opinion of management, any such liability will not have a material effect on BancShares’ consolidated financial statements.
Additional information relating to legal proceedings is set forth in
Note L
of BancShares' Notes to Unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements.
Item 1A.
Risk Factors
Except as discussed below, there have been no material changes from the risk factors previously disclosed in our Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2014
.
Additional risks and uncertainties that are not currently known or that management does not currently deem to be material could also have a material adverse impact on our financial condition, the results of our operations or our business. If such risks and uncertainties were to become reality or the likelihood of those risks was to increase, the market price of our common stock could decline significantly.
Certain risks continue to receive attention from regulators and financial statement users and therefore have been included in the 10-Q.
Completing the integration of BancShares and Bancorporation may be more difficult, costly, or time-consuming than expected, and the anticipated benefits and cost savings of the merger may not be fully realized.
BancShares merged with Bancorporation on October 1, 2014. The ultimate success of the merger will depend, in part, on our ability to realize the anticipated benefits and cost savings from combining and integrating the businesses, and to do so in a manner that permits growth opportunities and cost savings to be realized without materially disrupting existing customer relationships or decreasing revenues due to loss of customers. While significant strides have been made in combining the companies, the process is not yet completed. The remaining steps and events could result in the loss of key employees, the disruption of ongoing business, and inconsistencies in standards, controls, procedures and policies that affect adversely the our ability to maintain relationships with customers and employees or achieve the anticipated benefits and cost savings of the merger. The loss of key employees or delays or other problems in implementing planned system conversions could adversely affect our ability to successfully conduct business, which could have an adverse effect on our financial results and the value of our common stock. If we experience difficulties with the remaining integration processes, the anticipated benefits of the merger may not be realized fully or at all, or may take longer to realize than expected. As with any merger of financial institutions, there also may be business disruptions that cause us to lose customers or cause customers to remove their accounts from FCB and move their business to competing financial institutions. These integration matters could have an adverse effect on us. If we are not able to achieve our business objectives in the merger, the anticipated benefits and cost savings of the merger may not be realized fully or at all or may take longer to realize than expected.
Breaches of our and our vendor's information security systems could expose us to hacking and the loss of customer information, which could damage our business reputation and expose us to significant liability
We maintain and transmit large amounts of sensitive information electronically, including personal and financial information of our customers. In addition to our own systems, we also rely on external vendors to provide certain services and are, therefore,
exposed to their information security risk. While we seek to mitigate internal and external information security risks, the volume of business conducted through electronic devices continues to grow, and our computer systems and network infrastructure, as well as the systems of external vendors and customers, present security risks including susceptibility to hacking and/or identity theft.
We are also subject to risks arising from a broad range of attacks by doing business on the Internet, which arise from both domestic and international sources and seek to obtain customer information for fraudulent purposes or, in some cases, to disrupt business activities. Information security risks could result in reputational damage and lead to a material adverse impact on our business, financial condition and financial results of operations.
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We continue to encounter technological change for which we expect to incur significant expense
The technological complexity necessary for a competitive array of financial products and services to customers continues to increase. Our future success requires that we maintain technology and associated facilities that will support our ability to meet the banking and other financial needs of our customers. In 2013, we undertook projects to modernize our systems and associated facilities, strengthen our business continuity and disaster recovery efforts, and reduce operational risk. As these projects have evolved over time, we have identified other areas that require improvements to infrastructure, and have accordingly expanded the projects’ scope. In 2014, we increased the total projected spend to approximately $130 million. Of this projected spend, $99.1 million has been incurred, with $87.9 million capitalized and $11.2 million expensed through June 30, 2015. As remaining projects are completed over the next several quarters, we expect expenses to increase as the projects are amortized over their expected useful lives. If the remaining projects' objectives are not achieved or if the cost of the projects materially exceeds the estimate, our business, financial condition and financial results could be adversely impacted.
We rely on external vendors
Third party vendors provide key components of our business infrastructure, including certain data processing and information services. A number of our vendors are large national entities with dominant market presence in their respective fields, and their services could be difficult to quickly replace in the event of failure or other interruption in service. Failures of certain vendors to provide services could adversely affect our ability to deliver products and services to our customers. External vendors also present information security risks. We monitor vendor risks, including the financial stability of critical vendors. The failure of a critical external vendor could disrupt our business and cause us to incur significant expense.
We face significant operational risks in our businesses
Safely conducting and growing our business requires that we create and maintain an appropriate operational and organizational control infrastructure. Operational risk can arise in numerous ways, including employee fraud, customer fraud, and control lapses in bank operations and information technology. Our dependence on our employees, and internal and third party automated systems, to record and process transactions may further increase the risk that technical failures or system-tampering will result in losses that are difficult to detect. We may be subject to disruptions of our operating systems arising from events that are wholly or partially beyond our control. Failure to maintain appropriate operational infrastructure and oversight can lead to loss of service to customers, legal actions and noncompliance with various laws and regulations. We have implemented internal controls to safeguard and maintain our operational and organizational infrastructure and information.
Item 2.
Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
None.
Item 6.
Exhibits
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Table of Contents
31.1
Certification of Chief Executive Officer (filed herewith)
31.2
Certification of Chief Financial Officer (filed herewith)
32.1
Certification of Chief Executive Officer (filed herewith)
32.2
Certification of Chief Financial Officer (filed herewith)
101.INS
XBRL Instance Document
101.SCH
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema
101.CAL
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase
101.DEF
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase
101.LAB
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase
101.PRE
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase
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SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.
Date:
August 5, 2015
FIRST CITIZENS BANCSHARES, INC.
(Registrant)
By:
/s/ CRAIG L. NIX
Craig L. Nix
Chief Financial Officer
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