S&T Bancorp Inc. Q1 2023 Earnings Call
Speaker 1: that we undertook as a leadership team at the end of February through early March with our employees.
Speaker 1: As you may recall, we spent the last 12 to 18 months focusing on our vision for the future in the next chapter of S&T's performance. Defining our people forward purpose, clarifying the customer and employee values that guide how we run the company.
Speaker 1: and emphasizing the financial performance drivers that will deliver long-term sustainable financial results for our shareholders. We define this work as our shared future shared between our employees, our customers, communities, and shareholders. Within that shared future, we spent a lot of time focused on our financial drivers and in our discussions with our stakeholders.
Speaker 1: execution center around these drivers underpinned by our values and built by over 1,200 employees.
Speaker 1: To ensure effective communication and engagement around our people, forward, purpose, values, and these drivers of performance, we actually spent 12 days at the end of February through March the 9th face to face with all 1,200 of our employees in 12 different sessions.
Speaker 1: It couldn't have been timelier because no sooner did we finish this work, but the events of March the 10th began. It provided a rallying cry for our team and our people who would focus on customers, all centered around ensuring confidence, stability, safety, and soundness.
Speaker 1: in the eyes of our employees as well as our customers.
Speaker 1: We believe as leaders our responsibility is not only to ensure our employees know what to do, but ask probably more critically that we help our employees understand the why. The last four weeks since March the 10th have provided the perfect why behind our focus around our deposit franchise.
Speaker 1: the other drivers of our performance.
Speaker 1: Speaking of performance, turning to page three, you can see a summary here that Mark and Dave will dive into in more detail. But for the quarter, we had earnings of $1.02. That's the second quarter in a row with earnings over $1, net income of just under $40 million.
Speaker 1: Return metrics is defined here as solid. We could also throw the word strong in there with an ROTC of 1961 and a PPNR of 2.23%.
Speaker 1: Expenses remained well controlled with an efficiency ratio of right at around 50%. NIM down one basis point to 432 and is a benefit of a net recovery leading to a recovery of 29 basis points where we'll spend more time on later.
Speaker 1: Turning to page four, we did show loan growth of just under 4% for the quarter, driven primarily in our consumer book with over $65 million of consumer loan growth. I will say that we feel very good about the level of our pipelines within our commercial business. They're the highest we've seen in the last year.
Speaker 1: We've seen in a number of months that are representative of the growth and the commitment that we've made to that segment, including the attraction of talent into the company. On the deposit side, deposits ended at just right at $7.2 billion. There was a decrease.
Speaker 1: of $67 million in the quarter, but the declines occurred early in the quarter in January and then actually showed increases as the quarter went on. We think that was very important in light of all the external environments and the environment and the details are actually on page five here. This is a newer slide.
Speaker 1: that we provided to you all to give you an idea of what happened within the quarter to the deposit side of our balance sheet. Again, we do want to emphasize this well-diversified deposit base of almost 230,000 customers, a 60-40 mix between personal deposits and business.
Speaker 1: very granular in nature. You see the uninsured numbers there within that uninsured number is a little over $300 million of collateralized municipal deposits. The trends as you can see, the green line represents...
Speaker 1: the events that occurred in early March and the growth that we saw through the month. I do want to recognize, we have a lot of employees on this call and others, and I do want to recognize the great work that was done by our teams beginning really on that Monday early. Try and bring the cancellations that it urlred early in the month into early March and let
Speaker 1: where we organized ourselves around very proactive outreach with customers through social media, face-to-face interaction, helping them understand what was happening in the marketplace, the safety and soundness of our institution, and the options that they had available to them. We continue that focus every day, and we feel we're proud of the growth we've seen since.
Speaker 1: I'm going to stop there. I'll turn it over to Mark to provide a lot more details. Great. Thanks Chris.
Speaker 2: Slide six shows net interest income, which decreased by just $267,000 compared to the fourth quarter. And that was with two fewer days, which negatively impacted revenue by over a million and a half dollars.
Speaker 2: The nearest margin rate at 4.32% was essentially flat compared to the fourth quarter. Loan yields improved this quarter by 43 basis points and the cost of total deposits, including the EDA, increased by 25 basis points to 0.85%.
Speaker 2: Interest-bearing deposits increased by 37 basis points compared to the fourth quarter, while costing liabilities increased by 59 basis points as the decline in deposits and the increase in loans resulted in some additional borrowing.
Speaker 2: Again, about half of our loan portfolio is tied to short-term rates, which has been a big driver of the net interest income and net interest margin improvement that we have had over the past year.
Speaker 2: We have seen an increase in preference from some customers year to date for fixed rates due to the inverted curve, which has put some additional pressure on nominal new loan yields.
Speaker 2: As part of our Outgo strategy to protect net interest income and margin in the event of Fed rate cuts, we have hedged the floating rate loan concentration with $500 million of received fixed swaps.
Speaker 2: We continue to evaluate the right level of hedging, which will depend on the rate environment and how that impacts interest rate sensitivity of both deposits and loans.
Speaker 2: Most of the net interest margin pressure this quarter came on a liability side, as like most of the industry, we experienced a high level of customer interest in seeking higher rates than we anticipated.
Speaker 2: We believe we are past peak net interest margin a bit earlier than we expected. As you can see from the chart on the bottom left, the net interest margin rate for the month of March was lower than the full quarter.
Speaker 2: We do expect some firming of an energy margin in the near term as April brings the lagged repricing of our 425 million dollar HELOC portfolio.
Speaker 2: There's a possibility of further fed rate hikes in May.
Speaker 2: And we are experiencing some moderation in deposit mix changes and net deposit outflows.
Speaker 2: We expect NIM compression of approximately 5 to 10 basis points per quarter for the next couple of quarters. We expect NIM compression of approximately 5 to 10 basis points per quarter for the next
Speaker 2: Next, on slide seven, we provide a little more detail on the first quarter deposit changes.
Speaker 2: The top graph shows the quarterly point-to-point changes by deposit type. The bottom graph shows the migration, or how much moved from one type to another during the quarter.
Speaker 2: This is aggregated at the customer level.
Speaker 2: So for example, overall we saw DDA decline 120 million. That's on the top graph. Of that decline, 88 million is from customers moving funds from DDA to other deposit types within the bank. That's the bottom graph.
Speaker 2: The difference between the 32 million is the net decrease from closed and new DDA accounts and the net DDA inflows and outflows to and from the banks.
Speaker 2: Now within that DDA, 23 million of the 88 million DDA migration went to now, which is how we classify the Interfi product, which is what provides the additional FDIC insurance coverage for our customers. Are we in or Rs. 30 million comedic screen?
Speaker 2: Separately on CDs, we were up 240 million total bank. That's the top graph. 153 million of which came from other deposit types. That's the bond graph.
Speaker 2: Here, the $88 million CD difference is the net addition of new funds from both new and existing customers. The $88 million CD difference is the net addition of new and existing customers from both new
Speaker 2: Our liquidity, first and foremost, relies on a well-diversified deposit space. If you turn to slide 8, you can see that to supplement that, we have access to funding at the Federal Home Loan Bank of Pittsburgh and at the Federal Reserve.
Speaker 2: The Federal Reserve capacity is split between loans already pledged through the Borrow and Custody Program, or BIC, labeled here as Federal Reserve Window, and the newly implemented BTLF funding facility that accepts bonds as collateral at par.
Speaker 2: Between these two programs from the Federal Reserve, we have approximately one and a half billion of funding capacity, of which we are using none.
Speaker 2: including the FHLB availability, we have more than enough capacity to cover our uninsured deposits. Next Dave will provide some additional details on asset quality.
Speaker 3: Great, thank you Mark and good afternoon everyone. If I could direct your attention to slide 9 where we have presented our asset quality results for the quarter. Starting on the right hand side of the page, we reported a $5.1 million net recovery during Q1. The largest event influencing this result was a $9.3 million recovery related to
Speaker 3: the customer fraud loss that we experienced in 2020. Offsetting this recovery were total charges of $4.5 million for the quarter, including a $3.4 million charge that was the result of a strategic note sale that we successfully executed.
Speaker 3: Non-performing loans increased by $5.6 million primarily as a result of one C&I relationship that migrated during the quarter. A $4.2 million specific reserve was established for this account.
Speaker 3: On the left side of the page, you will see a detailed allowance for credit losses bridged between Q4 and Q1. We increased the overall reserve as a result of the specific reserve that I mentioned, along with growth and changes in the risk ratings that impacted the quantitative component.
Speaker 3: as well as a $1.85 million increase in the qualitative segment of the reserve that reflects changes in uncertainty in the macroeconomic environment. As a result, our overall total allowance increase from 1.41% of total loans to 1.49%.
Speaker 3: Turning to page 10, we continue to pay significant attention to our CRE exposures.
Speaker 3: We have depicted for you an analysis of our CRE as a percentage of total loans.
Speaker 3: CRE sub-segments as a percentage of total loans, and our office exposure. As depicted, this is a very diverse portfolio. This is reflected in our average loan size of $1.1 million. Furthermore, the average LTV of 63% and modest maturities over the next eight quarters.
Speaker 3: position this portfolio well in the current environment. Next, we drill deeper into our office portfolio to identify central business district versus non-central business district exposure. As you can see, 83% of our office exposure is non-CBD, reflecting our strategy and desire to keep this risk in this segment very granular.
Speaker 3: I'll also point out that only one of our four largest office exposures matures within the next 24 months, and that will occur in Q4 of 2024.
Speaker 3: As part of our portfolio management practices, we regularly stress test each property to apply stressed net operating income assumptions and to reflect the current rate environment in order to identify potential future issues.
Speaker 3: Turning to page 11, you will see a presentation for the entire CRE portfolio reflecting a very granular portfolio with an average size of $1.7 million and with approximately 15% of the entire CRE portfolio maturing in the next 24 months.
Speaker 3: I will mention that the higher level of maturities in the healthcare and hotel segments reflect our strategic management of these relationships and desire to keep terms tighter on these segments that were more highly impacted by the pandemic. I will also note that we actively monitor our concentration limits and adjust as needed to reflect stress test results and as we update our credit risk appetite.
Speaker 3: With regard to our construction loan balances, we anticipate a natural contraction as projects are completed and replacement rates have reduced. The current economic factors have shifted, making underwriting new deals challenging, and we have not relaxed our standards. We're paying close attention to things like reserves and contingencies. We recently completed a review of our largest construction loans.
Speaker 3: That review identified that those projects are on average approximately 75% complete and that the majority of the material and labor availability issues are behind us.
Speaker 3: I'll now turn the program back over to Mark to dig into some of the non-interest income issues. I'll now turn the program back over to Mark to dig into some of the non-interest income
Speaker 2: On slide 12, non-interest income decreased by $2.4 million in the first quarter compared to the fourth. This primarily related to a gain on the sale of an OREO property for $2 million in the fourth quarter. That shows up in the other line item.
Speaker 2: Mortgage banking was essentially flat compared to the fourth quarter as almost all of our production continues to go to the portfolio, contributing to the loan growth that we had in that category.
Speaker 2: Our quarter fee outlook is in the $13.5 to $14 million range.
Speaker 2: On slide 13, expenses were well controlled, up just $424,000 compared to the fourth quarter, the largest variance being the FDIC assessment, which increased across the board by two basis points.
Speaker 2: and marketing, which is related to some seasonal promotional activity. Efficiency ratio is just over 50 percent, and our quarterly expense expectations remain in the 52 to 53 million range as we invest in people and infrastructure. Slide 14 has some additional detail on our securities portfolio, which runs only about 11 percent of total assets.
Speaker 2: We favor a well-structured product as evidenced by the mix and the nominal extension of duration we have seen over the past year.
Speaker 2: All of our securities are classified as available for sale, so the 69.4 million securities related AOCI covers the entire portfolio and is very manageable given our strong earnings and capital level. Those capital levels can be seen on slide 15.
Speaker 2: TCE improved due to the quarterly earnings and lower term rates, which decreased to AOCI compared to the fourth quarter. At the Grow
Speaker 2: Our regulatory capital ratios are strong and well positioned for the environment with ample excess capital levels.
Speaker 2: Our buyback authorization has 29.8 million remaining, and we will look for opportunities depending on economic conditions, our financial performance and outlook, and the price of our stock.
Speaker 2: Thank you very much at this time. I'd like to turn the call back over to the operator to provide instructions for asking questions.
Speaker 4: Thank you. The floor is now open for questions. If you have any questions, please press the star key followed by the number 1 on your telephone keypad. If you'd like to withdraw your question, press star 1 once again. We ask that while asking your question, please pick up your handset and turn off your speakerphone for enhanced audio quality.
Speaker 4: Please hold while we poll for questions.
Speaker 4: We'll take our first question from Daniel Tomayo with Raymond James. Your line is open.
Speaker 5: Hey, thanks. Good afternoon. Everyone.
Speaker 5: Maybe 1st, starting on on the balance sheet.
Speaker 6: Thank you know something.
Speaker 5: The deposit loan deposit ratio a little back over 100%. I know you guys have been there before but deposits have come down over the last, you know, five quarters or so and and obviously things are getting more difficult here. How are you thinking about growing deposits? What buckets do you think you're going to be able to?
Speaker 5: To to see growth there and then where do you expect loan growth to be relative to the to the funding side?
Speaker 2: I'll start off on the deposit side. Just recently, just in the last month or so, and especially since some of the bank failures, we actually have seen affirming in the deposit levels, some of the runoff that we experienced during 2022 seems to have slowed. So we think we're near the bottom there.
Speaker 2: level of exception requests have declined here in April , so we're encouraged by that. Category-wise, we would expect the migration to continue, so we would expect to see additional movement from some of the core deposit categories into CDs, but we would expect that the overall level of deposits. There you have it.
Speaker 2: would start to turn around and possibly trend a little bit higher, not expecting huge growth, but that we would be at least at the bottom here. I'll turn it over to Dave to talk about loan growth expectations. Thanks, Mark. When we think about loan growth in Q1, I would expect similar loan growth in Q2.
Speaker 3: Q3 with everything that's happening in the macroeconomic environment as I noted in my prepared comments. There is some challenge with regard to getting deals to size and we are relatively concentrated in CRE and that's where we're comfortable. So there will be a challenge there. That being said we have added a number of bankers.
Speaker 3: that have helped us expand the pipeline. We're making really strong efforts in our business banking segment as well. Again, with that, thanks for watching.
Speaker 3: a concept of keeping things granular, so more deals that are smaller in nature and perhaps less risky on an aggregate basis. So, that low to mid-single digit number that we talked about last quarter would be consistent with the remainder of the year.
Speaker 1: You know, and Daniel, other things that we're doing is, in addition to bankers, we continue to enhance our leadership and the team within our treasury management business, both for our core commercial business as well as our business banking and our branch-based customers. And, you know, there's a lot of demand out there for treasury management services.
Speaker 5: Okay, terrific. Thanks for all that color and I'll let someone else tackle the margin question. Maybe just a clarifying question on the income. I was expecting the second quarter outlook to be a little bit lower from the removal of the NSF fees.
Speaker 5: Can you just remind us what that impact will be and when that will be felt?
Speaker 2: So the annual number is about a million dollars, so just that for the quarter would be about 250,000.
Speaker 5: Okay, and that will be fully felt in the second quarter. Yeah, those changes were made right in the first of April .
Speaker 7: Terrific.
Speaker 5: All right, I'll step back. Thanks for the questions or the answers. Next we'll go to Michael Parito with KDW. Your line's open.
Speaker 8: Hey guys, thanks for taking my questions.
Speaker 8: Hey guys, thanks for taking my questions.
Speaker 8: Obviously a pretty extraordinary month. Seems like you guys, generally speaking, even though we kind of felt the alarm, didn't see a ton of impact on the day to day. But there are some things going on around the CD growth and the remix.
Speaker 8: And I just wonder, how sustainable is that as kind of the new norm here? I mean, is CD growth continuing to make up the lion's share in the start of the second quarter here? And does it get to a point where if the credit environment remains this uncertain and the incremental funding is really just...
Speaker 8: pretty high cost CDs where the appetite for Lone World could be impacted from you guys.
Speaker 2: I'll just say the deposit part first. So far, it hasn't really slowed the migration within the book, has not slowed yet. We're still seeing that migration to the CDs. We are seeing some
Speaker 2: It doesn't really impact us as much. Some migration on the business side from DDA to the FDIC protected product, but that's not a huge margin impact. That typically comes with either none or minimal increase in funding costs.
Speaker 2: much some migration on the business side from DDA to the FDIC protected product, but that's not a huge margin impact. That typically comes with either none or minimal increase in funding costs. And it's a huge month, but whatever you really want to know the most about your investment
Speaker 3: Yeah, I think that we should have sufficient funding and liquidity in order to do what we're projecting to do in terms of low to mid-single digit growth. Our emphasis on having the bankers focus on the entire relationship, the investments we're making in treasury management to make sure that we're making the best possible investment
Speaker 3: focused on the asset side of the balance sheet and making a switch to focusing on deposit gathering and maintaining the relationship.
Speaker 3: and building that relationship is really the opportunity that we have right now. And as Chris said, we're investing in that, and we can continue to see positive results there. We have seen some...
Speaker 2: quarter over quarter, fourth quarter to first, we did see a pretty good increase in the borrowing portfolio, especially on an average basis, and that did have a pretty big impact on the margin. That was probably worth about 19 basis points or so. That has
Speaker 2: stabilized as we move into the second quarter. So we're at around, you know, 450, 500 million of borrowing. That has stayed relatively stable for the last month and a half or so. So we don't expect the same change impact as we go into second quarter, you know, assuming that some of those deposit rates hold. So we would be subject to...
Speaker 2: the increased cost on the shifting side within the deposit book, but less so from shifting from deposits to borrows, which is a little bit larger of a hit.
Speaker 1: And Mike, this is Chris. The only other thing I'll add is a lot of this growth in CD's is built on our strategy and philosophy is taking care of our customers. So this is very much proactive engagement with our customer base who are looking for options and we're proactively making sure that we're doing everything we can to protect those relationships and grow them and that's the source of some of the growth.
Speaker 1: where when employees need help with rates and things like that, they know where to go and get answers quickly, and that seems to have paid dividends for us.
Speaker 8: Okay, that's all helpful. And then Mark, are you able to give us some indication?
Speaker 8: As a function of that, NIM is obviously probably going down from here, but are you able to give us some indication of where NIM was towards the end of the quarter in March or something like that, if you think about the impact of some of this remix and the fully baking that into the NIM before we start bleeding it down a little for the environment? Right. So on the non-interest income.
Speaker 2: The net interest income slide, I'm sorry, that we had is on page six, kind of in the bottom left-hand corner. There's a box where we showed very high level of the major components of the net interest margin. So for the full quarter, that was 4.32. For the month of March, that was 4.21. For the month of March, that was 4.21.
Speaker 2: So we have, to your point, we have seen some decrease in the Morgan rate. I missed that. Yeah, no, that's right. Thank you.
Speaker 2: So we have, to your point, we have seen some decrease in the mortgage rate. Oh, sorry, I missed that. Yeah, no, that's very helpful. That's right. Thank you. Okay, thank you.
Speaker 8: We've looked at this a lot longer than you have, Mike. No issue. No, no. Laughs aside, some of the new slides are extremely helpful, so thanks for incorporating this in detail. Just last question for me. Have you guys been doing any kind of reviews?
Speaker 8: more so than normal or whatnot on the office CRE portfolio. And maybe as a follow up, if you have done any kind of new appraisals or anything on that book, any kind of broad commentary you can share in terms of valuations. We had a competitor in somewhat similar markets earlier this morning say they're seeing 15 to 20% downward movements. So, we're seeing a lot of that.
Speaker 3: kind of broad-based across their geographies. I'm just curious if you guys have any color that you could add there that's similar. Yes. So referring to slide 10, Mike, we tried to provide as much detail as we could around it, and what you'll see there is that the portfolio is extremely granular. The average size is 1,000,001. We only have...
Speaker 3: for exposures over 10 million dollars and the LTVs are at 63% based on current the most current valuation as well as the current outstanding and Then we did take a hard look at what's maturing over the next 12 to 24 months So there's you'll see a chart there that shows the dollar amount of maturity. So we think that
Speaker 3: We think that the portfolio is pretty well positioned given the current environment. We also have very limited central business district exposure where we think there is more risk.
So we have dug deeply into it. We do what we call spot reviews, where we are able to target certain segments. And this is a segment that we spent a lot of time digging into. Stress testing based on current NOIs and current rates. Stress testing both tendency and stress testing.
you know, rollover risk as well as the impact of, you know, at the potential of a higher rate if these deals were to go to market today.
And so that down on the bottom right, Mike, you see that RIGIN LTB. So that would be the LTB based upon the most current appraisal that we have.
Got it. Okay. All right. So, and those are pretty much… Let me be clear. I guess how recent are those… The most current… Sorry, go ahead. Let me get… Let me clear it. The most current may be at origination. Right. Okay.
So, if we haven't performed a recent appraisal, it wouldn't be included in this.
Got it. And I know there's no way to kind of broadly capture this, but just in any instance where you guys have had to do appraisals in the first quarter, do you guys have a sense of what kind of the impact was directionally to the prop valuation, the value? Yeah. So directionally values are down because cap rates are up.
I can't give you an exact percentage, but we have seen deals that, and I'm speaking particularly from underwriting new deals, has become much more challenging because the equity required to finance something today from a purchase or construction perspective is significantly higher than it was.
seven, eight, ten months ago, two years ago, when rates were significantly lower and values were higher.
Yeah, does that 15 to 20 day though feel reasonable or does that feel heavy? Yeah, it feels a little bit heavy for our markets, Mike. I mean, you know, Pittsburgh, Northeast Ohio, where a lot of our exposure isn't even in Columbus, you know, it doesn't necessarily always feel the same impact in some of the more urban areas.
you know, a suburban environment in smaller pieces.
Great guys, I really appreciate all the color. Thank you.
Thanks Mike. Next we'll go to Emmanuel Navas with DA Davidson. Your line is now open.
Hey good afternoon. contemplate.
How does the May raise impact on NIM Guide next quarter? We would expect a little bit of help from that. It comes, you know, you will get a couple.
potentially two of the months on that, so that might help it be closer to the five versus the ten, assuming we get another quarter.
Okay. And then do you have an updated thought on kind of through the cycle deposit data?
We were targeting a little bit better than historical previously. Yeah, I think they're still, you know, they're going to be a little bit, probably a little bit higher than we had originally thought, but, you know, still, you know, anywhere from, you know, seven to 10 points better than the prior cycle, we still think, based on.hum
the better starting mix and still the better ending mix that we think that we're going to have.
and still the better ending mix that we think that we're going to have.
As you
Think about hedging.
Is there kind of – and the potential for rates to come back down at some point. Longer term, where do you think the NIM can settle at? Is there any structural change to that in the past, even in the 360 range? Just kind of big picture thoughts on where that could go long term. Yeah. And I think if short of –
Short-term rates don't, I think we can settle higher, but we will experience additional pressure if the short end of the curve moves substantially lower. So I think the, you know, the status point, if it's, if we stay in this 5% range, you know, it is probably closer to that 4. But if we see a significant rate down, you know, then
we will see something, you know, certainly below four and closer to the mid three depending on how far the Fed goes.
certainly below four and closer to the mid three, depending on how far the Fed goes. So, okay.
With some of the deposit flows you've had, the deposits that didn't migrate, that exited, were there account closures associated with it or were they just folks mainly just using funds? And if there were exits…
or closures? Was there any consistent reason for it? I don't think the closures were huge. I mean, that was certainly a factor, but most of the rest of the change was just existing customers changing their net balance. So there's a lot of plus and minus and just the net of all that.
this decrease. We haven't seen significant increases in the kind of normal closure rate on the deposit side.
That is really helpful.
Can you talk a little bit more color how you've used Intrify product and...
Is it kind of...
help you defend the deposit base even beyond what's signed up in it. Like just any color there would be helpful.
Yeah, so as Chris mentioned, when the events occurred on March 10th, we put together a comprehensive calling list to get out in front of our largest, particularly those that have largest deposits, particularly those that have uninsured deposits. And we kind of led with that product beyond just having a conversation about retitling.
they wanted to understand the product, and now we're starting to onboard or move deposits into that product. And as Mark mentioned, they're showing up in the now balances. So it's really helped us in order to provide protection for those customers who were concerned.
I would anticipate further growth in that category as well. Okay. And we believe it's an important proactive conversation to be having with our large customers. And that's how we're approaching it. And they value the conversation to Dave's point. Lots of education around how it works. We have a team of Molly bones.
of treasury management professionals that work with the transition. And so far it's been received positively, but I would say the customers have reacted in a measured way. Okay, this is really helpful. I appreciate it, thank you.
Thanks. Next we'll go to Matthew Bries with Stevens.
Good afternoon. Hey Matt. First, just wanted to touch on the overall reserve. Obviously up a little bit this quarter. Could you give us a sense for some of the macro assumptions?
that are contemplated there under CECL? Yes, so there's a lot of different things that go in there. The biggest items that impact us this quarter, one of the indices we follow that impacts the reserve is a CRE pricing index.
And there was some deterioration in that that led to some additional reserve for that portfolio, the CRE portfolio. Another one that we look at is the ISM index. There was also a little bit of deterioration there, and that added some reserve on the C&I book. And then we also look at the ISM index.
beyond what we can quantify through those, where we have identified some areas that we just don't think the risk is captured in their certain segments, like CNI, like healthcare, where we have added some reserve in.
just because of the potential weakness that we've seen in some of those portfolios. What was the index? I'm sorry, what did you say the index was used for commercial real estate?
It's called the CoStar Index. It's the Commercial Real Estate Price Index. Understood. Okay.
And then in the release you had mentioned in your comments as well, you had mentioned that there was a 4.2 million dollar specific reserve set aside for a credit. I'm just curious if you could provide a little bit more color on the credit, what asset class it's exposed to and what kind of happened.
And do you expect any sort of charge off on that in the second or third quarter here? Well, we think we're adequately reserved. We'll start with that, having placed that specific reserve on this account. But it's a CNI account involved in manufacturing that was originated out of western Pennsylvania. Okay, got it. Okay.
And then maybe going back to page 10 in commercial real estate, you show for the second quarter of this year, there's $10 million of office maturing with a 65% LTV. I'm assuming there is some level of office that matured this quarter and just based on the averages probably call it a low to mid 60s kind of LTV.
in the original to the updated LTV.
So, the LTV adjustment is kind of secondary to how we underwrite, but it still fits within our standards. What we really are focused in on is making sure that the cash flow coverage ratios remain in place and that there's no significant tenant rollover issues that have occurred.
I think, as Mike asked earlier, is 15% the range? I mean, it depends on where the product is, what the project looks like, who the tenant is, the credit worthiness of the underlying tenant. But to date, through Q1, we haven't had issues being able to extend or rewrite or have these folks refinance elsewhere.
So I think that speaks again to the granular nature of the portfolio. You know, it's a relatively mature portfolio. Also, if you look at that LTV, and those that are maturing are typically coming off of a five or ten year amortization, you know, maybe a longer amortization schedule, but...
a five-year or ten-year maturity into a longer amortization schedule. They've had time to season and build equity, but that has not been the major issue for us in terms of getting things at maturity to re-appraise. Again, where we're running into the issues is really impacting new production.
where borrowers are looking for higher leverage levels in order to undertake a construction project or purchase a project, that's where we're running into issues with values.
where we're looking for higher leverage levels in order to undertake a construction project or purchase a project, that's where we're running into issues with values. right.
Okay, and what are you underwriting new office loans at in terms of cap rate and...
underwriting new office loans at in terms of cap rate and yeah.
Yeah, I don't have the cap rate off the top of my head. Matt, we'll have to get back to you on that.
Okay, I'll leave it there. That's all I had. Thanks for taking my questions. Yep. Thank you. Okay. Well, those are all the questions we have at this time. I'll now turn the call back over to Chief Executive Officer Chris McConish for any additional or closing remarks. Okay, thanks. Thanks everybody for your interest and engagement. Again, we wanted to provide additional transparency to you.
We feel good about the quarter and the environment that we're in. We look forward to Q2. Thank you very much.
This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.
Sing Sing Sing.