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ServisFirst Bancshares, Inc. (SFBS)

Q3 2025 Earnings Call· Mon, Oct 20, 2025

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Greetings, and welcome to the ServisFirst Bancshares Third Quarter Earnings Call. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Davis Mange, Director of Investor Relations. Thank you, Davis. You may begin.

Davis Mange

Management

Good afternoon, and welcome to our third quarter earnings call. Today's speakers will cover some highlights from the quarter and then take your questions. We'll have Tom Broughton, our CEO; Jim Harper, our Chief Credit Officer; and David Sparacio, our CFO. I'll now cover our forward-looking statements disclosure. Some of the discussion in today's earnings call may include forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ from any projections shared today due to factors described in our most recent 10-K and 10-Q filings. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made, and ServisFirst assumes no duty to update them. With that, I'll turn the call over to Tom.

Thomas Broughton

Management

Thank you, Davis. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining our third quarter conference call. I'll give you a few highlights followed by credit update from Jim Harper and followed by David Sparacio with some financial updates. Talk about loan growth, it was below our expectation for the third quarter. We went back and reviewed loans booked and draws versus paydowns over the 3 quarters of 2025 and loan paydowns were up $500 million over the prior 2 quarters in the third quarter. So this contributed to the lack of -- real significant loan growth. We did see a nice increase of over 10% in our loan pipeline in October compared to September. In comparing our loan pipeline to 1 year ago, the pipeline is 40% higher today. In addition, the projected payoffs today are 30% of the projected pipeline versus 1 year ago, there were 41% of the projected new loans. So we do see that there is a slight decline in the pipeline as a percent of the loan payoffs as a percent of the loan pipeline. So the pipeline is not scientific, though we do stress to our bankers, and we want to be as accurate as possible. Every fourth quarter that I can remember has been -- we've had solid loan growth -- so my expectation will be that we'll have a good closing long quarter in loans. And I'll say that not all loan payoffs are bad because some of them that are low fixed rates pay off on the asset sale. So we've had several this quarter. So we're glad to see those pay off. So on the deposit side, we did see some continued reduction in our high-cost municipal deposits in the third quarter. They were offset by some large corporate deposit inflows -- so -- but as David will discuss in a few minutes, we're trying to manage down our total deposit costs as the Federal Reserve reduces the Fed funds rate. On the new markets, we did hire 7 new producers. In the quarter spread throughout our footprint. And we're also proud of that all of our markets are now profitable. I don't think we've ever achieved this before since our first year in business. So we're very proud of that. So I'm going to turn it over now to Jim Harper for a credit update.

Jim Harper

Management

Thanks, Tom. As Tom noted, lending activity softened a bit during the third quarter, but activity as we moved into the fourth quarter has been robust. With activity across our footprint. From a credit metric standpoint, charge-offs totaled just over $9 million in the third quarter, which results in an annualized net charge-off to average loan percentage of 27 basis points, on higher than recent historical periods, the charges were primarily taken on loans, which had previously been impaired with one exception of a $3 million charge taken on a loan that had not previously been impaired. From an allowance perspective, the allowance to total loan percentage remains static compared to the second quarter at 1.28% at quarter end. Nonperforming assets were notably higher at [ 9/30 ], increasing by approximately $96 million during the quarter with the increase driven by our relationship consisting of 8 loans with a large merchant developer, rehabilitator of multifamily properties. Properties associated with the loans are in Alabama, Louisiana and Texas. Despite us placing these loans on nonaccrual during the quarter, the bank was able to successfully obtain additional collateral to -- bolster our position. Additionally, the borrower is actively selling assets as evidenced by purchase and sale agreements on 5 properties and 8 letters of intent on others as well as pursuing other corporate actions, which are expected to produce meaningful liquidity in the coming quarters. ServisFirst continues to aggressively manage our NPAs, and we expect to have resolutions on several material credits as soon as late in the fourth quarter of this year. I will now turn it over to David to provide his comments on our third quarter financial performance.

David Sparacio

Management

Thank you, Jim. Good afternoon, everybody. For the quarter, we reported net income of $65.6 million and diluted earnings per share of $1.20 and preprovision net revenue of $88.3 million. This represented a return on average assets of 1.47% and a return on common equity of 14.9%. Net income grew more than $9 million or 18% from same quarter last year. During this quarter, we had a few unique transactions. The first was the reversal of about $4.4 million of accrued interest on the credit that Jim spoke of. Secondly, we recognized a loss of $7.8 million on the sale of bonds. And thirdly, we invested in a solar tax credit, which gave us a benefit of about $2.4 million in tax provision. When we take these 3 transactions into account, we view our normalized net income for the quarter to be $73.8 million or $1.35 earnings per common share. I will talk more about these 3 transactions later on. And lastly, our book value grew by an annualized 14% versus last quarter and by more than 13% from the same quarter a year ago ending at $32.37 per share. We continue to be well capitalized with common equity Tier 1 capital ratio of 11.5% and risk-based capital ratio of 12.8% for the quarter. Of course, these are preliminary numbers. In net interest income, our amount for the quarter was $133.4 million as reported and normalized net interest income was $137.8 million. This equates to a net interest margin of 3.09% as reported and more importantly, 3.19% when normalized for the interest income reversal previously mentioned. This normalized net interest income is $8.4 million higher than the normalized number for second quarter of '25 and more than $22.7 million higher than third quarter of '24. We are pleased with the…

Thomas Broughton

Management

Thank you, David. Last thing I'd like to cover is there's been recent attention in the media in recent days on the increase of fraud and a few regional banks. Much of this is related to category -- lending called NDFI, which stands for nondepository financial institutional lending. We have avoided any significant exposure in most of the categories that fall within the NDFI category for one main reason, and that's because trois more common in NDFI loans, and it's hard to full-proof your process. warehouse lending, ABL lended and floor plans historically have had a greater incidence in fraud than any other types of loans. To cover our total NDFI exposure is $71 million or less than 1% of our loan portfolio. I think everybody knows that our correspondent division does business with our -- with community correspondent banks. And -- most of our exposure is to holding company lines of credit to community banks, a holding company. So we certainly are comfortable with our exposure in this category. I would differentiate a fraud issue from a credit issue. It's not that the credit deteriorated where there's [ fall ]. This [ fall ] is just a fraud and it typically is fairly common. You see it all the time. It continues in some sort of a pony scheme type situation until they are found out by their lender. And they have to come clean on it. So we avoid most of these categories like this, we avoid -- we shared national credits. We try to lend to borrowers. We think we know well, owner-managed companies and real estate developers are the best examples. We -- as lenders, we all make mistakes from time to time, but we -- because we have a record of lending to people we know. Our loan losses have been much lower and our credit quality has been much better at ServisFirst Bank. So we consider ourselves of community buy. We have 11 community banks plus our correspondent division. So we are proud of what we have built here over the last 20 years and certainly still the test of time, and we'll continue to do so. So this will conclude our prepared remarks, and now I'll turn it over to operator for questions.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Steve Moss with Raymond James.

Stephen Moss

Analyst

Good afternoon, guys. Maybe just starting with the nonperformer here. Just curious, what was the dynamic, if you can give us any color that pushed the borrower over to nonperforming status -- and also, what's the loan-to-value on the loans?

Thomas Broughton

Management

Well, we -- as again, said we took additional substantial additional collateral during the quarter and substantially he offered it. And we -- because he was expecting a large payment before quarter end, it did not come in. So we will have no choice other than -- move it to nonaccrual and we'll start -- like to think we will turn it to accrual status over the next 6 months. As [ selling ] these properties and many others. So it's workforce housing redeveloper, long-term customer. We have confidence in the this borrower. So we feel good about our exposure. We don't have a -- it's a good loan. Obviously, it's not a good loan in terms of -- it's not current at the current time. We feel comfortable where we are.

Stephen Moss

Analyst

Okay. Got it. And just in terms of just thinking like when you guys just -- I hear you on the additional collateral kind of like just maybe just a little comfort in terms like what's the loan to cost or just kind of how you're thinking about how secure you are? I hear you're going to start to come back to accrual status just kind of -- you can [ sit limit ]1.

Thomas Broughton

Management

So we think through the forbearance process and all the actions that we were able to execute toward the end of the quarter. We did think there was possibly a little bit of a collateral shortfall, and we were able to work with the borrower to obtain additional collateral across several different fronts, and we think we've shored that up. So our loan to value, while certainly elevated, we don't -- we certainly think that it's below 1:1 at this point, and we've got adequate security to cover the loans for sure right now.

Stephen Moss

Analyst

Appreciate that. And then in terms of just kind of on the margin front. I hear you guys about the amount of the reversal of accrued interest. Just curious, probably getting effect that next week, underlying margin was 3.19% -- just kind of curious on the cadence of margin are you guys still thinking something close to high single digits to tens given rate cuts? And also just curious on loan yields, where loan pricing is these days?

David Sparacio

Management

Yes. So Steve, this is David. Yes, we're still confident with, I'll call it, 7 to 10 basis points improvement in margin each quarter as we've been seeing -- for reference, our -- I don't want to call it adjusted, but our normalized spot rate for September was [ $328 ], right, for the month, excluding the net interest accrual reversal. So we're in good shape on margin. the Fed cut happened September 17, so we only experienced about 2 weeks of benefit from that -- so we'll see that throughout the fourth quarter as well as we anticipate additional cuts in the October and December meetings. The Fed is going to have -- so we're going to continue to see improvement in margin. As far as loan yields, the going-on rate dropped a bit. Last quarter, we were at [ $7.07 ] this quarter, we're at [ $6.87 ] for loans going on. But we're continuing to manage through the process. We continue to have healthy repricings and cash flows. We're still sitting at about $1.7 billion in the next 12 months. in cash flows. And then on top of that, as Tom alluded to in earlier conference calls, we have another roughly $300 million a year in covenant bust that get repriced. And so we're sitting at about $2 billion worth of opportunity of repricing on loans. So we feel really good about the margin expansion and we think that's going to continue at least for the foreseeable Future as long as there's nothing drastic done by the Fed.

Stephen Moss

Analyst

Got you. And just in terms of the cash flows for the next 12 months, it's still in the high 4s in terms of fixed rate loans, cash flow?

David Sparacio

Management

Yes. It's still in the high 4s. [ 4.87 ] was a number for second quarter. We don't have an updated number from our external ALM consulting yet for the third quarter. So -- but we can get that to you, but still in the high 4s.

Stephen Moss

Analyst

Of course. Okay. And Tom, in terms of the loan pipeline here picking up, just curious where are you seeing the growth and kind of what you're seeing the demand for loans [indiscernible]?

Thomas Broughton

Management

I can't give you a good answer, Steve. It's all over the [ bollard ]. That's what it it, we obviously would like to see more C&I than we spend more commercial real estate oriented. But our AD&C is the lowest it's been in.

Unknown Executive

Analyst

In years and years -- from a percentage.

Thomas Broughton

Management

The CRE is below 300% of capital -- so it's by region, it's hit or miss, it's here or there in younger. I mean, Atlanta has been really strong, and we've had pockets of places that some of our markets are doing quite well. Some of our near markets, obviously, you would think they would do well, right? And they are. The new markets are Memphis and Auburn and Piedmont region have had good loan growth this year, and that you would expect that and they are doing that. So I mean, I'd still say loan demand is okay. I saw a banker, Saturday and he said, "I was loan demand. He said Okay. I said, yes, I know it's okay. It's not great. So we need a few more rate cuts to hopefully help out loan demand overall.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Dave Bishop with Hovde Group.

David Bishop

Analyst · Hovde Group.

I'm curious -- Tom, on the expense side, Tom and Dave came in a little bit, I think, above expectations. Sounds like there was some shoring up on the incentive accruals. Is that correct? And maybe you can sort of ring fence that about maybe expectations where you see that compensation, salaries and benefits maybe settling into the final quarter of the year?

Thomas Broughton

Management

Yes, Dave, the true-up really happened in second quarter. So when you compare second quarter to the third quarter, it's really second quarter that was lower because of the true-up. We did an incentive true-up, it's all in incentive comp. And so it's going to depend a lot on loan production. We went back to accruing our normal incentive rate for the third quarter. And so fourth quarter, at this point in time, given the the uptick in the pipeline, we expect fourth quarter to be very similar to third quarter from an incentive standpoint. And so I would expect the noninterest expense to come in at the same level as well. So roughly $48 million. I know it's higher than expected. But I would just guide you back to our efficiency ratio. Our efficiency ratio is still best-in-class in the [ 130 ] we're not -- the expense increase is a fraction of what our revenue increase is. And as long as we continue on that trajectory. That's what I'm pleased with from the results standpoint.

David Bishop

Analyst · Hovde Group.

Got it. Appreciate that color. Then Tom, I think when we had you on the virtual road last month or so, still sort of fresh in the news, the opportunities from the MOE in your backyard. Any early signs of success there? Or you're pretty active in terms of recruiting efforts? Any -- any commentary you can provide there in terms of maybe early reads of relationship wins or bank or [indiscernible]?

Thomas Broughton

Management

Broadening that it's not only mergers that cause that create opportunity. We're looking at -- obviously, there are other mergers announced are going on and we look for opportunities in many fronts. And feel good about our ability to at least attract customers and offer them a more stable -- base than they've seen in some cases out there in the market. So we we feel confident about where we are and opportunities. Again, you've got to be out seeing people. And again, most of our opportunities come from existing customers, about 80% of our new business comes from referrals from existing clients. So that is something that we emphasize on trying to do a good job of taking care of our clients and they'll send us their friends and colleagues that they do business with and know well. So we think that's the very best thing we can do is take care of our clients and take care of their needs, and we'll get more just like them. So.

David Bishop

Analyst · Hovde Group.

Got it. And then one final maybe housekeeping question. The tax rate, I know with the solar tax credit investment bounced around a little bit. Maybe a good expectation for the effective tax rate going forward?

Jim Harper

Management

Yes. I think the 18.9%, Dave was going to stick for the year, at least for 2025. As Tom mentioned, this deal that we did, it kind of opened our eyes a bit on what's available and what's out there in the market. And so we have some good contacts. We have some good relationships. And so we're going to continue to develop those opportunities and take advantage of them. And so the goal -- you saw our tax rate jumped up a little bit in second quarter. And so the goal is to keep it certainly below 20% for sure. And so for 2026, we don't have anything that's planned right now, but we continue to have discussions with folks that have opportunities for us to take advantage of. So I would expect it to be in the 18%, 19% for the foreseeable future.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Stephen Scouten with Piper Sandler.

Stephen Scouten

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

David, I want to reconcile one number real quick. I think you said maybe a [ 328 ] margin for the month of September ex the reversal -- is that interest reversal, the main difference versus the [ $297 million ] listed in the supplemental information?

David Sparacio

Management

Yes, that is correct. Yes. It was -- it's about 31 basis points on that interest reversal.

Stephen Scouten

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Okay. Great And so you would expect to kind of see that 7 to 10 basis points, the way you would think about it in the fourth quarter would be 7 to 10 bps potential roughly off of the [ 319 ] all-in number. Is that the right way to think about it?

David Sparacio

Management

Yes, that is correct. .

Stephen Scouten

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Okay. Great. And then, Tom, maybe kind of following up on that question around dislocation. I like how you said that kind of offering stability in the market and being there for your customers. Are there any kind of new markets maybe on the horizon for you guys, where that level of business quality and stability you don't see being offered today that you'd be interested in, whether that's opened up via M&A or otherwise?

Thomas Broughton

Management

Yes. I think certainly, we've always had an interest in finding the right people in Texas, and that's something we're very interested in -- it's not easy. Texas is not an easy -- I'm not suggesting it's an easy market. I'm suggesting that there are -- if you have the right group of people with a bank base like ours, I think it could be a really good place to do business. And I think we could -- Texas is a very Texas-centric place. You can't send people there. The Texas people like to do business with Texas. And not people from Alabama or New York or anywhere else. So I get that, and I'm aware of it. So that's something we are certainly keenly interested in that market. And I'm not -- not to change the subject, but doubling back on what, David, to my interest rates, as the Fed cuts rate -- that rates -- that is our opportunity to say, okay, we need to try to manage down our deposit costs at least more than the Fed cut. So if the pay cut is 25, our goal is to manage down more than that, more than that 25 bps. So I think that's it's an opportunity. It's when we see the Fed cutting rates. That's our opportunity, Stephen. And I wouldn't avoid any further questions.

Stephen Scouten

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Yes, that makes sense. No, I appreciate that. That's a good reminder. And along with that, kind of maybe bouncing back to the NIM a little bit, I guess, when was that security sale completed this quarter? And is there any sort of incremental benefit to the run rate of securities yields in the NIM in the fourth quarter from that trade?

Unknown Executive

Analyst · Piper Sandler.

Yes. The security sale was done in late in third quarter, maybe the third week of September. And so you're not going to see much more benefit at all in third quarter as a result of that. You'll see the full benefit of it in the fourth quarter. And I don't have a number off the top of my head exactly what that is, but it's going to be 500 basis points or 250 basis points on $80 million -- or I'm sorry, $70 million.

Thomas Broughton

Management

Thank you, Stephen.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.