Blue Foundry Bancorp (NASDAQ:BLFY) Q2 2023 Earnings Call Transcript

Blue Foundry Bancorp (NASDAQ:BLFY) Q2 2023 Earnings Call Transcript July 26, 2023

Blue Foundry Bancorp beats earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $-0.08, expectations were $-0.11.

Operator: Good morning and welcome to the Blue Foundry Bancorp’s Second Quarter 2023 Earnings Call. My name is Carla and I will be your conference operator today. Comments made during today’s call may include forward-looking statements, which are based on management’s current expectations and are subject to uncertainty and changes in circumstances. Blue Foundry encourages all participants to refer to the full disclaimer contained in this morning’s earnings release, which has been posted to the Investor Relations page on bluefoundrybank.com. During the call, management will refer to non-GAAP measures, which exclude certain items from reported results. Please refer to today’s earnings release for reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures. As a reminder, this event is being recorded. [Operator Instructions] I will now turn the call over to President and CEO, Jim Nesci.

Jim Nesci: Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone and welcome to our second quarter earnings call. I am joined by our Chief Financial Officer, Kelly Pecoraro, who will share the company’s financial results in greater detail after my opening remarks. The competition for deposits from both depository and non-depository institutions, along with the inverted yield curve, continues to have an adverse impact on our margin and cost of funds. Despite this top line pressure, we have been pleased to see our investments in technology results and productivity saves. Quarter-over-quarter, our operating expenses declined $689,000, or 5.1%, driven primarily by lower compensation and benefits expense. Headcount is 9% lower than it was at the end of 2022, and employees have increased productivity by optimizing redundant tasks through the use of technology, allowing them to focus on more impactful projects.

Additionally, we have been keenly focused on managing down variable expenses. We have reduced our reliance on consultants, and our advertising costs were 71% below 2022’s quarterly average. During the second quarter, we repurchased 1,892,000 shares, at a weighted average cost of $9.68, a discount to tangible book value. This help tangible book value per share increased $0.29 to $14.35 at June 30. We continue to believe that share repurchase programs represent the accretive use of capital. We are still active in the lending markets. During the second quarter, we originated $41 million in loans, primarily in our commercial portfolios. Our underwriting standards remain conservative and our credit quality remains strong. Our management team continues to monitor the macroeconomic environment and liquidity challenges being experienced throughout the banking industry.

We remain steadfast in maintaining strong capital and liquidity positions. Both our bank and holding company remain more than well capitalized. At the end of the second quarter, we had over $395 million in untapped borrowing capacity. Additionally, our available-for-sale securities portfolio, which represents 90% of the debt securities we hold, provided an additional $301 million of liquidity. Blue Foundry continues to operate with a low percentage of uninsured deposits and low concentration risk to any single depositor, our bank subsidiary and uninsured deposits, totaling approximately $293 million at the end of the second quarter. This total includes approximately $69 million of deposits from the Blue Foundry Bancorp, $20 million of deposits from its subsidiary, Blue Factory Investment Company, and $32 million of municipal deposits, which are insured under New Jersey’s Governmental Unit Deposit Protection Act.

Excluding these three items, uninsured deposits from customer accounts represented only 13.6% of the bank’s total deposits. This improved from the prior quarter as some of our larger relationships took advantage of the increased FDIC coverage that we provide through our ICS and CDARS sweep account products. Additionally, our available liquidity covers 4.4x our uninsured and uncollateralized deposits to customers. With that, I’d like to turn the call over to Kelly and then we’d be delighted to answer your questions.

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Kelly Pecoraro: Thank you, Jim, and good morning, everyone. The net loss for the second quarter was $1.8 million, compared to net loss of $1.2 million during the prior quarter. This change was largely related to funding pressures from the competitive rate environment. While we realized a $933,000 expansion in interest income, our interest expense increased $2 million, resulting in a reduction of $1 million in net interest income. Yields on loans increased by 11 basis points to 4.18% and yield on all interest-bearing assets also increased by 11 basis points to 3.93%. Remaining competitive in deposit pricing, the cost of interest-bearing deposits increased 35 basis points to 1.73%. This, coupled with an increase in average short-term borrowings, drove the cost of funds to 2.15%, a 42 basis point increase compared with the prior quarter.

While the increase in the cost of interest-bearing liabilities and cost of funds has slowed since last quarter, we still expect pressure on our margin to continue due to competition for deposits, the current rate environment and the liability-sensitive nature of our balance sheet. During the quarter, we recorded a provision for credit loss of $143,000 for the quarter ended June 30, 2023, driven by an increase in the allowance for loans, partially offset by a decrease in the allowance for commitments. Our asset quality remains strong in the current environment. During the quarter, nonperforming loans to total loans increased 2 basis points to 49 basis points, primarily driven by a slight increase in non-accrual loans. Our allowance to total loans increased 2 basis points to 91 basis points, and our allowance to non-accrual loans decreased to 186% from 189% to the prior quarter, also due to the slight increase in non-accrual loans.

Expenses declined $689,000, largely driven by a reduction in compensation and benefit expense. This reduction was driven by a full quarter of sustained lower headcount and a reduction in variable compensation. We continue to explore opportunities to reduce our expense base. Additionally, while there were one-time items in operating expenses this quarter, they largely offset each other. Therefore, we expect operating expenses for the remainder of the year to remain relatively in line with the second quarter. Moving on to the balance sheet. Gross loans declined by $4.6 million, as amortization and payoffs outpaced loan funding. As a reminder, less than 2% of our loan portfolio is in office space and none is in the New York City market. With the duration of 4.8 years, our debt securities portfolio continues to provide cash flow that is being used to fund loans.

These securities declined $8.2 million due to maturities halt and scheduled pay-downs. Funding our balance sheet has been challenging in this environment. Deposits increased $23 million or 1.8% during the quarter. We were able to increase retail time deposits by $48 million and we executed $50 million of new brokered CDs. This growth in time deposits was partially offset by an outflow of $75 million from non-maturity accounts. Our focus remains on attracting the full banking relationship of small- to medium-sized businesses. We offer an extensive suite of low-cost deposit products to our business customers. Despite the competition for deposits, we were able to grow both business balances and the number of business accounts by 2% during the second quarter.

For the 6 months ended June 30, 2023, balances were up 8% and accounts were up 5%. During the quarter, borrowings decreased $23 million as we replaced short-term borrowings with time deposits. And with that, Jim and I are happy to take your questions.

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Q&A Session

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Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question is from Justin Crowley from Piper Sandler. Your line is now open.

Justin Crowley: Hi, good morning, guys. It’s certainly nice to see some of the expense reduction this quarter, and you spoke to sort of holding this rate through the end of the year. Curious – it sounds like maybe that was a little bit more of a pull forward. It’s looking for more of some of these reductions towards the back half of the year. But on some of the further strategies that you’re taking a look at, what does that sort of entail? Does it go beyond simply headcount, which you’ve done a strong job on?

Kelly Pecoraro: So Justin, yes, I think we’re guiding, at this point, to low-13 for the third quarter and into the fourth quarter, driven primarily by the reduction in headcount and variable compensation. We’re also continually looking at ways of reducing costs, whether it’s through our advertising initiatives or other initiatives throughout the bank, being able to leverage the technology we already have in place as opposed to putting new things on. So we continue to look for all of those cost save initiatives as we move forward.

Jim Nesci: Justin, just to add on to that a little bit. We go through a vendor analysis on a quarterly basis, where we can consolidate a number of vendors or extract better contract pricing, but that’s something that we do on a regular basis. So expense management is definitely a focus of the management team.

Justin Crowley: Okay. I appreciate that. And then switching over to growth. I think you guys have previously talked about being a little bit more judicious on loan growth. Curious how the slowdown that we saw this quarter, how that sort of compares to expectations as you look through the balance of the year? How much of that is predicated on what you see on the deposit generation side, and perhaps managing that loan-to-deposit ratio?

Jim Nesci: So I think you hit it spot on. We’re constantly looking at our funding sources, whether it’s on organic deposit generation or through wholesale funding. We are definitely opportunistic on match funding. We have excess – lines accessible to us, where we can still make a decent spread. So we are still in the market, still lending. But again, it is definitely – we look at funding first, and then we look at the opportunity and we look at the credit quality and what the market will give us. But I think Kelly may want to add to that?

Kelly Pecoraro: Yes. No, I think Jim is correct in terms of how we look at it. Also what’s available in the market, remaining disciplines on our credit standards as we are walking into this market. So that’s how we look at it. We do envision growth. We are able to originate in this market and look for opportunistic growth.

Justin Crowley: Okay. And where are you seeing the most opportunities? Is it going to be more like the C&I side, less so real estate, just as you look out here?

Kelly Pecoraro: So I think we’re seeing – in a couple of different segments, you did see our construction tick up. We are – have originated some construction loans to well-seasoned sponsors and building on the multifamily product. Also, we are seeing some additional increases in C&I as we move into the second half of the year.

Justin Crowley: Okay. That’s helpful. And then, I guess, just quickly, just back to the funding side of things. Weighing of putting on brokered money versus borrowings, can you just unpack a little bit what drives that decision? Is it the pure economics of it? And how do you balance that with, again, just sort of going back to the loan-to-deposit ratio, where that fleshes out, again, just versus looking at the cost between those two funding channels?

Jim Nesci: So we look at, say, funding curve. We go through wholesale funding first, then we look at our retail funding, and they are all laid out on the curve for us to consider. Sometimes the swap markets provide better value, but we are diligent in looking and picking where on the curve we want to be as far as duration, and then the type of funding we want to take on our balance sheet, where we can get a fuller relationship from a customer that does incentivize us to possibly pay up for a rate. But in general, we look at the funding sources between wholesale and retail.

Kelly Pecoraro: And then…

Justin Crowley: Okay. Got it. Sorry, go ahead.

Kelly Pecoraro: No. I was just saying, in terms of our wholesale funding, looking at the difference between whether we’re borrowing from the Federal Home Loan Bank or going into the brokered market, we take the metrics into consideration. We are sure that 40% of our wholesale funding book is under a year in terms of duration, so looking to be opportunistic as we place the funding.

Justin Crowley: Okay. And then do you – I mean at 10%, is there a limit on how much further you can lean into the brokered market?

Kelly Pecoraro: So it’s a combination in terms of what our policy limits has at this point, but we still have some room in the brokered spot.

Justin Crowley: Okay, got it. Alright, guys. I appreciate it. I will leave it there. Thank you for taking my questions.

Kelly Pecoraro: Thank you, Justin.

Jim Nesci: Thank you, Justin.

Operator: Thank you, Justin. We have no further questions at this time. So I will now hand back to Jim Nesci for any final remarks.

Jim Nesci: I’d like to thank all the participants who dialed in today. I appreciate your interest in Blue Foundry Bank, and we look forward to speaking with you again next quarter. Thank you.

Operator: This concludes today’s call. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.

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