The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) recently issued its first quarter 2023 Quarterly Banking Profile. The report provides financial information based on Call Reports filed by 4,672 FDIC-insured commercial banks and savings institutions. The report also contains a section specific to community bank performance. In first quarter 2023, this section included the financial information of 4,230 FDIC-insured community banks. BerryDunn’s key takeaways from the report are as follows:
More than half (56.8%) of all community banks reported lower net income compared to fourth quarter 2022.
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Community banks’ quarterly net income decreased 4.2% in first quarter 2023 from the previous quarter. Despite decreased quarterly net income, net income from the year-ago quarter was 6.1% higher. Higher net interest income was slightly diminished by higher noninterest and provision expenses and lower noninterest income. With the implementation of the current expected credit loss (CECL) standard in 2023, the quarterly provision expense decreased 17.3% from the previous quarter but increased 164% from a year ago. However, this did not include the “Day One” adjustment of $922 million made by the 3,993 community banks that adopted CECL in the first quarter. Rather, the adjustment was run through retained earnings and increased the allowance for credit losses but had no impact on the provision expense.
Community banks’ net interest margins (NIM) returned to below the pre-pandemic average of 3.63%, ending the quarter at 3.49%.
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However, the NIM remained 37 basis points higher than the year-ago quarter. Despite the increase year-over-year, the quarterly decrease to below pre-pandemic percentages was a direct reflection of the increase in the average cost of deposits outpacing the increase in the average yield on loans. The average cost of deposits reached 1.14%, a 39-basis point increase from the prior quarter and a 92-basis point increase from the year-ago quarter. Yields on total loans, 5.36% for the quarter, only showed a 16-basis point increase from the prior quarter despite having a 94-basis point increase from the year-ago quarter. The main contributor to the higher yields on total loans was attributed to higher yields on commercial real estate (CRE) loans.
Loan and lease balances continued to grow in first quarter 2023, with 66.8% of community banks reporting quarterly loan growth.
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Loan and lease balances continued to see widespread growth in first quarter 2023. Community banks saw loan growth in all major portfolios, except for the seasonally impacted agricultural production loans. Residential real estate loans exhibited the most growth from fourth quarter at 2.2%, followed closely by nonfarm, nonresidential CRE loans at 2%. For the year, 89.7% of community banks reported loan growth. This year-over-year growth was also driven by residential real estate and nonfarm, nonresidential CRE loans, which showed growth year-over-year of 17.1% and 13.4%, respectively.
Unrealized losses on securities decreased but remain elevated.
NOTE: This chart is for all insured institutions, not just community banks.
Unrealized losses on securities for community banks totaled $59.2 billion in the first quarter, down from $67.9 billion in the fourth quarter. Unrealized losses on held-to-maturity securities totaled $9.4 billion in first quarter 2023, while unrealized losses on available-for-sale securities totaled $49.8 billion.
First quarter 2023 appears to have continued a streak of strong quarters for the community banking industry, albeit still having its moments of turbulence, with bank failures, CECL adoption, and rate hikes all making headlines. Although net income was down from fourth quarter 2022, net income increased 6.1% from first quarter 2022, reflecting community bank management’s efforts in managing what has proven to be a challenging interest rate environment. Unrealized losses still plague community banks and, although these losses don’t pose any immediate danger to those who aren’t forced to sell these “underwater” securities, these losses and the recent bank failures have caused many management teams to take a closer look at liquidity planning. Boards and committees are asking questions about contingent liquidity funding sources, and rightfully so, as deposit growth continues to be outpaced by loan growth. As a result, community banks have turned to wholesale funding, a source of funding that has been used sparingly since 2020. The share of wholesale funds to total assets was 21.1% in first quarter 2023, up from 19.2% in fourth quarter 2022 and above the pre-pandemic average of 17.5%.
Loan quality still appears to remain strong, as early-stage delinquencies (loans 30 to 89 days past due) only grew one basis point from fourth quarter 2022 and remained unchanged from first quarter 2022 at 37 basis points, still well below the pre-pandemic average of 55 basis points. Similarly, the noncurrent rate (loans and leases 90 days or more past due or in nonaccrual status to total loans and leases) increased by one basis point from fourth quarter 2022 to 45 basis points. Even so, more than half of community banks reported quarter-over-quarter reductions in noncurrent loan balances. And to round out the credit quality metrics, the net charge-off rate also remained low, having only increased six basis points from .03% in first quarter 2022 to .09% in first quarter 2023. Although these ratios show slight signs of credit deterioration, loan quality appears to remain strong, relatively speaking. Even so, institutions with significant CRE concentrations, especially in the office space sector, have been getting enhanced scrutiny as current delinquency trends may not be indicative of what’s to come in this sector. As we transition out of the pandemic, and office space leases come due, many tenants are reassessing their office space needs. It will become imperative for management teams to maintain active communication with large CRE borrowers, especially those with office space, as the loss of one tenant could prove to be detrimental to their ability to repay their loan. Coupled with the liquidity crunch, a few larger CRE loans (or any loans for that matter) that become nonperforming could put stress on liquidity and ultimately capital.
Lastly, and at long last, first quarter 2023 saw the widespread adoption of the CECL standard. Issued in 2016, it at times felt as if this day would never come, with adoption of the CECL standard having been delayed. As of first quarter 2023, 3,993 community banks had adopted CECL accounting. The result was a “Day One” impact of $922 million, which did not impact earnings but did impact retained earnings. In this case, it resulted in a decrease in retained earnings. First quarter 2023 provision expense (calculated under CECL) was $160.2 million lower than fourth quarter 2022 (calculated under the incurred loss model). However, first quarter 2023 provision expense was $476.5 million higher than first quarter 2022. The result was a slight decline in the coverage ratio (the ratio of the allowance for credit losses to noncurrent loans) of 1.3% from fourth quarter 2022; however, the coverage ratio was still 272.9%, the second highest in the history of the Quarterly Banking Profile. The highest was in fourth quarter 2022. The allowance to total loans and leases for all insured institutions increased slightly in first quarter 2023 from fourth quarter 2022, having increased six basis points to 1.66%. From first quarter 2022, this ratio had increased 12 basis points. The verdict on CECL still remains to be determined and it will be interesting to see how provision expense behaves under the new accounting standard as compared to the long-lived incurred loss model. As always, please don’t hesitate to reach out to BerryDunn’s Financial Services team if you have any questions.