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First Foundation Inc. (FFWM)·Q3 2019 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2019 delivered higher revenues and EPS on strong banking activity and a $4.2M gain on sale from a $551M multifamily loan securitization; total revenues were $57.1M (+4% YoY) and diluted EPS $0.39 (+18% YoY) .
- Net interest margin was 2.89% (up vs Q2’s 2.84%), with management guiding to a flat NIM in Q4 and targeting ~3% next year as funding costs decline and customer-service deposit balances seasonally roll off .
- Banking pre-tax income rose meaningfully QoQ on higher net interest income, lower provision, and higher noninterest income (gain on sale, loan fees); noninterest expense benefited from a one-time $1.2M FDIC insurance refund .
- Deposits grew $638M YTD and originations remained robust ($486M 3Q, diversified with 31% commercial); tangible book rose to $11.35 per share .
- Consensus estimates from S&P Global were unavailable at time of request; result-to-estimate comparisons could not be assessed.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strong consolidated performance: “We experienced another strong quarter… earnings $17.4 million or $0.39 a share” with total revenues $57M and efficiency ratio 59.5% . Management highlighted completing its fourth securitization ($551M loans; $4.2M gain) as part of a multi-year strategic plan to expand lending while maintaining credit quality .
- Balanced growth engines: Loan originations $486M, deposits +$638M YTD, AUM +$309M YTD, Trust AUM +$97M YTD with trust fees up 35% YoY YTD, underpinning noninterest income diversification .
- Margin/funding setup improving: Overall cost of interest-bearing liabilities decreased to 1.91% in Q3 (from 1.94% in Q2) as short-term rates fell; management expects further funding cost relief and NIM to approach 3% next year .
What Went Wrong
- Seasonal and mix headwinds: Customer service costs rose QoQ (+$1.6M) on higher related deposit balances, partially offset by lower earnings credit rates; management expects balances to decline 20–30% from peak in Q4 but average balances fall less intra-quarter .
- Modest NIM still below 3%: Despite sequential improvement, NIM of 2.89% remains below 2018 levels (3.12% in Q3 2018), with securitization and securities remix pressuring reported NIM mix in the near term .
- Nonperforming assets ticked up: NPA ratio rose to 0.33% (from 0.25% in Q2), driven by two legacy relationships; management emphasized strong collateral and de minimis pipeline of troubled assets .
Financial Results
Segment breakdown (Income before taxes):
KPIs and balance metrics:
Estimates vs. actuals:
Note: Consensus estimates were unavailable from S&P Global at time of request.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We experienced another strong quarter… loan sale and securitization of $551 million of multifamily loans… sale of $284 million of lower yielding securities… purchase of $576 million of securities from the securitization. I’m very pleased with our ability to complete this fourth securitization, a tool which we intend to continue to utilize going forward.” — CEO Scott Kavanaugh .
- “Consistent with prior quarters we continue to diversify our originations… 31% of our originations coming from commercial lending… weighted average interest rate on our originations that is higher than the interest rate of our current overall loan portfolio.” — President David DePillo .
- “Our overall cost of interest-bearing liabilities decreased to 1.91%… we started to realize the benefits of decreasing short-term interest rates.” — CFO John Michel .
- “We expect another strong quarter [Q4]… pipelines continue to be strong… holding fairly judiciously on our rates.” — President David DePillo .
Q&A Highlights
- Margin outlook: Securities portfolio expected to yield ~3%; NIM flat in Q4 as seasonal runoff shifts benefits to bottom line; NIM path to ~3% seen in 2020 .
- Customer service costs: Expect ~20–30% end-of-quarter balance reduction; average balances decline less intra-quarter; potential dual benefit if Fed eases further .
- Originations pipeline: Management expects a strong Q4 with continued commercial demand; some year-end funding may slip into January .
- Liquidity and FHLB advance: Locked one-year funding at 1.77% amid market anomaly; on-balance liquidity near 18–20% with intent to maintain ~14–15% .
- Credit/NPA clarification: NPA increase tied to two legacy relationships (cash-secured line in litigation; land-secured low LTV); REO at zero; pipeline of troubled assets immaterial .
- FDIC credit: $1.2M small-bank credit taken in Q3 represents the entire expected credit, no carryover .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus EPS and revenue estimates for Q3 2019 were unavailable due to access limitations at time of request; therefore, beat/miss vs. Street cannot be determined.
- Given management’s commentary and sequential improvement in NIM and pre-tax income, estimate revisions for Q4 and FY could reflect lower funding costs and stable NIM trajectory, but exact consensus adjustments cannot be quantified without S&P Global data.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Securitization capability is a recurring strategic tool supporting loan growth and balance sheet optimization; the Q3 execution and attractive spread environment underpin 2020 cadence (~$500M planned) .
- Funding-cost relief is underway; as specialty deposit balances seasonally decline and rates ease, bottom-line leverage should improve even if reported NIM is flat short-term .
- Diversified originations with growing commercial mix sustain demand and support portfolio yield, while credit quality remains strong despite a slight NPA uptick concentrated in well-secured legacy loans .
- Noninterest income drivers (gain on sale, trust fees, servicing fees) provide earnings resilience; one-time FDIC refund aided Q3 expenses but will not recur .
- Tangible book value per share continues to compound ($11.35, +3.8% QoQ), offering valuation support as earnings momentum improves .
- Near-term trading: Expect focus on Q4 NIM stability, specialty deposit runoff dynamics, and any incremental Fed moves impacting funding costs; securitization spreads remain a positive catalyst .
- Medium-term thesis: Operating efficiency trending better, funding backdrop easing, and recurring securitizations should support earnings growth and ROE improvement into 2020 .
Notes on Non-GAAP metrics
Management uses non-GAAP measures (efficiency ratio, tangible common equity, tangible book value, NIM excluding loans held for sale), with reconciliations and definitions provided in the press releases .