GLEN BURNIE BANCORP - Annual Report: 2006 (Form 10-K)
SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington,
D.C. 20549
FORM
10-K
x
Annual report pursuant
to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 for the fiscal
year ended December 31, 2006 or
o
Transition report pursuant to Section 13
or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 for the transition period
from
to
.
Commission
file number: 0-24047
GLEN
BURNIE BANCORP
(Exact
name of registrant as specified in its charter)
MARYLAND
|
52-1782444
|
(State
or other jurisdiction
|
(I.R.S.
Employer
|
of
incorporation or organization)
|
Identification
No.)
|
101
Crain Highway, S.E., Glen Burnie, Maryland
|
21061
|
(Address
of principal executive offices)
|
(Zip
Code)
|
Registrant’s
telephone number, including area code
(410)
766-3300
Securities
registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title
of Class
|
Name
of Each Exchange on Which Registered
|
|
None
|
None
|
Securities
registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:
Title
of Class
Common
Stock, $1.00 par value
Common
Stock Purchase Rights
Indicate
by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined
in
Rule 405 of the Securities Act.
Yes
o No
x
Indicate
by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to
Section 13 or 15(d) of the Act.
Yes
o No
x
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 x
No
o
Indicate
by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of
Regulation S-K is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best
of registrant’s knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statement
incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to
this
Form 10-K. x
Indicate
by check mark if the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated
filer, or a non-accelerated filer. See definition of “accelerated filer and
large accelerated filer” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
Large
Accelerated o Filer
Accelerated
Filer o Non-Accelerated
Filer x
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule
12b-2 of the Exchange Act).
Yes o
No
x
The
aggregate market value of the voting stock held by non-affiliates of the
registrant as of February 6, 2007 was $35,666,554.
The
number of shares of common stock outstanding as of February 6, 2007 was
2,484,673.
DOCUMENTS
INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
To
the
extent specified, Part III of this Form 10-K incorporates information by
reference to the Registrant’s definitive proxy statement for its 2007 Annual
Meeting of Shareholders (to be filed).
GLEN
BURNIE BANCORP
2006
ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K
Table
of Contents
PART
I
|
||
Item
1.
|
Business
|
3
|
Item
1A.
|
Risk
Factors
|
16
|
Item
1B.
|
Unresolved
Staff Comments
|
19
|
Item
2.
|
Properties
|
20
|
Item
3.
|
Legal
Proceedings
|
20
|
Item
4.
|
Submission
of Matters to Vote of Security Holders
|
20
|
Executive
Officers of the Registrant
|
21
|
|
PART
II
|
||
Item
5.
|
Market
for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer
Purchases of Equity Securities
|
22
|
Item
6.
|
Selected
Financial Data
|
23
|
Item
7.
|
Management’s
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operations
|
24
|
Item
7A.
|
Quantitative
And Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
|
32
|
Item
8.
|
Financial
Statements and Supplementary Data
|
32
|
Item
9.
|
Changes
in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial
Disclosure
|
32
|
Item
9A.
|
Controls
and Procedures
|
32
|
Item
9B.
|
Other
Information
|
32
|
PART
III
|
||
Item
10.
|
Directors
and Executive Officers of the Registrant
|
33
|
Item
11.
|
Executive
Compensation
|
33
|
Item
12.
|
Security
Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and related
Stockholder Matters
|
33
|
Item
13.
|
Certain
Relationships and Related Transactions
|
33
|
Item
14.
|
Principal
Accountant Fees and Services
|
33
|
PART
IV
|
||
Item
15.
|
Exhibits
and Financial Statement Schedules
|
34
|
Signatures
|
35
|
PART
I
General
Glen
Burnie Bancorp (the “Company”) is a bank holding company organized in 1990 under
the laws of the State of Maryland. It presently owns all the outstanding shares
of capital stock of The Bank of Glen Burnie (the “Bank”), a commercial bank
organized in 1949 under the laws of the State of Maryland, serving northern
Anne
Arundel County and surrounding areas from its main office and branch in Glen
Burnie, Maryland and branch offices in Glen Burnie (South Crain location)
Odenton, Riviera Beach, Crownsville, Severn, Linthicum and Severna Park,
Maryland. The Bank also maintains two remote Automated Teller Machine (“ATM”)
locations in Ferndale and Pasadena, Maryland. The Bank maintains a website
at
www.thebankofglenburnie.com. The Bank is the oldest independent commercial
bank
in Anne Arundel County. The Bank is engaged in the commercial and retail banking
business as authorized by the banking statutes of the State of Maryland,
including the acceptance of demand and time deposits, and the origination of
loans to individuals, associations, partnerships and corporations. The Bank’s
real estate financing consists of residential first and second mortgage loans,
home equity lines of credit and commercial mortgage loans. Commercial lending
consists of both secured and unsecured loans. The Bank also originates
automobile loans through arrangements with local automobile dealers. The Bank’s
deposits are insured up to applicable limits by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (“FDIC”).
The
Company’s principal executive office is located at 101 Crain Highway, S.E., Glen
Burnie, Maryland 21061. Its telephone number at such office is (410)
766-3300.
Information
on the Company and its subsidiary Bank may be obtained from the Company’s
website www.thebankofglenburnie.com.
Copies
of the Company’s annual report on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q,
current reports on Form 8-K, and all amendments thereto are available free
of
charge on the website as soon as they are filed with the SEC through a link
to
the SEC’s EDGAR reporting system. Simply select the “Investor Relations” menu
item, then click on the “All SEC Filings” or “Insider Transactions”
link.
Market
Area
The
Bank
considers its principal market area for lending and deposit products to consist
of Northern Anne Arundel County, Maryland, which consists of those portions
of
the county north of U.S. Route 50. Northern Anne Arundel County includes mature
suburbs of the City of Baltimore, which in recent years have experienced modest
population growth and are characterized by an aging population. Management
believes that the majority of the working population in its market area either
commutes to Baltimore or is employed at businesses located at or around the
nearby Baltimore Washington International Airport. Anne Arundel County is
generally considered to have more affordable housing than other suburban
Baltimore areas and attracts younger persons and minorities on this basis.
This
inflow, however, has not been sufficient to affect current population
trends.
Lending
Activities
The
Bank
offers a full range of consumer and commercial loans. The Bank’s lending
activities include residential and commercial real estate loans, construction
loans, land acquisition and development loans, commercial loans and consumer
installment lending including indirect automobile lending. Substantially all
of
the Bank’s loan customers are residents of Anne Arundel County and surrounding
areas of Central Maryland. The Bank solicits loan applications for commercial
loans from small to medium sized businesses located in its market area. The
Company believes that this is a market in which a relatively small community
bank, like the Bank, has a competitive advantage in personal service and
flexibility. The Bank’s consumer lending currently consists primarily of
indirect automobile loans originated through arrangements with local dealers.
The
Company’s total loan portfolio increased during the 2006, 2005, 2004, and 2003
fiscal years, while declining in 2002. In 2006, the increases were primarily
due
to an increase in commercial mortgages (due to an increase in participations),
offset by decreases in residential mortgages and indirect automobile loans.
In
2005, the increases were primarily due to an increase in commercial and
industrial mortgages and indirect automobile loans. In 2003 and 2004, the
increases in loans were primarily due to increases in residential mortgages.
The
commercial mortgage portfolio declined in 2003 as a result of softening loan
demand and increased competition from large financial institutions. From 2002
to
2004, the residential mortgage portfolio achieved steady increases due to a
strong housing market environment.
3
The
following table provides information on the composition of the loan portfolio
at
the indicated dates.
At
December 31,
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
2003
|
2002
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(Dollars
in Thousands)
|
$
|
%
|
$
|
%
|
$
|
%
|
$
|
%
|
$
|
%
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Mortgage:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Residential
|
$
|
68,341
|
34.88
|
%
|
$
|
71,841
|
37.17
|
%
|
$
|
71,039
|
38.27
|
%
|
$
|
64,471
|
36.62
|
%
|
$
|
49,572
|
30.67
|
%
|
|||||||||||
Commercial
|
53,164
|
27.13
|
37,666
|
19.50
|
31,983
|
17.23
|
28,525
|
16.20
|
31,584
|
19.54
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Construction
and land development
|
1,609
|
0.83
|
1,402
|
0.73
|
2,080
|
1.12
|
3,112
|
1.77
|
2,338
|
1.45
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Consumer:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Installment
|
15,044
|
7.67
|
15,748
|
8.15
|
19,019
|
10.25
|
19,767
|
11.23
|
19,758
|
12.22
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Credit
card
|
144
|
0.08
|
128
|
0.07
|
180
|
0.10
|
175
|
0.10
|
228
|
0.14
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Indirect
automobile
|
52,539
|
26.81
|
60,510
|
31.31
|
55,703
|
30.00
|
53,883
|
30.61
|
52,795
|
32.66
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Commercial
|
5,077
|
2.60
|
5,932
|
3.07
|
5,618
|
3.03
|
6,113
|
3.47
|
5,374
|
3.32
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Gross
loans
|
195,918
|
100.00
|
%
|
193,227
|
100.00
|
%
|
185,622
|
100.00
|
%
|
176,046
|
100.00
|
%
|
161,649
|
100.00
|
%
|
||||||||||||||||
Unearned
income on loans
|
(743
|
)
|
(821
|
)
|
(919
|
)
|
(981
|
)
|
(847
|
)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Gross
loans net of unearned income
|
195,175
|
192,406
|
184,703
|
175,065
|
160,802
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Allowance
for credit losses
|
(1,839
|
)
|
(2,201
|
)
|
(2,412
|
)
|
(2,246
|
)
|
(2,515
|
)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Loans,
net
|
$
|
193,336
|
$
|
190,205
|
$
|
182,291
|
$
|
172,819
|
$
|
158,287
|
The
following table sets forth the maturities for various categories of the loan
portfolio at December 31, 2006. Demand loans and loans which have no stated
maturity, are treated as due in one year or less. At December 31, 2006, the
Bank
had $27,492,893 in loans due after one year with variable rates and $151,031,411
in such loans with fixed rates.
Due
Within
One
Year
|
Due
Over One To Five Years
|
Due
Over
Five
Years
|
Total
|
||||||||||
(In
Thousands)
|
|||||||||||||
Real
Estate - mortgage:
|
|||||||||||||
Residential
|
$
|
4,887
|
$
|
2,425
|
$
|
61,029
|
$
|
68,341
|
|||||
Commercial
|
8,646
|
24,476
|
20,042
|
53,164
|
|||||||||
Construction
and land development
|
346
|
527
|
736
|
1,609
|
|||||||||
Installment
|
1,085
|
10,443
|
3,516
|
15,044
|
|||||||||
Credit
Card
|
144
|
-
|
-
|
144
|
|||||||||
Indirect
automobile
|
999
|
45,611
|
5,929
|
52,539
|
|||||||||
Commercial
|
5,077
|
-
|
-
|
5,077
|
|||||||||
$
|
21,184
|
$
|
83,482
|
$
|
91,252
|
$
|
195,918
|
Real
Estate Lending.
The Bank
offers long-term mortgage financing for residential and commercial real estate
as well as shorter term construction and land development loans. Residential
mortgage and residential construction loans are originated with fixed rates,
while commercial mortgages may be originated on either a fixed or variable
rate
basis. Commercial construction loans are generally originated on a variable
rate
basis. Substantially all of the Bank’s real estate loans are secured by
properties in Anne Arundel County, Maryland.
Under
the
Bank’s loan policies, the maximum permissible loan-to-value ratio for
owner-occupied residential mortgages is 80% of the lesser of the purchase price
or appraised value. The Bank, however, will make loans secured by owner-occupied
residential real estate with loan-to-value ratios up to 95% (some restrictions
may apply), provided the borrower obtains private mortgage insurance for the
portion of the loan in excess of 80%. For residential investment properties,
the
maximum loan-to-value ratio is 80%. The maximum permissible loan-to-value ratio
for residential and residential construction loans is 80%. The maximum
loan-to-value ratio for permanent commercial mortgages is 75%. The maximum
loan-to-value ratio for land development loans is 70% and for unimproved land
is
65%. The Bank also offers home equity loans secured by the borrower’s primary
residence, provided that the aggregate indebtedness on the property does not
exceed 80% of its value.
Commercial
Lending.
The
Bank’s commercial loan portfolio consists of demand, installment and time loans
for commercial purposes. The Bank’s business demand, installment and time
lending includes various working capital loans, equipment, vehicles, lines
of
credit and letters of credit for commercial customers. Demand loans require
the
payment of interest until called, while installment loans require a monthly
payment of principal and interest, and time loans require at maturity a single
payment of principal and interest due monthly. Such loans may be made on a
secured or an unsecured basis. All such loans are underwritten on the basis
of
the borrower’s creditworthiness rather than the value of the
collateral.
4
Installment
Lending.
The Bank
makes consumer and commercial installment loans for the purchase of automobiles,
boats, other consumer durable goods, capital goods and equipment. Such loans
provide for repayment in regular installments and are secured by the goods
financed. Also included in installment loans are overdraft loans and other
credit repayable in installments. As of December 31, 2006, approximately 68.7%
of the installment loans in the Bank’s portfolio (other than indirect automobile
lending) had been originated for commercial purposes and 31.3% had been
originated for consumer purposes.
Indirect
Automobile Lending.
The Bank
commenced its indirect automobile lending program in January 1998. The Bank
finances new automobiles for terms of up to 72 months and used automobiles
for
terms of up to 60 months. For used vehicles, the age of the vehicle plus the
term of the loan cannot exceed eight years. The Bank does not lend more than
the
MSRP on new vehicles. On used vehicles, the Bank will not lend more than 110%
of
the average wholesale published in a nationally recognized used vehicle pricing
guide. The Bank requires all borrowers to obtain vendor’s single interest
coverage protecting the Bank against loss in the case a borrower’s automobile
insurance lapses. The Bank originates indirect loans through a network of
approximately 48 dealers which are primarily new car dealers located in Anne
Arundel County and the surrounding counties. Participating dealers take loan
applications from their customers and transmit them to the Bank for approval.
Other
Loans.
The Bank
offers overdraft protection lines of credit, tied to checking accounts, as
a
convenience to qualified customers.
Although
the risk of non-payment for any reason exists with respect to all loans, certain
other specific risks are associated with each type of loan. The primary risks
associated with commercial loans, including commercial real estate loans, are
the quality of the borrower’s management and a number of economic and other
factors which induce business failures and depreciate the value of business
assets pledged to secure the loan, including competition, insufficient capital,
product obsolescence, changes in the borrowers’ cost, environmental hazards,
weather, changes in laws and regulations and general changes in the marketplace.
Primary risks associated with residential real estate loans include fluctuating
land and property values and rising interest rates with respect to fixed-rate,
long-term loans. Residential construction lending exposes the Company to risks
related to builder performance. Consumer loans, including indirect automobile
loans, are affected primarily by domestic economic instability and a variety
of
factors that may lead to the borrower’s unemployment, including deteriorating
economic conditions in one or more segments of a local or broader economy.
Because the Bank deals with borrowers through an intermediary on indirect
automobile loans, this form of lending potentially carries greater risks of
defects in the application process for which claims may be made against the
Bank. Indirect automobile lending may also involve the Bank in consumer disputes
under state “lemon” or other laws. The Bank seeks to control these risks by
following strict underwriting and documentation guidelines. In addition,
dealerships are contractually obligated to indemnify the Bank for such losses
for a limited period of time.
The
Bank’s lending activities are conducted pursuant to written policies approved by
the Board of Directors intended to ensure proper management of credit risk.
Loans are subject to a well defined credit process that includes credit
evaluation of borrowers, establishment of lending limits and application of
lending procedures, including the holding of adequate collateral and the
maintenance of compensating balances, as well as procedures for on-going
identification and management of credit deterioration. Regular portfolio reviews
are performed by the Bank’s Senior Credit Officer to identify potential
underperforming loans and other credit facilities, estimate loss exposure and
to
ascertain compliance with the Bank’s policies. On a quarterly basis, the Bank’s
Internal Auditor performs an independent loan review in accordance with the
Bank’s loan review policy. For significant problem loans, management review
consists of evaluation of the financial strengths of the borrower and any
guarantor, the related collateral, and the effects of economic
conditions.
The
Bank’s loan approval policy provides for various levels of individual lending
authority. The maximum aggregate lending authority granted by the Bank to any
one Lending Officer is $750,000. A combination of approvals from certain
officers may be used to lend up to an aggregate of $1,000,000. The Bank’s
Executive Committee is authorized to approve loans up to $2.0 million. Larger
loans must be approved by the full Board of Directors.
Under
Maryland law, the maximum amount which the Bank is permitted to lend to any
one
borrower and their related interests may generally not exceed 10% of the Bank’s
unimpaired capital and surplus, which is defined to include the Bank’s capital,
surplus, retained earnings and 50% of its allowance for possible loan losses.
Under this authority, the Bank would have been permitted to lend up to $3.42
million to any one borrower at December 31, 2006. By interpretive ruling of
the
Commissioner of Financial Regulation, Maryland banks have the option of lending
up to the amount that would be permissible for a national bank which is
generally 15% of unimpaired capital and surplus (defined to include a bank’s
total capital for regulatory capital purposes plus any loan loss allowances
not
included in regulatory capital). Under this formula, the Bank would have been
permitted to lend up to $5.28 million to any one borrower at December 31, 2006.
It is currently the Bank’s policy to limit its exposure to any one borrower to
no more than $3.16 million in the aggregate unless any borrowings exceeding
this
amount are approved by a 75% vote of the Board of Directors. At December 31,
2006, the largest amount outstanding to any one borrower and its related
interests was $4,140,000.
5
Non-Performing
Loans
It
is the
policy of the Bank to reverse accrued, and discontinue the accrual of, interest
when a loan becomes 90 days or more delinquent and circumstances indicate that
collection is doubtful.
The
Bank
seeks to control delinquencies through diligent collection procedures. For
consumer loans, the Bank sends out payment reminders on the seventh and twelfth
days after a payment is due. If a consumer loan becomes 15 days past due, the
account is transferred to the Bank’s collections department, which will contact
the borrower by telephone and/or letter before the account becomes 30 days
past
due. If a consumer loan becomes more than 30 days past due, the Bank will
continue its collection efforts and will move to repossession or foreclosure
by
the 45th day if the Bank has reason to believe that the collateral may be in
jeopardy or the borrower has failed to respond to prior communications. The
Bank
will move to repossess or foreclose in all instances in which a consumer loan
becomes more than 60 days delinquent. After repossession of a motor vehicle,
the
borrower has a 15-day statutory right to redeem the vehicle and is entitled
to
10 days’ notice before the sale of a repossessed vehicle. The Bank sells the
vehicle as promptly as feasible after the expiration of these periods. If the
amount realized from the sale of the vehicle is less than the loan amount,
the
Bank will seek a deficiency judgment against the borrower. The Bank follows
similar collection procedures with respect to commercial loans.
The
following table sets forth the amount of the Bank’s restructured loans,
non-accrual loans and accruing loans 90 days or more past due at the dates
indicated:
At
December 31,
|
||||||||||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
2003
|
2002
|
||||||||||||
(Dollars
In Thousands)
|
||||||||||||||||
Restructured
Loans
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
95
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
41
|
||||||
Non-accrual
loans:
|
||||||||||||||||
Real
estate - mortgage:
|
||||||||||||||||
Residential
|
$
|
3
|
$
|
14
|
$
|
122
|
$
|
34
|
$
|
264
|
||||||
Commercial
|
-
|
-
|
255
|
265
|
178
|
|||||||||||
Real
estate - construction
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
7
|
|||||||||||
Installment
|
46
|
159
|
205
|
250
|
112
|
|||||||||||
Commercial
|
8
|
12
|
16
|
23
|
10
|
|||||||||||
Total non-accrual loans
|
57
|
185
|
598
|
572
|
571
|
|||||||||||
Accruing
loans past due 90 days or more
|
||||||||||||||||
Real
estate - mortgage:
|
||||||||||||||||
Residential
|
2
|
1
|
1
|
5
|
1
|
|||||||||||
Commercial
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|||||||||||
Real
estate - construction
|
-
|
3
|
6
|
6
|
-
|
|||||||||||
Installment
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
13
|
|||||||||||
Credit
card & related
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|||||||||||
Total accruing loans past due 90 days or more
|
2
|
4
|
7
|
11
|
15
|
|||||||||||
Total non-accrual and past due loans
|
$
|
59
|
$
|
189
|
$
|
605
|
$
|
583
|
$
|
586
|
||||||
Non-accrual and past due loans to gross loans
|
0.03
|
%
|
0.10
|
%
|
0.33
|
%
|
0.33
|
%
|
0.36
|
%
|
||||||
Allowance for credit losses to non-accrual and past due
loans
|
3,116.95
|
%
|
1,164.55
|
%
|
398.68
|
%
|
385.25
|
%
|
429.13
|
%
|
For
the
year ended December 31, 2006, interest of $10,658 would
have been accrued on non-accrual loans if such loans had been current in
accordance with their original terms. During that period, interest on
non-accrual loans was not included in income. $50,872, or 88.6%, of the Bank’s
total $57,429 non-accrual loans at December 31, 2006 were attributable to 4
borrowers. No charge-offs have previously been taken on these loans. One of
these borrowers with a loan totaling $2,551 was in bankruptcy at that date.
Because of the legal protections afforded to borrowers in bankruptcy,
collections on such loans are difficult and the Bank anticipates that such
loans
may remain delinquent for an extended period of time. Each of these loans is
secured by collateral with a value well in excess of the current active balance
of the Bank’s loan.
6
At
December 31, 2006, there were no loans outstanding not reflected in the above
table as to which known information about the borrower’s possible credit
problems caused management to have serious doubts as to the ability of the
borrowers to comply with present loan repayment terms. These loans consist
of
loans which were not 90 days or more past due but where the borrower is in
bankruptcy or has a history of delinquency or the loan to value ratio is
considered excessive due to deterioration of the collateral or other
factors.
At
December 31, 2006, the Company had $50,000 in real estate acquired in partial
or
total satisfaction of debt, compared to $50,000 and $171,882 in such properties
at December 31, 2005 and 2004, respectively. All such properties are recorded
at
the lower of cost or fair value at the date acquired and carried on the balance
sheet as other real estate owned. Losses arising at the date of acquisition
are
charged against the allowance for credit losses. Subsequent write-downs that
may
be required and expense of operation are included in non-interest expense.
Gains
and losses realized from the sale of other real estate owned are included in
non-interest income or expense. For a description of the properties comprising
other real estate owned at December 31, 2006, see “Item 2. --
Properties.”
Allowance
For Credit Losses
The
Bank’s allowance for credit losses is based on the probable estimated losses
that may be sustained in its loan portfolio. The allowance is based on two
basic principles of accounting. (1) Statement of Financial Accountings
Standards (SFAS) No. 5 “Accounting for Contingencies”, which requires that
losses be accrued when they are probable of occurring and estimable, and (2)
SFAS No. 114, “Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan”, which requires
that losses be accrued based on the differences between the value of collateral,
present value of future cash flows or values that are observable in the
secondary market and the loan balance.
The
allowance for credit losses is established through a provision for credit losses
charged to expense. Loans are charged against the allowance for credit losses
when management believes that the collectibility of the principal is unlikely.
The allowance, based on evaluations of the collectibility of loans and prior
loan loss experience, is an amount that management believes will be adequate
to
absorb possible losses on existing loans that may become uncollectible. The
evaluations take into consideration such factors as changes in the nature and
volume of the loan portfolio, overall portfolio quality, review of specific
problem loans, value of collateral, and current economic conditions and trends
that may affect the borrower’s ability to pay.
7
Year
Ended December 31,
|
||||||||||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
2003
|
2002
|
||||||||||||
(Dollars
In Thousands)
|
||||||||||||||||
Beginning
Balance
|
$
|
2,201
|
$
|
2,412
|
$
|
2,246
|
$
|
2,515
|
$
|
2,939
|
||||||
Loans
charged off
|
||||||||||||||||
Real
estate - mortgage:
|
||||||||||||||||
Residential
|
1
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
|||||||||||
Commercial
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|||||||||||
Real
estate - construction
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|||||||||||
Installment
|
528
|
495
|
502
|
687
|
594
|
|||||||||||
Credit
card & related
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
42
|
95
|
|||||||||||
Commercial
|
253
|
127
|
49
|
29
|
80
|
|||||||||||
Total
|
782
|
622
|
551
|
758
|
730
|
|||||||||||
Recoveries
|
||||||||||||||||
Real
estate - mortgage:
|
||||||||||||||||
Residential
|
1
|
-
|
35
|
1
|
1
|
|||||||||||
Commercial
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
|||||||||||
Real
estate - construction
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|||||||||||
Installment
|
335
|
276
|
293
|
369
|
215
|
|||||||||||
Credit
card & related
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
30
|
30
|
|||||||||||
Commercial
|
22
|
185
|
49
|
49
|
59
|
|||||||||||
Total
|
358
|
461
|
377
|
449
|
306
|
|||||||||||
Net
charge offs/(recoveries)
|
424
|
161
|
174
|
308
|
424
|
|||||||||||
Provisions
(credited) charged to operations
|
62
|
(50
|
)
|
340
|
40
|
-
|
||||||||||
Ending
balance
|
$
|
1,839
|
$
|
2,201
|
$
|
2,412
|
$
|
2,246
|
$
|
2,515
|
||||||
Average
loans
|
$
|
186,706
|
$
|
191,706
|
$
|
181,881
|
$
|
166,786
|
$
|
164,818
|
||||||
Net
charge-offs to average loans
|
0.23
|
%
|
0.09
|
%
|
0.10
|
%
|
0.18
|
%
|
0.18
|
%
|
8
The
following table shows the allowance for credit losses broken down by loan
category as of December 31, 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003, and 2002:
At
December 31,
|
|||||||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||||
Portfolio
|
Allowance
For Each
Category
|
Percentage
Of Loans In Each Category To Total
Loans
|
Allowance
For Each
Category
|
Percentage
Of Loans In Each Category To Total
Loans
|
|||||||||
(Dollars
In Thousands)
|
|||||||||||||
Real
Estate - mortgage:
|
|||||||||||||
Residential
|
$
|
149
|
34.88
|
%
|
$
|
153
|
37.17
|
%
|
|||||
Commercial
|
314
|
27.13
|
277
|
19.50
|
|||||||||
Real
Estate -- construction
|
14
|
0.83
|
8
|
0.73
|
|||||||||
Installment
|
103
|
7.67
|
103
|
8.15
|
|||||||||
Credit
Card
|
-
|
0.08
|
-
|
0.07
|
|||||||||
Indirect
automobile
|
1,119
|
26.81
|
1,260
|
31.31
|
|||||||||
Commercial
|
260
|
2.60
|
264
|
3.07
|
|||||||||
Unallocated
|
120
|
-
|
136
|
-
|
|||||||||
Total
|
$
|
1,839
|
100.00
|
%
|
$
|
2,201
|
100.00
|
%
|
At
December 31,
|
|||||||||||||||||||
2004
|
2003
|
2002
|
|||||||||||||||||
Portfolio
|
Allowance
For Each Category
|
Percentage
Of Loans In Each Category To Total Loans
|
Allowance
For Each Category
|
Percentage
Of Loans In Each Category To Total Loans
|
Allowance
For Each Category
|
Percentage
Of Loans In Each Category To Total Loans
|
|||||||||||||
(Dollars
In Thousands)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Real
Estate - mortgage:
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Residential
|
$
|
153
|
38.27
|
%
|
$
|
143
|
36.62
|
%
|
$
|
131
|
30.67
|
%
|
|||||||
Commercial
|
328
|
17.23
|
314
|
16.20
|
349
|
19.54
|
|||||||||||||
Real
Estate - construction
|
13
|
1.12
|
29
|
1.77
|
48
|
1.45
|
|||||||||||||
Installment
|
136
|
10.25
|
137
|
11.23
|
152
|
12.22
|
|||||||||||||
Credit
Card
|
-
|
0.10
|
-
|
0.10
|
-
|
0.14
|
|||||||||||||
Indirect
automobile
|
1,254
|
30.00
|
1,357
|
30.61
|
1,461
|
32.66
|
|||||||||||||
Commercial
|
343
|
3.03
|
271
|
3.47
|
168
|
3.32
|
|||||||||||||
Unallocated
|
185
|
-
|
(5
|
)
|
-
|
206
|
-
|
||||||||||||
Total
|
$
|
2,412
|
100.00
|
%
|
$
|
2,246
|
100.00
|
%
|
$
|
2,515
|
100.00
|
%
|
|||||||
Investment
Securities
The
Bank
maintains a substantial portfolio of investment securities to provide liquidity
as well as a source of earnings. The Bank’s investment securities portfolio
consists primarily of U.S. Treasury securities, securities issued by U.S.
Government agencies including mortgage-backed securities, securities issued
by
certain states and their political subdivisions, and corporate trust preferred
securities. The tax treatment of the Bank’s portfolio of securities issued by
certain states and their political subdivisions allows the Company to use the
full tax advantage of this portfolio.
The
following table presents at amortized cost the composition of the investment
portfolio by major category at the dates indicated.
At
December 31,
|
||||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
||||||||
(In
Thousands)
|
||||||||||
U.S.
Treasury securities
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
||||
U.S.
Government agencies and mortgage backed securities
|
57,119
|
52,402
|
52,020
|
|||||||
Obligations
of states and political subdivisions
|
36,811
|
30,277
|
36,640
|
|||||||
Corporate
trust preferred
|
3,080
|
4,976
|
5,008
|
|||||||
Total
investment securities
|
$
|
97,010
|
$
|
87,655
|
$
|
93,668
|
9
The
following table sets forth the scheduled maturities, book values and weighted
average yields for the Company’s investment securities portfolio at December 31,
2006:
One
Year Or Less
|
One
To Five Years
|
Five
to Ten Years
|
More
Than Ten Years
|
Total
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Book
Value
|
Weighted
Average Yield
|
Book
Value
|
Weighted
Average Yield
|
Book
Value
|
Weighted
Average Yield
|
Book
Value
|
Weighted
Average Yield
|
Book
Value
|
Weighted
Average Yield
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
U.S.
Treasury securities
|
$
|
-
|
-
|
%
|
$
|
-
|
-
|
%
|
$
|
-
|
-
|
%
|
$
|
-
|
-
|
%
|
$
|
-
|
-
|
%
|
|||||||||||
U.S.
Government agencies and mortgage backed securities
|
-
|
-
|
4,993
|
4.27
|
7,661
|
5.11
|
44,465
|
5.07
|
57,119
|
5.01
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Obligations
of states and political subdivisions
|
301
|
3.00
|
5,363
|
3.36
|
7,941
|
3.60
|
23,206
|
4.58
|
36,811
|
4.18
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Corporate
trust preferred
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,080
|
8.33
|
3,080
|
8.33
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Total
investment securities
|
$
|
301
|
3.00
|
%
|
$
|
10,356
|
3.79
|
%
|
$
|
15,602
|
4.34
|
%
|
$
|
70,751
|
4.73
|
%
|
$
|
97,010
|
4.81
|
%
|
At
December 31, 2006, the Bank had no investments in securities of a single issuer
(other than the U.S. Government securities and securities of federal agencies
and government-sponsored enterprises), which aggregated more than 10% of
stockholders’ equity.
Deposits
And Other Sources of Funds
The
funds
needed by the Bank to make loans are primarily generated by deposit accounts
solicited from the communities surrounding its branches in northern Anne Arundel
County. Consolidated total deposits were $274,833,457 as of December 31, 2006.
The Bank uses borrowings from the Federal Home Loan Bank (“FHLB”) of Atlanta to
supplement funding from deposits. The Bank was permitted to borrow up to $38.0
million under a line of credit from the FHLB of Atlanta as of December 31,
2006.
Deposits.
The
Bank’s deposit products include regular savings accounts (statements), money
market deposit accounts, demand deposit accounts, NOW checking accounts, IRA
and
SEP accounts, Christmas Club accounts and certificates of deposit. Variations
in
service charges, terms and interest rates are used to target specific markets.
Ancillary products and services for deposit customers include safe deposit
boxes, money orders and travelers checks, night depositories, automated
clearinghouse transactions, wire transfers, ATMs, telephone banking, and a
customer call center. The Bank is a member of the Cirrus(R) and Star(R) ATM
networks.
As
stated
above, the Bank obtains deposits principally through its network of branch
offices. The Bank does not solicit brokered deposits. At December 31, 2006,
the
Bank had approximately $30.2 million in certificates of deposit and other time
deposits of $100,000 or more, including IRA accounts. The following table
provides information as to the maturity of all time deposits of $100,000 or
more
at December 31, 2006:
Amount
(In
Thousands)
|
||||
Three
months or less
|
$
|
4,942
|
||
Over
three through six months
|
9,451
|
|||
Over
six through 12 months
|
6,795
|
|||
Over
12 months
|
8,991
|
|||
Total
|
$
|
30,179
|
||
Borrowings.
In
addition to deposits, the Bank from time to time obtains advances from the
FHLB
of Atlanta of which it is a member. FHLB of Atlanta advances may be used to
provide funds for residential housing finance, for small business lending,
and
to meet specific and anticipated needs. The Bank may draw on a $38.0 million
line of credit from the FHLB of Atlanta, which is secured by a floating lien
on
the Bank’s residential first mortgage loans and various federal and agency
securities. There was $7 million in a long-term convertible advance under this
credit arrangement at December 31, 2006. The advance matures in September
2010 and bears a 5.84% rate of interest. On September 7, 2000, the Company
issued $5,155,000 of its 10.6% Junior Subordinated Deferrable Interest
Debentures to Glen Burnie Statutory Trust I, a Connecticut statutory trust
wholly owned by the Company. The Trust, in turn, issued $5 million of its 10.6%
capital securities to institutional investors. The debentures are scheduled
to
mature on September 7, 2030, unless called by the Company not earlier than
September 7, 2010. It is the Company’s intention to call these debentures at the
earliest opportunity. The Bank also has an unsecured line of credit in the
amount of $5 million from another commercial bank but currently has no balance
outstanding. The Bank has a mortgage note on the 103 Crain Highway address
with
a balance of $140,170 as of December 31, 2006. This note is payable monthly
through October 2010 and has a 7% interest rate.
10
Competition
The
Bank
faces competition for deposits and loans from other community banks, branches
or
affiliates of larger banks, savings and loan associations, savings banks and
credit unions, which compete vigorously (currently, sixteen FDIC-insured
depository institutions operate within two miles of the Bank’s headquarters).
With respect to indirect lending, the Bank faces competition from other banks
and the financing arms of automobile manufacturers. The Bank competes in this
area by offering competitive rates and responsive service to
dealers.
The
Bank’s interest rates, loan and deposit terms, and offered products and services
are impacted, to a large extent, by such competition. The Bank attempts to
provide superior service within its community and to know, and facilitate
services, to, its customers. It seeks commercial relationships with small to
medium size businesses, which the Bank believes would welcome personal service
and flexibility. The bank believes its greatest competition comes from larger
intra- and inter-state financial institutions.
Other
Activities
The
Company also owns all outstanding shares of capital stock of GBB Properties,
Inc. (“GBB”), another Maryland corporation which was organized in 1994 and which
is engaged in the business of acquiring, holding and disposing of real property,
typically acquired in connection with foreclosure proceedings (or deeds in
lieu
of foreclosure) instituted by the Bank or acquired in connection with branch
expansions by the Bank.
Employees
At
December 31, 2006, the Bank had 119 full-time equivalent employees. Neither
the
Company nor GBB currently has any employees.
Regulation
of the Company
General.
The
Company is a bank holding company within the meaning of the Bank Holding Company
Act of 1956 (the “BHCA”). As such, the Company is registered with the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System (the “Federal Reserve Board”) and
subject to Federal Reserve Board regulation, examination, supervision and
reporting requirements. As a bank holding company, the Company is required
to
furnish to the Federal Reserve Board annual and quarterly reports of its
operations at the end of each period and to furnish such additional information
as the Federal Reserve Board may require pursuant to the BHCA. The Company
is
also subject to regular inspection by Federal Reserve Board
examiners.
Under
the
BHCA, a bank holding company must obtain the prior approval of the Federal
Reserve Board before: (1) acquiring direct or indirect ownership or control
of
any voting shares of any bank or bank holding company if, after such
acquisition, the bank holding company would directly or indirectly own or
control more than 5% of such shares; (2) acquiring all or substantially all
of
the assets of another bank or bank holding company; or (3) merging or
consolidating with another bank holding company.
The
Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act of 1994 (the
“Riegle-Neal Act”) authorizes the Federal Reserve Board to approve an
application of an adequately capitalized and adequately managed bank holding
company to acquire control of, or acquire all or substantially all of the assets
of, a bank located in a state other than such holding company’s home state,
without regard to whether the transaction is prohibited by the laws of any
state. The Federal Reserve Board may not approve the acquisition of a bank
that
has not been in existence for the minimum time period (not exceeding five years)
specified by the statutory law of the host state. The Riegle-Neal Act also
prohibits the Federal Reserve Board from approving such an application if the
applicant (and its depository institution affiliates) controls or would control
more than 10% of the insured deposits in the United States or 30% or more of
the
deposits in the target bank’s home state or in any state in which the target
bank maintains a branch. The Riegle-Neal Act does not affect the authority
of
states to limit the percentage of total insured deposits in the state which
may
be held or controlled by a bank or bank holding company to the extent such
limitation does not discriminate against out-of-state banks or bank holding
companies. Individual states may also waive the 30% state-wide concentration
limit contained in the Riegle-Neal Act. Under Maryland law, a bank holding
company is prohibited from acquiring control of any bank if the bank holding
company would control more than 30% of the total deposits of all depository
institutions in the State of Maryland unless waived by the Maryland Commissioner
of Financial Regulation.
11
Additionally,
the federal banking agencies are authorized to approve interstate merger
transactions without regard to whether such transaction is prohibited by the
law
of any state, unless the home state of one of the banks opted out of the
Riegle-Neal Act by adopting a law after the date of enactment of the Riegle-Neal
Act and prior to June 1, 1997 which applies equally to all out-of-state banks
and expressly prohibits merger transactions involving out-of-state banks. The
State of Maryland did not pass such a law during this period. Interstate
acquisitions of branches will be permitted only if the law of the state in
which
the branch is located permits such acquisitions. Interstate mergers and branch
acquisitions will also be subject to the nationwide and statewide insured
deposit concentration amounts described above.
The
BHCA
also prohibits, with certain exceptions, a bank holding company from acquiring
direct or indirect ownership or control of more than 5% of the voting shares
of
a company that is not a bank or a bank holding company, or from engaging
directly or indirectly in activities other than those of banking, managing
or
controlling banks, or providing services for its subsidiaries. The principal
exceptions to these prohibitions involve certain non-bank activities which,
by
statute or by Federal Reserve Board regulation or order, have been identified
as
activities closely related to the business of banking or managing or controlling
banks. The activities of the Company are subject to these legal and regulatory
limitations under the BHCA and the Federal Reserve Board’s regulations
thereunder. Notwithstanding the Federal Reserve Board’s prior approval of
specific nonbanking activities, the Federal Reserve Board has the power to
order
a holding company or its subsidiaries to terminate any activity, or to terminate
its ownership or control of any subsidiary, when it has reasonable cause to
believe that the continuation of such activity or such ownership or control
constitutes a serious risk to the financial safety, soundness or stability
of
any bank subsidiary of that holding company.
Effective
with the enactment of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (“G-L-B”) on November 12, 1999,
bank holding companies whose financial institution subsidiaries are well
capitalized and well managed and have satisfactory Community Reinvestment Act
records can elect to become “financial holding companies” which will be
permitted to engage in a broader range of financial activities than are
currently permitted to bank holding companies. Financial holding companies
are
authorized to engage in, directly or indirectly, financial activities. A
financial activity is an activity that is: (i) financial in nature; (ii)
incidental to an activity that is financial in nature; or (iii) complementary
to
a financial activity and that does not pose a safety and soundness risk. The
G-L-B Act includes a list of activities that are deemed to be financial in
nature. Other activities also may be decided by the Federal Reserve Board to
be
financial in nature or incidental thereto if they meet specified criteria.
A
financial holding company that intends to engage in a new activity to acquire
a
company to engage in such an activity is required to give prior notice to the
Federal Reserve Board. If the activity is not either specified in the G-L-B
Act
as being a financial activity or one that the Federal Reserve Board has
determined by rule or regulation to be financial in nature, the prior approval
of the Federal Reserve Board is required.
The
Maryland Financial Institutions Code prohibits a bank holding company from
acquiring more than 5% of any class of voting stock of a bank or bank holding
company without the approval of the Commissioner of Financial Regulation except
as otherwise expressly permitted by federal law or in certain other limited
situations. The Maryland Financial Institutions Code additionally prohibits
any
person from acquiring voting stock in a bank or bank holding company without
60
days’ prior notice to the Commissioner if such acquisition will give the person
control of 25% or more of the voting stock of the bank or bank holding company
or will affect the power to direct or to cause the direction of the policy
or
management of the bank or bank holding company. Any doubt whether the stock
acquisition will affect the power to direct or cause the direction of policy
or
management shall be resolved in favor of reporting to the Commissioner. The
Commissioner may deny approval of the acquisition if the Commissioner determines
it to be anti-competitive or to threaten the safety or soundness of a banking
institution. Voting stock acquired in violation of this statute may not be
voted
for five years.
Capital
Adequacy.
The
Federal Reserve Board has adopted guidelines regarding the capital adequacy
of
bank holding companies, which require bank holding companies to maintain
specified minimum ratios of capital to total assets and capital to risk-weighted
assets. See “Regulation of the Bank -- Capital Adequacy.”
Dividends
and Distributions.
The
Federal Reserve Board has the power to prohibit dividends by bank holding
companies if their actions constitute unsafe or unsound practices. The Federal
Reserve Board has issued a policy statement on the payment of cash dividends
by
bank holding companies, which expresses the Federal Reserve Board’s view that a
bank holding company should pay cash dividends only to the extent that the
company’s net income for the past year is sufficient to cover both the cash
dividends and a rate of earning retention that is consistent with the company’s
capital needs, asset quality, and overall financial condition.
12
Bank
holding companies are required to give the Federal Reserve Board notice of
any
purchase or redemption of their outstanding equity securities if the gross
consideration for the purchase or redemption, when combined with the net
consideration paid for all such purchases or redemptions during the preceding
12
months, is equal to 10% or more of the bank holding company’s consolidated net
worth. The Federal Reserve Board may disapprove such a purchase or redemption
if
it determines that the proposal would violate any law, regulation, Federal
Reserve Board order, directive, or any condition imposed by, or written
agreement with, the Federal Reserve Board. Bank holding companies whose capital
ratios exceed the thresholds for “well capitalized” banks on a consolidated
basis are exempt from the foregoing requirement if they were rated composite
1
or 2 in their most recent inspection and are not the subject of any unresolved
supervisory issues.
Regulation
of the Bank
General.
As a
state-chartered bank with deposits insured by the FDIC but which is not a member
of the Federal Reserve System (a “state non-member bank”), the Bank is subject
to the supervision of the Maryland Commissioner of Financial Regulation and
the
FDIC. The Commissioner and FDIC regularly examine the operations of the Bank,
including but not limited to capital adequacy, reserves, loans, investments
and
management practices. These examinations are for the protection of the Bank’s
depositors and not its stockholders. In addition, the Bank is required to
furnish quarterly and annual call reports to the Commissioner and FDIC. The
FDIC’s enforcement authority includes the power to remove officers and directors
and the authority to issue cease-and-desist orders to prevent a bank from
engaging in unsafe or unsound practices or violating laws or regulations
governing its business.
The
Bank’s deposits are insured by the FDIC to the legal maximum of $100,000 for
each insured depositor. Some of the aspects of the lending and deposit business
of the Bank that are subject to regulation by the Federal Reserve Board and
the
FDIC include reserve requirements and disclosure requirements in connection
with
personal and mortgage loans and savings deposit accounts. In addition, the
Bank
is subject to numerous Federal and state laws and regulations which set forth
specific restrictions and procedural requirements with respect to the
establishment of branches, investments, interest rates on loans, credit
practices, the disclosure of customer information, the disclosure of credit
terms and discrimination in credit transactions.
Patriot
Act. On
October 26, 2001, President Bush signed the USA Patriot Act (the “Patriot Act”),
which includes provisions pertaining to domestic security, surveillance
procedures, border protection, and terrorism laws to be administered by the
Secretary of the Treasury. Title III of the Patriot Act entitled,
“International Money Laundering Abatement and Anti-Terrorist Financing Act of
2001” includes amendments to the Bank Secrecy Act which expand the
responsibilities of financial institutions in regard to anti-money laundering
activities with particular emphasis upon international money laundering and
terrorism financing activities through designated correspondent and private
banking accounts.
Effective
December 25, 2001, Section 313(a) of the Patriot Act prohibits any insured
financial institution such as the Bank, from providing correspondent accounts
to
foreign banks which do not have a physical presence in any country (designated
as “shell banks”), subject to certain exceptions for regulated affiliates of
foreign banks. Section 313(a) also requires financial institutions to take
reasonable steps to ensure that foreign bank correspondent accounts are not
being used to indirectly provide banking services to foreign shell banks, and
Section 319(b) requires financial institutions to maintain records of the owners
and agent for service of process of any such foreign banks with whom
correspondent accounts have been established.
Effective
July 23, 2002, Section 312 of the Patriot Act creates a requirement for special
due diligence for correspondent accounts and private banking accounts.
Under Section 312, each financial institution that establishes, maintains,
administers, or manages a private banking account or a correspondent account
in
the United States for a non-United States person, including a foreign individual
visiting the United States, or a representative of a non-United States person
shall establish appropriate, specific, and, where necessary, enhanced, due
diligence policies, procedures, and controls that are reasonably designed to
detect and record instances of money laundering through those
accounts.
The
Company and the Bank are not currently aware of any account relationships
between the Bank and any foreign bank or other person or entity as described
above under Sections 313(a) or 312 of the Patriot Act. The terrorist
attacks on September 11, 2001 have realigned national security priorities of
the
United States and it is reasonable to anticipate that the United States Congress
may enact additional legislation in the future to combat terrorism including
modifications to existing laws such as the Patriot Act to expand powers as
deemed necessary. The effects which the Patriot Act and any additional
legislation enacted by Congress may have upon financial institutions is
uncertain; however, such legislation would likely increase compliance costs
and
thereby potentially have an adverse effect upon the Company’s results of
operations.
13
Community
Reinvestment Act.
Community Reinvestment Act (“CRA”) regulations evaluate banks’ lending to low
and moderate income individuals and businesses across a four-point scale from
“outstanding” to “substantial noncompliance,” and are a factor in regulatory
review of applications to merge, establish new branch offices or form bank
holding companies. In addition, any bank rated in “substantial
noncompliance” with the CRA regulations may be subject to enforcement
proceedings. The Bank has a current rating of “outstanding” for CRA
compliance.
Capital
Adequacy.
The
Federal Reserve Board and the FDIC have established guidelines with respect
to
the maintenance of appropriate levels of capital by bank holding companies
and
state non-member banks, respectively. The regulations impose two sets of capital
adequacy requirements: minimum leverage rules, which require bank holding
companies and banks to maintain a specified minimum ratio of capital to total
assets, and risk-based capital rules, which require the maintenance of specified
minimum ratios of capital to “risk-weighted” assets.
The
regulations of the Federal Reserve Board and the FDIC require bank holding
companies and state non-member banks, respectively, to maintain a minimum
leverage ratio of “Tier 1 capital” (as defined in the risk-based capital
guidelines discussed in the following paragraphs) to total assets of 3.0%.
Although setting a minimum 3.0% leverage ratio, the capital regulations state
that only the strongest bank holding companies and banks, with composite
examination ratings of 1 under the rating system used by the Federal bank
regulators, would be permitted to operate at or near such minimum level of
capital. All other bank holding companies and banks are expected to maintain
a
leverage ratio of at least 1% to 2% above the minimum ratio, depending on the
assessment of an individual organization’s capital adequacy by its primary
regulator. Any bank or bank holding company experiencing or anticipating
significant growth would be expected to maintain capital well above the minimum
levels. In addition, the Federal Reserve Board has indicated that whenever
appropriate, and in particular when a bank holding company is undertaking
expansion, seeking to engage in new activities or otherwise facing unusual
or
abnormal risks, it will consider, on a case-by-case basis, the level of an
organization’s ratio of tangible Tier 1 capital (after deducting all
intangibles) to total assets in making an overall assessment of
capital.
The
risk-based capital rules of the Federal Reserve Board and the FDIC require
bank
holding companies and state non-member banks, respectively, to maintain minimum
regulatory capital levels based upon a weighting of their assets and off-balance
sheet obligations according to risk. Risk-based capital is composed of two
elements: Tier 1 capital and Tier 2 capital. Tier 1 capital consists primarily
of common stockholders’ equity, certain perpetual preferred stock (which must be
noncumulative in the case of banks), and minority interests in the equity
accounts of consolidated subsidiaries; less all intangible assets, except for
certain purchased mortgage servicing rights and credit card relationships.
Tier
2 capital elements include, subject to certain limitations, the allowance for
losses on loans and leases; perpetual preferred stock that does not qualify
as
Tier 1 capital and long-term preferred stock with an original maturity of at
least 20 years from issuance; hybrid capital instruments, including perpetual
debt and mandatory convertible securities; and subordinated debt and
intermediate-term preferred stock.
The
risk-based capital regulations assign balance sheet assets and credit equivalent
amounts of off-balance sheet obligations to one of four broad risk categories
based principally on the degree of credit risk associated with the obligor.
The
assets and off-balance sheet items in the four risk categories are weighted
at
0%, 20%, 50% and 100%. These computations result in the total risk-weighted
assets. The risk-based capital regulations require all banks and bank holding
companies to maintain a minimum ratio of total capital (Tier 1 capital plus
Tier
2 capital) to total risk-weighted assets of 8%, with at least 4% as Tier 1
capital. For the purpose of calculating these ratios: (i) Tier 2 capital is
limited to no more than 100% of Tier 1 capital; and (ii) the aggregate amount
of
certain types of Tier 2 capital is limited. In addition, the risk-based capital
regulations limit the allowance for loan losses includable as capital to 1.25%
of total risk-weighted assets.
FDIC
regulations and guidelines additionally specify that state non-member banks
with
significant exposure to declines in the economic value of their capital due
to
changes in interest rates may be required to maintain higher risk-based capital
ratios. The Federal banking agencies, including the FDIC, have proposed a system
for measuring and assessing the exposure of a bank’s net economic value to
changes in interest rates. The Federal banking agencies, including the FDIC,
have stated their intention to propose a rule establishing an explicit capital
charge for interest rate risk based upon the level of a bank’s measured interest
rate risk exposure after more experience has been gained with the proposed
measurement process. Federal Reserve Board regulations do not specifically
take
into account interest rate risk in measuring the capital adequacy of bank
holding companies.
The
FDIC
has issued regulations which classify state non-member banks by capital levels
and which authorize the FDIC to take various prompt corrective actions to
resolve the problems of any bank that fails to satisfy the capital standards.
Under such regulations, a well-capitalized bank is one that is not subject
to
any regulatory order or directive to meet any specific capital level and that
has or exceeds the following capital levels: a total risk-based capital ratio
of
10%, a Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of 6%, and a leverage ratio of 5%. An
adequately capitalized bank is one that does not qualify as well-capitalized
but
meets or exceeds the following capital requirements: a total risk-based capital
ratio of 8%, a Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of 4%, and a leverage ratio
of
either (i) 4% or (ii) 3% if the bank has the highest composite examination
rating. A bank not meeting these criteria is treated as undercapitalized,
significantly undercapitalized, or critically undercapitalized depending on
the
extent to which the bank’s capital levels are below these standards. A state
non-member bank that falls within any of the three undercapitalized categories
established by the prompt corrective action regulation will be subject to severe
regulatory sanctions. As of December 31, 2006, the Bank was well capitalized
as
defined by the FDIC’s regulations.
14
Branching.
Maryland
law provides that, with the approval of the Commissioner, Maryland banks may
establish branches within the State of Maryland without geographic restriction
and may establish branches in other states by any means permitted by the laws
of
such state or by federal law. The Riegle-Neal Act authorizes the FDIC to approve
interstate branching de novo by state banks, only in states that specifically
allow for such branching. The Riegle-Neal Act also requires the appropriate
federal banking agencies to prescribe regulations by June 1, 1997 that prohibit
any out-of-state bank from using the interstate branching authority primarily
for the purpose of deposit production. These regulations must include guidelines
to ensure that interstate branches operated by an out-of-state bank in a host
state are reasonably helping to meet the credit needs of the communities that
they serve.
Dividend
Limitations.
Pursuant
to the Maryland Financial Institutions Code, Maryland banks may only pay
dividends from undivided profits or, with the prior approval of the
Commissioner, their surplus in excess of 100% of required capital stock. The
Maryland Financial Institutions Code further restricts the payment of dividends
by prohibiting a Maryland bank from declaring a dividend on its shares of common
stock until its surplus fund equals the amount of required capital stock or,
if
the surplus fund does not equal the amount of capital stock, in an amount in
excess of 90% of net earnings. In addition, the Bank is prohibited by federal
statute from paying dividends or making any other capital distribution that
would cause the Bank to fail to meet its regulatory capital requirements.
Further, the FDIC also has authority to prohibit the payment of dividends by
a
state non-member bank when it determines such payment to be an unsafe and
unsound banking practice.
Deposit
Insurance.
The Bank
is required to pay semi-annual assessments based on a percentage of its insured
deposits to the FDIC for insurance of its deposits by the Bank Insurance Fund
(“BIF”). Under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, the FDIC is required to set
semi-annual assessments for BIF-insured institutions to maintain the designated
reserve ratio of the BIF at 1.25% of estimated insured deposits or at a higher
percentage of estimated insured deposits that the FDIC determines to be
justified for that year by circumstances raising a significant risk of
substantial future losses to the BIF.
Under
the
risk-based deposit insurance assessment system adopted by the FDIC, the
assessment rate for an insured depository institution depends on the assessment
risk classification assigned to the institution by the FDIC, which is determined
by the institution’s capital level and supervisory evaluations. Based on the
data reported to regulators for the date closest to the last day of the seventh
month preceding the semi-annual assessment period, institutions are assigned
to
one of three capital groups -- “well capitalized, adequately capitalized or
undercapitalized.” Within each capital group, institutions are assigned to one
of three subgroups on the basis of supervisory evaluations by the institution’s
primary supervisory authority and such other information as the FDIC determines
to be relevant to the institution’s financial condition and the risk posed to
the deposit insurance fund. Under the current assessment schedule,
well-capitalized banks with the best supervisory ratings are not required to
pay
any premium for deposit insurance. All BIF-insured banks, however, will be
required to begin paying an assessment to the FDIC in an amount equal to 2.12
basis points times their assessable deposits to help fund interest payments
on
certain bonds issued by the Financing Corporation, an agency established by
the
federal government to finance takeovers of insolvent thrifts.
Transactions
With Affiliates. A
state
non-member bank or its subsidiaries may not engage in “covered transactions”
with any one affiliate in an amount greater than 10% of such bank’s capital
stock and surplus, and for all such transactions with all affiliates a state
non-member bank is limited to an amount equal to 20% of capital stock and
surplus. All such transactions must also be on terms substantially the same,
or
at least as favorable, to the bank or subsidiary as those provided to a
non-affiliate. The term “covered transaction” includes the making of loans,
purchase of assets, issuance of a guarantee and similar other types of
transactions. An affiliate of a state non-member bank is any company or entity
which controls or is under common control with the state non-member bank and,
for purposes of the aggregate limit on transactions with affiliates, any
subsidiary that would be deemed a financial subsidiary of a national bank.
In a
holding company context, the parent holding company of a state non-member bank
(such as the Company) and any companies which are controlled by such parent
holding company are affiliates of the state non-member bank. The BHCA further
prohibits a depository institution from extending credit to or offering any
other services, or fixing or varying the consideration for such extension of
credit or service, on the condition that the customer obtain some additional
service from the institution or certain of its affiliates or not obtain services
of a competitor of the institution, subject to certain limited
exceptions.
15
Loans
To Directors, Executive Officers and Principal
Stockholders.
Loans to
directors, executive officers and principal stockholders of a state non-member
bank must be made on substantially the same terms as those prevailing for
comparable transactions with persons who are not executive officers, directors,
principal stockholders or employees of the Bank unless the loan is made pursuant
to a compensation or benefit plan that is widely available to employees and
does
not favor insiders. Loans to any executive officer, director and principal
stockholder together with all other outstanding loans to such person and
affiliated interests generally may not exceed 15% of the bank’s unimpaired
capital and surplus and all loans to such persons may not exceed the
institution’s unimpaired capital and unimpaired surplus.
Loans
to
directors, executive officers and principal stockholders, and their respective
affiliates, in excess of the greater of $100,000 or 5% of capital and surplus
(up to $500,000) must be approved in advance by a majority of the board of
directors of the bank with any “interested” director not participating in the
voting. State non-member banks are prohibited from paying the overdrafts of
any
of their executive officers or directors. In addition, loans to executive
officers may not be made on terms more favorable than those afforded other
borrowers and are restricted as to type, amount and terms of
credit.
An
investment in the Common Stock is subject to risks inherent to the Bank’s
business. The material risk and uncertainties that management believes affect
the Bank are described below. Additional risks and uncertainties that management
is not aware of or focused on or that management currently deems immaterial
may
also impair the Company’s business operations.
RISK
FACTORS RELATING TO OUR BUSINESS GENERALLY
Fluctuations
in interest rates could reduce the Bank’s profitability and affect the value of
its assets.
Like
other financial institutions, the Bank is subject to interest rate risk. The
Company’s income and cash flow depend to a great extent on the difference
between the interest rates earned on the Bank’s interest-earning assets such as
loans and investment securities, and the interest rates paid on the Bank’s
interest-bearing liabilities such as deposits and borrowings. These rates are
highly sensitive to many factors that are beyond the Company’s control,
including general economic conditions and the policies of various government
agencies, in particular the Federal Reserve Bank. Changes in interest rates
will
influence the origination of loans, the prepayment speed of loans, the purchase
of investments, the generation of deposits and the rates received on loans
and
investment securities and paid on deposits or other sources of funding. The
impact of these changes may be magnified if the Company does not effectively
manage the relative sensitivity of its assets and liabilities to changes in
market interest rates. Fluctuations in these areas may adversely affect the
Company and its shareholders.
Until
recently, interest rates have been at historically low levels. However, since
June 30, 2004, the Federal Reserve has increased its target for Federal funds
rate numerous times. While these short-term market interest rates (which are
used as a guide for pricing deposits) have increased, longer-term market
interest rates (which are used as a guide for pricing longer-term loans and
leases) have not. This “flattening” of the market yield curve has had a negative
impact on the Bank’s interest rate spread and net interest margin to date. If
short-term interest rates continue to rise, and if rates on its deposits and
borrowings continue to reprice upwards faster than the rates on long-term loans
and investments, the Bank could experience compression of its interest rate
spread and net interest margin, which could have a negative effect on the Bank’s
profitability.
The
Bank is subject to credit risks relating to its loan
portfolio.
The
Bank
has certain lending policies and procedures in place that are designed to
maximize loan income within an acceptable level of risk. Management reviews
and
approves these policies and procedures on a regular basis. A reporting system
supplements the review process by providing management with frequent reports
related to loan production, loan quality, concentrations of credit, loan
delinquencies, and nonperforming and potential problem loans. Diversification
in
the loan portfolio is a means of managing risk associated with fluctuations
and
economic conditions.
The
Bank
maintains an independent loan review department that reviews and validates
the
credit risk program on a periodic basis. Results of these reviews are presented
to management. The loan review process complements and reinforces the risk
identification and assessment decisions made by lenders and credit personnel,
as
well as the Bank’s policies and procedures.
16
In
the
financial services industry, there is always a risk that certain borrowers
may
not repay borrowings. The Bank’s allowance for credit losses may not be
sufficient to cover the loan losses that it may actually incur. If the Bank
experiences defaults by borrowers in any of its businesses, the Bank’s earnings
could be negatively affected. Changes in local economic conditions could
adversely affect credit quality, particularly in its local business loan
portfolio. Changes in national economic conditions could also adversely affect
the quality of its loan portfolio.
Commercial
and commercial real estate loans generally involve higher credit risks than
residential real estate and consumer loans. Because payments on loans secured
by
commercial real estate or equipment are often dependent upon the successful
operation and management of the underlying assets, repayment of such loans
may
be influenced to a great extent by conditions in the market or the economy.
The
Bank seeks to minimize these risks through its underwriting standards. The
Bank
obtains financial information and performs credit risk analysis on its
customers. Underwriting standards are designed to promote relationship banking
rather than transactional banking. Most commercial and industrial loans are
secured by the assets being financed or other business assets; however, some
loans may be made on an unsecured basis. The Bank’s credit policy sets different
maximum exposure limits both by business sector and its current and historical
relationship and previous experience with each customer.
The
Bank
offers both fixed-rate and adjustable-rate consumer mortgage loans secured
by
properties, substantially all of which are located in the Bank’s primary market
area. Adjustable-rate mortgage loans help reduce the Bank’s exposure to changes
in interest rates; however, during periods of rising interest rates, the risk
of
default on adjustable-rate mortgage loans may increase as a result of repricing
and the increased payments required from the borrower.
Consumer
loans are primarily all other non-real estate loans to individuals in the Bank’s
regional market area. Consumer loans can entail risk, particularly in the case
of loans that are unsecured or secured by rapidly depreciating assets. In these
cases, any repossessed collateral may not provide an adequate source of
repayment of the outstanding loan balance. The remaining deficiency often does
not warrant further substantial collection efforts against the borrower beyond
obtaining a deficiency judgment. In addition, consumer loan collections are
dependent on the borrower’s continuing financial stability, and thus are more
likely to be adversely affected by job loss, divorce, illness, or personal
bankruptcy.
General
economic conditions nationally and in the Bank’s market are less than
favorable.
The
Company is affected by general economic conditions in the United States and,
in
particular, in the Bank’s market area. These conditions include short-term and
long-term interest rates, inflation, money supply, political issues, legislative
and regulatory changes, and the strength of both the U.S. economy and the local
economy in which the Bank operates, all of which are beyond the Company’s
control. Deterioration in economic conditions could result in an increase in
loan delinquencies and non-performing assets, decreases in loan collateral
values and a decrease in demand for the bank’s products and services, any of
which could have a material adverse impact on the Company’s financial condition
and results of operations.
The
financial services industry is very competitive.
The
Bank
faces competition in attracting and retaining deposits, making loans, and
providing other financial services throughout the Bank’s market area. The Bank’s
competitors include other community banks, larger banking institutions, and
wide
range of other financial institutions such as credit unions, government
sponsored enterprises, mutual fund companies, insurance companies and other
non-bank enterprises. Many of these competitors have substantially greater
resources than the Company. If the Bank is unable to compete effectively, it
will lose market share and income from deposits, loans, and other products
may
be reduced.
Legislative
or regulatory changes or actions, or significant litigation, could adversely
impact the Company or the businesses in which the Company is
engaged.
The
Company and the Bank are subject to extensive state and federal regulation,
supervision and legislation that govern almost all aspects of operations. Law
and regulations may change from time to time and are primarily intended for
the
protection of consumers, depositors and the deposit insurance funds. The impact
of any changes to laws and regulations or other actions by regulatory agencies
may negatively impact the Company or its ability to increase the value of its
business. Additionally, actions by regulatory agencies or significant litigation
against the Company or the Bank may cause the Company to devote significant
time
and resources to defending itself and may lead to penalties that materially
affect the Company and its shareholders. Future changes in the laws or
regulations or their interpretations or enforcement could be materially adverse
to the Company and its stockholders.
17
The
Company is subject to environmental liability risk associated with lending
activities.
A
portion
of the Bank’s loan portfolio is secured by real property. During the ordinary
course of business, the Bank may foreclose on and take title to properties
securing certain loans. In doing so, there is a risk that hazardous or toxic
substances could be found on these properties. If hazardous or toxic substances
are found, the Company may be liable for remediation costs, as well as for
personal injury and property damage. Environmental laws may require the Company
to incur substantial expenses and may materially reduce the affected property’s
value or limit the Company’s ability to use or sell the affected property. In
addition, future laws or more stringent interpretations or enforcement policies
with respect to existing laws may increase the Company’s exposure to
environmental liability. Although the Company has policies and procedures to
perform an environmental review before initiating any foreclosure action on
real
property, these reviews may not be sufficient to detect all potential
environmental hazards. The remediation costs and any other financial liabilities
associated with an environmental hazard could have a material adverse effect
on
the Company’s financial condition and results of operations.
The
Bank’s information systems may experience an interruption or breach in
security.
The
Bank
relies heavily on communications and information systems to conduct its
business. Any failure interruption or breach in security of these systems could
result in failures or disruptions in the Bank’s customer relationship
management, general ledger, deposit, loan and other system. While the Bank
has
policies and procedures designed to prevent or limit the effect of the failure,
interruption or security breach of its information systems, there can be no
assurance that any such failures, interruptions or security breaches will not
occur, or if they do occur, that they will be adequately addressed. The
occurrence, of any failures, interruptions or security breaches of the Bank’s
information systems could damage the Bank’s reputation, result in a loss of
customer business, subject the Bank to additional regulatory scrutiny, or expose
the Bank to civil litigation and possible financial liability, any of which
could have a material adverse effect on the Company’s financial condition and
results of operation.
Financial
services companies depend on the accuracy and completeness of information about
customers and counterparties.
In
deciding whether to extend credit or enter into other transactions, the Bank
may
rely on information furnished by or on behalf of customers and counterparties,
including financial statements, credit reports and other financial information.
The Bank may also rely on representations of those customers, counterparties
or
other third parties, such as independent auditors, as to the accuracy and
completeness of that information. Reliance on inaccurate or misleading financial
statements, credit reports or other financial information could have a material
adverse impact on the Bank’s business and, in turn, the Company’s financial
condition and results of operations.
The
inability to hire or retain certain key professionals, management and staff
could adversely affect the Company’s revenues and net
income.
The
Bank
relies on key personnel to manage and operate our business, including major
revenue generating functions such as our loan and deposit portfolios. The loss
of key staff may adversely affect the Bank’s ability to maintain and mange these
portfolios effectively, which could negatively affect the Company’s revenues. In
addition, loss of key personnel could result in increased recruiting and hiring
expenses, which could cause a decrease in the Company’s net income.
Severe
weather, acts of war and terrorism and other adverse external events could
significantly impact the Company’s business
Severe
weather, acts of war or terrorism and other adverse external events could have
a
significant impact on the Bank’s ability to conduct business. Such events could
affect the stability of the Bank’s deposit base, impair the ability of borrowers
to repay outstanding loans, impair the value of collateral securing loans,
cause
significant property damage, result in loss of revenue and/or cause the Company
to incur additional expenses. The occurrence of any such event could have a
material adverse effect on the Bank’s business, which, in turn, could have a
material adverse effect on the Company’s financial condition and results of
operations. The close proximity of the all of the Company’s branch locations to
Washington, D.C. may put it at an especially high risk of being impacted by
terrorism.
18
RISK
FACTORS RELATING TO THE COMPANY’S ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION AND THE COMMON
STOCK
The
liability of our directors is limited.
Our
Articles of Incorporation limit the liability of directors to the maximum extent
permitted by Maryland law.
The
trading volume in the Common Stock is less than that of other larger services
companies.
Although
the Common Stock is listed for trading on the Nasdaq SmallCap Market, the
trading volume in the Common Stock is less than that of other larger financial
services companies. A public trading market having the desired characteristics
of depth, liquidity and orderliness depends on the presence in the marketplace
of willing buyers and sellers of the Common Stock at any given time. This
presence depends on the individual decisions of investors and general economic
and market conditions over which the Company has no control. Given the lower
trading volume of the Common Stock, significant sales of the Common Stock,
or
the expectation of these sales, could negatively impact the Company’s stock
price.
It
may be difficult for a third party to acquire the Company, which could affect
the price of the Common Stock.
Our
charter and Bylaws contain certain anti-takeover provisions pursuant to the
Maryland General Corporation Law. In addition, the Company has a shareholders
rights plan that could make it more difficult to acquire the Company. As a
result, we may be a less attractive target to a potential acquirer who otherwise
may be willing to pay a premium for our common stock above its market price.
These provisions effectively inhibit a non-negotiated merger or other business
combination, even if doing so would be perceived to be beneficial to the
Company’s stockholders and could adversely affect the market price of the Common
Stock.
ITEM
1B.UNRESOLVED
STAFF COMMENTS
Not
applicable.
19
ITEM
2.
PROPERTIES
Year
Opened
|
Owned/
Leased
|
Book
Value
|
Approximate
Square
Footage
|
Deposits
|
||||||
Main
Office:
|
||||||||||
101
Crain Highway, S.E.
Glen
Burnie, MD 21061
|
1953
|
Owned
|
$668,641
|
10,000
|
$87,092,950
|
|||||
Branches:
|
||||||||||
Odenton
1405
Annapolis Road
Odenton,
MD 21113
|
1969
|
Owned
|
203,934
|
6,000
|
37,849,403
|
|||||
Riviera
Beach
8707
Ft. Smallwood Road
Pasadena,
MD 21122
|
1973
|
Owned
|
150,590
|
2,500
|
31,871,974
|
|||||
Crownsville
1221
Generals Highway
Crownsville,
MD 21032
|
1979
|
Owned
|
337,292
|
3,000
|
46,687,399
|
|||||
Severn
811
Reece Road
Severn,
MD 21144
|
1984
|
Owned
|
225,593
|
2,500
|
27,313,105
|
|||||
South
Crain
7984
Crain Highway
Glen
Burnie, MD 21061
|
1995
|
Leased
|
65,027
|
2,600
|
22,819,320
|
|||||
Linthicum
Burwood
Village Shopping Center
Glen
Burnie, MD 21060
|
2005
|
Leased
|
230,139
|
2,500
|
9,084,044
|
|||||
Severna
Park
534
Ritchie Highway
Severna
Park, MD 21146
|
2002
|
Leased
|
188,849
|
2,184
|
12,115,262
|
|||||
Operations
Centers:
|
||||||||||
106
Padfield Blvd.
Glen
Burnie, MD 21061
|
1991
|
Owned
|
1,046,123
|
16,200
|
N/A
|
|||||
103
Crain Highway, S.E.
Glen
Burnie, MD 21061
|
2000
|
Owned
|
289,823
|
3,727
|
N/A
|
At
December 31, 2006, the Bank owned one foreclosed real estate property with
a
total book value of $ 50,000. The Bank is holding this commercial property
for
sale.
From
time
to time, the Company and the Bank are involved in various legal actions relating
to their business activities. At December 31, 2006, there were no actions to
which the Company or the Bank was a party which involved claims for money
damages exceeding 10% of the Company’s consolidated current assets in any one
case or in any group of proceedings presenting in large degree the same legal
and factual issues.
Not
applicable.
20
EXECUTIVE
OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT
Set
forth
below is information about the Company’s executive officers.
NAME
|
AGE
|
POSITIONS
|
||
F.
William Kuethe, Jr.
|
74
|
President
and Chief Executive Officer
|
||
Michael
G. Livingston
|
53
|
Deputy
Chief Executive Officer, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating
Officer
|
||
John
E. Porter
|
53
|
Senior
Vice President and Chief Financial
Officer
|
F.
WILLIAM KUETHE, JR. has been President and Chief Executive Officer of the
Company and the Bank since 1995. He also was director of the Bank from 1963
through 1989. He was President of Glen Burnie Mutual Savings Bank from 1960
through 1995. Mr. Kuethe is a former licensed appraiser and real estate broker
with banking experience from 1960 to present, at all levels. He is the father
of
Frederick W. Kuethe, III, a director of the Company.
MICHAEL
G. LIVINGSTON was appointed Deputy Chief Executive Officer and Executive Vice
President in August 2004 and became a Director on January 1, 2005. Mr.
Livingston was a Senior Vice President from January 1998 until August 2004
and
had been Chief Lending Officer of the Bank from 1996 until August 2004. He
served as Deputy Chief Operating Officer from February 14, 2003 through December
31, 2003 and was appointed the Chief Operating Officer effective January 1,
2004.
JOHN
E.
PORTER was appointed Senior Vice President in January 1998. He has been
Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of the Company since 1995 and Vice
President, Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of the Bank since 1990. He
has
been Secretary/Treasurer of GBB since 1995.
21
PART
II
ITEM 5. |
The
Common Stock is traded on the Nasdaq SmallCap Market under the symbol “GLBZ”. As
of February 22, 2007, there were 476 record holders of the Common Stock. The
closing price for the Common Stock on that date was $17.50. A 20% stock dividend
was paid on January 23, 2006 to stockholders’ of record on January 9,
2006.
The
following table sets forth the high and low sales prices for the Common Stock
for each full quarterly period during 2006 and 2005 as reported by Nasdaq.
The
quotations represent prices between dealers and do not reflect the retailer
markups, markdowns or commissions, and may not represent actual transactions.
Also shown are dividends declared per share for these periods. The 2005 market
prices have been adjusted to reflect the 20% stock dividend paid on January
23,
2006.
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||||||||||
Quarter
Ended
|
High
|
Low
|
Dividends
|
High
|
Low
|
Dividends
|
|||||||||||||
March
31,
|
$
|
17.61
|
$
|
16.42
|
$
|
0.12
|
$
|
19.44
|
$
|
16.80
|
$
|
0.10
|
|||||||
June
30,
|
17.22
|
16.32
|
0.12
|
17.58
|
15.20
|
0.10
|
|||||||||||||
September
30
|
17.49
|
16.49
|
0.12
|
17.04
|
16.11
|
0.12
|
|||||||||||||
December
31
|
17.25
|
17.00
|
0.18
|
17.54
|
14.40
|
0.17
|
A
regular
dividend of $0.12 and a bonus dividend of $0.06 were declared for stockholders’
of record on December 29, 2006, payable on January 8, 2007 and January 11,
2007,
respectively.
The
Company intends to pay dividends approximating forty percent (40%) of its
profits for each quarter. However, dividends remain subject to declaration
by
the Board of Directors in its sole discretion and there can be no assurance
that
the Company will be legally or financially able to make such payments. Payment
of dividends may be limited by federal and state regulations which impose
general restrictions on a bank’s and bank holding company’s right to pay
dividends (or to make loans or advances to affiliates which could be used to
pay
dividends). Generally, dividend payments are prohibited unless a bank or bank
holding company has sufficient net (or retained) earnings and capital as
determined by its regulators. See “Item
1. Business
-
Supervision and Regulation - Regulation of the Company - Dividends and
Distributions” and “Item
1. Business
--
Supervision and Regulation - Regulation of the Bank - Dividend Limitations.” The
Company does not believe that those restrictions will materially limit its
ability to pay dividends.
22
ITEM
6.
SELECTED
FINANCIAL DATA
The
following table presents consolidated selected financial data for the Company
and its subsidiaries for each of the periods indicated. Dividends and earnings
per share have been adjusted to give retroactive effect to a 20% stock dividend
paid on January 23, 2006 and a six-for-five stock split effected through a
stock
dividend paid on January 6, 2004.
Year
Ended December 31,
|
||||||||||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
2003
|
2002
|
||||||||||||
(Dollars
In Thousand Except Per Share Data)
|
||||||||||||||||
Operations
Data:
|
||||||||||||||||
Net
Interest Income
|
$
|
11,821
|
$
|
11,966
|
$
|
12,016
|
$
|
11,263
|
$
|
11,368
|
||||||
Provision
for Credit Losses
|
62
|
(50
|
)
|
340
|
40
|
-
|
||||||||||
Other
Income
|
2,244
|
2,114
|
2,372
|
2,289
|
2,485
|
|||||||||||
Other
Expense
|
10,682
|
10,625
|
10,360
|
9,748
|
9,957
|
|||||||||||
Net
Income
|
2,720
|
2,775
|
3,056
|
3,077
|
2,811
|
|||||||||||
Share
Data:
|
||||||||||||||||
Basic
Net Income Per Share
|
$
|
1.10
|
$
|
1.13
|
$
|
1.25
|
$
|
1.27
|
$
|
1.17
|
||||||
Diluted
Net Income Per Share
|
1.10
|
1.13
|
1.25
|
1.27
|
1.17
|
|||||||||||
Cash
Dividends Declared Per Common Share
|
0.54
|
0.49
|
0.43
|
0.36
|
0.34
|
|||||||||||
Weighted
Average Common Shares Outstanding:
|
||||||||||||||||
Basic
|
2,472,803
|
2,456,723
|
2,442,944
|
2,430,603
|
2,416,703
|
|||||||||||
Diluted
|
2,472,803
|
2,456,723
|
2,442,944
|
2,430,603
|
2,420,087
|
|||||||||||
Financial
Condition Data:
|
||||||||||||||||
Total
Assets
|
$
|
317,746
|
$
|
306,561
|
$
|
302,312
|
$
|
302,252
|
$
|
279,406
|
||||||
Loans
Receivable, Net
|
193,337
|
190,205
|
182,291
|
172,819
|
158,287
|
|||||||||||
Total
Deposits
|
274,833
|
265,248
|
261,674
|
256,908
|
241,420
|
|||||||||||
Long
Term Borrowings
|
7,140
|
7,171
|
7,200
|
7,227
|
7,251
|
|||||||||||
Junior
Subordinated Debentures
|
5,155
|
5,155
|
5,155
|
5,155
|
5,155
|
|||||||||||
Total
Stockholders’ Equity
|
28,201
|
26,625
|
25,744
|
23,948
|
21,789
|
|||||||||||
Performance
Ratios:
|
||||||||||||||||
Return
on Average Assets
|
0.84
|
%
|
0.89
|
%
|
1.00
|
%
|
1.05
|
%
|
1.05
|
%
|
||||||
Return
on Average Equity
|
10.00
|
10.50
|
12.51
|
13.56
|
14.49
|
|||||||||||
Net
Interest Margin (1)
|
4.31
|
4.46
|
4.61
|
4.48
|
4.76
|
|||||||||||
Dividend
Payout Ratio
|
49.18
|
43.52
|
34.67
|
29.53
|
29.70
|
|||||||||||
Capital
Ratios:
|
||||||||||||||||
Average
Equity to Average Assets
|
8.36
|
%
|
8.47
|
%
|
8.16
|
%
|
7.76
|
%
|
9.03
|
%
|
||||||
Leverage
Ratio
|
10.30
|
10.17
|
9.85
|
9.25
|
9.07
|
|||||||||||
Total
Risk-Based Capital Ratio
|
17.07
|
16.98
|
16.40
|
15.79
|
15.28
|
|||||||||||
Asset
Quality Ratios:
|
||||||||||||||||
Allowance
for Credit Losses to Gross Loans
|
0.94
|
%
|
1.14
|
%
|
1.30
|
%
|
1.28
|
%
|
1.56
|
%
|
||||||
Non-accrual
and Past Due Loans to Gross Loans
|
0.03
|
%
|
0.10
|
%
|
0.33
|
%
|
0.33
|
%
|
0.36
|
%
|
||||||
Allowance
for Credit Losses to Non- Accrual and Past Due Loans
|
3,116.95
|
%
|
1,164.55
|
%
|
398.68
|
%
|
385.25
|
%
|
429.13
|
%
|
||||||
Net
Loan Charge-offs (Recoveries) to Average Loans
|
0.23
|
%
|
0.09
|
%
|
0.10
|
%
|
0.18
|
%
|
0.26
|
%
|
(1)
Presented on a tax-equivalent basis
23
ITEM
7.
MANAGEMENT’S
DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS
OF OPERATIONS
Forward-Looking
Statements
When
used
in this discussion and elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, the words
or phrases “will likely result,” “are expected to,” “will continue,” “is
anticipated,” “intends”, “estimate,” “project” or similar expressions are
intended to identify “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the
Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The Company cautions readers
not to place undue reliance on any such forward-looking statements, which speak
only as of the date made, and readers are advised that various factors,
including regional and national economic conditions, unfavorable judicial
decisions, substantial changes in levels of market interest rates, credit and
other risks of lending and investment activities and competitive and regulatory
factors could affect the Company’s financial performance and could cause the
Company’s actual results for future periods to differ materially from those
anticipated or projected. The Company does not undertake and specifically
disclaims any obligation to update any forward-looking statements to reflect
occurrence of anticipated or unanticipated events or circumstances after the
date of such statements.
Overview
During
2006,
net
interest income before provision for credit losses declined to $11,821,431
from
$11,966,103 in 2005, and net income decreased to $2,720,045 from $2,774,741
in
2005. In 2006, the Company saw continued growth in both deposits and the loan
portfolio. Non-interest bearing deposits decreased by $4,584,623, and interest
bearing deposits increased by $14,169,812. The loan portfolio increased by
$3,131,606, primarily due to an increase in commercial mortgage participation
loans.
All
per
share amounts throughout this report have been adjusted to give retroactive
effect to a six-for-five stock dividend paid on January 6, 2004 and a 20% stock
dividend paid on January 23, 2006.
Comparison
of Results of Operations for the Years Ended December 31, 2006, 2005 and
2004
General.
For the
year ended December 31, 2006, the Company reported consolidated net income
of
$2,720,045 ($1.10 basic and diluted earnings per share) compared to consolidated
net income of $2,774,741 ($1.13
basic and diluted earnings per share) for the year ended December 31, 2005
and
consolidated net income of $3,055,501 ($1.25 basic and diluted earnings per
share) for the year ended December 31, 2004.
Net
Interest Income.
The
primary component of the Company’s net income is its net interest income, which
is the difference between income earned on assets and interest paid on the
deposits and borrowings used to fund income producing assets. Net interest
income is determined by the spread between the yields earned on the Company’s
interest-earning assets and the rates paid on interest-bearing liabilities
as
well as the relative amounts of such assets and liabilities. Net interest
income, divided by average interest-earning assets, represents the Company’s net
interest margin.
Net
interest income is affected by the mix of loans in the Bank’s loan portfolio.
Currently a majority of the Bank’s loans are mortgage and construction loans
secured by real estate and indirect automobile loans secured by automobiles.
These types of loans are made at interest rates lower than unsecured loans.
While the Bank’s loan volume increased in 2004 and 2005, this loan mix produced
lower yields on the Company’s interest-earning assets. Meanwhile, market forces
resulted in higher rates of interest being paid by the Bank on deposits and
borrowings used to fund income producing assets resulting in a decline in net
interest income for 2005. In January of 2006, the Bank initiated a plan to
increase net interest income by reducing its portfolio of lower yielding loans,
acquiring additional deposits, expanding its customer base and increasing the
Bank’s higher yielding commercial loan portfolio. As part of this plan, the Bank
attracted additional deposits by temporarily offering above market rate savings
products which resulted in over $27 million in additional deposits which were
invested in marketable securities and overnight deposits making them readily
available to fund loans. The Bank also hired a new commercial loan officer
to
increase its ability to reach this market segment. In accordance with this
plan,
the Bank successfully increased its higher yield commercial loans resulting
in
increased loan volume and yield on commercial mortgages, although the commercial
loan volume increase was less than anticipated. Over the same period, yields
on
new indirect automobile loans increased as outstanding lower interest indirect
loans matured. As a result, the Bank earned higher yields on its interest
earning assets. However, market forces required us to pay higher rates of
interest on deposits and borrowings used to fund income producing assets
resulting in an overall decline in net interest income for 2006.
24
Consolidated
net interest income for the year ended December 31, 2006 was $11,821,431
compared to $11,966,103 for the year ended December 31, 2005 and $12,016,466
for
the year ended December 31, 2004. The $114,672 decrease for the most recent
year
was primarily due to an increase in deposit expense offset by increases in
U.S.
Government agency securities, state and municipal securities, other income
and
loan income. The $50,363 decrease in net interest income for 2005 as compared
to
2004 was primarily due to an increase in deposit expense, partially offset
by an
increase in loan income. The after tax net interest income for 2006 was
$12,741,143, a $9,019 or 0.07% decrease from the after tax net interest income
for 2005, which was $12,750,162, a $195,909 or 1.51% decrease from the
$12,946,071 after tax net interest income for 2004.
Interest
expense increased from $4,131,459 in 2005 to $5,833,765 in 2006, a $1,702,306
or
a 41.21 % increase, primarily due to an increase in deposit expense due to
rates
rising and a special offered on 15 month certificates of deposit and IRAs.
Interest expense increased from $3,644,661 in 2004 to $4,131,459 in 2005, a
$486,798 or a 13.36% increase, primarily due to an increase in deposit expense
due to rates increasing. Net interest margin for the year ended December 31,
2006 was 4.31% compared to 4.46% and 4.61% for the years ended December 31,
2005
and 2004, respectively.
The
following table allocates changes in income and expense attributable to the
Company’s interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities for the
periods indicated between changes due to changes in rate and changes in volume.
Changes due to rate/volume are allocated to changes due to volume.
Year
Ended December 31,
|
|||||||||||||||||||
2006
|
VS.
|
2005
|
2005
|
VS.
|
2004
|
||||||||||||||
Change
Due To:
|
Change
Due To:
|
||||||||||||||||||
Increase/
Decrease
|
Rate
|
Volume
|
Increase/
Decrease
|
Rate
|
Volume
|
||||||||||||||
(In
Thousands)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
ASSETS:
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Interest-earning
assets:
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Federal
funds sold
|
$
|
87
|
$
|
82
|
$
|
5
|
$
|
54
|
$
|
70
|
$
|
(16
|
)
|
||||||
Interest-bearing
deposits
|
156
|
45
|
111
|
40
|
11
|
29
|
|||||||||||||
Investment
securities:
|
|||||||||||||||||||
U.S.
Treasury securities, obligations of U.S. government agencies and
mortgage-backed securities
|
933
|
352
|
581
|
197
|
70
|
127
|
|||||||||||||
Obligations
of states and political subdivisions(1)
|
258
|
(27
|
)
|
285
|
(438
|
)
|
0
|
(438
|
)
|
||||||||||
All
other investment securities
|
(3
|
)
|
53
|
(56
|
)
|
20
|
22
|
(2
|
)
|
||||||||||
Total
investment securities
|
1,188
|
378
|
810
|
(221
|
)
|
92
|
(313
|
)
|
|||||||||||
Loans,
net of unearned income:
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Demand,
time and lease
|
24
|
65
|
(41
|
)
|
99
|
91
|
1
|
||||||||||||
Mortgage
and construction
|
339
|
178
|
161
|
474
|
(65
|
)
|
539
|
||||||||||||
Installment
and credit card
|
(157
|
)
|
218
|
(375
|
)
|
(151
|
)
|
(270
|
)
|
119
|
|||||||||
Total
gross loans(2)
|
206
|
461
|
(255
|
)
|
422
|
(238
|
)
|
660
|
|||||||||||
Allowance
for credit losses
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|||||||||||||
Total
net loans
|
206
|
461
|
(255
|
)
|
422
|
(238
|
)
|
660
|
|||||||||||
Total
interest-earning assets
|
$
|
1,637
|
$
|
966
|
$
|
671
|
$
|
295
|
$
|
(65
|
)
|
$
|
360
|
||||||
LIABILITIES:
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Interest-bearing
deposits:
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Savings
and NOW
|
$
|
(7
|
)
|
$
|
23
|
$
|
(30
|
)
|
$
|
13
|
$
|
9
|
$
|
4
|
|||||
Money
market
|
1
|
16
|
(15
|
)
|
20
|
29
|
(9
|
)
|
|||||||||||
Other
time deposits
|
1,696
|
953
|
743
|
446
|
422
|
24
|
|||||||||||||
Total
interest-bearing deposits
|
1,690
|
992
|
698
|
479
|
460
|
19
|
|||||||||||||
Non-interest-bearing
deposits
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|||||||||||||
Borrowed
funds
|
13
|
23
|
(10
|
)
|
7
|
41
|
(34
|
)
|
|||||||||||
Total
interest-bearing liabilities
|
$
|
1,703
|
$
|
1,015
|
$
|
688
|
$
|
486
|
$
|
501
|
$
|
(15
|
)
|
(1)
Tax equivalent basis.
(2)
Non-accrual loans included in average balances.
|
25
The
following table provides information for the designated periods with respect
to
the average balances, income and expense and annualized yields and costs
associated with various categories of interest-earning assets and
interest-bearing liabilities.
Year
Ended December 31,
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Average
Balance
|
Interest
|
Yield/
Cost
|
Average
Balance
|
Interest
|
Yield/
Cost
|
Average
Balance
|
Interest
|
Yield/
Cost
|
||||||||||||||||||||
(Dollars
In Thousands)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
ASSETS:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Interest-earning
assets:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Federal
funds sold
|
$
|
3,848
|
$
|
200
|
5.20
|
%
|
$
|
3,682
|
$
|
113
|
3.07
|
%
|
$
|
4,962
|
$
|
59
|
1.18
|
%
|
||||||||||
Interest-bearing
deposits
|
4,901
|
233
|
4.76
|
2,008
|
77
|
3.84
|
1,126
|
37
|
3.29
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Investment
securities:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
U.S.
Treasury securities, obligations of U.S. government agencies and
mortgage-backed securities
|
66,501
|
3,347
|
5.04
|
53,521
|
2,414
|
4.51
|
50,575
|
2,217
|
4.38
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Obligations
of states and political subdivisions(1)
|
38,723
|
2,516
|
6.50
|
34,391
|
2,258
|
6.57
|
41,016
|
2,696
|
6.57
|
|||||||||||||||||||
All
other investment securities
|
4,257
|
375
|
8.81
|
4,996
|
378
|
7.57
|
5,019
|
358
|
7.13
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Total
investment securities
|
109,481
|
6,238
|
5.70
|
92,908
|
5,050
|
5.44
|
96,610
|
5,271
|
5.46
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Loans,
net of unearned income:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Demand,
time and lease
|
5,064
|
456
|
9.01
|
5,597
|
432
|
7.72
|
5,556
|
333
|
5.99
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mortgage
and construction
|
111,426
|
7,307
|
6.56
|
109,025
|
6,968
|
6.40
|
100,590
|
6,494
|
6.46
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Installment
and credit card
|
70,216
|
4,068
|
5.80
|
77,084
|
4,225
|
5.49
|
74,902
|
4,376
|
5.84
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Total
gross loans(2)
|
186,706
|
11,831
|
6.34
|
191,706
|
11,625
|
6.07
|
181,048
|
11,203
|
6.19
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Allowance
for credit losses
|
(2,071
|
)
|
(2,301
|
)
|
(2,338
|
)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
net loans
|
184,635
|
11,831
|
6.41
|
189,404
|
11,625
|
6.14
|
178,710
|
11,203
|
6.27
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Total
interest-earning assets
|
302,865
|
18,069
|
5.97
|
288,002
|
16,865
|
5.86
|
281,408
|
16,570
|
5.89
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Cash
and due from banks
|
9,493
|
11,020
|
11,203
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other
assets
|
13,045
|
13,275
|
13,162
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
assets
|
$
|
325,403
|
$
|
312,297
|
$
|
305,773
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
LIABILITIES
AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Interest-bearing
deposits:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Savings
and NOW
|
$
|
77,761
|
274
|
0.36
|
%
|
$
|
85,005
|
281
|
0.33
|
%
|
$
|
83,354
|
268
|
0.32
|
%
|
|||||||||||||
Money
market
|
16,415
|
106
|
0.65
|
19,389
|
105
|
0.55
|
21,146
|
85
|
0.40
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Other
time deposits
|
109,499
|
4,401
|
4.02
|
86,051
|
2,705
|
3.15
|
84,621
|
2,259
|
2.66
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Total
interest-bearing deposits
|
203,675
|
4,781
|
2.35
|
190,445
|
3,091
|
1.63
|
189,121
|
2,612
|
1.38
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Short-term
borrowed funds
|
1,603
|
81
|
5.06
|
1,815
|
66
|
3.64
|
3,983
|
57
|
1.43
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Long-term
borrowed funds
|
12,309
|
972
|
7.90
|
12,339
|
974
|
7.90
|
12,367
|
976
|
7.89
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Total
interest-bearing liabilities
|
217,587
|
5,834
|
2.69
|
204,599
|
4,131
|
2.02
|
205,471
|
3,645
|
1.77
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Non-interest-bearing
deposits
|
79,199
|
79,843
|
74,686
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other
liabilitiesS
|
1,407
|
1,395
|
1,191
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stockholders’
equity
|
27,210
|
26,460
|
24,425
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
liabilities and equity
|
$
|
325,403
|
$
|
312,297
|
$
|
305,773
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Net
interest income
|
$
|
12,235
|
$
|
12,734
|
$
|
12,925
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Net
interest spread
|
3.28
|
%
|
3.84
|
%
|
4.12
|
%
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Net
interest margin
|
4.31
|
%
|
4.46
|
%
|
4.61
|
%
|
1 Tax
equivalent basis. The incremental tax rate applied was
35.90% for 2006 and 34.56% for 2005.
2 Non-accrual
loans included in average balance.
|
Provision
For Credit Losses.
During
the year ended December 31, 2006, the Company made a provision of $62,000 for
credit losses, compared to a reverse provision of $50,000 for credit losses
for
the year ended December 31, 2005, and a provision of $340,000 for the year
ended
December 31, 2004. At December 31, 2006, the allowance for credit losses equaled
2,829.23% of non-accrual and past due loans compared to 1,164.55% and 398.68%
at
December 31, 2005 and 2004, respectively. During the year ended December 31,
2006, the Company recorded net charge-offs of $424,256 compared to $160,544
and
$174,501 in net charge-offs during the years ended December 31, 2005 and 2004,
respectively.
Other
Income.
Other
income includes service charges on deposit accounts, other fees and commissions,
net gains on investment securities, and income on life insurance. Other income
increased from $2,113,824 in 2005 to $2,244,390 in 2006, a $130,566, or 6.18%
increase. The increase was primarily due to an increase in other fees and
commissions and an increase in gains on investment securities. Other income
decreased from $2,371,636 in 2004 to $2,113,824 in 2005, a $257,812, or 10.87%
decrease. The decrease was primarily due to a decrease on gains on investment
securities.
26
Other
Expenses. Other
expenses increased from $10,624,797 in 2005 to $10,668,465 in 2006, a $43,668
or
0.42% increase. This increase, which consists of non-interest operating
expenses, was primarily due to an increase in salaries, employee benefits,
and
occupancy costs offset by a decrease in other miscellaneous expenses. Other
expenses increased from $10,359,377 in 2004 to $10,624,797 in 2005, a $265,420
or 2.56% increase. This increase was primarily due to an increase in salaries
and occupancy costs due to an additional branch being opened.
Income
Taxes.
During
the year ended December 31, 2006, the Company recorded income tax expense of
$687,115, compared to income tax expense of $730,389 for the year ended December
31, 2005. This decrease was primarily due to more tax exempt income on municipal
securities. During the year ended December 31, 2005, the Company recorded income
tax expense of $730,389, compared to income tax expense of $633,224 for the
year
ended December 31, 2004.
Comparison
of Financial Condition at December 31, 2006, 2005 and
2004
The
Company’s total assets increased to $317,745,601 at December 31, 2006 from
$306,560,991 at December 31, 2005. The Company’s total assets increased to
$306,560,991 at December 31, 2005 from $302,312,126 at December 31, 2004.
The
Company’s net loan portfolio increased to $193,336,604 at December 31, 2006
compared to $190,204,998 at December 31, 2005 and $182,291,292 at December
31,
2004. The increase in the loan portfolio during the 2006 period is primarily
due
to an increase in commercial mortgages, and mortgage participations purchased
partially offset by a decline in indirect automobile loans. The increase in
the
loan portfolio during the 2005 period is primarily due to an increase in
commercial and industrial mortgages, and indirect automobile loans.
During
2006, the Company’s total investment securities portfolio (including both
investment securities available for sale and investment securities held to
maturity) totaled $96,494,659, a $9,214,772 or 10.56%, increase from $87,279,887
at December 31, 2005. This increase is primarily attributable to an increase
in
state and municipal securities and mortgage backed securities, offset by a
decrease in corporate trust preferred securities. During 2005, the Company’s
total investment securities portfolio (including both investment securities
available for sale and investment securities held to maturity) totaled
$87,279,887, a $7,626,160 or 8.04%, decrease from $94,906,047 at December 31,
2004. This decrease is primarily attributable to a decrease in state and
municipal securities.
Deposits
as of December 31, 2006 totaled $274,883,457, an increase of $9,585,189, or
3.61%, from the $265,248,268 total as of December 31, 2005. Deposits as of
December 31, 2005 totaled $265,248,268, an increase of $3,574,225, or 1.37%,
from the $261,674,043 total as of December 31, 2004. Demand deposits as of
December 31, 2006 totaled $74,729,298, a $4,584,623, or 5.78%, decrease from
$79,313,921 at December 31, 2005. NOW and Super NOW accounts, as of December
31,
2006, decreased
by $3,117,348, or 18.61% from their 2005 level to $22.274.015. Money market
accounts decreased by $1,405,734, or 8.39%, from their 2005 level, to total
$15,341,221 at December 31, 2006. Savings deposits decreased by $4,985,894,
or
9.03%, from their 2005 level, to $50,234,238 at December 31, 2006. Time deposits
over $100,000 totaled $30,178,739 on December 31, 2006, an increase of
$7,761,121, or 34.62% from December 31, 2005. Other time deposits (made up
of
certificates of deposit less than $100,000 and individual retirement accounts)
totaled $82,075,945 on December 31, 2006, a $15,917,665 or 24.06% increase
from
December 31, 2005.
Total
stockholders’ equity as of December 31, 2006 increased by $1,575,072, or 5.92%,
from the 2005 period. The increase was attributed to an increase in retained
earnings, common stock and surplus, offset by a decrease in accumulated other
comprehensive income, net of tax. Total stockholders’ equity as of December 31,
2005 increased by $881,033, or 3.42%, from the 2004 period. The increase was
attributed to an increase in retained earnings and surplus, offset by a decrease
in accumulated other comprehensive income, net of tax.
Off-Balance
Sheet Arrangements, Contractual
Obligations, and Commitments
Off-Balance
Sheet Arrangements. The
Bank
is a party to financial instruments in the normal course of business to meet
the
financing needs of its customers. These financial instruments include
commitments to extend credit and standby letters of credit, which involve,
to
varying degrees, elements of credit and interest rate risk in excess of the
amounts recognized in the consolidated financial statements.
27
Loan
commitments and lines of credit are agreements to lend to customers as long
as
there is no violation of any conditions of the contracts. Loan commitments
generally have interest rates fixed at current market amounts, fixed expiration
dates, and may require payment of a fee. Lines of credit generally have variable
interest rates. Many of the loan commitments and lines of credit are expected
to
expire without being drawn upon; accordingly, the total commitment amounts
do
not necessarily represent future cash requirements. The Bank evaluates each
customer’s creditworthiness on a case-by-case basis. The amount of collateral or
other security obtained, if deemed necessary by the Bank upon extension of
credit, is based on management’s credit evaluation. Collateral held varies but
may include deposits held in financial institutions, U.S. Treasury securities,
other marketable securities, accounts receivable, inventory, property and
equipment, personal residences, income-producing commercial properties, and
land
under development. Personal guarantees are also obtained to provide added
security for certain commitments.
Letters
of credit are conditional commitments issued by the Bank to guarantee the
performance of a customer to a third party. Those guarantees are primarily
issued to guarantee the installation of real property improvements and similar
transactions. The credit risk involved in issuing letters of credit is
essentially the same as that involved in extending loan facilities to customers.
The Bank holds collateral and obtains personal guarantees supporting those
commitments for which collateral or other securities is deemed
necessary.
The
Bank’s exposure to credit loss in the event of nonperformance by the customer is
the contractual amount of the commitment. Loan commitments, lines of credit,
and
letters of credit are made on the same terms, including collateral, as
outstanding loans. As of December 31, 2006, the Bank has accrued $200,000 for
unfunded commitments related to these financial instruments with off balance
sheet risk, which is included in other liabilities.
Contractual
Obligations.
The
following table presents, as of December 31, 2006, significant fixed and
determinable contractual obligations to third parties by payment date. Further
discussion of the nature of each obligation is included in the referenced note
to the consolidated financial statements.
PAYMENTS
DUE IN
|
|||||||||||||||||||
(IN
THOUSANDS)
|
NOTE
REFERENCE
|
ONE
YEAR OR
LESS
|
ONE
TO THREE YEARS
|
THREE
TO FIVE YEARS
|
OVER
FIVE YEARS
|
TOTAL
|
|||||||||||||
Deposits
without a stated maturity (a),(c)
|
9
|
$
|
162,578
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
162,578
|
||||||||
Time
deposits (a)
|
9
|
77,463
|
22,253
|
11,296
|
1,243
|
112,255
|
|||||||||||||
Short-term
borrowings (a)
|
6
|
545
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
545
|
|||||||||||||
Long-term
borrowings (b)
|
7,8
|
579
|
1,166
|
12,735
|
-
|
14,480
|
|||||||||||||
Operating
leases
|
5
|
233
|
402
|
212
|
1,729
|
2,576
|
(a)
|
Excludes
interest
|
(b)
|
Includes
Junior Subordinated Debentures and semi-annual payments (made in
March and
September) of $273,215. This is also assuming that the Debentures
will be
paid off in September 2010.
|
(c)
|
Includes
non-interest bearing deposits
|
Commitments.
The
following table details the amounts and expected maturities of significant
commitments as of December 31, 2006. Further discussion of these commitments
is
included in Note 16 to the consolidated financial statements.
PAYMENTS
DUE IN
|
||||||||||||||||
(IN
THOUSANDS)
|
ONE
YEAR OR
LESS
|
ONE
TO THREE YEARS
|
THREE
TO FIVE YEARS
|
OVER
FIVE YEARS
|
TOTAL
|
|||||||||||
Loan commitments: | ||||||||||||||||
Other
mortgage loans
|
$
|
528
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
528
|
||||||
Construction
& land development
|
482
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
482
|
|||||||||||
Unused
lines of credit:
|
||||||||||||||||
Home-equity
lines
|
630
|
810
|
645
|
4,326
|
6,411
|
|||||||||||
Commercial
lines
|
10,805
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
10,805
|
|||||||||||
Unsecured
consumer lines
|
780
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
780
|
|||||||||||
Secured
consumer lines
|
30
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
30
|
|||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Letters
of credit
|
11
|
-
|
-
|
285
|
296
|
28
Market
Risk Management
Market
risk is the risk of loss arising from adverse changes in the fair value of
financial instruments due to changes in interest rates, exchange rates or equity
pricing. The Company’s principal market risk is interest rate risk that arises
from its lending, investing and deposit taking activities. The Company’s
profitability is dependent on the Bank’s net interest income. Interest rate risk
can significantly affect net interest income to the degree that interest bearing
liabilities mature or reprice at different intervals than interest earning
assets. The Bank’s Asset/Liability and Risk Management Committee oversees the
management of interest rate risk. The primary purpose of the committee is to
manage the exposure of net interest margins to unexpected changes due to
interest rate fluctuations. The Company does not utilize derivative financial
or
commodity instruments or hedging strategies in its management of interest rate
risk. The primary tool used by the committee to monitor interest rate risk
is a
“gap” report which measures the dollar difference between the amount of interest
bearing assets and interest bearing liabilities subject to repricing within
a
given time period. These efforts affect the loan pricing and deposit rate
policies of the Company as well as the asset mix, volume guidelines, and
liquidity and capital planning.
The
following table sets forth the Bank’s interest-rate sensitivity at December 31,
2006.
0-3
Months
|
Over
3 To
12
Months
|
Over
1
Through
5 Years
|
Over
5
Years
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
(Dollars
In Thousands)
|
||||||||||||||||
Assets:
|
||||||||||||||||
Cash
and due from banks
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
9,348
|
||||||
Federal
funds and overnight deposits
|
3,972
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,972
|
|||||||||||
Securities
|
-
|
299
|
10,222
|
85,974
|
96,495
|
|||||||||||
Loans
|
12,731
|
8,453
|
83,482
|
91,252
|
195,918
|
|||||||||||
Fixed
Assets
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,406
|
|||||||||||
Other
Assets
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
8,607
|
|||||||||||
Total
assets
|
$
|
16,703
|
$
|
8,752
|
$
|
93,704
|
$
|
177,226
|
$
|
317,746
|
||||||
Liabilities:
|
||||||||||||||||
Demand
deposit accounts
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
74,729
|
||||||
NOW
accounts
|
22,274
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
22,274
|
|||||||||||
Money
market deposit accounts
|
15,341
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
15,341
|
|||||||||||
Savings
accounts
|
50,234
|
195
|
-
|
-
|
50,429
|
|||||||||||
IRA
accounts
|
2,879
|
12,300
|
14,181
|
1,154
|
30,514
|
|||||||||||
Certificates
of deposit
|
11,584
|
50,505
|
19,368
|
89
|
81,545
|
|||||||||||
Other
liabilities
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
9,558
|
|||||||||||
Junior
Subordinated Debenture
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
5,155
|
|||||||||||
Stockholders’
equity
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
28,201
|
|||||||||||
Total
liabilities and Stockholders’
equity
|
$
|
102,312
|
$
|
63,000
|
$
|
33,549
|
$
|
1,243
|
$
|
317,746
|
||||||
GAP
|
$
|
(85,609
|
)
|
$
|
(54,248
|
)
|
$
|
60,155
|
$
|
175,983
|
||||||
Cumulative
GAP
|
(85,609
|
)
|
(139,857
|
)
|
(79,702
|
)
|
96,281
|
|||||||||
Cumulative
GAP as a % of total
assets
|
(26.95
|
%)
|
(44.02
|
%)
|
(25.09
|
%)
|
30.31
|
%
|
The
foregoing analysis assumes that the Bank’s assets and liabilities move with
rates at their earliest repricing opportunities based on final maturity.
Mortgage backed securities are assumed to mature during the period in which
they
are estimated to prepay and it is assumed that loans and other securities are
not called prior to maturity. Certificates of deposit and IRA accounts are
presumed to reprice at maturity. NOW savings accounts are assumed to reprice
at
within three months although it is the Company’s experience that such accounts
may be less sensitive to changes in market rates.
In
addition to gap analysis, the Bank utilizes a simulation model to quantify
the
effect a hypothetical immediate plus or minus 200 basis point change in rates
would have on net interest income and the economic value of equity. The model
takes into consideration the effect of call features of investments as well
as
prepayments of loans in periods of declining rates. When actual changes in
interest rates occur, the changes in interest earning assets and interest
bearing liabilities may differ from the assumptions used in the model and,
in
the Bank’s experience, the changes historically realized have been narrower than
those projected by the model. However, the Bank believes that the model is
a
prudent forecasting tool. As of December 31, 2006, the model produced the
following sensitivity profile for net interest income and the economic value
of
equity.
29
Immediate
Change in Rates
|
||||
-200
|
-100
|
+100
|
+200
|
|
Basis
Points
|
Basis
Points
|
Basis
Points
|
Basis
Points
|
|
%
Change in Net Interest Income
|
-4.8%
|
-0.8%
|
-1.4%
|
-3.6%
|
%
Change in Economic Value of Equity
|
-9.5%
|
-1.5%
|
-5.4%
|
-12.0%
|
Liquidity
and Capital Resources
The
Company currently has no business other than that of the Bank and does not
currently have any material funding commitments. The Company’s principal sources
of liquidity are cash on hand and dividends received from the Bank. The Bank
is
subject to various regulatory restrictions on the payment of
dividends.
The
Bank’s principal sources of funds for investments and operations are net income,
deposits from its primary market area, principal and interest payments on loans,
interest received on investment securities and proceeds from maturing investment
securities. Its principal funding commitments are for the origination or
purchase of loans and the payment of maturing deposits. Deposits are considered
the primary source of funds supporting the Bank’s lending and investment
activities. The Bank also uses borrowings from the FHLB of Atlanta to supplement
deposits, residential and small business lending, and to meet specific and
anticipated needs.
The
Bank’s most liquid assets are cash and cash equivalents, which are cash on hand,
amounts due from financial institutions, federal funds sold and money market
mutual funds. The levels of such assets are dependent on the Bank’s operating
financing and investment activities at any given time. The variations in levels
of cash and cash equivalents are influenced by deposit flows and anticipated
future deposit flows.
Cash
and
cash equivalents (cash due from banks, interest-bearing deposits in other
financial institutions, and federal funds sold), as of December 31, 2006,
totaled $13,319,978, a decrease of $2,129,749 or 13.79%, from the December
31,
2005 total of $15,449,727. Most of this decrease was due to interest-bearing
deposits in FHLB but was offset by an increase in federal funds
sold.
As
of
December 31, 2006, the Bank was permitted to draw on a $38.0 million line of
credit from the FHLB of Atlanta. Borrowings under the line are secured by a
floating lien on the Bank’s residential mortgage loans and its portfolio of U.S.
Government and agency securities. As of December 31, 2006, a $7 million
long-term convertible advance was outstanding under this line. In addition
the
Bank has a secured line of credit in the amount of $5 million from another
commercial bank on which there is no outstanding balance at December 31,2006.
Furthermore, on September 7, 2000, the Company issued $5,155,000 of its 10.6%
Junior Subordinated Deferrable Interest Debentures to Glen Burnie Statutory
Trust I, a Connecticut statutory trust wholly owned by the Company. The Trust,
in turn, issued $5,000,000 of its 10.6% capital securities to institutional
investors. The debentures are scheduled to mature on September 7, 2030, unless
called by the Company not earlier than September 7, 2010. As of December 31,
2006, the full $5,155,000 was outstanding.
Federal
banking regulations require the Company and the Bank to maintain specified
levels of capital. At December 31, 2006, the Company was in compliance with
these requirements with a leverage ratio of 10.18%, a Tier 1 risk-based capital
ratio of 16.03% and total risk-based capital ratio of 17.02%. At December 31,
2006, the Bank met the criteria for designation as a well capitalized depository
institution under FDIC regulations.
Impact
of Inflation and Changing Prices
The
consolidated financial statements and notes thereto presented herein have been
prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, 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,
nearly all of the Company’s assets and liabilities are monetary in mature. As a
result, interest rates have a greater impact on the Company’s performance than
do the effects of general levels of inflation. Interest rates do not necessarily
move in the same direction or to the same extent as the prices of goods and
services.
Critical
Accounting Policies
The
Company’s accounting policies are more fully described in Note 1 of the Notes to
the Consolidated Financial Statements, starting on page F-8 and are essential
to
understanding Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and
Results of Operations. As discussed there, the preparation of financial
statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the
U.S. requires management to make estimates and assumptions about future events
that affect the amounts reported in the financial statements and accompanying
notes. Since future events and their effects cannot be determined with absolute
certainty, the determination of estimates requires the exercise of judgment.
Management has used the best information available to make the estimations
necessary to value the related assets and liabilities based
on
historical experience and on various assumptions which are believed to be
reasonable under the circumstances. Actual
results could differ from those estimates, and such differences may be material
to the financial statements. The Company reevaluates these variables as facts
and circumstances change. Historically, actual results have not differed
significantly from the Company’s estimates. The following is a summary of the
more judgmental accounting estimates and principles involved in the preparation
of the Company’s financial statements, including the identification of the
variables most important in the estimation process:
30
Allowance
for Credit Losses.
The
Bank's allowance for credit losses is determined based upon estimates that
can
and do change when the actual events occur, including historical losses as
an
indicator of future losses, fair market value of collateral, and various general
or industry or geographic specific economic events. The use of these
estimates and values is inherently subjective and the actual losses could be
greater or less than the estimates. For further information regarding our
allowance for credit losses, see “Allowance for Credit Losses” under Item 1-
“Business” of this Annual Report.
Accrued
Taxes.
Management estimates income tax expense based on the amount it expects to owe
various tax authorities. Income taxes are discussed in more detail in Note
10 to
the consolidated financial statements. Accrued taxes represent the net estimated
amount due or to be received from taxing authorities. In estimating accrued
taxes, management assesses the relative merits and risks of the appropriate
tax
treatment of transactions taking into account statutory, judicial and regulatory
guidance in the context of the Company’s tax position.
Recently
Issued Accounting Pronouncements
In
February 2006, the FASB issued Statement No. 155 (SFAS 155), Accounting
for Certain Hybrid Financial Instruments - an amendment of FASB Statements
No. 133 and 140.
SFAS
No. 155 simplifies accounting for certain hybrid instruments currently
governed by SFAS No. 133, Accounting
for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities,
by
allowing fair value remeasurement of hybrid instruments that contain an embedded
derivative that otherwise would require bifurcation. SFAS No. 155 also
eliminates the guidance in SFAS No. 133 Implementation Issue No. D1,
Application
of Statement 133 to Beneficial Interests in Securitized Financial
Assets,
which
provides such beneficial interests are not subject to SFAS No. 133. SFAS
No. 155 amends SFAS No. 140, Accounting
for Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and Extinguishments of
Liabilities - a Replacement of FASB Statement No. 125,
by
eliminating the restriction on passive derivative instruments that a qualifying
special-purpose entity may hold. SFAS No. 155 is effective for all
financial instruments acquired or issued after the beginning of an entity’s
first fiscal year that begins after September 15, 2006. The Company feels
that this pronouncement will not have a significant impact on the financial
statements.
In
March
2006, the FASB issued Statement No. 156 (SFAS 156), Accounting
for Servicing of Financial Assets- an amendment of FASB Statement
No. 140.
SFAS
No. 156 requires an entity to recognize a servicing asset or servicing
liability each time it undertakes an obligation to service a financial asset
by
entering into a servicing contract in specific situations. Additionally, the
servicing asset or servicing liability shall be initially measured at fair
value; however, an entity may elect the “amortization method” or “fair value
method” for subsequent balance sheet reporting periods. SFAS No. 156 is
effective as of an entity’s first fiscal year beginning January 1, 2007.
Early adoption is permitted as of the beginning of an entity’s fiscal year,
provided the entity has not yet issued financial statements, including interim
financial statements, for any period of that fiscal year. The Company feels
that
this pronouncement will not have a significant impact on the financial
statements.
In
September 2006, the FASB issued Statement No. 157 (SFAS 157),
Fair
Value Measurements.
SFAS
157 defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value and
expands disclosures about fair value measurements. SFAS 157 applies whenever
other standards require (or permit) assets or liabilities to be measured at
fair
value but does not expand the use of fair value in any new circumstances. In
this standard, the FASB clarifies the principle that fair value should be based
on the assumptions market participants would use when pricing the asset or
liability. In support of this principle, SFAS 157 establishes a fair value
hierarchy that prioritizes the information used to develop those assumptions.
The provisions of SFAS 157 are effective for financial statements issued for
fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007 and interim periods within
those fiscal years. The provisions should be applied prospectively, except
for
certain specifically identified financial instruments. The Company is currently
reviewing this pronouncement.
31
In
July 2006, the FASB issued Financial Accounting Standards Interpretation
No. 48 (FIN 48), Accounting
for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.
FIN 48
clarifies the accounting for uncertainty in income taxes recognized in an
enterprise’s financial statements in accordance with FASB Statement
No. 109, Accounting
for Income Taxes. FIN
48
prescribes a recognition threshold and measurement attributable for the
financial statement recognition and measurement of a tax position taken or
expected to be taken in a tax return. FIN 48 also provides guidance on
derecognition, classification, interest and penalties, accounting in interim
periods, disclosures and transitions. FIN 48 is effective for fiscal years
beginning after December 15, 2006. The Company feels that this
pronouncement will not have a significant impact on the financial statements
at
the current time.
In
September 2006, the FASB ratified the consensus reached by the Emerging
Issues Task Force (“EITF”) on Issue No. 06-5, Accounting
for Purchases of Life Insurance — Determining the Amount That Could Be Realized
in Accordance with FASB Technical Bulletin No. 85-4, Accounting for
Purchases of Life Insurance.
FASB
Technical Bulletin No. 85-4 requires that the amount that could be realized
under the insurance contract as of the date of the statement of financial
position should be reported as an asset. Since the issuance of FASB Technical
Bulletin No. 85-4, questions arose regarding whether “the amount that could
be realized” should consider 1) any additional amounts included in the
contractual terms of the insurance policy other than the cash surrender value
and 2) the contractual ability to surrender all of the individual-life policies
(or certificates in a group policy) at the same time. EITF 06-5 determined
that
“the amount that could be realized” should 1) consider any additional amounts
included in the contractual terms of the policy and 2) assume the surrender
of
an individual-life by individual-life policy (or certificate by certificate
in a
group policy). Any amount that is ultimately realized by the policy holder
upon
the assumed surrender of the final policy (or final certificate in a group
policy) shall be included in the “amount that could be realized.” An entity
should apply the provisions of EITF 06-5 through either a change in accounting
principle through a cumulative-effect adjustment to retained earnings as of
the
beginning of the year of adoption or a change in accounting principle through
retrospective application to all prior periods. The provisions of EITF 06-5
are
effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2006. Management
has not yet completed its evaluation of the impact that EITF 06-5 will
have.
ITEM
7A.
QUANTITATIVE
AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK
The
information required by this item may be found in Item 7 of Part II of this
report under the caption “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition and Results of Operation-Market Risk Management”, which is
incorporated herein by reference.
The
financial statements and supplementary data required by this Item 8 are included
in the Company’s Consolidated Financial Statements and set forth in the pages
indicated in Item 16(a) of this Annual Report.
Not
applicable.
ITEM
9A.
CONTROLS
AND PROCEDURES
The
Company maintains a system of disclosure controls and procedures that is
designed to provide reasonable assurance that information, which is required
to
be disclosed by the Company in the reports that it files or submits under the
Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, is recorded, processed,
summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the rules and
forms
of the Securities and Exchange Commission, and is accumulated and communicated
to management in a timely manner. The Company’s Chief Executive Officer and
Chief Financial Officer have evaluated this system of disclosure controls and
procedures as of the end of the period covered by this annual report, and
believe that the system is effective. There have been no changes in the
Company’s internal control over financial reporting during the most recent
fiscal year that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to
materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial
reporting.
ITEM
9B.
OTHER
INFORMATION
Not
applicable.
32
PART
III
The
information with respect to the identity and business experience of the
directors of the Company and their remuneration set forth in the section
captioned “Proposal I -- Election of Directors” in the Company’s definitive
Proxy Statement to be filed pursuant to Regulation 14A and issued in conjunction
with the 2006 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Proxy Statement”) is
incorporated herein by reference. The information with respect to the identity
and business experience of executive officers of the Company is set forth in
Part I of this Form 10-K. The information with respect to the Company’s Audit
Committee is incorporated herein by reference to the section captioned “Meetings
and Committees of the Board of Directors” in the Proxy Statement. The
information with respect to compliance with Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act
is
incorporated herein by reference to the section captioned “Section 16(a)
Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance” in the Proxy Statement. The
information with respect to the Company’s Code of Ethics is incorporated herein
by reference to the section captioned “Code of Ethics” in the Proxy
Statement.
ITEM
11.
EXECUTIVE
COMPENSATION
The
information required by this item is incorporated herein by reference to the
sections captioned “Director Compensation” and “Executive Compensation” in the
Proxy Statement.
ITEM
12. SECURITY
OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER
MATTERS
The
information required by this item is incorporated herein by reference to the
sections captioned “Voting Securities and Principal Holders Thereof” and
“Securities Ownership of Management” in the Proxy Statement.
ITEM
13.
CERTAIN
RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS
The
information required by this item is incorporated herein by reference to the
section captioned “Transactions with Management” in the Proxy Statement.
ITEM
14.
PRINCIPAL
ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES
The
information required by this item is incorporated herein by reference to the
section captioned “Authorization for Appointment of Auditors - Disclosure of
Independent
Auditor Fees”
in
the
Proxy Statement.
33
PART
IV
(a)
1. Financial Statements.
Page
|
|
Independent
Auditors’ Report
|
F-1
|
Consolidated
Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004
|
F-2
|
Consolidated
Statements of Income for the Years Ended December 31, 2006, 2005
and 2004
|
F-3
|
Consolidated
Statements of Comprehensive Income for the Years Ended December 31,
2006,
2005 and 2004
|
F-4
|
Consolidated
Statements of Changes in Stockholders’ Equity for the Years Ended December
31, 2006, 2005 and 2004
|
F-5
|
Consolidated
Statements of Cash Flows for the Years Ended December 31, 2006, 2005
and
2004
|
F-6
|
Notes
to Consolidated Financial Statements
|
F-8
|
(a)
2. Financial Statement Schedules.
All
schedules for which provision is made in the applicable accounting regulations
of the Securities and Exchange Commission are omitted because of the absence
of
conditions under which they are required or because the required information
is
included in the consolidated financial statements and related notes
thereto.
(a)
3. Exhibits required to be filed by Item 601 of Regulation
S-K.
Exhibit
No.
3.1
|
Articles
of Incorporation (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to Amendment
No. 1 to the Registrant’s Form 8-A filed December 27, 1999, File No.
0-24047)
|
3.2
|
Articles
of Amendment, dated October 8, 2003 (incorporated
by reference to Exhibit 3.2 to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form
10-Q for the Quarter ended September 30, 2003, File No.
0-24047)
|
3.3
|
Articles
Supplementary, dated November 16, 1999 (incorporated by reference
to
Exhibit 3.3 to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed December
8, 1999, File No. 0-24047)
|
3.4
|
By-Laws
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.4 to the Registrant’s Quarterly
Report on Form 10-Q for the Quarter ended September 30, 2003, File
No.
0-24047)
|
4.1
|
Rights
Agreement, dated as of February 13, 1998, between Glen Burnie Bancorp
and
The Bank of Glen Burnie, as Rights Agent, as amended and restated
as of
December 27, 1999 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Amendment
No. 1 to the Registrant’s Form 8-A filed December 27, 1999, File No.
0-24047)
|
10.1
|
Glen
Burnie Bancorp Director Stock Purchase Plan (incorporated by reference
to
Exhibit 99.1 to Post-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Registrant’s
Registration Statement on Form S-8, File
No.33-62280)
|
10.2
|
The
Bank of Glen Burnie Employee Stock Purchase Plan (incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 99.1 to Post-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the
Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-8, File No.
333-46943)
|
10.3
|
Amended
and Restated Change-in-Control Severance Plan (incorporated by reference
to Exhibit 3.2 to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the
Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2001, File No.
0-24047)
|
10.4
|
The
Bank of Glen Burnie Executive and Director Deferred Compensation
Plan
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the Registrant’s Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 1999,
File No.
0-24047)
|
21
|
Subsidiaries
of the Registrant (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.2 to the
Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the Fiscal Year Ended December
31, 2001, File No. 0-24047)
|
23
|
Consent
of Trice Geary & Myers LLC
|
31.1
|
Rule
15d-14(a) Certification of Chief Executive
Officer
|
31.2
|
Rule
15d-14(a) Certification of Chief Financial
Officer
|
32.1
|
Section
1350 Certifications
|
34
SIGNATURES
Pursuant
to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) 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.
GLEN
BURNIE BANCORP
|
|
March
9, 2007
|
By: /s/
F.
William Kuethe, Jr.
|
F. William Kuethe, Jr.
|
|
President
and Chief Executive Officer
|
Pursuant
to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has
been
signed below by the following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the
capacities and on the dates indicated.
Signature
|
Title
|
Date
|
|
/s/
F. William Kuethe, Jr.
|
President,
Chief Executive Officer
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
F. William Kuethe, Jr.
|
and
Director
|
||
/s/
Michael G. Livingston
|
Deputy
Chief Executive Officer,
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
Michael G. Livingston
|
Executive
Vice President, Chief
|
||
Operating
Officer and Director
|
|||
/s/
John E. Porter
|
Senior
Vice President and Chief
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
John E. Porter
|
Financial
Officer
|
||
/s/
John E. Demyan
|
Chairman
of the Board and Director
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
John E. Demyan
|
|||
/s/
Shirley E. Boyer
|
Director
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
Shirley E. Boyer
|
|||
/s/
Thomas Clocker
|
Director
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
Thomas Clocker
|
|||
/s/
Norman E. Harrison, Jr.
|
Director
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
Norman E. Harrison, Jr.
|
|||
/s/
F. W. Kuethe, III
|
Director
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
F. W. Kuethe, III
|
|||
/s/
Charles Lynch
|
Director
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
Charles Lynch
|
|||
/s/
Edward L. Maddox
|
Director
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
Edward L. Maddox
|
|||
/s/
William N. Scherer, Sr.
|
Director
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
William N. Scherer, Sr.
|
35
/s/
Karen B. Thorwarth
|
Director
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
Karen B. Thorwarth
|
|||
/s/
Mary Lou Wilcox
|
Director
|
March
9, 2007
|
|
Mary Lou Wilcox
|
36
REPORT
OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
Board
of
Directors
Glen
Burnie Bancorp and Subsidiaries
Glen
Burnie, Maryland
We
have
audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of Glen Burnie Bancorp
and
subsidiaries as of December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004, and the related
consolidated statements of income, comprehensive income, changes in
stockholders’ equity, and cash flows for the years then ended. These
consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these consolidated
financial statements based on our audits.
We
conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we
plan
and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
consolidated financial statements are free of material misstatement. The Company
is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its
internal control over financial reporting. Our audit included consideration
of
internal control over financial reporting as a basis for designing audit
procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose
of
expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control
over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit
also
includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and
disclosures in the consolidated financial statements, assessing the accounting
principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as
evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our
audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
In
our
opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above present fairly,
in all material respects, the consolidated financial position of Glen Burnie
Bancorp and subsidiaries as of December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004, and the
consolidated results of their operations and their consolidated cash flows
for
the years then ended in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted
in the United States of America.
Trice
Geary & Myers LLC
Salisbury,
Maryland
March
2,
2007
F-1
Consolidated
Balance Sheets
December
31,
|
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Assets
|
||||||||||
Cash
and due from banks
|
$
|
9,005,691
|
$
|
9,405,148
|
$
|
9,766,710
|
||||
Interest-bearing
deposits in other financial institutions
|
342,309
|
3,711,524
|
65,947
|
|||||||
Federal
funds sold
|
3,971,978
|
2,333,055
|
1,541,234
|
|||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents
|
13,319,978
|
15,449,727
|
11,373,891
|
|||||||
Investment
securities available for sale, at fair value
|
95,811,296
|
86,128,724
|
93,278,857
|
|||||||
Investment
securities held to maturity (fair value
|
||||||||||
2006
$729,960; 2005
$1,238,740; 2004 $1,761,894)
|
683,363
|
1,151,163
|
1,627,190
|
|||||||
Federal
Home Loan Bank stock, at cost
|
928,000
|
918,900
|
919,000
|
|||||||
Maryland
Financial Bank stock, at cost
|
100,000
|
100,000
|
100,000
|
|||||||
Common
stock in the Glen Burnie Statutory Trust I
|
155,000
|
155,000
|
155,000
|
|||||||
Ground
rents, at cost
|
219,100
|
235,700
|
235,700
|
|||||||
Loans,
less allowance for credit losses
|
||||||||||
2006
$1,839,094; 2005
$2,201,350; 2004 $2,411,894;
|
193,336,604
|
190,204,998
|
182,291,292
|
|||||||
Premises
and equipment, at cost, less accumulated depreciation
|
3,406,014
|
3,863,275
|
4,030,777
|
|||||||
Accrued
interest receivable on loans and investment securities
|
1,627,433
|
1,451,806
|
1,484,869
|
|||||||
Deferred
income tax benefits
|
292,131
|
264,139
|
-
|
|||||||
Other
real estate owned
|
50,000
|
50,000
|
50,000
|
|||||||
Cash
value of life insurance
|
6,892,455
|
5,681,802
|
5,483,681
|
|||||||
Other
assets
|
924,227
|
905,757
|
1,281,869
|
|||||||
Total
assets
|
$
|
317,745,601
|
$
|
306,560,991
|
$
|
302,312,126
|
||||
Liabilities
and Stockholders' Equity
|
||||||||||
Liabilities:
|
||||||||||
Deposits:
|
||||||||||
Noninterest-bearing
|
$
|
74,729,298
|
$
|
79,313,921
|
$
|
73,427,366
|
||||
Interest-bearing
|
200,104,159
|
185,934,347
|
188,246,677
|
|||||||
Total
deposits
|
274,833,457
|
265,248,268
|
261,674,043
|
|||||||
Short-term
borrowings
|
545,349
|
622,050
|
541,672
|
|||||||
Long-term
borrowings
|
7,140,170
|
7,170,977
|
7,199,708
|
|||||||
Junior
subordinated debentures owed to unconsolidated
|
||||||||||
subsidiary
trust
|
5,155,000
|
5,155,000
|
5,155,000
|
|||||||
Dividends
payable
|
366,580
|
339,005
|
287,938
|
|||||||
Accrued
interest payable on deposits
|
145,642
|
83,111
|
55,980
|
|||||||
Accrued
interest payable on junior subordinated debentures
|
171,518
|
171,518
|
171,518
|
|||||||
Deferred
income tax liabilities
|
-
|
-
|
330,583
|
|||||||
Other
liabilities
|
1,187,372
|
1,145,621
|
1,151,276
|
|||||||
Total
liabilities
|
289,545,088
|
279,935,550
|
276,567,718
|
|||||||
Commitments
and contingencies
|
||||||||||
Stockholders'
equity:
|
||||||||||
Common
stock, par value $1, authorized 15,000,000 shares;
|
||||||||||
issued
and outstanding 2006
2,484,633
shares;
|
||||||||||
2005
2,056,024 shares; 2004 2,041,033 shares;
|
2,484,633
|
2,056,024
|
2,041,033
|
|||||||
Surplus
|
11,719,907
|
11,458,465
|
11,169,283
|
|||||||
Retained
earnings
|
14,312,496
|
13,341,097
|
11,773,915
|
|||||||
Accumulated
other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax (benefits)
|
(316,523
|
)
|
(230,145
|
)
|
760,177
|
|||||
Total
stockholders' equity
|
28,200,513
|
26,625,441
|
25,744,408
|
|||||||
Total
liabilities and stockholders' equity
|
$
|
317,745,601
|
$
|
306,560,991
|
$
|
302,312,126
|
The
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these
consolidated financial statements.
F-2
Consolidated
Statements of Income
Years
Ended December 31,
|
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Interest
income on:
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Loans,
including fees
|
$
|
11,830,676
|
$
|
11,625,147
|
$
|
11,203,896
|
||||
U.S.
Government agency securities
|
3,347,090
|
2,413,687
|
2,216,554
|
|||||||
State
and municipal securities
|
1,653,109
|
1,473,550
|
1,769,813
|
|||||||
Corporate
trust preferred securities
|
374,588
|
378,167
|
358,290
|
|||||||
Federal
funds sold
|
200,418
|
113,246
|
59,461
|
|||||||
Other
|
249,315
|
93,765
|
53,113
|
|||||||
Total
interest income
|
17,655,196
|
16,097,562
|
15,661,127
|
|||||||
|
||||||||||
Interest
expense on:
|
||||||||||
Deposits
|
4,780,871
|
3,091,576
|
2,611,536
|
|||||||
Short-term
borrowings
|
80,994
|
65,906
|
56,938
|
|||||||
Long-term
borrowings
|
425,470
|
427,547
|
429,484
|
|||||||
Junior
subordinated debentures
|
546,430
|
546,430
|
546,703
|
|||||||
Total
interest expense
|
5,833,765
|
4,131,459
|
3,644,661
|
|||||||
|
||||||||||
Net
interest income
|
11,821,431
|
11,966,103
|
12,016,466
|
|||||||
|
||||||||||
Provision
for credit losses
|
62,000
|
(50,000
|
)
|
340,000
|
||||||
|
||||||||||
Net
interest income after provision for credit losses
|
11,759,431
|
12,016,103
|
11,676,466
|
|||||||
|
||||||||||
Other
income:
|
||||||||||
Service
charges on deposit accounts
|
831,140
|
864,823
|
899,196
|
|||||||
Other
fees and commissions
|
1,026,144
|
948,580
|
859,539
|
|||||||
Gains
on investment securities, net
|
176,453
|
102,300
|
411,478
|
|||||||
Income
on life insurance
|
210,653
|
198,121
|
201,423
|
|||||||
Total
other income
|
2,244,390
|
2,113,824
|
2,371,636
|
|||||||
|
||||||||||
Other
expenses:
|
||||||||||
Salaries
and wages
|
4,769,495
|
4,620,793
|
4,404,605
|
|||||||
Employee
benefits
|
1,748,294
|
1,788,453
|
1,891,244
|
|||||||
Occupancy
|
850,843
|
793,903
|
684,242
|
|||||||
Furniture
and equipment
|
864,151
|
885,203
|
839,485
|
|||||||
Other
expenses
|
2,363,878
|
2,536,445
|
2,539,801
|
|||||||
Total
other expenses
|
10,596,661
|
10,624,797
|
10,359,377
|
|||||||
|
||||||||||
Income
before income taxes
|
3,407,160
|
3,505,130
|
3,688,725
|
|||||||
|
||||||||||
Federal
and state income tax expense
|
687,115
|
730,389
|
633,224
|
|||||||
|
||||||||||
Net
income
|
$
|
2,720,045
|
$
|
2,774,741
|
$
|
3,055,501
|
||||
|
||||||||||
Basic
and diluted earnings per share of common stock
|
$
|
1.10
|
$
|
1.13
|
$
|
1.25
|
The
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these
consolidated financial statements.
F-3
Consolidated
Statements of Comprehensive Income
Years
Ended December 31,
|
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Net
income
|
$
|
2,720,045
|
$
|
2,774,741
|
$
|
3,055,501
|
||||
|
||||||||||
Other
comprehensive loss, net of tax
|
||||||||||
Unrealized
holding losses arising during the
|
||||||||||
period
(net of deferred tax benefits 2006
$6,826;
|
||||||||||
2005
$583,598; 2004 $173,611)
|
(10,849
|
)
|
(927,530
|
)
|
(275,926
|
)
|
||||
Reclassification
adjustment for gains included in net
|
||||||||||
income
(net of deferred taxes 2006
$47,522;
|
||||||||||
2005
$39,508; 2004 $154,291)
|
(75,529
|
)
|
(62,792
|
)
|
(245,220
|
)
|
||||
Total
other comprehensive loss
|
(86,378
|
)
|
(990,322
|
)
|
(521,146
|
)
|
||||
|
||||||||||
Comprehensive
income
|
$
|
2,633,667
|
$
|
1,784,419
|
$
|
2,534,355
|
The
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these
consolidated financial statements.
F-4
|
|
|
|
|
Accumulated
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
Other
|
Total
|
|||||||||||||
|
Common
Stock
|
|
Retained
|
Comprehensive
|
Stockholders'
|
||||||||||||||
|
Shares
|
Par
Value
|
Surplus
|
Earnings
|
Income
(Loss)
|
Equity
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
Balances,
December 31, 2003
|
1,689,281
|
$
|
1,689,281
|
$
|
10,861,986
|
$
|
10,115,038
|
$
|
1,281,323
|
$
|
23,947,628
|
||||||||
Net
income
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,055,501
|
-
|
3,055,501
|
|||||||||||||
Cash
dividends, $.43 per share
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,059,357
|
)
|
-
|
(1,059,357
|
)
|
|||||||||||
Dividends
reinvested under dividend
|
|||||||||||||||||||
reinvestment
plan
|
10,796
|
10,796
|
221,159
|
-
|
-
|
231,955
|
|||||||||||||
Shares
issued under employee stock
|
|||||||||||||||||||
purchase
plan
|
3,689
|
3,689
|
72,673
|
-
|
-
|
76,362
|
|||||||||||||
Stock
split effected in form of 20%
|
|||||||||||||||||||
stock
dividend
|
337,267
|
337,267
|
-
|
(337,267
|
)
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||||
Vested
stock options, net
|
-
|
-
|
13,465
|
-
|
-
|
13,465
|
|||||||||||||
Other
comprehensive loss, net of tax
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(521,146
|
)
|
(521,146
|
)
|
|||||||||||
Balances,
December 31, 2004
|
2,041,033
|
2,041,033
|
11,169,283
|
11,773,915
|
760,177
|
25,744,408
|
|||||||||||||
Net
income
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,774,741
|
-
|
2,774,741
|
|||||||||||||
Cash
dividends, $.49 per share
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,207,559
|
)
|
-
|
(1,207,559
|
)
|
|||||||||||
Dividends
reinvested under dividend
|
|||||||||||||||||||
reinvestment
plan
|
12,708
|
12,708
|
243,407
|
-
|
-
|
256,115
|
|||||||||||||
Shares
issued under employee stock
|
|||||||||||||||||||
purchase
plan
|
2,283
|
2,283
|
38,584
|
-
|
-
|
40,867
|
|||||||||||||
Vested
stock options, net
|
-
|
-
|
7,191
|
-
|
-
|
7,191
|
|||||||||||||
Other
comprehensive loss, net of tax
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(990,322
|
)
|
(990,322
|
)
|
|||||||||||
Balances,
December 31, 2005
|
2,056,024
|
2,056,024
|
11,458,465
|
13,341,097
|
(230,145
|
)
|
26,625,441
|
||||||||||||
Net
income
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,720,045
|
-
|
2,720,045
|
|||||||||||||
Cash
dividends, $.54 per share
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,337,545
|
)
|
-
|
(1,337,545
|
)
|
|||||||||||
Dividends
reinvested under dividend
|
|||||||||||||||||||
reinvestment
plan
|
15,113
|
15,113
|
229,946
|
-
|
-
|
245,059
|
|||||||||||||
Shares
issued under employee stock
|
|||||||||||||||||||
purchase
plan
|
2,395
|
2,395
|
31,496
|
-
|
-
|
33,891
|
|||||||||||||
Stock
split effected in form of 20%
|
|||||||||||||||||||
stock
dividend
|
411,101
|
411,101
|
-
|
(411,101
|
)
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||||
Other
comprehensive loss, net of tax
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(86,378
|
)
|
(86,378
|
)
|
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Balances,
December 31, 2006
|
2,484,633
|
$
|
2,484,633
|
$
|
11,719,907
|
$
|
14,312,496
|
$
|
(316,523
|
)
|
$
|
28,200,513
|
The
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these
consolidated financial statements.
F-5
Consolidated
Statements of Cash Flows
Years
Ended December 31,
|
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||
|
|
|||||||||
Cash
flows from operating activities:
|
|
|||||||||
Net
income
|
$
|
2,720,045
|
$
|
2,774,741
|
$
|
3,055,501
|
||||
Adjustments
to reconcile net income to net
|
||||||||||
cash
provided by operating activities
|
||||||||||
Depreciation,
amortization, and accretion
|
571,741
|
761,402
|
828,444
|
|||||||
Compensation
expense from vested stock options, net
|
-
|
7,191
|
13,465
|
|||||||
Provision
for credit losses
|
62,000
|
(50,000
|
)
|
340,000
|
||||||
Provision
for unfunded commitments
|
-
|
50,000
|
-
|
|||||||
Losses
on other real estate owned
|
-
|
-
|
7,372
|
|||||||
Deferred
income taxes (benefits), net
|
26,357
|
28,383
|
(133,613
|
)
|
||||||
Gains
on disposals of assets, net
|
(175,634
|
)
|
(100,866
|
)
|
(409,211
|
)
|
||||
Income
on investment in life insurance
|
(210,653
|
)
|
(198,121
|
)
|
(201,423
|
)
|
||||
Changes
in assets and liabilities:
|
||||||||||
(Increase)
decrease in accrued interest receivable
|
(175,627
|
)
|
33,063
|
91,049
|
||||||
Decrease
in other assets
|
38,161
|
238,828
|
5,663
|
|||||||
Increase
(decrease) in accrued interest payable
|
62,531
|
27,131
|
(11,119
|
)
|
||||||
Increase
(decrease) in other liabilities
|
41,751
|
(5,655
|
)
|
5,749
|
||||||
|
||||||||||
Net
cash provided by operating activities
|
2,960,672
|
3,566,097
|
3,591,877
|
|||||||
|
||||||||||
Cash
flows from investing activities:
|
||||||||||
Maturities
of held to maturity mortgage-backed securities
|
468,199
|
476,502
|
952,233
|
|||||||
Maturities
of other held to maturity investment securities
|
-
|
-
|
1,000,000
|
|||||||
Maturities
of available for sale mortgage-backed securities
|
9,331,430
|
7,810,035
|
6,984,287
|
|||||||
Maturities
of other available for sale investment securities
|
4,330,544
|
4,111,320
|
3,229,796
|
|||||||
Sales
of available for sale debt securities
|
22,431,078
|
16,951,413
|
18,345,056
|
|||||||
Purchases
of available for sale mortgage-backed securities
|
(25,365,231
|
)
|
(12,488,670
|
)
|
(18,214,141
|
)
|
||||
Purchases
of other available for sale investment securities
|
(20,398,575
|
)
|
(10,874,843
|
)
|
(4,651,079
|
)
|
||||
(Purchase)
sale of FHLB stock
|
(9,100
|
)
|
100
|
(22,600
|
)
|
|||||
Purchase
of MFB stock
|
-
|
-
|
(100,000
|
)
|
||||||
Purchase
of life insurance contracts
|
(1,000,000
|
)
|
-
|
(500,000
|
)
|
|||||
Increase
in loans, net
|
(3,193,606
|
)
|
(7,863,706
|
)
|
(9,697,733
|
)
|
||||
Purchases
of premises and equipment
|
(131,821
|
)
|
(378,774
|
)
|
(417,426
|
)
|
||||
|
||||||||||
Net
cash used by investing activities
|
(13,537,082
|
)
|
(2,256,623
|
)
|
(3,091,607
|
)
|
||||
|
||||||||||
Cash
flows from financing activities:
|
||||||||||
(Decrease)
increase in noninterest-bearing deposits, NOW
|
||||||||||
accounts,
money market accounts, and savings accounts, net
|
(4,584,623
|
)
|
5,886,555
|
3,778,548
|
||||||
Increase
(decrease) in time deposits, net
|
14,169,812
|
(2,312,330
|
)
|
987,260
|
||||||
(Decrease)
increase in short-term borrowings
|
(76,701
|
)
|
80,378
|
(6,060,248
|
)
|
|||||
Repayments
of long-term borrowings
|
(30,807
|
)
|
(28,731
|
)
|
(26,793
|
)
|
||||
Cash
dividends paid
|
(1,309,970
|
)
|
(1,156,492
|
)
|
(1,008,357
|
)
|
||||
Common
stock dividends reinvested
|
245,059
|
256,115
|
231,955
|
|||||||
Issuance
of common stock
|
33,891
|
40,867
|
76,362
|
|||||||
|
||||||||||
Net
cash provided (used) by financing activities
|
8,446,661
|
2,766,362
|
(2,021,273
|
)
|
||||||
|
||||||||||
(Decrease)
increase in cash and cash equivalents
|
(2,129,749
|
)
|
4,075,836
|
(1,521,003
|
)
|
|||||
|
||||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents, beginning of year
|
15,449,727
|
11,373,891
|
12,894,894
|
|||||||
|
||||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents, end of year
|
$
|
13,319,978
|
$
|
15,449,727
|
$
|
11,373,891
|
The
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these
consolidated financial statements.
F-6
Glen
Burnie Bancorp and Subsidiaries
Consolidated
Statements of Cash Flows
(Continued)
Years
Ended December 31,
|
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Supplementary
Cash Flow Information:
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Interest
paid
|
$
|
5,771,234
|
$
|
4,104,328
|
$
|
3,655,780
|
||||
Income
taxes paid
|
626,374
|
741,717
|
908,812
|
|||||||
Total
decrease in unrealized depreciation
|
||||||||||
on
available for sale securities
|
(140,725
|
)
|
(1,613,427
|
)
|
(849,050
|
)
|
The
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these
consolidated financial statements.
F-7
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies
The
Bank
of Glen Burnie (the “Bank”) provides financial services to individuals and
corporate customers located in Anne Arundel County and surrounding areas of
Central Maryland, and is subject to competition from other financial
institutions. The Bank is also subject to the regulations of certain Federal
and
State of Maryland (the “State”) agencies and undergoes periodic examinations by
those regulatory authorities. The accounting and financial reporting policies
of
the Bank conform, in all material respects, to accounting principles generally
accepted in the United States and to general practices within the banking
industry.
Significant
accounting policies not disclosed elsewhere in the consolidated financial
statements are as follows:
Principles
of Consolidation:
The
consolidated financial statements include the accounts of Glen Burnie Bancorp
(“Bancorp” or the “Company”) and its subsidiaries, The Bank of Glen Burnie and
GBB Properties, Inc., a company engaged in the acquisition and disposition
of
other real estate. Intercompany balances and transactions have been eliminated.
The Parent Only financial statements (see Note 21) of the Company account for
the subsidiaries using the equity method of accounting.
The
Company determines whether is has a controlling financial interest in an entity
by first evaluating whether the entity is a voting interest entity or a variable
interest entity under accounting principles generally accepted in the United
States. Voting interest entities are entities, in which the total equity
investment at risk is sufficient to enable the entity to finance itself
independently and provides the equity holders with the obligation to absorb
losses, the right to receive residual returns and the right to make decisions
about the entity’s activities. The Company consolidates voting interest entities
in which it has all, or at least a majority of, the voting interest. As defined
in applicable accounting standards, variable interest entities (VIE’s) are
entities that lack one or more of the characteristics of a voting interest
entity. A controlling financial interest in an entity is present when an
enterprise has a variable interest, or a combination of variable interest,
that
will absorb a majority of the entity’s expected losses, receive a majority of
the entity’s expected residual returns, or both. The enterprise with a
controlling financial interest, known as the primary beneficiary, consolidates
the VIE. The Company’s wholly owned subsidiary, Glen Burnie Statutory Trust I,
is a VIE for which the Company is not the primary beneficiary. Accordingly,
the
accounts of this entity are not included in the Company’s consolidated financial
statements.
Use
of
Estimates:
The
preparation of the consolidated financial statements in conformity with
accounting principles generally accepted within the United States of America
requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported
amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and
liabilities at the dates of the financial statements and the reported amounts
of
revenues and expenses during the reporting periods. Actual results could differ
from those estimates.
Securities
Held to Maturity:
Bonds,
notes, and debentures for which the Bank has the positive intent and ability
to
hold to maturity are reported at cost, adjusted for premiums and discounts
that
are recognized in interest income using the effective interest rate method
over
the period to maturity. Securities transferred into held to maturity from the
available for sale portfolio are recorded at fair value at time of transfer
with
unrealized gains or losses reflected in equity and amortized over the remaining
life of the security.
F-8
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (continued)
Securities
Available for Sale:
Marketable
debt securities not classified as held to maturity are classified as available
for sale. Securities available for sale may be sold in response to changes
in
interest rates, loan demand, changes in prepayment risk, and other factors.
Changes in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities available for
sale are reported in other comprehensive income, net of tax. Realized gains
(losses) on securities available for sale are included in other income (expense)
and, when applicable, are reported as a reclassification adjustment, net of
tax,
in other comprehensive income. The gains and losses on securities sold are
determined by the specific identification method. Premiums and discounts are
recognized in interest income using the effective interest rate method over
the
period to maturity. Additionally, declines in the fair value of individual
investment securities below their cost that are other than temporary are
reflected as realized losses in the consolidated statements of income.
Other
Securities:
Federal
Home Loan Bank (“FHLB”) and Maryland Financial Bank (“MFB”) stocks are equity
interests that do not necessarily have readily determinable fair values for
purposes of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (“SFAS”) No 115,
Accounting
for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities,
because
their ownership is restricted and they lack a market. FHLB stock can be sold
back only at its par value of $100 per share and only to the FHLB or another
member institution.
Loans
and
Allowance for Credit Losses:
Loans
are
generally carried at the amount of unpaid principal, adjusted for deferred
loan
fees, which are amortized over the term of the loan using the effective interest
rate method. Interest on loans is accrued based on the principal amounts
outstanding. It is the Bank’s policy to discontinue the accrual of interest when
a loan is specifically determined to be impaired or when principal or interest
is delinquent for ninety days or more. When a loan is placed on nonaccrual
status all interest previously accrued but not collected is reversed against
current period interest income. Interest income generally is not recognized
on
specific impaired loans unless the likelihood of further loss is remote. Cash
collections on such loans are applied as reductions of the loan principal
balance and no interest income is recognized on those loans until the principal
balance has been collected. Interest income on other nonaccrual loans is
recognized only to the extent of interest payments received. The carrying value
of impaired loans is based on the present value of the loan’s expected future
cash flows or, alternatively, the observable market price of the loan or the
fair value of the collateral.
The
allowance for loan losses is maintained at a level believed adequate by
management to absorb probable losses inherent in the loan portfolio and is
based
on the size and current risk characteristics of the loan portfolio, an
assessment of individual problem loans and actual loss experience, current
economic events in specific industries and geographical areas, including
unemployment levels, and other pertinent factors, including regulatory guidance
and general economic conditions. Determination of the allowance is inherently
subjective as it requires significant estimates, including the amounts and
timing of expected future cash flows on impaired loans, estimated losses on
pools of homogeneous loans based on historical loss experience, and
consideration of current economic trends, all of which may be susceptible to
significant change. Loan losses are charged off against the allowance, while
recoveries of amounts previously charged off are credited to the allowance.
A
provision for loan losses is charged to operations based on management’s
periodic evaluation of the factors previously mentioned, as well as other
pertinent factors. Evaluations are conducted at least quarterly and more often
if deemed necessary.
The
allowance for loan losses typically consists of an allocated component and
an
unallocated component. The components of the allowance for loan losses represent
an estimation done pursuant to either SFAS No 5, Accounting for Contingencies,
or SFAS No 114, Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan. The allocated
component of the allowance for loan losses reflects expected
F-9
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (continued)
losses
resulting from analyses developed through specific credit allocations for
individual loans and historical loss experience for each loan category. The
specific credit allocations are based on regular analyses of all loans over
a
fixed-dollar amount where the internal credit rating is at or below a
predetermined classification. The historical loan loss element is determined
statistically using a loss migration analysis that examines loss experience
and
the related internal gradings of loans charged off. The loss migration analysis
is performed quarterly and loss factors are updated regularly based on actual
experience. The allocated component of the allowance for loan losses also
includes consideration of concentrations and changes in portfolio mix and
volume.
Any
unallocated portion of the allowance reflects management’s estimate of probable
inherent but undetected losses within the portfolio due to uncertainties in
economic conditions, delays in obtaining information, including unfavorable
information about a borrower’s financial condition, the difficulty in
identifying triggering events that correlate perfectly to subsequent loss rates,
and risk factors that have not yet manifested themselves in loss allocation
factors. In addition, the unallocated allowance includes a component that
explicitly accounts for the inherent imprecision in loan loss migration models.
The historical losses used in the migration analysis may not be representative
of actual unrealized losses inherent in the portfolio. At December 31, 2006,
there was no unallocated component of the allowance reflected in the allowance
for credit losses.
Reserve
for Unfunded Commitments:
The
reserve for unfunded commitments is established through a provision for unfunded
commitments charged to other expenses. The reserve is calculated by utilizing
the same methodology and factors as the allowance for credit losses. The
reserve, based on evaluations of the collectibiltiy of loans and prior loan
loss
experience, is an amount that management believes will be adequate to absorb
possible losses on unfunded commitments (off-balance sheet financial
instruments) that may become uncollectible in the future.
Other
Real Estate Owned (“OREO”):
OREO
comprises properties acquired in partial or total satisfaction of problem loans.
The properties are recorded at the lower of cost or fair value (appraised value)
at the date acquired. Losses arising at the time of acquisition of such
properties are charged against the allowance for credit losses. Subsequent
write-downs that may be required and expenses of operation are included in
other
income or expenses. Gains and losses realized from the sale of OREO are included
in other income or expenses. No loans were converted to OREO in 2006, 2005,
or
2004. The Bank financed no sales of OREO for 2006, 2005, or 2004.
Bank
Premises and Equipment:
Bank
premises and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation. The
provision for depreciation is computed using the straight-line method over
the
estimated useful lives of the assets. Leasehold improvements are depreciated
over the lesser of the terms of the leases or their estimated useful lives.
Expenditures for improvements that extend the life of an asset are capitalized
and depreciated over the asset’s remaining useful life. Gains or losses realized
on the disposition of premises and equipment are reflected in the consolidated
statements of income. Expenditures for repairs and maintenance are charged
to
other expenses as incurred. Computer software is recorded at cost and amortized
over three to five years.
Intangible
Assets:
A
core
deposit intangible asset of $544,652,
relating to a branch acquisition, has been amortized on the straight-line method
over 10 years. Accumulated amortization totaled $544,652,
$544,652, and
F-10
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (continued)
$503,802
at December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004, respectively. Amortization expense totaled
$0,
$40,850, and $54,465
for the years ended December 2006, 2005, and 2004, respectively.
Long-Lived
Assets:
The
carrying value of long-lived assets and certain identifiable intangibles,
including goodwill, is reviewed by the Bank for impairment whenever events
or
changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of an asset may
not
be recoverable, as prescribed in SFAS No. 144, Accounting
for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Asset.
As of
December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004, certain loans existed which management
considered impaired (See Note 4).
Income
Taxes:
The
provision for Federal and state income taxes is based upon the results of
operations, adjusted for tax-exempt income. Deferred income taxes are provided
by applying enacted statutory tax rates to temporary differences between
financial and taxable bases.
Temporary
differences which give rise to deferred tax benefits relate principally to
deferred compensation and benefit plans, allowance for credit losses,
alternative minimum tax credits, net unrealized depreciation on investment
securities available for sale, and reserve for unfunded
commitments.
Temporary
differences which give rise to deferred tax liabilities relate principally
to
accumulated depreciation, accumulated securities discount accretion, and net
unrealized appreciation on investment securities available for
sale.
Credit
Risk:
The
Bank
has deposits in other financial institutions in excess of amounts insured by
the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”). At December 31, 2006, the Bank
had unsecured deposits and Federal funds sold with two separate financial
institutions of approximately $4,073,000.
Cash
and
Cash Equivalents:
The
Bank
has included cash and due from banks, interest-bearing deposits in other
financial institutions, and Federal funds sold as cash and cash equivalents
for
the purpose of reporting cash flows.
Accounting
for Stock Options:
On
January 1, 2006, the Company adopted SFAS No. 123R, Share-Based
Payments,
for
accounting and reporting for stock-based compensation plans. SFAS No. 123R
defines a fair value at grant date based method of accounting for measuring
compensation expense for stock-based plans to be recognized in the statement
of
income. For 2005 and 2004, the Company applied Accounting Principles Board
Opinion (APB) No. 25 and related Interpretations for accounting and reporting
for these plans. If compensation cost for these periods had been determined
based on the fair value at the grant date for awards under this plan consistent
with the methods outlined in SFAS No. 123R, there would be no change in reported
net income for the years ending December 31, 2005 and 2004 (See Note
17).
Earnings
per share:
Basic
earnings per common share are determined by dividing net income by the weighted
average number of shares of common stock outstanding. Diluted earnings per
share
are calculated including the average dilutive common stock equivalents
outstanding during the period. Dilutive common equivalent shares consist of
stock options, calculated using the treasury stock method.
F-11
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (continued)
Financial
Statement Presentation:
Certain
amounts in the prior years’ financial statements have been reclassified to
conform to the current year’s presentation.
Note
2. Restrictions on Cash and Due from Banks
The
Federal Reserve requires the Bank to maintain noninterest-bearing cash reserves
against certain categories of average deposit liabilities. Such reserves
averaged approximately $5,530,000, $5,976,000,
and $5,684,000 during the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004,
respectively.
Note
3. Investment Securities
|
|
Gross
|
Gross
|
|||||||||||
Amortized
|
Unrealized
|
Unrealized
|
Fair
|
|||||||||||
December
31, 2006
|
Cost
|
Gains
|
Losses
|
Value
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Available
for sale:
|
||||||||||||||
U.S.
Government agencies
|
$
|
11,484,102
|
$
|
6,250
|
$
|
299,634
|
$
|
11,190,718
|
||||||
State
and municipal
|
36,127,782
|
429,062
|
179,207
|
36,377,637
|
||||||||||
Corporate
trust preferred
|
3,079,958
|
372,316
|
-
|
3,452,274
|
||||||||||
Mortgage-backed
|
45,635,133
|
39,152
|
883,618
|
44,790,667
|
||||||||||
$
|
96,326,975
|
$
|
846,780
|
$
|
1,362,459
|
$
|
95,811,296
|
|||||||
Held
to maturity:
|
||||||||||||||
State
and municipal
|
$
|
683,363
|
$
|
46,597
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
729,960
|
||||||
|
||||||||||||||
$
|
683,363
|
$
|
46,597
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
729,960
|
|
|
Gross
|
Gross
|
|||||||||||
Amortized
|
Unrealized
|
Unrealized
|
Fair
|
|||||||||||
December
31, 2005
|
Cost
|
Gains
|
Losses
|
Value
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Available
for sale:
|
||||||||||||||
U.S.
Government agencies
|
$
|
11,978,348
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
476,568
|
$
|
11,501,780
|
||||||
State
and municipal
|
29,593,236
|
634,992
|
228,381
|
29,999,847
|
||||||||||
Corporate
trust preferred
|
4,976,388
|
475,487
|
-
|
5,451,875
|
||||||||||
Mortgage-backed
|
39,955,704
|
26,808
|
807,290
|
39,175,222
|
||||||||||
$
|
86,503,676
|
$
|
1,137,287
|
$
|
1,512,239
|
$
|
86,128,724
|
|||||||
Held
to maturity:
|
||||||||||||||
State
and municipal
|
$
|
683,073
|
$
|
63,670
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
746,743
|
||||||
Mortgage-backed
|
468,090
|
23,907
|
-
|
491,997
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
$
|
1,151,163
|
$
|
87,577
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
1,238,740
|
F-12
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
3. Investment Securities (continued)
December
31, 2004
|
Amortized
Cost
|
Gross
Unrealized
Gains
|
Gross
Unrealized
Losses
|
Fair
Value
|
||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
Available
for sale:
|
||||||||||||||
U.S.
Government agencies
|
$
|
12,511,877
|
$
|
93,242
|
$
|
487,504
|
$
|
12,117,615
|
||||||
State
and municipal
|
35,956,838
|
1,237,281
|
88,450
|
37,105,669
|
||||||||||
Corporate
trust preferred
|
5,008,127
|
459,840
|
-
|
5,467,967
|
||||||||||
Mortgage-backed
|
38,563,539
|
187,391
|
163,324
|
38,587,606
|
||||||||||
$
|
92,040,381
|
$
|
1,977,754
|
$
|
739,278
|
$
|
93,278,857
|
|||||||
Held
to maturity:
|
||||||||||||||
State
and municipal
|
$
|
682,945
|
$
|
71,933
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
754,878
|
||||||
Mortgage-backed
|
944,245
|
62,771
|
-
|
1,007,016
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
$
|
1,627,190
|
$
|
134,704
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
1,761,894
|
The
gross
unrealized losses and fair value, aggregated by investment category and length
of time that individual securities have been in a continuous unrealized loss
position, at December 31, 2006 are as follows:
Less
than 12 months
|
12
months or more
|
Total
|
||||||||||||||||||
Fair
|
Unrealized
|
Fair
|
Unrealized
|
Fair
|
Unrealized
|
|||||||||||||||
Value
|
Loss
|
Value
|
Loss
|
Value
|
Loss
|
|||||||||||||||
Obligations
of U.S.
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Government
agencies
|
$
|
2,481,406
|
$
|
13,759
|
$
|
7,703,031
|
$
|
285,875
|
$
|
10,184,437
|
$
|
299,634
|
||||||||
State
and Municipal
|
5,855,246
|
20,027
|
9,324,227
|
159,180
|
15,179,473
|
179,207
|
||||||||||||||
Mortgaged-backed
|
10,471,563
|
65,694
|
30,440,138
|
817,924
|
40,911,701
|
883,618
|
||||||||||||||
$
|
18,808,215
|
$
|
99,480
|
$
|
47,467,396
|
$
|
1,262,979
|
$
|
66,275,611
|
$
|
1,362,459
|
Declines
in the fair value of held to maturity and available for sale securities below
their cost that are deemed to be other than temporary are reflected in earnings
as realized losses. In estimating other-than-temporary impairment losses,
management considers, among other things, (i) the length of time and the extent
to which the fair value has been less than cost, (ii) the financial condition
and near-term prospects of the issuer, and (iii) the intent and ability of
the
Company to retain its investment in the issuer for a period of time sufficient
to allow for any anticipated recovery in fair value.
Management
has the ability and intent to hold the securities classified as held to maturity
until they mature, at which time the Company will receive full value for the
securities. Furthermore, as of December 31, 2006, management also had the
ability and intent to hold the securities classified as available for sale
for a
period of time sufficient for a recovery of cost. On December 31, 2006, the
Bank
held 83 investment securities having continuous unrealized loss positions for
more than 12 months. Management has determined that all unrealized losses are
largely due to increases in market interest rates over the yields available
at
the time the underlying securities were purchased. The fair value is expected
to
recover as the bonds approach their maturity date or repricing date or if market
yields for such investments decline. Management does not believe any of the
securities are impaired due to reasons of credit quality. Accordingly, as of
December 31, 2006, management believes the
F-13
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
3. Investment Securities (continued)
impairments
detailed in the table above are temporary and no impairment loss has been
realized in the Company’s consolidated income statement.
Contractual
maturities of investment securities at December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004 are
shown below. Actual maturities may differ from contractual maturities because
debtors may have the right to call or prepay obligations with or without call
or
prepayment penalties. Mortgage-backed securities have no stated maturity and
primarily reflect investments in various Pass-through and Participation
Certificates issued by the Federal National Mortgage Association and the
Government National Mortgage Association. Repayment of mortgage-backed
securities is affected by the contractual repayment terms of the underlying
mortgages collateralizing these obligations and the current level of interest
rates.
Available
for Sale
|
Held
to Maturity
|
|||||||||||||
Amortized
|
Fair
|
Amortized
|
Fair
|
|||||||||||
December
31, 2006
|
Cost
|
Value
|
Cost
|
Value
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Due
within one year
|
$
|
300,989
|
$
|
298,897
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
||||||
Due
over one to five years
|
10,355,087
|
10,221,909
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||
Due
over five to ten years
|
9,938,119
|
9,826,970
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||
Due
over ten years
|
30,097,647
|
30,672,853
|
683,363
|
729,960
|
||||||||||
Mortgage-backed,
due in
|
||||||||||||||
monthly
installments
|
45,635,133
|
44,790,667
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||
$
|
96,326,975
|
$
|
95,811,296
|
$
|
683,363
|
$
|
729,960
|
Available
for Sale
|
Held
to Maturity
|
|||||||||||||
Amortized
|
Fair
|
Amortized
|
Fair
|
|||||||||||
December
31, 2005
|
Cost
|
Value
|
Cost
|
Value
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
Due
within one year
|
$
|
500,000
|
$
|
494,687
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
||||||
Due
over one to five years
|
11,628,697
|
11,489,621
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||
Due
over five to ten years
|
12,395,207
|
12,265,866
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||
Due
over ten years
|
22,024,068
|
22,703,328
|
683,073
|
746,743
|
||||||||||
Mortgage-backed,
due in
|
||||||||||||||
monthly
installments
|
39,955,704
|
39,175,222
|
468,090
|
491,997
|
||||||||||
$
|
86,503,676
|
$
|
86,128,724
|
$
|
1,151,163
|
$
|
1,238,740
|
Available
for Sale
|
Held
to Maturity
|
|||||||||||||
Amortized
|
Fair
|
Amortized
|
Fair
|
|||||||||||
December
31, 2004
|
Cost
|
Value
|
Cost
|
Value
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
Due
within one year
|
$
|
2,874,617
|
$
|
2,893,275
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
-
|
||||||
Due
over one to five years
|
7,894,560
|
8,011,579
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||
Due
over five to ten years
|
17,111,432
|
17,210,406
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||
Due
over ten years
|
25,596,233
|
26,575,991
|
682,945
|
754,878
|
||||||||||
Mortgage-backed,
due in
|
||||||||||||||
monthly
installments
|
38,563,539
|
38,587,606
|
944,245
|
1,007,016
|
||||||||||
$
|
92,040,381
|
$
|
93,278,857
|
$
|
1,627,190
|
$
|
1,761,894
|
F-14
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
3. Investment Securities (continued)
Proceeds
from sales of available for sale securities prior to maturity
totaled
$22,431,078, $16,951,413,
and $18,345,056 for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004,
respectively. The Bank realized gains of $225,438
and
losses of $48,985
on
those
sales for 2006. The Bank realized gains of $198,360 and losses of $96,060 on
those sales for 2005. The Bank realized gains of $483,760 and losses of $72,282
on those sales for 2004. Realized gains and losses were calculated based on
the
amortized cost of the securities at the date of trade. Income tax expense
relating to net gains on sales of investment securities totaled $68,146,
$39,509, and $158,913 for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004,
respectively.
|
The
Bank has no derivative financial instruments required to be disclosed
under SFAS No. 119, Disclosure
about Derivative Financial Instruments and Fair Value of Financial
Instruments.
|
Note
4. Loans
Major
categories of loans are as follows:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
Mortgage:
|
|||||||||||
Residential
|
$
|
68,340,050
|
$
|
71,841,084
|
$
|
71,038,619
|
|||||
Commercial
|
53,164,479
|
37,666,243
|
31,982,864
|
||||||||
Construction
and land development
|
1,609,132
|
1,402,203
|
2,080,178
|
||||||||
Demand
and time
|
5,077,680
|
5,932,460
|
5,617,982
|
||||||||
Installment
|
67,726,942
|
76,385,365
|
74,902,306
|
||||||||
195,918,283
|
193,227,355
|
185,621,949
|
|||||||||
Unearned
income on loans
|
(742,585
|
)
|
(821,007
|
)
|
(918,763
|
)
|
|||||
195,175,698
|
192,406,348
|
184,703,186
|
|||||||||
Allowance
for credit losses
|
(1,839,094
|
)
|
(2,201,350
|
)
|
(2,411,894
|
)
|
|||||
$
|
193,336,604
|
$
|
190,204,998
|
$
|
182,291,292
|
The
Bank
has an automotive indirect lending program where vehicle collateralized loans
made by dealers to consumers are acquired by the Bank. The Bank’s installment
loan portfolio included approximately $52,539,000, $60,510,000,
and $55,703,000 of such loans at December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004,
respectively.
The
Bank
makes loans to customers located primarily in Anne Arundel County and
surrounding areas of Central Maryland. Although the loan portfolio is
diversified, its performance will be influenced by the economy of the
region.
Executive
officers, directors, and their affiliated interests enter into loan transactions
with the Bank in the ordinary course of business. These loans are made on the
same terms, including interest rates and collateral, as those prevailing at
the
time for comparable loans with unrelated borrowers. They do not involve more
than normal risk of collectibility or present other unfavorable terms. At
December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004, the amounts of such loans outstanding totaled
$3,293,148,
$1,970,926, and $1,443,878, respectively. During 2006, loan additions and
repayments totaled $1,849,400
and
$527,178,
respectively.
F-15
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
4. Loans (continued)
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||
Balance,
beginning of year
|
$
|
2,201,350
|
$
|
2,411,894
|
$
|
2,246,395
|
|||||
Provision
for credit losses
|
62,000
|
(50,000
|
)
|
340,000
|
|||||||
Recoveries
|
357,803
|
461,033
|
377,213
|
||||||||
Loans
charged off
|
(782,059
|
)
|
(621,577
|
)
|
(551,714
|
)
|
|||||
Balance,
end of year
|
$
|
1,839,094
|
$
|
2,201,350
|
$
|
2,411,894
|
Loans
on
which the accrual of interest has been discontinued totaled $57,429,
$185,430, and $598,162 at December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004, respectively.
Interest that would have been accrued under the terms of these loans totaled
$10,658,
$15,552, and $46,751 for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004,
respectively. Loans past due 90 days or more and still accruing interest
totaled
$1,751,
$3,500
and $6,964 at December 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004, respectively.
Information
regarding loans classified by the Bank as impaired is summarized as
follows:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
Loans
classified as impaired
|
$
|
49,441
|
$
|
185,930
|
$
|
490,656
|
|||||
Allowance
for credit losses on
|
|||||||||||
impaired
loans
|
35,423
|
93,054
|
116,160
|
||||||||
Average
balance of impaired loans
|
6,846
|
104,906
|
461,400
|
||||||||
Following
is a summary of cash receipts on impaired loans and how they were
applied:
|
|||||||||||
Cash
receipts applied to reduce principal balance
|
$
|
9,723
|
$
|
14,054
|
$
|
27,630
|
|||||
Cash
receipts recognized as interest income
|
-
|
2,790
|
27,190
|
||||||||
Total
cash receipts
|
$
|
9,723
|
$
|
16,844
|
$
|
54,820
|
No
troubled debt restructurings transpired in 2006. All prior investments in
troubled debt were performing under the terms of the modified
agreement.
No
troubled debt restructurings transpired in 2005. The remaining prior investment
in troubled debt was not performing under the terms of the modified agreement
in
the amount of $12,508 as of December 31, 2005.
At
December 31, 2004, the recorded investment in new troubled debt restructurings
totaled $94,783. The average recorded investment in troubled debt restructurings
totaled $96,624 for the year ended December 31, 2004. The allowance for credit
losses relating to troubled debt restructurings totaled $31,436 at December
31,
2004. The Bank recognized $8,015 in interest income on troubled debt
restructurings for cash payments received in 2004. All prior investments in
troubled debt were performing under the terms of the modified agreements, with
the exception of one credit relationship classified as impaired in the amount
of
$173,010 as of December 31, 2004.
The
Bank
has no commitments to loan additional funds to the borrowers of restructured,
impaired, or non-accrual loans.
F-16
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
5. Premises and Equipment
A
summary
of premises and equipment is as follows:
Useful
|
||||||||||||||
lives
|
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||||
Land
|
$
|
684,977
|
$
|
684,977
|
$
|
684,977
|
||||||||
Buildings
|
5-50
years
|
4,710,503
|
4,672,579
|
4,437,516
|
||||||||||
Equipment
and fixtures
|
5-30
years
|
5,456,049
|
5,426,032
|
5,248,830
|
||||||||||
Construction
in progress
|
26,088
|
122,652
|
298,480
|
|||||||||||
10,877,617
|
10,906,240
|
10,669,803
|
||||||||||||
Accumulated
depreciation
|
(7,471,603
|
)
|
(7,042,965
|
)
|
(6,639,026
|
)
|
||||||||
$
|
3,406,014
|
$
|
3,863,275
|
$
|
4,030,777
|
Construction
in progress at December 31, 2006 relates primarily to a future branch
site.
Depreciation
expense totaled $450,278,
$493,484, and $469,633 for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004,
respectively. Amortization of software and intangible assets totaled
$97,954, $138,642,
and $167,474 for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004,
respectively.
The
Bank
leases its South Crain Highway, Severna Park, and Linthicum branches. Minimum
lease obligations under the South Crain Highway branch are $115,400 per year
through September 2009, adjusted annually by the CPI. Minimum lease obligations
under the Severna Park branch are $30,000 per year through September 2007.
Minimum lease obligations under the Linthicum branch are $92,700 per year
through December 2014, adjusted annually on a pre-determined basis, with one
ten
year extension option. The Bank is also required to pay all maintenance costs
under all these leasing arrangements. Rent expense totaled $236,166,
$200,596, and $125,198 for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004,
respectively.
Note
6. Short-term borrowings
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||
Notes
payable - U.S. Treasury
|
$
|
545,349
|
$
|
622,050
|
$
|
541,672
|
F-17
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
6. Short-term borrowings (continued)
Notes
payable to the U.S. Treasury represents Federal treasury tax and loan deposits
accepted by the Bank from its customers to be remitted on demand to the Federal
Reserve Bank. The Bank pays interest on these balances at a slight discount
to
the Federal funds rate. This arrangement is secured by investment securities
with an amortized cost of approximately $1,000,000
at
December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004.
The
Bank
owned 9,280 shares of common stock of the FHLB at December 31, 2006. The Bank
is
required to maintain an investment of .2% of total assets, adjusted annually,
plus 4.5% of total advances, adjusted for advances and repayments. The credit
available under this facility is determined at 12% of the Bank’s total assets,
or approximately $38,000,000 at December 31, 2006. Long-term advances totaled
$7,000,000 under this credit arrangement at December 31, 2006 (see Note 7).
This
credit facility is secured by a floating lien on the Bank’s residential mortgage
loan portfolio. Average short-term borrowings under this facility approximated
$1,047,000,
$1,482,000 and $3,605,000 for
2006,
2005, and 2004, respectively.
The
Bank
also has available $5,000,000 in a short-term credit facility, an unsecured
line
of credit, from another bank for short-term liquidity needs, if necessary.
No
outstanding borrowings existed under this credit arrangement at December 31,
2006, 2005, and 2004.
Note
7. Long-term Borrowings
Long-term
borrowings are as follows:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
Federal
Home Loan Bank of Atlanta,
|
|||||||||||
convertible
advance
|
$
|
7,000,000
|
$
|
7,000,000
|
$
|
7,000,000
|
|||||
Mortgage
payable-individual, interest at 7%,
|
|||||||||||
payments
of $3,483, including principal
|
|||||||||||
and
interest, due monthly through
|
|||||||||||
October
2010, secured by real estate
|
140,170
|
170,977
|
199,708
|
||||||||
$
|
7,140,170
|
$
|
7,170,977
|
$
|
7,199,708
|
The
Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta convertible advance matures in September
2010,
with interest at 5.84%, payable quarterly. The Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta
has the option of converting the rate to a three-month LIBOR; however, if
converted, the borrowing can be repaid without penalty. The proceeds of the
convertible advance were used to purchase higher yielding investment
securities.
At
December 31, 2006, the scheduled maturities of long-term borrowings are
approximately as follows:
2006
|
||||
2007
|
$
|
33,000
|
||
2008
|
35,000
|
|||
2009
|
38,000
|
|||
2010
|
7,034,000
|
|||
$
|
7,140,000
|
F-18
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
8. Junior Subordinated Debentures owed to Unconsolidated Subsidiary
Trust
The
Bancorp sponsored a trust, Glen Burnie Statutory Trust I, of which 100% of
the
common equity is owned by the Company. The trust was formed for the purpose
of
issuing Company-obligated mandatorily redeemable capital securities (the capital
securities) to third-party investors and investing the proceeds from the sale
of
such capital securities solely in junior subordinated debt securities of the
Company (the debentures). The debentures held by the trust are the sole assets
of that trust. Distributions on the capital securities issued by the trust
are
payable semi-annually at a 10.6% rate per annum equal to the interest rate
being
earned by the trust on the debentures held by that trust. The capital securities
are subject to mandatory redemption, in whole or in part, upon repayment of
the
debentures. The Company has entered into agreements which, taken collectively,
fully and unconditionally guarantee the capital securities subject to the terms
of each of the guarantees. The debentures held by the trust carry non-call
provisions over the first 10 year period, and a declining 10 year premium call
thereafter. Both the capital securities of the statutory trust and the junior
subordinated debentures are scheduled to mature on September 7, 2030, unless
called by the Bancorp not earlier than September 7, 2010.
Despite
the fact that Trust I is not included in the Company’s consolidated financial
statements, the $5.0 million in trust preferred securities issued by the trust
are included in the Tier 1 capital of the Bank for regulatory capital purposes
as allowed by the Federal Reserve Board (the “Board”). In April 2005, the Board
amended its risk-based capital standards for bank holding companies to allow
the
continued inclusion of outstanding and prospective issuances of trust preferred
securities in the Tier 1 capital of bank holding companies, subject to stricter
quantitative limits and qualitative standards. The Board also revised the
quantitative limits applied to the aggregate amount of cumulative perpetual
preferred stock, trust preferred securities, and minority interest in the equity
accounts of most consolidated subsidiaries (collectively, restricted core
capital elements) included in the Tier 1 capital of bank holding companies.
The
new quantitative limits become effective after a five-year transition period,
ending March 31, 2009. In addition, the Board also revised the qualitative
standards for capital instruments included in regulatory capital consistent
with
longstanding Board policies. The Board has adopted this final rule to address
supervisory concerns, competitive equity considerations and changes in generally
accepted accounting principles and to strengthen the definition of regulatory
capital for bank holding companies. The Company does not expect that the
quantitative limits will preclude it from including the $5.0 million in trust
preferred securities in Tier 1 capital in the future.
Note
9. Deposits
Major
classifications of interest-bearing deposits are as follows:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||
NOW
and SuperNOW
|
$
|
22,274,015
|
$
|
25,391,363
|
$
|
27,089,844
|
|||||
Money
Market
|
15,341,221
|
16,746,954
|
20,208,804
|
||||||||
Savings
|
50,234,238
|
55,220,132
|
57,664,694
|
||||||||
Certificates
of Deposit, $100,000 or more
|
22,380,391
|
16,758,682
|
16,556,548
|
||||||||
Other
time deposits
|
89,874,294
|
71,817,216
|
66,726,787
|
||||||||
$
|
200,104,159
|
$
|
185,934,347
|
$
|
188,246,677
|
F-19
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
9. Deposits (continued)
Interest
expense on deposits is as follows:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||
NOW
and SuperNOW
|
$
|
52,047
|
$
|
39,315
|
$
|
31,465
|
|||||
Money
Market
|
106,264
|
105,166
|
84,385
|
||||||||
Savings
|
222,018
|
241,845
|
236,550
|
||||||||
Certificates
of Deposit, $100,000 or more
|
859,707
|
490,436
|
424,710
|
||||||||
Other
time deposits
|
3,540,835
|
2,214,814
|
1,834,426
|
||||||||
$
|
4,780,871
|
$
|
3,091,576
|
$
|
2,611,536
|
2006
|
||||
2007
|
$
|
77,463,000
|
||
2008
|
11,710,000
|
|||
2009
|
10,543,000
|
|||
2010
|
7,207,000
|
|||
2011
|
4,089,000
|
|||
2012
and thereafter
|
1,243,000
|
|||
$
|
112,255,000
|
Deposit
balances of executive officers and directors and their affiliated interests
totaled approximately $2,308,000, $1,967,000,
and $1,309,000 at December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004, respectively.
The
Bank
had no brokered deposits at December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004.
Note
10. Income Taxes
The
components of income tax expense for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005,
and 2004 are as follows:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
Current:
|
|||||||||||
Federal
|
$
|
493,052
|
$
|
635,576
|
$
|
660,981
|
|||||
State
|
167,706
|
66,430
|
105,856
|
||||||||
Total
current
|
660,758
|
702,006
|
766,837
|
||||||||
Deferred
income taxes (benefits):
|
|||||||||||
Federal
|
25,655
|
18,967
|
(111,600
|
)
|
|||||||
State
|
702
|
9,416
|
(22,013
|
)
|
|||||||
Total
deferred
|
26,357
|
28,383
|
(133,613
|
)
|
|||||||
Income
tax expense
|
$
|
687,115
|
$
|
730,389
|
$
|
633,224
|
F-20
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
10. Income Taxes (continued)
A
reconciliation of income tax expense computed at the statutory rate of 34%
to
the actual income tax expense for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005,
and
2004 is as follows:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||
Income
before income taxes
|
$
|
3,407,160
|
$
|
3,505,130
|
$
|
3,688,725
|
|||||
Taxes
computed at Federal income tax rate
|
$
|
1,158,434
|
$
|
1,191,745
|
$
|
1,254,167
|
|||||
Increase
(decrease) resulting from:
|
|||||||||||
Tax-exempt
income
|
(610,541
|
)
|
(556,922
|
)
|
(648,864
|
)
|
|||||
State
income taxes, net of Federal income
|
|||||||||||
tax
benefit
|
110,686
|
43,844
|
55,336
|
||||||||
Other
|
28,536
|
51,722
|
(27,415
|
)
|
|||||||
Income
tax expense
|
$
|
687,115
|
$
|
730,389
|
$
|
633,224
|
The
components of the net deferred income tax liabilities as of December 31, 2006,
2005, and 2004 are as follows:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||
Deferred
income tax benefits:
|
|||||||||||
Accrued
deferred compensation and benefit
|
|||||||||||
plan
obligations
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
32,876
|
$
|
57,807
|
|||||
Allowance
for credit losses
|
90,186
|
127,467
|
140,771
|
||||||||
Alternative
minimum tax credits
|
37,678
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation on investment
|
|||||||||||
securities
available for sale
|
199,155
|
144,806
|
-
|
||||||||
Reserve
for unfunded commitments
|
77,240
|
77,240
|
57,930
|
||||||||
Total
deferred income tax benefits
|
404,259
|
382,389
|
256,508
|
||||||||
Deferred
income tax liabilities:
|
|||||||||||
Accumulated
depreciation
|
42,991
|
109,270
|
76,244
|
||||||||
Accumulated
securities discount accretion
|
69,137
|
8,980
|
32,547
|
||||||||
Net
unrealized appreciation on investment
|
|||||||||||
securities
available for sale
|
-
|
-
|
478,300
|
||||||||
Total
deferred income tax liabilities
|
112,128
|
118,250
|
587,091
|
||||||||
Net
deferred income tax benefits (liabilities)
|
$
|
292,131
|
$
|
264,139
|
$
|
(330,583
|
)
|
Note
11. Pension and Profit Sharing Plans
The
Bank
has a money purchase pension plan, which provides for annual employer
contributions based on employee compensation, and covers substantially all
employees. Contributions under this plan, made from an existing safe harbor
accrual as a result of a prior termination of a defined benefit pension plan,
totaled $182,581 for the year ended December 31, 2004. Beginning in 2004, the
Bank is also accruing additional contributions under this plan. These additional
contributions, included in employee benefit expense, totaled $200,005,
$180,514 and $210,000 for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004,
respectively. The Bank is also making additional contributions under this plan
for the benefit of certain employees, whose retirement funds were negatively
affected by the termination of a defined benefit pension plan. These additional
contributions, included in employee benefit expense,
F-21
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
11. Pension and Profit Sharing Plans (continued)
totaled
$47,495, $40,769,
and $60,182 for
the
years ended December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004, respectively.
The
Bank
also has a defined contribution retirement plan qualifying under Section 401(k)
of the Internal Revenue Code that is funded through a profit sharing agreement
and voluntary employee contributions. The plan provides for discretionary
employer matching contributions to be determined annually by the Board of
Directors. The plan covers substantially all employees. The Bank’s contributions
to the plan, included in employee benefit expense, totaled $335,724, $343,729,
and $357,138 for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004,
respectively.
Note
12. Post-Retirement Health Care Benefits
The
Bank
provides health care benefits to employees who retire at age 65 with five years
of full time service immediately prior to retirement and two years of
participation in the medical benefits plan. In 2001, the Bank amended the plan
to include the current Board of Directors and their spouses and the spouses
of
current retirees. In the first quarter of 2002, the Bank again amended the
plan
so that all post-retirement healthcare benefits currently provided by the Bank
to the above qualified participants terminated on December 31, 2006. The plan
was funded only to the extent of the Bank’s monthly payments of insurance
premiums, which totaled $50,483,
$62,425, and $122,664 for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004,
respectively.
The
following table sets forth the financial status of the plan at December 31,
2006, 2005, and 2004:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
Accumulated
post-retirement benefit obligation:
|
|||||||||||
Retirees
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
63,489
|
$
|
268,168
|
|||||
Unrecognized
net gain (loss)
|
-
|
21,636
|
(118,489
|
)
|
|||||||
Accrued
post-retirement benefit cost
|
$
|
-
|
$
|
85,125
|
$
|
149,679
|
|||||
Net
post-retirement benefit (income) expense for the years ended December
31,
2006, 2005, and 2004 includes the
following:
|
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
Interest
cost
|
$
|
3,081
|
$
|
7,685
|
$
|
23,854
|
|||||
Amortization
of net (gain) loss
|
(37,723
|
)
|
(9,814
|
)
|
40,896
|
||||||
Net
post-retirement benefit (income) expense
|
$
|
(34,642
|
)
|
$
|
(2,129
|
)
|
$
|
64,750
|
|||
Assumptions
used in the accounting for net post-retirement benefit expense were as
follows:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||
Health
care cost trend rate
|
5.0%
|
|
5.0%
|
|
5.0%
|
||
Discount
rate
|
6.5%
|
|
6.5%
|
|
6.5%
|
F-22
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
12. Post-Retirement Health Care Benefits (continued)
If
the
assumed health cost trend rate were increased to 6% for 2006, 2005, and 2004,
the total of the service and interest cost components of net periodic
post-retirement health care benefit (income) cost would (decrease) increase
by
$0,
($35),
and $220 to ($34,642),
($2,094), and $64,970 as of for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005, and
2004, respectively.
Note
13. Other Benefit Plans
The
Bank
has life insurance contracts on several officers and is the sole owner and
beneficiary of the policies. Cash value totaled $6,892,455,
$5,681,802, and $5,483,681 at December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004, respectively.
Income on their insurance investment totaled $210,653,
$198,121, and $201,423 for 2006, 2005, and 2004, respectively.
The
Bank
has an unfunded grantor trust, as part of a change in control severance plan,
covering substantially all employees (See Note 15). Participants in the plan
are
entitled to cash severance benefits upon termination of employment, for any
reason other than just cause, should a “change in control” of the Company
occur.
Note
14. Other Operating Expenses
Other
operating expenses include the following:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
Professional
services
|
$
|
434,465
|
$
|
465,905
|
$
|
430,301
|
|||||
Stationery,
printing and supplies
|
209,385
|
246,882
|
229,806
|
||||||||
Postage
and delivery
|
224,856
|
233,403
|
232,742
|
||||||||
FDIC
assessment
|
33,847
|
34,953
|
36,972
|
||||||||
Directors
fees and expenses
|
207,796
|
192,227
|
194,901
|
||||||||
Marketing
|
232,258
|
240,177
|
220,899
|
||||||||
Data
processing
|
104,976
|
105,994
|
123,782
|
||||||||
Correspondent
bank services
|
89,924
|
87,784
|
81,668
|
||||||||
Telephone
|
165,529
|
151,440
|
117,228
|
||||||||
Liability
insurance
|
81,508
|
96,832
|
94,370
|
||||||||
Provision
for unfunded commitments
|
-
|
50,000
|
-
|
||||||||
Losses
and expenses on real estate owned (OREO)
|
922
|
681
|
551
|
||||||||
Other
ATM expense
|
235,116
|
228,710
|
251,688
|
||||||||
Other
|
343,296
|
401,457
|
524,893
|
||||||||
$
|
2,363,878
|
$
|
2,536,445
|
$
|
2,539,801
|
F-23
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
15. Standstill Agreement
During
1998, the Company was pursued by another competing financial institution (the
“Institution”) in a hostile take-over attempt. As part of a negotiation
settlement, the Company and the Institution entered into a standstill agreement
through November 2008.
Note
16. Commitments and Contingencies
Financial
instruments:
The
Bank
is a party to financial instruments in the normal course of business to meet
the
financing needs of its customers. These financial instruments include
commitments to extend credit and standby letters of credit, which involve,
to
varying degrees, elements of credit and interest rate risk in excess of the
amounts recognized in the consolidated financial statements.
Outstanding
loan commitments, unused lines of credit and letters of credit are as
follows:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||
Loan
commitments:
|
|||||||||||
Construction
and land development
|
$
|
482,000
|
$
|
224,000
|
$
|
3,150,000
|
|||||
Other
mortgage loans
|
528,000
|
1,881,400
|
1,137,500
|
||||||||
$
|
1,010,000
|
$
|
2,105,400
|
$
|
4,287,500
|
||||||
Unused
lines of credit:
|
|||||||||||
Home-equity
lines
|
$
|
6,410,947
|
$
|
6,341,738
|
$
|
6,297,160
|
|||||
Commercial
lines
|
10,805,449
|
7,581,877
|
10,550,804
|
||||||||
Unsecured
consumer lines
|
809,802
|
866,091
|
836,377
|
||||||||
$
|
18,026,198
|
$
|
14,789,706
|
$
|
17,684,341
|
||||||
Letters
of credit:
|
$
|
296,136
|
$
|
343,320
|
$
|
723,134
|
Loan
commitments and lines of credit are agreements to lend to customers as long
as
there is no violation of any conditions of the contracts. Loan commitments
generally have interest rates fixed at current market amounts, fixed expiration
dates, and may require payment of a fee. Lines of credit generally have variable
interest rates. Many of the loan commitments and lines of credit are expected
to
expire without being drawn upon; accordingly, the total commitment amounts
do
not necessarily represent future cash requirements. The Bank evaluates each
customer’s creditworthiness on a case-by-case basis. The amount of collateral or
other security obtained, if deemed necessary by the Bank upon extension of
credit, is based on management’s credit evaluation. Collateral held varies but
may include deposits held in financial institutions, U.S. Treasury securities,
other marketable securities, accounts receivable, inventory, property and
equipment, personal residences, income-producing commercial properties, and
land
under development. Personal guarantees are also obtained to provide added
security for certain commitments.
Letters
of credit are conditional commitments issued by the Bank to guarantee the
performance of a customer to a third party. Those guarantees are primarily
issued to guarantee the installation of real property improvements and similar
transactions. The credit risk involved in issuing letters of credit is
essentially the same as that involved in extending loan facilities to customers.
The Bank holds collateral and obtains personal guarantees supporting those
commitments for which collateral or other securities is deemed
necessary.
F-24
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
16. Commitments and Contingencies
(continued)
The
Bank’s exposure to credit loss in the event of nonperformance by the customer is
the contractual amount of the commitment. Loan commitments, lines of credit,
and
letters of credit are made on the same terms, including collateral, as
outstanding loans. As of December 31, 2006, the Bank has accrued $200,000
as a
reserve for losses on unfunded commitments related to these financial
instruments with off balance sheet risk, which is included in other
liabilities.
Note
17. Stockholders’ Equity
Restrictions
on dividends:
Banking
regulations limit the amount of dividends that may be paid without prior
approval of the Bank’s regulatory agencies. Regulatory approval is required to
pay dividends that exceed the Bank’s net profits for the current year plus its
retained net profits for the preceding two years. Retained earnings from which
dividends may not be paid without prior approval totaled approximately
$9,367,000, $7,609,000,
and $5,633,000 at December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004, respectively, based on
the
earnings restrictions and minimum capital ratio requirements noted
below.
Employee
stock purchase benefit plans:
The
Company has a stock-based compensation plan, which is described below. As
determined under SFAS No. 123R utilizing the Black-Scholes option pricing model,
management of the Company has not recorded any compensation expense for options
issued during the year ended December 31, 2006, as there would be no material
impact in the reported net income. As determined under APB No. 25, net
compensation cost of $7,191, and $13,465 have been recognized in the
accompanying consolidated financial statements in 2005 and 2004, respectively
(See Note 1).
Employees
who have completed one year of service are eligible to participate in the
employee stock purchase plan. The number of shares of common stock granted
under
options will bear a uniform relationship to compensation. The plan allows
employees to buy stock under options granted at 85% of the fair market value
of
the stock on the date of grant. Options are vested when granted and will expire
no later than 27 months from the grant date or upon termination of employment.
Activity under this plan is as follows:
F-25
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
17. Stockholders’ Equity (continued)
Grant
|
|||||||
Shares
|
Price
|
||||||
Outstanding
December 31, 2003
|
-
|
||||||
Granted
on January 7, 2004, expiring December 15, 2004
|
9,533
|
$
|
17.25
|
||||
Exercised
|
(4,427
|
)
|
|||||
Expired
|
(5,106
|
)
|
$
|
17.25
|
|||
Outstanding
December 31, 2004
|
-
|
||||||
Granted
on April 13, 2005, expiring December 2, 2005
|
5,683
|
$
|
14.92
|
||||
Exercised
|
(2,740
|
)
|
|||||
Expired
|
(2,943
|
)
|
$
|
14.92
|
|||
Outstanding
December 31, 2005
|
-
|
||||||
Granted
on June 8, 2006, expiring December 11, 2006
|
4,755
|
$
|
14.15
|
||||
Exercised
|
(2,395
|
)
|
|||||
Expired
|
(2,360
|
)
|
$
|
14.15
|
|||
Outstanding
December 31, 2006
|
-
|
At
December 31, 2006, shares of common stock reserved for issuance under the plan
totaled 41,050.
The
Board
of Directors may suspend or discontinue the plan at its discretion.
Dividend
reinvestment and stock purchase plan:
The
Company’s dividend reinvestment and stock purchase plan allows all participating
stockholders the opportunity to receive additional shares of common stock in
lieu of cash dividends at 95% of the fair market value on the dividend payment
date.
During
2006, 2005, and 2004, shares of common stock purchased under the
plan totaled
15,113,
12,708,
and 10,796, respectively. At December 31, 2006, shares of common stock reserved
for issuance under the plan totaled 150,986.
The
Board
of Directors may suspend or discontinue the plan at its discretion.
Stockholder
purchase plan:
The
Company’s stockholder purchase plan allows participating stockholders an option
to purchase newly issued shares of common stock. The Board of Directors shall
determine the number of shares that may be purchased pursuant to options.
Options granted will expire no later than three months from the grant date.
Each
option will entitle the stockholder to purchase one share of common stock,
and
will be granted in proportion to stockholder share holdings. At the discretion
of the Board of Directors, stockholders may be given the opportunity to purchase
unsubscribed shares.
There
was
no activity under this plan for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005, and
2004.
At
December 31, 2006, shares of common stock reserved for issuance under the plan
totaled 261,599.
F-26
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
17. Stockholders’ Equity (continued)
The
Board
of Directors may suspend or discontinue the plan at its discretion.
Under
all
three plans, options granted, exercised, and expired, shares issued and
reserved, and grant prices have been restated for the effects of any stock
dividends or stock splits.
Regulatory
capital requirements:
The
Company and Bank are subject to various regulatory capital requirements
administered by Federal and State banking agencies. Failure to meet minimum
capital requirements can initiate certain mandatory, and possibly additional
discretionary actions by regulators that, if undertaken, could have a direct
material effect on the Company’s financial statements. The Company and Bank must
meet specific capital guidelines that involve quantitative measures of their
respective assets, liabilities, and certain off-balance sheet items as
calculated under regulatory accounting principles. The Company’s and Bank’s
capital amounts and classification are also subject to qualitative judgments
by
the regulators about components, risk weightings, and other
factors.
Quantitative
measures established by regulation to ensure capital adequacy require the
Company and Bank to maintain minimum amounts and ratios (as defined in the
regulations) of total and Tier I capital to risk-weighted assets and of Tier
I
capital to average assets. Management believes, as of December 31, 2006, 2005,
and 2004, that both the Company and Bank meet all capital adequacy requirements
to which they are subject.
The
Bank
has been notified by its regulator that, as of its most recent regulatory
examination, it is regarded as well capitalized under the regulatory framework
for prompt corrective action. To be categorized as well capitalized the Bank
must maintain minimum total risk-based, Tier I risk-based, and Tier I leverage
ratios. There have been no conditions or events since that notification that
management believes have changed the Bank’s category.
As
discussed in Note 8, the capital securities held by the Glen Burnie Statutory
Trust I qualifies as Tier I capital for the Company under Federal Reserve Board
guidelines.
F-27
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
17. Stockholders’ Equity (continued)
A
comparison of capital as of December 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004 with minimum
requirements is approximately as follows:
To
Be Well Capitalized
|
|||||||||||||||||||
For
Capital
|
Under
Prompt Corrective
|
||||||||||||||||||
Actual
|
Adequacy
Purposes
|
Action
Provisions
|
|||||||||||||||||
Amount
|
Ratio
|
Amount
|
Ratio
|
Amount
|
Ratio
|
||||||||||||||
As
of December 31, 2006
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Total
Capital
|
|||||||||||||||||||
(to
Risk Weighted Assets)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Company
|
$
|
35,357,000
|
17.1
|
%
|
$
|
16,570,000
|
8.0
|
%
|
N/A
|
||||||||||
Bank
|
35,240,000
|
17.0
|
%
|
16,564,000
|
8.0
|
%
|
$
|
20,705,000
|
10.0
|
%
|
|||||||||
Tier
I Capital
|
|||||||||||||||||||
(to
Risk Weighted Assets)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Company
|
33,518,000
|
16.2
|
%
|
8,281,000
|
4.0
|
%
|
N/A
|
||||||||||||
Bank
|
33,201,000
|
16.0
|
%
|
8,285,000
|
4.0
|
%
|
12,427,000
|
6.0
|
%
|
||||||||||
Tier
I Capital
|
|||||||||||||||||||
(to
Average Assets)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Company
|
33,518,000
|
10.3
|
%
|
13,017,000
|
4.0
|
%
|
N/A
|
||||||||||||
Bank
|
33,201,000
|
10.2
|
%
|
13,046,000
|
4.0
|
%
|
16,307,000
|
5.0
|
%
|
||||||||||
As
of December 31, 2005
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Total
Capital
|
|||||||||||||||||||
(to
Risk Weighted Assets)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Company
|
$
|
34,257,000
|
17.0
|
%
|
$
|
16,121,000
|
8.0
|
%
|
N/A
|
||||||||||
Bank
|
33,868,000
|
16.8
|
%
|
16,128,000
|
8.0
|
%
|
$
|
20,160,000
|
10.0
|
%
|
|||||||||
Tier
I Capital
|
|||||||||||||||||||
(to
Risk Weighted Assets)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Company
|
31,856,000
|
15.8
|
%
|
8,065,000
|
4.0
|
%
|
N/A
|
||||||||||||
Bank
|
31,467,000
|
15.6
|
%
|
8,068,000
|
4.0
|
%
|
12,102,693
|
6.0
|
%
|
||||||||||
Tier
I Capital
|
|||||||||||||||||||
(to
Average Assets)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Company
|
31,856,000
|
10.2
|
%
|
12,493,000
|
4.0
|
%
|
N/A
|
||||||||||||
Bank
|
31,467,000
|
10.1
|
%
|
12,462,000
|
4.0
|
%
|
15,578,000
|
5.0
|
%
|
F-28
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
17. Stockholders’ Equity (continued)
To
Be Well Capitalized
|
|||||||||||||||||||
For
Capital
|
Under
Prompt Corrective
|
||||||||||||||||||
Actual
|
Adequacy
Purposes
|
Action
Provisions
|
|||||||||||||||||
Amount
|
Ratio
|
Amount
|
Ratio
|
Amount
|
Ratio
|
||||||||||||||
As
of December 31, 2004
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Total
Capital
|
|||||||||||||||||||
(to
Risk Weighted Assets)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Company
|
$
|
32,416,000
|
16.4
|
%
|
$
|
15,813,000
|
8.0
|
%
|
N/A
|
||||||||||
Bank
|
32,004,000
|
16.2
|
%
|
15,804,000
|
8.0
|
%
|
$
|
19,756,000
|
10.0
|
%
|
|||||||||
Tier
I Capital
|
|||||||||||||||||||
(to
Risk Weighted Assets)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Company
|
29,944,000
|
15.2
|
%
|
7,880,000
|
4.0
|
%
|
N/A
|
||||||||||||
Bank
|
29,538,000
|
15.0
|
%
|
7,877,000
|
4.0
|
%
|
11,815,000
|
6.0
|
%
|
||||||||||
Tier
I Capital
|
|||||||||||||||||||
(to
Average Assets)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Company
|
29,944,000
|
9.9
|
%
|
12,099,000
|
4.0
|
%
|
N/A
|
||||||||||||
Bank
|
29,538,000
|
9.7
|
%
|
12,181,000
|
4.0
|
%
|
15,226,000
|
5.0
|
%
|
Note
18. Earnings Per Common Share
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
||||||||
Basic:
|
||||||||||
Net
income
|
$
|
2,720,045
|
$
|
2,774,741
|
$
|
3,055,501
|
||||
Weighted
average common shares outstanding
|
2,472,803
|
2,456,723
|
2,442,944
|
|||||||
Basic
net income per share
|
$
|
1.10
|
$
|
1.13
|
$
|
1.25
|
||||
Diluted
earnings per share calculations were not required for 2006, 2005, and 2004
as
there were no options outstanding at December 31, 2006, 2005, and
2004.
F-29
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
19. Fair Values of Financial Instruments
In
accordance with the disclosure requirements of SFAS No. 107, the estimated
fair
value and the related carrying values of the Company’s financial instruments are
as follows:
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||||||||||||
Carrying
|
Fair
|
Carrying
|
Fair
|
Carrying
|
Fair
|
||||||||||||||
Amount
|
Value
|
Amount
|
Value
|
Amount
|
Value
|
||||||||||||||
Financial
assets:
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Cash
and due from banks
|
$
|
9,005,691
|
$
|
9,005,691
|
$
|
9,405,148
|
$
|
9,405,148
|
$
|
9,766,710
|
$
|
9,766,710
|
|||||||
Interest-bearing
deposits in other financial institutions
|
342,309
|
342,309
|
3,711,524
|
3,711,524
|
65,947
|
65,947
|
|||||||||||||
Federal
funds sold
|
3,971,978
|
3,971,978
|
2,333,055
|
2,333,055
|
1,541,234
|
1,541,234
|
|||||||||||||
Investment
securities available for sale
|
95,811,296
|
95,811,296
|
86,128,724
|
86,128,724
|
93,278,857
|
93,278,857
|
|||||||||||||
Investment
securities held to maturity
|
683,363
|
729,960
|
1,151,163
|
1,238,740
|
1,627,190
|
1,761,894
|
|||||||||||||
Federal
Home Loan Bank Stock
|
928,000
|
928,000
|
918,900
|
918,900
|
919,000
|
919,000
|
|||||||||||||
Maryland
Financial Bank Stock
|
100,000
|
100,000
|
100,000
|
100,000
|
100,000
|
100,000
|
|||||||||||||
Common
stock-Statutory Trust I
|
155,000
|
155,000
|
155,000
|
155,000
|
155,000
|
155,000
|
|||||||||||||
Ground
rents
|
219,100
|
219,100
|
235,700
|
235,700
|
235,700
|
235,700
|
|||||||||||||
Loans,
less allowance for credit losses
|
193,336,604
|
192,492,000
|
190,204,998
|
190,206,000
|
182,291,292
|
180,500,000
|
|||||||||||||
Accrued
interest receivable
|
1,627,433
|
1,627,433
|
1,451,806
|
1,451,806
|
1,484,869
|
1,484,869
|
|||||||||||||
Financial
liabilities:
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Deposits
|
274,833,457
|
273,033,000
|
265,248,268
|
264,846,000
|
261,674,043
|
261,826,000
|
|||||||||||||
Short-term
borrowings
|
545,349
|
545,349
|
622,050
|
622,050
|
541,672
|
541,672
|
|||||||||||||
Long-term
borrowings
|
7,140,170
|
7,151,651
|
7,170,977
|
7,533,950
|
7,199,708
|
8,388,328
|
|||||||||||||
Dividends
payable
|
366,580
|
366,580
|
339,005
|
339,005
|
287,938
|
287,938
|
|||||||||||||
Accrued
interest payable
|
145,642
|
145,642
|
83,111
|
83,111
|
55,980
|
55,980
|
|||||||||||||
Accrued
interest payable on junior subordinated debentures
|
171,518
|
171,518
|
171,518
|
171,518
|
171,518
|
171,518
|
|||||||||||||
Junior
subordinated debentures owed to unconsolidated subsidiary
trust
|
5,155,000
|
5,155,000
|
5,155,000
|
5,155,000
|
5,155,000
|
5,155,000
|
|||||||||||||
Unrecognized
financial instruments:
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
Commitments
to extend credit
|
19,036,198
|
19,036,198
|
16,895,106
|
16,895,106
|
21,971,841
|
21,971,841
|
|||||||||||||
Standby
letters of credit
|
296,136
|
296,136
|
343,320
|
343,320
|
723,134
|
723,134
|
For
purposes of the disclosures of estimated fair value, the following assumptions
were used.
Loans:
The
estimated fair value for loans is determined by discounting future cash flows
using current rates at which similar loans would be made to borrowers with
similar credit ratings and for the same remaining maturities.
Investment
securities:
Estimated
fair values are based on quoted market prices.
F-30
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
19. Fair Values of Financial Instruments (continued)
Deposits:
The
estimated fair value of deposits with no stated maturity, such as
noninterest-bearing demand
deposits, savings, NOW accounts and money market accounts, is equal to the
amount payable on
demand
at the reporting date (that is, their carrying amounts). The fair value of
certificates of deposit is based on the rates currently offered for deposits
of
similar maturities. The fair value estimates do not include the benefit that
results from the low-cost funding provided by the deposit liabilities
compared
to the cost of borrowing funds in the market.
Other
assets and liabilities:
The
estimated fair values for cash and due from banks, interest-bearing deposits
in
other financial institutions, Federal funds sold, accrued interest receivable
and payable, and short-term borrowings are considered to approximate cost
because of their short-term nature.
Other
assets and liabilities of the Bank that are not defined as financial instruments
are not included in the above disclosures, such as property and equipment.
In
addition, non-financial instruments typically not recognized in the financial
statements nevertheless may have value but are not included in the above
disclosures. These include, among other items, the estimated earnings power
of
core deposit accounts, the trained work force, customer goodwill, and similar
items.
Note
20. Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements
In
February 2006, the FASB issued Statement No. 155 (SFAS 155), Accounting
for Certain Hybrid Financial Instruments - an amendment of FASB Statements
No. 133 and 140.
SFAS
No. 155 simplifies accounting for certain hybrid instruments currently
governed by SFAS No. 133, Accounting
for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities,
by
allowing fair value remeasurement of hybrid instruments that contain an embedded
derivative that otherwise would require bifurcation. SFAS No. 155 also
eliminates the guidance in SFAS No. 133 Implementation Issue No. D1,
Application
of Statement 133 to Beneficial Interests in Securitized Financial
Assets,
which
provides such beneficial interests are not subject to SFAS No. 133. SFAS
No. 155 amends SFAS No. 140, Accounting
for Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and Extinguishments of
Liabilities - a Replacement of FASB Statement No. 125,
by
eliminating the restriction on passive derivative instruments that a qualifying
special-purpose entity may hold. SFAS No. 155 is effective for all
financial instruments acquired or issued after the beginning of an entity’s
first fiscal year that begins after September 15, 2006. The Company feels
that this pronouncement will not have a significant impact on the financial
statements.
In
March
2006, the FASB issued Statement No. 156 (SFAS 156), Accounting
for Servicing of Financial Assets- an amendment of FASB Statement
No. 140.
SFAS
No. 156 requires an entity to recognize a servicing asset or servicing
liability each time it undertakes an obligation to service a financial asset
by
entering into a servicing contract in specific situations. Additionally, the
servicing asset or servicing liability shall be initially measured at fair
value; however, an entity may elect the “amortization method” or “fair value
method” for subsequent balance sheet reporting periods. SFAS No. 156 is
effective as of an entity’s first fiscal year beginning January 1, 2007.
Early adoption is permitted as of the beginning of an entity’s fiscal year,
provided the entity has not yet issued financial statements, including interim
financial statements, for any period of that fiscal year. The Company feels
that
this pronouncement will not have a significant impact on the financial
statements.
In
September 2006, the FASB issued Statement No. 157 (SFAS 157),
Fair
Value Measurements.
SFAS
157 defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value and
expands disclosures about fair value measurements. SFAS 157 applies whenever
other standards require (or permit) assets or liabilities to be measured at
fair
value but does not expand the use of fair value in any new circumstances. In
this standard, the FASB clarifies the principle that fair value should be based
on the assumptions market participants would use when pricing the asset or
liability. In support of this
F-31
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
20. Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements (continued)
principle,
SFAS 157 establishes a fair value hierarchy that prioritizes the information
used to develop those assumptions. The provisions of SFAS 157 are effective
for
financial statements issued for fiscal years beginning after November 15,
2007 and interim periods within those fiscal years. The provisions should be
applied prospectively, except for certain specifically identified financial
instruments. The Company is currently reviewing this pronouncement.
In
July 2006, the FASB issued Financial Accounting Standards Interpretation
No. 48 (FIN 48), Accounting
for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.
FIN 48
clarifies the accounting for uncertainty in income taxes recognized in an
enterprise’s financial statements in accordance with FASB Statement
No. 109, Accounting
for Income Taxes. FIN
48
prescribes a recognition threshold and measurement attributable for the
financial statement recognition and measurement of a tax position taken or
expected to be taken in a tax return. FIN 48 also provides guidance on
derecognition, classification, interest and penalties, accounting in interim
periods, disclosures and transitions. FIN 48 is effective for fiscal years
beginning after December 15, 2006. The Company feels that this
pronouncement will not have a significant impact on the financial statements
at
the current time.
In
September 2006, the FASB ratified the consensus reached by the Emerging
Issues Task Force (“EITF”) on Issue No. 06-5, Accounting
for Purchases of Life Insurance — Determining the Amount That Could Be Realized
in Accordance with FASB Technical Bulletin No. 85-4, Accounting for
Purchases of Life Insurance.
FASB
Technical Bulletin No. 85-4 requires that the amount that could be realized
under the insurance contract as of the date of the statement of financial
position should be reported as an asset. Since the issuance of FASB Technical
Bulletin No. 85-4, questions arose regarding whether “the amount that could
be realized” should consider 1) any additional amounts included in the
contractual terms of the insurance policy other than the cash surrender value
and 2) the contractual ability to surrender all of the individual-life policies
(or certificates in a group policy) at the same time. EITF 06-5 determined
that
“the amount that could be realized” should 1) consider any additional amounts
included in the contractual terms of the policy and 2) assume the surrender
of
an individual-life by individual-life policy (or certificate by certificate
in a
group policy). Any amount that is ultimately realized by the policy holder
upon
the assumed surrender of the final policy (or final certificate in a group
policy) shall be included in the “amount that could be realized.” An entity
should apply the provisions of EITF 06-5 through either a change in accounting
principle through a cumulative-effect adjustment to retained earnings as of
the
beginning of the year of adoption or a change in accounting principle through
retrospective application to all prior periods. The provisions of EITF 06-5
are
effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2006. Management
has not yet completed its evaluation of the impact that EITF 06-5 will
have.
In
2006,
the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Office of Thrift Supervision,
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, and the National Credit Union Administration
(collectively, the agencies), have issued an interagency policy statement on
the
ALLL and supplemental FAQs. This issuance revises the 1993 policy statement
on
the ALLL previously issued by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency,
the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, and the Office of Thrift Supervision. The National Credit Union
Administration has also joined in issuing the revised guidance.
The
agencies believe an assessment of the appropriateness of the ALLL is critical
to
the safety and soundness of a financial institution. In light of ALLL-related
developments since the policy statement was first adopted in 1993, the agencies
have revised the previous policy to ensure consistency with generally accepted
accounting principles (GAAP) and more recent supervisory guidance. The 1993
policy statement was originally issued to describe the responsibilities of
the
boards of directors, management and examiners of banks and savings associations
regarding the ALLL; factors to be considered in the estimation of the ALLL;
and
the objectives and elements of an effective loan review system, including a
sound credit grading system. The revised policy statement updates this guidance
and also extends it to credit unions and their examiners.
F-32
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
20. Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements (continued)
This
revision reiterates key concepts and requirements included in existing ALLL
supervisory guidance and GAAP. Because the ALLL represents one of the most
significant estimates in an institution’s financial statements and regulatory
reports, the agencies remind those institutions of their responsibility for
developing, maintaining, and documenting a comprehensive, systematic, and
consistently applied process for determining the amounts of the ALLL and the
provision for loan and lease losses. To fulfill this responsibility, each
institution should ensure that controls are in place to determine consistently
the ALLL in accordance with GAAP, the institution’s stated policies and
procedures, management’s best judgment and relevant supervisory guidance.
Consistent
with longstanding supervisory guidance, institutions must maintain an ALLL
at a
level that is appropriate to cover estimated credit losses on individually
evaluated loans determined to be impaired as well as estimated credit losses
inherent in the remainder of the loan and lease portfolio. Estimates of credit
losses should reflect consideration of all significant factors that affect
the
collectibility of the portfolio as of the evaluation date. Arriving at an
appropriate allowance involves a high degree of management judgment and results
in a range of estimated losses. Accordingly, prudent, conservative, but not
excessive, loan loss allowances that represent management’s best estimate from
within an acceptable range of estimated losses are appropriate.
Although
the revised policy statement reiterates key concepts and requirements in GAAP
and existing supervisory guidance on the ALLL, the agencies recognize that
institutions may not have sufficient time to complete any enhancements needed
to
bring their ALLL processes and documentation into full compliance with the
revised guidance for year-end 2006 reporting purposes. Nevertheless, these
enhancements should be completed in the near term. Management of the Company
feels that they are currently in material compliance with this newly revised
policy and are reviewing the current ALLL methodology for necessary
enhancements.
F-33
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
21. Parent Company Financial Information
The
Balance Sheets, Statements of Income, and Statements of Cash Flows
for
Glen Burnie Bancorp (Parent Only) are presented
below:
|
December
31,
|
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||
Assets
|
||||||||||
Cash
|
$
|
441,919
|
$
|
483,459
|
$
|
453,685
|
||||
Investment
in The Bank of Glen Burnie
|
32,884,293
|
31,237,838
|
30,339,198
|
|||||||
Investment
in GBB Properties, Inc.
|
265,579
|
266,561
|
262,343
|
|||||||
Investment
in the Glen Burnie Statutory Trust I
|
155,000
|
155,000
|
155,000
|
|||||||
Due
from subsidiaries
|
26,820
|
22,888
|
20,765
|
|||||||
Other
assets
|
120,000
|
127,250
|
132,250
|
|||||||
Total
assets
|
$
|
33,893,611
|
$
|
32,292,996
|
$
|
31,363,241
|
||||
Liabilities
and Stockholders’ Equity
|
||||||||||
Dividends
payable
|
$
|
366,580
|
$
|
339,005
|
$
|
287,938
|
||||
Accrued
interest payable on borrowed funds
|
171,518
|
171,518
|
171,518
|
|||||||
Other
liabilities
|
-
|
2,032
|
4,377
|
|||||||
Borrowed
funds from subsidiary
|
5,155,000
|
5,155,000
|
5,155,000
|
|||||||
Total
liabilities
|
5,693,098
|
5,667,555
|
5,618,833
|
|||||||
Stockholders’
equity:
|
||||||||||
Common
stock
|
2,484,633
|
2,056,024
|
2,041,033
|
|||||||
Surplus
|
11,719,907
|
11,458,465
|
11,169,283
|
|||||||
Retained
earnings
|
14,312,496
|
13,341,097
|
11,773,915
|
|||||||
Accumulated
other comprehensive (loss),
|
||||||||||
income,
net of (benefits) taxes
|
(316,523
|
)
|
(230,145
|
)
|
760,177
|
|||||
Total
stockholders’ equity
|
28,200,513
|
26,625,441
|
25,744,408
|
|||||||
|
|
|
||||||||
Total
liabilities and stockholders’ equity
|
$
|
33,893,611
|
$
|
32,292,996
|
$
|
31,363,241
|
The
borrowed funds from subsidiary balance represents the junior subordinated
debt securities payable to the wholly-owned subsidiary trust that
was
deconsolidated as a result of applying the provisions of FIN 46.
The
Company continues to guarantee the capital securities issued by the
trust,
which totaled $5,000,000
at
December 31, 2006. (See Note 8).
|
F-34
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
21. Parent Company Financial Information
(continued)
|
||||||||||
Years
Ended December 31,
|
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Dividends
and distributions from subsidiaries
|
$
|
1,350,000
|
$
|
1,245,000
|
$
|
1,235,000
|
||||
Other
income
|
16,430
|
16,430
|
16,430
|
|||||||
Interest
expense on junior subordinated debentures
|
(546,430
|
)
|
(546,430
|
)
|
(546,703
|
)
|
||||
Other
expenses
|
(59,453
|
)
|
(50,397
|
)
|
(54,826
|
)
|
||||
Income
before income tax benefit and equity in undistributed
net income of subsidiaries
|
760,547
|
664,603
|
649,901
|
|||||||
Income
tax benefit
|
227,647
|
224,149
|
225,965
|
|||||||
Change
in undistributed net income of subsidiaries
|
1,731,851
|
1,885,989
|
2,179,635
|
|||||||
Net
income
|
$
|
2,720,045
|
$
|
2,774,741
|
$
|
3,055,501
|
||||
Statements
of Cash Flows
|
Years
Ended December 31,
|
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||
|
|
|
||||||||
Cash
flows from operating activities:
|
||||||||||
Net
income
|
$
|
2,720,045
|
$
|
2,774,741
|
$
|
3,055,501
|
||||
Adjustments
to reconcile net income to net
|
||||||||||
cash
provided by operating activities:
|
||||||||||
Decrease
in other assets
|
7,250
|
5,000
|
4,932
|
|||||||
(Increase)
decrease in due from subsidiaries
|
(3,932
|
)
|
(2,123
|
)
|
5,893
|
|||||
Decrease
in other liabilities
|
(2,032
|
)
|
(2,345
|
)
|
(1,859
|
)
|
||||
Change
in undistributed net income of subsidiaries
|
(1,731,851
|
)
|
(1,885,989
|
)
|
(2,179,635
|
)
|
||||
|
|
|
||||||||
Net
cash provided by operating activities
|
989,480
|
889,284
|
884,832
|
|||||||
|
|
|
||||||||
Cash
flows from financing activities:
|
||||||||||
Proceeds
from dividend reinvestment plan
|
245,059
|
256,115
|
231,955
|
|||||||
Proceeds
from issuance of common stock
|
33,891
|
40,867
|
76,362
|
|||||||
Dividends
paid
|
(1,309,970
|
)
|
(1,156,492
|
)
|
(1,008,357
|
)
|
||||
|
|
|
||||||||
Net
cash used in financing activities
|
(1,031,020
|
)
|
(859,510
|
)
|
(700,040
|
)
|
||||
(Decrease)
increase in cash
|
(41,540
|
)
|
29,774
|
184,792
|
||||||
Cash,
beginning of year
|
483,459
|
453,685
|
268,893
|
|||||||
|
|
|
||||||||
Cash,
end of year
|
$
|
441,919
|
$
|
483,459
|
$
|
453,685
|
||||
F-35
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Note
22. Quarterly Results of Operations (Unaudited)
The
following is a summary of consolidated unaudited quarterly results of
operations:
2006
|
|||||||||||||
(Dollars
in thousands,
|
Three
months ended,
|
||||||||||||
except
per share amounts)
|
December
31
|
September
30
|
June
30
|
March
31
|
|||||||||
Interest
income
|
$
|
4,542
|
$
|
4,492
|
$
|
4,447
|
$
|
4,174
|
|||||
Interest
expense
|
1,609
|
1,538
|
1,480
|
1,206
|
|||||||||
Net
interest income
|
2,933
|
2,954
|
2,967
|
2,968
|
|||||||||
Provision
for credit losses
|
62
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|||||||||
Net
securities gains
|
106
|
70
|
-
|
-
|
|||||||||
Income
before income taxes
|
903
|
912
|
844
|
748
|
|||||||||
Net
income
|
609
|
772
|
713
|
626
|
|||||||||
Net
income per share (basic and diluted)
|
$
|
0.25
|
$
|
0.31
|
$
|
0.29
|
$
|
0.25
|
2005
|
|||||||||||||
(Dollars
in thousands,
|
Three
months ended,
|
||||||||||||
except
per share amounts)
|
December
31
|
September
30
|
June
30
|
March
31
|
|||||||||
Interest
income
|
$
|
4,127
|
$
|
4,094
|
$
|
3,957
|
$
|
3,920
|
|||||
Interest
expense
|
1,133
|
1,080
|
989
|
930
|
|||||||||
Net
interest income
|
2,994
|
3,014
|
2,968
|
2,990
|
|||||||||
Provision
for credit losses
|
-
|
(50
|
)
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||
Net
securities gains
|
28
|
26
|
45
|
3
|
|||||||||
Income
before income taxes
|
909
|
935
|
819
|
842
|
|||||||||
Net
income
|
671
|
742
|
674
|
688
|
|||||||||
Net
income per share (basic and diluted)
|
$
|
0.28
|
$
|
0.30
|
$
|
0.27
|
$
|
0.28
|
2004
|
|||||||||||||
(Dollars
in thousands,
|
Three
months ended,
|
||||||||||||
except
per share amounts)
|
December
31
|
September
30
|
June
30
|
March
31
|
|||||||||
Interest
income
|
$
|
3,908
|
$
|
4,065
|
$
|
3,807
|
$
|
3,881
|
|||||
Interest
expense
|
894
|
928
|
885
|
938
|
|||||||||
Net
interest income
|
3,014
|
3,137
|
2,922
|
2,943
|
|||||||||
Provision
for credit losses
|
-
|
140
|
60
|
140
|
|||||||||
Net
securities gains
|
102
|
41
|
39
|
230
|
|||||||||
Income
before income taxes
|
921
|
973
|
883
|
912
|
|||||||||
Net
income
|
840
|
769
|
706
|
741
|
|||||||||
Net
income per share (basic and diluted)
|
$
|
0.33
|
$
|
0.32
|
$
|
0.29
|
$
|
0.31
|
F-36