Primis Financial - Q2 2023
July 28, 2023
Transcript
Operator (participant)
My name is David, and I'll be your conference operator today. At this time, I'd like to welcome everyone to the Primis Financial Corp second quarter earnings call. Today's conference is being recorded. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there'll be a question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question during this time, simply press the star key followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you'd like to withdraw your question, press star one once again. Thank you. Matthew Switzer, Chief Financial Officer, you may begin your conference.
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
Good morning, thank you for joining us. Before we begin, please note that many of our comments during this call will be forward-looking statements, which involve risk and uncertainty. There are many factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the anticipated results or other expectations expressed in the forward-looking statements. Further discussion of the company's risk factors and other important information regarding our forward-looking statements are part of our recent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including our recently filed earnings release, which has also been posted to the Investor Relations section of our corporate website, primisbank.com. We undertake no obligation to update or revise forward-looking statements to reflect changed assumptions, the occurrence of unanticipated events, or changes to future operating results over time. In addition, some of the financial measures that we may discuss this morning are non-GAAP financial measures.
A reconciliation of the non-GAAP measures to the most comparable GAAP measures can be found in our earnings release. I will now turn the call over to our President and Chief Executive Officer, Dennis Zember.
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
Thank you, Matt. Thank you to all of you that have joined our second quarter conference call. I know this is a noisy quarter, but I really want to stress how excited I am for how we position the bank going forward. The cost savings initiative is, is pretty hard, but will make us much leaner and more profitable right away. The credit charge to move NPAs position us to have best-in-class credit quality with tiny concentrations in office or retail CRE. Our digital platform has gone from 50 basis points over wholesale money to about 50 basis points below wholesale money in just six months. Lastly, while a lot of the industry is implementing the needed cost saves and branch reductions to offset revenue headwinds, I think we can offset all of ours with our move to the gain on sale strategy.
Let me give a little more color on, on all of that. First, the cost savings initiative. Since I came here in 2020, we have consolidated quite a few branches and worked pretty hard on a sales culture. After this recent consolidation is finished, we'll have 24 branches with core bank deposits of $2.5 billion. In the last three years, we've grown checking accounts in the core bank by about 12% annualized, we have completely, 100%, run away from all brokered CDs. The quality and value of this community bank's deposit portfolio, especially in this rate environment, has never been higher than it is right now. Consolidating that value into fewer branches with the best salespeople in our region is something to be excited about.
Matt's going to give more color about the cost savings initiative in his remarks, I believe this can be a transformative moment for us, I have seen over and over in my career how this discipline ultimately yields more savings and, and long-term better results. Still on the value of the community bank, our NPA levels were concentrated in just two relationships, it still damaged our ability to distinguish ourselves. Focusing on, excuse me, closing that one loan sale that we did in the quarter and taking contracts on the others, position us to have only 13 basis points of non-performing assets. We have never chased long maturity, hypercompetitive commercial real estate in our region. We've always focused on profitable, owner-occupied, or C&I deals in the core bank and medical professionals and cash-secured loans in the lines of business.
I think we're very well positioned for whatever's ahead, and this lower level of NPAs will allow us to experience the value from that. On the digital platform, we all questioned at the outset, honestly, if we could find a pathway to real value and profitability in the digital customers. We are working very hard to make sure that value proposition becomes a reality using all of the community bank and relationship skills that we have. In just six months, we've been able to add, to be able to move almost 100 basis points from 50 basis points ahead to 50 basis points below wholesale money. Lastly, we've had virtually no account attrition from our peak, and we've rebuilt almost every service platform we have to make sure our service and experience adds to our efforts.
Touching on our gain on sale, our pivot to the gain on sale model, our digital platform was meant to fully fund Life Premium Finance and Panacea and produce 325 basis points of margin. The loan businesses were meant to lessen. We went into the loan businesses simply to lessen the pressure we had to book every CRE deal that we looked at and to push higher quality credit into our book. There is no question we have done the latter, but the inverted yield curve means that on balance sheet, we're only getting about 200-210 basis points of incremental margin. I know that's too thin to keep leveraging, but I also know the yield curve will ultimately come back.
Instead of shutting down production and waiting and having to maybe rebuild the platforms, we've been instead building interest and commitments to sell these higher quality loans. As I sit here right now, I believe this strategy can completely neutralize all of the net interest income shrinkage that we experienced in the quarter, which is important because I think that means the cost savings that, that Matt's going to discuss about are more bottom line oriented than just replacement for temporary revenue declines. Primis Mortgage this quarter was a standout. Right now, we are slowly and methodically adding a couple producers here and there who are very reasonable about signing bonuses and have been producing, and have been producing solid levels in this environment.
We've grown from a $200 million shop to a $700 million shop. We're profitable all three months in the second quarter. Being profitable right now in this industry is honestly noteworthy, doing it as you're growing and at these lower levels is even more noteworthy. I'm really proud of what our team's doing here. I cannot wait for the day that we have an industry, a normal industry, to operate in. All of that takes me to page five in our slide deck, where Matt has outlined the current quarter with the impact of all these changes. Importantly, our non-branch savings have already been completed as of this month. A good portion of that will be in our third quarter run rate.
What the math doesn't include is about $800,000 a quarter of expenses related to bank operations that will result from tweaking some responsibilities and risk management. We honestly both believe this loan sale strategy is bigger than $1 million. With that loan sale strategy in place, the provisioning will fall as well, further improving the bottom line. Everything we've done here is just recalibrating the bank to be able to produce a minimum 1% ROA in this environment. Before I turn it back over to Matt, I want to say something about the employee fraud. First, I want to stress that I am confident that the vast majority of this is coming back from our insurance. The, given the timing of when we discovered it and our investigation, we did not book that receivable.
I believe in short order, there will be only minimal financial impact from this event. God knows I am not trying to spin this, but the fact that he spent a decade originating fake loans and stopped three years ago, illustrates how important good controls and procedures are, and for the need to have experts in administrative roles to maintain quality. For the last three years, he's basically just serviced the existing fraudulent loans with past proceeds until our credit and regional staff noticed a few unusual things and dug in to discover this. I expect that Matt and our forensic accountant will be done with their work shortly. We'll file the claim and work through the recovery process quickly. All right, with that, Matt, I'll turn it back to you.
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
Thank you, Dennis. I will provide a brief overview of our results before we turn to Q&A. As a reminder, a full description of our second quarter results can be found in our earnings release and second quarter earnings presentation, both of which can be found on our website. Operating earnings for the second quarter were $1 million or $0.04 per diluted share versus $6 million or $0.24 per diluted share in the first quarter. Total assets were $3.8 billion at June 30 versus $4.2 billion in March 31. The reduction in total assets was due to the sweep program we instituted at the end of the quarter that moved approximately $350 million of excess deposits off the balance sheet at the end of the quarter.
Excluding PPP loans and loans held for sale, loan balances grew 17% annualized. Growth was driven by Life Premium Finance and Panacea in the second quarter. We anticipate loan growth to moderate in the near term as we execute on our loan sale strategy, particularly for our higher growth business loans. Deposits were essentially flat in Q2, if you include the funds that were swept off the balance sheet at June 30. We intend to continue growing deposit relationships while managing overall liquidity through the sweep program. Excluding accounting adjustments related to a third-party managed portfolio, net interest income declined to $25.6 million from $27.5 million in Q1, largely due to funding cost pressures.
Interest margin adjusted for excess cash on the balance sheet in Q2 and Q1 that is now being swept off, was 3%, down from 3.38% in the first quarter. A couple of thoughts on margin and net interest income. Pressure on the margin largely occurred earlier in the second quarter, with a noticeable slowdown in deposit repricing later in the quarter. As you look at our press release and investor presentation, we detailed the difference in cost between the community bank and the digital platform. Our community bank beta has been approximately 23%, which we believe is very strong. Having an ability to raise incremental funds out of market has allowed us to be measured in our local markets without pressuring the entire bank.
We also will be launching our new digital business accounts in the third quarter that will allow us to raise incremental funds at a lower rate than consumer and sweep off higher cost deposits still on the balance sheet. Lastly, we entered into an interest rate swap in the middle of the second quarter. If in place for the whole quarter, net interest income would have been approximately $300,000 higher. Combined, we think we have an opportunity to mitigate a lot of the pressure on net interest income in the short term. Excluding accounting adjustments, non-interest income was $7.3 million in the second quarter versus $6.6 million for the first quarter, largely due to an increase in mortgage activity. Mortgage originations were up 50% in the quarter in the face of limited housing supply.
The locked pipeline also ended Q2 at $61 million, up 15% from March 31, suggesting strong momentum into the third quarter. Lastly, non-interest income included a gain of $103,000 from a small Panacea loan sale. We expect this activity to increase materially in the second half of 2023. Core non-interest expense, excluding accounting adjustments, non-recurring items, and mortgage, was $23.5 million for the second quarter versus $21.5 million in the previous quarter. Much of this increase was due to FDIC insurance, data processing expense, and debit card restocking costs that totaled approximately $2 million in the quarter, and that were artificially high due to the high volume of accounts opened late in Q1, early Q2. FDIC insurance, in particular, will decline due to the deposit sweep program.
Dennis also discussed a variety of operational changes that will benefit expenses going forward. We also announced a cost-save initiative, including broader administrative reductions and the consolidation of eight branches that will reduce non-interest expense by approximately $9.4 million annually. Annual administrative saves are approximately $6.5 million, with 2/3 of the run rate expected to be in the third quarter and full run rate in the fourth quarter. Annual branch consolidation saves are expected to be $2.9 million and will be effective starting October 31st. The provision for credit losses was $4.3 million in the second quarter versus $5.2 million in the first quarter. $1.4 million of that provision was due to accounting for a third-party managed portfolio, which is offset by non-interest income.
Also included in the provision is approximately $2.3 million of impairments related to non-performing loan relationship that we expect to be fully resolved in the third quarter. As Dennis highlighted, including an approximately $8 million NPA resolution in the second quarter, total NPAs would have been less than $6 million, and NPAs to assets would have been very low at approximately 13 basis points as of June 30. Core net charge-offs were only $200,000 in the quarter, and the allowance for credit losses to gross loans, excluding PPP, was 1.21% at June 30 versus 1.18% last quarter, largely due to specific reserve build for the NPA sale noted above.
Lastly, core pre-tax, pre-provision earnings were $5.6 million in the second quarter, after a $2 million reduction in net interest income and various expenses that hit this quarter, as discussed above, but that we expect to be lower going forward. As Dennis discussed, we believe our gain-on-sale strategy is on the cusp of producing results and will mitigate this reduction in net interest income and then some. Our cost save initiatives will also begin adding to earnings in Q3 and Q4, and we'll rightsize our expense base for the current environment. Combined, we believe we have a much better path to profitability than this quarter would indicate and are optimistic for the future. Operator, we can now open the line for Q&A.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. At this time, I'd like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press star, then one on your telephone keypad. We'll pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. We'll take our first question from Casey Whitman with Piper Sandler. Your line is now open.
Casey Whitman (Managing Director)
Hey, good morning.
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
Good morning, Casey.
Casey Whitman (Managing Director)
Just starting off with your comments around the gain on sale model, loan growth, could we see loan balances shrink, or are we just talking about slowing the growth here?
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
I don't think they would shrink. I think there's not everything that Panacea and Life Premium would produce would get sold. I think the vast majority would, but I think Panacea is consumer production. We like that. I don't think that we're looking to sell that. I do know that the activity in the core bank honestly has picked up a little. As you know, the, what we're able to do in the core bank, the fact that we even can loan money, sort of distinguishes us, and some of the yields we're seeing are in the mid-eights and nines. I think probably just concentrating more of our lending efforts there, probably just see single digits or low single-digit increases in loans as opposed to what you saw this quarter.
Casey Whitman (Managing Director)
Okay. I assume you can be pretty nimble there. I mean, how quickly can you kind of shut this off if the yield curve changes and you want to portfolio more?
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
I think, I think very fast. I mean, really what we're talking about is more, are more flow arrangements and flow agreements. I mean, we, we would want to honor that, honestly. Panacea is probably only producing 40%, 50% of what they could produce just because of how hard we've dialed them back. you know, we've not been recruiting producers. I think if we get good flow and arrangements in place, we could hire more producers, produce more, and really exhaust the name that they've built for themselves. I just feel like this yield curve and incremental funding, for us, and, and honestly, our limited capital, we're not going to burn off all of our capital on that, has made us sort of slow down there. really, this is such a welcome...
This is a very welcome move for, Panacea and probably what they can do. They might be able to double production levels if we get, when we start getting these in place.
Casey Whitman (Managing Director)
Okay. Maybe just start out with the, I think it was $1 million assumption for the gain on sale that you have in your slide deck, and we'll go from there.
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
I would probably start with that. I think we... Yeah, we would start with there. We're confident that we can do more, but I think for, for this quarter, that's probably a good number.
Casey Whitman (Managing Director)
Okay. Okay, then just the cost initiatives you guys are taking... Sounds like at least some of that was driven by, by the, the rate environment, or, you know, would you probably have made these moves regardless, but you just kind of had accelerated the efforts? Just kind of walk us through sort of how you, how, how you came to these decisions?
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
You chime in. I've, I've I mean, I think every single day, Matt and I come to work, and we look at what's happening, and we calibrate, you know, a pathway to the profitability levels we want. I mean, it's been decades, really, since the industry faced, you know, 10% declines in net interest income in a single quarter. Honestly, I think all that's going to moderate. I bet you a year from now, if rates stay like this, we'll, we'll be getting some of that back. It doesn't matter. Right now, the industry's got net interest income headwinds. It's, you can't even, you can't even conceivably grow through that. It was just, it's just the right time to do it. I mean, we've needed to consolidate some branches for years.
The opportunity to consolidate our management team and, and other positions is just every chance that we have to. I mean, Matt and I are not always looking for cost savings and to reduce staff levels. We're not. Every chance we have to, you know, strengthen our staffing levels and our, and our pathway to a profitability is we're going to take every pathway we can. Honestly, through the quarter, probably going into the second quarter on, really. We just looked, and it's like, you know, it's, it's going to be tougher to push a 1% ROA if we have a little shrinkage in net interest income, if we don't fix, if we don't build confidence into credit quality with non-performers post to that. That's, I think, what, what would you-
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
No, I completely... I mean, we, as Dennis said, are always looking for efficiencies, but probably more, more critical in this environment, particularly as we're trying to not grow the balance sheet as aggressively as we have. I mean, but you can carry higher expenses if you're growing the balance sheet, growing spread income, but in this environment, that's more challenging and we want to make sure we get the right expense base for the size balance sheet we're going to have in the near term.
Casey Whitman (Managing Director)
Yep. Ultimately, do you think 24 is the right branch network size? Could we see more branch reductions in the future, or?
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
I mean, never say never. It's going to depend on the certain extent, the environment and consumer behavior. I think we feel pretty good with the number of branches we have for right now. Could see incremental over time, but I don't think you'll see another large consolidation, like we just did.
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
I mean, I, I would say, too, we don't talk about this that much, but I mean, we're adding probably $25 million a quarter to our delivery service, V1BE, our delivery service. You know, some of that is out of our core network, but a lot of it is not. We're adding millions in places that we are kind of close to, but not right on top of. I mean, we, we would for sure add more branches. You know, in, in larger markets around where we are in, say, Norfolk and, and Virginia Beach and all that. For right now, we are. That's not on our radar.
Casey Whitman (Managing Director)
Okay. Maybe can you help us out then in terms of where, or give us a kind of quarterly range for where you expect expenses to run when all said and done with the cost saves? It can be a wide range, but just to help us out with modeling.
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
Yeah. I think, I mean, obviously, this won't all be in the run rate until later this year, but probably in the $18 million-$18.5 million, excluding mortgage, which obviously mortgage kind of fluctuates pretty dramatically based on-
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
Right
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
... seasonality. The core run rate would be in that lower 18 range.
Casey Whitman (Managing Director)
Okay. Thank you for taking my questions. Let someone else jump on.
Operator (participant)
Next, we'll go to Russell Gunther with Stephens. Your line is now open.
Russell Gunther (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Hey, good morning, guys.
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
Morning.
Russell Gunther (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
I wanted to follow up on the gain on sale model discussion and just get your thoughts about how you see that maturing, as we, as we look into 2024 and, you know, the, the 1% ROA bogey. I, I hear you on the near term gain on sale expectations, but how do you think that scales as we move forward?
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
I mean, Panacea produced, what, $45 this quarter? I think, I think Panacea did $45 in commercials. Matt's going to look it up. I think Panacea could, there's no question in my mind, they could hire, we could hire two or three more bankers and probably, maybe even double that. You know, now, finding buyers for all that, I think we've got quite a few lined up and several that are, you know, nearing the very end. You know, Panacea's commercial production on a floating rate basis is kind of right on top of prime.... These are, these are high, high quality commercial loans to medical professionals with strong credit metrics any way you look at it. I mean, I think there's a lot of interest in this.
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
They originated about $75 million in the quarter, almost a little less than half of that actually funded in the quarter.
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
Okay. $75 million in the quarter. I mean, it's a good problem to have, you know, having, you know, having something this robust. It's just, you know, I think it's a good opportunity. One, I think it's a real good opportunity for us to, to step out and find this, something like this. You know, right now, it's just, it's, this is not something we can do, even if yields were great and the yield curve was right. You know, Tyler and his staff, and Matt and I, we all understand, we just don't have the balance sheet or the capital to do that. This is, I think this is a real good opportunity. Again, I've, we got $1 million in there. I, I think it's, yeah, I think it can be a lot more than that.
We're just being careful.
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
Frankly, I mean, we talked about this last quarter. We thought there was going to be more gain on sale income in Q2. It's just taking a little bit longer to get to the finish line with some of these buyers, but that's why we think we're pretty confident about the third quarter.
Russell Gunther (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Understood. No, I appreciate that, guys. As I just kind of marry that with the balance sheet expectations, I think you said core loan growth in the single digits, kind of on an aggregate basis near term. Sort of still thinking of what that could look like in 2024 again, as we let the gain on sale model mature. How are you guys thinking about total loan growth going forward?
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
I mean, if we stay in the environment we're in right now, then we, we will target that low to mid single-digit loan growth next year as well. With, like, with these loan sales, it's not a requirement to sell everything we produce. If the curve changes, we have the flexibility to hold more. We have the flexibility to bring funding back on balance sheet out of the sweep program, so we can manage balance sheet size, basically quarter to quarter. But if we're, we're sitting in 2024 like we are right now, the goal will be to manage balance sheet and maximize spread as much as possible.
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
I don't want to overplay this, but it's, it's probably obvious. I mean, we're unique, really, especially in our region, for, for having some money to, to lend, that we have not completely pulled our horns in. We're getting looks at some pretty decent deals on the community bank side. I think, in fact, the, the, the place where we're raising money on the community bank side, on the deposit, from a deposit standpoint, compared to where we're able to put some money out on really good customers, this is probably the widest spreads we've had on the community bank side. I'm probably, yes, since I've been here. Honestly, getting some looks at customers that we, we probably wouldn't get to normally look at. Now, we're not trying to, you know, we're still on the, on the national platform.
We're, we're still being cautious. We're still in the romance stage, where we're making these customers as core as we possibly can before we get very confident about investing at all and just being prudent there. The sweep helps us because we're positive on the spread there on the whole platform. I mean, I really like the momentum that we're starting to see on the core bank side, the community bank side. You know, I think, I think mid-single digits is, is going to be pretty profitable on the, on the, for the bank.
Russell Gunther (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. I appreciate that, both of you for the color there. Just switching gears, a number of steps we're taking this quarter to support NII and, and the NIM going forward, be it the sweep or the swap. Just hoping you could tie all that together, give us a sense for where you expect the consolidated margin to trend in the back half of the year?
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
Okay, Matt, let Matt can do the swap part. On the sweep, the sweep is important to us because really we can grow, and I'm just stating the obvious here, but we can just grow almost infinitely, and really not have any impact on our capital ratios, on our margins, or anything like that. Everything we do incrementally on the digital platform has positive spread to it, to the sweep. There's some degree, there's some amount of that, that ultimately is going to pay for the whole platform. It's important for us to continue growing that like we have been. Especially now as the Fed keeps moving, you know, our incremental spread just continues to improve there. Most of that goes to non-interest income.
All of that goes to non-interest income, except for the portion that offsets sweep deposit interest expense. That, you know, that added what? Like 35 basis points to the margin in the quarter. To the degree that we raised funds in the core bank, which we're raising those funds at very healthy, margins at substantially less than the national platform. That means we can sweep more of the expensive money and, and see cost of deposits and our margins improve. With that, what would you-
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
Yeah, I mean, just to put a finer point on that last bit there, Russell. I mean, I mean, this is sometimes a little hard to appreciate. I mean, it's obvious on the loan side, if we sell loans, and we can book the gain on sale, and then we can replace those with potentially loans at a higher yield and pick up incremental spread while keeping the loan portfolio flat, let's say. We can, with the sweep, the one-way sweep, we can actually do the same thing on the deposit side. Less so, like, gains in the near term, but we've got about $500 million of deposits on balance sheet at that higher rate that we raised them at in the late in the first quarter, so around 5%.
Every dollar that we raise of deposits, either in our local markets with our new digital, business accounts that come on, or even through checking accounts on the digital platform, that every dollar we raise lower than 5%, we can keep those deposits on balance sheet and sweep off the $500 million that's at the higher rate. It doesn't cost us anything because the rate we're getting through the sweep platform service is basically the same rate. We can move them off with no incremental costs, but we pick up incremental spread on the balance sheet. When we talk about managing the balance sheet and through loan sales and through the sweep, we're really talking about both sides of the balance sheet.
We've got an opportunity to maybe average up loan yields on the loan side and then average down deposit costs on the liability side. This is all incremental stuff, so I'm not saying that we're going to suddenly, you know, reverse all the net interest income pressure we saw last quarter. As we think about the next couple of quarters, we feel confident that we're going to be able to pull some of these levers and mitigate some of the pressure that we've seen here recently. The other thing I'll say is, you know, I don't want to give specific guidance on margin because it's been so hard to predict, but I will say if we look at the quarter, the margin compression that we saw was heavily weighted to the first half of the quarter.
June was much, much lower, so it feels like we may be... You know, I can't say that there won't be any pressure in the third quarter, but it should be very incremental versus some of the step changes we saw in the first and second quarter.
Russell Gunther (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Thanks, Matt. Thanks, Dennis.
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
That doesn't necessarily mean net interest income...
Russell Gunther (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Yeah.
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
would decline again.
Russell Gunther (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Yeah.
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
The percentage wide.
Russell Gunther (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Yep. Okay, understood. Thank you. Just last one, tying it all together, a lot of proactive steps to improve profitability this quarter, you know. Could you just update us on what you think the glide path is to that 1% ROA from here?
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
Well, it's probably first quarter at the earliest the next year because we got to get all the cost saves in place from the branch closures and the consolidations and the rest of the-- largely the administrative saves are in place. All those movements, plus some of the other reductions in operating costs we talked about, get us most of the way there, and then the rest of the way comes from these loan sales. We get that, that $1 million of loan sale revenue doesn't get us there, but I think that's probably the variable.
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
I mean, if that comes on hotter, if that comes on hotter, that's probably going to move us from, to call it, say, 70, 80 basis points, you know, closer to one or over one. That's probably the variable.
Russell Gunther (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Thank you both. Thanks for taking my questions.
Operator (participant)
Okay. Next, we'll go to Christopher Marinac with Janney Montgomery Scott. Your line is open.
Christopher Marinac (Director of Research)
Thanks. Good morning, Dennis and Matt. Just wanted to go through kind of the cost of funds and, you know, should we think of it kind of maybe bottoming here, given that you're going to get a benefit from the sweep program, and then that kind of covers, you know, this, this last Fed move that we just saw this week? Is that a, a somewhat good way to think about it?
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
I, I hope so. I think so. I mean, we are, we are what Matt, the point Matt just made about sweeping more of the digital deposits that have a higher rate as we replace them with core bank, community bank deposits that have, you know, substantially lower rates. I mean, we are, we are working tirelessly on that effort. Yes, that, that probably, altogether could, you know, put a cap on where we are on the cost of funds and probably help us on net interest margin.
Christopher Marinac (Director of Research)
Okay. Then the other side of that question was really just the ability to, to continue to push through both loan and earning asset yields, and that, that's not done evolving in your favor.
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
Correct.
Christopher Marinac (Director of Research)
...Then, if we go through the, the fraud situation, that's not the first time you've seen and dealt with these things. Can you kind of just remind us all the things you've done internally since you've been at the bank and kind of where that positions you going forward, and maybe just the cost that you've already put in for some of the systems you've done to kind of avoid future incidents like this legacy problem?
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
Oh, my God, I wish I would have prepared better for that. I mean, because so that I could be concise. I mean, put in new chief credit officer, put in a fully staffed credit administration team, lowered the level for, substantially lowered the level for, for analyst and underwriter, independent analyst and underwriter approvals. I hate to say this, but this is the fact, put in a, put in a regularly occurring process for approving loans. In other words, we don't just approve loans randomly, one-off here and there. I mean, we have a team of experts that get packages, that review loans, and that approve them. I know that probably sounds very basic, but yeah, we've had to do that. The amount of loan systems and monitoring that we've put in, extraordinary.
I mean, when we focus, when we say no, I mean, just learning how to say no to a lot of customers when they want, you know, extensions of, of this or renewals of that, when we, when we not being, not being so this is everybody, every banker that hears this will know what I'm saying, but when you don't have to say yes to every single loan demand, every single loan request because you have other options, I just, you know, processes for renewals, processes for extensions. You know, how, how ask yourself, how hard do you look at renewals and extensions, or do you just sort of quickly approve those to get through? We, we don't do that anymore. It's pretty extensive.
Honestly, a lot of that happened right out of the gate because, as soon as I got here, we, we fell into COVID. We had the hospitality book that, you know, wasn't performing very well, and a lot of other customers that were stressed. It was really in that, that we just instituted, a lot more detailed review, a lot more detailed understanding of, of everything.
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
Truthfully, I mean, Chris, I don't want to go into a whole lot of detail, we're very confident that this was a one-off issue. It was a rogue employee, who'd been conducting this for quite a while, taking advantage of his knowledge of policies and procedures and controls, and basically leveraging relationships, and his tenure at the bank to avoid a lot of those and get around them. What Dennis was just describing is what caused it to all unwind. I mean, he had built a house of cards that he was able to manage under the previous policies and kind of how things were structured. But with those changes that Dennis talked about, it made it untenable for him to keep all the balls in the air, and that's how it all fell apart.
Um-
Christopher Marinac (Director of Research)
Sure. Nope, that's all helpful background. Thank you very much for all that. Just a quick final question for you just on the mortgage business. Does the seasonality, both in Q3 and Q4, suggest that you can still make a little bit of pre-tax income now and then have a small loss in Q4, or do you think it can be better than that?
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
I think if we can make... I, I think Q3 should probably look a little bit like Q2, especially, I think, with what Matt was saying about the pipeline. I think Q3, Q3 should look a little mostly like Q2, maybe a little better, I don't know. Q4, I think we probably need to be somewhere around $1 million pre-tax profitable so that we don't dip into negative territory in the fourth quarter. I, I'm hopeful that the fourth quarter fall off in production and, and, and pipeline and all that, our goal is to just get the, get it above break even for the fourth quarter.
Christopher Marinac (Director of Research)
Sure. Okay. Very well. Thank you both. I appreciate all the background.
Matthew Switzer (CFO)
All right. Thank you, Chris.
Operator (participant)
Okay. I show that there are no further questions at this time, and I'll turn the call back over to, Dennis Zember for any additional or close remarks.
Dennis Zember (President and CEO)
Thank you all for, again, for calling. Hope you have a good weekend. If you have any questions or comments or want to discuss anything further, Matt and I are available and happy to get on the phone with you. All right, thank you and have a good weekend.
Operator (participant)
This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.