Earnings call: Cathay General Bancorp posts stable Q3 results, plans buybacks By Investing.com

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Cathay General Bancorp (NASDAQ:) has reported a slight increase in net income and earnings per share in its third-quarter earnings call held on October 30, 2024. Net income rose to $67.5 million, up by 1% from the previous quarter, with diluted earnings per share growing to $0.94.

The bank also announced its intention to continue its stock repurchase program, aiming to buy back roughly $35 million in stock per quarter through the first quarter of 2025, subject to market conditions.

Key Takeaways

  • Cathay General Bancorp reported a 1% increase in net income to $67.5 million for Q3 2024.
  • Diluted earnings per share rose by 2.2% to $0.94.
  • The bank repurchased 832,460 shares at an average cost of $42.
  • Total gross loans increased slightly, driven by growth in commercial real estate loans.
  • Non-accrual loans rose to 0.84% of total loans, largely due to a $38 million loan becoming non-accrual.
  • Net interest margin improved to 3.04%, with projections between 3.05% and 3.10% for the full year.
  • Non-interest income increased, primarily from gains on equity securities.

Company Outlook

  • Cathay anticipates loan growth for 2024 to be between -1% and 0%.
  • The bank expects to maintain a net interest margin between 3.05% and 3.10% for 2024.
  • Future buyback authorization may increase to $150 million, pending Board review.

Bearish Highlights

  • Non-accrual loans increased, with a significant $38 million loan relationship placed on non-accrual.
  • The Tier 1 leverage capital ratio slightly decreased to 10.82% from 10.83%.

Bullish Highlights

  • Total deposits and core deposits both showed healthy growth rates.
  • The effective tax rate remained low at 13.6%, with future rates projected to be even lower.
  • The bank plans to manage maturing CDs effectively, with average yields around 4.82%.

Misses

  • There was a $10 million increase in loan loss reserves, attributed to general reserves.
  • Income tax expense increased by $2.2 million due to a true-up of low-income housing tax credits.

Q&A Highlights

  • Heng Chen confirmed that amortization for low-income housing is expected to remain at $10 million for Q4.
  • Adam Butler inquired about the NIM, with management providing current spot rates for various loan categories.
  • Concerns regarding non-performing loans were addressed, noting a particular $38.1 million relationship and additional exposures in Hong Kong.

Cathay General Bancorp’s third quarter earnings call underscored the bank’s steady financial performance and strategic initiatives in the face of market fluctuations.

With a continued focus on stock repurchases and cautious loan management, Cathay aims to maintain its financial stability while navigating the challenges ahead.

The company’s management expressed their gratitude to call participants and shared their anticipation for the forthcoming quarterly earnings release.

InvestingPro Insights

Cathay General Bancorp’s (CATY) recent earnings report aligns with several key metrics and insights from InvestingPro. The company’s P/E ratio of 10.71 suggests that the stock may be undervalued relative to its earnings, which could be attractive to value investors given the reported increase in net income and earnings per share.

An InvestingPro Tip highlights that Cathay General Bancorp has maintained dividend payments for 34 consecutive years, reflecting the company’s commitment to shareholder returns. This is particularly relevant in light of the bank’s announcement to continue its stock repurchase program, further emphasizing its focus on returning value to shareholders.

The company’s revenue for the last twelve months stands at $735.21 million, with a revenue growth of -9.45% over the same period. This decline in revenue is consistent with the InvestingPro Tip indicating that net income is expected to drop this year. However, it’s worth noting that despite these challenges, analysts predict the company will remain profitable this year, as mentioned in another InvestingPro Tip.

Cathay General Bancorp’s dividend yield of 3.05% may be attractive to income-focused investors, especially considering the bank’s long history of dividend payments. This yield, combined with the stock repurchase program, contributes to a high shareholder yield, as noted in an InvestingPro Tip.

For investors seeking a more comprehensive analysis, InvestingPro offers additional tips and insights beyond those mentioned here. In fact, there are 7 more InvestingPro Tips available for Cathay General Bancorp, providing a deeper understanding of the company’s financial health and market position.

Full transcript – Cathay General Bancorp (CATY) Q3 2024:

Operator: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Cathay General Bancorp’s Third Quarter of 2024 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Rocco, and I will be your coordinator for today. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. Following the prepared remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Today’s call is being recorded and will be available for replay at www. cathaygeneralbancorp.com. Now, I would like to turn the call over to Georgia Lo, Investor Relations of Cathay General Bancorp.

Georgia Lo: Thank you, Rocco, and good afternoon. Here to discuss the financial results today are Mr. Chang Liu, our President and Chief Executive Officer; and Mr. Heng Chen, our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, we wish to remind you that the speakers on this call may make forward-looking statements within the meaning of the applicable provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 concerning future results and events and that these statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. These risks and uncertainties are further described in the company’s annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023, at Item 1A in particular, and in other reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission from time-to-time. As such, we caution you not to place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements. Any forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date on which it’s made and except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update or review any forward-looking statements to reflect future circumstances, developments or events or the occurrence of unanticipated events. This afternoon, Cathay General Bancorp issued an earnings release outlining its third quarter 2024 results. To obtain a copy of our earnings release as well as our earnings presentation, please visit our website at www.cathaygeneralbancorp.com. After comments by management today, we will open up this call for questions. I will now turn the call over to our President and Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Chang Liu.

Chang Liu: Thank you, Georgia, and good afternoon. Welcome to our 2024 third quarter earnings conference call. This afternoon, we reported net income of $67.5 million for Q3 2024, a 1% increase as compared to $66.8 million in Q2. Diluted earnings per share increased 2.2% to $0.94 per share for the third quarter as compared to $0.92 per share in Q2. During the third quarter of 2024, we repurchased 832,460 shares of our common stock at an average cost of $42 per share, with $35 million under our May 2024, $125 million stock buyback program. We anticipate continuing to repurchase around $35 million in stock per quarter in Q4 and Q1 2025, depending on the market conditions. In Q3 2024, total gross loans increased $16 million or 0.3% annualized, primarily driven by increases of $89 million or 4% annualized in CRE loans and $16 million or 2% annualized in C&I loans, offset by decreases of $40 million or 3% annualized in residential mortgages and HELOC and $50 million or 47% annualized in construction loans. We expect loan growth for 2024 to be between minus 1% and 0% based on the loan trends so far in 2024. Slide 6 shows the percentage of loans in each major loan portfolio that are either fixed rate or hybrid loans in their fixed rate period. Our loan portfolio consists of 63% fixed rate and hybrid loans excluding fixed to flow interest rate swaps on 4.5% of total loans. Fixed rate loans comprised 3% of total loans and hybrid and fixed rate period comprised 33% of total loans. We expect these fixed rate loans to support our loan yields as market rates are expected to decline. We continue to monitor our commercial real estate loans. Turning to Slide 8 of our earnings presentation. As of September 30, 2024, the average loan to value of our CRE loans was 49%. As of September 30, 2024, our retail property loan portfolio as shown on Slide 9 comprised of 24% of our total CRE loan portfolio or 12% of our total loan portfolio. 90% of the $2.4 billion in retail property loans secured by retail store, building, neighborhood mixed use or strip centers only 9% secured by shopping centers. On Slide 10, office property loans represent 15% of our total CRE loan portfolio or 8% of our total loan portfolio. Only 35% of the $1. 5 billion in office property loans are collateralized by pure office buildings, only 3% are in central business districts. 38% of office property loans are collateralized by office retail stores, office mix use and medical offices, and the remainder 27% are collateralized by office condos. For Q3 2024, we reported net charge offs of $4.2 million, as compared to $8 million in Q2. Our non-accrual loans were 0.84% of total loans as of September 30, 2024, which increased $55.5 million to $162.8 million as compared to Q2. The increase in non-accrual loans during Q3 2024 came primarily from a $38 million loan relationship that was placed on non-accrual due to interest delinquency of more than 90 days on $19 million of those loans. Of this loan relationship, $11.2 million is a real estate loan where the borrowers looking for another lender. The borrowers also seeking new financing to repay commercial loans in this relationship. We expect the loan delinquency to be resolved in the next few months. The other large new non-accrual loan is a $12.7 million real estate loan in Hong Kong secured by four rental properties with no projected loss. During the third quarter, we also saw our largest non-accrual loan, a $23 million construction loan and recovered $1.9 million of back interest. Turning to Slide 12. As of September 30, 2024, classified loans increased to $382 million from $324 million in Q2, mainly due to the placement of the $38 million loan relationship discussed above to non-accrual and our special mention loans increased to $203 million from $202 million in Q2. We recorded a provision for credit loss of $14.5 million in Q3 2024 as compared to a $6.6 million provision for credit losses for Q2. This increased the reserve to loan ratio from 0.79% for Q2 to 0.85% for Q3. However, excluding our residential mortgage portfolio, which has historically have very low loss content, the total reserve to loan ratio would be 1.08%. Total deposits increased by $171 million or 3.5% annualized during Q3 2024. Total core deposits increased $195 million or 7.8% annualized due to seasonal factors in marketing activities and total time deposits decreased $24 million or 1% annualized during Q3 2024. The average number of months of time deposits is five months, which will allow us to lower the cost of time deposits as deposit rates are expected to decline. As of September 30, 2024, total uninsured deposits were $8.4 billion, net of $0.8 billion in collateralized deposits or 42.1% of total deposits. We have an unused borrowing capacity from the Federal Home Loan Bank of $7.2 billion and the Federal Reserve Bank of $438 million and unpledged securities of $1.5 billion as of September 30, 2024. These sources of available liquidity more than covers 100% of uninsured and uncollateralized deposits as of September 30, 2024. I will now turn the floor over to our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Mr. Heng Chen to discuss quarterly financial results in more detail.

Heng Chen: Thank you, Chang, and good afternoon, everyone. For Q3 2024, net income increased $0.7 million or 1% to $67.5 million compared to $66.8 million for Q2, primarily due to increases of $3.8 million in net interest income and $7.1 million in non-interest income and $2.5 million decreases in non-interest expense, offset by $7.9 million increase in provision for credit losses and $4.9 million increase in income tax expense. Net income for Q3 2024 was reduced by $2.2 million or $0.03 per share from the true-up of loan compounding (ph) tax credits recorded for 2023. Q3 2024 net interest margin was 3.04% as compared to 3.01% for Q2. With the Fed starting the rate cutting cycle, our net interest margin appears to have bottomed out and begun to increase. We anticipate that the net interest margin for 2024 to range between 3.05% and 3.10%. In Q3, interest recoveries and prepayment penalties added 5 basis points to the net interest income as compared to adding 2 basis points in net interest margin for Q2. Non-interest income for Q3 2024 increased $7.2 million to $20.4 million, when compared to $13.2 million in Q2 2024. The increase was primarily due to a $5.7 million increase and mark-to-market annualized gain on equity securities. Non-interest expenses decreased by $2.5 million or 2.5% to $96.9 million in Q3 2024 when compared to $99.4 million in Q2. This decrease was primarily due to $1.2 million in lower professional expense and $1.2 million in lower operating expenses — lower other operating expenses. The effective tax rate for Q3 2024 was 13.6% as compared to 7.9% for Q2. We expect an effective tax rate between 10.5% and 11.5% for 2024. The solar tax credit investment amortization is expected to be $32.5 million in 2024, with $1.5 million in Q4. A true-up of low-income housing tax credits for 2023 added $2.2 million in third quarter 2024 income tax expense. As of September 30, 2024, Tier 1 leverage capital ratio decreased to 10.82% as compared to 10.83% as of June 30, 2024, our Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio increased to 13.33% from 13.26% as of June 30, 2024, and our total risk-based capital ratio increased to 14.88% from 14.74% as of June 30, 2024.

Chang Liu: Thank you, Heng. We will now proceed to the question-and-answers portion of the call.

Operator: Thank you. [Operator Instructions] The first question today comes from Gary Tenner at D.A. Davidson. Please go ahead.

Gary Tenner: Thanks. Good afternoon. I wanted to ask first about the increase in the loan loss reserve in the quarter, the $10 million increase. Was that related to the $38 million loan relationship that went on non-accrual in the quarter or any other changes that you made to the model or any inputs there?

Heng Chen: Yeah, Gary. This is Heng. That’s a $30 million loan. We did not have any specific reserves against that. So we mainly added the extra $10 million net of charge offs just to bolster our reserves. It’s general reserves.

Gary Tenner: Okay. Thank you. And then, as we’re looking out to 2025, the fixed loans and then the fixed loans that become hybrid loans, can you give us an idea of the maturity schedule of the fixed loans and then how much of those fixed loans enter a hybrid period next year?

Heng Chen: I don’t have that handy. Give me a couple of days, and I’ll get back to you, but most of those hybrid loans are residential mortgage.

Gary Tenner: Okay. All right. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. And our next question today comes from Andrew Terrell with Stephens. Please go ahead.

Andrew Terrell: Hey, good afternoon.

Heng Chen: Hi, Andrew (ph).

Andrew Terrell: If I could just start on the CD repricing, it’s good to see the time deposit cost leveled out in the third quarter. Just curious, if you look at the fourth quarter, how much is [Technical Difficulty] coming up for maturity? And then relative to your average cost right now, where — what’s the kind of back book cost of what’s rolling off in the fourth quarter and where you’re pricing new CDs at today?

Chang Liu: So I can start with that. In the fourth quarter, maturing CDs is going to be about $3.49 billion. The average yield on those maturing CDs is about 4.82%. Depending upon where — what kind of tenure, the clients choose whether it’s six months or 12 months, those rates are going to be in the low to mid-4s.

Heng Chen: Yes. And then we have about $600 million that is maturing in January and early February from our Chinese New Year promotion, that’s the one year CDs. And those were at 4.85% and they’ll roll down to hopefully low 4s, maybe 4.20%, 4.30%. And then lastly, we have another $800 million or so a six month Chinese promotion CDs that matured in July and early August. So they — we repriced some down by maybe 20 basis points. But when they come up for renewal in January and February, there will be another 60 basis point or so in reduction on those.

Andrew Terrell: Okay. Very good. I appreciate it. If I could just ask one more on the expense side, just making sure I have the guidance correctly. It looks like to get to the stated full year expense growth range on the core expense side, it implies kind of a moderation again by a few million dollars off the core run rate, in 4Q ’24, a similar move to what we saw this quarter. Does that sound right? Should we expect the core expenses to step down by a few million bucks or so in 4Q?

Heng Chen: I think there’ll be close to Q3. But we have this — our largest project, which is the – improve our deposit opening process and that should be finished in Q3. So we’ll save something there for office. It’s just a couple of them Andrew from our guidance.

Andrew Terrell: Okay. Very good. Thank you for taking my questions. I’ll step back.

Operator: Thank you. And Our next question comes from Chris McGratty, KBW. Please go ahead.

Nicholas Moutafakis: Hi. This is Nick Moutafakis on for Chris. Maybe just on — start real quick on the amortization for low-income housing. Is $10 million still a good run rate for the fourth quarter?

Heng Chen: Yes.

Nicholas Moutafakis: Okay. And then just on the buyback, I know you said $35 million for this quarter and next. But any reason to deviate as you looked into 2025 for re-up in the authorization just given the capital levels?

Heng Chen: Well, our Board will consider that when we’re done with this one. But we will probably do the same signs maybe we’ll increase it instead of $125 million will increase it to $150 million for the buyback, but we’ll have to see how things are.

Nicholas Moutafakis: Okay. Thank you for taking my questions.

Heng Chen: Yeah. Thanks.

Operator: And our next question today comes from Adam Butler with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.

Adam Butler: Hey, everyone. This is Adam on for Matthew Clark. If I look at your NIM guide, the low end would assume about a 3 basis point increase from this prior quarter and the upside high end would be even more. Do you guys happen to have the spot rate on loans, deposits and/or the NIM at the end of the quarter for the month of September?

Chang Liu: Yes. So for the quarter, our spot rates on the residential mortgage is about 7% compared to — portfolio is about 5.6% and mid-5s. Our spot rate for commercial real estate is in the mid — around the mid-6s compared to our portfolio average yield that — right at basically the 6% mark. And for the C&I loans, our spot rates should be at prime and the portfolio yield is about 8.4%.

Adam Butler: Thank you for that. And then, I was also curious about the deposits and the NIM, if you have that?

Heng Chen: Yeah. So the deposits, it’s — I mean, we can get you by categories. So now period end now account rate is 1.2%, savings is 1.83%, money market is 3.58%, and CDs is 4.58%, and total interest bearing is at 9.30% is 3.82%. And then the NIM for September it has quite a bit of interest recovery on that, September NIM was 3.17%.

Adam Butler: Okay. That’s very helpful. And if I could ask just one more question. It looks like the non-performers increased primarily due to that $38.1 million relationship, but it looks like a little bit more migrated in as well. You guys haven’t — can you guys provide any color on the remaining migration during the quarter?

Chang Liu: Yeah. One of them was, one, we were talking about in Hong Kong that has secured by three retail center collaterals and that was about $12.7 million.

Adam Butler: Okay. Thank you. I appreciate you guys taking the questions.

Chang Liu: Of course, thank you.

Heng Chen: Thank you.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] I want to thank everybody for joining us on our call. Thank you for your participation. I will now turn the call back over to Cathay General Bancorp’s management for closing remarks.

Chang Liu: I want to thank everyone for joining us on our call, and we look forward to speaking with you at our next quarterly earnings release call.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your participation in today’s conference. This concludes the presentation. You may now disconnect and good day.

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