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LAKELAND BANCORP INC - Quarter Report: 2022 September (Form 10-Q)


UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-Q
(Mark one)
    QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended 
September 30, 2022
OR
    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
000-17820
LAKELAND BANCORP, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
New Jersey
22-2953275
(State or other jurisdiction of
 incorporation  or organization) 
 (I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)
250 Oak Ridge Road, Oak Ridge, New Jersey 07438
 (Address of principal executive offices and zip code)
(973) 697-2000
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each classTrading SymbolName of exchange on which registered
Common Stock, no par valueLBAIThe NASDAQ Stock Market

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.  Yes      No  
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (Section 232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files).  Yes      No  
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company or an emerging growth company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act:
Large accelerated filer     Accelerated filer     Non-accelerated filer   Smaller reporting company   Emerging growth company
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.  
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.): Yes      No  

APPLICABLE ONLY TO CORPORATE ISSUERS:
Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuer’s classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date.
As of November 1, 2022, there were 64,809,579 outstanding shares of Common Stock, no par value.
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LAKELAND BANCORP, INC.
Form 10-Q Index
 
  PAGE
Consolidated Balance Sheets as of September 30, 2022 (unaudited) and December 31, 2021
Consolidated Statements of Income for the Three and Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022 and 2021 (unaudited)
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the Three and Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022 and 2021 (unaudited)
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Stockholders’ Equity for the Three and Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022 and 2021 (unaudited)
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022 and 2021 (unaudited)
Item 5.
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PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Item 1.    Financial Statements
Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Balance Sheets
September 30, 2022December 31, 2021
(dollars in thousands)(unaudited)
Assets
Cash$234,571 $199,158 
Interest-bearing deposits due from banks11,192 29,372 
Total cash and cash equivalents245,763 228,530 
Investment securities available for sale, at fair value (allowance for credit losses of $4,165 at September 30, 2022 and $83 at December 31, 2021)
1,074,013 769,956 
Investment securities held to maturity (fair value of $753,565 at September 30, 2022 and $815,211 at December 31, 2021 and allowance for credit losses of $152 at September 30, 2022 and $181 at December 31, 2021)
934,947 824,956 
Equity securities, at fair value17,180 17,368 
Federal Home Loan Bank and other membership bank stock, at cost21,046 9,049 
Loans held for sale890 1,943 
Loans, net of deferred fees7,568,826 5,976,148 
Less: Allowance for credit losses68,879 58,047 
Total loans, net7,499,947 5,918,101 
Premises and equipment, net54,670 45,916 
Operating lease right-of-use assets25,854 15,222 
Accrued interest receivable29,542 19,209 
Goodwill271,829 156,277 
Other intangible assets9,669 2,420 
Bank owned life insurance156,273 117,356 
Other assets173,976 71,753 
Total Assets$10,515,599 $8,198,056 
Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity
Liabilities
Deposits8,677,799 6,965,823 
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase357,787 106,453 
Other borrowings25,000 25,000 
Subordinated debentures194,148 179,043 
Operating lease liabilities27,224 16,523 
Other liabilities151,235 78,200 
Total Liabilities9,433,193 7,371,042 
Stockholders' Equity
Common stock, no par value; authorized 100,000,000 shares; issued 64,935,026 shares and outstanding 64,803,991 shares at September 30, 2022 and issued 50,737,400 shares and outstanding 50,606,365 shares at December 31, 2021
854,336 565,862 
Retained earnings305,303 259,340 
Treasury shares, at cost, 131,035 shares at September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021
(1,452)(1,452)
Accumulated other comprehensive (loss) income(75,781)3,264 
Total Stockholders' Equity1,082,406 827,014 
Total Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity$10,515,599 $8,198,056 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
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Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Income (Unaudited)
 For the Three Months Ended September 30,For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(in thousands, except per share data)2022202120222021
Interest Income
Loans and fees$84,924 $59,957 $229,706 $179,264 
Federal funds sold and interest-bearing deposits with banks429 161 846 250 
Taxable investment securities and other9,589 4,232 24,583 12,242 
Tax-exempt investment securities1,485 588 4,229 1,831 
Total Interest Income96,427 64,938 259,364 193,587 
Interest Expense
Deposits13,618 3,987 22,486 13,349 
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase717 19 887 58 
Other borrowings1,807 1,594 5,016 4,374 
Total Interest Expense16,142 5,600 28,389 17,781 
Net Interest Income80,285 59,338 230,975 175,806 
Provision for credit losses (benefit)1,358 (2,703)11,274 (11,304)
Net Interest Income after Provision for Credit Losses (benefit)78,927 62,041 219,701 187,110 
Noninterest Income
Service charges on deposit accounts2,808 2,536 8,145 7,277 
Commissions and fees2,212 1,609 6,873 4,962 
Income on bank owned life insurance1,468 645 3,118 1,922 
Loss on equity securities(464)(58)(1,313)(191)
Gains on sales of loans held for sale355 550 2,496 1,865 
Gains on investment securities transactions, net— — — 
Swap income711 — 1,110 634 
Other income143 187 647 19 
Total Noninterest Income7,233 5,469 21,076 16,497 
Noninterest Expense
Compensation and employee benefits26,636 21,478 81,253 62,403 
Premises and equipment7,574 6,206 23,225 18,602 
FDIC insurance expense690 461 2,034 1,793 
Data processing expense1,419 1,495 4,980 4,049 
Merger-related expenses3,488 1,072 8,073 1,072 
Other expenses8,004 6,495 23,273 17,288 
Total Noninterest Expense47,811 37,207 142,838 105,207 
Income before provision for income taxes38,349 30,303 97,939 98,400 
Provision for income taxes9,603 8,014 24,147 25,529 
Net Income$28,746 $22,289 $73,792 $72,871 
Per Share of Common Stock
Basic earnings$0.44 $0.43 $1.13 $1.42 
Diluted earnings$0.44 $0.43 $1.13 $1.42 
Dividends paid$0.145 $0.135 $0.425 $0.395 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
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Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) (Unaudited)
 For the Three Months Ended September 30,For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(in thousands)2022202120222021
Net income$28,746 $22,289 $73,792 $72,871 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax:
Unrealized losses on securities available for sale(27,972)(1,504)(78,625)(7,520)
Reclassification for securities gains included in net income
— — — (6)
Net gain on securities reclassified from available for sale to held to maturity— 2,784 — 2,784 
Amortization of gain on debt securities reclassified to held to maturity(137)(116)(420)(116)
Unrealized gains (losses) on derivatives— — (25)
Other comprehensive (loss) income(28,109)1,169 (79,045)(4,883)
Total comprehensive income (loss)$637 $23,458 $(5,253)$67,988 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
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Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Stockholders’ Equity (Unaudited)
For the Three Months Ended September 30, 2022 and 2021

(in thousands, except per share data)Common StockRetained EarningsTreasury StockAccumulated Other Comprehensive Income (Loss)Total
July 1, 2021$563,980 $228,803 $(1,452)$5,345 $796,676 
Net income— 22,289 — — 22,289 
Other comprehensive income, net of tax— — — 1,169 1,169 
Stock-based compensation958 — — — 958 
Retirement of restricted stock36 — — — 36 
Cash dividends on common stock of $0.135 per share
— (7,000)— — (7,000)
September 30, 2021$564,974 $244,092 $(1,452)$6,514 $814,128 
July 1, 2022$853,206 $286,063 $(1,452)$(47,672)$1,090,145 
Net income— 28,746 — — 28,746 
Other comprehensive loss, net of tax— — — (28,109)(28,109)
Stock-based compensation1,209 — — — 1,209 
Retirement of restricted stock(79)— — — (79)
Cash dividends on common stock of $0.145 per share
— (9,506)— — (9,506)
September 30, 2022$854,336 $305,303 $(1,452)$(75,781)$1,082,406 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
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Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Stockholders’ Equity (Unaudited)
For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022 and 2021
(in thousands, except per share data)Common
Stock
Retained
Earnings
Treasury StockAccumulated
Other
Comprehensive
Income (Loss)
Total
 
January 1, 2021$562,421 $191,418 $(1,452)$11,397 $763,784 
Net income— 72,871 — — 72,871 
Other comprehensive loss, net of tax— — — (4,883)(4,883)
Stock based compensation3,154 — — — 3,154 
Retirement of restricted stock(620)— — — (620)
Exercise of stock options19 — — — 19 
Cash dividends on common stock of $0.395 per share
— (20,197)— — (20,197)
September 30, 2021$564,974 $244,092 $(1,452)$6,514 $814,128 
January 1, 2022$565,862 $259,340 $(1,452)$3,264 $827,014 
Net income— 73,792 — — 73,792 
Other comprehensive loss, net of tax— — — (79,045)(79,045)
Issuance of stock for 1st Constitution acquisition285,742 — — — 285,742 
Stock based compensation3,807 — — — 3,807 
Retirement of restricted stock(1,075)— — — (1,075)
Cash dividends on common stock of $0.425 per share
— (27,829)— — (27,829)
September 30, 2022$854,336 $305,303 $(1,452)$(75,781)$1,082,406 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

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Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows (Unaudited)
 For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(in thousands)20222021
Cash Flows from Operating Activities:
Net income$73,792 $72,871 
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:
Net amortization of premiums, discounts and deferred loan fees and costs4,264 (4,157)
Depreciation and amortization4,071 3,973 
Amortization of intangible assets1,770 658 
Amortization of operating lease right-of-use assets3,098 2,072 
Provision for credit losses (benefit)11,274 (11,304)
Loans originated for sale(53,280)(44,372)
Proceeds from sales of loans held for sale61,449 46,721 
Gains on investment securities transactions, net— (9)
Loss on equity securities1,313 191 
Income on bank owned life insurance(2,376)(1,922)
Gains on proceeds from bank owned life insurance policies(742)— 
Gains on sales of loans held for sale(2,496)(1,865)
Gains on other real estate and other repossessed assets(17)(17)
Loss (gains) on sales of premises and equipment218 (41)
Impairment of property held for sale100 400 
Long-term debt extinguishment costs— 831 
Stock-based compensation3,807 3,154 
Excess tax benefits (deficiencies)62 (93)
(Increase) decrease in other assets(68,258)30,945 
Increase (decrease) in other liabilities60,647 (27,653)
Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities98,696 70,383 
Cash Flows from Investing Activities:
Net cash acquired in acquisitions326,236 — 
Proceeds from repayments and maturities of available for sale securities111,966 145,249 
Proceeds from repayments and maturities of held to maturity securities108,875 38,432 
Proceeds from sales of available for sale securities— 4,402 
Purchase of available for sale securities(312,904)(329,351)
Purchase of held to maturity securities(99,249)(148,684)
Purchase of equity securities(1,125)(1,919)
Death benefit proceeds from bank owned life insurance policy1,825 — 
Proceeds from redemptions of Federal Home Loan Bank stock42,900 13,524 
Purchases of Federal Home Loan Bank stock(53,650)(10,885)
Net (increase) decrease in loans(487,444)128,284 
Proceeds from sales of loans previously held for investment— 21,765 
Proceeds from sales of other real estate and repossessed assets17 17 
Proceeds from dispositions and sales of premises and equipment598 676 
Purchases of premises and equipment(3,726)(3,422)
Net Cash Used in Investing Activities(365,681)(141,912)
Cash Flows from Financing Activities:
Net increase in deposits61,788 475,161 
Increase (decrease) in federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase251,334 (57,653)
Net proceeds from issuance of subordinated debt— 148,195 
Redemption of subordinated debt— (80,831)
Exercise of stock options— 19 
Retirement of restricted stock(1,075)(620)
Dividends paid(27,829)(20,197)
Net Cash Provided by Financing Activities284,218 464,074 
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents17,233 392,545 
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period228,530 270,090 
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period$245,763 $662,635 
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Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows (Unaudited)

 For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(in thousands)20222021
Supplemental schedule of non-cash investing and financing activities:
Cash paid during the period for income taxes$24,829 $22,964 
Cash paid during the period for interest28,163 19,559 
Transfer of available for sale debt securities to held to maturity securities at fair value— 494,164 
Transfer of loans to loans held for sale— 21,689 
Right-of-use assets obtained in exchange for new lease liabilities739 109 
Acquisitions:
Non-cash assets acquired:
Federal Home Loan Bank stock1,247 — 
Investment securities available for sale217,774 — 
Investment securities held to maturity124,485 — 
Loans held for sale4,620 — 
Loans1,095,266 — 
Fixed Assets13,748 — 
Operating lease right-of-use assets12,991 — 
Goodwill and other intangible assets, net124,570 — 
Bank owned life insurance37,580 — 
Other assets8,820 — 
Total non-cash assets acquired1,641,101 — 
Liabilities assumed:
Deposits1,650,613 — 
Subordinated debt14,734 — 
Operating lease liabilities12,991 — 
Other liabilities3,257 — 
Total liabilities assumed1,681,595 — 
Common stock issued$285,742 $— 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
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Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements (unaudited)
Note 1 – Significant Accounting Policies
Basis of Presentation
This quarterly report presents the consolidated financial statements of Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. and its subsidiaries, including Lakeland Bank (“Lakeland”) and Lakeland’s wholly owned subsidiaries (collectively, the “Company”). The accounting and reporting policies of the Company conform with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“U.S. GAAP”) and predominant practices within the banking industry. The Company’s unaudited interim financial statements reflect all adjustments, such as normal recurring accruals that are in the opinion of management, necessary for the fair presentation of the results of the interim periods. The results of operations for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 do not necessarily indicate the results that the Company will achieve for all of 2022.
Certain information and footnote disclosures required under U.S. GAAP have been condensed or omitted, as permitted by rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission. These unaudited interim financial statements should be read in conjunction with the audited consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes that are presented in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021. Certain reclassifications have been made in the consolidated financial statements to conform with current year classifications.
Note 2 – Business Combinations
Provident Financial Services, Inc.
On September 26, 2022, the Company entered into definitive merger agreement with Provident Financial Services, Inc. ("Provident") pursuant to which the companies will combine in an all-stock merger. Under the terms of the merger agreement, the Company will merge with and into Provident, with Provident as the surviving corporation, and Lakeland Bank will merge with and into Provident Bank, with Provident Bank as the surviving bank. Following the closing of the transaction, Lakeland shareholders will receive 0.8319 shares of Provident common stock for each share of Lakeland common stock they own. Upon completion of the transaction, which is subject to both Provident and Lakeland shareholder approval, Provident shareholders will own approximately 58% and Lakeland shareholders will own approximately 42% of the combined company. As of September 26, 2022, the transaction is valued at approximately $1.3 billion on a fully diluted basis. The combined company is expected to have more than $25 billion in total assets, $18 billion in total loans and $20 billion in total deposits.
The transaction has been approved by the boards of directors of both companies and is expected to close in the second quarter of 2023, subject to satisfaction of customary closing conditions, including receipt of customary regulatory approvals and approval by the shareholders of each company.
The Company incurred merger-related expenses on the anticipated transaction with Provident of $3.5 million during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022.
1st Constitution Bancorp
On January 6, 2022, the Company completed its acquisition of 1st Constitution Bancorp ("1st Constitution"), a bank holding company headquartered in Cranbury, New Jersey. 1st Constitution was the parent of 1st Constitution Bank, which operated 25 branches in Bergen, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Ocean and Somerset Counties in New Jersey. This acquisition enabled the Company to establish a presence in Mercer, Middlesex and Monmouth Counties and broaden its presence in the other counties. Effective as of the close of business on January 6, 2022, 1st Constitution merged into the Company and 1st Constitution Bank merged into Lakeland. Pursuant to the merger agreement, the shareholders of 1st Constitution received for each outstanding share of 1st Constitution common stock that they owned at the effective time of the merger, 1.3577 shares of Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. common stock. The Company issued 14,020,495 shares of its common stock in the merger. Outstanding 1st Constitution stock options were paid out in cash at the difference between $25.55 and an average strike price of $15.95 for a total cash payment of $559,000.
The acquisition was accounted for under the acquisition method of accounting and accordingly, the assets acquired and liabilities assumed in the acquisition were recorded at their estimated fair values as of the acquisition date. 1st Constitution's assets were recorded at their preliminary estimated fair values as of January 6, 2022 and 1st Constitution's results of operations have been included in the Company's Consolidated Statements of Income from that date forward.
The assets acquired and liabilities assumed in the acquisition were recorded at their estimated fair values based on management's best estimates using information available at the date of the acquisition, including the use of a third-party valuation specialist. The calculation of goodwill is subject to change for up to one year after the closing date of the transaction as additional information relative to closing date estimates and uncertainties becomes available. As the Company finalizes its analysis of these assets and liabilities, there may be adjustments to the recorded carrying values. The goodwill is not deductible for tax purposes.
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The following table summarizes the estimated fair value of the acquired assets and liabilities assumed at the date of acquisition for 1st Constitution.
(in thousands)
Assets acquired:
Cash and cash equivalents$326,236 
Investment securities available for sale217,774 
Investment securities held to maturity124,485 
Federal Home Loan Bank stock1,247 
Loans held for sale4,620 
Loans1,095,266 
Premises and equipment13,748 
Right-of-use assets, operating lease12,991 
Goodwill115,552 
Other intangible assets9,018 
Bank owned life insurance37,580 
Accrued interest receivable and other assets8,820 
Total assets acquired1,967,337 
Liabilities assumed:
Deposits(1,650,613)
Subordinated debt(14,734)
Operating lease liabilities(12,991)
Other liabilities(3,257)
Total liabilities assumed(1,681,595)
Net assets acquired$285,742 
Loans acquired in the 1st Constitution acquisition were recorded at fair value and subsequently accounted for in accordance with ASC Topic 310. There was no carryover related allowance for loan losses. The fair values of loans acquired from 1st Constitution were estimated using the discounted cash flow method based on the remaining maturity and repricing terms. Cash flows were adjusted for estimated future credit losses and the rate of prepayments. Projected cash flows were then discounted to present value based on the relative risk of the cash flows, taking into account the loan type, liquidity risk, maturity of the loans, servicing costs, and a required return on capital; the monthly principal and interest cash flows were discounted to present value and summed to arrive at the calculated value of loans.
For loans acquired without evidence of more-than-insignificant deterioration in credit quality since origination, the Company prepared the interest rate loan fair value and credit fair value adjustments. Loans were grouped into pools based on similar characteristics, such as loan type, fixed or adjustable interest rates, payment type, index rate and caps/floors, and non-accrual status. The loans were valued at the sub-pool level and were pooled at the summary level based on loan type. Market rates for similar loans were obtained from various internal and external data sources and reviewed by management for reasonableness. The average of these market rates was used as the fair value interest rate that a market participant would utilize.
Loans acquired that have experienced more-than-insignificant deterioration in credit quality since origination are considered purchased credit deteriorated ("PCD") loans. The Company evaluated acquired loans for deterioration in credit quality based on any of, but not limited to, the following: (1) non-accrual status; (2) troubled debt restructured designation; (3) risk ratings of special mention, substandard or doubtful; and (4) delinquency status. At the acquisition date, an estimate of expected credit losses is made for groups of PCD loans with similar risk characteristics and individual PCD loans without similar risk characteristics. Additionally for PCD loans, an allowance for loan losses was calculated using management's best estimate of projected losses over the remaining life of the loans, in accordance with ASC 326-20. This represents the portion of loan balances that has been deemed uncollectible based on the Company's expectation of future cash flows for the PCD loans. For loans that were put in collection status immediately, Management made a best estimate of the loan's fair value based on an analysis of the credit and our lien position. For all other loans, the fair value was determined using discounted cash flows as described above for non-PCD loans.
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The table below illustrates the fair value adjustments made to the amortized cost basis in order to present a fair value of the loans acquired (in thousands):
Gross amortized cost basis at January 6, 2022$1,110,600 
Interest rate fair value adjustment on all loans3,057 
Credit fair value adjustment on non-PCD loans(6,314)
Fair value of acquired loans at January 6, 20221,107,343 
Allowance for credit losses on PCD loans(12,077)
Fair value of acquired loans, net, as of January 6, 2022$1,095,266 
The following is a summary of the PCD loans acquired in the 1st Constitution acquisition as of the closing date.
(in thousands)PCD Loans
Gross amortized cost basis at January 6, 2022$140,300 
Interest component of expected cash flows (accretable difference)(3,792)
Allowance for credit losses on PCD loans(12,077)
Net PCD loans$124,431 
    The Company acquired 25 branches through the 1st Constitution merger, eight of which were owned premises. The fair value of the properties acquired was derived by valuations prepared by an independent third party using the sales comparison approach to value the property as improved.
As part of the 1st Constitution acquisition, the Company added 17 lease obligations. The Company recorded a $13.0 million right of use asset and lease liability for these lease obligations.
The core deposit intangible totaled $9.0 million and is being amortized over its estimated useful life of approximately ten years using an accelerated method. The goodwill will be evaluated annually for impairment. The goodwill is not deductible for tax purposes.
The fair values of deposit liabilities with no stated maturities such as checking, money market and savings accounts, were assumed to equal the carrying amounts since these deposits are payable on demand. The fair values of certificates of deposit represent the present value of contractual cash flows discounted at market rates for similar certificates of deposit.
Direct costs related to the 1st Constitution acquisition were expensed as incurred. The Company recorded no merger-related expenses related to the 1st Constitution acquisition in the third quarter of 2022 and $4.6 million in the nine months ended September 30, 2022. In the three and nine months ended September 30, 2021, the Company recorded $1.1 million of merger-related expenses.
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Supplemental Pro Forma Financial Information
The following table presents financial information regarding the former 1st Constitution operations included in the Consolidated Statements of Income from the date of the acquisition (January 6, 2022) through September 30, 2022. In addition the table provides condensed pro forma financial information assuming that the 1st Constitution acquisition had been completed as of January 1, 2022 for the nine months ended September 30, 2021 and 2022. The table has been prepared for comparative purposes only and is not necessarily indicative of the actual results that would have been attained had the acquisitions occurred as of the beginning of the periods presented, nor is it indicative of future results. The pro forma information does not reflect management's estimate of any revenue-enhancing opportunities nor anticipated cost savings that may have occurred as a result of the integration and consolidation of 1st Constitution's operations. The pro forma information reflects adjustments related to certain purchase accounting fair value adjustments, amortization of core deposit and other intangibles and related income tax effects.
(in thousands, except per share data)
1st Constitution Actual from Acquisition to September 30, 2022
Pro forma Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022
Pro forma Nine Months Ended September 30, 2021
Net interest income$36,980 $233,381 $219,976 
Provision (benefit) for credit losses42 11,274 (8,704)
Noninterest income10,311 20,774 28,213 
Noninterest expense22,980 145,871 138,667 
Net income18,348 73,086 87,576 
Earnings per share:
   Fully diluted$0.28 $1.13 $1.43 
Note 3 – Earnings Per Share
The following schedule shows the Company’s earnings per share calculations for the periods presented:
 For the Three Months Ended September 30,For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(in thousands, except per share data)2022202120222021
Net income available to common shareholders
$28,746 $22,289 $73,792 $72,871 
Less: earnings allocated to participating securities
339 303 847 839 
Net income allocated to common shareholders
$28,407 $21,986 $72,945 $72,032 
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding - basic
64,842 50,637 64,547 50,616 
Share-based plans219 238 208 220 
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding - diluted
65,061 50,875 64,755 50,836 
Basic earnings per share$0.44 $0.43 $1.13 $1.42 
Diluted earnings per share$0.44 $0.43 $1.13 $1.42 
There were no antidilutive options to purchase common stock excluded from the computation for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021.
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Note 4 – Investment Securities
The amortized cost, gross unrealized gains and losses, allowance for credit losses and the fair value of the Company's available for sale securities are as follows:
 September 30, 2022
(in thousands)Amortized
Cost
Gross
Unrealized
Gains
Gross
Unrealized
Losses
Allowance for Credit LossesFair
Value
U.S. Treasury and U.S. government agencies$387,049 $116 $(29,316)$— $357,849 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential360,191 (45,850)— 314,345 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential177,032 — (15,808)— 161,224 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily1,006 — (221)— 785 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, multifamily51,711 — (4,987)— 46,724 
Asset-backed securities59,131 — (1,588)— 57,543 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions23,024 — (1,504)(1)21,519 
Corporate bonds124,443 — (6,255)(4,164)114,024 
Total$1,183,587 $120 $(105,529)$(4,165)$1,074,013 
 December 31, 2021
(in thousands)Amortized
Cost
Gross
Unrealized
Gains
Gross
Unrealized
Losses
Allowance for Credit LossesFair
Value
U.S. Treasury and U.S. government agencies$202,961 $1,215 $(789)$— $203,387 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential238,456 1,250 (1,731)— 237,975 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential191,086 1,693 (1,488)— 191,291 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily1,816 — (75)— 1,741 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, multifamily32,254 511 (246)— 32,519 
Asset-backed securities52,518 153 (87)— 52,584 
Corporate bonds49,598 959 (15)(83)50,459 
Total$768,689 $5,781 $(4,431)$(83)$769,956 
The amortized cost, gross unrealized gains and losses, allowance for credit losses and the fair value of the Company's held to maturity investment securities are as follows:
 September 30, 2022
(in thousands)Amortized
Cost
Gross
Unrealized
Gains
Gross
Unrealized
Losses
Allowance for Credit LossesFair
Value
U.S. government agencies$16,296 $13 $(733)$— $15,576 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential357,453 (61,970)— 295,488 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential13,328 — (2,380)— 10,948 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily5,117 — (768)— 4,349 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions539,905 (115,168)(17)424,722 
Corporate bonds3,000 — (383)(135)2,482 
Total$935,099 $20 $(181,402)$(152)$753,565 
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 December 31, 2021
(in thousands)Amortized
Cost
Gross
Unrealized
Gains
Gross
Unrealized
Losses
Allowance for Credit LossesFair
Value
U.S. government agencies$18,672 $293 $— $— $18,965 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential370,247 718 (5,989)— 364,976 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential13,921 168 — — 14,089 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily2,710 26 (2)— 2,734 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions416,587 810 (5,800)(21)411,576 
Corporate bonds3,000 31 — (160)2,871 
Total$825,137 $2,046 $(11,791)$(181)$815,211 
During the third quarter of 2021, the Company transferred $494.2 million of previously designated available for sale securities to a held to maturity designation at estimated fair value. The reclassification for the period ended September 30, 2021 was permitted as the Company has appropriately determined the ability and intent to hold these securities as an investment until maturity or call. The securities transferred had an unrealized net gain of $3.8 million at the time of transfer, which is reflected, net of taxes, in accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) on the consolidated balance sheets. Subsequent amortization will be recognized over the life of the securities. The Company recorded amortization, net of tax, of $137,000 and $420,000 during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022, respectively. Amortization, net of tax, of $116,000 was recorded during both the three and nine months ended September 30, 2021.
The following table lists contractual maturities of investment securities classified as available for sale and held to maturity as of September 30, 2022. Mortgage-backed and asset-backed securities are not shown by maturity because expected maturities may differ from contractual maturities due to underlying loan prepayments of the issuer. Expected maturities will differ from contractual maturities because borrowers may have the right to call or prepay obligations with or without call or prepayment penalties.
 Available for SaleHeld to Maturity
(in thousands)Amortized
Cost
Fair
Value
Amortized
Cost
Fair
Value
Due in one year or less$36,294 $35,718 $75,152 $74,792 
Due after one year through five years241,367 224,953 33,556 31,625 
Due after five years through ten years189,407 171,408 70,529 58,896 
Due after ten years67,448 61,313 379,964 277,467 
534,516 493,392 559,201 442,780 
Mortgage-backed and asset-backed securities649,071 580,621 375,898 310,785 
Total$1,183,587 $1,074,013 $935,099 $753,565 
During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022 and during the third quarter of 2021, there were no sales of available for sale securities. During the nine months ended September 30, 2021, the Company sold $4.4 million of available for sale securities recording a gain of $9,000. Gains or losses on sales of securities are based on the net proceeds and the adjusted carrying amount of the securities sold using the specific identification method.
Securities with a carrying value of approximately $1.21 billion and $1.04 billion at September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively, were pledged to secure public deposits and for other purposes required by applicable laws and regulations.
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The following tables indicate the length of time individual securities have been in a continuous unrealized loss position for the periods presented:
September 30, 2022Less Than 12 Months12 Months or LongerTotal
(dollars in thousands)Fair ValueUnrealized
Losses
Fair ValueUnrealized
Losses
Number of
Securities
Fair ValueUnrealized
Losses
Available for Sale
U.S. Treasury and U.S. government agencies
$303,011 $25,348 $28,189 $3,968 66 $331,200 $29,316 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential254,502 34,557 58,564 11,293 136 313,066 45,850 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential100,681 7,502 60,543 8,306 107 161,224 15,808 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily— — 785 221 785 221 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, multifamily40,474 3,270 6,249 1,717 20 46,723 4,987 
Asset-backed securities
44,227 1,049 13,317 539 18 57,544 1,588 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions
20,594 1,504 — — 47 20,594 1,504 
Corporate bonds109,103 5,725 4,922 530 50 114,025 6,255 
Total$872,592 $78,955 $172,569 $26,574 445 $1,045,161 $105,529 
Held to Maturity
U.S. government agencies$14,214 $733 $— $— $14,214 $733 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential80,909 12,964 214,223 49,006 182 295,132 61,970 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential10,947 2,380 — — 12 10,947 2,380 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily4,349 768 — — 4,349 768 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions
197,570 46,268 199,669 68,900 383 397,239 115,168 
Corporate bonds2,616 383 — — 2,616 383 
Total$310,605 $63,496 $413,892 $117,906 586 $724,497 $181,402 
December 31, 2021Less Than 12 Months12 Months or LongerTotal
(dollars in thousands)Fair ValueUnrealized
Losses
Fair ValueUnrealized
Losses
Number of
Securities
Fair ValueUnrealized
Losses
Available for Sale
U.S. Treasury and U.S. government agencies
$76,106 $322 $14,670 $467 15 $90,776 $789 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential176,990 1,465 14,582 266 45 191,572 1,731 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential86,749 1,429 5,000 59 18 91,749 1,488 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily— — 1,741 75 1,741 75 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, multifamily9,083 210 1,072 36 10,155 246 
Asset-backed securities
14,688 87 — — 14,688 87 
Corporate bonds15,325 (5)980 20 16,305 15 
Total$378,941 $3,508 $38,045 $923 94 $416,986 $4,431 
Held to Maturity
Mortgage-backed securities, residential$340,474 $5,882 $2,376 $107 96 $342,850 $5,989 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, multifamily2,051 — — 2,051 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions
307,827 5,800 — — 239 307,827 5,800 
Total$650,352 $11,684 $2,376 $107 336 $652,728 $11,791 
For available for sale securities, the Company assesses whether a loss is from credit or other factors and considers the extent to which fair value is less than amortized cost, any changes to the rating of the security by a rating agency and adverse conditions related to the security, among other factors. If this assessment indicates that a credit loss exists, the present value of cash flows expected to be collected from the security are compared to the amortized cost basis of the security. If the present value of cash flows is less than the amortized cost, a credit loss exists and an allowance is created, limited by the amount that the fair value is less than the amortized cost basis.
For held to maturity securities, management measures expected credit losses on a collective basis by major security type. All of the mortgage-backed securities are issued by U.S. government agencies and are either explicitly or implicitly guaranteed by the U.S. government, are highly rated by major rating agencies and have a long history of no credit losses and, therefore, the expectation of non-payment is zero. A range of historical losses method is utilized in estimating the net amount expected to be collected for mortgage-backed securities, collateralized mortgage obligations and obligations of states and political subdivisions.
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The gross unrealized losses reported for residential mortgage-backed securities relate to investment securities issued by U.S. government sponsored entities such as Federal National Mortgage Association and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation and U.S. government agencies such as Government National Mortgage Association. The total gross unrealized losses, shown in the tables above, were primarily attributable to changes in interest rates and levels of market liquidity, relative to when the investment securities were purchased, and not due to the credit quality of the investment securities.
Credit Quality Indicators
Credit ratings, which are updated monthly, are a key measure for estimating the probability of a bond's default and for monitoring credit quality on an on-going basis. For bonds other than U.S. Treasuries and bonds issued or guaranteed by U.S. government agencies, credit ratings issued by one or more nationally recognized statistical rating organizations are considered in conjunction with an assessment by the Company's management. Investment grade reflects a credit quality of BBB or above.
The tables below indicate the credit profile of the Company's held to maturity investment securities at amortized cost:
September 30, 2022 AAA  AA  A  BBB  Not Rated  Total
(in thousands)
U.S. government agencies$16,296 $— $— $— $— $16,296 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential357,453 — — — — 357,453 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential13,328 — — — — 13,328 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily5,117 — — — — 5,117 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions164,350 314,959 1,032 — 59,564 539,905 
Corporate bonds— — — 3,000 — 3,000 
Total$556,544 $314,959 $1,032 $3,000 $59,564 $935,099 
December 31, 2021 AAA  AA  A  BBB  Not Rated  Total
(in thousands)
U.S. government agencies$18,672 $— $— $— $— $18,672 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential370,247 — — — — 370,247 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential13,921 — — — — 13,921 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily2,710 — — — — 2,710 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions143,777 270,909 1,068 — 833 416,587 
Corporate bonds— — — 3,000 — 3,000 
Total$549,327 $270,909 $1,068 $3,000 $833 $825,137 
Equity securities at fair value
The Company has an equity securities portfolio, which primarily consists of investments in Community Reinvestment funds. The fair value of the equity portfolio was $17.2 million and $17.4 million at September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively. For the nine months ended September 30, 2022, the Company recorded no sales of equity securities or Community Reinvestment funds. The Company recorded fair value losses on equity securities of $464,000 for the third quarter of 2022 and fair value losses of $58,000 for the third quarter of 2021. For the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, the Company recorded fair value losses on equity securities of $1.3 million and $191,000, respectively. Fair value gain or loss on equity securities are recorded in noninterest income.
As of September 30, 2022, the Company's investments in Community Reinvestment funds include $7.8 million that are primarily invested in community development loans that are guaranteed by the Small Business Administration (“SBA”). Because the funds are primarily guaranteed by the federal government, there are minimal changes in fair value between accounting periods. These funds can be redeemed with 60 days' notice at the net asset value less unpaid management fees with the approval of the fund manager. As of September 30, 2022, the net amortized cost equaled the fair value of the investment. There are no unfunded commitments related to these investments.
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The Community Reinvestment funds also included $9.4 million of investment in government guaranteed loans, mortgage-backed securities, small business loans and other instruments supporting affordable housing and economic development as of September 30, 2022. The Company may redeem these funds at the net asset value calculated at the end of the current business day less any unpaid management fees. There are no restrictions on redemptions for the holdings in these investments other than the notice required by the fund manager. There are no unfunded commitments related to these investments.
Note 5 – Loans
The following sets forth the composition of the Company’s loan portfolio:
(in thousands)September 30, 2022December 31, 2021
Non-owner occupied commercial$2,873,824 $2,316,284 
Owner occupied commercial1,141,290 908,449 
Multifamily1,186,036 972,233 
Non-owner occupied residential222,597 177,097 
Commercial, industrial and other613,228 462,406 
Construction381,109 302,228 
Equipment finance137,999 123,212 
Residential mortgage690,453 438,710 
Home equity and consumer322,290 275,529 
Total$7,568,826 $5,976,148 
Loans are recorded at amortized cost, which includes principal balance and net deferred loan fees and costs. The Company elected to exclude accrued interest receivable from amortized cost. Accrued interest receivable is reported separately in the Consolidated Balance Sheets and totaled $20.9 million at September 30, 2022 and $13.9 million at December 31, 2021. Loan origination fees and certain direct loan origination costs are deferred and the net fee or cost is recognized in interest income as an adjustment of yield. Net deferred loan fees are included in loans by respective segment and totaled $2.5 million at September 30, 2022 and $5.8 million at December 31, 2021.
At September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, SBA Paycheck Protection Program ("PPP") loans totaled $734,000 and $56.6 million, respectively, and are included in the balance of commercial, industrial and other loans. Consumer loans included overdraft deposit balances of $345,000 and $184,000, at September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively. At September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, the Company had $2.81 billion and $2.30 billion of loans pledged for potential borrowings at the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York ("FHLB"), respectively.
The Company transferred approximately $6.6 million of commercial and residential mortgage loans from the loan portfolio to loans held for sale during the three months ended September 30, 2021 and subsequently sold these loans. For the nine months ended September 30, 2021, the Company transferred from the loan portfolio to loans held for sale and subsequently sold approximately $21.7 million of commercial and residential mortgage loans. Excluding these loan transfers, there were no other sales of loans from the held for investment portfolio during the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021.
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Credit Quality Indicators
Management closely and continually monitors the quality of its loans and assesses the quantitative and qualitative risks arising from the credit quality of its loans. Lakeland assigns a credit risk rating to all loans and loan commitments. The credit risk rating system has been developed by management to provide a methodology to be used by loan officers, department heads and senior management in identifying various levels of credit risk that exist within the loan portfolios. The risk rating system assists senior management in evaluating the loan portfolio and analyzing trends. In assigning risk ratings, management considers, among other things, the borrower’s ability to service the debt based on relevant information such as current financial information, historical payment experience, credit documentation, public information and current economic conditions.
Management categorizes loans and commitments into the following risk ratings:
Pass: "Pass" assets are well protected by the current net worth and paying capacity of the obligor or guarantors, if any, or by the fair value of any underlying collateral.
Watch: "Watch" assets require more than the usual amount of monitoring due to declining earnings, strained cash flow, increasing leverage and/or weakening market. These borrowers generally have limited additional debt capacity and modest coverage and average or below average asset quality, margins and market share.
Special Mention: "Special mention" assets exhibit identifiable credit weakness, which if not checked or corrected could weaken the loan quality or inadequately protect the bank’s credit position at some future date.
Substandard: "Substandard" assets are inadequately protected by the current sound worth and paying capacity of the obligors or of the collateral pledged, if any. A substandard loan has a well-defined weakness or weaknesses that may jeopardize the liquidation of the debt.
Doubtful: "Doubtful" assets that exhibit all of the weaknesses inherent in substandard loans, but have the added characteristics that the weaknesses make collection or liquidation in full improbable on the basis of existing facts.
Loss: “Loss” is a rating for loans or portions of loans that are considered uncollectible and of such little value that their continuance as bankable loans is not warranted.

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The following table presents the risk category of loans by class of loan and vintage as of September 30, 2022.
Term Loans by Origination Year
(in thousands)20222021202020192018Pre-2018Revolving LoansRevolving to TermTotal
Non-owner occupied commercial
  Pass$568,312 $387,895 $536,408 $276,115 $199,556 $727,912 $16,019 — $2,712,217 
  Watch— — 2,939 25,627 9,375 63,784 — — 101,725 
  Special mention— — 946 14,347 10,298 9,511 — — 35,102 
  Substandard— — — 852 134 23,754 40 — 24,780 
    Total568,312 387,895 540,293 316,941 219,363 824,961 16,059 — 2,873,824 
Owner occupied commercial
  Pass145,236 201,964 183,610 89,761 62,778 328,032 11,800 83 1,023,264 
  Watch— 17,771 2,955 7,068 6,971 29,766 — — 64,531 
  Special mention592 — 5,746 4,479 3,171 15,026 — — 29,014 
  Substandard— — 9,704 — 1,150 13,627 — — 24,481 
    Total145,828 219,735 202,015 101,308 74,070 386,451 11,800 83 1,141,290 
Multifamily
  Pass222,643 223,070 265,900 64,363 94,302 262,993 1,149 — 1,134,420 
  Watch— 5,848 11,801 3,060 1,301 4,018 — — 26,028 
  Special mention400 — 2,433 — — 11,344 — — 14,177 
  Substandard— — — 3,884 — 7,527 — — 11,411 
    Total223,043 228,918 280,134 71,307 95,603 285,882 1,149 — 1,186,036 
Non-owner occupied residential
  Pass28,029 30,019 21,232 24,220 16,238 75,526 7,789 20 203,073 
  Watch— — 2,524 2,079 3,368 6,729 75 — 14,775 
  Special mention— — — 623 826 1,034 — — 2,483 
  Substandard— — — — — 2,266 — — 2,266 
    Total28,029 30,019 23,756 26,922 20,432 85,555 7,864 20 222,597 
Commercial, industrial and other
  Pass41,596 55,217 29,656 64,466 15,274 41,636 328,418 329 576,592 
  Watch500 1,035 126 322 — 1,239 18,680 138 22,040 
  Special mention— — — 3,104 41 639 937 — 4,721 
  Substandard776 102 — 445 5,082 (119)3,589 — 9,875 
    Total42,872 56,354 29,782 68,337 20,397 43,395 351,624 467 613,228 
Construction
  Pass50,985 182,764 63,804 32,071 20,752 4,915 10,402 — 365,693 
  Watch941 — — — — — 294 — 1,235 
  Special mention— — — — — — — — — 
  Substandard— — 2,228 — — 11,953 — — 14,181 
    Total51,926 182,764 66,032 32,071 20,752 16,868 10,696 — 381,109 
Equipment finance
  Pass51,471 39,053 22,714 18,269 5,351 909 — — 137,767 
  Substandard— 60 — 139 33 — — — 232 
    Total51,471 39,113 22,714 18,408 5,384 909 — — 137,999 
Residential mortgage
  Pass241,176 170,411 111,322 35,659 20,801 108,824 — — 688,193 
  Substandard— — — 449 326 1,485 — — 2,260 
    Total241,176 170,411 111,322 36,108 21,127 110,309 — — 690,453 
Consumer
  Pass38,954 32,160 9,036 4,357 3,469 23,034 210,084 — 321,094 
  Substandard33 — — — 25 856 282 — 1,196 
    Total38,987 32,160 9,036 4,357 3,494 23,890 210,366 — 322,290 
Total loans$1,391,644 $1,347,369 $1,285,084 $675,759 $480,622 $1,778,220 $609,558 $570 $7,568,826 

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The following table presents the risk category of loans by class of loan and vintage as of December 31, 2021.
Term Loans by Origination Year
(in thousands)20212020201920182017Pre-2017Revolving LoansRevolving to TermTotal
Non-owner occupied commercial
  Pass$363,459 $516,131 $295,944 $189,592 $195,733 $562,338 $18,795 — $2,141,992 
  Watch— — 25,292 14,660 4,641 47,011 130 — 91,734 
  Special mention— 458 — 5,749 14,639 6,602 — — 27,448 
  Substandard119 431 332 2,656 8,000 43,572 — — 55,110 
    Total363,578 517,020 321,568 212,657 223,013 659,523 18,925 — 2,316,284 
Owner occupied commercial
  Pass209,515 133,292 83,395 54,019 48,850 252,001 8,343 108 789,523 
  Watch— 5,757 2,134 900 280 24,873 — — 33,944 
  Special mention— 9,694 21,837 12,632 95 17,851 — — 62,109 
  Substandard— — 2,597 1,299 18,972 — — 22,873 
    Total209,520 148,743 107,366 70,148 50,524 313,697 8,343 108 908,449 
Multifamily
  Pass225,060 255,016 72,438 71,366 73,122 207,509 18,161 1,281 923,953 
  Watch— 966 — 13,709 854 6,497 — — 22,026 
  Special mention— 2,470 — — 8,944 2,948 — — 14,362 
  Substandard— — 5,485 1,321 — 4,987 99 — 11,892 
    Total225,060 258,452 77,923 86,396 82,920 221,941 18,260 1,281 972,233 
Non-owner occupied residential
  Pass28,476 18,527 16,928 15,695 18,048 51,194 7,288 — 156,156 
  Watch— — — — 651 5,057 — — 5,708 
  Special mention— — 523 837 1,205 284 515 — 3,364 
  Substandard— 3,062 510 4,797 988 2,512 — — 11,869 
    Total28,476 21,589 17,961 21,329 20,892 59,047 7,803 — 177,097 
Commercial, industrial and other
  Pass100,921 23,940 65,225 11,636 3,808 37,479 191,293 872 435,174 
  Watch939 461 446 — 1,378 173 5,056 — 8,453 
  Special mention— — — — 1,896 443 1,365 — 3,704 
  Substandard101 7,352 — 1,276 496 422 5,428 — 15,075 
    Total101,961 31,753 65,671 12,912 7,578 38,517 203,142 872 462,406 
Construction
  Pass108,585 84,993 40,847 30,125 23,578 3,654 — — 291,782 
  Special mention— — — — 10,446 — — — 10,446 
    Total108,585 84,993 40,847 30,125 34,024 3,654 — — 302,228 
Equipment finance
  Pass50,482 30,486 27,626 10,238 3,128 803 — — 122,763 
  Substandard— — 216 177 56 — — — 449 
    Total50,482 30,486 27,842 10,415 3,184 803 — — 123,212 
Residential mortgage
  Pass171,442 112,680 27,228 20,784 9,103 96,510 — — 437,747 
  Substandard12 — — 123 694 134 — — 963 
    Total171,454 112,680 27,228 20,907 9,797 96,644 — — 438,710 
Consumer
  Pass35,283 10,476 5,358 4,561 3,260 24,888 190,481 34 274,341 
  Substandard32 — — — — 630 526 — 1,188 
    Total35,315 10,476 5,358 4,561 3,260 25,518 191,007 34 275,529 
Total loans$1,294,431 $1,216,192 $691,764 $469,450 $435,192 $1,419,344 $447,480 $2,295 $5,976,148 

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Past Due and Non-Accrual Loans
Loans are considered past due if required principal and interest payments have not been received as of the date such payments were contractually due. A loan is generally considered non-performing when it is placed on non-accrual status. A loan is generally placed on non-accrual status when it becomes 90 days past due if such loan has been identified as presenting uncertainty with respect to the collectability of interest and principal. A loan past due 90 days or more may remain on accruing status if such loan is both well secured and in the process of collection.
In the absence of other intervening factors, loans granted payment deferrals related to COVID-19 were not reported as past due or placed on non-accrual status provided the borrowers met the criteria in the CARES Act or otherwise met the criteria included in an interagency statement issued by bank regulatory agencies.
The following tables present the payment status of the recorded investment in past due loans as of the periods noted, by class of loans.
September 30, 2022Past Due
(in thousands)Current30 - 59 Days60 - 89 DaysGreater than 89 daysTotalTotal Loans
Non-owner occupied commercial$2,873,092 $421 $— $311 $732 $2,873,824 
Owner occupied commercial1,131,553 1,051 8,198 488 9,737 1,141,290 
Multifamily1,186,036 — — — — 1,186,036 
Non-owner occupied residential221,212 517 — 868 1,385 222,597 
Commercial, industrial and other609,403 116 141 3,568 3,825 613,228 
Construction381,109 — — — — 381,109 
Equipment finance137,172 607 173 47 827 137,999 
Residential mortgage687,242 1,391 490 1,330 3,211 690,453 
Consumer321,679 518 89 611 322,290 
Total$7,548,498 $4,621 $9,006 $6,701 $20,328 $7,568,826 
December 31, 2021Past Due
(in thousands)Current30 - 59 Days60 - 89 DaysGreater than 89 daysTotalTotal Loans
Non-owner occupied commercial$2,312,557 $— $718 $3,009 $3,727 $2,316,284 
Owner occupied commercial905,751 20 — 2,678 2,698 908,449 
Multifamily972,233 — — — — 972,233 
Non-owner occupied residential174,245 — 136 2,716 2,852 177,097 
Commercial, industrial and other461,659 154 — 593 747 462,406 
Construction302,228 — — — — 302,228 
Equipment finance122,923 211 41 37 289 123,212 
Residential mortgage437,574 255 64 817 1,136 438,710 
Consumer274,426 705 135 263 1,103 275,529 
Total$5,963,596 $1,345 $1,094 $10,113 $12,552 $5,976,148 
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The following tables present information on non-accrual loans at September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021:
September 30, 2022
(in thousands)Non-accrualInterest Income Recognized on Non-accrual LoansAmortized Cost Basis of Loans > 89 days Past due but still accruingAmortized Cost Basis of Non-accrual Loans without Related Allowance
Non-owner occupied commercial$307 $— $— $— 
Owner occupied commercial10,322 — — 9,638 
Non-owner occupied residential868 — — 450 
Commercial, industrial and other3,623 — — — 
Equipment finance226 — — — 
Residential mortgage2,226 — — — 
Consumer798 — 31 — 
Total$18,370 $— $31 $10,088 
December 31, 2021
(in thousands)Non-accrualInterest Income Recognized on Non-accrual LoansAmortized Cost Basis of Loans > 89 days Past due but still accruingAmortized Cost Basis of Non-accrual Loans without Related Allowance
Non-owner occupied commercial$3,009 $— $— $2,624 
Owner occupied commercial2,810 — — 2,398 
Non-owner occupied residential2,852 — — 2,567 
Commercial, industrial and other6,763 — — 1,122 
Equipment finance43 — — — 
Residential mortgage817 — — 694 
Consumer687 — — 
Total$16,981 $— $$9,405 
At September 30, 2022, there was one loan with a recorded investment of $31,000 that was past due more than 89 days and still accruing and, at December 31, 2021, one loan with a recorded investment of $1,000 was past due more than 89 days and still accruing. The Company had $871,000 and $930,000 in residential mortgages and consumer home equity loans included in total non-accrual loans that were in the process of foreclosure at September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively.
Purchased Credit Deteriorated Loans
The following summarizes the PCD loans acquired in the 1st Constitution acquisition as of the closing date, January 6, 2022.
(in thousands)PCD Loans
Gross amortized cost basis$140,300 
Interest component of expected cash flows (accretable difference)(3,792)
Allowance for credit losses on PCD loans(12,077)
Net PCD loans$124,431 
    At September 30, 2022, net PCD loans acquired from 1st Constitution totaled $101.1 million.
Troubled Debt Restructurings
Loans are classified as troubled debt restructured loans ("TDR") in cases where borrowers experience financial difficulties and Lakeland makes certain concessionary modifications to contractual terms. Restructured loans typically involve a modification of terms such as a reduction of the stated interest rate, a moratorium of principal payments and/or an extension of the maturity date at a stated interest rate lower than the current market rate of a new loan with similar risk.
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The CARES Act and related legislation provided relief from TDR classification for certain loan modifications related to the COVID-19 pandemic beginning March 1, 2020 through December 31, 2021. Additionally, banking regulatory agencies issued interagency guidance that COVID-19 related short-term modifications (i.e., six months or less) granted to borrowers that were current as of the loan modification program implementation date do not need to be considered TDRs. The Company elected this provision of the CARES Act and excluded modified loans that met the required guidelines for relief from its TDR classification. At September 30, 2022, no loans were on COVID-related deferrals as any remaining 90-day loan deferments expired and borrowers began paying their pre-deferral loan payments in the first quarter of 2021. For most commercial loans, borrowers are paying their pre-deferral loan payments plus an additional monthly amount to catch up on the payments that were deferred. None of these modifications were considered TDRs.
At September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, TDRs totaled $3.1 million and $3.5 million, respectively. Accruing TDRs totaled $3.1 million and there were no non-accrual TDRs at September 30, 2022. Accruing TDRs and non-accrual TDRs totaled $3.3 million and $127,000, respectively, at December 31, 2021. There were no loans that were restructured during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022 that met the definition of a TDR. During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2021, there was one consumer loan totaling $116,000 that was restructured that met the definition of a TDR. There were no restructured loans that subsequently defaulted in the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021.
Note 6 - Allowance for Credit Losses
The Company measures expected credit losses for financial assets measured at amortized cost, including loans, investments and certain off-balance-sheet credit exposures in accordance with ASU 2016-13. See Note 1 - Summary of Significant Accounting Policies in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021 for a description of the Company's methodology.
Under the standard, the Company's methodology for determining the allowance for credit losses on loans is based upon key assumptions, including the lookback periods, historic net charge-off factors, economic forecasts, reversion periods, prepayments and qualitative adjustments. The allowance is measured on a collective, or pool, basis when similar risk characteristics exist. Loans that do not share common risk characteristics are evaluated on an individual basis and are excluded from the collective evaluation. At September 30, 2022, loans totaling $7.45 billion were evaluated collectively and the allowance on these balances totaled $63.7 million and loans totaling $118.7 million were evaluated on an individual basis with the specific allocations of the allowance for credit losses totaling $5.2 million. Loans evaluated on an individual basis include $101.5 million in PCD loans, which had a specific allowance for credit losses of $3.4 million. The Company made the election to exclude accrued interest receivable from the estimate of credit losses.
Allowance for Credit Losses - Loans
The allowance for credit losses on loans is summarized in the following table:
For the Three Months Ended September 30,For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(in thousands)2022202120222021
Balance at beginning of the period$68,836 $60,389 $58,047 $71,124 
Initial allowance for credit losses on PCD loans— — 12,077 — 
Charge-offs on PCD loans— — (7,634)— 
Charge-offs(56)(996)(595)(4,128)
Recoveries88 1,266 760 1,785 
  Net recoveries (charge-offs)32 270 (7,469)(2,343)
Provision (benefit) for credit loss - loans11 (2,706)6,224 (10,828)
Balance at end of the period$68,879 $57,953 $68,879 $57,953 
The lower provision for credit losses on loans for the third quarter of 2022 was primarily due to a slight increase in the baseline estimate due to increased loan balances, which was largely offset by a decrease in the total of individually evaluated loans, while the provision for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 was predominantly due to the provision for the 1st Constitution's acquired non-purchased credit deteriorated loans and the additional charge-offs on PCD loans. The benefit for credit losses for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2021, was largely due to an improvement in macroeconomic factors. Charge-offs in the nine months ended September 30, 2022 include $7.6 million in charge-offs on 1st Constitution's acquired PCD loans. Non-performing loans totaling $6.6 million and $21.7 million were sold during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2021, respectively, resulting in net recoveries of $502,000 and net charge-offs of $706,000, respectively.

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The following tables detail activity in the allowance for credit losses on loans by portfolio segment for the three months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021:
(in thousands)
Balance at June 30, 2022
Charge-offsRecoveriesProvision (Benefit) for Credit Loss
Balance at September 30, 2022
Non-owner occupied commercial$23,926 $— $— $294 $24,220 
Owner occupied commercial6,938 — — (666)6,272 
Multifamily8,441 — — 426 8,867 
Non-owner occupied residential2,893 — — (101)2,792 
Commercial, industrial and other10,089 — 49 (1,171)8,967 
Construction2,937 — — (48)2,889 
Equipment finance2,253 — 23 258 2,534 
Residential mortgage6,579 — — 861 7,440 
Consumer4,780 (56)16 158 4,898 
Total$68,836 $(56)$88 $11 $68,879 
(in thousands)
Balance at June 30, 2021
Charge-offsRecoveries(Benefit) Provision for Credit Loss
Balance at September 30, 2021
Non owner occupied commercial$20,906 $(465)$459 $(387)$20,513 
Owner occupied commercial4,100 (204)284 131 4,311 
Multifamily7,177 (28)— 418 7,567 
Non owner occupied residential2,592 (11)16 206 2,803 
Commercial, industrial and other10,489 (26)290 (2,678)8,075 
Construction1,034 (54)(118)866 
Equipment finance5,120 (138)— (142)4,840 
Residential mortgage3,885 (28)348 4,206 
Consumer5,086 (42)212 (484)4,772 
Total$60,389 $(996)$1,266 $(2,706)$57,953 
The following tables detail activity in the allowance for credit losses on loans by portfolio segment for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021:
(in thousands)
Balance at December 31, 2021
Initial allowance for credit losses on PCD loansCharge-offsRecoveries(Benefit) Provision for Credit Loss
Balance at September 30, 2022
Non-owner occupied commercial$20,071 $1,312 $(4)$$2,837 $24,220 
Owner occupied commercial3,964 1,137 (38)351 858 6,272 
Multifamily8,309 — — 554 8,867 
Non-owner occupied residential2,380 175 — 14 223 2,792 
Commercial, industrial and other9,891 2,413 (1,128)127 (2,336)8,967 
Construction838 6,843 (6,807)2,012 2,889 
Equipment finance3,663 — (121)102 (1,110)2,534 
Residential mortgage3,914 179 — 48 3,299 7,440 
Consumer5,017 14 (131)111 (113)4,898 
Total$58,047 $12,077 $(8,229)$760 $6,224 $68,879 
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(in thousands)
Balance at December 31, 2020
Charge-offsRecoveries(Benefit) Provision for Credit Loss
Balance at September 30, 2021
Non owner occupied commercial$25,910 $(2,708)$462 $(3,151)$20,513 
Owner occupied commercial3,955 (282)301 337 4,311 
Multifamily7,253 (28)— 342 7,567 
Non owner occupied residential3,321 (223)29 (324)2,803 
Commercial, industrial and other13,665 (401)439 (5,628)8,075 
Construction786 (54)71 63 866 
Equipment finance6,552 (242)17 (1,487)4,840 
Residential mortgage3,623 (64)177 470 4,206 
Consumer6,059 (126)289 (1,450)4,772 
Total$71,124 $(4,128)$1,785 $(10,828)$57,953 
The following tables present the recorded investment in loans by portfolio segment and the related allowance for credit losses at September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021:
September 30, 2022Loans Allowance for Credit Losses
(in thousands) Individually evaluated for impairment Collectively evaluated for impairmentAcquired with deteriorated credit qualityTotalIndividually evaluated for impairmentCollectively evaluated for impairment Total
Non-owner occupied commercial$427 $2,822,565 $50,832 $2,873,824 $857 $23,363 $24,220 
Owner occupied commercial12,853 1,101,625 26,812 1,141,290 999 5,273 6,272 
Multifamily— 1,179,539 6,497 1,186,036 17 8,850 8,867 
Non-owner occupied residential450 216,168 5,979 222,597 27 2,765 2,792 
Commercial, industrial and other3,491 600,151 9,586 613,228 3,116 5,851 8,967 
Construction— 381,109 — 381,109 — 2,889 2,889 
Equipment finance— 137,999 — 137,999 — 2,534 2,534 
Residential mortgage— 689,028 1,425 690,453 186 7,254 7,440 
Consumer— 321,938 352 322,290 15 4,883 4,898 
Total loans$17,221 $7,450,122 $101,483 $7,568,826 $5,217 $63,662 $68,879 
December 31, 2021Loans Allowance for Credit Losses
(in thousands)Individually evaluated for impairmentCollectively evaluated for impairmentAcquired with deteriorated credit qualityTotalIndividually evaluated for impairmentCollectively evaluated for impairmentTotal
Non-owner occupied commercial$3,063 $2,313,047 $174 2,316,284 $— $20,071 $20,071 
Owner occupied commercial6,678 901,638 133 908,449 69 3,895 3,964 
Multifamily— 972,233 — 972,233 — 8,309 8,309 
Non-owner occupied residential2,567 174,463 67 177,097 — 2,380 2,380 
Commercial, industrial and other6,537 455,306 563 462,406 4,182 5,709 9,891 
Construction— 302,228 — 302,228 — 838 838 
Equipment finance— 123,212 — 123,212 — 3,663 3,663 
Residential mortgage1,416 437,294 — 438,710 — 3,914 3,914 
Consumer— 275,529 — 275,529 — 5,017 5,017 
Total loans$20,261 $5,954,950 $937 $5,976,148 $4,251 $53,796 $58,047 
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Allowance for Credit Losses - Securities
At September 30, 2022, the balance of the allowance for credit loss on available for sale and held to maturity securities was $4.2 million and $152,000, respectively. At December 31, 2021, the Company reported an allowance for credit losses on available for sale securities of $83,000 and an allowance for credit losses on held to maturity securities of $181,000.
The allowance for credit losses on securities is summarized in the following tables:
Available for SaleFor the Three Months Ended September 30,For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(in thousands)2022202120222021
Balance at beginning of the period$2,802 $21 $83 $
AFS - HTM Transfer$— (3)$— $(3)
Provision for credit loss expense1,363 32 4,082 51 
Balance at end of the period$4,165 $50 $4,165 $50 
Held to MaturityFor the Three Months Ended September 30,For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(in thousands)2022202120222021
Balance at beginning of the period$190 $137 $181 $— 
AFS - HTM Transfer$— $$— $
(Benefit) provision for credit loss expense(38)43 (29)180 
Balance at end of the period$152 $183 $152 $183 
Accrued interest receivable on securities is reported as a component of accrued interest receivable on the consolidated balance sheets and totaled $8.6 million at September 30, 2022 and $5.3 million and December 31, 2021. The Company made the election to exclude accrued interest receivable from the estimate of credit losses on securities.
Allowance for Credit Losses - Off-Balance-Sheet Exposures
The allowance for credit losses on off-balance sheet exposures is reported in other liabilities in the Consolidated Balance Sheets. The liability represents an estimate of expected credit losses arising from off balance sheet exposures such as letters of credit, guarantees and unfunded loan commitments. The process for measuring lifetime expected credit losses on these exposures is consistent with that for loans as discussed above, but is subject to an additional estimate reflecting the likelihood that funding will occur. No liability is recognized for off balance sheet credit exposures that are unconditionally cancellable by the Company. Adjustments to the liability are reported as a component of the provision for credit losses.
At September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, the balance of the allowance for credit losses for off-balance sheet exposures was $3.3 million and $2.3 million, respectively. The Company recorded a provision for credit losses on off-balance-sheet exposures in other operating expense of $22,000 for the third quarter of 2022 and a benefit for credit losses on off-balance-sheet exposures of $72,000 for the third quarter of 2021. For the nine months ended September 30, 2022, the Company recorded a provision for credit losses on off-balance-sheet exposures in other operating expense of $997,000 and a benefit for credit losses on off-balance-sheet exposures of $707,000 for the same period in 2021.
Note 7 – Leases
The Company leases certain premises and equipment under operating leases. Portions of certain properties are subleased for terms extending through 2027. At September 30, 2022, the Company had lease liabilities totaling $27.2 million and right-of-use assets totaling $25.9 million related to these leases. At December 31, 2021, the Company had lease liabilities totaling $16.5 million and right-of-use assets totaling $15.2 million. The calculated amount of the right-of-use assets and lease liabilities are impacted by the length of the lease term and the discount rate used to calculate the present value of the minimum lease payments. The Company's lease agreements often include one or more options to renew at the Company's discretion. If at lease inception, the Company considers the exercising of a renewal option to be reasonably certain, the Company will include the extended term in the calculation of the right-of-use asset and lease liability. The Company uses its incremental borrowing rate at lease inception, on a collateralized basis, over a similar term.
For the nine months ended September 30, 2022, the weighted average remaining lease term for operating leases was 11.76 years and the weighted average discount rate used in the measurement of operating lease liabilities was 3.05%. At December 31, 2021, the weighted average remaining lease term for operating leases was 9.16 years and the weighted average discount rate used in the measurement of operating lease liabilities was 3.41%.
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As the Company elected not to separate lease and non-lease components and instead to account for them as a single lease component, the variable lease cost primarily represents variable payments such as common area maintenance and utilities. Lease costs were as follows:
For the Three Months Ended September 30,For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(in thousands)2022202120222021
Operating lease cost$1,248 $769 $3,716 $2,427 
Short-term lease cost— — 18 — 
Variable lease cost15 22 48 67 
Sublease income$(32)$(30)(96)(91)
Net lease cost$1,231 $761 $3,686 $2,403 
The table below presents other information on the Company's operating leases for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021:
Nine Months Ended September 30,
(in thousands)20222021
Cash paid for amounts included in the measurement of lease liabilities:
Operating cash flows from operating leases$3,050 $2,194 
Right-of-use assets obtained in exchange for new operating lease liabilities739 109 
There were no sale and leaseback transactions, leveraged leases or lease transactions with related parties during the nine months ended September 30, 2022 or September 30, 2021. At September 30, 2022, the Company had no leases that had not yet commenced.
A maturity analysis of operating lease liabilities and a reconciliation of the undiscounted cash flows to the total operating lease liability at September 30, 2022 are as follows:
(in thousands)
Within one year$1,265 
After one year but within three years9,148 
After three years but within five years6,520 
After five years16,255 
Total undiscounted cash flows33,188 
Discount on cash flows(5,964)
Total operating lease liabilities$27,224 
Note 8 - Deposits
    The following table sets forth the details of total deposits:
(dollars in thousands)September 30, 2022December 31, 2021
Noninterest-bearing demand$2,288,902 26.4 %$1,732,452 24.9 %
Interest-bearing checking2,997,064 34.5 %2,219,658 31.9 %
Money market1,312,757 15.1 %1,577,385 22.6 %
Savings1,044,895 12.0 %677,101 9.7 %
Certificates of deposit $250 thousand and under807,211 9.3 %623,393 8.9 %
Certificates of deposit over $250 thousand226,970 2.7 %135,834 2.0 %
Total deposits$8,677,799 100.0 %$6,965,823 100.0 %
At September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, certificates of deposit obtained through brokers totaled $58.1 million and $114.3 million, respectively. Brokered deposits are included in the Consolidated Balance Sheets as certificates of deposit $250,000 and under.
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Note 9 – Borrowings
Overnight and Short-Term Borrowings
At September 30, 2022, the Company had $225.0 million overnight and short-term borrowings from the FHLB and none at December 31, 2021. In addition, Lakeland had no overnight and short-term borrowings from correspondent banks at September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021. At September 30, 2022, Lakeland had overnight and short-term federal funds lines available to borrow up to $250.0 million from correspondent banks. Lakeland may also borrow from the discount window of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York based on the fair value of collateral pledged. Lakeland had no borrowings with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York as of September 30, 2022 or December 31, 2021.
Other short-term borrowings at September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021 consisted of short-term securities sold under agreements to repurchase of $132.8 million and $106.5 million, respectively. The securities sold under agreements to repurchase are overnight sweep arrangement accounts with our customers. As of September 30, 2022, the Company had $135.1 million in U.S. treasury, agency and mortgage-backed securities pledged for its securities sold under agreements to repurchase.
At times, the fair values of securities collateralizing our securities sold under agreements to repurchase may decline due to changes in interest rates and may necessitate our lenders to issue a “margin call” which requires Lakeland to pledge additional collateral to meet that margin call.
FHLB Advances
The Company had one advance from the FHLB, which totaled $25.0 million at both September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, with a weighted average interest rate of 0.77% and maturity in 2025. The advance was collateralized by first mortgage loans and has prepayment penalties.
Subordinated Debentures
On January 6, 2022, the Company acquired $18.0 million of fixed to floating subordinated notes in connection with the 1st Constitution acquisition with a fair value of $14.7 million. The notes were dated June 15, 2006 and pay interest at a rate of LIBOR plus a spread of 165 basis points which resets quarterly until maturity on June 15, 2036 or earlier redemption.
The Company completed an offering of $150.0 million of fixed to floating rate subordinated notes on September 15, 2021, due on September 15, 2031. The notes bear interest at a rate of 2.875% per annum until September 15, 2026, and will then reset quarterly to benchmark rate, which is expected to be the three-month term Secured Overnight Financing Rate ("SOFR") plus a spread of 220 basis points. The debt is included in Tier 2 capital for the Company.
Note 10 – Share-Based Compensation
The Company's 2018 Omnibus Equity Incentive Plan (the "Plan") authorizes the granting of incentive stock options, supplemental stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock, restricted stock units (“RSUs”), other stock-based awards and cash-based awards to officers, employees and non-employee directors of, and consultants and advisors to, the Company and its subsidiaries.
Restricted Stock
The following is a summary of the Company’s restricted stock activity during the nine months ended September 30, 2022:
Number of
Shares
Weighted
Average
Price
Outstanding, January 1, 202216,035 $13.72 
Granted17,722 19.74 
Vested(16,035)13.72 
Outstanding, September 30, 202217,722 $19.74 
In the first nine months of 2022, the Company granted 17,722 shares of restricted stock to non-employee directors at a grant date fair value of $19.74 per share under the Plan. The restricted stock vests one year from the date it was granted. Compensation expense on this restricted stock is expected to be $350,000 over a one year period. In the first nine months of 2021, the Company granted 16,035 shares of restricted stock to non-employee directors at a grant date fair value of $13.72 per share. The restricted stock vested one year from the date it was granted with a compensation expense of $220,000 over such period.
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The Company recognized share-based compensation expense on its restricted stock of $87,000 and $88,000 for the third quarter of 2022 and 2021, respectively, and $262,000 and $264,000 for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, respectively. As of September 30, 2022, there was unrecognized compensation cost of $87,000 related to unvested restricted stock that is expected to be recognized over a weighted average period of approximately 0.3 years.
Restricted Stock Units
The following is a summary of the Company’s RSU activity during the nine months ended September 30, 2022:
Number of
Shares
Weighted
Average
Price
Outstanding, January 1, 2022591,342 $16.64 
Granted315,419 17.99 
Vested(206,670)16.64 
Forfeited(4,081)17.66 
Outstanding, September 30, 2022696,010 $17.25 
In the first nine months of 2022, the Company granted 315,419 RSUs under the Plan at a weighted average grant date fair value of $17.99 per share. These units vest within a range of 2 to 3 years. A portion of these RSUs will vest subject to certain performance conditions in the applicable RSU agreement. There are also certain provisions in the compensation program which state that if a recipient of the RSUs reaches a certain age and years of service, the person has effectively earned a portion of the RSUs at that time. Compensation expense on these RSUs is expected to average approximately $1.9 million per year over a three-year period. In the first nine months of 2021, the Company granted 375,716 RSUs under the Plan at a weighted average grant date fair value of $17.20 per share. Compensation expense on these RSUs is expected to average approximately $2.2 million per year over a three-year period.
For the third quarter of 2022 and 2021, the Company recognized share-based compensation expense on RSUs of $1.1 million and $871,000, respectively, and $3.5 million and $2.9 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, respectively. Unrecognized compensation expense related to RSUs was approximately $7.1 million as of September 30, 2022, and that cost is expected to be recognized over a period of 1.34 years.
Stock Options
At September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, there were no stock options outstanding under the Plan. There were no stock option grants in the first nine months of 2022 or 2021. There were no stock options exercised during the third quarter of 2022 and the 2,764 stock options that were exercised during the first nine months of 2021 resulted in $19,000 in cash receipts and had an aggregate intrinsic value of $27,000.
Note 11 – Revenue Recognition
The Company’s primary source of revenue is interest income generated from loans and investment securities. Interest income is recognized according to the terms of the financial instrument agreement over the life of the loan or investment security unless it is determined that the counterparty is unable to continue making interest payments. Interest income also includes prepaid interest fees from commercial customers, which approximates the interest foregone on the balance of the loan prepaid.
The Company’s additional source of income, also referred to as noninterest income, is generated from deposit related fees, interchange fees, loan fees, merchant fees, loan sales, investment services and other miscellaneous income and is largely based on contracts with customers. In these cases, the Company recognizes revenue when it satisfies a performance obligation by transferring control over a product or service to a customer. The Company considers a customer to be any party to which the Company will provide goods or services that are an output of the Company’s ordinary activities in exchange for consideration. There is little seasonality with regards to revenue from contracts with customers and all inter-company revenue is eliminated when the Company’s financial statements are consolidated.
Generally, the Company enters into contracts with customers that are short-term in nature where the performance obligations are fulfilled and payment is processed at the same time. Such examples include revenue related to merchant fees, interchange fees and investment services income. In addition, revenue generated from existing customer relationships such as deposit accounts are also considered short-term in nature, because the relationship may be terminated at any time and payment is processed at the time performance obligations are fulfilled. As a result, the Company does not have contract assets, contract liabilities or related receivable accounts for contracts with customers. In cases where collectability is a concern, the Company does not record revenue.
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Generally, the pricing of transactions between the Company and each customer is either (i) established within a legally enforceable contract between the two parties, as is the case with loan sales, or (ii) disclosed to the customer at a specific point in time, as is the case when a deposit account is opened or before a new loan is underwritten. Fees are usually fixed at a specific amount or as a percentage of a transaction amount. No judgment or estimates by management are required to record revenue related to these transactions and pricing is clearly identified within these contracts.
The Company primarily operates in one geographic region, Northern and Central New Jersey and contiguous areas. Therefore, all significant operating decisions are based upon analysis of the Company as one operating segment or unit.
We disaggregate our revenue from contracts with customers by contract-type and timing of revenue recognition, as we believe it best depicts how the nature, amount, timing and uncertainty of our revenue and cash flows are affected by economic factors. Noninterest income not generated from customers during the Company’s ordinary activities primarily relates to income from bank owned life insurance, gains/losses on the sale of investment securities, gains/losses on the sale of other real estate owned, gains/losses on the sale of property, plant and equipment and mortgage servicing rights.
The following table sets forth the components of noninterest income for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021:
For the Three Months Ended September 30,For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(in thousands)2022202120222021
Deposit-Related Fees and Charges
Debit card interchange income$1,686 $1,585 $4,995 $4,603 
Overdraft charges802 647 2,327 1,785 
ATM service charges220 182 599 497 
Demand deposit fees and charges79 107 166 348 
Savings service charges21 15 58 44 
Total deposit-related fees and charges2,808 2,536 8,145 7,277 
Commissions and fees
Loan fees712 376 2,302 1,367 
Wire transfer charges502 376 1,484 1,126 
Investment services income457 373 1,562 1,210 
Merchant fees 300 270 853 729 
Commissions from sales of checks88 73 263 226 
Safe deposit income105 82 258 240 
Other income42 54 129 143 
Total commissions and fees2,206 1,604 6,851 5,041 
Gains on sales of loans355 550 2,496 1,865 
Other income
Gains on customer swap transactions711 — 1,110 634 
Title insurance income44 43 46 87 
Other income82 99 870 262 
Total other income837 142 2,026 983 
Revenue not from contracts with customers1,027 637 1,558 1,331 
Total Noninterest Income$7,233 $5,469 $21,076 $16,497 
Timing of Revenue Recognition:
Products and services transferred at a point in time6,206 4,832 19,518 15,143 
Products and services transferred over time— — — 23 
Revenue not from contracts with customers1,027 637 1,558 1,331 
Total Noninterest Income$7,233 $5,469 $21,076 $16,497 
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Note 12 - Other Operating Expenses
The following table presents the major components of other operating expenses for the periods indicated:
For the Three Months Ended September 30,For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(in thousands)2022202120222021
Consulting and advisory board fees1,007 927 2,988 2,281 
ATM and debit card expense659 658 2,025 1,873 
Telecommunications expense582 536 1,728 1,575 
Marketing expense816 395 1,973 1,140 
Core deposit intangible amortization581 211 1,770 658 
Other real estate owned and other repossessed assets expense— — 
Long-term debt extinguishment costs— 831 — 831 
Other operating expenses4,358 2,937 12,788 8,930 
Total other operating expenses$8,004 $6,495 $23,273 $17,288 
Note 13 – Comprehensive Income
The components of other comprehensive income are as follows:
For the Three Months Ended
 September 30, 2022September 30, 2021
(in thousands)Before
Tax Amount
Tax Benefit
(Expense)
Net of
Tax Amount
Before
Tax Amount
Tax Benefit
(Expense)
Net of
Tax Amount
Unrealized losses on available for sale securities arising during the period$(38,037)$10,065 $(27,972)$(2,008)$504 $(1,504)
Net gain on securities reclassified from available for sale to held to maturity— — — 3,814 (1,030)2,784 
Amortization of gain on debt securities reclassified to held to maturity from available for sale(187)50 (137)(158)42 (116)
Unrealized gains on derivatives— — — (3)
Other comprehensive (loss) income, net$(38,224)$10,115 $(28,109)$1,656 $(487)$1,169 
For the Nine Months Ended
 September 30, 2022September 30, 2021
(in thousands)Before Tax AmountTax Benefit (Expense)Net of Tax AmountBefore Tax AmountTax Benefit
(Expense)
Net of Tax Amount
Unrealized losses on available for sale securities arising during the period:$(106,759)$28,134 $(78,625)$(10,907)$3,387 $(7,520)
Reclassification adjustment for securities gains arising during the period— — — (9)(6)
Net unrealized losses(106,759)28,134 (78,625)(10,916)3,390 (7,526)
Net gain on securities reclassified from available for sale to held to maturity— — — 3,814 (1,030)2,784 
Amortization of gain on debt securities reclassified to held to maturity from available for sale(566)146 (420)(158)42 (116)
Unrealized gains on derivatives— — — 143 (168)(25)
Other comprehensive loss, net$(107,325)$28,280 $(79,045)$(7,117)$2,234 $(4,883)
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The following tables show the changes in the balances of each of the components of other comprehensive income (loss) for the periods presented, net of tax:
For the Three Months Ended September 30, 2022
(in thousands)Unrealized Gains
(Losses) on
Available for  Sale
Securities
Amortization of Gain on Debt Securities Reclassified to Held to MaturityTotal
Beginning balance$(49,908)$2,236 $(47,672)
Net current period other comprehensive loss(27,972)(137)(28,109)
Ending balance$(77,880)$2,099 $(75,781)
For the Three Months Ended September 30, 2021
(in thousands)Unrealized Gains
(Losses) on
Available for  Sale
Securities
Amortization of Gain on Debt Securities Reclassified to Held to MaturityUnrealized
Gains (Losses)
on Derivatives
Pension ItemsTotal
Beginning balance$5,380 $— $(5)$(30)$5,345 
Net unrealized gain on securities reclassified from available for sale to held to maturity(2,784)2,784 — — — 
Net current period other comprehensive income (loss)1,280 (116)— 1,169 
Ending balance$3,876 $2,668 $— $(30)$6,514 
For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022
(in thousands)Unrealized Gains
(Losses) on
Available for  Sale
Securities
Amortization of Gain on Debt Securities Reclassified to Held to MaturityTotal
Beginning balance$745 $2,519 $3,264 
Net current period other comprehensive loss(78,625)(420)(79,045)
Ending balance$(77,880)$2,099 $(75,781)
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2021
(in thousands)Unrealized Gains
(Losses) on
Available for  Sale
Securities
Amortization of Gain on Debt Securities Reclassified to Held to MaturityUnrealized
Gains (Losses)
on Derivatives
Pension ItemsTotal
Beginning balance$11,402 $— $25 $(30)$11,397 
Net unrealized gain on securities reclassified from available for sale to held to maturity(2,784)2,784 — — — 
Net current period other comprehensive loss(4,736)(116)(25)— (4,877)
Amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income(6)— — — (6)
Net current period other comprehensive loss(4,742)(116)(25)— (4,883)
Ending balance$3,876 $2,668 $— $(30)$6,514 
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Note 14 – Derivatives
Lakeland is a party to interest rate derivatives that are not designated as hedging instruments. Lakeland executes interest rate swaps with commercial lending customers to facilitate their respective risk management strategies. These interest rate swaps with customers are simultaneously offset by interest rate swaps that Lakeland executes with a third-party financial institution, such that Lakeland minimizes its net risk exposure resulting from such transactions. Because the interest rate swaps do not meet the strict hedge accounting requirements, changes in the fair value of both the customer swaps and the offsetting swaps are recognized directly in earnings. The changes in the fair value of the swaps offset each other, except for the credit risk of the counterparties, which is determined by taking into consideration the risk rating, probability of default and loss given default for all counterparties. Lakeland had $4.5 million and $55.1 million in investment securities available for sale pledged for collateral on its interest rate swaps with financial institutions at September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively.
In June 2016, the Company entered into two cash flow hedges in order to hedge the variable cash outflows associated with its subordinated debentures. The notional value of these hedges was $30.0 million. The Company’s objectives in using cash flow hedges were to add stability to interest expense and to manage its exposure to interest rate movements. The Company used interest rate swaps designated as cash flow hedges which involved the receipt of variable amounts from a counterparty in exchange for the Company making fixed-rate payments over the life of the agreements without exchange of the underlying notional amount. In these particular hedges, the Company was paying a third party an average of 1.10% in exchange for a payment at the 3 month LIBOR rate. The effective portion of changes in the fair value of derivatives designated and that qualify as cash flow hedges are recorded in accumulated other comprehensive income and are subsequently reclassified into earnings in the period that the hedged forecasted transaction affects earnings. On June 30, 2021, $20.0 million in notional value of the swaps matured and on August 1, 2021, the remaining $10.0 million matured. The Company reclassified $8,000 of accumulated other comprehensive loss into interest expense for the third quarter of 2021 and $142,000 first nine months of 2021. Amounts reported in accumulated other comprehensive income related to derivatives were reclassified to interest expense as interest payments are made on the Company’s debt.
The following table presents summary information regarding these derivatives for the periods presented (dollars in thousands):
September 30, 2022Notional AmountAverage
Maturity (Years)
Weighted Average
Fixed Rate
Weighted Average
Variable Rate
Fair
 Value
Classified in Other Assets:
Third Party interest rate swaps$963,994 7.53.67 %
1 Mo. LIBOR + 1.98
$105,098 
Classified in Other Liabilities:
Customer interest rate swaps$963,994 7.53.67 %
1 Mo. LIBOR + 1.98
$(105,098)
December 31, 2021Notional
 Amount
Average
Maturity  (Years)
Weighted 
Average
Fixed Rate
Weighted Average
Variable Rate
Fair
 Value
Classified in Other Assets:
Third Party interest rate swaps$326,941 7.73.14 %
1 Mo. LIBOR + 2.32
$9,847 
Customer interest rate swaps607,688 8.23.97 %
1 Mo. LIBOR + 1.87
33,952 
Classified in Other Liabilities:
Customer interest rate swaps $326,941 7.73.14 %
1 Mo. LIBOR + 2.32
(9,847)
Third party interest rate swaps607,688 8.23.97 %
1 Mo. LIBOR + 1.87
(33,952)
Note 15 – Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets
The Company had goodwill of $271.8 million at September 30, 2022 and $156.3 million at December 31, 2021. The Company recorded $115.6 million in goodwill from the 1st Constitution merger in January 2022 as further described in Note 2 of the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q. The Company reviews its goodwill and intangible assets annually, on November 30, or more frequently if conditions warrant, for impairment. In testing goodwill for impairment, the Company compares the estimated fair value of its reporting unit to its carrying amount, including goodwill. The Company has determined that it has one reporting unit. During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022, there were no triggering events that would more likely than not reduce the fair value of our one reporting unit below its carrying amount. There was no impairment of goodwill recognized during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021.
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The Company had core deposit intangibles of $9.7 million and $2.4 million at September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively. The Company recorded core deposit intangible of $9.0 million in connection with the 1st Constitution acquisition. Amortization of core deposit intangible totaled $581,000 and $211,000 for the third quarters of 2022 and 2021, respectively, and $1.8 million and $658,000 for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, respectively. The estimated future amortization expense for the remainder of 2022 and for each of the succeeding five years ended December 31 is as follows (in thousands):
For the Year Ended
2022$581 
20232,029 
20241,737 
20251,465 
20261,193 
2027955 
Note 16 – Fair Value Measurement and Fair Value of Financial Instruments
Fair Value Measurement
Fair value is defined as the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in the principal or most advantageous market for an asset or liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. U.S. GAAP establishes a fair value hierarchy that prioritizes the inputs to valuation techniques used to measure fair value into three broad levels giving the highest priority to unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities (level 1 measurements) and the lowest level priority to unobservable inputs (level 3 measurements). The following describes the three levels of fair value hierarchy:
Level 1 – unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities; includes U.S. Treasury Notes, and other U.S. Government Agency securities that actively trade in over-the-counter markets; equity securities and mutual funds that actively trade in over-the-counter markets.
Level 2 – quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities in active markets; or quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in markets that are not active; or inputs other than quoted prices that are observable for the asset or liability including yield curves, volatilities and prepayment speeds.
Level 3 – unobservable inputs for the asset or liability that reflect the Company’s own assumptions about assumptions that market participants would use in the pricing of the asset or liability and that are consequently not based on market activity but upon particular valuation techniques.
The Company’s assets that are measured at fair value on a recurring basis are its investment securities available for sale, equity securities and its interest rate swaps. The Company obtains fair values on its securities using information from a third-party servicer. If quoted prices for securities are available in an active market, those securities are classified as Level 1 securities. The Company has U.S. Treasury Notes that are classified as Level 1 securities. Level 2 securities were primarily comprised of U.S. Agency bonds, residential mortgage-backed securities, obligations of state and political subdivisions and corporate securities. Fair values were estimated primarily by obtaining quoted prices for similar assets in active markets or through the use of pricing models supported with market data information. Standard inputs include benchmark yields, reported trades, broker-dealer quotes, issuer spreads, bids and offers. On a quarterly basis, the Company reviews the pricing information received from the Company’s third-party pricing service. This review includes a comparison to non-binding third-party quotes.
The fair values of derivatives are based on valuation models from a third party using current market terms (including interest rates and fees), the remaining terms of the agreements and the credit worthiness of the counter party as of the measurement date (Level 2).
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Recurring Fair Value Measurements
The following table sets forth the Company’s financial assets that were accounted for at fair value on a recurring basis as of the periods presented by level within the fair value hierarchy. During the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and during 2021, the Company did not make any transfers between any levels within the fair value hierarchy. Financial assets and liabilities are classified in their entirety based on the lowest level of input that is significant to the fair value measurement:
September 30, 2022Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for Identical
Assets
(Level 1)
Significant
Other
Observable
Inputs
(Level 2)
Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
Total
Fair Value
(in thousands)
Assets:
Investment securities, available for sale
U.S. Treasury and government agencies$161,796 $196,053 $— $357,849 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential— 314,345 — 314,345 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential— 161,224 — 161,224 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily— 785 — 785 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, multifamily— 46,724 — 46,724 
Asset-backed securities— 57,543 — 57,543 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions— 21,519 — 21,519 
Corporate bonds— 114,024 — 114,024 
Total investment securities, available for sale161,796 912,217 — 1,074,013 
Equity securities, at fair value— 17,180 — 17,180 
Derivative assets— 105,098 — 105,098 
Total Assets$161,796 $1,034,495 $— $1,196,291 
Liabilities:
Derivative liabilities$— $105,098 $— $105,098 
Total Liabilities$— $105,098 $— $105,098 
December 31, 2021Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for Identical
Assets
(Level 1)
Significant
Other
Observable
Inputs
(Level 2)
Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
Total
Fair Value
(in thousands)
Assets:
Investment securities, available for sale
U.S. Treasury and government agencies$104,861 $98,526 $— $203,387 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential— 237,975 — 237,975 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential— 191,291 — 191,291 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily— 1,741 — 1,741 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, multifamily— 32,519 — 32,519 
Asset-backed securities— 52,584 — 52,584 
Corporate bonds— 50,459 — 50,459 
Total investment securities, available for sale104,861 665,095 — 769,956 
Equity securities, at fair value— 17,368 — 17,368 
Derivative assets— 43,799 — 43,799 
Total Assets$104,861 $726,262 $— $831,123 
Liabilities:
Derivative liabilities$— $43,799 $— $43,799 
Total Liabilities$— $43,799 $— $43,799 
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Non-Recurring Fair Value Measurements
The Company has a held for sale loan portfolio that consists of residential mortgages that are being sold in the secondary market. The Company records these mortgages at the lower of cost or fair value. Fair value is generally determined by the value of purchase commitments.
Loans that do not have similar risk characteristics to the segments reported must be individually evaluated to determine an appropriate allowance. Management has identified criteria and procedures for identifying whether a loan should be individually evaluated for calculation of expected credit losses. If a loan is identified as meeting any of the criteria, it is deemed to have risk characteristics that are unique and will be separated from a pool. Those loans that are considered to have unique risk characteristics are then subjected to an individual allowance evaluation using either the fair value of the collateral, less estimated costs to sell, if collateral-dependent or the discounted cash flow method.
Other real estate owned (OREO) and other repossessed assets, representing property acquired through foreclosure or deed in lieu of foreclosure, are carried at fair value less estimated disposal costs of the acquired property. Fair value on other real estate owned is based on the appraised value of the collateral using discount rates or capitalization rates similar to those used in impaired loan valuation. The fair value of other repossessed assets is estimated by inquiry through a recognized valuation resource. At September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, the Company had no OREO or other repossessed assets.
Changes in the assumptions or methodologies used to estimate fair values may materially affect the estimated amounts. Changes in economic conditions, locally or nationally, could impact the value of the estimated amounts of individually evaluated loans, OREO and other repossessed assets.
The following table summarized the Company’s financial assets that are measured at fair value on a non-recurring basis. Assets are classified in their entirety based on the lowest level of input that is significant to the fair value measurement:
(in thousands)(Level 1)(Level 2)(Level 3)Total
Fair Value
September 30, 2022
Assets:
Individually evaluated loans$— $— $4,775 $4,775 
December 31, 2021
Assets:
Individually evaluated loans$— $— $7,113 $7,113 
Fair Value of Certain Financial Instruments
Estimated fair values have been determined by the Company using the best available data and an estimation methodology suitable for each category of financial instruments. Management is concerned that there may not be reasonable comparability between institutions due to the wide range of permitted assumptions and methodologies in the absence of active markets. This lack of uniformity gives rise to a high degree of subjectivity in estimating financial instrument fair values.
The estimation methodologies used, the estimated fair values and recorded book balances at September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, are outlined below.
This summary, as well as the table below, excludes financial assets and liabilities for which carrying value approximates fair value. For financial assets, these include cash and cash equivalents. For financial liabilities, these include noninterest-bearing demand deposits, savings and interest-bearing transaction accounts and federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase. The estimated fair value of demand, savings and interest-bearing transaction accounts is the amount payable on demand at the reporting date. Carrying value is used because there is no stated maturity on these accounts, and the customer has the ability to withdraw the funds immediately. Also excluded from this summary and the following table are those financial instruments recorded at fair value on a recurring basis, as previously described.
The fair value of investment securities held to maturity is measured using information from the same third-party servicer used for investment securities available for sale using the same methodologies discussed above.
FHLB stock is an equity interest that can be sold to the issuing FHLB, to other FHLBs, or to other member banks at its par value. Because ownership of these securities is restricted, they do not have a readily determinable fair value. As such, the Company’s FHLB stock is recorded at cost or par value and is evaluated for impairment each reporting period by considering the ultimate recoverability of the investment rather than temporary declines in value. The Company’s evaluation primarily includes an evaluation of liquidity, capitalization, operating performance, commitments, and regulatory or legislative events.
The net loan portfolio has been valued using an exit price approach, which incorporates a buildup discount rate calculation that uses a swap rate adjusted for credit risk, servicing costs, a liquidity premium and a prepayment premium.
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For fixed maturity certificates of deposit, fair value is estimated based on the present value of discounted cash flows using the rates currently offered for deposits of similar remaining maturities. The carrying amount of accrued interest payable approximates its fair value.
The fair value of long-term debt is based upon the discounted value of contractual cash flows. The Company estimates the discount rate using the rates currently offered for similar borrowing arrangements. The fair value of subordinated debentures is based on bid/ask prices from brokers for similar types of instruments.
The fair values of commitments to extend credit and standby letters of credit are estimated using the fees currently charged to enter into similar agreements, taking into account the remaining terms of the agreements and the present creditworthiness of the counterparties. For fixed-rate loan commitments, fair value also considers the difference between current levels of interest rates and the committed rates. The fair value of guarantees and letters of credit is based on fees currently charged for similar agreements or on the estimated cost to terminate them or otherwise settle the obligations with the counterparties at the reporting date. The fair value of commitments to extend credit and standby letters of credit are deemed immaterial.
The following table presents the carrying values, fair values and placement in the fair value hierarchy of the Company’s financial instruments not carried at fair value as of September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021:
September 30, 2022Carrying
Value
Fair
Value
Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for Identical
Assets
(Level 1)
Significant
Other
Observable
Inputs
(Level 2)
Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
(in thousands)
Financial Assets:
Investment securities, held to maturity
U.S. government agencies$16,296 $15,576 $— $15,576 $— 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential357,453 295,488 — 295,488 — 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential13,328 10,948 — 10,948 — 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily5,117 4,349 — 4,349 — 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions539,888 424,722 — 400,378 24,344 
Corporate bonds2,865 2,482 — 2,482 — 
Total investment securities, held to maturity$934,947 $753,565 $— $729,221 $24,344 
Federal Home Loan Bank and other membership bank stocks21,046 21,046 — 21,046 — 
Loans, net7,499,947 7,349,734 — — 7,349,734 
Financial Liabilities:
Certificates of deposit1,034,181 998,659 — 998,659 — 
Other borrowings25,000 22,902 — 22,902 — 
Subordinated debentures194,148 157,228 — — 157,228 
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December 31, 2021Carrying
Value
Fair
Value
Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for Identical
Assets
(Level 1)
Significant
Other
Observable
Inputs
(Level 2)
Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
(in thousands)
Financial Assets:
Investment securities, held to maturity
U.S. government agencies$18,672 $18,965 $— $18,965 $— 
Mortgage-backed securities, residential370,247 364,976 — 364,976 — 
Collateralized mortgage obligations, residential13,921 14,089 — 14,089 — 
Mortgage-backed securities, multifamily2,710 2,734 — 2,734 — 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions416,566 411,576 — 410,744 832 
Corporate bonds2,840 2,871 — 2,871 — 
Total investment securities, held to maturity824,956 815,211 — 814,379 832 
Federal Home Loan Bank and other membership bank stocks9,049 9,049 — 9,049 — 
Loans, net5,918,101 5,900,876 — — 5,900,876 
Financial Liabilities:
Certificates of deposit759,227 753,483 — 753,483 — 
Other borrowings25,000 24,604 — 24,604 — 
Subordinated debentures179,043 175,243 — — 175,243 
Note 17 - Other Matters
On September 27, 2022, Lakeland Bank (the "Bank"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company, entered into a consent order with the U.S. Department of Justice (“DOJ”) to resolve allegations of violations of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Credit Opportunity Act within the Newark, NJ-PA Metro Division, as constituted in 2015. The DOJ’s consent order requires the Bank, among other things, to invest $12 million over five years in a loan subsidy fund to increase credit opportunities to residents of majority-Black and Hispanic neighborhoods in Essex, Morris, Somerset, Sussex and Union Counties, New Jersey (the “Newark Lending Area”), and devote a minimum of $400,000 over five years towards community development partnership contributions in the Newark Lending Area and $150,000 per year over five years toward advertising, community outreach, and credit repair and education in the Newark Lending Area. Pursuant to the terms of the consent order, the Bank will also establish two new full-service branches in majority-Black and Hispanic census tracts: one in Newark, New Jersey and one in the Bank’s Newark Lending Area. In addition, the Bank must continue to maintain its full-time Community Development Officer position to oversee these efforts throughout the term of the consent order. On September 29, 2022, the DOJ consent order was approved by the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey resolving all claims by the DOJ against Lakeland Bank. The Company is committed to investing $12 million over five years and will record the related expenses in the period in which the activities occur.
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Item 2.  Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
This section should be read in conjunction with Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021.
Note Regarding Forward Looking Statements
The information disclosed in this document includes various forward-looking statements that are made in reliance upon the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 with respect to credit quality (including delinquency trends and the allowance for credit losses), corporate objectives and other financial and business matters. The words “anticipates,” “projects,” “intends,” “estimates,” “expects,” “believes,” “plans,” “may,” “will,” “should,” “could” and other similar expressions are intended to identify such forward-looking statements. The Company cautions that these forward-looking statements are necessarily speculative and speak only as of the date made, and are subject to numerous assumptions, risks and uncertainties, all of which may change over time. Actual results could differ materially from such forward-looking statements. Accordingly, you should not put undue reliance on forward-looking statements.
In addition to the risk factors disclosed elsewhere in this document and in the Company's most recently filed Annual Report on Form 10-K, as updated by the Company's subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and Current Reports on Form 8-K, the following factors, among others, could cause the Company’s actual results to differ materially and adversely from such forward-looking statements: changes in the financial services industry and the U.S. and global capital markets; changes in economic conditions nationally, regionally and in the Company’s markets; the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak and its effects on economic activity; government responses to the COVID-19 pandemic; the nature and timing of actions of the Federal Reserve Board and other regulators; the nature and timing of legislation affecting the financial services industry; changes in federal and state tax laws; government intervention in the U.S. financial system; changes in levels of inflation and market interest rates, which may affect demand for our products and the value of our financial instruments; pricing pressures on loan and deposit products; credit risks of Lakeland’s lending activities; successful implementation, deployment and upgrades of new and existing technology, systems, services and products; customers’ acceptance of Lakeland’s products and services; failure to realize anticipated efficiencies and synergies from the merger of 1st Constitution Bancorp into Lakeland Bancorp and the merger of 1st Constitution Bank into Lakeland Bank; and expenses related to our proposed merger with Provident Financial Services, Inc. ("Provident"), unexpected delays related to the merger, inability to obtain regulatory approvals or satisfy other closing conditions required to complete the merger, and failure to realize anticipated efficiencies and synergies from the merger.
The above-listed risk factors are not exhaustive, particularly as to possible future events, and new risk factors may emerge from time to time. Certain events may occur that could cause the Company’s actual results to be materially different than those described in the Company’s periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Any statements made by the Company that are not historical facts should be considered to be forward-looking statements. The Company is not obligated to update and does not undertake to update any of its forward-looking statements made herein.
Critical Accounting Policies, Judgments and Estimates
The accounting and reporting policies of the Company and its subsidiaries conform to U.S. generally accepted accounting principles and predominant practices within the banking industry. The consolidated financial statements include the accounts of the Company, Lakeland and its subsidiaries, including Lakeland NJ Investment Corp., Lakeland Investment Corp., Lakeland Equity, Inc., Lakeland Preferred Equity, Inc., 1st Constitution Investment Company of New Jersey, Inc. and 1st Constitution Real Estate Corporation. All intercompany balances and transactions have been eliminated.
The preparation of financial statements 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 date of the financial statements. These estimates and assumptions also affect reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from these estimates. There have been no material changes in the Company’s critical accounting policies, judgments and estimates, including assumptions or estimation techniques utilized, as compared to those disclosed in the Company’s most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K.
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Executive Summary
On January 6, 2022, the Company completed its acquisition of 1st Constitution with 1st Constitution merging into Lakeland Bancorp and 1st Constitution’s wholly-owned subsidiary, 1st Constitution Bank, merging into Lakeland Bank. The merger added $1.97 billion in total assets including $1.10 billion in total loans and $1.65 billion in total deposits. Goodwill totaled $115.6 million and core deposit intangibles were $9.0 million. The acquisition represents a significant addition to Lakeland’s New Jersey franchise and the consolidated organization totals over $10 billion in assets. Full systems integration was completed in February 2022. The Company’s financial statements reflect the impact of the merger from the date of acquisition, which should be considered when comparing periods. For additional information on the fair value of the acquired assets of 1st Constitution, please see Note 2 of the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q.
On September 27, 2022, the Company and Provident announced that they had entered into a definitive merger agreement pursuant to which the companies will combine in an all-stock merger, valued at approximately $1.3 billion. The merger combines two complementary banking platforms into a company that will have more than $25 billion in assets, $18 billion in total loans and $20 billion in total deposits.
Financial Overview
For the third quarter of 2022, the Company reported net income of $28.7 million and earnings per diluted share of $0.44 compared to net income of $22.3 million and earnings per diluted share of $0.43 for the third quarter of 2021. For the third quarter of 2022, annualized return on average assets was 1.10%, annualized return on average common equity was 10.33% and annualized return on average tangible common equity was 13.87% compared to 1.10%, 10.94%, and 13.63%, respectively, for the third quarter of 2021.
For the nine months ended September 30, 2022, the Company reported net income of $73.8 million, compared to $72.9 million for the same period in 2021. For the nine months ended September 30, 2022, the Company reported earnings per diluted share of $1.13 compared to $1.42 earnings per diluted share reported for the first nine months of 2021. For the first nine months of 2022, annualized return on average assets was 0.96%, annualized return on average common equity was 8.99%, and annualized return on average tangible common equity was 12.08% compared to 1.24%, 12.39% and 15.53%, respectively, for the same period in 2021.
Net interest income increased by $20.9 million and $55.2 million for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022 when compared to the same periods in 2021. Net interest margin for the third quarter of 2022 of 3.28% increased 18 basis points compared to the third quarter of 2021 and decreased 10 basis points compared to the linked second quarter of 2022. Net interest margin for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 was 3.23% as compared to 3.19% for the same period in 2021. The increase in net interest margin compared to the third quarter of 2021 and the year-to-date periods was due primarily to an increase in the volume of interest-earning assets and an increase in yields on interest-earning assets offset by an increase in the cost of interest-bearing liabilities.
The Company recorded merger-related expenses of $3.5 million and $1.1 million for the third quarters of 2022 and 2021, respectively, and year-to-date 2022 and 2021 merger-related expenses of $8.1 million and $1.1 million, respectively. Excluding merger-related expenses after tax, third quarter of 2022 net income was $31.6 million or $0.48 diluted EPS, resulting in an annualized return on average assets of 1.21%, annualized return on average common equity of 11.36%, and annualized return on average tangible common equity of 15.25%. Net income, excluding merger-related expenses after tax, for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 was $80.2 million or $1.23 diluted EPS, resulting in an annualized return on average assets of 1.05%, annualized return on average common equity of 9.78%, and annualized return on average tangible common equity of 13.13%. See the non-GAAP Reconciliation of Net Income table below.
Total loans, net of deferred fees, increased $1.59 billion to $7.57 billion during the first nine months of 2022 and included loans totaling $1.10 billion acquired in the Company's acquisition of 1st Constitution. Total deposits increased $1.71 billion, or 25%, during the first nine months of 2022, to $8.68 billion and includes deposits of $1.65 billion acquired from 1st Constitution.
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Comparison of Operating Results for the Three Months Ended September 30, 2022 and 2021
Net Income
Net income was $28.7 million or $0.44 per diluted share, for the third quarter of 2022 compared to net income of $22.3 million or $0.43 per diluted share, for the third quarter of 2021. The increase in net income compared to the third quarter of 2021 was due primarily to an increase of $20.9 million in net interest income, partially offset by an increase in noninterest expense of $10.6 million and a provision for credit losses of $1.4 million, which compared to a negative provision of $2.7 million recorded in the third quarter of 2021.
Net Interest Income
Net interest income is the difference between interest income on earning assets and the cost of funds supporting those assets. The Company’s net interest income is determined by: (i) the volume of interest-earning assets that it holds and the yields that it earns on those assets, and (ii) the volume of interest-bearing liabilities that it has assumed and the rates that it pays on those liabilities.
Net interest income on a tax equivalent basis for the third quarter of 2022 was $80.7 million, compared to $59.5 million for the third quarter of 2021. The net interest margin increased 18 basis points to 3.28% in the third quarter of 2022 from 3.10% in the third quarter of 2021. The increase in net interest income compared to the third quarter of 2021 was due primarily to the growth of loans and investment securities.

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The following table reflects the components of the Company’s net interest income, setting forth for the periods presented, (1) average assets, liabilities and stockholders’ equity, (2) interest income earned on interest-earning assets and interest expense paid on interest-bearing liabilities, (3) average yields earned on interest-earning assets and average rates paid on interest-bearing liabilities, (4) the Company’s net interest spread (i.e., the average yield on interest-earning assets less the average cost of interest-bearing liabilities) and (5) the Company’s net interest margin. Rates for the three months ended September 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021 are computed on a tax equivalent basis using a tax rate of 21%.
For the Three Months Ended September 30, 2022For the Three Months Ended September 30, 2021
(dollars in thousands)Average
Balance
Interest
Income/
Expense
Average
Rates
Earned/
Paid
Average
Balance
Interest
Income/
Expense
Average
Rates
Earned/
Paid
Assets
Interest-earning assets:
Loans (1)$7,517,878 $84,924 4.43 %$5,943,698 $59,957 4.00 %
Taxable investment securities and other1,806,894 9,589 2.12 %1,005,744 4,232 1.68 %
Tax-exempt securities353,825 1,880 2.12 %138,612 745 2.15 %
Federal funds sold (2)77,200 429 2.21 %523,205 161 0.12 %
Total interest-earning assets
9,755,797 96,822 3.90 %7,611,259 65,095 3.40 %
Noninterest-earning assets:
Allowance for credit losses(69,472)(60,490)
Other assets
672,275 519,281 
Total Assets$10,358,600 $8,070,050 
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
Interest-bearing liabilities:
Savings accounts$1,092,222 $696 0.25 %$653,840 $85 0.05 %
Interest-bearing transaction accounts4,337,559 10,634 0.97 %3,701,676 2,775 0.30 %
Time deposits905,735 2,288 1.00 %826,831 1,127 0.55 %
Federal funds purchased116,685 669 2.24 %— — — %
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase124,043 48 0.15 %108,519 19 0.07 %
Long-term borrowings219,082 1,807 3.23 %162,216 1,594 3.85 %
Total interest-bearing liabilities
6,795,326 16,142 0.94 %5,453,082 5,600 0.41 %
Noninterest-bearing liabilities:
Demand deposits2,325,391 1,702,788 
Other liabilities133,738 106,224 
Stockholders' equity1,104,145 807,956 
Total Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity$10,358,600 $8,070,050 
Net interest income/spread
80,680 2.96 %59,495 2.99 %
Tax equivalent basis adjustment
395 157 
Net Interest Income$80,285 $59,338 
Net interest margin (3)3.28 %3.10 %
(1)Includes non-accrual loans, the effect of which is to reduce the yield earned on loans, and deferred loan fees.
(2)Includes interest-bearing cash accounts.
(3)Net interest income divided by interest-earning assets.
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Interest income on a tax equivalent basis increased $31.7 million to $96.8 million in the third quarter of 2022 from $65.1 million in the third quarter of 2021. Average loans increased $1.57 billion to $7.52 billion in the third quarter of 2022 compared to $5.94 billion in the third quarter of 2021, due primarily to the acquisition of 1st Constitution. The yield earned on loans increased by 43 basis points to 4.43% in the third quarter of 2022 from the third quarter of 2021 due primarily to the increase in market rates. Total average taxable investment securities increased $801.2 million to $1.81 billion for the third quarter of 2022 from the third quarter of 2021, while average tax-exempt securities increased $215.2 million to $353.8 million for the same periods, due to the acquisition of 1st Constitution and purchases of investment securities. The yield on average taxable investment securities increased 44 basis points from the third quarter of 2021 to 2.12% for the third quarter of 2022, while the yield on average tax-exempt investment securities decreased three basis points to 2.12% due to declines in market conditions during the period and an increase in bond anticipation note purchases at lower rates. Average federal funds sold in the third quarter of 2022 decreased $446.0 million compared to the third quarter of 2021, while the yield increased 209 basis points to 2.21% for the third quarter of 2022 as short-term market rates have risen in 2022.
Total interest expense of $16.1 million in the third quarter of 2022 increased by $10.5 million from the $5.6 million reported for the same period in 2021. The cost of average interest-bearing liabilities increased from 0.41% in the third quarter of 2021 to 0.94% in the third quarter of 2022, largely driven by increases in interest-bearing deposit costs offset by a reduction in the cost of long-term borrowings on the Company's subordinated notes. Total interest-bearing deposits increased by $1.15 billion from the third quarter of 2021 to $6.34 billion, while the cost of interest-bearing deposits increased 55 basis points. For the third quarter of 2022, savings and interest-bearing transaction account average balances increased $438.4 million and $635.9 million, respectively, when compared to the same period in 2021, and average time deposits increased $78.9 million. Additionally, in September 2021 the Company issued $150.0 million Fixed-to-Floating Rate Subordinated Notes at a fixed rate of 2.875% and redeemed $75.0 million of its outstanding 5.125% Fixed-to-Floating Rate Subordinated Notes, which contributed to a decrease in the average cost of long-term borrowings of 62 basis points, to 3.23% in the third quarter of 2022 from 3.85% in the third quarter of 2021.
Provision for Credit Losses
In determining the allowance for credit losses on investments, loans and off-balance-sheet credit exposures, management measures expected credit losses based on relevant information about past events, current conditions, reasonable and supportable forecasts, prepayments and future economic conditions. The key assumptions of the methodology include the lookback periods, historic net charge-off factors, economic forecasts, reversion periods, prepayments and qualitative adjustments. The Company uses its best judgment to assess economic conditions and loss data in estimating the allowance for credit losses.
In the third quarter of 2022, a $1.4 million provision for credit losses was recorded, compared to a $2.7 million benefit for credit losses for the same period last year. The provision is comprised of a provision for credit losses on loans of $11,000, a provision for credit losses on securities of $1.3 million and a provision on off-balance-sheet exposures of $22,000. The slight increase in the provision for credit losses on loans was primarily due to an increase in loan balances, which was largely offset by a decrease in the specific reserves for individually evaluated loans. The provision for credit losses on securities during the third quarter of 2022 was primarily due to increased unrealized losses on lower credit rated securities within our portfolio resulting from a rise in market interest rates. The Company recorded loan charge-offs of $56,000 and recoveries on loans of $88,000 in the third quarter of 2022 compared to loan charge-offs of $996,000 and loan recoveries of $1.3 million in the third quarter of 2021. For more information, see Note 6 in Notes to the Consolidated Statements in this Form 10-Q.
Noninterest Income
Noninterest income increased $1.8 million to $7.2 million for the third quarter of 2022 compared to $5.5 million during the same period in 2021. BOLI income increased $823,000 from the third quarter of 2021 due primarily to death benefits received during the third quarter of 2022. Commissions and fees increased $603,000 from the third quarter of 2021 due primarily to increases in wire transfer charges and financial services income. Service charges on deposit accounts increased $272,000 compared to the second quarter of 2021 due primarily to increases in debit card interchange income. Losses on equity securities totaled $464,000 for the three months ended September 30, 2022 compared to losses of $58,000 in the same period of 2021. The Company recorded swap income in the third quarter of 2022 of $711,000 compared to none in the third quarter of 2021, as changes in the yield curve increased the demand for swap transactions.
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Noninterest Expense
Noninterest expense in the third quarter of 2022 totaled $47.8 million compared to $37.2 million for the same quarter of 2021, an increase of $10.6 million. Compensation and employee benefits increased $5.2 million to $26.6 million in the third quarter of 2022 due primarily to additions to our staff from the 1st Constitution merger and normal merit increases. The Company recorded merger-related expenses related to the anticipated merger with Provident in the third quarter of 2022 of $3.5 million and merger-related expenses related to the acquisition of 1st Constitution of $1.1 million in the same period in 2021. Premises and equipment expense of $7.6 million and $6.2 million, respectively, was recorded in the three months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, an increase of $1.4 million due primarily to increases in occupancy expense related to the 1st Constitution branches. Core deposit intangible amortization was $581,000 and $211,000, for the third quarter of 2022 and 2021, respectively, increasing due to the core deposit intangible recorded on the 1st Constitution acquisition. Other operating expenses, excluding core deposit amortization expense, increased $1.1 million in the third quarter of 2022 compared to the same period in 2021 due primarily to increased consulting fees, appraisal fees, marketing and insurance expense.
The Company’s efficiency ratio, a non-GAAP financial measure, was 49.76% in the third quarter of 2022, compared to 54.02% for the same period last year. The Company uses this ratio because it believes that the ratio provides a good comparison of period-to-period performance and because the ratio is widely accepted in the banking industry. The following table shows the calculation of the efficiency ratio for the periods presented:
 For the Three Months Ended September 30,
(dollars in thousands)20222021
 
Total noninterest expense$47,811 $37,207 
Less:
Amortization of core deposit intangibles581 211 
Merger-related expenses3,488 1,072 
Long term debt extinguishment costs— 831 
Noninterest expense, as adjusted$43,742 $35,093 
Net interest income$80,285 $59,338 
Noninterest income7,233 5,469 
Total revenue87,518 64,807 
Tax-equivalent adjustment on municipal securities395 157 
Total revenue, as adjusted$87,913 $64,964 
Efficiency ratio49.76 %54.02 %
Income Tax Expense
The effective tax rate in the third quarter of 2022 was 25.0% compared to 26.4% during the same period in 2021 primarily as a result of tax advantaged items increasing as a percentage of pretax income.
Comparison of Operating Results for the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022 and 2021
Net Income
Net income was $73.8 million, or $1.13 per diluted share, for the first nine months of 2022 compared to net income of $72.9 million, or $1.42 per diluted share, for the first nine months of 2021. Net income increased primarily as a result of increases of $55.2 million in net interest income and $4.6 million in noninterest income, partially offset by increases of $37.6 million in noninterest expense and $22.6 million in provision for credit losses.
Net interest income on a tax equivalent basis for the first nine months of 2022 was $232.1 million, compared to $176.3 million for the first nine months of 2021. The increase in net interest income was due primarily to an increase in the volume of interest-earning assets and loan yields, offset by an increase in the cost of interest-bearing deposits. The net interest margin of 3.23% in the first nine months of 2022 increased from 3.19% for the same period in 2021, primarily due to the increase in the yield on interest-earning assets. The components of net interest income are discussed in greater detail below.
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The following table reflects the components of the Company’s net interest income, setting forth for the periods presented, (1) average assets, liabilities and stockholders’ equity, (2) interest income earned on interest-earning assets and interest expense paid on interest-bearing liabilities, (3) average yields earned on interest-earning assets and average rates paid on interest-bearing liabilities, (4) the Company’s net interest spread (i.e., the average yield on interest-earning assets less the average cost of interest-bearing liabilities) and (5) the Company’s net interest margin. Rates for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021 are computed on a tax equivalent basis using a tax rate of 21%.
For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2021
(dollars in thousands)Average
Balance
Interest
Income/
Expense
Average
Rates
Earned/
Paid
Average
Balance
Interest
Income/
Expense
Average
Rates
Earned/
Paid
ASSETS
Interest-earning assets:
Loans (1)$7,257,990 $229,706 4.18 %$6,037,419 $179,264 3.97 %
Taxable investment securities and other1,770,121 24,583 1.86 %942,389 12,242 1.73 %
Tax-exempt securities353,229 5,353 2.02 %129,434 2,318 2.39 %
Federal funds sold (2)235,742 846 0.48 %286,936 250 0.12 %
Total interest-earning assets
9,617,082 260,488 3.58 %7,396,178 194,074 3.51 %
Noninterest-earning assets:
Allowance for credit losses(69,232)(66,641)
Other assets
682,682 524,814 
TOTAL ASSETS
$10,230,532 $7,854,351 
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
Interest-bearing liabilities:
Savings accounts$1,125,580 $1,686 0.20 %$632,950 $247 0.05 %
Interest-bearing transaction accounts4,368,492 16,842 0.51 %3,529,586 8,447 0.32 %
Time deposits862,958 3,958 0.61 %916,476 4,655 0.68 %
Federal funds purchased48,473 794 2.16 %3,040 0.36 %
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase110,560 93 0.11 %86,200 50 0.08 %
Long -term borrowings218,679 5,016 2.06 %148,616 4,374 2.46 %
Total interest-bearing liabilities
6,734,742 28,389 0.56 %5,316,868 17,781 0.45 %
Noninterest-bearing liabilities:
Demand deposits2,277,192 1,637,101 
Other liabilities121,677 113,740 
Stockholders' equity1,096,921 786,642 
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY$10,230,532 $7,854,351 
Net interest income/spread
232,099 3.02 %176,293 3.06 %
Tax equivalent basis adjustment
1,124 487 
NET INTEREST INCOME$230,975 $175,806 
Net interest margin (3)3.23 %3.19 %

(1)Includes non-accrual loans, the effect of which is to reduce the yield earned on loans, and deferred loan fees.
(2)Includes interest-bearing cash accounts.
(3)Net interest income divided by interest-earning assets.
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On a tax equivalent basis, interest income increased $66.4 million, or 34%, from $194.1 million in the nine months ended September 30, 2021, to $260.5 million in the same period of 2022. The increase in interest income was primarily due to growth in the volume and yields of interest-earning assets. Average loans increased $1.22 billion compared to the first nine months of 2021, due to the acquisition of 1st Constitution. The yield on average loans of 4.18% in the nine months ended September 30, 2022, was 21 basis points higher than the same period in 2021. Average taxable and tax-exempt investment securities increased $827.7 million and $223.8 million, respectively, for the first nine months of 2022 compared to the same period in 2021 due to the acquisition of 1st Constitution and purchases of securities. The yield on average taxable investment securities increased 13 basis points, while the yield on average and tax-exempt investment securities decreased 37 basis points. Average federal funds sold decreased $51.2 million in the first nine months of 2022 compared to the same period in 2021, while the yield on federal funds sold increased 36 basis points.
Total interest expense of $28.4 million in the first nine months of 2022 was $10.6 million greater than the interest expense reported for the same period in 2021. Total average interest-bearing liabilities increased $1.42 billion, while the cost of average interest-bearing liabilities increased from 0.45% in the nine months ended September 30, 2021 to 0.56% in the first nine months of 2022. The increase in the balance was due to the acquisition of deposits from 1st Constitution. Rates paid increased in almost all categories of interest-bearing deposits. The cost of long-term borrowings and time deposits decreased by 40 basis points and seven basis points, respectively, while the cost of overnight borrowings increased 180 basis points compared to the first nine months of 2021.
Provision for Credit Losses
In the nine months ended September 30, 2022, the Company recorded an $11.3 million provision for credit losses compared to an $11.3 million benefit for the same period last year. As of September 30, 2022, the provision was comprised of a provision for credit losses on loans of $6.2 million, a provision for credit losses on securities of $4.1 million and a provision for off-balance-sheet exposures of $997,000. In addition, the Company recorded an initial allowance for credit losses of $12.1 million on purchased credit deteriorated loans acquired from 1st Constitution. The provision for credit losses on loans included a day one provision for the 1st Constitution non-PCD loans of $4.6 million. The benefit for credit losses on loans in the nine months ended September 30, 2021 was comprised of a benefit for credit losses on loans of $10.8 million, a provision for credit losses on securities of $231,000 and a benefit for off-balance-sheet exposures of $707,000. The increase in the provision recorded for loans and off-balance-sheet exposures in 2022 was due primarily to the provision for non-PCD loans acquired in the 1st Constitution merger and charge-offs for PCD loans. The provision for credit losses on securities during the nine months of 2022 was primarily due to increased unrealized losses on lower credit rated securities within the investment portfolio. The increase in unrealized losses in 2022 was primarily due to the rise in market interest rates, which caused decreases in the fair values of investment securities available for sale. The Company charged off $7.6 million of purchased credit deteriorated loans acquired from 1st Constitution in first nine months of 2022. In addition, other charge-offs totaled $595,000 and recoveries totaled $760,000 in the first nine months of 2022 compared to $4.1 million in charge-offs and $1.8 million in recoveries in the first nine months of 2021. For more information regarding the determination of the provision, see “Risk Elements” below.
Noninterest Income
The Company recorded noninterest income of $21.1 million in the nine months ended September 30, 2022, an increase of $4.6 million from $16.5 million in the same period in 2021 due primarily to increases in BOLI income, commissions and fees and service charges on deposit accounts. BOLI income was $3.1 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2022, an increase of $1.2 million from the 2021 period primarily due to death benefits received during 2022. Commissions and fees increased $1.9 million due primarily to increases in wire transfer charges and financial services income, while service charges on deposit accounts increased $868,000 compared to the first nine months of 2021 due to an increase in debit card income. Gains on sales of loans increased $631,000 driven primarily by an increase in sale volume of residential mortgages due to the 1st Constitution acquisition and swap income increased $476,000, because changes in the yield curve increased the demand for swap transactions. Losses on equity securities totaled $1.3 million and $191,000 in the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, respectively. Other income increased $628,000 in 2022 due primarily to reductions in write-downs on premises and recoveries on loans charged off from prior acquisitions.
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Noninterest Expense
Noninterest expense in the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021 totaled $142.8 million and $105.2 million, respectively, increasing $37.6 million from the prior year. Compensation and employee benefit expense and premises and equipment expense increased $18.9 million and $4.6 million, respectively, compared to the first nine months of 2021 due to the increases in staff and premises from the 1st Constitution acquisition. During the nine months ended September 30, 2022, the Company recorded merger-related expenses of $8.1 million for the completed acquisition of 1st Constitution Bancorp and the anticipated merger with Provident. Other operating expenses increased $6.0 million in the first nine months of 2022 compared to the same period in 2021. Included in the increase in other operating expenses are increases in core deposit intangible amortization, consulting, and marketing expense, which increased $1.1 million, $707,000 and $833,000, respectively, compared to the first nine months of 2021. The Company’s efficiency ratio, a non-GAAP financial measure, was 52.53% in the first nine months of 2022, compared to 53.24% for the same period in 2021. The Company uses this ratio because it believes that the ratio provides a good comparison of period-to-period performance and because the ratio is widely accepted in the banking industry.
The following table shows the calculation of the efficiency ratio for the periods presented:
 Nine Months Ended September 30,
(dollars in thousands)20222021
Total noninterest expense$142,838 $105,207 
Less:
Amortization of core deposit intangibles1,770 658 
Merger-related expenses8,073 1,072 
Long-term debt extinguishment costs— 831 
Noninterest expense, as adjusted$132,995 $102,646 
Net interest income$230,975 $175,806 
Noninterest income21,076 16,497 
Total revenue252,051 192,303 
Tax-equivalent adjustment on municipal securities1,124 487 
Less:
Gains on sales of investment securities— 
Total revenue, as adjusted$253,175 $192,781 
Efficiency ratio52.53 %53.24 %
Income Tax Expense
The effective tax rate in the first nine months of 2022 was 24.7% compared to 25.9% during the same period last year due primarily to tax-advantaged items increasing as a percentage of pretax income resulting from the increase in BOLI and tax exempt securities interest income during the current period.
Financial Condition
The Company’s total assets increased $2.32 billion from December 31, 2021, to $10.52 billion at September 30, 2022. Total loans, net of deferred fees, were $7.57 billion, an increase of $1.59 billion, or 27% from $5.98 billion at December 31, 2021. Total deposits were $8.68 billion, an increase of $1.71 billion, or 25%, from December 31, 2021, while total borrowings increased $266.4 million to $576.9 million at September 30, 2022.
With the completion of the 1st Constitution merger in January 2022, the Company recorded the assets acquired and the liabilities assumed in the acquisition at their estimated fair values as of the acquisition date. Total assets, total loans and total deposits acquired were $1.97 billion, $1.10 billion and $1.65 billion, respectively.
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Loans
Lakeland primarily serves New Jersey, the Hudson Valley region in New York and the surrounding areas. Its equipment finance division serves a broader market with a primary focus on the Northeast United States. Total loans, net of deferred fees, totaled $7.57 billion at September 30, 2022, an increase of $1.59 billion as compared to December 31, 2021 and included $1.10 billion of loans acquired from 1st Constitution. Excluding the impact of the 1st Constitution acquisition, loans increased $497.4 million or 8%. For more information on the loan portfolio, see Note 5 in Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q.
Risk Elements
Commercial loans are placed on a non-accrual status with all accrued interest and unpaid interest reversed if (a) because of the deterioration in the financial position of the borrower, they are maintained on a cash basis (which means payments are applied when and as received rather than on a regularly scheduled basis), (b) payment of all contractual principal and interest is not expected, or (c) principal and interest have been in default for a period of 90 days or more unless the obligation is both well-secured and in process of collection. Residential mortgage loans and closed-end consumer loans are placed on non-accrual status at the time principal and interest have been in default for a period of 90 days or more, except where there exists sufficient collateral to cover the defaulted principal and interest payments, and the loans are well-secured and in the process of collection. Open-end consumer loans secured by real estate are generally placed on non-accrual status and reviewed for charge-off when principal and interest payments are four months in arrears unless the obligations are well-secured and in the process of collection. Interest thereafter on such charged-off consumer loans is taken into income when received only after full recovery of principal. As a general rule, a non-accrual asset may be restored to accrual status when none of its principal or interest is due and unpaid and satisfactory payments have been received for a sustained period (usually six months), or when it otherwise becomes well-secured and in the process of collection.
Non-performing assets, including non-accrual PCD loans, increased $1.4 million from $17.0 million at December 31, 2021 to $18.4 million at September 30, 2022. Owner occupied commercial non-accrual loans increased $7.5 million due to one loan, while residential non-accrual loans increased by $1.4 million. Non owner occupied commercial and residential segments decreased by a total of $4.7 million and the commercial, industrial and other segment decreased by $3.1 million as the Company exited several larger loan relationships and received principal paydowns on three other loans. The percentage of non-performing assets to total assets was 0.17% at September 30, 2022 compared to 0.21% at December 31, 2021. Non-accrual loans at September 30, 2022 included three loan relationships with a balance of $1 million or greater, totaling $13.3 million and one loan relationship between $500,000 and $1.0 million, totaling $828,000. At September 30, 2022, there was one loan of $31,000 that was past due more than 89 days and still accruing and at December 31, 2021, one loan with a recorded investment of $1,000 was past due more than 89 days and still accruing.
On September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, the Company had $3.1 million and $3.3 million, respectively, in loans that were TDRs and accruing interest income. These loans are expected to be able to perform under the modified terms of the loan. At September 30, 2022, the Company had no TDRs that were included in non-accrual loans and at December 31, 2021, there was $127,000 in TDRs that were included in non-accrual loans.
At September 30, 2022 and December 31, 2021, the Company had $73.8 million and $102.3 million, respectively, of loans that were rated substandard that were not classified as non-performing. There were no loans at September 30, 2022, other than those designated non-performing or substandard, where the Company was aware of any credit conditions of any borrowers or obligors that would indicate a strong possibility of the borrowers not complying with present terms and conditions of repayment and which may result in such loans being included as non-accrual, past due or renegotiated at a future date.
Allowance for credit losses on loans
The Company accounts for the allowance for credit losses using Accounting Standards Update ("ASU") 2016-13 - Financial Instruments - Credit Losses (Topic 326): Measurement of Credit Losses on Financial Instruments ("ASU 2016-13"), which requires the measurement of expected credit losses for financial assets measured at amortized cost, including loans and certain off-balance-sheet credit exposures. Under the standard, the Company's methodology for determining the allowance for credit losses on loans is based upon key assumptions, including the lookback periods, historic net charge-off factors, economic forecasts, reversion periods, prepayments and qualitative adjustments. The allowance is measured on a collective, or pool, basis when similar risk characteristics exist. Loans that do not share common risk characteristics are evaluated on an individual basis and are excluded from the collective evaluation.
The overall balance of the allowance for credit losses on loans of $68.9 million at September 30, 2022 increased $10.8 million from December 31, 2021, an increase of 19% due primarily to a day one PCD allowance of $12.1 million for the 1st Constitution acquisition offset by charge-offs of 1st Constitution's PCD loans of $7.6 million. The Company also recorded a provision on 1st Constitution's non-PCD loans of $4.6 million.

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As of and for the Nine Months Ended September 30,
As of and for the Year Ended
(dollars in thousands)20222021December 31, 2021
Allowance for credit losses on loans to total loans outstanding0.91 %0.99 %0.97 %
Allowance for credit losses on loans$68,879 $57,953 $58,047 
Total loans outstanding7,568,826 5,880,802 5,976,148 
Non-accrual loans to total loans outstanding0.24 %0.21 %0.28 %
Non-accrual loans$18,370 $12,248 $16,981 
Total loans outstanding7,568,826 5,880,802 5,976,148 
Allowance for credit losses on loans to non-accrual loans374.95 %473.16 %341.83 %
Allowance for credit losses on loans$68,879 $57,953 $58,047 
Non-accrual loans18,370 12,248 16,981 
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As of and for the Nine Months Ended September 30,
As of and for the Year Ended
(dollars in thousands)20222021December 31, 2021
Net charge-offs (recoveries) during the period to average loans outstanding:
Non-owner occupied commercial— %0.13 %0.10 %
Net charge-offs during the period$— $2,246 $2,246 
Average amount outstanding2,757,621 2,360,606 2,347,575 
Owner occupied commercial(0.04)%— %— %
Net recoveries during the period$(313)$(19)$(20)
Average amount outstanding1,095,030 863,693 870,727 
Multifamily— %— %— %
Net charge-offs during the period$— $28 $28 
Average amount outstanding1,112,123 872,226 889,456 
Non owner occupied residential(0.01)%0.13 %0.03 %
Net (recoveries) charge-offs during the period$(14)$194 $58 
Average amount outstanding215,445 191,839 188,166 
Commercial, industrial and other0.20 %(0.01)%(0.08)%
Net charge-offs (recoveries) during the period$1,001 $(38)$(487)
Average amount outstanding655,499 638,771 593,979 
Construction2.28 %(0.01)%(0.01)%
Net charge-offs (recoveries) during the period$6,804 $(17)$(21)
Average amount outstanding397,371 315,384 312,107 
Equipment finance0.02 %0.25 %0.24 %
Net charge-offs during the period$19 $225 $285 
Average amount outstanding128,657 119,642 120,252 
Residential mortgage(0.01)%(0.04)%(0.02)%
Net recoveries during the period$(48)$(113)$(64)
Average amount outstanding590,848 390,293 398,141 
Consumer0.01 %(0.08)%0.05 %
Net charge-offs (recoveries) during the period$20 $(163)$137 
Average amount outstanding302,696 283,938 281,896 
Total loans 0.14 %0.05 %0.04 %
Net charge-offs during the period$7,469 $2,343 $2,162 
Average amount outstanding7,255,290 6,036,392 6,002,299 
Non-accrual loans of $18.4 million at September 30, 2022 increased $1.4 million from December 31, 2021. The allowance for credit losses as a percent of total loans was 0.91% at September 30, 2022 compared to 0.97% at December 31, 2021. The decrease in the allowance for credit losses as a percent of total loans was primarily due to an increase in loans and and continued strength in asset quality.
Management believes, based on appraisals and estimated selling costs, that the majority of the Company's non-performing loans are adequately secured and that reserves on its non-performing loans are adequate. Based upon the process employed and giving recognition to all accompanying factors related to the loan portfolio, management considers the allowance for credit losses to be adequate at September 30, 2022.
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Net recoveries as a percentage of average loans outstanding was less than 0.00% in the third quarter of 2022 compared to net recoveries as a percentage of average loans outstanding of 0.02% for the third quarter of 2021. Net charge-offs as a percentage of average loans outstanding was 0.14% and 0.05% for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, respectively, with the change predominately related to 1st Constitution PCD loans charged off in the first quarter of 2022.
Investment Securities
Investment securities increased $414.0 million in the nine months ended September 30, 2022, including $342.3 million acquired from 1st Constitution, to $2.01 billion at September 30, 2022 compared to $1.59 billion at December 31, 2021, as the Company deployed excess cash. For detailed information on the composition and maturity distribution of the Company’s investment securities portfolio, see Note 4 in Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements contained in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q.
Deposits
Total deposits increased from $6.97 billion at December 31, 2021 to $8.68 billion at September 30, 2022, an increase of $1.71 billion, or 25%, including $1.65 billion assumed in the 1st Constitution merger. Excluding the impact of the 1st Constitution acquisition, deposits increased $61.4 million or 1%. Savings and interest-bearing transaction accounts increased $880.6 million due primarily to an increase in interest-bearing checking and savings accounts resulting from the addition of 1st Constitution deposits. Noninterest-bearing deposits increased $556.5 million, including $510.9 million from 1st Constitution, during the nine months ended September 30, 2022 to $2.29 billion.
Liquidity
“Liquidity” measures whether an entity has sufficient cash flow to meet its financial obligations and commitments on a timely basis. The Company is liquid when its subsidiary bank has the cash available to meet the borrowing and cash withdrawal requirements of customers and the Company can pay for current and planned expenditures and satisfy its debt obligations.
Lakeland funds loan demand and operation expenses from several sources:
Net income. Cash provided by operating activities was $98.7 million for the first nine months of 2022 compared to $70.4 million for the same period in 2021.
Deposits. Lakeland can offer new products or change its rate structure in order to increase deposits. In the first nine months of 2022, Lakeland’s deposits increased $1.71 billion, including the impact of the 1st Constitution acquisition.
Sales of investment securities. At September 30, 2022 the Company had $1.07 billion in securities designated “available for sale.” Of these securities, $667.9 million were pledged to secure public deposits and for other purposes required by applicable laws and regulations.
Principal repayments on loans.
Credit lines. As a member of the FHLB, Lakeland has the ability to borrow overnight based on the fair value of collateral pledged. Lakeland had $225.0 million of overnight borrowings from the FHLB on September 30, 2022. Lakeland also has overnight federal funds lines available for it to borrow up to $250.0 million, of which none were outstanding at September 30, 2022. Lakeland may also borrow from the discount window of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York based on the fair value of collateral pledged. Lakeland had no borrowings with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York as of September 30, 2022.
Other borrowings. Lakeland can also generate funds by utilizing long-term debt or securities sold under agreements to repurchase that would be collateralized by security or mortgage collateral. At times, the fair value of securities collateralizing our securities sold under agreements to repurchase may decline due to changes in interest rates and may necessitate our lenders to issue a “margin call” which requires Lakeland to pledge additional collateral to meet that margin call.
Management and the Board monitor the Company’s liquidity through the Asset/Liability Committee, which monitors the Company’s compliance with certain regulatory ratios and other various liquidity guidelines. Management is closely monitoring changes in liquidity needs. The Company has increased collateral and expanded access to additional borrowings should it be necessary in order to meet liquidity needs. While we are unable to predict actual fluctuations in deposit or cash balances, management continues to monitor liquidity and believes that its current level of liquidity is sufficient to meet its current and future operational needs.
The cash flow statements for the periods presented provide an indication of the Company’s sources and uses of cash, as well as an indication of the ability of the Company to maintain an adequate level of liquidity. A discussion of the cash flow statement for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 follows.
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Cash and cash equivalents totaling $245.8 million on September 30, 2022 increased $17.2 million from December 31, 2021. Operating activities provided $98.7 million in net cash. Investing activities used $365.7 million in net cash, primarily due to securities purchases of $412.2 million and loan funding of $487.4 million, partially offset by net cash acquired in the 1st Constitution acquisition of $326.2 million and proceeds from repayments and maturities of investments securities of $220.8 million. Financing activities provided $284.2 million in net cash primarily due to increases of $251.3 million in federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase and $61.8 million in deposits, partially offset by dividends paid of $27.8 million. The Company anticipates that it will have sufficient funds available to meet its current loan commitments and deposit maturities.
The following table sets forth contractual obligations and other commitments representing required and potential cash outflows as of September 30, 2022. Interest on subordinated debentures and long-term borrowed funds is calculated based on current contractual interest rates.
(in thousands)TotalWithin
One Year
After One
But Within
Three Years
After Three
But Within
Five Years
After
Five Years
Minimum annual rentals on noncancellable operating leases
$33,188 $1,265 $9,148 $6,520 $16,255 
Benefit plan commitments4,224 422 755 745 2,302 
Remaining contractual maturities of time deposits
1,034,181 810,535 204,758 18,792 96 
Subordinated debentures194,148 — — — 194,148 
Loan commitments1,767,454 1,319,040 191,280 41,216 215,918 
Other borrowings25,000 — 25,000 — — 
Interest on other borrowings (1)70,574 7,010 13,922 13,636 36,006 
Standby letters of credit20,627 19,162 110 — 1,355 
Total$3,149,396 $2,157,434 $444,973 $80,909 $466,080 
(1) Includes interest on other borrowings and subordinated debentures at a weighted rate of 3.20%.    
Capital Resources
Total stockholders’ equity increased to $1.08 billion on September 30, 2022 from $827.0 million on December 31, 2021, an increase of $255.4 million. Book value per common share increased to $16.70 on September 30, 2022 from $16.34 on December 31, 2021. Tangible book value per share decreased from $13.21 per share on December 31, 2021 to $12.36 per share on September 30, 2022, a decrease of 6%, resulting primarily from an increase in goodwill and the number of shares outstanding from the 1st Constitution merger. Please see “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” below. In addition to the equity acquired in the 1st Constitution merger of $285.7 million, the increase in stockholders’ equity from December 31, 2021 to September 30, 2022 was due in part to $73.8 million of net income, offset by an other comprehensive loss of $79.0 million and by the payment of cash dividends on common stock of $27.8 million.
The Company and Lakeland are subject to various regulatory capital requirements that are monitored by federal banking agencies. Failure to meet minimum capital requirements can lead to certain supervisory actions by regulators; any supervisory action could have a direct material adverse effect on the Company or Lakeland or their financial statements. As of September 30, 2022, the Company and Lakeland met all capital adequacy requirements to which they are subject.     
As of September 30, 2022, the Company’s capital levels remained characterized as “well-capitalized.”
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The capital ratios for the Company and Lakeland Bank for the periods presented are as follows: 
 Tier 1 Capital to Total
Average Assets Ratio
Common Equity Tier 1 to
Risk-Weighted Assets
Ratio
Tier 1 Capital to Risk-
Weighted Assets Ratio
Total Capital to Risk-
Weighted Assets Ratio
September 30, 2022December 31, 2021September 30, 2022December 31, 2021September 30, 2022December 31, 2021September 30, 2022December 31, 2021
The Company9.10 %8.51 %10.62 %10.67 %11.16 %11.15 %13.78 %14.48 %
Lakeland Bank10.01 %9.70 %12.29 %12.71 %12.29 %12.71 %13.12 %13.67 %
Required capital ratios including conservation buffer4.00 %4.00 %7.00 %7.00 %8.50 %8.50 %10.50 %10.50 %
“Well capitalized” institution under FDIC Regulations5.00 %5.00%6.50 %6.50%8.00 %8.00%10.00 %10.00%
Non-GAAP Financial Measures
Reported amounts are presented in accordance with U.S. GAAP. The Company’s management uses certain supplemental non-GAAP information in its analysis of the Company’s financial results. Specifically, the Company provides measurements and ratios based on tangible equity and tangible assets. These measures are utilized by regulators and market analysts to evaluate a company’s financial condition and therefore, such information is useful to investors.
The Company also provides measures based on what it believes are its operating earnings on a consistent basis, and excludes material non-routine operating items which affect the GAAP reporting of results of operations. The Company’s management believes that providing this information to analysts and investors allows them to better understand and evaluate the Company’s core financial results for the periods in question.
These disclosures should not be viewed as a substitute for financial results determined in accordance with U.S. GAAP, nor are they necessarily comparable to non-GAAP performance measures which may be presented by other companies.
(dollars in thousands, except share and per share amounts)September 30, 2022December 31, 2021
Calculation of Tangible Book Value per Common Share
Total common stockholders’ equity at end of period - GAAP$1,082,406 $827,014 
Less:
Goodwill271,829 156,277 
Other identifiable intangible assets, net9,669 2,420 
Total tangible common stockholders’ equity at end of period - Non-GAAP$800,908 $668,317 
Shares outstanding at end of period64,804 50,606 
Book value per share - GAAP$16.70 $16.34 
Tangible book value per share - Non-GAAP$12.36 $13.21 
Calculation of Tangible Common Equity to Tangible Assets
Total tangible common stockholders’ equity at end of period - Non-GAAP$800,908 $668,317 
Total assets at end of period$10,515,599 $8,198,056 
Less:
Goodwill271,829 156,277 
Other identifiable intangible assets, net9,669 2,420 
Total tangible assets at end of period - Non-GAAP$10,234,101 $8,039,359 
Common equity to assets - GAAP10.29 %10.09 %
Tangible common equity to tangible assets - Non-GAAP7.83 %8.31 %
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 For the Three Months Ended September 30,For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(dollars in thousands)2022202120222021
Calculation of Return on Average Tangible Common Equity
Net income - GAAP$28,746 $22,289 $73,792 $72,871 
Total average common stockholders’ equity
$1,104,145 $807,956 $1,096,936 $786,642 
Less:
Average goodwill271,829 156,277 269,713 156,277 
Average other identifiable intangible assets, net
9,982 2,758 10,464 2,975 
Total average tangible common stockholders’ equity - Non-GAAP
$822,334 $648,921 $816,759 $627,390 
Return on average common stockholders’ equity - GAAP
10.33 %10.94 %8.99 %12.39 %
Return on average tangible common stockholders’ equity - Non-GAAP
13.87 %13.63 %12.08 %15.53 %
For the Three Months Ended September 30,For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)2022202120222021
Calculation of EPS excluding non-routine transactions
Net income - GAAP$28,746 $22,289 $73,792 $72,871 
Non-Routine Transactions:
Debt Prepayment Penalty— 831 — 831 
Tax deductible merger-related expenses2,100 500 5,536 500 
Tax effect on tax deductible merger-related expenses$(632)(400)(1,666)(400)
Non-tax deductible merger-related expenses1,388 572 2,538 572 
  Effect of non-routine transactions, net of tax$2,856 $1,503 $6,408 $1,503 
Net income available to common shareholders excluding non-routine transactions$31,602 $23,792 $80,200 $74,374 
Less: Earnings allocated to participating securities339 303 847 839 
Net Income, excluding non-routine transactions$31,263 $23,489 $79,353 $73,535 
Weighted average shares - Basic64,842 50,637 64,547 $50,616 
Weighted average shares - Diluted65,061 50,875 64,755 $50,837 
Basic earnings per share - GAAP$0.44 $0.43 $1.13 $1.42 
Diluted earnings per share - GAAP$0.44 $0.43 $1.13 $1.42 
Basic earnings per share, adjusted for non-routine transactions$0.48 $0.46 $1.23 $1.45 
Diluted earnings per share, adjusted for non-routine transactions$0.48 $0.46 $1.23 $1.45 
Calculation of return on average assets excluding non-routine transactions
Net Income, excluding non-routine transactions$31,602 $23,792 $80,200 $74,374 
Average assets10,358,600 8,070,050 10,230,532 7,854,351 
Return on average assets - GAAP1.10 %1.10 %0.96 %1.24 %
Return on average assets, adjusted for non-routine transactions1.21 %1.17 %1.05 %1.27 %
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For the Three Months Ended September 30,For the Nine Months Ended September 30,
(Dollars in thousands)2022202120222021
Calculation of return on average equity excluding non-routine transactions
Net Income, excluding non-routine transactions$31,602 $23,792 $80,200 $74,374 
Total average common stockholders' equity1,104,145 807,956 1,096,936 786,642 
Return on average common stockholders' equity - GAAP10.33 %10.94 %8.99 %12.39 %
Return on average common stockholders' equity, adjusted for non-routine transactions11.36 %11.68 %9.78 %12.64 %
Calculation of return on average tangible common equity excluding non-routine transactions
Net Income, excluding non-routine transactions$31,602 $23,792 $80,200 $74,374 
Total average tangible common stockholders' equity - Non-GAAP822,334 648,921 816,744 627,390 
Return on average tangible common stockholders' equity - Non-GAAP13.87 %13.63 %12.08 %15.53 %
Return on average tangible common stockholders' equity - Non-GAAP, adjusted for non-routine transactions15.25 %14.55 %13.13 %15.85 %
Recent Accounting Pronouncements
In June 2022, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued Update 2022-03, "Fair Value Measurement (Topic 820)" ("ASU 2022-03"). The guidance clarifies the guidance in Topic 820 when measuring the fair value of an equity security subject to contractual restrictions that prohibits the sale of an equity security, amends a related illustrative example, and introduces new disclosure requirements for equity securities subject to contractual sale restrictions that are measured at fair value in accordance with Topic 820. This ASU will be effective for financial statements issued by public business entities for fiscal years and interim periods beginning after December 15, 2023. Early adoption is permitted for both interim and annual financial statements that have not yet been issued or made available for issuance. The Company does not expect ASU 2022-03 to have a material impact on the Company's financial statements.
In March 2022, FASB issued Update 2022-02, "Financial Instruments - Credit Losses (ASC 326): Troubled Debt Restructurings (TDRs) and Vintage Disclosures" ("ASU 2022-02"). The guidance amends ASC 326 to eliminate the accounting guidance for TDRs by creditors, while enhancing disclosure requirements for certain loan refinancing and restructuring activities by creditors when a borrower is experiencing financial difficulty. Specifically, rather than applying TDR recognition and measurement guidance, creditors will determine whether a modification results in a new loan or continuation of existing loan. These amendments are intended to enhance existing disclosure requirements and introduce new requirements related to certain modifications of receivables made to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty. Additionally, the amendments to ASC 326 require that an entity disclose current-period gross write-offs by year of origination within the vintage disclosures, which requires that an entity disclose the amortized cost basis of financing receivables by credit quality indicator and class of financing receivable by year of origination. The guidance is only for entities that have adopted the amendments in Update 2016-13, Financial Instruments - Credit Losses (Topic 326): Measurement of Credit Losses on Financial Instruments ("ASU 2016-13") for fiscal years, and interim periods within those fiscal years, beginning after December 15, 2022. Early adoption using prospective application, including adoption in an interim period where the guidance should be applied as of the beginning of the fiscal year. The Company is currently assessing the impact of ASU 2022-02 on its disclosures and control structure; however, the Company does not expect the adoption of this standard to have a material impact on the consolidated financial statements.
In October 2021, FASB issued Update 2021-08, an update to Topic 805, Business Combinations. The update provides guidance to improve the accounting for acquired revenue contracts with customers in a business combination by addressing diversity in practice and inconsistency related to the recognition of an acquired contract liability and payment terms and their effect on subsequent revenue recognized by the acquirer. The amendment provides specific guidance on how to recognize and measure acquired contract assets and contract liabilities from revenue contracts in a business combination. The amendments in this ASU apply to all entities that enter into a business combination within the scope of Subtopic 805-10, Business Combinations - Overall. This ASU will be effective for financial statements issued by public business entities for fiscal years and interim periods beginning after December 15, 2022. The Company does not expect the ASU to have a material impact on the Company's financial statements.
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In March 2020, FASB issued Update 2020-04, an update to Topic 848, Reference Rate Reform. The update provides guidance to ease the potential burden in accounting for, or recognizing the effects of, reference rate reform on financial reporting. The update provides optional expedients and exceptions for applying generally accepted accounting principles to contracts, hedging relationships and other transactions affected by reference rate reform if certain criteria are met and only applies to contracts, hedging relationships and other transactions that reference LIBOR or another reference rate expected to be discontinued because of reference rate reform. In addition, the update provides optional expedients for applying the requirements of certain Topics or Industry Subtopics in the Codification for contracts that are modified because of reference rate reform and contemporaneous modifications of other contract terms related to the replacement of the reference rate. The ASU allows companies to apply the standard as of the beginning of the interim period that includes March 12, 2020 or any date thereafter. The Company is currently assessing the impact to its financial statements; however, the impact is not expected to be material.
In December 2019, FASB issued Update 2019-12, an update to Topic 740, Income Taxes, as part of an initiative to reduce complexity in accounting standards for income taxes. The amendments also improve consistent application of and simplify GAAP for other areas of Topic 740 by clarifying and amending existing guidance. This update is effective for financial statements issued for fiscal years and interim periods beginning after December 15, 2021 with early adoption permitted. The update did not have a material impact on the Company's financial statements.
Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
The Company manages interest rate risk and market risk by identifying and quantifying interest rate risk exposures using simulation analysis and economic value at risk models. Net interest income simulation considers the relative sensitivities of the balance sheet including the effects of interest rate caps on adjustable rate mortgages and the relatively stable aspects of core deposits. As such, net interest income simulation is designed to address the probability of interest rate changes and the behavioral response of the balance sheet to those changes. Market Value of Portfolio Equity represents the fair value of the net present value of assets, liabilities and off-balance-sheet items. Changes in estimates and assumptions made for interest rate sensitivity modeling could have a significant impact on projected results and conclusions. These assumptions could include prepayment rates, sensitivity of non-maturity deposits and other similar assumptions. Therefore, if our assumptions should change, this technique may not accurately reflect the impact of general interest rate movements on the Company’s net interest income or net portfolio value.
The starting point (or “base case”) for the following table is an estimate of the following year’s net interest income assuming that both interest rates and the Company’s interest-sensitive assets and liabilities remain at period-end levels. The net interest income estimated for this purpose for the next twelve months (the base case) is $323.1 million. The information provided for net interest income assumes that changes in interest rates change gradually in equal increments (“rate ramp”) over the twelve month period.
 Changes in Interest Rates
Rate Ramp+200 bp
Asset/Liability Policy limit(5.0)%
September 30, 2022(1.0)%
December 31, 2021(0.9)%
The Company’s review of interest rate risk includes policy limits for net interest income changes in various “rate shock” scenarios. Rate shocks assume that current interest rates change immediately. The information provided for net interest income assumes fluctuations or “rate shocks” for changes in interest rates as shown in the table below.
 Changes in Interest Rates
Rate Shock+400bp+300 bp+200 bp+100 bp
Asset/Liability policy limit(25.0)%(20.0)%(15.0)%(10.0)%
September 30, 2022(3.0)%(2.3)%(1.7)%(0.6)%
December 31, 2021(1.2)%(0.9)%(0.7)%(0.5)%
The base case for the following table is an estimate of the Company’s net portfolio value for the periods presented using current discount rates, and assuming the Company’s interest-sensitive assets and liabilities remain at period-end levels. The net portfolio value at September 30, 2022 (the base case) was $2.11 billion. The information provided for the net portfolio value assumes fluctuations or “rate shocks” for changes in interest rates as shown in the table below. Rate shocks assume that current interest rates change immediately.
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 Changes in Interest Rates
Rate Shock+400bp+300 bp+200 bp+100 bp-100 bp
Asset/Liability policy limit(35.0)%(25.0)%(20.0)%(10.0)%(10.0)%
September 30, 2022(11.4)%(8.5)%(5.5)%(2.3)%1.3 %
December 31, 2021(14.8)%(10.9)%(7.0)%(2.7)%(7.0)%
The information set forth in the above tables and the net interest income estimate set forth above are based on significant estimates and assumptions, and constitute forward-looking statements under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. For more information regarding the Company’s market risk and assumptions used in the Company’s simulation models, please refer to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021.
Certain shortcomings are inherent in the methodologies used in the above interest rate risk measurements. Modeling changes in net interest income requires the making of certain assumptions regarding prepayment and deposit decay rates, which may or may not reflect the manner in which actual yields and costs respond to changes in market interest rates. While management believes such assumptions are reasonable, there can be no assurance that assumed prepayment rates and decay rates will approximate actual future loan prepayment and deposit withdrawal activity. Moreover, the net interest income table presented assumes that the composition of interest sensitive assets and liabilities existing at the beginning of a period remains constant over the period being measured and also assumes that a particular change in interest rates is reflected uniformly across the yield curve regardless of the duration to maturity or repricing of specific assets and liabilities. Accordingly, although the net interest income table provides an indication of the Company’s interest rate risk exposure at a particular point in time, such measurement is not intended to and does not provide a precise forecast of the effect of changes in market interest rates on net interest income and will differ from actual results.
Item 4.  Controls and Procedures
(a)Disclosure controls and procedures. As of the end of the Company’s most recently completed fiscal quarter covered by this report, the Company carried out an evaluation, with the participation of the Company’s management, including the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, of the effectiveness of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures pursuant to Securities Exchange Act Rule 13a-15. Based upon that evaluation, the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures are effective in ensuring that information required to be disclosed by the Company in the reports that it files or submits under the Securities Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported, within the time periods specified in the SEC’s rules and forms and are operating in an effective manner and that such information is accumulated and communicated to our management, including our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.
(b)Changes in internal controls over financial reporting. There have been no changes in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the quarter ended September 30, 2022, that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.
PART II. OTHER INFORMATION
Item 1.   Legal Proceedings
There are no pending legal proceedings involving the Company or Lakeland other than those arising in the normal course of business. Management does not anticipate that the potential liability, if any, arising out of such legal proceedings will have a material effect on the financial condition or results of operations of the Company and Lakeland on a consolidated basis.
Item 1A.   Risk Factors
In addition to the other information contained in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, the following risk factors relating to the Company’s proposed merger with Provident (the “merger”) represent a material update and addition to the risk factors previously disclosed in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2021, as updated by our subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and Current Reports on Form 8-K. The risk factors set forth below also identify important factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from those expressed in any forward-looking statements made by or on behalf of us. In the discussion below, references to the “merger agreement” mean the Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated September 26, 2022, by and among Provident, NL 239 Corp. and the Company.
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Because the market price of Provident common stock may fluctuate, the Company’s shareholders cannot be certain of the market value of the merger consideration they will receive.
In the merger, each share of Company common stock (Nasdaq: LBAI) that is issued and outstanding immediately prior to the effective time (except for certain excluded shares) will be converted into 0.8319 of a share of Provident common stock (NYSE: PFS). This exchange ratio is fixed and will not be adjusted for changes in the market price of either Provident common stock or Company common stock. Changes in the price of Provident common stock between now and the time of the merger will affect the value that the Company’s shareholders will receive in the merger. However, neither Provident nor the Company is permitted to terminate the merger agreement as a result of any increase or decrease in the market price of Provident common stock or Company common stock.
Stock price changes may result from a variety of factors, including general market and economic conditions, changes in Provident’s and the Company’s businesses, operations and prospects, volatility in the prices of securities in global financial markets, including market prices for the common stock of other banking companies, the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, and changes in laws and regulations, many of which are beyond Provident’s and the Company’s control. Accordingly, at the time of the special meeting of shareholders of the Company to vote on the merger agreement, shareholders will not know the market value of the consideration that they will receive at the effective time of the merger.
The market price of Provident common stock after the merger may be affected by factors different from those currently affecting the shares of Provident common stock or Company common stock.
Following the merger, shareholders of the Company will become Provident stockholders. Provident’s business differs from that of the Company and certain adjustments may be made to Provident’s business as a result of the merger. Accordingly, the results of operations of the combined company and the market price of Provident common stock after the completion of the merger may be affected by factors different from those currently affecting the independent results of operations of each of Provident and the Company.
Issuance of shares of Provident common stock in connection with the merger may adversely affect the market price of Provident common stock.
In connection with the payment of the merger consideration, Provident will issue shares of Provident common stock to the Company’s shareholders. The issuance of these new shares of Provident common stock may result in fluctuations in the market price of Provident common stock, including a stock price decrease.
Provident and the Company are expected to incur substantial costs related to the merger and integration.
Provident and the Company have incurred and expect to incur a number of non-recurring costs associated with the merger. These costs include legal, financial advisory, accounting, consulting and other advisory fees, severance/employee benefit-related costs, public company filing fees and other regulatory fees, financial printing and other printing costs and other related costs. Some of these costs are payable by either Provident or the Company regardless of whether the merger is completed.
In addition, the combined company will incur integration costs following the completion of the merger as Provident and the Company integrate their businesses, including facilities and systems consolidation costs and employment-related costs. Provident and the Company may also incur additional costs to maintain employee morale and to retain key employees. There are a large number of processes, policies, procedures, operations, technologies and systems that may need to be integrated, including purchasing, accounting and finance, payroll, compliance, treasury management, branch operations, vendor management, risk management, lines of business, pricing and benefits. While Provident and the Company have assumed that a certain level of costs will be incurred, there are many factors beyond their control that could affect the total amount or the timing of the integration costs. Moreover, many of the costs that will be incurred are, by their nature, difficult to estimate accurately. These integration costs may result in the combined company taking charges against earnings following the completion of the merger, and the amount and timing of such charges are uncertain at present. There can be no assurances that the expected benefits and efficiencies related to the integration of the businesses will be realized to offset these transaction and integration costs over time.
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Combining Provident and the Company may be more difficult, costly or time-consuming than expected, and Provident and the Company may fail to realize the anticipated benefits of the merger.
The merger will combine two financial institutions of relatively similar asset size. The success of the merger will depend, in part, on the ability to realize the anticipated cost savings from combining the businesses of Provident and the Company. To realize the anticipated benefits and cost savings from the merger, Provident and the Company must successfully integrate and combine their businesses in a manner that permits those cost savings to be realized, without adversely affecting current revenues and future growth. If Provident and the Company are not able to successfully achieve these objectives, the anticipated benefits of the merger may not be realized fully or at all or may take longer to realize than expected. In addition, the actual cost savings of the merger could be less than anticipated, and integration may result in additional and unforeseen expenses.
An inability to realize the full extent of the anticipated benefits of the merger and the other transactions contemplated by the merger agreement, as well as any delays encountered in the integration process, could have an adverse effect upon the revenues, levels of expenses and operating results of the combined company following the completion of the merger, which may adversely affect the value of the common stock of the combined company following the completion of the merger.
Provident and the Company have operated and, until the completion of the merger, must continue to operate, independently. It is possible that the integration process could result in the loss of key employees, the disruption of each company’s ongoing businesses or inconsistencies in standards, controls, procedures and policies that adversely affect the companies’ ability to maintain relationships with clients, customers, depositors and employees or to achieve the anticipated benefits and cost savings of the merger. Integration efforts between the two companies may also divert management attention and resources. These integration matters could have an adverse effect on each of Provident and the Company during this transition period and on the combined company for an undetermined period after completion of the merger.
Furthermore, the board of directors and executive leadership of the combined company will consist of former directors and executive officers from each of Provident and the Company. Combining the boards of directors and management teams of each company into a single board and a single management team could require the reconciliation of differing priorities and philosophies.
The COVID-19 pandemic may delay and adversely affect the completion of the merger.
The COVID-19 pandemic created economic and financial disruptions that adversely affected the business, financial condition, liquidity, capital and results of operations of Provident and the Company. If the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic or any similar public health emergency cause a continued or extended decline in the economic environment and the financial results of Provident or the Company, or the business operations of Provident or the Company are disrupted as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, efforts to complete the merger and integrate the businesses of Provident and the Company may also be delayed and adversely affected. Additional time may be required to obtain the requisite regulatory approvals, and regulators may impose additional requirements on Provident or the Company that must be satisfied prior to completion of the merger, which could delay and adversely affect the completion of the merger.
The future results of the combined company following the merger may suffer if the combined company does not effectively manage its expanded operations.
Following the merger, the size of the business of the combined company will increase beyond the current size of either Provident’s or the Company’s business. The combined company’s future success will depend, in part, upon its ability to manage this expanded business, which may pose challenges for management, including challenges related to the management and monitoring of new operations and associated increased costs and complexity. The combined company may also face increased scrutiny from governmental authorities as a result of the increased size of its business. There can be no assurances that the combined company will be successful or that it will realize the expected operating efficiencies, revenue enhancement or other benefits currently anticipated from the merger.
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The combined company may be unable to retain Provident and/or Company personnel successfully after the merger is completed.
The success of the merger will depend in part on the combined company’s ability to retain the talents and dedication of key employees currently employed by Provident and the Company. It is possible that these employees may decide not to remain with Provident or the Company, as applicable, while the merger is pending or with the combined company after the merger is consummated. If Provident and the Company are unable to retain key employees, including management, who are critical to the successful integration and future operations of the companies, Provident and the Company could face disruptions in their operations, loss of existing customers, loss of key information, expertise or know-how and unanticipated additional recruitment costs. In addition, following the merger, if key employees terminate their employment, the combined company’s business activities may be adversely affected, and management’s attention may be diverted from successfully hiring suitable replacements, all of which may cause the combined company’s business to suffer. Provident and the Company also may not be able to locate or retain suitable replacements for any key employees who leave either company.
Regulatory approvals may not be received, may take longer than expected, or may impose conditions that are not presently anticipated or that could have an adverse effect on the combined company following the merger.
Before the merger and other transactions contemplated by the merger agreement may be completed, various approvals, consents and non-objections must be obtained from the Federal Reserve Board, the FDIC and the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance and other regulatory authorities in the United States. In determining whether to grant these approvals, such regulatory authorities consider a variety of factors, including the regulatory standing of each party. These approvals could be delayed or not obtained at all, including due to an adverse development in either party’s regulatory standing or in any other factors considered by regulators when granting such approvals; governmental, political or community group inquiries, investigations or opposition; or changes in legislation or the political environment generally.
Any approvals that are granted may impose terms and conditions, limitations, obligations or costs, or place restrictions on the conduct of the combined company’s business or require changes to the terms of the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement. There can be no assurance that regulators will not impose any such conditions, limitations, obligations or restrictions and that such conditions, limitations, obligations or restrictions will not have the effect of delaying the completion of any of the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement, imposing additional material costs on or materially limiting the revenues of the combined company following the merger or otherwise reduce the anticipated benefits of the merger if the merger were consummated successfully within the expected timeframe. In addition, there can be no assurance that any such conditions, terms, obligations or restrictions will not result in the delay or abandonment of the merger. Additionally, the completion of the merger is conditioned on the absence of certain orders, injunctions or decrees by any court or regulatory agency of competent jurisdiction that would prohibit or make illegal the completion of any of the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement.
In addition, despite the parties’ commitments to using their reasonable best efforts to comply with conditions imposed by regulators, under the terms of the merger agreement, neither Provident nor the Company, nor any of their respective subsidiaries, is permitted (without the written consent of the other party), to take any action, or commit to take any action, or agree to any condition or restriction, in connection with obtaining the required permits, consents, approvals and authorizations of governmental entities that would reasonably be expected to have a material adverse effect on the combined company and its subsidiaries, taken as a whole, after giving effect to the merger.
As a result of the mergers, the combined company will become subject to additional requirements and restrictions imposed by the U.S. Department of Justice (the “DOJ”).
On September 28, 2022, Lakeland Bank entered into a consent order with the DOJ to resolve allegations of violations of the Fair Housing Act and Equal Credit Opportunity Act within the Newark, NJ-PA Metro Division, as constituted in 2015. The DOJ’s consent order was approved by the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey on September 29, 2022.
The DOJ’s consent order requires Lakeland Bank to, among other things, invest $12 million over five years in a loan subsidy fund to increase credit opportunities to residents of majority-Black and Hispanic neighborhoods in Essex, Morris, Somerset, Sussex and Union Counties, New Jersey (the “Newark Lending Area”), and devote a minimum of $400,000 over five years toward community development partnership contributions in the Newark Lending Area and $150,000 per year over five years toward advertising, community outreach, and credit repair and education in the Newark Lending Area. Pursuant to the terms of the consent order, Lakeland Bank will also establish two new full-service branches in majority-Black and Hispanic census tracts: one in Newark, New Jersey and one in Lakeland Bank’s Newark Lending Area. In addition, Lakeland Bank must continue to maintain its full-time Community Development Officer position to oversee these efforts throughout the term of the consent order.
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Under the terms of the DOJ’s consent order, the combined bank will assume the consent order in connection with the merger. Although both Provident and the Company are committed to full compliance with the DOJ’s consent order, achieving such compliance will require significant management attention from the Company and, following the merger, the combined company, and may cause the Company and, following the merger, the combined company to incur unanticipated costs and expenses. Actions taken to achieve compliance with the DOJ’s consent order may affect the Company’s and the combined company’s business or financial performance and may require the Company or the combined company to reallocate resources away from existing businesses or to undertake significant changes to their respective businesses, operations, products and services and risk management practices. In addition, the Company and its subsidiaries or, following the merger, the combined company and its subsidiaries could be subject to other enforcement actions relating to the alleged violations resolved by the DOJ’s consent order.
Certain of the Company’s directors and executive officers may have interests in the merger that may differ from, or are in addition to, the interests of the Company’s shareholders.
Shareholders should be aware that some of the Company’s directors and executive officers may have interests in the merger and have arrangements that are different from, or in addition to, those of shareholders of the Company generally. These interests and arrangements may create potential conflicts of interest.
The merger agreement may be terminated in accordance with its terms and the merger may not be completed.
The merger agreement is subject to a number of conditions which must be fulfilled in order to complete the merger. Those conditions include approval by Provident’s and the Company’s shareholders; SEC registration of the shares of Provident common stock to be issued in the merger; authorization for listing on the New York Stock Exchange of the shares of Provident common stock to be issued in the merger, subject to official notice of issuance; and the receipt of required regulatory approvals. Each party’s obligation to complete the merger is also subject to certain additional customary conditions, including the accuracy of the representations and warranties of the other party and the performance by the other party of its obligations under the merger agreement.
These conditions to the closing may not be fulfilled in a timely manner or at all, and, accordingly, the merger may not be completed. In addition, the parties can mutually decide to terminate the merger agreement at any time, before or after the requisite stockholder and shareholder approvals, or Provident or the Company may elect to terminate the merger agreement in certain other circumstances.
Failure to complete the merger could negatively impact Provident or the Company.
If the merger is not completed for any reason, including as a result of Provident stockholders failing to approve the issuance of Provident common stock in the merger or Company shareholders failing to approve the merger agreement, there may be various adverse consequences and Provident and/or the Company may experience negative reactions from the financial markets and from their respective customers and employees. For example, Provident’s or the Company’s businesses may be impacted adversely by the failure to pursue other beneficial opportunities due to the focus of management on the merger, without realizing any of the anticipated benefits of completing the merger. Additionally, if the merger agreement is terminated, the market price of Provident common stock or Company common stock could decline to the extent that current market prices reflect a market assumption that the merger will be beneficial and will be completed. Provident and/or the Company also could be subject to litigation related to any failure to complete the merger or to proceedings commenced against Provident or the Company to perform their respective obligations under the merger agreement. If the merger agreement is terminated under certain circumstances, either Provident or the Company may be required to pay a termination fee of $50 million to the other party.
Additionally, each of Provident and the Company has incurred and will incur substantial expenses in connection with the negotiation and completion of the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement, as well as the costs and expenses of preparing, filing, printing and mailing a joint proxy statement/prospectus, and all filing and other fees paid in connection with the merger. If the merger is not completed, Provident and the Company would have to pay these expenses without realizing the expected benefits of the merger.
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In connection with the merger, Provident will assume the Company’s outstanding debt obligations, and the combined company’s level of indebtedness following the completion of the merger could adversely affect the combined company’s ability to raise additional capital and to meet its obligations under its existing indebtedness.
In connection with the merger, Provident will assume the Company’s outstanding indebtedness. Provident’s existing debt, together with any future incurrence of additional indebtedness, and the assumption of the Company’s outstanding indebtedness, could have important consequences for the combined company’s creditors and the combined company’s stockholders. For example, it could:
limit the combined company’s ability to obtain additional financing for working capital, capital expenditures, debt service requirements, acquisitions and general corporate or other purposes;
restrict the combined company from making strategic acquisitions or cause the combined company to make non-strategic divestitures;
restrict the combined company from paying dividends to its stockholders;
increase the combined company’s vulnerability to general economic and industry conditions; and
require a substantial portion of cash flow from operations to be dedicated to the payment of principal and interest on the combined company’s indebtedness, thereby reducing the combined company’s ability to use cash flows to fund its operations, capital expenditures and future business opportunities.
Provident and the Company will be subject to business uncertainties and contractual restrictions while the merger is pending.
Uncertainty about the effect of the merger on employees and customers may have an adverse effect on Provident and the Company. These uncertainties may impair Provident’s or the Company’s ability to attract, retain and motivate key personnel until the merger is completed, and could cause customers and others that deal with Provident or the Company to seek to change existing business relationships with Provident or the Company. In addition, subject to certain exceptions, Provident and the Company have each agreed to operate its business in the ordinary course in all material respects and to refrain from taking certain actions that may adversely affect its ability to consummate the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement on a timely basis without the consent of the other party. These restrictions may prevent Provident or the Company from pursuing attractive business opportunities that may arise prior to the completion of the merger.
The announcement of the proposed merger could disrupt Provident’s and the Company’s relationships with their customers, suppliers, business partners and others, as well as their operating results and businesses generally.
Whether or not the merger is ultimately consummated, as a result of uncertainty related to the proposed transactions, risks relating to the impact of the announcement of the merger on Provident’s and the Company’s businesses include the following:
their employees may experience uncertainty about their future roles, which might adversely affect Provident’s or the Company’s ability to retain and hire key personnel and other employees;
customers, suppliers, business partners and other parties with which Provident and the Company maintain business relationships may experience uncertainty about their respective futures and seek alternative relationships with third parties, seek to alter their business relationships with Provident and the Company or fail to extend an existing relationship with Provident and the Company; and
Provident and the Company have each expended and will continue to expend significant costs, fees and expenses for professional services and transaction costs in connection with the proposed merger.
If any of the aforementioned risks were to materialize, they could lead to significant costs which may impact each party’s results of operations and financial condition.
The merger agreement limits Provident’s and the Company’s respective abilities to pursue alternatives to the merger and may discourage other companies from trying to acquire Provident or the Company.
The merger agreement contains “no shop” covenants that restrict each of Provident’s and the Company’s ability to, directly or indirectly, among other things, initiate, solicit, knowingly encourage or knowingly facilitate, inquiries or proposals with respect to, or, subject to certain exceptions generally related to the exercise of fiduciary duties by Provident’s and the Company’s respective board of directors, engage in any negotiations concerning, or provide any confidential or non-public information or data relating to, any alternative acquisition proposals. These provisions, which include a $50 million termination fee payable under certain circumstances, may discourage a potential third-party acquirer that might have an interest in acquiring all or a significant part of Provident or the Company from considering or proposing that acquisition.
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The shares of Provident common stock to be received by Company shareholders as a result of the merger will have different rights from the shares of Company common stock.
Following the merger, the Company’s shareholders will become Provident stockholders and their rights as stockholders will be governed by Delaware law and the governing documents of the combined company following the merger. The rights associated with Delaware corporation law and Provident common stock are different from the rights associated with Company common stock.
Holders of Company common stock will have reduced ownership and voting interest in the combined company after the consummation of the merger and will exercise less influence over management.
Shareholders of Provident and the Company currently have the right to vote in the election of the board of directors and on other matters affecting Provident and the Company, respectively. When the merger is completed, each Provident stockholder and each Company shareholder will become a holder of common stock of the combined company, with a percentage ownership of the combined company that is smaller than the holder’s percentage ownership of either Provident or the Company individually, as applicable, prior to the consummation of the merger. Because of this, the Company’s shareholders may have less influence on the management and policies of the combined company than they now have on the management and policies of the Company.
Shareholders of the Company will not have appraisal rights or dissenters’ rights in the merger.
Appraisal rights (also known as dissenters’ rights) are statutory rights that, if applicable under law, enable stockholders or shareholders to dissent from an extraordinary transaction, such as a merger, and to demand that the corporation pay the fair value for their shares as determined by a court in a judicial proceeding instead of receiving the consideration offered to stockholders in connection with the extraordinary transaction.
Under Title 14A, Chapter 11 of the New Jersey Business Corporation Act, shareholders have the right to dissent from any plan of merger or consolidation to which the corporation is a party, and to demand payment for the fair value of their shares. However, unless the corporation’s certificate of incorporation otherwise provides, dissenters’ rights of appraisal do not apply to any plan of merger or consolidation with respect to shares (i) of a class or series which is listed on a national securities exchange or is held of record by not less than 1,000 holders or (ii) for which, pursuant to the plan of merger or consolidation, such shareholder will receive (a) cash, (b) shares, obligations or other securities which, upon consummation of the merger or consolidation, will either be listed on a national securities exchange or held of record by not less than 1,000 holders, or (c) cash and such securities. The Company’s certificate of incorporation is silent as to dissenters’ rights of appraisal. The Company’s common stock is currently listed on Nasdaq, a national securities exchange, and is expected to continue to be so listed until the completion of the merger. In addition, as merger consideration, the shareholders of the Company will receive shares of Provident common stock, which is currently listed on the NYSE, a national securities exchange, and is expected to be listed at the effective time of the merger. Accordingly, holders of Company common stock are not entitled to any dissenters’ rights of appraisal in connection with the merger.
Shareholder litigation could prevent or delay the completion of the merger or otherwise negatively impact the business and operations of Provident and the Company.
Shareholders of Provident or the Company may file lawsuits against Provident, the Company and/or the directors and officers of either company in connection with the merger. One of the conditions to the closing is that there must be no order, injunction or decree issued by any court or governmental entity of competent jurisdiction or other legal restraint preventing the consummation of the merger or any of the other transactions contemplated by the merger agreement. If any plaintiff were successful in obtaining an injunction prohibiting Provident or the Company from completing the merger or any of the other transactions contemplated by the merger agreement, then such injunction may delay or prevent the effectiveness of the merger and could result in significant costs to Provident or the Company, including any cost associated with the indemnification of directors and officers of each company. Provident and the Company may incur costs in connection with the defense or settlement of any stockholder or shareholder lawsuits filed in connection with the merger. Such litigation could have an adverse effect on the financial condition and results of operations of Provident and the Company and could prevent or delay the completion of the merger.
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The COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on the combined company’s business and operations following the completion of the merger is uncertain.
The extent to which the COVID-19 pandemic will negatively affect the business, financial condition, liquidity, capital and results of operations of the combined company following the completion of the merger will depend on future developments, which are highly uncertain and cannot be predicted, including the scope and duration of the COVID-19 pandemic, the direct and indirect impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on employees, clients, counterparties and service providers, as well as other market participants, and actions taken by governmental authorities and other third parties in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Given the ongoing and dynamic nature of the circumstances, it is difficult to predict the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the combined company’s business, and there is no guarantee that efforts by the combined company to address the adverse impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic will be effective.
Even after the COVID-19 pandemic has subsided, the combined company may continue to experience adverse impacts to its business as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic’s global economic impact, including reduced availability of credit, adverse impacts on liquidity and the negative financial effects from any recession or depression that may occur.
Item 2.   Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
The following table presents information regarding shares of our common stock repurchased during the third quarter of 2022.
PeriodTotal Number of Shares (or Units) Purchased (1)Weighted Average Price Paid per Share (or Unit)Total Number of Shares (or Units) Purchased as Part of Publicly Announced Plans or ProgramsMaximum Number of Shares (or Units) that May Yet Be Purchased Under the Plans or Programs
July 1 to July 31, 2022— $— — 2,393,423
August 1 to August 31, 2022— — — 2,393,423
September 1 to September 30, 2022— — — 2,393,423
(1)On October 24, 2019, the Company announced that its Board of Directors authorized a new share repurchase program. Under the repurchase program, the Company may repurchase up to 2,524,458 shares of its common stock, or approximately 5% of its outstanding shares of common stock at September 30, 2019. Repurchases may be made from time to time through a combination of open market and privately negotiated repurchases. The specific timing, price and quantity of repurchases will be at the discretion of the Company and will depend on a variety of factors, including general market conditions, the trading price of the common stock, legal and contractual requirements and the Company's financial performance. The share repurchase program has no expiration date.
Item 3.   Defaults Upon Senior SecuritiesNot Applicable
Item 4.   Mine Safety DisclosuresNot Applicable
Item 5.   Other InformationNot applicable
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Item 6.   Exhibits
2.1
2.2
3.1
3.2
4.1
4.2
4.3
10.1
10.2
31.1
31.2
32.1
101.INSInline XBRL Instance Document (The instance document does not appear in the interactive data file because its XBRL tags are embedded within the Inline XBRL document)
101.SCHInline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document
101.CALInline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document
101.DEFInline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document
101.LABInline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document
101.PREInline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document
104Cover Page Interactive Data File (formatted as Inline XBRL and contained in Exhibits 101)
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SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.
Lakeland Bancorp, Inc.
(Registrant)
/s/ Thomas J. Shara
Thomas J. Shara
President and Chief Executive Officer
(Principal Executive Officer)
/s/ Thomas F. Splaine
Thomas F. Splaine
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)
Date: November 8, 2022

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