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Watchlist
Account
Wintrust Financial
WTFC
#1930
Rank
$10.58 B
Marketcap
๐บ๐ธ
United States
Country
$157.97
Share price
0.45%
Change (1 day)
23.39%
Change (1 year)
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Annual Reports (10-K)
Wintrust Financial
Quarterly Reports (10-Q)
Financial Year FY2017 Q2
Wintrust Financial - 10-Q quarterly report FY2017 Q2
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Table of Contents
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
_________________________________________
FORM 10-Q
_________________________________________
þ
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended June 30, 2017
OR
¨
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 001-35077
_____________________________________
WINTRUST FINANCIAL CORPORATION
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
Illinois
36-3873352
(State of incorporation or organization)
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
9700 W. Higgins Road, Suite 800
Rosemont, Illinois 60018
(Address of principal executive offices)
(847) 939-9000
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
______________________________________
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or 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
þ
No
¨
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically and posted on its corporate Web site, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files). Yes
þ
No
¨
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer”, “smaller reporting company,” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. (Check one):
Large accelerated filer
þ
Accelerated filer
¨
Non-accelerated filer
¨
(Do not check if a smaller reporting company)
Smaller reporting company
¨
Emerging growth company
¨
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.
¨
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes
¨
No
þ
Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuer’s classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date.
Common Stock — no par value, 55,810,134 shares, as of July 31, 2017
Table of Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
PART I. — FINANCIAL INFORMATION
ITEM 1.
Financial Statements
1
ITEM 2.
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
55
ITEM 3.
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
s
93
ITEM 4.
Controls and Procedures
95
PART II. — OTHER INFORMATION
ITEM 1.
Legal Proceedings
96
ITEM 1A.
Risk Factors
96
ITEM 2.
Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
97
ITEM 3.
Defaults Upon Senior Securities
NA
ITEM 4.
Mine Safety Disclosures
NA
ITEM 5.
Other Information
NA
ITEM 6.
Exhibits
97
Signatures
98
Index of Exhibits
99
Table of Contents
PART I
ITEM 1. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
WINTRUST FINANCIAL CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CONDITION
(Unaudited)
(Unaudited)
(In thousands, except share data)
June 30,
2017
December 31,
2016
June 30,
2016
Assets
Cash and due from banks
$
296,105
$
267,194
$
267,551
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements
56
2,851
4,024
Interest bearing deposits with banks
1,011,635
980,457
693,269
Available-for-sale securities, at fair value
1,649,636
1,724,667
637,663
Held-to-maturity securities, at amortized cost ($787.5 million, $607.6 million and $1.0 billion fair value at June 30, 2017, December 31, 2016 and June 30, 2016 respectively)
793,376
635,705
992,211
Trading account securities
1,987
1,989
3,613
Federal Home Loan Bank and Federal Reserve Bank stock
80,812
133,494
121,319
Brokerage customer receivables
23,281
25,181
26,866
Mortgage loans held-for-sale
382,837
418,374
554,256
Loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
20,743,332
19,703,172
18,174,655
Covered loans
50,119
58,145
105,248
Total loans
20,793,451
19,761,317
18,279,903
Allowance for loan losses
(129,591
)
(122,291
)
(114,356
)
Allowance for covered loan losses
(1,074
)
(1,322
)
(2,412
)
Net loans
20,662,786
19,637,704
18,163,135
Premises and equipment, net
605,211
597,301
595,792
Lease investments, net
191,248
129,402
103,749
Accrued interest receivable and other assets
577,359
593,796
670,014
Trade date securities receivable
133,130
—
1,079,238
Goodwill
500,260
498,587
486,095
Other intangible assets
19,546
21,851
21,821
Total assets
$
26,929,265
$
25,668,553
$
24,420,616
Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity
Deposits:
Non-interest bearing
$
6,294,052
$
5,927,377
$
5,367,672
Interest bearing
16,311,640
15,731,255
14,674,078
Total deposits
22,605,692
21,658,632
20,041,750
Federal Home Loan Bank advances
318,270
153,831
588,055
Other borrowings
277,710
262,486
252,611
Subordinated notes
139,029
138,971
138,915
Junior subordinated debentures
253,566
253,566
253,566
Trade date securities payable
5,151
—
40,000
Accrued interest payable and other liabilities
490,389
505,450
482,124
Total liabilities
24,089,807
22,972,936
21,797,021
Shareholders’ Equity:
Preferred stock, no par value; 20,000,000 shares authorized:
Series C - $1,000 liquidation value; no shares issued and outstanding at June 30, 2017, and 126,257 shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 2016 and June 30, 2016, respectively
—
126,257
126,257
Series D - $25 liquidation value; 5,000,000 shares issued and outstanding at June 30, 2017, December 31, 2016 and June 30, 2016, respectively
125,000
125,000
125,000
Common stock, no par value; $1.00 stated value; 100,000,000 shares authorized at June 30, 2017, December 31, 2016 and June 30, 2016; 55,801,665 shares issued at June 30, 2017, 51,978,289 shares issued at December 31, 2016 and 51,708,585 shares issued at June 30, 2016
55,802
51,978
51,708
Surplus
1,511,080
1,365,781
1,350,751
Treasury stock, at cost, 101,738 shares at June 30, 2017, 97,749 shares at December 31, 2016, and 89,430 shares at June 30, 2016
(4,884
)
(4,589
)
(4,145
)
Retained earnings
1,198,997
1,096,518
1,008,464
Accumulated other comprehensive loss
(46,537
)
(65,328
)
(34,440
)
Total shareholders’ equity
2,839,458
2,695,617
2,623,595
Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity
$
26,929,265
$
25,668,553
$
24,420,616
See accompanying notes to unaudited consolidated financial statements.
1
Table of Contents
WINTRUST FINANCIAL CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME (UNAUDITED)
Three Months Ended
Six Months Ended
(In thousands, except per share data)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Interest income
Interest and fees on loans
$
212,709
$
178,530
$
412,023
$
351,657
Interest bearing deposits with banks
1,634
793
3,257
1,539
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements
1
1
2
2
Investment securities
15,524
16,398
29,097
33,588
Trading account securities
4
14
15
25
Federal Home Loan Bank and Federal Reserve Bank stock
1,153
1,112
2,223
2,049
Brokerage customer receivables
156
216
323
435
Total interest income
231,181
197,064
446,940
389,295
Interest expense
Interest on deposits
18,471
13,594
34,741
26,375
Interest on Federal Home Loan Bank advances
2,933
2,984
4,523
5,870
Interest on other borrowings
1,149
1,086
2,288
2,144
Interest on subordinated notes
1,786
1,777
3,558
3,554
Interest on junior subordinated debentures
2,433
2,353
4,841
4,573
Total interest expense
26,772
21,794
49,951
42,516
Net interest income
204,409
175,270
396,989
346,779
Provision for credit losses
8,891
9,129
14,100
17,163
Net interest income after provision for credit losses
195,518
166,141
382,889
329,616
Non-interest income
Wealth management
19,905
18,852
40,053
37,172
Mortgage banking
35,939
36,807
57,877
58,542
Service charges on deposit accounts
8,696
7,726
16,961
15,132
Gains (losses) on investment securities, net
47
1,440
(8
)
2,765
Fees from covered call options
890
4,649
1,649
6,361
Trading losses, net
(420
)
(316
)
(740
)
(484
)
Operating lease income, net
6,805
4,005
12,587
6,811
Other
18,110
11,636
30,358
27,252
Total non-interest income
89,972
84,799
158,737
153,551
Non-interest expense
Salaries and employee benefits
106,502
100,894
205,818
196,705
Equipment
9,909
9,307
18,911
18,074
Operating lease equipment depreciation
5,662
3,385
10,298
5,435
Occupancy, net
12,586
11,943
25,687
23,891
Data processing
7,804
7,138
15,729
13,657
Advertising and marketing
8,726
6,941
13,876
10,720
Professional fees
7,510
5,419
12,170
9,478
Amortization of other intangible assets
1,141
1,248
2,305
2,546
FDIC insurance
3,874
4,040
8,030
7,653
OREO expense, net
739
1,348
2,404
1,908
Other
19,091
19,306
36,434
34,632
Total non-interest expense
183,544
170,969
351,662
324,699
Income before taxes
101,946
79,971
189,964
158,468
Income tax expense
37,049
29,930
66,689
59,316
Net income
$
64,897
$
50,041
$
123,275
$
99,152
Preferred stock dividends
2,050
3,628
5,678
7,256
Net income applicable to common shares
$
62,847
$
46,413
$
117,597
$
91,896
Net income per common share—Basic
$
1.15
$
0.94
$
2.20
$
1.88
Net income per common share—Diluted
$
1.11
$
0.90
$
2.11
$
1.80
Cash dividends declared per common share
$
0.14
$
0.12
$
0.28
$
0.24
Weighted average common shares outstanding
54,775
49,140
53,528
48,794
Dilutive potential common shares
1,812
3,965
2,981
3,887
Average common shares and dilutive common shares
56,587
53,105
56,509
52,681
See accompanying notes to unaudited consolidated financial statements.
2
Table of Contents
WINTRUST FINANCIAL CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (UNAUDITED)
Three Months Ended
Six Months Ended
(In thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Net income
$
64,897
$
50,041
$
123,275
$
99,152
Unrealized gains on securities
Before tax
17,593
5,968
24,972
31,144
Tax effect
(6,910
)
(2,244
)
(9,810
)
(12,232
)
Net of tax
10,683
3,724
15,162
18,912
Reclassification of net gains (losses) included in net income
Before tax
47
1,440
(8
)
2,765
Tax effect
(18
)
(565
)
3
(1,086
)
Net of tax
29
875
(5
)
1,679
Reclassification of amortization of unrealized gains and losses on investment securities transferred to held-to-maturity from available-for-sale
Before tax
22
(3,832
)
1,450
(7,257
)
Tax effect
(9
)
1,506
(570
)
2,845
Net of tax
13
(2,326
)
880
(4,412
)
Net unrealized gains on securities
10,641
5,175
14,287
21,645
Unrealized (losses) gains on derivative instruments
Before tax
(310
)
(523
)
1,305
(45
)
Tax effect
123
206
(511
)
18
Net unrealized (losses) gains on derivative instruments
(187
)
(317
)
794
(27
)
Foreign currency adjustment
Before tax
3,820
856
5,035
9,203
Tax effect
(987
)
(244
)
(1,325
)
(2,553
)
Net foreign currency adjustment
2,833
612
3,710
6,650
Total other comprehensive income
13,287
5,470
18,791
28,268
Comprehensive income
$
78,184
$
55,511
$
142,066
$
127,420
See accompanying notes to unaudited consolidated financial statements.
3
Table of Contents
WINTRUST FINANCIAL CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY (UNAUDITED)
(In thousands)
Preferred
stock
Common
stock
Surplus
Treasury
stock
Retained
earnings
Accumulated
other
comprehensive
loss
Total
shareholders’
equity
Balance at January 1, 2016
$
251,287
$
48,469
$
1,190,988
$
(3,973
)
$
928,211
$
(62,708
)
$
2,352,274
Net income
—
—
—
—
99,152
—
99,152
Other comprehensive income, net of tax
—
—
—
—
—
28,268
28,268
Cash dividends declared on common stock
—
—
—
—
(11,643
)
—
(11,643
)
Dividends on preferred stock
—
—
—
—
(7,256
)
—
(7,256
)
Stock-based compensation
—
—
4,752
—
—
—
4,752
Conversion of Series C preferred stock to common stock
(30
)
1
29
—
—
—
—
Common stock issued for:
New issuance, net of costs
—
3,000
149,823
—
—
—
152,823
Exercise of stock options and warrants
—
97
2,991
—
—
—
3,088
Restricted stock awards
—
87
114
(172
)
—
—
29
Employee stock purchase plan
—
29
1,270
—
—
—
1,299
Director compensation plan
—
25
784
—
—
—
809
Balance at June 30, 2016
$
251,257
$
51,708
$
1,350,751
$
(4,145
)
$
1,008,464
$
(34,440
)
$
2,623,595
Balance at January 1, 2017
$
251,257
$
51,978
$
1,365,781
$
(4,589
)
$
1,096,518
$
(65,328
)
$
2,695,617
Net income
—
—
—
—
123,275
—
123,275
Other comprehensive income, net of tax
—
—
—
—
—
18,791
18,791
Cash dividends declared on common stock
—
—
—
—
(15,118
)
—
(15,118
)
Dividends on preferred stock
—
—
—
—
(5,678
)
—
(5,678
)
Stock-based compensation
—
—
5,746
—
—
—
5,746
Conversion of Series C preferred stock to common stock
(126,257
)
3,121
123,136
—
—
—
—
Common stock issued for:
Exercise of stock options and warrants
—
573
14,488
—
—
—
15,061
Restricted stock awards
—
79
(79
)
(295
)
—
—
(295
)
Employee stock purchase plan
—
19
1,230
—
—
—
1,249
Director compensation plan
—
32
778
—
—
—
810
Balance at June 30, 2017
$
125,000
$
55,802
$
1,511,080
$
(4,884
)
$
1,198,997
$
(46,537
)
$
2,839,458
See accompanying notes to unaudited consolidated financial statements.
4
Table of Contents
WINTRUST FINANCIAL CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS (UNAUDITED)
Six Months Ended
(In thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Operating Activities:
Net income
$
123,275
$
99,152
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by (used for) operating activities
Provision for credit losses
14,100
17,163
Depreciation, amortization and accretion, net
29,958
27,296
Stock-based compensation expense
5,746
4,752
Net amortization of premium on securities
3,198
1,840
Accretion of discount on loans
(11,979
)
(15,849
)
Mortgage servicing rights fair value change, net
(1,265
)
(4,291
)
Originations and purchases of mortgage loans held-for-sale
(1,856,725
)
(1,948,890
)
Proceeds from sales of mortgage loans held-for-sale
1,928,870
1,825,686
Bank owned life insurance ("BOLI") income
(1,873
)
(1,729
)
Decrease (increase) in trading securities, net
2
(3,165
)
Net decrease in brokerage customer receivables
1,900
765
Gains on mortgage loans sold
(43,547
)
(43,014
)
Losses (gains) on investment securities, net
8
(2,765
)
Gains on early extinguishment of debt
—
(4,305
)
(Gains) losses on sales of premises and equipment, net
(140
)
3
Net losses on sales and fair value adjustments of other real estate owned
896
322
Increase in accrued interest receivable and other assets, net
(45,232
)
(116,118
)
(Decrease) increase in accrued interest payable and other liabilities, net
(22,451
)
70,756
Net Cash Provided by (Used for) Operating Activities
124,741
(92,391
)
Investing Activities:
Proceeds from maturities of available-for-sale securities
138,516
529,463
Proceeds from maturities of held-to-maturity securities
50,923
319
Proceeds from sales and calls of available-for-sale securities
9,729
1,071,996
Proceeds from calls of held-to-maturity securities
51,062
281,981
Purchases of available-for-sale securities
(185,245
)
(1,526,467
)
Purchases of held-to-maturity securities
(256,532
)
(350,078
)
Redemption (purchase) of Federal Home Loan Bank and Federal Reserve Bank stock, net
52,682
(19,738
)
Net cash paid in business combinations
(284
)
(18,133
)
Proceeds from sales of other real estate owned
8,601
19,455
Proceeds received from the FDIC related to reimbursements on covered assets
791
420
Net increase in interest bearing deposits with banks
(31,178
)
(81,250
)
Net increase in loans
(1,032,772
)
(942,958
)
Redemption of BOLI
—
659
Purchases of premises and equipment, net
(26,260
)
(24,235
)
Net Cash Used for Investing Activities
(1,219,967
)
(1,058,566
)
Financing Activities:
Increase in deposit accounts
947,150
1,302,188
Increase (decrease) in subordinated notes and other borrowings, net
15,163
(13,249
)
Increase (decrease) in Federal Home Loan Bank advances, net
163,000
(271,025
)
Proceeds from the issuance of common stock, net
—
152,823
Redemption of junior subordinated debentures, net
—
(10,695
)
Issuance of common shares resulting from the exercise of stock options, employee stock purchase plan and conversion of common stock warrants
17,120
5,766
Common stock repurchases for tax withholdings related to stock-based compensation
(295
)
(172
)
Dividends paid
(20,796
)
(18,899
)
Net Cash Provided by Financing Activities
1,121,342
1,146,737
Net Increase (Decrease) in Cash and Cash Equivalents
26,116
(4,220
)
Cash and Cash Equivalents at Beginning of Period
270,045
275,795
Cash and Cash Equivalents at End of Period
$
296,161
$
271,575
See accompanying notes to unaudited consolidated financial statements.
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WINTRUST FINANCIAL CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(1)
Basis of Presentation
The consolidated financial statements of Wintrust Financial Corporation and Subsidiaries (“Wintrust” or “the Company”) presented herein are unaudited, but in the opinion of management reflect all necessary adjustments of a normal or recurring nature for a fair presentation of results as of the dates and for the periods covered by the consolidated financial statements.
The accompanying consolidated financial statements are unaudited and do not include information or footnotes necessary for a complete presentation of financial condition, results of operations or cash flows in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles ("GAAP"). The consolidated financial statements should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and notes included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2016
(“
2016
Form 10-K”). Operating results reported for the period are not necessarily indicative of the results which may be expected for the entire year. Reclassifications of certain prior period amounts have been made to conform to the current period presentation.
The preparation of the financial statements requires management to make estimates, assumptions and judgments that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities. Management believes that the estimates made are reasonable, however, changes in estimates may be required if economic or other conditions develop differently from management’s expectations. Certain policies and accounting principles inherently have a greater reliance on the use of estimates, assumptions and judgments and as such have a greater possibility of producing results that could be materially different than originally reported. Management views critical accounting policies to be those which are highly dependent on subjective or complex judgments, estimates and assumptions, and where changes in those estimates and assumptions could have a significant impact on the financial statements. Management currently views the determination of the allowance for loan losses, allowance for covered loan losses and the allowance for losses on lending-related commitments, loans acquired with evidence of credit quality deterioration since origination, estimations of fair value, the valuations required for impairment testing of goodwill, the valuation and accounting for derivative instruments and income taxes as the accounting areas that require the most subjective and complex judgments, and as such could be the most subject to revision as new information becomes available. Descriptions of the Company's significant accounting policies are included in Note 1 - “Summary of Significant Accounting Policies” of the
2016
Form 10-K.
(2)
Recent Accounting Developments
Revenue Recognition
In May 2014, the FASB issued ASU No. 2014-09, which created “Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606),” to clarify the principles for recognizing revenue and develop a common revenue standard for customer contracts. This ASU provides guidance regarding how an entity should recognize revenue to depict the transfer of promised goods or services to customers in an amount that reflects the consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled in exchange for those goods or services. The ASU also added a new subtopic to the codification, ASC 340-40, “Other Assets and Deferred Costs: Contracts with Customers” to provide guidance on costs related to obtaining and fulfilling a customer contract. Furthermore, the new standard requires disclosure of sufficient information to enable users of financial statements to understand the nature, amount, timing, and uncertainty of revenue and cash flows arising from contracts with customers. At the time ASU No. 2014-09 was issued, the guidance was effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2016. In July 2015, the FASB approved a deferral of the effective date by one year, which would result in the guidance becoming effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017.
The FASB has continued to issue various Updates to clarify and improve specific areas of ASU No. 2014-09. In March 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-08, “Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606): Principal versus Agent Considerations (Reporting Revenue Gross versus Net),” to clarify the implementation guidance within ASU No. 2014-09 surrounding principal versus agent considerations and its impact on revenue recognition. In April 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-10, “Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606): Identifying Performance Obligations and Licensing,” to also clarify the implementation guidance within ASU No. 2014-09 related to these two topics. In May 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-11, “Revenue Recognition (Topic 605) and Derivative and Hedging (Topic 815): Rescission of SEC Guidance Because of Accounting Standards Updates 2014-09 and 2014-16 Pursuant to Staff Announcements at the March 3, 2016 EITF Meeting,” to remove certain areas of SEC Staff Guidance from those specific Topics. In May 2016 and December 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-12, “Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606): Narrow-Scope Improvements and Practical Expedients” and ASU 2016-20, “Technical Corrections and Improvements to Topic 606, Revenue from Contracts with Customers,” to clarify specific aspects of implementation, including the collectability criterion, exclusion of sales taxes collected from a transaction price, noncash consideration, contract modifications, completed contracts at transition, the applicability of loan guarantee fees, impairment of capitalized contract costs and certain disclosure requirements. In February 2017, the FASB issued ASU No. 2017-05, “Other
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Income - Gains and Losses from the Derecognition of Nonfinancial Assets (Subtopic 610-20): Clarifying the Scope of Asset Derecognition Guidance and Accounting for Partial Sales of Nonfinancial Assets,” to clarify the implementation guidance within ASU No. 2014-09 surrounding transfers of nonfinancial assets, including partial sales of such assets, and its impact on revenue recognition. Like ASU No. 2014-09, this guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017.
The Company is currently evaluating the impact on the consolidated financial statements of adopting this new guidance. The Company is currently assessing specific characteristics of the various sources of revenues previously identified as being affected by the new guidance and has reviewed specific contracts related to those sources. As certain significant revenue sources such as interest income are considered not in-scope, the Company does not believe the new guidance will have a significant impact on its consolidated financial statements. The Company expects to adopt the new guidance using the modified retrospective approach.
Financial Instruments
In January 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-01,
“
Financial Instruments - Overall (Subtopic 825-10): Recognition and Measurement of Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities,
”
to improve the accounting for financial instruments. This ASU requires equity investments with readily determinable fair values to be measured at fair value with changes recognized in net income regardless of classification. For equity investments without a readily determinable fair value, the value of the investment would be measured at cost minus impairment, if any, plus or minus changes resulting from observable price changes in orderly transactions for the identical or a similar investment of the same issuer instead of fair value, unless a qualitative assessment indicates impairment. Additionally, this ASU requires the separate presentation of financial assets and financial liabilities by measurement category and form of financial asset on the balance sheet or the accompanying notes to the financial statements. This guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017 and is to be applied prospectively with a cumulative-effect adjustment to the balance sheet as of the beginning of the fiscal year of adoption. The Company is currently evaluating the impact of adopting this new guidance on the consolidated financial statements.
Leases
In February 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-02,
“
Leases (Topic 842),
”
to improve transparency and comparability across entities regarding leasing arrangements. This ASU requires the recognition of a separate lease liability representing the required discounted lease payments over the lease term and a separate lease asset representing the right to use the underlying asset during the same lease term. Additionally, this ASU provides clarification regarding the identification of certain components of contracts that would represent a lease as well as requires additional disclosures to the notes of the financial statements. This guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2018, including interim periods within those fiscal years, and is to be applied under a modified retrospective approach, including the option to apply certain practical expedients.
The Company is currently evaluating the impact of adopting this new guidance on the consolidated financial statements. Excluding any impact from the clarification of contracts representing a lease, the Company expects to recognize separate lease liabilities and right to use assets for the amounts related to
certain facilities under operating lease agreements
disclosed in Note 15 - Minimum Lease Commitments in the
2016
Form 10-K
. Additionally, the Company does not expect to significantly change operating lease agreements prior to adoption.
Derivatives
In March 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-05,
“
Derivatives and Hedging (Topic 815): Effect of Derivative Contract Novations on Existing Hedge Accounting Relationships,
”
to clarify guidance surrounding the effect on an existing hedging relationship of a change in the counterparty to a derivative instrument that has been designated as a hedging instrument. This ASU states that a change in counterparty to such derivative instrument does not, in and of itself, require dedesignation of that hedging relationship provided that all other hedge accounting criteria continue to be met. This guidance was effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2016 and did not have a material impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.
Equity Method Investments
In March 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-07,
“
Investments - Equity Method and Joint Ventures (Topic 323): Simplifying the Transition to the Equity Method of Accounting,
”
to simplify the accounting for investments qualifying for the use of the equity method of accounting. This ASU eliminates the requirement to retroactively adopt the equity method of accounting when an investment qualifies for such method as a result of an increase in the level of ownership interest or degree of influence. The ASU requires the equity method investor add the cost of acquiring the additional interest to the current basis and adopt the equity method of accounting as of that date going forward. Additionally, for available-for-sale equity securities that become qualified for equity method accounting, the ASU requires the related unrealized holding gains or losses included in accumulated other comprehensive
7
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income be recognized in earnings at the date the investment qualifies for such accounting. This guidance was effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2016 and did not have a material impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.
Employee Share-Based Compensation
In March 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-09,
“
Compensation - Stock Compensation (Topic 718): Improvements to Employee Share-Based Payment Accounting,
”
to simplify the accounting for several areas of share-based payment transactions. This included the recognition of all excess tax benefits and tax deficiencies as income tax expense instead of surplus, the classification on the statement of cash flows of excess tax benefits and taxes paid when the employer withholds shares for tax-withholding purposes. Additionally, related to forfeitures, the ASU provides the option to estimate the number of awards that are expected to vest or account for forfeitures as they occur. This guidance was effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2016. In the first six months of 2017, the Company recorded
$3.9 million
of excess tax benefits within income tax expense on the Consolidated Statements of Income as a result of adoption.
Allowance for Credit Losses
In June 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-13,
“
Financial Instruments - Credit Losses (Topic 326): Measurement of Credit Losses on Financial Instruments,
”
to replace the current incurred loss methodology for recognizing credit losses, which delays recognition until it is probable a loss has been incurred, with a methodology that reflects an estimate of all expected credit losses and considers additional reasonable and supportable forecasted information when determining credit loss estimates. This impacts the calculation of the allowance for credit losses for all financial assets measured under the amortized cost basis, including PCI loans at the time of and subsequent to acquisition. Additionally, credit losses related to available-for-sale debt securities would be recorded through the allowance for credit losses and not as a direct adjustment to the amortized cost of the securities. This guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2019, including interim periods within those fiscal years, and is to be applied under a modified retrospective approach.
The Company is currently evaluating the impact of adopting this new guidance on the consolidated financial statements as well as the impact on current systems and processes. Specifically, the Company has established a group consisting of individuals from the various areas of the Company tasked with transitioning to the new requirements. At this time, the Company is reviewing potential methodologies for estimating expected credit losses using reasonable and supportable forecast information and has identified certain data and system requirements.
Statement of Cash Flows
In August 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-15,
“
Statement of Cash Flows (Topic 230): Classification of Certain Cash Receipts and Cash Payments (a consensus of the FASB Emerging Issues Task Force),
”
to clarify the presentation of specific types of cash flow receipts and payments, including the payment of debt prepayment or debt extinguishment costs, contingent consideration cash payments paid subsequent to the acquisition date and proceeds from settlement of BOLI policies
. This guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017, including interim periods within those fiscal years, and is to be applied under a retrospective approach, if practicable. The Company does not expect this guidance to have a material impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.
In November 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-18
“
Statement of Cash Flows (Topic 230): Restricted Cash (a consensus of the FASB Emerging Issues Task Force),
”
to clarify the classification and presentation of changes in restricted cash on the statement of cash flows
. This guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017, including interim periods within those fiscal years, and is to be applied under a retrospective approach. The Company does not expect this guidance to have a material impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.
Income Taxes
In October 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-16, “Income Taxes (Topic 740): Intra-Entity Transfers of Assets Other Than Inventory,” to improve the accounting for intra-entity transfers of assets other than inventory. This ASU allows the recognition of current and deferred income taxes for such transfers prior to the subsequent sale of the transferred assets to an outside party. Initial recognition of current and deferred income taxes is currently prohibited for intra-entity transfers of assets other than inventory. This guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017, including interim periods within those fiscal years, and is to be applied under a modified retrospective approach through cumulative-effect adjustment directly to retained earnings as of the beginning of the period of adoption. The Company is currently evaluating the impact of adopting this new guidance on the consolidated financial statements.
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Table of Contents
Consolidation
In October 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-17,
“
Consolidation (Topic 810): Interest Held through Related Parties That Are under Common Control,
”
to amend guidance from ASU No. 2015-02 regarding how a reporting entity treats indirect interests in a variable interest entity (“VIE”) held through related parties under common control when determining whether the reporting entity is the primary beneficiary of such VIE
. This guidance was effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2016 and did not have a material impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.
Business Combinations
In January 2017, the FASB issued ASU No. 2017-01, “Business Combinations (Topic 805): Clarifying the Definition of a Business,” to improve such definition and, as a result, assist entities with evaluating whether transactions should be accounted for as acquisitions (or disposals) of assets or as business combinations. The definition of a business impacts many areas of accounting including acquisitions, disposals, goodwill and consolidation. This guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017, including interim periods within those fiscal years, and is to be applied under a prospective approach. The Company expects the adoption of this new guidance to impact the determination of whether future acquisitions are considered a business combination and the resulting impact of such determination on the consolidated financial statements.
Goodwill
In January 2017, the FASB issued ASU No. 2017-04, “Intangibles - Goodwill and Other (Topic 350): Simplifying the Test for Goodwill Impairment,” to simplify the subsequent measurement of goodwill. When the carrying amount of a reporting unit exceeds its fair value, an entity would no longer be required to determine goodwill impairment by assigning the fair value of a reporting unit to all of its assets and liabilities as if that reporting unit was acquired in a business combination. Goodwill impairment would be recognized according to the excess of the carrying amount of the reporting unit over the calculated fair value of such unit. This guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2019, including interim periods within those fiscal years, and is to be applied under a prospective approach.
The Company does not expect this guidance to have a material impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.
Compensation
In March 2017, the FASB issued ASU No. 2017-07, “Compensation - Retirement Benefits (Topic 715): Improving the Presentation of Net Periodic Pension Cost and Net Periodic Postretirement Benefit Cost,” to improve the presentation of net periodic pension cost and net periodic postretirement benefit cost. An entity will be required to report the service cost component of such costs in the same line item or items as other compensation costs related to services rendered. Additionally, only the service cost component will be eligible for capitalization when applicable. This guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017, including interim periods within those fiscal years, and is to be applied under a retrospective approach related to presentation of the service cost component and a prospective approach related to capitalization of such costs. Early adoption is permitted as of the beginning of an annual period that has not been issued or made available for issuance. The Company has not early adopted this guidance. When adopted,
the Company does not expect this guidance to have a material impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.
In May 2017, the FASB issued ASU No. 2017-09, “Compensation - Stock Compensation (Topic 718): Scope of Modification Accounting,” to clarify when modification accounting is appropriate for changes to the terms and conditions of a share-based payment award. An entity will be required to account for such changes as a modification unless certain criteria is met. This guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017, including interim periods within those fiscal years, and is to be applied under a prospective approach for awards modified on or after the adoption date. Early adoption is permitted as of the beginning of an annual period that has not been issued or made available for issuance. The Company has not early adopted this guidance. When adopted,
the Company does not expect this guidance to have a material impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.
Amortization of Premium on Certain Debt Securities
In March 2017, the FASB issued ASU No. 2017-08, “Receivables - Nonrefundable Fees and Other Costs (Subtopic 310-20): Premium Amortization on Purchased Callable Debt Securities,” to amend the amortization period for certain purchased callable debt securities held at a premium. The amortization period for such securities will be shortened to the earliest call date. This guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2018, including interim periods within those fiscal years, and is to be applied under a modified retrospective approach. Early adoption is permitted as of the beginning of an annual period that
9
Table of Contents
has not been issued or made available for issuance. The Company has not early adopted this guidance. The Company is currently evaluating the impact of adopting this new guidance on the consolidated financial statements.
(3)
Business Combinations
Non-FDIC Assisted Bank Acquisitions
On
November 18, 2016
,
the Company acquired First Community Financial Corporation ("FCFC"). FCFC was the parent company of First Community Bank.
Through this transaction, the Company acquired First Community Bank's
two
banking locations in Elgin, Illinois
. First Community Bank was merged into the Company's wholly-owned subsidiary St. Charles Bank & Trust Company ("St. Charles Bank"). The Company acquired assets with a fair value of approximately
$187.2 million
, including approximately
$79.5 million
of loans, and assumed deposits with a fair value of approximately
$150.3 million
. Additionally, the Company recorded goodwill of $
13.0 million
on the acquisition.
On
August 19, 2016
, the Company, through its wholly-owned subsidiary Lake Forest Bank & Trust Company ("Lake Forest Bank"), acquired approximately
$561.4 million
in performing loans and related relationships from an affiliate of GE Capital Franchise Finance. The loans are to franchise operators (primarily quick service restaurant concepts) in the Midwest and in the Western portion of the United States.
On
March 31, 2016
, the Company acquired Generations Bancorp, Inc. ("Generations"). Generations was the parent company of Foundations Bank, which had
one
banking location in Pewaukee, Wisconsin. Foundations Bank was merged into the Company's wholly-owned subsidiary Town Bank. The Company acquired assets with a fair value of approximately
$134.2 million
, including approximately
$67.4 million
of loans, and assumed deposits with a fair value of approximately
$100.2 million
. Additionally, the Company recorded goodwill of
$11.5 million
on the acquisition.
FDIC-Assisted Transactions
From 2010 to 2012, the Company acquired the banking operations, including the acquisition of certain assets and the assumption of liabilities, of
nine
financial institutions in FDIC-assisted transactions. Loans comprise the majority of the assets acquired in nearly all of these FDIC-assisted transactions, most of which are subject to loss sharing agreements with the FDIC whereby the FDIC has agreed to reimburse the Company for
80%
of losses incurred on the purchased loans, other real estate owned (“OREO”), and certain other assets. Additionally, clawback provisions within these loss share agreements with the FDIC require the Company to reimburse the FDIC in the event that actual losses on covered assets are lower than the original loss estimates agreed upon with the FDIC with respect of such assets in the loss share agreements. The Company refers to the loans subject to these loss sharing agreements as “covered loans” and uses the term “covered assets” to refer to covered loans, covered OREO and certain other covered assets. The agreements with the FDIC require that the Company follow certain servicing procedures or risk losing the FDIC reimbursement of covered asset losses.
The loans covered by the loss sharing agreements are classified and presented as covered loans and the estimated reimbursable losses are recorded as an FDIC indemnification asset or other liability in the Consolidated Statements of Condition. The Company recorded the acquired assets and liabilities at their estimated fair values at the acquisition date. The fair value for loans reflected expected credit losses at the acquisition date. Therefore, the Company will only recognize a provision for credit losses and charge-offs on the acquired loans for any further credit deterioration subsequent to the acquisition date. See Note 7 — Allowance for Loan Losses, Allowance for Losses on Lending-Related Commitments and Impaired Loans for further discussion of the allowance on covered loans.
The loss share agreements with the FDIC cover realized losses on loans, foreclosed real estate and certain other assets and require the Company to record loss share assets and liabilities that are measured separately from the loan portfolios because they are not contractually embedded in the loans and are not transferable with the loans should the Company choose to dispose of them. Fair values at the acquisition dates were estimated based on projected cash flows available for loss share based on the credit adjustments estimated for each loan pool and the loss share percentages. The loss share assets and liabilities are recorded as FDIC indemnification assets and other liabilities, respectively, on the Consolidated Statements of Condition. Subsequent to the acquisition date, reimbursements received from the FDIC for actual incurred losses will reduce the FDIC indemnification assets. Reductions to expected losses, to the extent such reductions to expected losses are the result of an improvement to the actual or expected cash flows from the covered assets, will also reduce the FDIC indemnification assets and, if necessary, increase any loss share liability when necessary reductions exceed the current value of the FDIC indemnification assets. In accordance with the clawback provision noted above, the Company may be required to reimburse the FDIC when actual losses are less than certain thresholds established for each loss share agreement. The balance of these estimated reimbursements in accordance with clawback provisions and any related amortization are adjusted periodically for changes in the expected losses on covered assets. On the Consolidated Statements
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of Condition, estimated reimbursements from clawback provisions are recorded as a reduction to the FDIC indemnification asset or, if necessary, an increase to the loss share liability, which is included within accrued interest payable and other liabilities. In the second quarter of 2017, the Company recorded a
$4.9 million
reduction to the estimated loss share liability as a result of an adjustment related to such clawback provisions. Although these assets are contractual receivables from the FDIC and these liabilities are contractual payables to the FDIC, there are no contractual interest rates. Additional expected losses, to the extent such expected losses result in recognition of an allowance for covered loan losses, will increase the FDIC indemnification asset or reduce the FDIC indemnification liability. The corresponding amortization is recorded as a component of non-interest income on the Consolidated Statements of Income.
The following table summarizes the activity in the Company’s FDIC indemnification liability during the periods indicated:
Three Months Ended
Six Months Ended
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Balance at beginning of period
$
18,263
$
10,029
$
16,701
$
6,100
Reductions from reimbursable expenses
(75
)
(648
)
(157
)
(730
)
Amortization
455
506
699
866
Changes in expected reimbursements (to) from the FDIC for changes in expected credit losses and reimbursable expenses
(3,673
)
1,785
(2,659
)
5,073
Payments received from the FDIC
405
57
791
420
Balance at end of period
$
15,375
$
11,729
$
15,375
$
11,729
Mortgage Banking Acquisitions
On February 14, 2017, the Company acquired certain assets and assumed certain liabilities of the mortgage banking business of American Homestead Mortgage, LLC ("AHM"). The Company recorded goodwill of
$999,000
on the acquisition.
PCI Loans
Purchased loans acquired in a business combination are recorded at estimated fair value on their purchase date. Expected future cash flows at the purchase date in excess of the fair value of loans are recorded as interest income over the life of the loans if the timing and amount of the future cash flows is reasonably estimable (“accretable yield”). The difference between contractually required payments and the cash flows expected to be collected at acquisition is referred to as the non-accretable difference and represents probable losses in the portfolio.
In determining the acquisition date fair value of PCI loans, and in subsequent accounting, the Company aggregates these purchased loans into pools of loans by common risk characteristics, such as credit risk rating and loan type. Subsequent to the purchase date, increases in cash flows over those expected at the purchase date are recognized as interest income prospectively. Subsequent decreases to the expected cash flows will generally result in a provision for loan losses.
The Company purchased a portfolio of life insurance premium finance receivables in 2009. These purchased life insurance premium finance receivables are valued on an individual basis. If credit related conditions deteriorate, an allowance related to these loans will be established as part of the provision for credit losses.
See Note 6—Loans, for additional information on PCI loans.
(4)
Cash and Cash Equivalents
For purposes of the Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows, the Company considers cash and cash equivalents to include cash on hand, cash items in the process of collection, non-interest bearing amounts due from correspondent banks, federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements with original maturities of three months or less.
11
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(5)
Investment Securities
The following tables are a summary of the available-for-sale and held-to-maturity securities portfolios as of the dates shown:
June 30, 2017
(Dollars in thousands)
Amortized
Cost
Gross
Unrealized
Gains
Gross
Unrealized
Losses
Fair
Value
Available-for-sale securities
U.S. Treasury
$
119,804
$
—
$
(723
)
$
119,081
U.S. Government agencies
158,162
22
(674
)
157,510
Municipal
121,610
2,774
(264
)
124,120
Corporate notes:
Financial issuers
60,340
71
(810
)
59,601
Other
1,000
—
(3
)
997
Mortgage-backed:
(1)
Mortgage-backed securities
1,139,734
2,301
(31,704
)
1,110,331
Collateralized mortgage obligations
42,845
433
(319
)
42,959
Equity securities
32,642
3,028
(633
)
35,037
Total available-for-sale securities
$
1,676,137
$
8,629
$
(35,130
)
$
1,649,636
Held-to-maturity securities
U.S. Government agencies
$
585,071
$
556
$
(7,461
)
$
578,166
Municipal
208,305
2,298
(1,280
)
209,323
Total held-to-maturity securities
$
793,376
$
2,854
$
(8,741
)
$
787,489
December 31, 2016
Amortized
Cost
Gross
Unrealized
Gains
Gross
Unrealized
Losses
Fair
Value
(Dollars in thousands)
Available-for-sale securities
U.S. Treasury
$
142,741
$
1
$
(759
)
$
141,983
U.S. Government agencies
189,540
47
(435
)
189,152
Municipal
129,446
2,969
(606
)
131,809
Corporate notes:
Financial issuers
65,260
132
(1,000
)
64,392
Other
1,000
—
(1
)
999
Mortgage-backed:
(1)
Mortgage-backed securities
1,185,448
284
(54,330
)
1,131,402
Collateralized mortgage obligations
30,105
67
(490
)
29,682
Equity securities
32,608
3,429
(789
)
35,248
Total available-for-sale securities
$
1,776,148
$
6,929
$
(58,410
)
$
1,724,667
Held-to-maturity securities
U.S. Government agencies
$
433,343
$
7
$
(24,470
)
$
408,880
Municipal
202,362
647
(4,287
)
198,722
Total held-to-maturity securities
$
635,705
$
654
$
(28,757
)
$
607,602
June 30, 2016
Amortized
Cost
Gross
Unrealized
Gains
Gross
Unrealized
Losses
Fair
Value
(Dollars in thousands)
Available-for-sale securities
U.S. Treasury
$
122,296
$
35
$
(1
)
$
122,330
U.S. Government agencies
69,678
238
—
69,916
Municipal
108,179
3,588
(127
)
111,640
Corporate notes:
Financial issuers
68,097
1,502
(1,411
)
68,188
Other
1,500
2
—
1,502
Mortgage-backed:
(1)
Mortgage-backed securities
162,593
4,280
(150
)
166,723
Collateralized mortgage obligations
40,419
457
(91
)
40,785
Equity securities
51,426
5,544
(391
)
56,579
Total available-for-sale securities
$
624,188
$
15,646
$
(2,171
)
$
637,663
Held-to-maturity securities
U.S. Government agencies
$
789,482
$
11,861
$
(647
)
$
800,696
Municipal
202,729
6,967
(213
)
209,483
Total held-to-maturity securities
$
992,211
$
18,828
$
(860
)
$
1,010,179
(1)
Consisting entirely of residential mortgage-backed securities,
none
of which are subprime.
12
Table of Contents
The following table presents the portion of the Company’s available-for-sale and held-to-maturity securities portfolios which has gross unrealized losses, reflecting the length of time that individual securities have been in a continuous unrealized loss position at
June 30, 2017
:
Continuous unrealized
losses existing for
less than 12 months
Continuous unrealized
losses existing for
greater than 12 months
Total
(Dollars in thousands)
Fair Value
Unrealized Losses
Fair Value
Unrealized Losses
Fair Value
Unrealized Losses
Available-for-sale securities
U.S. Treasury
$
119,081
$
(723
)
$
—
$
—
$
119,081
$
(723
)
U.S. Government agencies
152,149
(674
)
—
—
152,149
(674
)
Municipal
145,960
(155
)
5,852
(109
)
151,812
(264
)
Corporate notes:
Financial issuers
—
—
35,154
(810
)
35,154
(810
)
Other
997
(3
)
—
—
997
(3
)
Mortgage-backed:
Mortgage-backed securities
932,800
(31,704
)
—
—
932,800
(31,704
)
Collateralized mortgage obligations
11,809
(122
)
7,353
(197
)
19,162
(319
)
Equity securities
10,189
(271
)
5,138
(362
)
15,327
(633
)
Total available-for-sale securities
$
1,372,985
$
(33,652
)
$
53,497
$
(1,478
)
$
1,426,482
$
(35,130
)
Held-to-maturity securities
U.S. Government agencies
$
363,692
$
(7,461
)
$
—
$
—
$
363,692
$
(7,461
)
Municipal
73,447
(1,280
)
—
—
73,447
(1,280
)
Total held-to-maturity securities
$
437,139
$
(8,741
)
$
—
$
—
$
437,139
$
(8,741
)
The Company conducts a regular assessment of its investment securities to determine whether securities are other-than-temporarily impaired considering, among other factors, the nature of the securities, credit ratings or financial condition of the issuer, the extent and duration of the unrealized loss, expected cash flows, market conditions and the Company’s ability to hold the securities through the anticipated recovery period.
The Company does not consider securities with unrealized losses at
June 30, 2017
to be other-than-temporarily impaired.
The
Company does not intend to sell these investments and it is more likely than not that the Company will not be required to sell these investments before recovery of the amortized cost bases, which may be the maturity dates of the securities. The unrealized losses within each category have occurred as a result of changes in interest rates, market spreads and market conditions subsequent to purchase. Securities with continuous unrealized losses existing for more than twelve months were primarily corporate notes and mortgage-backed securities. Unrealized losses recognized on corporate notes and mortgage-backed securities are the result of increases in yields for similar types of securities.
The following table provides information as to the amount of gross gains and gross losses realized and proceeds received through the sale or call of investment securities:
Three months ended June 30,
Six months ended June 30,
(Dollars in thousands)
2017
2016
2017
2016
Realized gains
$
48
$
1,487
$
48
$
4,037
Realized losses
(1
)
(47
)
(56
)
(1,272
)
Net realized gains (losses)
$
47
$
1,440
$
(8
)
$
2,765
Other than temporary impairment charges
—
—
—
—
Gains (losses) on investment securities, net
$
47
$
1,440
$
(8
)
$
2,765
Proceeds from sales and calls of available-for-sale securities
$
3,724
$
1,068,795
$
9,729
$
1,071,996
Proceeds from calls of held-to-maturity securities
2
183,738
51,062
281,981
13
Table of Contents
The amortized cost and fair value of securities as of
June 30, 2017
,
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
, by contractual maturity, are shown in the following table. Contractual maturities may differ from actual maturities as borrowers may have the right to call or repay obligations with or without call or prepayment penalties. Mortgage-backed securities determined to be available-for-sale are not included in the maturity categories in the following maturity summary as actual maturities may differ from contractual maturities because the underlying mortgages may be called or prepaid without penalties:
June 30, 2017
December 31, 2016
June 30, 2016
(Dollars in thousands)
Amortized Cost
Fair Value
Amortized Cost
Fair Value
Amortized Cost
Fair Value
Available-for-sale securities
Due in one year or less
$
125,706
$
125,170
$
145,353
$
145,062
$
214,917
$
215,290
Due in one to five years
289,688
289,243
321,019
320,423
113,263
113,395
Due in five to ten years
38,213
39,463
27,319
28,451
28,111
30,870
Due after ten years
7,309
7,433
34,296
34,399
13,459
14,021
Mortgage-backed
1,182,579
1,153,290
1,215,553
1,161,084
203,012
207,508
Equity securities
32,642
35,037
32,608
35,248
51,426
56,579
Total available-for-sale securities
$
1,676,137
$
1,649,636
$
1,776,148
$
1,724,667
$
624,188
$
637,663
Held-to-maturity securities
Due in one year or less
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
Due in one to five years
32,925
32,776
29,794
29,416
27,505
27,738
Due in five to ten years
172,398
172,800
69,664
67,820
68,691
70,121
Due after ten years
588,053
581,913
536,247
510,366
896,015
912,320
Total held-to-maturity securities
$
793,376
$
787,489
$
635,705
$
607,602
$
992,211
$
1,010,179
Securities having a fair value of
$1.5 billion
at
June 30, 2017
as well as securities having a fair value of
$1.4 billion
at
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
were pledged as collateral for public deposits, trust deposits, Federal Home Loan Bank ("FHLB") advances, securities sold under repurchase agreements and derivatives. At
June 30, 2017
, there were
no
securities of a single issuer, other than U.S. Government-sponsored agency securities, which exceeded
10%
of shareholders’ equity.
14
Table of Contents
(6)
Loans
The following table shows the Company’s loan portfolio by category as of the dates shown:
June 30,
December 31,
June 30,
(Dollars in thousands)
2017
2016
2016
Balance:
Commercial
$
6,406,289
$
6,005,422
$
5,144,533
Commercial real estate
6,402,494
6,196,087
5,848,334
Home equity
689,483
725,793
760,904
Residential real estate
762,810
705,221
653,664
Premium finance receivables—commercial
2,648,386
2,478,581
2,478,280
Premium finance receivables—life insurance
3,719,043
3,470,027
3,161,562
Consumer and other
114,827
122,041
127,378
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
$
20,743,332
$
19,703,172
$
18,174,655
Covered loans
50,119
58,145
105,248
Total loans
$
20,793,451
$
19,761,317
$
18,279,903
Mix:
Commercial
31
%
30
%
28
%
Commercial real estate
31
31
31
Home equity
3
4
4
Residential real estate
3
4
4
Premium finance receivables—commercial
13
12
14
Premium finance receivables—life insurance
18
18
17
Consumer and other
1
1
1
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
100
%
100
%
99
%
Covered loans
—
—
1
Total loans
100
%
100
%
100
%
The Company’s loan portfolio is generally comprised of loans to consumers and small to medium-sized businesses located within the geographic market areas that the banks serve. The premium finance receivables portfolios are made to customers throughout the United States and Canada. The Company strives to maintain a loan portfolio that is diverse in terms of loan type, industry, borrower and geographic concentrations. Such diversification reduces the exposure to economic downturns that may occur in different segments of the economy or in different industries.
Certain premium finance receivables are recorded net of unearned income. The unearned income portions of such premium finance receivables were
$81.0 million
at
June 30, 2017
,
$69.6 million
at
December 31, 2016
and
$64.1 million
at
June 30, 2016
. PCI loans are recorded net of credit discounts. See “Acquired Loan Information at Acquisition” below.
Total loans, excluding PCI loans, include net deferred loan fees and costs and fair value purchase accounting adjustments totaling
$6.5 million
at
June 30, 2017
,
$2.6 million
at
December 31, 2016
and
$(5.0) million
at
June 30, 2016
. The net credit balance at
June 30, 2016
, is primarily the result of purchase accounting adjustments related to acquisitions in 2016 and 2015.
It is the policy of the Company to review each prospective credit in order to determine the appropriateness and, when required, the adequacy of security or collateral necessary to obtain when making a loan. The type of collateral, when required, will vary from liquid assets to real estate. The Company seeks to ensure access to collateral, in the event of default, through adherence to state lending laws and the Company’s credit monitoring procedures.
15
Table of Contents
Acquired Loan Information at Acquisition—PCI Loans
As part of the Company's previous acquisitions, the Company acquired loans for which there was evidence of credit quality deterioration since origination (PCI loans) and determined that it was probable that the Company would be unable to collect all contractually required principal and interest payments. The following table presents the unpaid principal balance and carrying value for these acquired loans:
June 30, 2017
December 31, 2016
(Dollars in thousands)
Unpaid
Principal
Balance
Carrying
Value
Unpaid
Principal
Balance
Carrying
Value
PCI loans
$
443,216
$
412,519
$
509,446
$
471,786
See Note 7—Allowance for Loan Losses, Allowance for Losses on Lending-Related Commitments and Impaired Loans for further discussion regarding the allowance for loan losses associated with PCI loans at
June 30, 2017
.
Accretable Yield Activity - PCI Loans
Changes in expected cash flows may vary from period to period as the Company periodically updates its cash flow model assumptions for PCI loans. The factors that most significantly affect the estimates of gross cash flows expected to be collected, and accordingly the accretable yield, include changes in the benchmark interest rate indices for variable-rate products and changes in prepayment assumptions and loss estimates. The following table provides activity for the accretable yield of PCI loans:
Three Months Ended
Six Months Ended
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Accretable yield, beginning balance
$
45,762
$
59,218
$
49,408
$
63,902
Acquisitions
(105
)
125
426
1,266
Accretable yield amortized to interest income
(5,477
)
(5,199
)
(11,076
)
(10,656
)
Accretable yield amortized to indemnification asset/liability
(1)
(361
)
(1,624
)
(715
)
(3,795
)
Reclassification from non-accretable difference
(2)
3,554
2,536
6,089
6,729
Decreases in interest cash flows due to payments and changes in interest rates
2,137
574
1,378
(1,816
)
Accretable yield, ending balance
(3)
$
45,510
$
55,630
$
45,510
$
55,630
(1)
Represents the portion of the current period accreted yield, resulting from lower expected losses, applied to reduce the loss share indemnification asset or increase the loss share indemnification liability.
(2)
Reclassification is the result of subsequent increases in expected principal cash flows.
(3)
As of
June 30, 2017
, the Company estimates that the remaining accretable yield balance to be amortized to the indemnification asset or liability for the bank
acquisitions is
$448,000
. The remainder of the accretable yield related to bank acquisitions is expected to be amortized to interest income.
Accretion to interest income accounted for under ASC 310-30 totaled
$5.5 million
and
$5.2 million
in the
second quarter of 2017
and
2016
, respectively.
For the six months ended June 30, 2017 and 2016
, the Company recorded accretion to interest income of
$11.1 million
and
$10.7 million
, respectively. These amounts include accretion from both covered and non-covered loans, and are both included within interest and fees on loans in the Consolidated Statements of Income.
16
Table of Contents
(7)
Allowance for Loan Losses, Allowance for Losses on Lending-Related Commitments and Impaired Loans
The tables below show the aging of the Company’s loan portfolio at
June 30, 2017
,
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
:
As of June 30, 2017
90+ days and still accruing
60-89 days past due
30-59 days past due
(Dollars in thousands)
Nonaccrual
Current
Total Loans
Loan Balances:
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
$
8,720
$
—
$
5,917
$
12,658
$
4,067,237
$
4,094,532
Franchise
—
—
—
—
838,394
838,394
Mortgage warehouse lines of credit
—
—
—
2,361
232,282
234,643
Asset-based lending
936
—
983
7,293
862,694
871,906
Leases
535
—
—
60
356,009
356,604
PCI - commercial
(1)
—
1,572
162
—
8,476
10,210
Total commercial
10,191
1,572
7,062
22,372
6,365,092
6,406,289
Commercial real estate:
Construction
2,408
—
—
—
707,179
709,587
Land
202
—
—
6,455
105,496
112,153
Office
4,806
—
607
7,725
874,546
887,684
Industrial
2,193
—
—
709
789,889
792,791
Retail
1,635
—
—
15,081
903,778
920,494
Multi-family
354
—
—
1,186
813,058
814,598
Mixed use and other
5,382
—
713
7,590
2,005,265
2,018,950
PCI - commercial real estate
(1)
—
8,768
322
3,303
133,844
146,237
Total commercial real estate
16,980
8,768
1,642
42,049
6,333,055
6,402,494
Home equity
9,482
—
855
2,858
676,288
689,483
Residential real estate, including PCI
14,292
775
1,273
300
746,170
762,810
Premium finance receivables
Commercial insurance loans
10,456
5,922
4,951
11,713
2,615,344
2,648,386
Life insurance loans
—
1,046
—
16,977
3,474,686
3,492,709
PCI - life insurance loans
(1)
—
—
—
—
226,334
226,334
Consumer and other, including PCI
439
125
331
515
113,417
114,827
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
$
61,840
$
18,208
$
16,114
$
96,784
$
20,550,386
$
20,743,332
Covered loans
1,961
2,504
113
598
44,943
50,119
Total loans, net of unearned income
$
63,801
$
20,712
$
16,227
$
97,382
$
20,595,329
$
20,793,451
(1)
PCI loans represent loans acquired with evidence of credit quality deterioration since origination, in accordance with ASC 310-30.
Loan agings are based upon contractually required payments.
17
Table of Contents
As of December 31, 2016
90+ days and still accruing
60-89 days past due
30-59 days past due
(Dollars in thousands)
Nonaccrual
Current
Total Loans
Loan Balances:
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
$
13,441
$
174
$
2,341
$
11,779
$
3,716,977
$
3,744,712
Franchise
—
—
—
493
869,228
869,721
Mortgage warehouse lines of credit
—
—
—
—
204,225
204,225
Asset-based lending
1,924
—
135
1,609
871,402
875,070
Leases
510
—
—
1,331
293,073
294,914
PCI - commercial
(1)
—
1,689
100
2,428
12,563
16,780
Total commercial
15,875
1,863
2,576
17,640
5,967,468
6,005,422
Commercial real estate
Construction
2,408
—
—
1,824
606,007
610,239
Land
394
—
188
—
104,219
104,801
Office
4,337
—
4,506
1,232
857,599
867,674
Industrial
7,047
—
4,516
2,436
756,602
770,601
Retail
597
—
760
3,364
907,872
912,593
Multi-family
643
—
322
1,347
805,312
807,624
Mixed use and other
6,498
—
1,186
12,632
1,931,859
1,952,175
PCI - commercial real estate
(1)
—
16,188
3,775
8,888
141,529
170,380
Total commercial real estate
21,924
16,188
15,253
31,723
6,110,999
6,196,087
Home equity
9,761
—
1,630
6,515
707,887
725,793
Residential real estate, including PCI
12,749
1,309
936
8,271
681,956
705,221
Premium finance receivables
Commercial insurance loans
14,709
7,962
5,646
14,580
2,435,684
2,478,581
Life insurance loans
—
3,717
17,514
16,204
3,182,935
3,220,370
PCI - life insurance loans
(1)
—
—
—
—
249,657
249,657
Consumer and other, including PCI
439
207
100
887
120,408
122,041
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
$
75,457
$
31,246
$
43,655
$
95,820
$
19,456,994
$
19,703,172
Covered loans
2,121
2,492
225
1,553
51,754
58,145
Total loans, net of unearned income
$
77,578
$
33,738
$
43,880
$
97,373
$
19,508,748
$
19,761,317
As of June 30, 2016
90+ days and still accruing
60-89 days past due
30-59 days past due
(Dollars in thousands)
Nonaccrual
Current
Total Loans
Loan Balances:
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
$
16,414
$
—
$
1,412
$
22,317
$
3,416,432
$
3,456,575
Franchise
—
—
560
87
289,258
289,905
Mortgage warehouse lines of credit
—
—
—
—
270,586
270,586
Asset-based lending
—
235
1,899
6,421
834,112
842,667
Leases
387
—
48
—
267,639
268,074
PCI - commercial
(1)
—
1,956
630
1,426
12,714
16,726
Total commercial
16,801
2,191
4,549
30,251
5,090,741
5,144,533
Commercial real estate:
Construction
673
—
46
7,922
396,264
404,905
Land
1,725
—
—
340
103,816
105,881
Office
6,274
—
5,452
4,936
892,791
909,453
Industrial
10,295
—
1,108
719
754,647
766,769
Retail
916
—
535
6,450
889,945
897,846
Multi-family
90
—
2,077
1,275
775,075
778,517
Mixed use and other
4,442
—
4,285
8,007
1,795,931
1,812,665
PCI - commercial real estate
(1)
—
27,228
1,663
2,608
140,799
172,298
Total commercial real estate
24,415
27,228
15,166
32,257
5,749,268
5,848,334
Home equity
8,562
—
380
4,709
747,253
760,904
Residential real estate, including PCI
12,413
1,479
1,367
299
638,106
653,664
Premium finance receivables
Commercial insurance loans
14,497
10,558
6,966
9,456
2,436,803
2,478,280
Life insurance loans
—
—
46,651
11,953
2,811,356
2,869,960
PCI - life insurance loans
(1)
—
—
—
—
291,602
291,602
Consumer and other, including PCI
475
226
610
1,451
124,616
127,378
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
$
77,163
$
41,682
$
75,689
$
90,376
$
17,889,745
$
18,174,655
Covered loans
2,651
6,810
697
1,610
93,480
105,248
Total loans, net of unearned income
$
79,814
$
48,492
$
76,386
$
91,986
$
17,983,225
$
18,279,903
(1)
PCI loans represent loans acquired with evidence of credit quality deterioration since origination, in accordance with ASC 310-30.
Loan agings are based upon contractually required payments.
18
Table of Contents
The Company's ability to manage credit risk depends in large part on our ability to properly identify and manage problem loans. To do so, the Company operates a credit risk rating system under which our credit management personnel assign a credit risk rating (1 to 10 rating) to each loan at the time of origination and review loans on a regular basis.
Each loan officer is responsible for monitoring his or her loan portfolio, recommending a credit risk rating for each loan in his or her portfolio and ensuring the credit risk ratings are appropriate. These credit risk ratings are then ratified by the bank’s chief credit officer and/or concurrence credit officer. Credit risk ratings are determined by evaluating a number of factors including: a borrower’s financial strength, cash flow coverage, collateral protection and guarantees.
The Company’s Problem Loan Reporting system automatically includes all loans with credit risk ratings of 6 through 9. This system is designed to provide an on-going detailed tracking mechanism for each problem loan. Once management determines that a loan has deteriorated to a point where it has a credit risk rating of 6 or worse, the Company’s Managed Asset Division performs an overall credit and collateral review. As part of this review, all underlying collateral is identified and the valuation methodology is analyzed and tracked. As a result of this initial review by the Company’s Managed Asset Division, the credit risk rating is reviewed and a portion of the outstanding loan balance may be deemed uncollectible or an impairment reserve may be established. The Company’s impairment analysis utilizes an independent re-appraisal of the collateral (unless such a third-party evaluation is not possible due to the unique nature of the collateral, such as a closely-held business or thinly traded securities). In the case of commercial real estate collateral, an independent third party appraisal is ordered by the Company’s Real Estate Services Group to determine if there has been any change in the underlying collateral value. These independent appraisals are reviewed by the Real Estate Services Group and sometimes by independent third party valuation experts and may be adjusted depending upon market conditions.
Through the credit risk rating process, loans are reviewed to determine if they are performing in accordance with the original contractual terms. If the borrower has failed to comply with the original contractual terms, further action may be required by the Company, including a downgrade in the credit risk rating, movement to non-accrual status, a charge-off or the establishment of a specific impairment reserve. If a loan amount, or portion thereof, is determined to be uncollectible, the loan’s credit risk rating is immediately downgraded to an 8 or 9 and the uncollectible amount is charged-off. Any loan that has a partial charge-off continues to be assigned a credit risk rating of an 8 or 9 for the duration of time that a balance remains outstanding. The Company undertakes a thorough and ongoing analysis to determine if additional impairment and/or charge-offs are appropriate and to begin a workout plan for the credit to minimize actual losses.
If, based on current information and events, it is probable that the Company will be unable to collect all amounts due to it according to the contractual terms of the loan agreement, a specific impairment reserve is established. In determining the appropriate charge-off for collateral-dependent loans, the Company considers the results of appraisals for the associated collateral.
19
Table of Contents
Non-performing loans include all non-accrual loans (8 and 9 risk ratings) as well as loans 90 days past due and still accruing interest, excluding PCI and covered loans. The remainder of the portfolio is considered performing under the contractual terms of the loan agreement. The following table presents the recorded investment based on performance of loans by class, excluding covered loans, per the most recent analysis at
June 30, 2017
,
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
:
Performing
Non-performing
Total
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
December 31,
2016
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
December 31,
2016
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
December 31,
2016
June 30,
2016
Loan Balances:
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
$
4,085,812
$
3,731,097
$
3,440,161
$
8,720
$
13,615
$
16,414
$
4,094,532
$
3,744,712
$
3,456,575
Franchise
838,394
869,721
289,905
—
—
—
838,394
869,721
289,905
Mortgage warehouse lines of credit
234,643
204,225
270,586
—
—
—
234,643
204,225
270,586
Asset-based lending
870,970
873,146
842,432
936
1,924
235
871,906
875,070
842,667
Leases
356,069
294,404
267,687
535
510
387
356,604
294,914
268,074
PCI - commercial
(1)
10,210
16,780
16,726
—
—
—
10,210
16,780
16,726
Total commercial
6,396,098
5,989,373
5,127,497
10,191
16,049
17,036
6,406,289
6,005,422
5,144,533
Commercial real estate
Construction
707,179
607,831
404,232
2,408
2,408
673
709,587
610,239
404,905
Land
111,951
104,407
104,156
202
394
1,725
112,153
104,801
105,881
Office
882,878
863,337
903,179
4,806
4,337
6,274
887,684
867,674
909,453
Industrial
790,598
763,554
756,474
2,193
7,047
10,295
792,791
770,601
766,769
Retail
918,859
911,996
896,930
1,635
597
916
920,494
912,593
897,846
Multi-family
814,244
806,981
778,427
354
643
90
814,598
807,624
778,517
Mixed use and other
2,013,568
1,945,677
1,808,223
5,382
6,498
4,442
2,018,950
1,952,175
1,812,665
PCI - commercial real estate
(1)
146,237
170,380
172,298
—
—
—
146,237
170,380
172,298
Total commercial real estate
6,385,514
6,174,163
5,823,919
16,980
21,924
24,415
6,402,494
6,196,087
5,848,334
Home equity
680,001
716,032
752,342
9,482
9,761
8,562
689,483
725,793
760,904
Residential real estate, including PCI
748,339
692,472
641,251
14,471
12,749
12,413
762,810
705,221
653,664
Premium finance receivables
Commercial insurance loans
2,632,008
2,455,910
2,453,225
16,378
22,671
25,055
2,648,386
2,478,581
2,478,280
Life insurance loans
3,491,663
3,216,653
2,869,960
1,046
3,717
—
3,492,709
3,220,370
2,869,960
PCI - life insurance loans
(1)
226,334
249,657
291,602
—
—
—
226,334
249,657
291,602
Consumer and other, including PCI
114,325
121,458
126,740
502
583
638
114,827
122,041
127,378
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
$
20,674,282
$
19,615,718
$
18,086,536
$
69,050
$
87,454
$
88,119
$
20,743,332
$
19,703,172
$
18,174,655
(1)
PCI loans represent loans acquired with evidence of credit quality deterioration since origination, in accordance with ASC 310-30. See Note 6 - Loans for further discussion of these purchased loans.
20
Table of Contents
A summary of activity in the allowance for credit losses by loan portfolio (excluding covered loans) for the three and
six months ended
June 30, 2017
and 2016 is as follows:
Three months ended June 30, 2017
Commercial Real Estate
Home Equity
Residential Real Estate
Premium Finance Receivables
Consumer and Other
Total, Excluding Covered Loans
(Dollars in thousands)
Commercial
Allowance for credit losses
Allowance for loan losses at beginning of period
$
46,582
$
52,633
$
12,203
$
5,530
$
7,559
$
1,312
$
125,819
Other adjustments
(2
)
(47
)
—
(3
)
22
—
(30
)
Reclassification from allowance for unfunded lending-related commitments
92
14
—
—
—
—
106
Charge-offs
(913
)
(1,985
)
(1,631
)
(146
)
(1,878
)
(175
)
(6,728
)
Recoveries
561
276
144
54
404
33
1,472
Provision for credit losses
6,038
1,448
418
708
245
95
8,952
Allowance for loan losses at period end
$
52,358
$
52,339
$
11,134
$
6,143
$
6,352
$
1,265
$
129,591
Allowance for unfunded lending-related commitments at period end
$
500
$
1,205
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
1,705
Allowance for credit losses at period end
$
52,858
$
53,544
$
11,134
$
6,143
$
6,352
$
1,265
$
131,296
Individually evaluated for impairment
$
2,528
$
1,473
$
1,296
$
764
$
—
$
91
$
6,152
Collectively evaluated for impairment
49,692
51,952
9,838
5,306
6,352
1,174
124,314
Loans acquired with deteriorated credit quality
638
119
—
73
—
—
830
Loans at period end
Individually evaluated for impairment
$
14,469
$
34,690
$
9,633
$
20,859
$
—
$
421
$
80,072
Collectively evaluated for impairment
6,381,610
6,221,567
679,850
708,042
6,141,095
113,319
20,245,483
Loans acquired with deteriorated credit quality
10,210
146,237
—
3,736
226,334
1,087
387,604
Loans held at fair value
—
—
—
30,173
—
—
30,173
Three months ended June 30, 2016
Commercial
Commercial Real Estate
Home Equity
Residential Real Estate
Premium Finance Receivables
Consumer and Other
Total, Excluding Covered Loans
(Dollars in thousands)
Allowance for credit losses
Allowance for loan losses at beginning of period
$
38,435
$
45,263
$
12,915
$
5,164
$
7,205
$
1,189
$
110,171
Other adjustments
(59
)
(70
)
—
(9
)
4
—
(134
)
Reclassification from allowance for unfunded lending-related commitments
—
(40
)
—
—
—
—
(40
)
Charge-offs
(721
)
(502
)
(2,046
)
(693
)
(1,911
)
(224
)
(6,097
)
Recoveries
121
296
71
31
633
35
1,187
Provision for credit losses
3,878
1,877
443
912
1,883
276
9,269
Allowance for loan losses at period end
$
41,654
$
46,824
$
11,383
$
5,405
$
7,814
$
1,276
$
114,356
Allowance for unfunded lending-related commitments at period end
$
—
$
1,070
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
1,070
Allowance for credit losses at period end
$
41,654
$
47,894
$
11,383
$
5,405
$
7,814
$
1,276
$
115,426
Individually evaluated for impairment
$
3,417
$
2,121
$
477
$
625
$
—
$
5
$
6,645
Collectively evaluated for impairment
37,571
45,736
10,906
4,720
7,814
1,271
108,018
Loans acquired with deteriorated credit quality
666
37
—
60
—
—
763
Loans at period end
Individually evaluated for impairment
$
21,173
$
49,284
$
8,562
$
17,281
$
—
$
536
$
96,836
Collectively evaluated for impairment
5,106,634
5,626,752
752,342
615,831
5,348,240
126,842
17,576,641
Loans acquired with deteriorated credit quality
16,726
172,298
—
4,258
291,602
—
484,884
Loans held at fair value
—
—
—
16,294
—
—
16,294
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Table of Contents
Six months ended June 30, 2017
Commercial Real Estate
Home Equity
Residential Real Estate
Premium Finance Receivable
Consumer and Other
Total, Excluding Covered Loans
(Dollars in thousands)
Commercial
Allowance for credit losses
Allowance for loan losses at beginning of period
$
44,493
$
51,422
$
11,774
$
5,714
$
7,625
$
1,263
$
122,291
Other adjustments
(21
)
(83
)
—
(7
)
25
—
(86
)
Reclassification from allowance for unfunded lending-related commitments
—
(32
)
—
—
—
—
(32
)
Charge-offs
(1,554
)
(2,246
)
(2,256
)
(475
)
(3,305
)
(309
)
(10,145
)
Recoveries
834
830
209
232
1,016
174
3,295
Provision for credit losses
8,606
2,448
1,407
679
991
137
14,268
Allowance for loan losses at period end
$
52,358
$
52,339
$
11,134
$
6,143
$
6,352
$
1,265
$
129,591
Allowance for unfunded lending-related commitments at period end
$
500
$
1,205
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
1,705
Allowance for credit losses at period end
$
52,858
$
53,544
$
11,134
$
6,143
$
6,352
$
1,265
$
131,296
Six months ended June 30, 2016
Commercial Real Estate
Home Equity
Residential Real Estate
Premium Finance Receivable
Consumer and Other
Total, Excluding Covered Loans
(Dollars in thousands)
Commercial
Allowance for credit losses
Allowance for loan losses at beginning of period
$
36,135
$
43,758
$
12,012
$
4,734
$
7,233
$
1,528
$
105,400
Other adjustments
(68
)
(146
)
—
(39
)
41
—
(212
)
Reclassification from allowance for unfunded lending-related commitments
—
(121
)
—
—
—
—
(121
)
Charge-offs
(1,392
)
(1,173
)
(3,098
)
(1,186
)
(4,391
)
(331
)
(11,571
)
Recoveries
750
665
119
143
1,420
71
3,168
Provision for credit losses
6,229
3,841
2,350
1,753
3,511
8
17,692
Allowance for loan losses at period end
$
41,654
$
46,824
$
11,383
$
5,405
$
7,814
$
1,276
$
114,356
Allowance for unfunded lending-related commitments at period end
$
—
$
1,070
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
1,070
Allowance for credit losses at period end
$
41,654
$
47,894
$
11,383
$
5,405
$
7,814
$
1,276
$
115,426
A summary of activity in the allowance for covered loan losses for the three and
six months ended
June 30, 2017
and
2016
is as follows:
Three Months Ended
Six Months Ended
June 30,
June 30,
June 30,
June 30,
(Dollars in thousands)
2017
2016
2017
2016
Balance at beginning of period
$
1,319
$
2,507
$
1,322
$
3,026
Provision for covered loan losses before benefit attributable to FDIC loss share agreements
(303
)
(702
)
(838
)
(2,648
)
Benefit attributable to FDIC loss share agreements
242
562
670
2,119
Net provision for covered loan losses
(61
)
(140
)
(168
)
(529
)
Increase/decrease in FDIC indemnification liability/asset
(242
)
(562
)
(670
)
(2,119
)
Loans charged-off
(120
)
(143
)
(336
)
(373
)
Recoveries of loans charged-off
178
750
926
2,407
Net recoveries
58
607
590
2,034
Balance at end of period
$
1,074
$
2,412
$
1,074
$
2,412
In conjunction with FDIC-assisted transactions, the Company entered into loss share agreements with the FDIC. Additional expected losses, to the extent such expected losses result in the recognition of an allowance for loan losses, will increase the FDIC loss share asset or reduce any FDIC loss share liability. The allowance for loan losses for loans acquired in FDIC-assisted transactions is determined without giving consideration to the amounts recoverable through loss share agreements (since the loss share agreements are separately accounted for and thus presented “gross” on the balance sheet). On the Consolidated Statements of Income, the provision for credit losses is reported net of changes in the amount recoverable under the loss share agreements. Reductions to expected losses, to the extent such reductions to expected losses are the result of an improvement to the actual or expected cash flows from the covered assets, will reduce the FDIC loss share asset or increase any FDIC loss share liability. Additions to expected losses will require an increase to the allowance
22
Table of Contents
for covered loan losses, and a corresponding increase to the FDIC loss share asset or reduction to any FDIC loss share liability. See “FDIC-Assisted Transactions” within Note 3 – Business Combinations for more detail.
Impaired Loans
A summary of impaired loans, including troubled debt restructurings ("TDRs"), is as follows:
June 30,
December 31,
June 30,
(Dollars in thousands)
2017
2016
2016
Impaired loans (included in non-performing and TDRs):
Impaired loans with an allowance for loan loss required
(1)
$
29,037
$
33,146
$
42,968
Impaired loans with no allowance for loan loss required
50,281
57,370
53,008
Total impaired loans
(2)
$
79,318
$
90,516
$
95,976
Allowance for loan losses related to impaired loans
$
5,633
$
6,377
$
6,611
TDRs
$
33,091
$
41,708
$
49,635
(1)
These impaired loans require an allowance for loan losses because the estimated fair value of the loans or related collateral is less than the recorded investment in the loans.
(2)
Impaired loans are considered by the Company to be non-accrual loans, TDRs or loans with principal and/or interest at risk, even if the
loan is current with all payments of principal and interest.
The following tables present impaired loans by loan class, excluding covered loans, for the periods ended as follows:
For the Six Months Ended
As of June 30, 2017
June 30, 2017
Recorded Investment
Unpaid Principal Balance
Related Allowance
Average Recorded Investment
Interest Income Recognized
(Dollars in thousands)
Impaired loans with a related ASC 310 allowance recorded
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
$
2,969
$
3,006
$
1,499
$
3,061
$
83
Asset-based lending
511
512
293
704
21
Leases
2,504
2,508
235
2,578
62
Commercial real estate
Construction
7,632
7,632
957
7,665
165
Land
1,750
1,750
7
1,750
32
Office
1,314
1,418
32
1,318
44
Industrial
—
—
—
—
—
Retail
1,582
1,631
130
1,596
40
Multi-family
1,513
1,513
27
1,518
28
Mixed use and other
1,455
1,531
302
1,478
35
Home equity
1,901
1,950
1,296
1,920
35
Residential real estate
5,815
6,090
764
5,731
118
Consumer and other
91
93
91
96
2
Impaired loans with no related ASC 310 allowance recorded
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
$
6,815
$
7,785
$
—
$
7,285
$
213
Asset-based lending
425
425
—
764
16
Leases
852
852
—
879
26
Commercial real estate
Construction
1,504
1,504
—
1,534
33
Land
2,375
2,472
—
2,380
56
Office
3,973
5,074
—
4,076
131
Industrial
2,193
3,622
—
4,328
190
Retail
1,188
1,273
—
1,188
51
Multi-family
89
174
—
89
4
Mixed use and other
7,761
9,299
—
8,494
239
Home equity
7,732
11,260
—
8,906
258
Residential real estate
15,044
17,068
—
15,203
368
Consumer and other
330
434
—
333
11
Total impaired loans, net of unearned income
$
79,318
$
90,876
$
5,633
$
84,874
$
2,261
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Table of Contents
For the Twelve Months Ended
As of December 31, 2016
December 31, 2016
Recorded Investment
Unpaid Principal Balance
Related Allowance
Average Recorded Investment
Interest Income Recognized
(Dollars in thousands)
Impaired loans with a related ASC 310 allowance recorded
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
$
2,601
$
2,617
$
1,079
$
2,649
$
134
Asset-based lending
233
235
26
235
10
Leases
2,441
2,443
107
2,561
128
Commercial real estate
Construction
5,302
5,302
86
5,368
164
Land
1,283
1,283
1
1,303
47
Office
2,687
2,697
324
2,797
137
Industrial
5,207
5,843
1,810
7,804
421
Retail
1,750
1,834
170
2,039
101
Multi-family
—
—
—
—
—
Mixed use and other
3,812
4,010
592
4,038
195
Home equity
1,961
1,873
1,233
1,969
75
Residential real estate
5,752
6,327
849
5,816
261
Consumer and other
117
121
100
131
7
Impaired loans with no related ASC 310 allowance recorded
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
$
12,534
$
14,704
$
—
$
14,944
$
948
Asset-based lending
1,691
2,550
—
8,467
377
Leases
873
873
—
939
56
Commercial real estate
Construction
4,003
4,003
—
4,161
81
Land
3,034
3,503
—
3,371
142
Office
3,994
5,921
—
4,002
323
Industrial
2,129
2,436
—
2,828
274
Retail
—
—
—
—
—
Multi-family
1,903
1,987
—
1,825
84
Mixed use and other
6,815
7,388
—
6,912
397
Home equity
8,033
10,483
—
8,830
475
Residential real estate
11,983
14,124
—
12,041
622
Consumer and other
378
489
—
393
26
Total impaired loans, net of unearned income
$
90,516
$
103,046
$
6,377
$
105,423
$
5,485
For the Six Months Ended
As of June 30, 2016
June 30, 2016
Recorded Investment
Unpaid Principal Balance
Related Allowance
Average Recorded Investment
Interest Income Recognized
(Dollars in thousands)
Impaired loans with a related ASC 310 allowance recorded
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
$
10,253
$
12,866
$
3,280
$
10,172
$
375
Asset-based lending
—
—
—
—
—
Leases
387
387
128
390
10
Commercial real estate
Construction
—
—
—
—
—
Land
4,538
4,538
18
4,592
83
Office
2,401
3,059
176
2,427
70
Industrial
7,369
7,773
1,514
7,552
195
Retail
7,007
7,024
264
7,064
95
Multi-family
1,274
1,274
15
1,066
18
Mixed use and other
3,040
3,162
109
3,063
73
Home equity
1,349
1,511
477
1,443
30
Residential real estate
5,230
5,840
625
5,289
123
Consumer and other
120
148
5
123
4
Impaired loans with no related ASC 310 allowance recorded
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
$
10,092
$
10,950
$
—
$
10,045
$
328
Asset-based lending
—
—
—
—
—
Leases
—
—
—
—
—
Commercial real estate
Construction
2,677
2,677
—
2,693
77
Land
2,979
7,492
—
3,001
254
Office
6,967
8,715
—
7,107
227
Industrial
3,966
5,093
—
4,326
168
Retail
1,122
1,122
—
1,129
27
Multi-family
90
174
—
119
3
Mixed use and other
5,435
5,960
—
5,498
159
Home equity
7,213
9,674
—
8,356
219
Residential real estate
12,051
14,180
—
11,997
308
Consumer and other
416
494
—
427
14
Total impaired loans, net of unearned income
$
95,976
$
114,113
$
6,611
$
97,879
$
2,860
24
Table of Contents
TDRs
At
June 30, 2017
, the Company had
$33.1 million
in loans modified in TDRs. The
$33.1 million
in TDRs represents
77
credits in which economic concessions were granted to certain borrowers to better align the terms of their loans with their current ability to pay.
The Company’s approach to restructuring loans, excluding PCI loans, is built on its credit risk rating system which requires credit management personnel to assign a credit risk rating to each loan. In each case, the loan officer is responsible for recommending a credit risk rating for each loan and ensuring the credit risk ratings are appropriate. These credit risk ratings are then reviewed and approved by the bank’s chief credit officer and/or concurrence credit officer. Credit risk ratings are determined by evaluating a number of factors including a borrower’s financial strength, cash flow coverage, collateral protection and guarantees. The Company’s credit risk rating scale is one through ten with higher scores indicating higher risk. In the case of loans rated six or worse following modification, the Company’s Managed Assets Division evaluates the loan and the credit risk rating and determines that the loan has been restructured to be reasonably assured of repayment and of performance according to the modified terms and is supported by a current, well-documented credit assessment of the borrower’s financial condition and prospects for repayment under the revised terms.
A modification of a loan, excluding PCI loans, with an existing credit risk rating of 6 or worse or a modification of any other credit, which will result in a restructured credit risk rating of six or worse, must be reviewed for possible TDR classification. In that event, our Managed Assets Division conducts an overall credit and collateral review. A modification of these loans is considered to be a TDR if both (1) the borrower is experiencing financial difficulty and (2) for economic or legal reasons, the bank grants a concession to a borrower that it would not otherwise consider. The modification of a loan, excluding PCI loans, where the credit risk rating is 5 or better both before and after such modification is not considered to be a TDR. Based on the Company’s credit risk rating system, it considers that borrowers whose credit risk rating is 5 or better are not experiencing financial difficulties and therefore, are not considered TDRs.
All credits determined to be a TDR will continue to be classified as a TDR in all subsequent periods, unless the borrower has been in compliance with the loan’s modified terms for a period of six months (including over a calendar year-end) and the current interest rate represents a market rate at the time of restructuring. The Managed Assets Division, in consultation with the respective loan officer, determines whether the modified interest rate represented a current market rate at the time of restructuring. Using knowledge of current market conditions and rates, competitive pricing on recent loan originations, and an assessment of various characteristics of the modified loan (including collateral position and payment history), an appropriate market rate for a new borrower with similar risk is determined. If the modified interest rate meets or exceeds this market rate for a new borrower with similar risk, the modified interest rate represents a market rate at the time of restructuring. Additionally, before removing a loan from TDR classification, a review of the current or previously measured impairment on the loan and any concerns related to future performance by the borrower is conducted. If concerns exist about the future ability of the borrower to meet its obligations under the loans based on a credit review by the Managed Assets Division, the TDR classification is not removed from the loan.
TDRs are reviewed at the time of the modification and on a quarterly basis to determine if a specific reserve is necessary. The carrying amount of the loan is compared to the expected payments to be received, discounted at the loan's original rate, or for collateral dependent loans, to the fair value of the collateral. Any shortfall is recorded as a specific reserve. The Company, in accordance with ASC 310-10, continues to individually measure impairment of these loans after the TDR classification is removed.
Each TDR was reviewed for impairment at
June 30, 2017
and approximately
$953,000
of impairment was present and appropriately reserved for through the Company’s normal reserving methodology in the Company’s allowance for loan losses. For TDRs in which impairment is calculated by the present value of future cash flows, the Company records interest income representing the decrease in impairment resulting from the passage of time during the respective period, which differs from interest income from contractually required interest on these specific loans. During the three months ended
June 30, 2017
and
2016
, the Company recorded
$49,000
and
$135,000
, respectively, of interest income, which was reflected as a decrease in impairment. For the
six months ended
June 30, 2017
and
2016
, the Company recorded
$104,000
and
$225,000
, respectively, of interest income, which was reflected as a decrease in impairment.
TDRs may arise in which, due to financial difficulties experienced by the borrower, the Company obtains through physical possession one or more collateral assets in satisfaction of all or part of an existing credit. Once possession is obtained, the Company reclassifies the appropriate portion of the remaining balance of the credit from loans to OREO, which is included within other assets in the Consolidated Statements of Condition. For any residential real estate property collateralizing a consumer mortgage loan, the Company is considered to possess the related collateral only if legal title is obtained upon completion of foreclosure, or the borrower conveys all interest in the residential real estate property to the Company through completion of a deed in lieu of foreclosure or similar legal agreement. Excluding covered OREO, at
June 30, 2017
, the Company had
$8.4 million
of foreclosed residential real estate properties included within OREO. Furthermore, the recorded investment in residential mortgage loans secured by residential real estate properties for which foreclosure proceedings are in process totaled
$12.4 million
at
June 30, 2017
.
25
Table of Contents
The tables below present a summary of the post-modification balance of loans restructured during the three and
six months ended
June 30, 2017
and
2016
, respectively, which represent TDRs:
Three months ended
June 30, 2017
(Dollars in thousands)
Total
(1)(2)
Extension at
Below Market
Terms
(2)
Reduction of Interest
Rate
(2)
Modification to
Interest-only
Payments
(2)
Forgiveness of Debt
(2)
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
—
$
—
—
$
—
—
$
—
—
$
—
—
$
—
Commercial real estate
Office
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Industrial
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Mixed use and other
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Residential real estate and other
4
2,210
4
2,210
3
2,161
—
—
—
—
Total loans
4
$
2,210
4
$
2,210
3
$
2,161
—
$
—
—
$
—
Three months ended
June 30, 2016
(Dollars in thousands)
Total
(1)(2)
Extension at
Below Market
Terms
(2)
Reduction of Interest
Rate
(2)
Modification to
Interest-only
Payments
(2)
Forgiveness of Debt
(2)
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
1
$
275
1
$
275
—
$
—
—
$
—
1
$
275
Commercial real estate
Office
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Industrial
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Mixed use and other
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Residential real estate and other
1
380
1
380
1
380
1
380
—
—
Total loans
2
$
655
2
$
655
1
$
380
1
$
380
1
$
275
(1)
TDRs may have more than one modification representing a concession. As such, TDRs during the period may be represented in more than one of the categories noted above.
(2)
Balances represent the recorded investment in the loan at the time of the restructuring.
During the three months ended
June 30, 2017
,
four
loans totaling
$2.2 million
were determined to be TDRs, compared to
two
loans totaling
$655,000
during the three months ended June 30,
2016
. Of these loans extended at below market terms, the weighted average extension had a term of approximately
54
months during the quarter ended
June 30, 2017
compared to
36
months for the quarter ended
June 30, 2016
. Further, the weighted average decrease in the stated interest rate for loans with a reduction of interest rate during the period was approximately
195 basis points
and
275 basis points
during the three months ended
June 30, 2017
and
2016
, respectively. Interest-only payments terms were approximately
six months
during the three months ended
June 30, 2016
. Additionally,
no
principal balances were forgiven in the
second quarter of 2017
compared to
$300,000
of principal balance forgiven in the
second quarter of 2016
.
Six months ended
June 30, 2017
(Dollars in thousands)
Total
(1)(2)
Extension at
Below Market
Terms
(2)
Reduction of Interest
Rate
(2)
Modification to
Interest-only
Payments
(2)
Forgiveness of Debt
(2)
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
1
$
95
1
$
95
—
$
—
—
$
—
—
$
—
Commercial real estate
Office
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Industrial
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Mixed use and other
1
1,245
1
1,245
—
—
—
—
—
—
Residential real estate and other
6
2,383
6
2,383
5
2,334
—
—
—
—
Total loans
8
$
3,723
8
$
3,723
5
$
2,334
—
$
—
—
$
—
(1)
TDRs may have more than one modification representing a concession. As such, TDRs during the period may be represented in more than one of the categories noted above.
(2)
Balances represent the recorded investment in the loan at the time of the restructuring.
26
Table of Contents
Six months ended
June 30, 2016
(Dollars in thousands)
Total
(1)(2)
Extension at
Below Market
Terms
(2)
Reduction of Interest
Rate
(2)
Modification to
Interest-only
Payments
(2)
Forgiveness of Debt
(2)
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
2
$
317
2
$
317
—
$
—
—
$
—
1
$
275
Commercial real estate
Office
1
450
1
450
—
—
—
—
—
—
Industrial
6
7,921
6
7,921
3
7,196
—
—
—
—
Mixed use and other
2
150
2
150
—
—
—
—
—
—
Residential real estate and other
2
540
1
380
2
540
1
380
—
—
Total loans
13
$
9,378
12
$
9,218
5
$
7,736
1
$
380
1
$
275
(1)
TDRs may have more than one modification representing a concession. As such, TDRs during the period may be represented in more than one of the categories noted above.
(2)
Balances represent the recorded investment in the loan at the time of the restructuring.
During the
six months ended June 30, 2017
,
eight
loans totaling
$3.7 million
were determined to be TDRs, compared to
13
loans totaling
$9.4 million
in the same period of
2016
. Of these loans extended at below market terms, the weighted average extension had a term of approximately
36 months
during the
six months ended June 30, 2017
compared to
six months
for the
six months ended June 30, 2016
. Further, the weighted average decrease in the stated interest rate for loans with a reduction of interest rate during the period was approximately
184 basis
points and
30 basis
points for the year-to-date periods
June 30, 2017
and
2016
, respectively. Interest-only payment terms were approximately
six months
during the six months ended
June 30, 2016
. Additionally,
no
principal balances were forgiven in the
first six months of 2017
compared to
$300,000
of principal balance forgiven during the same period of
2016
.
The following table presents a summary of all loans restructured in TDRs during the twelve months ended
June 30, 2017
and
2016
, and such loans which were in payment default under the restructured terms during the respective periods below:
(Dollars in thousands)
As of June 30, 2017
Three Months Ended
June 30, 2017
Six Months Ended
June 30, 2017
Total
(1)(3)
Payments in Default
(2)(3)
Payments in Default
(2)(3)
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
2
$
123
1
$
28
1
$
28
Leases
2
2,949
—
—
—
—
Commercial real estate
Office
—
—
—
—
—
—
Industrial
—
—
—
—
—
—
Mixed use and other
1
1,245
—
—
—
—
Residential real estate and other
11
2,925
1
232
1
232
Total loans
16
$
7,242
2
$
260
2
$
260
(Dollars in thousands)
As of June 30, 2016
Three Months Ended
June 30, 2016
Six Months Ended
June 30, 2016
Total
(1)(3)
Payments in Default
(2)(3)
Payments in Default
(2)(3)
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Count
Balance
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
2
$
317
—
$
—
—
$
—
Leases
—
—
—
—
—
—
Commercial real estate
Office
1
450
1
450
1
450
Industrial
6
7,921
3
725
3
725
Mixed use and other
4
351
1
16
3
217
Residential real estate and other
3
762
1
222
1
222
Total loans
16
$
9,801
6
$
1,413
8
$
1,614
(1)
Total TDRs represent all loans restructured in TDRs during the previous twelve months from the date indicated.
(2)
TDRs considered to be in payment default are over 30 days past-due subsequent to the restructuring.
(3)
Balances represent the recorded investment in the loan at the time of the restructuring.
27
Table of Contents
(8)
Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets
A summary of the Company’s goodwill assets by business segment is presented in the following table:
(Dollars in thousands)
January 1,
2017
Goodwill
Acquired
Impairment
Loss
Goodwill Adjustments
June 30,
2017
Community banking
$
427,781
$
999
$
—
$
(152
)
$
428,628
Specialty finance
38,692
—
—
826
39,518
Wealth management
32,114
—
—
—
32,114
Total
$
498,587
$
999
$
—
$
674
$
500,260
The community banking segment's goodwill increased
$847,000
in the
first six months of 2017
primarily as a result of the acquisition of AHM. The specialty finance segment's goodwill increased
$826,000
in the
first six months of 2017
as a result of foreign currency translation adjustments related to the Canadian acquisitions.
At June 30, 2017, the Company utilized a quantitative approach for its annual goodwill impairment test of the community banking segment and determined that no impairment existed at that time. At December 31, 2016, the Company utilized a quantitative approach for its annual goodwill impairment tests of the specialty finance and wealth management segments and determined that no impairment existed at that time. At each reporting date between annual goodwill impairment tests, the Company considers potential indicators of impairment. As of
June 30, 2017
, the Company identified no such indicators of goodwill impairment within the specialty finance and wealth management segments.
A summary of finite-lived intangible assets as of the dates shown and the expected amortization as of
June 30, 2017
is as follows:
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
December 31,
2016
June 30,
2016
Community banking segment:
Core deposit intangibles:
Gross carrying amount
$
37,272
$
37,272
$
34,998
Accumulated amortization
(23,632
)
(21,614
)
(19,654
)
Net carrying amount
$
13,640
$
15,658
$
15,344
Specialty finance segment:
Customer list intangibles:
Gross carrying amount
$
1,800
$
1,800
$
1,800
Accumulated amortization
(1,221
)
(1,159
)
(1,100
)
Net carrying amount
$
579
$
641
$
700
Wealth management segment:
Customer list and other intangibles:
Gross carrying amount
$
7,940
$
7,940
$
7,940
Accumulated amortization
(2,613
)
(2,388
)
(2,163
)
Net carrying amount
$
5,327
$
5,552
$
5,777
Total other intangible assets, net
$
19,546
$
21,851
$
21,821
Estimated amortization
Actual in six months ended June 30, 2017
$
2,305
Estimated remaining in 2017
2,086
Estimated—2018
3,778
Estimated—2019
3,206
Estimated—2020
2,580
Estimated—2021
2,039
The core deposit intangibles recognized in connection with prior bank acquisitions are amortized over a
ten
-year period on an accelerated basis. The customer list intangibles recognized in connection with the purchase of life insurance premium finance assets in 2009 are being amortized over an
18
-year period on an accelerated basis while the customer list intangibles recognized
28
Table of Contents
in connection with prior acquisitions within the wealth management segment are being amortized over a
ten
-year period on a straight-line basis.
Total amortization expense associated with finite-lived intangibles totaled approximately
$2.3 million
and
$2.5 million
for the
six months ended June 30, 2017
and
2016
, respectively.
(9)
Deposits
The following table is a summary of deposits as of the dates shown:
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
December 31,
2016
June 30,
2016
Balance:
Non-interest bearing
$
6,294,052
$
5,927,377
$
5,367,672
NOW and interest bearing demand deposits
2,459,238
2,624,442
2,450,710
Wealth management deposits
2,464,162
2,209,617
1,904,121
Money market
4,449,385
4,441,811
4,384,134
Savings
2,419,463
2,180,482
1,851,863
Time certificates of deposit
4,519,392
4,274,903
4,083,250
Total deposits
$
22,605,692
$
21,658,632
$
20,041,750
Mix:
Non-interest bearing
28
%
27
%
27
%
NOW and interest bearing demand deposits
11
12
12
Wealth management deposits
11
10
10
Money market
19
21
22
Savings
11
10
9
Time certificates of deposit
20
20
20
Total deposits
100
%
100
%
100
%
Wealth management deposits represent deposit balances (primarily money market accounts) at the Company’s subsidiary banks from brokerage customers of Wayne Hummer Investments, LLC ("WHI"), trust and asset management customers of Company and brokerage customers from unaffiliated companies.
(10)
FHLB Advances, Other Borrowings and Subordinated Notes
The following table is a summary of FHLB advances, other borrowings and subordinated notes as of the dates shown:
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
December 31,
2016
June 30,
2016
FHLB advances
$
318,270
$
153,831
$
588,055
Other borrowings:
Notes payable
44,959
52,445
59,937
Short-term borrowings
46,280
61,809
38,798
Other
49,765
18,154
18,564
Secured borrowings
136,706
130,078
135,312
Total other borrowings
277,710
262,486
252,611
Subordinated notes
139,029
138,971
138,915
Total FHLB advances, other borrowings and subordinated notes
$
735,009
$
555,288
$
979,581
FHLB Advances
FHLB advances consist of obligations of the banks and are collateralized by qualifying commercial and residential real estate and home equity loans and certain securities. FHLB advances are stated at par value of the debt adjusted for unamortized prepayment fees paid at the time of prior restructurings of FHLB advances and unamortized fair value adjustments recorded in connection with advances acquired through acquisitions.
29
Table of Contents
Notes Payable
At
June 30, 2017
, notes payable represented a
$45.0 million
term facility ("Term Facility"), which is part of a
$150.0 million
loan agreement ("Credit Agreement") with unaffiliated banks dated
December 15, 2014
. The Credit Agreement consists of the Term Facility with an original outstanding balance of
$75.0 million
and a
$75.0 million
revolving credit facility ("Revolving Credit Facility"). At
June 30, 2017
, the Company had a balance of
$45.0 million
compared to
$52.4 million
at
December 31, 2016
and
$59.9 million
at
June 30, 2016
under the Term Facility. The Term Facility is stated at par of the current outstanding balance of the debt adjusted for unamortized costs paid by the Company in relation to the debt issuance. The Company was contractually required to borrow the entire amount of the Term Facility on
June 15, 2015
and all such borrowings must be repaid by
June 15, 2020
. Beginning
September 30, 2015
, the Company was required to make straight-line
quarterly
amortizing payments on the Term Facility. At
June 30, 2017
,
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
, the Company had
no
outstanding balance under the Revolving Credit Facility. As no outstanding balance exists on the Revolving Credit Facility, unamortized costs paid by the Company in relation to the issuance of this debt are classified in other assets on the Consolidated Statements of Condition. In
December 2015
, the Company amended the Credit Agreement, effectively extending the maturity date on the Revolving Credit Facility from
December 14, 2015
to
December 12, 2016
. In December 2016, the Company again amended the Credit Agreement, effectively extending the maturity date on the Revolving Credit Facility from December 12, 2016 to
December 11, 2017
.
Borrowings under the Credit Agreement that are considered “Base Rate Loans” bear interest at a rate equal to the sum of (1)
50 basis points
(in the case of a borrowing under the Revolving Credit Facility) or
75 basis points
(in the case of a borrowing under the Term Facility) plus (2) the highest of (a) the federal funds rate plus
50 basis points
, (b) the lender's prime rate, and (c) the Eurodollar Rate (as defined below) that would be applicable for an interest period of one month plus
100 basis points
. Borrowings under the agreement that are considered “Eurodollar Rate Loans” bear interest at a rate equal to the sum of (1)
150 basis points
(in the case of a borrowing under the Revolving Credit Facility) or
175 basis points
(in the case of a borrowing under the Term Facility) plus (2) the LIBOR rate for the applicable period, as adjusted for statutory reserve requirements for eurocurrency liabilities (the “Eurodollar Rate”). A commitment fee is payable
quarterly
equal to
0.20%
of the actual daily amount by which the lenders' commitment under the Revolving Credit Facility exceeded the amount outstanding under such facility.
Borrowings under the Credit Agreement are secured by pledges of and first priority perfected security interests in the Company's equity interest in its bank subsidiaries and contain several restrictive covenants, including the maintenance of various capital adequacy levels, asset quality and profitability ratios, and certain restrictions on dividends and other indebtedness. At
June 30, 2017
, the Company was in compliance with all such covenants. The Revolving Credit Facility and the Term Facility are available to be utilized, as needed, to provide capital to fund continued growth at the Company’s banks and to serve as an interim source of funds for acquisitions, common stock repurchases or other general corporate purposes.
Short-term Borrowings
Short-term borrowings include securities sold under repurchase agreements and federal funds purchased. These borrowings totaled
$46.3 million
at
June 30, 2017
compared to
$61.8 million
at
December 31, 2016
and
$38.8 million
at
June 30, 2016
. At
June 30, 2017
,
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
, securities sold under repurchase agreements represent
$46.3 million
,
$61.8 million
and
$38.8 million
, respectively, of customer sweep accounts in connection with master repurchase agreements at the banks. The Company records securities sold under repurchase agreements at their gross value and does not offset positions on the Consolidated Statements of Condition. As of
June 30, 2017
, the Company had pledged securities related to its customer balances in sweep accounts of
$69.4 million
. Securities pledged for customer balances in sweep accounts and short-term borrowings from brokers are maintained under the Company’s control and consist of U.S. Government agency and mortgage-backed securities. These securities are included in the available-for-sale and held-to-maturity securities portfolios as reflected on the Company’s Consolidated Statements of Condition.
30
Table of Contents
The following is a summary of these securities pledged as of
June 30, 2017
disaggregated by investment category and maturity of the related customer sweep account, and reconciled to the outstanding balance of securities sold under repurchase agreements:
(Dollars in thousands)
Overnight Sweep Collateral
Available-for-sale securities pledged
Mortgage-backed securities
$
44,372
Held-to-maturity securities pledged
U.S. Government agencies
25,000
Total collateral pledged
$
69,372
Excess collateral
23,092
Securities sold under repurchase agreements
$
46,280
Other Borrowings
Other borrowings at
June 30, 2017
represent a fixed-rate promissory note issued by the Company in
June 2017
("Fixed-Rate Promissory Note") related to and secured by two office buildings owned by the Company, and non-recourse notes issued by the Company to other banks related to certain capital leases. At
June 30, 2017
, the Fixed-Rate Promissory Note had a balance of
$49.5 million
. Under the Fixed-Rate Promissory Note, the Company will make
monthly
principal payments and pay interest at a fixed rate of
3.36%
until maturity on
June 30, 2022
. Under a previous fixed-rate promissory note with an unrelated creditor related to and secured by an office building owned by the Company, other borrowings totaled
$17.7 million
and
$18.0 million
at
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
, respectively. In June 2017, this previous fixed-rate promissory note was paid-off upon the Company's issuance of the Fixed-Rate Promissory Note. At
June 30, 2017
, the non-recourse notes related to certain capital leases totaled
$300,000
compared to
$447,000
and
$591,000
at
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
, respectively.
Secured Borrowings
Secured borrowings at
June 30, 2017
primarily represents transactions to sell an undivided co-ownership interest in all receivables owed to the Company's subsidiary, FIFC Canada. In December 2014, FIFC Canada sold such interest to an unrelated third party in exchange for a cash payment of approximately
C$150 million
pursuant to a receivables purchase agreement (“Receivables Purchase Agreement”). The Receivables Purchase Agreement was amended in December 2015, effectively extending the maturity date from
December 15, 2015
to
December 15, 2017
. Additionally, at that time, the unrelated third party paid an additional
C$10 million
, which increased the total payments to
C$160 million
. These transactions were not considered sales of receivables and, as such, related proceeds received are reflected on the Company’s Consolidated Statements of Condition as a secured borrowing owed to the unrelated third party, net of unamortized debt issuance costs, and translated to the Company’s reporting currency as of the respective date. At
June 30, 2017
, the translated balance of the secured borrowing totaled
$123.4 million
compared to
$119.0 million
at
December 31, 2016
and
$123.7 million
at
June 30, 2016
. Additionally, the interest rate under the Receivables Purchase Agreement at
June 30, 2017
was
1.6431%
. The remaining
$13.3 million
within secured borrowings at June 30, 2017 represents other sold interests in certain loans by the Company that were not considered sales and, as such, related proceeds received are reflected on the Company’s Consolidated Statements of Condition as a secured borrowing owed to the various unrelated third parties.
Subordinated Notes
At
June 30, 2017
, the Company had outstanding subordinated notes totaling
$139.0 million
compared to
$139.0 million
and
$138.9 million
outstanding at
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
, respectively. The notes have a stated interest rate of
5.00%
and mature in
June 2024
. These notes are stated at par adjusted for unamortized costs paid related to the issuance of this debt.
(11)
Junior Subordinated Debentures
As of
June 30, 2017
, the Company owned
100%
of the common securities of
eleven
trusts, Wintrust Capital Trust III, Wintrust Statutory Trust IV, Wintrust Statutory Trust V, Wintrust Capital Trust VII, Wintrust Capital Trust VIII, Wintrust Capital Trust IX, Northview Capital Trust I, Town Bankshares Capital Trust I, First Northwest Capital Trust I, Suburban Illinois Capital Trust II, and Community Financial Shares Statutory Trust II (the “Trusts”) set up to provide long-term financing. The Northview, Town, First Northwest, Suburban, and Community Financial Shares capital trusts were acquired as part of the acquisitions of Northview Financial Corporation, Town Bankshares, Ltd., First Northwest Bancorp, Inc., Suburban and CFIS, respectively. The Trusts were formed for purposes of issuing trust preferred securities to third-party investors and investing the proceeds from the issuance of
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Table of Contents
the trust preferred securities and common securities solely in junior subordinated debentures issued by the Company (or assumed by the Company in connection with an acquisition), with the same maturities and interest rates as the trust preferred securities. The junior subordinated debentures are the sole assets of the Trusts. In each Trust, the common securities represent approximately
3%
of the junior subordinated debentures and the trust preferred securities represent approximately
97%
of the junior subordinated debentures.
In January 2016, the Company acquired
$15.0 million
of the
$40.0 million
of trust preferred securities issued by Wintrust Capital Trust VIII from a third-party investor. The purchase effectively extinguished
$15.0 million
of junior subordinated debentures related to Wintrust Capital Trust VIII and resulted in a
$4.3 million
gain from the early extinguishment of debt.
The Trusts are reported in the Company’s consolidated financial statements as unconsolidated subsidiaries. Accordingly, in the Consolidated Statements of Condition, the junior subordinated debentures issued by the Company to the Trusts are reported as liabilities and the common securities of the Trusts, all of which are owned by the Company, are included in available-for-sale securities.
The following table provides a summary of the Company’s junior subordinated debentures as of
June 30, 2017
. The junior subordinated debentures represent the par value of the obligations owed to the Trusts.
(Dollars in thousands)
Common
Securities
Trust
Preferred
Securities
Junior
Subordinated
Debentures
Rate
Structure
Contractual rate
at 6/30/2017
Issue
Date
Maturity
Date
Earliest
Redemption
Date
Wintrust Capital Trust III
$
774
$
25,000
$
25,774
L+3.25
4.41
%
04/2003
04/2033
04/2008
Wintrust Statutory Trust IV
619
20,000
20,619
L+2.80
4.10
%
12/2003
12/2033
12/2008
Wintrust Statutory Trust V
1,238
40,000
41,238
L+2.60
3.90
%
05/2004
05/2034
06/2009
Wintrust Capital Trust VII
1,550
50,000
51,550
L+1.95
3.20
%
12/2004
03/2035
03/2010
Wintrust Capital Trust VIII
1,238
25,000
26,238
L+1.45
2.75
%
08/2005
09/2035
09/2010
Wintrust Capital Trust IX
1,547
50,000
51,547
L+1.63
2.88
%
09/2006
09/2036
09/2011
Northview Capital Trust I
186
6,000
6,186
L+3.00
4.17
%
08/2003
11/2033
08/2008
Town Bankshares Capital Trust I
186
6,000
6,186
L+3.00
4.17
%
08/2003
11/2033
08/2008
First Northwest Capital Trust I
155
5,000
5,155
L+3.00
4.30
%
05/2004
05/2034
05/2009
Suburban Illinois Capital Trust II
464
15,000
15,464
L+1.75
3.00
%
12/2006
12/2036
12/2011
Community Financial Shares Statutory Trust II
109
3,500
3,609
L+1.62
2.87
%
06/2007
09/2037
06/2012
Total
$
253,566
3.45
%
The junior subordinated debentures totaled
$253.6 million
at
June 30, 2017
,
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
.
The interest rates on the variable rate junior subordinated debentures are based on the three-month LIBOR rate and reset on a quarterly basis. At
June 30, 2017
, the weighted average contractual interest rate on the junior subordinated debentures was
3.45%
. The Company entered into interest rate swaps and caps to hedge the variable cash flows on certain junior subordinated debentures. The hedge-adjusted rate on the junior subordinated debentures as of
June 30, 2017
, was
3.59%
. Distributions on the common and preferred securities issued by the Trusts are payable quarterly at a rate per annum equal to the interest rates being earned by the Trusts on the junior subordinated debentures. Interest expense on the junior subordinated debentures is deductible for income tax purposes.
The Company has guaranteed the payment of distributions and payments upon liquidation or redemption of the trust preferred securities, in each case to the extent of funds held by the Trusts. The Company and the Trusts believe that, taken together, the obligations of the Company under the guarantees, the junior subordinated debentures, and other related agreements provide, in the aggregate, a full, irrevocable and unconditional guarantee, on a subordinated basis, of all of the obligations of the Trusts under the trust preferred securities. Subject to certain limitations, the Company has the right to defer the payment of interest on the junior subordinated debentures at any time, or from time to time, for a period not to exceed
20
consecutive quarters. The trust preferred securities are subject to mandatory redemption, in whole or in part, upon repayment of the junior subordinated debentures at maturity or their earlier redemption. The junior subordinated debentures are redeemable in whole or in part prior to maturity at any time after the earliest redemption dates shown in the table, and earlier at the discretion of the Company if certain conditions are met, and, in any event, only after the Company has obtained Federal Reserve Bank ("FRB") approval, if then required under applicable guidelines or regulations.
Prior to January 1, 2015, the junior subordinated debentures, subject to certain limitations, qualified as Tier 1 regulatory capital of the Company and the amount in excess of those certain limitations could, subject to other restrictions, be included in Tier 2 capital. Starting in 2015, a portion of these junior subordinated debentures still qualified as Tier 1 regulatory capital of the Company
32
Table of Contents
and the amount in excess of those certain limitations, subject to certain restrictions, was included in Tier 2 capital. Starting in 2016,
none
of the junior subordinated debentures qualified as Tier 1 regulatory capital of the Company resulting in
$245.5 million
of the junior subordinated debentures, net of common securities, being included in the Company's Tier 2 regulatory capital.
(12)
Segment Information
The Company’s operations consist of
three
primary segments: community banking, specialty finance and wealth management.
The
three
reportable segments are strategic business units that are separately managed as they offer different products and services and have different marketing strategies. In addition, each segment’s customer base has varying characteristics and each segment has a different regulatory environment. While the Company’s management monitors each of the
fifteen
bank subsidiaries’ operations and profitability separately, these subsidiaries have been aggregated into
one
reportable operating segment due to the similarities in products and services, customer base, operations, profitability measures, and economic characteristics.
For purposes of internal segment profitability, management allocates certain intersegment and parent company balances. Management allocates a portion of revenues to the specialty finance segment related to loans and leases originated by the specialty finance segment and sold or assigned to the community banking segment. Similarly, for purposes of analyzing the contribution from the wealth management segment, management allocates a portion of the net interest income earned by the community banking segment on deposit balances of customers of the wealth management segment to the wealth management segment. See Note 9 — Deposits, for more information on these deposits. Finally, expenses incurred at the Wintrust parent company are allocated to each segment based on each segment's risk-weighted assets.
The segment financial information provided in the following tables has been derived from the internal profitability reporting system used by management to monitor and manage the financial performance of the Company. The accounting policies of the segments are substantially similar to those described in “Summary of Significant Accounting Policies” in Note 1 of the Company’s
2016
Form 10-K. The Company evaluates segment performance based on after-tax profit or loss and other appropriate profitability measures common to each segment.
33
Table of Contents
The following is a summary of certain operating information for reportable segments:
Three months ended
$ Change in
Contribution
% Change in
Contribution
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Net interest income:
Community Banking
$
166,329
$
142,251
$
24,078
17
%
Specialty Finance
28,558
24,352
4,206
17
Wealth Management
4,919
4,383
536
12
Total Operating Segments
199,806
170,986
28,820
17
Intersegment Eliminations
4,603
4,284
319
7
Consolidated net interest income
$
204,409
$
175,270
$
29,139
17
%
Non-interest income:
Community Banking
$
65,007
$
60,813
$
4,194
7
%
Specialty Finance
13,721
12,482
1,239
10
Wealth Management
20,573
19,863
710
4
Total Operating Segments
99,301
93,158
6,143
7
Intersegment Eliminations
(9,329
)
(8,359
)
(970
)
(12
)
Consolidated non-interest income
$
89,972
$
84,799
$
5,173
6
%
Net revenue:
Community Banking
$
231,336
$
203,064
$
28,272
14
%
Specialty Finance
42,279
36,834
5,445
15
Wealth Management
25,492
24,246
1,246
5
Total Operating Segments
299,107
264,144
34,963
13
Intersegment Eliminations
(4,726
)
(4,075
)
(651
)
(16
)
Consolidated net revenue
$
294,381
$
260,069
$
34,312
13
%
Segment profit:
Community Banking
$
46,026
$
34,576
$
11,450
33
%
Specialty Finance
14,849
12,044
2,805
23
Wealth Management
4,022
3,421
601
18
Consolidated net income
$
64,897
$
50,041
$
14,856
30
%
Segment assets:
Community Banking
$
22,032,302
$
20,190,707
$
1,841,595
9
%
Specialty Finance
4,255,109
3,645,077
610,032
17
Wealth Management
641,854
584,832
57,022
10
Consolidated total assets
$
26,929,265
$
24,420,616
$
2,508,649
10
%
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Table of Contents
Six months ended
$ Change in
Contribution
% Change in
Contribution
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Net interest income:
Community Banking
$
322,609
$
283,949
$
38,660
14
%
Specialty Finance
55,370
45,532
9,838
22
Wealth Management
9,975
8,866
1,109
13
Total Operating Segments
387,954
338,347
49,607
15
Intersegment Eliminations
9,035
8,432
603
7
Consolidated net interest income
$
396,989
$
346,779
$
50,210
14
%
Non-interest income:
Community Banking
$
107,723
$
106,480
$
1,243
1
%
Specialty Finance
27,877
24,885
2,992
12
Wealth Management
41,375
38,615
2,760
7
Total Operating Segments
176,975
169,980
6,995
4
Intersegment Eliminations
(18,238
)
(16,429
)
(1,809
)
(11
)
Consolidated non-interest income
$
158,737
$
153,551
$
5,186
3
%
Net revenue:
Community Banking
$
430,332
$
390,429
$
39,903
10
%
Specialty Finance
83,247
70,417
12,830
18
Wealth Management
51,350
47,481
3,869
8
Total Operating Segments
564,929
508,327
56,602
11
Intersegment Eliminations
(9,203
)
(7,997
)
(1,206
)
(15
)
Consolidated net revenue
$
555,726
$
500,330
$
55,396
11
%
Segment profit:
Community Banking
$
83,703
$
69,333
$
14,370
21
%
Specialty Finance
30,947
23,516
7,431
32
Wealth Management
8,625
6,303
2,322
37
Consolidated net income
$
123,275
$
99,152
$
24,123
24
%
(13)
Derivative Financial Instruments
The Company primarily enters into derivative financial instruments as part of its strategy to manage its exposure to changes in interest rates. Derivative instruments represent contracts between parties that result in one party delivering cash to the other party based on a notional amount and an underlying term (such as a rate, security price or price index) as specified in the contract. The amount of cash delivered from one party to the other is determined based on the interaction of the notional amount of the contract with the underlying term. Derivatives are also implicit in certain contracts and commitments.
The derivative financial instruments currently used by the Company to manage its exposure to interest rate risk include: (1) interest rate swaps and caps to manage the interest rate risk of certain fixed and variable rate assets and variable rate liabilities; (2) interest rate lock commitments provided to customers to fund certain mortgage loans to be sold into the secondary market; (3) forward commitments for the future delivery of such mortgage loans to protect the Company from adverse changes in interest rates and corresponding changes in the value of mortgage loans held-for-sale; and (4) covered call options to economically hedge specific investment securities and receive fee income effectively enhancing the overall yield on such securities to compensate for net interest margin compression. The Company also enters into derivatives (typically interest rate swaps) with certain qualified borrowers to facilitate the borrowers’ risk management strategies and concurrently enters into mirror-image derivatives with a third party counterparty, effectively making a market in the derivatives for such borrowers. Additionally, the Company enters into foreign currency contracts to manage foreign exchange risk associated with certain foreign currency denominated assets.
The Company recognizes derivative financial instruments in the consolidated financial statements at fair value regardless of the purpose or intent for holding the instrument. The Company records derivative assets and derivative liabilities on the Consolidated Statements of Condition within accrued interest receivable and other assets and accrued interest payable and other liabilities, respectively. Changes in the fair value of derivative financial instruments are either recognized in income or in shareholders’ equity as a component of other comprehensive income depending on whether the derivative financial instrument qualifies for hedge accounting and, if so, whether it qualifies as a fair value hedge or cash flow hedge. Generally, changes in fair values of derivatives
35
Table of Contents
accounted for as fair value hedges are recorded in income in the same period and in the same income statement line as changes in the fair values of the hedged items that relate to the hedged risk(s). Changes in fair values of derivative financial instruments accounted for as cash flow hedges, to the extent they are effective hedges, are recorded as a component of other comprehensive income, net of deferred taxes, and reclassified to earnings when the hedged transaction affects earnings. Changes in fair values of derivative financial instruments not designated in a hedging relationship pursuant to ASC 815, including changes in fair value related to the ineffective portion of cash flow hedges, are reported in non-interest income during the period of the change. Derivative financial instruments are valued by a third party and are corroborated by comparison with valuations provided by the respective counterparties. Fair values of certain mortgage banking derivatives (interest rate lock commitments and forward commitments to sell mortgage loans) are estimated based on changes in mortgage interest rates from the date of the loan commitment. The fair value of foreign currency derivatives is computed based on changes in foreign currency rates stated in the contract compared to those prevailing at the measurement date.
The table below presents the fair value of the Company’s derivative financial instruments as of
June 30, 2017
,
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
:
Derivative Assets
Derivative Liabilities
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
December 31,
2016
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
December 31,
2016
June 30,
2016
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments under ASC 815:
Interest rate derivatives designated as Cash Flow Hedges
$
8,644
$
8,011
$
12
$
—
$
—
$
1,577
Interest rate derivatives designated as Fair Value Hedges
2,074
2,228
—
26
—
999
Total derivatives designated as hedging instruments under ASC 815
$
10,718
$
10,239
$
12
$
26
$
—
$
2,576
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments under ASC 815:
Interest rate derivatives
$
35,929
$
38,974
$
89,024
$
35,317
$
37,665
$
88,316
Interest rate lock commitments
2,875
4,265
11,435
182
1,325
2,973
Forward commitments to sell mortgage loans
78
2,037
—
1,961
—
6,496
Foreign exchange contracts
103
879
581
165
849
551
Total derivatives not designated as hedging instruments under ASC 815
$
38,985
$
46,155
$
101,040
$
37,625
$
39,839
$
98,336
Total Derivatives
$
49,703
$
56,394
$
101,052
$
37,651
$
39,839
$
100,912
Cash Flow Hedges of Interest Rate Risk
The Company’s objectives in using interest rate derivatives are to add stability to net interest income and to manage its exposure to interest rate movements. To accomplish these objectives, the Company primarily uses interest rate swaps and interest rate caps as part of its interest rate risk management strategy. Interest rate swaps designated as cash flow hedges involve the receipt of variable-rate amounts from a counterparty in exchange for the Company making fixed-rate payments over the life of the agreements without the exchange of the underlying notional amount. Interest rate caps designated as cash flow hedges involve the receipt of payments at the end of each period in which the interest rate specified in the contract exceeds the agreed upon strike price.
As of
June 30, 2017
, the Company had
four
interest rate swap derivatives designated as cash flow hedges of variable rate deposits. The interest rate swap derivatives had notional amounts of
$200.0 million
,
$250.0 million
,
$275.0 million
and
$200.0 million
and mature in June 2019, July 2019, August 2019 and June 2020, respectively. Additionally, as of
June 30, 2017
, the Company had
two
interest rate caps designated as hedges of the variable cash outflows associated with interest expense on the Company’s junior subordinated debentures. These cap derivatives had notional amounts of
$50.0 million
and
$40.0 million
, respectively, both maturing in September 2017. The effective portion of changes in the fair value of these cash flow hedges is recorded in accumulated other comprehensive income and is subsequently reclassified to interest expense as interest payments are made on the Company’s variable rate junior subordinated debentures. The changes in fair value (net of tax) are separately disclosed in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income. The ineffective portion of the change in fair value of these derivatives is recognized directly in earnings; however,
no
hedge ineffectiveness was recognized during the
six months ended June 30, 2017
or
June 30, 2016
. The Company uses the hypothetical derivative method to assess and measure hedge effectiveness.
36
Table of Contents
The table below provides details on each of these cash flow hedges as of
June 30, 2017
:
June 30, 2017
(Dollars in thousands)
Notional
Fair Value
Maturity Date
Amount
Asset (Liability)
Interest Rate Swaps:
June 2019
$
200,000
$
96
July 2019
250,000
3,750
August 2019
275,000
4,671
June 2020
200,000
122
Total Interest Rate Swaps
$
925,000
$
8,639
Interest Rate Caps:
September 2017
$
50,000
$
—
September 2017
40,000
5
Total Interest Rate Caps
$
90,000
$
5
Total Cash Flow Hedges
$
1,015,000
$
8,644
A rollforward of the amounts in accumulated other comprehensive loss related to interest rate derivatives designated as cash flow hedges follows:
Three months ended
Six months ended
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Unrealized gain (loss) at beginning of period
$
8,559
$
(3,051
)
$
6,944
$
(3,529
)
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive loss to interest expense on deposits and junior subordinated debentures
821
832
1,037
1,555
Amount of (loss) gain recognized in other comprehensive income
(1,131
)
(1,355
)
268
(1,600
)
Unrealized gain (loss) at end of period
$
8,249
$
(3,574
)
$
8,249
$
(3,574
)
As of
June 30, 2017
, the Company estimates that during the next twelve months,
$2.3 million
will be reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive gain as an increase to interest expense.
Fair Value Hedges of Interest Rate Risk
Interest rate swaps designated as fair value hedges involve the payment of fixed amounts to a counterparty in exchange for the Company receiving variable payments over the life of the agreements without the exchange of the underlying notional amount. As of
June 30, 2017
, the Company has
eleven
interest rate swaps with an aggregate notional amount of
$121.1 million
that were designated as fair value hedges associated with fixed rate commercial and industrial and commercial franchise loans as well as life insurance premium finance receivables.
For derivatives designated and that qualify as fair value hedges, the gain or loss on the derivative as well as the offsetting loss or gain on the hedged item attributable to the hedged risk are recognized in earnings. The Company includes the gain or loss on the hedged item in the same line item as the offsetting loss or gain on the related derivatives. The Company recognized a net gain of
$40,000
and
$17,000
in other income related to hedge ineffectiveness for the three months ended
June 30, 2017
and
2016
, respectively. On a year-to-date basis, the Company recognized a net gain of
$29,000
and a net loss of
$22,000
in other income related to hedge ineffectiveness for the six months ended
June 30, 2017
and
2016
, respectively.
37
Table of Contents
The following table presents the gain/(loss) and hedge ineffectiveness recognized on derivative instruments and the related hedged items that are designated as a fair value hedge accounting relationship as of
June 30, 2017
and
2016
:
(Dollars in thousands)
Derivatives in Fair Value
Hedging Relationships
Location of Gain/(Loss)
Recognized in Income on
Derivative
Amount of Loss Recognized
in Income on Derivative
Three Months Ended
Amount of Gain Recognized
in Income on Hedged Item
Three Months Ended
Income Statement Gain
due to Hedge
Ineffectiveness
Three Months Ended
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Interest rate swaps
Trading losses, net
$
(333
)
$
(329
)
$
373
$
346
$
40
$
17
(Dollars in thousands)
Derivatives in Fair Value
Hedging Relationships
Location of Gain/(Loss)
Recognized in Income on
Derivative
Amount of Loss Recognized
in Income on Derivative
Six Months Ended
Amount of Gain Recognized
in Income on Hedged Item
Six Months Ended
Income Statement Gain/
(Loss) due to Hedge
Ineffectiveness
Six Months Ended
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Interest rate swaps
Trading losses, net
$
(181
)
$
(883
)
$
210
$
861
$
29
$
(22
)
Non-Designated Hedges
The Company does not use derivatives for speculative purposes. Derivatives not designated as accounting hedges are used to manage the Company’s economic exposure to interest rate movements and other identified risks but do not meet the strict hedge accounting requirements of ASC 815. Changes in the fair value of derivatives not designated in hedging relationships are recorded directly in earnings.
Interest Rate Derivatives
—The Company has interest rate derivatives, including swaps and option products, resulting from a service the Company provides to certain qualified borrowers. The Company’s banking subsidiaries execute certain derivative products (typically interest rate swaps) directly with qualified commercial borrowers to facilitate their respective risk management strategies. For example, these arrangements allow the Company’s commercial borrowers to effectively convert a variable rate loan to a fixed rate. In order to minimize the Company’s exposure on these transactions, the Company simultaneously executes offsetting derivatives with third parties. In most cases, the offsetting derivatives have mirror-image terms, which result in the positions’ changes in fair value substantially offsetting through earnings each period. However, to the extent that the derivatives are not a mirror-image and because of differences in counterparty credit risk, changes in fair value will not completely offset resulting in some earnings impact each period. Changes in the fair value of these derivatives are included in non-interest income. At
June 30, 2017
, the Company had interest rate derivative transactions with an aggregate notional amount of approximately
$4.8 billion
(all interest rate swaps and caps with customers and third parties) related to this program. These interest rate derivatives had maturity dates ranging from
July 2017
to
February 2045
.
Mortgage Banking Derivatives—
These derivatives include interest rate lock commitments provided to customers to fund certain mortgage loans to be sold into the secondary market and forward commitments for the future delivery of such loans. It is the Company’s practice to enter into forward commitments for the future delivery of a portion of our residential mortgage loan production when interest rate lock commitments are entered into in order to economically hedge the effect of future changes in interest rates on its commitments to fund the loans as well as on its portfolio of mortgage loans held-for-sale. The Company’s mortgage banking derivatives have not been designated as being in hedge relationships. At
June 30, 2017
, the Company had forward commitments to sell mortgage loans with an aggregate notional amount of approximately
$824.3 million
and interest rate lock commitments with an aggregate notional amount of approximately
$446.2 million
. The fair values of these derivatives were estimated based on changes in mortgage rates from the dates of the commitments. Changes in the fair value of these mortgage banking derivatives are included in mortgage banking revenue.
Foreign Currency Derivatives—
These derivatives include foreign currency contracts used to manage the foreign exchange risk associated with foreign currency denominated assets and transactions. Foreign currency contracts, which include spot and forward contracts, represent agreements to exchange the currency of one country for the currency of another country at an agreed-upon price on an agreed-upon settlement date. As a result of fluctuations in foreign currencies, the U.S. dollar-equivalent value of the foreign currency denominated assets or forecasted transactions increase or decrease. Gains or losses on the derivative instruments related to these foreign currency denominated assets or forecasted transactions are expected to substantially offset this variability.
38
Table of Contents
As of
June 30, 2017
the Company held foreign currency derivatives with an aggregate notional amount of approximately
$39.7 million
.
Other Derivatives—
Periodically, the Company will sell options to a bank or dealer for the right to purchase certain securities held within the banks’ investment portfolios (covered call options). These option transactions are designed primarily to mitigate overall interest rate risk and to increase the total return associated with the investment securities portfolio. These options do not qualify as accounting hedges pursuant to ASC 815, and, accordingly, changes in fair value of these contracts are recognized as other non-interest income. There were
no
covered call options outstanding as of
June 30, 2017
,
December 31, 2016
or
June 30, 2016
.
Amounts included in the Consolidated Statements of Income related to derivative instruments not designated in hedge relationships were as follows:
(Dollars in thousands)
Three Months Ended
Six Months Ended
Derivative
Location in income statement
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Interest rate swaps and caps
Trading losses, net
$
(365
)
$
(432
)
$
(668
)
$
(356
)
Mortgage banking derivatives
Mortgage banking revenue
(48
)
(2,707
)
690
(843
)
Covered call options
Fees from covered call options
890
4,649
1,649
6,361
Foreign exchange contracts
Trading losses, net
(64
)
(173
)
(92
)
(236
)
Credit Risk
Derivative instruments have inherent risks, primarily market risk and credit risk. Market risk is associated with changes in interest rates and credit risk relates to the risk that the counterparty will fail to perform according to the terms of the agreement. The amounts potentially subject to market and credit risks are the streams of interest payments under the contracts and the market value of the derivative instrument and not the notional principal amounts used to express the volume of the transactions. Market and credit risks are managed and monitored as part of the Company's overall asset-liability management process, except that the credit risk related to derivatives entered into with certain qualified borrowers is managed through the Company's standard loan underwriting process since these derivatives are secured through collateral provided by the loan agreements. Actual exposures are monitored against various types of credit limits established to contain risk within parameters. When deemed necessary, appropriate types and amounts of collateral are obtained to minimize credit exposure.
The Company has agreements with certain of its interest rate derivative counterparties that contain cross-default provisions, which provide that if the Company defaults on any of its indebtedness, including default where repayment of the indebtedness has not been accelerated by the lender, then the Company could also be declared in default on its derivative obligations. The Company also has agreements with certain of its derivative counterparties that contain a provision allowing the counterparty to terminate the derivative positions if the Company fails to maintain its status as a well or adequately capitalized institution, which would require the Company to settle its obligations under the agreements. As of
June 30, 2017
, the fair value of interest rate derivatives in a net liability position that were subject to such agreements, which includes accrued interest related to these agreements, was
$11.3 million
. If the Company had breached any of these provisions and the derivatives were terminated as a result, the Company would have been required to settle its obligations under the agreements at the termination value and would have been required to pay any additional amounts due in excess of amounts previously posted as collateral with the respective counterparty.
The Company is also exposed to the credit risk of its commercial borrowers who are counterparties to interest rate derivatives with the banks. This counterparty risk related to the commercial borrowers is managed and monitored through the banks' standard underwriting process applicable to loans since these derivatives are secured through collateral provided by the loan agreement. The counterparty risk associated with the mirror-image swaps executed with third parties is monitored and managed in connection with the Company's overall asset liability management process.
39
Table of Contents
The Company records interest rate derivatives subject to master netting agreements at their gross value and does not offset derivative assets and liabilities on the Consolidated Statements of Condition. The tables below summarize the Company's interest rate derivatives and offsetting positions as of the dates shown.
Derivative Assets
Derivative Liabilities
Fair Value
Fair Value
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
December 31,
2016
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
December 31,
2016
June 30,
2016
Gross Amounts Recognized
$
46,647
$
49,213
$
89,036
$
35,343
$
37,665
$
90,892
Less: Amounts offset in the Statements of Financial Condition
—
—
—
—
—
—
Net amount presented in the Statements of Financial Condition
$
46,647
$
49,213
$
89,036
$
35,343
$
37,665
$
90,892
Gross amounts not offset in the Statements of Financial Condition
Offsetting Derivative Positions
(15,828
)
(14,441
)
(161
)
(15,828
)
(14,441
)
(161
)
Collateral Posted
(1)
(3,150
)
(8,530
)
—
(19,515
)
(12,400
)
(90,731
)
Net Credit Exposure
$
27,669
$
26,242
$
88,875
$
—
$
10,824
$
—
(1)
As of June 30, 2017 and June 30, 2016, the Company posted collateral of
$21.0 million
and
$94.2 million
, respectively, which resulted in excess collateral with its counterparties. For purposes of this disclosure, the amount of posted collateral is limited to the amount offsetting the derivative liability.
(14)
Fair Values of Assets and Liabilities
The Company measures, monitors and discloses certain of its assets and liabilities on a fair value basis. These financial assets and financial liabilities are measured at fair value in three levels, based on the markets in which the assets and liabilities are traded and the observability of the assumptions used to determine fair value. These levels are:
•
Level 1—unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities.
•
Level 2
—
inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These include quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities in active markets, quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in markets that are not active, inputs other than quoted prices that are observable for the asset or liability or inputs that are derived principally from or corroborated by observable market data by correlation or other means.
•
Level 3—significant unobservable inputs that reflect the Company’s own assumptions that market participants would use in pricing the assets or liabilities. Level 3 assets and liabilities include financial instruments whose value is determined using pricing models, discounted cash flow methodologies, or similar techniques, as well as instruments for which the determination of fair value requires significant management judgment or estimation.
A financial instrument’s categorization within the above valuation hierarchy is based upon the lowest level of input that is significant to the fair value measurement. The Company’s assessment of the significance of a particular input to the fair value measurement in its entirety requires judgment, and considers factors specific to the assets or liabilities. Following is a description of the valuation methodologies used for the Company’s assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis.
Available-for-sale and trading account securities
—Fair values for available-for-sale and trading securities are typically based on prices obtained from independent pricing vendors. Securities measured with these valuation techniques are generally classified as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy. Typically, standard inputs such as benchmark yields, reported trades for similar securities, issuer spreads, benchmark securities, bids, offers and reference data including market research publications are used to fair value a security. When these inputs are not available, broker/dealer quotes may be obtained by the vendor to determine the fair value of the security. We review the vendor’s pricing methodologies to determine if observable market information is being used, versus unobservable inputs. Fair value measurements using significant inputs that are unobservable in the market due to limited activity or a less liquid market are classified as Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy.
The Company’s Investment Operations Department is responsible for the valuation of Level 3 available-for-sale securities. The methodology and variables used as inputs in pricing Level 3 securities are derived from a combination of observable and
40
Table of Contents
unobservable inputs. The unobservable inputs are determined through internal assumptions that may vary from period to period due to external factors, such as market movement and credit rating adjustments.
At
June 30, 2017
, the Company classified
$77.3 million
of municipal securities as Level 3. These municipal securities are bond issues for various municipal government entities primarily located in the Chicago metropolitan area and southern Wisconsin and are privately placed, non-rated bonds without CUSIP numbers. The Company also classified
$4.1 million
of U.S. government agencies as Level 3 at
June 30, 2017
. The Company’s methodology for pricing these securities focuses on three distinct inputs: equivalent rating, yield and other pricing terms. To determine the rating for a given non-rated municipal bond, the Investment Operations Department references a publicly issued bond by the same issuer if available. A reduction is then applied to the rating obtained from the comparable bond, as the Company believes if liquidated, a non-rated bond would be valued less than a similar bond with a verifiable rating. The reduction applied by the Company is one complete rating grade (i.e. a “AA” rating for a comparable bond would be reduced to “A” for the Company’s valuation). In the
second quarter
of
2017
, all of the ratings derived in the above process by Investment Operations were BBB or better, for both bonds with and without comparable bond proxies. The fair value measurement of municipal bonds is sensitive to the rating input, as a higher rating typically results in an increased valuation. The remaining pricing inputs used in the bond valuation are observable. Based on the rating determined in the above process, Investment Operations obtains a corresponding current market yield curve available to market participants. Other terms including coupon, maturity date, redemption price, number of coupon payments per year, and accrual method are obtained from the individual bond term sheets. Certain municipal bonds held by the Company at
June 30, 2017
have a call date that has passed, and are now continuously callable. When valuing these bonds, the fair value is capped at par value as the Company assumes a market participant would not pay more than par for a continuously callable bond. To determine the rating for the U.S. government agency securities, the Investment Operations Department assigned a AAA rating as it is guaranteed by the U.S. government.
At
June 30, 2017
and
December 31, 2016
, the Company held
no
equity securities classified as Level 3 compared to
$25.2 million
at
June 30, 2016
. At June 30, 2016, the securities in Level 3 were primarily comprised of auction rate preferred securities. The Company’s valuation methodology at that time included modeling the contractual cash flows of the underlying preferred securities and applying a discount to these cash flows by a market spread derived from the market price of the securities underlying debt. In 2016, the Company exchanged these auction rate securities for the underlying preferred securities, resulting in a
$2.4 million
gain on the nonmonetary sale. The Company classified the preferred securities received as Level 2 in the fair value hierarchy at the time of the transaction due to observable inputs other than quoted prices existing for the preferred securities.
Mortgage loans held-for-sale
—The fair value of mortgage loans held-for-sale is determined by reference to investor price sheets for loan products with similar characteristics.
Loans held-for-investment
—The fair value for loans in which the Company elected the fair value option is estimated by discounting future scheduled cash flows for the specific loan through maturity, adjusted for estimated credit losses and prepayments. At
June 30, 2017
, the Company classified
$30.2 million
of loans held-for-investment as Level 3. The weighted average discount rate used as an input to value these loans at
June 30, 2017
was
3.70%
with discount rates applied ranging from
3%
-
4%
. The higher the rate utilized to discount estimated future cash flows, the lower the fair value measurement. As noted above, the fair value estimate also includes assumptions of prepayment speeds and credit losses. The Company included a prepayments speed assumption of
9.42%
at
June 30, 2017
. Prepayment speeds are inversely related to the fair value of these loans as an increase in prepayment speeds results in a decreased valuation. Additionally, the weighted average credit loss rate used as an input to value the specific loans was
0.89%
with credit loss rates ranging from
0%
-
3%
at
June 30, 2017
.
Mortgage servicing rights ("MSRs")
—Fair value for MSRs is determined utilizing a valuation model which calculates the fair value of each servicing rights based on the present value of estimated future cash flows. The Company uses a discount rate commensurate with the risk associated with each servicing rights, given current market conditions. At
June 30, 2017
, the Company classified
$27.3 million
of MSRs as Level 3. The weighted average discount rate used as an input to value the MSRs at
June 30, 2017
was
9.81%
with discount rates applied ranging from
9%
-
16%
. The higher the rate utilized to discount estimated future cash flows, the lower the fair value measurement. The fair value of MSRs was also estimated based on other assumptions including prepayment speeds and the cost to service. Prepayment speeds used as an input to value the MSRs at
June 30, 2017
ranged from
0%
-
34%
or a weighted average prepayment speed of
9.64%
. Further, for current and delinquent loans, the Company assumed a weighted average cost of servicing of
$65
and
$422
, respectively, per loan. Prepayment speeds and the cost to service are both inversely related to the fair value of MSRs as an increase in prepayment speeds or the cost to service results in a decreased valuation.
Derivative instruments
—The Company’s derivative instruments include interest rate swaps and caps, commitments to fund mortgages for sale into the secondary market (interest rate locks), forward commitments to end investors for the sale of mortgage loans and foreign currency contracts. Interest rate swaps and caps are valued by a third party, using models that primarily use market observable inputs, such as yield curves, and are corroborated by comparison with valuations provided by the respective counterparties. The credit risk associated with derivative financial instruments that are subject to master netting agreements is
41
Table of Contents
measured on a net basis by counterparty portfolio. The fair value for mortgage-related derivatives is based on changes in mortgage rates from the date of the commitments. The fair value of foreign currency derivatives is computed based on change in foreign currency rates stated in the contract compared to those prevailing at the measurement date.
At
June 30, 2017
, the Company classified
$1.0 million
of derivative assets related to interest rate locks as Level 3. The fair value of interest rate locks is based on prices obtained for loans with similar characteristics from third parties, adjusted for the pull-through rate, which represents the Company’s best estimate of the likelihood that a committed loan will ultimately fund. The weighted-average pull-through rate at
June 30, 2017
was
89.79%
with pull-through rates applied ranging from
40%
to
100%
. Pull-through rates are directly related to the fair value of interest rate locks as an increase in the pull-through rate results in an increased valuation
Nonqualified deferred compensation assets
—The underlying assets relating to the nonqualified deferred compensation plan are included in a trust and primarily consist of non-exchange traded institutional funds which are priced based by an independent third party service.
The following tables present the balances of assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis for the periods presented:
June 30, 2017
(Dollars in thousands)
Total
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Available-for-sale securities
U.S. Treasury
$
119,081
$
—
$
119,081
$
—
U.S. Government agencies
157,510
—
153,400
4,110
Municipal
124,120
—
46,779
77,341
Corporate notes
60,598
—
60,598
—
Mortgage-backed
1,153,290
—
1,153,290
—
Equity securities
35,037
—
35,037
—
Trading account securities
1,987
—
1,987
—
Mortgage loans held-for-sale
382,837
—
382,837
—
Loans held-for-investment
30,173
—
—
30,173
MSRs
27,307
—
—
27,307
Nonqualified deferred compensation assets
10,556
—
10,556
—
Derivative assets
49,703
—
48,656
1,047
Total
$
2,152,199
$
—
$
2,012,221
$
139,978
Derivative liabilities
$
37,651
$
—
$
37,651
$
—
December 31, 2016
(Dollars in thousands)
Total
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Available-for-sale securities
U.S. Treasury
$
141,983
$
—
$
141,983
$
—
U.S. Government agencies
189,152
—
189,152
—
Municipal
131,809
—
52,183
79,626
Corporate notes
65,391
—
65,391
—
Mortgage-backed
1,161,084
—
1,161,084
—
Equity securities
35,248
—
35,248
—
Trading account securities
1,989
—
1,989
—
Mortgage loans held-for-sale
418,374
—
418,374
—
Loans held-for-investment
22,137
—
—
22,137
MSRs
19,103
—
—
19,103
Nonqualified deferred compensation assets
9,228
—
9,228
—
Derivative assets
56,394
—
54,103
2,291
Total
$
2,251,892
$
—
$
2,128,735
$
123,157
Derivative liabilities
$
39,839
$
—
$
39,839
$
—
42
Table of Contents
June 30, 2016
(Dollars in thousands)
Total
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Available-for-sale securities
U.S. Treasury
$
122,330
$
—
$
122,330
$
—
U.S. Government agencies
69,916
—
69,916
—
Municipal
111,640
—
41,828
69,812
Corporate notes
69,690
—
69,690
—
Mortgage-backed
207,508
—
207,508
—
Equity securities
56,579
—
31,392
25,187
Trading account securities
3,613
—
3,613
—
Mortgage loans held-for-sale
554,256
—
554,256
—
Loans held-for-investment
16,294
—
16,294
—
MSRs
13,382
—
—
13,382
Nonqualified deferred compensation assets
9,076
—
9,076
—
Derivative assets
101,052
—
91,321
9,731
Total
$
1,335,336
$
—
$
1,217,224
$
118,112
Derivative liabilities
$
100,912
$
—
$
100,912
$
—
The aggregate remaining contractual principal balance outstanding as of
June 30, 2017
,
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
for mortgage loans held-for-sale measured at fair value under ASC 825 was
$368.8 million
,
$414.4 million
and
$529.0 million
, respectively, while the aggregate fair value of mortgage loans held-for-sale was
$382.8 million
,
$418.4 million
and
$554.3 million
, for the same respective periods, as shown in the above tables. There were
no
nonaccrual loans or loans past due greater than 90 days and still accruing in the mortgage loans held-for-sale portfolio as of
June 30, 2017
,
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
.
The changes in Level 3 assets measured at fair value on a recurring basis during the
three and six
months ended
June 30, 2017
and
2016
are summarized as follows:
Equity securities
U.S. Government Agencies
Loans held-for- investment
Mortgage
servicing rights
Derivative Assets
(Dollars in thousands)
Municipal
Balance at April 1, 2017
$
79,745
$
—
$
4,283
$
28,548
$
21,596
$
3,582
Total net gains (losses) included in:
Net income
(1)
—
—
—
1,304
5,711
(2,535
)
Other comprehensive income (loss)
2,572
—
(173
)
—
—
—
Purchases
3,293
—
—
—
—
—
Issuances
—
—
—
—
—
—
Sales
—
—
—
—
—
—
Settlements
(8,269
)
—
—
(2,159
)
—
—
Net transfers into/(out of) Level 3
—
—
—
2,480
—
—
Balance at June 30, 2017
$
77,341
$
—
$
4,110
$
30,173
$
27,307
$
1,047
(1)
Changes in the balance of MSRs are recorded as a component of mortgage banking revenue in non-interest income.
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Table of Contents
Equity securities
U.S. Government Agencies
Loans held-for- investment
Mortgage
servicing rights
Derivative Assets
(Dollars in thousands)
Municipal
Balance at January 1, 2017
$
79,626
$
—
$
—
$
22,137
$
19,103
$
2,291
Total net gains (losses) included in:
Net income
(1)
—
—
—
1,192
8,204
(1,244
)
Other comprehensive income (loss)
3,029
—
(173
)
—
—
—
Purchases
10,879
—
—
—
—
—
Issuances
—
—
—
—
—
—
Sales
—
—
—
—
—
—
Settlements
(16,193
)
—
—
(5,491
)
—
—
Net transfers into/(out of) Level 3
—
—
4,283
12,335
—
—
Balance at June 30, 2017
$
77,341
$
—
$
4,110
$
30,173
$
27,307
$
1,047
Equity securities
U.S. Government Agencies
Loans held-for- investment
Mortgage
servicing rights
Derivative Assets
(Dollars in thousands)
Municipal
Balance at April 1, 2016
$
70,242
$
24,054
$
—
$
—
$
10,128
$
9,917
Total net gains (losses) included in:
Net income
(1)
—
—
—
—
3,254
(186
)
Other comprehensive income
113
1,133
—
—
—
—
Purchases
1,003
—
—
—
—
—
Issuances
—
—
—
—
—
—
Sales
—
—
—
—
—
—
Settlements
(1,546
)
—
—
—
—
—
Net transfers into/(out of) Level 3
—
—
—
—
—
—
Balance at June 30, 2016
$
69,812
$
25,187
$
—
$
—
$
13,382
$
9,731
Equity securities
U.S. Government Agencies
Loans held-for- investment
Mortgage
servicing rights
Derivative Assets
(Dollars in thousands)
Municipal
Balance at January 1, 2016
$
68,613
$
25,199
$
—
$
—
$
9,092
$
7,021
Total net gains (losses) included in:
Net income
(1)
—
—
—
—
4,290
2,710
Other comprehensive income (loss)
100
(12
)
—
—
—
—
Purchases
4,274
—
—
—
—
—
Issuances
—
—
—
—
—
—
Sales
—
—
—
—
—
—
Settlements
(3,175
)
—
—
—
—
—
Net transfers into/(out of) Level 3
—
—
—
—
—
—
Balance at June 30, 2016
$
69,812
$
25,187
$
—
$
—
$
13,382
$
9,731
(1)
Changes in the balance of MSRs are recorded as a component of mortgage banking revenue in non-interest income.
44
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Also, the Company may be required, from time to time, to measure certain other financial assets at fair value on a nonrecurring basis in accordance with GAAP. These adjustments to fair value usually result from impairment charges on individual assets. For assets measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis that were still held in the balance sheet at the end of the period, the following table provides the carrying value of the related individual assets or portfolios at
June 30, 2017
.
June 30, 2017
Three Months Ended June 30, 2017
Fair Value Losses Recognized, net
Six Months Ended June 30, 2017 Fair Value Losses Recognized, net
(Dollars in thousands)
Total
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Impaired loans—collateral based
$
57,259
$
—
$
—
$
57,259
$
4,609
$
6,330
Other real estate owned, including covered other real estate owned
(1)
42,617
—
—
42,617
265
1,270
Total
$
99,876
$
—
$
—
$
99,876
$
4,874
$
7,600
(1)
Fair value losses recognized, net on other real estate owned include valuation adjustments and charge-offs during the respective period.
Impaired loans
—A loan is considered to be impaired when, based on current information and events, it is probable that the Company will be unable to collect all amounts due pursuant to the contractual terms of the loan agreement. A loan modified in a TDR is an impaired loan according to applicable accounting guidance. Impairment is measured by estimating the fair value of the loan based on the present value of expected cash flows, the market price of the loan, or the fair value of the underlying collateral. Impaired loans are considered a fair value measurement where an allowance is established based on the fair value of collateral. Appraised values, which may require adjustments to market-based valuation inputs, are generally used on real estate collateral-dependent impaired loans.
The Company’s Managed Assets Division is primarily responsible for the valuation of Level 3 inputs of impaired loans. For more information on the Managed Assets Division review of impaired loans refer to Note 7 – Allowance for Loan Losses, Allowance for Losses on Lending-Related Commitments and Impaired Loans. At
June 30, 2017
, the Company had
$79.3 million
of impaired loans classified as Level 3. Of the
$79.3 million
of impaired loans,
$57.3 million
were measured at fair value based on the underlying collateral of the loan as shown in the table above. The remaining
$22.0 million
were valued based on discounted cash flows in accordance with ASC 310.
Other real estate owned (including covered other real estate owned)
—Other real estate owned is comprised of real estate acquired in partial or full satisfaction of loans and is included in other assets. Other real estate owned is recorded at its estimated fair value less estimated selling costs at the date of transfer, with any excess of the related loan balance over the fair value less expected selling costs charged to the allowance for loan losses. Subsequent changes in value are reported as adjustments to the carrying amount and are recorded in other non-interest expense. Gains and losses upon sale, if any, are also charged to other non-interest expense. Fair value is generally based on third party appraisals and internal estimates that are adjusted by a discount representing the estimated cost of sale and is therefore considered a Level 3 valuation.
The Company’s Managed Assets Division is primarily responsible for the valuation of Level 3 inputs for non-covered other real estate owned and covered other real estate owned. At
June 30, 2017
, the Company had
$42.6 million
of other real estate owned classified as Level 3. The unobservable input applied to other real estate owned relates to the
10%
reduction to the appraisal value representing the estimated cost of sale of the foreclosed property. A higher discount for the estimated cost of sale results in a decreased carrying value.
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Table of Contents
The valuation techniques and significant unobservable inputs used to measure both recurring and non-recurring Level 3 fair value measurements at
June 30, 2017
were as follows:
(Dollars in thousands)
Fair Value
Valuation Methodology
Significant Unobservable Input
Range
of Inputs
Weighted
Average
of Inputs
Impact to valuation
from an increased or
higher input value
Measured at fair value on a recurring basis:
Municipal Securities
$
77,341
Bond pricing
Equivalent rating
BBB-AA+
N/A
Increase
U.S. Government agencies
4,110
Bond pricing
Equivalent rating
AAA
AAA
Increase
Loans held-for-investment
30,173
Discounted cash flows
Discount rate
3%-4%
3.70%
Decrease
Credit loss rate
0%-3%
0.89%
Decrease
Constant prepayment rate (CPR)
9.42%
9.42%
Decrease
MSRs
27,307
Discounted cash flows
Discount rate
9%-16%
9.81%
Decrease
Constant prepayment rate (CPR)
0%-34%
9.64%
Decrease
Cost of servicing
$65-$75
$
65
Decrease
Cost of servicing - delinquent
$200-$1,000
$
422
Decrease
Derivatives
1,047
Discounted cash flows
Pull-through rate
40%-100%
89.79%
Increase
Measured at fair value on a non-recurring basis:
Impaired loans—collateral based
$
57,259
Appraisal value
Appraisal adjustment - cost of sale
10%
10.00%
Decrease
Other real estate owned, including covered other real estate owned
42,617
Appraisal value
Appraisal adjustment - cost of sale
10%
10.00%
Decrease
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Table of Contents
The Company is required under applicable accounting guidance to report the fair value of all financial instruments on the consolidated statements of condition, including those financial instruments carried at cost. The table below presents the carrying amounts and estimated fair values of the Company’s financial instruments as of the dates shown:
At June 30, 2017
At December 31, 2016
At June 30, 2016
Carrying
Fair
Carrying
Fair
Carrying
Fair
(Dollars in thousands)
Value
Value
Value
Value
Value
Value
Financial Assets:
Cash and cash equivalents
$
296,161
$
296,161
$
270,045
$
270,045
$
271,575
$
271,575
Interest bearing deposits with banks
1,011,635
1,011,635
980,457
980,457
693,269
693,269
Available-for-sale securities
1,649,636
1,649,636
1,724,667
1,724,667
637,663
637,663
Held-to-maturity securities
793,376
787,489
635,705
607,602
992,211
1,010,179
Trading account securities
1,987
1,987
1,989
1,989
3,613
3,613
FHLB and FRB stock, at cost
80,812
80,812
133,494
133,494
121,319
121,319
Brokerage customer receivables
23,281
23,281
25,181
25,181
26,866
26,866
Mortgage loans held-for-sale, at fair value
382,837
382,837
418,374
418,374
554,256
554,256
Loans held-for-investment, at fair value
30,173
30,173
22,137
22,137
16,294
16,294
Loans held-for-investment, at amortized cost
20,763,278
21,921,002
19,739,180
20,755,320
18,263,609
19,212,397
MSRs
27,307
27,307
19,103
19,103
13,382
13,382
Nonqualified deferred compensation assets
10,556
10,556
9,228
9,228
9,076
9,076
Derivative assets
49,703
49,703
56,394
56,394
101,052
101,052
Accrued interest receivable and other
215,291
215,291
204,513
204,513
198,017
198,017
Total financial assets
$
25,336,033
$
26,487,870
$
24,240,467
$
25,228,504
$
21,902,202
$
22,868,958
Financial Liabilities
Non-maturity deposits
$
18,086,300
$
18,086,300
$
17,383,729
$
17,383,729
$
15,958,500
$
15,958,500
Deposits with stated maturities
4,519,392
4,503,645
4,274,903
4,263,576
4,083,250
4,086,350
FHLB advances
318,270
316,799
153,831
157,051
588,055
597,568
Other borrowings
277,710
277,710
262,486
262,486
252,611
252,611
Subordinated notes
139,029
143,126
138,971
135,268
138,915
141,858
Junior subordinated debentures
253,566
253,330
253,566
254,384
253,566
254,143
Derivative liabilities
37,651
37,651
39,839
39,839
100,912
100,912
FDIC indemnification liability
15,375
15,375
16,701
16,701
11,729
11,729
Accrued interest payable
6,460
6,460
6,421
6,421
6,175
6,175
Total financial liabilities
$
23,653,753
$
23,640,396
$
22,530,447
$
22,519,455
$
21,393,713
$
21,409,846
Not all the financial instruments listed in the table above are subject to the disclosure provisions of ASC Topic 820, as certain assets and liabilities result in their carrying value approximating fair value. These include cash and cash equivalents, interest bearing deposits with banks, brokerage customer receivables, FHLB and FRB stock, FDIC indemnification asset and liability, accrued interest receivable and accrued interest payable and non-maturity deposits.
The following methods and assumptions were used by the Company in estimating fair values of financial instruments that were not previously disclosed.
Held-to-maturity securities.
Held-to-maturity securities include U.S. Government-sponsored agency securities and municipal bonds issued by various municipal government entities primarily located in the Chicago metropolitan area and southern Wisconsin. Fair values for held-to-maturity securities are typically based on prices obtained from independent pricing vendors. In accordance with ASC 820, the Company has categorized held-to-maturity securities as a Level 2 fair value measurement.
Loans held-for-investment, at amortized cost.
Fair values are estimated for portfolios of loans with similar financial characteristics. Loans are analyzed by type such as commercial, residential real estate, etc. Each category is further segmented by interest rate type (fixed and variable) and term. For variable-rate loans that reprice frequently, estimated fair values are based on carrying values. The fair value of residential loans is based on secondary market sources for securities backed by similar loans, adjusted for differences in loan characteristics. The fair value for other fixed rate loans is estimated by discounting scheduled cash flows
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Table of Contents
through the estimated maturity using estimated market discount rates that reflect credit and interest rate risks inherent in the loan. The primary impact of credit risk on the present value of the loan portfolio, however, was assessed through the use of the allowance for loan losses, which is believed to represent the current fair value of probable incurred losses for purposes of the fair value calculation. In accordance with ASC 820, the Company has categorized loans as a Level 3 fair value measurement.
Deposits with stated maturities.
The fair value of certificates of deposit is based on the discounted value of contractual cash flows. The discount rate is estimated using the rates currently in effect for deposits of similar remaining maturities. In accordance with ASC 820, the Company has categorized deposits with stated maturities as a Level 3 fair value measurement.
FHLB advances.
The fair value of FHLB advances is obtained from the FHLB which uses a discounted cash flow analysis based on current market rates of similar maturity debt securities to discount cash flows. In accordance with ASC 820, the Company has categorized FHLB advances as a Level 3 fair value measurement.
Subordinated notes.
The fair value of the subordinated notes is based on a market price obtained from an independent pricing vendor. In accordance with ASC 820, the Company has categorized subordinated notes as a Level 2 fair value measurement.
Junior subordinated debentures.
The fair value of the junior subordinated debentures is based on the discounted value of contractual cash flows. In accordance with ASC 820, the Company has categorized junior subordinated debentures as a Level 3 fair value measurement.
(15)
Stock-Based Compensation Plans
In May 2015, the Company’s shareholders approved the 2015 Stock Incentive Plan (“the 2015 Plan”) which provides for the issuance of up to
5,485,000
shares of common stock. The 2015 Plan replaced the 2007 Stock Incentive Plan (“the 2007 Plan”) which replaced the 1997 Stock Incentive Plan (“the 1997 Plan”). The 2015 Plan, the 2007 Plan and the 1997 Plan are collectively referred to as “the Plans.” The 2015 Plan has substantially similar terms to the 2007 Plan and the 1997 Plan. Outstanding awards under the Plans for which common shares are not issued by reason of cancellation, forfeiture, lapse of such award or settlement of such award in cash, are again available under the 2015 Plan. All grants made after the approval of the 2015 Plan are made pursuant to the 2015 Plan. As of
June 30, 2017
, approximately
4.0 million
shares were available for future grants assuming the maximum number of shares are issued for the performance awards outstanding. The Plans cover substantially all employees of Wintrust. The Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors administers all stock-based compensation programs and authorizes all awards granted pursuant to the Plans.
The Plans permit the grant of incentive stock options, non-qualified stock options, stock appreciation rights, stock awards, restricted share or unit awards, performance awards and other incentive awards valued in whole or in part by reference to the Company’s common stock, all on a stand alone, combination or tandem basis. The Company historically awarded stock-based compensation in the form of time-vested non-qualified stock options and time-vested restricted share unit awards (“restricted shares”). The grants of options provide for the purchase of shares of the Company’s common stock at the fair market value of the stock on the date the options are granted. Stock options under the 2015 Plan and the 2007 Plan generally vest ratably over periods of
three
to
five
years and have a maximum term of
seven
years from the date of grant. Stock options granted under the 1997 Plan provided for a maximum term of
10
years. Restricted shares entitle the holders to receive, at no cost, shares of the Company’s common stock. Restricted shares generally vest over periods of
one
to
five
years from the date of grant.
Beginning in 2011, the Company has awarded annual grants under the Long-Term Incentive Program (“LTIP”), which is administered under the Plans. The LTIP is designed in part to align the interests of management with the interests of shareholders, foster retention, create a long-term focus based on sustainable results and provide participants with a target long-term incentive opportunity. It is anticipated that LTIP awards will continue to be granted annually. LTIP grants generally consist of a combination of time-vested non-qualified stock options, performance-based stock awards and performance-based cash awards. Performance-based stock and cash awards granted under the LTIP are contingent upon the achievement of pre-established long-term performance goals set in advance by the Compensation Committee over a
three
-year period starting at the beginning of each calendar year. These performance awards are granted at a target level, and based on the Company’s achievement of the pre-established long-term goals, the actual payouts can range from
0%
to a maximum of
150%
(for awards granted after 2014) or
200%
(for awards granted prior to 2015) of the target award. The awards vest in the quarter after the end of the performance period upon certification of the payout by the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors. Holders of performance-based stock awards are entitled to receive, at no cost, the shares earned based on the achievement of the pre-established long-term goals.
Holders of restricted share awards and performance-based stock awards received under the Plans are not entitled to vote or receive cash dividends (or cash payments equal to the cash dividends) on the underlying common shares until the awards are vested and issued. Shares that are vested but not issuable pursuant to deferred compensation arrangements accrue additional shares based on
48
Table of Contents
the value of dividends otherwise paid. Except in limited circumstances, these awards are canceled upon termination of employment without any payment of consideration by the Company.
Stock-based compensation is measured as the fair value of an award on the date of grant, and the measured cost is recognized over the period which the recipient is required to provide service in exchange for the award. The fair values of restricted share and performance-based stock awards are determined based on the average of the high and low trading prices on the grant date, and the fair value of stock options is estimated using a Black-Scholes option-pricing model that utilizes the assumptions outlined in the following table. Option-pricing models require the input of highly subjective assumptions and are sensitive to changes in the option's expected life and the price volatility of the underlying stock, which can materially affect the fair value estimate. Options granted since the inception of the LTIP in 2011 were primarily granted as LTIP awards. Expected life of options granted since the inception of the LTIP awards has been based on the safe harbor rule of the SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 107 “Share-Based Payment” as the Company believes historical exercise data may not provide a reasonable basis to estimate the expected term of these options. Expected stock price volatility is based on historical volatility of the Company's common stock, which correlates with the expected life of the options, and the risk-free interest rate is based on comparable U.S. Treasury rates. Management reviews and adjusts the assumptions used to calculate the fair value of an option on a periodic basis to better reflect expected trends.
The following table presents the weighted average assumptions used to determine the fair value of options granted in the six month period ended
June 30, 2016
.
No
options were granted in the six month period ended
June 30, 2017
.
Six Months Ended
June 30,
2016
Expected dividend yield
0.9
%
Expected volatility
25.2
%
Risk-free rate
1.3
%
Expected option life (in years)
4.5
Stock based compensation is recognized based upon the number of awards that are ultimately expected to vest, taking into account expected forfeitures. In addition, for performance-based awards, an estimate is made of the number of shares expected to vest as a result of actual performance against the performance criteria in the award to determine the amount of compensation expense to recognize. The estimate is reevaluated periodically and total compensation expense is adjusted for any change in estimate in the current period. Stock-based compensation expense recognized in the Consolidated Statements of Income was
$2.8 million
in the
second quarter of 2017
and
$2.3 million
in the
second quarter of 2016
, and
$5.7 million
and
$4.8 million
for the 2017 and 2016 year-to-date periods, respectively.
A summary of the Company's stock option activity for the
six months ended
June 30, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
is presented below:
Stock Options
Common
Shares
Weighted
Average
Strike Price
Remaining
Contractual
Term
(1)
Intrinsic
Value
(2)
($000)
Outstanding at January 1, 2017
1,698,912
$
41.50
Granted
—
—
Exercised
(374,046
)
40.28
Forfeited or canceled
(8,173
)
42.49
Outstanding at June 30, 2017
1,316,693
$
41.84
4.4
$
45,561
Exercisable at June 30, 2017
765,711
$
41.56
3.7
$
26,707
(1)
Represents the remaining weighted average contractual life in years.
(2)
Aggregate intrinsic value represents the total pre-tax intrinsic value (i.e., the difference between the Company's stock price on the last trading day of the quarter and the option exercise price, multiplied by the number of shares) that would have been received by the option holders if they had exercised their options on the last day of the quarter. Options with exercise prices above the stock price on the last trading day of the quarter are excluded from the calculation of intrinsic value. The intrinsic value will change based on the fair market value of the Company's stock.
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Table of Contents
Stock Options
Common
Shares
Weighted
Average
Strike Price
Remaining
Contractual
Term
(1)
Intrinsic
Value
(2)
($000)
Outstanding at January 1, 2016
1,551,734
$
41.32
Granted
558,411
40.96
Exercised
(99,760
)
37.56
Forfeited or canceled
(84,750
)
49.03
Outstanding at June 30, 2016
1,925,635
$
41.07
4.9
$
19,159
Exercisable at June 30, 2016
896,155
$
39.08
3.6
$
10,695
(1)
Represents the remaining weighted average contractual life in years.
(2)
Aggregate intrinsic value represents the total pre-tax intrinsic value (i.e., the difference between the Company's stock price on the last trading day of the quarter and the option exercise price, multiplied by the number of shares) that would have been received by the option holders if they had exercised their options on the last day of the quarter. Options with exercise prices above the stock price on the last trading day of the quarter are excluded from the calculation of intrinsic value. The intrinsic value will change based on the fair market value of the Company's stock.
The weighted average grant date fair value per share of options granted during the six months ended June 30, 2016 was
$8.61
. The aggregate intrinsic value of options exercised during the
six months ended June 30, 2017
and
2016
, was
$11.9 million
and
$1.2 million
, respectively. Cash received from option exercises under the Plan for the
six months ended June 30, 2017
and
2016
were
$15.1 million
and
$3.7 million
, respectively.
A summary of the Plans' restricted share activity for the
six months ended
June 30, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
is presented below:
Six months ended June 30, 2017
Six months ended June 30, 2016
Restricted Shares
Common
Shares
Weighted
Average
Grant-Date
Fair Value
Common
Shares
Weighted
Average
Grant-Date
Fair Value
Outstanding at January 1
133,425
$
49.94
137,593
$
49.63
Granted
13,385
72.36
14,546
43.95
Vested and issued
(10,104
)
45.55
(8,523
)
44.10
Forfeited or canceled
—
—
(504
)
44.26
Outstanding at June 30
136,706
$
52.46
143,112
$
49.40
Vested, but not issuable at June 30
89,391
$
51.55
88,696
$
51.43
A summary of the Plans' performance-based stock award activity, based on the target level of the awards, for the
six months ended
June 30, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
is presented below:
Six months ended June 30, 2017
Six months ended June 30, 2016
Performance-based Stock
Common
Shares
Weighted
Average
Grant-Date
Fair Value
Common
Shares
Weighted
Average
Grant-Date
Fair Value
Outstanding at January 1
298,180
$
43.64
276,533
$
43.01
Granted
143,439
72.55
117,409
40.95
Vested and issued
(68,712
)
46.85
(78,410
)
37.90
Forfeited
(8,438
)
49.47
(13,064
)
41.13
Outstanding at June 30
364,469
$
54.28
302,468
$
43.62
Vested, but deferred at June 30
13,590
$
42.60
6,646
$
37.89
The Company issues new shares to satisfy its obligation to issue shares granted pursuant to the Plans.
(16)
Shareholders’ Equity and Earnings Per Share
Common Stock Offering
In June 2016, the Company issued through a public offering a total of
3,000,000
shares of its common stock. Net proceeds to the Company totaled approximately
$152.9 million
.
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Table of Contents
Series D Preferred Stock
In June 2015, the Company issued and sold
5,000,000
shares of fixed-to-floating non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock, Series D, liquidation preference
$25
per share (the “Series D Preferred Stock”) for
$125.0 million
in a public offering. When, as and if declared, dividends on the Series D Preferred Stock are payable
quarterly
in arrears at a fixed rate of
6.50%
per annum from the original issuance date to, but excluding,
July 15, 2025
, and from (and including) that date at a floating rate equal to three-month LIBOR plus a spread of
4.06%
per annum.
Series C Preferred Stock
In March 2012, the Company issued and sold
126,500
shares of non-cumulative perpetual convertible preferred stock, Series C, liquidation preference
$1,000
per share (the “Series C Preferred Stock”) for
$126.5 million
in a public offering. When, as and if declared, dividends on the Series C Preferred Stock were payable
quarterly
in arrears at a rate of
5.00%
per annum. The Series C Preferred Stock was convertible into common stock at the option of the holder subject to customary anti-dilution adjustments. Additionally, on and after April 15, 2017, the Company had the right under certain circumstances to cause the Series C Preferred Stock to be converted into common stock if the closing price of the Company’s common stock exceeded a certain amount. In
2016
, pursuant to such terms,
30
shares of the Series C Preferred Stock were converted at the option of the respective holders into
729
shares of the Company's common stock. On
April 25, 2017
,
2,073
shares of the Series C Preferred Stock were converted at the option of the respective holder into
51,244
shares of the Company's common stock, pursuant to the terms of the Series C Preferred Stock. On
April 27, 2017
, the Company caused a mandatory conversion of its remaining
124,184
shares of Series C Preferred Stock into
3,069,828
shares of the Company's common stock at a conversion rate of
24.72
shares of common stock per share of Series C Preferred Stock. Cash was paid in lieu of fractional shares for an amount considered insignificant.
Common Stock Warrant
Pursuant to the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s (the “U.S. Treasury”) Capital Purchase Program, on December 19, 2008, the Company issued to the U.S. Treasury a warrant to exercise
1,643,295
warrant shares of Wintrust common stock with a term of
10
years. The exercise price, subject to customary anti-dilution, was
$22.68
at
June 30, 2017
. In February 2011, the U.S. Treasury sold all of its interest in the warrant issued to it in a secondary underwritten public offering. During the
first six months of 2017
290,545
warrant shares were exercised, which resulted in
199,210
shares of common stock issued. At
June 30, 2017
, all remaining holders of the interest in the warrant were able to exercise
51,307
warrant shares.
Other
At the January 2017 Board of Directors meeting, a quarterly cash dividend of
$0.14
per share (
$0.56
on an annualized basis) was declared. It was paid on
February 23, 2017
to shareholders of record as of
February 9, 2017
. At the April 2017 Board of Directors meeting, a quarterly cash dividend of
$0.14
per share (
$0.56
on an annualized basis) was declared. It was paid on
May 25, 2017
to shareholders of record as of
May 11, 2017
.
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Table of Contents
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income (Loss)
The following tables summarize the components of other comprehensive income (loss), including the related income tax effects, and the related amount reclassified to net income for the periods presented (in thousands).
Accumulated
Unrealized
Gains (Losses)
on Securities
Accumulated
Unrealized
Losses on
Derivative
Instruments
Accumulated
Foreign
Currency
Translation
Adjustments
Total
Accumulated
Other
Comprehensive
Loss
Balance at April 1, 2017
$
(25,663
)
$
5,146
$
(39,307
)
$
(59,824
)
Other comprehensive income (loss) during the period, net of tax, before reclassifications
10,683
(600
)
2,833
12,916
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) into net income, net of tax
(29
)
413
—
384
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income related to amortization of unrealized losses on investment securities transferred to held-to-maturity from available-for-sale, net of tax
(13
)
—
—
(13
)
Net other comprehensive income (loss) during the period, net of tax
$
10,641
$
(187
)
$
2,833
$
13,287
Balance at June 30, 2017
$
(15,022
)
$
4,959
$
(36,474
)
$
(46,537
)
Balance at January 1, 2017
$
(29,309
)
$
4,165
$
(40,184
)
$
(65,328
)
Other comprehensive income during the period, net of tax, before reclassifications
15,162
165
3,710
19,037
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income into net income, net of tax
5
629
—
634
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income related to amortization of unrealized losses on investment securities transferred to held-to-maturity from available-for-sale, net of tax
$
(880
)
$
—
$
—
$
(880
)
Net other comprehensive income during the period, net of tax
$
14,287
$
794
$
3,710
$
18,791
Balance at June 30, 2017
$
(15,022
)
$
4,959
$
(36,474
)
$
(46,537
)
Balance at April 1, 2016
$
(1,204
)
$
(1,903
)
$
(36,803
)
$
(39,910
)
Other comprehensive income (loss) during the period, net of tax, before reclassifications
3,724
(822
)
612
3,514
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) into net income, net of tax
(875
)
505
—
(370
)
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income related to amortization of unrealized losses on investment securities transferred to held-to-maturity from available-for-sale, net of tax
2,326
—
—
2,326
Net other comprehensive income (loss) during the period, net of tax
$
5,175
$
(317
)
$
612
$
5,470
Balance at June 30, 2016
$
3,971
$
(2,220
)
$
(36,191
)
$
(34,440
)
Balance at January 1, 2016
$
(17,674
)
$
(2,193
)
$
(42,841
)
$
(62,708
)
Other comprehensive income (loss) during the period, net of tax, before reclassifications
18,912
(971
)
6,650
24,591
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) into net income, net of tax
(1,679
)
944
—
(735
)
Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income related to amortization of unrealized losses on investment securities transferred to held-to-maturity from available-for-sale, net of tax
4,412
—
—
4,412
Net other comprehensive income (loss) during the period, net of tax
$
21,645
$
(27
)
$
6,650
$
28,268
Balance at June 30, 2016
$
3,971
$
(2,220
)
$
(36,191
)
$
(34,440
)
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Table of Contents
Amount Reclassified from Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income for the
Details Regarding the Component of Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income
Three Months Ended
Six Months Ended
Impacted Line on the Consolidated Statements of Income
June 30,
June 30,
2017
2016
2017
2016
Accumulated unrealized losses on securities
Gains (losses) included in net income
$
47
$
1,440
$
(8
)
$
2,765
Gains (losses) on investment securities, net
47
1,440
(8
)
2,765
Income before taxes
Tax effect
$
(18
)
$
(565
)
$
3
$
(1,086
)
Income tax expense
Net of tax
$
29
$
875
$
(5
)
$
1,679
Net income
Accumulated unrealized losses on derivative instruments
Amount reclassified to interest expense on deposits
$
323
$
338
$
365
$
593
Interest on deposits
Amount reclassified to interest expense on junior subordinated debentures
358
494
$
672
$
962
Interest on junior subordinated debentures
(681
)
(832
)
(1,037
)
(1,555
)
Income before taxes
Tax effect
$
268
$
327
$
408
$
611
Income tax expense
Net of tax
$
(413
)
$
(505
)
$
(629
)
$
(944
)
Net income
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Table of Contents
Earnings per Share
The following table shows the computation of basic and diluted earnings per share for the periods indicated:
Three Months Ended
Six Months Ended
(In thousands, except per share data)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Net income
$
64,897
$
50,041
$
123,275
$
99,152
Less: Preferred stock dividends
2,050
3,628
5,678
7,256
Net income applicable to common shares—Basic
(A)
62,847
46,413
117,597
91,896
Add: Dividends on convertible preferred stock, if dilutive
—
1,578
1,578
3,156
Net income applicable to common shares—Diluted
(B)
62,847
47,991
119,175
95,052
Weighted average common shares outstanding
(C)
54,775
49,140
53,528
48,794
Effect of dilutive potential common shares
Common stock equivalents
927
856
994
778
Convertible preferred stock, if dilutive
885
3,109
1,987
3,109
Total dilutive potential common shares
1,812
3,965
2,981
3,887
Weighted average common shares and effect of dilutive potential common shares
(D)
56,587
53,105
56,509
52,681
Net income per common share:
Basic
(A/C)
$
1.15
$
0.94
$
2.20
$
1.88
Diluted
(B/D)
$
1.11
$
0.90
$
2.11
$
1.80
Potentially dilutive common shares can result from stock options, restricted stock unit awards, stock warrants, the Company’s convertible preferred stock and shares to be issued under the Employee Stock Purchase Plan and the Directors Deferred Fee and Stock Plan, being treated as if they had been either exercised or issued, computed by application of the treasury stock method. While potentially dilutive common shares are typically included in the computation of diluted earnings per share, potentially dilutive common shares are excluded from this computation in periods in which the effect would reduce the loss per share or increase the income per share. For diluted earnings per share, net income applicable to common shares can be affected by the conversion of the Company’s convertible preferred stock. Where the effect of this conversion would reduce the loss per share or increase the income per share for a period, net income applicable to common shares is not adjusted by the associated preferred dividends.
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Table of Contents
ITEM 2
MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL
CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
The following discussion and analysis of financial condition as of
June 30, 2017
compared with
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
, and the results of operations for the
three and six
month periods ended
June 30, 2017
and
2016
, should be read in conjunction with the unaudited consolidated financial statements and notes contained in this report and the risk factors discussed herein and under Item 1A of the Company’s
2016
Annual Report on Form 10-K. This discussion contains forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties and, as such, future results could differ significantly from management’s current expectations. See the last section of this discussion for further information on forward-looking statements.
Introduction
Wintrust is a financial holding company that provides traditional community banking services, primarily in the Chicago metropolitan area and southern Wisconsin, and operates other financing businesses on a national basis and in Canada through several non-bank subsidiaries. Additionally, Wintrust offers a full array of wealth management services primarily to customers in the Chicago metropolitan area and southern Wisconsin.
Overview
Second Quarter
Highlights
The Company recorded net income of
$64.9 million
for the
second quarter of 2017
compared to
$50.0 million
in the
second quarter of 2016
. The results for the
second quarter of 2017
demonstrate continued momentum on our operating strengths including strong loan and deposit growth, increased operating lease income and improving credit quality metrics. Combined with the continued loan growth, the improvement in net interest margin during the
second quarter of 2017
resulted in higher net interest income in the current period. Additionally, the Company reduced its estimated FDIC indemnification liability by $4.9 million primarily as a result of an adjustment related to clawback provisions within certain loss-sharing agreements.
The Company increased its loan portfolio, excluding covered loans and mortgage loans held-for-sale, from
$18.2 billion
at
June 30, 2016
and
$19.7 billion
at
December 31, 2016
to
$20.7 billion
at
June 30, 2017
. The increase in the current quarter compared to the prior quarters was primarily a result of the Company’s growth in the commercial, commercial real estate and life insurance premium finance receivables portfolios. The Company is focused on making new loans, including in the commercial and commercial real estate sector, where opportunities that meet our underwriting standards exist. For more information regarding changes in the Company’s loan portfolio, see “Financial Condition – Interest Earning Assets” and Note 6 “Loans” of the Consolidated Financial Statements in Item 1 of this report.
The Company recorded net interest income of
$204.4 million
in the
second quarter of 2017
compared to
$175.3 million
in the
second quarter of 2016
. The higher level of net interest income recorded in the
second quarter of 2017
compared to the
second quarter of 2016
resulted primarily from a
$2.4 billion
increase in average loans, excluding covered loans, and a substantial improvement in the net interest margin. This was partially offset by an increase in interest-bearing liabilities (see "Net Interest Income" for further detail).
Non-interest income totaled
$90.0 million
in the
second quarter of 2017
compared to
$84.8 million
in the
second quarter of 2016
. Increases from higher wealth management revenue, higher operating lease income, an increase in service charges on deposits and a reduction to the estimated FDIC indemnification liability were offset by lower fees from covered call options and lower gains on sales of investment securities (see “Non-Interest Income” for further detail).
Non-interest expense totaled
$183.5 million
in the
second quarter of 2017
, increasing
$12.6 million
, or
7
%, compared to the
second quarter of 2016
. The increase compared to the
second quarter of 2016
was primarily attributable to higher salary and employee benefit costs caused by the addition of employees from various acquisitions, and higher staffing levels as the Company grows, increased operating lease equipment depreciation, higher professional fees and an increase in data processing, marketing, and occupancy expenses (see “Non-Interest Expense” for further detail).
Management considers the maintenance of adequate liquidity to be important to the management of risk. During the
second quarter of 2017
, the Company continued its practice of maintaining appropriate funding capacity to provide the Company with adequate liquidity for its ongoing operations. In this regard, the Company benefited from its strong deposit base, a liquid short-term investment portfolio and its access to funding from a variety of external funding sources. At
June 30, 2017
, the Company had approximately
$1.3 billion
in overnight liquid funds and interest-bearing deposits with banks.
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Table of Contents
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
Earnings Summary
The Company’s key operating measures for the
three and six
months ended
June 30, 2017
, as compared to the same period last year, are shown below:
Three months ended
(Dollars in thousands, except per share data)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Percentage (%) or
Basis Point (bp) Change
Net income
$
64,897
$
50,041
30
%
Net income per common share—Diluted
1.11
0.90
23
Net revenue
(1)
294,381
260,069
13
Net interest income
204,409
175,270
17
Net interest margin
3.41
%
3.24
%
17 bp
Net interest margin - fully taxable equivalent (non-GAAP)
(2)
3.43
%
3.27
%
16
Net overhead ratio
(3)
1.44
%
1.46
%
(2
)
Return on average assets
1.00
0.85
15
Return on average common equity
9.55
8.43
112
Return on average tangible common equity (non-GAAP)
(2)
12.02
11.12
90
Six months ended
(Dollars in thousands, except per share data)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Percentage (%) or
Basis Point (bp) Change
Net income
$
123,275
$
99,152
24
%
Net income per common share—Diluted
2.11
1.80
17
Net revenue
(1)
555,726
500,330
11
Net interest income
396,989
346,779
14
Net interest margin
3.38
%
3.26
%
12 bp
Net interest margin - fully taxable equivalent (non-GAAP)
(2)
3.41
%
3.29
%
12
Net overhead ratio
(3)
1.52
1.48
4
Return on average assets
0.97
0.85
12
Return on average common equity
9.24
8.49
75
Return on average tangible common equity (non-GAAP)
(2)
11.74
11.22
52
At end of period
Total assets
$
26,929,265
$
24,420,616
10
%
Total loans, excluding loans held-for-sale, excluding covered loans
20,743,332
18,174,655
14
Total loans, including loans held-for-sale, excluding covered loans
21,126,169
18,728,911
13
Total deposits
22,605,692
20,041,750
13
Total shareholders’ equity
2,839,458
2,623,595
8
Book value per common share
(2)
48.73
45.96
6
Tangible common book value per share
(2)
39.40
36.12
9
Market price per common share
76.44
51.00
50
Excluding covered loans:
Allowance for credit losses to total loans
(4)
0.63
%
0.64
%
(1) bp
Non-performing loans to total loans
0.33
%
0.48
%
(15
)
(1)
Net revenue is net interest income plus non-interest income.
(2)
See following section titled, “Supplementary Financial Measures/Ratios” for additional information on this performance measure/ratio.
(3)
The net overhead ratio is calculated by netting total non-interest expense and total non-interest income, annualizing this amount, and dividing by that period’s total average assets. A lower ratio indicates a higher degree of efficiency.
(4)
The allowance for credit losses includes both the allowance for loan losses and the allowance for lending-related commitments.
Certain returns, yields, performance ratios, and quarterly growth rates are “annualized” in this presentation and throughout this report to represent an annual time period. This is done for analytical purposes to better discern for decision-making purposes underlying performance trends when compared to full-year or year-over-year amounts. For example, balance sheet growth rates are most often expressed in terms of an annual rate. As such, 5% growth during a quarter would represent an annualized growth rate of 20%.
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Table of Contents
SUPPLEMENTAL FINANCIAL MEASURES/RATIOS
The accounting and reporting policies of Wintrust conform to generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) in the United States and prevailing practices in the banking industry. However, certain non-GAAP performance measures and ratios are used by management to evaluate and measure the Company’s performance. These include taxable-equivalent net interest income (including its individual components), taxable-equivalent net interest margin (including its individual components), the taxable-equivalent efficiency ratio, tangible common equity ratio, tangible common book value per share and return on average tangible common equity. Management believes that these measures and ratios provide users of the Company’s financial information a more meaningful view of the performance of the Company's interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities and of the Company’s operating efficiency. Other financial holding companies may define or calculate these measures and ratios differently.
Management reviews yields on certain asset categories and the net interest margin of the Company and its banking subsidiaries on a fully taxable-equivalent (“FTE”) basis. In this non-GAAP presentation, net interest income is adjusted to reflect tax-exempt interest income on an equivalent before-tax basis. This measure ensures comparability of net interest income arising from both taxable and tax-exempt sources. Net interest income on a FTE basis is also used in the calculation of the Company’s efficiency ratio. The efficiency ratio, which is calculated by dividing non-interest expense by total taxable-equivalent net revenue (less securities gains or losses), measures how much it costs to produce one dollar of revenue. Securities gains or losses are excluded from this calculation to better match revenue from daily operations to operational expenses. Management considers the tangible common equity ratio and tangible book value per common share as useful measurements of the Company’s equity. The Company references the return on average tangible common equity as a measurement of profitability.
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Table of Contents
A reconciliation of certain non-GAAP performance measures and ratios used by the Company to evaluate and measure the Company’s performance to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures is shown below:
Three Months Ended
Six Months Ended
June 30,
June 30,
June 30,
June 30,
(Dollars and shares in thousands)
2017
2016
2017
2016
Calculation of Net Interest Margin and Efficiency Ratio
(A) Interest Income (GAAP)
$
231,181
$
197,064
$
446,940
$
389,295
Taxable-equivalent adjustment:
- Loans
831
523
1,621
1,032
- Liquidity Management Assets
866
932
1,773
1,852
- Other Earning Assets
2
8
7
14
(B) Interest Income - FTE
$
232,880
$
198,527
$
450,341
$
392,193
(C) Interest Expense (GAAP)
26,772
21,794
49,951
42,516
(D) Net Interest Income - FTE (B minus C)
$
206,108
$
176,733
$
400,390
$
349,677
(E) Net Interest Income (GAAP) (A minus C)
$
204,409
$
175,270
$
396,989
$
346,779
Net interest margin (GAAP-derived)
3.41
%
3.24
%
3.38
%
3.26
%
Net interest margin - FTE
3.43
%
3.27
%
3.41
%
3.29
%
(F) Non-interest income
$
89,972
$
84,799
$
158,737
$
153,551
(G) Gains (losses) on investment securities, net
47
1,440
(8
)
2,765
(H) Non-interest expense
183,544
170,969
351,662
324,699
Efficiency ratio (H/(E+F-G))
62.36
%
66.11
%
63.28
%
65.26
%
Efficiency ratio - FTE (H/(D+F-G))
62.00
%
65.73
%
62.89
%
64.88
%
Calculation of Tangible Common Equity ratio (at period end)
Total shareholders’ equity
$
2,839,458
$
2,623,595
(I) Less: Convertible preferred stock
—
(126,257
)
Less: Non-convertible preferred stock
(125,000
)
(125,000
)
Less: Intangible assets
(519,806
)
(507,916
)
(J) Total tangible common shareholders’ equity
$
2,194,652
$
1,864,422
Total assets
$
26,929,265
$
24,420,616
Less: Intangible assets
(519,806
)
(507,916
)
(K) Total tangible assets
$
26,409,459
$
23,912,700
Tangible common equity ratio (J/K)
8.3
%
7.8
%
Tangible common equity ratio, assuming full conversion of convertible preferred stock ((J-I)/K)
8.3
%
8.3
%
Calculation of book value per share
Total shareholders’ equity
$
2,839,458
$
2,623,595
Less: Preferred stock
(125,000
)
(251,257
)
(L) Total common equity
$
2,714,458
$
2,372,338
(M) Actual common shares outstanding
55,700
51,619
Book value per common share (L/M)
$
48.73
$
45.96
Tangible common book value per share (J/M)
$
39.40
$
36.12
Calculation of return on average common equity
(N) Net income applicable to common shares
62,847
46,413
117,597
91,896
Add: After-tax intangible asset amortization
726
781
1,497
1,593
(O) Tangible net income applicable to common shares
63,573
47,194
119,094
93,489
Total average shareholders' equity
2,800,905
2,465,732
2,771,768
2,427,751
Less: Average preferred stock
(161,028
)
(251,257
)
(205,893
)
(251,259
)
(P) Total average common shareholders' equity
2,639,877
2,214,475
2,565,875
2,176,492
Less: Average intangible assets
(519,340
)
(507,439
)
(519,840
)
(501,516
)
(Q) Total average tangible common shareholders’ equity
2,120,537
1,707,036
2,046,035
1,674,976
Return on average common equity, annualized (N/P)
9.55
%
8.43
%
9.24
%
8.49
%
Return on average tangible common equity, annualized (O/Q)
12.02
%
11.12
%
11.74
%
11.22
%
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Table of Contents
Critical Accounting Policies
The Company’s Consolidated Financial Statements are prepared in accordance with GAAP in the United States and prevailing practices of the banking industry. Application of these principles requires management to make estimates, assumptions, and judgments that affect the amounts reported in the financial statements and accompanying notes. Certain policies and accounting principles inherently have a greater reliance on the use of estimates, assumptions and judgments, and as such have a greater possibility that changes in those estimates and assumptions could produce financial results that are materially different than originally reported. Estimates, assumptions and judgments are necessary when assets and liabilities are required to be recorded at fair value, when a decline in the value of an asset not carried on the financial statements at fair value warrants an impairment write-down or valuation reserve to be established, or when an asset or liability needs to be recorded contingent upon a future event, are based on information available as of the date of the financial statements; accordingly, as information changes, the financial statements could reflect different estimates and assumptions. Management views critical accounting policies to be those which are highly dependent on subjective or complex judgments, estimates and assumptions, and where changes in those estimates and assumptions could have a significant impact on the financial statements. Management currently views critical accounting policies to include the determination of the allowance for loan losses, allowance for covered loan losses and the allowance for losses on lending-related commitments, loans acquired with evidence of credit quality deterioration since origination, estimations of fair value, the valuations required for impairment testing of goodwill, the valuation and accounting for derivative instruments and income taxes as the accounting areas that require the most subjective and complex judgments, and as such could be most subject to revision as new information becomes available. For a more detailed discussion on these critical accounting policies, see “Summary of Critical Accounting Policies” beginning on page
55
of the Company’s
2016
Form 10-K.
Net Income
Net income for the quarter ended
June 30, 2017
totaled
$64.9 million
, an increase of
$14.9 million
, or
30%
, compared to the
second quarter of 2016
. On a per share basis, net income for the
second quarter of 2017
totaled
$1.11
per diluted common share compared to
$0.90
in the
second quarter of 2016
.
The most significant factors impacting net income for the
second quarter of 2017
as compared to the same period in the prior year include an increase in net interest income as a result of growth in earning assets and an improvement in net interest margin, increased operating lease income, an increase in other income due to an adjustment in the estimated FDIC indemnification liability and an increase in wealth management revenue. These improvements were offset by a decrease in fees from covered call options, lower gains on investment securities and an increase in non-interest expense primarily attributable to higher salary and employee benefit costs caused by higher staffing levels as the Company grows, increased operating lease equipment depreciation and an increase in professional fees and marketing expenses.
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Table of Contents
Net Interest Income
The primary source of the Company’s revenue is net interest income. Net interest income is the difference between interest income and fees on earnings assets, such as loans and securities, and interest expense on the liabilities to fund those assets, including interest bearing deposits and other borrowings. The amount of net interest income is affected by both changes in the level of interest rates, and the amount and composition of earning assets and interest bearing liabilities.
Quarter Ended
June 30, 2017
compared to the Quarters Ended
March 31, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
The following table presents a summary of the Company’s net interest income and related net interest margin, including a calculation on a fully taxable equivalent basis, for the
second quarter of 2017
as compared to the
first quarter of 2017
(sequential quarters) and
second quarter of 2016
(linked quarters):
Average Balance
for three months ended,
Interest
for three months ended,
Yield/Rate
for three months ended,
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
March 31,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
March 31,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
March 31,
2017
June 30,
2016
Interest-bearing deposits with banks and cash equivalents
(1)
722,349
780,752
639,753
1,635
1,624
794
0.91
%
0.84
%
0.50
%
Investment securities
2,572,619
2,395,625
2,656,654
16,390
14,480
17,330
2.55
2.45
2.62
FHLB and FRB stock
99,438
94,090
116,706
1,153
1,070
1,112
4.66
4.61
3.83
Liquidity management
assets
(2)(7)
$
3,394,406
$
3,270,467
$
3,413,113
$
19,178
$
17,174
$
19,236
2.27
%
2.13
%
2.27
%
Other earning assets
(2)(3)(7)
25,749
25,236
29,759
162
183
238
2.53
2.95
3.21
Loans, net of unearned income
(2)(4)(7)
20,599,718
19,923,606
18,204,552
212,892
199,186
177,571
4.15
4.05
3.92
Covered loans
51,823
56,872
109,533
648
918
1,482
5.01
6.55
5.44
Total earning assets
(7)
$
24,071,696
$
23,276,181
$
21,756,957
$
232,880
$
217,461
$
198,527
3.88
%
3.79
%
3.67
%
Allowance for loan and covered loan losses
(132,053
)
(127,425
)
(116,984
)
Cash and due from banks
242,495
229,588
272,935
Other assets
1,868,811
1,829,004
1,841,847
Total assets
$
26,050,949
$
25,207,348
$
23,754,755
Interest-bearing deposits
$
15,621,674
$
15,466,670
$
14,065,995
$
18,471
$
16,270
$
13,594
0.47
%
0.43
%
0.39
%
FHLB advances
689,600
181,338
946,081
2,933
1,590
2,984
1.71
3.55
1.27
Other borrowings
240,547
255,012
248,233
1,149
1,139
1,086
1.92
1.81
1.76
Subordinated notes
139,007
138,980
138,898
1,786
1,772
1,777
5.14
5.10
5.12
Junior subordinated notes
253,566
253,566
253,566
2,433
2,408
2,353
3.80
3.80
3.67
Total interest-bearing liabilities
$
16,944,394
$
16,295,566
$
15,652,773
$
26,772
$
23,179
$
21,794
0.63
%
0.58
%
0.56
%
Non-interest bearing deposits
5,904,679
5,787,034
5,223,384
Other liabilities
400,971
385,698
412,866
Equity
2,800,905
2,739,050
2,465,732
Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity
$
26,050,949
$
25,207,348
$
23,754,755
Interest rate spread
(5)(7)
3.25
%
3.21
%
3.11
%
Less: Fully tax-equivalent adjustment
(1,699
)
(1,702
)
(1,463
)
(0.02
)
(0.03
)
(0.03
)
Net free funds/contribution
(6)
$
7,127,302
$
6,980,615
$
6,104,184
0.18
0.18
0.16
Net interest income/ margin
(7)
(GAAP)
$
204,409
$
192,580
$
175,270
3.41
%
3.36
%
3.24
%
Fully tax-equivalent adjustment
1,699
$
1,702
$
1,463
0.02
0.03
0.03
Net interest income/ margin - FTE
(7)
$
206,108
$
194,282
$
176,733
3.43
%
3.39
%
3.27
%
(1)
Liquidity management assets include available-for-sale and held-to-maturity securities, interest earning deposits with banks, federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements.
(2)
Interest income on tax-advantaged loans, trading securities and securities reflects a tax-equivalent adjustment based on a marginal federal corporate tax rate of 35%. The total adjustments for the three months ended
June 30, 2017
,
March 31, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
were
$1.7 million
,
$1.7 million
and
$1.5 million
respectively.
(3)
Other earning assets include brokerage customer receivables and trading account securities.
(4)
Loans, net of unearned income, include loans held-for-sale and non-accrual loans.
(5)
Interest rate spread is the difference between the yield earned on earning assets and the rate paid on interest-bearing liabilities.
(6)
Net free funds are the difference between total average earning assets and total average interest-bearing liabilities. The estimated contribution to net interest margin from net free funds is calculated using the rate paid for total interest-bearing liabilities.
(7)
See “Supplemental Financial Measures/Ratios” for additional information on this performance ratio.
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Table of Contents
For the
second quarter of 2017
, net interest income totaled
$204.4 million
, an increase of
$11.8 million
as compared to the
first quarter of 2017
and an increase of
$29.1 million
as compared to the
second quarter of 2016
. Net interest margin was
3.41%
(
3.43%
on a fully tax-equivalent basis) during the
second quarter of 2017
compared to
3.36%
(
3.39%
on a fully tax-equivalent basis) during the
first quarter of 2017
and
3.24%
(
3.27%
on a fully tax-equivalent basis) during the
second quarter of 2016
.
Six months ended
June 30, 2017
compared to
six months ended
June 30, 2016
The following table presents a summary of the Company’s net interest income and related net interest margin, including a calculation on a fully taxable equivalent basis, for the
six months ended
June 30, 2017
compared to the
six months ended
June 30, 2016
:
Average Balance
for six months ended,
Interest
for six months ended,
Yield/Rate
for six months ended,
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Interest-bearing deposits with banks and cash equivalents(1)
751,389
605,724
3,259
1,541
0.87
%
0.51
%
Investment securities
2,484,611
2,638,911
30,870
35,440
2.51
2.70
FHLB and FRB stock
96,779
111,990
2,223
2,049
4.64
3.68
Liquidity management assets
(1)(2)(7)
$
3,332,779
$
3,356,625
$
36,352
$
39,030
2.20
%
2.34
%
Other earning assets
(2)(3)(7)
25,494
29,246
345
474
2.73
3.26
Loans, net of unearned income
(2)(4)(7)
20,263,842
17,856,572
412,078
349,196
4.10
3.93
Covered loans
54,505
125,442
1,566
3,493
5.79
5.60
Total earning assets
(7)
$
23,676,620
$
21,367,885
$
450,341
$
392,193
3.84
%
3.69
%
Allowance for loan and covered loan losses
(129,751
)
(114,506
)
Cash and due from banks
236,077
266,139
Other assets
1,849,058
1,809,316
Total assets
$
25,632,004
$
23,328,834
Interest-bearing deposits
$
15,544,603
$
13,891,664
$
34,741
$
26,375
0.45
%
0.38
%
FHLB advances
436,873
885,592
4,523
5,870
2.09
1.33
Other borrowings
247,740
252,809
2,288
2,144
1.86
1.71
Subordinated notes
138,994
138,884
3,558
3,554
5.12
5.12
Junior subordinated notes
253,566
255,626
4,841
4,573
3.80
3.54
Total interest-bearing liabilities
$
16,621,776
$
15,424,575
$
49,951
$
42,516
0.60
%
0.55
%
Non-interest bearing deposits
5,845,083
5,081,565
Other liabilities
393,377
394,943
Equity
2,771,768
2,427,751
Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity
$
25,632,004
$
23,328,834
Interest rate spread
(5)(7)
3.24
%
3.14
%
Less: Fully tax-equivalent adjustment
(3,401
)
(2,898
)
(0.03
)
(0.03
)
Net free funds/contribution
(6)
$
7,054,844
$
5,943,310
0.17
0.15
Net interest income/ margin
(7)
(GAAP)
$
396,989
$
346,779
3.38
%
3.26
%
Fully tax-equivalent adjustment
3,401
2,898
0.03
0.03
Net interest income/ margin - FTE
(7)
$
400,390
$
349,677
3.41
%
3.29
%
(1)
Liquidity management assets include available-for-sale and held-to-maturity securities, interest earning deposits with banks, federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements.
(2)
Interest income on tax-advantaged loans, trading securities and securities reflects a tax-equivalent adjustment based on a marginal federal corporate tax rate of 35%. The total adjustments for the nine months ended
June 30, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
were
$3.4 million
and
$2.9 million
respectively.
(3)
Other earning assets include brokerage customer receivables and trading account securities.
(4)
Loans, net of unearned income, include loans held-for-sale and non-accrual loans.
(5)
Interest rate spread is the difference between the yield earned on earning assets and the rate paid on interest-bearing liabilities.
(6)
Net free funds are the difference between total average earning assets and total average interest-bearing liabilities. The estimated contribution to net interest margin from net free funds is calculated using the rate paid for total interest-bearing liabilities.
(7)
See “Supplemental Financial Measures/Ratios” for additional information on this performance ratio.
For the first six months of 2017 net interest income totaled
$397.0 million
, an increase of
$50.2 million
as compared to the first six month of 2016. Net interest margin was
3.38%
(
3.41%
on a fully tax-equivalent basis) for the first six months of 2017 compared to
3.26%
(
3.29%
on a fully tax-equivalent basis) for the first six months of 2016.
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Table of Contents
Analysis of Changes in Net Interest Income (GAAP)
The following table presents an analysis of the changes in the Company’s net interest income comparing the three month periods ended
June 30, 2017
to
March 31, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
and the six month periods ended
June 30, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
. The reconciliations set forth the changes in the GAAP-derived net interest income as a result of changes in volumes, changes in rates and differing number of days in each period:
Second Quarter
of 2017
Compared to
First Quarter
of 2017
Second Quarter
of 2017
Compared to
Second Quarter
of 2016
First Six
Months of 2017
Compared to
First Six
Months of 2016
(Dollars in thousands)
Net interest income (GAAP) for comparative period
$
192,580
$
175,270
$
346,779
Change due to mix and growth of earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities (volume)
4,149
23,878
50,542
Change due to interest rate fluctuations (rate)
5,564
5,261
1,584
Change due to number of days in each period
2,116
—
(1,916
)
Net interest income (GAAP) for the period ended June 30, 2017
$
204,409
$
204,409
$
396,989
Fully tax-equivalent adjustment
1,699
1,699
3,401
Net interest income - FTE
$
206,108
$
206,108
$
400,390
Non-interest Income
The following table presents non-interest income by category for the periods presented:
Three Months Ended
$
Change
%
Change
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Brokerage
$
5,449
$
6,302
$
(853
)
(14
)%
Trust and asset management
14,456
12,550
1,906
15
Total wealth management
19,905
18,852
1,053
6
Mortgage banking
35,939
36,807
(868
)
(2
)
Service charges on deposit accounts
8,696
7,726
970
13
Gains (losses) on investment securities, net
47
1,440
(1,393
)
(97
)
Fees from covered call options
890
4,649
(3,759
)
(81
)
Trading losses, net
(420
)
(316
)
(104
)
33
Operating lease income, net
6,805
4,005
2,800
70
Other:
Interest rate swap fees
2,221
1,835
386
21
BOLI
888
1,257
(369
)
(29
)
Administrative services
986
1,074
(88
)
(8
)
Gain on extinguishment of debt
—
—
—
NM
Early pay-offs of leases
10
—
10
NM
Miscellaneous
14,005
7,470
6,535
87
Total Other
18,110
11,636
6,474
56
Total Non-Interest Income
$
89,972
$
84,799
$
5,173
6
%
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Table of Contents
Six Months Ended
$
Change
%
Change
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Brokerage
$
11,669
$
12,359
$
(690
)
(6
)%
Trust and asset management
28,384
24,813
3,571
14
Total wealth management
40,053
37,172
2,881
8
Mortgage banking
57,877
58,542
(665
)
(1
)
Service charges on deposit accounts
16,961
15,132
1,829
12
(Losses) gains on investment securities, net
(8
)
2,765
(2,773
)
NM
Fees from covered call options
1,649
6,361
(4,712
)
(74
)
Trading losses, net
(740
)
(484
)
(256
)
53
Operating lease income, net
12,587
6,811
5,776
85
Other:
Interest rate swap fees
3,654
6,273
(2,619
)
(42
)
BOLI
1,873
1,729
144
8
Administrative services
2,010
2,143
(133
)
(6
)
Gain on extinguishment of debt
—
4,305
(4,305
)
NM
Early pay-offs of leases
1,221
—
1,221
NM
Miscellaneous
21,600
12,802
8,798
69
Total Other
30,358
27,252
3,106
11
Total Non-Interest Income
$
158,737
$
153,551
$
5,186
3
%
NM - Not Meaningful
Notable contributions to the change in non-interest income are as follows:
The increase in wealth management revenue during the current period as compared to the
second quarter of 2016
is primarily attributable to growth in assets under management due to new customers. Wealth management revenue is comprised of the trust and asset management revenue of The Chicago Trust Company and Great Lakes Advisors and the brokerage commissions, managed money fees and insurance product commissions at WHI.
The decrease in mortgage banking revenue in the current quarter as compared to the same period of 2016 resulted primarily from lower origination volumes in the current quarter. Mortgage loans originated or purchased for sale decreased during the current quarter, totaling
$1.1 billion
in the
second quarter of 2017
as compared to
$1.2 billion
in the
second quarter of 2016
. Mortgage banking revenue includes revenue from activities related to originating, selling and servicing residential real estate loans for the secondary market.
Mortgage revenue is also impacted by changes in the fair value of mortgage servicing rights ("MSRs") as the Company does not hedge this change in fair value. The Company originates mortgage loans held-for-sale with associated MSRs either retained or released. The Company records MSRs at fair value on a recurring basis. The table below presents additional selected information regarding mortgage banking revenue for the respective periods.
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Table of Contents
The table below presents additional selected information regarding mortgage banking revenue for the respective periods.
Three months ended
Six Months Ended
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Retail originations
$
963,396
$
1,135,082
$
1,588,367
$
1,840,072
Correspondent originations
170,862
77,160
268,358
108,818
Total originations (A)
$
1,134,258
$
1,212,242
$
1,856,725
$
1,948,890
Purchases as a percentage of originations
84
%
65
%
77
%
62
%
Refinances as a percentage of originations
16
35
23
38
Total
100
%
100
%
100
%
100
%
Production revenue
(1)
(B)
$
28,140
$
32,221
$
45,817
$
52,151
Production margin (B/A)
2.48
%
2.66
%
2.47
%
2.68
%
Loans serviced for others (C)
$
2,303,435
$
1,250,062
MSRs, at fair value (D)
27,307
13,382
Percentage of MSRs to loans serviced for others (D/C)
1.19
%
1.07
%
(1)
Production revenue represents revenue earned from the origination and subsequent sale of mortgages, including gains on loans sold and fees from originations, processing and other related activities, and excludes servicing fees, changes in fair value of servicing rights and changes to the mortgage recourse obligation.
The decrease in net gains on investment securities in the current quarter primarily relates to the realized gains on sales and calls of certain securities that were held in the Company's investment securities portfolio in the second quarter of 2016.
The Company has typically written call options with terms of less than three months against certain U.S. Treasury and agency securities held in its portfolio for liquidity and other purposes. Management has effectively entered into these transactions with the goal of economically hedging security positions and enhancing its overall return on its investment portfolio by using fees generated from these options to compensate for net interest margin compression. These option transactions are designed to mitigate overall interest rate risk and do not qualify as hedges pursuant to accounting guidance. Fees from covered call options decreased in the current year compared to the same period of 2016 primarily as a result of selling call options against a smaller value of underlying securities resulting in lower premiums received by the Company. There were no outstanding call option contracts at June 30, 2017
and June 30, 2016.
The increase in operating lease income in the current quarter compared to the prior year quarters is primarily related to growth in business from the Company's leasing divisions.
The increase in other non-interest income during the second quarter of 2017 as compared to the same period of 2016 is primarily due to a reduction in the estimated FDIC indemnification liability of $4.9 million in the second quarter of 2017 and higher swap fee revenues resulting from interest rate hedging transactions related to both customer-based trades and the related matched trades with inter-bank dealer counterparties.
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Table of Contents
Non-interest Expense
The following table presents non-interest expense by category for the periods presented:
Three months ended
$
Change
%
Change
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Salaries and employee benefits:
Salaries
$
55,215
$
52,924
$
2,291
4
%
Commissions and incentive compensation
34,050
32,531
1,519
5
Benefits
17,237
15,439
1,798
12
Total salaries and employee benefits
106,502
100,894
5,608
6
Equipment
9,909
9,307
602
6
Operating lease equipment depreciation
5,662
3,385
2,277
67
Occupancy, net
12,586
11,943
643
5
Data processing
7,804
7,138
666
9
Advertising and marketing
8,726
6,941
1,785
26
Professional fees
7,510
5,419
2,091
39
Amortization of other intangible assets
1,141
1,248
(107
)
(9
)
FDIC insurance
3,874
4,040
(166
)
(4
)
OREO expense, net
739
1,348
(609
)
(45
)
Other:
Commissions—3rd party brokers
1,033
1,324
(291
)
(22
)
Postage
2,080
2,038
42
2
Miscellaneous
15,978
15,944
34
—
Total other
19,091
19,306
(215
)
(1
)
Total Non-Interest Expense
$
183,544
$
170,969
$
12,575
7
%
Six months ended
$
Change
%
Change
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Salaries and employee benefits:
Salaries
$
110,223
$
103,206
$
7,017
7
%
Commissions and incentive compensation
60,693
58,906
1,787
3
Benefits
34,902
34,593
309
1
Total salaries and employee benefits
205,818
196,705
9,113
5
Equipment
18,911
18,074
837
5
Operating lease equipment depreciation
10,298
5,435
4,863
89
Occupancy, net
25,687
23,891
1,796
8
Data processing
15,729
13,657
2,072
15
Advertising and marketing
13,876
10,720
3,156
29
Professional fees
12,170
9,478
2,692
28
Amortization of other intangible assets
2,305
2,546
(241
)
(9
)
FDIC insurance
8,030
7,653
377
5
OREO expense, net
2,404
1,908
496
26
Other:
Commissions—3rd party brokers
2,131
2,634
(503
)
(19
)
Postage
3,522
3,340
182
5
Miscellaneous
30,781
28,658
2,123
7
Total other
36,434
34,632
1,802
5
Total Non-Interest Expense
$
351,662
$
324,699
$
26,963
8
%
Notable contributions to the change in non-interest expense are as follows:
Salaries and employee benefits expense increased in the current period compared to the same period of 2016 primarily as a result of the addition of employees from acquisitions, increased staffing as the Company grows, higher employee benefits and higher incentive compensation on variable pay based arrangements.
Operating lease equipment depreciation increased in the current quarter compared to the same period of
2016
as a result of growth in business from the Company's leasing divisions.
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Table of Contents
The increase in advertising and marketing expenses during the current quarter compared to the same period of 2016 is primarily related to the higher expenses for community advertisements and sponsorships. Marketing costs are incurred to promote the Company's brand, commercial banking capabilities, the Company's various products, to attract loans and deposits and to announce new branch openings as well as the expansion of the Company's non-bank businesses. The level of marketing expenditures depends on the timing of sponsorship programs and type of marketing programs utilized which are determined based on the market area, targeted audience, competition and various other factors.
The increase in professional fees during the current quarter compared to the second quarter of 2016 is primarily related to consulting fees. Professional fees include legal, audit and tax fees, external loan review costs, consulting arrangements and normal regulatory exam assessments.
Income Taxes
The Company recorded income tax expense of
$37.0 million
for the three months ended
June 30, 2017
, compared to
$29.9 million
for same period of
2016
. Income tax expense was
$66.7 million
and
$59.3 million
for the
six months ended June 30, 2017 and 2016
, respectively. The effective tax rates were 36.3% and 37.4% for the second quarters of
2017
and
2016
, respectively, and 35.1% and 37.4% for the
2017
and
2016
year-to-date periods, respectively. The lower effective tax rate in the
first six months of 2017
was primarily a result of recording $3.9 million of excess tax benefits during the period related to the adoption of new accounting rules related to income taxes attributed to share-based compensation that became effective on January 1, 2017. These excess tax benefits are expected to be higher in the first quarter of fiscal years when the majority of the Company's share-based awards vest, and will fluctuate throughout the remainder of the year based on the Company's stock price and timing of employee stock option exercises and vesting of other share-based awards.
Operating Segment Results
As described in Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Item 1, the Company’s operations consist of three primary segments: community banking, specialty finance and wealth management. The Company’s profitability is primarily dependent on the net interest income, provision for credit losses, non-interest income and operating expenses of its community banking segment. For purposes of internal segment profitability, management allocates certain intersegment and parent company balances. Management allocates a portion of revenues to the specialty finance segment related to loans and leases originated by the specialty finance segment and sold or assigned to the community banking segment. Similarly, for purposes of analyzing the contribution from the wealth management segment, management allocates a portion of the net interest income earned by the community banking segment on deposit balances of customers of the wealth management segment to the wealth management segment. Finally, expenses incurred at the Wintrust parent company are allocated to each segment based on each segment's risk-weighted assets.
The community banking segment’s net interest income for the quarter ended
June 30, 2017
totaled
$166.3 million
as compared to
$142.3 million
for the same period in
2016
, an increase of
$24.1 million
, or
17%
. On a year-to-date basis, net interest income for the segment increased by
$38.7 million
from
$283.9 million
for the first
six
months of
2016
to
$322.6 million
for the first
six
months of
2017
. The increase in both the three and six month periods is primarily attributable to growth in earning assets and higher net interest margin. The community banking segment’s non-interest income totaled
$65.0 million
in the
second quarter of 2017
, an increase of
$4.2 million
, or
7%
, when compared to the
second quarter of 2016
total of
$60.8 million
. On a year-to-date basis, non-interest income totaled
$107.7 million
for the first
six
months of
2017
, an increase of
$1.2 million
, or
1%
, compared to
$106.5 million
in the
six months ended June 30, 2016
. The increase in non-interest income in the quarter and year-to-date periods was primarily attributable to increase in service charges on deposits and an adjustment to the estimated FDIC indemnification liability. The community banking segment’s net income for the quarter ended
June 30, 2017
totaled
$46.0 million
, an increase of
$11.5 million
as compared to net income in the
second quarter of 2016
of
$34.6 million
. On a year-to-date basis, the community banking segment's net income was
$83.7 million
for the first
six
months of
2017
as compared to
$69.3 million
for the first
six
months of
2016
.
The specialty finance segment's net interest income totaled
$28.6 million
for the quarter ended
June 30, 2017
, compared to
$24.4 million
for the same period in
2016
, an increase of
$4.2 million
, or
17%
. On a year-to-date basis, net interest income increased by
$9.8 million
in the first
six
months of
2017
as compared to the first
six
months of
2016
. The increase during both periods is primarily attributable to growth in earning assets. The specialty finance segment’s non-interest income totaled
$13.7 million
and
$12.5 million
for the three month periods ended
June 30, 2017
and
2016
, respectively. On a year-to-date basis, non-interest income increased by
$3.0 million
in the first
six
months of
2017
as compared to the first
six
months of
2016
. The increase in non-interest income in the current year periods is primarily the result of higher originations and increased balances related to the life insurance premium finance portfolio as well as increased leasing activity since the prior year periods. Our commercial premium finance operations, life insurance finance operations, lease financing operations and accounts receivable finance operations accounted for
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Table of Contents
35%, 42%, 17% and 6%, respectively, of the total revenues of our specialty finance business for the six month period ended
June 30, 2017
. The net income of the specialty finance segment for the quarter ended
June 30, 2017
totaled
$14.8 million
as compared to
$12.0 million
for the quarter ended
June 30, 2016
. On a year-to-date basis, the net income of the specialty finance segment for the
six months ended June 30, 2017
totaled
$30.9 million
as compared to
$23.5 million
for the
six months ended June 30, 2016
.
The wealth management segment reported net interest income of
$4.9 million
for the
second quarter of 2017
compared to
$4.4 million
in the same quarter of
2016
. On a year-to-date basis, net interest income totaled
$10.0 million
for the first
six
months of
2017
as compared to
$8.9 million
for the first
six
months of
2016
. Net interest income for this segment is primarily comprised of an allocation of the net interest income earned by the community banking segment on non-interest bearing and interest-bearing wealth management customer account balances on deposit at the banks. Wealth management customer account balances on deposit at the banks averaged
$1.1 billion
and
$958.9 million
in the
first six months of 2017
and
2016
, respectively. This segment recorded non-interest income of
$20.6 million
for the
second quarter of 2017
compared to
$19.9 million
for the
second quarter of 2016
. On a year-to-date basis, the wealth management segment's non-interest income totaled
$41.4 million
during the
first six months of 2017
as compared to
$38.6 million
in the
first six months of 2016
. Distribution of wealth management services through each bank continues to be a focus of the Company as the number of financial advisors in its banks continues to increase. The Company is committed to growing the wealth management segment in order to better service its customers and create a more diversified revenue stream. The wealth management segment’s net income totaled
$4.0 million
for the
second quarter of 2017
compared to
$3.4 million
for the
second quarter of 2016
. On a year-to-date basis, the wealth management segment's net income totaled
$8.6 million
and
$6.3 million
for the
six
month periods ended
June 30, 2017
and
2016
, respectively.
Financial Condition
Total assets were
$26.9 billion
at
June 30, 2017
, representing an increase of
$2.5 billion
, or
10%
, when compared to
June 30, 2016
and an increase of approximately
$1.2 billion
, or
18%
on an annualized basis, when compared to
March 31, 2017
. Total funding, which includes deposits, all notes and advances, including secured borrowings and the junior subordinated debentures, was
$23.6 billion
at
June 30, 2017
,
$22.6 billion
at
March 31, 2017
, and
$21.3 billion
at
June 30, 2016
. See Notes 5, 6, 9, 10 and 11 of the Consolidated Financial Statements presented under Item 1 of this report for additional period-end detail on the Company’s interest-earning assets and funding liabilities.
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Interest-Earning Assets
The following table sets forth, by category, the composition of average earning asset balances and the relative percentage of total average earning assets for the periods presented:
Three Months Ended
June 30, 2017
March 31, 2017
June 30, 2016
(Dollars in thousands)
Balance
Percent
Balance
Percent
Balance
Percent
Loans:
Commercial
$
6,184,352
26
%
$
5,931,606
25
%
$
5,030,253
22
%
Commercial real estate
6,324,735
26
6,191,202
27
5,811,650
27
Home equity
698,112
3
719,525
3
771,992
4
Residential real estate
(1)
1,079,339
4
988,121
4
1,024,441
5
Premium finance receivables
6,186,230
26
5,971,554
26
5,433,006
25
Other loans
126,950
1
121,598
1
133,210
1
Total loans, net of unearned income excluding covered loans
(2)
$
20,599,718
86
%
$
19,923,606
86
%
$
18,204,552
84
%
Covered loans
51,823
—
56,872
—
109,533
1
Total average loans
(2)
$
20,651,541
86
%
$
19,980,478
86
%
$
18,314,085
85
%
Liquidity management assets
(3)
$
3,394,406
14
%
$
3,270,467
14
%
3,413,113
15
%
Other earning assets
(4)
25,749
—
25,236
—
29,759
—
Total average earning assets
$
24,071,696
100
%
$
23,276,181
100
%
$
21,756,957
100
%
Total average assets
$
26,050,949
$
25,207,348
$
23,754,755
Total average earning assets to total average assets
92
%
92
%
92
%
(1)
Includes mortgage loans held-for-sale
(2)
Includes loans held-for-sale and non-accrual loans
(3)
Liquidity management assets include investment securities, other securities, interest earning deposits with banks, federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements
(4)
Other earning assets include brokerage customer receivables and trading account securities
Loans.
Average total loans, net of unearned income, totaled
$20.7 billion
in the
second quarter
of
2017
, increasing
$2.3 billion
, or
13%
, from the
second quarter
of
2016
and
$671.1 million
, or
13%
on an annualized basis, from the
first quarter of 2017
. Combined, the commercial and commercial real estate loan categories comprised
61%
and
59%
of the average loan portfolio in the
second quarter
of
2017
and
2016
, respectively. Growth realized in these categories for the
second quarter
of
2017
as compared to the sequential and prior year periods is primarily attributable to increased business development efforts.
Home equity loan portfolio averaged
$698.1 million
in the
second quarter
of
2017
, and decreased
$73.9 million
, or
10%
from the average balance of
$772.0 million
in same period of
2016
. The Company has been actively managing its home equity portfolio to ensure that diligent pricing, appraisal and other underwriting activities continue to exist. The Company has not sacrificed asset quality or pricing standards when originating new home equity loans.
Residential real estate loans averaged
$1.1 billion
in the
second quarter
of
2017
, and increased
$54.9 million
, or
5%
from the average balance of
$1.0 billion
in same period of
2016
. Additionally, compared to the quarter ended
March 31, 2017
, the average balance increased
$91.2 million
, or
37%
on an annualized basis. The residential real estate loan category includes mortgage loans held-for-sale. By selling residential mortgage loans into the secondary market, the Company eliminates the interest-rate risk associated with these loans, as they are predominantly long-term fixed rate loans, and provides a source of non-interest revenue.
Average premium finance receivables totaled
$6.2 billion
in the
second quarter
of
2017
, and accounted for
30%
of the Company’s average total loans. The increase during the second quarter of
2017
compared to both the first quarter of 2017 and the second quarter of 2016 was the result of continued originations within the portfolio due to the effective marketing and customer servicing. Approximately
$1.9 billion
of premium finance receivables were originated in the
second quarter
of
2017
compared to
$1.8 billion
during the same period of
2016
. Premium finance receivables consist of a commercial portfolio and a life portfolio comprising approximately
41%
and
59%
, respectively, of the average total balance of premium finance receivables for the
second quarter
of
2017
, and
44%
and
56%
, respectively, for the
second quarter
of
2016
.
Other loans represent a wide variety of personal and consumer loans to individuals as well as high-yielding short-term accounts receivable financing to clients in the temporary staffing industry located throughout the United States. Consumer loans generally
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have shorter terms and higher interest rates than mortgage loans but generally involve more credit risk due to the type and nature of the collateral. Additionally, short-term accounts receivable financing may also involve greater credit risks than generally associated with the loan portfolios of more traditional community banks depending on the marketability of the collateral.
Covered loans represent loans acquired through the nine FDIC-assisted transactions, all of which occurred prior to 2013. These loans are subject to loss sharing agreements with the FDIC. The FDIC has agreed to reimburse the Company for 80% of losses incurred on the purchased loans, foreclosed real estate, and certain other assets. The Company expects the covered loan portfolio to continue to decrease as these acquired loans are paid off and as loss sharing agreements expire. See Note 3 of the Consolidated Financial Statements presented under Item 1 of this report for a discussion of these acquisitions, including the aggregation of these loans by risk characteristics when determining the initial and subsequent fair value.
Liquidity management assets.
Funds that are not utilized for loan originations are used to purchase investment securities and short term money market investments, to sell as federal funds and to maintain in interest bearing deposits with banks. The balances of these assets can fluctuate based on management’s ongoing effort to manage liquidity and for asset liability management purposes.
Other earning assets.
Other earning assets include brokerage customer receivables and trading account securities. In the normal course of business, WHI activities involve the execution, settlement, and financing of various securities transactions. WHI’s customer securities activities are transacted on either a cash or margin basis. In margin transactions, WHI, under an agreement with an out-sourced securities firm, extends credit to its customers, subject to various regulatory and internal margin requirements, collateralized by cash and securities in customer’s accounts. In connection with these activities, WHI executes and the out-sourced firm clears customer transactions relating to the sale of securities not yet purchased, substantially all of which are transacted on a margin basis subject to individual exchange regulations. Such transactions may expose WHI to off-balance-sheet risk, particularly in volatile trading markets, in the event margin requirements are not sufficient to fully cover losses that customers may incur. In the event a customer fails to satisfy its obligations, WHI under the agreement with the outsourced securities firm, may be required to purchase or sell financial instruments at prevailing market prices to fulfill the customer’s obligations. WHI seeks to control the risks associated with its customers’ activities by requiring customers to maintain margin collateral in compliance with various regulatory and internal guidelines. WHI monitors required margin levels daily and, pursuant to such guidelines, requires customers to deposit additional collateral or to reduce positions when necessary.
The following table sets forth, by category, the composition of average earning asset balances and the relative percentage of total average earning assets for the periods presented:
Six Months Ended
June 30, 2017
June 30, 2016
(Dollars in thousands)
Balance
Percent
Balance
Percent
Loans:
Commercial
$
6,058,871
26
%
$
4,858,912
23
%
Commercial real estate
6,258,445
26
5,720,238
27
Home equity
708,760
3
775,748
4
Residential real estate
(1)
1,033,992
4
969,145
4
Premium finance receivables
6,079,485
26
5,396,920
25
Other loans
124,289
1
135,609
1
Total loans, net of unearned income excluding covered loans
(2)
$
20,263,842
86
%
$
17,856,572
84
%
Covered loans
54,505
—
125,442
1
Total average loans
(2)
$
20,318,347
86
%
$
17,982,014
85
%
Liquidity management assets
(3)
$
3,332,779
14
%
$
3,356,625
15
%
Other earning assets
(4)
25,494
—
29,246
—
Total average earning assets
$
23,676,620
100
%
$
21,367,885
100
%
Total average assets
$
25,632,004
$
23,328,834
Total average earning assets to total average assets
92
%
92
%
(1)
Includes mortgage loans held-for-sale
(2)
Includes loans held-for-sale and non-accrual loans
(3)
Liquidity management assets include investment securities, other securities, interest earning deposits with banks, federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements
(4)
Other earning assets include brokerage customer receivables and trading account securities
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Table of Contents
Total average loans for the first six months of 2017 increased
$2.3 billion
or
13%
over the previous year period. Similar to the quarterly discussion above, approximately
$1.2 billion
of this increase relates to the commercial portfolio,
$538.2 million
of this increase relates to the commercial real estate portfolio and
$682.6 million
of this increase relates to the premium finance receivables portfolio.
LOAN PORTFOLIO AND ASSET QUALITY
Loan Portfolio
The following table shows the Company’s loan portfolio by category as of the dates shown:
June 30, 2017
December 31, 2016
June 30, 2016
% of
% of
% of
(Dollars in thousands)
Amount
Total
Amount
Total
Amount
Total
Commercial
$
6,406,289
31
%
$
6,005,422
30
%
$
5,144,533
28
%
Commercial real estate
6,402,494
31
6,196,087
31
5,848,334
31
Home equity
689,483
3
725,793
4
760,904
4
Residential real estate
762,810
3
705,221
4
653,664
4
Premium finance receivables—commercial
2,648,386
13
2,478,581
12
2,478,280
14
Premium finance receivables—life insurance
3,719,043
18
3,470,027
18
3,161,562
17
Consumer and other
114,827
1
122,041
1
127,378
1
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
$
20,743,332
100
%
$
19,703,172
100
%
$
18,174,655
99
%
Covered loans
50,119
—
58,145
—
105,248
1
Total loans
$
20,793,451
100
%
$
19,761,317
100
%
$
18,279,903
100
%
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Commercial and commercial real estate loans.
Our commercial and commercial real estate loan portfolios are comprised primarily of commercial real estate loans and lines of credit for working capital purposes. The table below sets forth information regarding the types and amounts of our loans within these portfolios (excluding covered loans) as of
June 30, 2017
and
2016
:
As of June 30, 2017
As of June 30, 2016
Allowance
Allowance
% of
For Loan
% of
For Loan
Total
Losses
Total
Losses
(Dollars in thousands)
Balance
Balance
Allocation
Balance
Balance
Allocation
Commercial:
Commercial, industrial and other
$
4,094,532
32.0
%
$
35,542
$
3,456,575
31.3
%
$
28,133
Franchise
838,394
6.5
5,305
289,905
2.6
3,337
Mortgage warehouse lines of credit
234,643
1.8
1,719
270,586
2.5
1,976
Asset-based lending
871,906
6.8
8,004
842,667
7.7
6,735
Leases
356,604
2.8
1,150
268,074
2.4
807
PCI - commercial loans
(1)
10,210
0.1
638
16,726
0.2
666
Total commercial
$
6,406,289
50.0
%
$
52,358
$
5,144,533
46.7
%
$
41,654
Commercial Real Estate:
Construction
$
709,587
5.5
%
$
9,187
$
404,905
3.7
%
$
4,322
Land
112,153
0.9
3,596
105,881
1.0
3,455
Office
887,684
6.9
5,740
909,453
8.3
6,099
Industrial
792,791
6.2
5,201
766,769
7.0
6,443
Retail
920,494
7.2
5,971
897,846
8.2
6,060
Multi-family
814,598
6.4
8,226
778,517
7.1
7,746
Mixed use and other
2,018,950
15.8
14,299
1,812,665
16.5
12,662
PCI - commercial real estate
(1)
146,237
1.1
119
172,298
1.5
37
Total commercial real estate
$
6,402,494
50.0
%
$
52,339
$
5,848,334
53.3
%
$
46,824
Total commercial and commercial real estate
$
12,808,783
100.0
%
$
104,697
$
10,992,867
100.0
%
$
88,478
Commercial real estate - collateral location by state:
Illinois
$
4,988,746
77.9
%
$
4,622,897
79.1
%
Wisconsin
689,007
10.8
597,531
10.2
Total primary markets
$
5,677,753
88.7
%
$
5,220,428
89.3
%
Indiana
142,137
2.2
125,210
2.1
Florida
105,897
1.7
77,829
1.3
Arizona
57,219
0.9
43,409
0.7
Ohio
46,652
0.7
18,923
0.3
Michigan
45,541
0.7
34,825
0.6
California
38,626
0.6
62,920
1.1
Other
288,669
4.5
264,790
4.6
Total
$
6,402,494
100.0
%
$
5,848,334
100.0
%
(1)
PCI loans represent loans acquired with evidence of credit quality deterioration since origination, in accordance with ASC 310-30. Loan agings are based upon contractually required payments.
We make commercial loans for many purposes, including working capital lines, which are generally renewable annually and supported by business assets, personal guarantees and additional collateral. Commercial business lending is generally considered to involve a slightly higher degree of risk than traditional consumer bank lending. Primarily as a result of growth in the commercial
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Table of Contents
portfolio, our allowance for loan losses in our commercial loan portfolio is
$52.4 million
as of
June 30, 2017
compared to
$41.7 million
as of
June 30, 2016
.
Our commercial real estate loans are generally secured by a first mortgage lien and assignment of rents on the property. Since most of our bank branches are located in the Chicago metropolitan area and southern Wisconsin,
88.7%
of our commercial real estate loan portfolio is located in this region as of
June 30, 2017
. While commercial real estate market conditions have improved recently, a number of specific markets continue to be under stress. We have been able to effectively manage our total non-performing commercial real estate loans. As of
June 30, 2017
, our allowance for loan losses related to this portfolio is
$52.3 million
compared to
$46.8 million
as of
June 30, 2016
.
The Company also participates in mortgage warehouse lending by providing interim funding to unaffiliated mortgage bankers to finance residential mortgages originated by such bankers for sale into the secondary market. The Company’s loans to the mortgage bankers are secured by the business assets of the mortgage companies as well as the specific mortgage loans funded by the Company, after they have been pre-approved for purchase by third party end lenders. The Company may also provide interim financing for packages of mortgage loans on a bulk basis in circumstances where the mortgage bankers desire to competitively bid on a number of mortgages for sale as a package in the secondary market. Amounts advanced with respect to any particular mortgage loan are usually required to be repaid within 21 days. Mortgage warehouse lines decreased to
$234.6 million
as of
June 30, 2017
from
$270.6 million
as of
June 30, 2016
.
Home equity loans.
Our home equity loans and lines of credit are originated by each of our banks in their local markets where we have a strong understanding of the underlying real estate value. Our banks monitor and manage these loans, and we conduct an automated review of all home equity loans and lines of credit at least twice per year. This review collects current credit performance for each home equity borrower and identifies situations where the credit strength of the borrower is declining, or where there are events that may influence repayment, such as tax liens or judgments. Our banks use this information to manage loans that may be higher risk and to determine whether to obtain additional credit information or updated property valuations.
The rates we offer on new home equity lending are based on several factors, including appraisals and valuation due diligence, in order to reflect inherent risk, and we place additional scrutiny on larger home equity requests. In a limited number of cases, we issue home equity credit together with first mortgage financing, and requests for such financing are evaluated on a combined basis. It is not our practice to advance more than 85% of the appraised value of the underlying asset, which ratio we refer to as the loan-to-value ratio, or LTV ratio, and a majority of the credit we previously extended, when issued, had an LTV ratio of less than 80%.
Our home equity loan portfolio has performed well in light of the ongoing volatility in the overall residential real estate market.
Residential real estate mortgages.
Our residential real estate portfolio predominantly includes one- to four-family adjustable rate mortgages that have repricing terms generally from one to three years, construction loans to individuals and bridge financing loans for qualifying customers. As of
June 30, 2017
, our residential loan portfolio totaled
$762.8 million
, or
3%
of our total outstanding loans.
Our adjustable rate mortgages relate to properties located principally in the Chicago metropolitan area and southern Wisconsin or vacation homes owned by local residents. These adjustable rate mortgages are often non-agency conforming. Adjustable rate mortgage loans decrease the interest rate risk we face on our mortgage portfolio. However, this risk is not eliminated due to the fact that such loans generally provide for periodic and lifetime limits on the interest rate adjustments among other features. Additionally, adjustable rate mortgages may pose a higher risk of delinquency and default because they require borrowers to make larger payments when interest rates rise. As of
June 30, 2017
,
$14.3 million
of our residential real estate mortgages, or
1.9%
of our residential real estate loan portfolio were classified as nonaccrual,
$775,000
were 90 or more days past due and still accruing (
0.1%
),
$1.6 million
were 30 to 89 days past due (
0.2%
) and
$746.2 million
were current (
97.8%
). We believe that since our loan portfolio consists primarily of locally originated loans, and since the majority of our borrowers are longer-term customers with lower LTV ratios, we face a relatively low risk of borrower default and delinquency.
While we generally do not originate loans for our own portfolio with long-term fixed rates due to interest rate risk considerations, we can accommodate customer requests for fixed rate loans by originating such loans and then selling them into the secondary market, for which we receive fee income. We may also selectively retain certain of these loans within the banks’ own portfolios where they are non-agency conforming, or where the terms of the loans make them favorable to retain. A portion of the loans we sold into the secondary market were sold with the servicing of those loans retained. The amount of loans serviced for others as of
June 30, 2017
and
2016
was
$2.3 billion
and
$1.3 billion
, respectively. All other mortgage loans sold into the secondary market were sold without the retention of servicing rights.
It is not our current practice to underwrite, and we have no plans to underwrite, subprime, Alt A, no or little documentation loans, or option ARM loans. As of
June 30, 2017
, approximately
$1.8 million
of our mortgage loans consist of interest-only loans.
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Table of Contents
Premium finance receivables – commercial.
FIFC and FIFC Canada originated approximately
$1.6 billion
in commercial insurance premium finance receivables in the
second quarter of 2017
as compared to
$1.5 billion
of originations in the
second quarter of 2016
. During the
six months ended June 30, 2017 and 2016
, FIFC and FIFC Canada originated approximately
$3.1 billion
and
$2.9 billion
, respectively, in commercial insurance premium finance receivables. FIFC and FIFC Canada make loans to businesses to finance the insurance premiums they pay on their commercial insurance policies. The loans are originated by working through independent medium and large insurance agents and brokers located throughout the United States and Canada. The insurance premiums financed are primarily for commercial customers’ purchases of liability, property and casualty and other commercial insurance.
This lending involves relatively rapid turnover of the loan portfolio and high volume of loan originations. Because of the indirect nature of this lending through third party agents and brokers and because the borrowers are located nationwide and in Canada, this segment is more susceptible to third party fraud than relationship lending. The Company performs ongoing credit and other reviews of the agents and brokers, and performs various internal audit steps to mitigate against the risk of any fraud. The majority of these loans are purchased by the banks in order to more fully utilize their lending capacity as these loans generally provide the banks with higher yields than alternative investments.
Premium finance receivables—life insurance.
FIFC originated approximately
$243.4 million
in life insurance premium finance receivables in the
second quarter of 2017
as compared to
$270.9 million
of originations in the
second quarter of 2016
. During the
six months ended June 30, 2017 and 2016
, FIFC originated approximately
$447.2 million
and
$480.6 million
, respectively, in life insurance premium finance receivables. The Company continues to experience increased competition and pricing pressure within the current market. These loans are originated directly with the borrowers with assistance from life insurance carriers, independent insurance agents, financial advisors and legal counsel. The life insurance policy is the primary form of collateral. In addition, these loans often are secured with a letter of credit, marketable securities or certificates of deposit. In some cases, FIFC may make a loan that has a partially unsecured position.
Consumer and other.
Included in the consumer and other loan category is a wide variety of personal and consumer loans to individuals as well as high yielding short-term accounts receivable financing to clients in the temporary staffing industry located throughout the United States. The Banks originate consumer loans in order to provide a wider range of financial services to their customers.
Consumer loans generally have shorter terms and higher interest rates than mortgage loans but generally involve more credit risk than mortgage loans due to the type and nature of the collateral. Additionally, short-term accounts receivable financing may also involve greater credit risks than generally associated with the loan portfolios of more traditional community banks depending on the marketability of the collateral.
Covered loans.
Covered loans represent loans acquired through the nine FDIC-assisted transactions, all of which occurred prior to 2013. These loans are subject to loss sharing agreements with the FDIC. The FDIC has agreed to reimburse the Company for 80% of losses incurred on the purchased loans, foreclosed real estate, and certain other assets. The Company expects the covered loan portfolio to continue to decrease as these acquired loans are paid off and as loss sharing agreements expire. See Note 3 of the Consolidated Financial Statements presented under Item 1 of this report for a discussion of these acquisitions, including the aggregation of these loans by risk characteristics when determining the initial and subsequent fair value.
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Table of Contents
Maturities and Sensitivities of Loans to Changes in Interest Rates
The following table classifies the loan portfolio, excluding covered loans, at
June 30, 2017
by date at which the loans reprice or mature, and the type of rate exposure:
As of June 30, 2017
One year or less
From one to five years
Over five years
(Dollars in thousands)
Total
Commercial
Fixed rate
$
155,364
$
703,707
$
470,295
$
1,329,366
Variable rate
5,067,733
7,288
1,902
5,076,923
Total commercial
$
5,223,097
$
710,995
$
472,197
$
6,406,289
Commercial real estate
Fixed rate
404,454
1,735,009
252,118
2,391,581
Variable rate
3,978,265
31,068
1,580
4,010,913
Total commercial real estate
$
4,382,719
$
1,766,077
$
253,698
$
6,402,494
Home Equity
Fixed rate
5,962
4,657
63,208
73,827
Variable rate
611,581
4,075
—
615,656
Total home equity
$
617,543
$
8,732
$
63,208
$
689,483
Residential real estate
Fixed rate
40,593
38,946
145,978
225,517
Variable rate
54,493
180,457
302,343
537,293
Total residential real estate
$
95,086
$
219,403
$
448,321
$
762,810
Premium finance receivables - commercial
Fixed rate
2,560,924
87,462
—
2,648,386
Variable rate
—
—
—
—
Total premium finance receivables - commercial
$
2,560,924
$
87,462
$
—
$
2,648,386
Premium finance receivables - life insurance
Fixed rate
17,174
34,370
1,370
52,914
Variable rate
3,666,129
—
—
3,666,129
Total premium finance receivables - life insurance
$
3,683,303
$
34,370
$
1,370
$
3,719,043
Consumer and other
Fixed rate
54,315
13,124
3,536
70,975
Variable rate
43,852
—
—
43,852
Total consumer and other
$
98,167
$
13,124
$
3,536
$
114,827
Total per category
Fixed rate
3,238,786
2,617,275
936,505
6,792,566
Variable rate
13,422,053
222,888
305,825
13,950,766
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
$
16,660,839
$
2,840,163
$
1,242,330
$
20,743,332
Variable Rate Loan Pricing by Index:
Prime
$
2,957,739
One- month LIBOR
6,514,657
Three- month LIBOR
500,408
Twelve- month LIBOR
3,525,934
Other
452,028
Total variable rate
$
13,950,766
74
Table of Contents
Past Due Loans and Non-Performing Assets
Our ability to manage credit risk depends in large part on our ability to properly identify and manage problem loans. To do so, the Company operates a credit risk rating system under which our credit management personnel assign a credit risk rating to each loan at the time of origination and review loans on a regular basis to determine each loan’s credit risk rating on a scale of 1 through 10 with higher scores indicating higher risk. The credit risk rating structure used is shown below:
1 Rating —
Minimal Risk (Loss Potential – none or extremely low) (Superior asset quality, excellent liquidity, minimal leverage)
2 Rating —
Modest Risk (Loss Potential demonstrably low) (Very good asset quality and liquidity, strong leverage capacity)
3 Rating —
Average Risk (Loss Potential low but no longer refutable) (Mostly satisfactory asset quality and liquidity, good leverage capacity)
4 Rating —
Above Average Risk (Loss Potential variable, but some potential for deterioration) (Acceptable asset quality, little excess liquidity, modest leverage capacity)
5 Rating —
Management Attention Risk (Loss Potential moderate if corrective action not taken) (Generally acceptable asset quality, somewhat strained liquidity, minimal leverage capacity)
6 Rating —
Special Mention (Loss Potential moderate if corrective action not taken) (Assets in this category are currently protected, potentially weak, but not to the point of substandard classification)
7 Rating —
Substandard Accrual (Loss Potential distinct possibility that the bank may sustain some loss, but no discernable impairment) (Must have well defined weaknesses that jeopardize the liquidation of the debt)
8 Rating —
Substandard Non-accrual (Loss Potential well documented probability of loss, including potential impairment) (Must have well defined weaknesses that jeopardize the liquidation of the debt)
9 Rating —
Doubtful (Loss Potential extremely high) (These assets have all the weaknesses in those classified “substandard” with the added characteristic that the weaknesses make collection or liquidation in full, on the basis of current existing facts, conditions, and values, highly improbable)
10 Rating —
Loss (fully charged-off) (Loans in this category are considered fully uncollectible.)
Each loan officer is responsible for monitoring his or her loan portfolio, recommending a credit risk rating for each loan in his or her portfolio and ensuring the credit risk ratings are appropriate. These credit risk ratings are then ratified by the bank’s chief credit officer and/or concurrence credit officer. Credit risk ratings are determined by evaluating a number of factors including a borrower’s financial strength, cash flow coverage, collateral protection and guarantees. A third party loan review firm independently reviews a significant portion of the loan portfolio at each of the Company’s subsidiary banks to evaluate the appropriateness of the management-assigned credit risk ratings. These ratings are subject to further review at each of our bank subsidiaries by the applicable regulatory authority, including the FRB of Chicago, the OCC, the State of Illinois and the State of Wisconsin and are also reviewed by our internal audit staff.
The Company’s problem loan reporting system automatically includes all loans with credit risk ratings of 6 through 9. This system is designed to provide an on-going detailed tracking mechanism for each problem loan. Once management determines that a loan has deteriorated to a point where it has a credit risk rating of 6 or worse, the Company’s Managed Asset Division performs an overall credit and collateral review. As part of this review, all underlying collateral is identified and the valuation methodology is analyzed and tracked. As a result of this initial review by the Company’s Managed Asset Division, the credit risk rating is reviewed and a portion of the outstanding loan balance may be deemed uncollectible or an impairment reserve may be established. The Company’s impairment analysis utilizes an independent re-appraisal of the collateral (unless such a third-party evaluation is not possible due to the unique nature of the collateral, such as a closely-held business or thinly traded securities). In the case of commercial real estate collateral, an independent third party appraisal is ordered by the Company’s Real Estate Services Group to determine if there has been any change in the underlying collateral value. These independent appraisals are reviewed by the Real Estate Services Group and sometimes by independent third party valuation experts and may be adjusted depending upon market conditions. An appraisal is ordered at least once a year for these loans, or more often if market conditions dictate. In the event that the underlying value of the collateral cannot be easily determined, a detailed valuation methodology is prepared by the Managed Asset Division. A summary of this analysis is provided to the directors’ loan committee of the bank which originated the credit for approval of a charge-off, if necessary.
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Table of Contents
Through the credit risk rating process, loans are reviewed to determine if they are performing in accordance with the original contractual terms. If the borrower has failed to comply with the original contractual terms, further action may be required by the Company, including a downgrade in the credit risk rating, movement to non-accrual status, a charge-off or the establishment of a specific impairment reserve. In the event a collateral shortfall is identified during the credit review process, the Company will work with the borrower for a principal reduction and/or a pledge of additional collateral and/or additional guarantees. In the event that these options are not available, the loan may be subject to a downgrade of the credit risk rating. If we determine that a loan amount or portion thereof, is uncollectible the loan’s credit risk rating is immediately downgraded to an 8 or 9 and the uncollectible amount is charged-off. Any loan that has a partial charge-off continues to be assigned a credit risk rating of an 8 or 9 for the duration of time that a balance remains outstanding. The Managed Asset Division undertakes a thorough and ongoing analysis to determine if additional impairment and/or charge-offs are appropriate and to begin a workout plan for the credit to minimize actual losses.
The Company’s approach to workout plans and restructuring loans is built on the credit-risk rating process. A modification of a loan with an existing credit risk rating of 6 or worse or a modification of any other credit, which will result in a restructured credit risk rating of 6 or worse must be reviewed for TDR classification. In that event, our Managed Assets Division conducts an overall credit and collateral review. A modification of a loan is considered to be a TDR if both (1) the borrower is experiencing financial difficulty and (2) for economic or legal reasons, the bank grants a concession to a borrower that it would not otherwise consider. The modification of a loan where the credit risk rating is 5 or better both before and after such modification is not considered to be a TDR. Based on the Company’s credit risk rating system, it considers that borrowers whose credit risk rating is 5 or better are not experiencing financial difficulties and therefore, are not considered TDRs.
TDRs, which are by definition considered impaired loans, are reviewed at the time of modification and on a quarterly basis to determine if a specific reserve is needed. The carrying amount of the loan is compared to the expected payments to be received, discounted at the loan’s original rate, or for collateral dependent loans, to the fair value of the collateral less the estimated cost to sell. Any shortfall is recorded as a specific reserve.
For non-TDR loans, if based on current information and events, it is probable that the Company will be unable to collect all amounts due to it according to the contractual terms of the loan agreement, a loan is considered impaired, and a specific impairment reserve analysis is performed and if necessary, a specific reserve is established. In determining the appropriate reserve for collateral-dependent loans, the Company considers the results of appraisals for the associated collateral.
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Table of Contents
Non-performing Assets, excluding covered assets
The following table sets forth Wintrust’s non-performing assets and TDRs performing under the contractual terms of the loan agreement, excluding covered assets and PCI loans, as of the dates shown:
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
March 31,
2017
December 31,
2016
June 30,
2016
Loans past due greater than 90 days and still accruing
(1)
:
Commercial
$
—
$
100
$
174
$
235
Commercial real estate
—
—
—
—
Home equity
—
—
—
—
Residential real estate
179
—
—
—
Premium finance receivables—commercial
5,922
4,991
7,962
10,558
Premium finance receivables—life insurance
1,046
2,024
3,717
—
Consumer and other
63
104
144
163
Total loans past due greater than 90 days and still accruing
7,210
7,219
11,997
10,956
Non-accrual loans
(2)
:
Commercial
10,191
14,307
15,875
16,801
Commercial real estate
16,980
20,809
21,924
24,415
Home equity
9,482
11,722
9,761
8,562
Residential real estate
14,292
11,943
12,749
12,413
Premium finance receivables—commercial
10,456
12,629
14,709
14,497
Premium finance receivables—life insurance
—
—
—
—
Consumer and other
439
350
439
475
Total non-accrual loans
61,840
71,760
75,457
77,163
Total non-performing loans:
Commercial
10,191
14,407
16,049
17,036
Commercial real estate
16,980
20,809
21,924
24,415
Home equity
9,482
11,722
9,761
8,562
Residential real estate
14,471
11,943
12,749
12,413
Premium finance receivables—commercial
16,378
17,620
22,671
25,055
Premium finance receivables—life insurance
1,046
2,024
3,717
—
Consumer and other
502
454
583
638
Total non-performing loans
$
69,050
$
78,979
$
87,454
$
88,119
Other real estate owned
16,853
17,090
17,699
22,154
Other real estate owned—from acquisitions
22,508
22,774
22,583
15,909
Other repossessed assets
532
544
581
420
Total non-performing assets
$
108,943
$
119,387
$
128,317
$
126,602
TDRs performing under the contractual terms of the loan agreement
28,008
28,392
29,911
33,310
Total non-performing loans by category as a percent of its own respective category’s period-end balance:
Commercial
0.16
%
0.24
%
0.27
%
0.33
%
Commercial real estate
0.27
0.33
0.35
0.42
Home equity
1.38
1.66
1.34
1.13
Residential real estate
1.90
1.66
1.81
1.90
Premium finance receivables—commercial
0.62
0.72
0.91
1.01
Premium finance receivables—life insurance
0.03
0.06
0.11
—
Consumer and other
0.44
0.38
0.48
0.50
Total non-performing loans
0.33
%
0.40
%
0.44
%
0.48
%
Total non-performing assets, as a percentage of total assets
0.40
%
0.46
%
0.50
%
0.52
%
Allowance for loan losses as a percentage of total non-performing loans
187.68
%
159.31
%
139.83
%
129.78
%
(1)
As of the dates shown,
no
TDRs were past due greater than 90 days and still accruing interest.
(2)
Non-accrual loans included TDRs totaling
$5.1 million
,
$11.3 million
,
$11.8 million
and
$16.3 million
as of
June 30, 2017
,
March 31, 2017
,
December 31, 2016
and
June 30, 2016
respectively.
Management is pursuing the resolution of all credits in this category. At this time, management believes reserves are appropriate to absorb inherent losses that are expected upon the ultimate resolution of these credits.
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Table of Contents
Loan Portfolio Aging
The tables below show the aging of the Company’s loan portfolio at
June 30, 2017
and
March 31, 2017
:
Nonaccrual
90+ days
and still
accruing
60-89
days past
due
30-59
days past
due
Current
Total Loans
As of June 30, 2017
(Dollars in thousands)
Loan Balances:
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
$
8,720
$
—
$
5,917
$
12,658
$
4,067,237
$
4,094,532
Franchise
—
—
—
—
838,394
838,394
Mortgage warehouse lines of credit
—
—
—
2,361
232,282
234,643
Asset-based lending
936
—
983
7,293
862,694
871,906
Leases
535
—
—
60
356,009
356,604
PCI - commercial
(1)
—
1,572
162
—
8,476
10,210
Total commercial
10,191
1,572
7,062
22,372
6,365,092
6,406,289
Commercial real estate
Construction
2,408
—
—
—
707,179
709,587
Land
202
—
—
6,455
105,496
112,153
Office
4,806
—
607
7,725
874,546
887,684
Industrial
2,193
—
—
709
789,889
792,791
Retail
1,635
—
—
15,081
903,778
920,494
Multi-family
354
—
—
1,186
813,058
814,598
Mixed use and other
5,382
—
713
7,590
2,005,265
2,018,950
PCI - commercial real estate
(1)
—
8,768
322
3,303
133,844
146,237
Total commercial real estate
16,980
8,768
1,642
42,049
6,333,055
6,402,494
Home equity
9,482
—
855
2,858
676,288
689,483
Residential real estate, including PCI
14,292
775
1,273
300
746,170
762,810
Premium finance receivables
Commercial insurance loans
10,456
5,922
4,951
11,713
2,615,344
2,648,386
Life insurance loans
—
1,046
—
16,977
3,474,686
3,492,709
PCI - life insurance loans
(1)
—
—
—
—
226,334
226,334
Consumer and other, including PCI
439
125
331
515
113,417
114,827
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
$
61,840
$
18,208
$
16,114
$
96,784
$
20,550,386
$
20,743,332
Covered loans
1,961
2,504
113
598
44,943
50,119
Total loans, net of unearned income
$
63,801
$
20,712
$
16,227
$
97,382
$
20,595,329
$
20,793,451
Aging as a % of Loan Balance:
As of June 30, 2017
Nonaccrual
90+ days
and still
accruing
60-89
days past
due
30-59
days past
due
Current
Total Loans
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
0.2
%
—
%
0.1
%
0.3
%
99.4
%
100.0
%
Franchise
—
—
—
—
100.0
100.0
Mortgage warehouse lines of credit
—
—
—
1.0
99.0
100.0
Asset-based lending
0.1
—
0.1
0.8
99.0
100.0
Leases
0.2
—
—
—
99.8
100.0
PCI - commercial
(1)
—
15.4
1.6
—
83.0
100.0
Total commercial
0.2
—
0.1
0.3
99.4
100.0
Commercial real estate
Construction
0.3
—
—
—
99.7
100.0
Land
0.2
—
—
5.8
94.0
100.0
Office
0.5
—
0.1
0.9
98.5
100.0
Industrial
0.3
—
—
0.1
99.6
100.0
Retail
0.2
—
—
1.6
98.2
100.0
Multi-family
—
—
—
0.1
99.9
100.0
Mixed use and other
0.3
—
—
0.4
99.3
100.0
PCI - commercial real estate
(1)
—
6.0
0.2
2.3
91.5
100.0
Total commercial real estate
0.3
0.1
—
0.7
98.9
100.0
Home equity
1.4
—
0.1
0.4
98.1
100.0
Residential real estate, including PCI
1.9
0.1
0.2
—
97.8
100.0
Premium finance receivables
Commercial insurance loans
0.4
0.2
0.2
0.4
98.8
100.0
Life insurance loans
—
—
—
0.5
99.5
100.0
PCI - life insurance loans
(1)
—
—
—
—
100.0
100.0
Consumer and other, including PCI
0.4
0.1
0.3
0.4
98.8
100.0
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
0.3
%
0.1
%
0.1
%
0.5
%
99.0
%
100.0
%
Covered loans
3.9
5.0
0.2
1.2
89.7
100.0
Total loans, net of unearned income
0.3
%
0.1
%
0.1
%
0.5
%
99.0
%
100.0
%
(1)
PCI loans represent loans acquired with evidence of credit quality deterioration since origination, in accordance with ASC 310-30. Loan agings are based upon contractually required payments.
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Table of Contents
Nonaccrual
90+ days
and still
accruing
60-89
days past
due
30-59
days past
due
Current
Total Loans
As of March 31, 2017
(Dollars in thousands)
Loan Balances:
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
$
12,036
$
100
$
19
$
23,780
$
3,855,140
$
3,891,075
Franchise
323
—
—
987
822,424
823,734
Mortgage warehouse lines of credit
—
—
—
9,111
145,069
154,180
Asset-based lending
1,378
—
—
3,744
875,882
881,004
Leases
570
—
—
874
318,566
320,010
PCI - commercial
(1)
—
1,368
—
944
9,174
11,486
Total commercial
14,307
1,468
19
39,440
6,026,255
6,081,489
Commercial real estate
Construction
2,408
—
391
4,356
648,178
655,333
Land
350
—
—
3,274
101,455
105,079
Office
3,513
—
953
7,155
859,045
870,666
Industrial
7,004
—
—
2,656
783,302
792,962
Retail
589
—
—
4,727
906,470
911,786
Multi-family
668
—
203
4,813
799,092
804,776
Mixed use and other
6,277
—
3,207
14,166
1,940,094
1,963,744
PCI - commercial real estate
(1)
—
12,559
672
15,565
128,540
157,336
Total commercial real estate
20,809
12,559
5,426
56,712
6,166,176
6,261,682
Home equity
11,722
—
430
4,884
691,222
708,258
Residential real estate, including PCI
11,943
900
3,410
5,262
699,093
720,608
Premium finance receivables
Commercial insurance loans
12,629
4,991
6,383
23,775
2,399,168
2,446,946
Life insurance loans
—
2,024
2,535
32,208
3,316,090
3,352,857
PCI - life insurance loans
(1)
—
—
—
—
240,706
240,706
Consumer and other, including PCI
350
167
323
543
117,129
118,512
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
$
71,760
$
22,109
$
18,526
$
162,824
$
19,655,839
$
19,931,058
Covered loans
1,592
2,808
268
1,570
46,121
52,359
Total loans, net of unearned income
$
73,352
$
24,917
$
18,794
$
164,394
$
19,701,960
$
19,983,417
Aging as a % of Loan Balance:
As of March 31, 2017
Nonaccrual
90+ days
and still
accruing
60-89
days past
due
30-59
days past
due
Current
Total Loans
Commercial
Commercial, industrial and other
0.3
%
—
%
—
%
0.6
%
99.1
%
100.0
%
Franchise
—
—
—
0.1
99.9
100.0
Mortgage warehouse lines of credit
—
—
—
5.9
94.1
100.0
Asset-based lending
0.2
—
—
0.4
99.4
100.0
Leases
0.2
—
—
0.3
99.5
100.0
PCI - commercial
(1)
—
11.9
—
8.2
79.9
100.0
Total commercial
0.2
—
—
0.6
99.2
100.0
Commercial real estate
Construction
0.4
—
0.1
0.7
98.8
100.0
Land
0.3
—
—
3.1
96.6
100.0
Office
0.4
—
0.1
0.8
98.7
100.0
Industrial
0.9
—
—
0.3
98.8
100.0
Retail
0.1
—
—
0.5
99.4
100.0
Multi-family
0.1
—
—
0.6
99.3
100.0
Mixed use and other
0.3
—
0.2
0.7
98.8
100.0
PCI - commercial real estate
(1)
—
8.0
0.4
9.9
81.7
100.0
Total commercial real estate
0.3
0.2
0.1
0.9
98.5
100.0
Home equity
1.7
—
0.1
0.7
97.5
100.0
Residential real estate, including PCI
1.7
0.1
0.5
0.7
97.0
100.0
Premium finance receivables
Commercial insurance loans
0.5
0.2
0.3
1.0
98.0
100.0
Life insurance loans
—
0.1
0.1
1.0
98.8
100.0
PCI - life insurance loans
(1)
—
—
—
—
100.0
100.0
Consumer and other, including PCI
0.3
0.1
0.3
0.5
98.8
100.0
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
0.4
%
0.1
%
0.1
%
0.8
%
98.6
%
100.0
%
Covered loans
3.0
5.4
0.5
3.0
88.1
100.0
Total loans, net of unearned income
0.4
%
0.1
%
0.1
%
0.8
%
98.6
%
100.0
%
(1)
PCI loans represent loans acquired with evidence of credit quality deterioration since origination, in accordance with ASC 310-30. Loan agings are based upon contractually required payments.
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Table of Contents
As of
June 30, 2017
,
$16.1 million
of all loans, excluding covered loans, or
0.1%
, were 60 to 89 days past due and
$96.8 million
or
0.5%
, were 30 to 59 days (or one payment) past due. As of
March 31, 2017
,
$18.5 million
of all loans, excluding covered loans, or
0.1%
, were 60 to 89 days past due and
$162.8 million
, or
0.8%
, were 30 to 59 days (or one payment) past due. Many of the commercial and commercial real estate loans shown as 60 to 89 days and 30 to 59 days past due are included on the Company’s internal problem loan reporting system. Loans on this system are closely monitored by management on a monthly basis.
The Company's home equity and residential loan portfolios continue to exhibit low delinquency ratios. Home equity loans at
June 30, 2017
that were current with regard to the contractual terms of the loan agreement represent
98.1%
of the total home equity portfolio. Residential real estate loans at
June 30, 2017
that were current with regards to the contractual terms of the loan agreements comprise
97.8%
of total residential real estate loans outstanding.
Non-performing Loans Rollforward
The table below presents a summary of non-performing loans, excluding covered loans and PCI loans, for the periods presented:
Three Months Ended
Six Months Ended
June 30,
June 30,
June 30,
June 30,
(Dollars in thousands)
2017
2016
2017
2016
Balance at beginning of period
$
78,979
$
89,499
$
87,454
$
84,057
Additions, net
10,888
10,351
19,497
22,517
Return to performing status
(975
)
(873
)
(2,567
)
(2,879
)
Payments received
(10,684
)
(4,810
)
(16,298
)
(8,118
)
Transfer to OREO and other repossessed assets
(2,543
)
(1,818
)
(4,204
)
(3,898
)
Charge-offs
(4,344
)
(2,943
)
(5,624
)
(3,476
)
Net change for niche loans
(1)
(2,271
)
(1,287
)
(9,208
)
(84
)
Balance at end of period
$
69,050
$
88,119
$
69,050
$
88,119
(1)
This includes activity for premium finance receivables and indirect consumer loans.
PCI loans are excluded from non-performing loans as they continue to earn interest income from the related accretable yield, independent of performance with contractual terms of the loan. See Note 7 of the Consolidated Financial Statements in Item 1 for further discussion of non-performing loans and the loan aging during the respective periods.
Allowance for Loan Losses
The allowance for loan losses represents management’s estimate of the probable and reasonably estimable loan losses that our loan portfolio is expected to incur. The allowance for loan losses is determined quarterly using a methodology that incorporates important risk characteristics of each loan, as described below under “How We Determine the Allowance for Credit Losses” in this Item 2. This process is subject to review at each of our bank subsidiaries by the applicable regulatory authority, including the FRB of Chicago, the OCC, the State of Illinois and the State of Wisconsin.
Management determined that the allowance for loan losses was appropriate at
June 30, 2017
, and that the loan portfolio is well diversified and well secured, without undue concentration in any specific risk area. While this process involves a high degree of management judgment, the allowance for credit losses is based on a comprehensive, well documented, and consistently applied analysis of the Company’s loan portfolio. This analysis takes into consideration all available information existing as of the financial statement date, including environmental factors such as economic, industry, geographical and political factors. The relative level of allowance for credit losses is reviewed and compared to industry peers. This review encompasses levels of total non-performing loans, portfolio mix, portfolio concentrations, current geographic risks and overall levels of net charge-offs. Historical trending of both the Company’s results and the industry peers is also reviewed to analyze comparative significance.
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Allowance for Credit Losses, excluding covered loans
The following table summarizes the activity in our allowance for credit losses during the periods indicated.
Three Months Ended
Six Months Ended
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Allowance for loan losses at beginning of period
$
125,819
$
110,171
$
122,291
$
105,400
Provision for credit losses
8,952
9,269
14,268
17,692
Other adjustments
(30
)
(134
)
(86
)
(212
)
Reclassification to allowance for unfunded lending-related commitments
106
(40
)
(32
)
(121
)
Charge-offs:
Commercial
913
721
1,554
1,392
Commercial real estate
1,985
502
2,246
1,173
Home equity
1,631
2,046
2,256
3,098
Residential real estate
146
693
475
1,186
Premium finance receivables—commercial
1,878
1,911
3,305
4,391
Premium finance receivables—life insurance
—
—
—
—
Consumer and other
175
224
309
331
Total charge-offs
6,728
6,097
10,145
11,571
Recoveries:
Commercial
561
121
834
750
Commercial real estate
276
296
830
665
Home equity
144
71
209
119
Residential real estate
54
31
232
143
Premium finance receivables—commercial
404
633
1,016
1,420
Premium finance receivables—life insurance
—
—
—
—
Consumer and other
33
35
174
71
Total recoveries
1,472
1,187
3,295
3,168
Net charge-offs
(5,256
)
(4,910
)
(6,850
)
(8,403
)
Allowance for loan losses at period end
$
129,591
$
114,356
$
129,591
$
114,356
Allowance for unfunded lending-related commitments at period end
1,705
1,070
1,705
1,070
Allowance for credit losses at period end
$
131,296
$
115,426
$
131,296
$
115,426
Annualized net charge-offs by category as a percentage of its own respective category’s average:
Commercial
0.02
%
0.05
%
0.02
%
0.03
%
Commercial real estate
0.11
0.01
0.05
0.02
Home equity
0.85
1.03
0.58
0.77
Residential real estate
0.03
0.26
0.05
0.22
Premium finance receivables—commercial
0.23
0.21
0.19
0.25
Premium finance receivables—life insurance
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
Consumer and other
0.45
0.57
0.22
0.38
Total loans, net of unearned income, excluding covered loans
0.10
%
0.11
%
0.07
%
0.09
%
Net charge-offs as a percentage of the provision for credit losses
58.71
%
52.97
%
48.01
%
47.50
%
Loans at period-end, excluding covered loans
$
20,743,332
$
18,174,655
Allowance for loan losses as a percentage of loans at period end
0.62
%
0.63
%
Allowance for credit losses as a percentage of loans at period end
0.63
%
0.64
%
The allowance for credit losses, excluding the allowance for covered loan losses, is comprised of an allowance for loan losses, which is determined with respect to loans that we have originated, and an allowance for lending-related commitments. Our allowance for lending-related commitments is determined with respect to funds that we have committed to lend but for which funds have not yet been disbursed and is computed using a methodology similar to that used to determine the allowance for loan losses. The allowance for unfunded lending-related commitments totaled
$1.7 million
and
$1.1 million
as of
June 30, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
, respectively.
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Additions to the allowance for loan losses are charged to earnings through the provision for credit losses. Charge-offs represent the amount of loans that have been determined to be uncollectible during a given period, and are deducted from the allowance for loan losses, and recoveries represent the amount of collections received from loans that had previously been charged off, and are credited to the allowance for loan losses. See Note 7 of the Consolidated Financial Statements presented under Item 1 of this report for further discussion of activity within the allowance for loan losses during the period and the relationship with respective loan balances for each loan category and the total loan portfolio, excluding covered loans.
How We Determine the Allowance for Credit Losses
The allowance for loan losses includes an element for estimated probable but undetected losses and for imprecision in the credit risk models used to calculate the allowance. If the loan is impaired, the Company analyzes the loan for purposes of calculating our specific impairment reserves as part of the Problem Loan Reporting system review. A general reserve is separately determined for loans not considered impaired. See Note 7 of the Consolidated Financial Statements presented under Item 1 of this report for further discussion of the specific impairment reserve and general reserve as it relates to the allowance for credit losses for each loan category and the total loan portfolio, excluding covered loans.
Specific Impairment Reserves:
Loans with a credit risk rating of a 6 through 9 are reviewed on a monthly basis to determine if (a) an amount is deemed uncollectible (a charge-off) or (b) it is probable that the Company will be unable to collect amounts due in accordance with the original contractual terms of the loan (impaired loan). If a loan is impaired, the carrying amount of the loan is compared to the expected payments to be received, discounted at the loan’s original rate, or for collateral dependent loans, to the fair value of the collateral less the estimated cost to sell. Any shortfall is recorded as a specific impairment reserve.
At
June 30, 2017
, the Company had
$79.3 million
of impaired loans with
$29.0 million
of this balance requiring
$5.6 million
of specific impairment reserves. At
March 31, 2017
, the Company had
$87.5 million
of impaired loans with
$40.0 million
of this balance requiring
$8.2 million
of specific impairment reserves. The most significant fluctuations in the recorded investment of impaired loans with specific impairment from
March 31, 2017
to
June 30, 2017
occurred within the commercial real estate industrial and commercial real estate mixed use and other portfolios. The recorded investment and specific impairment reserves in the commercial real estate industrial portfolio decreased by $4.8 million and $1.7 million, respectively, which was primarily the result of the sale and partial charge-off of one relationship in the second quarter of 2017 with a recorded investment of $4.0 million and a specific impairment reserve of $1.7 million. The recorded investment and specific impairment reserves in the commercial real estate mixed use and other portfolio decreased by $4.0 million and $600,000, respectively. These decreases were primarily the result of three loans with total recorded investment of $3.0 million and specific impairment reserves of $586,000 no longer requiring specific impairment reserves during the second quarter of 2017. See Note 7 of the Consolidated Financial Statements presented under Item 1 of this report for further discussion of impaired loans and the related specific impairment reserve.
General Reserves:
For loans with a credit risk rating of 1 through 7 that are not considered impaired loans, reserves are established based on the type of loan collateral, if any, and the assigned credit risk rating. Determination of the allowance is inherently subjective as it requires significant estimates, including the amounts and timing of expected future cash flows on impaired loans, estimated losses on pools of homogeneous loans based on the average historical loss experience over a six-year period, and consideration of current environmental factors and economic trends, all of which may be susceptible to significant change.
We determine this component of the allowance for loan losses by classifying each loan into (i) categories based on the type of collateral that secures the loan (if any), and (ii) one of ten categories based on the credit risk rating of the loan, as described above under “Past Due Loans and Non-Performing Assets” in this Item 2. Each combination of collateral and credit risk rating is then assigned a specific loss factor that incorporates the following factors:
•
historical loss experience;
•
changes in lending policies and procedures, including changes in underwriting standards and collection, charge-off, and recovery practices not considered elsewhere in estimating credit losses;
•
changes in national, regional, and local economic and business conditions and developments that affect the collectibility of the portfolio;
•
changes in the nature and volume of the portfolio and in the terms of the loans;
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•
changes in the experience, ability, and depth of lending management and other relevant staff;
•
changes in the volume and severity of past due loans, the volume of non-accrual loans, and the volume and severity of adversely classified or graded loans;
•
changes in the quality of the bank’s loan review system;
•
changes in the underlying collateral for collateral dependent loans;
•
the existence and effect of any concentrations of credit, and changes in the level of such concentrations; and
•
the effect of other external factors such as competition and legal and regulatory requirements on the level of estimated credit losses in the bank’s existing portfolio.
In 2017, the Company modified its historical loss experience analysis by incorporating seven-year average loss rate assumptions, for its historical loss experience to capture an extended credit cycle. The current seven-year average loss rate assumption analysis is computed for each of the Company’s collateral codes. The historical loss experience is combined with the specific loss factor for each combination of collateral and credit risk rating which is then applied to each individual loan balance to determine an appropriate general reserve. The historical loss rates are updated on a quarterly basis and are driven by the performance of the portfolio and any changes to the specific loss factors are driven by management judgment and analysis of the factors described above. The Company also analyzes the three-, four-, five- and six-year average historical loss rates on a quarterly basis as a comparison.
Home Equity and Residential Real Estate Loans:
The determination of the appropriate allowance for loan losses for residential real estate and home equity loans differs slightly from the process used for commercial and commercial real estate loans. The same credit risk rating system, Problem Loan Reporting system, collateral coding methodology and loss factor assignment are used. The only significant difference is in how the credit risk ratings are assigned to these loans.
The home equity loan portfolio is reviewed on a loan by loan basis by analyzing current FICO scores of the borrowers, line availability, recent line usage, an approaching maturity and the aging status of the loan. Certain of these factors, or combination of these factors, may cause a portion of the credit risk ratings of home equity loans across all banks to be downgraded. Similar to commercial and commercial real estate loans, once a home equity loan’s credit risk rating is downgraded to a 6 through 9, the Company’s Managed Asset Division reviews and advises the subsidiary banks as to collateral valuations and as to the ultimate resolution of the credits that deteriorate to a non-accrual status to minimize losses.
Residential real estate loans that are downgraded to a credit risk rating of 6 through 9 also enter the problem loan reporting system and have the underlying collateral evaluated by the Managed Assets Division.
Premium Finance Receivables:
The determination of the appropriate allowance for loan losses for premium finance receivables is based on the assigned credit risk rating of loans in the portfolio. Loss factors are assigned to each risk rating in order to calculate an allowance for credit losses. The allowance for loan losses for these categories is entirely a general reserve.
Methodology in Assessing Impairment and Charge-off Amounts
In determining the amount of impairment or charge-offs associated with collateral dependent loans, the Company values the loan generally by starting with a valuation obtained from an appraisal of the underlying collateral and then deducting estimated selling costs to arrive at a net appraised value. We obtain the appraisals of the underlying collateral typically on an annual basis from one of a pre-approved list of independent, third party appraisal firms. Types of appraisal valuations include “as-is,” “as-complete,” “as-stabilized,” bulk, fair market, liquidation and “retail sellout” values.
In many cases, the Company simultaneously values the underlying collateral by marketing the property to market participants interested in purchasing properties of the same type. If the Company receives offers or indications of interest, we will analyze the price and review market conditions to assess whether in light of such information the appraised value overstates the likely price and that a lower price would be a better assessment of the market value of the property and would enable us to liquidate the
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collateral. Additionally, the Company takes into account the strength of any guarantees and the ability of the borrower to provide value related to those guarantees in determining the ultimate charge-off or reserve associated with any impaired loans. Accordingly, the Company may charge-off a loan to a value below the net appraised value if it believes that an expeditious liquidation is desirable in the circumstance and it has legitimate offers or other indications of interest to support a value that is less than the net appraised value. Alternatively, the Company may carry a loan at a value that is in excess of the appraised value if the Company has a guarantee from a borrower that the Company believes has realizable value. In evaluating the strength of any guarantee, the Company evaluates the financial wherewithal of the guarantor, the guarantor’s reputation, and the guarantor’s willingness and desire to work with the Company. The Company then conducts a review of the strength of a guarantee on a frequency established as the circumstances and conditions of the borrower warrant.
In circumstances where the Company has received an appraisal but has no third party offers or indications of interest, the Company may enlist the input of realtors in the local market as to the highest valuation that the realtor believes would result in a liquidation of the property given a reasonable marketing period of approximately 90 days. To the extent that the realtors’ indication of market clearing price under such scenario is less than the net appraised valuation, the Company may take a charge-off on the loan to a valuation that is less than the net appraised valuation.
The Company may also charge-off a loan below the net appraised valuation if the Company holds a junior mortgage position in a piece of collateral whereby the risk to acquiring control of the property through the purchase of the senior mortgage position is deemed to potentially increase the risk of loss upon liquidation due to the amount of time to ultimately market the property and the volatile market conditions. In such cases, the Company may abandon its junior mortgage and charge-off the loan balance in full.
In other cases, the Company may allow the borrower to conduct a “short sale,” which is a sale where the Company allows the borrower to sell the property at a value less than the amount of the loan. Many times, it is possible for the current owner to receive a better price than if the property is marketed by a financial institution which the market place perceives to have a greater desire to liquidate the property at a lower price. To the extent that we allow a short sale at a price below the value indicated by an appraisal, we may take a charge-off beyond the value that an appraisal would have indicated.
Other market conditions may require a reserve to bring the carrying value of the loan below the net appraised valuation such as litigation surrounding the borrower and/or property securing our loan or other market conditions impacting the value of the collateral.
Having determined the net value based on the factors such as those noted above and compared that value to the book value of the loan, the Company arrives at a charge-off amount or a specific reserve included in the allowance for loan losses. In summary, for collateral dependent loans, appraisals are used as the fair value starting point in the estimate of net value. Estimated costs to sell are deducted from the appraised value to arrive at the net appraised value. Although an external appraisal is the primary source of valuation utilized for charge-offs on collateral dependent loans, alternative sources of valuation may become available between appraisal dates. As a result, we may utilize values obtained through these alternating sources, which include purchase and sale agreements, legitimate indications of interest, negotiated short sales, realtor price opinions, sale of the note or support from guarantors, as the basis for charge-offs. These alternative sources of value are used only if deemed to be more representative of value based on updated information regarding collateral resolution. In addition, if an appraisal is not deemed current, a discount to appraised value may be utilized. Any adjustments from appraised value to net value are detailed and justified in an impairment analysis, which is reviewed and approved by the Company’s Managed Assets Division.
TDRs
At
June 30, 2017
, the Company had
$33.1 million
in loans modified in TDRs. The
$33.1 million
in TDRs represents
77
credits in which economic concessions were granted to certain borrowers to better align the terms of their loans with their current ability to pay. The balance decreased from
$39.7 million
representing
85
credits at
March 31, 2017
and decreased from
$49.6 million
representing
97
credits at
June 30, 2016
.
Concessions were granted on a case-by-case basis working with these borrowers to find modified terms that would assist them in retaining their businesses or their homes and attempt to keep these loans in an accruing status for the Company. Typical concessions include reduction of the interest rate on the loan to a rate considered lower than market and other modification of terms including forgiveness of a portion of the loan balance, extension of the maturity date, and/or modifications from principal and interest payments to interest-only payments for a certain period. See Note 7 of the Consolidated Financial Statements in Item 1 of this report for further discussion regarding the effectiveness of these modifications in keeping the modified loans current based upon contractual terms.
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Subsequent to its restructuring, any TDR that becomes nonaccrual or more than 90 days past-due and still accruing interest will be included in the Company’s non-performing loans. Each TDR was reviewed for impairment at
June 30, 2017
and approximately
$953,000
of impairment was present and appropriately reserved for through the Company’s normal reserving methodology in the Company’s allowance for loan losses. Additionally, at
June 30, 2017
, the Company was committed to lend additional
$122,000
funds to borrowers under the contractual terms of TDRs.
The table below presents a summary of restructured loans for the respective periods, presented by loan category and accrual status:
June 30,
March 31,
June 30,
(Dollars in thousands)
2017
2017
2016
Accruing TDRs:
Commercial
$
3,886
$
4,607
$
3,931
Commercial real estate
17,349
18,923
24,450
Residential real estate and other
6,773
4,862
4,929
Total accruing TDRs
$
28,008
$
28,392
$
33,310
Non-accrual TDRs:
(1)
Commercial
$
1,110
$
1,424
$
1,477
Commercial real estate
1,839
7,338
12,240
Residential real estate and other
2,134
2,515
2,608
Total non-accrual TDRs
$
5,083
$
11,277
$
16,325
Total TDRs:
Commercial
$
4,996
$
6,031
$
5,408
Commercial real estate
19,188
26,261
36,690
Residential real estate and other
8,907
7,377
7,537
Total TDRs
$
33,091
$
39,669
$
49,635
Weighted-average contractual interest rate of TDRs
4.28
%
4.37
%
4.31
%
(1)
Included in total non-performing loans.
TDR Rollforward
The tables below present a summary of TDRs as of
June 30, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
, and shows the changes in the balance during those periods:
Three Months Ended June 30, 2017
(Dollars in thousands)
Commercial
Commercial
Real Estate
Residential
Real Estate
and Other
Total
Balance at beginning of period
$
6,031
$
26,261
$
7,377
$
39,669
Additions during the period
—
—
2,210
2,210
Reductions:
Charge-offs
(287
)
(805
)
—
(1,092
)
Transferred to OREO and other repossessed assets
—
(610
)
—
(610
)
Removal of TDR loan status
(1)
(610
)
(1,648
)
—
(2,258
)
Payments received
(138
)
(4,010
)
(680
)
(4,828
)
Balance at period end
$
4,996
$
19,188
$
8,907
$
33,091
(1)
Loan was previously classified as a TDR and subsequently performed in compliance with the loan's modified
terms for a period of six months (including over a calendar year-end) at a modified interest rate which represented a market rate at the time of restructuring. Per our TDR policy, the TDR classification is removed.
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Table of Contents
Three Months Ended June 30, 2016
(
Dollars in thousands)
Commercial
Commercial
Real Estate
Residential
Real Estate
and Other
Total
Balance at beginning of period
$
5,225
$
39,888
$
7,442
$
52,555
Additions during the period
275
—
380
655
Reductions:
Charge-offs
—
(410
)
(212
)
(622
)
Transferred to OREO and other repossessed assets
—
(684
)
—
(684
)
Removal of TDR loan status
(1)
—
(739
)
—
(739
)
Payments received
(92
)
(1,365
)
(73
)
(1,530
)
Balance at period end
$
5,408
$
36,690
$
7,537
$
49,635
Six Months Ended June 30, 2017
(Dollars in thousands)
Commercial
Commercial
Real Estate
Residential
Real Estate
and Other
Total
Balance at beginning of period
$
6,130
$
28,146
$
7,432
$
41,708
Additions during the period
95
1,245
2,383
3,723
Reductions:
Charge-offs
(315
)
(925
)
(77
)
(1,317
)
Transferred to OREO and other repossessed assets
—
(610
)
(96
)
(706
)
Removal of TDR loan status
(1)
(610
)
(2,331
)
—
(2,941
)
Payments received
(304
)
(6,337
)
(735
)
(7,376
)
Balance at period end
$
4,996
$
19,188
$
8,907
$
33,091
Six Months Ended June 30, 2016
(
Dollars in thousands)
Commercial
Commercial
Real Estate
Residential
Real Estate
and Other
Total
Balance at beginning of period
$
5,747
$
38,707
$
7,399
$
51,853
Additions during the period
317
8,521
540
9,378
Reductions:
Charge-offs
(20
)
(834
)
(212
)
(1,066
)
Transferred to OREO and other repossessed assets
—
(684
)
—
(684
)
Removal of TDR loan status (1)
—
(5,156
)
—
(5,156
)
Payments received
(636
)
(3,864
)
(190
)
(4,690
)
Balance at period end
$
5,408
$
36,690
$
7,537
$
49,635
(1)
Loan was previously classified as a TDR and subsequently performed in compliance with the loan's modified
terms for a period of six months (including over a calendar year-end) at a modified interest rate which represented a market rate at the time of restructuring. Per our TDR policy, the TDR classification is removed.
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Other Real Estate Owned
In certain circumstances, the Company is required to take action against the real estate collateral of specific loans. The Company uses foreclosure only as a last resort for dealing with borrowers experiencing financial hardships. The Company employs extensive contact and restructuring procedures to attempt to find other solutions for our borrowers. The tables below present a summary of other real estate owned, excluding covered other real estate owned, and shows the activity for the respective periods and the balance for each property type:
Three Months Ended
Six Months Ended
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
June 30,
2017
June 30,
2016
Balance at beginning of period
$
39,864
$
41,002
$
40,282
$
43,945
Disposal/resolved
(4,270
)
(6,591
)
(6,914
)
(13,357
)
Transfers in at fair value, less costs to sell
3,965
1,309
6,233
4,600
Transfers in from covered OREO subsequent to loss share expiration
—
3,300
760
3,300
Additions from acquisition
—
—
—
1,064
Fair value adjustments
(198
)
(957
)
(1,000
)
(1,489
)
Balance at end of period
$
39,361
$
38,063
$
39,361
$
38,063
Period End
(Dollars in thousands)
June 30,
2017
March 31,
2017
June 30,
2016
Residential real estate
$
7,684
$
7,597
$
9,153
Residential real estate development
755
1,240
2,133
Commercial real estate
30,922
31,027
26,777
Total
$
39,361
$
39,864
$
38,063
Deposits
Total deposits at
June 30, 2017
were
$22.6 billion
,
an increase of
$2.6 billion
, or
13%
, compared to total deposits at
June 30, 2016
. See Note 9 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Item 1 of this report for a summary of period end deposit balances.
The following table sets forth, by category, the maturity of time certificates of deposit as of
June 30, 2017
:
Time Certificates of Deposit
Maturity/Re-pricing Analysis
As of June 30, 2017
(Dollars in thousands)
CDARs &
Brokered
Certificates
of Deposit
(1)
MaxSafe
Certificates
of Deposit
(1)
Variable Rate
Certificates
of Deposit
(2)
Other Fixed
Rate Certificates
of Deposit
(1)
Total Time
Certificates of
Deposits
Weighted-Average
Rate of Maturing
Time Certificates
of Deposit
(3)
1-3 months
$
537
$
37,577
$
128,018
$
637,354
$
803,486
0.67
%
4-6 months
1,252
30,757
—
792,236
824,245
0.91
%
7-9 months
1,494
25,237
—
826,270
853,001
0.99
%
10-12 months
59,732
15,749
—
714,749
790,230
1.04
%
13-18 months
—
17,213
—
737,219
754,432
1.17
%
19-24 months
249
10,922
—
179,144
190,315
1.25
%
24+ months
1,000
17,467
—
285,216
303,683
1.45
%
Total
$
64,264
$
154,922
$
128,018
$
4,172,188
$
4,519,392
1.00
%
(1)
This category of certificates of deposit is shown by contractual maturity date.
(2)
This category includes variable rate certificates of deposit and savings certificates with the majority repricing on at least a monthly basis.
(3)
Weighted-average rate excludes the impact of purchase accounting fair value adjustments.
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The following table sets forth, by category, the composition of average deposit balances and the relative percentage of total average deposits for the periods presented:
Three Months Ended
June 30, 2017
March 31, 2017
June 30, 2016
(Dollars in thousands)
Balance
Percent
Balance
Percent
Balance
Percent
Non-interest bearing
$
5,904,679
27
%
$
5,787,034
27
%
$
5,223,384
28
%
NOW and interest bearing demand deposits
2,470,131
11
2,512,598
12
2,383,125
12
Wealth management deposits
2,091,251
10
2,082,285
10
1,585,607
8
Money market
4,435,670
21
4,407,902
21
4,308,657
22
Savings
2,329,195
11
2,227,024
10
1,803,421
9
Time certificates of deposit
4,295,427
20
4,236,861
20
3,985,185
21
Total average deposits
$
21,526,353
100
%
$
21,253,704
100
%
$
19,289,379
100
%
Total average deposits for the
second quarter of 2017
were $21.5 billion, an increase of $2.2 billion, or 12%, from the
second quarter of 2016
. The increase in average deposits is primarily attributable to additional deposits associated with the Company's bank acquisitions as well as increased commercial lending relationships. The Company continues to see a beneficial shift in its deposit mix as average non-interest bearing deposits increased $681.3 million, or 13%, in the
second quarter of 2017
compared to the
second quarter of 2016
.
Wealth management deposits are funds from the brokerage customers of WHI, the trust and asset management customers of the Company and brokerage customers from unaffiliated companies which have been placed into deposit accounts of the banks (“wealth management deposits” in the table above). Wealth Management deposits consist primarily of money market accounts. Consistent with reasonable interest rate risk parameters, these funds have generally been invested in loan production of the banks as well as other investments suitable for banks.
Brokered Deposits
While the Company obtains a portion of its total deposits through brokered deposits, the Company does so primarily as an asset-liability management tool to assist in the management of interest rate risk, and the Company does not consider brokered deposits to be a vital component of its current liquidity resources. Historically, brokered deposits have represented a small component of the Company’s total deposits outstanding, as set forth in the table below:
June 30,
December 31,
(Dollars in thousands)
2017
2016
2016
2015
2014
Total deposits
$
22,605,692
$
20,041,750
$
21,658,632
$
18,639,634
$
16,281,844
Brokered deposits
1,552,893
1,020,233
1,159,475
862,026
718,986
Brokered deposits as a percentage of total deposits
6.9
%
5.1
%
5.4
%
4.6
%
4.4
%
Brokered deposits include certificates of deposit obtained through deposit brokers, deposits received through the Certificate of Deposit Account Registry Program (“CDARS”), and wealth management deposits of brokerage customers from unaffiliated companies which have been placed into deposit accounts of the banks.
Other Funding Sources
Although deposits are the Company’s primary source of funding its interest-earning assets, the Company’s ability to manage the types and terms of deposits is somewhat limited by customer preferences and market competition. As a result, in addition to deposits and the issuance of equity securities and the retention of earnings, the Company uses several other funding sources to support its growth. These sources include short-term borrowings, notes payable, FHLB advances, subordinated debt, secured borrowings and junior subordinated debentures. The Company evaluates the terms and unique characteristics of each source, as well as its asset-liability management position, in determining the use of such funding sources.
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The following table sets forth, by category, the composition of the average balances of other funding sources for the quarterly periods presented:
Three Months Ended
June 30,
March 31,
June 30,
(Dollars in thousands)
2017
2017
2016
FHLB advances
$
689,600
$
181,338
$
946,081
Other borrowings:
Notes payable
48,662
52,363
63,642
Short-term borrowings
42,074
52,002
41,597
Secured borrowings
131,582
132,577
124,317
Other
18,229
18,070
18,677
Total other borrowings
$
240,547
$
255,012
$
248,233
Subordinated notes
139,007
138,980
138,898
Junior subordinated debentures
253,566
253,566
253,566
Total other funding sources
$
1,322,720
$
828,896
$
1,586,778
FHLB advances provide the banks with access to fixed rate funds which are useful in mitigating interest rate risk and achieving an acceptable interest rate spread on fixed rate loans or securities. Additionally, the banks have the ability to borrow shorter-term, overnight funding from the FHLB for other general purposes. FHLB advances to the banks totaled
$318.3 million
at
June 30, 2017
, compared to
$227.6 million
at
March 31, 2017
and
$588.1 million
at
June 30, 2016
.
Notes payable balances represent the balances on a
$150 million
loan agreement with unaffiliated banks consisting of a
$75.0 million
revolving credit facility and a
$75.0 million
term facility. Both loan facilities are available for corporate purposes such as to provide capital to fund continued growth at existing bank subsidiaries, possible future acquisitions and for other general corporate matters. At
June 30, 2017
, the Company had a balance under the term facility of
$45.0 million
compared to
$52.4 million
at
March 31, 2017
and
$59.9 million
at
June 30, 2016
. The Company was contractually required to borrow the entire amount of the term facility on
June 15, 2015
and all such borrowings must be repaid by
June 15, 2020
. At
June 30, 2017
,
March 31, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
, the Company had no outstanding balance on the
$75.0 million
revolving credit facility.
Short-term borrowings include securities sold under repurchase agreements and federal funds purchased. These borrowings totaled
$46.3 million
at
June 30, 2017
compared to
$39.2 million
at
March 31, 2017
and
$38.8 million
at
June 30, 2016
. Securities sold under repurchase agreements represent sweep accounts for certain customers in connection with master repurchase agreements at the banks. This funding category typically fluctuates based on customer preferences and daily liquidity needs of the banks, their customers and the banks’ operating subsidiaries.
The average balance of secured borrowings primarily represents a third party Canadian transaction ("Canadian Secured Borrowing"). Under the Canadian Secured Borrowing, in December 2014, the Company, through its subsidiary, FIFC Canada, sold an undivided co-ownership interest in all receivables owed to FIFC Canada to an unrelated third party in exchange for a cash payment of approximately
C$150 million
pursuant to a receivables purchase agreement (“Receivables Purchase Agreement”). The Receivables Purchase Agreement was amended in December 2015, effectively extending the maturity date from December 15, 2015 to December 15, 2017. Additionally, at that time, the unrelated third party paid an additional
C$10 million
, which increased the total payments to
C$160 million
. The proceeds received from these transactions are reflected on the Company’s Consolidated Statements of Condition as a secured borrowing owed to the unrelated third party and translated to the Company’s reporting currency as of the respective date. The translated balance of the Canadian Secured Borrowing under the Receivables Purchase Agreement totaled
$123.4 million
at
June 30, 2017
compared to
$120.1 million
at
March 31, 2017
and
$123.7 million
at
June 30, 2016
. At
June 30, 2017
, the interest rate of the Canadian Secured Borrowing was
1.6431%
.
Other borrowings include fixed-rate promissory notes related to office buildings owned by the Company and non-recourse notes issued by the Company to other banks related to certain capital leases. At
June 30, 2017
, the fixed-rate promissory note had a balance of
$49.5 million
compared to
$17.6 million
at
March 31, 2017
and
$18.0 million
at
June 30, 2016
. The increase in the second quarter of 2017 was the result of the Company issuing a $49.6 million fixed-rate promissory note in June 2017. At that time, the previous note to an unrelated creditor was paid-off by the Company.
At
June 30, 2017
, the Company had outstanding subordinated notes totaling
$139.0 million
compared to
$139.0 million
and
$138.9 million
outstanding at
March 31, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
, respectively. The notes have a stated interest rate of
5.00%
and mature in
June 2024
. These notes are stated at par adjusted for unamortized costs paid related to the issuance of this debt.
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The Company had
$253.6 million
of junior subordinated debentures outstanding as of
June 30, 2017
,
March 31, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
.
The amounts reflected on the balance sheet represent the junior subordinated debentures issued to
eleven
trusts by the Company and equal the amount of the preferred and common securities issued by the trusts. In January 2016, the Company acquired
$15.0 million
of the
$40.0 million
of trust preferred securities issued by Wintrust Capital Trust VIII from a third-party investor. The purchase effectively extinguished
$15.0 million
of junior subordinated debentures related to Wintrust Capital Trust VIII and resulted in a
$4.3 million
gain from the early extinguishment of debt.
Starting in 2016,
none
of the junior subordinated debentures qualified as Tier 1 regulatory capital of the Company resulting in
$245.5 million
of the junior subordinated debentures, net of common securities, being included in the Company's Tier 2 regulatory capital.
See Notes 10 and 11 of the Consolidated Financial Statements presented under Item 1 of this report for details of period end balances and other information for these various funding sources.
Shareholders’ Equity
The following tables reflect various consolidated measures of capital as of the dates presented and the capital guidelines established by the FRB for a bank holding company:
June 30,
2017
March 31,
2017
June 30,
2016
Leverage ratio
9.2
%
9.3
%
9.2
%
Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets
9.8
10.0
10.1
Common equity Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets
9.3
8.9
8.9
Total capital to risk-weighted assets
12.0
12.2
12.4
Total average equity-to-total average assets
(1)
10.8
10.9
10.4
(1)
Based on quarterly average balances.
Minimum
Capital
Requirements
Well
Capitalized
Leverage ratio
4.0
%
5.0
%
Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets
6.0
8.0
Common equity Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets
4.5
6.5
Total capital to risk-weighted assets
8.0
10.0
The Company’s principal sources of funds at the holding company level are dividends from its subsidiaries, borrowings under its loan agreement with unaffiliated banks and proceeds from the issuances of subordinated debt and additional equity. Refer to Notes 10, 11 and 16 of the Consolidated Financial Statements in Item 1 for further information on these various funding sources. Management is committed to maintaining the Company’s capital levels above the “Well Capitalized” levels established by the FRB for bank holding companies.
The Company’s Board of Directors approves dividends from time to time, however, the ability to declare a dividend is limited by the Company's financial condition, the terms of the Company's Series D preferred stock, the terms of the Company’s Trust Preferred Securities offerings and under certain financial covenants in the Company’s revolving and term facilities. In January and April of 2017, the Company declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.14 per common share. In January, April, July and October of 2016, the Company declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.12 per common share.
See Note 16 of the Consolidated Financial Statements presented under Item 1 of this report for details on the Company’s issuance of Series D and Series C preferred stock in June 2015 and March 2012, respectively, as well as details on the Company's offering of common stock in June 2016. The Company hereby incorporates by reference Note 16 of the Consolidated Financial Statements presented under Item 1 of this report in its entirety.
LIQUIDITY
Wintrust manages the liquidity position of its banking operations to ensure that sufficient funds are available to meet customers’ needs for loans and deposit withdrawals. The liquidity to meet these demands is provided by maturing assets, liquid assets that can be converted to cash and the ability to attract funds from external sources. Liquid assets refer to money market assets such as
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Federal funds sold and interest bearing deposits with banks, as well as available-for-sale debt securities which are not pledged to secure public funds.
The Company believes that it has sufficient funds and access to funds to meet its working capital and other needs. Please refer to Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operation - Interest-Earning Assets, -Deposits, -Other Funding Sources and -Shareholders’ Equity sections of this report for additional information regarding the Company’s liquidity position.
INFLATION
A banking organization’s assets and liabilities are primarily monetary. Changes in the rate of inflation do not have as great an impact on the financial condition of a bank as do changes in interest rates. Moreover, interest rates do not necessarily change at the same percentage as inflation. Accordingly, changes in inflation are not expected to have a material impact on the Company. An analysis of the Company’s asset and liability structure provides the best indication of how the organization is positioned to respond to changing interest rates. See “Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risks” section of this report for additional information.
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
This document contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities laws. Forward-looking information can be identified through the use of words such as “intend,” “plan,” “project,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “contemplate,” “possible,” “point,” “will,” “may,” “should,” “would” and “could.” Forward-looking statements and information are not historical facts, are premised on many factors and assumptions, and represent only management’s expectations, estimates and projections regarding future events. Similarly, these statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve certain risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict, which may include, but are not limited to, those listed below and the Risk Factors discussed under Item 1A of the Company’s
2016
Annual Report on Form 10-K and in any of the Company’s subsequent SEC filings. The Company intends such forward-looking statements to be covered by the safe harbor provisions for forward-looking statements contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, and is including this statement for purposes of invoking these safe harbor provisions. Such forward-looking statements may be deemed to include, among other things, statements relating to the Company’s future financial performance, the performance of its loan portfolio, the expected amount of future credit reserves and charge-offs, delinquency trends, growth plans, regulatory developments, securities that the Company may offer from time to time, and management’s long-term performance goals, as well as statements relating to the anticipated effects on financial condition and results of operations from expected developments or events, the Company’s business and growth strategies, including future acquisitions of banks, specialty finance or wealth management businesses, internal growth and plans to form additional de novo banks or branch offices. Actual results could differ materially from those addressed in the forward-looking statements as a result of numerous factors, including the following:
•
negative economic conditions that adversely affect the economy, housing prices, the job market and other factors that may affect the Company’s liquidity and the performance of its loan portfolios, particularly in the markets in which it operates;
•
the extent of defaults and losses on the Company’s loan portfolio, which may require further increases in its allowance for credit losses;
•
estimates of fair value of certain of the Company’s assets and liabilities, which could change in value significantly from period to period;
•
the financial success and economic viability of the borrowers of our commercial loans;
•
commercial real estate market conditions in the Chicago metropolitan area and southern Wisconsin;
•
the extent of commercial and consumer delinquencies and declines in real estate values, which may require further increases in the Company’s allowance for loan and lease losses;
•
inaccurate assumptions in our analytical and forecasting models used to manage our loan portfolio;
•
changes in the level and volatility of interest rates, the capital markets and other market indices that may affect, among other things, the Company’s liquidity and the value of its assets and liabilities;
•
competitive pressures in the financial services business which may affect the pricing of the Company’s loan and deposit products as well as its services (including wealth management services), which may result in loss of market share and reduced income from deposits, loans, advisory fees and income from other products;
•
failure to identify and complete favorable acquisitions in the future or unexpected difficulties or developments related to the integration of the Company’s recent or future acquisitions;
•
unexpected difficulties and losses related to FDIC-assisted acquisitions, including those resulting from our loss-sharing arrangements with the FDIC;
•
any negative perception of the Company’s reputation or financial strength;
•
ability of the Company to raise additional capital on acceptable terms when needed;
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•
disruption in capital markets, which may lower fair values for the Company’s investment portfolio;
•
ability of the Company to use technology to provide products and services that will satisfy customer demands and create efficiencies in operations and to manage risks associated therewith;
•
adverse effects on our information technology systems resulting from failures, human error or cyberattack, any of which could result in an information or security breach, the disclosure or misuse of confidential or proprietary information, significant legal and financial losses and reputational harm;
•
adverse effects of failures by our vendors to provide agreed upon services in the manner and at the cost agreed, particularly our information technology vendors;
•
increased costs as a result of protecting our customers from the impact of stolen debit card information;
•
accuracy and completeness of information the Company receives about customers and counterparties to make credit decisions;
•
ability of the Company to attract and retain senior management experienced in the banking and financial services industries;
•
environmental liability risk associated with lending activities;
•
the impact of any claims or legal actions to which the Company is subject, including any effect on our reputation;
•
losses incurred in connection with repurchases and indemnification payments related to mortgages and increases in reserves associated therewith;
•
the loss of customers as a result of technological changes allowing consumers to complete their financial transactions without the use of a bank;
•
the soundness of other financial institutions;
•
the expenses and delayed returns inherent in opening new branches and de novo banks;
•
examinations and challenges by tax authorities;
•
changes in accounting standards, rules and interpretations and the impact on the Company’s financial statements;
•
the ability of the Company to receive dividends from its subsidiaries;
•
a decrease in the Company’s regulatory capital ratios, including as a result of further declines in the value of its loan portfolios, or otherwise;
•
legislative or regulatory changes, particularly changes in regulation of financial services companies and/or the products and services offered by financial services companies, including those resulting from the Dodd-Frank Act;
•
a lowering of our credit rating;
•
changes in U.S. monetary policy;
•
restrictions upon our ability to market our products to consumers and limitations on our ability to profitably operate our mortgage business resulting from the Dodd-Frank Act;
•
increased costs of compliance, heightened regulatory capital requirements and other risks associated with changes in regulation and the current regulatory environment, including the Dodd-Frank Act;
•
the impact of heightened capital requirements;
•
increases in the Company’s FDIC insurance premiums, or the collection of special assessments by the FDIC;
•
delinquencies or fraud with respect to the Company’s premium finance business;
•
credit downgrades among commercial and life insurance providers that could negatively affect the value of collateral securing the Company’s premium finance loans;
•
the Company’s ability to comply with covenants under its credit facility; and
•
fluctuations in the stock market, which may have an adverse impact on the Company’s wealth management business and brokerage operation.
Therefore, there can be no assurances that future actual results will correspond to these forward-looking statements. The reader is cautioned not to place undue reliance on any forward-looking statement made by the Company. Any such statement speaks only as of the date the statement was made or as of such date that may be referenced within the statement. The Company undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statement to reflect the impact of circumstances or events that arise after the date the forward-looking statement was made. Persons are advised, however, to consult further disclosures management makes on related subjects in its reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and in its press releases.
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ITEM 3
QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISKS
As an ongoing part of its financial strategy, the Company attempts to manage the impact of fluctuations in market interest rates on net interest income. This effort entails providing a reasonable balance between interest rate risk, credit risk, liquidity risk and maintenance of yield. Asset-liability management policies are established and monitored by management in conjunction with the boards of directors of the banks, subject to general oversight by the Risk Management Committee of the Company’s Board of Directors. The policies establish guidelines for acceptable limits on the sensitivity of the market value of assets and liabilities to changes in interest rates.
Interest rate risk arises when the maturity or re-pricing periods and interest rate indices of the interest earning assets, interest bearing liabilities, and derivative financial instruments are different. It is the risk that changes in the level of market interest rates will result in disproportionate changes in the value of, and the net earnings generated from, the Company’s interest earning assets, interest bearing liabilities and derivative financial instruments. The Company continuously monitors not only the organization’s current net interest margin, but also the historical trends of these margins. In addition, management attempts to identify potential adverse changes in net interest income in future years as a result of interest rate fluctuations by performing simulation analysis of various interest rate environments. If a potential adverse change in net interest margin and/or net income is identified, management would take appropriate actions with its asset-liability structure to mitigate these potentially adverse situations.
Since the Company’s primary source of interest bearing liabilities is from customer deposits, the Company’s ability to manage the types and terms of such deposits is somewhat limited by customer preferences and local competition in the market areas in which the banks operate. The rates, terms and interest rate indices of the Company’s interest earning assets result primarily from the Company’s strategy of investing in loans and securities that permit the Company to limit its exposure to interest rate risk, together with credit risk, while at the same time achieving an acceptable interest rate spread.
The Company’s exposure to interest rate risk is reviewed on a regular basis by management and the Risk Management Committees of the boards of directors of the banks and the Company. The objective of the review is to measure the effect on net income and to adjust balance sheet and derivative financial instruments to minimize the inherent risk while at the same time maximize net interest income.
The following interest rate scenarios display the percentage change in net interest income over a one-year time horizon assuming increases of 100 and 200 basis points and decreases of 100 basis points. The Static Shock Scenario results incorporate actual cash flows and repricing characteristics for balance sheet instruments following an instantaneous, parallel change in market rates based upon a static (i.e. no growth or constant) balance sheet. Conversely, the Ramp Scenario results incorporate management’s projections of future volume and pricing of each of the product lines following a gradual, parallel change in market rates over twelve months. Actual results may differ from these simulated results due to timing, magnitude, and frequency of interest rate changes as well as changes in market conditions and management strategies. The interest rate sensitivity for both the Static Shock and Ramp Scenarios at
June 30, 2017
,
March 31, 2017
and
June 30, 2016
is as follows:
Static Shock Scenarios
+200
Basis
Points
+100
Basis
Points
-100
Basis
Points
June 30, 2017
19.3
%
10.4
%
(13.5
)%
March 31, 2017
17.7
%
9.3
%
(13.2
)%
June 30, 2016
16.9
%
8.9
%
(8.9
)%
Ramp Scenarios
+200
Basis
Points
+100
Basis
Points
-100
Basis
Points
June 30, 2017
7.8
%
4.0
%
(4.6
)%
March 31, 2017
7.3
%
3.9
%
(4.8
)%
June 30, 2016
7.0
%
3.5
%
(3.7
)%
One method utilized by financial institutions, including the Company, to manage interest rate risk is to enter into derivative financial instruments. Derivative financial instruments include interest rate swaps, interest rate caps and floors, futures, forwards, option contracts and other financial instruments with similar characteristics. Additionally, the Company enters into commitments to fund certain mortgage loans (interest rate locks) to be sold into the secondary market and forward commitments for the future delivery
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of mortgage loans to third party investors. See Note 13 of the Consolidated Financial Statements in Item 1 of this report for further information on the Company’s derivative financial instruments.
During the first six months of 2017 and 2016, the Company entered into certain covered call option transactions related to certain securities held by the Company. The Company uses these option transactions (rather than entering into other derivative interest rate contracts, such as interest rate floors) to economically hedge positions and compensate for net interest margin compression by increasing the total return associated with the related securities through fees generated from these options. Although the revenue received from these options is recorded as non-interest income rather than interest income, the increased return attributable to the related securities from these options contributes to the Company’s overall profitability. The Company’s exposure to interest rate risk may be impacted by these transactions. To mitigate this risk, the Company may acquire fixed rate term debt or use financial derivative instruments. There were no covered call options outstanding as of
June 30, 2017
and 2016.
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ITEM 4
CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
As of the end of the period covered by this report, the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer carried out an evaluation under their supervision, with the participation of other members of management as they deemed appropriate, of the effectiveness of the design and operation of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures as contemplated by Exchange Act Rule 13a-15. Based upon, and as of the date of that evaluation, the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures are effective, in all material respects, in timely alerting them to material information relating to the Company (and its consolidated subsidiaries) required to be included in the periodic reports the Company is required to file and submit to the SEC under the Exchange Act.
There were no changes in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rule 13a-15(f)) during the period that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal controls over financial reporting.
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PART II —
Item 1: Legal Proceedings
In accordance with applicable accounting principles, the Company establishes an accrued liability for litigation and threatened litigation actions and proceedings when those actions present loss contingencies which are both probable and estimable. In actions for which a loss is reasonably possible in future periods, the Company determines whether it can estimate a loss or range of possible loss. To determine whether a possible loss is estimable, the Company reviews and evaluates its material litigation on an ongoing basis, in conjunction with any outside counsel handling the matter, in light of potentially relevant factual and legal developments. This review may include information learned through the discovery process, rulings on substantive or dispositive motions, and settlement discussions.
On January 15, 2015, Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc. (“Lehman Holdings”) sent a demand letter asserting that Wintrust Mortgage must indemnify it for losses arising from loans sold by Wintrust Mortgage to Lehman Brothers Bank, FSB under a Loan Purchase Agreement between Wintrust Mortgage, as successor to SGB Corporation, and Lehman Brothers Bank. The demand was the precursor for triggering the alternative dispute resolution process mandated by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. Lehman Holdings triggered the mandatory alternative dispute resolution process on October 16, 2015. On February 3, 2016, following a ruling by the federal Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit that was adverse to Lehman Holdings on the statute of limitations that is applicable to similar loan purchase claims, Lehman Holdings filed a complaint against Wintrust Mortgage and 150 other entities from which it had purchased loans in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. The mandatory mediation was held on March 16, 2016, but did not result in a consensual resolution of the dispute. The court entered a case management order governing the litigation on November 1, 2016. Lehman Holdings filed an amended complaint against Wintrust Mortgage on December 29, 2016. Wintrust Mortgage moved to dismiss the amended complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and improper venue. This motion remains pending before the court.
The Company has reserved an amount for the Lehman Holdings action that is immaterial to its results of operations or financial condition. Such litigation and threatened litigation actions necessarily involve substantial uncertainty and it is not possible at this time to predict the ultimate resolution or to determine whether, or to what extent, any loss with respect to these legal proceedings may exceed the amounts reserved by the Company.
On August 28, 2015, Wintrust Mortgage received a demand from RFC Liquidating Trust asserting that Wintrust Mortgage is liable to it for losses arising from loans sold by Wintrust Mortgage or its predecessors to Residential Funding Company LLC and/or related entities. No litigation has been initiated and the range of liability is not reasonably estimable at this time and it is not foreseeable when sufficient information will become available to provide a basis for recording a reserve, should a reserve ultimately be required.
In addition, the Company and its subsidiaries, from time to time, are subject to pending and threatened legal action and proceedings arising in the ordinary course of business.
Based on information currently available and upon consultation with counsel, management believes that the eventual outcome of any pending or threatened legal actions and proceedings described above, including our ordinary course litigation, will not have a material adverse effect on the operations or financial condition of the Company. However, it is possible that the ultimate resolution of these matters, if unfavorable, may be material to the results of operations or financial condition for a particular period.
Item 1A: Risk Factors
There were no material changes from the risk factors set forth under Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors” in the Company’s Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2016
.
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Item 2: Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
No purchases of the Company’s common shares were made by or on behalf of the Company or any “affiliated purchaser” as defined in Rule 10b-18(a)(3) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, during the three months ended
June 30, 2017
. There is currently no authorization to repurchase shares of outstanding common stock.
Item 6: Exhibits:
(a)
Exhibits
31.1
Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
31.2
Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
32.1
Certification of Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
101.INS
XBRL Instance Document (1)
101.SCH
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document
101.CAL
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document
101.LAB
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document
101.PRE
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document
101.DEF
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document
(1)
Includes the following financial information included in the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended
June 30, 2017
, formatted in XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language): (i) the Consolidated Statements of Condition, (ii) the Consolidated Statements of Income, (iii) the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income, (iv) the Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareholders’ Equity, (v) the Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows, and (vi) Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
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SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
WINTRUST FINANCIAL CORPORATION
(Registrant)
Date:
August 8, 2017
/s/ DAVID L. STOEHR
David L. Stoehr
Executive Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)
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INDEX OF EXHIBITS
Exhibit No.
Exhibit Description
31.1
Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
31.2
Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
32.1
Certification of Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
101.INS
XBRL Instance Document (1)
101.SCH
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document
101.CAL
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document
101.LAB
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document
101.PRE
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document
101.DEF
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document
(1)
Includes the following financial information included in the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended
June 30, 2017
, formatted in XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language): (i) the Consolidated Statements of Condition, (ii) the Consolidated Statements of Income, (iii) the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income, (iv) the Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareholders’ Equity, (v) the Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows, and (vi) Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
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