Companies:
10,761
total market cap:
HK$1021.114 T
Sign In
๐บ๐ธ
EN
English
$ HKD
$
USD
๐บ๐ธ
โฌ
EUR
๐ช๐บ
โน
INR
๐ฎ๐ณ
ยฃ
GBP
๐ฌ๐ง
$
CAD
๐จ๐ฆ
$
AUD
๐ฆ๐บ
$
NZD
๐ณ๐ฟ
$
SGD
๐ธ๐ฌ
Global ranking
Ranking by countries
America
๐บ๐ธ United States
๐จ๐ฆ Canada
๐ฒ๐ฝ Mexico
๐ง๐ท Brazil
๐จ๐ฑ Chile
Europe
๐ช๐บ European Union
๐ฉ๐ช Germany
๐ฌ๐ง United Kingdom
๐ซ๐ท France
๐ช๐ธ Spain
๐ณ๐ฑ Netherlands
๐ธ๐ช Sweden
๐ฎ๐น Italy
๐จ๐ญ Switzerland
๐ต๐ฑ Poland
๐ซ๐ฎ Finland
Asia
๐จ๐ณ China
๐ฏ๐ต Japan
๐ฐ๐ท South Korea
๐ญ๐ฐ Hong Kong
๐ธ๐ฌ Singapore
๐ฎ๐ฉ Indonesia
๐ฎ๐ณ India
๐ฒ๐พ Malaysia
๐น๐ผ Taiwan
๐น๐ญ Thailand
๐ป๐ณ Vietnam
Others
๐ฆ๐บ Australia
๐ณ๐ฟ New Zealand
๐ฎ๐ฑ Israel
๐ธ๐ฆ Saudi Arabia
๐น๐ท Turkey
๐ท๐บ Russia
๐ฟ๐ฆ South Africa
>> All Countries
Ranking by categories
๐ All assets by Market Cap
๐ Automakers
โ๏ธ Airlines
๐ซ Airports
โ๏ธ Aircraft manufacturers
๐ฆ Banks
๐จ Hotels
๐ Pharmaceuticals
๐ E-Commerce
โ๏ธ Healthcare
๐ฆ Courier services
๐ฐ Media/Press
๐ท Alcoholic beverages
๐ฅค Beverages
๐ Clothing
โ๏ธ Mining
๐ Railways
๐ฆ Insurance
๐ Real estate
โ Ports
๐ผ Professional services
๐ด Food
๐ Restaurant chains
โ๐ป Software
๐ Semiconductors
๐ฌ Tobacco
๐ณ Financial services
๐ข Oil&Gas
๐ Electricity
๐งช Chemicals
๐ฐ Investment
๐ก Telecommunication
๐๏ธ Retail
๐ฅ๏ธ Internet
๐ Construction
๐ฎ Video Game
๐ป Tech
๐ฆพ AI
>> All Categories
ETFs
๐ All ETFs
๐๏ธ Bond ETFs
๏ผ Dividend ETFs
โฟ Bitcoin ETFs
โข Ethereum ETFs
๐ช Crypto Currency ETFs
๐ฅ Gold ETFs & ETCs
๐ฅ Silver ETFs & ETCs
๐ข๏ธ Oil ETFs & ETCs
๐ฝ Commodities ETFs & ETNs
๐ Emerging Markets ETFs
๐ Small-Cap ETFs
๐ Low volatility ETFs
๐ Inverse/Bear ETFs
โฌ๏ธ Leveraged ETFs
๐ Global/World ETFs
๐บ๐ธ USA ETFs
๐บ๐ธ S&P 500 ETFs
๐บ๐ธ Dow Jones ETFs
๐ช๐บ Europe ETFs
๐จ๐ณ China ETFs
๐ฏ๐ต Japan ETFs
๐ฎ๐ณ India ETFs
๐ฌ๐ง UK ETFs
๐ฉ๐ช Germany ETFs
๐ซ๐ท France ETFs
โ๏ธ Mining ETFs
โ๏ธ Gold Mining ETFs
โ๏ธ Silver Mining ETFs
๐งฌ Biotech ETFs
๐ฉโ๐ป Tech ETFs
๐ Real Estate ETFs
โ๏ธ Healthcare ETFs
โก Energy ETFs
๐ Renewable Energy ETFs
๐ก๏ธ Insurance ETFs
๐ฐ Water ETFs
๐ด Food & Beverage ETFs
๐ฑ Socially Responsible ETFs
๐ฃ๏ธ Infrastructure ETFs
๐ก Innovation ETFs
๐ Semiconductors ETFs
๐ Aerospace & Defense ETFs
๐ Cybersecurity ETFs
๐ฆพ Artificial Intelligence ETFs
Watchlist
Account
WaFd Bank
WAFD
#4353
Rank
HK$18.59 B
Marketcap
๐บ๐ธ
United States
Country
HK$243.26
Share price
-1.71%
Change (1 day)
11.45%
Change (1 year)
๐ฆ Banks
๐ณ Financial services
Categories
Market cap
Revenue
Earnings
Price history
P/E ratio
P/S ratio
More
Price history
P/E ratio
P/S ratio
P/B ratio
Operating margin
EPS
Stock Splits
Dividends
Dividend yield
Shares outstanding
Fails to deliver
Cost to borrow
Total assets
Total liabilities
Total debt
Cash on Hand
Net Assets
Annual Reports (10-K)
WaFd Bank
Quarterly Reports (10-Q)
Financial Year FY2014 Q2
WaFd Bank - 10-Q quarterly report FY2014 Q2
Text size:
Small
Medium
Large
Table of Contents
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-Q
(Mark One)
x
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended
March 31, 2014
or
o
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from
to
Commission file number 001-34654
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
Washington
91-1661606
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)
425 Pike Street Seattle, Washington 98101
(Address of principal executive offices and zip code)
(206) 624-7930
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
(Former name, former address and former fiscal year, if changed since last report.)
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 12 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 90 days. Yes
x
No
o
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 for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files) Yes
x
No
o
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 definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer” and “smaller reporting company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
Large accelerated filer
x
Accelerated filer
o
Non-accelerated filer
o
Smaller reporting company
o
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes
o
No
x
APPLICABLE ONLY TO CORPORATE ISSUERS
Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuer’s classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date.
Title of class:
at April 30, 2014
Common stock, $1.00 par value
101,329,755
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
PART I
Item 1.
Financial Statements (Unaudited)
The Consolidated Financial Statements of Washington Federal, Inc. and Subsidiaries filed as a part of the report are as follows:
Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition as of March 31, 2014 and September 30, 2013
3
Consolidated Statements of Operations for the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2014 and March 31, 2013
4
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income for the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2014 and March 31, 2013
5
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity for the six months ended March 31, 2014 and March 31, 2013
6
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the six months ended March 31, 2014 and March 31, 2013
7
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
9
Item 2.
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
40
Item 3.
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
48
Item 4.
Controls and Procedures
48
PART II
Item 1.
Legal Proceedings
49
Item 1A.
Risk Factors
49
Item 2.
Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
49
Item 3.
Defaults Upon Senior Securities
49
Item 4.
Mine Safety Disclosures
49
Item 5.
Other Information
49
Item 6.
Exhibits
49
Signatures
51
2
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
(UNAUDITED)
March 31, 2014
September 30, 2013
(In thousands, except share data)
ASSETS
Cash and cash equivalents
$
608,236
$
203,563
Available-for-sale securities, at fair value
3,110,575
2,360,948
Held-to-maturity securities, at amortized cost
1,611,303
1,654,666
Loans receivable, net
7,737,109
7,528,030
Covered loans, net
229,605
295,947
Interest receivable
51,284
49,218
Premises and equipment, net
228,663
206,172
Real estate held for sale
60,995
72,925
Real estate held for investment
13,596
9,392
Covered real estate held for sale
23,005
30,980
FDIC indemnification asset
53,289
64,615
FHLB & FRB stock
167,174
173,009
Intangible assets, net
300,215
264,318
Federal and state income tax assets, net
36,568
44,000
Other assets
132,982
125,076
$
14,364,599
$
13,082,859
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
Liabilities
Customer accounts
Transaction deposit accounts
$
4,874,321
$
3,540,842
Time deposit accounts
5,470,570
5,549,429
10,344,891
9,090,271
FHLB advances
1,930,000
1,930,000
Advance payments by borrowers for taxes and insurance
17,251
42,443
Accrued expenses and other liabilities
91,774
82,510
12,383,916
11,145,224
Stockholders’ equity
Common stock, $1.00 par value, 300,000,000 shares authorized;
133,299,419
and 132,572,475 shares issued;
101
,763,415
an
d 102,484,671 shares outstanding
133,300
132,573
Paid-in capital
1,636,515
1,625,051
Accumulated other comprehensive income, net of taxes
10,490
6,378
Treasury stock, at cost;
31
,536,004
and 30,087,804 shares
(452,593
)
(420,817
)
Retained earnings
652,971
594,450
1,980,683
1,937,635
$
14,364,599
$
13,082,859
SEE NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
3
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(UNAUDITED)
Quarter Ended March 31,
Six Months Ended March 31,
2014
2013
2014
2013
(In thousands, except per share data)
INTEREST INCOME
Loans
$
106,334
$
112,879
$
213,561
$
229,722
Mortgage-backed securities
20,968
10,642
40,360
22,374
Investment securities and cash equivalents
5,049
2,984
9,688
5,717
132,351
126,505
263,609
257,813
INTEREST EXPENSE
Customer accounts
14,780
16,695
30,279
35,466
FHLB advances and other borrowings
16,935
16,787
34,383
33,890
31,715
33,482
64,662
69,356
Net interest income
100,636
93,023
198,947
188,457
Provision for (reversal of) loan losses
(4,336
)
—
(8,936
)
3,600
Net interest income after provision for (reversal of) loan losses
104,972
93,023
207,883
184,857
OTHER INCOME
6,702
6,046
12,490
11,003
OTHER EXPENSE
Compensation and benefits
27,836
23,077
52,962
44,149
Occupancy
5,990
4,825
11,607
9,272
FDIC insurance premiums
2,767
3,107
5,701
6,450
Information technology
3,931
2,852
6,860
5,290
Amortization of intangible assets
728
371
1,549
726
Other
10,807
6,932
17,500
13,575
52,059
41,164
96,179
79,462
Gain (loss) on real estate acquired through foreclosure, net
553
(4,003
)
(1,398
)
(7,322
)
Income before income taxes
60,168
53,902
122,796
109,076
Income tax provision
21,511
17,924
43,903
37,816
NET INCOME
$
38,657
$
35,978
$
78,893
$
71,260
PER SHARE DATA
Basic earnings
$
0.38
$
0.34
$
0.77
$
0.67
Diluted earnings
0.38
0.34
0.77
0.67
Basic weighted average number of shares outstanding
102,013,857
105,206,491
102,173,829
105,606,688
Diluted weighted average number of shares outstanding, including dilutive stock options
102,488,844
105,258,240
102,652,984
105,655,770
SEE NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
4
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
(UNAUDITED)
Quarter Ended March 31,
Six Months Ended March 31,
2014
2013
2014
2013
(In thousands)
Net income
$
38,657
$
35,978
$
78,893
$
71,260
Other comprehensive income (loss) net of tax:
Net unrealized gain (loss) on available-for-sale securities
16,277
408
6,501
(2,228
)
Related tax benefit (expense)
(5,982
)
(150
)
(2,389
)
819
Other comprehensive income (loss)
10,295
258
4,112
(1,409
)
Comprehensive income
$
48,952
$
36,236
$
83,005
$
69,851
SEE NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
5
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
(UNAUDITED)
(In thousands)
Common Stock
Paid-in Capital
Retained Earnings
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income
Treasury Stock
Total
Balance at October 1, 2013
$
132,573
$
1,625,051
$
594,450
$
6,378
$
(420,817
)
$
1,937,635
Net income
78,893
78,893
Other comprehensive income adjustment
4,112
4,112
Dividends paid on common stock
(20,372
)
(20,372
)
Compensation expense related to common stock options
600
600
Proceeds from exercise of common stock options
727
9,184
9,911
Restricted stock
1,680
1,680
Treasury stock acquired
(31,776
)
(31,776
)
Balance at March 31, 2014
$
133,300
$
1,636,515
$
652,971
$
10,490
$
(452,593
)
$
1,980,683
(In thousands)
Common Stock
Paid-in Capital
Retained Earnings
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income
Treasury Stock
Total
Balance at October 1, 2012
$
129,950
$
1,586,295
$
480,780
$
13,306
$
(310,579
)
$
1,899,752
Net income
71,260
71,260
Other comprehensive income adjustment
(1,409
)
(1,409
)
Dividends paid on common stock
(18,090
)
(18,090
)
Compensation expense related to common stock options
600
600
Proceeds from exercise of common stock options
13
139
152
Proceeds from issuance of common stock
1,996
31,496
33,492
Restricted stock
20
1,797
1,817
Treasury stock acquired
(53,224
)
(53,224
)
Balance at March 31, 2013
$
131,979
$
1,620,327
$
533,950
$
11,897
$
(363,803
)
$
1,934,350
SEE NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
6
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(UNAUDITED)
Six Months Ended March 31,
2014
2013
(In thousands)
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net income
$
78,893
$
71,260
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:
Depreciation and amortization
5,993
7,088
Cash received from FDIC under loss share
1,629
11,668
Stock option compensation expense
600
600
Provision for (reversal of) loan losses
(8,936
)
3,600
(Gain) loss on investment securities and real estate held for sale, net
(1,042
)
3,028
(Increase) decrease in accrued interest receivable
(2,066
)
3,440
(Increase) in FDIC loss share receivable
(1,896
)
(777
)
Increase (decrease) in income taxes payable
5,043
(13,937
)
FHLB and FRB stock dividends
(7,753
)
35,712
(Increase) decrease in other assets
6,113
(8,770
)
Net cash provided by operating activities
76,578
112,912
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
Net (loan originations) principal collections
(127,918
)
381,932
FHLB & FRB stock redemption
5,682
1,382
Available-for-sale securities purchased
(930,476
)
(356,966
)
Principal payments and maturities of available-for-sale securities
185,050
100,906
Available-for-sale securities sold
—
43,199
Held-to-maturity securities purchased
—
(407,135
)
Principal payments and maturities of held-to-maturity securities
42,253
132,755
Net cash received from acquisitions
1,254,517
202,308
Proceeds from real estate owned and held for investment
45,705
67,418
Decrease (increase) in intangible assets
—
—
Premises and equipment purchased, net
(19,659
)
(18,048
)
Net cash provided by investing activities
455,154
147,751
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
Net increase (decrease) in customer accounts
(59,630
)
(161,712
)
Net proceeds from borrowings
—
27,529
Proceeds from exercise of common stock options and related tax benefit
9,911
152
Dividends paid on common stock
(20,372
)
(18,930
)
Treasury stock purchased
(31,776
)
(53,224
)
Proceeds from Employee Stock Ownership Plan
(25,192
)
(23,849
)
Proceeds from issuance of preferred stock and related warrants
(127,059
)
(230,034
)
Increase (decrease) in advance payments by borrowers for taxes and insurance
404,673
30,629
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period
203,563
751,430
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period
$
608,236
$
782,059
(CONTINUED)
SEE NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
7
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS (CONTINUED)
(UNAUDITED)
Six Months Ended March 31,
2014
2013
(In thousands)
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION
Non-cash investing activities
Non-covered real estate acquired through foreclosure
$
20,898
$
52,760
Covered real estate acquired through foreclosure
836
5,954
Cash paid during the period for
Interest
65,499
71,092
Income taxes
37,572
32,465
The following summarizes the non-cash activities related to acquisitions
Fair value of assets acquired
$
63,111
$
819,904
Fair value of liabilities assumed
(1,317,628
)
(776,009
)
Net fair value of assets (liabilities)
$
(1,254,517
)
$
43,895
SEE NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
8
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
NOTE A – Summary of Significant Accounting Policies
Washington Federal, Inc. was formed in 1994 as a Washington corporation headquartered in Seattle, Washington. The Company is a bank holding company that conducts its operations through a federally-insured national bank subsidiary. As used throughout this document, the terms "Washington Federal" or the "Company" refer to Washington Federal, Inc. and its consolidated subsidiaries and the term "Bank" refers to the operating subsidiary Washington Federal, National Association.
The consolidated unaudited interim financial statements included in this report have been prepared by Washington Federal. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“GAAP”) requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect amounts reported in the financial statements. Actual results could differ from these estimates. In the opinion of management, all adjustments (consisting only of normal recurring accruals) necessary for a fair presentation are reflected in the interim financial statements. The September 30, 2013 Consolidated Statement of Financial Condition was derived from audited financial statements.
The information included in this Form 10-Q should be read in conjunction with Company’s 2013 Annual Report on Form 10-K (“2013 Form 10-K”) as filed with the SEC. Interim results are not necessarily indicative of results for a full year.
The significant accounting policies used in preparation of the Company's consolidated financial statements are disclosed in its 2013 Form 10-K. Other than as discussed below, there have not been any material changes in its significant accounting policies compared to those contained in its 2013 Form 10-K.
Off-Balance-Sheet Credit Exposures
– The only material off-balance-sheet credit exposures are loans in process and unused lines of credit, which had a combined balance at
March 31, 2014
, excluding covered loans, of
$545 million
. The Company estimates losses on off-balance-sheet credit exposures by including the exposures with the related principal balance outstanding and then applying its general reserve methodology.
NOTE B - Acquisitions
Certain Branches of Bank of America, National Association
Effective as of the close of business on October 31, 2013, the Bank completed the acquisition of
eleven
branches from Bank of America, National Association; these branches are located in New Mexico. Effective as of the close of business on December 6, 2013, the Bank completed the acquisition of another
forty
branches from Bank of America, National Association; these branches are located in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. The combined acquisitions provided
$1.3 billion
in deposit accounts,
$8 million
of loans, and
$17 million
in branch properties. The Bank paid a
2.60%
premium on the total deposits and received
$1.3 billion
in cash from the transaction.
The acquisition method of accounting was used to account for the acquisitions. The purchased assets and assumed liabilities are recorded at their respective acquisition date estimated fair values.
The operating results of the Company include the operating results produced by the first
eleven
branches for the period from November 1, 2013 to March 31, 2014 and for the additional
forty
branches from December 7, 2013 to March 31, 2014.
The table below displays the adjusted fair value as of the acquisition date for each major class of assets acquired and liabilities assumed:
9
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
Adjusted Fair Value Recorded by
Washington Federal
(In thousands)
Assets:
Cash
$
1,254,517
Loans receivable, net
8,278
Property and equipment, net
17,388
Core deposit intangible
8,145
Goodwill
29,300
Total Assets
1,317,628
Liabilities:
Customer accounts
1,314,478
Other liabilities
3,150
Total Liabilities
1,317,628
Net assets acquired
$
—
NOTE C – Dividends
On April 18, 2014, the Company paid its 125th consecutive quarterly cash dividend. Dividends per share were $
.10
and $
.09
for the quarters ended
March 31, 2014
and
2013
, respectively.
10
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
NOTE D – Loans Receivable (excluding Covered Loans)
March 31, 2014
September 30, 2013
(In thousands)
Non-acquired loans
Single-family residential
$
5,448,587
66.5
%
$
5,359,149
67.1
%
Construction - speculative
135,001
1.7
130,778
1.6
Construction - custom
354,279
4.3
302,722
3.8
Land - acquisition & development
74,155
0.9
77,775
1.1
Land - consumer lot loans
113,623
1.3
121,671
1.5
Multi-family
866,097
10.6
831,684
10.4
Commercial real estate
454,246
5.6
414,961
5.1
Commercial & industrial
277,109
3.4
243,199
3.0
HELOC
112,549
1.4
112,186
1.4
Consumer
41,339
0.5
47,141
0.6
Total non-acquired loans
7,876,985
96.2
7,641,266
95.6
Non-impaired acquired loans
Single-family residential
13,177
0.2
14,468
0.2
Construction - speculative
—
—
—
—
Construction - custom
—
—
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
1,135
—
1,489
—
Land - consumer lot loans
3,241
0.1
3,313
—
Multi-family
3,538
—
3,914
0.1
Commercial real estate
112,089
1.3
133,423
1.7
Commercial & industrial
69,872
0.9
75,326
0.9
HELOC
8,624
0.1
10,179
0.1
Consumer
6,842
0.1
8,267
0.1
Total acquired loans
218,518
2.7
250,379
3.1
Credit-impaired acquired loans
Single-family residential
329
—
333
—
Construction - speculative
—
—
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
1,759
—
2,396
—
Multi-family
—
—
—
—
Commercial real estate
68,122
0.9
76,909
1.1
Commercial & industrial
4,724
0.1
7,925
0.1
HELOC
10,679
0.1
11,266
0.1
Consumer
58
—
71
—
Total credit-impaired acquired loans
85,671
1.1
98,900
1.3
Total loans
Single-family residential
5,462,093
66.7
5,373,950
67.3
Construction - speculative
135,001
1.7
130,778
1.6
Construction - custom
354,279
4.3
302,722
3.8
Land - acquisition & development
77,049
0.9
81,660
1.1
Land - consumer lot loans
116,864
1.4
124,984
1.5
Multi-family
869,635
10.6
835,598
10.5
Commercial real estate
634,457
7.8
625,293
7.9
Commercial & industrial
351,705
4.4
326,450
4.0
11
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
HELOC
131,852
1.6
133,631
1.6
Consumer
48,239
0.6
55,479
0.7
Total Loans
8,181,174
100
%
7,990,545
100
%
Less:
Allowance for probable losses
114,931
116,741
Loans in process
264,946
275,577
Discount on acquired loans
29,286
34,143
Deferred net origination fees
34,902
36,054
444,065
462,515
$
7,737,109
$
7,528,030
Changes in the carrying amount and accretable yield for acquired non-impaired and credit-impaired loans (excluding covered loans) for the
six
months ended
March 31, 2014
and the fiscal year ended September 30, 2013 were as follows:
March 31, 2014
Acquired Impaired
Acquired Non-impaired
Accretable
Yield
Net Carrying
Amount of
Loans
Accretable
Yield
Carrying
Amount of
Loans
(In thousands)
Balance as of beginning of period
$
37,236
$
69,718
$
4,977
$
245,373
Reclassification from nonaccretable balance, net (1)
7,300
—
—
—
Accretion
(5,838
)
5,838
(606
)
606
Transfers to REO
—
(1,188
)
—
(1,278
)
Payments received, net
—
(13,620
)
—
(30,565
)
Balance as of end of period
$
38,698
$
60,748
$
4,371
$
214,136
(1) reclassification due to improvements in expected cash flows of the underlying loans.
September 30, 2013
Acquired Impaired
Acquired Non-impaired
Accretable
Yield
Net Carrying
Amount of
Loans
Accretable
Yield
Carrying
Amount of
Loans
(In thousands)
Balance as of beginning of period
$
16,928
$
77,613
$
—
$
—
Reclassification from nonaccretable balance, net (1)
30,026
—
—
—
Additions (2)
—
9,865
10,804
351,335
Accretion
(9,718
)
9,718
(5,827
)
5,827
Transfers to REO
—
(3,975
)
—
(7,755
)
Payments received, net
—
(23,503
)
—
(104,034
)
Balance as of end of period
$
37,236
$
69,718
$
4,977
$
245,373
(1) reclassification due to improvements in expected cash flows of the underlying loans.
(2) includes acquired loans which were acquired as part of the South Valley Bank acquisition.
12
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
The following table sets forth information regarding non-accrual loans (excluding covered loans) held by the Company as of the dates indicated:
March 31, 2014
September 30, 2013
(In thousands)
Non-accrual loans:
Single-family residential
$
81,740
81.6
%
$
100,460
76.5
%
Construction - speculative
2,132
2.1
4,560
3.5
Construction - custom
265
0.3
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
2,113
2.1
2,903
2.2
Land - consumer lot loans
3,007
3.0
3,337
2.5
Multi-family
2,199
2.2
6,573
5.0
Commercial real estate
7,101
7.1
11,736
8.9
Commercial & industrial
579
0.6
477
0.4
HELOC
441
0.4
263
0.2
Consumer
621
0.6
990
0.8
Total non-accrual loans
$
100,198
100
%
$
131,299
100
%
The following tables provide an analysis of the age of loans (excluding covered loans) in past due status as of
March 31, 2014
and
September 30, 2013
, respectively. These balances are net of LIP and charge-offs only.
March 31, 2014
Amount of Loans
Days Delinquent Based on $ Amount of Loans
% based
on $
Type of Loan
Net of LIP & Chg.-Offs
Current
30
60
90
Total
(In thousands)
Non-acquired loans
Single-Family Residential
$
5,445,950
$
5,343,076
$
27,559
$
11,275
$
64,040
$
102,874
1.89
%
Construction - Speculative
88,954
88,124
196
—
634
830
0.93
Construction - Custom
178,099
176,624
1,210
—
265
1,475
0.83
Land - Acquisition & Development
67,314
65,259
—
—
2,055
2,055
3.05
Land - Consumer Lot Loans
113,567
110,021
391
273
2,882
3,546
3.12
Multi-Family
848,708
847,562
20
—
1,126
1,146
0.14
Commercial Real Estate
438,382
435,766
967
387
1,262
2,616
0.60
Commercial & Industrial
277,100
275,817
1,246
1
36
1,283
0.46
HELOC
112,550
111,625
603
284
38
925
0.82
Consumer
41,434
40,184
781
225
244
1,250
3.02
Total non-acquired loans
7,612,058
7,494,058
32,973
12,445
72,582
118,000
1.55
%
Non-impaired acquired loans
Single-Family Residential
13,177
13,104
73
—
—
73
0.55
%
Construction - Speculative
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Construction - Custom
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Land - Acquisition & Development
1,135
726
—
409
—
409
36.04
13
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
Land - Consumer Lot Loans
3,240
3,115
—
—
125
125
3.86
Multi-Family
3,538
3,402
—
—
136
136
3.84
Commercial Real Estate
112,083
108,651
96
—
3,336
3,432
3.06
Commercial & Industrial
69,868
69,542
120
69
137
326
0.47
HELOC
8,624
8,440
184
—
—
184
2.13
Consumer
6,842
6,417
46
2
377
425
6.21
Total non-impaired acquired loans
218,507
213,397
519
480
4,111
5,110
2.34
%
Credit-impaired acquired loans
Single-Family Residential
329
329
—
—
—
—
—
%
Construction - Speculative
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Construction - Custom
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Land - Acquisition & Development
1,758
1,758
—
—
—
—
—
Land - Consumer Lot Loans
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Multi-Family
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Commercial Real Estate
68,115
67,767
348
—
—
348
0.51
Commercial & Industrial
4,724
4,318
—
—
406
406
8.59
HELOC
10,679
10,276
—
—
403
403
3.77
Consumer
58
58
—
—
—
—
—
Total credit-impaired acquired loans
85,663
84,506
348
—
809
1,157
1.35
%
Total Loans
$
7,916,228
$
7,791,961
$
33,840
$
12,925
$
77,502
$
124,267
1.57
%
September 30, 2013
Amount of Loans
Days Delinquent Based on $ Amount of Loans
% based
on $
Type of Loan
Net of LIP & Chg.-Offs
Current
30
60
90
Total
(In thousands)
Non-acquired loans
Single-Family Residential
$
5,356,200
$
5,237,413
$
26,888
$
12,373
$
79,526
$
118,787
2.22
%
Construction - Speculative
82,422
80,047
—
—
2,375
2,375
2.88
Construction - Custom
130,095
129,678
417
—
—
417
0.32
Land - Acquisition & Development
71,567
70,106
—
—
1,461
1,461
2.04
Land - Consumer Lot Loans
121,473
117,076
806
355
3,236
4,397
3.62
Multi-Family
790,564
785,793
—
—
4,771
4,771
0.60
Commercial Real Estate
404,680
398,114
2,942
351
3,273
6,566
1.62
Commercial & Industrial
249,405
249,363
42
—
—
42
0.02
HELOC
112,186
111,407
493
213
73
779
0.69
Consumer
47,142
45,620
849
283
390
1,522
3.23
Total non-acquired loans
7,365,734
7,224,617
32,437
13,575
95,105
141,117
1.92
%
14
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
Non-impaired acquired loans
Single-Family Residential
14,468
14,343
82
—
43
125
0.86
%
Construction - Speculative
—
—
—
—
—
—
NM
Construction - Custom
—
—
—
—
—
—
NM
Land - Acquisition & Development
1,489
1,241
—
—
248
248
16.66
Land - Consumer Lot Loans
3,313
2,987
125
100
101
326
9.84
Multi-Family
3,914
3,914
—
—
—
—
—
Commercial Real Estate
133,398
128,610
134
617
4,037
4,788
3.59
Commercial & Industrial
75,323
74,992
10
153
168
331
0.44
HELOC
10,179
10,063
—
16
100
116
1.14
Consumer
8,266
7,568
90
8
600
698
8.44
Total non-impaired acquired loans
250,350
243,718
441
894
5,297
6,632
2.65
%
Credit-impaired acquired loans
Single-Family Residential
333
333
—
—
—
—
—
%
Construction - Speculative
—
—
—
—
—
—
NM
Construction - Custom
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Land - Acquisition & Development
2,393
1,929
—
464
—
464
19.39
Land - Consumer Lot Loans
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Multi-Family
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Commercial Real Estate
83,116
80,095
2,301
—
720
3,021
3.63
Commercial & Industrial
1,705
1,396
—
—
309
309
18.12
HELOC
11,266
11,176
—
—
90
90
0.80
Consumer
71
71
—
—
—
—
—
Total credit-impaired acquired loans
98,884
95,000
2,301
464
1,119
3,884
3.93
%
Total Loans
$
7,714,968
$
7,563,335
$
35,179
$
14,933
$
101,521
$
151,633
1.97
%
Most loans restructured in troubled debt restructurings ("TDRs") are accruing and performing loans where the borrower has proactively approached the Company about modification due to temporary financial difficulties. Each request is individually evaluated for merit and likelihood of success. The concession for these loans is typically a payment reduction through a rate reduction of between
100
to
200
basis points for a specific term, usually
six
to
twenty-four months
. Interest-only payments may also be approved during the modification period. As of
March 31, 2014
, single-family residential loans comprised
86.1%
of TDRs.
The Company reserves for restructured loans within its allowance for loan loss methodology by taking into account the following performance indicators: 1) time since modification, 2) current payment status and 3) geographic area.
15
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
The following tables provide information related to loans that were restructured during the periods indicated:
Quarter Ended March 31,
2014
2013
Pre-Modification
Post-Modification
Pre-Modification
Post-Modification
Outstanding
Outstanding
Outstanding
Outstanding
Number of
Recorded
Recorded
Number of
Recorded
Recorded
Contracts
Investment
Investment
Contracts
Investment
Investment
(In thousands)
(In thousands)
Troubled Debt Restructurings:
Single-Family Residential
43
$
12,692
$
12,692
130
$
36,059
$
36,059
Construction - Speculative
—
—
—
—
—
—
Construction - Custom
—
—
—
—
—
—
Land - Acquisition & Development
—
—
—
—
—
—
Land - Consumer Lot Loans
1
302
302
9
1,350
1,350
Multi-Family
—
—
—
—
—
—
Commercial Real Estate
—
—
—
—
—
—
Commercial & Industrial
—
—
—
—
—
—
HELOC
—
—
—
1
200
200
Consumer
1
130
130
—
—
—
45
$
13,124
$
13,124
140
$
37,609
$
37,609
Six Months Ended March 31,
2014
2013
Pre-Modification
Post-Modification
Pre-Modification
Post-Modification
Outstanding
Outstanding
Outstanding
Outstanding
Number of
Recorded
Recorded
Number of
Recorded
Recorded
Contracts
Investment
Investment
Contracts
Investment
Investment
(In thousands)
(In thousands)
Troubled Debt Restructurings:
Single-Family Residential
151
34,877
34,877
230
63,146
63,146
Construction - Speculative
—
—
—
1
2,492
2,492
Construction - Custom
—
—
—
—
—
—
Land - Acquisition & Development
—
—
—
—
—
—
Land - Consumer Lot Loans
6
1,394
1,394
18
2,761
2,761
Multi-Family
2
1,207
1,207
1
55
55
Commercial Real Estate
1
804
804
—
—
—
Commercial & Industrial
—
—
—
—
—
—
HELOC
1
261
261
1
200
200
Consumer
3
167
167
—
—
—
164
$
38,710
$
38,710
251
$
68,654
$
68,654
16
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
The following tables provide information on restructured loans for which a payment default occurred during the periods indicated and that had been modified as a TDR within 12 months or less of the payment default:
Quarter Ended March 31,
2014
2013
Number of
Recorded
Number of
Recorded
Contracts
Investment
Contracts
Investment
(In thousands)
(In thousands)
Troubled Debt Restructurings That Subsequently Defaulted:
Single-Family Residential
23
$
4,218
37
$
8,579
Construction - Speculative
—
—
—
—
Construction - Custom
—
—
—
—
Land - Acquisition & Development
—
—
—
—
Land - Consumer Lot Loans
1
83
1
139
Multi-Family
—
—
1
55
Commercial Real Estate
—
—
—
—
Commercial & Industrial
—
—
—
—
HELOC
—
—
2
113
Consumer
—
—
—
—
24
$
4,301
41
$
8,886
Six Months Ended March 31,
2014
2013
Number of
Recorded
Number of
Recorded
Contracts
Investment
Contracts
Investment
(In thousands)
(In thousands)
Troubled Debt Restructurings That Subsequently Defaulted:
Single-Family Residential
38
$
7,067
55
$
13,704
Construction - Speculative
—
—
—
—
Construction - Custom
—
—
—
—
Land - Acquisition & Development
—
—
—
—
Land - Consumer Lot Loans
4
358
1
139
Multi-Family
—
—
1
55
Commercial Real Estate
—
—
1
302
Commercial & Industrial
—
—
—
—
HELOC
—
—
2
113
Consumer
—
—
—
—
42
$
7,425
60
$
14,313
17
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
NOTE E – Allowance for Losses on Loans
The Company has an asset quality review function that analyzes its loan portfolios and reports the results of the review to the Board of Directors on a quarterly basis. The single-family residential, HELOC and consumer portfolios are evaluated based on their performance as a pool of loans, since no single loan is individually significant or judged by its risk rating, size or potential risk of loss. The construction, land, multi-family, commercial real estate and commercial and industrial loans are risk rated on a loan by loan basis to determine the relative risk inherent in specific borrowers or loans. Based on that risk rating, the loans are assigned a grade and classified as follows:
•
Pass – the credit does not meet one of the definitions below.
•
Special mention – A special mention credit is considered to be currently protected from loss but is potentially weak. No loss of principal or interest is foreseen; however, proper supervision and Management attention is required to deter further deterioration in the credit. Assets in this category constitute some undue and unwarranted credit risk but not to the point of justifying a risk rating of substandard. The credit risk may be relatively minor yet constitutes an unwarranted risk in light of the circumstances surrounding a specific asset.
•
Substandard – A substandard credit is an unacceptable credit. Additionally, repayment in the normal course is in jeopardy due to the existence of one or more well defined weaknesses. In these situations, loss of principal is likely if the weakness is not corrected. A substandard asset is inadequately protected by the current sound worth and paying capacity of the borrower or of the collateral pledged, if any. Assets so classified will have a well defined weakness or weaknesses that jeopardize the liquidation of the debt. Loss potential, while existing in the aggregate amount of substandard assets, does not have to exist in individual assets risk rated substandard.
•
Doubtful – A credit classified doubtful has all the weaknesses inherent in one classified substandard with the added characteristic that the weakness makes collection or liquidation in full, on the basis of currently existing facts, conditions and values, highly questionable and improbable. The probability of loss is high, but because of certain important and reasonably specific pending factors that may work to the advantage and strengthening of the asset, its classification as an estimated loss is deferred until its more exact status may be determined. Pending factors include proposed merger, acquisition, or liquidation procedures, capital injection, perfecting liens on additional collateral, and refinancing plans.
•
Loss – Credits classified loss are considered uncollectible and of such little value that their continuance as a bankable asset is not warranted. This classification does not mean that the asset has absolutely no recovery or salvage value, but rather it is not practical or desirable to defer writing off this asset even though partial recovery may be affected in the future. Losses should be taken in the period in which they are identified as uncollectible. Partial charge-off versus full charge-off may be taken if the collateral offers some identifiable protection.
18
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
The following table summarizes the activity in the allowance for loan losses (excluding acquired and covered loans) for the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
and fiscal year ended
September 30, 2013
:
Quarter Ended March 31, 2014
Beginning
Allowance
Charge-offs
Recoveries
Provision &
Transfers
Ending
Allowance
(In thousands)
Single-family residential
$
67,692
$
(2,444
)
$
2,088
$
(3,988
)
$
63,348
Construction - speculative
8,142
(488
)
—
(881
)
6,773
Construction - custom
1,474
—
—
125
1,599
Land - acquisition & development
7,084
(85
)
299
(1,271
)
6,027
Land - consumer lot loans
3,274
(231
)
—
(69
)
2,974
Multi-family
4,109
—
—
78
4,187
Commercial real estate
5,868
(73
)
—
129
5,924
Commercial & industrial
16,505
(444
)
2,852
1,490
20,403
HELOC
943
—
—
32
975
Consumer
3,067
(1,010
)
1,059
(395
)
2,721
$
118,158
$
(4,775
)
$
6,298
$
(4,750
)
$
114,931
Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2013
Beginning
Allowance
Charge-offs
Recoveries
Provision &
Transfers
Ending
Allowance
(In thousands)
Single-family residential
$
81,815
$
(20,947
)
$
9,416
$
(6,100
)
$
64,184
Construction - speculative
12,060
(1,446
)
501
(2,708
)
8,407
Construction - custom
347
(481
)
—
1,016
882
Land - acquisition & development
15,598
(3,983
)
4,105
(6,555
)
9,165
Land - consumer lot loans
4,937
(1,363
)
40
(62
)
3,552
Multi-family
5,280
(1,043
)
171
(592
)
3,816
Commercial real estate
1,956
(747
)
17
4,369
5,595
Commercial & industrial
7,626
(1,145
)
95
10,038
16,614
HELOC
965
(163
)
—
200
1,002
Consumer
2,563
(2,783
)
2,000
1,744
3,524
$
133,147
$
(34,101
)
$
16,345
$
1,350
$
116,741
The Company recorded a $
4,336,000
reversal of the provision for loan losses during the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
, while $
0
provision was recorded for the same quarter one year ago. This reversal of the provision for loan losses is comprised of a
$4,750,000
reversal for non-covered loans and a provision of
$414,000
for acquired or covered loans. The primary reason for the current period recovery is the credit quality of the portfolio has been improving significantly and economic conditions are more favorable.
Non-performing assets (“NPAs”) amounted to $
174,789,000
, or
1.22%
, of total assets at
March 31, 2014
, compared to
$246,075,000
, or
1.88%
, of total assets one year ago. Acquired loans, including covered loans, are not initially classified as non-performing loans because, at acquisition, the carrying value of these loans is adjusted to reflect fair value. There was an additional provision for loan losses recorded on acquired or covered loans during the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
of
$414,000
as a result of decreased expectations of future cash flows due to increased credit losses for certain acquired loan pools. Non-accrual loans decreased from
$149,033,000
at
March 31, 2013
, to
$100,198,000
at
March 31, 2014
, a
32.8%
decrease.
The Company had net recoveries of
$1,523,000
for the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
, compared with
$3,943,000
of net charge-offs for the same quarter one year ago. A loan is charged-off when the loss is estimable and it is confirmed that the borrower will not be able to meet its contractual obligations.
19
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
For the period ending
March 31, 2014
,
$114,096,000
of the allowance was calculated under the Company's general allowance methodology and the remaining
$835,000
was made up of specific reserves on loans that were deemed to be impaired. For the period ending
September 30, 2013
, these amounts were
$113,268,000
and $
3,473,000
, respectively. The shift in total allowance allocation from specific reserves to general reserves is due to the Company having already addressed many of the problem loans focused in the speculative construction and land A&D portfolios, combined with an increase in delinquencies and elevated charge-offs in the single family residential portfolio as compared to prior to the 2009-2011 financial crisis.
The following tables shows a summary of loans collectively and individually evaluated for impairment and the related allocation of general and specific reserves as of
March 31, 2014
and
September 30, 2013
:
March 31, 2014
Loans Collectively Evaluated for Impairment
Loans Individually Evaluated for Impairment
General Reserve
Allocation
Gross Loans Subject to
General Reserve (1)
Ratio
Specific Reserve
Allocation
Gross Loans Subject to
Specific Reserve (1)
Ratio
(In thousands)
(In thousands)
Single-family residential
$
63,348
$
5,357,841
1.2
%
$
—
$
90,746
—
%
Construction - speculative
6,713
123,185
5.4
60
11,816
0.5
Construction - custom
1,599
354,279
0.5
—
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
5,252
64,917
8.1
775
9,238
8.4
Land - consumer lot loans
2,974
99,065
3.0
—
14,558
—
Multi-family
4,187
857,244
0.5
—
8,853
—
Commercial real estate
5,924
439,307
1.3
—
14,938
—
Commercial & industrial
20,403
288,641
7.1
—
10
—
HELOC
975
111,530
0.9
—
1,020
—
Consumer
2,721
41,339
6.6
—
—
—
$
114,096
$
7,737,348
1.5
%
$
835
$
151,179
0.6
%
(1)
Excludes acquired loans with discounts sufficient to absorb potential losses and covered loans
September 30, 2013
Loans Collectively Evaluated for Impairment
Loans Individually Evaluated for Impairment
General Reserve
Allocation
Gross Loans Subject to
General Reserve (1)
Ratio
Specific Reserve
Allocation
Gross Loans Subject to
Specific Reserve (1)
Ratio
(In thousands)
(In thousands)
Single-family residential
$
64,184
$
5,262,159
1.2
%
$
—
$
96,989
—
%
Construction - speculative
7,307
115,554
6.3
1,100
15,224
7.2
Construction - custom
882
302,722
0.3
—
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
6,943
67,521
10.3
2,222
10,254
21.7
Land - consumer lot loans
3,506
107,216
3.3
46
14,455
0.3
Multi-family
3,711
824,279
0.5
105
7,405
1.4
Commercial real estate
5,595
400,789
1.4
—
14,172
—
Commercial & industrial
16,614
256,954
6.5
—
48
—
HELOC
1,002
111,169
0.9
—
1,017
—
Consumer
3,524
47,141
7.5
—
—
—
$
113,268
$
7,495,504
1.5
%
$
3,473
$
159,564
2.2
%
(1) Excludes acquired loans with discounts sufficient to absorb potential losses and covered loans
20
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
The following tables provide information on loans based on credit quality indicators (defined above) as of
March 31, 2014
and
September 30, 2013
.
Credit Risk Profile by Internally Assigned Grade (excludes covered loans):
March 31, 2014
Internally Assigned Grade
Total
Pass
Special mention
Substandard
Doubtful
Loss
Gross Loans
(In thousands)
Non-acquired loans
Single-family residential
$
5,282,350
$
3,009
$
163,228
$
—
$
—
$
5,448,587
Construction - speculative
119,429
—
15,572
—
—
135,001
Construction - custom
354,279
—
—
—
—
354,279
Land - acquisition & development
64,579
—
9,576
—
—
74,155
Land - consumer lot loans
113,160
—
463
—
—
113,623
Multi-family
859,295
1,825
4,977
—
—
866,097
Commercial real estate
419,914
17,526
16,806
—
—
454,246
Commercial & industrial
255,607
19,668
1,797
37
—
277,109
HELOC
112,549
—
—
—
—
112,549
Consumer
41,077
—
262
—
—
41,339
7,622,239
42,028
212,681
37
—
7,876,985
Non-impaired acquired loans
Single-family residential
13,177
—
—
—
—
13,177
Construction - speculative
—
—
—
—
—
—
Construction - custom
—
—
—
—
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
726
—
409
—
—
1,135
Land - consumer lot loans
3,116
—
125
—
—
3,241
Multi-family
3,402
—
136
—
—
3,538
Commercial real estate
93,378
3,473
15,235
3
—
112,089
Commercial & industrial
51,471
13,726
4,638
37
—
69,872
HELOC
8,624
—
—
—
—
8,624
Consumer
6,465
—
377
—
—
6,842
180,359
17,199
20,920
40
—
218,518
Credit-impaired acquired loans
Pool 1 - Construction and land A&D
1,387
—
371
—
—
1,758
Pool 2 - Single-family residential
329
—
—
—
—
329
Pool 3 - Multi-family
—
—
—
—
—
—
Pool 4 - HELOC & other consumer
10,335
—
403
—
—
10,738
Pool 5 - Commercial real estate
50,768
2,168
15,186
—
—
68,122
Pool 6 - Commercial & industrial
1,126
3,598
—
—
—
4,724
Total credit impaired acquired loans
63,945
5,766
15,960
—
—
85,671
Total gross loans
$
7,866,543
$
64,993
$
249,561
$
77
$
—
$
8,181,174
Total grade as a % of total gross loans
96.2
%
0.8
%
3.0
%
—
%
—
%
21
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
September 30, 2013
Internally Assigned Grade
Total
Pass
Special mention
Substandard
Doubtful
Loss
Gross Loans
(In thousands)
Non-acquired loans
Single-family residential
$
5,184,101
$
4,595
$
170,453
$
—
$
—
$
5,359,149
Construction - speculative
99,436
3,199
28,143
—
—
130,778
Construction - custom
302,722
—
—
—
—
302,722
Land - acquisition & development
64,355
775
12,645
—
—
77,775
Land - consumer lot loans
121,039
—
632
—
—
121,671
Multi-family
819,911
2,114
9,659
—
—
831,684
Commercial real estate
373,012
21,652
20,297
—
—
414,961
Commercial & industrial
240,441
1,049
1,709
—
—
243,199
HELOC
112,186
—
—
—
—
112,186
Consumer
46,720
—
421
—
—
47,141
7,363,923
$
33,384
$
243,959
$
—
$
—
$
7,641,266
Non-impaired acquired loans
Single-family residential
14,468
—
—
—
—
14,468
Construction - speculative
—
—
—
—
—
—
Construction - custom
—
—
—
—
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
312
—
1,177
—
—
1,489
Land - consumer lot loans
3,313
—
—
—
—
3,313
Multi-family
3,227
—
687
—
—
3,914
Commercial real estate
105,055
4,190
24,178
—
—
133,423
Commercial & industrial
64,933
1,309
9,084
—
—
75,326
HELOC
10,179
—
—
—
—
10,179
Consumer
8,267
—
—
—
—
8,267
209,754
5,499
35,126
—
—
250,379
Credit-impaired acquired loans
Pool 1 - Construction and land A&D
980
461
955
—
—
2,396
Pool 2 - Single-family residential
333
—
—
—
—
333
Pool 3 - Multi-family
—
—
—
—
—
—
Pool 4 - HELOC & other consumer
11,337
—
—
—
—
11,337
Pool 5 - Commercial real estate
52,509
3,155
21,245
—
—
76,909
Pool 6 - Commercial & industrial
881
—
7,044
—
—
7,925
Total credit impaired acquired loans
66,040
3,616
29,244
—
—
98,900
Total gross loans
$
7,639,717
$
42,499
$
308,329
$
—
$
—
$
7,990,545
Total grade as a % of total gross loans
95.6
%
0.5
%
3.9
%
—
%
—
%
22
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
Credit Risk Profile Based on Payment Activity (excludes acquired and covered loans):
March 31, 2014
Performing Loans
Non-Performing Loans
Amount
% of Total
Gross Loans
Amount
% of Total
Gross Loans
(In thousands)
Single-family residential
$
5,366,847
98.5
%
$
81,740
1.5
%
Construction - speculative
132,869
98.4
2,132
1.6
Construction - custom
354,014
99.9
265
0.1
Land - acquisition & development
72,042
97.2
2,113
2.8
Land - consumer lot loans
110,616
97.4
3,007
2.6
Multi-family
863,898
99.7
2,199
0.3
Commercial real estate
447,145
98.4
7,101
1.6
Commercial & industrial
276,530
99.8
579
0.2
HELOC
112,108
99.6
441
0.4
Consumer
40,718
98.5
621
1.5
$
7,776,787
98.7
%
$
100,198
1.3
%
September 30, 2013
Performing Loans
Non-Performing Loans
Amount
% of Total
Gross Loans
Amount
% of Total
Gross Loans
(In thousands)
Single-family residential
$
5,258,688
98.1
%
$
100,460
1.9
%
Construction - speculative
126,218
96.5
4,560
3.5
Construction - custom
302,722
100.0
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
74,872
96.3
2,903
3.7
Land - consumer lot loans
118,334
97.3
3,337
2.7
Multi-family
825,111
99.2
6,573
0.8
Commercial real estate
389,423
97.1
11,736
2.9
Commercial & industrial
256,525
99.8
477
0.2
HELOC
111,923
99.8
263
0.2
Consumer
46,151
97.9
990
0.2
$
7,509,967
98.3
%
$
131,299
1.7
%
23
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
The following table provides information on impaired loan balances and the related allowances by loan types as of
March 31, 2014
and
September 30, 2013
:
March 31, 2014
Recorded
Investment
Unpaid
Principal
Balance
Related
Allowance
Average Recorded Investment
(In thousands)
With no related allowance recorded:
Single-family residential
$
26,196
$
29,644
$
—
$
23,970
Construction - speculative
1,769
2,392
—
1,993
Construction - custom
265
265
—
133
Land - acquisition & development
1,973
9,325
—
2,085
Land - consumer lot loans
2,239
2,337
—
2,261
Multi-family
1,264
1,305
—
816
Commercial real estate
22,498
25,229
—
15,076
Commercial & industrial
3,843
23,737
—
3,897
HELOC
262
596
—
262
Consumer
321
376
—
329
60,630
95,206
—
50,822
With an allowance recorded:
Single-family residential
348,917
355,044
15,730
347,772
Construction - speculative
9,613
10,043
60
9,625
Construction - custom
1,196
1,196
—
1,196
Land - acquisition & development
5,164
6,104
775
5,302
Land - consumer lot loans
13,270
13,653
—
13,305
Multi-family
7,727
7,947
—
7,744
Commercial real estate
14,457
14,662
—
14,511
Commercial & industrial
31
31
—
38
HELOC
1,198
1,198
—
1,198
Consumer
197
197
—
134
401,770
410,075
16,565
(1)
400,825
Total:
Single-family residential
375,113
384,688
15,730
371,742
Construction - speculative
11,382
12,435
60
11,618
Construction - custom
1,461
1,461
—
1,329
Land - acquisition & development
7,137
15,429
775
7,387
Land - consumer lot loans
15,509
15,990
—
15,566
Multi-family
8,991
9,252
—
8,560
Commercial real estate
36,955
39,891
—
29,587
Commercial & industrial
3,874
23,768
—
3,935
HELOC
1,460
1,794
—
1,460
Consumer
518
573
—
463
$
462,400
$
505,281
$
16,565
(1)
$
451,647
(1)
Includes
$835,000
of specific reserves and
$15,730,000
included in the general reserves.
24
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
September 30, 2013
Recorded
Investment
Unpaid
Principal
Balance
Related
Allowance
2013 Average
Recorded
Investment
(In thousands)
With no related allowance recorded:
Single-family residential
$
33,883
$
38,928
$
—
$
21,458
Construction - speculative
3,891
4,099
—
3,339
Construction - custom
—
—
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
3,020
10,705
—
2,548
Land - consumer lot loans
3,186
3,376
—
1,839
Multi-family
4,929
4,929
—
1,734
Commercial real estate
23,537
31,876
—
9,651
Commercial & industrial
7,279
31,197
—
3,123
HELOC
446
946
—
133
Consumer
601
618
—
127
80,772
126,674
—
43,952
With an allowance recorded:
Single-family residential
335,140
341,910
15,137
330,407
Construction - speculative
8,892
9,342
1,100
12,362
Construction - custom
—
—
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
2,598
4,002
—
8,315
Land - consumer lot loans
12,631
13,014
2,222
12,301
Multi-family
5,958
6,178
46
7,731
Commercial real estate
7,539
8,476
105
9,321
Commercial & industrial
56
56
—
11
HELOC
938
938
—
858
Consumer
33
33
—
9
373,785
383,949
18,610
(1)
381,315
Total:
Single-family residential
369,023
380,838
15,137
351,865
Construction - speculative
12,783
13,441
1,100
15,701
Construction - custom
—
—
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
5,618
14,707
—
10,863
Land - consumer lot loans
15,817
16,390
2,222
14,140
Multi-family
10,887
11,107
46
9,465
Commercial real estate
31,076
40,352
105
18,972
Commercial & industrial
7,335
31,253
—
3,134
HELOC
1,384
1,884
—
991
Consumer
634
651
—
136
$
454,557
$
510,623
$
18,610
(1)
$
425,267
(1)
Includes
$3,473,000
of specific reserves and
$15,137,000
included in the general reserves.
25
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
NOTE F – New Accounting Pronouncements
In January 2014, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued Accounting Standards Update ("ASU") 2014-01, Investments - Equity Method and Joint Ventures (Topic 323): Accounting for Investments in Qualified Affordable Housing Projects. This ASU apply to all reporting entities that invest in qualified affordable housing projects through limited liability entities that are flow through entities for tax purposes. The amendments in this ASU eliminate the effective yield election and permit reporting entities to make an accounting policy election to account for their investments in qualified affordable housing projects using the proportional amortization method if certain conditions are met. Under the proportional amortization method, an entity amortizes the initial cost of the investment in proportion to the tax credits and other tax benefits received and recognizes the net investment performance in the income statement as a component of income tax expense (benefit). Those not electing the proportional amortization method would account for the investment using the equity method or cost method. The amendments in this ASU should be applied retrospectively to all periods presented. The amendments in this ASU are effective for public business entities for annual periods and interim reporting periods within those annual periods, beginning after December 15, 2014. Early adoption is permitted. The Company has adopted this ASU as of December 31, 2013. It has been adopted prospectively, as the retrospective adjustments were not material. The amount of affordable housing tax credits that are expected to be recognized during the 2014 calendar year is
$3 million
. The net investment balance recognized as of March 31, 2014 is
$33 million
. Using the proportional amortization method, the amount recognized as a component of income tax expense for the 2014 calendar year is
$4 million
. Contingent commitments for equity contributions during the 2014 calendar year are
$31 million
. Overall, this adoption does not have a material impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.
In January 2014, the FASB issued ASU 2014-04, Receivables - Troubled Debt Restructurings by Creditors (Subtopic 310-40) - Reclassification of Residential Real Estate Collateralized Consumer Mortgage Loans upon Foreclosure. The amendments are intended to clarify when a creditor should be considered to have received physical possession of residential real estate property collateralizing a consumer mortgage loan such that the loan should be derecognized and the real estate recognized. These amendments clarify 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: (a) the creditor obtaining legal title to the residential real estate property upon completion of a foreclosure; or (b) 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. Additional disclosures are required. The amendments are effective for public business entities for annual periods and interim periods within those annual periods beginning after December 15, 2014. This ASU is not expected to have a material impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.
In July 2013, the FASB issued ASU 2013-11, Income Taxes (Topic 740): Presentation of an Unrecognized Tax Benefit When a Net Operating Loss Carryforward, A Similar Tax Loss, or a Tax Credit Carryforward Exists. Some entities present unrecognized tax benefits as a liability unless the unrecognized tax benefit is directly associated with a tax position taken in a tax year that results in, or that resulted in, the recognition of a net operating loss or tax credit carryforward for that year and the net operating loss or tax credit carryforward has not been utilized. Other entities present unrecognized tax benefits as a reduction of a deferred tax asset for a net operating loss or tax credit carryforward in certain circumstances. The objective of the amendments in this Update is to eliminate that diversity in practice. The guidance in this ASU is effective for fiscal years, and interim periods within those years, beginning after December 15, 2013. The amendments should be applied prospectively to all unrecognized tax benefits that exist at the effective date. Retrospective application is permitted. This new guidance is not expected to have a material impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.
26
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
NOTE G – Fair Value Measurements
U.S. GAAP defines fair value as the exchange price that would be received for an asset or paid to transfer a liability (an exit price) in the principal or most advantageous market for the asset or liability in an orderly transaction between market participants on the measurement date. U.S. GAAP also establishes a fair value hierarchy which requires an entity to maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable inputs when measuring fair value. The standard describes three levels of inputs that may be used to measure fair value:
Level 1:
Quoted prices (unadjusted) for identical assets or liabilities in active exchange markets that the entity has the ability to access as of the measurement date.
Level 2:
Significant other observable inputs other than Level 1 prices, such as quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities, quoted prices in markets that are not active and other inputs that are observable or can be corroborated by observable market data.
Level 3:
Significant unobservable inputs that reflect a company’s own assumptions about the assumptions that market participants would use in pricing an asset or liability.
We have established and documented the Company's process for determining the fair values of the Company's assets and liabilities, where applicable. Fair value is based on quoted market prices, when available, for identical or similar assets or liabilities. In the absence of quoted market prices, fair value is determined using valuation models or third-party appraisals. The following is a description of the valuation methodologies used to measure and report the fair value of financial assets and liabilities on a recurring or nonrecurring basis:
Measured on a Recurring Basis
Securities
Securities available for sale are recorded at fair value on a recurring basis. Most securities at fair value are priced using model pricing based on the securities' relationship to other benchmark quoted prices as provided by an independent third party, and under the provisions of the Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures topic of the FASB Accounting Standards Codification are considered a Level 2 input method. Securities that are traded on active exchanges are considered a Level 1 input method.
The following tables present the balance of assets measured at fair value on a recurring basis at
March 31, 2014
and September 30, 2013:
Fair Value at March 31, 2014
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Total
(In thousands)
Available-for-sale securities
Equity securities
$
101,496
$
—
$
—
$
101,496
Obligations of U.S. government
—
782,257
—
782,257
Obligations of states and political subdivisions
—
22,912
—
22,912
Corporate debt securities
—
434,570
—
434,570
Mortgage-backed securities
—
Agency pass-through certificates
—
1,709,873
—
1,709,873
Other Commercial MBS
—
59,467
—
59,467
Balance at end of period
$
101,496
$
3,009,079
$
—
$
3,110,575
There were no transfers between, into and/or out of Levels 1, 2 or 3 during the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
.
27
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
Fair Value at September 30, 2013
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Total
(In thousands)
Available-for-sale securities
Equity securities
$
101,237
$
—
$
—
$
101,237
Obligations of U.S. government
—
533,975
—
533,975
Obligations of states and political subdivisions
—
22,545
—
22,545
Corporate debt securities
—
452,015
—
452,015
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates
—
1,251,176
—
1,251,176
Balance at end of period
$
101,237
$
2,259,711
$
—
$
2,360,948
There were no transfers between, into and/or out of Levels 1, 2 or 3 during the quarter ended September 30, 2013 other than a transfer from Level 2 to Level 1 of $511 in Equity securities.
Measured on a Nonrecurring Basis
Impaired Loans & Real Estate Held for Sale
From time to time, and on a nonrecurring basis, fair value adjustments to collateral-dependent loans and real estate held for sale are recorded to reflect write-downs of principal balances based on the current appraised or estimated value of the collateral. When management determines that the fair value of the collateral or the real estate held for sale requires additional adjustments, either as a result of a non-current appraisal value or when there is no observable market price, the Company classifies the impaired loan or real estate held for sale as Level 3. Level 3 assets recorded at fair value on a nonrecurring basis at
March 31, 2014
included loans for which a specific reserve allowance was established or a partial charge-off was recorded based on the fair value of collateral, as well as covered REO and real estate held for sale for which fair value of the properties was less than the cost basis.
Real estate held for sale consists principally of properties acquired through foreclosure.
The following tables present the aggregated balance of assets measured at estimated fair value on a nonrecurring basis through the six months ended
March 31, 2014
and March 31, 2013, and the total losses (gains) resulting from those fair value adjustments for the quarters and six months ended
March 31, 2014
and March 31, 2013. These estimated fair values are shown gross of estimated selling costs.
Six Months Ended March 31, 2014
Quarter
Ended
March 31, 2014
Six Months
Ended March 31, 2014
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Total
Total Losses (Gains)
(In thousands)
Impaired loans (1)
$
—
$
—
$
7,066
$
7,066
$
269
$
(536
)
Covered REO (2)
—
—
2,760
2,760
64
129
Real estate held for sale (2)
—
—
26,725
26,725
2,657
6,382
Balance at end of period
$
—
$
—
$
36,551
$
36,551
$
2,990
$
5,975
28
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
Six Months Ended March 31, 2013
Quarter
Ended
March 31, 2013
Six Months
Ended March 31, 2013
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Total
Total Losses
(In thousands)
Impaired loans (1)
$
—
$
—
$
45,966
$
45,966
$
1,225
$
11,038
Covered REO (2)
—
—
13,988
13,988
281
372
Real estate held for sale (2)
—
—
54,069
54,069
6,488
14,024
Balance at end of period
$
—
$
—
$
114,023
$
114,023
$
7,994
$
25,434
___________________
(1)
The losses represents remeasurements of collateral-dependent loans.
(2)
The losses represents aggregate writedowns and charge-offs on real estate held for sale.
There were
no
liabilities carried at fair value, measured on a recurring or nonrecurring basis, at
March 31, 2014
or March 31, 2013.
The following describes the process used to value Level 3 assets measured on a nonrecurring basis:
Impaired loans
- The Company adjusts the carrying amount of impaired loans when there is evidence of probable loss and the expected fair value of the loan is less than its contractual amount. The amount of the impairment may be determined based on the estimated present value of future cash flows or the fair value of the underlying collateral. Impaired loans with a specific reserve allowance based on cash flow analysis or the value of the underlying collateral are classified as Level 3 assets.
The evaluations for impairment are prepared by the Problem Loan Review Committee, which is chaired by the Chief Credit Officer and includes the Loan Review manager and Special Credits manager, as well as senior credit officers, division managers and group executives, as applicable. These evaluations are performed in conjunction with the quarterly allowance for probable loan & lease losses process.
Applicable loans are evaluated for impairment on a quarterly basis. Loans included in the previous quarter's review are reevaluated and if their values are materially different from the prior quarter evaluation, the underlying information (loan balance and collateral value) are compared. Material differences are evaluated for reasonableness and discussions are held between the relationship manager and their division manager to understand the difference and determine if any adjustment is necessary. The inputs are developed and substantiated on a quarterly basis, based on current borrower developments, market conditions and collateral values. The following method is used to value impaired loans:
•
The fair value of the collateral, which may take the form of real estate or personal property, is based on internal estimates, field observations, assessments provided by third-party appraisers and other valuation models. The Company performs or reaffirms valuations of collateral-dependent impaired loans at least annually. Adjustments are made if management believes that more recent information is available and relevant with respect to the fair value of the collateral.
Real estate held for sale ("REO")
- These assets are valued based on inputs such as appraisals and third-party price opinions, less estimated selling costs. Assets that are acquired through foreclosure are recorded initially at the lower of the loan balance or fair value at the date of foreclosure. After foreclosure, valuations are updated periodically, and current market conditions may require the assets to be written down further to a new cost basis. The following method is used to value real estate held for sale:
•
When a loan is reclassified from loan status to real estate held for sale due to the Company taking possession of the collateral, a Special Credits officer, along with the Special Credits manager, obtains a valuation, which may include a third-party appraisal, which is used to establish the fair value of the underlying collateral. The determined fair value net of selling costs, to the extent it does not exceed the carrying value of the loan, becomes the carrying value of the REO asset. In addition to the valuations from independent third-party sources, the carrying balance of REO assets are written down once a bona fide offer is contractually accepted, through execution of a Purchase and Sale Agreement, where the accepted price is lower than the current balance of the particular REO asset. The fair value of REO assets is re-evaluated quarterly and the REO asset is adjusted to reflect the lower of cost or fair value as necessary.
29
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
Fair Values of Financial Instruments
U. S. GAAP requires disclosure of fair value information about financial instruments, whether or not recognized on the statement of financial condition, for which it is practicable to estimate those values. Certain financial instruments and all non-financial instruments are excluded from the disclosure requirements. Accordingly, the aggregate fair value estimates presented do not reflect the underlying fair value of the Company. Although management is not aware of any factors that would materially affect the estimated fair value amounts presented below, such amounts have not been comprehensively revalued for purposes of these financial statements since the dates shown, and therefore, estimates of fair value subsequent to those dates may differ significantly from the amounts presented below.
March 31, 2014
September 30, 2013
Level in Fair Value Hierarchy
Carrying
Amount
Estimated
Fair Value
Carrying
Amount
Estimated
Fair Value
(In thousands)
Financial assets
Cash and cash equivalents
1
$
608,236
$
608,236
$
203,563
$
203,563
Available-for-sale securities
Equity securities
1
101,496
101,496
101,237
101,237
Obligations of U.S. government
2
782,257
782,257
533,975
533,975
Obligations of states and political subdivisions
2
22,912
22,912
22,545
22,545
Corporate debt securities
2
434,570
434,570
452,015
452,015
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates
2
1,709,873
1,709,873
1,251,176
1,251,176
Other Commercial MBS
2
59,467
59,467
—
—
Total available-for-sale securities
3,110,575
3,110,575
2,360,948
2,360,948
Held-to-maturity securities
2
Total held-to-maturity securities
1,611,303
1,527,531
1,654,666
1,582,849
Loans receivable
3
7,737,109
8,205,310
7,528,030
8,070,279
Covered loans
3
229,605
233,275
295,947
300,610
FDIC indemnification asset
3
53,289
52,408
64,615
62,300
FHLB and FRB stock
2
167,174
167,174
173,009
173,009
Financial liabilities
Customer accounts
2
10,344,891
9,720,995
9,090,271
8,585,068
FHLB advances and other borrowings
2
1,930,000
2,056,430
1,930,000
2,064,248
The following methods and assumptions were used to estimate the fair value of financial instruments:
Cash and cash equivalents
– The carrying amount of these items is a reasonable estimate of their fair value.
Available-for-sale securities and held-to-maturity securities
– Securities at fair value are primarily priced using model pricing based on the securities' relationship to other benchmark quoted prices as provided by an independent third party, and under the provisions of the Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures topic of the FASB Accounting Standards Codification are considered a Level 2 input method. Equity securities which are exchange traded are considered a Level 1 input method.
Loans receivable and covered loans
– For certain homogeneous categories of loans, such as fixed- and variable-rate residential mortgages, fair value is estimated for securities backed by similar loans, adjusted for differences in loan characteristics, using the same methodology described above for AFS and HTM securities. The fair value of other loan types is estimated by discounting the future cash flows and estimated prepayments using the current rates at which similar loans would be made to borrowers with similar credit ratings and for the same remaining term. Some loan types were valued at carrying value because of their floating rate or expected maturity characteristics. Net deferred loan fees are not included in the fair value calculation but are included in the carrying amount.
30
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
FDIC indemnification asset
– The fair value of the indemnification asset is estimated by discounting the expected future cash flows using the current rates.
FHLB stock
– The fair value is based upon the par value of the stock which equates to its carrying value.
Customer accounts
– The fair value of demand deposits, savings accounts, and money market accounts is the amount payable on demand at the reporting date. The fair value of fixed-maturity certificates of deposit is estimated by discounting the estimated future cash flows using the rates currently offered for deposits with similar remaining maturities.
FHLB advances and other borrowings
– The fair value of FHLB advances and other borrowings is estimated by discounting the estimated future cash flows using rates currently available to the Company for debt with similar remaining maturities.
The following tables provide a reconciliation of amortized cost to fair value of available-for-sale and held-to-maturity securities as of March 31, 2014 and September 30, 2013:
March 31, 2014
Amortized
Cost
Gross Unrealized
Fair
Value
Yield
Gains
Losses
(In thousands)
Available-for-sale securities
U.S. government and agency securities due
1 to 5 years
$
111,002
$
2,933
$
(1,035
)
$
112,900
1.58
5 to 10 years
143,562
863
(244
)
144,181
1.55
Over 10 years
524,826
1,284
(934
)
525,176
1.51
Equity Securities
Within 1 year
500
6
—
506
2.17
1 to 5 years
100,000
990
—
100,990
1.80
5 to 10 years
—
—
—
—
—
Corporate bonds due
Within 1 year
—
—
—
—
—
1 to 5 years
317,365
2,785
—
320,150
0.75
5 to 10 years
113,130
1,465
(175
)
114,420
1.53
Municipal bonds due
Over 10 years
20,412
2,500
—
22,912
6.45
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates
1,703,893
10,746
(4,766
)
1,709,873
2.59
Other Commercial MBS
59,300
167
—
59,467
1.69
3,093,990
23,739
(7,154
)
3,110,575
2.09
Held-to-maturity securities
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates
1,611,303
1,619
(85,391
)
1,527,531
3.13
$
4,705,293
$
25,358
$
(92,545
)
$
4,638,106
2.44
%
31
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
September 30, 2013
Amortized
Cost
Gross Unrealized
Fair
Value
Yield
Gains
Losses
(In thousands)
Available-for-sale securities
U.S. government and agency securities due
1 to 5 years
$
61,002
$
3,393
$
(252
)
$
64,143
1.98
5 to 10 years
129,219
—
(1,547
)
127,672
0.86
Over 10 years
344,571
—
(2,411
)
342,160
0.93
Equity Securities
1 to 5 years
500
11
—
511
2.17
5 to 10 years
100,000
726
—
100,726
1.80
Corporate bonds due
Within 1 year
19,500
3
—
19,503
0.49
1 to 5 years
317,190
1,980
(130
)
319,040
0.75
5 to 10 years
113,060
1,180
(768
)
113,472
1.53
Municipal bonds due
Over 10 years
20,422
2,123
—
22,545
6.45
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates
1,245,400
10,270
(4,494
)
1,251,176
2.18
2,350,864
19,686
(9,602
)
2,360,948
1.70
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates
1,654,666
3,387
(75,204
)
1,582,849
3.14
$
4,005,530
$
23,073
$
(84,806
)
$
3,943,797
2.30
%
During the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
, there were no available-for-sale securities sold. There were
$43,199,000
of available-for-sale securities sold during the quarter ended
March 31, 2013
, resulting in a gain of $
0
. These securities were acquired from South Valley Bank and sold on the same day. Substantially all mortgage-backed securities have contractual due dates that exceed
10 years
.
32
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
The following tables indicate the total unrealized gross losses in the securities portfolio (shown above). The unrealized gross losses and fair value of securities as of
March 31, 2014
and September 30, 2013 are also shown by the length of time that individual securities in each category have been in a continuous loss position. Management believes that the declines in fair value of these investments are not an other than temporary impairment.
March 31, 2014
Less than 12 months
12 months or more
Total
Unrealized
Gross Losses
Fair
Value
Unrealized
Gross Losses
Fair
Value
Unrealized
Gross Losses
Fair
Value
(In thousands)
Corporate bonds due
$
(100
)
$
49,900
$
(76
)
$
9,925
$
(176
)
$
59,825
U.S. government and agency securities due
(2,158
)
256,389
(55
)
12,083
(2,213
)
268,472
Agency pass-through certificates
(37,918
)
1,112,954
(52,238
)
934,305
(90,156
)
2,047,259
$
(40,176
)
$
1,419,243
$
(52,369
)
$
956,313
$
(92,545
)
$
2,375,556
September 30, 2013
Less than 12 months
12 months or more
Total
Unrealized
Gross Losses
Fair
Value
Unrealized
Gross Losses
Fair
Value
Unrealized
Gross Losses
Fair
Value
(In thousands)
Corporate bonds due
$
(660
)
$
52,434
$
(238
)
$
9,763
$
(898
)
$
62,197
U.S. government and agency securities due
(4,144
)
309,109
(66
)
14,091
(4,210
)
323,200
Agency pass-through certificates
(78,291
)
1,703,948
(1,407
)
166,503
(79,698
)
1,870,451
$
(83,095
)
$
2,065,491
$
(1,711
)
$
190,357
$
(84,806
)
$
2,255,848
33
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
NOTE H – Covered Assets
Covered assets represent loans and real estate held for sale acquired from the FDIC that are subject to loss sharing agreements and were
$252,610,000
as of
March 31, 2014
, versus
$326,927,000
as of
September 30, 2013
.
Changes in the net carrying amount and accretable yield for acquired impaired and non-impaired covered loans for the year to date period ended
March 31, 2014
and the fiscal year ended
September 30, 2013
were as follows:
March 31, 2014
Acquired Impaired
Acquired Non-impaired
Accretable
Yield
Net Carrying
Amount of
Loans
Accretable
Yield
Net Carrying
Amount of
Loans
(In thousands)
Balance at beginning of period
$
78,277
$
138,091
$
17,263
$
157,856
Reclassification from nonaccretable balance, net (1)
5,885
(2,069
)
—
—
Accretion
(15,655
)
15,655
(3,475
)
3,475
Transfers to REO
—
(678
)
—
—
Payments received, net
—
(50,394
)
—
(32,331
)
Balance at end of period
$
68,507
$
100,605
$
13,788
$
129,000
(1) reclassification due to improvements/impairments in expected cash flows of the underlying pools.
September 30, 2013
Acquired Impaired
Acquired Non-impaired
Accretable
Yield
Net Carrying
Amount of
Loans
Accretable
Yield
Carrying
Amount of
Loans
(In thousands)
Balance at beginning of period
$
50,902
$
74,953
$
23,789
$
213,423
Additions (1)
43,299
107,946
—
—
Reclassification from nonaccretable balance, net (2)
17,850
—
—
—
Accretion
(33,774
)
33,774
(6,526
)
6,526
Transfers to REO
—
(11,196
)
—
—
Payments received, net
—
(67,386
)
—
(62,093
)
Balance at end of period
$
78,277
$
138,091
$
17,263
$
157,856
(1) includes FDIC covered loans which were acquired as part of the South Valley Bank acquisition.
(2) reclassification due to improvements/impairments in expected cash flows of the underlying pools.
At
March 31, 2014
, none of the acquired impaired or non-impaired covered loans were classified as non-performing assets. Therefore, interest income, through accretion of the difference between the carrying amount of the loans and the expected cash flows, was recognized on all acquired loans. The allowance for credit losses related to the acquired loans results from decreased expectations of future cash flows due to increased credit losses for certain acquired loan pools.
The outstanding principal balance of acquired covered loans was
$285,769,000
and
$362,248,000
as of
March 31, 2014
and
September 30, 2013
, respectively. The discount balance related to the acquired covered loans was
$54,095,000
and
$66,301,000
as of
March 31, 2014
and
September 30, 2013
, respectively.
34
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
The following table shows the year to date activity for the FDIC indemnification asset:
March 31, 2014
September 30, 2013
(In thousands)
Balance at beginning of fiscal year 2014 and 2013
$
64,615
$
87,571
Additions (1)
1,896
18,101
Payments made (received)
(1,629
)
(13,421
)
Amortization
(12,007
)
(28,722
)
Accretion
414
1,086
Balance at end of period
$
53,289
$
64,615
(1) Includes FDIC covered loans which were acquired as part of the South Valley Bank acquisition in 2013.
35
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
The following tables provide information on covered loans based on credit quality indicators (defined in Note E ) as of
March 31, 2014
and
September 30, 2013
:
March 31, 2014
Internally Assigned Grade
Total
Net Loans
Pass
Special mention
Substandard
Doubtful
Loss
(In thousands)
Acquired non-impaired loans:
Single-family residential
$
23,060
$
—
$
2,462
$
—
$
—
$
25,522
Construction - speculative
—
—
—
—
—
—
Construction - custom
—
—
—
—
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
2,267
—
716
—
—
2,983
Land - consumer lot loans
74
—
34
—
—
108
Multi-family
16,814
—
—
—
—
16,814
Commercial real estate
40,675
157
26,854
—
—
67,686
Commercial & industrial
4,041
—
3,226
—
—
7,267
HELOC
13,294
—
39
—
—
13,333
Consumer
534
—
—
—
—
534
100,759
157
33,331
—
—
134,247
Total grade as a % of total net loans
75.1
%
0.1
%
24.8
%
—
%
—
%
Acquired credit-impaired loans:
Pool 1 - Construction and land A&D
14,266
—
24,493
—
—
38,759
Pool 2 - Single-family residential
19,010
—
982
—
—
19,992
Pool 3 - Multi-family
55
—
1,026
—
—
1,081
Pool 4 - HELOC & other consumer
3,338
—
2,289
—
—
5,627
Pool 5 - Commercial real estate
36,352
3,992
36,528
—
—
76,872
Pool 6 - Commercial & industrial
4,977
437
3,235
542
—
9,191
$
77,998
$
4,429
$
68,553
$
542
$
—
151,522
Total covered loans
285,769
Discount
(54,095
)
Allowance
(2,069
)
Covered loans, net
$
229,605
36
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
September 30, 2013
Internally Assigned Grade
Total
Net Loans
Pass
Special mention
Substandard
Doubtful
Loss
(In thousands)
Acquired non-impaired loans:
Single-family residential
$
26,426
$
—
$
2,034
$
—
$
—
$
28,460
Construction - speculative
—
—
—
—
—
—
Construction - custom
—
—
—
—
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
3,069
1,019
722
—
—
4,810
Land - consumer lot loans
245
—
—
—
—
245
Multi-family
17,217
—
1,635
—
—
18,852
Commercial real estate
56,120
9,235
24,144
—
—
89,499
Commercial & industrial
5,175
500
3,741
—
—
9,416
HELOC
14,750
—
—
—
—
14,750
Consumer
604
—
—
—
—
604
123,606
10,754
32,276
—
—
166,636
Total grade as a % of total net loans
74.2
%
6.4
%
19.4
%
—
%
—
%
Acquired credit-impaired loans:
Pool 1 - Construction and land A&D
14,361
4,296
25,363
—
—
44,020
Pool 2 - Single-family residential
21,541
—
—
—
—
21,541
Pool 3 - Multi-family
4,131
—
1,100
—
—
5,231
Pool 4 - HELOC & other consumer
4,111
—
1,880
—
—
5,991
Pool 5 - Commercial real estate
36,494
15,113
53,946
—
—
105,553
Pool 6 - Commercial & industrial
4,265
204
8,807
—
—
13,276
$
84,903
$
19,613
$
91,096
$
—
$
—
195,612
Total covered loans
362,248
Discount
(66,301
)
Allowance
—
Covered loans, net
$
295,947
37
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
The following tables provide an analysis of the age of acquired non credit-impaired covered loans in past due status as of
March 31, 2014
and
September 30, 2013
:
March 31, 2014
Amount of Loans
Net of LIP & Chg.-Offs
Days Delinquent Based on $ Amount of Loans
% based
on $
Type of Loans
Current
30
60
90
Total
Single-Family Residential
$
25,522
$
23,543
$
281
$
63
$
1,635
$
1,979
7.75
%
Construction - Speculative
—
—
—
—
—
—
NM
Construction - Custom
—
—
—
—
—
—
NM
Land - Acquisition & Development
2,983
2,947
—
—
36
36
1.21
Land - Consumer Lot Loans
108
74
—
—
34
34
31.48
Multi-Family
16,814
16,814
—
—
—
—
—
Commercial Real Estate
67,686
66,136
—
—
1,550
1,550
2.29
Commercial & Industrial
7,267
7,173
—
—
94
94
1.29
HELOC
13,333
13,294
—
—
39
39
0.29
Consumer
534
534
—
—
—
—
—
$
134,247
$
130,515
$
281
$
63
$
3,388
$
3,732
2.78
%
September 30, 2013
Amount of Loans
Net of LIP & Chg.-Offs
Days Delinquent Based on $ Amount of Loans
% based
on $
Type of Loans
Current
30
60
90
Total
Single-Family Residential
$
28,460
$
27,411
$
78
$
—
$
971
$
1,049
3.69
%
Construction - Speculative
—
—
—
—
—
—
NM
Construction - Custom
—
—
—
—
—
—
NM
Land - Acquisition & Development
4,810
4,774
—
—
36
36
0.75
Land - Consumer Lot Loans
245
199
—
—
46
46
18.78
Multi-Family
18,852
17,511
—
—
1,341
1,341
7.11
Commercial Real Estate
89,499
84,949
2,779
455
1,316
4,550
5.08
Commercial & Industrial
9,416
9,416
—
—
—
—
—
HELOC
14,750
14,334
103
74
239
416
2.82
Consumer
604
601
3
—
—
3
0.50
$
166,636
$
159,195
$
2,963
$
529
$
3,949
$
7,441
4.47
%
NM - not meaningful
38
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2014 AND 2013
(UNAUDITED)
NOTE I – Derivatives and Hedging Activities
The Company periodically enters into certain commercial loan interest rate swap agreements in order to provide commercial loan customers the ability to convert from variable to fixed interest rate payments, while the bank retains a variable rate loan. Under these agreements, the Company enters into a variable rate loan agreement and a swap agreement with the client. The swap agreement effectively converts the client’s variable rate loan into a fixed rate. The Company enters into a corresponding swap agreement with a third party in order to offset its exposure on the variable and fixed components of the client's swap agreement. The interest rate swap agreements with the clients and third parties are not designated as hedges under ASC 815, the Derivatives and Hedging topic; the instruments are marked to market in earnings.
The notional amount of open interest rate swap agreements at
March 31, 2014
was
$110,462,000
compared to
$83,594,000
as of September 30, 2013. There was
no
impact to the statement of operations for the
six
-months ended
March 31, 2014
as the asset and liability side of the swaps offset each other. The fee income related to swaps was $
273,200
for the
six
months ended
March 31, 2014
.
The Company periodically enters into forward contracts to purchase mortgage-backed securities as part of its interest rate risk management program. The notional amount of commitments to purchase mortgage-backed securities at
March 31, 2014
was
$0
and at September 30, 2013 was
$200,000,000
. When there is a balance, the fair value of these contracts is included with the available-for-sale securities on the statement of financial condition.
The following table presents the fair value and balance sheet classification of derivatives not designated as hedging instruments at
March 31, 2014
and
September 30, 2013
:
Asset Derivatives
Liability Derivatives
March 31, 2014
September 30, 2013
March 31, 2014
September 30, 2013
Balance Sheet
Balance Sheet
Balance Sheet
Balance Sheet
Location
Fair Value
Location
Fair Value
Location
Fair Value
Location
Fair Value
(In thousands)
Interest rate contracts
Other assets
$
322
Other assets
$
7
Other liabilities
$
322
Other liabilities
$
7
Commitments to purchase MBS
AFS securities
—
AFS securities
$
3,188
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
NOTE J – Subsequent Events
Branch acquisition
Upon the receipt of regulatory approvals and the completion of closing conditions, on May 2, 2014, the Bank completed its previously announced acquisition of
23
branches, located in Arizona and Nevada, from Bank of America, National Association.
The
98,000
deposit accounts acquired totaled
$539 million
, which is
$71 million
less than the
$610 million
that was forecasted. As a result of the decrease in deposits prior to closing, the purchase and sale contract adjusted the deposit premium from
1.30%
of deposits to
.50%
of deposits. The deposit premium paid amounted to
$2.7 million
. The acquisition also provided
$5 million
of loans,
$11 million
in branch properties and equipment, and
$523 million
in cash from the transaction.
39
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
PART I – Financial Information
Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS
In addition to historical information, this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q includes certain “forward-looking statements,” as defined in the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as amended (the "Exchange Act"), based on current management expectations. Actual results could differ materially from those management expectations. Such forward-looking statements include statements regarding the Company’s intentions, beliefs or current expectations as well as the assumptions on which such statements are based. Stockholders and potential stockholders are cautioned that any such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties, and that actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by such forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause future results to vary from current management expectations include, but are not limited to: general economic conditions; legislative and regulatory changes, including without limitation the potential effect of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and regulations being promulgated thereunder; monetary fiscal policies of the federal government; changes in tax policies; rates and regulations of federal, state and local tax authorities; changes in interest rates; deposit flows; cost of funds; demand for loan products; demand for financial services; competition; changes in the quality or composition of the Company’s loan and investment portfolios; changes in accounting principles; policies or guidelines and other economic, competitive, governmental and technological factors affecting the Company’s operations, markets, products, services and fees. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements to reflect changed assumptions, the occurrence of unanticipated events or changes to future operating results over time.
GENERAL
Washington Federal, Inc. was formed in 1994 as a Washington corporation headquartered in Seattle, Washington. The Company is a bank holding company that conducts its operations through the Bank, a federally-insured national bank subsidiary.
On July 17, 2013, the Bank converted from a federal savings association to a national bank charter with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and is now a national bank. At the same time, the Company which had previously been a savings and loan holding company, became a bank holding company under the Bank Holding Company Act.
The Company's fiscal year end is September 30th. All references to 2013 and 2012 represent balances as of September 30, 2013 and September 30, 2012, respectively, or activity for the fiscal years then ended.
The results discussed below were impacted by the acquisition on close of business October 31, 2013 of eleven branches from Bank of America, National Association; these branches are located in New Mexico. Effective as of the close of business on December 6, 2013, the Bank completed the acquisition of another forty branches from Bank of America, National Association; these branches are located in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. The combined acquisitions provided $1.3 billion in deposit accounts, $8 million of loans, and $17 million in branch properties. Washington Federal paid a 2.60% premium on the total deposits and received $1.3 billion in cash from the transactions.
The operating results of the Company include the operating results produced by the first eleven branches for the period from November 1, 2013 to March 31, 2014 and for the additional forty branches from December 7, 2013 to March 31, 2014.
INTEREST RATE RISK
Historically, the Company accepted a higher level of interest rate risk as a result of its significant holdings of fixed-rate single-family home loans that are longer in term than the characteristics of its primary liabilities of customer accounts and borrowings. Based on Management's assessment of the current interest rate environment, the Company has taken steps, including growing shorter-term business loans, transaction deposit accounts and extending the maturity on borrowings, to reduce its interest rate risk profile compared to its historical norms. The recent branch acquisitions have accelerated these efforts. The acquired $1.3 billion in deposits are 83% transaction accounts. The Company has also been purchasing more variable rate investments. The composition of the investment portfolio is now 45% variable and 55% fixed rate. In addition, $1.6 billion of its purchased 30-year fixed rate mortgage-backed securities have been designated as held-to-maturity. With rising interest rates, these securities may be subject to unrealized losses. As of March 31, 2014, the unrealized losses on these securities were $84 million.
The Company relies on various measures of interest rate risk, including an asset/liability maturity gap analysis, modeling of changes in forecasted net interest income under various rate change scenarios, and the impact of interest rate changes on the net portfolio value (“NPV”) of the Company.
40
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
PART I – Financial Information
Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
Maturity Gap Analysis.
At
March 31, 2014
, the Company had approximately $2.0 billion more in liabilities subject to repricing in the next year than assets, which amounted to a negative one-year maturity gap of 13.9% of total assets. This was an increase from the 12.9% negative gap as of
September 30, 2013
. The increase is partly due to the recently acquired deposits as transaction accounts are subject to repricing at any time. Additionally, the estimated maturities of mortgage securities and loans has extended as prepayments have slowed. A negative maturity gap implies that funding costs will change more rapidly than interest income on earning assets with movement in interest rates. A negative maturity gap typically results in lower margins when interest rates rise and higher margins when interest rates decline. Gap analysis provides management with a high-level indication of interest rate risk, but is considered less reliable than more detailed modeling.
Net Interest Income Sensitivity.
The potential impact of rising interest rates on net interest income in the future is estimated using a model that is based on account level detail for loans and deposits. In the event of an immediate and parallel increase of 200 basis points in both short and long-term interest rates, the model estimates that net interest income will decrease by 2.1% in the next year. This compares to an estimated decrease of 1.6% as of the September 30, 2013 analysis. The increased sensitivity is due to some maturity extension in the investment portfolio. This analysis assumes zero balance sheet growth and a constant percentage composition of assets and liabilities. It also assumes that loan and deposit prices respond in full to the increase in market rates. Actual results will differ from the assumptions used in this model, as Management monitors and adjusts loan and deposit pricing and the size and composition of the balance sheet to respond to changing interest rates.
NPV Sensitivity.
The NPV estimates the market of value of shareholder's equity based upon forecasted interest rate scenarios. It is derived by calculating the difference between the present value of expected cash flows from interest-earning assets and the present value of expected cash flows from interest-paying liabilities and off-balance-sheet contracts. The sensitivity of the NPV to changes in interest rates is another measure of interest rate risk. This approach provides a longer term view of interest rate risk as it incorporates all future expected cash flows. In the event of an immediate and parallel increase of 200 basis points in interest rates, the NPV is estimated to decline by $539 million and the NPV to total assets ratio to decline to 15.23%. As of
September 30, 2013
, the estimated decrease in NPV in this event was $314 million and the NPV to total assets ratio was estimated to decline to 17.42%. The increased NPV sensitivity and lower base NPV ratio as of March 31, 2014 is due to the impact of the branch acquisitions, including the characteristics of the acquired deposits and the deployment of cash into securities.
Interest Rate Spread.
The interest rate spread decreased to 2.67% at
March 31, 2014
from 2.73% at
September 30, 2013
. The spread decreased due to a decline in the average rate on loans and investment securities. As of
March 31, 2014
, the weighted average rate on customer deposit accounts and borrowings decreased by 15 basis points compared to
September 30, 2013
, while the weighted average rates on earning assets decreased by 22 basis points over the same period.
As of
March 31, 2014
, the Company had increased total assets by $1,281,740,000 from $13,082,859,000 at
September 30, 2013
due to the recent branch acquisitions that brought $1,314,478,000 in deposits. For the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
, compared to
September 30, 2013
, loans (both non-covered and covered) increased $142,737,000, or 1.8%. Investment securities increased $706,264,000, or 17.6%. Cash and cash equivalents of $608,236,000 and stockholders’ equity of $1,980,683,000 as of March 31, 2014 provides management with flexibility in managing interest rate risk going forward.
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
The Company’s net worth at
March 31, 2014
was
$1,980,683,000
, or
13.79%
of total assets. This was an increase of $43,048,000 from
September 30, 2013
when net worth was
$1,937,635,000
, or
14.81%
of total assets. The Company’s net worth was impacted in the
six
months ended
March 31, 2014
by net income of
$78,893,000
, the payment of
$20,372,000
in cash dividends, treasury stock purchases that totaled
$31,776,000
, as well as a increase in other comprehensive income of
$4,112,000
.
Management believes this strong net worth position will help the Company manage its inherent risks and resultant profitability and provide the capital support needed for controlled growth in a regulated environment. To be categorized as well capitalized, Washington Federal must maintain minimum total risk-based, Tier 1 risk-based and Tier 1 leverage ratios as set forth in the following table.
41
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
PART I – Financial Information
Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
Actual
Capital
Adequacy Guidelines
Categorized as
Well Capitalized Under
Prompt Corrective
Action Provisions
Capital
Ratio
Capital
Ratio
Capital
Ratio
(In thousands)
March 31, 2014
Total capital (to risk-weighted assets)
The Company
$
1,755,764
25.48
%
$
551,298
8.00
%
NA
NA
The Bank
1,740,488
25.25
%
551,420
8.00
%
$689,275
10.00
%
Tier I capital (to risk-weighted assets)
The Company
1,668,794
24.22
%
275,649
4.00
%
NA
NA
The Bank
1,653,499
23.99
%
275,710
4.00
%
413,565
6.00
%
Tier I Capital (to average assets)
The Company
1,668,794
11.85
%
563,323
4.00
%
NA
NA
The Bank
1,653,499
11.74
%
563,463
4.00
%
704,329
5.00
%
September 30, 2013
Total capital (to risk-weighted assets)
The Company
1,749,383
26.49
%
528,243
8.00
%
NA
NA
The Bank
1,693,227
25.64
%
528,380
8.00
%
660,475
10.00
%
Tier I capital (to risk-weighted assets)
The Company
1,666,091
25.23
%
264,121
4.00
%
NA
NA
The Bank
1,609,914
24.38
%
264,190
4.00
%
396,285
6.00
%
Tier I Capital (to average assets)
The Company
1,666,091
13.03
%
511,334
4.00
%
NA
N/A
The Bank
1,609,914
12.59
%
511,358
4.00
%
639,197
5.00
%
The Company's cash and cash equivalents amounted to
$608,236,000
at
March 31, 2014
, an increase from
$203,563,000
at
September 30, 2013
. The Company is in the process of investing the liquid assets that were acquired in the recent branch acquisitions. Previously, it was holding higher than normal amounts of liquidity due to concern about potentially rising interest rates in the future. Additionally, see "Interest Rate Risk" above and the "Statement of Cash Flows" included in the financial statements.
CHANGES IN FINANCIAL CONDITION
Available-for-sale and held-to-maturity securities
: Available-for-sale securities increased $749,627,000, or 31.7%, during the
six
months ended
March 31, 2014
, which included the purchase of
$930,476,000
of available-for-sale securities. There were no available-for-sale securities sold during the
six
months ended
March 31, 2014
. During the same period, there were no held-to-maturity securities purchased and no sales. As of
March 31, 2014
, the Company had net unrealized gains on available-for-sale securities of
$10,490,000
, net of tax, which were recorded as part of stockholders’ equity. The Company increased its available-for-sale portfolio with investments made with the proceeds from the recent branch acquisitions.
Loans receivable
: During the
six
months ended
March 31, 2014
, the balance of loans receivable increased to
$7,737,109,000
compared to
$7,528,030,000
at
September 30, 2013
. This increase includes net loan activity (originations less principal payments and maturities) for non covered loans of $208,020,000 and the acquisition of
$8,278,000
in loans as described in Note B. Additionally, during the
six
month period,
$20,898,000
of loans were transferred to REO.
Covered loans
: As of
March 31, 2014
, covered loans decreased 22.4%, or $66,342,000 to
$229,605,000
, compared to
September 30, 2013
due primarily to $80,725,000 of principal payments and maturities.
42
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
PART I – Financial Information
Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
The following table shows the loan portfolio by category for the last three quarters.
Loan Portfolio by Category *
March 31, 2014
December 31, 2013
September 30, 2013
Total Loans
Single-family residential
5,462,093
66.6
5,436,083
67.0
5,373,950
67.3
Construction - speculative
135,001
1.7
135,868
1.7
130,778
1.6
Construction - custom
354,279
4.3
333,954
4.1
302,722
3.8
Land - acquisition & development
77,049
0.9
75,506
0.9
81,660
1.1
Land - consumer lot loans
116,864
1.5
122,467
1.5
124,984
1.5
Multi-family
869,635
10.6
846,116
10.5
835,598
10.5
Commercial real estate
634,457
7.8
622,240
7.7
625,293
7.9
Commercial & industrial
351,705
4.4
354,166
4.4
326,450
4
HELOC
131,852
1.6
131,949
1.6
133,631
1.6
Consumer
48,239
0.6
51,960
0.6
55,479
0.7
Total Loans
8,181,174
100
%
8,110,309
100
%
7,990,545
100
%
Less:
Allowance for probable losses
114,931
118,158
116,741
Loans in process
264,946
273,263
275,577
Discount on acquired loans
29,286
31,485
34,143
Deferred net origination fees
34,902
35,845
36,054
444,065
458,751
462,515
$
7,737,109
$
7,651,558
$
7,528,030
____________________
* Excludes covered loans
Non-performing assets (excludes discounted acquired assets)
: NPAs decreased during the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
to
$174,789,000
from
$213,616,000
at
September 30, 2013
, an
18.2%
decrease, due to improving credit conditions and credit quality. Non-performing assets as a percentage of total assets was
1.22%
at
March 31, 2014
compared to
1.63%
at
September 30, 2013
. This level of NPAs is significantly higher than the Company's history prior to 2007 of 0.50%. The Company’s 30-year average is 0.96%.
43
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
PART I – Financial Information
Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
The following table sets forth information regarding restructured and non-accrual loans and REO held by the Company at the dates indicated.
March 31,
2014
September 30,
2013
(In thousands)
Restructured loans:
Single-family residential
$
348,918
86.1
%
$
356,577
85.7
%
Construction - speculative
9,416
2.3
10,733
2.6
Construction - custom
1,196
0.3
1,196
0.3
Land - acquisition & development
5,164
1.3
7,211
1.7
Land - consumer lot loans
13,270
3.3
12,706
3.1
Multi - family
7,727
1.9
7,557
1.8
Commercial real estate
18,107
4.5
18,539
4.5
Commercial & industrial
31
—
56
—
HELOC
1,198
0.3
1,088
0.3
Consumer
197
—
33
—
Total restructured loans (1)
405,224
100
%
415,696
100
%
Non-accrual loans:
Single-family residential
81,740
81.6
%
100,460
76.5
%
Construction - speculative
2,132
2.1
4,560
3.5
Construction - custom
265
0.3
—
—
Land - acquisition & development
2,113
2.1
2,903
2.2
Land - consumer lot loans
3,007
3.0
3,337
2.5
Multi-family
2,199
2.2
6,573
5.0
Commercial real estate
7,101
7.1
11,736
8.9
Commercial & industrial
579
0.6
477
0.4
HELOC
441
0.4
263
0.2
Consumer
621
0.6
990
0.8
Total non-accrual loans (2)
100,198
100
%
131,299
100
%
Total REO (3)
60,995
72,925
Total REHI (3)
13,596
9,392
Total non-performing assets
$
174,789
$
213,616
Total non-performing assets and performing restructured loans as a percentage of total assets
3.88
%
4.52
%
(1) Restructured loans were as follows:
Performing
$
381,849
94.2
%
$
391,415
94.2
%
Non-accrual (included in Total non-accrual loans)
23,375
5.8
24,281
5.8
$
405,224
100
%
$
415,696
100
%
(2)
The Company recognized interest income on nonaccrual loans of approximately $3,057,000 in the six months ended
March 31, 2014
. Had these loans performed according to their original contract terms, the Company would have recognized interest income of approximately $2,819,000 for the six months ended
March 31, 2014
. The recognized interest income may include more than six months of interest for some of the loans that were brought current.
44
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
PART I – Financial Information
Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
In addition to the nonaccrual loans reflected in the above table, at
March 31, 2014
the Company had $87,415,000 of loans that were less than 90 days delinquent but which it had classified as substandard for one or more reasons. If these loans were deemed non-performing, the Company’s ratio of total NPAs and performing restructured loans as a percent of total assets would have increased to 4.48% at
March 31, 2014
.
(3)
Total REO and REHI includes real estate held for sale acquired in settlement of loans or acquired from purchased institutions in settlement of loans. Excludes covered REO.
Restructured single-family residential loans are reserved for under the Company’s general reserve methodology. If any individual loan is significant in balance, the Company may establish a specific reserve as warranted.
Most restructured loans are accruing and performing loans where the borrower has proactively approached the Company about modifications due to temporary financial difficulties. Each request is individually evaluated for merit and likelihood of success. Single-family residential loans comprised
86.1%
of restructured loans as of
March 31, 2014
. The concession for these loans is typically a payment reduction through a rate reduction of from 100 to 200 bps for a specific term, usually six to twelve months. Interest-only payments may also be approved during the modification period.
For commercial loans, six consecutive payments on newly restructured loan terms are required prior to returning the loan to accrual status. In some instances after the required six consecutive payments are made, a management assessment will conclude that collection of the entire principal balance is still in doubt. In those instances, the loan will remain on non-accrual. Homogeneous loans may or may not be on accrual status at the time of restructuring, but all are placed on accrual status upon the restructuring of the loan. Homogeneous loans are restructured only if the borrower can demonstrate the ability to meet the restructured payment terms; otherwise, collection is pursued and the loan remains on non-accrual status until liquidated. If the homogeneous restructured loan does not perform it will be placed in non-accrual status when it is 90 days delinquent.
A loan that defaults and is subsequently modified would impact the Company’s delinquency trend, which is part of the qualitative risk factors component of the general reserve calculation. Any modified loan that re-defaults and is charged-off would impact the historical loss factors component of the Company's general reserve calculation.
Allocation of the allowance for loan losses
: The following table shows the allocation of the Company’s allowance for loan losses at the dates indicated.
March 31, 2014
September 30, 2013
Amount
Loans to
Total Loans (1)
Coverage
Ratio (2)
Amount
Loans to
Total Loans (1)
Coverage
Ratio (2)
(In thousands)
(In thousands)
Single-family residential
$
63,348
69.1
%
1.2
%
$
64,184
69.9
%
1.2
%
Construction - speculative
6,773
1.7
5.0
8,407
1.7
6.4
Construction - custom
1,599
4.5
0.5
882
4.0
0.3
Land - acquisition & development
6,027
0.9
8.1
9,165
1.0
11.8
Land - consumer lot loans
2,974
1.4
2.6
3,552
1.6
2.9
Multi-family
4,187
11.0
0.5
3,816
10.9
0.5
Commercial real estate
5,924
5.8
1.3
5,595
5.4
1.3
Commercial & industrial
20,403
3.7
7.1
16,614
3.4
6.5
HELOC
975
1.4
0.9
1,002
1.5
0.9
Consumer
2,721
0.5
6.6
3,524
0.6
7.5
$
114,931
100
%
1.5
%
$
116,741
100
%
1.5
%
(1)
Represents the total amount of the loan category as a % of total gross non-acquired and non-covered loans outstanding.
(2)
Represents the allocated allowance of the loan category as a % of total gross non-acquired and non-covered loans outstanding for the same loan category.
45
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
PART I – Financial Information
Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
Customer accounts
: Customer accounts increased
$1,254,620,000
, or
13.80%
, to
$10,344,891,000
at
March 31, 2014
compared with
$9,090,271,000
at
September 30, 2013
.
The following table shows the composition of the Company’s customer accounts by deposit type as of the dates shown:
March 31, 2014
September 30, 2013
(In thousands)
Wtd. Avg.
Rate
Wtd. Avg.
Rate
Non-interest checking
$
691,577
6.7
%
—
%
$
447,368
4.9
%
—
%
Interest checking
1,265,041
12.2
0.08
%
800,516
8.8
0.13
%
Savings (passbook/stmt)
575,440
5.6
0.10
%
404,938
4.5
0.15
%
Money Market
2,342,263
22.6
0.19
%
1,888,020
20.8
0.23
%
CD’s
5,470,570
52.9
0.95
%
5,549,429
61.0
1.03
%
Total
$
10,344,891
100
%
0.56
%
$
9,090,271
100
%
0.69
%
FHLB advances and other borrowings
: Total borrowings were
$1,930,000,000
as of
March 31, 2014
which is the same balance as of
September 30, 2013
. The Company has a credit line with the FHLB Seattle equal to 50% of total assets, providing a substantial source of liquidity if needed. FHLB advances are collateralized as provided for in the Advances, Pledge and Security Agreement by all FHLB stock owned by the Company, deposits with the FHLB and certain mortgages or deeds of trust securing such properties as provided in the agreements with the FHLB.
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
Net Income
: The quarter ended
March 31, 2014
produced net income of
$38,657,000
compared to
$35,978,000
for the same quarter one year ago. For the six months ended
March 31, 2014
, net income totaled
$78,893,000
compared to
$71,260,000
for the same period one year ago. Net income for the quarter and six months ended
March 31, 2014
benefited from overall lower credit costs, which included the recovery for loan losses and reduced losses on real estate acquired through foreclosure. The provision for loan losses amounted to a recovery of
$4,336,000
and
$8,936,000
for the quarter and six months ended
March 31, 2014
, respectively, as compared to a provision of
$0
and
$3,600,000
for the quarter and six months ended
March 31, 2013
, respectively. See related discussion in “Provision for Loan Losses” section below for reasons for the decrease in the provision for loan losses. Gains/losses recognized on real estate acquired through foreclosure was a net gain of
$553,000
and a net loss of
$1,398,000
for the quarter and six months ended
March 31, 2014
, respectively, as compared to a net loss of
$4,003,000
and
$7,322,000
for the quarter and six month periods one year ago, respectively.
Net Interest Income
: Net interest income was
$100,636,000
for the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
, compared to
$93,023,000
for the same quarter one year ago, due to increased interest income on mortgage-backed securities and lower rates on customer deposits.
The following table sets forth certain information explaining changes in interest income and interest expense for the periods indicated compared to the same periods one year ago. For each category of interest-earning asset and interest-bearing liability, information is provided on changes attributable to (1) changes in volume (changes in volume multiplied by old rate) and (2) changes in rate (changes in rate multiplied by old volume). The change in interest income and interest expense attributable to changes in both volume and rate has been allocated proportionately to the change due to volume and the change due to rate.
46
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
PART I – Financial Information
Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
Rate / Volume Analysis:
Comparison of Quarters Ended
3/31/14 and 3/31/13
Comparison of Six months Ended
3/31/14 and 3/31/13
Volume
Rate
Total
Volume
Rate
Total
(In thousands)
(In thousands)
Interest income:
Loans and covered loans
$
464
$
(7,009
)
$
(6,545
)
$
(1,316
)
$
(14,845
)
$
(16,161
)
Mortgaged-backed securities
4,269
6,161
10,430
7,596
10,470
18,066
Investments (1)
887
1,074
1,961
1,469
2,422
3,891
All interest-earning assets
5,620
226
5,846
7,749
(1,953
)
5,796
Interest expense:
Customer accounts
2,096
(4,011
)
(1,915
)
3,420
(8,607
)
(5,187
)
FHLB advances and other borrowings
523
(375
)
148
1,955
(1,462
)
493
All interest-bearing liabilities
2,619
(4,386
)
(1,767
)
5,375
(10,069
)
(4,694
)
Change in net interest income
$
3,001
$
4,612
$
7,613
$
2,374
$
8,116
$
10,490
___________________
(1)
Includes interest on cash equivalents and dividends on FHLB stock
Provision for Loan Losses
: The Company recorded a $
4,336,000
recovery for loan losses during the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
, while a $
0
provision was recorded for the same quarter one year ago. Non-performing assets amounted to
$174,789,000
, or
1.22%
, of total assets at
March 31, 2014
, compared to
$246,075,000
, or
1.88%
, of total assets one year ago. Non-accrual loans decreased from
$149,033,000
at
March 31, 2013
, to
$100,198,000
at
March 31, 2014
, a
32.8%
decrease. The Company had net recoveries of
$1,523,000
for the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
, compared with
$3,943,000
of net charge-offs for the same quarter one year ago. The improvement in the provision for loan losses is in response to three primary factors: first, the amount of NPAs improved year-over-year; second, non-accrual loans as a percentage of net loans decreased from
2.00%
at
March 31, 2013
, to
1.30%
at
March 31, 2014
; and third, the percentage of loans 30 days or more delinquent decreased from
2.34%
at
March 31, 2013
, to
1.57%
at
March 31, 2014
.
Management believes the allowance for loan losses, totaling
$114,931,000
, or
1.40%
of gross loans, is sufficient to absorb estimated losses inherent in the portfolio. See Note E for further discussion and analysis of the allowance for loan losses for the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
.
Other Income
: The quarter ended
March 31, 2014
produced total other income of
$6,702,000
compared to
$6,046,000
for the same quarter one year ago, an increase of $656,000, due primarily to increased transaction fee income related to deposit accounts acquired as part of the acquisition of branches from Bank of America, National Association as of the close of business on October 31, 2013 and December 6, 2013. Please see Note B for additional information.
Other Expense
: The quarter ended
March 31, 2014
, produced total other expense of
$52,059,000
compared to
$41,164,000
for the same quarter one year ago, a 26.5% increase. Total other expense for the quarters ended
March 31, 2014
and
2013
equaled 1.45% and 1.26%, respectively, of average assets. The number of staff, including part-time employees on a full-time equivalent basis, was
1,846
and 1,439 at
March 31, 2014
and
2013
, respectively. Higher occupancy expense was due to an increase in the number of branches from 188 as of March 31, 2013 to
231
as of March 31, 2014.
Loss on Real Estate Acquired Through Foreclosure:
The quarter ended
March 31, 2014
, produced a net gain on the sale of real estate acquired through foreclosure of
$553,000
compared to a net loss of
$4,003,000
for the same quarter one year ago, a 113.8% improvement. The table below indicates some of the activity in the gain (loss) on real estate acquired through foreclosure.
47
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
PART I – Financial Information
Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
Quarter Ended March 31,
2014
2013
(In thousands)
Net Gain on Sale
$
2,362
$
1,035
REO Writedowns
(879
)
(2,868
)
REO Operating Expenses
(930
)
(2,170
)
Gain (loss) on real estate acquired through foreclosure, net
$
553
$
(4,003
)
Taxes
: Income taxes increased to
$21,511,000
for the quarter ended
March 31, 2014
, as compared to
$17,924,000
for the same period one year ago. The effective tax rate for the quarter ended March 31, 2014 was 35.75% compared to 33.25% for the quarter ended March 31, 2013. The quarter ended March 31, 2013 benefited from the settlement of a tax dispute in the Company's favor. The Company expects an effective tax rate of 35.75% going forward.
Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
Management believes that there have been no material changes in the Company’s quantitative and qualitative information about market risk since
September 30, 2013
. For a complete discussion of the Company’s quantitative and qualitative market risk, see “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” in the Company’s 2013 Form 10-K.
Item 4. Controls and Procedures
(a)
Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures
. The Company maintains a set of disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Exchange Act that are designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed by the Company in the reports it files or submits under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the Securities and Exchange Commission's rules and forms, and that such information is accumulated and communicated to the Company's management, including the Company’s President and Chief Executive Officer and the Company’s Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure. Management has evaluated, with the participation of the Company’s President and Chief Executive Officer, and the Company’s Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, the effectiveness of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures as of the end of the period covered by this quarterly report (the "Evaluation Date"). Based on the evaluation, the Company’s President and Chief Executive Officer and the Company’s Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer have concluded that, as of the Evaluation Date, the Company's disclosure controls and procedures are effective.
(b)
Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting
. During the period to which this report relates, there have not been any changes in the Company's internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Exchange Act) that have materially affected, or that are reasonably likely to materially affect, such controls.
48
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
PART II – Other Information
Item 1. Legal Proceedings
From time to time the Company or its subsidiaries are engaged in legal proceedings in the ordinary course of business, none of which are considered to have a material impact on the Company’s financial position or results of operations.
Item 1A. Risk Factors
In addition to the other information set forth in this report, you should carefully consider the factors discussed under "Part I--Item 1A--Risk Factors" in the 2013 Form 10-K for the year ended
September 30, 2013
. These factors could materially and adversely affect the Company's business, financial condition, liquidity, results of operations and capital position, and could cause its actual results to differ materially from our historical results or the results contemplated by the forward-looking statements contained in this report.
Item 2. Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
The following table provides information with respect to purchases made by or on behalf of the Company of the Company’s common stock during the three months ended
March 31, 2014
.
Period
Total Number of
Shares Purchased
Average Price
Paid Per Share
Total Number of
Shares Purchased
as Part of Publicly
Announced Plan (1)
Maximum
Number of Shares
That May Yet Be
Purchased Under
the Plan at the
End of the Period
January 1, 2014 to January 31, 2014
—
$
—
—
9,017,934
February 1, 2014 to February 28, 2014
593,300
21.63
593,300
8,424,634
March 1, 2014 to March 31, 2014
—
—
—
8,424,634
Total
593,300
$
21.63
593,300
8,424,634
___________________
(1)
The Company's only stock repurchase program was publicly announced by its Board of Directors on February 3, 1995 and has no expiration date. Under this ongoing program, a total of
41,956,264
shares have been authorized for repurchase.
Item 3. Defaults Upon Senior Securities
Not applicable
Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures
Not applicable
Item 5. Other Information
Not applicable
Item 6. Exhibits
49
Table of Contents
(a)
Exhibits
31.1
Section 302 Certification by the Chief Executive Officer
31.2
Section 302 Certification by the Chief Financial Officer
32
Section 906 Certification by the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer
101
Financial Statements from the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the fiscal quarter ended March 31, 2014 formatted in XBRL
50
Table of Contents
WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Exchange Act, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.
May 8, 2014
/
S
/ R
OY
M. W
HITEHEAD
ROY M. WHITEHEAD
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer
May 8, 2014
/S/ DIANE L. KELLEHER
DIANE L. KELLEHER
Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
51