Annual Statements Open main menu

AUBURN NATIONAL BANCORPORATION, INC - Quarter Report: 2022 September (Form 10-Q)

Form 10-Q
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C.
 
20549
 
 
 
FORM
10-Q
 
(Mark One)
 
Quarterly report pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
For the quarterly period ended
September 30, 2022
 
Transition report pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
For the transition period __________
 
to __________
Commission File Number:
0-26486
 
Auburn National Bancorporation, Inc.
(Exact Name of
 
Registrant as Specified
 
in Its Charter)
 
Delaware
(State or other
 
jurisdiction of
incorporation
 
or organization)
63-0885779
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification
 
No.)
100 N. Gay Street
Auburn
,
Alabama
 
36830
 
(
334
)
821-9200
 
(Address and telephone
 
number of principal
 
executive offices)
 
(Former Name,
 
Former Address
 
and Former
 
Fiscal Year,
 
if Changed Since
 
Last Report)
 
Indicate
 
by
 
check
 
mark
 
whether
 
the
 
registrant
 
(1) has
 
filed
 
all
 
reports
 
required to
 
be
 
filed by
 
Section 13 or
 
15(d)
 
of
 
the
 
Securities
Exchange
 
Act
 
of
 
1934 during the preceding 12 months (or
 
for
 
such
 
shorter period that
 
the
 
registrant was
 
required to
 
file such
 
reports),
and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
 
Yes
 
No
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and
posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required
to submit such files).
 
Yes
 
No
Indicate by
 
check
 
mark whether
 
the
 
registrant is a large
 
accelerated
 
filer, an accelerated
 
filer, a non-accelerated filer, a
 
smaller reporting
company
 
or
 
an
 
emerging
 
growth
 
company.
 
See
 
the
 
definitions of
 
“large
 
accelerated
 
filer,”
 
“accelerated
 
filer,”
 
“smaller reporting
company” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
 
Large Accelerated
 
filer
Accelerated filer
Non-accelerated filer
Smaller reporting company
Emerging growth company
If
 
an
 
emerging
 
growth
 
company,
 
indicate
 
by
 
check
 
mark
 
if
 
the
 
registrant
 
has
 
elected
 
not
 
to
 
use
 
the
 
extended
 
transition period for
complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Act). Yes
 
No
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each class
Trading Symbol(s)
Name of each exchange on
 
which registered
Common Stock, par value $0.01
AUBN
NASDAQ
 
Global Market
Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuer's classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date.
Class
Outstanding at November 8, 2022
Common Stock, $0.01 par value per share
3,504,420
 
shares
 
AUBURN
 
NATIONAL BANCORPORATION,
 
INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
INDEX
 
PAGE
Item 1
3
 
4
5
6
7
8
Item 2
 
28
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
Item 3
57
Item 4
57
Item 1
57
Item 1A
57
Item 2
58
Item 3
58
Item 4
58
Item 5
58
Item 6
59
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
3
PART 1.
 
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
ITEM 1. FINANCIAL
 
STATEMENTS
AUBURN
 
NATIONAL BANCORPORATION,
 
INC. AND
 
SUBSIDIARIES
Consolidated Balance Sheets
(Unaudited)
 
September
 
30,
December 31,
(Dollars
 
in thousands, except
 
share data)
2022
2021
Assets:
Cash and due
 
from banks
$
20,488
$
11,210
Federal funds
 
sold
31,133
77,420
Interest-bearing bank
 
deposits
18,016
67,629
Cash and cash
 
equivalents
69,637
156,259
Securities available-for-sale
 
411,538
421,891
Loans held for sale
1,376
Loans, net of unearned
 
income
474,035
458,364
Allowance
 
for loan losses
(4,966)
(4,939)
Loans, net
469,069
453,425
Premises and equipment,
 
net
46,419
41,724
Bank-owned life insurance
19,929
19,635
Other assets
25,967
10,840
Total assets
$
1,042,559
$
1,105,150
Liabilities:
Deposits:
Noninterest-bearing
 
$
321,702
$
316,132
Interest-bearing
656,236
678,111
Total deposits
977,938
994,243
Federal funds
 
purchased and
 
securities sold under
 
agreements to repurchase
2,613
3,448
Accrued expenses and
 
other liabilities
2,215
3,733
Total liabilities
982,766
1,001,424
Stockholders' equity:
Preferred stock of $
.01
 
par
 
value;
 
authorized
200,000
 
shares;
no shares issued
Common stock
 
of $
.01
 
par
 
value; authorized
8,500,000
 
shares;
issued
3,957,135
 
shares
39
39
Additional
 
paid-in capital
3,797
3,794
Retained
 
earnings
113,063
109,974
Accumulated
 
other comprehensive (loss) income,
 
net
(45,675)
891
Less treasury stock,
 
at cost -
451,780
 
shares and
436,650
 
at September
 
30, 2022
and December 31, 2021,
 
respectively
(11,431)
(10,972)
Total stockholders’ equity
59,793
103,726
Total liabilities and stockholders’
 
equity
$
1,042,559
$
1,105,150
See accompanying notes to
 
consolidated
 
financial statements
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
4
AUBURN
 
NATIONAL BANCORPORATION,
 
INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
Consolidated Statements
 
of Earnings
(Unaudited)
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30,
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands, except
 
share and
 
per share
 
data)
2022
2021
2022
2021
Interest income:
Loans, including
 
fees
$
5,097
$
5,127
$
14,638
$
15,417
Securities:
Taxable
1,808
1,048
4,691
3,006
Tax-exempt
441
441
1,275
1,337
Federal funds
 
sold and interest-bearing
 
bank deposits
426
49
767
105
Total interest income
7,772
6,665
21,371
19,865
Interest expense:
Deposits
524
620
1,661
1,900
Short-term borrowings
5
4
15
12
Total interest expense
529
624
1,676
1,912
Net interest income
7,243
6,041
19,695
17,953
Provision for loan losses
250
(600)
Net interest income after
 
provision for
 
loan losses
6,993
6,041
19,695
18,553
Noninterest income:
Service charges
 
on deposit accounts
158
149
446
419
Mortgage lending
126
268
566
1,241
Bank-owned life insurance
97
100
293
302
Other
427
443
1,259
1,311
Securities gains,
 
net
44
15
44
15
Total noninterest income
852
975
2,608
3,288
Noninterest expense:
Salaries and
 
benefits
2,975
2,893
8,901
8,641
Net occupancy
 
and equipment
794
467
1,955
1,340
Professional fees
235
232
704
814
Other
1,411
1,163
3,814
3,566
Total noninterest expense
5,415
4,755
15,374
14,361
Earnings before income taxes
2,430
2,261
6,929
7,480
Income tax
 
expense
432
386
1,049
1,313
Net earnings
$
1,998
$
1,875
$
5,880
$
6,167
Net earnings per share:
Basic and
 
diluted
$
0.57
$
0.53
$
1.67
$
1.74
Weight
 
ed average
 
shares outstanding:
Basic and
 
diluted
3,507,318
3,536,320
3,513,068
3,552,387
See accompanying notes to
 
consolidated
 
financial statements
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
5
AUBURN
 
NATIONAL BANCORPORATION,
 
INC. AND
 
SUBSIDIARIES
Consolidated Statements
 
of Comprehensive Income
(Unaudited)
 
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30,
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
2022
2021
2022
2021
Net earnings
$
1,998
$
1,875
$
5,880
$
6,167
Other comprehensive loss,
 
net of
 
tax:
Unrealized
 
net loss on securities
(17,223)
(1,493)
(46,533)
(4,837)
Reclassification adjustment
 
for net gain
 
on securities
 
recognized in
 
net earnings
(33)
(11)
(33)
(11)
Other comprehensive
 
loss
(17,256)
(1,504)
(46,566)
(4,848)
Comprehensive (loss)
 
income
$
(15,258)
$
371
$
(40,686)
$
1,319
See accompanying
 
notes to consolidated financial statements
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
6
AUBURN
 
NATIONAL BANCORPORATION,
 
INC. AND
 
SUBSIDIARIES
Consolidated Statements
 
of Stockholders'
 
Equity
(Unaudited)
 
Accumulated
Common
Additional
other
Shares
Common
paid-in
Retained
 
comprehensive
Treasury
(Dollars
 
in thousands, except
 
share data)
Outstanding
Stock
capital
earnings
(loss) income
stock
Total
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30, 2022
Balance, June
 
30, 2022
3,509,940
$
39
$
3,796
$
111,994
$
(28,419)
$
(11,303)
$
76,107
Net earnings
1,998
1,998
Other comprehensive
 
loss
(17,256)
(17,256)
Cash dividends
 
paid ($
.265
 
per share)
(929)
(929)
Stock repurchases
(4,640)
(128)
(128)
Sale of treasury
 
stock
55
1
1
Balance, September
 
30, 2022
3,505,355
$
39
$
3,797
$
113,063
$
(45,675)
$
(11,431)
$
59,793
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30, 2021
Balance, June
 
30, 2021
3,545,855
$
39
$
3,792
$
108,060
$
4,255
$
(10,103)
$
106,043
Net earnings
1,875
1,875
Other comprehensive
 
loss
(1,504)
(1,504)
Cash dividends
 
paid ($
.26
 
per share)
(917)
(917)
Stock repurchases
(16,582)
(570)
(570)
Sale of treasury
 
stock
65
2
2
Balance, September
 
30, 2021
3,529,338
$
39
$
3,794
$
109,018
$
2,751
$
(10,673)
$
104,929
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30, 2022
Balance, December
 
31, 2021
3,520,485
$
39
$
3,794
$
109,974
$
891
$
(10,972)
$
103,726
Net earnings
5,880
5,880
Other comprehensive
 
loss
(46,566)
(46,566)
Cash dividends
 
paid ($
.795
 
per share)
(2,791)
(2,791)
Stock repurchases
(15,280)
(460)
(460)
Sale of treasury
 
stock
150
3
1
4
Balance, September
 
30, 2022
3,505,355
$
39
$
3,797
$
113,063
$
(45,675)
$
(11,431)
$
59,793
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30, 2021
Balance, December
 
31, 2020
3,566,276
$
39
$
3,789
$
105,617
$
7,599
$
(9,354)
$
107,690
Net earnings
6,167
6,167
Other comprehensive
 
loss
(4,848)
(4,848)
Cash dividends
 
paid ($
.78
 
per share)
(2,766)
(2,766)
Stock repurchases
(37,093)
(1,320)
(1,320)
Sale of treasury
 
stock
155
5
1
6
Balance, September
 
30, 2021
3,529,338
$
39
$
3,794
$
109,018
$
2,751
$
(10,673)
$
104,929
See accompanying
 
notes to consolidated
 
financial statements
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
7
AUBURN
 
NATIONAL BANCORPORATION,
 
INC. AND
 
SUBSIDIARIES
Consolidated Statements
 
of Cash
 
Flows
(Unaudited)
 
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
2022
2021
Cash flows from operating
 
activities:
Net earnings
$
5,880
$
6,167
Adjustments
 
to reconcile net earnings
 
to net cash
 
provided by
operating activities:
Provision for loan
 
losses
(600)
Depreciation and
 
amortization
1,098
967
Premium amortization
 
and
 
discount accretion, net
2,450
2,954
Net gain on securities available-for-sale
(44)
(15)
Net gain on sale
 
of loans held
 
for sale
(315)
(1,168)
Net gain on other
 
real estate owned
(162)
Loans originated
 
for sale
(8,711)
(39,632)
Proceeds from sale of loans
10,292
43,234
Increase in cash
 
surrender value
 
of bank-owned
 
life insurance
(294)
(302)
Net increase in
 
other assets
(15,570)
(216)
Net increase (decrease) in
 
accrued expenses
 
and
 
other liabilities
14,102
(2,430)
Net cash provided
 
by operating
 
activities
8,726
8,959
Cash flows from investing activities:
Proceeds from prepayments
 
and
 
maturities of securities available-for-sale
38,871
53,724
Purchase of securities available-for-sale
(93,106)
(135,434)
(Increase) decrease in
 
loans, net
(15,644)
8,569
Net purchases
 
of premises and
 
equipment
(5,540)
(13,287)
(Increase) decrease in
 
FHLB
 
stock
(74)
267
Proceeds from sale of other
 
real estate owned
536
Net cash used in
 
investing activities
(74,957)
(86,161)
Cash flows from financing activities:
Net increase in
 
noninterest-bearing
 
deposits
5,570
53,752
Net (decrease) increase in
 
interest-bearing
 
deposits
(21,875)
61,427
Net (decrease) increase in
 
federal funds
 
purchased
 
and securities sold
 
under agreements to
 
repurchase
(835)
918
Stock repurchases
(460)
(1,320)
Dividends paid
(2,791)
(2,766)
Net cash (used
 
in) provided
 
by financing
 
activities
(20,391)
112,011
Net change in cash
 
and cash equivalents
(86,622)
34,809
Cash and cash
 
equivalents at beginning
 
of period
156,259
112,575
Cash and
 
cash equivalents at end
 
of period
$
69,637
$
147,384
Supplemental disclosures of
 
cash flow information:
Cash paid
 
during the period for:
Interest
$
1,705
$
1,914
Income taxes
1,031
2,145
See accompanying notes to
 
consolidated
 
financial statements
8
AUBURN
 
NATIONAL BANCORPORATION,
 
INC. AND
 
SUBSIDIARIES
Notes to Consolidated
 
Financial Statements
 
(Unaudited)
NOTE 1:
 
SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT
 
ACCOUNTING
 
POLICIES
General
Auburn National
 
Bancorporation, Inc.
 
(the “Company”)
 
provides
 
a full range of
 
banking services to individuals
 
and
commercial customers in
 
Lee
 
County, Alabama
 
and surrounding
 
areas through its wholly
 
owned subsidiary,
 
AuburnBank
(the “Bank”).
 
The Company
 
does not have
 
any segments other than
 
banking that
 
are considered material.
Basis of Presentation and
 
Use of Estimates
The unaudited
 
consolidated financial
 
statements in
 
this report have
 
been prepared
 
in accordance with
 
U.S. generally
accepted accounting
 
principles (“GAAP”)
 
for interim financial
 
information.
 
Accordingly, these financial
 
statements do not
include all of
 
the information and
 
footnotes required by
 
U.S. GAAP for complete financial
 
statements.
 
The
 
unaudited
consolidated financial
 
statements include,
 
in the
 
opinion of management,
 
all adjustments
 
necessary to present a
 
fair
statement of the
 
financial
 
position and
 
the results of operations for
 
all periods presented.
 
All
 
such adjustments
 
are of a
normal recurring
 
nature. The results of
 
operations in
 
the interim statements
 
are not
 
necessarily indicative
 
of the results of
operations that
 
the Company
 
and its subsidiaries may
 
achieve for future
 
interim periods or the
 
entire year. For further
information, refer to the consolidated
 
financial
 
statements and
 
footnotes included in
 
the Company's
 
Annual Report
 
on Form
10-K for the year
 
ended December 31, 2021.
The unaudited
 
consolidated financial
 
statements include
 
the accounts
 
of the Company
 
and
 
its wholly-owned
 
subsidiaries.
 
Significant
 
intercompany
 
transactions and
 
accounts are
 
eliminated in consolidation.
The preparation
 
of financial statements in
 
conformity with
 
U.S. GAAP
 
requires management
 
to make estimates and
assumptions that
 
affect the reported amounts
 
of assets and
 
liabilities and
 
disclosures of contingent assets
 
and
 
liabilities as of
the balance sheet date
 
and the reported amounts
 
of revenues
 
and expenses during
 
the reporting period.
 
Actual results could
differ from those estimates.
 
Material estimates
 
that are
 
particularly susceptible to
 
significant
 
change
 
in the near term
include other-than-temporary
 
impairment on
 
investment
 
securities, the determination
 
of the allowance
 
for loan losses, fair
value of financial
 
instruments, and
 
the valuation of
 
deferred tax assets and
 
other real estate owned
 
(“OREO”).
Revenue Recognition
On January 1,
 
2018, the Company
 
implemented Accounting
 
Standards Update
 
(“ASU”
 
or “updates”) 2014-09,
 
Revenue
from Contracts with Customers
, codified
 
at
 
Accounting Standards Codification
 
(“ASC”)
606. The
 
Company adopted
 
ASC
606 using
 
the modified retrospective
 
transition method.
 
The majority of
 
the Company’s
 
revenue stream is
 
generated from
interest income on
 
loans and
 
securities which
 
are outside the
 
scope of ASC
 
606.
 
The Company’s sources of income
 
that
 
fall within the
 
scope of ASC 606 include
 
service charges on
 
deposits, interchange
fees and gains and
 
losses on sales of other real
 
estate, all of which
 
are presented as
 
components of noninterest income.
 
The
following is
 
a summary of
 
the revenue
 
streams that
 
fall within the
 
scope of ASC 606:
 
Service charges
 
on deposits, investment
 
services, ATM and interchange
 
fees – Fees from these services
 
are either
transaction-based, for which
 
the performance obligations
 
are satisfied
 
when
 
the individual
 
transaction is processed,
or set periodic service charges,
 
for which
 
the performance obligations
 
are satisfied
 
over the
 
period the
 
service is
provided. Transaction-based
 
fees are recognized at
 
the time the transaction
 
is processed,
 
and
 
periodic service
charges are recognized
 
over the
 
service period.
 
Gains on sales of
 
OREO
 
A gain on sale
 
should be recognized
 
when
 
a contract for sale exists and
 
control of the
asset has been transferred
 
to the buyer. ASC
 
606 lists several criteria required
 
to conclude that
 
a contract for sale
exists, including
 
a determination that
 
the institution will
 
collect substantially all
 
of the consideration
 
to which
 
it is
entitled.
 
In addition
 
to the loan-to-value
 
ratio, the
 
analysis is based
 
on various other factors,
 
including
 
the credit
quality of
 
the borrower, the structure of the
 
loan,
 
and any other
 
factors that we
 
believe may
 
affect collectability.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
9
Subsequent Events
 
The Company
 
has evaluated
 
the effects of events and
 
transactions through
 
the date of this
 
filing that
 
have occurred
subsequent
 
to September 30,
 
2022.
 
The Company
 
does not believe
 
there were any material
 
subsequent
 
events
 
during this period
 
that would have
 
required
further recognition or disclosure
 
in the
 
unaudited consolidated financial
 
statements included
 
in this
 
report except as
reported in NOTE
 
8, SUBSEQUENT
 
EVENTS.
 
Reclassifications
Certain amounts
 
reported in prior periods
 
have
 
been reclassified to conform
 
to the current-period
 
presentation. These
reclassifications had
 
no material effect on
 
the Company’s
 
previously
 
reported net earnings
 
or total stockholders’
 
equity.
Accounting Developments
In the first nine months
 
of 2022, the Company
 
did not adopt
 
any new accounting
 
guidance.
NOTE 2:
 
BASIC AND DILUTED
 
NET EARNINGS
 
PER SHARE
Basic net earnings
 
per share is computed
 
by dividing net
 
earnings by the
 
weighted average
 
common shares outstanding
 
for
the respective period.
 
Diluted net
 
earnings per
 
share reflect the potential dilution
 
that
 
could occur upon
 
exercise of
securities or other rights for, or
 
convertible into,
 
shares of the
 
Company’s
 
common stock.
 
At September
 
30, 2022 and
2021, respectively, the
 
Company had
 
no such securities or rights issued
 
or outstanding,
 
and therefore, no
 
dilutive
 
effect to
consider for the diluted
 
net earnings
 
per share calculation.
The basic
 
and diluted net earnings
 
per share computations
 
for the respective
 
periods are presented
 
below
 
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30,
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands, except
 
share and
 
per share
 
data)
2022
2021
2022
2021
Basic and diluted:
Net earnings
$
1,998
$
1,875
$
5,880
$
6,167
Weighted average common
 
shares outstanding
3,507,318
3,536,320
3,513,068
3,552,387
Net earnings per
 
share
$
0.57
$
0.53
$
1.67
$
1.74
NOTE 3:
 
VARIABLE INTEREST ENTITIES
Generally, a variable
 
interest entity (“VIE”)
 
is a corporation, partnership,
 
trust or other legal
 
structure that
 
does not have
equity investors with
 
substantive
 
or proportional voting
 
rights or has equity
 
investors that
 
do not provide
 
sufficient financial
resources for the entity to
 
support its activities.
 
At September 30,
 
2022, the Company
 
did not have any
 
consolidated VIEs
 
to disclose but did
 
have one nonconsolidated
VIE, discussed below.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
10
New Markets Tax Credit Investment
The New Markets
 
Tax Credit (“NMTC”)
 
program
 
provides federal tax
 
incentives to investors
 
to make
 
investments in
distressed communities and
 
promotes economic improvement
 
through
 
the development
 
of successful businesses in
 
these
communities.
 
The
 
NMTC is
 
available to investors
 
over seven
 
years and
 
is subject to recapture if certain
 
events
 
occur
during such
 
period.
 
At September 30,
 
2022 and
 
December 31, 2021, respectively,
 
the Company
 
had one such
 
investment
 
in
the amounts
 
of $2.1 million and
 
$2.2 million, respectively, which
 
was included
 
in other assets in
 
the consolidated balance
sheets.
 
The
 
Company’s equity investment
 
in the NMTC
 
entity meets the
 
definition of a
 
VIE. While the Company’s
investment
 
exceeds 50% of the
 
outstanding
 
equity interests, the Company
 
does not consolidate the VIE
 
because it
 
does not
meet the characteristics of a
 
primary
 
beneficiary since the
 
Company
 
lacks the power
 
to direct the activities
 
of the VIE.
 
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Maximum
Loss Exposure
Asset Recognized
Classification
Type:
New Markets Tax
 
Credit investment
$
2,126
$
2,126
Other assets
 
NOTE 4:
 
SECURITIES
At September 30,
 
2022 and
 
December 31, 2021, respectively,
 
all securities within
 
the scope of ASC
 
320,
Investments –
Debt and Equity Securities,
were classified
 
as available-for-sale.
 
The
 
fair value and
 
amortized cost for securities
 
available-
for-sale by contractual
 
maturity
 
at September 30,
 
2022 and
 
December 31, 2021, respectively,
 
are presented below.
1 year
1 to 5
5 to 10
After 10
Fair
Gross Unrealized
 
Amortized
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
or less
years
years
years
Value
Gains
Losses
Cost
September 30, 2022
Agency obligations
 
(a)
$
50,826
74,490
125,316
16,305
$
141,621
Agency MBS
 
(a)
382
34,606
186,320
221,308
36,601
257,909
State and political subdivisions
170
924
16,243
47,577
64,914
7
8,093
73,000
Total available-for-sale
$
170
52,132
125,339
233,897
411,538
7
60,999
$
472,530
December 31, 2021
Agency obligations
 
(a)
$
5,007
49,604
69,802
124,413
1,080
2,079
$
125,412
Agency MBS
 
(a)
680
35,855
186,836
223,371
1,527
2,680
224,524
State and political subdivisions
170
647
15,743
57,547
74,107
3,611
270
70,766
Total available-for-sale
$
5,177
50,931
121,400
244,383
421,891
6,218
5,029
$
420,702
(a) Includes
 
securities issued by
 
U.S. government
 
agencies or government-sponsored
 
entities.
 
Securities with
 
aggregate fair
 
values of $
210.7
 
million
 
and
 
$
172.3
 
million at
 
September 30, 2022
 
and
 
December 31, 2021,
respectively, were pledged
 
to secure public
 
deposits, securities sold
 
under
 
agreements to repurchase,
 
Federal Home
 
Loan
Bank of Atlanta
 
(“FHLB
 
of Atlanta”) advances,
 
and for other purposes
 
required or permitted
 
by
 
law.
 
Included
 
in other assets on the
 
accompanying
 
consolidated balance
 
sheets are non-marketable
 
equity
 
investments.
 
The
carrying amounts
 
of non-marketable
 
equity investments
 
were $
1.2
 
million at
 
September 30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021,
respectively.
 
Non-marketable equity
 
investments include
 
FHLB of Atlanta
 
Stock, Federal Reserve
 
Bank of Atlanta
(“FRB”) stock, and
 
stock in a privately
 
held financial
 
institution.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
11
Gross Unrealized
 
Losses and
 
Fair Value
The fair values
 
and gross unrealized
 
losses on securities at
 
September 30, 2022
 
and
 
December 31, 2021, respectively,
segregated by
 
those securities that have
 
been in an unrealized
 
loss position for less than
 
12 months and
 
12 months or
longer, are presented below.
 
Less than 12 Months
12 Months
 
or Longer
Total
Fair
Unrealized
Fair
Unrealized
Fair
Unrealized
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Value
Losses
Value
Losses
Value
Losses
September 30, 2022:
Agency obligations
 
$
64,689
5,097
60,627
11,208
$
125,316
16,305
Agency MBS
117,411
14,777
103,897
21,824
221,308
36,601
State and political subdivisions
56,132
5,977
7,027
2,116
63,159
8,093
Total
 
$
238,232
25,851
171,551
35,148
$
409,783
60,999
December 31, 2021:
Agency obligations
 
$
49,799
1,025
26,412
1,054
$
76,211
2,079
Agency MBS
130,110
1,555
38,611
1,125
168,721
2,680
State and political subdivisions
7,960
109
3,114
161
11,074
270
Total
 
$
187,869
2,689
68,137
2,340
$
256,006
5,029
For the securities in
 
the previous
 
table, the Company
 
does not have
 
the intent to sell and
 
has determined it is
 
not more likely
than not that
 
the Company will
 
be required to sell the
 
securities before recovery
 
of the amortized
 
cost basis, which
 
may be
maturity.
 
On a quarterly
 
basis, the Company
 
also assesses each security
 
for credit impairment.
 
For debt
 
securities, the
Company evaluates,
 
where necessary, whether
 
credit impairment exists by
 
comparing
 
the present value
 
of the expected
cash flows to
 
the securities’ amortized
 
cost basis.
In determining
 
whether a
 
loss is temporary, the Company
 
considers all relevant
 
information including:
the length
 
of time and
 
the extent to which
 
the fair value
 
has been less than
 
the amortized
 
cost basis;
adverse conditions specifically
 
related to the
 
security, an industry, or
 
a geographic
 
area (for example,
 
changes in
the financial
 
condition of the
 
issuer of the security, or in
 
the case of
 
MBS, in
 
the financial
 
condition of the
underlying
 
obligors on the
 
assets securing such
 
MBS, including
 
changes in technology
 
or the discontinuance
 
of a
segment of the
 
business that may
 
affect the future earnings
 
potential of the
 
issuer or underlying
 
loan obligors of
the security or changes
 
in the quality
 
of the credit enhancement);
the historical and
 
implied volatility
 
of the security’s fair value;
the payment
 
structure of the debt
 
security and,
 
in the case of variable
 
rate securities, the likelihood
 
of the issuer
being able to
 
make payments
 
that may increase in
 
the future;
failure of the
 
issuer of the security to
 
make
 
scheduled interest or principal
 
payments;
any changes
 
to the rating of
 
the security by
 
a rating agency;
 
and
recoveries or additional
 
declines in
 
fair value
 
subsequent
 
to the balance sheet
 
date.
Agency obligations
The unrealized
 
losses associated with
 
agency obligations
 
were primarily
 
driven by increases in
 
market interest rates
 
and
 
not
due to the credit quality
 
of the securities. These
 
securities were
 
issued by
 
U.S. government
 
agencies or government-
sponsored entities and
 
did not have any
 
credit losses given
 
the explicit government
 
guarantee or
 
other government
 
support.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
12
Agency mortgage-backed securities
 
(“MBS”)
The unrealized
 
losses associated with
 
agency MBS were
 
primarily driven
 
by increases in market
 
interest rates and
 
not due
to the credit quality
 
of the securities. These
 
securities were issued
 
by
 
U.S. government
 
agencies or government-sponsored
entities and did
 
not have any
 
credit losses given
 
the explicit government
 
guarantee or other government
 
support.
 
Securities of U.S. states and
 
political subdivisions
The unrealized
 
losses associated with
 
securities of U.S.
 
states and
 
political subdivisions were
 
primarily driven
 
by increases
in market interest rates and
 
were not due
 
to the credit quality
 
of the securities. Some
 
of these securities
 
are guaranteed
 
by a
bond insurer, but management
 
did not rely on
 
such guarantees
 
in making
 
its investment
 
decision.
 
These securities will
continue to be monitored
 
as part
 
of the Company’s quarterly
 
impairment analysis,
 
but are expected to
 
perform even
 
if the
rating agencies
 
reduce the credit rating
 
of the bond
 
insurers. As a
 
result, the Company
 
expects to recover the
 
entire
amortized cost basis
 
of these securities.
The carrying values
 
of the Company’s investment
 
securities could decline in
 
the future
 
if market interest rates continue
 
to
increase.
 
If the financial
 
condition of an
 
issuer (other than
 
the U.S. government
 
or its agencies’
 
obligations) deteriorates
and the Company
 
determines it is probable
 
that
 
it will not recover the
 
entire amortized cost basis
 
for the security,
 
there is a
risk that other-than-temporary
 
impairment charges
 
may occur in
 
the future.
 
The Company
 
will evaluate whether
 
any loss is
temporary or not.
Other-Than-Temporarily Impaired
 
Securities
Credit-impaired debt
 
securities are debt
 
securities where the
 
Company
 
has written down
 
the amortized cost basis of
 
a
security for other-than-temporary
 
impairment and
 
the credit component of the
 
loss is recognized
 
in earnings.
 
At September
30, 2022 and December 31,
 
2021, the Company
 
had no credit-impaired debt
 
securities and
 
there were no
 
additions or
reductions in
 
the credit loss component
 
of credit-impaired
 
debt securities
 
during
 
the quarters and nine
 
months ended
September 30, 2022 and
 
2021, respectively.
 
Realized Gains and
 
Losses
The following
 
table presents the gross realized
 
gains
 
and losses on sales of securities.
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30,
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
2022
2021
2022
2021
Gross realized gains
$
44
15
$
44
15
Realized
 
gains, net
$
44
15
$
44
15
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
13
NOTE 5:
 
LOANS AND
 
ALLOWANCE FOR LOAN
 
LOSSES
.
September
 
30,
December 31,
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
2022
2021
Commercial and
 
industrial
$
70,685
$
83,977
Construction and
 
land development
54,773
32,432
Commercial real estate:
Owner occupied
57,828
63,375
Hotel/motel
33,918
43,856
Multi-family
29,317
42,587
Other
128,967
108,553
Total commercial real estate
250,030
258,371
Residential real estate:
Consumer mortgage
40,207
29,781
Investment
 
property
51,391
47,880
Total residential real estate
91,598
77,661
Consumer installment
7,551
6,682
Total loans
474,637
459,123
Less: unearned income
(602)
(759)
Loans, net of unearned
 
income
$
474,035
$
458,364
Loans secured by
 
real estate were
 
approximately
83.5%
 
of the Company’s
 
total loan
 
portfolio at September 30,
 
2022.
 
At
September 30, 2022, the
 
Company’s
 
geographic
 
loan distribution was
 
concentrated primarily
 
in Lee
 
County, Alabama, and
surrounding areas.
In accordance with
 
ASC 310, a
 
portfolio segment is defined
 
as the
 
level at which an
 
entity develops
 
and documents a
systematic method for determining
 
its allowance
 
for loan losses. As
 
part of the
 
Company’s quarterly assessment of the
allowance, the
 
loan portfolio included the
 
following
 
portfolio segments: commercial
 
and
 
industrial,
 
construction and
 
land
development,
 
commercial real estate, residential
 
real estate,
 
and
 
consumer installment. Where
 
appropriate,
 
the Company’s
loan portfolio segments
 
are further disaggregated
 
into classes. A
 
class is generally
 
determined based
 
on the initial
measurement attribute,
 
risk characteristics
 
of the loan,
 
and an entity’s method
 
for monitoring and
 
determining credit risk.
The following
 
describes
 
the risk
 
characteristics relevant
 
to each of the
 
portfolio segments and
 
classes.
Commercial and industrial (“C&I”)
 
includes loans
 
to finance
 
business operations, equipment
 
purchases, or
 
other needs
for small and
 
medium-sized commercial
 
customers. Also
 
included
 
in this category
 
are loans
 
to finance
 
agricultural
production.
 
Generally,
 
the primary
 
source of repayment
 
is the cash
 
flow from business operations
 
and
 
activities of the
borrower.
 
As of September
 
30, 2022, the Company
 
had
1
 
remaining
 
PPP loan outstanding
 
in the amount
 
of $
0.1
 
million,
compared to
138
 
PPP loans with
 
an aggregate principal
 
balance of $
8.1
 
million at
 
December 31, 2021.
 
Construction and land development
 
(“C&D”)
 
includes both loans
 
and credit lines for the
 
purpose of purchasing,
carrying, and
 
developing
 
land into commercial developments
 
or residential
 
subdivisions.
 
Also included
 
are loans and
 
credit
lines for construction
 
of residential,
 
multi-family,
 
and
 
commercial buildings.
 
Generally,
 
the primary
 
source of repayment
 
is
dependent upon
 
the sale or refinance of
 
the real
 
estate collateral.
Commercial real estate (“CRE”)
 
includes loans
 
disaggregated
 
into four classes: (1) owner
 
occupied, (2) hotel/motel,
 
(3) multifamily and
 
(4)
 
other.
 
Owner occupied
 
– includes loans
 
secured by
 
business facilities to finance
 
business operations,
 
equipment
 
and
owner-occupied facilities
 
primarily for small
 
and
 
medium-sized commercial
 
customers.
 
Generally,
 
the primary
source of repayment
 
is the cash
 
flow from
 
business operations and
 
activities of the
 
borrower, who owns
 
the
property.
Hotel/motel
– includes loans
 
for hotels and
 
motels.
 
Generally, the primary
 
source of repayment
 
is dependent
 
upon
income generated from
 
the real
 
estate collateral.
 
The
 
underwriting
 
of these loans
 
takes into
 
consideration the
occupancy
 
and rental rates, as
 
well as
 
the financial
 
health of the borrower.
14
Multi-family
 
– primarily
 
includes loans
 
to finance
 
income-producing
 
multi-family properties.
 
Loans
 
in this
 
class
include loans for 5
 
or more unit
 
residential property and
 
apartments
 
leased to residents. Generally,
 
the primary
source of repayment
 
is dependent
 
upon income generated from
 
the real
 
estate collateral.
 
The
 
underwriting of these
loans takes into
 
consideration the
 
occupancy
 
and rental
 
rates,
 
as well as the
 
financial health
 
of the respective
borrowers.
 
Other
 
– primarily
 
includes loans
 
to finance
 
income-producing
 
commercial properties other
 
than
 
hotels/motels and
multi-family properties,
 
and
 
which
 
are not owner
 
occupied.
 
Loans in this
 
class include loans
 
for neighborhood
retail centers,
 
medical and
 
professional offices, single retail
 
stores,
 
industrial buildings,
 
and warehouses
 
leased to
local businesses.
 
Generally,
 
the primary
 
source of repayment
 
is dependent
 
upon income generated
 
from the real
estate collateral. The
 
underwriting of these loans
 
takes into
 
consideration the
 
occupancy
 
and rental
 
rates,
 
as well as
the financial
 
health of the
 
borrower.
 
Residential real estate (“RRE”)
 
includes loans
 
disaggregated into
 
two classes: (1) consumer mortgage
 
and
 
(2)
investment
 
property.
Consumer mortgage
 
– primarily
 
includes
 
first or second
 
lien mortgages
 
and
 
home equity
 
lines of credit to
consumers that
 
are secured by
 
a primary
 
residence or second home.
 
These
 
loans are underwritten
 
in accordance
with the Bank’s general
 
loan policies and
 
procedures which
 
require, among
 
other things, proper
 
documentation of
each borrower’s financial
 
condition, satisfactory
 
credit history,
 
and
 
property value.
 
Investment property
 
– primarily
 
includes loans
 
to finance
 
income-producing
 
1-4 family residential properties.
Generally,
 
the primary
 
source of repayment
 
is dependent
 
upon income generated
 
from leasing
 
the property
securing the
 
loan. The underwriting
 
of these loans
 
takes into consideration
 
the rental
 
rates and property
 
value, as
well as the
 
financial health of
 
the borrower.
 
Consumer installment —
includes loans
 
to individuals
 
both secured by
 
personal property
 
and
 
unsecured.
 
Loans include
personal lines of credit,
 
automobile loans,
 
and
 
other retail loans.
 
These loans
 
are underwritten
 
in accordance with
 
the
Bank’s general loan
 
policies and procedures which
 
require, among
 
other things,
 
proper documentation
 
of each
 
borrower’s
financial
 
condition, satisfactory credit history, and,
 
if applicable,
 
property value.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
15
The following
 
is a summary
 
of current, accruing
 
past due,
 
and nonaccrual loans
 
by portfolio segment and
 
class as of
September 30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021.
 
Accruing
Accruing
Total
30-89 Days
Greater than
Accruing
Non-
Total
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Current
Past Due
90 days
Loans
Accrual
Loans
September 30, 2022:
Commercial and
 
industrial
$
70,684
1
70,685
$
70,685
Construction and
 
land development
54,491
282
54,773
54,773
Commercial real estate:
Owner occupied
57,828
57,828
57,828
Hotel/motel
33,918
33,918
33,918
Multi-family
29,317
29,317
29,317
Other
128,797
128,797
170
128,967
Total commercial real estate
249,860
249,860
170
250,030
Residential real estate:
Consumer mortgage
39,984
46
40,030
177
40,207
Investment
 
property
51,351
40
51,391
51,391
Total residential real estate
91,335
86
91,421
177
91,598
Consumer installment
7,543
8
7,551
7,551
Total
$
473,913
377
474,290
347
$
474,637
December 31, 2021:
Commercial and
 
industrial
$
83,974
3
83,977
$
83,977
Construction and
 
land development
32,228
204
32,432
32,432
Commercial real estate:
Owner occupied
63,375
63,375
63,375
Hotel/motel
43,856
43,856
43,856
Multi-family
42,587
42,587
42,587
Other
108,366
108,366
187
108,553
Total commercial real estate
258,184
258,184
187
258,371
Residential real estate:
Consumer mortgage
29,070
516
29,586
195
29,781
Investment
 
property
47,818
47,818
62
47,880
Total residential real estate
76,888
516
77,404
257
77,661
Consumer installment
6,657
25
6,682
6,682
Total
$
457,931
748
458,679
444
$
459,123
Allowance for Loan
 
Losses
The Company
 
assesses the adequacy
 
of its allowance
 
for loan losses prior to the
 
end
 
of each calendar
 
quarter. The level of
the allowance
 
is based upon
 
management’s evaluation
 
of the loan
 
portfolio, past loan
 
loss experience, current asset
 
quality
trends, known and
 
inherent risks in
 
the portfolio, adverse
 
situations that
 
may affect a
 
borrower’s ability
 
to repay (including
the timing of
 
future payment),
 
the estimated value
 
of any underlying
 
collateral, composition
 
of the loan
 
portfolio, economic
conditions, market
 
interest rates, inflation
 
and
 
related expectations, industry
 
and
 
peer bank
 
loan loss rates, and
 
other
pertinent factors, including
 
regulatory recommendations.
 
This
 
evaluation is inherently
 
subjective as it
 
requires material
estimates including
 
the amounts
 
and timing of
 
future cash flows
 
expected to be received
 
on impaired
 
loans that may be
susceptible to significant
 
change.
 
Loans are charged off, in
 
whole or in part, when
 
management
 
believes that
 
the full
collectability of the loan
 
is unlikely. A loan
 
may be partially
 
charged-off after a “confirming
 
event” has occurred, which
serves to validate
 
that full repayment
 
pursuant
 
to the terms of the
 
loan is unlikely.
16
The Company
 
deems loans
 
impaired
 
when, based on current
 
information and
 
events, it is probable
 
that the Company
 
will
be unable
 
to collect all amounts
 
due according
 
to the contractual
 
terms of the loan
 
agreement. Collection of
 
all amounts
 
due
according to
 
the contractual
 
terms means
 
that both
 
the interest and
 
principal payments
 
of a loan
 
will be collected as
scheduled in
 
the loan agreement.
 
An impairment allowance
 
is recognized if
 
the fair value
 
of the loan
 
is less than the
 
recorded investment in
 
the loan. The
impairment is
 
recognized through
 
the allowance. Loans
 
that are
 
impaired are
 
recorded at the present
 
value of expected
future cash flows
 
discounted at
 
the loan’s effective interest rate, or
 
if the loan
 
is collateral dependent,
 
the impairment
measurement is based
 
on the fair value
 
of the collateral, less estimated
 
disposal costs.
 
The level of allowance
 
maintained is believed
 
by management to
 
be adequate
 
to absorb probable
 
losses inherent in the
portfolio at the
 
balance sheet date.
 
The allowance
 
is increased by provisions
 
charged to
 
expense and
 
decreased by charge-
offs, net of recoveries of amounts
 
previously
 
charged-off.
 
In assessing the
 
adequacy of
 
the allowance,
 
the Company also
 
considers the results of its ongoing
 
internal and
 
independent
loan review
 
processes. The Company’s
 
loan review
 
process assists in determining
 
whether
 
there are loans
 
in the portfolio
whose credit quality
 
has weakened
 
over time and
 
evaluating the
 
risk characteristics of the entire
 
loan portfolio. The
Company’s loan review
 
process includes the judgment
 
of management,
 
the input from our
 
independent loan
 
reviewers, and
reviews conducted
 
by bank regulatory
 
agencies as
 
part of their examination
 
process. The Company
 
incorporates loan
review results in
 
the determination of whether
 
or not it
 
is probable that
 
it will be able
 
to collect all amounts
 
due according
to the contractual terms of
 
a
 
loan.
 
As part of the
 
Company’s quarterly assessment of the
 
allowance,
 
management
 
evaluates the loan
 
portfolio’s five segments:
commercial and
 
industrial,
 
construction and
 
land development,
 
commercial real estate, residential
 
real estate,
 
and
 
consumer
installment. The
 
Company analyzes
 
each segment and
 
estimates an allowance
 
allocation for each
 
loan segment.
 
The allocation of the
 
allowance
 
for loan losses begins with
 
a process of estimating the
 
probable
 
losses inherent for each
loan segment.
 
The estimates for these loans
 
are established
 
by category
 
and based
 
on the Company’s
 
internal system of
credit risk ratings
 
and historical loss data.
 
The estimated loan loss allocation
 
rate for the
 
Company’s
 
internal system of
credit risk grades
 
is based on
 
its experience with
 
similarly graded
 
loans. For loan
 
segments where
 
the Company
 
believes it
does not have
 
sufficient historical loss data,
 
the Company may
 
make adjustments based,
 
in part, on loss rates
 
of peer bank
groups.
 
At September 30,
 
2022 and
 
December 31, 2021, and
 
for the periods then
 
ended, the Company
 
adjusted its
historical loss rates for the
 
commercial real estate
 
portfolio
 
segment based,
 
in part, on loss rates
 
of peer bank
 
groups.
 
The estimated loan
 
loss allocation for all
 
five
 
loan portfolio segments is then
 
adjusted
 
for management’s estimate of
probable
 
losses for several “qualitative
 
and environmental”
 
factors. The allocation
 
for qualitative
 
and environmental
 
factors
is particularly
 
subjective and
 
does not lend
 
itself to exact mathematical
 
calculation. This
 
amount represents estimated
probable
 
inherent credit losses which
 
exist, but have
 
not yet been identified,
 
as of
 
the balance
 
sheet date, and
 
are based
upon quarterly
 
trend assessments in
 
delinquent
 
and nonaccrual
 
loans, credit concentration
 
changes,
 
prevailing
 
economic
conditions, changes
 
in lending personnel
 
experience, changes
 
in lending
 
policies or procedures, and
 
other factors. These
qualitative
 
and environmental
 
factors are considered for each
 
of the five
 
loan segments and
 
the allowance
 
allocation, as
determined by
 
the processes noted above,
 
is increased or decreased
 
based
 
on the incremental
 
assessment of these factors.
 
The Company
 
regularly re-evaluates
 
its practices in determining
 
the allowance
 
for loan losses. The
 
Company’s look-back
period each
 
quarter incorporates the
 
effects of at
 
least one economic downturn
 
in its loss history. The
 
Company believes
this look-back period
 
is appropriate
 
due to the risks inherent
 
in the loan portfolio. Absent
 
this look-back period,
 
the early
cycle periods in
 
which the
 
Company experienced
 
significant losses
 
would
 
be excluded
 
from the determination
 
of the
allowance for loan
 
losses and its
 
balance would
 
decrease.
 
For the
 
quarter ended
 
September 30, 2022, the
 
Company
increased its look-back period
 
to 54 quarters to
 
continue to include
 
losses incurred
 
by the
 
Company beginning
 
with the first
quarter of
 
2009.
 
The
 
Company will
 
likely continue
 
to increase its look-back period
 
to incorporate
 
the effects of
 
at least
 
one
economic downturn
 
in its loss history.
 
During
 
the second quarter
 
of 2021, the Company
 
adjusted
 
certain qualitative
 
and
economic factors, previously
 
downgraded
 
as a result of the
 
COVID-19 pandemic,
 
to reflect improvements in
 
economic
conditions in our
 
primary market
 
area.
 
Further adjustments
 
may be
 
made from time to time
 
in the
 
future as a result of the
waning of
 
COVID-19 as
 
a pandemic and
 
other changes
 
in economic conditions.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
17
The following
 
table details the
 
changes in the
 
allowance for loan
 
losses by portfolio segment for the
 
respective
 
periods.
 
September
 
30, 2022
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Commercial
 
and
industrial
Construction
and land
development
Commercial
real estate
Residential
real estate
Consumer
installment
Total
Quarter ended:
Beginning balance
$
761
576
2,523
753
103
$
4,716
Charge-offs
(13)
(3)
(16)
Recoveries
2
8
6
16
Net (charge-offs) recoveries
(11)
8
3
Provision for loan
 
losses
(18)
213
38
22
(5)
250
Ending balance
$
732
789
2,561
783
101
$
4,966
Nine months ended:
Beginning balance
$
857
518
2,739
739
86
$
4,939
Charge-offs
(17)
(67)
(84)
Recoveries
6
22
22
61
111
Net (charge-offs) recoveries
(11)
22
22
(6)
27
Provision for loan
 
losses
(114)
271
(200)
22
21
Ending balance
$
732
789
2,561
783
101
$
4,966
September
 
30, 2021
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Commercial
 
and
industrial
Construction
and land
development
Commercial
real estate
Residential
real estate
Consumer
installment
Total
Quarter ended:
Beginning balance
$
829
639
2,704
838
97
$
5,107
Recoveries
1
7
4
12
Net recoveries
1
7
4
12
Provision for loan
 
losses
(14)
(49)
119
(46)
(10)
Ending balance
$
816
590
2,823
799
91
$
5,119
Nine months ended:
Beginning balance
$
807
594
3,169
944
104
$
5,618
Charge-offs
 
 
 
(1)
 
(5)
(6)
Recoveries
55
 
 
33
19
107
Net recoveries
55
 
 
32
14
101
Provision for loan
 
losses
(46)
(4)
(346)
(177)
(27)
(600)
Ending balance
$
816
590
2,823
799
91
$
5,119
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
18
The following
 
table presents an
 
analysis of the allowance
 
for loan losses and
 
recorded investment in
 
loans by portfolio
segment and
 
impairment methodology
 
as of
 
September 30, 2022 and
 
2021.
 
Collectively
 
evaluated (1)
Individually
 
evaluated (2)
Total
Allowance
Recorded
Allowance
Recorded
Allowance
Recorded
for loan
investment
for loan
investment
for loan
investment
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
losses
in loans
losses
in loans
losses
in loans
September 30, 2022:
Commercial and
 
industrial
$
732
70,685
732
70,685
Construction and
 
land development
789
54,773
789
54,773
Commercial real estate
2,561
249,860
170
2,561
250,030
Residential real estate
783
91,598
783
91,598
Consumer installment
101
7,551
101
7,551
Total
$
4,966
474,467
170
4,966
474,637
September 30, 2021:
Commercial and
 
industrial (3)
$
816
79,202
816
79,202
Construction and
 
land development
590
34,890
590
34,890
Commercial real estate
2,823
252,605
193
2,823
252,798
Residential real estate
799
80,112
93
799
80,205
Consumer installment
91
7,060
91
7,060
Total
$
5,119
453,869
286
5,119
454,155
(1)
Represents
 
loans collectively
 
evaluated for impairment
 
in accordance
 
with ASC 450-20,
Loss Contingencies
, and
 
pursuant
 
to amendments
 
by ASU 2010-20
 
regarding allowance
 
for non-impaired
 
loans.
(2)
Represents
 
loans individually
 
evaluated for impairment
 
in accordance
 
with ASC 310-30,
Receivables
, and
 
pursuant
 
to amendments
 
by ASU 2010-20
 
regarding allowance
 
for impaired loans.
(3)
Includes $13.3
 
million of PPP
 
loans for which
 
no allowance
 
for loan losses
 
was allocated due to
 
100% SBA
 
guarantee.
See “Impaired
 
Loans” and
 
“Troubled Debt Restructurings”
 
below
 
for additional
 
information about
 
such loans.
Credit Quality Indicators
The credit quality
 
of the loan
 
portfolio is summarized
 
no less frequently
 
than quarterly
 
using categories similar
 
to the
standard asset classification
 
system used
 
by
 
the federal banking
 
agencies.
 
The following
 
table presents credit quality
indicators for the loan
 
portfolio segments and
 
classes. These categories
 
are utilized
 
to develop
 
the associated allowance
 
for
loan losses using historical
 
losses adjusted
 
for qualitative
 
and environmental
 
factors and
 
are defined as follows:
 
Pass – loans which
 
are well protected by
 
the current net
 
worth and
 
paying capacity of
 
the obligor (or guarantors,
 
if
any) or by the
 
fair value, less cost to acquire
 
and
 
sell, of any
 
underlying collateral.
Special Mention
 
– loans with
 
potential weakness
 
that may, if not reversed
 
or corrected, weaken
 
the credit or
inadequately
 
protect the Company’s
 
position at some
 
future date. These
 
loans are
 
not adversely classified
 
and
 
do
not expose an
 
institution to sufficient risk
 
to warrant
 
an adverse classification.
Substandard Accruing
 
– loans that exhibit
 
a well-defined weakness
 
which presently jeopardizes
 
debt repayment,
even though
 
they are currently
 
performing. These
 
loans are characterized
 
by the
 
distinct possibility that
 
the
Company may
 
incur a loss in
 
the future
 
if these weaknesses are
 
not corrected.
Nonaccrual –
 
includes loans
 
where management
 
has determined that
 
full payment of
 
principal
 
and interest is not
expected.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
19
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
 
Pass
 
Special
Mention
Substandard
Accruing
Nonaccrual
Total
 
loans
September 30, 2022:
 
Commercial and
 
industrial
$
70,480
11
194
$
70,685
Construction and
 
land development
54,773
54,773
Commercial real estate:
Owner occupied
57,424
241
163
57,828
Hotel/motel
33,918
33,918
Multi-family
29,317
29,317
Other
128,591
178
28
170
128,967
Total commercial real estate
249,250
419
191
170
250,030
Residential real estate:
Consumer mortgage
38,946
443
641
177
40,207
Investment
 
property
51,096
44
251
51,391
Total residential real estate
90,042
487
892
177
91,598
Consumer installment
7,522
29
7,551
Total
$
472,067
917
1,306
347
$
474,637
December 31, 2021:
Commercial and
 
industrial
$
83,725
26
226
$
83,977
Construction and
 
land development
32,212
2
218
32,432
Commercial real estate:
Owner occupied
61,573
1,675
127
63,375
Hotel/motel
36,162
7,694
43,856
Multi-family
39,093
3,494
42,587
Other
107,426
911
29
187
108,553
Total commercial real estate
244,254
13,774
156
187
258,371
Residential real estate:
Consumer mortgage
27,647
452
1,487
195
29,781
Investment
 
property
47,459
98
261
62
47,880
Total residential real estate
75,106
550
1,748
257
77,661
Consumer installment
6,650
20
12
6,682
Total
$
441,947
14,372
2,360
444
$
459,123
Impaired loans
The following
 
tables present details
 
related to the
 
Company’s
 
impaired
 
loans. Loans that
 
have been
 
fully charged-off are
not included
 
in the following
 
tables. The
 
related allowance
 
generally represents the
 
following
 
components that
 
correspond
to impaired loans:
Individually evaluated
 
impaired
 
loans equal to
 
or greater than
 
$500 thousand
 
secured by real
 
estate (nonaccrual
construction and
 
land development,
 
commercial real estate, and
 
residential real estate loans).
Individually evaluated
 
impaired
 
loans equal to
 
or greater than
 
$250 thousand
 
not secured by
 
real estate
(nonaccrual commercial
 
and
 
industrial and
 
consumer installment loans).
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
20
The following
 
tables set forth certain
 
information regarding
 
the Company’s
 
impaired
 
loans that were
 
individually evaluated
for impairment
 
at September 30,
 
2022 and
 
December 31, 2021.
September
 
30, 2022
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Unpaid principal
balance (1)
Charge-offs
 
and
payments applied
(2)
Recorded
investment
 
(3)
Related allowance
With no allowance recorded:
Commercial real estate:
Other
$
197
(27)
170
$
Total commercial real estate
197
(27)
170
Total impaired loans
$
197
(27)
170
$
(1) Unpaid principal
 
balance represents
 
the contractual
 
obligation due
 
from the customer.
(2) Charge-offs
 
and payments
 
applied represents
 
cumulative charge
 
-offs taken,
 
as well as interest
 
payments that have
 
been
applied against
 
the outstanding
 
principal balance subsequent
 
to the loans being placed on
 
nonaccrual status.
(3) Recorded investment
 
represents
 
the unpaid principal
 
balance less
 
charge-offs
 
and payments
 
applied; it is shown
 
before
 
any related allowance
 
for loan losses.
December 31,
 
2021
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Unpaid principal
balance (1)
Charge-offs
 
and
payments applied
(2)
Recorded
investment
 
(3)
Related allowance
With no allowance recorded:
Commercial real estate:
Other
$
205
(18)
187
$
Total commercial real estate
205
(18)
187
Residential real estate:
Investment
 
property
68
(6)
62
Total residential real estate
68
(6)
62
Total impaired loans
$
273
(24)
249
$
(1) Unpaid principal
 
balance represents
 
the contractual
 
obligation due
 
from the customer.
(2) Charge-offs
 
and payments
 
applied represents
 
cumulative charge
 
-offs taken,
 
as well as interest
 
payments that have
 
been
applied against
 
the outstanding
 
principal balance subsequent
 
to the loans being placed on
 
nonaccrual status.
(3) Recorded investment
 
represents
 
the unpaid principal
 
balance less
 
charge-offs
 
and payments
 
applied; it is shown
 
before
 
any related allowance
 
for loan losses.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
21
The following
 
table provides
 
the average recorded investment
 
in impaired
 
loans,
 
if any, by portfolio segment, and
 
the
amount of interest income recognized
 
on impaired
 
loans after impairment
 
by portfolio segment and
 
class during the
respective periods.
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30, 2022
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30, 2022
Average
Total
 
interest
Average
Total
 
interest
recorded
income
recorded
income
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
investment
recognized
investment
recognized
Impaired loans:
Commercial real estate:
Other
$
173
199
Total commercial real estate
173
199
Residential real estate:
Investment
 
property
6
Total residential real estate
6
Total
 
$
173
205
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30, 2021
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30, 2021
Average
Total
 
interest
Average
Total
 
interest
recorded
income
recorded
income
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
investment
recognized
investment
recognized
Impaired loans:
Commercial real estate:
Other
$
196
202
Total commercial real estate
196
202
Residential real estate:
Investment
 
property
95
100
Total residential real estate
95
100
Total
 
$
291
302
Troubled Debt Restructurings
 
Impaired loans
 
also include
 
troubled debt
 
restructurings (“TDRs”).
 
Section 4013 of the CARES
 
Act, “Temporary Relief
From Troubled Debt
 
Restructurings,” provided
 
banks the option to
 
temporarily suspend
 
certain requirements under
 
ASC
340-10 TDR
 
classifications for a
 
limited period of time
 
to account for the
 
effects of COVID-19.
 
In addition, the
 
Interagency
Statement on COVID-19
 
Loan Modifications, encouraged
 
banks
 
to work prudently
 
with borrowers and
 
describes the
agencies’ interpretation
 
of how
 
accounting
 
rules under ASC
 
310-40, “Troubled
 
Debt Restructurings
 
by
 
Creditors,” apply
 
to
certain COVID-19-related
 
modifications.
 
The
 
Interagency Statement
 
on COVID-19
 
Loan Modifications was
 
supplemented
on June 23, 2020 by
 
the Interagency
 
Examiner Guidance
 
for Assessing Safety
 
and Soundness
 
Considering the
 
Effect of the
COVID-19 Pandemic
 
on Institutions.
 
If a loan
 
modification was
 
eligible, a bank could
 
elect to account for the
 
loan under
section 4013 of the CARES
 
Act. If a loan
 
modification was
 
not eligible under
 
section 4013, or if the
 
bank elected not
 
to
account for the
 
loan modification under
 
section 4013, the
 
Revised
 
Statement
 
included
 
criteria when a
 
bank may presume a
loan modification is not
 
a
 
TDR in accordance with
 
ASC 310-40.
The Company
 
evaluates loan
 
extensions or modifications
 
not qualified
 
under
 
Section 4013 of the CARES
 
Act or under the
Interagency Statement
 
and related regulatory
 
guidance
 
on COVID-19
 
Loan Modifications in
 
accordance with
 
FASB ASC
340-10 with
 
respect to the classification
 
of the loan
 
as a TDR.
 
In the normal
 
course of business, management
 
may grant
concessions to borrowers that
 
are experiencing
 
financial
 
difficulty.
 
A concession
 
may include,
 
but is not limited
 
to, delays
in required payments
 
of principal
 
and interest for a
 
specified period, reduction
 
of the stated
 
interest rate of the
 
loan,
reduction of accrued
 
interest, extension
 
of the maturity
 
date, or reduction
 
of the face
 
amount
 
or maturity amount
 
of the debt.
 
A concession has
 
been granted when,
 
as a result of the restructuring,
 
the Bank
 
does not expect
 
to collect, when
 
due, all
amounts owed,
 
including interest at
 
the original
 
stated rate.
 
A concession may
 
have also
 
been granted if the
 
debtor is not
able to access funds
 
elsewhere at
 
a market rate
 
for debt with
 
risk characteristics similar to
 
the restructured
 
debt.
 
In making
the determination of whether
 
a loan
 
modification is a TDR,
 
the Company considers the
 
individual
 
facts and circumstances
surrounding each
 
modification.
 
As part
 
of the credit approval
 
process, the restructured
 
loans are
 
evaluated
 
for adequate
collateral protection in
 
determining the
 
appropriate accrual
 
status at the time
 
of restructure.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
22
Similar to
 
other impaired
 
loans, TDRs are
 
measured for impairment
 
based on the
 
present value of
 
expected payments
 
using
the loan’s original
 
effective interest rate as
 
the discount
 
rate, or the
 
fair value of the
 
collateral, less selling
 
costs if the loan
 
is
collateral dependent.
 
If the recorded investment
 
in the
 
loan exceeds the measure
 
of fair value,
 
impairment is
 
recognized by
establishing a
 
valuation allowance
 
as part of the allowance
 
for loan losses or a
 
charge-off to the allowance
 
for loan losses.
 
In periods subsequent
 
to the modification,
 
all TDRs
 
are evaluated individually,
 
including those that
 
have payment
 
defaults,
for possible impairment.
The following
 
is a summary
 
of accruing and
 
nonaccrual
 
TDRs, which
 
are included
 
in the impaired
 
loan totals, and the
related allowance
 
for loan losses, by
 
portfolio segment and
 
class as of September
 
30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021,
respectively.
 
TDRs
Related
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Accruing
Nonaccrual
Total
Allowance
September 30, 2022
Commercial real estate:
Other
$
170
170
$
Total commercial real estate
170
170
Total
 
$
170
170
$
TDRs
Related
(In thousands)
Accruing
Nonaccrual
Total
Allowance
December 31, 2021
Commercial real estate:
Other
$
187
187
$
Total commercial real estate
187
187
Investment
 
property
62
62
Total residential real estate
62
62
Total
 
$
249
249
$
At September 30,
 
2022 there were no
 
significant outstanding
 
commitments to advance
 
additional
 
funds to customers whose
loans had been
 
restructured.
 
There were no
 
loans
 
modified in
 
a TDR during the
 
quarters and
 
nine months
 
ended
 
September 30, 2022
 
and
 
2021,
respectively.
 
For the
 
same periods,
 
the Company
 
had no loans
 
modified in a
 
TDR within the
 
previous 12 months
 
for which
there was a
 
payment default.
 
NOTE 6:
 
MORTGAGE SERVICING
 
RIGHTS, NET
Mortgage servicing
 
rights (“MSRs”)
 
are recognized based
 
on the fair value
 
of the servicing
 
rights on
 
the date the
corresponding mortgage
 
loans are
 
sold.
 
An estimate of the
 
fair value
 
of the Company’s
 
MSRs is determined using
assumptions that
 
market participants
 
would use in
 
estimating future
 
net servicing income,
 
including
 
estimates of
prepayment speeds,
 
discount rates, default
 
rates, costs to service,
 
escrow
 
account earnings,
 
contractual servicing
 
fee
income, ancillary
 
income, and
 
late fees.
 
Subsequent
 
to the date
 
of transfer, the Company
 
has elected to measure its
 
MSRs
under the amortization
 
method.
 
Under
 
the amortization method,
 
MSRs
 
are amortized in
 
proportion to, and
 
over the period
of, estimated net
 
servicing income.
 
The Company
 
has recorded MSRs
 
related to loans
 
sold without
 
recourse to Fannie
 
Mae.
 
The Company
 
generally sells
conforming, fixed-rate, closed-end,
 
residential mortgages
 
to Fannie
 
Mae.
 
MSRs are included
 
in other assets on
 
the
accompanying
 
consolidated balance
 
sheets.
The Company
 
evaluates MSRs
 
for impairment
 
on a quarterly
 
basis.
 
Impairment is
 
determined by
 
stratifying MSRs
 
into
groupings based
 
on predominant
 
risk characteristics, such
 
as interest rate and
 
loan type.
 
If, by individual
 
stratum, the
carrying amount
 
of the MSRs
 
exceeds fair value,
 
a valuation allowance
 
is established. The
 
valuation allowance
 
is adjusted
as the fair value
 
changes.
 
Changes in the valuation
 
allowance
 
are recognized in
 
earnings as a component of mortgage
lending income.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
23
The following
 
table details the
 
changes in amortized
 
MSRs
 
and the related valuation
 
allowance
 
for the respective periods.
 
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30,
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
2022
2021
2022
2021
MSRs, net:
Beginning balance
$
1,259
$
1,360
$
1,309
$
1,330
Additions, net
13
93
110
407
Amortization
 
expense
(64)
(127)
(211)
(411)
Ending balance
$
1,208
$
1,326
$
1,208
$
1,326
Valuation allowance included in MSRs,
 
net:
Beginning of period
$
$
$
$
End of period
Fair value of
 
amortized MSRs:
Beginning of period
$
2,547
$
1,833
$
1,908
$
1,489
End of period
2,478
1,776
2,478
1,776
NOTE 7:
 
FAIR VALUE
 
Fair Value Hierarchy
 
“Fair value”
 
is defined by
 
ASC 820,
Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures
, as
 
the price that
 
would be
 
received to sell
an asset or paid
 
to transfer a liability
 
in an orderly transaction
 
occurring in
 
the principal
 
market (or most
 
advantageous
market in the
 
absence of a principal
 
market) for an
 
asset or liability
 
at the measurement date.
 
GAAP establishes a
 
fair
value hierarchy
 
for valuation inputs
 
that gives
 
the highest priority to
 
quoted prices in
 
active markets
 
for identical assets or
liabilities and
 
the lowest priority to unobservable
 
inputs.
 
The fair value hierarchy
 
is as follows:
Level 1—inputs
 
to the valuation
 
methodology are
 
quoted prices, unadjusted,
 
for identical assets or liabilities
 
in active
markets.
 
Level 2—inputs
 
to the valuation
 
methodology include
 
quoted prices for similar
 
assets and
 
liabilities in active
 
markets,
quoted prices for identical
 
or similar assets
 
or liabilities
 
in markets
 
that
 
are not active, or inputs
 
that are observable
 
for the
asset or liability, either directly
 
or indirectly.
 
Level 3—inputs
 
to the valuation
 
methodology are
 
unobservable
 
and reflect the Company’s
 
own assumptions
 
about
 
the
inputs market
 
participants would
 
use in pricing
 
the asset or
 
liability.
 
Level changes in fair
 
value measurements
 
Transfers between
 
levels of the
 
fair value hierarchy
 
are generally recognized
 
at the end
 
of each reporting
 
period.
 
The
Company monitors the
 
valuation
 
techniques utilized
 
for each category
 
of financial
 
assets and
 
liabilities to ascertain when
transfers between levels
 
have been
 
affected.
 
The nature
 
of the Company’s financial
 
assets and liabilities generally
 
is such
that transfers in
 
and out
 
of any level are expected
 
to be
 
infrequent. For
 
the nine months
 
ended September
 
30, 2022, there
were no transfers between
 
levels and
 
no changes
 
in valuation techniques
 
for the Company’s
 
financial assets and
 
liabilities.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
24
Assets and liabilities measured
 
at fair
 
value on
 
a recurring basis
Securities available-for-sale
Fair values of
 
securities available
 
for sale were
 
primarily measured
 
using Level 2
 
inputs.
 
For these securities,
 
the Company
obtains pricing
 
from third party
 
pricing services.
 
These
 
third party pricing
 
services consider observable
 
data that
 
may
include broker/dealer quotes,
 
market spreads,
 
cash flows,
 
benchmark
 
yields, reported trades
 
for similar securities,
 
market
consensus prepayment
 
speeds, credit information,
 
and
 
the securities’ terms and
 
conditions.
 
On a
 
quarterly basis,
management
 
reviews the pricing
 
received from the
 
third party pricing
 
services for reasonableness given
 
current market
conditions.
 
As part
 
of its review, management
 
may obtain
 
non-binding third
 
party broker/dealer quotes
 
to validate
 
the fair
value measurements.
 
In addition,
 
management
 
will periodically submit
 
pricing provided
 
by the third party pricing
 
services
to another
 
independent valuation
 
firm on a sample
 
basis.
 
This independent
 
valuation firm
 
will compare the
 
price provided
by the third party
 
pricing service with
 
its own price and
 
will review the
 
significant assumptions
 
and valuation
methodologies used
 
with management.
The following
 
table presents the balances
 
of the assets and
 
liabilities measured at
 
fair value
 
on a recurring basis
 
as of
September 30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021, respectively,
 
by caption,
 
on the accompanying
 
consolidated balance
 
sheets by
ASC 820 valuation
 
hierarchy (as described
 
above).
 
Quoted Prices
 
in
Significant
Active Markets
Other
Significant
for
Observable
Unobservable
Identical Assets
Inputs
Inputs
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Amount
(Level 1)
(Level 2)
(Level 3)
September 30, 2022:
Securities available-for-sale:
Agency obligations
 
$
125,316
125,316
Agency RMBS
221,308
221,308
State and political subdivisions
64,914
64,914
Total securities available-for-sale
411,538
411,538
Total assets at fair value
$
411,538
411,538
December 31, 2021:
Securities available-for-sale:
Agency obligations
 
$
124,413
124,413
Agency RMBS
223,371
223,371
State and political subdivisions
74,107
74,107
Total securities available-for-sale
421,891
421,891
Total assets at fair value
$
421,891
421,891
Assets and liabilities measured
 
at fair
 
value on
 
a nonrecurring basis
Loans held for sale
Loans held for sale
 
are carried at
 
the lower of cost or fair
 
value. Fair
 
values
 
of loans held
 
for
 
sale are determined
 
using
quoted market
 
secondary market
 
prices for similar loans.
 
Loans
 
held for sale
 
are classified within
 
Level 2 of the fair
 
value
hierarchy.
Impaired Loans
Loans considered impaired
 
under
 
ASC 310-10-35,
Receivables
, are
 
loans for which,
 
based on current information
 
and
events, it is probable
 
that the Company
 
will be unable
 
to collect all principal
 
and
 
interest payments
 
due in accordance
 
with
the contractual terms of the
 
loan agreement.
 
Impaired
 
loans can be measured
 
based on the
 
present value of
 
expected
payments using
 
the loan’s original effective rate
 
as the discount
 
rate, the
 
loan’s observable
 
market price, or the
 
fair value of
the collateral less selling
 
costs if the
 
loan is
 
collateral dependent.
 
25
The fair value of
 
impaired
 
loans was primarily
 
measured based
 
on the value
 
of the collateral securing
 
these loans. Impaired
loans are classified within
 
Level 3
 
of the fair value
 
hierarchy. Collateral may
 
be real estate and/or
 
business assets including
equipment, inventory,
 
and/or accounts receivable.
 
The Company
 
determines the value
 
of the collateral based
 
on
independent appraisals
 
performed by qualified
 
licensed appraisers. These
 
appraisals
 
may utilize a single
 
valuation approach
or a combination of
 
approaches
 
including
 
comparable sales
 
and the
 
income approach.
 
Appraised values
 
are discounted for
estimated costs to sell and
 
may be discounted
 
further based
 
on management’s
 
historical knowledge,
 
changes
 
in market
conditions from the date
 
of the most
 
recent appraisal,
 
and/or management’s
 
expertise and knowledge
 
of the customer and
the customer’s business.
 
Such
 
discounts by
 
management
 
are subjective and
 
are typically
 
significant unobservable
 
inputs for
determining fair
 
value. Impaired
 
loans are
 
reviewed and evaluated
 
on at least a
 
quarterly basis
 
for additional
 
impairment
and adjusted accordingly,
 
based on the
 
same factors discussed above.
 
Other real estate owned
Other real
 
estate
 
owned,
 
consisting of properties obtained
 
through
 
foreclosure or in
 
satisfaction of loans,
 
are initially
recorded at the
 
lower of the loan’s carrying
 
amount or the fair
 
value less the estimated costs to
 
sell upon
 
transfer of the
loans to other
 
real
 
estate.
 
Subsequently, other real
 
estate is carried
 
at the lower
 
of carrying
 
value or fair value
 
less costs to
sell. Fair
 
values are generally
 
based on third
 
party appraisals of the
 
property and are
 
classified within
 
Level 3 of the
 
fair
value hierarchy.
 
The appraisals
 
are sometimes further discounted
 
based
 
on management’s
 
historical knowledge,
 
and/or
changes in market
 
conditions from the date
 
of the most
 
recent appraisal,
 
and/or management’s expertise and
 
knowledge
 
of
the customer and
 
the customer’s business.
 
Such
 
discounts are typically
 
significant unobservable
 
inputs
 
for determining fair
value. In
 
cases where the
 
carrying amount
 
exceeds the fair
 
value, less costs to sell, a
 
loss is recognized in
 
noninterest
expense.
Mortgage servicing rights,
 
net
MSRs, net, included
 
in other assets on
 
the accompanying
 
consolidated balance
 
sheets, are carried at
 
the lower of cost or
estimated fair value.
 
MSRs do not
 
trade in an
 
active market with
 
readily observable
 
prices.
 
To determine the fair
 
value of
MSRs, the Company
 
engages an independent
 
third party.
 
The independent
 
third party’s valuation
 
model calculates the
present value of
 
estimated future net
 
servicing income
 
using
 
assumptions that
 
market participants
 
would use in
 
estimating
future net
 
servicing income, including
 
estimates of prepayment
 
speeds, discount
 
rates, default
 
rates, cost to service,
 
escrow
account earnings,
 
contractual servicing
 
fee
 
income, ancillary
 
income, and
 
late fees.
 
Periodically, the Company
 
will review
broker surveys
 
and other market
 
research to validate
 
significant assumptions
 
used in
 
the model.
 
The significant
unobservable
 
inputs include
 
prepayment speeds
 
or the constant
 
prepayment rate
 
(“CPR”)
 
and the weighted
 
average
discount rate.
 
Because the
 
valuation of
 
MSRs requires the use
 
of significant unobservable
 
inputs, all
 
of the Company’s
MSRs are
 
classified within
 
Level 3 of the
 
valuation hierarchy.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
26
The following
 
table presents the balances
 
of the assets and
 
liabilities measured at
 
fair value
 
on a nonrecurring
 
basis as of
September 30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021, respectively,
 
by caption,
 
on the accompanying
 
consolidated balance sheets
and by FASB ASC
 
820 valuation hierarchy
 
(as described above):
Quoted Prices
 
in
Active Markets
Other
Significant
for
Observable
Unobservable
Carrying
Identical Assets
Inputs
Inputs
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Amount
(Level 1)
(Level 2)
(Level 3)
September 30, 2022:
Loans, net
(1)
170
170
Other assets
(2)
1,208
1,208
Total assets at fair value
$
1,378
1,378
December 31, 2021:
Loans held for sale
$
1,376
1,376
Loans, net
(1)
249
249
Other assets
(2)
1,683
1,683
Total assets at fair value
$
3,308
1,376
1,932
(1)
Loans considered
 
impaired under
 
ASC 310-10-35
 
Receivables.
 
This amount reflects
 
the recorded
 
investment
 
in impaired loans,
 
net
of any related
 
allowance for loan
 
losses.
(2)
Represents
 
other real estate
 
owned and MSRs,
 
net, carried at lower
 
of cost or estimated
 
fair value.
Quantitative Disclosures for
 
Level 3 Fair
 
Value Measurements
At September 30,
 
2022 and
 
December 31, 2021, the
 
Company
 
had no Level
 
3 assets measured
 
at fair value
 
on a recurring
basis.
 
For Level
 
3 assets measured at
 
fair value
 
on a non-recurring basis
 
at September
 
30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021,
the significant unobservable
 
inputs used in
 
the fair value
 
measurements and
 
the range of such
 
inputs with respect to such
assets are presented below.
Range of
Weighted
 
Carrying
 
Significant
 
Unobservable
Average
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Amount
Valuation
 
Technique
Unobservable
 
Input
Inputs
of Input
September 30, 2022:
Impaired loans
$
170
Appraisal
Appraisal discounts
10.0
-
10.0
%
10.0
%
Mortgage servicing
 
rights, net
1,208
Discounted cash
 
flow
Prepayment speed
 
or CPR
7.1
-
20.6
7.4
 
Discount rate
9.5
-
11.5
9.5
December 31, 2021:
Impaired loans
$
249
Appraisal
Appraisal discounts
10.0
-
10.0
%
10.0
%
Other real
 
estate owned
374
Appraisal
Appraisal discounts
55.0
-
55.0
55.0
Mortgage servicing
 
rights, net
1,309
Discounted cash
 
flow
Prepayment speed
 
or CPR
6.8
-
16.5
13.3
 
Discount rate
9.5
-
11.5
9.5
Fair Value of Financial Instruments
ASC 825,
Financial Instruments
, requires
 
disclosure
 
of fair value
 
information about
 
financial
 
instruments, whether
 
or not
recognized on
 
the face of the
 
balance sheet, for which
 
it is practicable to estimate that
 
value.
 
The assumptions
 
used in the
estimation of the fair
 
value of the
 
Company’s financial instruments
 
are explained
 
below. Where quoted
 
market prices are
not available,
 
fair values are
 
based on estimates using
 
discounted cash
 
flow analyses.
 
Discounted cash
 
flows can be
significantly affected by
 
the assumptions used,
 
including the discount
 
rate and estimates of future
 
cash flows.
 
The
following fair
 
value estimates cannot
 
be substantiated
 
by comparison to independent
 
markets and
 
should not be
 
considered
representative of the
 
liquidation
 
value of the
 
Company’s financial instruments,
 
but
 
rather are a good-faith estimate of
 
the
fair value of financial
 
instruments held by
 
the Company.
 
ASC 825 excludes certain financial
 
instruments and
 
all
nonfinancial
 
instruments from its disclosure requirements.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
27
The following
 
methods and assumptions
 
were used
 
by the Company
 
in estimating the
 
fair value of its financial
 
instruments:
 
Loans, net
 
Fair values for loans
 
were calculated
 
using discounted
 
cash flows.
 
The discount rates reflected
 
current rates
 
at which
 
similar
loans would
 
be made for the
 
same remaining
 
maturities. Expected
 
future cash
 
flows were projected based
 
on contractual
cash flows,
 
adjusted for estimated prepayments.
 
The
 
fair value of loans
 
was measured
 
using an exit
 
price notion.
Loans held for
 
sale
Fair values of
 
loans held for
 
sale are
 
determined using
 
quoted secondary
 
market prices for similar
 
loans.
 
Time Deposits
 
Fair values for time
 
deposits were
 
estimated using
 
discounted cash
 
flows. The
 
discount rates were
 
based on rates currently
offered for deposits with
 
similar remaining
 
maturities.
 
The carrying value,
 
related estimated fair
 
value,
 
and placement in
 
the fair value
 
hierarchy of the Company’s
 
financial
instruments at
 
September 30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021 are
 
presented
 
below.
 
This table
 
excludes financial
 
instruments
for which
 
the carrying amount
 
approximates
 
fair value.
 
Financial assets for which
 
fair value approximates
 
carrying
 
value
included cash
 
and cash equivalents.
 
Financial liabilities for which
 
fair value
 
approximates
 
carrying value
 
included
noninterest-bearing
 
demand
 
deposits,
 
interest-bearing
 
demand
 
deposits, and
 
savings deposits.
 
Fair value
 
approximates
carrying value
 
in these financial
 
liabilities due to these products
 
having
 
no stated maturity.
 
Additionally, financial
liabilities for which
 
fair value
 
approximates
 
carrying value
 
included overnight
 
borrowings
 
such as
 
federal funds purchased
and securities sold under
 
agreements to repurchase.
Fair Value
 
Hierarchy
Carrying
Estimated
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
amount
fair value
inputs
inputs
Inputs
September 30, 2022:
Financial Assets:
Loans, net (1)
$
469,069
$
454,105
$
$
$
454,105
Financial Liabilities:
Time Deposits
$
146,508
$
144,702
$
$
144,702
$
December 31, 2021:
Financial Assets:
Loans, net (1)
$
453,425
$
449,105
$
$
$
449,105
Loans held for sale
1,376
1,410
1,410
Financial Liabilities:
Time Deposits
$
156,650
$
160,581
$
$
160,581
$
(1) Represents
 
loans, net of
 
unearned income and
 
the allowance
 
for loan losses.
 
The fair value
 
of loans was
 
measured using
 
an exit
 
price notion.
 
NOTE 8:
 
SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
On October 13, 2022, the
 
Company
 
closed the sale of
 
approximately
 
0.85 acres of land
 
located next
 
to the Company’s
headquarters
 
in Auburn, Alabama
 
at a purchase
 
price of $
4.26
 
million.
 
Although
 
not all invoices
 
have been
 
received, after
prorations, closing
 
costs and
 
costs of demolishing
 
the Bank’s former main
 
office building,
 
the Company
 
estimates that the
sale will result in
 
a pre-tax gain of
 
$
3.2
 
million.
28
ITEM 2. MANAGEMENT'S
 
DISCUSSION
 
AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL
 
CONDITION
 
AND RESULTS OF
OPERATIONS
General
Auburn National
 
Bancorporation, Inc.
 
(the “Company”)
 
is a bank
 
holding company
 
registered with
 
the Board
 
of Governors
of the Federal Reserve
 
System (the
 
“Federal
 
Reserve”) under
 
the Bank Holding
 
Company Act
 
of 1956, as amended
 
(the
“BHC Act”).
 
The Company
 
was incorporated in
 
Delaware in
 
1990, and in
 
1994 it succeeded its Alabama
 
predecessor as
 
the
bank holding company
 
controlling AuburnBank,
 
an Alabama
 
state member bank
 
with its
 
principal office in Auburn,
Alabama (the
 
“Bank”). The
 
Company and
 
its predecessor have
 
controlled the Bank
 
since 1984.
 
As
 
a bank holding
company, the Company
 
may diversify
 
into a broader range
 
of financial
 
services and
 
other business activities than
 
currently
are permitted to the
 
Bank
 
under applicable
 
laws and regulations.
 
The holding company
 
structure also provides
 
greater
financial
 
and operating flexibility than
 
is presently permitted to
 
the Bank.
 
The Bank
 
has operated continuously
 
since 1907 and
 
currently conducts its business
 
primarily in
 
East Alabama,
 
including
Lee County
 
and surrounding
 
areas.
 
The Bank
 
has been a member
 
of the Federal
 
Reserve System
 
since April 1995.
 
The
Bank’s primary regulators
 
are the
 
Federal Reserve
 
and the Alabama
 
Superintendent of
 
Banks (the “Alabama
Superintendent”).
 
The Bank has
 
been a member
 
of the Federal Home
 
Loan Bank
 
of Atlanta (the “FHLB
 
of Atlanta”)
 
since
1991. Certain of the
 
statements made
 
in this discussion and
 
analysis and
 
elsewhere, including
 
information incorporated
herein by reference to other
 
documents,
 
are “forward-looking
 
statements” as
 
more fully described
 
under
 
“Special Notice
Regarding Forward-Looking
 
Statements” below.
 
The following
 
discussion and
 
analysis is intended
 
to provide a better understanding
 
of various
 
factors related to the results
of operations and
 
financial
 
condition of the
 
Company and
 
the Bank.
 
This discussion is intended
 
to supplement and
highlight information
 
contained in
 
the accompanying
 
unaudited condensed
 
consolidated financial
 
statements and
 
related
notes for the quarters
 
and
 
nine months ended
 
September 30, 2022
 
and
 
2021, as well
 
as the information contained
 
in our
annual report on Form
 
10-K for the
 
year ended
 
December 31, 2021 and
 
our interim reports on
 
Form 10-Q
 
for the quarters
ended March 31,
 
2022 and
 
June 30, 2022.
 
Special Notice Regarding Forward-Looking
 
Statements
Various of the statements made
 
herein under
 
the captions “Management’s
 
Discussion and
 
Analysis of Financial
 
Condition
and Results of Operations”,
 
“Quantitative
 
and Qualitative Disclosures about
 
Market Risk”,
 
“Risk Factors”
 
and elsewhere,
are “forward-looking
 
statements” within
 
the meaning
 
and protections of Section
 
27A of
 
the Securities Act
 
of 1933, as
amended (the
 
“Securities Act”)
 
and Section 21E
 
of the Securities Exchange
 
Act of 1934, as amended
 
(the “Exchange
 
Act”).
Forward-looking
 
statements include statements
 
with
 
respect to our beliefs, plans,
 
objectives, goals,
 
expectations,
anticipations, assumptions,
 
estimates, intentions
 
and
 
future performance, and
 
involve known
 
and unknown
 
risks,
uncertainties and
 
other factors, which
 
may be beyond
 
our control, and
 
which may cause
 
the actual results, performance,
achievements
 
or financial
 
condition of the Company
 
to be materially
 
different from future results,
 
performance,
achievements
 
or financial
 
condition expressed or implied
 
by
 
such forward-looking statements.
 
You should not
 
expect us to
update any forward-looking
 
statements.
All statements other than
 
statements of historical fact are
 
statements that
 
could be
 
forward-looking statements.
 
You can
identify these forward-looking
 
statements through
 
our use
 
of words such as
 
“may,” “will,” “anticipate,”
 
“assume,”
“appears,” “should,”
 
“indicate,”
 
“would,” “believe,”
 
“contemplate,” “expect,”
 
“estimate,”
 
“continue,” “plan,”
 
“point to,”
“project,”
 
“could,” “intend,”
 
“target,” “view,” and other similar
 
words
 
and expressions of the
 
future.
 
These
 
forward-
looking statements may
 
not be realized due
 
to a variety
 
of factors, including,
 
without limitation:
the effects of future economic,
 
business and
 
market conditions and
 
changes, foreign,
 
domestic and
 
locally,
including inflation,
 
seasonality, natural disasters or climate
 
change,
 
such as rising
 
sea and
 
water levels, hurricanes
and tornados,
 
COVID-19 or
 
other epidemics or pandemics
 
including
 
supply chain disruptions,
 
inventory
 
volatility,
and changes
 
in consumer behaviors;
the effects of war
 
or other conflicts, acts of
 
terrorism, or other
 
events
 
that
 
may affect general economic
 
conditions;
governmental
 
monetary and
 
fiscal policies, including
 
the continuing
 
effects
 
of COVID-19
 
fiscal and
 
monetary
stimulus, and
 
changes in monetary
 
policies in response to inflations
 
including
 
increases in the
 
Federal Reserve’s
target federal funds
 
rate and reductions in
 
the Federal
 
Reserve’s holdings of securities;
29
legislative and
 
regulatory changes,
 
including changes
 
in banking, securities and
 
tax laws,
 
regulations and rules
 
and
their application
 
by our regulators, including
 
capital and liquidity
 
requirements, and
 
changes in the scope and
 
cost
of FDIC insurance;
changes in accounting
 
pronouncements and
 
interpretations, including
 
the required
 
implementation of Financial
Accounting Standards
 
Board’s (“FASB”) Accounting
 
Standards Update
 
(ASU) 2016-13, “Financial
 
Instruments –
Credit Losses (Topic 326): Measurement
 
of Credit Losses
 
on Financial
 
Instruments,” as
 
well as the
 
updates issued
since June 2016 (collectively,
 
FASB ASC Topic 326) on Current
 
Expected Credit
 
Losses (“CECL”),
 
and ASU
2022-02, Troubled Debt
 
Restructurings and
 
Vintage Disclosures, which
 
eliminates troubled debt
 
restructurings
(“TDRs”) and
 
related guidance;
the failure of assumptions
 
and
 
estimates, as well
 
as differences in, and
 
changes to,
 
economic, market and
 
credit
conditions, including
 
changes in borrowers’
 
credit risks and
 
payment behaviors
 
from those used
 
in our loan
portfolio reviews;
the risks of changes
 
in interest rates on the
 
levels, composition and
 
costs of deposits, loan
 
demand
 
and mortgage
loan originations, and
 
the values
 
and liquidity of
 
loan collateral, securities,
 
and
 
interest
 
-sensitive
 
assets and
liabilities, and the
 
risks and uncertainty
 
of the amounts
 
realizable on collateral;
changes in borrower
 
liquidity
 
and credit risks, and
 
savings, deposit
 
and payment
 
behaviors;
changes in the
 
availability and cost of credit and
 
capital in the
 
financial markets,
 
and the types
 
of instruments that
may be included
 
as capital for regulatory
 
purposes;
changes in the
 
prices, values
 
and sales volumes
 
of residential and
 
commercial real estate;
the effects of competition
 
from a
 
wide variety
 
of local, regional,
 
national
 
and other providers of
 
financial,
investment
 
and insurance
 
services, including
 
the disruption
 
effects of financial technology
 
and
 
other competitors
who are not subject
 
to the same
 
regulations as
 
the Company and
 
the Bank;
the failure of assumptions
 
and
 
estimates underlying
 
the establishment
 
of allowances
 
for possible loan
 
losses and
other asset impairments,
 
losses valuations
 
of assets and
 
liabilities and other estimates;
the timing and
 
amount of rental income
 
from third parties
 
following
 
the June 2022 opening
 
of our new
headquarters;
the risks of mergers, acquisitions
 
and
 
divestitures, including,
 
without limitation,
 
the related time
 
and
 
costs of
implementing
 
such transactions,
 
integrating
 
operations as part
 
of these transactions and
 
possible failures to achieve
expected gains,
 
revenue growth
 
and/or expense
 
savings from such
 
transactions;
changes in technology
 
or products that
 
may be more difficult, costly,
 
or less effective than
 
anticipated;
cyber-attacks and
 
data breaches that
 
may compromise our
 
systems, our
 
vendor
 
systems
 
or customers’
information;
the risks that
 
our deferred tax
 
assets (“DTAs”) included
 
in “other assets” on
 
our consolidated balance
 
sheets, if
any, could be reduced
 
if estimates of future taxable
 
income from our operations
 
and
 
tax planning
 
strategies are less
than currently estimated,
 
and
 
sales of our capital
 
stock could trigger
 
a reduction in
 
the amount of
 
net operating
 
loss
carry-forwards that
 
we may be able to
 
utilize for income tax
 
purposes;
 
the timing and
 
amount of any credit approved
 
by the Internal
 
Revenue Service
 
(“IRS”) resulting
 
from our filing,
seeking an Employee
 
Retention Credit, which
 
we believe we are
 
eligible for under
 
the CARES Act
 
and the 2020
Consolidated Appropriations
 
Act; and
other factors and
 
information in
 
this report and
 
other filings that we
 
make with the SEC
 
under the
 
Exchange Act,
including our
 
Annual Report on
 
Form 10-K
 
for the year ended
 
December 31, 2021 and
 
subsequent
 
quarterly and
current reports. See Part II,
 
Item 1A. “RISK
 
FACTORS”.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
30
All written or
 
oral forward-looking
 
statements that
 
are made
 
by us or
 
are attributable to
 
us are expressly qualified
 
in their
entirety by this
 
cautionary notice.
 
We have no obligation
 
and
 
do not undertake to
 
update,
 
revise or correct any
 
of the
forward-looking statements after the
 
date of
 
this report, or after
 
the respective
 
dates on
 
which such statements otherwise are
made.
Summary of Results of
 
Operations
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30,
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands, except
 
per share
 
amounts)
2022
2021
2022
2021
Net interest income (a)
$
7,360
$
6,158
$
20,034
$
18,308
Less: tax-equivalent
 
adjustment
117
117
339
355
Net interest income (GAAP)
7,243
6,041
19,695
17,953
Noninterest income
 
852
975
2,608
3,288
Total revenue
 
8,095
7,016
22,303
21,241
Provision for loan
 
losses
250
 
 
(600)
Noninterest expense
5,415
4,755
15,374
14,361
Income tax expense
 
432
386
1,049
1,313
Net earnings
$
1,998
$
1,875
$
5,880
$
6,167
Basic and
 
diluted earnings
 
per share
$
0.57
$
0.53
$
1.67
$
1.74
(a) Tax-equivalent.
 
See "Table 1 - Explanation
 
of Non-GAAP Financial
 
Measures."
Financial Summary
The Company’s net earnings
 
were $5.9 million for the first
 
nine months
 
of 2022, down
 
5% compared to $6.2 million
 
for the
first nine months
 
of 2021.
 
Basic and
 
diluted earnings
 
per share were $1.67 per
 
share for the
 
first nine months
 
of 2022,
down 4% from the
 
$1.74 per share
 
for the first nine
 
months of
 
2021.
 
Net interest
 
income (tax-equivalent)
 
was $20.0 million for the
 
first nine
 
months of
 
2022, a 9%
 
increase compared to $18.3
million for the first nine
 
months of
 
2021.
 
This
 
increase was due
 
to balance sheet growth,
 
and an increase in
 
the Company’s
net interest margin (tax-equivalent).
 
Net interest margin
 
(tax-equivalent)
 
increased to 2.67%
 
in the
 
first nine months
 
of
2022, compared to 2.59%
 
for the
 
first nine months
 
of 2021 due to increases
 
in the
 
Federal Reserve’s target
 
federal funds
rates, and changes
 
in our asset
 
mix resulting from the
 
continuing
 
elevated levels
 
of customer deposits.
 
Beginning
 
in March
2022 through September
 
30, 2022, the
 
Federal Reserve
 
increased the
 
target federal funds
 
range
 
from 0 – 0.25% to 3.00 –
3.25%.
 
On November
 
3, the Federal
 
Reserve increased its
 
target federal funds
 
rate by
 
a further 0.75%.
 
The
 
Federal
Reserve has
 
indicated that additional
 
increases in the
 
target federal funds
 
rate are possible if inflation
 
remains elevated.
 
Net
interest income (tax-equivalent)
 
included
 
$0.3 million in
 
PPP loan fees, net
 
of related costs for
 
the first nine
 
months of
2022, compared to $0.8 million
 
for the first nine
 
months of 2021.
 
At September 30,
 
2022, the Company’s
 
allowance for loan
 
losses was $5.0 million,
 
or 1.05
%
of total
 
loans, compared
 
to
$4.9 million, or 1.08%
 
of total loans,
 
at December 31,
 
2021, and
 
$5.1 million, or 1.13%
 
of total loans,
 
at September
 
30,
2021.
 
The Company
 
recorded no net
 
provision for loan
 
losses during
 
the first nine
 
months of 2022 compared
 
to a negative
provision for loan
 
losses of $0.6 million during
 
the first nine
 
months of 2021.
 
The
 
negative provision
 
for loan losses during
2021 was primarily
 
related to improvements
 
in economic conditions
 
in our
 
primary market
 
area, and related improvements
in our asset quality.
 
The provision
 
for loan losses is based
 
upon various
 
estimates and judgments,
 
including the
 
absolute
level of loans,
 
economic conditions, credit quality
 
and
 
the amount of
 
net charge-offs.
Noninterest income was
 
$2.6 million for the
 
first nine months
 
of 2022,
 
21% less than
 
the $3.3 million earned
 
in the first
nine months
 
of 2021.
 
The
 
decrease in noninterest income
 
was
 
primarily due
 
to a decrease in mortgage
 
lending income of
$0.7 million as
 
market interest rates on
 
mortgage loans
 
increased.
 
31
Noninterest expense was
 
$15.4 million for the
 
first nine months
 
of 2022,
 
up
 
7% compared
 
to $14.4 million for the
 
first nine
months of
 
2021.
 
The
 
increase in noninterest expense
 
was
 
due to increases in
 
salaries and
 
benefits expense of $0.3
 
million,
net occupancy
 
and equipment expense
 
of $0.6
 
million related
 
to the Company’s
 
new headquarters,
 
and other noninterest
expense of $0.2
 
million.
 
Inflation
 
may also
 
have affected our costs adversely.
 
These increases were partially
 
offset by
 
a
decrease in professional fees
 
of $0.1 million.
 
Income tax expense
 
was $1.0 million for the
 
first nine
 
months of
 
2022 compared to
 
$1.3 million during
 
the first nine
months of 2021.
 
The
 
Company’s effective tax
 
rate for the first nine
 
months of
 
2022 was 15.14%, compared
 
to 17.55% in
the first nine months
 
of 2021.
 
The
 
decrease was
 
primarily due
 
to an income tax
 
benefit related to a
 
New Markets
 
Tax
Credit investment
 
funded in the
 
fourth quarter
 
of 2021.
 
The
 
Company’s effective income tax
 
rate is principally
 
impacted
by tax-exempt earnings
 
from the Company’s
 
investments in
 
municipal securities, bank-owned
 
life insurance, and
 
New
Markets Tax Credits.
 
The Company
 
paid cash dividends
 
of $0.765 per share in
 
the first nine
 
months of
 
2022, an increase of 2%
 
from the same
period of 2021.
 
The
 
Company has
 
repurchased 15,280 shares
 
for $0.5 million
 
since December 31,
 
2021.
 
At
 
September 30,
2022, the Bank’s regulatory
 
capital ratios were
 
well above
 
the minimum amounts
 
required to be “well
 
capitalized” under
current regulatory standards
 
with a total risk-based
 
capital ratio
 
of 16.16%, a
 
tier 1 leverage ratio
 
of 9.29% and
 
a common
equity tier 1 (“CET1”)
 
ratio of 15.39% at
 
September 30, 2022.
 
At
 
September 30, 2022, the
 
Company’s
 
equity
 
to total
assets ratio was
 
5.74%, compared
 
to 9.39% at
 
December 31, 2021,
 
and
 
9.84% at
 
September 30, 2021.
For the third
 
quarter of 2022, net earnings
 
were $2.0 million, or
 
$0.57 per share, compared
 
to $1.9 million,
 
or $0.53 per
share, for the third
 
quarter of 2021.
 
Net interest income
 
(tax-equivalent)
 
was
 
$7.4 million for the third
 
quarter of
 
2022, a
20%
 
increase compared to
 
$6.2
 
million for the
 
third quarter
 
of 2021.
 
This increase was
 
primarily due
 
to recent increases in
market interest rates.
 
Since March
 
2022, the Federal
 
Reserve has
 
increased the target
 
federal funds
 
range by 300 basis
points.
 
Further increases in
 
the target federal
 
funds rate
 
are possible if inflation remains
 
elevated.
 
The
 
Company’s net
interest margin (tax-equivalent)
 
was 3.00%
 
in the third
 
quarter of
 
2022 compared to 2.51% in
 
the third
 
quarter of 2021.
 
Net
interest income (tax-equivalent)
 
included
 
$26 thousand
 
in PPP loan fees, net
 
of related costs for the
 
third quarter
 
of 2022
and $0.3
 
million in
 
the third quarter
 
of 2021.
 
The
 
Company recorded a
 
provision for loan
 
losses during the
 
third quarter
 
of
2022 of $0.3 million, compared
 
to no
 
provision for loan
 
losses during the
 
third quarter
 
2021.
 
The
 
provision for loan
 
losses
was primarily
 
related to loan growth
 
during the third
 
quarter of
 
2022.
 
Noninterest income
 
was
 
$0.9 million in the
 
third
quarter of
 
2022, compared to $1.0 million
 
in the
 
third quarter
 
of 2021.
 
The decrease in
 
noninterest income was
 
primarily
due to a decrease in
 
mortgage lending
 
income of $0.1
 
million as
 
market interest rates on
 
mortgage loans
 
increased.
 
Noninterest expense was
 
$5.4
 
million in
 
the third quarter
 
of 2022,
 
compared to
 
$4.8 million
 
for the third
 
quarter of
 
2021.
 
The increase in
 
noninterest expense was
 
primarily due
 
to an increase in
 
net occupancy
 
and equipment expense
 
of $0.3
million related to the
 
Company’s
 
new headquarters,
 
which opened
 
in June 2022, and
 
other noninterest expenses of
 
$0.2
million.
 
Income tax
 
expense was
 
$0.4
 
million for the third
 
quarter of 2022 and
 
2021, respectively.
 
The
 
Company's
effective tax rate
 
for the third quarter
 
of 2022 was 17.79%, compared
 
to 17.07%
 
in the
 
third quarter
 
of 2021.
 
The
Company’s effective income tax
 
rate is principally
 
impacted by
 
tax-exempt earnings
 
from the Company’s
 
investment
 
in
municipal securities, bank-owned
 
life insurance, and
 
New Markets Tax Credits.
COVID-19 Impact
 
Assessment
The COVID-19
 
pandemic has
 
occurred in waves
 
of different variants
 
since the first quarter
 
of 2020. Vaccines to protect
against and/or
 
reduce the severity
 
of COVID-19
 
were widely
 
introduced at the
 
beginning of 2021. At
 
times, the pandemic
has severely
 
restricted the level
 
of economic activity
 
in our markets.
 
In response to the COVID-19
 
pandemic, the State
 
of
Alabama,
 
and most other states, have
 
taken preventative
 
or protective actions to prevent
 
the spread of
 
the virus, including
imposing restrictions on
 
travel
 
and business operations and
 
a statewide mask
 
mandate, advising
 
or requiring individuals
 
to
limit or forego their time outside
 
of their homes,
 
limitations on
 
gathering
 
of people and
 
social distancing,
 
and causing
temporary closures of businesses
 
that
 
have been
 
deemed to be non-essential. Though
 
certain of these measures have
 
been
relaxed or
 
eliminated, especially as
 
vaccination levels
 
increased, such
 
measures could be
 
reestablished in
 
cases of new
waves, especially a
 
wave of a COVID-19
 
variant that is
 
more resistant to existing
 
vaccines and
 
newly developed
treatments.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
32
COVID-19 has significantly
 
affected local state, national
 
and
 
global health and
 
economic activity and
 
its future effects are
uncertain and
 
will depend on various
 
factors, including,
 
among others, the
 
duration
 
and scope of the pandemic,
 
especially
new variants of
 
the virus, effective vaccines
 
and
 
drug treatments, together with
 
governmental,
 
regulatory and
 
private sector
responses. COVID-19
 
has had
 
continuing
 
significant effects on the
 
economy, financial markets
 
and our
 
employees,
customers and
 
vendors. Our
 
business, financial
 
condition and results of operations
 
generally rely
 
upon
 
the ability
 
of our
borrowers to make
 
deposits and
 
repay their loans,
 
the value of collateral underlying
 
our secured loans,
 
market value,
stability and
 
liquidity and demand
 
for loans and
 
other products and
 
services we offer, all of which
 
are affected by
 
the
pandemic.
 
We have implemented a number
 
of procedures in
 
response to the pandemic
 
to support
 
the safety
 
and well-being
 
of our
employees, customers and
 
shareholders.
We believe our business continuity
 
plan has
 
worked to provide
 
essential banking
 
services to our communities and
customers, while protecting
 
our employees’
 
health.
 
As part of our
 
efforts
 
to exercise social
 
distancing
 
in
accordance with
 
the guidelines
 
of the Centers for Disease
 
Control and
 
the Governor of
 
the State of
 
Alabama,
starting March
 
23, 2020, we
 
limited branch lobby
 
service to appointment
 
only while continuing
 
to operate our
branch drive-thru
 
facilities and ATMs. As permitted by
 
state public health
 
guidelines, on
 
June 1, 2020, we
 
re-
opened some of
 
our branch lobbies.
 
In 2021, we
 
opened our remaining
 
branch lobbies. We continue
 
to provide
services through
 
our online and
 
other electronic channels.
 
In addition,
 
we maintain
 
remote work access to
 
help
employees stay at
 
home while
 
providing continuity
 
of service during
 
outbreaks of
 
COVID-19 variants.
We serviced the financial
 
needs of our
 
commercial and
 
consumer clients with
 
extensions and
 
deferrals to loan
customers effected by
 
COVID-19, provided
 
such customers were
 
not more than
 
30 days past
 
due at the time
 
of the
request; and
We were an active PPP lender. PPP loans
 
were forgivable,
 
in whole or
 
in part, if the
 
proceeds are used
 
for payroll
and other permitted purposes
 
in accordance
 
with
 
the requirements of the PPP. These
 
loans carry
 
a fixed rate
 
of
1.00% and
 
a term of two years
 
(loans made
 
before June 5,
 
2020) or five years
 
(loans made
 
on or after June
 
5,
2020), if not forgiven,
 
in whole or
 
in part. Payments
 
are deferred until either the
 
date on
 
which the Small
 
Business
Administration
 
(“SBA”) remits the amount
 
of forgiveness proceeds to the
 
lender or the
 
date that
 
is 10 months after
the last day
 
of the covered period
 
if the borrower
 
does not apply
 
for forgiveness within
 
that 10-month period.
 
We
believe these loans
 
and our participation
 
in the program
 
helped our customers and
 
the communities we
 
serve.
COVID-19 has also
 
had various
 
economic effects, generally. These
 
include supply
 
chain disruptions
 
and
 
manufacturing
delays, shortages of
 
certain goods and
 
services, reduced consumer expenditure
 
on hospitality
 
and
 
travel, and
 
migration from
larger urban centers to less populated
 
areas and
 
remote work.
 
The demand
 
for single family
 
housing has exceeded existing
supplies. When
 
coupled with construction
 
delays
 
attributable to
 
supply chain
 
disruptions and
 
worker shortages, these
factors have
 
caused housing prices and
 
apartment
 
rents to increase, generally. Stimulative
 
monetary and fiscal policies,
along with shortages
 
of certain goods
 
and
 
services, and
 
rising petroleum and
 
food prices,
 
reflecting, among
 
other things, the
war in the Ukraine,
 
have led to
 
the highest inflation
 
in decades.
 
The Federal
 
Reserve has
 
begun rapidly
 
increasing its target
federal funds rate
 
from 0 – 0.25%
 
at the beginning
 
of March 2022 to 3.00 – 3.25%
 
at September
 
30, 2022 and
 
3.75 – 4.00%
as of November
 
30.
 
The Federal
 
Reserve also has
 
been reducing
 
its holdings
 
of securities to counteract
 
inflation.
 
A summary
 
of PPP loans extended
 
during 2020 follows:
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
# of SBA
Approved
Mix
$ of SBA
Approved
Mix
SBA Tier:
$2 million to $10 million
%
$
%
$350,000 to less than
 
$2 million
23
5
14,691
40
Up to $350,000
400
95
21,784
60
Total
423
100
%
$
36,475
100
%
We collected approximately $1.5 million
 
in fees from the
 
SBA
 
related to our
 
PPP loans during
 
2020. Through
 
December
31, 2021, we
 
had
 
recognized all of these fees, net
 
of related costs.
 
As
 
of December 31, 2021, we
 
had received payments
 
and
forgiveness on all
 
PPP loans extended
 
during 2020.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
33
On December 27, 2020,
 
the Economic Aid
 
to Hard-Hit Small Businesses, Nonprofits,
 
and
 
Venues Act (the “Economic
 
Aid
Act”) was
 
signed into law. The
 
Economic Aid
 
Act provides a second
 
$900 billion stimulus
 
package,
 
including $325 billion
in additional
 
PPP loans. The
 
Economic Aid
 
Act also permits the
 
collection of a
 
higher
 
amount of PPP loan
 
fees by
participating
 
banks.
A summary
 
of PPP loans extended
 
during 2021 under
 
the Economic Aid
 
Act follows:
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
# of SBA
Approved
Mix
$ of SBA
Approved
Mix
SBA Tier:
$2 million to $10 million
%
$
%
$350,000 to less than
 
$2 million
12
5
6,494
32
Up to $350,000
242
95
13,757
68
Total
254
100
%
$
20,251
100
%
We collected approximately $1.0 million
 
in fees from the
 
SBA
 
related to PPP loans
 
under
 
the Economic Aid
 
Act. Through
September 30, 2022, we
 
have recognized
 
all of these fees, net
 
of related costs. As
 
of September 30, 2022, we
 
have received
payments and
 
forgiveness on all but
 
1 PPP loan,
 
in the amount
 
of $0.1 million, under
 
the Economic Aid
 
Act.
 
We believe that the COVID-19
 
pandemic stimuli
 
and decreased economic activity
 
increased customer
 
liquidity
 
and
 
tier
deposits at the
 
Bank and decreased loan
 
demand, while
 
monetary stimulus
 
reduced interest rates
 
and
 
our costs of funds
 
and
our interest earnings
 
on loans.
 
As a result, our
 
net interest margin
 
was adversely
 
affected.
 
A return
 
to more normal
 
interest
rates appears underway,
 
beginning
 
in March 2022, and
 
has accelerated in
 
recent months as
 
a result of Federal
 
Reserve
efforts
 
to curb
 
inflation.
 
This
 
has resulted in improved
 
net interest margin,
 
but at the same
 
time has reduced the
 
market
values of our
 
securities portfolio and
 
resulted in unrealized
 
securities losses.
 
As a
 
result, we have
 
had losses in our
 
other
comprehensive income and
 
our equity under generally
 
accepted accounting
 
principles has
 
declined.
 
This has not
 
adversely
affected our regulatory
 
capital,
 
however.
 
We continue to closely monitor the
 
pandemic’s
 
effects
 
,
 
and
 
are working
 
to continue our
 
services and
 
to address
developments
 
as those occur. Our results of operations
 
for the
 
nine months
 
ended September 30,
 
2022, and
 
our financial
condition at
 
that date,
 
which
 
reflect only the continuing
 
direct and
 
indirect effects of the pandemic,
 
may not be
 
indicative
 
of
future results or financial
 
conditions, including
 
possible changes
 
in monetary
 
or fiscal stimulus, and
 
the possible effects of
the expiration or extension
 
of temporary
 
accounting
 
and
 
bank regulatory relief measures
 
in response to
 
the COVID-19
pandemic.
 
As of September 30,
 
2022,
 
all of our
 
capital ratios were
 
in excess of all
 
regulatory requirements to be
 
well capitalized.
 
The
continuing
 
effects
 
of the COVID-19
 
pandemic could
 
result in adverse
 
changes to credit quality
 
and our
 
regulatory capital
ratios, and inflation
 
will
 
affect our costs, interest rates and
 
the values of our
 
assets and
 
liabilities, customer behaviors
 
and
economic activity.
 
Continuing
 
supply chain
 
and supply disruptions
 
also adversely
 
affect the levels and
 
costs of economic
activities.
 
We continue to closely monitor these
 
continuing
 
effects of the pandemic,
 
and are working
 
to anticipate and
 
address developments.
The CARES
 
Act and the 2020 Consolidated
 
Appropriations
 
Act
 
provide eligible employers
 
an
 
employee retention credit
related to COVID-19.
 
After consultation with
 
our tax advisors,
 
we believe
 
we are eligible, and
 
have filed amended
 
payroll
tax returns with
 
the IRS, of an
 
estimated employee retention
 
credit of $1.6 million,
 
or approximately
 
$1.2 million, net
 
of
estimated income tax
 
effects, or approximately
 
$0.33 per share.
 
IRS
 
action on
 
this request, including
 
its timing and
 
the
amount of any
 
credit approved by
 
the IRS, cannot be
 
predicted.
The direct health
 
issues related to COVID-19
 
appear to
 
be waning as a
 
result of vaccinations,
 
new medications and
increased resistance to the
 
virus
 
as a result of prior infections,
 
although
 
new strains continue
 
to appear.
 
The economic
effects
 
of the pandemic
 
and
 
government fiscal and
 
monetary policy responses,
 
supply
 
chain disruptions
 
and inflation
continue, however.
34
CRITICAL
 
ACCOUNTING
 
POLICIES
The accounting
 
and financial reporting
 
policies of the Company
 
conform with
 
U.S. generally
 
accepted accounting
principles and
 
with general
 
practices within
 
the banking industry.
 
In connection with
 
the application
 
of those principles, we
have made judgments
 
and estimates which,
 
in the case of the
 
determination of our
 
allowance
 
for loan losses, our
assessment of other-than-temporary
 
impairment,
 
recurring and
 
non-recurring fair value
 
measurements, the
 
valuation
 
of
other real estate owned,
 
and the valuation
 
of deferred tax
 
assets, were critical to the
 
determination of
 
our financial
 
position
and results of operations.
 
Other policies also
 
require subjective
 
judgment
 
and assumptions
 
and may accordingly
 
impact our
financial
 
position and results of operations.
 
Allowance for Loan
 
Losses
The Company
 
assesses the adequacy
 
of its allowance
 
for loan losses prior to the
 
end
 
of each calendar
 
quarter. The level of
the allowance
 
is based upon
 
management’s evaluation
 
of the loan
 
portfolio, past loan
 
loss experience, current asset
 
quality
trends, known and
 
inherent risks in
 
the portfolio, adverse
 
situations that
 
may affect a
 
borrower’s ability to
 
repay (including
the timing of
 
future payment),
 
the estimated value
 
of any underlying
 
collateral, composition
 
of the loan
 
portfolio, economic
conditions, changes
 
in, and expectations
 
regarding,
 
market interest rates and
 
inflation, industry and
 
peer bank
 
loan loss rates
and other pertinent factors.
 
This
 
evaluation is inherently
 
subjective as it
 
requires material estimates including
 
the amounts
and timing of
 
future cash flows
 
expected to be
 
received on impaired
 
loans that
 
may be susceptible to significant
 
change.
Loans are
 
charged off, in whole
 
or in part,
 
when management
 
believes that
 
the full collectability
 
of the loan
 
is unlikely. A
loan may be partially
 
charged-off after a
 
“confirming event”
 
has occurred which
 
serves to validate
 
that full repayment
pursuant to the
 
terms of the loan
 
is unlikely.
 
In addition, our
 
regulators, as
 
an integral part
 
of their examination
 
process,
will periodically review
 
the Company’s allowance
 
for loan losses, and
 
may require the
 
Company to
 
make additional
provisions to the
 
allowance for loan
 
losses based on
 
their judgment
 
about information available
 
to them at the time
 
of their
examinations.
The Company
 
deems loans
 
impaired
 
when, based on current information
 
and
 
events, it is probable
 
that the Company
 
will
be unable
 
to collect all amounts
 
due according
 
to the contractual
 
terms of the loan
 
agreement. Collection of
 
all amounts
 
due
according to
 
the contractual
 
terms means
 
that both
 
the interest and
 
principal payments
 
of a loan
 
will be collected as
scheduled in
 
the loan agreement.
An impairment allowance
 
is recognized if
 
the fair value
 
of the loan
 
is less than the
 
recorded investment in
 
the loan. The
impairment is
 
recognized through
 
the allowance. Loans
 
that are
 
impaired are
 
recorded at the
 
present value of
 
expected
future cash flows
 
discounted at
 
the loan’s effective interest rate, or
 
if the loan
 
is collateral dependent,
 
impairment
measurement is based
 
on the fair value
 
of the collateral, less estimated
 
disposal costs.
The level of the
 
allowance for loan
 
losses maintained is
 
believed
 
by management, based
 
on its processes and
 
estimates, to
be adequate
 
to absorb probable
 
losses inherent in the
 
portfolio at the
 
balance sheet date.
 
The allowance
 
is increased by
provisions charged
 
to expense and decreased by
 
charge-offs, net of recoveries of amounts
 
previously
 
charged-off and
 
by
releases from the allowance
 
when determined
 
to be
 
appropriate to
 
the levels of loans
 
and probable loan
 
losses in such
 
loans.
In assessing the
 
adequacy of
 
the allowance,
 
the Company also
 
considers the results of its
 
ongoing
 
internal, independent
loan review
 
process. The Company’s
 
loan review
 
process assists in determining
 
whether
 
there are loans
 
in the portfolio
whose credit quality
 
has weakened
 
over time and
 
evaluating the
 
risk characteristics of the entire
 
loan portfolio. The
Company’s loan review
 
process includes the judgment
 
of management,
 
the input from our
 
independent loan
 
reviewers, and
reviews that
 
may have been
 
conducted by bank
 
regulatory agencies
 
as part of
 
their examination
 
process. The
 
Company
incorporates loan
 
review results in
 
the determination
 
of whether
 
or not it is
 
probable
 
that it will be able
 
to collect all
amounts due according
 
to the contractual
 
terms of a
 
loan.
As part of the
 
Company’s quarterly assessment of the
 
allowance,
 
management
 
divides the loan
 
portfolio into five segments:
commercial and
 
industrial,
 
construction and
 
land development,
 
commercial real estate, residential
 
real estate,
 
and
 
consumer
installment loans.
 
The Company
 
analyzes
 
each segment and
 
estimates an
 
allowance allocation for each
 
loan segment.
35
The allocation of the
 
allowance
 
for loan losses begins with
 
a process of estimating the
 
probable
 
losses inherent for these
types of loans.
 
The estimates for these loans
 
are established
 
by
 
category and based
 
on the Company’s
 
internal system of
credit risk ratings
 
and historical loss data.
 
The estimated loan
 
loss allocation rate for the Company’s
 
internal system of
credit risk grades
 
is based on
 
its experience with
 
similarly graded
 
loans. For loan
 
segments where
 
the Company
 
believes it
does not have
 
sufficient historical loss data,
 
the Company may
 
make adjustments based,
 
in part, on loss rates of peer
 
bank
groups. At September
 
30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021, and
 
for the periods then
 
ended, the Company
 
adjusted its historical
loss rates for the commercial
 
real estate portfolio
 
segment based,
 
in part, on
 
loss rates of peer bank
 
groups.
The estimated loan
 
loss allocation for all
 
five
 
loan portfolio segments is then
 
adjusted
 
for management’s estimate of
probable
 
losses for several “qualitative
 
and environmental”
 
factors.
 
The
 
allocation for qualitative
 
and environmental
factors is particularly
 
subjective and
 
does not lend
 
itself to exact mathematical
 
calculation.
 
This amount
 
represents
estimated probable
 
inherent credit losses
 
which
 
exist, but have
 
not yet been identified, as
 
of the balance
 
sheet date, and
 
are
based upon quarterly
 
trend assessments in
 
delinquent
 
and nonaccrual
 
loans, credit concentration
 
changes,
 
prevailing
economic conditions, changes
 
in lending
 
personnel experience, changes
 
in lending
 
policies or procedures and
 
other
influencing
 
factors.
 
These
 
qualitative
 
and environmental
 
factors are considered for each
 
of the five
 
loan segments and
 
the
allowance allocation,
 
as determined
 
by the
 
processes noted above,
 
is increased or decreased
 
based
 
on the incremental
assessment of these factors.
The Company
 
regularly re-evaluates
 
its practices in determining
 
the allowance
 
for loan losses. The
 
Company’s look-back
period each
 
quarter incorporates the effects
 
of at
 
least one economic downturn
 
in its loss history. The
 
Company believes
this look-back period
 
is appropriate
 
due to the risks inherent
 
in the loan
 
portfolio. Absent
 
this look-back period,
 
the early
cycle periods in
 
which the
 
Company experienced significant
 
losses would
 
be excluded
 
from the determination
 
of the
allowance for loan
 
losses and its
 
balance would
 
decrease. For the
 
quarter ended
 
September 30, 2022, the
 
Company
increased its look-back period
 
to 54 quarters
 
to continue to
 
include losses
 
incurred
 
by the
 
Company beginning
 
with the first
quarter of
 
2009. The Company
 
will likely continue
 
to increase its look-back period
 
to incorporate
 
the effects of
 
at least
 
one
economic downturn
 
in its loss history.
 
During
 
the quarter ended
 
June 30, 2021, the Company
 
adjusted certain qualitative
and economic factors,
 
previously
 
downgraded
 
as a result of the
 
COVID-19 pandemic,
 
to reflect improvements in
 
economic
conditions in our
 
primary market
 
area.
 
Further adjustments
 
may be
 
made from time to time
 
in the
 
future as a result of the
COVID-19 pandemic
 
and other economic changes.
Assessment for Other-Than-Temporary
 
Impairment of
 
Securities
On a quarterly
 
basis, management
 
makes an assessment to determine
 
whether there
 
have
 
been events
 
or economic
circumstances to indicate that
 
a
 
security on which
 
there is an
 
unrealized loss is other-than-temporarily
 
impaired.
 
For debt securities with
 
an unrealized
 
loss, an other-than-temporary
 
impairment write-down
 
is triggered when
 
(1) the
Company has
 
the intent to sell a
 
debt security, (2) it is more likely
 
than
 
not that the Company
 
will be required
 
to sell the
debt security before recovery
 
of its amortized cost basis,
 
or (3) the Company
 
does not expect to recover
 
the entire amortized
cost basis of the
 
debt security.
 
If the Company
 
has the intent
 
to sell a debt security
 
or if it
 
is more likely
 
than not
 
that it will
be required to sell the
 
debt security before recovery,
 
the other-than-temporary
 
write-down
 
is equal to
 
the entire difference
between the
 
debt security’s amortized cost and
 
its fair value.
 
If the Company
 
does not intend
 
to sell the security or it is not
more likely than
 
not that it will
 
be required to sell the
 
security before recovery, the
 
other-than-temporary
 
impairment write-
down is separated
 
into the
 
amount that
 
is credit related (credit loss component)
 
and
 
the amount due
 
to all other factors.
 
The
credit loss component is
 
recognized
 
in earnings
 
and is the difference between
 
the security’s amortized cost
 
basis and
 
the
present value of
 
its expected future
 
cash flows.
 
The remaining
 
difference between the
 
security’s fair value
 
and the present
value of future
 
expected cash
 
flows is due to
 
factors that are
 
not credit related and
 
is recognized in
 
other comprehensive
income, net of
 
applicable taxes.
The Company
 
is required to
 
own certain stock as
 
a condition of
 
membership, such
 
as the FHLB
 
of Atlanta
 
and Federal
Reserve Bank
 
of Atlanta
 
(“FRB”).
 
These non-marketable
 
equity securities are accounted
 
for at cost which
 
equals
 
par or
redemption value.
 
These securities do not
 
have a
 
readily determinable fair
 
value
 
as their ownership
 
is restricted and
 
there is
no market
 
for these securities.
 
The
 
Company records these
 
non-marketable equity
 
securities as
 
a
 
component of other
assets, which
 
are periodically evaluated
 
for impairment.
 
Management
 
considers these non-marketable
 
equity
 
securities to
be long-term investments.
 
Accordingly, when
 
evaluating
 
these securities for impairment,
 
management
 
considers the
ultimate recoverability of
 
the par
 
value rather than by
 
recognizing temporary
 
declines in value.
36
Fair Value Determination
U.S. GAAP
 
requires management
 
to value and disclose certain
 
of the Company’s
 
assets and
 
liabilities at fair
 
value,
including investments
 
classified as
 
available-for-sale
 
and
 
derivatives.
 
ASC 820,
Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures
,
which defines fair
 
value, establishes a
 
framework
 
for measuring
 
fair value in accordance
 
with U.S.
 
GAAP and expands
disclosures about
 
fair value
 
measurements.
 
For more information
 
regarding
 
fair value
 
measurements and
 
disclosures,
please refer to Note 7,
 
Fair Value, of the
 
consolidated financial
 
statements that
 
accompany
 
this report.
Fair values are
 
based on active
 
market prices of identical assets
 
or liabilities
 
when available.
 
Comparable assets or
liabilities or a
 
composite of comparable
 
assets in
 
active
 
markets are used when
 
identical assets or liabilities do
 
not have
readily available
 
active market
 
pricing.
 
However, some of
 
the Company’s
 
assets or liabilities lack
 
an available
 
or
comparable trading
 
market characterized by
 
frequent transactions between
 
willing buyers
 
and sellers. In these cases,
 
fair
value is estimated using
 
pricing models
 
that use discounted
 
cash flows
 
and other pricing
 
techniques. Pricing models
 
and
their underlying
 
assumptions are
 
based upon management’s
 
best estimates for appropriate
 
discount
 
rates, default
 
rates,
prepayments,
 
market volatility
 
and other factors, taking
 
into account
 
current observable
 
market data
 
and experience.
These assumptions
 
may have
 
a significant effect on
 
the reported fair
 
values
 
of assets and
 
liabilities and the
 
related income
and expense.
 
As such, the
 
use of different models and
 
assumptions, as
 
well as changes in
 
market conditions, could
 
result in
materially different net earnings
 
and retained
 
earnings
 
results.
 
Other Real Estate Owned
Other real
 
estate owned (“OREO”),
 
consists of properties obtained
 
through
 
foreclosure or in satisfaction
 
of loans and
 
is
reported at the
 
lower of cost or fair value,
 
less estimated costs to sell
 
at the
 
date acquired
 
with any loss recognized as
 
a
charge-off through
 
the allowance
 
for loan losses. Additional
 
OREO losses for subsequent
 
valuation
 
adjustments are
determined on
 
a specific property basis
 
and
 
are included
 
as a component
 
of other noninterest expense
 
along
 
with holding
costs. Any gains
 
or losses on disposal of
 
OREO
 
are also reflected in
 
noninterest expense. Significant
 
judgments
 
and
complex estimates are required
 
in estimating
 
the fair
 
value of OREO,
 
and the period of
 
time within
 
which such estimates
can be considered current is
 
significantly
 
shortened during
 
periods of market
 
volatility. As a result, the
 
net proceeds
realized from sales transactions
 
could
 
differ significantly
 
from appraisals,
 
comparable sales,
 
and
 
other estimates used
 
to
determine the fair
 
value of OREO.
Deferred Tax Asset Valuation
A valuation
 
allowance is
 
recognized for a
 
deferred tax
 
asset if, based
 
on the weight of
 
available evidence,
 
it is more-likely-
than-not that some portion or
 
the entire deferred
 
tax
 
asset will not
 
be realized. The
 
ultimate realization
 
of deferred tax
 
assets
is dependent
 
upon the generation
 
of future taxable
 
income during
 
the periods in
 
which those temporary
 
differences become
deductible. Management
 
considers the scheduled
 
reversal of deferred
 
tax
 
liabilities, projected future
 
taxable
 
income and
 
tax
planning
 
strategies in making
 
this assessment. At
 
September 30, 2022 we
 
had total deferred tax
 
assets of $16.1 million
included as “other
 
assets”, including
 
$15.3 million resulting from
 
unrealized
 
losses in our
 
securities portfolio.
 
Based
 
upon
the level of
 
taxable income over
 
the last three years
 
and projections for future taxable
 
income over the
 
periods in
 
which the
deferred tax
 
assets are deductible,
 
management
 
believes it is
 
more likely than not
 
that we will realize
 
the benefits of these
deductible differences at
 
September 30, 2022.
 
The
 
amount of the
 
deferred tax
 
assets considered realizable,
 
however,
 
could
be reduced if
 
estimates of future taxable
 
income are reduced.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
37
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
Average Balance Sheet and
 
Interest Rates
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
 
2022
2021
Average
Yield/
Average
Yield/
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Balance
Rate
Balance
Rate
Loans and loans
 
held for sale
 
$
442,613
4.42%
$
460,732
4.47%
Securities - taxable
370,402
1.69%
310,288
1.30%
Securities - tax-exempt
 
61,227
3.52%
62,915
3.60%
Total securities
 
431,629
1.95%
373,203
1.68%
Federal funds
 
sold
54,924
0.76%
36,821
0.14%
Interest bearing
 
bank deposits
73,630
0.82%
75,170
0.12%
Total interest
 
-earning
 
assets
1,002,796
2.89%
945,926
2.86%
Deposits:
 
 
NOW
201,792
0.13%
176,242
0.12%
Savings and
 
money market
335,005
0.20%
289,758
0.23%
Time deposits
155,824
0.84%
159,412
1.05%
Total interest
 
-bearing
 
deposits
692,621
0.32%
625,412
0.41%
Short-term borrowings
3,969
0.50%
3,329
0.50%
Total interest
 
-bearing
 
liabilities
696,590
0.32%
628,741
0.41%
Net interest income and
 
margin (tax-equivalent)
$
20,034
2.67%
$
18,308
2.59%
Net Interest Income and
 
Margin
Net interest income (tax-equivalent)
 
was
 
$20.0 million for the first nine
 
months of
 
2022,
 
a
 
9% increase compared
 
to $18.3
million for the first nine
 
months of
 
2021.
 
This
 
increase was due
 
to balance sheet
 
growth, and
 
an increase in
 
the Company’s
net interest margin (tax-equivalent).
 
Net interest margin
 
(tax-equivalent)
 
increased to 2.67% in
 
the first nine
 
months of
2022, compared to 2.59% for
 
the first nine
 
months of
 
2021 due to increases
 
in the
 
Federal Reserve’s target
 
federal funds
rates beginning
 
March 17, 2022, and
 
changes in our
 
asset mix resulting from the
 
continuing
 
elevated
 
levels of customer
deposits.
 
The
 
Federal Reserve
 
increased the target
 
federal funds
 
range by 25 basis
 
points on
 
March 17, 2022, 50 basis
points on May
 
5 and 75 basis
 
points on each of
 
June 16, July 28,
 
and September 22.
 
The
 
target rate was increased 75
 
basis
points on November
 
3, 2022, and further
 
increases in
 
the target federal
 
funds rate
 
appear likely if
 
inflation remains
elevated.
 
Net interest income (tax-equivalent)
 
included
 
$0.3 million in
 
PPP loan fees, net
 
of related costs for the
 
first nine
months of
 
2022, compared to $0.8 million
 
for the first nine
 
months of
 
2021.
The tax-equivalent yield
 
on total interest-earning
 
assets increased by
 
3 basis points
 
to 2.89% in the
 
first nine months
 
of
2022 compared to 2.86% in
 
the first nine
 
months of
 
2021.
 
This
 
increase was primarily
 
due to changes in
 
our asset mix
resulting from the
 
significant increase in
 
customer deposits.
The cost of total interest-bearing
 
liabilities decreased
 
by
 
9 basis points
 
to 0.32% in the
 
first nine months
 
of 2022 compared
to 0.41% in
 
the first nine months
 
of 2021, even
 
as interest bearing
 
deposits increased.
 
The
 
net decrease in
 
our funding
 
costs
was primarily
 
due to a portion of
 
our time deposits repricing
 
into lower prevailing
 
market interest rates through
 
the first
nine months
 
of 2022.
 
Our
 
deposit costs may
 
increase as the
 
Federal Reserve
 
increases its target federal
 
funds
 
rate, market
interest rates increase, and
 
as customer behaviors
 
change
 
as a result of inflation and
 
higher market
 
interest rates on deposits
and other alternative
 
investments.
The Company
 
continues to deploy
 
various asset liability
 
management
 
strategies to manage
 
its risk to interest rate
fluctuations. Pricing
 
remains competitive
 
in our
 
markets.
 
We believe this challenging
 
competitive environment
 
will
continue throughout
 
the remainder
 
of 2022.
 
Our
 
ability to hold our
 
deposit rates low
 
until our interest-earning
 
assets
reprice will be
 
important in
 
our ability to maintain
 
or potentially increase our
 
net interest margin
 
during the beginning
 
of
the monetary tightening
 
cycle that we
 
believe we will
 
continue to experience in
 
2022.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
38
Provision for Loan
 
Losses
The provision
 
for loan losses represents a
 
charge to earnings
 
necessary to provide
 
an allowance for loan
 
losses that
management
 
believes, based
 
on its processes and
 
estimates, should be
 
adequate to provide
 
for the probable
 
losses on
outstanding loans.
 
The Company
 
recorded no net
 
provision for loan
 
losses during the
 
first nine months
 
of 2022 compared
to a negative
 
provision for loan
 
losses of $0.6 million during
 
the first nine months
 
of 2021.
 
The
 
negative
 
provision for loan
losses during 2021 was
 
primarily related
 
to improvements
 
in economic conditions
 
in our
 
primary
 
market area, and related
improvements in
 
our asset quality.
 
The provision
 
for loan losses is based
 
upon various
 
estimates and
 
judgments, including
the absolute level
 
of loans,
 
economic conditions, credit quality
 
and the
 
amount of net
 
charge-offs.
Based upon
 
its assessment of the loan
 
portfolio, management
 
adjusts the allowance
 
for loan losses to an
 
amount it
 
believes
should be
 
appropriate to adequately
 
cover its estimate of probable
 
losses in the
 
loan portfolio. The
 
Company’s allowance
for loan losses as
 
a percentage of
 
total loans was
 
1.05%
 
at September
 
30, 2022, compared
 
to 1.08% at
 
December 31, 2021.
 
While the
 
policies and procedures used
 
to estimate the
 
allowance
 
for loan losses, as
 
well as
 
the resulting provision
 
for loan
losses charged to operations,
 
are considered
 
adequate
 
by management
 
and are reviewed
 
from time to time by
 
our regulators,
they are based
 
on estimates and judgments
 
and are therefore approximate
 
and
 
imprecise. Factors beyond
 
our control (such
as conditions in
 
the local and
 
national economy, local real
 
estate markets, or
 
industries) may
 
have a material adverse
 
effect
on our asset quality
 
and the adequacy
 
of our allowance
 
for loan losses resulting
 
in significant
 
increases in the
 
provision for
loan losses.
Noninterest Income
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30,
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
2022
2021
2022
2021
Service charges
 
on deposit accounts
$
158
$
149
$
446
$
419
Mortgage lending
 
income
126
268
566
1,241
Bank-owned life insurance
97
100
293
302
Securities gains,
 
net
44
15
44
15
Other
427
443
1,259
1,311
Total noninterest income
$
852
$
975
$
2,608
$
3,288
The Company’s income from
 
mortgage lending
 
was primarily
 
attributable to
 
the (1) origination and
 
sale of mortgage
 
loans
and (2) servicing
 
of mortgage
 
loans. Origination
 
income, net,
 
is comprised of gains
 
or losses from the sale
 
of the mortgage
loans originated,
 
origination fees, underwriting
 
fees, and other
 
fees associated with
 
the origination of loans,
 
which
 
are
netted against
 
the commission expense associated
 
with these originations.
 
The
 
Company’s normal
 
practice is to originate
mortgage loans
 
for sale in the secondary
 
market and
 
to either sell or retain the
 
associated MSRs
 
when the
 
loan is sold.
 
MSRs are
 
recognized based
 
on the fair
 
value of the servicing
 
right on the date
 
the corresponding mortgage
 
loan is
 
sold.
 
Subsequent to
 
the date of transfer, the
 
Company
 
has elected to measure its
 
MSRs
 
under the
 
amortization method.
 
Servicing
fee income is reported
 
net of any
 
related amortization expense.
 
The Company
 
evaluates MSRs
 
for impairment
 
on a quarterly
 
basis.
 
Impairment is
 
determined by
 
grouping MSRs
 
by
common predominant
 
characteristics, such
 
as interest rate and
 
loan type.
 
If the aggregate
 
carrying amount
 
of a particular
group of MSRs
 
exceeds the group’s
 
aggregate fair value,
 
a valuation allowance
 
for that group
 
is established.
 
The valuation
allowance is
 
adjusted as the
 
fair value changes.
 
An increase in
 
mortgage interest rates typically
 
results in
 
an increase in
 
the
fair value of the
 
MSRs while
 
a decrease in mortgage
 
interest rates typically
 
results in
 
a decrease in
 
the fair
 
value of MSRs.
 
The following
 
table presents a
 
breakdown
 
of the Company’s mortgage
 
lending income.
 
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30,
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
2022
2021
2022
2021
Origination income
$
39
$
233
$
315
$
1,168
Servicing fees, net
87
35
251
73
Total mortgage lending income
$
126
$
268
$
566
$
1,241
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
39
The Company’s income from
 
mortgage lending
 
typically
 
fluctuates as
 
mortgage interest rates change
 
and is primarily
attributable to
 
the origination and
 
sale of mortgage
 
loans. Origination
 
income decreased as
 
market interest rates on
mortgage loans
 
increased.
 
The decrease in
 
origination income was
 
partially offset by an increase in
 
servicing fees, net
 
of
related amortization expense
 
as prepayment
 
speeds slowed,
 
resulting in
 
decreased amortization expense.
 
Noninterest Expense
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30,
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
2022
2021
2022
2021
Salaries and
 
benefits
$
2,975
$
2,893
$
8,901
$
8,641
Net occupancy
 
and equipment
794
467
1,955
1,340
Professional fees
235
232
704
814
Other
1,411
1,163
3,814
3,566
Total noninterest expense
$
5,415
$
4,755
$
15,374
$
14,361
The increase in
 
salaries and
 
benefits was
 
primarily due to
 
a decrease in
 
deferred costs related to
 
the PPP loan
 
program, and
routine annual
 
wage and
 
benefit increases.
The increase in
 
net occupancy
 
and equipment
 
expense was
 
primarily due to
 
increased expenses related
 
to the
redevelopment of
 
the Company’s
 
headquarters
 
in downtown Auburn.
 
This amount
 
includes depreciation expense
 
and
 
one-
time costs associated
 
with the
 
opening of the Company’s
 
new headquarters.
 
The Company
 
relocated its main
 
office branch
and bank operations into
 
its newly
 
constructed headquarters
 
during
 
June 2022.
Income Tax Expense
Income tax expense
 
was $1.0 million for the
 
first nine
 
months of
 
2022 compared
 
to $1.3 million
 
for the first nine
 
months of
2021.
 
The
 
Company’s effective income tax
 
rate for the
 
first nine months
 
of 2022 was 15.14%, compared
 
to 17.55% in
 
the
first nine months
 
of 2021.
 
The
 
decrease was primarily
 
due to an income
 
tax benefit related
 
to a
 
New Markets Tax Credit
investment
 
funded in the
 
fourth quarter of 2021.
 
The
 
Company’s effective income tax
 
rate is principally
 
impacted by
 
tax-
exempt earnings
 
from the Company’s
 
investments in
 
municipal securities,
 
bank-owned
 
life insurance, and
 
New Markets
Tax Credits.
 
BALANCE SHEET
 
ANALYSIS
Securities
 
Securities available-for-sale
 
were $411.5 million
 
at September
 
30, 2022 compared
 
to $421.9 million
 
at December 31,
 
2021.
 
This decrease reflects
 
an
 
increase in the amortized
 
cost basis of securities
 
available-for-sale
 
of $51.8 million,
 
offset by
 
a
decrease of $62.2
 
million in
 
the fair
 
value of securities available-for-sale.
 
The
 
increase in the
 
amortized cost basis
 
of
securities available-for-sale
 
was
 
primarily attributable
 
to management
 
allocating more funding
 
to the investment
 
portfolio
following the
 
significant increase in
 
customer deposits.
 
The
 
decrease in
 
the fair value
 
of securities was
 
primarily due
 
to an
increase in long-term market
 
interest rates, which
 
resulted in $15.3 million
 
of deferred tax
 
assets included
 
in our other
assets.
 
The
 
average annualized
 
tax-equivalent
 
yields earned on total
 
securities were 1.95%
 
in the
 
first nine months
 
of 2022
and 1.68%
 
in the first
 
nine months
 
of 2021.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
40
Loans
2022
2021
Third
Second
First
Fourth
Third
(In thousands)
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Commercial and
 
industrial
$
70,685
70,087
73,297
83,977
79,202
Construction and
 
land development
54,773
38,654
33,058
32,432
34,890
Commercial real estate
250,030
240,296
235,062
258,371
252,798
Residential real estate
91,598
85,224
79,102
77,661
80,205
Consumer installment
7,551
7,122
8,412
6,682
7,060
Total loans
474,637
441,383
428,931
459,123
454,155
Less:
 
unearned income
(602)
(511)
(514)
(759)
(923)
Loans, net of unearned
 
income
$
474,035
440,872
428,417
458,364
453,232
Total loans, net of
 
unearned income, were
 
$474.0 million at
 
September 30, 2022,
 
and
 
$458.4 million at
 
December 31, 2021,
an increase of $15.7 million,
 
or 3%.
 
Total loans at December
 
31, 2021 included
 
$8.0
 
million in
 
PPP loans, all
 
of which
were repaid
 
during the first nine
 
months of
 
2022.
 
Excluding
 
PPP loans, total loans,
 
net of unearned
 
income, increased
$23.8 million, or 5%
 
from December 31,
 
2021.
 
Four loan
 
categories represented
 
the majority
 
of the loan
 
portfolio at
September 30, 2022: commercial
 
real estate (53%),
 
residential real
 
estate (19%),
 
commercial and
 
industrial (15%) and
construction and
 
land development
 
(12%).
 
Approximately
 
23% of the
 
Company’s commercial real estate
 
loans were
classified as owner-occupied
 
at September
 
30, 2022.
Within the residential real estate portfolio
 
segment, the
 
Company
 
had junior lien
 
mortgages of approximately
 
$6.8
 
million,
or 1%, and $7.2 million,
 
or 2%, of
 
total loans,
 
net of unearned
 
income at September
 
30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021,
respectively.
 
For residential real estate
 
mortgage loans
 
with
 
a consumer purpose, the
 
Company
 
had no loans that
 
required
interest only payments
 
at September 30,
 
2022 and
 
December 31, 2021. The
 
Company’s residential real estate
 
mortgage
portfolio does not include
 
any
 
option ARM
 
loans, subprime
 
loans, or any
 
material amount
 
of other consumer mortgage
products which
 
are generally viewed
 
as high risk.
 
The average
 
yield earned
 
on loans and
 
loans held for sale was
 
4.42% in the first nine
 
months of
 
2022 and 4.47% in
 
the first
nine months
 
of 2021.
 
The specific economic and
 
credit risks associated with
 
our loan portfolio include,
 
but
 
are not limited to,
 
the effects of
current economic
 
conditions, including
 
the continuing
 
effects
 
from the
 
COVID-19
 
pandemic, as
 
well as high inflation
 
rates
and the Federal
 
Reserve’s shift from stimulative
 
monetary policy
 
to increases in
 
the target Federal
 
Funds rate and
reductions in its
 
securities holdings, on
 
our borrowers’
 
cash flows,
 
real estate market
 
sales volumes,
 
valuations, availability
and cost of financing
 
properties, real estate industry
 
concentrations,
 
competitive pressures
 
from a
 
wide range of
 
other
lenders, deterioration
 
in certain
 
credits, interest rate
 
fluctuations and
 
increases, reduced collateral values
 
or non-existent
collateral, title defects, inaccurate
 
appraisals,
 
financial
 
deterioration of borrowers,
 
fraud,
 
and any violation
 
of applicable
laws and regulations.
The Company
 
attempts to reduce
 
these economic and
 
credit risks through
 
its loan-to-value
 
guidelines for collateralized
loans, investigating
 
the creditworthiness of borrowers
 
and
 
monitoring borrowers’ financial
 
position. Also,
 
we have
established and
 
periodically review, lending
 
policies and
 
procedures. Banking
 
regulations limit a
 
bank’s credit exposure by
prohibiting
 
unsecured loan
 
relationships that
 
exceed 10% of its capital;
 
or 20% of capital,
 
if loans in excess of 10%
 
of
capital are fully
 
secured. Under
 
these regulations, we
 
are prohibited from having
 
secured loan
 
relationships in excess of
approximately
 
$21.7 million.
 
Furthermore, we
 
have an internal
 
limit for aggregate
 
credit exposure (loans
 
outstanding
 
plus
unfunded commitments)
 
to a
 
single borrower of
 
$19.5 million. Our
 
loan policy
 
requires that
 
the Loan Committee of the
Board of Directors approve
 
any loan relationships that
 
exceed this internal
 
limit.
 
At September
 
30, 2022, the Bank
 
had no
relationships exceeding
 
these limits.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
41
We periodically analyze
 
our commercial and
 
industrial and commercial
 
real estate loan
 
portfolios to determine
 
if a
concentration of credit risk
 
exists in
 
any one or
 
more industries. We use classification
 
systems broadly
 
accepted by
 
the
financial
 
services industry
 
in order to categorize our
 
commercial borrowers.
 
Loan
 
concentrations to borrowers
 
in the
following classes exceeded
 
25% of the
 
Bank’s total
 
risk-based capital
 
at September 30,
 
2022 and
 
December 31, 2021.
 
September
 
30,
December 31,
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
2022
2021
Lessors of 1-4 family
 
residential properties
$
51,391
$
47,880
Hotel/motel
33,918
43,856
Multi-family residential properties
29,317
42,587
Shopping centers
27,174
29,574
In light of disruptions
 
in economic conditions
 
caused by
 
COVID-19,
 
the financial
 
regulators have issued
 
guidance
encouraging banks
 
to work constructively
 
with
 
borrowers affected by
 
the virus in
 
our community.
 
This guidance,
 
including
the Interagency
 
Statement
 
on COVID-19
 
Loan Modifications and
 
the Interagency Examiner
 
Guidance for Assessing
 
Safety
and Soundness
 
Considering the
 
Effect of the COVID-19
 
Pandemic on Institutions,
 
provides
 
that the agencies will
 
not
criticize financial institutions
 
that
 
mitigate credit risk through
 
prudent actions consistent
 
with
 
safe and sound
 
practices.
 
Specifically, examiners will
 
not criticize institutions
 
for working
 
with borrowers as
 
part of a risk mitigation
 
strategy
intended to improve
 
existing loans, even
 
if the restructured loans
 
have or
 
develop weaknesses
 
that ultimately
 
result in
adverse credit classification.
 
Upon
 
demonstrating the
 
need for payment
 
relief, the bank
 
will work
 
with qualified borrowers
that were otherwise current
 
before the
 
pandemic
 
to determine the
 
most appropriate deferral
 
option.
 
For residential
mortgage and
 
consumer loans the
 
borrower may
 
elect to defer payments
 
for up to
 
three months.
 
Interest continues to
accrue and the
 
amount due at maturity
 
increases.
 
Commercial
 
real estate, commercial,
 
and
 
small business borrowers may
elect to defer payments
 
for up to
 
three months or
 
pay scheduled
 
interest payments
 
for a
 
six-month period.
 
The bank
recognizes that
 
a combination
 
of the payment
 
relief options may
 
be prudent dependent
 
on a borrower’s business
 
type.
 
As
of September 30,
 
2022, we had
 
no COVID-19
 
loan deferrals, compared
 
to one COVID-19
 
loan deferral totaling
 
$0.1
million at
 
December 31, 2021.
Section 4013 of the CARES
 
Act provides that
 
a qualified loan
 
modification is exempt
 
by
 
law from classification as
 
a TDR
pursuant to GAA
P.
 
In addition,
 
the Interagency Statement
 
on COVID-19
 
Loan Modifications provides
 
circumstances in
which a loan
 
modification is not
 
subject to classification
 
as a
 
TDR if such loan
 
is not eligible for modification
 
under
Section 4013.
 
We had no new
 
TDRs during the
 
first nine months
 
of 2022, and
 
only $170 thousand
 
of nonaccruing
 
TDRs
remained at
 
September 30, 2022 compared
 
to $249 thousand
 
at December 31,
 
2021.
 
Allowance for Loan
 
Losses
 
The Company
 
maintains the
 
allowance for loan
 
losses at a
 
level that management
 
believes appropriate
 
to adequately cover
the Company’s estimate of probable
 
losses inherent
 
in the
 
loan portfolio. The
 
allowance
 
for loan losses was
 
$5.0 million at
September 30, 2022 compared
 
to $4.9 million
 
at December 31,
 
2021,
 
which
 
management
 
believed to be adequate
 
at each of
the respective dates.
 
The judgments
 
and estimates associated with
 
the determination of the
 
allowance for loan
 
losses are
described under
 
“Critical Accounting
 
Policies.”
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
42
A summary
 
of the changes in
 
the allowance
 
for loan losses and
 
certain asset quality
 
ratios for the third
 
quarter of
 
2022 and
the previous
 
four quarters is
 
presented below.
 
2022
2021
Third
Second
First
Fourth
Third
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Balance at beginning
 
of period
$
4,716
4,658
4,939
5,119
5,107
Charge-offs:
Commercial and
 
industrial
(13)
(4)
Commercial real estate
(254)
Residential real estate
(2)
Consumer installment
(3)
(16)
(48)
(32)
Total charge-offs
(16)
(20)
(48)
(288)
Recoveries
16
78
17
108
12
Net recoveries (charge-offs)
58
(31)
(180)
12
Provision for loan
 
losses
250
(250)
Ending balance
$
4,966
4,716
4,658
4,939
5,119
as a % of loans
1.05
%
1.07
1.09
1.08
1.13
as a % of nonperforming
 
loans
1,431
%
1,314
1,256
1,112
1,053
Net (recoveries) charge-offs
 
as %
 
of average loans
 
(a)
%
(0.05)
0.03
0.16
(0.01)
(a) Net (recoveries) charge-offs are annualized.
As described under
 
“Critical Accounting
 
Policies,” management
 
assesses the adequacy
 
of the allowance prior
 
to the end
 
of
each calendar
 
quarter. The level of
 
the allowance is
 
based upon
 
management’s evaluation
 
of the loan portfolios, past loan
loss experience, current asset
 
quality
 
trends, known
 
and inherent risks in
 
the portfolio, adverse
 
situations that
 
may affect the
borrower’s ability
 
to repay (including
 
the timing of
 
future payment),
 
the estimated value
 
of any underlying
 
collateral,
composition of the
 
loan portfolio, economic
 
conditions,
 
inflation
 
and
 
changes in market
 
interest rates, industry and
 
peer
bank loan
 
loss rates, and
 
other pertinent factors. This
 
evaluation
 
is inherently subjective
 
as it
 
requires various
 
material
estimates and
 
judgments,
 
including the amounts
 
and timing of
 
future cash flows
 
expected to be received
 
on impaired
 
loans
that may be susceptible to
 
significant
 
change.
 
The ratio of our
 
allowance for loan
 
losses to total loans
 
outstanding
 
was
1.05%
 
at September
 
30, 2022, compared to 1.08%
 
at December
 
31, 2021.
 
In
 
the future, the
 
allowance to total
 
loans
outstanding ratio
 
will increase or decrease
 
to the extent
 
the factors that
 
influence our quarterly
 
allowance
 
assessment,
including the duration
 
and magnitude
 
of COVID-19
 
effects
 
and
 
increasing market
 
interest rates and
 
expectations regarding
inflation and interest rates as
 
the Federal
 
Reserve shifts from stimulus
 
to fighting
 
inflation, in
 
their entirety either improve
or weaken.
 
In addition, our regulators,
 
as an
 
integral part
 
of their examination
 
process, will periodically review
 
the
Company’s allowance
 
for loan losses, and
 
may require the
 
Company to
 
make additional
 
provisions to the allowance
 
for
loan losses based on
 
their judgment
 
about information available
 
to them
 
at the time of their
 
examinations.
 
Nonperforming Assets
At September 30,
 
2022 the Company
 
had $0.3 million in
 
nonperforming assets compared
 
to $0.8 million
 
at December 31,
2021.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
43
The table below
 
provides information concerning
 
total nonperforming
 
assets and
 
certain asset quality
 
ratios for the third
quarter of
 
2022 and the previous
 
four quarters.
 
2022
2021
Third
Second
First
Fourth
Third
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Nonperforming assets:
Nonaccrual loans
$
347
359
371
444
486
Other real
 
estate owned
374
374
Total nonperforming assets
$
347
359
745
818
486
as a % of loans
 
and other real
 
estate owned
0.07
%
0.08
0.17
0.18
0.11
as a % of total assets
0.03
%
0.03
0.07
0.07
0.05
Nonperforming loans
 
as a % of
 
total loans
0.07
%
0.08
0.09
0.10
0.11
Accruing loans
 
90 days or more past
 
due
$
69
The table below
 
provides information concerning
 
the composition of
 
nonaccrual
 
loans for the third
 
quarter of
 
2022 and the
previous four quarters.
 
2022
2021
Third
Second
First
Fourth
Third
(In thousands)
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Nonaccrual loans:
Commercial real estate
$
170
176
182
187
193
Residential real estate
177
183
189
257
293
Total nonaccrual loans
$
347
359
371
444
486
The Company
 
discontinues the accrual
 
of interest income when
 
(1) there is a significant
 
deterioration in
 
the financial
condition of the
 
borrower and
 
full repayment
 
of principal
 
and interest is not expected
 
or (2) the principal
 
or interest is
90 days or more past
 
due, unless
 
the loan is both well-secured
 
and
 
in the process of collection.
 
The
 
Company had
 
$0.3
million in
 
loans on nonaccrual
 
status at September
 
30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021,
 
respectively.
 
The Company
 
had no loans
 
90 days or more past
 
due and still accruing
 
at September 30,
 
2022 and
 
December 31, 2021,
respectively.
The table below
 
provides information concerning
 
the composition of OREO
 
for the third
 
quarter of 2022 and
 
the previous
four quarters.
 
2022
2021
Third
Second
First
Fourth
Third
(In thousands)
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Other real estate owned:
Commercial real estate
$
374
374
Total other real estate owned
$
374
374
Potential Problem Loans
Potential problem loans
 
represent those
 
loans with
 
a well-defined weakness
 
and where information
 
about
 
possible credit
problems of a borrower
 
has
 
caused management
 
to have serious doubts
 
about
 
the borrower’s ability
 
to comply
 
with present
repayment
 
terms.
 
This definition is believed
 
to be substantially
 
consistent with
 
the standards
 
established by
 
the Federal
Reserve, the Company’s
 
primary regulator, for loans
 
classified as
 
substandard,
 
excluding nonaccrual
 
loans.
 
Potential
problem loans,
 
which are not
 
included in nonperforming
 
assets, amounted
 
to $1.3 million, or
 
0.3% of total loans
 
at
September 30, 2022, and
 
$2.4 million, or 0.5%
 
of total loans
 
at December 31,
 
2021.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
44
The table below
 
provides information concerning
 
the composition of
 
potential
 
problem loans
 
for the third
 
quarter of
 
2022
and the previous
 
four quarters.
 
2022
2021
Third
Second
First
Fourth
Third
(In thousands)
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Potential problem loans:
Commercial and
 
industrial
$
194
225
215
226
274
Construction and
 
land development
13
218
231
Commercial real estate
191
146
150
156
172
Residential real estate
892
915
1,592
1,748
1,848
Consumer installment
29
24
8
12
19
Total potential problem loans
$
1,306
1,310
1,978
2,360
2,544
At September 30,
 
2022,
 
approximately
 
$46 thousand
 
or 4% of
 
total potential problem
 
loans were
 
past due at
 
least 30 days,
but less than
 
90 days.
The following
 
table is a summary
 
of the Company’s
 
performing loans
 
that were
 
past due at least 30 days,
 
but less than
90 days,
 
for the third
 
quarter of 2022 and
 
the previous
 
four quarters.
 
2022
2021
Third
Second
First
Fourth
Third
(In thousands)
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Performing loans past
 
due 30 to 89 days:
Commercial and
 
industrial
$
1
34
7
3
68
Construction and
 
land development
282
1
204
Commercial real estate
28
Residential real estate
86
130
496
516
409
Consumer installment
8
7
15
25
25
Total
 
$
377
199
519
748
502
Deposits
Total deposits were $978.0 million
 
at September
 
30, 2022 compared
 
to $994.2 million
 
at December 31,
 
2021.
 
The
 
decrease
in total deposits was
 
primarily due
 
to a decrease in rate-sensitive
 
money market
 
and savings
 
accounts of $21.8
million.
 
Noninterest
 
-bearing
 
deposits were $321.7
 
million, or
 
32% of total deposits,
 
at September
 
30, 2022, compared
 
to
$316.1 million, or 32%
 
of total deposits
 
at December 31,
 
2021.
 
We had no brokered
 
deposits on September
 
30, 2022 or at
December 31, 2021.
 
Estimated uninsured
 
deposits totaled $393.8
 
million and
 
$420.8 million at
 
September 30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021,
respectively.
 
Uninsured
 
amounts
 
are estimated based
 
on the portion of
 
account balances
 
in excess of FDIC
 
insurance
limits.
The average
 
rate paid on total
 
interest
 
-bearing
 
deposits was
 
0.32% in the first nine
 
months of
 
2022 compared to 0.41% in
the first nine months
 
of 2021.
 
Other Borrowings
Other borrowings
 
consist of short-term borrowings
 
and
 
long-term debt. Short-term borrowings
 
generally consist
 
of federal
funds purchased
 
and securities sold under
 
agreements to repurchase
 
with
 
an original
 
maturity of one
 
year or less.
 
The Bank
had available federal
 
funds
 
lines totaling $61.0 million
 
and
 
$41.0 million with
 
none outstanding
 
at September 30,
 
2022, and
December 31, 2021, respectively.
 
Securities sold
 
under
 
agreements to repurchase totaled
 
$2.6 million and
 
$3.4 million at
September 30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021,
 
respectively.
 
The average
 
rate paid on short-term
 
borrowings
 
was 0.50% in
 
the first nine
 
months of
 
2022 and 2021,
 
respectively.
45
The Company
 
had no long-term debt
 
at September 30,
 
2022 and
 
December 31, 2021.
CAPITAL ADEQUACY
 
The Company’s consolidated stockholders’
 
equity
 
was
 
$59.8 million and
 
$103.7 million as
 
of September 30,
 
2022 and
December 31, 2021, respectively.
 
The decrease from
 
December 31,
 
2021 was
 
primarily driven
 
by an other comprehensive
loss due to
 
the change in
 
unrealized gains/losses on securities
 
available-for-sale,
 
net of tax
 
of $46.6 million.
 
The
 
increase in
the unrealized
 
loss on securities was
 
primarily due to
 
increases in market
 
interest rates.
 
These
 
unrealized losses do not
affect the Bank’s capital
 
for regulatory capital
 
purposes.
 
The
 
Company’s consolidated stockholders’
 
equity
 
was
 
also
decreased by cash
 
dividends paid
 
of $2.8 million, and
 
repurchases of the
 
Company’s stock of $0.5 million.
 
These
decreases in the
 
Company’s consolidated
 
stockholders’
 
equity
 
were partially
 
offset by net
 
earnings of $5.9 million.
 
The Company
 
paid cash dividends
 
of $0.795 per share in
 
the first nine
 
months of 2022, an
 
increase of 2% from the
 
same
period in 2021. The
 
Company’s share
 
repurchases of $0.5
 
million since December
 
31, 2021 resulted
 
in 15,280 fewer
outstanding common
 
shares at
 
September 30, 2022.
 
These
 
shares were
 
repurchased at
 
an average cost per
 
share of $30.06
and a total cost of $0.5 million.
On January 1,
 
2015, the Company
 
and Bank became
 
subject to the
 
rules of the
 
Basel III regulatory
 
capital framework
 
and
related Dodd-Frank
 
Wall Street Reform and
 
Consumer Protection Act
 
changes.
 
The rules included
 
the implementation of
 
a
capital conservation buffer
 
that
 
is added to
 
the minimum requirements for
 
capital adequacy
 
purposes.
 
The capital
conservation buffer was
 
subject to a
 
three year phase-in
 
period that began
 
on January 1,
 
2016 and was
 
fully phased-in on
January 1, 2019 at
 
2.5%.
 
A banking organization
 
with a conservation
 
buffer of less than
 
the required
 
amount will
 
be
subject to limitations on
 
capital distributions,
 
including
 
dividend
 
payments and
 
certain discretionary bonus
 
payments
 
to
executive officers.
 
At
 
September 30, 2022, the
 
Bank’s ratio
 
was sufficient to meet the fully
 
phased-in
 
conservation buffer.
Effective March
 
20, 2020, the Federal
 
Reserve and
 
the other federal banking
 
regulators adopted
 
an interim final
 
rule that
amended the capital
 
conservation buffer.
 
The interim final
 
rule was adopted
 
as a final rule
 
on August 26,
 
2020.
 
The
 
new
rule revises the
 
definition of “eligible
 
retained income”
 
for purposes of the
 
maximum
 
payout ratio to allow
 
banking
organizations to
 
more freely use their capital
 
buffers to promote lending
 
and other financial
 
intermediation activities,
 
by
making the limitations on
 
capital distributions
 
more gradual.
 
The eligible retained
 
income is now
 
the greater of (i) net
income for the four
 
preceding quarters,
 
net of distributions
 
and
 
associated tax
 
effects
 
not reflected
 
in net income;
 
and (ii)
the average
 
of all net income over
 
the preceding
 
four quarters.
 
This rule only affects the capital
 
buffers, and
 
banking
organizations were
 
encouraged to make
 
prudent capital
 
distribution decisions.
The Federal
 
Reserve has
 
treated us as a
 
“small bank holding
 
company’ under
 
the Federal
 
Reserve’s Small Bank
 
Holding
Company Policy.
 
Accordingly, our
 
capital adequacy
 
is evaluated
 
at the Bank
 
level, and not
 
for the Company
 
and its
consolidated subsidiaries.
 
The
 
Bank’s tier 1 leverage
 
ratio was 9.29%, CET1
 
risk-based capital ratio
 
was 15.39%, tier 1
risk-based capital
 
ratio was 15.39%,
 
and
 
total risk-based capital
 
ratio was 16.16% at
 
September 30, 2022.
 
These
 
ratios
exceed the minimum
 
regulatory capital
 
percentages of 5.0% for tier 1
 
leverage
 
ratio, 6.5% for CET1
 
risk-based capital
ratio, 8.0% for tier 1
 
risk-based capital
 
ratio, and
 
10.0% for total risk-based capital
 
ratio to be
 
considered “well
 
capitalized.”
 
The Bank’s capital
 
conservation buffer was
 
8.16%
 
at September 30,
 
2022.
 
Our
 
unrealized
 
losses on securities due
 
to
increases in market
 
interest rates do not
 
directly affect our
 
capital for regulatory
 
purposes,
 
and
 
the resulting
 
deferred tax
assets, including
 
$15.3 million resulting from
 
such unrealized
 
securities losses, was
 
below the
 
25% threshold requiring
deduction of
 
such assets from CET1
 
capital.
MARKET
 
AND LIQUIDITY
 
RISK MANAGEMENT
Management’s objective
 
is to manage
 
assets and
 
liabilities to provide
 
a satisfactory, consistent level of
 
profitability within
the framework
 
of established liquidity,
 
loan, investment,
 
borrowing, and
 
capital policies. The
 
Bank’s Asset Liability
Management
 
Committee (“ALCO”)
 
is charged with
 
the responsibility of monitoring
 
these policies, which
 
are designed to
ensure an acceptable
 
asset/liability
 
composition. Two
 
critical areas of focus for ALCO
 
are interest rate risk
 
and
 
liquidity
risk management.
 
46
Interest Rate Risk Management
In the normal
 
course of business, the
 
Company
 
is exposed to
 
market risk arising
 
from fluctuations in
 
interest rates. ALCO
measures and
 
evaluates interest rate risk so that
 
the Bank
 
can meet customer demands
 
for various
 
types of loans
 
and
deposits. Measurements used
 
to help
 
manage interest rate sensitivity
 
include an
 
earnings simulation
 
model and
 
an economic
value of equity
 
(“EVE”) model.
Earnings simulation
. Management
 
believes that
 
interest rate risk is best
 
estimated by
 
our earnings
 
simulation modeling.
Forecasted levels of earning
 
assets, interest-bearing
 
liabilities,
 
and
 
off-balance sheet financial
 
instruments are combined
with ALCO
 
forecasts of market interest
 
rates for the next
 
12 months and
 
other factors in order to
 
produce various
 
earnings
simulations and
 
estimates. To help limit interest rate risk,
 
we
 
have guidelines for earnings
 
at risk which
 
seek to limit the
variance of net
 
interest income from gradual
 
changes in interest rates.
 
For changes
 
up or down
 
in rates from management’s
flat interest rate forecast over
 
the next
 
12 months,
 
policy limits for net
 
interest income variances
 
are as follows:
+/-
 
20% for a gradual
 
change of
 
400 basis points
+/-
 
15% for a gradual
 
change of
 
300 basis points
+/-
 
10% for a gradual
 
change of
 
200 basis points
+/-
 
5% for a
 
gradual change of
 
100 basis points
While a gradual
 
change in
 
interest rates was
 
used in the above
 
analysis to provide
 
an estimate of exposure under
 
these
scenarios, our modeling
 
under
 
both a gradual
 
and instantaneous change
 
in interest rates indicates
 
our balance
 
sheet is asset
sensitive.
At September 30,
 
2022, our earnings
 
simulation model
 
indicated that
 
we were in
 
compliance with
 
the policy
 
guidelines
noted above.
 
Economic Value of Equity
. EVE measures the
 
extent that
 
the estimated economic values
 
of our assets, liabilities,
 
and
 
off-
balance sheet items will
 
change as
 
a result of interest rate changes.
 
Economic values
 
are estimated by
 
discounting expected
cash flows from
 
assets, liabilities, and
 
off-balance sheet items, which
 
establishes a
 
base case EVE.
 
In contrast with
 
our
earnings simulation
 
model, which
 
evaluates interest rate risk
 
over a
 
12 month
 
timeframe, EVE uses a
 
terminal horizon
which allows for the
 
re-pricing of all
 
assets, liabilities, and
 
off-balance sheet items. Further,
 
EVE
 
is measured
 
using values
as of a point
 
in time and
 
does not reflect any
 
actions that ALCO
 
might take in
 
responding to or
 
anticipating changes
 
in
interest rates, or market
 
and
 
competitive conditions.
 
To help limit
 
interest rate risk, we
 
have stated
 
policy guidelines
 
for an
instantaneous
 
basis point change
 
in interest rates, such
 
that
 
our EVE should
 
not decrease from our
 
base case by
 
more than
the following:
45% for an
 
instantaneous
 
change of
 
+/-
 
400 basis points
35% for an
 
instantaneous
 
change of
 
+/-
 
300 basis points
25% for an
 
instantaneous
 
change of
 
+/-
 
200 basis points
15% for an
 
instantaneous
 
change of
 
+/-
 
100 basis points
At September 30,
 
2022, our EVE
 
model indicated
 
that we were
 
in compliance with
 
our policy guidelines.
Each of the above
 
analyses may
 
not, on its own, be
 
an accurate indicator
 
of how
 
our net interest income will
 
be affected by
changes in interest rates. Income
 
associated
 
with
 
interest
 
-earning
 
assets and
 
costs associated with
 
interest
 
-bearing
 
liabilities
may not be
 
affected uniformly by
 
changes
 
in interest rates. In addition,
 
the magnitude
 
and duration
 
of changes in
 
interest
rates may
 
have a significant impact
 
on net interest income.
 
For example,
 
although
 
certain assets and
 
liabilities may
 
have
similar maturities or periods
 
of repricing,
 
they may
 
react in
 
different degrees to changes
 
in market
 
interest rates, and
 
other
economic and
 
market factors, including
 
market perceptions. Interest
 
rates on certain
 
types of assets and
 
liabilities fluctuate
in advance of
 
changes in general
 
market rates,
 
while interest rates on
 
other types of
 
assets and
 
liabilities may
 
lag behind
changes in general
 
market rates. In
 
addition, certain
 
assets, such as
 
adjustable
 
rate mortgage loans,
 
have features (generally
referred to as
 
“interest rate caps
 
and floors”) which
 
limit changes
 
in interest rates. Prepayments
 
and
 
early withdrawal
 
levels
also could deviate
 
significantly from those assumed
 
in calculating
 
the maturity
 
of certain instruments.
 
The
 
ability of many
borrowers to service their debts
 
also may
 
decrease during
 
periods of rising
 
interest rates or economic
 
stress, which
 
may
differ across industries and
 
economic sectors. ALCO
 
reviews each of
 
the above
 
interest rate sensitivity
 
analyses
 
along with
several different interest rate
 
scenarios in
 
seeking satisfactory, consistent
 
levels of profitability
 
within
 
the framework
 
of the
Company’s established
 
liquidity, loan,
 
investment,
 
borrowing, and
 
capital policies.
 
47
The Company
 
may also use
 
derivative financial
 
instruments to improve
 
the balance between
 
interest
 
-sensitive
 
assets and
interest
 
-sensitive
 
liabilities, and
 
as a tool to manage
 
interest rate sensitivity
 
while continuing
 
to meet the
 
credit and
 
deposit
needs of our customers. From
 
time to time, the
 
Company
 
also may enter into
 
back-to-back
 
interest rate swaps
 
to facilitate
customer transactions and
 
meet their financing
 
needs. These
 
interest rate swaps
 
qualify as
 
derivatives, but
 
are not
designated
 
as hedging instruments.
 
At September
 
30, 2022 and
 
December 31, 2021, the Company
 
had no derivative
contracts designated as
 
part of a
 
hedging relationship to
 
assist in managing
 
its interest rate sensitivity.
 
Liquidity Risk Management
 
Liquidity is
 
the Company’s ability to
 
convert assets into
 
cash equivalents
 
in order to meet daily
 
cash flow requirements,
primarily for deposit
 
withdrawals,
 
loan demand and
 
maturing obligations.
 
Without proper management
 
of its liquidity, the
Company could
 
experience higher costs of obtaining
 
funds
 
due to insufficient liquidity, while
 
excessive liquidity
 
could lead
to lower earnings
 
due to the cost of foregoing
 
alternative
 
higher-yield market
 
investment
 
opportunities.
 
Liquidity is
 
managed at two
 
levels. The
 
first is the liquidity
 
of the Company.
 
The second is the
 
liquidity
 
of the Bank.
 
The
management
 
of liquidity at
 
both levels is
 
essential, because the
 
Company
 
and the Bank are separate
 
and distinct legal
entities with
 
different funding needs
 
and sources, and
 
each are subject to regulatory
 
guidelines and
 
requirements.
 
The
Company depends
 
upon dividends
 
from the Bank for liquidity
 
to pay its operating
 
expenses, debt
 
obligations and
dividends.
 
The Bank’s payment
 
of dividends
 
depends on its earnings,
 
liquidity, capital and the absence
 
of regulatory
restrictions on such
 
dividends.
 
The primary
 
source of funding
 
and liquidity
 
for the Company has
 
been dividends
 
received from the
 
Bank.
 
If needed, the
Company could
 
also borrow
 
money, or issue common stock or other
 
securities.
 
Primary uses of funds
 
by the Company
include dividends
 
paid to stockholders,
 
Company
 
stock repurchases,
 
and
 
payment of Company
 
expenses.
 
Primary sources of funding
 
for the Bank
 
include customer deposits,
 
other borrowings,
 
repayment
 
and maturity of
 
securities,
sales of securities, and
 
the sale and repayment
 
of loans. The Bank
 
has access to federal funds
 
lines from various
 
banks
 
and
borrowings
 
from the Federal
 
Reserve discount
 
window. In addition to
 
these sources, the
 
Bank
 
may participate in
 
the
FHLB’s advance program
 
to obtain funding
 
for its growth.
 
Advances include
 
both fixed and variable
 
terms and may be
taken out with
 
varying maturities. At
 
September 30, 2022, the
 
Bank
 
had a remaining
 
available line
 
of credit with
 
the FHLB
of $325.1 million.
 
At
 
September 30, 2022, the
 
Bank
 
also had $61.0 million of available
 
federal funds
 
lines with no
borrowings outstanding.
 
Primary uses of
 
funds include
 
repayment of maturing
 
obligations and growing
 
the loan portfolio.
 
The Bank
 
has no brokered deposits on
 
September 30, 2022
 
or at
 
December 31, 2021
 
Management
 
believes that
 
the Company and
 
the Bank have
 
adequate sources of liquidity
 
to meet all
 
their respective
 
known
contractual obligations and
 
unfunded commitments,
 
including
 
loan commitments and
 
reasonable borrower, depositor, and
creditor requirements over
 
the next
 
twelve months.
 
Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements,
 
Commitments,
 
Contingencies and
 
Contractual Obligations
At September 30,
 
2022, the Bank
 
had outstanding
 
standby letters of credit of
 
$1.0
 
million and
 
unfunded loan
 
commitments
outstanding of
 
$88.8 million.
 
Because these commitments
 
generally have
 
fixed expiration
 
dates and many
 
will expire
without being
 
drawn upon, the
 
total commitment level
 
does not necessarily
 
represent future
 
cash requirements.
 
If needed
 
to
fund these outstanding
 
commitments, the Bank
 
could liquidate
 
federal funds
 
sold or a portion of our
 
securities available-
for-sale, or draw
 
on its available
 
credit facilities.
 
Mortgage lending activities
We primarily sell residential mortgage
 
loans in
 
the secondary
 
market to Fannie
 
Mae while retaining
 
the servicing of
 
these
loans. The sale
 
agreements for these residential
 
mortgage loans
 
with
 
Fannie Mae and other investors
 
include various
representations and
 
warranties regarding
 
the origination
 
and characteristics of
 
the residential
 
mortgage loans.
 
Although
 
the
representations and
 
warranties vary among
 
investors, they
 
typically cover
 
ownership of the
 
loan, validity
 
of the lien
securing the
 
loan, the absence
 
of delinquent
 
taxes or liens against
 
the property
 
securing the
 
loan, compliance with
 
loan
criteria set forth in
 
the applicable
 
agreement, compliance
 
with
 
applicable federal,
 
state, and local
 
laws, among
 
other
matters.
48
As of September 30,
 
2022, the unpaid
 
principal
 
balance of residential mortgage
 
loans, which
 
we have originated
 
and sold,
but retained the servicing
 
rights, was
 
$238.3 million.
 
Although
 
these loans are
 
generally sold
 
on a non-recourse basis, we
may be obligated
 
to repurchase residential mortgage
 
loans or reimburse
 
investors for
 
losses incurred
 
(make
 
whole
 
requests)
if a loan review
 
reveals a potential
 
breach of
 
seller representations and
 
warranties.
 
Upon receipt of a
 
repurchase or make
whole request, we
 
work with investors
 
to arrive at
 
a mutually agreeable
 
resolution. Repurchase
 
and
 
make whole
 
requests
are typically
 
reviewed on
 
an individual loan
 
by loan basis to validate
 
the claims made
 
by the investor
 
and to determine if a
contractually required
 
repurchase or make
 
whole
 
event has occurred. We seek to reduce and
 
manage the risks of
 
potential
repurchases, make
 
whole requests, or other claims
 
by
 
mortgage loan
 
investors through
 
our underwriting
 
and quality
assurance practices and
 
by servicing
 
mortgage loans
 
to meet investor
 
and secondary
 
market
 
standards.
The Company
 
was not required to
 
repurchase any
 
loans during
 
the first nine
 
months of 2022 as a
 
result of representation
and warranty provisions
 
contained in
 
the Company’s sale agreements
 
with Fannie
 
Mae, and had
 
no pending repurchase
 
or
make-whole
 
requests at September
 
30, 2022.
We service all residential mortgage
 
loans originated
 
and
 
sold by us to
 
Fannie Mae.
 
As servicer, our primary
 
duties are
 
to:
(1) collect payments
 
due
 
from borrowers;
 
(2) advance
 
certain delinquent
 
payments of
 
principal
 
and interest;
 
(3) maintain
and administer
 
any hazard, title, or
 
primary
 
mortgage insurance
 
policies relating to
 
the mortgage
 
loans;
 
(4) maintain
 
any
required escrow accounts
 
for payment
 
of taxes and
 
insurance and
 
administer escrow payments;
 
and (5) foreclose on
defaulted mortgage
 
loans or take other actions
 
to mitigate the
 
potential losses to
 
investors consistent
 
with
 
the agreements
governing our
 
rights and
 
duties as servicer.
The agreement
 
under which
 
we act as servicer generally
 
specifies standards
 
of responsibility for actions
 
taken
 
by us in
 
such
capacity and
 
provides
 
protection against expenses
 
and
 
liabilities incurred by
 
us when acting
 
in compliance with
 
the
respective servicing
 
agreements.
 
However,
 
if we commit a
 
material breach of
 
our obligations
 
as servicer, we
 
may be
subject to termination if
 
the breach
 
is not cured within
 
a specified period following
 
notice.
 
The
 
standards governing
servicing and
 
the possible remedies for violations
 
of such
 
standards
 
are determined
 
by servicing
 
guides issued by
 
Fannie
Mae as well as
 
the contract provisions
 
established
 
between
 
Fannie Mae
 
and the
 
Bank.
 
Remedies could include
 
repurchase
of an affected loan.
Although repurchase
 
and make
 
whole requests related to
 
representation
 
and
 
warranty provisions
 
and servicing
 
activities
have been
 
limited to date,
 
it is possible that
 
requests to repurchase mortgage
 
loans or reimburse
 
investors for
 
losses incurred
(make whole requests) may
 
increase in
 
frequency if
 
investors more aggressively
 
pursue all
 
means of recovering
 
losses on
their purchased
 
loans.
 
As of September 30,
 
2022, we do
 
not believe that
 
this exposure is
 
material due
 
to the historical level
of repurchase requests and
 
loss trends, in addition
 
to the fact that
 
99%
 
of our residential mortgage
 
loans serviced
 
for Fannie
Mae were
 
current as of such
 
date.
 
We maintain ongoing
 
communications with
 
our investors and
 
will continue to
 
evaluate
this exposure by
 
monitoring the
 
level and number
 
of repurchase requests as
 
well as
 
the delinquency
 
rates in our
 
investor
portfolios.
The Bank
 
sells mortgage loans
 
to Fannie
 
Mae and services these on
 
an actual/actual
 
basis. As a result, the
 
Bank is not
obligated to
 
make any advances
 
to Fannie Mae
 
on principal and
 
interest on such
 
mortgage loans
 
where the borrower is
entitled to forbearance.
Effects of
 
Inflation and
 
Changing Prices
The consolidated financial
 
statements and
 
related consolidated financial
 
data presented
 
herein have
 
been prepared
 
in
accordance with
 
GAAP and practices within
 
the banking
 
industry which
 
require the measurement
 
of financial
 
position and
operating results in
 
terms of historical dollars without
 
considering the
 
changes
 
in the relative
 
purchasing
 
power of money
over time due
 
to inflation. Unlike
 
most industrial
 
companies, virtually
 
all the assets and
 
liabilities of a
 
financial
 
institution
are monetary in
 
nature. As
 
a result, interest rates have
 
a more significant
 
impact on
 
a financial institution’s performance
than the effects of general levels
 
of inflation.
 
Inflation,
 
however, could increase our
 
noninterest expenses,
 
and
 
Federal
Reserve monetary
 
policy in response to inflation
 
has
 
increased market
 
interest rates and
 
affected values
 
of certain of our
assets and
 
liabilities, including
 
our securities portfolio and
 
mortgage servicing
 
assets.
CURRENT ACCOUNTING
 
DEVELOPMENTS
The following
 
ASUs have been
 
issued by the
 
FASB but are not yet effective.
 
ASU 2016-13,
Financial Instruments
 
– Credit Losses (Topic 326):
 
Measurement of Credit
 
Losses on
 
Financial
Instruments; and
49
ASU 2022-02,
Financial Instruments
 
– Credit Losses (Topic 326):
 
Troubled Debt Restructurings
 
and Vintage
Disclosures
Information about
 
these pronouncements is described
 
in more detail
 
below.
ASU 2016-13,
Financial Instruments
 
- Credit Losses (Topic 326): -
 
Measurement of Credit Losses
 
on Financial
Instruments
, amends
 
guidance
 
on reporting credit losses for
 
assets held
 
at amortized
 
cost basis and
 
available for
 
sale debt
securities.
 
For assets held
 
at amortized
 
cost basis, the
 
new standard
 
eliminates the probable
 
initial recognition threshold in
current GAAP
 
and, instead,
 
requires an
 
entity to reflect its current estimate
 
of all expected
 
credit losses using
 
a
 
broader
range of information
 
regarding
 
past events, current
 
conditions and
 
forecasts assessing the
 
collectability of cash
 
flows. The
allowance for credit losses
 
is a
 
valuation account
 
that is deducted
 
from the amortized
 
cost basis of the
 
financial
 
assets to
present the net
 
amount expected
 
to be collected.
 
For available
 
for sale debt securities,
 
credit losses should
 
be measured
 
in a
manner similar
 
to current GAAP, however
 
the new standard
 
will require that
 
credit losses be presented
 
as an
 
allowance
rather than as
 
a write-down.
 
The new guidance
 
affects entities holding
 
financial
 
assets and
 
net investment
 
in leases that are
not accounted
 
for at fair value
 
through net income.
 
The
 
amendments affect loans,
 
debt securities, trade
 
receivables,
 
net
investments in
 
leases, off-balance sheet
 
credit exposures,
 
reinsurance receivables,
 
and
 
any other financial
 
assets not
excluded from
 
the scope that
 
have the contractual
 
right to
 
receive cash.
 
For public business
 
entities, the new
 
guidance was
originally effective
 
for annual and
 
interim periods in
 
fiscal years beginning
 
after December 15, 2019.
 
On
 
October 16, 2019,
the FASB approved a
 
previously issued
 
proposal granting
 
smaller reporting
 
companies a
 
postponement of the
 
required
implementation date
 
for ASU 2016-13.
 
The
 
Company is
 
required to implement
 
the new standard
 
in January 2023, with
early adoption
 
permitted in
 
any period prior
 
to that date.
 
Institutions are
 
to apply the changes
 
through a cumulative-effect
adjustment
 
to retained earnings
 
as of the
 
beginning of the
 
first reporting period
 
in which
 
the standard
 
is effective.
 
The
Company is
 
currently assessing the
 
impact of
 
the new guidance
 
on its consolidated
 
financial
 
statements. An
 
increase in the
overall allowance
 
for loan losses is likely
 
upon
 
adoption in order to provide
 
for expected credit losses over
 
the life of the
loan portfolio.
ASU 2022-02,
Financial Instruments
 
- Credit Losses (Topic 326): -
 
Troubled Debt Restructurings
 
and Vintage
Disclosures,
 
eliminates the
 
accounting
 
guidance
 
for troubled debt
 
restructurings (“TDRs”),
 
while enhancing
 
disclosure
requirements for certain loan
 
refinancings and
 
restructurings by
 
creditors when
 
a borrower is experiencing
 
financial
difficulty.
 
The new
 
standard is effective for fiscal
 
years, and
 
interim periods within
 
those fiscal years, beginning
 
after
December 15, 2022.
 
The
 
new standard is
 
not expected to have
 
a material
 
impact on
 
the Company’s consolidated financial
tatements.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
50
Table 1 – Explanation of
 
Non-GAAP Financial Measures
In addition to
 
results presented in
 
accordance with
 
U.S. generally
 
accepted accounting
 
principles (GAAP),
 
this quarterly
report on Form
 
10-Q includes certain
 
designated
 
net interest income amounts
 
presented on
 
a tax-equivalent
 
basis, a non-
GAAP financial
 
measure, including
 
the presentation and
 
calculation of the
 
efficiency ratio.
 
The Company
 
believes the
 
presentation of net
 
interest income on
 
a
 
tax-equivalent basis
 
provides comparability
 
of net
interest income from both
 
taxable
 
and tax-exempt
 
sources and facilitates comparability
 
within
 
the industry. Although the
Company believes
 
these non-GAAP
 
financial measures enhance
 
investors’ understanding
 
of its business and
 
performance,
these non-GAAP
 
financial measures should
 
not be considered an
 
alternative to GAAP. The reconciliations
 
of these non-
GAAP financial
 
measures to their most directly
 
comparable GAAP
 
financial
 
measures are presented below.
 
2022
2021
Third
Second
First
Fourth
Third
(in thousands)
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Net interest income (GAAP)
$
7,243
6,374
6,078
6,037
6,041
Tax-equivalent adjustment
117
110
112
115
117
Net interest income (Tax-equivalent)
$
7,360
6,484
6,190
6,152
6,158
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
(In thousands)
2022
2021
Net interest income (GAAP)
$
19,695
17,953
Tax-equivalent adjustment
339
355
Net interest income (Tax-equivalent)
$
20,034
18,308
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
51
Table 2 - Selected Quarterly Financial
 
Data
 
2022
2021
Third
Second
First
Fourth
Third
(Dollars
 
in thousands, except
 
per share
 
amounts)
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Results of Operations
Net interest income
 
(a)
$
7,360
6,484
6,190
6,152
6,158
Less: tax-equivalent
 
adjustment
117
110
112
115
117
Net interest income
 
(GAAP)
7,243
6,374
6,078
6,037
6,041
Noninterest
 
income
852
848
908
1,019
975
Total revenue
8,095
7,222
6,986
7,056
7,016
Provision for loan
 
losses
250
(250)
Noninterest
 
expense
5,415
5,058
4,901
5,092
4,755
Income tax expense
 
432
363
254
93
386
Net earnings
$
1,998
1,801
2,081
1,871
1,875
Per share
 
data:
Basic and
 
diluted net earnings
 
$
0.57
0.51
0.59
0.53
0.53
Cash dividends
 
declared
0.265
0.265
0.265
0.26
0.26
Weighted
 
average shares
 
outstanding:
Basic and
 
diluted
3,507,318
3,513,353
3,518,657
3,524,311
3,536,320
Shares outstanding,
 
at period end
3,505,355
3,509,940
3,516,971
3,520,485
3,529,338
Book value
$
17.06
21.68
24.57
29.46
29.73
Common stock price:
High
$
29.02
33.57
34.49
34.79
35.36
Low
 
23.02
27.04
31.75
31.32
33.25
Period end:
23.02
27.04
33.21
32.30
33.80
To earnings
 
ratio
10.46
x
12.52
14.44
14.23
14.57
To book
 
value
135
%
125
135
110
114
Performance ratios:
Return on average
 
equity
 
10.35
%
8.26
7.97
7.07
7.01
Return on average
 
assets
 
0.75
%
0.66
0.75
0.70
0.72
Dividend payout
 
ratio
46.49
%
51.96
44.92
49.06
49.06
Asset Quality:
Allowance for
 
loan losses
 
as a % of:
Loans
1.05
%
1.07
1.09
1.08
1.13
Nonperforming
 
loans
1,431
%
1,314
1,256
1,112
1,053
Nonperforming
 
assets
 
as a % of:
Loans and foreclosed
 
properties
0.07
%
0.08
0.17
0.18
0.11
Total assets
 
0.03
%
0.03
0.07
0.07
0.05
Nonperforming
 
loans as a %
 
of total loans
0.07
%
0.08
0.09
0.10
0.11
Annualized
 
net (recoveries) charge
 
-offs as % of
 
average loans
%
(0.05)
0.03
0.16
(0.01)
Capital Adequacy:
 
(c)
CET 1 risk-based
 
capital ratio
15.39
%
16.59
17.26
16.23
16.82
Tier 1
 
risk-based capital ratio
15.39
%
16.59
17.26
16.23
16.82
Total risk-based
 
capital ratio
16.16
%
17.38
18.08
17.06
17.72
Tier 1
 
leverage ratio
9.29
%
9.16
9.09
9.35
9.57
Other financial
 
data:
Net interest margin
 
(a)
3.00
%
2.60
2.43
2.45
2.51
Effective income
 
tax rate
17.78
%
16.77
10.88
4.74
17.07
Efficiency
 
ratio (b)
65.94
%
68.99
69.05
71.01
66.66
Selected average
 
balances:
Securities
$
432,393
427,426
435,097
414,061
395,529
Loans, net of unearned
 
income
457,722
428,612
439,713
455,726
452,668
Total assets
1,069,973
1,092,759
1,114,407
1,073,564
1,040,985
Total deposits
987,614
999,867
1,003,394
961,544
927,368
Total stockholders’
 
equity
77,191
87,247
104,493
105,925
106,936
Selected period
 
end balances:
 
Securities
$
411,538
429,220
417,459
421,891
407,474
Loans, net of unearned
 
income
474,035
440,872
428,417
458,364
453,232
Allowance for
 
loan losses
4,966
4,716
4,658
4,939
5,119
Total assets
1,042,559
1,084,251
1,109,664
1,105,150
1,065,871
Total deposits
977,938
1,002,698
1,017,742
994,243
954,971
Total stockholders’
 
equity
59,793
76,107
86,411
103,726
104,929
(a) Tax-equivalent.
 
See "Table
 
1 - Explanation
 
of Non-GAAP Financial
 
Measures."
(b) Efficiency
 
ratio is the result
 
of noninterest
 
expense divided by the
 
sum of noninterest
 
income and tax
 
-equivalent
 
net interest income.
 
See
 
"Table
 
1 - Explanation
 
of Non-GAAP
 
Financial Measures."
(c) Regulatory
 
capital ratios presented
 
are for the Company's
 
wholly-owned subsidiary,
 
AuburnBank.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
52
Table 3 - Selected Financial Data
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
(Dollars
 
in thousands, except
 
per share
 
amounts)
2022
2021
Results of Operations
Net interest income
 
(a)
$
20,034
18,308
Less: tax-equivalent
 
adjustment
339
355
Net interest income
 
(GAAP)
19,695
17,953
Noninterest
 
income
2,608
3,288
Total revenue
22,303
21,241
Provision for loan
 
losses
 
(600)
 
Noninterest
 
expense
15,374
14,361
Income tax expense
1,049
1,313
Net earnings
$
5,880
6,167
Per share
 
data:
Basic and
 
diluted net earnings
 
$
1.67
1.74
Cash dividends
 
declared
0.795
0.78
Weighted
 
average shares
 
outstanding:
Basic and
 
diluted
3,513,068
3,552,387
Shares outstanding,
 
at period end
3,505,355
3,529,338
Book value
$
17.06
29.73
Common stock price:
High
$
34.49
48.00
Low
 
23.02
33.25
Period end
23.02
33.80
To earnings
 
ratio
10.46
x
14.57
To book
 
value
135
%
114
Performance ratios:
Return on average
 
equity
 
8.76
%
7.70
Return on average
 
assets
 
0.72
%
0.81
Dividend payout
 
ratio
47.60
%
44.83
Asset Quality:
Allowance for
 
loan losses
 
as a % of:
Loans
1.05
%
1.13
Nonperforming
 
loans
1,431
%
1,053
Nonperforming
 
assets
 
as a % of:
Loans and other
 
real estate
 
owned
0.07
%
0.11
Total assets
 
0.03
%
0.05
Nonperforming
 
loans as a %
 
of total loans
0.07
%
0.11
Annualized
 
net recoveries as
 
a % of average
 
loans
(0.01)
%
(0.03)
 
Capital Adequacy:
 
(c)
CET 1 risk-based
 
capital ratio
15.39
%
16.82
Tier 1
 
risk-based capital ratio
15.39
%
16.82
Total risk-based
 
capital ratio
16.16
%
17.72
Tier 1
 
leverage ratio
9.29
%
9.57
Other financial
 
data:
Net interest margin
 
(a)
2.67
%
2.59
Effective income
 
tax rate
15.14
%
17.55
Efficiency
 
ratio (b)
67.90
%
66.50
Selected average
 
balances:
Securities
$
431,629
373,203
Loans, net of unearned
 
income
442,081
458,882
Total assets
1,092,216
1,009,131
Total deposits
996,900
895,342
Total stockholders’
 
equity
89,544
106,798
Selected period
 
end balances:
 
Securities
$
411,538
407,474
Loans, net
 
of unearned income
474,035
453,232
Allowance for
 
loan losses
4,966
5,119
Total assets
1,042,559
1,065,871
Total deposits
977,938
954,971
Total stockholders’
 
equity
59,793
104,929
(a) Tax-equivalent.
 
See "Table
 
1 - Explanation
 
of Non-GAAP Financial
 
Measures."
(b) Efficiency
 
ratio is the result
 
of noninterest
 
expense divided by the
 
sum of noninterest
 
income and tax
 
-equivalent
 
net interest income.
 
See
 
"Table
 
1 - Explanation
 
of Non-GAAP
 
Financial Measures."
(c) Regulatory
 
capital ratios presented
 
are for the Company's
 
wholly-owned subsidiary,
 
AuburnBank.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
53
Table 4 - Average Balances and Net
 
Interest Income Analysis
Quarter ended
 
September
 
30,
2022
2021
Interest
Interest
Average
Income/
Yield/
Average
Income/
Yield/
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Balance
Expense
Rate
Balance
Expense
Rate
Interest-earning assets:
 
 
Loans and loans
 
held for sale (1)
$
457,861
$
5,097
4.42%
$
453,649
$
5,127
4.48%
Securities - taxable
369,202
1,808
1.94%
332,474
1,048
1.25%
Securities - tax-exempt (2)
63,191
558
3.50%
63,055
558
3.51%
Total securities
 
432,393
2,366
2.17%
395,529
1,606
1.61%
Federal funds
 
sold
38,994
200
2.03%
40,995
16
0.15%
Interest bearing
 
bank deposits
45,343
226
1.98%
82,878
33
0.16%
Total interest
 
-earning
 
assets
974,591
$
7,889
3.21%
973,051
$
6,782
2.77%
Cash and due
 
from banks
14,503
14,326
Other assets
80,879
53,608
Total assets
$
1,069,973
$
1,040,985
Interest-bearing liabilities:
Deposits:
 
 
NOW
$
195,655
$
70
0.14%
$
182,417
$
51
0.11%
Savings and
 
money market
328,555
163
0.20%
300,746
167
0.22%
Time deposits
151,785
291
0.76%
159,423
402
1.00%
Total interest
 
-bearing
 
deposits
675,995
524
0.31%
642,586
620
0.38%
Short-term borrowings
3,759
5
0.50%
3,454
4
0.50%
Total interest
 
-bearing
 
liabilities
679,754
$
529
0.31%
646,040
$
624
0.38%
Noninterest-bearing deposits
311,619
 
284,781
 
Other liabilities
1,409
3,228
Stockholders' equity
77,191
 
106,936
 
Total liabilities and stockholders' equity
$
1,069,973
$
1,040,985
Net interest income and
 
margin (tax-equivalent)
$
7,360
3.00%
$
6,158
2.51%
 
 
 
(1) Average loan balances
 
are shown net
 
of unearned
 
income and loans
 
on nonaccrual
 
status have been included
 
 
in the computation
 
of average
 
balances.
(2) Yields on tax-exempt
 
securities have
 
been computed
 
on a tax-equivalent
 
basis using a federal income
tax rate of 21%.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
54
Table 5 - Average Balances and Net
 
Interest Income Analysis
Nine months
 
ended September
 
30,
 
 
2022
2021
Interest
Interest
Average
Income/
Yield/
Average
Income/
Yield/
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Balance
Expense
Rate
Balance
Expense
Rate
Interest-earning assets:
 
 
Loans and loans
 
held for sale (1)
$
442,613
$
14,638
4.42%
$
460,732
$
15,417
4.47%
Securities - taxable
370,402
4,691
1.69%
310,288
3,006
1.30%
Securities - tax-exempt (2)
61,227
1,614
3.52%
62,915
1,692
3.60%
Total securities
 
431,629
6,305
1.95%
373,203
4,698
1.68%
Federal funds
 
sold
54,924
313
0.76%
36,821
39
0.14%
Interest bearing
 
bank deposits
73,630
454
0.82%
75,170
66
0.12%
Total interest
 
-earning
 
assets
1,002,796
$
21,710
2.89%
945,926
$
20,220
2.86%
Cash and due
 
from banks
15,029
14,345
Other assets
74,391
48,860
Total assets
$
1,092,216
$
1,009,131
Interest-bearing liabilities:
Deposits:
 
 
NOW
$
201,792
$
189
0.13%
$
176,242
$
161
0.12%
Savings and
 
money market
335,005
494
0.20%
289,758
488
0.23%
Time deposits
155,824
978
0.84%
159,412
1,251
1.05%
Total interest
 
-bearing
 
deposits
692,621
1,661
0.32%
625,412
1,900
0.41%
Short-term borrowings
3,969
15
0.50%
3,329
12
0.50%
Total interest
 
-bearing
 
liabilities
696,590
$
1,676
0.32%
628,741
$
1,912
0.41%
Noninterest-bearing deposits
304,279
 
269,930
 
Other liabilities
1,803
3,662
Stockholders' equity
89,544
 
106,798
 
Total liabilities and stockholders' equity
$
1,092,216
$
1,009,131
Net interest income and
 
margin (tax-equivalent)
$
20,034
2.67%
$
18,308
2.59%
 
 
 
(1) Average loan balances
 
are shown net
 
of unearned
 
income and loans
 
on nonaccrual status
 
have been included
 
 
in the computation
 
of average
 
balances.
(2) Yields on tax-exempt
 
securities have
 
been computed
 
on a tax-equivalent
 
basis using a federal income
tax rate of 21%.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
55
Table 6 - Allocation of Allowance for
 
Loan
 
Losses
2022
2021
Third Quarter
Second Quarter
First Quarter
Fourth Quarter
Third Quarter
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
Amount
%*
Amount
%*
Amount
%*
Amount
%*
Amount
%*
Commercial and
 
industrial
$
732
14.9
$
761
15.9
$
774
17.1
$
857
18.3
$
816
17.4
Construction and
 
land
 
development
789
11.5
576
8.8
508
7.7
518
7.1
590
7.7
Commercial real estate
2,561
52.7
2,523
54.4
2,536
54.8
2,739
56.2
2,823
55.6
Residential real estate
783
19.3
753
19.3
737
18.4
739
16.9
799
17.7
Consumer installment
101
1.6
103
1.6
103
2.0
86
1.5
91
1.6
Total allowance for
 
loan losses
$
4,966
$
4,716
$
4,658
$
4,939
$
5,119
* Loan balance
 
in each category expressed
 
as a
 
percentage of total
 
loans.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
56
Table 7 – Estimated Uninsured Time
 
Deposits by
 
Maturity
(Dollars
 
in thousands)
September
 
30, 2022
Maturity of:
3 months or less
$
17,778
Over 3 months
 
through 6 months
11,792
Over 6 months
 
through 12 months
4,496
Over 12 months
5,458
Total estimated uninsured
 
time deposits
$
39,524
57
ITEM 3.
 
QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES
 
ABOUT
 
MARKET
 
RISK
The information called
 
for by
 
ITEM 3 is set forth in
 
ITEM 2 under the
 
caption “MARKET
 
AND LIQUIDITY
 
RISK
MANAGEMENT”
 
and is incorporated herein
 
by
 
reference.
 
ITEM 4. CONTROLS
 
AND PROCEDURES
The Company, with the
 
participation of its
 
management,
 
including its
 
Chief Executive
 
Officer and Chief Financial
 
Officer,
carried out an
 
evaluation
 
of the effectiveness of the design
 
and
 
operation of its disclosure controls
 
and
 
procedures (as
defined in
 
Rules 13a-15(e) and
 
15d-15(e) under the
 
Securities Exchange
 
Act of 1934, as
 
amended)
 
as of the end of
 
the
period covered
 
by this report. Based
 
upon that
 
evaluation and
 
as of the end of
 
the period
 
covered by this
 
report, the
Company’s Chief
 
Executive Officer and
 
Chief Financial Officer concluded
 
that
 
the Company’s
 
disclosure controls and
procedures were effective
 
to allow timely
 
decisions regarding
 
disclosure in its
 
reports that the
 
Company
 
files or submits to
the Securities and
 
Exchange
 
Commission under
 
the Securities Exchange
 
Act of 1934, as
 
amended. There
 
have been no
changes in the
 
Company’s internal
 
control over financial
 
reporting that
 
occurred during the
 
period covered
 
by this report
that have materially
 
affected, or are reasonably
 
likely to materially
 
affect, the Company’s
 
internal control over
 
financial
reporting.
PART II. OTHER INFORMATION
ITEM 1. LEGAL
 
PROCEEDINGS
In the normal
 
course of its business, the
 
Company
 
and the Bank
 
are, from time to time,
 
involved
 
in legal proceedings. The
Company’s and Bank’s management
 
believe there are
 
no pending or
 
threatened legal,
 
governmental, or
 
regulatory
proceedings that,
 
upon resolution, are
 
expected to have
 
a material adverse
 
effect upon the
 
Company’s or the Bank’s
financial
 
condition or results of operations.
 
See also,
 
Part I,
 
Item 3 of the Company’s
 
Annual Report
 
on Form 10-K
 
for the
year ended December 31,
 
2021.
 
ITEM 1A.
 
RISK FACTORS
In addition to
 
the other information
 
set forth in
 
this report, you should
 
carefully consider the factors
 
discussed in
 
Part I,
Item 1A. “RISK
 
FACTORS” in the Company’s
 
Annual Report
 
on Form 10-K
 
for the year
 
ended December 31, 2021,
which could
 
materially affect our business,
 
financial
 
condition or future
 
results. The
 
risks described in
 
our annual report on
Form 10-K
 
are not the
 
only the risks
 
facing our Company.
 
Increases in inflation
 
and
 
the resulting tightening
 
of Federal
Reserve monetary
 
policy by increased target
 
interest rates,
 
has
 
and is expected to continue
 
to affect mortgage
 
originations
and income and
 
the market values
 
of our securities portfolio.
 
These
 
could also affect our
 
deposit, costs and
 
mixes, and
change consumer
 
savings
 
and payment behaviors.
 
Additional risks and
 
uncertainties not currently
 
known
 
to us or that we
currently deem
 
to be immaterial also
 
may materially
 
adversely
 
affect our business, financial
 
condition, and/or
 
operating
results in the
 
future.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
58
ITEM 2.
 
UNREGISTERED
 
SALES OF
 
EQUITY SECURITIES
 
AND USE OF
 
PROCEEDS
The Company’s repurchases
 
of its common stock
 
during
 
the third quarter
 
of 2022 were as
 
follows:
Period
Total Number of
Shares Purchased
Average Price
Paid per Share
Total Number of
Shares Purchased
 
as
Part of Publicly
Announced Plans
 
or
Programs
Approximate
 
Dollar
Value of Shares that
May Yet Be
Purchased Under
 
the
Plans or Programs
(1)
July 1 - July 31, 2022
658
27.53
658
4,769,664
August 1 - August 31, 2022
3,982
27.72
3,982
4,659,289
September 1 - September 30, 2022
4,659,289
Total
4,640
27.69
4,640
4,659,289
(1)
 
On April 12, 2022, the Company adopted a new $5 million stock repurchase program that became effective April 12, 2022.
ITEM 3.
 
DEFAULTS UPON SENIOR SECURITIES
Not applicable.
ITEM 4.
 
MINE SAFETY
 
DISCLOSURES
Not applicable.
ITEM 5.
 
OTHER INFORMATION
Not applicable.
 
 
 
59
ITEM 6.
 
EXHIBITS
Exhibit
 
Number
 
Description
 
3.1
 
3.2
 
31.1
 
31.2
 
32.1
32.2
 
101.INS
 
XBRL Instance
 
Document
101.SCH
 
XBRL Taxonomy Extension
 
Schema Document
101.CAL
 
XBRL Taxonomy Extension
 
Calculation Linkbase
 
Document
101.LAB
 
XBRL Taxonomy Extension
 
Label Linkbase
 
Document
101.PRE
 
XBRL Taxonomy Extension
 
Presentation Linkbase
 
Document
101.DEF
 
XBRL Taxonomy Extension
 
Definition Linkbase
 
Document
104
 
Cover Page
 
Interactive Data
 
File (formatted as
 
inline XBRL and
 
contained in
 
Exhibit 101)
*
 
 
Incorporated by
 
reference from Registrant’s Form
 
10-Q dated
 
June 30,
 
2002.
 
**
 
Incorporated by
 
reference from Registrant’s Form
 
10-K dated
 
March 31,
 
2008.
 
***
The certifications attached
 
as exhibits
 
32.1 and
 
32.2 to this quarterly
 
report on Form
 
10-Q are
 
“furnished” to
 
the
Securities and
 
Exchange Commission pursuant
 
to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley
 
Act of 2002 and
 
shall not be
deemed “filed”
 
by the Company for
 
purposes of Section
 
18 of the
 
Securities Exchange
 
Act of 1934, as
 
amended.
 
 
 
 
 
60
SIGNATURES
Pursuant
 
to the requirements of the
 
Securities Exchange
 
Act of 1934, the
 
registrant has
 
duly caused
 
this
 
report
 
to
be signed on
 
its behalf by the
 
undersigned thereunto
 
duly authorized.
AUBURN NATIONAL BANCORPORATION,
 
INC.
 
(Registrant)
Date:
 
November 9,
 
2022
 
By:
 
/s/ Robert W. Dumas
 
Robert W. Dumas
Chairman, President and
 
CEO
Date:
 
November 9,
 
2022
 
By:
 
/s/ David A.
 
Hedges
 
David A. Hedges
Executive Vice President and
 
Chief Financial
 
Officer