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QCR HOLDINGS INC - Annual Report: 2015 (Form 10-K)

qcrh20151231_10k.htm

 

U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM 10-K

 

 

ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES

EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

 

For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015.

 

Commission file number: 0-22208

 

QCR HOLDINGS, INC.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

 

Delaware

(State of incorporation)

42-1397595

(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)

 

3551 7th Street, Moline, Illinois 61265

(Address of principal executive offices)

 

(309) 743-7724

(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)

 

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Exchange Act:

Common stock, $1.00 Par Value The NASDAQ Global Market

 

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Exchange Act:

Preferred Share Purchase Rights

 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.

Yes [   ]          No [ X ]

 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Exchange Act.

Yes [   ]          No [ X ]

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for past 90 days. Yes [ X ] No [   ]

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically and posted on its corporate Web site, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files).

Yes [ X ]          No [   ]

 

Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers in response to Item 405 of Regulation S-K is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of registrant’s knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K. [ X ]

 

 
1

 

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” and “smaller reporting company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.

 

Large accelerated filer  [   ]

 Accelerated filer  [ X ]

Non-accelerated filer  [   ]

Smaller reporting company  [   ]

 

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Act).

Yes [   ]          No [ X ]     

 

The aggregate market value of the voting and non-voting common equity held by non-affiliates of the registrant, based on the last sales price quoted on The NASDAQ Global Market on June 30, 2015, the last business day of the registrant’s most recently completed second fiscal quarter, was approximately $235,581,715.

 

As of February 29, 2016, the Registrant had outstanding 11,812,011 shares of common stock, $1.00 par value per share.

 

Documents incorporated by reference:

Part III of Form 10-K - Proxy statement for annual meeting of stockholders to be held in May 2016.

 

 
2

 

 

QCR HOLDINGS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

 

INDEX

 

       

Page

Number(s)

Part I

     
 

Item 1.

Business

 

5

 

Item 1A.

Risk Factors

 

14

 

Item 1B.

Unresolved Staff Comments

 

23

 

Item 2.

Properties

 

24

 

Item 3.

Legal Proceedings

 

24

 

Item 4.

Mine Safety Disclosures

 

24

         

Part II

     
 

Item 5.

Market for Registrant's Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities

 

25

 

Item 6.

Selected Financial Data

 

27

 

Item 7.

Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations

   
   

General

 

28

   

Executive Overview

 

28

   

Long-Term Financial Goals

 

29

   

Strategic Developments

 

30

   

GAAP to Non-GAAP Reconciliations

 

32

   

Net Interest Income and Margin (Tax Equivalent Basis)

 

34

   

Critical Accounting Policies

 

37

   

Results of Operations

   
   

Interest Income

 

38

   

Interest Expense

 

38

   

Provision for Loan/Lease Losses

 

39

   

Noninterest Income

 

40

   

Noninterest Expense

 

43

   

Income Taxes

 

45

   

Financial Condition

   
   

Overview

 

45

   

Investment Securities

 

46

   

Loans/Leases

 

47

   

Allowance for Estimated Losses on Loans/Leases

 

48

   

Nonperforming Assets

 

51

   

Deposits

 

52

   

Short-Term Borrowings

 

52

   

FHLB Advances and Other Borrowings

 

53

   

Stockholders' Equity

 

54

   

Liquidity and Capital Resources

 

55

   

Commitments, Contingencies, Contractual Obligations, and Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

 

56

   

Impact of Inflation and Changing Prices

 

57

   

Special Note Concerning Forward-Looking Statements

 

57

 

Item 7A.

Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk

 

58

 

 
3

 

 

 

Item 8.

Consolidated Financial Statements

 

60

   

Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2015 and 2014

 

62

   

Consolidated Statements of Income for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013

 

63

   

Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013

  64
   

Consolidated Statements of Changes in Stockholders' Equity for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013

  65
   

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013

 

66

   

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

   
   

Note 1: Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies

 

68

   

Note 2: Community National Bancorporation and Community National Bank

 

83

   

Note 3: Investment Securities

 

88

   

Note 4: Loans/Leases Receivable

 

93

   

Note 5: Premises and Equipment

 

105

   

Note 6: Derivatives and Hedging Activities

 

105

   

Note 7: Deposits

 

106

   

Note 8: Short-Term Borrowings

 

107

   

Note 9: FHLB Advances

 

108

   

Note 10: Other Borrowings and Unused Lines of Credit

 

110

   

Note 11: Junior Subordinated Debentures

 

112

   

Note 12: Common Stock Offering and Balance Sheet Restructuring

 

113

   

Note 13: Federal and State Income Taxes

 

114

   

Note 14: Employee Benefit Plans

 

116

   

Note 15: Stock-Based Compensation

 

117

   

Note 16: Regulatory Capital Requirements and Restrictions on Dividends

 

120

   

Note 17: Earnings Per Share

 

122

   

Note 18: Commitments and Contingencies

 

123

   

Note 19: Quarterly Results of Operations (Unaudited)

 

125

   

Note 20: Parent Company Only Financial Statements

 

126

   

Note 21: Fair Value

 

129

   

Note 22: Business Segment Information

 

132

   

Note 23: Acquisition of Noncontrolling Interest in m2 Lease Funds

 

134

   

Note 24: Sale of Credit Card Loan Receivables and Credit Card Issuing Operations for QCBT

 

134

   

Note 25: Subsequent Event - Junior Subordinated Debentures Retirement and Balance Sheet Restructuring

 

134

         
 

Item 9.

Changes in and Disagreements With Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure

 

135

 

Item 9A.

Controls and Procedures

 

135

 

Item 9B.

Other Information

 

138

         

Part III

     
 

Item 10.

Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance

 

138

 

Item 11.

Executive Compensation

 

138

 

Item 12.

Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters

 

138

 

Item 13.

Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence

 

139

 

Item 14.

Principal Accountant Fees and Services

 

139

         

Part IV

     
 

Item 15.

Exhibits

 

139

         

Signatures

   

143

 

Throughout the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements, Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations, and remaining sections of this Form 10-K (including appendices), we use certain acronyms and abbreviations, as defined in Note 1 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

 
4

 

 

Part I 

 

Item 1.

Business

 

General. QCR Holdings, Inc. is a multi-bank holding company headquartered in Moline, Illinois, that was formed in February 1993 under the laws of the state of Delaware. The Company serves the Quad Cities, Cedar Rapids, Waterloo/Cedar Falls and Rockford communities through the following three wholly-owned banking subsidiaries, which provide full-service commercial and consumer banking and trust and asset management services:

 

 

QCBT, which is based in Bettendorf, Iowa, and commenced operations in 1994;

 

CRBT, which is based in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and commenced operations in 2001; and

 

RB&T, which is based in Rockford, Illinois, and commenced operations in 2005.

 

On May 13, 2013, the Company acquired Community National and its banking subsidiary, CNB. Community National and CNB commenced operations in 1997 and historically provided full-service commercial and consumer banking, and trust and asset management services, to Cedar Falls, Mason City, and Waterloo, Iowa and Austin, Minnesota. At acquisition, CNB had a total of eight branch facilities with four in the Waterloo/Cedar Falls area where CNB was headquartered, two in Mason City, and two in Austin. On October 4, 2013, the Company finalized the sale of the two branches in Mason City. On October 11, 2013, the Company finalized the sale of the two branches in Austin. On October 26, 2013, CNB merged with and into CRBT. CNB’s merged branch offices operate as a division of CRBT under the name “Community Bank & Trust.” In December 2013, one of the branch facilities in Cedar Falls was closed due to lack of sufficient customer activity. See Note 2 to the consolidated financial statements for further discussion of the acquisition of Community National and sales of certain CNB branches.

 

The Company also engages in direct financing lease contracts through m2, a wholly-owned subsidiary of QCBT based in Brookfield, Wisconsin. QCBT previously owned 80% of m2. In August 2012, QCBT entered into an amendment to the operating agreement of m2 and purchased the remaining 20% noncontrolling interest. See Note 23 to the consolidated financial statements for further discussion of the acquisition.

 

Subsidiary Banks. QCBT was capitalized on October 13, 1993, and commenced operations on January 7, 1994. QCBT is an Iowa-chartered commercial bank that is a member of the Federal Reserve System with depository accounts insured by the FDIC to the maximum amount permitted by law. QCBT provides full service commercial, correspondent, and consumer banking and trust and asset management services in the Quad Cities and adjacent communities through its five offices that are located in Bettendorf and Davenport, Iowa and in Moline, Illinois. QCBT, on a consolidated basis with m2, had total segment assets of $1.34 billion and $1.32 billion as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively.

 

CRBT is an Iowa-chartered commercial bank that is a member of the Federal Reserve System with depository accounts insured by the FDIC to the maximum amount permitted by law. The Company commenced operations in Cedar Rapids in June 2001, operating a branch of QCBT. The Cedar Rapids branch operation then began functioning under the CRBT charter in September 2001. As previously discussed, the merged branches of CNB operate as a division of CRBT under the name “Community Bank & Trust.” CRBT provides full-service commercial and consumer banking and trust and asset management services to Cedar Rapids and Waterloo/Cedar Falls, Iowa and adjacent communities through its five facilities. The headquarters for CRBT is located in downtown Cedar Rapids with one other branch located in northern Cedar Rapids, two branches located in Waterloo and one branch located in Cedar Falls. CRBT had total segment assets of $866.9 million and $840.3 million as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively.

 

RB&T is an Illinois-chartered commercial bank that is a member of the Federal Reserve System with depository accounts insured by the FDIC to the maximum amount permitted by law. The Company commenced operations in Rockford, Illinois in September 2004, operating a branch of QCBT, and that operation began functioning under the RB&T charter in January 2005. RB&T provides full-service commercial and consumer banking and trust and asset management services to Rockford and adjacent communities through its headquarters located on Guilford Road at Alpine Road in Rockford and its branch facility located in downtown Rockford. RB&T had total segment assets of $367.5 million and $353.4 million as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively.

 

 
5

 

 

See Note 22 to the consolidated financial statements for additional business segment information.

 

Other Operating Subsidiaries. m2, which is based in Brookfield, Wisconsin, is engaged in the business of leasing machinery and equipment to C&I businesses under direct financing lease contracts.

 

Trust Preferred Subsidiaries. Following is a listing of the Company’s non-consolidated subsidiaries formed for the issuance of trust preferred securities, including pertinent information as of December 31, 2015 and 2014:

 

Name

Date Issued

 

Amount Issued

as of

12/31/15

   

Amount Issued

as of

12/31/14

 

Interest Rate

 

Interest Rate

as of

12/31/2015

   

Interest Rate

as of

12/31/2014

 
                                     

QCR Holdings Statutory Trust II

February 2004

  $ 10,310,000     $ 12,372,000  

2.85% over 3-month LIBOR

    3.18%       3.08%  

QCR Holdings Statutory Trust III

February 2004

    8,248,000       8,248,000  

2.85% over 3-month LIBOR

    3.18%       3.08%  

QCR Holdings Statutory Trust IV

May 2005

    5,155,000       5,155,000  

1.80% over 3-month LIBOR

    2.12%       2.03%  

QCR Holdings Statutory Trust V

February 2006

    10,310,000       10,310,000  

1.55% over 3-month LIBOR

    1.87%       1.78%  

Community National Statutory Trust II

September 2004

    3,093,000       3,093,000  

2.17% over 3-month LIBOR

    2.74%       2.42%  

Community National Statutory Trust III

March 2007

    3,609,000       3,609,000  

1.75% over 3-month LIBOR

    2.26%       1.99%  
      $ 40,725,000     $ 42,787,000  

Weighted Average Rate

    2.60%       2.50%  

 

Securities issued by all of the trusts listed above mature thirty years from the date of issuance, but are all currently callable at par at any time. Interest rate reset dates vary by trust.

 

QCR Holdings Statutory Trust IV was dissolved in 2016 after the Company purchased the related security at auction, as noted in Note 25 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

Other Ownership Interests. In addition to its wholly-owned subsidiaries, the Company owns a 20% equity position in Nobel Real Estate Investors, LLC. In June 2005, CRBT entered into a joint venture as a 50% owner of Cedar Rapids Mortgage Company, LLC, which provided residential real estate mortgage lending services. During the first quarter of 2013, CRBT and the partner mutually terminated the joint venture. CRBT continues to provide residential real estate mortgage lending services through its consumer banking division. In December 2014, QCBT entered into a joint venture as a 20% owner of Ruhl Mortgage, to provide residential real estate mortgage lending services and products to QCBT clients.

 

Business. The Company’s principal business consists of attracting deposits and investing those deposits in loans/leases and securities. The deposits of the subsidiary banks are insured to the maximum amount allowable by the FDIC. The Company’s results of operations are dependent primarily on net interest income, which is the difference between the interest earned on its loans/leases and securities and the interest paid on deposits and borrowings. The Company’s operating results are affected by economic and competitive conditions, particularly changes in interest rates, government policies and actions of regulatory authorities, as described more fully in this Form 10-K. Its operating results also can be affected by trust fees, investment advisory and management fees, deposit service charge fees, gains on the sale of residential real estate and government guaranteed loans, earnings from BOLI and other noninterest income. Operating expenses include employee compensation and benefits, occupancy and equipment expense, professional and data processing fees, advertising and marketing expenses, bank service charges, FDIC and other insurance, loan/lease expenses and other administrative expenses.

 

The Company and its subsidiaries collectively employed 406 and 409 FTEs at December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively.

 

The Federal Reserve is the primary federal regulator of the Company and its subsidiaries. In addition, QCBT and CRBT are regulated by the Iowa Superintendent and RB&T is regulated by the IDFPR. The FDIC, as administrator of the Deposit Insurance Fund, also has regulatory authority over the subsidiary banks. See Appendix A for more information on the federal and state statutes and regulations that are applicable to the Company and its subsidiaries.

 

 
6

 

 

Lending/Leasing. The Company and its subsidiaries provide a broad range of commercial and retail lending/leasing and investment services to corporations, partnerships, individuals, and government agencies. The subsidiary banks actively market their services to qualified lending and deposit clients. Officers actively solicit the business of new clients entering their market areas as well as long-standing members of the local business community. The Company has an established lending/leasing policy which includes a number of underwriting factors to be considered in making a loan/lease, including, but not limited to, location, loan-to-value ratio, cash flow, collateral and the credit history of the borrower.

 

In accordance with Iowa regulation, the legal lending limit to one borrower for QCBT and CRBT, calculated as 15% of aggregate capital, was $19.7 million and $15.8 million, respectively, as of December 31, 2015. In accordance with Illinois regulation, the legal lending limit to one borrower for RB&T, calculated as 25% of aggregate capital, totaled $9.6 million as of December 31, 2015.

 

The Company recognizes the need to prevent excessive concentrations of credit exposure to any one borrower or group of related borrowers. As such, the Company has established an in-house lending limit, which is lower than each subsidiary bank’s legal lending limit, in an effort to manage individual borrower exposure levels.

 

The in-house lending limit is the maximum amount of credit each subsidiary bank will extend to a single borrowing entity or group of related entities. Under the in-house limit, total credit exposure to a single borrowing entity or group of related entities will not exceed the following, subject to certain exceptions:

 

QCBT:

 

$

10.0 million

CRBT:

 

$

7.5 million

RB&T:

 

$

3.7 million

 

On a consolidated basis, the in-house lending limit is $15.0 million, which is the maximum amount of credit that all affiliated banks, when combined, will extend to a single borrowing entity or group of related entities, subject to certain exceptions.

 

In addition, m2’s in-house lending limit is $1.0 million to a single leasing entity or group of related entities.

 

As part of the loan monitoring activity at the three subsidiary banks, credit administration personnel interact closely with senior bank management. For example, the internal loan committee of each subsidiary bank meets weekly. The Company has a separate in-house loan review function to analyze credits of the subsidiary banks. To complement the in-house loan review, an independent third-party performs external loan reviews. Historically, management has attempted to identify problem loans at an early stage and to aggressively seek a resolution of those situations.

 

The Company recognizes that a diversified loan/lease portfolio contributes to reducing risk in the overall loan/lease portfolio. The specific loan/lease portfolio mix is subject to change based on loan/lease demand, the business environment and various economic factors. The Company actively monitors concentrations within the loan/lease portfolio to ensure appropriate diversification and concentration risk is maintained. 

 

 
7

 

 

Specifically, each subsidiary bank’s total loans as a percentage of average assets may not exceed 85%. In addition, following are established policy limits and the actual allocations for the three subsidiary banks as of December 31, 2015 for the loan portfolio on a per loan type basis, reflected as a percentage of the subsidiary bank’s average gross loans:

 

   

QCBT

   

CRBT

   

RB&T

 

Type of Loan *

 

Maximum

Percentage

per Loan

Policy

   

As of

December 31,

2015

   

Maximum

Percentage

per Loan

Policy

   

As of

December 31,

2015

   

Maximum

Percentage

per Loan

Policy

   

As of

December 31,

2015

 
                                                 

One-to-four family residential

    30 %     14 %     25 %     11 %     30 %     20 %

Multi-family

    15 %     2 %     15 %     7 %     15 %     3 %

Farmland

    5 %     1 %     5 %     1 %     5 %     0 %

Non-farm, nonresidential

    50 %     26 %     50 %     34 %     50 %     43 %

Construction and land development

    20 %     3 %     15 %     6 %     20 %     3 %

C&I

    60 %     20 %     60 %     30 %     60 %     26 %

Loans to individuals

    10 %     1 %     10 %     1 %     10 %     1 %

Lease financing

    30 %     21 %     5 %     0 %     20 %     0 %

Bank stock loans

      **       **     10 %     1 %     10 %     0 %

All other loans

    15 %     12 %     10 %     9 %     10 %     4 %
              100 %             100 %             100 %

 

 

* The loan types above are as defined and reported in the subsidiary banks’ quarterly Reports of Condition and Income (also known as Call Reports).

** QCBT’s maximum percentage for bank stock loans is 150% of aggregate capital (bank stock loan commitments are limited to 200% of aggregate capital). At December 31, 2015, QCBT’s bank stock loans totaled 50% of aggregate capital.

 

 

The following table presents total loans/leases by major loan/lease type and subsidiary as of December 31, 2015 and 2014. Residential real estate loans held for sale are included in residential real estate loans below.

 

 

   

QCBT

   

m2

Lease Funds

   

CRBT

   

RBT

   

Intercompany

Elimination

   

Consolidated

Total

 
    $    

%

    $    

%

    $    

%

    $    

%

    $     $    

%

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
As of December 31, 2015:                                                                                        
                                                                                         

C&I loans

  $ 267,367       39 %   $ 20,120       10 %   $ 263,792       43 %   $ 96,881       33 %   $ -     $ 648,160       36 %

CRE loans

    296,157       43 %     -       0 %     285,866       46 %     142,346       48 %     -       724,369       40 %

Direct financing leases

    -       0 %     173,656       86 %     -       0 %     -       0 %     -       173,656       10 %

Residential real estate loans

    86,920       13 %     -       0 %     43,345       7 %     40,168       14 %     -       170,433       9 %

Installment and other consumer loans

    35,862       5 %     -       0 %     23,970       4 %     13,837       5 %     -       73,669       4 %

Deferred loan/lease origination costs, net of fees

    457       0 %     7,343       4 %     (358 )     0 %     294       0 %     -       7,736       0 %
    $ 686,763       100 %   $ 201,119       100 %   $ 616,615       100 %   $ 293,526       100 %   $ -     $ 1,798,023       100 %
                                                                                         

As of December 31, 2014:

                                                                                       
                                                                                         

C&I loans

  $ 238,495       39 %   $ 4,739       3 %   $ 212,208       37 %   $ 68,485       25 %   $ -     $ 523,927       32 %

CRE loans

    256,195       42 %     -       0 %     297,377       51 %     150,031       55 %     (1,463 )     702,140       43 %

Direct financing leases

    -       0 %     166,032       93 %     -       0 %     -       0 %     -       166,032       10 %

Residential real estate loans

    75,095       13 %     -       0 %     43,863       8 %     39,675       15 %     -       158,633       10 %

Installment and other consumer loans

    35,213       6 %     -       0 %     24,252       4 %     13,142       5 %     -       72,607       5 %

Deferred loan/lease origination costs, net of fees

    80       0 %     6,673       4 %     (337 )     0 %     248       0 %     -       6,664       0 %
    $ 605,078       100 %   $ 177,444       100 %   $ 577,363       100 %   $ 271,581       100 %   $ (1,463 )   $ 1,630,003       100 %

 

Proper pricing of loans is necessary to provide adequate return to the Company’s stockholders. Loan pricing, as established by the subsidiary banks’ internal loan committees, includes consideration for the cost of funds, loan maturity and risk, origination and maintenance costs, appropriate stockholder return, competitive factors, and the economic environment. The portfolio contains a mix of loans with fixed and floating interest rates. Management attempts to maximize the use of interest rate floors on its variable rate loan portfolio. Refer to Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk for more discussion on the Company’s management of interest rate risk.

 

 
8

 

 

C&I Lending

 

As noted above, the subsidiary banks are active C&I lenders. The current areas of emphasis include loans to small and mid-sized businesses with a wide range of operations such as wholesalers, manufacturers, building contractors, business services companies, other banks, and retailers. The banks provide a wide range of business loans, including lines of credit for working capital and operational purposes, and term loans for the acquisition of facilities, equipment and other purposes. Since 2010, the subsidiary banks have been active in participating in lending programs offered by the SBA and USDA. Under these programs, the government entities will generally provide a guarantee of repayment ranging from 50% to 85% of the principal amount of the qualifying loan.

 

Loan approval is generally based on the following factors:

 

 

Ability and stability of current management of the borrower;

 

Stable earnings with positive financial trends;

 

Sufficient cash flow to support debt repayment;

 

Earnings projections based on reasonable assumptions;

 

Financial strength of the industry and business; and

 

Value and marketability of collateral.

 

For C&I loans, the Company assigns internal risk ratings which are largely dependent upon the aforementioned approval factors. The risk rating is reviewed annually or on an as needed basis depending on the specific circumstances of the loan. See Note 1 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information, including the internal risk rating scale.

 

As part of the underwriting process, management reviews current borrower financial statements. When appropriate, certain C&I loans may contain covenants requiring maintenance of financial performance ratios such as, but not limited to:

 

 

Minimum debt service coverage ratio;

 

Minimum current ratio;

 

Maximum debt to tangible net worth ratio; and/or

 

Minimum tangible net worth.

 

Establishment of these financial performance ratios depends on a number of factors, including risk rating and the specific industry.

 

Collateral for these loans generally includes accounts receivable, inventory, equipment, and real estate. The Company’s lending policy specifies approved collateral types and corresponding maximum advance percentages. The value of collateral pledged on loans must exceed the loan amount by a margin sufficient to absorb potential erosion of its value in the event of foreclosure and cover the loan amount plus costs incurred to convert it to cash. Approved non-real estate collateral types and corresponding maximum advance percentages for each are listed below.

 

 
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Approved Collateral Type

Maximum Advance %
   

Financial Instruments

 

U.S. Government Securities

90% of market value

Securities of Federal Agencies

90% of market value

Municipal Bonds rated by Moody’s As “A” or better

80% of market value

Listed Stocks

75% of market value

Mutual Funds

75% of market value

Cash Value Life Insurance

95%, less policy loans

Savings/Time Deposits (Bank)

100% of current value

General Business

 

Accounts Receivable

80% of eligible accounts

Inventory

50% of value

Fixed Assets (Existing)

50% of net book value, or

  75% of orderly liquidation appraised value

Fixed Assets (New)

80% of cost

Leasehold Improvements

0%

  

Generally, if the above collateral is part of a cross-collateralization with other approved assets, then the maximum advance percentage may be higher.

 

The Company’s lending policy specifies maximum term limits for C&I loans. For term loans, the maximum term is generally seven years. Generally, term loans range from three to five years. For lines of credit, the maximum term is typically 365 days.

 

In addition, the subsidiary banks often take personal guarantees or cosignors to help assure repayment. Loans may be made on an unsecured basis if warranted by the overall financial condition of the borrower.

 

 
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CRE Lending

 

The subsidiary banks also make CRE loans. CRE loans are subject to underwriting standards and processes similar to C&I loans, in addition to those standards and processes specific to real estate loans. Collateral for these loans generally includes the underlying real estate and improvements, and may include additional assets of the borrower. The Company’s lending policy specifies maximum loan-to-value limits based on the category of CRE (commercial real estate loans on improved property, raw land, land development, and commercial construction). These limits are the same limits as, or in some situations, more conservative than, those established by regulatory authorities. Following is a listing of these limits as well as some of the other guidelines included in the Company’s lending policy for the major categories of CRE loans:

 

 

CRE Loan Types

 

Maximum Advance Rate **

 

Maximum

Term

         

CRE Loans on Improved Property *

 

80%

 

7 years

Raw Land

 

Lesser of 90% of project cost, or 65% of "as is" appraised value

 

12 months

Land Development

 

Lesser of 90% of project cost, or 75% of appraised value

 

24 months

Commercial Construction Loans

 

Lesser of 90% of project cost, or 80% of appraised value

 

365 days

 

* Generally, the debt service coverage ratio must be a minimum of 1.25x for non-owner occupied loans and 1.15x for owner-occupied loans. For loans greater than $500 thousand, the subsidiary banks sensitize this ratio for deteriorated economic conditions, major changes in interest rates, and/or significant increases in vacancy rates.

** These maximum rates are consistent with, or in some situations, more conservative than, those established by regulatory authorities.

 

The Company’s lending policy also includes guidelines for real estate appraisals and evaluations, including minimum appraisal and evaluation standards based on certain transactions. In addition, the subsidiary banks often take personal guarantees to help assure repayment.

 

In addition, management tracks the level of owner-occupied CRE loans versus non-owner occupied CRE loans. Owner-occupied CRE loans are generally considered to have less risk. As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, approximately 35% and 37%, respectively, of the CRE loan portfolio was owner-occupied.

 

 
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The Company’s lending policy limits non-owner occupied CRE lending to 300% of total risk-based capital, and limits construction, land development, and other land loans to 100% of total risk-based capital. Exceeding these limits warrants the use of heightened risk management practices in accordance with regulatory guidelines. As of December 31, 2015, all three subsidiary banks were in compliance with these limits.

 

Following is a listing of the significant industries within the Company’s CRE loan portfolio as of December 31, 2015 and 2014:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 
   

Amount

   

%

   

Amount

   

%

 
                                 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                                 

Lessors of Nonresidential Buildings

  $ 264,133       37 %   $ 248,326       35 %

Lessors of Residential Buildings

    89,189       12 %     73,781       11 %

Lessors of Other Real Estate Property

    22,009       3 %     17,553       3 %

Hotels

    19,228       3 %     16,252       2 %

Land Subdivision

    17,839       2 %     19,504       3 %

Nursing Care Facilities

    17,288       2 %     17,078       2 %

New Car Dealers

    11,656       2 %     16,090       2 %

Other *

    283,027       39 %     293,556       42 %
                                 

Total Commercial Real Estate Loans

  $ 724,369       100 %   $ 702,140       100 %

 

* “Other” consists of all other industries. None of these had concentrations greater than $14.0 million, or 2%, of total CRE loans.

 

Direct Financing Leasing

 

m2 leases machinery and equipment to C&I customers under direct financing leases. All lease requests are subject to the credit requirements and criteria as set forth in the lending/leasing policy. In all cases, a formal independent credit analysis of the lessee is performed.

 

The following private and public sector business assets are generally acceptable to consider for lease funding:

 

 

Computer systems;

 

Photocopy systems;

 

Fire trucks;

 

Specialized road maintenance equipment;

 

Medical equipment;

 

Commercial business furnishings;

 

Vehicles classified as heavy equipment;

 

Trucks and trailers;

 

Equipment classified as plant or office equipment; and

 

Marine boat lifts.

 

m2 will generally refrain from funding leases of the following type:

 

 

Leases collateralized by non-marketable items;

 

Leases collateralized by consumer items, such as vehicles, household goods, recreational vehicles, boats, etc.;

 

Leases collateralized by used equipment, unless its remaining useful life can be readily determined; and

 

Leases with a repayment schedule exceeding seven years.

 

 
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Residential Real Estate Lending

 

Generally, the subsidiary banks’ residential real estate loans conform to the underwriting requirements of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to allow the subsidiary banks to resell loans in the secondary market. The subsidiary banks structure most loans that will not conform to those underwriting requirements as adjustable rate mortgages that adjust in one to five years, and then retain these loans in their portfolios. Servicing rights are not presently retained on the loans sold in the secondary market. The Company’s lending policy establishes minimum appraisal and other credit guidelines.

 

The following table presents the originations and sales of residential real estate loans for the Company. Included in originations is activity related to the refinancing of previously held in-house mortgages.

 

   

For the year ended December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 

Originations of residential real estate loans

  $ 41,279     $ 72,146     $ 105,716  

Sales of residential real estate loans

  $ 23,726     $ 33,100     $ 56,103  

Percentage of sales to originations

    57 %     46 %     53 %

 

Installment and Other Consumer Lending

 

The consumer lending department of each subsidiary bank provides many types of consumer loans, including home improvement, home equity, motor vehicle, signature loans and small personal credit lines. The Company’s lending policy addresses specific credit guidelines by consumer loan type. In particular, for home equity loans and home equity lines of credit, the minimum credit bureau score is 680. For both home equity loans and lines of credit, the maximum advance rate is 90% of value with a minimum credit bureau score of 720, and the maximum advance rate is 80% of value with a credit bureau score of 680 to 719. The maximum term on home equity loans is 10 years and maximum amortization is 15 years. The maximum term on home equity lines of credit is five years.

 

In some instances for all loans/leases, it may be appropriate to originate or purchase loans/leases that are exceptions to the guidelines and limits established within the Company’s lending policy described above. In general, exceptions to the lending policy do not significantly deviate from the guidelines and limits established within the lending policy and, if there are exceptions, they are generally noted as such and specifically identified in loan/lease approval documents.

 

Competition. The Company currently operates in the highly competitive Quad Cities, Cedar Rapids, Waterloo/Cedar Falls, and Rockford markets. Competitors include not only other commercial banks, credit unions, thrift institutions, and mutual funds, but also insurance companies, finance companies, brokerage firms, investment banking companies, and a variety of other financial services and advisory companies. Many of these competitors are not subject to the same regulatory restrictions as the Company. Many of these unregulated competitors compete across geographic boundaries and provide customers increasing access to meaningful alternatives to banking services. The Company competes in markets with a number of much larger financial institutions with substantially greater resources and larger lending limits.

 

Appendices. The commercial banking business is a highly regulated business. See Appendix A for a summary of the federal and state statutes and regulations that are applicable to the Company and its subsidiaries. Supervision, regulation and examination of banks and bank holding companies by bank regulatory agencies are intended primarily for the protection of depositors rather than stockholders of bank holding companies and banks.

 

See Appendix B for tables and schedules that show selected comparative statistical information relating to the business of the Company required to be presented pursuant to federal securities laws. Consistent with the information presented in the Form 10-K, results are presented as of and for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013, as applicable.

 

 
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Internet Site, Securities Filings and Governance Documents. The Company maintains an Internet site at www.qcrh.com. The Company makes available free of charge through this site its annual report on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K, and other reports filed or furnished pursuant to Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as soon as reasonably practicable after it electronically files such material with, or furnishes it to, the SEC. These filings are available at http://www.snl.com/IRW/Docs/1024092. Also available are many of its corporate governance documents, including the Code of Conduct (http://www.snl.com/IRW/govdocs/1024092).

 

 

Item 1A.

Risk Factors

 

In addition to the other information in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, stockholders or prospective investors should carefully consider the following risk factors:

 

A prolonged continuation of economic uncertainty or worsening of current economic conditions could have a material adverse effect on our financial condition and results of operations.

 

While economic indicators have generally shown signs of gradual improvement, uncertainty related to U.S. and worldwide fiscal issues, political climates and global economic conditions continue. There can be no assurance that this improvement will continue or be spread evenly throughout the markets that the Company serves. Continued uncertainty, elevated unemployment, volatility or disruptions of global financial markets, or prolonged deterioration in the global, national or local business or economic conditions could result in, among other things, a deterioration of credit quality, further impairment of real estate values or a reduced demand for credit or other products and services we offer to clients.

 

Additionally, competitive dynamics in our industry could change as a result of continued consolidation of financial services companies in connection with current market conditions.

 

If market conditions do not continue to improve or worsen to recessionary conditions, and/or if negative developments in the domestic and international credit markets continue, there can be no assurance that we will not experience an adverse effect, which may be material, on our ability to access capital and on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

 

Potential future acquisitions could be difficult to integrate, divert the attention of key personnel, disrupt our business, dilute stockholder value and adversely affect our financial results.

 

As part of our business strategy, we may consider acquisitions of other banks or financial institutions or branches, assets or deposits of such organizations. There is no assurance, however, that we will determine to pursue any of these opportunities or that if we determine to pursue them that we will be successful.  Acquisitions involve numerous risks, any of which could harm our business, including:

 

 

difficulties in integrating the operations, technologies, products, existing contracts, accounting processes and personnel of the target company and realizing the anticipated synergies of the combined businesses;

 

 

difficulties in supporting and transitioning customers of the target company;

 

 

diversion of financial and management resources from existing operations;

 

 

the price we pay or other resources that we devote may exceed the value we realize, or the value we could have realized if we had allocated the purchase price or other resources to another opportunity;

 

 
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risks of entering new markets or areas in which we have limited or no experience or are outside our core competencies;

 

 

potential loss of key employees, customers and strategic alliances from either our current business or the business of the target company;

 

 

assumption of unanticipated problems or latent liabilities; and

 

 

inability to generate sufficient revenue to offset acquisition costs.

 

Future acquisitions may involve the issuance of our equity securities as payment or in connection with financing the business or assets acquired, and as a result, could dilute the ownership interests of existing stockholders. In addition, consummating these transactions could result in the incurrence of additional debt and related interest expense, as well as unforeseen liabilities, all of which could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition. The failure to successfully evaluate and execute acquisitions or otherwise adequately address the risks associated with acquisitions could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition. 

 

We must effectively manage our credit risk.

 

There are risks inherent in making any loan, including risks inherent in dealing with specific borrowers, risks of nonpayment, risks resulting from uncertainties as to the future value of collateral and risks resulting from changes in economic and industry conditions. We attempt to minimize our credit risk through prudent loan application approval procedures, careful monitoring of the concentration of our loans within specific industries and periodic independent reviews of outstanding loans by our credit review department and an external third party. However, we cannot assure you that such approval and monitoring procedures will reduce these credit risks.

 

The majority of our subsidiary banks’ loan portfolios are invested in C&I and CRE loans, and we focus on lending to small to medium-sized businesses. The size of the loans we can offer to commercial customers is less than the size of the loans that our competitors with larger lending limits can offer. This may limit our ability to establish relationships with the area’s largest businesses. Smaller companies tend to be at a competitive disadvantage and generally have limited operating histories, less sophisticated internal record keeping and financial planning capabilities and fewer financial resources than larger companies. As a result, we may assume greater lending risks than financial institutions that have a lesser concentration of such loans and tend to make loans to larger, more established businesses. Collateral for these loans generally includes accounts receivable, inventory, equipment and real estate. However, depending on the overall financial condition of the borrower, some loans are made on an unsecured basis. In addition to C&I and CRE loans, our subsidiary banks are also active in residential mortgage and consumer lending. Our borrowers may experience financial difficulties, and the level of nonperforming loans, charge-offs and delinquencies could rise, which could negatively impact our business through increased provision, reduced interest income on loans/leases, and increased expenses incurred to carry and resolve problem loans/leases.

 

C&I loans make up a large portion of our loan/lease portfolio.

 

C&I loans were $648.2 million, or approximately 36% of our total loan/lease portfolio, as of December 31, 2015. Our C&I loans are primarily made based on the identified cash flow of the borrower and secondarily on the underlying collateral provided by the borrower. Most often, this collateral is accounts receivable, inventory, equipment and real estate. Credit support provided by the borrower for most of these loans and the probability of repayment is based on the liquidation value of the pledged collateral and enforcement of a personal guarantee, if any exists. Whenever possible, we require a personal guarantee or cosigner on commercial loans. As a result, in the case of loans secured by accounts receivable, the availability of funds for the repayment of these loans may be substantially dependent on the ability of the borrower to collect amounts due from its customers. The collateral securing these loans may lose value over time, may be difficult to appraise, and may fluctuate in value based on the success of the business. In addition, a prolonged recovery period could harm or continue to harm the businesses of our C&I customers and reduce the value of the collateral securing these loans.

 

 
15

 

 

Our loan/lease portfolio has a significant concentration of CRE loans, which involve risks specific to real estate values.

 

CRE lending comprises a significant portion of our lending business. Specifically, CRE loans were $724.4 million, or approximately 40% of our total loan/lease portfolio, as of December 31, 2015. Of this amount, $252.5 million, or approximately 35%, was owner-occupied. The market value of real estate securing our CRE loans can fluctuate significantly in a short period of time as a result of market conditions in the geographic area in which the real estate is located. Adverse developments affecting real estate values in one or more of our markets could increase the credit risk associated with our loan portfolio. Additionally, real estate lending typically involves higher loan principal amounts and the repayment of the loans generally is dependent, in large part, on sufficient income from the properties securing the loans to cover operating expenses and debt service. Economic events or governmental regulations outside of the control of the borrower or lender could negatively impact the future cash flow and market values of the affected properties.

 

The problems that have occurred in the residential real estate and mortgage markets throughout much of the U.S. in prior years also affected the commercial real estate market. In our market areas, we generally experienced a downturn in credit performance by our CRE loan customers in prior years relative to historical norms, and despite recent improvements in certain aspects of the economy, a level of uncertainty continues to exist in the economy and credit markets, there can be no guarantee that we will not experience further deterioration in the performance of CRE and other real estate loans in the future. In such case, we may not be able to realize the amount of security that we anticipated at the time of originating the loan, which could cause us to increase our provision and adversely affect our operating results, financial condition and/or capital.

 

Our allowance may prove to be insufficient to absorb losses in our loan/lease portfolio.

 

We establish our allowance in consultation with management of our subsidiaries and maintain it at a level considered adequate by management to absorb loan/lease losses that are inherent in the portfolio. The amount of future loan/lease losses is susceptible to changes in economic, operating and other conditions, including changes in interest rates, which may be beyond our control, and such losses may exceed current estimates. At December 31, 2015, our allowance as a percentage of total gross loans/leases was 1.46%, and as a percentage of total NPLs was 223.33%. In addition, we had net charge-offs as a percentage of gross average loans/leases of 0.22% for the year ended December 31, 2015. Because of the concentration of C&I and CRE loans in our loan portfolio, which tend to be larger in amount than residential real estate and installment loans, the movement of a small number of loans to nonperforming status can have a significant impact on these ratios. Although management believes that the allowance as of December 31, 2015 was adequate to absorb losses on any existing loans/leases that may become uncollectible, we cannot predict loan/lease losses with certainty, and we cannot assure you that our allowance will prove sufficient to cover actual loan/lease losses in the future, particularly if economic conditions are more difficult than what management currently expects. Additional provisions and loan/lease losses in excess of our allowance may adversely affect our business, financial condition and results of operations.

 

The Company’s information systems may experience an interruption or breach in security and cyber-attacks, all of which could have a material adverse effect on the Company’s business.

 

The Company relies heavily on internal and outsourced technologies, communications, and information systems to conduct its business.  Additionally, in the normal course of business, the Company collects, processes and retains sensitive and confidential information regarding our customers. As the Company’s reliance on technology has increased, so have the potential risks of a technology-related operation interruption (such as disruptions in the Company’s customer relationship management, general ledger, deposit, loan, or other systems) or the occurrence of a cyber-attacks (such as unauthorized access to the Company’s systems).  These risks have increased for all financial institutions as new technologies, the use of the Internet and telecommunications technologies (including mobile devices) to conduct financial and other business transactions and the increased sophistication and activities of organized crime, perpetrators of fraud, hackers, terrorists and others have also increased. In addition to cyber-attacks or other security breaches involving the theft of sensitive and confidential information, hackers have engaged in attacks against financial institutions, particularly denial of service attacks that are designed to disrupt key business services, such as customer-facing web sites. The Company is not able to anticipate or implement effective preventive measures against all security breaches of these types, especially because the techniques used change frequently and because attacks can originate from a wide variety of sources.  It is also possible that a cyber incident, such as a security breach, may remain undetected for a period of time, further exposing the Company to technology-related risks. However, applying guidance from the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, the Company has analyzed and will continue to analyze security related to device specific considerations, user access topics, transaction-processing and network integrity.

 

 
16

 

 

The Company also faces risks related to cyber-attacks and other security breaches in connection with credit card and debit card transactions that typically involve the transmission of sensitive information regarding the Company’s customers through various third parties, including merchant acquiring banks, payment processors, payment card networks and its processors. Some of these parties have in the past been the target of security breaches and cyber-attacks, and because the transactions involve third parties and environments such as the point of sale that the Company does not control or secure, future security breaches or cyber-attacks affecting any of these third parties could impact the Company through no fault of its own, and in some cases it may have exposure and suffer losses for breaches or attacks relating to them.  Despite third-party security risks that are beyond our control, the Company offers its customers protection against fraud and attendant losses for unauthorized use of debit cards in order to stay competitive in the marketplace. Offering such protection to our customers exposes the Company to potential losses which, in the event of a data breach at one or more retailers of considerable magnitude, may adversely affect its business, financial condition, and results of operations. Further cyber-attacks or other breaches in the future, whether affecting the Company or others, could intensify consumer concern and regulatory focus and result in reduced use of payment cards and increased costs, all of which could have a material adverse effect on the Company’s business.  To the extent we are involved in any future cyber-attacks or other breaches, the Company’s reputation could be affected, which could also have a material adverse effect on the Company’s business, financial condition or results of operations.

 

System failure or breaches of our network security could subject us to increased operating costs as well as litigation and other liabilities.

 

The computer systems and network infrastructure we use could be vulnerable to unforeseen problems. Our operations are dependent upon our ability to protect our computer equipment against damage from physical theft, fire, power loss, telecommunications failure or a similar catastrophic event, as well as from security breaches, denial of service attacks, viruses, worms and other disruptive problems caused by hackers. Any damage or failure that causes an interruption in our operations could have a material adverse effect on our financial condition and results of operations. Computer break-ins, phishing and other disruptions could also jeopardize the security of information stored in and transmitted through our computer systems and network infrastructure, as well as that of our customers engaging in internet banking activities, which may result in significant liability to us and may cause existing and potential customers to refrain from doing business with us. Although we, with the help of third-party service providers, intend to continue to implement security technology and establish operational procedures to prevent such damage, there can be no assurance that these security measures will be successful. In addition, advances in computer capabilities, new discoveries in the field of cryptography or other developments could result in a compromise or breach of the algorithms we and our third-party service providers use to encrypt and protect customer transaction data. Any interruption in, or breach of security of, our computer systems and network infrastructure, or that of our internet banking customers, could damage our reputation, result in a loss of customer business, subject us to additional regulatory scrutiny, or expose us to civil litigation and possible financial liability, any of which could have a material adverse effect on our financial condition and results of operations.

 

We are subject to certain operational risks, including, but not limited to, customer or employee fraud and data processing system failures and errors.

 

Employee errors and employee and customer misconduct could subject us to financial losses or regulatory sanctions and seriously harm our reputation. Misconduct by our employees could include hiding unauthorized activities from us, improper or unauthorized activities on behalf of our customers or improper use of confidential information. It is not always possible to prevent employee errors and misconduct, and the precautions we take to prevent and detect this activity may not be effective in all cases. Employee errors could also subject us to financial claims for negligence.

 

We maintain a system of internal controls and insurance coverage to mitigate operational risks, including data processing system failures and errors and customer or employee fraud. Should our internal controls fail to prevent or detect an occurrence, and if any resulting loss is not insured or exceeds applicable insurance limits, such failure could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

 

 
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We may be materially and adversely affected by the highly regulated environment in which we operate.

 

The Company and its bank subsidiaries are subject to extensive federal and state regulation, supervision and examination. Banking regulations are primarily intended to protect depositors’ funds, FDIC funds, customers and the banking system as a whole, rather than stockholders. These regulations affect our lending practices, capital structure, investment practices, dividend policy and growth, among other things.

 

As a bank holding company, we are subject to regulation and supervision primarily by the Federal Reserve. QCBT and CRBT, as Iowa-chartered state member banks, are subject to regulation and supervision primarily by both the Iowa Superintendent and the Federal Reserve. RB&T, as an Illinois-chartered state member bank, is subject to regulation and supervision primarily by both the DFPR and the Federal Reserve. We and our banks undergo periodic examinations by these regulators, who have extensive discretion and authority to prevent or remedy unsafe or unsound practices or violations of law by banks and bank holding companies.

 

The primary federal and state banking laws and regulations that affect us are described in Appendix A to this report. These laws, regulations, rules, standards, policies and interpretations are constantly evolving and may change significantly over time. For example, on July 21, 2010, the Dodd-Frank Act was signed into law, which significantly changed the regulation of financial institutions and the financial services industry. The Dodd-Frank Act, together with the regulations to be developed thereunder, includes provisions affecting large and small financial institutions alike, including several provisions that affect how community banks, thrifts and small bank and thrift holding companies are regulated. In addition, in recent years the Federal Reserve has adopted numerous new regulations addressing banks’ overdraft and mortgage lending practices. Further, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was recently established, with broad powers to supervise and enforce consumer protection laws, and additional consumer protection legislation and regulatory activity is anticipated in the near future.

 

In September 2010, the Group of Governors and Heads of Supervision, the oversight body of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, adopted Basel III, which constitutes a strengthened set of capital requirements for banking organizations in the U.S. and around the world. In July 2013, the U.S. federal banking authorities approved the implementation of the Basel III regulatory capital reforms and issued rules effecting certain changes required by the Dodd-Frank Act (the “Basel III Rules”).  The Basel III Rules are applicable to all U.S. banks that are subject to minimum capital requirements, as well as to bank and savings and loan holding companies other than “small bank holding companies” (generally bank holding companies with consolidated assets of less than $1 billion).  The Basel III Rules not only increased most of the required minimum regulatory capital ratios, but they introduced a new Common Equity Tier 1 Capital ratio and the concept of a capital conservation buffer.  The Basel III Rules also expanded the definition of capital as in effect currently by establishing criteria that instruments must meet to be considered Additional Tier 1 Capital (Tier 1 Capital in addition to Common Equity) and Tier 2 Capital.  A number of instruments that now qualify as Tier 1 Capital will not qualify, or their qualifications will change.  The Basel III Rules also permit smaller banking organizations to retain, through a one-time election, the existing treatment for accumulated other comprehensive income, which currently does not affect regulatory capital.  The Company made this election in the first quarter of 2015. The Basel III Rules have maintained the general structure of the current prompt corrective action framework, while incorporating the increased requirements. The prompt corrective action guidelines were also revised to add the Common Equity Tier 1 Capital ratio.  In order to be a “well-capitalized” depository institution under the new regime, a bank and holding company must maintain a Common Equity Tier 1 Capital ratio of 6.5% or more; a Tier 1 Capital ratio of 8% or more; a Total Capital ratio of 10% or more; and a leverage ratio of 5% or more.  Generally, financial institutions became subject to the new Basel III Rules on January 1, 2015.  

 

U.S. financial institutions are also subject to numerous monitoring, recordkeeping, and reporting requirements designed to detect and prevent illegal activities such as money laundering and terrorist financing. These requirements are imposed primarily through the Bank Secrecy Act which was most recently amended by the USA Patriot Act. We have instituted policies and procedures to protect us and our employees, to the extent reasonably possible, from being used to facilitate money laundering, terrorist financing and other financial crimes. There can be no guarantee, however, that these policies and procedures are effective.

 

Failure to comply with applicable laws, regulations or policies could result in sanctions by regulatory agencies, civil monetary penalties, and/or damage to our reputation, which could have a material adverse effect on us. Although we have policies and procedures designed to mitigate the risk of any such violations, there can be no assurance that such violations will not occur.

 

 
18

 

  

Monetary policies and regulations of the Federal Reserve could adversely affect our business, financial condition and results of operations.

 

In addition to being affected by general economic conditions, our earnings and growth are affected by the policies of the Federal Reserve.  An important function of the Federal Reserve is to regulate the money supply and credit conditions.  Among the instruments used by the Federal Reserve to implement these objectives are open market operations in U.S. government securities, adjustments of the discount rate and changes in reserve requirements against bank deposits.  These instruments are used in varying combinations to influence overall economic growth and the distribution of credit, bank loans, investments and deposits.  Their use also affects interest rates charged on loans or paid on deposits.

 

The monetary policies and regulations of the Federal Reserve have had a significant effect on the operating results of commercial banks in the past and are expected to continue to do so in the future.  The effects of such policies upon our business, financial condition and results of operations cannot be predicted.

 

Interest rates and other conditions impact our results of operations.

 

Our profitability is in large part a function of the spread between the interest rates earned on investments and loans/leases and the interest rates paid on deposits and other interest bearing liabilities. Like most banking institutions, our net interest spread and margin will be affected by general economic conditions and other factors, including fiscal and monetary policies of the federal government that influence market interest rates and our ability to respond to changes in such rates. At any given time, our assets and liabilities will be such that they are affected differently by a given change in interest rates. As a result, an increase or decrease in rates, the length of loan/lease terms, the mix of adjustable and fixed rate loans/leases in our portfolio, the length of time deposits and borrowings, and the rate sensitivity of our deposit customers could have a positive or negative effect on our net income, capital and liquidity. We measure interest rate risk under various rate scenarios using specific criteria and assumptions. A summary of this process, along with the results of our net interest income simulations is presented at “Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk” included under Item 7A of Part II of this Form 10-K. Although we believe our current level of interest rate sensitivity is reasonable and effectively managed, significant fluctuations in interest rates may have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations. 

 

We are required to maintain capital to meet regulatory requirements, and if we fail to maintain sufficient capital, whether due to losses, an inability to raise additional capital or otherwise, our financial condition, liquidity and results of operations, as well as our ability to maintain regulatory compliance, would be adversely affected.

 

The Company and each of its banking subsidiaries are required by federal and state regulatory authorities to maintain adequate levels of capital to support their operations, which have recently increased due to the effectiveness of the Basel III Rules. We intend to grow our business organically and to explore opportunities to grow our business by taking advantage of attractive acquisition opportunities, and such growth plans may require us to raise additional capital to ensure that we have adequate levels of capital to support such growth on top of our current operations. Our ability to raise additional capital, when and if needed or desired, will depend on conditions in the capital markets, economic conditions and a number of other factors, including investor perceptions regarding the banking industry and market conditions, and governmental activities, many of which are outside our control, and on our financial condition and performance. Accordingly, we cannot assure you that we will be able to raise additional capital if needed or on terms acceptable to us. Our failure to meet these capital and other regulatory requirements could affect customer confidence, our ability to grow, our costs of funds and FDIC insurance costs, our ability to pay dividends on common and preferred stock and to make distributions on our trust preferred securities, our ability to make acquisitions, and our business, results of operations and financial condition.

 

 
19

 

 

Failure to pay interest on our debt may adversely impact our ability to pay common stock dividends.

 

As of December 31, 2015, we had $40.7 million of junior subordinated debentures held by six business trusts that we control. Interest payments on the debentures, which totaled $1.3 million for 2015, must be paid before we pay dividends on our capital stock, including our common stock. We have the right to defer interest payments on the debentures for up to 20 consecutive quarters. However, if we elect to defer interest payments, all deferred interest must be paid before we may pay dividends on our capital stock. Deferral of interest payments on the debentures could cause a subsequent decline in the market price of our common stock because we would not be able to pay dividends on our common stock.

 

As a bank holding company, our sources of funds are limited.

 

We are a bank holding company, and our operations are primarily conducted by our subsidiary banks, which are subject to significant federal and state regulation. When available, cash to pay dividends to our stockholders is derived primarily from dividends received from our subsidiary banks. Our ability to receive dividends or loans from our subsidiary banks is restricted. Dividend payments by our subsidiaries to us in the future will require generation of future earnings by them and could require regulatory approval if any proposed dividends are in excess of prescribed guidelines. Further, as a structural matter, our right to participate in the assets of our subsidiary banks in the event of a liquidation or reorganization of any of the banks would be subject to the claims of the creditors of such bank, including depositors, which would take priority except to the extent we may be a creditor with a recognized claim. As of December 31, 2015, our subsidiary banks had deposits and other liabilities in the aggregate of approximately $2.31 billion.

 

Declines in asset values may result in impairment charges and adversely affect the value of our investments, financial performance and capital.

 

The market value of investments in our securities portfolio has become increasingly volatile in recent years, and as of December 31, 2015, we had gross unrealized losses of $5.4 million, or 0.9% of amortized cost, in our investment portfolio (almost entirely offset by gross unrealized gains of $5.2 million). The market value of investments may be affected by factors other than the underlying performance of the servicer of the securities or the mortgages underlying the securities, such as ratings downgrades, adverse changes in the business climate and a lack of liquidity in the secondary market for certain investment securities. On a quarterly basis, we formally evaluate investments and other assets for impairment indicators. We may be required to record additional impairment charges if our investments suffer a decline in value that is considered other-than-temporary. If we determine that a significant impairment has occurred, we would be required to charge against earnings the credit-related portion of the OTTI, which could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations in the periods in which the write-offs occur. Based on management’s evaluation, it was determined that the gross unrealized losses at December 31, 2015 were temporary and primarily a function of the changes in certain market interest rates.

 

Liquidity risks could affect operations and jeopardize our business, results of operations and financial condition.

 

Liquidity is essential to our business. An inability to raise funds through deposits, borrowings, the sale of securities and/or loans and other sources could have a substantial negative effect on our liquidity. Our primary sources of funds consist of cash from operations, deposits, investment maturities and calls, and loan/lease repayments. Additional liquidity is provided by federal funds purchased from the FRB or other correspondent banks, FHLB advances, wholesale and customer repurchase agreements, brokered time deposits, and the ability to borrow at the FRB’s Discount Window. Our access to funding sources in amounts adequate to finance or capitalize our activities or on terms that are acceptable to us could be impaired by factors that affect us directly or the financial services industry or economy in general, such as disruptions in the financial markets or negative views and expectations about the prospects for the financial services industry.

 

During the recent recession and subsequent recovery, the financial services industry and the credit markets generally were materially and adversely affected by significant declines in asset values and by a lack of liquidity.  The liquidity issues were particularly acute for regional and community banks, as many of the larger financial institutions significantly curtailed their lending to regional and community banks to reduce their exposure to the risks of other banks.  In addition, many of the larger correspondent lenders reduced or even eliminated federal funds lines for their correspondent customers. Furthermore, regional and community banks generally have less access to the capital markets than do the national and super-regional banks because of their smaller size and limited analyst coverage. Any decline in available funding could adversely impact our ability to originate loans/leases, invest in securities, meet our expenses, pay dividends to our stockholders, or fulfill obligations such as repaying our borrowings or meeting deposit withdrawal demands, any of which could have a material adverse impact on our liquidity, business, results of operations and financial condition.

 

 
20

 

 

Our business is concentrated in and dependent upon the continued growth and welfare of the Quad Cities, Cedar Rapids, Waterloo/Cedar Falls, and Rockford markets.

 

We operate primarily in the Quad Cities, Cedar Rapids, Waterloo/Cedar Falls, and Rockford markets, and as a result, our financial condition, results of operations and cash flows are subject to changes in the economic conditions in those areas. We have developed a particularly strong presence in Bettendorf, Cedar Falls, Cedar Rapids, Davenport, and Waterloo, Iowa and Moline, Rock Island, and Rockford, Illinois and their surrounding communities. Our success depends upon the business activity, population, income levels, deposits and real estate activity in these markets. Although our customers’ business and financial interests may extend well beyond these market areas, adverse economic conditions that affect these market areas could reduce demand for our products and services, affect the ability of our customers to repay their loans to us, increase the levels of our nonperforming and problem loans, and generally affect our financial condition and results of operations. Because of our geographic concentration, we are less able than other regional or national financial institutions to diversify our credit risks across multiple markets.  

 

We face intense competition in all phases of our business from other banks and financial institutions.

 

The banking and financial services businesses in our markets are highly competitive. Our competitors include large regional banks, local community banks, savings and loan associations, securities and brokerage companies, mortgage companies, insurance companies, finance companies, money market mutual funds, credit unions and other non-bank financial services providers. Many of these competitors are not subject to the same regulatory restrictions as we are. Many of our unregulated competitors compete across geographic boundaries and are able to provide customers with a feasible alternative to traditional banking services.

 

Increased competition in our markets may result in a decrease in the amounts of our loans and deposits, reduced spreads between loan/lease rates and deposit rates or loan/lease terms that are more favorable to the borrower. Any of these results could have a material adverse effect on our ability to grow and remain profitable. If increased competition causes us to significantly discount the interest rates we offer on loans or increase the amount we pay on deposits, our net interest income could be adversely impacted. If increased competition causes us to modify our underwriting standards, we could be exposed to higher losses from lending and leasing activities. Additionally, many of our competitors are much larger in total assets and capitalization, have greater access to capital markets, have larger lending limits and offer a broader range of financial services than we can offer.

 

The soundness of other financial institutions could negatively affect us. 

 

Our ability to engage in routine funding and other transactions could be negatively affected by the actions and commercial soundness of other financial institutions. Financial services institutions are interrelated as a result of trading, clearing, counterparty or other relationships. Defaults by, or even rumors or questions about, one or more financial services institutions, or the financial services industry generally, have led to market-wide liquidity problems and losses of depositor, creditor and counterparty confidence and could lead to losses or defaults by us or by other institutions. We could experience increases in deposits and assets as a result of the difficulties or failures of other banks, which would increase the capital we need to support our growth.

 

Our community banking strategy relies heavily on our subsidiaries’ independent management teams, and the unexpected loss of key managers may adversely affect our operations.

 

We rely heavily on the success of our bank subsidiaries’ independent management teams. Accordingly, much of our success to date has been influenced strongly by our ability to attract and to retain senior management experienced in banking and financial services and familiar with the communities in our market areas. Our ability to retain the executive officers and current management teams of our operating subsidiaries will continue to be important to the successful implementation of our strategy. It is also critical, as we manage our existing portfolio and grow, to be able to attract and retain qualified additional management and loan officers with the appropriate level of experience and knowledge about our market areas to implement our community-based operating strategy. The unexpected loss of services of any key management personnel, or the inability to recruit and retain qualified personnel in the future, could have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations. Effective succession planning is also important to our long-term success. Failure to ensure effective transfer of knowledge and smooth transitions involving key employees could hinder our strategic planning and execution.

 

 
21

 

 

We have a continuing need for technological change, and we may not have the resources to effectively implement new technology.

 

The financial services industry continues to undergo rapid technological changes with frequent introductions of new technology-driven products and services. In addition to enabling us to better serve our customers, the effective use of technology increases efficiency and the potential for cost reduction. Our future success will depend in part upon our ability to address the needs of our customers by using technology to provide products and services that will satisfy customer demands for convenience as well as to create additional efficiencies in our operations as we continue to grow our market share. Many of our larger competitors have substantially greater resources to invest in technological improvements. As a result, they may be able to offer additional or superior products to those that we will be able to offer, which would put us at a competitive disadvantage. Accordingly, we cannot provide you with assurance that we will be able to effectively implement new technology-driven products and services or be successful in marketing such products and services to our customers.

 

Our reputation could be damaged by negative publicity.

 

Reputational risk, or the risk to our business, financial condition or results of operations from negative publicity, is inherent in our business. Negative publicity can result from actual or alleged conduct in a number of areas, including legal and regulatory compliance, lending practices, corporate governance, litigation, inadequate protection of customer data, ethical behavior of our employees, and from actions taken by regulators, ratings agencies and others as a result of that conduct. Damage to our reputation could impact our ability to attract new or maintain existing loan and deposit customers, employees and business relationships.

 

The preparation of our consolidated financial statements requires us to make estimates and judgments, which are subject to an inherent degree of uncertainty and which may differ from actual results.

 

Our consolidated financial statements are prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP and general reporting practices within the financial services industry, which require us to make estimates and judgments that affect the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses and related disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities. Some accounting policies, such as those pertaining to our allowance, require the application of significant judgment by management in selecting the appropriate assumptions for calculating financial estimates. By their nature, these estimates and judgments are subject to an inherent degree of uncertainty and actual results may differ from these estimates and judgments under different assumptions or conditions, which may have a material adverse effect on our financial condition or results of operations in subsequent periods.

 

From time to time, the FASB and the SEC change the financial accounting and reporting standards or the interpretation of those standards that govern the preparation of our external financial statements. These changes are beyond our control, can be difficult to predict and could materially impact how we report our financial condition and results of operations.

 

Changes in these standards are continuously occurring, and given the current economic environment, more drastic changes may occur. The implementation of such changes could have a material adverse effect on our financial condition and results of operations.

 

 
22

 

 

Secondary mortgage, government guaranteed loan and interest rate swap market conditions could have a material impact on our financial condition and results of operations.

 

Currently, we sell a portion of the residential real estate and government guaranteed loans we originate. The profitability of these operations depends in large part upon our ability to make loans and to sell them in the secondary market at a gain. Thus, we are dependent upon the existence of an active secondary market and our ability to profitably sell loans into that market.

 

In addition to being affected by interest rates, the secondary markets are also subject to investor demand for residential mortgages and government guaranteed loans and investor yield requirements for those loans. These conditions may fluctuate or even worsen in the future. As a result, a prolonged period of secondary market illiquidity may reduce our loan production volumes and could have a material adverse effect on our financial condition and results of operations.  

 

The interest rate swap market is dependent upon market conditions. If interest rates move, interest rate swap transactions may no longer make sense for the Company and/or its customers. Interest rate swaps are generally appropriate for commercial customers with a certain level of expertise and comfort with derivatives, so our success is dependent upon the ability to make loans to these types of commercial customers. Additionally, our ability to execute interest rate swaps is also dependent upon counterparties that are willing to enter into the interest rate swap that is equal and offsetting to the interest rate swap we enter into with the commercial customer.

 

Customers may decide not to use banks to complete their financial transactions, which could result in a loss of income to us.

 

Technology and other changes are allowing customers to complete financial transactions using nonbanks that historically have involved banks at one or both ends of the transaction. For example, customers can now pay bills and transfer funds directly without going through a bank. The process of eliminating banks as intermediaries, known as disintermediation, could result in the loss of fee income as well as the loss of customer deposits.

 

Item 1B.

Unresolved Staff Comments

 

There are no unresolved staff comments.

 

 
23

 

 

Item 2.

Properties

 

The following table is a listing of the Company’s operating facilities:

 

Facility Address

Facility Square

Footage

 

Owned or

Leased

           

QCR Holdings, Inc.

         

3551 7th Street in Moline, IL (1)

    30,000  

Owned

           

QCBT

         

2118 Middle Road in Bettendorf, IA

    6,700  

Owned

4500 Brady Street in Davenport, IA

    36,000  

Owned

5405 Utica Ridge Road in Davenport, IA

    7,400  

Leased

1700 Division Street in Davenport, IA

    12,000  

Owned

           

CRBT

         

500 1st Avenue NE, Suite 100 in Cedar Rapids, IA (2)

    48,000  

Owned

5400 Council Street in Cedar Rapids, IA

    5,900  

Owned

422 Commercial Street in Waterloo, IA (3)

    25,000  

Owned

11 Tower Park Drive in Waterloo, IA (3)

    6,000  

Owned

312 1st Street in Cedar Falls, IA (3)

    3,000  

Owned

           

RBT

         

4571 Guilford Road in Rockford, IL

    20,000  

Owned

308 West State Street in Rockford, IL

    1,100  

Leased

           

m2

         

175 North Patrick Boulevard in Brookfield, WI

    4,500  

Leased

 

(1) This facility is utilized as a branch of QCBT in addition to housing the holding company.

(2) In January 2015, CRBT purchased the 3rd floor of the 1st Avenue NE branch facility, adding approximately 12,000 square feet of additional business space.

(3) Branches of Community Bank & Trust.

 

The subsidiary banks intend to limit their investment in premises to no more than 50% of their capital. Management believes that the facilities are of sound construction, in good operating condition, are appropriately insured, and are adequately equipped for carrying on the business of the Company.

 

No individual real estate property amounts to 10% or more of consolidated assets.

 

Item 3.

Legal Proceedings

 

There are no material pending legal proceedings to which the Company or any of its subsidiaries is a party other than ordinary routine litigation incidental to their respective businesses.

 

Item 4.

Mine Safety Disclosures

 

Not applicable.

 

 

 
24

 

 

Part II

 

Item 5.

Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities

 

Market Information. The common stock, par value $1.00 per share, of the Company is listed on The NASDAQ Global Market under the symbol “QCRH”. The stock began trading on NASDAQ on October 6, 1993. The Company transferred its listing from the NASDAQ Capital Market to the NASDAQ Global Market on March 1, 2010. As of February 29, 2016, there were 11,812,011 shares of common stock outstanding held by approximately 2,700 holders of record. Additionally, there are an estimated 800 beneficial holders whose stock was held in the street name by brokerage houses and other nominees as of that date. The following table sets forth the high and low sales prices of the common stock, as reported by NASDAQ for the periods indicated.

 

   

2015 Sales Price

   

2014 Sales Price

   

2013 Sales Price

 
   

High

   

Low

   

High

   

Low

   

High

   

Low

 
                                                 

First quarter

  $ 18.19     $ 16.91     $ 17.48     $ 16.99     $ 16.96     $ 13.05  

Second quarter

    22.75       17.51       17.96       17.00       16.50       13.18  

Third quarter

    23.23       19.58       18.10       16.96       16.51       14.96  

Fourth quarter

    24.90       21.00       18.20       17.50       18.20       15.65  

 

Dividends on Common Stock. Dividends paid on common stock for the years ending December 31, 2015 and 2014 are as follows:

 

Declaration Date

Amount Declared

Per Share

Record Date

Total Amount

Paid to

Shareholders

(in thousands)

Date Paid

         

May 14, 2014

$0.04

June 20, 2014

$315

July 8, 2014

November 6, 2014

0.04

December 19, 2014

316

January 7, 2015

May 20, 2015

0.04

June 19, 2015

466

July 8, 2015

November 20, 2015

0.04

December 18, 2015

469

January 6, 2016

 

As mentioned in the press release dated February 18, 2016, starting with the first quarter dividend declared on February 11, 2016, the board of directors has resolved to evaluate paying dividends on a quarterly basis, as opposed to the prior practice of semi-annual dividends. The Company anticipates an ongoing need to retain much of its operating income to help provide the capital for continued growth, but believes that operating results have reached a level that can sustain dividends, if declared, to stockholders.

 

The Company is heavily dependent on dividend payments from its subsidiary banks to provide cash flow for the operations of the holding company and dividend payments on the Company’s common stock. Under applicable state laws, the banks are restricted as to the maximum amount of dividends that they may pay on their common stock. Iowa and Illinois law provide that state-chartered banks in those states may not pay dividends in excess of their undivided profits.

 

The Company’s ability to pay dividends to its stockholders may be affected by both general corporate law considerations and policies of the Federal Reserve applicable to bank holding companies. The payment of dividends by any financial institution or its holding company is affected by the requirement to maintain adequate capital pursuant to applicable capital adequacy guidelines and regulations, and a financial institution generally is prohibited from paying any dividends if, following payment thereof, the institution would be undercapitalized.

 

The Company also has certain contractual restrictions on its ability to pay dividends. The Company has issued junior subordinated debentures in private placements. Under the terms of the debentures, the Company may be prohibited, under certain circumstances, from paying dividends on shares of its common stock. None of these circumstances existed through the date of filing of this Form 10-K filed with the SEC. See Note 16 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information regarding dividend restrictions.

 

 
25

 

 

Purchase of Equity Securities by the Company. There were no purchases of common stock by the Company for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013.

 

Stockholder Return Performance Graph. The following graph indicates, for the period commencing December 31, 2010 and ending December 31, 2015, a comparison of cumulative total returns for the Company, the NASDAQ Composite Index, and the SNL Bank NASDAQ Index prepared by SNL Financial, Charlottesville, Virginia. The graph was prepared at the Company’s request by SNL Financial. The information assumes that $100 was invested at the closing price on December 31, 2010 in the common stock of the Company and in each index, and that all dividends were reinvested.

 

 

 

 

    Period Ending  

Index

 

12/31/10

   

12/31/11

   

12/31/12

   

12/31/13

   

12/31/14

   

12/31/15

 

QCR Holdings, Inc.

    100.00       128.64       188.10       243.46       256.47       350.02  

NASDAQ Composite

    100.00       99.21       116.82       163.75       188.03       201.40  

SNL Bank NASDAQ

    100.00       88.73       105.75       152.00       157.42       169.94  

 

 
26

 

 

Item 6.

Selected Financial Data

 

The following “Selected Financial Data” of the Company is derived in part from, and should be read in conjunction with, our consolidated financial statements and the accompanying notes thereto. See Item 8. Financial Statements. Results for past periods are not necessarily indicative of results to be expected for any future period.

 

   

Years Ended December 31,

 
                                         
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

   

2012

   

2011

 

STATEMENT OF INCOME DATA

 

(dollars in thousands, except per share data)

 

Interest income

  $ 90,003     $ 85,965     $ 81,872     $ 77,376     $ 77,723  

Interest expense

    13,707       16,894       17,767       19,727       23,578  

Net interest income

    76,296       69,071       64,105       57,649       54,145  

Provision for loan/lease losses

    6,871       6,807       5,930       4,371       6,616  

Non-interest income

    24,530       21,158       26,846       18,953       19,085  

Non-interest expense (1)

    73,358       65,430       65,465       54,591       52,616  

Income tax expense

    3,669       3,039       4,618       4,534       3,868  

Net income

    16,928       14,953       14,938       13,106       10,130  

Less: net income attributable to noncontrolling interests

    -       -       -       488       438  

Net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc.

    16,928       14,953       14,938       12,618       9,692  

Less: preferred stock dividends and discount accretion

    -       1,082       3,168       3,496       5,284  

Net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc. common stockholders

    16,928       13,871       11,770       9,122       4,408  
                                         

PER COMMON SHARE DATA

                                       
                                         

Net income - Basic (2)

  $ 1.64     $ 1.75     $ 2.13     $ 1.88     $ 0.93  

Net income - Diluted (2)

    1.61       1.72       2.08       1.85       0.92  

Cash dividends declared

    0.08       0.08       0.08       0.08       0.08  

Dividend payout ratio

    4.88

%

    4.57

%

    3.76

%

    4.26

%

    8.60

%

Closing stock price

  $ 24.29     $ 17.86     $ 17.03     $ 13.22     $ 9.10  
                                         

BALANCE SHEET DATA

                                       
                                         

Total assets

  $ 2,593,198     $ 2,524,958     $ 2,394,953     $ 2,093,730     $ 1,966,610  

Securities

    577,109       651,539       697,210       602,239       565,229  

Total loans/leases

    1,798,023       1,630,003       1,460,280       1,287,388       1,200,745  

Allowance

    26,141       23,074       21,448       19,925       18,789  

Deposits

    1,880,666       1,679,668       1,646,991       1,374,114       1,205,458  

Borrowings

    444,162       662,558       563,381       547,758       590,603  

Stockholders' equity:

                                       

Preferred

    -       -       29,799       53,163       63,386  

Common

    225,886       144,079       117,778       87,271       81,047  
                                         

KEY RATIOS

                                       

ROAA (3)

    0.66

%

    0.61

%

    0.64

%

    0.62

%

    0.51

%

ROACE (2)

    8.79       10.49       11.48       10.84       5.82  

ROAE (3)

    8.79       10.48       10.24       8.90       7.09  

NIM, tax equivalent yield (4)

    3.37       3.15       3.03       3.14       3.08  

Efficiency ratio (5)

    72.76       72.52       71.98       71.27       71.85  

Loans to deposits

    95.61       97.04       88.66       93.69       99.61  

NPAs to total assets

    0.74       1.31       1.28       1.41       2.06  

Allowance to total loans/leases

    1.46       1.42       1.47       1.55       1.56  

Allowance to NPLs

    223.33       114.78       104.70       78.47       58.70  

Net charge-offs to average loans/leases

    0.22       0.34       0.31       0.27       0.70  

Average total stockholders' equity to average total assets

    7.55       5.82       6.26       7.00       7.17  

 

(1)  Non-interest expense for 2015 includes several one-time expenses - most notably, $7.5 million of losses on debt extinguishment related tothe prepayment of certain borrowings further described in Notes 9, 10 and 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

(2)  Numerator is net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc. common stockholders

(3)  Numerator is net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc.

(4)  Interest earned and yields on nontaxable investments and nontaxable loans are determined on a tax equivalent basis using a 35% tax rate

(5)  Non-interest expenses divided by the sum of net interest income before provision for loan/lease losses and non-interest income

 

 
27

 

 

Item 7.

Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations

 

The following discussion provides additional information regarding our operations for the years ending December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013, and our financial condition at December 31, 2015 and 2014. This discussion should be read in conjunction with “Selected Financial Data” and our consolidated financial statements and the accompanying notes thereto included or incorporated by reference elsewhere in this document.

 

Additionally, a comprehensive list of the acronyms and abbreviations used throughout this discussion is included in Note 1 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

GENERAL

 

The Company was formed in February 1993 for the purpose of organizing QCBT. Over the past twenty two years, the Company has grown to include two additional banking subsidiaries (including the 2013 acquisition of CNB which was merged into one of the Company’s legacy banking subsidiaries) and a number of nonbanking subsidiaries. As of December 31, 2015, the Company had $2.59 billion in consolidated assets, including $1.80 billion in total loans/leases and $1.88 billion in deposits.

 

EXECUTIVE OVERVIEW

 

The Company reported net income of $16.9 million for the year ended December 31, 2015, and diluted EPS of $1.61. For the same period in 2014, the Company reported net income of $15.0 million, and diluted EPS of $1.72, after preferred stock dividends of $1.1 million. By comparison, for 2013, the Company reported net income of $14.9 million, and diluted EPS of $2.08, after preferred stock dividends of $3.2 million.

 

The fiscal year ended December 31, 2015 was highlighted by several significant items:

 

 

A successful common stock offering (described in Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements);

 

Several balance sheet restructurings (described in Notes 9, 10 and 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements);

 

Net interest margin improvement of 22 basis points, year-over-year, primarily attributable to the balance sheet restructurings;

 

Loan and lease growth of 10.3% for the year;

 

Strong gains on the sale of government guaranteed portions of loans and swap fee income – totaling $3.0 million for the year; and

 

Improved asset quality metrics, with a reduction in NPAs as a percentage of total assets from 1.31% at December 31, 2014 to 0.74% at December 31, 2015.

 

Following is a table that represents the various net income measurements for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013.

 

   

Year Ended December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Net income

  $ 16,927,881     $ 14,952,537     $ 14,938,245  

Less: Preferred stock dividends and discount accretion

    -       1,081,877       3,168,302  

Net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc. common stockholders

  $ 16,927,881     $ 13,870,660     $ 11,769,943  
                         

Diluted EPS

  $ 1.61     $ 1.72     $ 2.08  
                         

Weighted average common and common equivalent shares outstanding*

    10,499,841       8,048,661       5,646,926  

 

*The increase in the weighted average common and common equivalent shares outstanding was primarily due to the common stock issuance discussed in Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

 
28

 

 

The Company reported core net income (non-GAAP) of $20.9 million, with diluted core EPS of $1.99. Core net income for the year excludes a number of non-recurring items, most significantly the $4.9 million of after-tax non-recurring expenses related to the prepayment of wholesale borrowings.

 

Following is a table that represents the major income and expense categories.

 

   

Year Ended December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Net interest income

  $ 76,296,724     $ 69,071,128     $ 64,105,437  

Provision for loan/lease losses

    6,870,900       6,807,000       5,930,420  

Noninterest income

    24,529,723       21,157,357       26,845,676  

Noninterest expense

    73,358,424       65,429,978       65,464,506  

Federal and state income tax

    3,669,242       3,038,970       4,617,942  

Net income

  $ 16,927,881     $ 14,952,537     $ 14,938,245  

 

In comparison to prior years, the following are some noteworthy changes in the Company’s financial results for 2015:

 

 

Net interest income grew $7.2 million, or 10%, compared to the prior year. Compared to 2013, net interest income grew $12.2 million, or 19%.

 

Provision for loan/lease losses was relatively flat from the prior year, while increasing $940 thousand compared to 2013.

 

Noninterest income increased $3.4 million, or 16%, compared to the prior year.

 

o

Gains on the sale of government guaranteed portion of loans and swap fee income increased $827 thousand, compared to the prior year.

 

o

Trust department fees and investment advisory and management fees increased $590 thousand during the same period.

 

o

Additionally, the Company recognized a lawsuit award in 2015 totaling $387 thousand and a gain on debt extinguishment of $300 thousand.

 

Several one-time acquisition-related gains and other one-time gains were recognized in 2013, totaling approximately $5.6 million, resulting in the decrease in noninterest income from 2013 to 2014.

 

Noninterest expense increased $7.9 million, or 12%, compared to the prior year. Losses on debt extinguishment totaled $7.5 million for the year. The Company also recognized a $1.2 million gain on the sale of an OREO property.

 

Acquisition and data conversion costs totaling $2.4 million in 2013 contributed to the higher noninterest expense in that year.

 

LONG-TERM FINANCIAL GOALS

 

As previously stated, the Company has established certain financial goals by which it manages its business and measures its performance. The goals are periodically updated to reflect changes in business developments. While the Company is determined to work prudently to achieve these goals, there is no assurance that they will be met. Moreover, the Company’s ability to achieve these goals will be affected by the factors discussed under “Forward Looking Statements” as well as the factors detailed in the “Risk Factors” section included under Item 1A. of Part I of this Form 10-K. The Company’s long-term financial goals are as follows:

 

 

Improve balance sheet efficiency by targeting a gross loans and leases to total assets ratio greater than 70%;

 

 

Improve profitability (measured by NIM and ROAA);

 

 

Prioritize strong asset quality by maintaining NPAs to total assets of less than 0.75% and maintain charge-offs as a percentage of average loans of under 0.25% annually;

 

 
29

 

 

 

Reduce reliance on wholesale funding to less than 15% of total assets;

 

 

Grow noninterest bearing deposits to more than 30% of total assets;

 

 

Increase the commercial lease portfolio so that it represents 10% of total assets;

 

 

Grow gains on sales of government guaranteed portions of loans and swap fee income to more than $4.0 million annually; and

 

 

Grow wealth management segment net income by 15% annually.

 

The following table shows the evaluation of the Company’s long-term financial goals.

 

     

For the Year Ending

     

December 31,

2015

December 31,

2015 (non-

GAAP)(1)

December 31,

2014

Goal Key Metric Target (2)

(dollars in thousands)

Balance sheet efficiency

Gross loans and leases to total assets

> 70%

69%

 

65%

Profitability

NIM

> 3.50%

3.37%

 

3.15%

ROAA

> 1.00%

0.66%

0.82%

0.61%

Asset quality

NPAs to total assets

< 0.75%

0.74%

 

1.31%

Net charge-offs to average loans/leases

< 0.25% annually

0.22%

 

0.34%

Lower reliance on wholesale funding

Wholesale funding to total assets

< 15%

20%

 

30%

Funding mix

Noninterest bearing deposits as a percentage of total assets

> 30%

24%

 

20%

Commercial leasing

Leases as a percentage of total assets

10%

7%

 

7%

Consistent, high quality noninterest

income revenue streams

Gains on sales of government guaranteed portions of loans and swap fee income

> $4 million annually

$3.0 million

 

$2.3 million

Grow wealth management segment net income

> 15% annually

5%

 

13%

 

(1) Non-GAAP calculations are provided, when applicable. Refer to GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation table for details.

(2) Targets will be re-evaluated and adjusted annually. The Company revisited targets in early 2016 and has adjusted accordingly.

 

STRATEGIC DEVELOPMENTS

 

The Company took the following actions to support our corporate strategy and the long-term financial goals shown above.

 

 

Loan and lease growth for the year was 10.3%. This was within the Company’s target organic growth rate of 10-12%. A majority of this growth was in the C&I loan category. As of December 31, 2015, this segment of the portfolio accounted for 36% of total loans and leases. At the same time, the Company has reduced its reliance on CRE loans, with that segment representing 40% of the portfolio as of December 31, 2015, down from 43% as of December 31, 2014. This loan and lease growth has continued to help move the loan and lease to total asset ratio upward to 69%, from 65% in the prior year and 61% two years ago. Additionally, the Company continues to evaluate market opportunities to rotate out of securities and into loans and leases, as this will also make the balance sheet more profitable. Generally, securities have a lower yield; therefore, by replacing with loans and leases, the Company will continue to improve NIM.

 

 

In the second quarter of 2015, the Company executed a common stock offering and balance sheet restructuring that greatly reduced borrowings and the weighted average cost of borrowings in order to improve the long-term profitability of the Company. Refer to Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information. The Company continued to execute restructuring activities in the fourth quarter of 2015 (described in Notes 9 and 10 of the Consolidated Financial Statements) and the first quarter of 2016 (described in Note 25 of the Consolidated Financial Statements).

 

 
30

 

 

 

The Company was heavily focused on reducing NPAs to total assets ratio to below 1.00% and was successful in achieving this benchmark during the third quarter, with an actual ratio of 0.80% as of September 30. 2015. The Company continued to see improvement in this ratio in the fourth quarter, with an actual ratio of 0.74% as of December 31, 2015. The reduction of NPAs throughout the year was primarily due to OREO sales and nonaccrual loan paydowns. The Company remains committed to further improving asset quality in 2016.

 

 

Management continues to focus on reducing the Company’s reliance on wholesale funding. The balance sheet restructuring that was executed in the second quarter lowered the Company’s reliance significantly. Continued restructuring in the fourth quarter of 2015 helped further reduce the Company’s reliance on wholesale funding to 20% (down from 30% at December 31, 2014). The restructuring executed in the 1st quarter of 2016 (as described in Note 25 of the Consolidated Financial Statements) has further reduced the Company’s reliance on wholesale funding. Management continues to closely evaluate opportunities for further reduction in wholesale funding.

 

 

Correspondent banking continues to be a core line of business for the Company. The Company is competitively positioned with experienced staff, software systems and processes to continue growing in the three states currently served – Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin. The Company acts as the correspondent bank for 172 downstream banks with total noninterest bearing deposits of $286.9 million as of December 31, 2015. Average noninterest bearing deposit balances for 2015 totaled $343.1 million. This line of business provides a strong source of noninterest bearing deposits, fee income and high-quality loan participations.

 

 

The Company provides commercial leasing services through its wholly-owned subsidiary, m2 Lease Funds, which has lease specialists in Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, South Carolina, North Carolina, Georgia, Florida and Pennsylvania. Historically, this portfolio has been high yielding, with an average gross yield in 2015 approximating 8.2%. This portfolio has also shown strong asset quality throughout its history and the Company intends to grow this portfolio to 10% of consolidated assets.

 

 

SBA and USDA lending is a specialty lending area on which the Company has focused. Once these loans are originated, the government-guaranteed portion of the loan can be sold to the secondary market for premiums. The Company intends to make this a more significant and consistent source of noninterest income. In 2014, the Company hired a government-guaranteed lending specialist in the QCBT market. Also in 2014, in the CRBT market, the Company added a USDA relationship manager to CRBT’s specialty lending team.

 

 

As a result of the historically low interest rate environment, the Company is focused on executing interest rate swaps on select commercial loans. The interest rate swaps allow the commercial borrowers to pay a fixed interest rate while the Company receives a variable interest rate as well as an upfront fee dependent on the pricing. Management believes that these swaps help position the Company more favorably for rising rate environments. The Company will continue to review opportunities to execute these swaps at all of its subsidiary banks, as the circumstances are appropriate for the borrower and the Company.

  

 

Wealth management is another core line of business for the Company and includes a full range of products, including trust services, brokerage and investment advisory services, asset management, estate planning and financial planning. As of December 31, 2015 the Company had $1.73 billion of total financial assets in trust (and related) accounts and $628 million of total financial assets in brokerage (and related) accounts. Continued growth in assets under management will help to drive trust and investment advisory fees, with a goal of growing this segment’s net income by 15% annually. The Company hired four business development officers in 2014 to help with this strategy. Additionally, the Company has started offering trust and investment advisory services to the correspondent banks that it serves. As management focuses on growing fee income, expanding market share will continue to be a primary strategy.

  

 
31

 

 

GAAP TO NON-GAAP RECONCILIATIONS

 

The following table presents certain non-GAAP financial measures related to the “tangible common equity to tangible assets ratio”, “core net income”, “core net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc. common stockholders”, “core earnings per common share” and “core return on average assets”. The table also reconciles the GAAP performance measures to the corresponding non-GAAP measures.

 

The tangible common equity to tangible assets non-GAAP ratio has been a focus for investors and management believes that this ratio may assist investors in analyzing the Company’s capital position without regard to the effects of intangible assets.

  

The table below also includes several “core” non-GAAP measurements of financial performance. The Company's management believes that these measures are important to investors as they exclude non-recurring income and expense items; therefore, they provide a better comparison for analysis and may provide a better indicator of future run-rates.

 

Non-GAAP financial measures have inherent limitations, are not required to be uniformly applied, and are not audited. Although these non-GAAP financial measures are frequently used by investors to evaluate a company, they have limitations as analytical tools and should not be considered in isolation, or as a substitute for analyses of results as reported under GAAP.

 

 

As of

 

GAAP TO NON-GAAP RECONCILIATIONS

December 31,

2015

 

December 31,

2014

 
 

(dollars in thousands, except per share data)

 

TANGIBLE COMMON EQUITY TO TANGIBLE ASSETS RATIO (1)

           
             

Stockholders' equity (GAAP)

$ 225,886   $ 144,079  

Less: Intangible assets

  4,694     4,894  

Tangible common equity (non-GAAP)

$ 221,192   $ 139,185  
             

Total assets (GAAP)

$ 2,593,198   $ 2,524,958  

Less: Intangible assets

  4,694     4,894  

Tangible assets (non-GAAP)

$ 2,588,504   $ 2,520,064  
             

Tangible common equity to tangible assets ratio (non-GAAP)

  8.55 %   5.52 %

 

 

 
32

 

 

   

For the Year Ended

 

CORE NET INCOME (2)

 

December 31,

2015

   

December 31,

2014

 
                 

Net income (GAAP)

  $ 16,928     $ 14,953  
                 

Less nonrecurring items (post-tax) (3):

               

Income:

               

Securities gains

  $ 519     $ 60  

Gain on debt extinguishment

    195       -  

Lawsuit award

    252       -  

Total nonrecurring income (non-GAAP)

  $ 966     $ 60  
                 

Expense:

               

Losses on debt extinguishment

  $ 4,866     $ -  

Accrual adjustments

    (487 )     -  

Other non-recurring expenses

    513       -  

Total nonrecurring expense (non-GAAP)

  $ 4,892     $ -  
                 

Core net income (non-GAAP)

  $ 20,854     $ 14,893  

Less: Preferred stock dividends

    -       1,082  

Core net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc. common stockholders (non-GAAP) (2)

  $ 20,854     $ 13,811  
                 
                 

CORE EARNINGS PER COMMON SHARE (2)

               
                 

Core net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc. common stockholders (non-GAAP) (from above)

  $ 20,854     $ 13,811  
                 

Weighted average common shares outstanding

    10,345,286       7,925,220  

Weighted average common and common equivalent shares outstanding

    10,499,841       8,048,661  
                 

Core earnings per common share (non-GAAP):

               

Basic

  $ 2.02     $ 1.74  

Diluted

  $ 1.99     $ 1.72  
                 
                 

CORE RETURN ON AVERAGE ASSETS (2)

               
                 

Core net income (non-GAAP) (from above)

  $ 20,854     $ 14,893  
                 

Average Assets

  $ 2,549,921     $ 2,453,678  
                 

Core return on average assets (non-GAAP)

    0.82 %     0.61 %

 

 

(1) This ratio is a non-GAAP financial measure. The Company's management believes that this measure is important to many investors in the marketplace who are interested in changes period-to-period in common equity.

(2) Core net income, core net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc. common stockholders, core earnings per common share and core return on average assets are non-GAAP financial measures. The Company's management believes that these measure are important to investors as they exclude non-recurring income and expense items, therefore, they provide a more realistic run-rate for future periods.

(3) Nonrecurring items (post-tax) are calculated using an estimated tax rate of 35%.

 

 
33

 

 

NET INTEREST INCOME AND MARGIN (TAX EQUIVALENT BASIS)

 

Net interest income, on a tax equivalent basis, grew $8.1 million, or 11%, in 2015 compared to 2014. Net interest income improved due to several factors:

 

 

The Company’s strategy to redeploy funds from the taxable securities portfolio into higher yielding loans and leases;

 

Organic loan and lease growth has been strong throughout the year. Average gross loans/leases grew 10.9% in 2015; and

 

The Company’s balance sheet restructuring and deleveraging strategy that was executed in the second quarter of 2015. Refer to Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional details. Continued balance sheet restructurings occurred in late 2015 and early 2016, as described in Notes 9, 10 and 25 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

A comparison of yields, spreads and margins from 2015 to 2014 shows the following (on a tax equivalent basis):

 

 

The average yield on interest-earning assets increased 6 basis points from 3.88% to 3.94%.

 

The average cost of interest-bearing liabilities decreased 18 basis points from .99% to .81%.

 

The net interest spread improved 24 basis points from 2.89% to 3.13%.

 

The NIM improved 22 basis points from 3.15% to 3.37%.

 

Net interest income, on a tax equivalent basis, grew $6.3 million, or 10%, in 2014 compared to 2013. The increase in net interest income was partly driven by the addition of CNB for the first full year. Additionally, the Company’s legacy charters experienced strong organic loan growth and improvements in investment securities yield during 2014. A comparison of yields, spreads and margins from 2014 to 2013 shows the following (on a tax equivalent basis):

 

 

The average yield on interest-earning assets increased 4 basis points from 3.84% to 3.88%.

 

The average cost of interest-bearing liabilities decreased 10 basis points from 1.09% to .99%.

 

The net interest spread improved 14 basis points from 2.75% to 2.89%.

 

The NIM improved 12 basis points from 3.03% to 3.15%.

 

The Company’s management closely monitors and manages NIM. From a profitability standpoint, an important challenge for the Company’s subsidiary banks and leasing company is the improvement of their net interest margins. Management continually addresses this issue with pricing and other balance sheet management strategies.

 

During 2014 and 2015, the Company placed an emphasis on shifting its balance sheet mix. With a stated goal of increasing loans/leases as a percentage of assets to at least 70%, the Company funded its loan/lease growth with a mixture of core deposits and cash from the investment securities portfolio, including the targeted sales of securities with the cash redeployed into the loan portfolio, with an attempt to minimize any extension of duration and a significant increase in yield. Additionally, the Company has recognized net gains on these sales due to the current rate environment. As rates rise, the Company should also have less market volatility in the investment securities portfolio, as this becomes a smaller portion of the balance sheet.

 

The Company continues to monitor and evaluate both prepayment and debt restructuring opportunities within the wholesale funding portion of the balance sheet, as executing on such a strategy could potentially increase NIM at a much quicker pace than holding the debt until maturity.

 

 
34

 

 

The Company’s average balances, interest income/expense, and rates earned/paid on major balance sheet categories are presented in the following table:

 

    Years Ended December 31,  
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
   

Average

Balance

   

Interest

Earned

or Paid

   

Average

Yield or

Cost

   

Average

Balance

   

Interest

Earned

or Paid

   

Average

Yield or

Cost

   

Average

Balance

   

Interest

Earned

or Paid

   

Average

Yield or

Cost

 
                                                                         
   

(dollars in thousands)

 

ASSETS

                                                                       

Interest earning assets:

                                                                       

Federal funds sold

  $ 17,418     $ 25       0.14

%

  $ 17,263     $ 21       0.12

%

  $ 14,577     $ 19       0.13

%

Interest-bearing deposits at financial institutions

    66,897       304       0.45       56,620       299       0.53       43,909       275       0.63  

Investment securities (1)

    599,648       18,380       3.07       688,827       18,679       2.71       700,344       16,140       2.30  

Restricted investment securities

    14,727       504       3.42       16,349       529       3.24       16,083       559       3.48  

Gross loans/leases receivable (1) (2) (3)

    1,707,523       75,671       4.43       1,540,382       70,414       4.57       1,425,364       67,484       4.73  

Total interest earning assets

  $ 2,406,213       94,884       3.94     $ 2,319,441       89,942       3.88     $ 2,200,277       84,477       3.84  
                                                                         

Noninterest-earning assets:

                                                                       

Cash and due from banks

  $ 45,178                     $ 44,905                     $ 44,336                  

Premises and equipment, net

    38,162                       36,372                       35,820                  

Less allowance for estimated losses on loans/leases

    (25,027 )                     (22,726 )                     (21,500 )                

Other

    85,395                       75,686                       71,671                  

Total assets

  $ 2,549,921                     $ 2,453,678                     $ 2,330,604                  
                                                                         

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

                                                                       

Interest-bearing liabilities:

                                                                       

Interest-bearing demand deposits

  $ 821,043       1,836       0.22

%

  $ 741,061       1,832       0.25

%

  $ 672,038       1,879       0.28

%

Time deposits

    388,691       2,660       0.68       392,167       2,677       0.68       404,495       2,836       0.70  

Short-term borrowings

    151,141       210       0.14       162,732       234       0.14       164,710       293       0.18  

Federal Home Loan Bank advances

    154,268       3,511       2.28       218,704       6,026       2.76       207,684       6,863       3.30  

Other borrowings

    126,902       4,234       3.34       147,091       4,891       3.33       140,888       4,753       3.37  

Junior subordinated debentures

    40,364       1,256       3.11       40,356       1,234       3.06       39,495       1,143       2.89  

Total interest-bearing liabilities

  $ 1,682,409       13,707       0.81     $ 1,702,111       16,894       0.99     $ 1,629,310       17,767       1.09  
                                                                         

Noninterest-bearing demand deposits

  $ 641,848                     $ 575,549                     $ 518,406                  

Other noninterest-bearing liabilities

    33,175                       33,284                       36,982                  

Total liabilities

  $ 2,357,432                     $ 2,310,944                     $ 2,184,698                  
                                                                         

Stockholders' equity

    192,489                       142,734                       145,906                  
                                                                         

Total liabilities and stockholders' equity

  $ 2,549,921                     $ 2,453,678                     $ 2,330,604                  
                                                                         

Net interest income

          $ 81,177                     $ 73,048                     $ 66,710          
                                                                         

Net interest spread

                    3.13 %                     2.89 %                     2.75 %
                                                                         

Net interest margin

                    3.37 %                     3.15 %                     3.03 %
                                                                         
 Ratio of average interest earning assets to average interest-bearing liabilities     143.02 %                     136.27 %                     135.04 %                

 

(1)

Interest earned and yields on nontaxable investment securities and loans are determined on a tax equivalent basis using a 35% tax rate in each year presented.

(2)

Loan/lease fees are not material and are included in interest income from loans/leases receivable in accordance with accounting and regulatory guidance.

(3)

Non-accrual loans/leases are included in the average balance for gross loans/leases receivable in accordance with accounting and regulatory guidance.

 

 
35

 

 

The Company’s components of change in net interest income are presented in the following table:

 

   

For the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013

 
                                                 
   

Inc./(Dec.)

from

   

Components

of Change (1)

   

Inc./(Dec.)

from

   

Components

of Change (1)

 
   

Prior Year

   

Rate

   

Volume

   

Prior Year

   

Rate

   

Volume

 
   

2015 vs. 2014

   

2014 vs. 2013

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

   

(dollars in thousands)

 

INTEREST INCOME

                                               

Federal funds sold

  $ 4     $ 4     $ -     $ 2     $ (1 )   $ 3  

Interest-bearing deposits at other financial institutions .

    5       (45 )     50       24       (48 )     72  

Investment securities (2)

    (299 )     2,276       (2,575 )     2,539       2,808       (269 )

Restricted investment securities

    (25 )     30       (55 )     (30 )     (39 )     9  

Gross loans/leases receivable (2) (3)

    5,256       (2,202 )     7,458       2,930       (2,384 )     5,314  
                                                 

Total change in interest income

  $ 4,941     $ 63     $ 4,878     $ 5,465     $ 336     $ 5,129  
                                                 

INTEREST EXPENSE

                                               

Interest-bearing demand deposits

  $ 4     $ (184 )   $ 188     $ (47 )   $ (230 )   $ 183  

Time deposits

    (17 )     7       (24 )     (159 )     (74 )     (85 )

Short-term borrowings

    (24 )     (8 )     (16 )     (59 )     (55 )     (4 )

Federal Home Loan Bank advances

    (2,515 )     (934 )     (1,581 )     (837 )     (1,186 )     349  

Other borrowings

    (658 )     15       (673 )     138       (69 )     207  

Junior subordinated debentures

    22       22       -       91       66       25  
                                                 

Total change in interest expense

  $ (3,188 )   $ (1,082 )   $ (2,106 )   $ (873 )   $ (1,548 )   $ 675  
                                                 

Total change in net interest income

  $ 8,129     $ 1,145     $ 6,984     $ 6,338     $ 1,884     $ 4,454  

 

 

(1)

The column "Inc/(Dec) from Prior Year" is segmented into the changes attributable to variations in volume and the changes attributable to changes in interest rates. The variations attributable to simultaneous volume and rate changes have been proportionately allocated to rate and volume.

(2)

Interest earned and yields on nontaxable investment securities and loans are determined on a tax equivalent basis using a 35% tax rate in each year presented.

(3)

Loan/lease fees are not material and are included in interest income from loans/leases receivable in accordance with accounting and regulatory guidance.

 

The Company’s operating results are also impacted by various sources of noninterest income, including trust department fees, investment advisory and management fees, deposit service fees, gains from the sales of residential real estate loans and government guaranteed loans, earnings on BOLI, and other income. Offsetting these items, the Company incurs noninterest expenses which include salaries and employee benefits, occupancy and equipment expense, professional and data processing fees, FDIC and other insurance expense, loan/lease expense, and other administrative expenses.

 

The Company’s operating results are also affected by economic and competitive conditions, particularly changes in interest rates, income tax rates, government policies, and actions of regulatory authorities.

 

 
36

 

 

CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES

 

The Company’s financial statements are prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. The financial information contained within these statements is, to a significant extent, financial information that is based on approximate measures of the financial effects of transactions and events that have already occurred.

 

ALLOWANCE FOR LOAN AND LEASE LOSSES

 

Based on its consideration of accounting policies that involve the most complex and subjective decisions and assessments, management has identified its most critical accounting policy to be that related to the allowance.

 

The Company’s allowance methodology incorporates a variety of risk considerations, both quantitative and qualitative, in establishing an allowance that management believes is appropriate at each reporting date. Quantitative factors include the Company’s historical loss experience, delinquency and charge-off trends, collateral values, governmental guarantees, payment status, changes in nonperforming loans/leases, and other factors. Quantitative factors also incorporate known information about individual loans/leases, including borrowers’ sensitivity to interest rate movements.

 

Qualitative factors include the general economic environment in the Company’s markets, including economic conditions throughout the Midwest, and in particular, the economic health of certain industries. Size and complexity of individual credits in relation to loan/lease structure, existing loan/lease policies and pace of portfolio growth are other qualitative factors that are considered in the methodology. As the Company adds new products and increases the complexity of its loan/lease portfolio, it enhances its methodology accordingly.

 

Management may report a materially different amount for the provision in the statement of operations to change the allowance if its assessment of the above factors were different. The discussion regarding the Company’s allowance should be read in conjunction with the Company’s financial statements and the accompanying notes presented elsewhere in this Form 10-K, as well as the portion of this MD&A section entitled “Financial Condition – Allowance for Estimated Losses on Loans/Leases.”

 

Although management believes the level of the allowance as of December 31, 2015 was adequate to absorb losses inherent in the loan/lease portfolio, a decline in local economic conditions, or other factors, could result in increasing losses that cannot be reasonably predicted at this time.

 

OTHER-THAN-TEMPORARY IMPAIRMENT

 

The Company’s assessment of OTTI of its securities portfolio is another critical accounting policy as a result of the level of judgment required by management. Available-for-sale and held to maturity securities are evaluated to determine whether declines in fair value below their cost are other-than-temporary.

 

In estimating OTTI losses, management considers a number of factors including, but not limited to: (1) the length of time and extent to which the fair value has been less than amortized cost; (2) the financial condition and near-term prospects of the issuer; (3) the current market conditions; and (4) the intent of the Company to not sell the security prior to recovery and whether it is not more-likely-than-not that the Company will be required to sell the security prior to recovery. The discussion regarding the Company’s assessment of OTTI should be read in conjunction with the Company’s financial statements and the accompanying notes presented elsewhere in this Form 10-K.

 

 
37

 

 

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013

 

INTEREST INCOME

 

For 2015, interest income grew $4.0 million, or 5%. In total, the Company’s average interest-earning assets increased $86.8 million, or 4%, year-over-year. This growth more than offset the continued impact of declining average yields on loans/leases. Average loans/leases grew 11%, while average securities declined 13%. This shift was part of the Company’s strategy to shift the mix of earning assets from lower yielding securities to higher yielding loans/leases.

 

Additionally, the Company continued to diversify its securities portfolio, including increasing its portfolio of tax exempt municipal securities. The large majority of these are privately placed debt issuances located in the Midwest and require a thorough underwriting process before investment. Execution of this strategy has led to increased interest income on a tax equivalent basis over the past several years. Management understands that this strategy has extended the duration of its securities portfolio and continually evaluates the combined benefit of increased interest income and reduced effective income tax rate and the impact on interest rate risk. 

 

For 2014, interest income grew $4.1 million, or 5%. In total, the Company’s average interest-earning assets increased $119.2 million, or 5%, year-over-year. This growth more than offset the continued impact of declining average yields on loans/leases. Average loans/leases grew 8%, while average securities declined 2%. This shift was part of the Company’s strategy to shift the mix of earning assets from lower yielding securities to higher yielding loans/leases.

 

In 2014, the Company diversified its securities portfolio by increasing its portfolio of tax-exempt municipal securities, as described above.

 

The Company intends to continue to grow quality loans and leases as well as diversify the securities portfolio to maximize yield while minimizing credit and interest rate risk.

 

INTEREST EXPENSE 

 

Comparing 2015 to 2014, interest expense declined $3.2 million, or 19%, year-over-year. Average interest-bearing liabilities declined 1% in 2015. The Company was successful in continuing to manage down its cost of funds as follows:

 

 

Continued reduction of interest rates paid across all deposits without runoff (the average cost of interest-bearing deposits fell from 0.40% for 2014 to 0.37% for 2015);

 

Continued growth in noninterest bearing deposit accounts (average noninterest bearing balances grew 12% in 2015, primarily due to successful growth in the correspondent banking area); and

 

Continued shift of funding from high-cost borrowings to deposits and/or low-cost borrowings. Average interest bearing deposits increased 7%, while average borrowings decreased 17% during 2015.

 

Comparing 2014 to 2013, interest expense declined $872 thousand, or 5%, year-over-year. Average interest-bearing liabilities grew 4% in 2014 with most of this in deposits. The Company was successful in continuing to manage down its cost of funds as follows:

 

 

Continued reduction of interest rates paid across all deposits without runoff (the average cost of interest-bearing deposits fell from 0.44% for 2013 to 0.40% for 2014);

 

Continued growth in noninterest bearing deposit accounts (average noninterest bearing balances grew 11% in 2014, primarily due to successful growth in the correspondent banking area); and

 

Continued shift of funding from high-cost borrowings to deposits and/or low-cost borrowings.

 

The Company’s management intends to continue to shift the mix of funding from wholesale funds to core deposits, including noninterest-bearing deposits. Continuing this trend is expected to strengthen the Company’s franchise value, reduce funding costs, and increase fee income opportunities through deposit service charges.

 

 
38

 

 

PROVISION FOR LOAN/LEASE LOSSES 

 

The provision is established based on a number of factors, including the Company’s historical loss experience, delinquencies and charge-off trends, the local and national economy and the risk associated with the loans/leases in the portfolio as described in more detail in the “Critical Accounting Policies” section.

 

The Company’s provision totaled $6.9 million for 2015, which was flat from 2014. Despite the drop in NPAs during the year (decreasing from 1.31% of total assets to 0.74%), the Company had strong loan growth to provide for, as well as several specific reserves for certain existing NPLs as the workouts of these loans and leases progressed.

 

Comparing 2014 to 2013, the Company’s provision increased $877 thousand, or 15%, from $5.9 million for 2013 to $6.8 million for 2014.

 

The Company had an allowance of 1.45% of total gross loans/leases at December 31, 2015, compared to 1.42% of total gross loans/leases at December 31, 2014, and compared to 1.47% of total gross loans/leases at December 31, 2013.

 

The Company’s allowance to total NPLs was 223% at December 31, 2015, which was up from 115% at December 31, 2014, and up from 105% at December 31, 2013.

 

 
39

 

 

NONINTEREST INCOME. The following tables set forth the various categories of noninterest income for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013.

 

   

Years Ended

                 
   

December 31,

2015

   

December 31,

2014

   

$ Change

   

% Change

 
                                 

Trust department fees

  $ 6,131,209     $ 5,715,151     $ 416,058       7.3

%

Investment advisory and management fees

    2,971,964       2,798,170       173,794       6.2  

Deposit service fees

    3,823,818       3,847,350       (23,532 )     (0.6 )

Gains on sales of residential real estate loans, net

    322,872       460,721       (137,849 )     (29.9 )

Gains on sales of government guaranteed portions of loans, net

    1,304,575       2,040,638       (736,063 )     (36.1 )

Swap fee income

    1,717,552       154,800       1,562,752       1,009.5  

Securities gains

    798,983       92,363       706,620       765.0  

Earnings on bank-owned life insurance

    1,762,107       1,721,507       40,600       2.4  

Debit card fees

    1,072,431       982,005       90,426       9.2  

Correspondent banking fees

    1,190,411       1,064,030       126,381       11.9  

Participation service fees on commercial loan participations

    865,280       854,621       10,659       1.2  

Fee income from early termination of leases

    296,546       60,941       235,605       386.6  

Credit card issuing fees

    538,167       552,639       (14,472 )     (2.6 )

Lawsuit award

    387,045       -       387,045       100.0  

Gain on debt extinguishment

    300,000       -       300,000       100.0  

Other

    1,046,763       812,421       234,342       28.8  

Total noninterest income

  $ 24,529,723     $ 21,157,357     $ 3,372,366       15.9

%

 

   

Years Ended

                 
   

December 31,

2014

   

December 31,

2013

   

$ Change

   

% Change

 
                                 

Trust department fees

  $ 5,715,151     $ 4,941,681     $ 773,470       15.7

%

Investment advisory and management fees

    2,798,170       2,580,140       218,030       8.5  

Deposit service fees

    3,847,350       3,873,349       (25,999 )     (0.7 )

Gains on sales of residential real estate loans, net

    460,721       836,065       (375,344 )     (44.9 )

Gains on sales of government guaranteed portions of loans, net

    2,040,638       2,148,979       (108,341 )     (5.0 )

Swap fee income

    154,800       104,560       50,240       48.0  

Securities gains

    92,363       432,492       (340,129 )     (78.6 )

Earnings on bank-owned life insurance

    1,721,507       1,786,023       (64,516 )     (3.6 )

Debit card fees

    982,005       991,300       (9,295 )     (0.9 )

Correspondent banking fees

    1,064,030       772,120       291,910       37.8  

Participation service fees on commercial loan participations

    854,621       768,547       86,074       11.2  

Bargain purchase gain on Community National Acquisition

    -       1,841,385       (1,841,385 )     (100.0 )

Gains on sales of certain Community National Bank branches

    -       2,334,216       (2,334,216 )     (100.0 )

Gain on the sale of credit card loan receivables

    -       495,405       (495,405 )     (100.0 )

Gain on the sale of credit card issuing operations

    -       355,268       (355,268 )     (100.0 )

Fee income from early termination of leases

    60,941       123,587       (62,646 )     (50.7 )

Credit card issuing fees

    552,639       743,700       (191,061 )     (25.7 )

Lawsuit award

    -       444,732       (444,732 )     (100.0 )

Other

    812,421       1,272,127       (459,706 )     (36.1 )

Total noninterest income

  $ 21,157,357     $ 26,845,676     $ (5,688,319 )     (21.2

)%

 

Trust department fees continue to be a significant contributor to noninterest income, increasing 7% in 2015 and 16% in 2014. Income is generated primarily from fees charged based on assets under administration for corporate and personal trusts and for custodial services. The majority of the trust department fees are determined based on the value of the investments within the fully managed trusts. Part of the increase in 2014 was the result of the addition of CNB’s trust department for the first full year. As the markets have strengthened with the national economy’s gradual recovery from recession, the Company’s fee income has experienced similar growth. In recent years, the Company has been successful in expanding its customer base, which has helped drive the recent increases in fee income. Additionally, the Company recently started offering trust operations services to correspondent banks. Fees are expected to continue to grow as this new offering is rolled out.

 

 
40

 

 

Management has placed a stronger emphasis on growing its investment advisory and management services. Part of this initiative has been to restructure the Company’s Wealth Management Division to allow for more efficient delivery of products and services through selective additions of talent as well as leverage of and collaboration among existing resources (including the aforementioned trust department). Similar to trust department fees, these fees are largely determined based on the value of the investments managed. And, similar to the trust department, the Company has had some success in expanding its customer base, which has helped drive the recent increases in fee income. Investment advisory fees increased 6% in 2015 and 9% in 2014.

 

Deposit service fees declined slightly in each of the last two years (less than 1%). The decrease in 2015 was primarily due to lower overdraft fees, while the decrease in 2014 was primarily due to a decrease in commercial analysis fees. The Company intends to grow this line item by shifting the mix of deposits from brokered and retail time deposits to non-maturity demand deposits, as the latter tends to be lower in interest cost and higher in service fees.

 

Gains on sales of residential real estate loans decreased 30% in 2015 and 45% in 2014. With the sustained historically low interest rate environment, refinancing activity has slowed as many of the Company’s existing and prospective customers have already executed a refinancing.

 

Gains on the sale of government guaranteed portions of loans decreased 36% in 2015 and 5% in 2014. As one of its core strategies, the Company continues to leverage its small business lending expertise by taking advantage of programs offered by the SBA and the USDA. The Company’s portfolio of government guaranteed loans has grown as a direct result of the Company’s strong expertise in SBA and USDA lending. In some cases, it is more beneficial for the Company to sell the government guaranteed portion on the secondary market for a premium rather than retain the loans in the Company’s portfolio. Sales activity for government guaranteed portions of loans tends to fluctuate depending on the demand for small business loans that fit the criteria for the government guarantee. Further, some of the transactions can be large and, as the gain is determined as a percentage of the guaranteed amount, the resulting gain on sale can be large. Lastly, a strategy for improved pricing is packaging loans together for sale. From time to time, the Company may execute on this strategy, which may delay the gains on sales of some loans to achieve better pricing. The Company is adding additional talent and executing on strategies in an effort to make this a more consistent and larger source of revenue.

 

As a result of the sustained historically low interest rate environment, the Company was able to execute several interest rate swaps on select commercial loans. The interest rate swaps allow the commercial borrowers to pay a fixed interest rate while the Company receives a variable interest rate as well as an upfront fee dependent upon the pricing. Management believes that these swaps help position the Company more favorably for rising rate environments. Management will continue to review opportunities to execute these swaps at all of its subsidiary banks, as the circumstances are appropriate for the borrower and the Company. Swap fee income totaled $1.7 million in 2015, as compared to $155 thousand in 2014 and $105 thousand in 2013. Future levels of swap fee income are very dependent upon market interest rates.

 

As the Company works to improve its balance sheet mix, investment securities continue to be sold (as market opportunity allows) to fund loan/lease growth and municipal securities, improving the yield the Company earns on these assets and NIM. In 2015, the Company sold $81.4 million of investment securities at a net gain of $799 thousand. In 2014, the Company sold $78.5 million of investment securities at a modest net gain of $92 thousand. During 2013, the Company sold $37.4 million of investment securities at a net gain of $432 thousand.      

 

Earnings on BOLI increased 2% in 2015 and decreased 4% in 2014. There were no purchases of BOLI in 2014 or 2015. With the acquisition of CNB in 2013, the Company acquired $4.6 million of BOLI. Yields on BOLI (based on a simple average and excluding the impact of the federal income tax exemption) were 3.23% for 2015, 3.26% for 2014, and 3.65% for 2013. Notably, a small portion of the Company’s BOLI is variable rate whereby the returns are determined by the performance of the equity market. Management intends to continue to review its BOLI investments to be consistent with policy and regulatory limits in conjunction with the rest of its earning assets in an effort to maximize returns while minimizing risk.

 

 
41

 

 

Debit card fees increased 9% in 2015 and were relatively flat in 2014. These fees can vary based on customer debit card usage, so fluctuations from period to period may occur. As an opportunity to maximize fees, the Company offers a deposit product with a modestly increased interest rate that incentivizes debit card activity.

 

Correspondent banking fees grew 12% in 2015 and 38% in 2014. Correspondent banking continues to be a core strategy for the Company, as this line of business provides a high level of noninterest-bearing deposits that can be used to fund additional loan growth as well as a steady source of fee income. In 2014, the Company expanded its territory to Wisconsin in order to continue to build this business unit. The Company now serves approximately 172 Banks in Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin.

 

Participation service fees on commercial loan participations increased 1% in 2015 and 11% in 2014. These fees represent the amount paid to the Company by participants to cover the servicing expenses incurred by the Company. The fee is generally 25 basis points of the participated loan amount. Additionally, the Company receives a mandated 1% servicing fee on the sold portion of government guaranteed loans.

 

In accordance with acquisition accounting rules, the Company recognized a bargain purchase gain of $1.8 million in 2013 in recording the acquisition of Community National. The Company adjusted the acquired assets and assumed liabilities to fair value as determined by an independent valuation specialist. The gain resulted primarily from the recording of a core deposit intangible based on the value of the acquired deposit portfolio, and the recognition of a discount on the trust preferred securities that were previously issued by Community National and were assumed by the Company in the transaction. Net of other more modest valuation adjustments, and the resulting deferred income tax liabilities, the $1.8 million bargain purchase gain was included in noninterest income. See Note 2 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information regarding the Company’s acquisition of Community National.

 

In October 2013, the Company sold certain assets and liabilities of certain branches of CNB for a pre-tax gain on sale of $2.3 million. Specifically, the Company sold certain assets and liabilities of the two Mason City, Iowa branches, including deposits of $55 million and loans of $23 million, for a pre-tax gain on sale of $874 thousand. Additionally, the Company sold certain assets and liabilities of the two Austin, Minnesota branches, including deposits of $36 million and loans of $32 million, for a pre-tax gain on sale of $1.4 million. See Note 2 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information regarding these branch sales.

 

During the first quarter of 2013, QCBT sold its credit card loan portfolio for a pre-tax gain on sale of $495 thousand. In addition, QCBT sold its credit card issuing operations to the same purchaser for a pre-tax gain on sale of $355 thousand.

 

Fee income from the early termination of leases totaled $297 thousand, $61 thousand and $124 thousand in 2015, 2014 and 2013, respectively. From time to time, customers will choose to terminate their lease agreements prior to the original maturity date. At termination, the Company recognizes income related to these terminations (similar to a prepayment penalty).

 

Credit card issuing fees decreased 3% in 2015 and 26% in 2014. The decrease in 2014 was primarily the result of the sale of QCBT’s credit card issuing operations in 2013.

 

The Company received lawsuit awards in the amounts of $387 thousand in 2015 and $445 thousand in 2013related to the favorable conclusion of a single lawsuit.

 

In 2015, the Company extinguished $2.1 million of the QCR Holdings Capital Trust II junior subordinated debentures and recorded a $300 thousand gain on extinguishment, as the Company was able to acquire the related security at a discount through auction. The interest rate on these debentures floated at 3-month LIBOR plus 2.85% and had a rate of 3.18% at the time of extinguishment.

 

Other noninterest income increased 29% in 2015 and decreased 36% in 2014. The increase in 2015 was primarily the result of earnings from a joint venture. In December 2014, QCBT entered into a joint venture as 20% owner of Ruhl Mortgage. In 2013, QCBT sold certain nonperforming loans at a gain of $576 thousand.

 

 
42

 

 

NONINTEREST EXPENSES. The following tables set forth the various categories of noninterest expenses for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013.

 

   

Years Ended

                 
   

December 31,

2015

   

December 31,

2014

   

$ Change

   

% Change

 
                                 

Salaries and employee benefits

  $ 42,967,915     $ 40,337,055     $ 2,630,860       6.5

%

Occupancy and equipment expense

    7,042,706       7,385,526       (342,820 )     (4.6 )

Professional and data processing fees

    5,523,447       6,191,574       (668,127 )     (10.8 )

FDIC insurance, other insurance and regulatory fees

    2,724,968       2,895,494       (170,526 )     (5.9 )

Loan/lease expense

    882,591       665,602       216,989       32.6  

Net cost of operations of other real estate

    (1,092,401 )     603,092       (1,695,493 )     (281.1 )

Advertising and marketing

    1,900,539       1,985,121       (84,582 )     (4.3 )

Postage and communications

    936,231       930,408       5,823       0.6  

Stationery and supplies

    595,689       579,330       16,359       2.8  

Bank service charges

    1,486,265       1,291,017       195,248       15.1  

Losses on debt extinguishment

    7,485,601       -       7,485,601       100.0  

Correspondent banking expense

    703,495       635,630       67,865       10.7  

Other

    2,201,378       1,930,129       271,249       14.1  

Total noninterest expense

  $ 73,358,424     $ 65,429,978     $ 7,928,446       12.1

%

 

 

   

Years Ended

                 
   

December 31,

2014

   

December 31,

2013

   

$ Change

   

% Change

 
                                 

Salaries and employee benefits

  $ 40,337,055     $ 37,510,318     $ 2,826,737       7.5

%

Occupancy and equipment expense

    7,385,526       6,712,468       673,058       10.0  

Professional and data processing fees

    6,191,574       6,424,594       (233,020 )     (3.6 )

FDIC insurance, other insurance and regulatory fees

    2,895,494       2,587,041       308,453       11.9  

Loan/lease expense

    665,602       1,241,704       (576,102 )     (46.4 )

Net cost of operations of other real estate

    603,092       1,206,973       (603,881 )     (50.0 )

Advertising and marketing

    1,985,121       1,726,314       258,807       15.0  

Postage and communications

    930,408       1,069,142       (138,734 )     (13.0 )

Stationery and supplies

    579,330       562,301       17,029       3.0  

Bank service charges

    1,291,017       1,144,757       146,260       12.8  

Acquisition and data conversion costs

    -       2,353,162       (2,353,162 )     (100.0 )

Correspondent banking expense

    635,630       661,451       (25,821 )     (3.9 )

Other

    1,930,129       2,264,281       (334,152 )     (14.8 )

Total noninterest expense

  $ 65,429,978     $ 65,464,506     $ (34,528 )     (0.1

)%

 

Management places strong emphasis on overall cost containment and is committed to improving the Company’s general efficiency.

 

 
43

 

 

Salaries and employee benefits, which is the largest component of noninterest expense, increased 7% and 8% in 2015 and 2014, respectively. The increase in 2014 was largely due to the addition of CNB’s cost structure for the full year in 2014.

 

The Company’s increase in 2015 was largely the result of:

 

 

Customary annual salary and benefits increases averaging approximately 3% for the Company’s employee base.

 

Continued increases in health insurance-related employee benefits for the Company’s employee base.

 

Higher accrued incentive compensation based on core net income.

 

Targeted talent additions. Throughout 2014, the Company added twelve business development/sales officers (four in the Wealth Management area, four in the Commercial Banking area, three in the Correspondent Banking area, and one at m2) in an effort to continue to grow market share. Four additional business development/sales officers (two in the Wealth Management area, one in the Commercial Banking area and one at m2) were added in 2015.

 

The Company had several retirements at the end of 2015. Some of these positions will not be replaced or will be replaced with existing resources.

 

Occupancy and equipment expense decreased 5% in 2015 and increased 10% in 2014. The decrease in 2015 was primarily due to the relocation of RB&T’s downtown facility. In 2014, RB&T’s downtown Rockford branch was relocated to a more cost-effective space with improved visibility. In 2015, the Company adjusted certain accrued expenses, a portion of which included occupancy expense.

 

Professional and data processing fees decreased 11% in 2015 and 4% in 2014. The decrease in 2015 was primarily due to the adjustment of certain accrued expenses, including data processing expense.

 

FDIC insurance, other insurance and regulatory fees have generally fallen over the past several years since the FDIC modified its assessment calculation to more closely align with bank performance and risk. The increase in 2014 was primarily the result of adding CNB for the full year.

 

Loan/lease expense fluctuated significantly over the past two years with a 33% increase during 2015 and a 46% decrease in 2014. The Company incurred elevated levels of expense during 2015 for certain existing NPLs in connection with the work-out of these loans. Generally, loan/lease expense has a direct relationship with the level of NPLs; however, it may deviate depending upon the individual NPLs. Management expects these historically elevated levels of expense to decline in line with the declining trend in NPLs.

 

Net cost of operations of other real estate includes gains/losses on the sale of OREO, write-downs of OREO and all income/expenses associated with OREO. In 2015, this included a $1.2 million gain on the sale of a large OREO property that also reduced NPAs by $3.2 million.

 

Advertising and marketing expense decreased 4% in 2015 and increased 15% in 2014. The Company incurred additional expenses during 2014 in an effort to gain market share across all four markets the Company serves. A portion of the increase in 2014 was also attributable to a full year of CNB’s cost structure.

 

Bank service charges, a large portion of which includes indirect costs incurred to provide services to QCBT’s correspondent banking customer portfolio, increased significantly over the past two years (15% in 2015 and 13% in 2014). The increases were due, in large part, to the success QCBT has had in growing its correspondent banking customer portfolio over the past two years.

 

In 2015, the Company incurred $7.5 million of losses on debt extinguishment. These losses relate to the prepayment of certain FHLB advances and wholesale structured repurchase agreements. Refer to Notes 9, 10 and 12 of the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information.

 

 
44

 

 

With the acquisition of Community National on May 13, 2013, the Company incurred costs related to the acquisition including professional fees (legal, investment banking, accounting), data conversion costs (including both the de-conversion of the sold branches and the conversion of the remaining branches), and compensation costs for retained and severed employees. In accordance with GAAP, the Company expensed these costs as incurred during 2013.

 

Correspondent banking expense increased 11% in 2015 and decreased 4% in 2014. These are direct costs incurred to provide services to QCBT’s correspondent banking customer portfolio, including safekeeping and cash management services. The increase in 2015 was due, in large part, to the success QCBT has had in growing its correspondent banking customer portfolio.

 

Other noninterest expense increased 14% in 2015 and decreased 15% in 2014. Included in other noninterest expense are items such as subscriptions, sales and use tax and expenses related to wealth management. As the wealth management area continues to grow, expenses related to this area also increase, resulting in an increase to this line item in 2015. The decrease in 2014 was primarily due to the efficiencies gained from the full integration of CNB into CRBT’s operational structure.

 

INCOME TAX EXPENSE 

 

The provision for income taxes was $3.7 million for 2015, or an effective tax rate of 17.8%, compared to $3.0 million for 2014, or an effective tax rate of 16.9%, and compared to $4.6 million for 2013, or an effective tax rate of 23.6%. The general declines in the effective tax rate were primarily the result of the following:

 

 

The continued increases in tax-exempt income for securities and loans. For securities, nontaxable interest income on municipal securities grew 28% in 2015 and 46% in 2014. These growth rates outpaced the growth rates of the Company’s taxable income sources.

 

The Company recognized a one-time tax benefit in the first quarter of 2014 of $359 thousand as a result of the finalization of the tax issues related to the CNB acquisition following the filing of the acquired entity’s final tax return.

 

Refer to the reconciliation of the expected income tax expense to the effective tax rate that is included in Note 13 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional details.

 

FINANCIAL CONDITION, AS OF THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2015 AND 2014

 

OVERVIEW 

 

Following is a table that represents the major categories of the Company’s balance sheet.

 

   

As of December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
   

Amount

   

%

   

Amount

   

%

 

Cash, federal funds sold, and interest-bearing deposits

  $ 97,906       4 %   $ 120,350       5 %

Securities

    577,109       22 %     651,539       26 %

Net loans/leases

    1,771,882       68 %     1,606,929       64 %

Other assets

    146,301       6 %     146,140       5 %

Total assets

  $ 2,593,198       100 %   $ 2,524,958       100 %
                                 

Total deposits

  $ 1,880,666       72 %   $ 1,679,668       67 %

Total borrowings

    444,162       17 %     662,558       26 %

Other liabilities

    42,484       2 %     38,653       1 %

Total stockholders' equity

    225,886       9 %     144,079       6 %

Total liabilities and stockholders' equity

  $ 2,593,198       100 %   $ 2,524,958       100 %

  

 
45

 

 

In 2015, total assets grew $68.2 million, or 3%. The Company organically grew its net loan/lease portfolio $165.0 million, which was partly funded by cash from the securities portfolio, as it decreased $74.4 million, or 11% (mostly due to the sale of securities). Deposits grew $201.0 million, or 12% during 2015. Borrowings decreased $218.4 million, or 33% during 2015, mostly due the balance sheet restructuring activities that took place throughout 2015, the details of which are in Notes 9, 10 and 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

In 2014, total assets grew $130.0 million, or 5%. The Company organically grew its net loan/lease portfolio $168.1 million, which was partly funded by cash from the securities portfolio, as it decreased $45.7 million, or 7% (mostly due to the sale of securities). Deposits grew $32.7 million, or 2% during 2014. Borrowings increased $99.2 million, mostly due to an increase in overnight funding of $80.6 million. Quarter-end and year-end deposit balances can fluctuate a great deal due to large customer and correspondent bank activity. Since this cash outflow is typically temporary, the Company normally fills the funding gap with overnight or other short-term borrowings.

 

INVESTMENT SECURITIES 

 

The composition of the Company’s securities portfolio is managed to meet liquidity needs while prioritizing the impact on interest rate risk and maximizing return, while minimizing credit risk. The Company has further diversified the portfolio by decreasing U.S government sponsored agency securities and residential mortgage-backed securities, while increasing municipal securities. Of the latter, the large majority are privately placed tax-exempt debt issuances by municipalities located in the Midwest (with some in or near the Company’s existing markets) and require a thorough underwriting process before investment. Additionally, management will continue to diversify the portfolio with further growth strictly dictated by the pace of growth in deposits and loans. Management expects to continue to fund future loan growth partially with cashflow from the securities portfolio (calls and maturities of government sponsored agencies, paydowns on residential mortgage-backed securities, and/or targeted sales of securities that meet certain criteria as defined by management).

 

Following is a breakdown of the Company’s securities portfolio by type as of December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013.

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
   

Amount

   

%

   

Amount

   

%

   

Amount

   

%

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 

U.S. govt. sponsored agency securities

  $ 213,537       37 %   $ 307,869       47 %   $ 356,473       51 %

Municipal securities

    280,203       49 %     229,230       35 %     180,361       26 %

Residential mortgage-backed and related securities

    80,670       14 %     111,423       17 %     157,429       23 %

Other securities

    2,699       0 %     3,017       1 %     2,947       0 %
    $ 577,109       100 %   $ 651,539       100 %   $ 697,210       100 %
                                                 

As a % of Total Assets

    22.25 %             25.80 %             27.61 %        

Net Unrealized Losses as a % of Amortized Cost

    (0.03 )%             (0.19 )%             (4.02 )%        

Duration (in years)

    5.1               4.4               4.7          

Yield on investment securities (tax equivalent)

    3.07 %             2.71 %             2.30 %        

 

As a result of fluctuations in longer-term interest rates, the Company’s fair value of its securities portfolio moved from a net unrealized loss position (approximately 4.02% of amortized cost at the end of 2013) to more modest net unrealized loss positions (approximately 0.19% at the end of 2014 and 0.03% at the end of 2015). Management monitors the level of unrealized gains/losses including performing quarterly reviews of individual securities for evidence of OTTI. Management identified no OTTI in 2015, 2014 or 2013.

 

In 2015, the duration of the securities portfolio increased due, in large part, to the continued shift in mix. Duration was extended from the strong growth in longer term fixed rate municipal securities, but was partially offset by the duration shortening of agency and mortgage-backed securities portfolios resulting from targeted sales of longer duration investments and as the remaining agency portfolio rolled closer to maturities or call dates.

 

 
46

 

 

In 2014, the duration of the securities portfolio decreased slightly for two reasons:

 

 

A portion of the government-sponsored agency securities contain call options at the discretion of the issuer whereby the issuer can call the security at par at certain times which vary by individual security.  With a steady decline in longer-term market interest rates in 2014, the duration of these callable agency securities shortened as the likelihood of a call increased. 

 

The Company’s sales strategy in 2014 targeted the liquidation of longer duration government-sponsored agency securities and government-sponsored mortgage-backed securities.

 

The Company has not invested in commercial mortgage-backed securities or pooled trust preferred securities. Additionally, the Company has not invested in the types of securities subject to the Volcker Rule (a provision of the Dodd-Frank Act).

 

See Note 3 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information regarding the Company’s investment securities.

 

LOANS/LEASES

 

The Company’s total loan/lease portfolio grew $166.9 million, or 10%, during 2015. Notably, C&I loans increased $124.2 million, or 24%. Although CRE loans grew $22.2 million, or 3%, this sector of the loan/lease portfolio is becoming a smaller percentage of total loans/leases (down from 43% in 2014 to 40% in 2015).

 

The Company’s gross loan/lease portfolio grew $167.6 million, or 12%, during 2014. Notably, C&I loans increased $92.2 million, or 21%, and direct financing leases increased $37.1 million, or 29%. Although CRE loans grew $30.4 million, or 5%, this sector of the loan/lease portfolio is becoming a smaller percentage of total loans/leases (down from 46% in 2013 to 43% in 2014).

 

The mix of loan/lease types within the Company’s loan/lease portfolio is presented in the following table.

 

   

As of December 31,

 
   

2015

 

2014

 

2013

 

2012

 

2011

 
   

Amount

   

%

 

Amount

   

%

 

Amount

   

%

 

Amount

   

%

 

Amount

   

%

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 

C&I loans

  $ 648,160       36 %   $ 523,927       32 %   $ 431,688       30 %     $ 394,244       31 %   $ 350,794     29 %  

CRE loans

    724,369       40 %     702,140       43 %     671,753       46 %       593,979       46 %     577,804      48 %  

Direct financing leases

    173,656       10 %     166,032       10 %     128,902       9 %       103,686       8 %     93,212      8 %  

Residential real estate loans

    170,433       10 %     158,633       10 %     147,356       10 %       115,582       9 %     98,107      8 %  

Installment and other consumer loans

    73,669       4 %     72,607       5 %     76,034       5 %       76,720       6 %     78,223      7 %  
                                                                                   

Total loans/leases

  $ 1,790,287       100 %   $ 1,623,339       100 %   $ 1,455,733       100 %     $ 1,284,211       100 %   $ 1,198,140      100 %  
                                                                                   

Plus deferred loan/lease origination costs, net of fees

    7,736               6,664               4,547                 3,176               2,605          

Less allowance

    (26,141 )             (23,074 )             (21,448 )               (19,925 )             (18,789 )        
                                                                                   

Net loans/leases

  $ 1,771,882             $ 1,606,929             $ 1,438,832               $ 1,267,462             $ 1,181,956          

 

Historically, the Company structures most residential real estate loans to conform to the underwriting requirements of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to allow the subsidiary banks to resell the loans on the secondary market to avoid the interest rate risk associated with longer term fixed rate loans and recognizing noninterest income from the gain on sale. Loans originated for this purpose were classified as held for sale and are included in the residential real estate loans in the table above. Historically, the subsidiary banks structure most loans that will not conform to those underwriting requirements as adjustable rate mortgages that mature or adjust in one to five years, and then retain these loans in their portfolios. The Company holds a limited amount of 15-year fixed rate residential real estate loans originated in prior years that met certain credit guidelines. The remaining residential real estate loans originated by the Company continue to be sold on the secondary market to avoid the interest rate risk associated with longer term fixed rate loans. In addition, the Company has not originated any subprime, Alt-A, no documentation, or stated income residential real estate loans throughout its history.

 

 
47

 

 

The following tables set forth the remaining maturities by loan/lease type as of December 31, 2015 and 2014. Maturities are based on contractual dates.

 

   

As of December 31, 2015

 
                           

Maturities After One Year

 
   

Due in one

year or less

   

Due after one

through 5 years

   

Due after

5 years

   

Predetermined

interest rates

   

Adjustable

interest rates

 
                                         
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                                         

C&I loans

  $ 224,414     $ 280,857     $ 142,889     $ 275,094     $ 148,652  

CRE loans

    102,009       426,821       195,539       439,108       183,252  

Direct financing leases

    5,034       163,010       5,612       168,622       -  

Residential real estate loans

    2,774       2,418       165,241       116,224       51,435  

Installment and other consumer loans

    21,072       40,619       11,978       26,499       26,098  
    $ 355,303     $ 913,725     $ 521,259     $ 1,025,547     $ 409,437  
                                         

Percentage of total loans/leases

    20 %     51 %     29 %     71 %     29 %

 

 

   

As of December 31, 2014

 
                           

Maturities After One Year

 
   

Due in one

year or less

   

Due after one

through 5 years

   

Due after

5 years

   

Predetermined

interest rates

   

Adjustable

interest rates

 
                                         
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                                         

C&I loans

  $ 179,177     $ 254,961     $ 89,789     $ 226,178     $ 118,572  

CRE loans

    131,438       446,352       124,350       427,753       142,949  

Direct financing leases

    5,326       151,558       9,148       160,706       -  

Residential real estate loans

    3,688       2,625       152,320       109,398       45,547  

Installment and other consumer loans

    21,851       41,077       9,679       25,711       25,045  
    $ 341,480     $ 896,573     $ 385,286     $ 949,746     $ 332,113  
                                         

Percentage of total loans/leases

    21 %     55 %     24 %     74 %     26 %

 

 

Over the past two years, the Company has seen modest changes to the duration of its overall loan/lease portfolio. With the growth in municipal securities and residential real estate loans, both of which are longer duration assets with fixed interest rates, it is important that the Company limits extension of the rest of the loan portfolio in an effort to limit exposure to rising rate scenarios. The strategy, as discussed in the “Noninterest Income” section, of the execution of interest rate swaps on commercial loans, helps offset the growth of longer term fixed rate assets and maintain a favorable interest rate risk profile.

 

Management continues to focus on growing quality loans/leases and carefully monitors maturities and interest rate sensitivity of the current portfolio. 

 

See Note 4 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information on the Company’s loan/lease portfolio.

 

ALLOWANCE FOR ESTIMATED LOSSES ON LOANS/LEASES

 

The allowance totaled $26.1 million at December 31, 2015, which was an increase of $3.1 million, or 13%, from $23.1 million at December 31, 2014. Provision totaled $6.9 million for 2015 and outpaced net charge-offs of $3.8 million (or 22 basis points of average loans/leases outstanding).

 

The allowance totaled $23.1 million at December 31, 2014, which was an increase of $1.6 million, or 8%, from $21.4 million at December 31, 2013. Provision totaled $6.8 million for 2014 and outpaced net charge-offs of $5.2 million (or 34 basis points of average loans/leases outstanding).

 

The increase in allowance in both 2015 and 2014 was primarily due to a combination of general allocations related to loan growth, as well as changes in qualitative and quantitative factors.

 

 
48

 

 

The following table summarizes the activity in the allowance.

 

   

Years ended December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

   

2012

   

2011

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                                         

Average amount of loans/leases outstanding, before allowance

  $ 1,707,523     $ 1,540,382     $ 1,425,364     $ 1,219,623     $ 1,177,705  
                                         

Allowance:

                                       

Balance, beginning of fiscal period

  $ 23,074     $ 21,448     $ 19,925     $ 18,789     $ 20,365  

Charge-offs:

                                       

C&I

    (454 )     (1,476 )     (963 )     (683 )     (3,334 )

CRE

    (2,560 )     (2,756 )     (3,573 )     (2,232 )     (3,682 )

Direct financing leases

    (1,789 )     (1,504 )     (917 )     (740 )     (1,101 )

Residential real estate

    (170 )     (131 )     (162 )     (4 )     -  

Installment and other consumer

    (252 )     (269 )     (229 )     (717 )     (945 )

Subtotal charge-offs

    (5,225 )     (6,136 )     (5,844 )     (4,376 )     (9,062 )
                                         

Recoveries:

                                       

C&I

    634       363       626       663       414  

CRE

    502       418       574       222       287  

Direct financing leases

    136       68       12       77       3  

Residential real estate

    4       10       17       -       -  

Installment and other consumer

    145       96       208       179       166  

Subtotal recoveries

    1,421       955       1,437       1,141       870  

Net charge-offs

    (3,804 )     (5,181 )     (4,407 )     (3,235 )     (8,192 )

Provision charged to expense

    6,871       6,807       5,930       4,371       6,616  

Balance, end of fiscal year

  $ 26,141     $ 23,074     $ 21,448     $ 19,925     $ 18,789  
                                         

Ratio of net charge-offs to average loans/leases outstanding

    0.22 %     0.34 %     0.31 %     0.27 %     0.70 %

 

The adequacy of the allowance was determined by management based on factors that included the overall composition of the loan/lease portfolio, types of loans/leases, historical loss experience, loan/lease delinquencies, potential substandard and doubtful credits, economic conditions, collateral positions, government guarantees and other factors that, in management's judgment, deserved evaluation. To ensure that an adequate allowance was maintained, provisions were made based on the increase/decrease in loans/leases and a detailed analysis of the loan/lease portfolio. The loan/lease portfolio was reviewed and analyzed quarterly with specific detailed reviews completed on all credits risk-rated less than “fair quality” and carrying aggregate exposure in excess of $250 thousand. The adequacy of the allowance was monitored by the credit administration staff and reported to management and the board of directors.

 

The Company continued the strengthening of its core loan portfolio as the levels of criticized loans remained relatively flat, while levels of classified loans declined in 2015 and 2014, as reported in the following table.

 

    As of December 31,  

Internally Assigned Risk Rating *

 

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
    (dollars in thousands)  
                         

Special Mention (Rating 6)

  $ 37,289     $ 32,958     $ 24,572  

Substandard (Rating 7)

    27,962       35,715       43,508  

Doubtful (Rating 8)

    -       -       -  
    $ 65,251     $ 68,673     $ 68,080  
                         

Criticized Loans **

  $ 65,251     $ 68,673     $ 68,080  

Classified Loans ***

  $ 27,962     $ 35,715     $ 43,508  

 

* Amounts above exclude the government guaranteed portion, if any. The Company assigns internal risk ratings of Pass (Rating 2) for the government guaranteed portion.

** Criticized loans are defined as C&I and CRE loans with internally assigned risk ratings of 6, 7, or 8, regardless of performance.

*** Classified loans are defined as C&I and CRE loans with internally assigned risk ratings of 7 or 8, regardless of performance.

 

 
49

 

 

Criticized loans stayed relatively flat over the past three years, while classified loans have seen a steady decline from 2013 to 2015. Classified loans decreased 18% in 2014 and 22% in 2015.

 

NPLs (consisting of nonaccrual loans/leases, accruing loans/leases past due 90 days or more, and accruing TDRs) declined $8.4 million, or 42%, during 2015, $383 thousand, or 2%, during 2014 and $4.9 million, or 19%, during 2013. Furthermore, NPLs have declined $35.6 million, or 75% from their peak at September 30, 2010.

 

See the table in the following section for further detail on NPLs and NPAs. As a direct result, the level of allowance as a percentage of gross loans/leases declined from 2009 to 2014. In 2015, allowance as a percentage of gross loans/leases slightly increased.

 

Further, in accordance with GAAP for acquisition accounting, the acquired CNB loans were recorded at fair value; therefore, there was no allowance associated with CNB’s loans at acquisition. Additionally, the Company has strengthened its allowance as a percentage of NPLs.

 

The following table summarizes the trend in allowance as a percentage of gross loans/leases and as a percentage of NPLs as of December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013.

 

   

As of December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Allowance / Gross Loans/Leases

    1.46 %     1.42 %     1.47 %

Allowance / NPLs

    223.33 %     114.78 %     104.70 %

 

 

The following table presents the allowance by type and the percentage of loan/lease type to total loans/leases.

 

   

As of December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

   

2012

   

2011

 
   

Amount

   

%

   

Amount

   

%

   

Amount

   

%

   

Amount

   

%

   

Amount

   

%

 
                                                                                 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                                                                                 

C&I loans

    10,484       36 %     8,834       32 %     5,649       30 %     4,532       31 %     4,878       29 %

CRE loans

    9,375       40 %     8,353       43 %     10,705       46 %     11,070       46 %     10,597       48 %

Direct financing leases

    3,395       10 %     3,359       10 %     2,517       9 %     1,990       8 %     1,339       8 %

Residential real estate loans

    1,790       10 %     1,526       10 %     1,396       10 %     1,070       9 %     705       8 %

Installment and other consumer loans

    1,097       4 %     1,002       5 %     1,181       5 %     1,263       6 %     1,270       7 %
    $ 26,141       100 %   $ 23,074       100 %   $ 21,448       100 %   $ 19,925       100 %   $ 18,789       100 %

 

% - Represents the percentage of the certain type of loan/lease to total loans/leases

 

Although management believes that the allowance at December 31, 2015 was at a level adequate to absorb probable losses on existing loans/leases, there can be no assurance that such losses will not exceed the estimated amounts or that the Company will not be required to make additional provisions for loan/lease losses in the future. Unpredictable future events could adversely affect cash flows for both commercial and individual borrowers, which could cause the Company to experience increases in problem assets, delinquencies and losses on loans/leases, and require additional increases in the provision. Asset quality is a priority for the Company and its subsidiaries. The ability to grow profitably is in part dependent upon the ability to maintain that quality. The Company continually focuses efforts at its subsidiary banks and its leasing company with the intention to improve the overall quality of the Company’s loan/lease portfolio.      

 

See Note 4 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information on the Company’s allowance.

 

 
50

 

 

NONPERFORMING ASSETS 

 

The table below presents the amounts of NPAs.

 

   

As of December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

   

2012

   

2011

 
                                         
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                                         

Nonaccrual loans/leases (1) (2)

  $ 10,648     $ 18,588     $ 17,878     $ 17,932     $ 18,995  

Accruing loans/leases past due 90 days or more

    3       93       84       159       1,111  

TDRs - accruing

    1,054       1,421       2,523       7,300       11,904  

NPLs

    11,705       20,102       20,485       25,391       32,010  

OREO

    7,151       12,768       9,729       3,955       8,386  

Other repossessed assets

    246       155       346       212       109  

NPAs

  $ 19,102     $ 33,025     $ 30,560     $ 29,558     $ 40,505  
                                         

NPLs to total loans/leases

    0.65 %     1.23 %     1.40 %     1.97 %     2.67 %

NPAs to total loans/leases plus repossessed property

    1.06 %     2.01 %     2.08 %     2.29 %     3.35 %

NPAs to total assets

    0.74 %     1.31 %     1.28 %     1.41 %     2.06 %

Texas ratio (3)

    7.62 %     20.26 %     18.43 %     18.68 %     25.58 %

 

 

(1)

Includes government guaranteed portions of loans, if applicable.

 

(2)

Includes TDRs of $1.5 million at December 31, 2015, $5.0 million at December 31, 2014, $10.9 million at December 31, 2013, $5.7 million at December 31, 2012, and $8.6 million at December 31, 2011.

 

(3)

Texas Ratio = NPAs (excluding Other Repossessed Assets) / Tangible Equity plus Allowance. Texas Ratio is a non-GAAP financial measure. Management included the ratio as it is considered by many investors and analysts to be a metric with which to analyze and evaluate asset quality. Other companies may calculate this ratio differently.

 

The large majority of the Company’s NPAs consists of nonaccrual loans/leases and OREO. For nonaccrual loans/leases, management thoroughly reviewed these loans/leases and provided specific allowances as appropriate. OREO is carried at the lower of carrying amount or fair value less costs to sell.

 

The policy of the Company is to place a loan/lease on nonaccrual status if: (a) payment in full of interest or principal is not expected; or (b) principal or interest has been in default for a period of 90 days or more unless the obligation is both in the process of collection and well secured. A loan/lease is well secured if it is secured by collateral with sufficient market value to repay principal and all accrued interest. A debt is in the process of collection if collection of the debt is proceeding in due course either through legal action, including judgment enforcement procedures, or in appropriate circumstances, through collection efforts not involving legal action which are reasonably expected to result in repayment of the debt or in its restoration to current status.

 

In 2015, the Company’s NPAs decreased $13.9 million, or 42%. Nonaccrual loans decreased $7.9 million as a result of improving performance and paydowns. OREO decreased $5.6 million due to the sale of two large properties during the year, one of which was sold at a gain of $1.2 million.

 

In 2014, the Company’s nonperforming assets increased $2.5 million, or 8%, as OREO increased $3.0 million. The growth in OREO was primarily the result of foreclosure on the collateral securing one large nonperforming relationship that was shared between each of the three charters. Management continues to proactively manage its OREO portfolio in an effort to sell timely and prudently. Accruing troubled debt restructurings fell $1.1 million, as the result of improved performance.

 

The Company’s lending/leasing practices remain unchanged and asset quality remains a top priority for management.

 

 
51

 

 

DEPOSITS 

 

Deposits grew $201.0 million, or 12%, during 2015. For 2014, deposits grew $32.7 million, or 2%. The table below presents the composition of the Company’s deposit portfolio.

 

   

As of December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
   

Amount

   

%

   

Amount

   

%

   

Amount

   

%

 
                                                 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                                                 

Noninterest-bearing demand deposits

  $ 615,292       33 %   $ 511,992       31 %   $ 542,566       33 %

Interest-bearing demand deposits

    886,294       47 %     778,570       46 %     713,533       43 %

Time deposits

    309,974       16 %     306,364       18 %     326,852       20 %

Brokered deposits*

    69,106       4 %     82,742       5 %     64,040       4 %
    $ 1,880,666       100 %   $ 1,679,668       100 %   $ 1,646,991       100 %

 

*Includes brokered money market balances of $15.0 million, $13.5 million and $2.1 million as of December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013, respectively.

 

The Company has been successful in growing its noninterest-bearing deposit portfolio over the past several years, growing average balances 12% in 2015 and 11% in 2014. Year-end balances can fluctuate a great deal due to large customer and correspondent bank activity. Trends have shown that this fluctuation is temporary.

 

Management will continue to focus on growing its noninterest bearing deposit portfolio, including its correspondent banking business at QCBT, as well as shifting the mix from brokered and other higher cost deposits to lower cost core deposits. With the significant success achieved by QCBT in growing its correspondent banking business, QCBT has developed procedures to proactively monitor this industry concentration of deposits and loans. Other deposit-related industry concentrations and large accounts are monitored by the internal asset liability management committee. See discussion regarding policy limits on bank stock loans in the Lending/Leasing section under Item 1 – Business in Part I of this Form 10-K.

 

SHORT-TERM BORROWINGS 

 

The subsidiary banks offer overnight repurchase agreements to some of their major customers. Also, the subsidiary banks purchase federal funds for short-term funding needs from the FRB, or from their correspondent banks. The table below presents the composition of the Company’s short-term borrowings.

 

 

   

As of December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                         

Overnight repurchase agreements with customers

  $ 73,873     $ 137,252     $ 98,823  

Federal funds purchased

    70,790       131,100       50,470  
    $ 144,663     $ 268,352     $ 149,293  

 

In 2015, the Company shifted some overnight customer repurchase agreement funds to insured deposit products which do not require collateral, helping to free up additional liquidity for the Company. This also allows the Company to further execute on the strategy of rotating out of investment securities into loans and leases.

 

Regarding the Company’s federal funds purchased, this fluctuates based on the short-term funding needs of the Company’s subsidiary banks. See Note 8 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information on the Company’s short-term borrowings.

 

 
52

 

 

FHLB ADVANCES AND OTHER BORROWINGS

 

As a result of their memberships in the FHLB of Des Moines and Chicago, the subsidiary banks have the ability to borrow funds for short-term or long-term purposes under a variety of programs. The subsidiary banks utilize FHLB advances for loan matching as a hedge against the possibility of rising interest rates or when these advances provide a less costly source of funds than customer deposits. For 2015, FHLB advances decreased $52.5 million, or 26%, as several prepayments of advances were included in balance sheet restructurings throughout the year. See Notes 9 and 12 of the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional details. For 2014, FHLB advances decreased $27.9 million, or 12%, as QCBT had $20.4 million of advances mature without replacement during the year.

 

 

    As of December 31,  
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                         

Amount Due

  $ 151,000     $ 203,500     $ 231,350  

Weighted Average Interest Rate at Year-End

    1.37 %     2.83 %     2.86 %

 

See Note 9 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information regarding FHLB advances.

 

Other borrowings consist largely of wholesale structured repurchase agreements which the subsidiary banks utilize as an alternative funding source to FHLB advances and customer deposits. The table below presents the composition of the Company’s other borrowings.

 

    As of December 31,  
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                         

Wholesale structured repurchase agreements

  $ 110,000     $ 130,000     $ 130,000  

Term note

    -       17,625       9,800  

Series A subordinated notes

    -       2,657       2,648  
    $ 110,000     $ 150,282     $ 142,448  

 

In 2015, other borrowings decreased $40 million. In 2014, other borrowings increased $7.8 million.

 

See Notes 9, 10 and 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information regarding FHLB advances, other borrowings and the balance sheet restructuring that occurred in 2015. 

 

It is management’s intention to continue to reduce its reliance on wholesale funding, including FHLB advances, wholesale structured repurchase agreements, and brokered time deposits. Replacement of this funding with core deposits helps to reduce interest expense as the wholesale funding tends to be higher cost. However, the Company may choose to utilize wholesale funding sources to supplement funding needs, as this is a way for the Company to effectively and efficiently manage interest rate risk.

 

 
53

 

 

STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY

 

The table below presents the composition of the Company’s stockholders’ equity, including the common and preferred equity components.

 

   

As of December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
   

Amount

   

%

   

Amount

   

%

   

Amount

   

%

 
                                                 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                                                 

Common stock

  $ 11,761             $ 8,074             $ 8,006          

Additional paid in capital - common

    123,283               61,669               60,360          

Retained earnings

    92,966               77,877               64,637          

AOCI

    (2,124 )             (1,935 )             (13,644 )        

Less: Treasury stock

    -               (1,606 )             (1,606 )        

Total common stockholders' equity

    225,886       100 %     144,079       100 %     117,753       80 %
                                                 

Preferred stock

    -               -               30          

Additional paid in capital - preferred

    -               -               29,794          

Total preferred stockholders' equity

    -       0 %     -       0 %     29,824       20 %
                                                 

Total stockholders' equity

  $ 225,886       100 %   $ 144,079       100 %   $ 147,577       100 %
                                                 

Tangible common equity* / total tangible assets

    8.55 %             5.52 %             4.71 %        

 

*Tangible common equity is defined as total common stockholders’ equity excluding equity of noncontrolling interests and excluding goodwill and other intangible assets. This ratio is a non-GAAP financial measure. Management included this ratio as it is considered by many investors and analysts to be a metric with which to analyze and evaluate the equity composition. Other companies may calculate this ratio differently.

 

As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, no preferred stock was outstanding. At December 31, 2013, preferred stock consisted solely of Senior Non-Cumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock, Series F, and totaled $29.8 million.

 

The Series E Preferred Stock was converted into the Company’s common stock on December 23, 2013. Pursuant to the terms of the Series E Preferred Stock, because the Company’s common stock price exceeded $17.22 for at least 20 trading days in a period of 30 consecutive trading days, the Company’s Board of Directors approved the conversion and the preferred stockholders were notified by mail on November 21, 2013. Each share of Series E Preferred Stock was converted into the number of shares of common stock that resulted from dividing $1,000 (the issuance price per share of the Series E Preferred Stock) by $12.15 (the conversion price per share). As a result of the conversion, the Company issued 2,057,502 shares of common stock.

 

In 2015, the Company announced and closed an underwritten public offering of 3,680,000 shares of its common stock at a price of $18.25 per share. This offering significantly increased common stock and additional paid in capital – common in comparison to the prior year. Proceeds from the issuance (net of costs) totaled $63.5 million. Refer to Note 12 of the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information.

 

 
54

 

 

The following table presents the rollforward of stockholders’ equity for the years ended December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively.

 

   

For the Years Ended December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 

Beginning balance

  $ 144,079     $ 147,577  

Net income

    16,928       14,953  

Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax

    (189 )     11,709  

Preferred and common cash dividends declared

    (935 )     (1,713 )

Proceeds from issuance of 3,680,000 shares of common stock, net of costs

    63,484       -  

Redemption of 29,867 shares of Series F Preferred Stock

    -       (29,824 )

Other *

    2,519       1,377  

Ending balance

  $ 225,886     $ 144,079  

 

*Includes mostly common stock issued for options exercised and the employee stock purchase plans, as well as stock-based compensation.

 

The available for sale portion of the securities portfolio experienced a significant increase in fair value during 2014 as the result of the decrease in longer term interest rates. The fair value stayed relatively flat during 2015. See previous discussion in the Investment Securities section.

 

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

 

Liquidity measures the ability of the Company to meet maturing obligations and its existing commitments, to withstand fluctuations in deposit levels, to fund its operations, and to provide for customers’ credit needs. The Company monitors liquidity risk through contingency planning stress testing on a regular basis. The Company seeks to avoid over concentration of funding sources and to establish and maintain contingent funding facilities that can be drawn upon if normal funding sources become unavailable. One source of liquidity is cash and short-term assets, such as interest-bearing deposits in other banks and federal funds sold, which averaged $129.5 million during 2015, $118.8 million during 2014 and $102.8 million during 2013. The Company’s on balance sheet liquidity position can fluctuate based on short-term activity in deposits and loans.

 

The subsidiary banks have a variety of sources of short-term liquidity available to them, including federal funds purchased from correspondent banks, FHLB advances, structured repos, brokered time deposits, lines of credit, borrowing at the Federal Reserve Discount Window, sales of securities available for sale, and loan/lease participations or sales. The Company also generates liquidity from the regular principal payments and prepayments made on its loan/lease portfolio, and on the regular monthly payments on its residential mortgage-backed securities portfolio.

 

At December 31, 2015, the subsidiary banks had 32 lines of credit totaling $346.6 million, of which $14.6 million was secured and $332.0 million was unsecured. At December 31, 2015, $286.6 million was available as $60.0 million was utilized for short-term borrowing needs at QCBT.

 

At December 31, 2014, the subsidiary banks had 35 lines of credit totaling $351.6 million, of which $17.1 million was secured and $334.5 million was unsecured. At December 31, 2014, $237.6 million was available as $114.0 million was utilized for short-term borrowing needs at QCBT and RB&T.

 

The Company has emphasized growing the number and amount of lines of credit in an effort to strengthen this contingent source of liquidity. Additionally, the Company maintains its $40.0 million secured revolving credit note with a variable interest rate and a maturity of June 30, 2016. At December 31, 2015, the Company had not borrowed on this revolving credit note and had the full amount available. See Note 10 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information.

 

Investing activities used cash of $65.9 million during 2015 compared to $129.9 million during 2014, and $164.6 million during 2013. Proceeds from calls, maturities, paydowns, and sales of securities were $308.8 million for 2015 compared to $137.3 million for 2014, and $230.8 million for 2013. Purchases of securities used cash of $232.1 million for 2015 compared to $76.3 million for 2014, and $313.0 million for 2013. The net increase in loans/leases used cash of $172.8 million for 2015 compared to $180.3 million for 2014, and $55.3 million for 2013. The Company paid cash of $30.4 million on sales of certain branches of CNB in 2013.

 

 
55

 

 

Financing activities provided cash of $39.5 million for 2015 compared to $100.6 million for 2014, and $112.9 million for 2013. Net increases in deposits totaled $201.0 million, $32.7 million, and $108.9 million for 2015, 2014, and 2013, respectively. Net short-term borrowings decreased $123.7 million in 2015, while they increased $119.1 million in 2014 and decreased $21.8 million in 2013. In 2015, the Company used $119.0 million to prepay select FHLB advances and other borrowings. In the same period, the Company received $63.5 million of proceeds from the public common stock offering of 3.7 million shares of common stock.

 

Total cash provided by operating activities was $30.1 million for 2015, compared to $25.6 million for 2014, and $32.0 million for 2013.

 

Throughout its history, the Company has secured additional capital through various resources, including the issuance of trust preferred securities. See Notes 11 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for information on the issuance of trust preferred securities.

 

On August 27, 2015, the Company filed a universal shelf registration statement on Form S-3 with the SEC, as amended on September 24, 2015. This registration statement, declared effective by the SEC on October 5, 2015, will allow the Company to issue various types of securities, including common stock, preferred stock, debt securities or warrants, from time to time, up to an aggregate amount of $100.0 million. The specific terms and prices of the securities will be determined at the time of any future offering and described in a separate prospectus supplement, which would be filed with the SEC at the time of the particular offering, if any.

 

As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, the subsidiary banks remained “well-capitalized” in accordance with regulatory capital requirements administered by the federal banking authorities. See Note 16 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for detail of the capital amounts and ratios for the Company and subsidiary banks.

 

COMMITMENTS, CONTINGENCIES, CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS, AND OFF-BALANCE SHEET ARRANGEMENTS

 

In the normal course of business, the subsidiary banks make various commitments and incur certain contingent liabilities that are not presented in the accompanying consolidated financial statements. The commitments and contingent liabilities include various guarantees, commitments to extend credit, and standby letters of credit.

 

Commitments to extend credit are agreements to lend to a customer as long as there is no violation of any condition established in the contract. Commitments generally have fixed expiration dates or other termination clauses and may require payment of a fee. Since many of the commitments are expected to expire without being drawn upon, the total commitment amounts do not necessarily represent future cash requirements. The subsidiary banks evaluate each customer's creditworthiness on a case-by-case basis. The amount of collateral obtained, if deemed necessary by the banks upon extension of credit, is based upon management's credit evaluation of the counter-party. Collateral held varies but may include accounts receivable, marketable securities, inventory, property, plant and equipment, and income-producing commercial properties.

 

Standby letters of credit are conditional commitments issued by the subsidiary banks to guarantee the performance of a customer to a third party. Those guarantees are primarily issued to support public and private borrowing arrangements and, generally, have terms of one year, or less. The credit risk involved in issuing letters of credit is essentially the same as that involved in extending loan facilities to customers. The banks hold collateral, as described above, supporting those commitments if deemed necessary. In the event the customer does not perform in accordance with the terms of the agreement with the third party, the banks would be required to fund the commitments. The maximum potential amount of future payments the banks could be required to make is represented by the contractual amount. If the commitment is funded, the banks would be entitled to seek recovery from the customer. At December 31, 2015 and 2014, no amounts had been recorded as liabilities for the banks' potential obligations under these guarantees.

 

 
56

 

 

As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, commitments to extend credit aggregated $480.5 million and $499.3 million, respectively. As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, standby letters of credit aggregated $13.1 million and $12.9 million, respectively. Management does not expect that all of these commitments will be funded.

 

Additional information regarding commitments, contingencies, and off-balance sheet arrangements is described in Note 18 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

The Company has various financial obligations, including contractual obligations and commitments, which may require future cash payments. The following table presents, as of December 31, 2015, significant fixed and determinable contractual obligations to third parties by payment date. Further discussion of the nature of each obligation is included in the referenced note to the consolidated financial statements.

 

           

Payments Due by Period

 

Description

 

Financial

Statement

Note Reference

   

Total

   

One Year

or Less

   

2 - 3 Years

   

4 - 5 Years

   

After 5 Years

 
                                                 
           

(dollars in thousands)

 
                                                 

Deposits without a stated maturity

    N/A     $ 1,516,599     $ 1,516,599     $ -     $ -     $ -  

Certificates of deposit

    7       364,067       274,389       62,722       23,293       3,663  

Short-term borrowings

    8       144,663       144,663       -       -       -  

FHLB advances

    9       151,000       103,000       48,000       -       -  

Other borrowings

    10       110,000       -       20,000       90,000       -  

Junior subordinated debentures

    11       38,499       -       -       -       38,499  

Rental commitments

    5       838       240       435       163       -  

Operating contracts

    N/A       20,213       6,544       9,086       4,583       -  

Total contractual cash obligations

          $ 2,345,879     $ 2,045,435     $ 140,243     $ 118,039     $ 42,162  

 

Purchase obligations represent obligations under agreements to purchase goods or services that are enforceable and legally binding on the Company and that specify all significant terms, including: (1) fixed or minimum quantities to be purchased; (2) fixed, minimum or variable price provisions; and (3) the approximate timing of the transaction. The Company had no purchase obligations at December 31, 2015. The Company's operating contract obligations represent short and long-term lease payments for data processing equipment and services, software, and other equipment and professional services.

 

IMPACT OF INFLATION AND CHANGING PRICES

 

The Consolidated Financial Statements of the Company and the accompanying notes have been prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP, which require the measurement of financial position and operating results in terms of historical dollar amounts without considering the changes in the relative purchasing power of money over time due to inflation. The impact of inflation is reflected in the increased cost of the Company’s operations. Unlike industrial companies, nearly all of the assets and liabilities of the Company are monetary in nature. As a result, interest rates have a greater impact on the Company’s performance than do the effects of general levels of inflation. Interest rates do not necessarily move in the same direction or to the same extent as the price of goods and services.

 

FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS

 

This document (including information incorporated by reference) contains, and future oral and written statements of the Company and its management may contain, forward-looking statements, within the meaning of such term in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, with respect to the financial condition, results of operations, plans, objectives, future performance and business of the Company. Forward-looking statements, which may be based upon beliefs, expectations and assumptions of the Company’s management and on information currently available to management, are generally identifiable by the use of words such as “believe,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “bode,” “predict,” “suggest,” “project,” “appear,” “plan,” “intend,” “estimate,” “may,” “will,” “would,” “could,” “should,” “likely,” or other similar expressions. Additionally, all statements in this document, including forward-looking statements, speak only as of the date they are made, and the Company undertakes no obligation to update any statement in light of new information or future events.

 

 
57

 

 

The Company’s ability to predict results or the actual effect of future plans or strategies is inherently uncertain. The factors that could have a material adverse effect on the operations and future prospects of the Company and its subsidiaries are detailed in the “Risk Factors” section included under Item 1A. of Part I of this Form 10-K. In addition to the risk factors described in that section, there are other factors that may impact any public company, including ours, which could have a material adverse effect on the operations and future prospects of the Company and its subsidiaries. These additional factors include, but are not limited to, the following:

 

 

The strength of the local and national economy.

 

Changes in the interest rate environment.

 

The economic impact of exceptional weather occurrences such as tornadoes, floods and blizzards.

 

The economic impact of past and any future terrorist attacks, acts of war or threats thereof and the response of the United States to any such threats and attacks.

 

The impact of cybersecurity risks.

 

The costs, effects and outcomes of existing or future litigation.

 

Changes in accounting policies and practices, as may be adopted by state and federal regulatory agencies, the FASB, the SEC or the PCAOB.

 

The ability of the Company to manage the risks associated with the foregoing as well as anticipated.

 

These risks and uncertainties should be considered in evaluating forward-looking statements and undue reliance should not be placed on such statements.

 

Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk

 

The Company, like other financial institutions, is subject to direct and indirect market risk. Direct market risk exists from changes in interest rates. The Company’s net income is dependent on its net interest income. Net interest income is susceptible to interest rate risk to the degree that interest-bearing liabilities mature or reprice on a different basis than interest-earning assets. When interest-bearing liabilities mature or reprice more quickly than interest-earning assets in a given period, a significant increase in market rates of interest could adversely affect net interest income. Similarly, when interest-earning assets mature or reprice more quickly than interest-bearing liabilities, falling interest rates could result in a decrease in net interest income.

 

In an attempt to manage the Company’s exposure to changes in interest rates, management monitors the Company’s interest rate risk. Each subsidiary bank has an asset/liability management committee of the board of directors that meets quarterly to review the bank’s interest rate risk position and profitability, and to make or recommend adjustments for consideration by the full board of each bank.

 

Internal asset/liability management teams consisting of members of the subsidiary banks’ management meet weekly to manage the mix of assets and liabilities to maximize earnings and liquidity and minimize interest rate and other risks. Management also reviews the subsidiary banks’ securities portfolios, formulates investment strategies, and oversees the timing and implementation of transactions to assure attainment of the board's objectives in the most effective manner. Notwithstanding the Company’s interest rate risk management activities, the potential for changing interest rates is an uncertainty that can have an adverse effect on net income.

 

In adjusting the Company’s asset/liability position, the board of directors and management attempt to manage the Company’s interest rate risk while maintaining or enhancing net interest margins. At times, depending on the level of general interest rates, the relationship between long-term and short-term interest rates, market conditions and competitive factors, the board of directors and management may decide to increase the Company’s interest rate risk position somewhat in order to increase its net interest margin. The Company’s results of operations and net portfolio values remain vulnerable to increases in interest rates and to fluctuations in the difference between long-term and short-term interest rates.

 

 
58

 

  

One method used to quantify interest rate risk is a short-term earnings at risk summary, which is a detailed and dynamic simulation model used to quantify the estimated exposure of net interest income to sustained interest rate changes. This simulation model captures the impact of changing interest rates on the interest income received and interest expense paid on all interest sensitive assets and liabilities reflected on the Company’s consolidated balance sheet. This sensitivity analysis demonstrates net interest income exposure annually over a five-year horizon, assuming no balance sheet growth, no balance sheet mix change, and various interest rate scenarios including no change in rates; 200, 300, 400, and 500 basis point upward shifts; and a 100 basis point downward shift in interest rates, where interest-bearing assets and liabilities reprice at their earliest possible repricing date.

 

The model assumes parallel and pro rata shifts in interest rates over a twelve-month period for the 200 basis point upward shift and 100 basis point downward shift. For the 400 basis point upward shift, the model assumes a parallel and pro rata shift in interest rates over a twenty-four month period. For the 500 basis point upward shift, the model assumes a flattening and pro rata shift in interest rates over a twelve-month period where the short-end of the yield curve shifts upward greater than the long-end of the yield curve.

 

Further, in recent years, the Company added additional interest rate scenarios where interest rates experience a parallel and instantaneous shift (“shock”) upward of 100, 200, 300, and 400 basis points and a parallel and instantaneous shock downward of 100 basis points. The Company will run additional interest rate scenarios on an as-needed basis.

 

The asset/liability management committees of the subsidiary bank boards of directors have established policy limits of a 10% decline in net interest income for the 200 basis point upward parallel shift and the 100 basis point downward parallel shift. For the 300 basis point upward shock, the established policy limit has been increased to 25% decline in net interest income. The increased policy limit is appropriate as the shock scenario is extreme and unlikely and warrants a higher limit than the more realistic and traditional parallel/pro-rata shift scenarios. 

 

Application of the simulation model analysis for select interest rate scenarios at December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013 demonstrated the following:

 

           

NET INTEREST INCOME EXPOSURE in YEAR 1

 

INTEREST RATE SCENARIO

 

POLICY LIMIT

   

As of December 31, 2015

   

As of December 31, 2014

   

As of December 31, 2013

 
                                 

100 basis point downward shift

    -10.0 %     -2.1 %     -1.7 %     -1.0 %

200 basis point upward shift

    -10.0 %     -2.7 %     -5.0 %     -4.8 %

300 basis point upward shock

    -25.0 %     -7.1 %     -11.9 %     -11.0 %

 

The simulation is within the board-established policy limits for all three scenarios. Additionally, for all of the various interest rate scenarios modeled and measured by management (as described above), the results at December 31, 2015 were within established risk tolerances as established by policy or by best practice (if the interest rate scenario didn’t have a specific policy limit).

 

In 2014, the Company executed two interest rate cap transactions, each with a notional value of $15.0 million, for a total of $30.0 million. The interest rate caps purchased essentially set a ceiling to the interest rate paid on the $30.0 million of short-term FHLB advances that are being hedged, minimizing the interest rate risk associated with rising interest rates. The Company will continue to analyze and evaluate similar transactions as an alternative and cost effective way to mitigate interest rate risk.

 

Interest rate risk is considered to be one of the most significant market risks affecting the Company. For that reason, the Company engages the assistance of a national consulting firm and its risk management system to monitor and control the Company’s interest rate risk exposure. Other types of market risk, such as foreign currency exchange rate risk and commodity price risk, do not arise in the normal course of the Company’s business activities.

 

 
59

 

 

 

Item 8.

Financial Statements

 

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc.

 

Index to Consolidated Financial Statements

 

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 
   

Financial Statements

 
   

Consolidated balance sheets as of December 31, 2015 and 2014

 
   

Consolidated statements of income for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013

 
   

Consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss) for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013

 
   
Consolidated statements of changes in stockholders' equity for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013  
   
Consolidated statements of cash flows for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013  

  

Notes to consolidated financial statements:  
  Note 1: Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies  
  Note 2:

Community National Bancorporation and Community National Bank

 
  Note 3:

Investment Securities

 
  Note 4:

Loans/Leases Receivable

 
  Note 5:

Premises and Equipment

 
  Note 6:

Derivatives and Hedging Activities

 
  Note 7:

Deposits

 
  Note 8:

Short-Term Borrowings

 
  Note 9:

FHLB Advances

 
  Note 10:

Other Borrowings and Unused Lines of Credit

 
  Note 11:

Junior Subordinated Debentures

 
  Note 12:

Common Stock Offering and Balance Sheet Restructuring

 
  Note 13:

Federal and State Income Taxes

 
  Note 14:

Employee Benefit Plans

 
  Note 15:

Stock-Based Compensation

 
  Note 16:

Regulatory Capital Requirements and Restrictions on Dividends

 
  Note 17:

Earnings Per Share

 
  Note 18:

Commitments and Contingencies

 
  Note 19:

Quarterly Results of Operations (Unaudited)

 
  Note 20:

Parent Company Only Financial Statements

 
  Note 21:

Fair Value

 
  Note 22:

Business Segment Information

 
  Note 23:

Acquisition of Noncontrolling Interest in m2 Lease Funds

 
  Note 24:

Sale of Credit Card Loan Receivables and Credit Card Issuing Operations for QCBT

 
  Note 25:

Subsequent Event - Junior Subordinated Debentures Retirement and Balance Sheet Restructuring

 

 

 
60

 

 

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

 

To the Board of Directors and Stockholders

QCR Holdings, Inc.

 

 

We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of QCR Holdings, Inc. and subsidiaries as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, and the related consolidated statements of income, comprehensive income (loss), changes in stockholders’ equity, and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2015. These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.

 

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

 

In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of QCR Holdings, Inc. and subsidiaries as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, and the results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2015, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

 

We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), QCR Holdings, Inc. and subsidiaries’ internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2015, based on criteria established in Internal Control – Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission in 2013, and our report dated March 11, 2016 expressed an unqualified opinion on the effectiveness of QCR Holdings, Inc. and subsidiaries’ internal control over financial reporting.

 

Davenport, Iowa

March 11, 2016 

 

 
61

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Consolidated Balance Sheets

December 31, 2015 and 2014

 

Assets

 

2015

   

2014

 

Cash and due from banks

  $ 41,957,855     $ 38,235,019  

Federal funds sold

    19,850,000       46,780,000  

Interest-bearing deposits at financial institutions

    36,098,431       35,334,682  
                 

Securities held to maturity, at amortized cost

    253,674,159       199,879,574  

Securities available for sale, at fair value

    323,434,982       451,659,630  

Total securities

    577,109,141       651,539,204  
                 

Loans receivable, held for sale

    565,850       553,000  

Loans/leases receivable, held for investment

    1,797,456,825       1,629,450,070  

Gross loans/leases receivable

    1,798,022,675       1,630,003,070  

Less allowance for estimated losses on loans/leases

    (26,140,906 )     (23,074,365 )

Net loans/leases receivable

    1,771,881,769       1,606,928,705  
                 

Bank-owned life insurance

    55,485,655       53,723,548  

Premises and equipment, net

    37,350,352       36,021,128  

Restricted investment securities

    14,835,925       15,559,575  

Other real estate owned, net

    7,150,658       12,767,636  

Goodwill

    3,222,688       3,222,688  

Core deposit intangible

    1,471,409       1,670,921  

Other assets

    26,784,392       23,174,994  

Total assets

  $ 2,593,198,275     $ 2,524,958,100  
                 

Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity

               

Liabilities:

               

Deposits:

               

Noninterest-bearing

  $ 615,292,211     $ 511,991,864  

Interest-bearing

    1,265,373,973       1,167,676,149  

Total deposits

    1,880,666,184       1,679,668,013  
                 

Short-term borrowings

    144,662,716       268,351,670  

Federal Home Loan Bank advances

    151,000,000       203,500,000  

Other borrowings

    110,000,000       150,282,492  

Junior subordinated debentures

    38,499,052       40,423,735  

Other liabilities

    42,484,573       38,653,681  

Total liabilities

    2,367,312,525       2,380,879,591  
                 

Commitments and Contingencies

               
                 

Stockholders' Equity:

               

Preferred stock, $1 par value; shares authorized 250,000

               

December 2015 and 2014 - No shares issued or outstanding

    -       -  

Common stock, $1 par value; shares authorized 20,000,000

    11,761,083       8,074,443  

December 2015 - 11,761,083 shares issued and outstanding

               

December 2014 - 8,074,443 shares issued and 7,953,197 outstanding

               

Additional paid-in capital

    123,282,851       61,668,968  

Retained earnings

    92,965,645       77,876,824  

Accumulated other comprehensive loss:

               

Securities available for sale

    (1,324,408 )     (1,535,849 )

Interest rate cap derivatives

    (799,421 )     (399,367 )

Less treasury stock, at cost

    -       (1,606,510 )

December 2015 - 0 common shares

               

December 2014 - 121,246 common shares

               

Total stockholders' equity

    225,885,750       144,078,509  

Total liabilities and stockholders' equity

  $ 2,593,198,275     $ 2,524,958,100  

 

See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

 
62

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Consolidated Statements of Income

Years Ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 

Interest and dividend income:

                       

Loans/leases, including fees

  $ 74,615,499     $ 69,423,001     $ 66,810,952  

Securities:

                       

Taxable

    6,772,244       9,618,436       10,061,066  

Nontaxable

    7,782,370       6,074,896       4,147,050  

Interest-bearing deposits at financial institutions

    304,602       299,227       275,352  

Restricted investment securities

    503,764       528,660       558,946  

Federal funds sold

    24,774       21,036       18,592  

Total interest and dividend income

    90,003,253       85,965,256       81,871,958  
                         

Interest expense:

                       

Deposits

    4,495,538       4,508,921       4,714,306  

Short-term borrowings

    210,306       233,930       293,020  

Federal Home Loan Bank advances

    3,511,541       6,025,749       6,863,216  

Other borrowings

    4,233,193       4,890,909       4,753,260  

Junior subordinated debentures

    1,255,951       1,234,619       1,142,719  

Total interest expense

    13,706,529       16,894,128       17,766,521  
                         

Net interest income

    76,296,724       69,071,128       64,105,437  

Provision for loan/lease losses

    6,870,900       6,807,000       5,930,420  

Net interest income after provision for loan/lease losses

    69,425,824       62,264,128       58,175,017  
                         

Noninterest income:

                       

Trust department fees

    6,131,209       5,715,151       4,941,681  

Investment advisory and management fees

    2,971,964       2,798,170       2,580,140  

Deposit service fees

    3,823,818       3,847,350       3,873,349  

Gains on sales of residential real estate loans, net

    322,872       460,721       836,065  

Gains on sales of government guaranteed portions of loans, net

    1,304,575       2,040,638       2,148,979  

Swap fee income

    1,717,552       154,800       104,560  

Securities gains

    798,983       92,363       432,492  

Earnings on bank-owned life insurance

    1,762,107       1,721,507       1,786,023  

Debit card fees

    1,072,431       982,005       991,300  

Correspondent banking fees

    1,190,411       1,064,030       772,120  

Participation service fees on commercial loan participations

    865,280       854,621       768,547  

Bargain purchase gain on Community National Acquisition

    -       -       1,841,385  

Gains on sales of certain Community National Bank branches

    -       -       2,334,216  

Gain on sale of credit card loan receivables

    -       -       495,405  

Gain on sale of credit card issuing operations

    -       -       355,268  

Fee income from early termination of leases

    296,546       60,941       123,587  

Credit card issuing fees

    538,167       552,639       743,700  

Lawsuit award

    387,045       -       444,732  

Gains on debt extinguishment

    300,000       -       -  

Other

    1,046,763       812,421       1,272,127  

Total noninterest income

    24,529,723       21,157,357       26,845,676  
                         

Noninterest expenses:

                       

Salaries and employee benefits

    42,967,915       40,337,055       37,510,318  

Occupancy and equipment expense

    7,042,706       7,385,526       6,712,468  

Professional and data processing fees

    5,523,447       6,191,574       6,424,594  

FDIC insurance, other insurance and regulatory fees

    2,724,968       2,895,494       2,587,041  

Loan/lease expense

    882,591       665,602       1,241,704  

Net cost of operations of other real estate

    (1,092,401 )     603,092       1,206,973  

Advertising and marketing

    1,900,539       1,985,121       1,726,314  

Postage and communications

    936,231       930,408       1,069,142  

Stationery and supplies

    595,689       579,330       562,301  

Bank service charges

    1,486,265       1,291,017       1,144,757  

Losses on debt extinguishment

    7,485,601       -       -  

Acquisition and data conversion costs

    -       -       2,353,162  

Correspondent banking expense

    703,495       635,630       661,451  

Other

    2,201,378       1,930,129       2,264,281  

Total noninterest expenses

    73,358,424       65,429,978       65,464,506  
                         

Income before income taxes

    20,597,123       17,991,507       19,556,187  

Federal and state income tax expense

    3,669,242       3,038,970       4,617,942  

Net income

  $ 16,927,881     $ 14,952,537     $ 14,938,245  
                         

Less: preferred stock dividends

    -       1,081,877       3,168,302  

Net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc. common stockholders

  $ 16,927,881     $ 13,870,660     $ 11,769,943  
                         

Basic earnings per common share

  $ 1.64     $ 1.75     $ 2.13  

Diluted earnings per common share

  $ 1.61     $ 1.72     $ 2.08  
                         

Weighted average common shares outstanding

    10,345,286       7,925,220       5,531,948  

Weighted average common and common equivalent shares outstanding

    10,499,841       8,048,661       5,646,926  
                         

Cash dividends declared per common share

  $ 0.08     $ 0.08     $ 0.08  

 

See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

 
63

 

 

QCR HOLDINGS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

 

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)

Years Ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 

Net income

  $ 16,927,881     $ 14,952,537     $ 14,938,245  
                         

Other comprehensive income (loss):

                       
                         

Unrealized gains (losses) on securities available for sale:

                       

Unrealized holding gains (losses) arising during the period before tax

    1,144,314       19,697,118       (29,292,079 )

Less reclassification adjustment for gains included in net income before tax

    798,983       92,363       432,492  
      345,331       19,604,755       (29,724,571 )

Unrealized losses on interest rate cap derivatives:

                       

Unrealized holding losses arising during the period before tax

    (631,363 )     (584,264 )     -  

Less reclassification adjustment for ineffectiveness and caplet amortization before tax

    (15,895 )     30,147       -  
      (615,468 )     (614,411 )     -  
                         

Other comprehensive income (loss), before tax

    (270,137 )     18,990,344       (29,724,571 )

Tax expense (benefit)

    (81,524 )     7,281,574       (11,373,902 )

Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax

    (188,613 )     11,708,770       (18,350,669 )
                         

Comprehensive income (loss) attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc.

  $ 16,739,268     $ 26,661,307     $ (3,412,424 )

 

See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 

 
64

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Consolidated Statements of Changes in Stockholders' Equity

Years Ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013

 

   

Preferred

Stock

   

Common

Stock

   

Additional

Paid-In

Capital

   

Retained

Earnings

   

Accumulated

Other

Comprehensive

Income (Loss)

   

Treasury

Stock

   

Total

 

Balance, December 31, 2012

  $ 54,867     $ 5,039,448     $ 78,912,791     $ 53,326,542     $ 4,706,683     $ (1,606,510 )   $ 140,433,821  

Net income

    -       -       -       14,938,245       -       -       14,938,245  

Other comprehensive loss, net of tax

    -       -       -       -       (18,350,669 )     -       (18,350,669 )

Common cash dividends declared, $0.08 per share

    -       -       -       (459,312 )     -       -       (459,312 )

Preferred cash dividends declared and accrued

    -       -       -       (3,168,302 )     -       -       (3,168,302 )

Issuance of 834,715 shares of common stock as a result of the acquisition of Community National Bancorporation, net

    -       834,715       12,181,894       -       -       -       13,016,609  

Conversion of 25,000 shares of Series E Non-cumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock to 2,057,502 shares of common stock

    (25,000 )     2,057,502       (2,032,502 )     -       -       -       -  

Proceeds from issuance of 27,110 shares of common stock as a result of stock purchased under the Employee Stock Purchase Plan

    -       27,110       304,396       -       -       -       331,506  

Proceeds from issuance of 41,258 shares of common stock as a result of stock options exercised

    -       41,258       373,519       -       -       -       414,777  

Exchange of 7,679 shares of common stock in connection with stock options exercised

    -       (7,679 )     (120,955 )     -       -       -       (128,634 )

Stock-based compensation expense

    -       -       792,279       -       -       -       792,279  

Tax benefit of nonqualified stock options exercised

    -       -       62,371       -       -       -       62,371  

Restricted stock awards

    -       30,152       (30,152 )     -       -       -       -  

Exchange of 16,798 shares of common stock in connection with restricted stock vested

    -       (16,798 )     (289,113 )     -       -       -       (305,911 )

Balance, December 31, 2013

  $ 29,867     $ 8,005,708     $ 90,154,528     $ 64,637,173     $ (13,643,986 )   $ (1,606,510 )   $ 147,576,780  

Net income

    -       -       -       14,952,537       -       -       14,952,537  

Other comprehensive income, net of tax

    -       -       -       -       11,708,770       -       11,708,770  

Common cash dividends declared, $0.08 per share

    -       -       -       (631,009 )     -       -       (631,009 )

Preferred cash dividends declared and accrued

    -       -       -       (1,081,877 )     -       -       (1,081,877 )

Redemption of 29,867 shares of Series F Non-cumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock

    (29,867 )     -       (29,794,055 )     -       -       -       (29,823,922 )

Proceeds from issuance of 25,321 shares of common stock as a result of stock purchased under the Employee Stock Purchase Plan

    -       25,321       353,566       -       -       -       378,887  

Proceeds from issuance of 23,659 shares of common stock as a result of stock options exercised

    -       23,659       218,095       -       -       -       241,754  

Stock-based compensation expense

    -       -       891,619       -       -       -       891,619  

Tax benefit of nonqualified stock options exercised

    -       -       42,954       -       -       -       42,954  

Restricted stock awards

    -       30,055       (30,055 )     -       -       -       -  

Exchange of 10,300 shares of common stock in connection with restricted stock vested

    -       (10,300 )     (167,684 )     -       -       -       (177,984 )

Balance, December 31, 2014

  $ -     $ 8,074,443     $ 61,668,968     $ 77,876,824     $ (1,935,216 )   $ (1,606,510 )   $ 144,078,509  

Net income

    -       -       -       16,927,881       -       -       16,927,881  

Other comprehensive loss, net of tax

    -       -       -       -       (188,613 )     -       (188,613 )

Common cash dividends declared, $0.08 per share

    -       -       -       (934,682 )     -       -       (934,682 )

Proceeds from issuance of 3,680,000 share of common stock, net of issuance costs

    -       3,680,000       59,804,123       -       -       -       63,484,123  

Proceeds from issuance of 24,033 shares of common stock as a result of stock purchased under the Employee Stock Purchase Plan

    -       24,033       375,120       -       -       -       399,153  

Proceeds from issuance of 78,909 shares of common stock as a result of stock options exercised

    -       78,909       1,074,611       -       -       -       1,153,520  

Stock-based compensation expense

    -       -       941,469       -       -       -       941,469  

Tax benefit of nonqualified stock options exercised

    -       -       93,096       -       -       -       93,096  

Retirement of treasury stock, 121,246 shares of common stock

    -       (121,246 )     (580,886 )     (904,378 )     -       1,606,510       -  

Restricted stock awards

    -       28,846       (28,846 )     -       -       -       -  

Exchange of 3,902 shares of common stock in connection with restricted stock vested

    -       (3,902 )     (64,804 )     -       -       -       (68,706 )

Balance, December 31, 2015

  $ -     $ 11,761,083     $ 123,282,851     $ 92,965,645     $ (2,123,829 )   $ -     $ 225,885,750  

 

See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

 
65

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

Years Ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 

Cash Flows from Operating Activities:

                       

Net income

  $ 16,927,881     $ 14,952,537     $ 14,938,245  

Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities

                       

Depreciation

    3,065,031       2,812,645       2,695,578  

Provision for loan/lease losses

    6,870,900       6,807,000       5,930,420  

Deferred income taxes

    (2,004,532 )     (1,165,009 )     (1,021,991 )

Stock-based compensation expense

    941,469       891,619       792,279  

Deferred compensation expense accrued

    1,023,827       1,311,627       822,335  

Losses (gains) on sale of other real estate owned, net

    (1,021,242 )     447,272       545,340  

Amortization of premiums on securities, net

    1,040,275       1,809,804       3,574,097  

Securities gains, net

    (798,983 )     (92,363 )     (432,492 )

Loans originated for sale

    (38,748,100 )     (58,128,415 )     (80,027,780 )

Proceeds on sales of loans

    40,362,697       61,435,064       86,231,767  

Gains on sales of residential real estate loans, net

    (322,872 )     (460,721 )     (836,065 )

Gains on sales of government guaranteed portions of loans, net

    (1,304,575 )     (2,040,638 )     (2,148,979 )

Gain on sale of credit card loan receivables

    -       -       (495,405 )

Gain on sale of credit card issuing operations

    -       -       (355,268 )

Bargain purchase gain on Community National acquisition

    -       -       (1,841,385 )

Losses on debt extinguishment

    7,485,601       -       -  

Gain on debt extinguishment

    (300,000 )     -       -  

Amortization of core deposit intangible

    199,512       199,512       178,881  

Accretion of acquisition fair value adjustments, net

    (367,009 )     (674,539 )     (1,060,708 )

Gains on sales of certain branches of Community National Bank

    -       -       (2,334,216 )

Increase in cash value of bank-owned life insurance

    (1,762,107 )     (1,721,507 )     (1,786,023 )

Decrease (increase) in other assets

    (3,910,486 )     (1,198,107 )     7,650,490  

Increase in other liabilities

    2,721,335       414,134       1,017,133  

Net cash provided by operating activities

    30,098,622       25,599,915       32,036,253  
                         

Cash Flows from Investing Activities:

                       

Net (increase) decrease in federal funds sold

    26,930,000       (7,345,000 )     (540,000 )

Net increase in interest-bearing deposits at financial institutions

    (763,749 )     (2,289,765 )     (8,660,888 )

Proceeds from sales of other real estate owned

    7,696,026       1,593,714       1,345,479  

Purchase of derivative instruments

    -       (2,071,650 )     -  

Activity in securities portfolio:

                       

Purchases

    (232,092,732 )     (76,256,503 )     (312,970,498 )

Calls, maturities and redemptions

    211,942,737       35,247,090       147,264,900  

Paydowns

    15,476,369       23,611,559       46,098,773  

Sales

    81,410,368       78,476,422       37,393,047  

Activity in restricted investment securities:

                       

Purchases

    (3,752,450 )     (1,912,050 )     (7,264,600 )

Redemptions

    4,476,100       3,380,100       7,244,200  

Net increase in loans/leases originated and held for investment

    (172,786,032 )     (180,325,359 )     (55,311,462 )

Purchase of premises and equipment

    (4,394,255 )     (2,035,855 )     (2,430,353 )

Proceeds from sale of credit card loan receivables

    -       -       10,674,723  

Net cash received from Community National Acquisition

    -       -       3,025,073  

Net cash paid on sales of certain branches of Community National Bank

    -       -       (30,425,618 )

Net cash used in investing activities

    (65,857,618 )     (129,927,297 )     (164,557,224 )
                         

Cash Flows from Financing Activities:

                       

Net increase in deposits

    200,988,645       32,695,797       108,923,293  

Net (decrease) increase in short-term borrowings

    (123,688,954 )     119,058,703       (21,789,994 )

Activity in Federal Home Loan Bank advances:

                       

Term advances

    5,000,000       6,000,000       77,000,000  

Calls and maturities

    (26,000,000 )     (27,850,000 )     (82,000,000 )

Net change in short-term and overnight advances

    47,000,000       (6,000,000 )     34,000,000  

Prepayments

    (84,401,601 )     -       -  

Activity in other borrowings:

                       

Proceeds from other borrowings

    -       10,000,000       10,000,000  

Calls, maturities and scheduled principal payments

    (7,350,000 )     (2,125,000 )     (5,800,000 )

Prepayments

    (34,559,000 )     -       -  

Retirement of junior subordinated debentures

    (1,762,000 )     -       -  

Repayment of Community National's other borrowings at acquisition

    -       -       (3,950,000 )

Payment of cash dividends on common and preferred stock

    (782,054 )     (1,964,608 )     (4,062,726 )

Net proceeds from common stock offering, 3,680,000 shares issued

    63,484,123       -       -  

Redemption of 29,867 shares of Series F Noncumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock, net

    -       (29,823,922 )     -  

Proceeds from issuance of common stock, net

    1,552,673       620,641       582,742  

Net cash provided by financing activities

    39,481,832       100,611,611       112,903,315  
                         

Net (decrease) increase in cash and due from banks

    3,722,836       (3,715,771 )     (19,617,656 )

Cash and due from banks, beginning

    38,235,019       41,950,790       61,568,446  

Cash and due from banks, ending

  $ 41,957,855     $ 38,235,019     $ 41,950,790  

 

Continued

 

 
66

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows - Continued

Years Ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 

Supplemental Disclosures of Cash Flow Information, cash payments for:

                       

Interest

  $ 14,027,512     $ 16,826,619     $ 17,953,357  

Income and franchise taxes

    2,619,288       4,541,000       3,011,244  
                         

Supplemental Schedule of Noncash Investing and Financing Activities:

                       

Change in accumulated other comprehensive income (loss), unrealized gains (losses) on on securities available for sale and derivative instruments, net

    (188,613 )     11,708,770       (18,350,669 )

Exchange of shares of common stock in connection with payroll taxes for restricted stock and options exercised

    (68,706 )     (177,984 )     (434,545 )

Tax benefit of nonqualified stock options exercised

    93,096       42,954       62,371  

Transfers of loans to other real estate owned

    1,577,060       5,594,256       7,115,008  

Due from broker

    -       2,290,930       -  

Dividends payable

    468,583       315,955       567,677  
                         

Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information for Community National Acquisition:

                       

Fair value of assets acquired:

                       

Cash and due from banks *

  $ -     $ -     $ 9,286,757  

Federal funds sold

    -       -       12,335,000  

Interest-bearing deposits at financial institutions

    -       -       2,024,539  

Securities available for sale

    -       -       45,853,826  

Loans/leases receivable held for investment, net

    -       -       195,658,486  

Premises and equipment, net

    -       -       8,132,021  

Core deposit intangible

    -       -       3,440,076  

Bank-owned life insurance

    -       -       4,595,529  

Restricted investment securities

    -       -       1,259,375  

Other real estate owned

    -       -       550,326  

Other assets

    -       -       5,178,583  

Total assets acquired

  $ -     $ -     $ 288,314,518  
                         

Fair value of liabilities assumed:

                       

Deposits

  $ -     $ -     $ 255,045,071  

Other borrowings

    -       -       3,950,000  

Junior subordinated debentures

    -       -       4,125,175  

Other liabilities

    -       -       3,911,053  

Total liabilities assumed

  $ -     $ -     $ 267,031,299  
                         

Net assets acquired

  $ -     $ -     $ 21,283,219  

Consideration paid:

                       

Cash paid *

  $ -     $ -     $ 6,261,684  

Issuance of 834,715 shares of common stock

    -       -       13,180,150  

Total consideration paid

  $ -     $ -     $ 19,441,834  
                         

Bargain purchase gain

  $ -     $ -     $ 1,841,385  

* Net cash received at closing totaled $3,025,073

                       
                         

Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information for sales of certain Community National Bank branches:

                       

Assets sold:

                       

Cash **

  $ -     $ -     $ 30,425,618  

Loans receivable

    -       -       54,458,870  

Premises and equipment, net

    -       -       2,373,822  

Core deposit intangible

    -       -       1,390,762  

Other assets

    -       -       138,899  

Total assets sold

  $ -     $ -     $ 88,787,971  
                         

Liabilities sold:

                       

Deposits

  $ -     $ -     $ 91,022,098  

Other liabilities

    -       -       100,089  

Total liabilities sold

  $ -     $ -     $ 91,122,187  
                         

Gains on sales of certain branches of Community National Bank

  $ -     $ -     $ 2,334,216  

 

** Net cash paid at closing totaled $30,425,618

 

See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

 
67

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies

 

Basis of presentation:

 

The acronyms and abbreviations identified below are used in the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements, as well as in the other sections of this Form 10-K (including appendices). It may be helpful to refer back to this page as you read this report.

 

Allowance: Allowance for estimated losses on loans/leases

HTM: Held to maturity

AML-BSA: Anti-money laundering and bank secrecy laws

Iowa Superintendent: Iowa Superintendent of Banking

AOCI: Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)

LCR: Liquidity Coverage Ratio

AFS: Available for sale

m2: m2 Lease Funds, LLC

ASC: Accounting Standards Codification

MD&A: Management's Discussion & Analysis

ASU: Accounting Standards Update

NIM: Net interest margin

BHCA: Bank Holding Company Act of 1956

NPA: Nonperforming asset

BOLI: Bank-owned life insurance

NPL: Nonperforming loan

Caps: Interest rate cap derivatives

NSFR: Net Stable Funding Ratio

CFPB: Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection

OREO: Other real estate owned

Community National: Community National Bancorporation

OTTI: Other-than-temporary impairment

CNB: Community National Bank

PCAOB: Public Company Accounting Oversight Board

CPP: Capital Purchase Program

Provision: Provision for loan/lease losses

CRBT: Cedar Rapids Bank & Trust Company

PUD LOC: Public Unit Deposit Letter of Credit

CRE: Commercial real estate

QCBT: Quad City Bank & Trust Company

CRE Guidance: Interagency Concentrations in Commercial Real Estate

RB&T: Rockford Bank & Trust Company

     Lending, Sound Risk Management Practices guidance

ROAA: Return on Average Assets

C&I: Commercial and industrial

ROACE: Return on Average Common Equity

Dodd-Frank Act: Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and

ROAE: Return on Average Equity

     Consumer Protection Act

SBA: U.S. Small Business Administration

IDFPR: Illinois Department of Financial & Professional Regulation

SBLF: Small Business Lending Fund

DGCL: Delaware General Corporation Law

SEC: Securities and Exchange Commission

DIF: Deposit Insurance Fund

SERPs: Supplemental Executive Retirement Plans

EPS: Earnings per share

TA: Tangible assets

Exchange Act: Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended

TCE: Tangible common equity

FASB: Financial Accounting Standards Board

TDRs: Troubled debt restructurings

FDIC: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

The Company: QCR Holdings, Inc.

Federal Reserve: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Treasury: U.S. Department of the Treasury

FHLB: Federal Home Loan Bank

USA Patriot Act: Uniting and Strengthening America by

FICO: Financing Corporation

     Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and

FRB: Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

     Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001

FTEs: Full-time equivalents

USDA: U.S. Department of Agriculture

GAAP: Generally Accepted Accounting Principles

VPHC: Velie Plantation Holding Company

Goldman Sachs: Goldman Sachs and Company

 

 

Nature of business:

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. is a bank holding company providing bank and bank-related services through its banking subsidiaries, QCBT, CRBT, and RB&T. The Company also engages in direct financing lease contracts through its wholly-owned equity investment by QCBT in m2, headquartered in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

 

 
68

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

On May 13, 2013, the Company acquired Community National and its banking subsidiary, CNB. In October 2013, the Company sold certain assets and liabilities of certain branches of CNB in two separate transactions. The Company operated CNB as a separate banking charter since the acquisition until October 26, 2013, when CNB’s charter was merged with and into CRBT. CNB’s merged branch offices operate as a division of CRBT under the name of “Community Bank & Trust.” See Note 2 for additional information on the acquisition, sales of certain branches, and subsequent merger into CRBT.

 

The remaining subsidiaries of the Company consist of six non-consolidated subsidiaries formed for the issuance of trust preferred securities. The Company assumed two of these subsidiaries in the acquisition of Community National on May 13, 2013. See Note 11 for a listing of these subsidiaries and additional information.

 

QCBT is a commercial bank that serves the Iowa and Illinois Quad Cities and adjacent communities. CRBT is a commercial bank that serves Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and adjacent communities including Cedar Falls and Waterloo, Iowa. RB&T is a commercial bank that serves Rockford, Illinois, and adjacent communities. 

 

QCBT and CRBT are chartered and regulated by the state of Iowa, and RB&T is chartered and regulated by the state of Illinois. All three subsidiary banks are insured and subject to regulation by the FDIC, and are members of and regulated by the Federal Reserve System.

 

In December 2014, the Company entered into a joint venture providing residential real estate mortgage services and products to customers. This joint venture is a collaboration between QCBT and Ruhl Mortgage. QCBT has a 20% ownership interest.

 

Significant accounting policies:

 

Accounting estimates: The preparation of financial statements, in conformity with GAAP, requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amount of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Material estimates that are particularly susceptible to significant change in the near term relate to the determination of the allowance, OTTI of securities, and the fair value of financial instruments.

 

Principles of consolidation: The accompanying consolidated financial statements include the accounts of the Company and its subsidiaries, except those six subsidiaries formed for the issuance of trust preferred securities which do not meet the criteria for consolidation. See Note 11 for a detailed listing of these subsidiaries. All material intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

 

 
69

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


  

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

Presentation of cash flows: For purposes of reporting cash flows, cash and due from banks include cash on hand and noninterest bearing amounts due from banks. Cash flows from federal funds sold, interest bearing deposits at financial institutions, loans/leases, deposits, and short-term borrowings are treated as net increases or decreases.

 

Cash and due from banks: The subsidiary banks are required by federal banking regulations to maintain certain cash and due from bank reserves. The reserve requirement was approximately $30,532,000 and $23,251,000 as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively.

 

Investment securities: Investment securities held to maturity are those debt securities that the Company has the ability and intent to hold until maturity regardless of changes in market conditions, liquidity needs, or changes in general economic conditions. Such securities are carried at cost adjusted for amortization of premiums and accretion of discounts. If the ability or intent to hold to maturity is not present for certain specified securities, such securities are considered AFS as the Company intends to hold them for an indefinite period of time but not necessarily to maturity. Any decision to sell a security classified as AFS would be based on various factors, including movements in interest rates, changes in the maturity mix of the Company's assets and liabilities, liquidity needs, regulatory capital considerations, and other factors. Securities AFS are carried at fair value. Unrealized gains or losses, net of taxes, are reported as increases or decreases in AOCI. Realized gains or losses, determined on the basis of the cost of specific securities sold, are included in earnings.

 

All securities are evaluated to determine whether declines in fair value below their amortized cost are other-than-temporary.

 

In estimating OTTI losses on AFS debt securities, management considers a number of factors including, but not limited to, (1) the length of time and extent to which the fair value has been less than amortized cost, (2) the financial condition and near-term prospects of the issuer, (3) the current market conditions, and (4) the intent of the Company to not sell the security prior to recovery and whether it is not more-likely-than-not that it will be required to sell the security prior to recovery.

 

If the Company does not intend to sell the security, and it is not more-likely-than-not the entity will be required to sell the security before recovery of its amortized cost basis, the Company will recognize the credit component of an OTTI of a debt security in earnings and the remaining portion in other comprehensive income. For held to maturity debt securities, the amount of an OTTI recorded in other comprehensive income for the noncredit portion would be amortized prospectively over the remaining life of the security on the basis of the timing of future estimated cash flows of the security.

 

In estimating OTTI losses on AFS equity securities management considers factors (1), (2) and (3) above as well as whether the Company has the intent and the ability to hold the security until its recovery. If the Company (a) intends to sell an impaired equity security and does not expect the fair value of the security to fully recover before the expected time of sale, or (b) does not have the ability to hold the security until its recovery, the security is deemed other-than-temporarily impaired and the impairment is charged to earnings. The Company recognizes an impairment loss through earnings if based upon other factors the loss is deemed to be other-than-temporary even if the decision to sell has not been made.

 

Loans receivable, held for sale: Residential real estate loans which are originated and intended for resale in the secondary market in the foreseeable future are classified as held for sale. These loans are carried at the lower of cost or estimated market value in the aggregate. As assets specifically acquired for resale, the origination of, disposition of, and gain/loss on these loans are classified as operating activities in the statement of cash flows.

 

 
70

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

Loans receivable, held for investment: Loans that management has the intent and ability to hold for the foreseeable future, or until pay-off or maturity occurs, are classified as held for investment. These loans are stated at the amount of unpaid principal adjusted for charge-offs, the allowance, and any deferred fees and/or costs on originated loans. Interest is credited to earnings as earned based on the principal amount outstanding. Deferred direct loan origination fees and/or costs are amortized as an adjustment of the related loan’s yield. As assets held for and used in the production of services, the origination and collection of these loans are classified as investing activities in the statement of cash flows.

 

The Company discloses allowance for credit losses (also known allowance) and fair value by portfolio segment, and credit quality information, impaired financing receivables, nonaccrual status, and TDRs by class of financing receivable.  A portfolio segment is the level at which the Company develops and documents a systematic methodology to determine its allowance for credit losses. A class of financing receivable is a further disaggregation of a portfolio segment based on risk characteristics and the Company’s method for monitoring and assessing credit risk. See the following information and Note 4.

 

The Company’s portfolio segments are as follows:

 

 

C&I

 

CRE

 

Residential real estate

 

Installment and other consumer

 

Direct financing leases are considered a segment within the overall loan/lease portfolio.

 

The Company’s classes of loans receivable are as follows:

 

 

C&I

 

Owner-occupied CRE

 

Commercial construction, land development, and other land loans that are not owner-occupied CRE

 

Other non-owner-occupied CRE

 

Residential real estate

 

Installment and other consumer

 

Direct financing leases are considered a class of financing receivable within the overall loan/lease portfolio. The accounting policies for direct financing leases are disclosed below.

 

Generally, for all classes of loans receivable, loans are considered past due when contractual payments are delinquent for 31 days or greater.

 

 
71

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


  

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

For all classes of loans receivable, loans will generally be placed on nonaccrual status when the loan has become 90 days past due (unless the loan is well secured and in the process of collection); or if any of the following conditions exist:

 

 

It becomes evident that the borrower will not make payments, or will not or cannot meet the terms for renewal of a matured loan;

 

When full repayment of principal and interest is not expected;

 

When the loan is graded “doubtful”

 

When the borrower files bankruptcy and an approved plan of reorganization or liquidation is not anticipated in the near future; or

 

When foreclosure action is initiated.

 

When a loan is placed on nonaccrual status, income recognition is ceased. Previously recorded but uncollected amounts of interest on nonaccrual loans are reversed at the time the loan is placed on nonaccrual status. Generally, cash collected on nonaccrual loans is applied to principal. Should full collection of principal be expected, cash collected on nonaccrual loans can be recognized as interest income.

 

For all classes of loans receivable, nonaccrual loans may be restored to accrual status provided the following criteria are met:

 

 

The loan is current, and all principal and interest amounts contractually due have been made;

 

All principal and interest amounts contractually due, including past due payments, are reasonably assured of repayment within a reasonable period; and

 

There is a period of minimum repayment performance, as follows, by the borrower in accordance with contractual terms:

 

o

Six months of repayment performance for contractual monthly payments, or

 

o

One year of repayment performance for contractual quarterly or semi-annual payments.

 

Direct finance leases receivable, held for investment: The Company leases machinery and equipment to customers under leases that qualify as direct financing leases for financial reporting and as operating leases for income tax purposes. Under the direct financing method of accounting, the minimum lease payments to be received under the lease contract, together with the estimated unguaranteed residual values (approximately 3% to 25% of the cost of the related equipment), are recorded as lease receivables when the lease is signed and the lease property delivered to the customer. The excess of the minimum lease payments and residual values over the cost of the equipment is recorded as unearned lease income. Unearned lease income is recognized over the term of the lease on a basis that results in an approximate level rate of return on the unrecovered lease investment.

 

Lease income is recognized on the interest method. Residual value is the estimated fair market value of the equipment on lease at lease termination. In estimating the equipment’s fair value at lease termination, the Company relies on historical experience by equipment type and manufacturer and, where available, valuations by independent appraisers, adjusted for known trends.

 

The Company’s estimates are reviewed continuously to ensure reasonableness; however, the amounts the Company will ultimately realize could differ from the estimated amounts. If the review results in a lower estimate than had been previously established, a determination is made as to whether the decline in estimated residual value is other-than-temporary. If the decline in estimated unguaranteed residual value is judged to be other-than-temporary, the accounting for the transaction is revised using the changed estimate. The resulting reduction in the investment is recognized as a loss in the period in which the estimate is changed. An upward adjustment of the estimated residual value is not recorded.

 

The policies for delinquency and nonaccrual for direct financing leases are materially consistent with those described above for all classes of loan receivables.

 

 
72

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

The Company defers and amortizes fees and certain incremental direct costs over the contractual term of the lease as an adjustment to the yield. These initial direct leasing costs generally approximate 5.5% of the leased asset’s cost. The unamortized direct costs are recorded as a reduction of unearned lease income.

 

TDRs: TDRs exist when the Company, for economic or legal reasons related to the borrower’s/lessee’s financial difficulties, grants a concession (either imposed by court order, law, or agreement between the borrower/lessee and the Company) to the borrower/lessee that it would not otherwise consider. The Company is attempting to maximize its recovery of the balances of the loans/leases through these various concessionary restructurings.

 

The following criteria, related to granting a concession, together or separately, create a TDR:

 

 

A modification of terms of a debt such as one or a combination of:

 

 

o

The reduction of the stated interest rate.

 

o

The extension of the maturity date or dates at a stated interest rate lower than the current market rate for the new debt with similar risk.

 

o

The reduction of the face amount or maturity amount of the debt as stated in the instrument or other agreement.

 

o

The reduction of accrued interest.

 

 

A transfer from the borrower/lessee to the Company of receivables from third parties, real estate, other assets, or an equity position in the borrower to fully or partially satisfy a loan.

 

 

The issuance or other granting of an equity position to the Company to fully or partially satisfy a debt unless the equity position is granted pursuant to existing terms for converting the debt into an equity position.

 

Allowance: For all portfolio segments, the allowance is established as losses are estimated to have occurred through a provision that is charged to earnings. Loan/lease losses, for all portfolio segments, are charged against the allowance when management believes the uncollectability of a loan/lease balance is confirmed. Subsequent recoveries, if any, are credited to the allowance.

 

For all portfolio segments, the allowance is evaluated on a regular basis by management and is based upon management’s periodic review of the collectability of the loans/leases in light of historical experience, the nature and volume of the loan/lease portfolio, adverse situations that may affect the borrower’s/lessee’s ability to repay, estimated value of any underlying collateral and prevailing economic conditions. This evaluation is inherently subjective as it requires estimates that are susceptible to significant revision as more information becomes available.

 

A discussion of the risk characteristics and the allowance by each portfolio segment follows:

 

 
73

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

For C&I loans, the Company focuses on small and mid-sized businesses with primary operations as wholesalers, manufacturers, building contractors, business services companies, other banks, and retailers. The Company provides a wide range of C&I loans, including lines of credit for working capital and operational purposes, and term loans for the acquisition of facilities, equipment and other purposes. Approval is generally based on the following factors:

 

 

Ability and stability of current management of the borrower;

 

Stable earnings with positive financial trends;

 

Sufficient cash flow to support debt repayment;

 

Earnings projections based on reasonable assumptions;

 

Financial strength of the industry and business; and

 

Value and marketability of collateral.

 

Collateral for C&I loans generally includes accounts receivable, inventory, equipment and real estate. The Company’s lending policy specifies approved collateral types and corresponding maximum advance percentages. The value of collateral pledged on loans must exceed the loan amount by a margin sufficient to absorb potential erosion of its value in the event of foreclosure and cover the loan amount plus costs incurred to convert it to cash.

 

The Company’s lending policy specifies maximum term limits for C&I loans. For term loans, the maximum term is generally 7 years. Generally, term loans range from 3 to 5 years. For lines of credit, the maximum term is typically 365 days.

 

In addition, the Company often takes personal guarantees or cosigners to help assure repayment. Loans may be made on an unsecured basis if warranted by the overall financial condition of the borrower.

 

CRE loans are subject to underwriting standards and processes similar to C&I loans, in addition to those standards and processes specific to real estate loans. Collateral for CRE loans generally includes the underlying real estate and improvements, and may include additional assets of the borrower. The Company’s lending policy specifies maximum loan-to-value limits based on the category of CRE (CRE loans on improved property, raw land, land development, and commercial construction). These limits are the same limits established by regulatory authorities.

 

The Company’s lending policy also includes guidelines for real estate appraisals, including minimum appraisal standards based on certain transactions. In addition, the Company often takes personal guarantees to help assure repayment.

 

In addition, management tracks the level of owner-occupied CRE loans versus non-owner occupied loans. Owner-occupied loans are generally considered to have less risk. As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, approximately 35% and 37%, respectively, of the CRE loan portfolio was owner-occupied.

 

The Company’s lending policy limits non-owner occupied CRE lending to 300% of total risk-based capital, and limits construction, land development, and other land loans to 100% of total risk-based capital. Exceeding these limits warrants the use of heightened risk management practices in accordance with regulatory guidelines. As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, all three subsidiary banks were in compliance with these limits.

 

In some instances for all loans/leases, it may be appropriate to originate or purchase loans/leases that are exceptions to the guidelines and limits established within the Company’s lending policy described above and below. In general, exceptions to the lending policy do not significantly deviate from the guidelines and limits established within the Company’s lending policy and, if there are exceptions, they are clearly noted as such and specifically identified in loan/lease approval documents.

 

 
74

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

For C&I and CRE loans, the allowance consists of specific and general components.

 

The specific component relates to loans that are classified as impaired, as defined below. For those loans that are classified as impaired, an allowance is established when the discounted cash flows (or collateral value or observable market price) of the impaired loan are lower than the carrying value of that loan.

 

For C&I loans and all classes of CRE loans, a loan is considered impaired when, based on current information and events, it is probable that the Company will be unable to collect the scheduled payments of principal and interest when due according to the contractual terms of the loan agreement. Factors considered by management in determining impairment include payment status, collateral value, and the probability of collecting scheduled principal and interest payments when due. Loans that experience insignificant payment delays and payment shortfalls generally are not classified as impaired. Management determines the significance of payment delays and payment shortfalls on a case-by-case basis, taking into consideration all of the circumstances surrounding the loan and the borrower, including the length of the delay, the reasons for the delay, the borrower’s prior payment record, and the amount of the shortfall in relation to the principal and interest owed. Impairment is measured on a case-by-case basis by either the present value of expected future cash flows discounted at the loan’s effective interest rate, the loan’s obtainable market price, or the fair value of the collateral if the loan is collateral dependent.

 

The general component consists of quantitative and qualitative factors and covers non-impaired loans. The quantitative factors are based on historical charge-off experience and expected loss given default derived from the Company’s internal risk rating process. See below for a detailed description of the Company’s internal risk rating scale. The qualitative factors are determined based on an assessment of internal and/or external influences on credit quality that are not fully reflected in the historical loss or risk rating data.

 

For C&I and CRE loans, the Company utilizes the following internal risk rating scale:

 

1. Highest Quality (Pass) – loans of the highest quality with no credit risk, including those fully secured by subsidiary bank certificates of deposit and U.S. government securities.

 

2. Superior Quality (Pass) – loans with very strong credit quality. Borrowers have exceptionally strong earnings, liquidity, capital, cash flow coverage, and management ability. Includes loans secured by high quality marketable securities, certificates of deposit from other institutions, and cash value of life insurance. Also includes loans supported by U.S. government, state, or municipal guarantees.

 

3. Satisfactory Quality (Pass) loans with satisfactory credit quality. Established borrowers with satisfactory financial condition, including credit quality, earnings, liquidity, capital and cash flow coverage. Management is capable and experienced. Collateral coverage and guarantor support, if applicable, are more than adequate. Includes loans secured by personal assets and business assets, including equipment, accounts receivable, inventory, and real estate.

 

4. Fair Quality (Pass) loans with moderate but still acceptable credit quality. The primary repayment source remains adequate; however, management’s ability to maintain consistent profitability is unproven or uncertain. Borrowers exhibit acceptable leverage and liquidity. May include new businesses with inexperienced management or unproven performance records in relation to peer, or borrowers operating in highly cyclical or deteriorating industries.

 

 
75

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

5. Early Warning (Pass) loans where the borrowers have generally performed as agreed, however unfavorable financial trends exist or are anticipated. Earnings may be erratic, with marginal cash flow or declining sales. Borrowers reflect leveraged financial condition and/or marginal liquidity. Management may be new and a track record of performance has yet to be developed. Financial information may be incomplete, and reliance on secondary repayment sources may be increasing.

 

6. Special Mention – loans where the borrowers exhibit credit weaknesses or unfavorable financial trends requiring close monitoring. Weaknesses and adverse trends are more pronounced than Early Warning loans, and if left uncorrected, may jeopardize repayment according to the contractual terms. Currently, no loss of principal or interest is expected. Borrowers in this category have deteriorated to the point that it would be difficult to refinance with another lender. Special Mention should be assigned to borrowers in turnaround situations. This rating is intended as a transitional rating, therefore, it is generally not assigned to a borrower for a period of more than one year.

 

7. Substandard loans which are inadequately protected by the current sound worth and paying capacity of the obligor or of the collateral pledged, if applicable. These loans have a well-defined weakness or weaknesses which jeopardize repayment according to the contractual terms. There is distinct loss potential if the weaknesses are not corrected. Includes loans with insufficient cash flow coverage which are collateral dependent, other real estate owned, and repossessed assets.

 

8. Doubtful loans which have all the weaknesses inherent in a Substandard loan, with the added characteristic that existing weaknesses make full principal collection, on the basis of current facts, conditions and values, highly doubtful. The possibility of loss is extremely high, but because of pending factors, recognition of a loss is deferred until a more exact status can be determined. All doubtful loans will be placed on non-accrual, with all payments, including principal and interest, applied to principal reduction.

 

The Company has certain loans risk-rated 7 (substandard), which are not classified as impaired based on the facts of the credit. For these non-impaired and risk-rated 7 loans, the Company does not follow the same allowance methodology as it does for all other non-impaired, collectively evaluated loans. Rather, the Company performs a more detailed analysis including evaluation of the cash flow and collateral valuations. Based upon this evaluation, an estimate of the probable loss in this portfolio is collectively evaluated under ASC 450-20. These non-impaired risk-rated 7 loans exist primarily in the C&I and CRE segments.

 

For term C&I and CRE loans or credit relationships with aggregate exposure greater than $1,000,000, a loan review is required within 15 months of the most recent credit review. The review is completed in enough detail to, at a minimum, validate the risk rating. Additionally, the review shall include an analysis of debt service requirements, covenant compliance, if applicable, and collateral adequacy. The frequency of the review is generally accelerated for loans with poor risk ratings.

 

The Company’s Loan Quality area performs a documentation review of a sampling of C&I and CRE loans, the primary purpose of which is to ensure the credit is properly documented and closed in accordance with approval authorities and conditions. A review is also performed by the Company’s Internal Audit Department of a sampling of C&I and CRE loans for proper documentation, according to an approved schedule. Validation of the risk rating is also part of Internal Audit’s review (performed by Internal Loan Review). Additionally, over the past several years, the Company has contracted an independent outside third party to review a sampling of C&I and CRE loans. Validation of the risk rating is part of this review as well.

 

The Company leases machinery and equipment to C&I customers under direct financing leases. All lease requests are subject to the credit requirements and criteria as set forth in the lending/leasing policy. In all cases, a formal independent credit analysis of the lessee is performed.

 

 
76

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

For direct financing leases, the allowance consists of specific and general components.

 

The specific component relates to leases that are classified as impaired, as defined for commercial loans above. For those leases that are classified as impaired, an allowance is established when the discounted cash flows (or collateral value or observable market price) of the impaired lease is lower than the carrying value of that lease.

 

The general component consists of quantitative and qualitative factors and covers nonimpaired leases. The quantitative factors are based on historical charge-off experience for the entire lease portfolio. The qualitative factors are determined based on an assessment of internal and/or external influences on credit quality that are not fully reflected in the historical loss data.

 

Generally, the Company’s residential real estate loans conform to the underwriting requirements of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to allow the subsidiary banks to resell loans in the secondary market. The subsidiary banks structure most loans that will not conform to those underwriting requirements as adjustable rate mortgages that mature or adjust in one to five years or fixed rate mortgages that mature in 15 years, and then retain these loans in their portfolios. Servicing rights are not presently retained on the loans sold in the secondary market. The Company’s lending policy establishes minimum appraisal and other credit guidelines.

 

The Company provides many types of installment and other consumer loans including motor vehicle, home improvement, home equity, signature loans and small personal credit lines. The Company’s lending policy addresses specific credit guidelines by consumer loan type.

 

For residential real estate loans, and installment and other consumer loans, these large groups of smaller balance homogenous loans are collectively evaluated for impairment. The Company applies a quantitative factor based on historical charge-off experience in total for each of these segments. Accordingly, the Company generally does not separately identify individual residential real estate loans, and/or installment or other consumer loans for impairment disclosures, unless such loans are the subject of a restructuring agreement due to financial difficulties of the borrower.

 

TDRs are considered impaired loans/leases and are subject to the same allowance methodology as described above for impaired loans/leases by portfolio segment.

 

Credit related financial instruments: In the ordinary course of business, the Company has entered into commitments to extend credit and standby letters of credit. Such financial instruments are recorded when they are funded.

 

 
77

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

Transfers of financial assets: Transfers of financial assets are accounted for as sales only when control over the assets has been surrendered. Control over transferred assets is deemed to be surrendered when: (1) the assets have been isolated from the Company, (2) the transferee obtains the right to pledge or exchange the assets it received, and no condition both constrains the transferee from taking advantage of its right to pledge or exchange and provides more than a modest benefit to the transferor, and (3) the Company does not maintain effective control over the transferred assets through an agreement to repurchase them before their maturity or the ability to unilaterally cause the holder to return specific assets. In addition, for transfers of a portion of financial assets (for example, participations of loan receivables), the transfer must meet the definition of a “participating interest” in order to account for the transfer as a sale. Following are the characteristics of a “participating interest”:

 

 

Pro-rata ownership in an entire financial asset.

 

From the date of the transfer, all cash flows received from entire financial assets are divided proportionately among the participating interest holders in an amount equal to their share of ownership.

 

The rights of each participating interest holder have the same priority, and no participating interest holder’s interest is subordinated to the interest of another participating interest holder. That is, no participating interest holder is entitled to receive cash before any other participating interest holder under its contractual rights as a participating interest holder.

 

No party has the right to pledge or exchange the entire financial asset unless all participating interest holders agree to pledge or exchange the entire financial asset.

 

BOLI:  BOLI is carried at cash surrender value with increases/decreases reflected as income/expense in the statement of income.

 

Premises and equipment:  Premises and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation. Depreciation is computed primarily by the straight-line method over the estimated useful lives of the assets.

 

Restricted investment securities:  Restricted investment securities represent FHLB and FRB common stock. The stock is carried at cost. These equity securities are “restricted” in that they can only be sold back to the respective institution or another member institution at par. Therefore, they are less liquid than other tradable equity securities. The Company views its investment in restricted stock as a long-term investment. Accordingly, when evaluating for impairment, the value is determined based on the ultimate recovery of the par value, rather than recognizing temporary declines in value. There have been no other-than-temporary write-downs recorded on these securities.

 

OREO:  Real estate acquired through, or in lieu of, loan foreclosures, is held for sale and initially recorded at fair value less costs to sell, establishing a new cost basis. Subsequent to foreclosure, valuations are periodically performed by management and the assets are carried at the lower of carrying amount or fair value less costs to sell. Subsequent write-downs to fair value are charged to earnings. The Company had approximately $685 thousand and $170 thousand of residential real estate properties that were in the process of foreclosure as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively. The Company also had approximately $471 thousand and $54 thousand of residential real estate properties that were included in OREO as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively.

 

Repossessed assets:  Equipment or other non-real estate property acquired through, or in lieu of foreclosure, is held for sale and initially recorded at fair value less costs to sell. As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, the Company had $246,612 and $154,528, respectively, of repossessed assets that were included within other assets on the Consolidated Balance Sheets.

 

Goodwill:  The Company recorded goodwill from QCBT’s purchase of 80% of m2 in August 2005. The goodwill is not being amortized, but is evaluated at least annually for impairment. An impairment charge is recognized when the calculated fair value of the reporting unit, including goodwill, is less than its carrying amount. Based on the annual analysis completed as of September 30, 2015, the Company determined that the goodwill was not impaired.

 

 
78

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

Core deposit intangible:  The Company recorded a core deposit intangible from the acquisition of Community National. The core deposit intangible was the portion of the acquisition purchase price which represented the value assigned to the existing deposit base at acquisition. The core deposit intangible has a finite life and is amortized by the straight-line method over the estimated useful life of the deposits (10 years).

 

Swap transactions:  The Company offers a loan swap program to certain commercial loan customers. Through this program, the Company originates a variable rate loan with the customer. The Company and the swap customer will then enter into a fixed interest rate swap. Lastly, an identical offsetting swap is entered into by the Company with a counterparty. These “back-to-back” swap arrangements are intended to offset each other and allow the Company to book a variable rate loan, while providing the customer with a contract for fixed interest payments. In these arrangements, the Company’s net cash flow is equal to the interest income received from the variable rate loan originated with the customer. These customer swaps are not designated as hedging instruments and are recorded at fair value in other assets and other liabilities. Additionally, the Company receives an upfront fee from the counterparty, dependent upon the pricing that is recognized upon receipt from the counterparty. Swap fee income totaled $1.7 million, $155 thousand and $105 thousand for the years ending December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013, respectively.

 

Fee income from early termination of leases:  From time to time, leasing customers will choose to terminate their lease agreements prior to the original maturity date. At termination, the Company recognizes income related to these terminations (similar to a prepayment penalty).

 

Derivatives and hedging activities:  The Company enters into derivative financial instruments as part of its strategy to manage its exposure to changes in interest rates.

 

Derivative instruments represent contracts between parties that result in one party delivering cash to the other party based on a notional amount and an underlying index (such as a rate, security price or price index) as specified in the contract. The amount of cash delivered from one party to the other is determined based on the interaction of the notional amount of the contract with the underlying index.

 

The derivative financial instruments currently used by the Company to manage its exposure to interest rate risk include: (1) interest rate lock commitments provided to customers to fund certain mortgage loans to be sold into the secondary market (although this type of derivative is negligible); and (2) interest rate caps to manage the interest rate risk of certain short-term fixed rate liabilities.

 

Interest rate caps are valued by the transaction counterparty on a monthly basis and corroborated by a third party annually. The company uses the hypothetical derivative method to assess and measure effectiveness in accordance with ASC 815, Derivatives and Hedging.

 

Preferred stock:  The Company currently has 250,000 shares of preferred stock authorized, but none outstanding as of December 31, 2015 and 2014. Should the Company have preferred stock outstanding in the future, dividends declared on those shares would be deducted from net income to arrive at net income available to common shareholders. Net income available to common shareholders would then be used in the earnings per share computations.

 

Treasury stock:  Treasury stock is accounted for by the cost method, whereby shares of common stock reacquired are recorded at their purchase price. When treasury stock is reissued, any difference between the sales proceeds, or fair value when issued for business combinations, and the cost is recognized as a charge or credit to additional paid-in capital. The Company’s treasury stock was retired in 2015.

 

 
79

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

Stock-based compensation plans: At December 31, 2015, the Company had three stock-based employee compensation plans, which are described more fully in Note 15.

 

The Company accounts for stock-based compensation with measurement of compensation cost for all stock-based awards at fair value on the grant date and recognition of compensation over the requisite service period for awards expected to vest.

 

As discussed in Note 15, during the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013, the Company recognized stock-based compensation expense related to stock options, stock purchase plans, and stock appreciation rights of $941,469, $891,619, and $792,279, respectively. As required, management made an estimate of expected forfeitures and is recognizing compensation costs only for those equity awards expected to vest.

 

The Company uses the Black-Scholes option pricing model to estimate the fair value of stock option grants with the following assumptions for the indicated periods:

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 

Dividend yield

  .37% to .46%       .47%       .44% to .53%  

Expected volatility

  28.92% to 29.32%     29.07% to 29.18%     29.50% to 30.56%  

Risk-free interest rate

  1.89% to 2.37%     2.69% to 2.82%     1.71% to 2.90%  

Expected life of option grants (years)

    6         6         6    

Weighted-average grant date fair value

    $5.11         $5.68         $5.14    

 

The Company also uses the Black-Scholes option pricing model to estimate the fair value of stock purchase grants with the following assumptions for the indicated periods:

  

    2015     2014     2013  

Dividend yield

  .37%

to

.45%     .46%

to

.47%     .53% to

.61%

 

Expected volatility

  8.81%

to

13.10%     16.96%

to

19.35%     23.05% to

24.25%

 

Risk-free interest rate

  .09%

to

.16%     .04%

to

.12%     .10% to

.18%

 

Expected life of purchase grants (months)

  3

to

6     3

to

6     3 to

6

 

Weighted-average grant date fair value

   

$2.39

       

$2.37

        $2.10

 

 

 

The fair value is amortized on a straight-line basis over the vesting periods of the grants and will be adjusted for subsequent changes in estimated forfeitures. The expected dividend yield assumption is based on the Company's current expectations about its anticipated dividend policy. Expected volatility is based on historical volatility of the Company's common stock price. The risk-free interest rate for periods within the contractual life of the option or purchase is based on the U.S. Treasury yield curve in effect at the time of the grant. The expected life of the option and purchase grants is derived using the “simplified” method and represents the period of time that options and purchases are expected to be outstanding. Historical data is used to estimate forfeitures used in the model. Two separate groups of employees (employees subject to broad based grants, and executive employees and directors) are used.

 

As of December 31, 2015, there was $721,916 of unrecognized compensation cost related to share based payments, which is expected to be recognized over a weighted average period of 2.28 years.

 

The aggregate intrinsic value is calculated as the difference between the exercise price of the underlying awards and the quoted price of the Company's common stock for the 623,176 options that were in-the-money at December 31, 2015. The aggregate intrinsic value at December 31, 2015 was $6.5 million on options outstanding and $4.6 million on options exercisable. During the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013, the aggregate intrinsic value of options exercised under the Company's stock option plans was $480,354, $173,105, and $268,920, respectively, and determined as of the date of the option exercise.

 

 
80

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

Income taxes: The Company files its tax return on a consolidated basis with its subsidiaries. The entities follow the direct reimbursement method of accounting for income taxes under which income taxes or credits which result from the inclusion of the subsidiaries in the consolidated tax return are paid to or received from the parent company.

 

Deferred income taxes are provided under the liability method whereby deferred tax assets are recognized for deductible temporary differences and net operating loss and tax credit carryforwards and deferred tax liabilities are recognized for taxable temporary differences. Temporary differences are the differences between the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and their tax basis. Deferred tax assets are reduced by a valuation allowance when, in the opinion of management, it is more likely than not that some or all of the deferred tax assets will not be realized. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are adjusted for the effects of changes in tax laws and rates on the date of enactment.

 

When tax returns are filed, it is highly certain that some positions taken would be sustained upon examination by the taxing authorities, while others are subject to uncertainty about the merits of the position taken or the amount of the position that would be ultimately sustained. The benefit of a tax position is recognized in the financial statements in the period during which, based on all available evidence, management believes it is more likely than not that the position will be sustained upon examination, including the resolution of appeals or litigation processes, if any. Tax positions taken are not offset or aggregated with other positions. Tax positions that meet the more likely than not recognition threshold are measured as the largest amount of tax benefit that is more than 50 percent likely of being realized upon settlement with the applicable taxing authority. The portion of the benefits associated with tax positions taken that exceeds the amount measured as described above is reflected as a liability for unrecognized tax benefits in the accompanying balance sheet along with any associated interest and penalties that would be payable to the taxing authorities upon examination.

 

Interest and penalties associated with unrecognized tax benefits are classified as additional income taxes in the statements of income.

 

Trust assets: Trust assets held by the subsidiary banks in a fiduciary, agency, or custodial capacity for their customers, other than cash on deposit at the subsidiary banks, are not included in the accompanying consolidated financial statements since such items are not assets of the subsidiary banks.

 

Earnings per share: See Note 17 for a complete description and calculation of basic and diluted earnings per share.

 

Reclassifications: Certain amounts in the prior year financial statements have been reclassified, with no effect on net income, comprehensive income, or stockholders’ equity, to conform with the current period presentation.

 

 
81

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 1.     Nature of Business and Significant Accounting Policies (continued)

 

New accounting pronouncements:

 

In May 2014, FASB issued ASU 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers. ASU 2014-09 implements a common revenue standard that clarifies the principles for recognizing revenue. The core principle of ASU 2014-09 is that an entity should recognize revenue to depict the transfer of promised goods or services to customers in an amount that reflects the consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled in exchange for those goods or services. To achieve that core principle, an entity should apply the following steps: (i) identify the contract(s) with a customer, (ii) identify the performance obligations in the contract, (iii) determine the transaction price, (iv) allocate the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract and (v) recognize revenue when (or as) the entity satisfies a performance obligation. ASU 2014-09 was originally effective for the Company on January 1, 2017, however, FASB issued ASU 2015-14 which defers the effective date in order to provide additional time for both public and private entities to evaluate the impact. ASU 2014-09 will now be effective for the Company on January 1, 2018 and it is not expected to have a significant impact on the Company’s consolidated financial statements.

 

In February 2015, FASB issued ASU 2015-02, Consolidation: Amendments to the Consolidation Analysis. ASU 2015-02 is intended to improve targeted areas of consolidation guidance for legal entities such as limited partnerships, limited liability corporations, and securitization structures (collateralized debt obligations, collateralized loan obligations, and mortgage-backed security transactions). The ASU focuses on the consolidation evaluation for reporting organizations that are required to evaluate whether they should consolidate certain legal entities. The ASU also reduces the number of consolidation models from four to two. ASU 2015-02 is effective for fiscal years, and interim periods within those years, beginning after December 15, 2015 and adoption is not expected to have a significant impact on the Company’s consolidated financial statements.

 

In January 2016, FASB issued ASU 2016-01, Financial Instruments – Overall. ASU 2016-01 makes targeted adjustments to GAAP by eliminating the available for sale classification for equity securities and requiring equity investments to be measured at fair value with changes in fair value recognized in net income. The standard also requires public business entities to use the exit price notion when measuring fair value of financial instruments for disclosure purposes. The standard clarifies that an entity should evaluate the need for a valuation allowance on a deferred tax asset related to available-for-sale securities in combination with the entity’s other deferred tax assets. It also requires an entity to present separately (within other comprehensive income) the portion of the total change in the fair value of a liability resulting from a change in the instrument-specific credit risk when the entity has elected to measure the liability at fair value in accordance with the fair value option for financial instruments. Additionally, the standard eliminates the requirement for public business entities to disclose the methods and significant assumptions used to estimate the fair value that is required to be disclosed for financial instruments measured at amortized cost on the balance sheet. ASU 2016-01 is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017, including interim periods within those fiscal years. The Company is in the process of analyzing the impact of adoption.

 

In November 2015, FASB reached a decision on the effective date for its yet to be issued standard regarding measurement of credit losses on financial instruments. Under the standard it is expected that impairment of the Company’s loans/leases receivable will be measured using the current expected credit loss model, which will entail day-one recognition of life-of-asset expected losses. The standard is expected to be issued during the first quarter of 2016 and will be effective for the Company for the fiscal year beginning January 1, 2019. Management has not yet analyzed the impact of adoption.

 

 
82

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 2.     Community National Bancorporation and Community National Bank

 

On May 13, 2013, the Company acquired 100% of Community National’s outstanding common stock for aggregate consideration totaling $19,441,834, which consisted of 834,715 shares of the Company’s common stock valued at $13,180,150 and cash of $6,261,684. Community National was a bank holding company providing bank and bank related services through its wholly-owned bank subsidiary, CNB. CNB was a commercial bank headquartered in Waterloo, Iowa serving Waterloo and Cedar Falls, Iowa. As a de novo bank, CNB commenced its operations in 1997. Previously, CNB also served Mason City, Iowa and Austin, Minnesota. On October 4, 2013, the Company sold certain assets and liabilities of the two Mason City branches of CNB. And, on October 11, 2013, the Company sold certain assets and liabilities of the two Austin branches of CNB. The Company operated CNB as a separate banking charter from the date of acquisition until October 26, 2013, when CNB’s charter was merged with and into CRBT. CNB’s merged branch offices now operate as a division of CRBT under the name “Community Bank & Trust.”

 

The Company accounted for the business combination under the acquisition method of accounting in accordance with ASC 805, Business Combinations. The Company recognized the full fair value of the assets acquired and liabilities assumed at the acquisition date, net of applicable income tax effects. The excess of fair value of net assets over the carrying value is recorded as bargain purchase gain which is included in noninterest income on the statement of income. The market value adjustments are accreted or amortized on a level yield basis over the expected term. Additionally, the Company recorded a core deposit intangible totaling $3,440,076, which was the portion of the acquisition purchase price that represented the value assigned to the existing deposit base at acquisition. The core deposit intangible has a finite life and is amortized by the straight-line method over the estimated useful life of the deposits (10 years). Following is a rollforward of the core deposit intangible for the years ended December 31, 2015 and 2014:

 

 

   

2015

   

2014

 
                 

Balance, beginning

  $ 1,670,921     $ 1,870,433  

Amortization expense

    (199,512 )     (199,512 )

Balance, ending

  $ 1,471,409     $ 1,670,921  

 

The Company expects annual amortization expense of $199,512 for each of the five succeeding years and $473,849 combined in years thereafter.

 

 
83

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 2.     Community National Bancorporation and Community National Bank (continued)

 

The following table presents the gross carrying amount, accumulated amortization, and net carrying amount of the core deposit intangible as of December 31, 2015 and 2014.

 

   

2015

   

2014

 
                 

Gross carrying amount

  $ 1,995,127     $ 1,995,127  

Accumulated amortization

    (523,718 )     (324,206 )

Net carrying amount

  $ 1,471,409     $ 1,670,921  

 

The Company’s acquired loans were recorded at fair value at the acquisition date and no separate valuation allowance was established. The initial fair value was determined with the assistance of a valuation specialist that discounted expected cash flows at appropriate rates. The discount rates were based on market rates for new originations of comparable loans and did not include a factor for credit losses, as that was included in the estimated cash flows. ASC Topic 310-30, “Loans and Debt Securities Acquired with Deteriorated Credit Quality”, applies to loans acquired in a transfer with evidence of deterioration of credit quality for which it is probable, at acquisition, that the investor will be unable to collect all contractually required payments receivable. If both conditions exist, the Company determines whether to account for each loan individually or whether such loans will be assembled into pools based on common risk characteristics such as credit score, loan type, and origination date. Based on this evaluation, the Company determined that the loans acquired from the Community National acquisition subject to ASC Topic 310-30 would be accounted for individually. At the acquisition date, the historical cost and fair value of these loans totaled $3,033,022 and $2,207,891, respectively.

 

The Company considered expected prepayments and estimated the total expected cash flows, which includes undiscounted expected principal and interest. The excess of that amount over the fair value of the loan is referred to as accretable yield. Accretable yield is recognized as interest income on a constant yield basis over the expected life of the loan. The excess of the contractual cash flows over expected cash flows is referred to as nonaccretable difference and is not accreted into income. Over the life of the loan, the Company continues to estimate expected cash flows. Subsequent decreases in expected cash flows are recognized as impairments in the current period through a provision for loan losses. Subsequent increases in cash flows to be collected are first used to reverse any existing valuation allowance and any remaining increase is recognized prospectively through an adjustment of the loan’s yield over its remaining life. At the acquisition date, accretable yield totaled $4,128,315 and nonaccretable yield totaled $397,894. At December 31, 2015 and 2014, accretable yield totaled $640,194 and $1,215,398 and nonaccretable yield totaled $71,677 and $98,615, respectively. The decline in accretable yield was primarily the result of accelerated accretion of accretable yield for early payoffs of acquired performing loans and the predetermined schedule of accretable yield.

 

The Company assumed junior subordinated debentures with principal outstanding of $6,702,000 and fair value of $4,125,175 after a discount of $2,576,825. The initial fair value was determined with the assistance of a valuation specialist that discounted expected cash flows at appropriate rates. The discount is accreted as interest expense on a level yield basis over the expected remaining term of the junior subordinated debentures.

 

Results of the operations of the acquired business are included in the income statement from the effective date of the acquisition.

 

 
84

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 2.     Community National Bancorporation and Community National Bank (continued)

 

The fair values of the assets acquired and liabilities assumed, including the consideration paid and resulting bargain purchase gain, is as follows:

 

   

As of

May 13, 2013

 

ASSETS

       

Cash and due from banks

  $ 9,286,757  

Federal funds sold

    12,335,000  

Interest-bearing deposits at financial institutions

    2,024,539  

Securities available for sale

    45,853,826  

Loans/leases receivable, net

    195,658,486  

Premises and equipment

    8,132,021  

Core deposit intangible

    3,440,076  

Bank-owned life insurance

    4,595,529  

Restricted investment securities

    1,259,375  

Other real estate owned

    550,326  

Other assets

    5,178,583  

Total assets acquired

  $ 288,314,518  
         

LIABILITIES

       

Deposits

  $ 255,045,071  

Other borrowings

    3,950,000  

Junior subordinated debentures

    4,125,175  

Other liabilities

    3,911,053  

Total liabilities assumed

  $ 267,031,299  
         

Net assets acquired

  $ 21,283,219  
         

CONSIDERATION PAID:

       

Cash

  $ 6,261,684  

Issuance of 834,715 shares of common stock

    13,180,150  

Total consideration paid

  $ 19,441,834  

Bargain purchase gain

  $ 1,841,385  

 

In order to fund the cash portion of the consideration and pay off the $3,950,000 of Community National borrowings at acquisition, the Company borrowed $4,400,000 on its 364-day revolving credit note. The outstanding balance on the 364-day revolving credit note totaled $10,000,000 until maturity at June 26, 2013. Upon maturity, the credit facility was restructured whereby the $10,000,000 of outstanding debt was restructured into a secured 3-year term note with principal due quarterly and interest due monthly where the interest is calculated at the effective LIBOR rate plus 3.00% per annum (3.17% at December 31, 2013). Additionally, as part of the restructuring, the Company maintained a secured 364-day revolving credit note with availability of $10,000,000 where the interest is calculated at the effective LIBOR rate plus 2.50% per annum. At December 31, 2013, the Company had not borrowed on this revolving credit note and had the full amount available. See Note 10 regarding 2014 and 2015 activity in this debt.

 

The current note agreement contains certain covenants that place restrictions on additional debt and stipulate minimum capital and various asset quality and operating ratios.

 

 
85

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 2.     Community National Bancorporation and Community National Bank (continued)

 

The Company recorded a bargain purchase gain on the acquisition totaling $1,841,385 as the market value of the net assets acquired from Community National exceeded the total consideration paid. The consideration paid approximated a slight premium to the book value of Community National’s net assets at acquisition. The net impact of the market value adjustments resulted in a net increase to Community National’s net assets. The more significant market value adjustments were the core deposit intangible ($3,440,076) and the discount on the trust preferred securities ($2,576,825), as previously discussed.

 

The Company incurred costs related to the acquisition of Community National totaling $2,353,162. These costs consisted of professional fees (legal, investment banking, and accounting) for the acquisition of Community National and the subsequent branch sales, as well as data conversion costs (including both the de-conversion of the sold branches and the conversion of the remaining branches), and compensation costs for severed and retained employees.

 

Unaudited pro forma combined operating results for the year ended December 31, 2013, giving effect to the Community National acquisition as if it had occurred as of January 1, 2012 (the beginning of the prior annual reporting period in the year of acquisition), are as follows:

 

   

Year ended

December 31,

 
   

2013

 
         

Interest income

  $ 83,008,255  

Noninterest income

  $ 22,042,194  

Net income

  $ 11,320,890  

Net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc. common stockholders

  $ 8,152,588  
         

Earnings per common share attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc. common stockholders

       

Basic

  $ 1.47  

Diluted

  $ 1.44  

 

The pro forma results exclude the impact of the bargain purchase gain of $1,841,385 and the impact of the gains on sales of certain CNB branches of $2,334,216. Additionally, the pro forma results do not purport to be indicative of the results of operations that actually would have resulted had the acquisition occurred on January 1, 2012 or of future results of operations of the consolidated entities.

  

 
86

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 2.     Community National Bancorporation and Community National Bank (continued)

 

On October 4, 2013, the Company finalized the sale of certain assets and liabilities of the two Mason City, Iowa branches of CNB. The detail of the assets and liabilities sold, and resulting gain on sale, is as follows:

 

ASSETS

 

As of

October 4, 2013

 

Cash

  $ 29,905,991  

Loans receivable

    22,709,735  

Premises and equipment

    776,782  

Core deposit intangible

    910,415  

Other assets

    68,456  

Total assets sold

  $ 54,371,379  
         

LIABILITIES

       

Deposits

  $ 55,191,930  

Other liabilities

    53,421  

Total liabilities sold

  $ 55,245,351  
         

Gain on sale, pre-tax

  $ 873,972  

 

On October 11, 2013, the Company finalized the sale of certain assets and liabilities of the two Austin, Minnesota branches of CNB. The detail of the assets and liabilities sold, and resulting gain on sale, is as follows:

 

ASSETS

 

As of

October 11, 2013

 

Cash

  $ 519,627  

Loans receivable

    31,749,135  

Premises and equipment

    1,597,040  

Core deposit intangible

    480,347  

Other assets

    70,443  

Total assets sold

  $ 34,416,592  
         

LIABILITIES

       

Deposits

  $ 35,830,168  

Other liabilities

    46,668  

Total liabilities sold

  $ 35,876,836  
         

Gain on sale, pre-tax

  $ 1,460,244  

 

 
87

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 3.     Investment Securities

 

The amortized cost and fair value of investment securities as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 are summarized as follows:

 

   

Amortized

Cost

   

Gross

Unrealized

Gains

   

Gross

Unrealized

(Losses)

   

Fair

Value

 

December 31, 2015:

                               

Securities held to maturity:

                               

Municipal securities

  $ 252,624,159     $ 3,190,558     $ (1,173,432 )   $ 254,641,285  

Other securities

    1,050,000       -       -       1,050,000  
    $ 253,674,159     $ 3,190,558     $ (1,173,432 )   $ 255,691,285  
                                 

Securities available for sale:

                               

U.S. govt. sponsored agency securities

  $ 216,281,416     $ 104,524     $ (2,848,561 )   $ 213,537,379  

Residential mortgage-backed and related securities

    81,442,479       511,095       (1,283,439 )     80,670,135  

Municipal securities

    26,764,981       872,985       (59,378 )     27,578,588  

Other securities

    1,108,124       540,919       (163 )     1,648,880  
    $ 325,597,000     $ 2,029,523     $ (4,191,541 )   $ 323,434,982  
                                 

December 31, 2014:

                               

Securities held to maturity:

                               

Municipal securities

  $ 198,829,574     $ 2,420,298     $ (1,186,076 )   $ 200,063,796  

Other securities

    1,050,000       -       -       1,050,000  
    $ 199,879,574     $ 2,420,298     $ (1,186,076 )   $ 201,113,796  
                                 

Securities available for sale:

                               

U.S. govt. sponsored agency securities

  $ 312,959,760     $ 173,685     $ (5,263,873 )   $ 307,869,572  

Residential mortgage-backed and related securities

    110,455,925       1,508,331       (541,032 )     111,423,224  

Municipal securities

    29,408,740       1,053,713       (62,472 )     30,399,981  

Other securities

    1,342,554       625,145       (846 )     1,966,853  
    $ 454,166,979     $ 3,360,874     $ (5,868,223 )   $ 451,659,630  

 

The Company’s HTM municipal securities consist largely of private issues of municipal debt. The municipalities are located primarily within the Midwest with a large portion located in or adjacent to the communities of QCBT and CRBT. The municipal debt investments are underwritten using specific guidelines with ongoing monitoring.

 

The Company’s residential mortgage-backed and related securities portfolio consists entirely of government sponsored or government guaranteed securities. The Company has not invested in commercial mortgage-backed securities or pooled trust preferred securities.

 

 
88

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 3.     Investment Securities (continued)

 

Gross unrealized losses and fair value, aggregated by investment category and length of time that individual securities have been in a continuous unrealized loss position, as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, are summarized as follows:

 

   

Less than 12 Months

   

12 Months or More

   

Total

 
   

Fair

Value

   

Gross

Unrealized

Losses

   

Fair

Value

   

Gross

Unrealized

Losses

   

Fair

Value

   

Gross

Unrealized

Losses

 

December 31, 2015:

                                               

Securities held to maturity:

                                               

Municipal securities

  $ 14,803,408     $ (294,438 )   $ 19,927,581     $ (878,994 )   $ 34,730,989     $ (1,173,432 )
                                                 

Securities available for sale:

                                               

U.S. govt. sponsored agency securities

  $ 112,900,327     $ (1,397,591 )   $ 64,476,661     $ (1,450,970 )   $ 177,376,988     $ (2,848,561 )

Residential mortgage-backed and related securities

    40,356,921       (730,466 )     19,836,637       (552,973 )     60,193,558       (1,283,439 )

Municipal securities

    2,220,800       (31,807 )     848,329       (27,571 )     3,069,129       (59,378 )

Other securities

    411       (163 )     -       -       411       (163 )
    $ 155,478,459     $ (2,160,027 )   $ 85,161,627     $ (2,031,514 )   $ 240,640,086     $ (4,191,541 )
                                                 

December 31, 2014:

                                               

Securities held to maturity:

                                               

Municipal securities

  $ 20,419,052     $ (587,992 )   $ 38,779,545     $ (598,084 )   $ 59,198,597     $ (1,186,076 )
                                                 

Securities available for sale:

                                               

U.S. govt. sponsored agency securities

  $ 23,970,085     $ (102,695 )   $ 255,743,056     $ (5,161,178 )   $ 279,713,141     $ (5,263,873 )

Residential mortgage-backed and related securities

    10,710,671       (10,139 )     37,570,774       (530,893 )     48,281,445       (541,032 )

Municipal securities

    920,935       (1,773 )     4,425,337       (60,699 )     5,346,272       (62,472 )

Other securities

    243,004       (846 )     -       -       243,004       (846 )
    $ 35,844,695     $ (115,453 )   $ 297,739,167     $ (5,752,770 )   $ 333,583,862     $ (5,868,223 )

 

At December 31, 2015, the investment portfolio included 470 securities. Of this number, 136 securities were in an unrealized loss position. The aggregate losses of these securities totaled approximately 1% of the total aggregate amortized cost. Of these 136 securities, 49 securities had an unrealized loss for 12 months or more. All of the debt securities in unrealized loss positions are considered acceptable credit risks. Based upon an evaluation of the available evidence, including the recent changes in market rates, credit rating information and information obtained from regulatory filings, management believes the declines in fair value for these debt securities are temporary. In addition, the Company does not intend to sell these securities and/or it is not more-likely-than-not that the Company will be required to sell these debt securities before their anticipated recovery. At December 31, 2015 and 2014, the Company’s equity securities represent less than 1% of the total portfolio.

 

The Company did not recognize OTTI on any debt or equity securities for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014 or 2013.  

 

 
89

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 3.     Investment Securities (continued)

 

All sales of securities, as applicable, for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013, respectively, were from securities identified as AFS. Information on proceeds received, as well as the gains and losses from the sale of those securities is as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Proceeds from sales of securities

  $ 81,410,368     $ 78,476,422     $ 37,393,047  

Gross gains from sales of securities

    1,045,444       517,116       523,071  

Gross losses from sales of securities

    (246,461 )     (424,753 )     (90,579 )

 

The amortized cost and fair value of securities as of December 31, 2015, by contractual maturity are shown below. Expected maturities of mortgage-backed and related securities may differ from contractual maturities because the mortgages underlying the securities may be called or prepaid without any penalties. Therefore, these securities are not included in the maturity categories in the following summary. “Other securities” available for sale are excluded from the maturity categories as there is no fixed maturity date for those securities.

 

   

Amortized Cost

   

Fair Value

 

Securities held to maturity:

               

Due in one year or less

  $ 3,801,378     $ 3,803,101  

Due after one year through five years

    20,215,332       20,344,971  

Due after five years

    229,657,449       231,543,213  
    $ 253,674,159     $ 255,691,285  
                 

Securities available for sale:

               

Due in one year or less

  $ 1,858,965     $ 1,858,071  

Due after one year through five years

    120,846,468       119,986,551  

Due after five years

    120,340,964       119,271,345  
    $ 243,046,397     $ 241,115,967  

Residential mortgage-backed and related securities

    81,442,479       80,670,135  

Other securities

    1,108,124       1,648,880  
    $ 325,597,000     $ 323,434,982  

 

Portions of the U.S. government sponsored agencies and municipal securities contain call options, at the discretion of the issuer, to terminate the security at predetermined dates prior to the stated maturity, summarized as follows:

 

   

Amortized Cost

   

Fair Value

 

Securities held to maturity:

               

Municipal securities

  $ 139,103,302     $ 140,444,117  
                 

Securities available for sale:

               

U.S. govt. sponsored agency securities

    127,935,745       125,936,777  

Municipal securities

    16,751,793       17,127,904  
    $ 144,687,538     $ 143,064,681  

 

As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, investment securities with a carrying value of $248,277,471 and $402,507,865, respectively, were pledged on FHLB advances, customer and wholesale repurchase agreements, and for other purposes as required or permitted by law.

 

 
90

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 3.     Investment Securities (continued)

 

As of December 31, 2015, the Company’s municipal securities portfolios were comprised of general obligation bonds issued by 82 issuers with fair values totaling $67.8 million and revenue bonds issued by 92 issuers, primarily consisting of states, counties, towns, villages and school districts with fair values totaling $214.4 million. The Company held investments in general obligation bonds in 19 states, including four states in which the aggregate fair value exceeded $5.0 million. The Company held investments in revenue bonds in nine states, including four states in which the aggregate fair value exceeded $5.0 million.

 

As of December 31, 2014, the Company’s municipal securities portfolios were comprised of general obligation bonds issued by 77 issuers with fair values totaling $68.8 million and revenue bonds issued by 64 issuers, primarily consisting of states, counties, towns, villages and school districts with fair values totaling $161.7 million. The Company held investments in general obligation bonds in 19 states, including three states in which the aggregate fair value exceeded $5.0 million. The Company held investments in revenue bonds in eight states, including four states in which the aggregate fair value exceeded $5.0 million.

 

The amortized cost and fair values of the Company’s portfolio of general obligation bonds are summarized in the following tables by the issuer’s state:

 

December 31, 2015:

                               

U.S. State:

 

Number of

Issuers

   

Amortized Cost

   

Fair Value

   

Average

Exposure Per

Issuer (Fair Value)

 
                                 

Iowa

    15     $ 19,974,939     $ 20,247,108     $ 1,349,807  

Illinois

    9       10,928,700       11,264,348       1,251,594  

North Dakota

    5       10,890,000       11,050,235       2,210,047  

Missouri

    12       7,924,800       7,986,856       665,571  

Other

    41       16,965,393       17,229,485       420,231  

Total general obligation bonds

    82     $ 66,683,832     $ 67,778,032     $ 826,561  

 

December 31, 2014:

                               

U.S. State:

 

Number of

Issuers

   

Amortized Cost

   

Fair Value

   

Average

Exposure Per

Issuer (Fair Value)

 
                                 

Illinois

    10     $ 22,447,799     $ 22,784,638     $ 2,278,464  

Iowa

    14       20,156,969       20,446,655       1,460,475  

Missouri

    11       8,424,928       8,426,047       766,004  

Other

    42       16,838,719       17,110,831       407,401  

Total general obligation bonds

    77     $ 67,868,415     $ 68,768,171     $ 893,093  

 

 
91

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 3.     Investment Securities (continued)

 

The amortized cost and fair values of the Company’s portfolio of revenue bonds are summarized in the following tables by the issuer’s state:

 

December 31, 2015:

                               

U.S. State:

 

Number of

Issuers

   

Amortized Cost

   

Fair Value

   

Average

Exposure Per

Issuer (Fair Value)

 
                                 

Missouri

    41     $ 78,593,590     $ 79,015,378     $ 1,927,204  

Iowa

    26       70,773,660       71,659,410       2,756,131  

Indiana

    17       40,018,381       40,210,320       2,365,313  

Kansas

    3       11,748,679       11,821,055       3,940,352  

Other

    5       11,570,998       11,735,678       2,347,136  

Total revenue bonds

    92     $ 212,705,308     $ 214,441,841     $ 2,330,890  

 

December 31, 2014:

                               

U.S. State:

 

Number of

Issuers

   

Amortized Cost

   

Fair Value

   

Average

Exposure Per

Issuer (Fair Value)

 
                                 

Missouri

    30     $ 62,358,276     $ 62,584,516     $ 2,086,151  

Iowa

    20       59,417,246       60,402,941       3,020,147  

Indiana

    8       17,991,200       17,925,721       2,240,715  

Kansas

    2       12,307,866       12,332,528       6,166,264  

Other

    4       8,295,311       8,449,900       2,112,475  

Total revenue bonds

    64     $ 160,369,899     $ 161,695,606     $ 2,526,494  

 

Both general obligation and revenue bonds are diversified across many issuers. As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, the Company did not hold general obligation or revenue bonds of any single issuer, the aggregate book or market value of which exceeded 10% of the Company’s stockholders’ equity. Of the general obligation and revenue bonds in the Company’s portfolio, the majority are unrated bonds that represent small, private issuances. All unrated bonds were underwritten according to loan underwriting standards and have an average risk rating of 2, indicating very high quality. Additionally, many of these bonds are funding essential municipal services (water, sewer, education, medical facilities).

 

The Company’s municipal securities are owned by each of the three charters, whose investment policies set forth limits for various subcategories within the municipal securities portfolio. Each charter is monitored individually and as of December 31, 2015, all were well-within policy limitations approved by the board of directors. Policy limits are calculated as a percentage of total risk-based capital.

 

As of December 31, 2015, the Company’s standard monitoring of its municipal securities portfolio had not uncovered any facts or circumstances resulting in significantly different credits ratings than those assigned by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization, or in the case of unrated bonds, the rating assigned using the credit underwriting standards.

 

 
92

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 4.     Loans/Leases Receivable

 

The composition of the loan/lease portfolio as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 is presented as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 
                 

C&I loans

  $ 648,159,892     $ 523,927,140  

CRE loans

               

Owner-occupied CRE

    252,523,164       260,069,080  

Commercial construction, land development, and other land

    49,083,844       68,118,989  

Other non owner-occupied CRE

    422,761,757       373,952,353  
      724,368,765       702,140,422  
                 

Direct financing leases *

    173,655,605       166,032,416  

Residential real estate loans **

    170,432,530       158,632,492  

Installment and other consumer loans

    73,669,493       72,606,480  
      1,790,286,285       1,623,338,950  

Plus deferred loan/lease orgination costs, net of fees

    7,736,390       6,664,120  
      1,798,022,675       1,630,003,070  

Less allowance

    (26,140,906 )     (23,074,365 )
    $ 1,771,881,769     $ 1,606,928,705  
                 

* Direct financing leases:

               

Net minimum lease payments to be received

  $ 195,476,230     $ 188,181,432  

Estimated unguaranteed residual values of leased assets

    1,165,706       1,488,342  

Unearned lease/residual income

    (22,986,331 )     (23,637,358 )
      173,655,605       166,032,416  

Plus deferred lease origination costs, net of fees

    6,594,582       6,639,244  
      180,250,187       172,671,660  

Less allowance

    (3,395,088 )     (3,359,400 )
    $ 176,855,099     $ 169,312,260  

 

Management performs an evaluation of the estimated unguaranteed residual values of leased assets on an annual basis, at a minimum. The evaluation consists of discussions with reputable and current vendors and management’s expertise and understanding of the current states of particular industries to determine informal valuations of the equipment. As necessary and where available, management will utilize valuations by independent appraisers. The large majority of leases with residual values contain a lease options rider which requires the lessee to pay the residual value directly, finance the payment of the residual value, or extend the lease term to pay the residual value. In these cases, the residual value is protected and the risk of loss is minimal.

 

There were no losses related to residual values during the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013. At December 31, 2015, the Company had 16 leases remaining with residual values totaling $1,165,706 that were not protected with a lease end options rider. At December 31, 2014, the Company had 27 leases remaining with residual values totaling $1,488,342 that were not protected with a lease end options rider. Management has performed specific evaluations of these residual values and determined that the valuations are appropriate.

 

**Includes residential real estate loans held for sale totaling $565,850 and $553,000 as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively.

 

 
93

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 4.     Loans/Leases Receivable (continued)

 

The aging of the loan/lease portfolio by classes of loans/leases as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 is presented as follows:

 

   

2015

 

Classes of Loans/Leases

 

Current

   

30-59 Days

Past Due

   

60-89 Days

Past Due

   

Accruing Past

Due 90 Days or

More

   

Nonaccrual Loans/Leases

   

Total

 
                                                 

C&I

  $ 640,725,241     $ 1,636,860     $ 5,816     $ -     $ 5,791,975     $ 648,159,892  

CRE

                                               

Owner-Occupied CRE

    251,612,752       182,949       -       -       727,463       252,523,164  

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    48,890,040       -       -       -       193,804       49,083,844  

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    420,819,874       614,732       219,383       -       1,107,768       422,761,757  

Direct Financing Leases

    170,021,289       1,490,818       439,314       2,843       1,701,341       173,655,605  

Residential Real Estate

    166,415,118       2,800,589       200,080       -       1,016,743       170,432,530  

Installment and Other Consumer

    73,134,197       412,052       14,127       -       109,117       73,669,493  
    $ 1,771,618,511     $ 7,138,000     $ 878,720     $ 2,843     $ 10,648,211     $ 1,790,286,285  
                                                 

As a percentage of total loan/lease portfolio

    98.96 %     0.40 %     0.05 %     0.00 %     0.59 %     100.00 %

 

   

2014

 

Classes of Loans/Leases

 

Current

   

30-59 Days

Past Due

   

60-89 Days

Past Due

   

Accruing Past

Due 90 Days or

More

   

Nonaccrual Loans/Leases

   

Total

 
                                                 

C&I

  $ 515,616,752     $ 323,145     $ -     $ 822     $ 7,986,421     $ 523,927,140  

CRE

                                               

Owner-Occupied CRE

    259,166,743       239,771       -       -       662,566       260,069,080  

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    67,021,157       729,983       111,837       -       256,012       68,118,989  

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    360,970,551       3,448,902       2,840,862       60,000       6,632,038       373,952,353  

Direct Financing Leases

    164,059,914       573,575       293,212       -       1,105,715       166,032,416  

Residential Real Estate

    154,303,644       2,528,287       475,343       25,673       1,299,545       158,632,492  

Installment and Other Consumer

    71,534,329       172,872       246,882       6,916       645,481       72,606,480  
    $ 1,592,673,090     $ 8,016,535     $ 3,968,136     $ 93,411     $ 18,587,778     $ 1,623,338,950  
                                                 

As a percentage of total loan/lease portfolio

    98.11 %     0.49 %     0.24 %     0.01 %     1.15 %     100.00 %

 

 
94

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 4.     Loans/Leases Receivable (continued)

 

Nonperforming loans/leases by classes of loans/leases as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 is presented as follows:

 

   

2015

 

Classes of Loans/Leases

 

Accruing Past

Due 90 Days or

More

   

Nonaccrual Loans/Leases *

   

Troubled Debt Restructurings - Accruing

   

Total

Nonperforming Loans/Leases

   

Percentage of

Total

Nonperforming Loans/Leases

 
                                         

C&I

  $ -     $ 5,791,975     $ 173,087     $ 5,965,062       50.96 %

CRE

                                       

Owner-Occupied CRE

    -       727,463       -       727,463       6.22 %

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    -       193,804       -       193,804       1.66 %

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    -       1,107,768       -       1,107,768       9.46 %

Direct Financing Leases

    2,843       1,701,341       -       1,704,184       14.56 %

Residential Real Estate

    -       1,016,743       402,044       1,418,787       12.12 %

Installment and Other Consumer

    -       109,117       478,625       587,742       5.02 %
    $ 2,843     $ 10,648,211     $ 1,053,756     $ 11,704,810       100.00 %

 

*At December 31, 2015, nonaccrual loans/leases included $1,533,657 of troubled debt restructurings, including $1,164,423 in C&I loans, $193,804 in CRE loans, $42,098 in direct financing leases, $119,305 in residential real estate loans, and $14,027 in installment loans.

 

 

   

2014

 

Classes of Loans/Leases

 

Accruing Past

Due 90 Days or

More

   

Nonaccrual Loans/Leases **

   

Troubled Debt Restructurings - Accruing

   

Total

Nonperforming Loans/Leases

   

Percentage of

Total

Nonperforming Loans/Leases

 
                                         

C&I

  $ 822     $ 7,986,421     $ 235,926     $ 8,223,169       40.91 %

CRE

                                       

Owner-Occupied CRE

    -       662,566       -       662,566       3.30 %

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    -       256,012       -       256,012       1.27 %

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    60,000       6,632,038       -       6,692,038       33.29 %

Direct Financing Leases

    -       1,105,715       233,557       1,339,272       6.66 %

Residential Real Estate

    25,673       1,299,545       489,183       1,814,401       9.02 %

Installment and Other Consumer

    6,916       645,481       462,552       1,114,949       5.55 %
    $ 93,411     $ 18,587,778     $ 1,421,218     $ 20,102,407       100.00 %

 

**At December 31, 2014, nonaccrual loans/leases included $5,013,041 of troubled debt restructurings, including $1,227,537 in C&I loans, $3,214,468 in CRE loans, $61,144 in direct financing leases, $506,283 in residential real estate loans, and $3,609 in installment loans.

 

 
95

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 4.     Loans/Leases Receivable (continued)

 

Changes in the allowance by portfolio segment for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013 are presented as follows:

 

   

Year Ended December 31, 2015

 
                                                 
   

C&I

   

CRE

   

Direct Financing Leases

   

Residential Real Estate

   

Installment and

Other Consumer

   

Total

 
                                                 

Balance, beginning

  $ 8,833,832     $ 8,353,386     $ 3,359,400     $ 1,525,952     $ 1,001,795     $ 23,074,365  

Provisions charged to expense

    1,470,526       3,080,611       1,688,031       430,087       201,645       6,870,900  

Loans/leases charged off

    (453,782 )     (2,560,749 )     (1,788,772 )     (169,996 )     (251,838 )     (5,225,137 )

Recoveries on loans/leases previously charged off

    633,504       501,869       136,429       4,107       144,869       1,420,778  

Balance, ending

  $ 10,484,080     $ 9,375,117     $ 3,395,088     $ 1,790,150     $ 1,096,471     $ 26,140,906  

 

   

Year Ended December 31, 2014

 
                                                 
   

C&I

   

CRE

   

Direct Financing Leases

   

Residential Real Estate

   

Installment and

Other Consumer

   

Total

 
                                                 

Balance, beginning

  $ 5,648,774     $ 10,705,434     $ 2,517,217     $ 1,395,849     $ 1,180,774     $ 21,448,048  

Provisions charged to expense

    4,297,253       (13,326 )     2,278,132       251,030       (6,089 )     6,807,000  

Loans/leases charged off

    (1,475,885 )     (2,756,083 )     (1,504,181 )     (130,900 )     (268,656 )     (6,135,705 )

Recoveries on loans/leases previously charged off

    363,690       417,361       68,232       9,973       95,766       955,022  

Balance, ending

  $ 8,833,832     $ 8,353,386     $ 3,359,400     $ 1,525,952     $ 1,001,795     $ 23,074,365  

 

   

Year Ended December 31, 2013

 
                                                 
   

C&I

   

CRE

   

Direct Financing Leases

   

Residential Real Estate

   

Installment and

Other Consumer

   

Total

 
                                                 

Balance, beginning

  $ 4,531,545     $ 11,069,502     $ 1,990,395     $ 1,070,328     $ 1,263,434     $ 19,925,204  

Provisions charged to expense

    1,453,455       2,635,327       1,431,246       471,060       (60,668 )     5,930,420  

Loans/leases charged off

    (962,607 )     (3,573,006 )     (916,836 )     (162,010 )     (229,447 )     (5,843,906 )

Recoveries on loans/leases previously charged off

    626,381       573,611       12,412       16,471       207,455       1,436,330  

Balance, ending

  $ 5,648,774     $ 10,705,434     $ 2,517,217     $ 1,395,849     $ 1,180,774     $ 21,448,048  

 

 
96

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 4.     Loans/Leases Receivable (continued)

 

The allowance by impairment evaluation and by portfolio segment as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 is presented as follows:

 

   

2015

 
   

C&I

   

CRE

   

Direct Financing Leases

   

Residential Real Estate

   

Installment and

Other Consumer

   

Total

 
                                                 

Allowance for impaired loans/leases

  $ 2,592,270     $ 76,934     $ 306,193     $ 185,801     $ 143,089     $ 3,304,287  

Allowance for nonimpaired loans/leases

    7,891,810       9,298,183       3,088,895       1,604,349       953,382       22,836,619  
    $ 10,484,080     $ 9,375,117     $ 3,395,088     $ 1,790,150     $ 1,096,471     $ 26,140,906  
                                                 
                                                 

Impaired loans/leases

  $ 5,286,482     $ 2,029,035     $ 1,701,341     $ 1,418,787     $ 587,742     $ 11,023,387  

Nonimpaired loans/leases

    642,873,410       722,339,730       171,954,264       169,013,743       73,081,751       1,779,262,898  
    $ 648,159,892     $ 724,368,765     $ 173,655,605     $ 170,432,530     $ 73,669,493     $ 1,790,286,285  
                                                 
                                                 

Allowance as a percentage of impaired loans/leases

    49.04 %     3.79 %     18.00 %     13.10 %     24.35 %     29.98 %

Allowance as a percentage of nonimpaired loans/leases

    1.23 %     1.29 %     1.80 %     0.95 %     1.30 %     1.28 %

Total allowance as a percentage of total loans/leases

    1.62 %     1.29 %     1.96 %     1.05 %     1.49 %     1.46 %

 

 

 

   

2014

 
   

C&I

   

CRE

   

Direct Financing Leases

   

Residential Real Estate

   

Installment and

Other Consumer

   

Total

 
                                                 

Allowance for impaired loans/leases

  $ 3,300,199     $ 1,170,020     $ 356,996     $ 151,663     $ 265,795     $ 5,244,673  

Allowance for nonimpaired loans/leases

    5,533,633       7,183,366       3,002,404       1,374,289       736,000       17,829,692  
    $ 8,833,832     $ 8,353,386     $ 3,359,400     $ 1,525,952     $ 1,001,795     $ 23,074,365  
                                                 
                                                 

Impaired loans/leases

  $ 7,279,709     $ 7,433,383     $ 1,339,272     $ 1,788,728     $ 1,108,033     $ 18,949,125  

Nonimpaired loans/leases

    516,647,431       694,707,039       164,693,144       156,843,764       71,498,447       1,604,389,825  
    $ 523,927,140     $ 702,140,422     $ 166,032,416     $ 158,632,492     $ 72,606,480     $ 1,623,338,950  
                                                 
                                                 

Allowance as a percentage of impaired loans/leases

    45.33 %     15.74 %     26.66 %     8.48 %     23.99 %     27.68 %

Allowance as a percentage of nonimpaired loans/leases

    1.07 %     1.03 %     1.82 %     0.88 %     1.03 %     1.11 %

Total allowance as a percentage of total loans/leases

    1.69 %     1.19 %     2.02 %     0.96 %     1.38 %     1.42 %

 

 
97

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 4.     Loans/Leases Receivable (continued)

 

Information for impaired loans/leases is presented in the tables below. The recorded investment represents customer balances net of any partial charge-offs recognized on the loan/lease. The unpaid principal balance represents the recorded balance outstanding on the loan/lease prior to any partial charge-offs.

 

Loans/leases, by classes of financing receivable, considered to be impaired as of and for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013 are presented as follows:

 

   

2015

 

Classes of Loans/Leases

 

Recorded

Investment

   

Unpaid Principal Balance

   

Related

Allowance

   

Average

Recorded Investment

   

Interest Income Recognized

   

Interest Income Recognized for

Cash Payments Received

 
                                                 

Impaired Loans/Leases with No Specific Allowance Recorded:

                                               

C&I

  $ 234,636     $ 346,072     $ -     $ 380,495     $ 7,436     $ 7,436  

CRE

                                               

Owner-Occupied CRE

    256,761       350,535       -       447,144       -       -  

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    -       228,818       -       117,406       -       -  

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    1,578,470       1,578,470       -       2,953,888       -       -  

Direct Financing Leases

    871,884       871,884       -       892,281       4,142       4,142  

Residential Real Estate

    613,486       649,064       -       1,047,001       3,929       3,929  

Installment and Other Consumer

    377,304       377,304       -       817,854       9,563       9,563  
    $ 3,932,541     $ 4,402,147     $ -     $ 6,656,069     $ 25,070     $ 25,070  
                                                 

Impaired Loans/Leases with Specific Allowance Recorded:

                                               

C&I

  $ 5,051,846     $ 5,055,685     $ 2,592,270     $ 4,811,046     $ -     $ -  

CRE

                                               

Owner-Occupied CRE

    -       -       -       -       -       -  

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    193,804       205,804       76,934       195,986       -       -  

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    -       -       -       -       -       -  

Direct Financing Leases

    829,457       829,457       306,193       474,458       -       -  

Residential Real Estate

    805,301       805,301       185,801       712,085       7,913       7,913  

Installment and Other Consumer

    210,438       210,438       143,089       189,539       5,693       5,693  
    $ 7,090,846     $ 7,106,685     $ 3,304,287     $ 6,383,114     $ 13,606     $ 13,606  
                                                 

Total Impaired Loans/Leases:

                                               

C&I

  $ 5,286,482     $ 5,401,757     $ 2,592,270     $ 5,191,541     $ 7,436     $ 7,436  

CRE

                                               

Owner-Occupied CRE

    256,761       350,535       -       447,144       -       -  

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    193,804       434,622       76,934       313,392       -       -  

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    1,578,470       1,578,470       -       2,953,888       -       -  

Direct Financing Leases

    1,701,341       1,701,341       306,193       1,366,739       4,142       4,142  

Residential Real Estate

    1,418,787       1,454,365       185,801       1,759,086       11,842       11,842  

Installment and Other Consumer

    587,742       587,742       143,089       1,007,393       15,256       15,256  
    $ 11,023,387     $ 11,508,832     $ 3,304,287     $ 13,039,183     $ 38,676     $ 38,676  

 

Impaired loans/leases for which no allowance has been provided have adequate collateral, based on management’s current estimates.

 

 
98

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 4.     Loans/Leases Receivable (continued)

 

   

2014

 

Classes of Loans/Leases

 

Recorded Investment

   

Unpaid Principal Balance

   

Related

Allowance

   

Average

Recorded Investment

   

Interest Income Recognized

   

Interest Income Recognized for Cash Payments Received

 
                                                 

Impaired Loans/Leases with No Specific Allowance Recorded:

                                               

C&I

  $ 246,308     $ 342,391     $ -     $ 525,543     $ 7,599     $ 7,599  

CRE

                                               

Owner-Occupied CRE

    67,415       163,638       -       548,464       -       -  

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    31,936       143,136       -       1,656,401       -       -  

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    491,717       491,717       -       4,925,681       13,283       13,283  

Direct Financing Leases

    561,414       561,414       -       867,657       31,911       31,911  

Residential Real Estate

    1,060,770       1,060,770       -       1,269,213       3,032       3,032  

Installment and Other Consumer

    613,804       813,804       -       893,971       -       -  
    $ 3,073,364     $ 3,576,870     $ -     $ 10,686,930     $ 55,825     $ 55,825  
                                                 

Impaired Loans/Leases with Specific Allowance Recorded:

                                               

C&I

  $ 7,033,401     $ 8,190,495     $ 3,300,199     $ 3,159,985     $ 14,837     $ 14,837  

CRE

                                               

Owner-Occupied CRE

    620,896       620,896       4,462       316,743       -       -  

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    337,076       577,894       12,087       528,564       -       -  

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    5,884,343       6,583,934       1,153,471       4,240,000       -       -  

Direct Financing Leases

    777,858       777,858       356,996       514,144       -       -  

Residential Real Estate

    727,958       763,537       151,663       538,678       2,967       2,967  

Installment and Other Consumer

    494,229       494,229       265,795       386,009       3,564       3,564  
    $ 15,875,761     $ 18,008,843     $ 5,244,673     $ 9,684,123     $ 21,368     $ 21,368  
                                                 

Total Impaired Loans/Leases:

                                               

C&I

  $ 7,279,709     $ 8,532,886     $ 3,300,199     $ 3,685,528     $ 22,436     $ 22,436  

CRE

                                               

Owner-Occupied CRE

    688,311       784,534       4,462       865,207       -       -  

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    369,012       721,030       12,087       2,184,965       -       -  

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    6,376,060       7,075,651       1,153,471       9,165,681       13,283       13,283  

Direct Financing Leases

    1,339,272       1,339,272       356,996       1,381,801       31,911       31,911  

Residential Real Estate

    1,788,728       1,824,307       151,663       1,807,891       5,999       5,999  

Installment and Other Consumer

    1,108,033       1,308,033       265,795       1,279,980       3,564       3,564  
    $ 18,949,125     $ 21,585,713     $ 5,244,673     $ 20,371,053     $ 77,193     $ 77,193  

 

Impaired loans/leases for which no allowance has been provided have adequate collateral, based on management’s current estimates.

 

 
99

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 4.     Loans/Leases Receivable (continued)

 

   

2013

 

Classes of Loans/Leases

 

Recorded Investment

   

Unpaid Principal Balance

   

Related

Allowance

   

Average

Recorded Investment

   

Interest Income Recognized

   

Interest Income Recognized for Cash Payments Received

 
                                                 

Impaired Loans/Leases with No Specific Allowance Recorded:

                                               

C&I

  $ 492,622     $ 568,951     $ -     $ 747,134     $ 7,749     $ 7,749  

CRE

                                               

Owner-Occupied CRE

    392,542       392,542       -       1,881,823       -       -  

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    1,943,168       2,054,368       -       2,666,039       -       -  

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    1,790,279       1,902,279       -       3,869,493       58,534       58,534  

Direct Financing Leases

    557,469       557,469       -       802,825       -       -  

Residential Real Estate

    1,071,927       1,071,927       -       1,010,027       4,235       4,235  

Installment and Other Consumer

    509,667       509,667       -       606,282       4,464       4,464  
    $ 6,757,674     $ 7,057,203     $ -     $ 11,583,623     $ 74,982     $ 74,982  
                                                 

Impaired Loans/Leases with Specific Allowance Recorded:

                                               

C&I

  $ 1,269,228     $ 1,956,755     $ 927,453     $ 1,222,449     $ 33,703     $ 33,703  

CRE

                                               

Owner-Occupied CRE

    159,247       159,247       67,498       87,035       -       -  

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    888,547       1,011,747       503,825       1,137,489       10,862       10,862  

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    7,783,132       8,488,414       2,603,381       7,426,299       45,926       45,926  

Direct Financing Leases

    336,989       336,989       192,847       97,846       -       -  

Residential Real Estate

    1,044,820       1,044,820       246,266       641,217       1,883       1,883  

Installment and Other Consumer

    840,783       840,783       467,552       640,557       -       -  
    $ 12,322,746     $ 13,838,755     $ 5,008,822     $ 11,252,892     $ 92,374     $ 92,374  
                                                 

Total Impaired Loans/Leases:

                                               

C&I

  $ 1,761,850     $ 2,525,706     $ 927,453     $ 1,969,583     $ 41,452     $ 41,452  

CRE

                                               

Owner-Occupied CRE

    551,789       551,789       67,498       1,968,858       -       -  

Commercial Construction, Land Development, and Other Land

    2,831,715       3,066,115       503,825       3,803,528       10,862       10,862  

Other Non Owner-Occupied CRE

    9,573,411       10,390,693       2,603,381       11,295,792       104,460       104,460  

Direct Financing Leases

    894,458       894,458       192,847       900,671       -       -  

Residential Real Estate

    2,116,747       2,116,747       246,266       1,651,244       6,118       6,118  

Installment and Other Consumer

    1,350,450       1,350,450       467,552       1,246,839       4,464       4,464  
    $ 19,080,420     $ 20,895,958     $ 5,008,822     $ 22,836,515     $ 167,356     $ 167,356  

 

Impaired loans/leases for which no allowance has been provided have adequate collateral, based on management’s current estimates.

 

 
100

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 4.     Loans/Leases Receivable (continued)

 

For C&I and CRE loans, the Company’s credit quality indicator is internally assigned risk ratings. Each commercial loan is assigned a risk rating upon origination. The risk rating is reviewed every 15 months, at a minimum, and on an as needed basis depending on the specific circumstances of the loan. See Note 1 for further discussion on the Company’s risk ratings.

 

For direct financing leases, residential real estate loans, and installment and other consumer loans, the Company’s credit quality indicator is performance determined by delinquency status. Delinquency status is updated daily by the Company’s loan system.

 

For each class of financing receivable, the following presents the recorded investment by credit quality indicator as of December 31, 2015 and 2014:

 

   

2015

 
           

CRE

                 
                   

Non Owner-Occupied

                 

Internally Assigned Risk Rating

 

C&I

   

Owner-Occupied

CRE

   

Commercial Construction,

Land

Development, and Other Land

   

Other CRE

   

Total

   

As a % of

Total

 
                                                 

Pass (Ratings 1 through 5)

  $ 616,200,797     $ 238,119,608     $ 46,929,876     $ 406,027,442     $ 1,307,277,723       95.24 %

Special Mention (Rating 6)

    18,031,845       8,630,658       1,780,000       8,846,286       37,288,789       2.72 %

Substandard (Rating 7)

    13,927,250       5,772,898       373,968       7,888,029       27,962,145       2.04 %

Doubtful (Rating 8)

    -       -       -       -       -       0.00 %
    $ 648,159,892     $ 252,523,164     $ 49,083,844     $ 422,761,757     $ 1,372,528,657       100.00 %

 

   

2015

 

Delinquency Status *

 

Direct Financing Leases

   

Residential Real Estate

   

Installment and

Other Consumer

   

Total

   

As a % of

Total

 
                                         

Performing

  $ 171,951,419     $ 169,013,743     $ 73,081,751     $ 414,046,913       99.11 %

Nonperforming

    1,704,186       1,418,787       587,742       3,710,715       0.89 %
    $ 173,655,605     $ 170,432,530     $ 73,669,493     $ 417,757,628       100.00 %

 

   

2014

 
           

CRE

                 
                   

Non Owner-Occupied

                 

Internally Assigned Risk Rating

 

C&I

   

Owner-Occupied

CRE

   

Commercial Construction,

Land

Development, and Other Land

   

Other CRE

   

Total

   

As a % of

Total

 
                                                 

Pass (Ratings 1 through 5)

  $ 491,883,568     $ 245,237,462     $ 65,691,737     $ 354,581,419     $ 1,157,394,186       94.40 %

Special Mention (Rating 6)

    17,034,909       12,637,930       -       3,285,191       32,958,030       2.69 %

Substandard (Rating 7)

    15,008,663       2,193,688       2,427,252       16,085,743       35,715,346       2.91 %

Doubtful (Rating 8)

    -       -       -       -       -       0.00 %
    $ 523,927,140     $ 260,069,080     $ 68,118,989     $ 373,952,353     $ 1,226,067,562       100.00 %

 

    2014  

Delinquency Status *

 

Direct Financing

Leases

   

Residential Real

Estate

   

Installment and

Other Consumer

   

Total

   

As a % of

Total

 
                                         

Performing

  $ 164,693,144     $ 156,818,091     $ 71,491,531     $ 393,002,766       98.93 %

Nonperforming

    1,339,272       1,814,401       1,114,949       4,268,622       1.07 %
    $ 166,032,416     $ 158,632,492     $ 72,606,480     $ 397,271,388       100.00 %

 

*Performing = loans/leases accruing and less than 90 days past due. Nonperforming = loans/leases on nonaccrual, accruing loans/leases that are greater than or equal to 90 days past due, and accruing troubled debt restructurings.

 

 
101

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 4.     Loans/Leases Receivable (continued)

 

As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, TDRs totaled $2,587,413 and $6,434,259, respectively.

 

For each class of financing receivable, the following presents the number and recorded investment of troubled debt restructurings, by type of concession, that were restructured during the years ended December 31, 2015 and 2014. The difference between the pre-modification recorded investment and the post-modification recorded investment would be any partial charge-offs at the time of restructuring. The specific allowance is as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively. The following excludes any troubled debt restructurings that were restructured and paid off or charged off in the same year.

 

   

2015

 

Classes of Loans/Leases

 

Number of Loans/Leases

   

Pre-

Modification Recorded

Investment

   

Post-

Modification Recorded

Investment

   

Specific

Allowance

 
                                 

CONCESSION - Interest rate adjusted below market

                               

Installment and Other Consumer

    2     $ 37,979     $ 37,979     $ 12,013  
      2     $ 37,979     $ 37,979     $ 12,013  
                                 

TOTAL

    2     $ 37,979     $ 37,979     $ 12,013  

 

Of the TDRs reported above, one with a post-modification recorded investment totaling $14,027 was on nonaccrual as of December 31, 2015.

 

For the year ended December 31, 2015, the Company had no TDRs that redefaulted within 12 months subsequent to restructure, where default is defined as delinquency of 90 days or more and/or placement on nonaccrual status.

 

The Company had no TDRs that were both restructured and charged off in 2015.

 

 
102

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 4.     Loans/Leases Receivable (continued)

 

   

2014

 

Classes of Loans/Leases

 

Number of Loans/Leases

   

Pre-

Modification Recorded

Investment

   

Post-

Modification Recorded

Investment

   

Specific

Allowance

 
                                 

CONCESSION - Extension of maturity

                               

C&I

    1     $ 58,987     $ 58,987     $ 58,987  

Direct Financing Leases

    2       303,701       303,701       12,644  

Residential Real Estate

    1       159,680       159,680       25,360  

Installment and Other Consumer

    1       113,653       113,653       113,653  
      5     $ 636,021     $ 636,021     $ 210,644  
                                 

CONCESSION - Significant payment delay

                               

C&I

    3     $ 889,154     $ 889,154     $ 217,524  
      3     $ 889,154     $ 889,154     $ 217,524  
                                 

CONCESSION - Forgiveness of principal

                               

C&I

    1       96,439       71,760       6,948  
      1     $ 96,439     $ 71,760     $ 6,948  
                                 

CONCESSION - Other

                               

C&I

    1     $ 427,849     $ 427,849     $ 60,429  
      1     $ 427,849     $ 427,849     $ 60,429  
                                 

TOTAL

    10     $ 2,049,463     $ 2,024,784     $ 495,545  

 

Of the TDRs reported above, five with post-modification recorded investments totaling $1,387,147 were on nonaccrual as of December 31, 2014.

 

For the year ended December 31, 2014, the Company had no TDRs that redefaulted within 12 months subsequent to restructure, where default is defined as delinquency of 90 days or more and/or placement on nonaccrual status.

 

Not included in the table above, the Company had one TDR that was restructured and charged off in 2014, totaling $89,443.

 

 
103

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 4.     Loans/Leases Receivable (continued)

 

Loans are made in the normal course of business to directors, executive officers, and their related interests. The terms of these loans, including interest rates and collateral, are similar to those prevailing for comparable transactions with other persons. An analysis of the changes in the aggregate committed amount of loans greater than or equal to $60,000 during the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013, is as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Balance, beginning

  $ 42,469,111     $ 39,192,966     $ 20,502,058  

Net increase (decrease) due to change in related parties

    (3,606,418 )     1,040,278       17,124,702  

Advances

    19,040,675       13,284,475       6,213,381  

Repayments

    (15,891,055 )     (11,048,608 )     (4,647,175 )

Balance, ending

  $ 42,012,313     $ 42,469,111     $ 39,192,966  

 

The Company’s loan portfolio includes a geographic concentration in the Midwest. Additionally, the loan portfolio included a concentration of loans in certain industries as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 

Industry Name

 

Balance

   

Percentage of Total Loans/Leases

   

Balance

   

Percentage of Total Loans/Leases

 
                                 

Lessors of Non-Residential Buildings

  $ 311,138,005       17 %   $ 256,436,213       16 %

Lessors of Residential Buildings

    91,811,101       5 %     74,667,674       5 %

Bank Holding Companies

    55,840,984       3 %     60,910,570       4 %

 

Concentrations within the leasing portfolio are monitored by equipment type – none of which represent a concentration within the total loans/leases portfolio. Within the leasing portfolio, diversification is spread among construction, manufacturing and the service industries. Geographically, the lease portfolio is diversified across all 50 states. No individual state represents a concentration within the total loan/lease portfolio.

 

 
104

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 5.     Premises and Equipment

 

The following summarizes the components of premises and equipment as of December 31, 2015 and 2014:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 
                 

Land

  $ 6,655,796     $ 7,100,393  

Buildings (useful lives 15 to 50 years)

    34,615,006       31,602,931  

Furniture and equipment (useful lives 3 to 10 years)

    24,953,570       23,142,643  
      66,224,372       61,845,967  

Less accumulated depreciation

    28,874,020       25,824,839  
    $ 37,350,352     $ 36,021,128  

 

Certain facilities are leased under operating leases. Rental expense was $339,839, $484,868, and $795,816 for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013, respectively.

 

Future minimum rental commitments under noncancelable leases are as follows as of December 31, 2015:

 

Year ending December 31:

       

2016

  $ 239,565  

2017

    241,440  

2018

    194,340  

2019

    162,819  
    $ 838,164  

 

Note 6.     Derivatives and Hedging Activities

 

Below is a summary of the interest rate cap derivatives held by the Company as of December 31, 2015 and 2014. An initial premium of $2.1 million was paid upfront for the two caps. The fair value of these instruments will fluctuate with market value changes, as well as amortization of the initial premium to interest expense.

 

Effective Date

Maturity Date

Balance Sheet

Location

 

Notional Amount

 

Accounting Treatment

 

December 31, 2015

Fair Value

   

December 31, 2014

Fair Value

 

June 5, 2014

June 5, 2019

Other Assets

  $ 15,000,000  

Cash Flow Hedging

  $ 321,112     $ 608,189  

June 5, 2014

June 5, 2021

Other Assets

    15,000,000  

Cash Flow Hedging

    534,912       879,198  
        $ 30,000,000       $ 856,024     $ 1,487,387  

 

Changes in the fair values of derivative financial instruments accounted for as cash flow hedges to the extent they are effective hedges, are recorded as a component of accumulated other comprehensive income. The following is a summary of how AOCI was impacted during the reporting periods:

 

 
105

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 6.     Derivatives and Hedging Activities (continued)

 

   

Year Ended

 
   

December 31, 2015

   

December 31, 2014

 

Unrealized loss at beginning of period, net of tax

  $ (399,367 )   $ -  

Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income to noninterest income related to hedge ineffectiveness

    (156 )     (30,212 )

Amount reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income to interest expense related to caplet amortization

    16,051       65  

Amount of loss recognized in other comprehensive income, net of tax

    (415,949 )     (369,220 )

Unrealized loss at end of period, net of tax

  $ (799,421 )   $ (399,367 )

 

Changes in the fair value related to the ineffective portion of cash flow hedges, are reported in noninterest income during the period of the change. As shown in the table above, $156 and $30,212 of income from the change in fair value for the years ending December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively, was due to ineffectiveness.

 

Note 7.     Deposits

 

The aggregate amount of certificates of deposit, each with a minimum denomination of $250,000, was $235,565,570 and $230,925,385 as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively.

 

As of December 31, 2015, the scheduled maturities of certificates of deposit were as follows:

 

Year ending December 31:

       

2016

  $ 274,389,118  

2017

    39,795,570  

2018

    22,926,023  

2019

    13,872,274  

2020

    9,421,012  

Thereafter

    3,663,106  
    $ 364,067,103  

 

 

The Company had a $45.0 million PUD LOC with the FHLB of Des Moines and an $8.0 million PUD LOC with the FHLB of Chicago for the purpose of providing additional collateral on public deposits as of December 31, 2015. As of December 31, 2014, the Company had a $15.0 million PUD LOC with the FHLB of Des Moines. There were no amounts outstanding under these letters of credit as of December 31, 2015 or 2014.

 

 
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Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 8.     Short-Term Borrowings

 

Short-term borrowings as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 are summarized as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 
                 

Overnight repurchase agreements with customers

  $ 73,872,716     $ 137,251,670  

Federal funds purchased

    70,790,000       131,100,000  
    $ 144,662,716     $ 268,351,670  

 

The Company’s overnight repurchase agreements with customers are collateralized by investment securities with carrying values as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 

U.S. govt. sponsored agency securities

  $ 29,499,803     $ 68,430,410  

Residential mortgage-backed and related securities

    65,888,911       96,930,017  

Total securities pledged to overnight customer repurchase agreements

  $ 95,388,714     $ 165,360,427  

Less: overcollateralized position

    21,515,998       28,108,757  
    $ 73,872,716     $ 137,251,670  

 

 

Inherent in the overnight purchase agreements is a risk that the fair value of the collateral pledged on the agreements could decline below the amount obligated under our customer repurchase agreements. The Company considers this risk minimal. The Company monitors balances daily to ensure that collateral is sufficient to meet obligations. Additionally, the Company maintains an overcollateralized position that is sufficient to cover any minor interest rate movements.

 

The securities underlying the agreements as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 were under the Company's control in safekeeping at third-party financial institutions.

 

Information concerning overnight repurchase agreements with customers is summarized as follows as of December 31, 2015 and 2014:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 
                 

Average daily balance during the period

  $ 121,186,231     $ 128,818,152  

Average daily interest rate during the period

    0.11 %     0.12 %

Maximum month-end balance during the period

  $ 159,407,193     $ 147,623,624  

Weighted average rate as of end of period

    0.11 %     0.11 %

 

 
107

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 8.     Short-Term Borrowings (continued)

 

Information concerning federal funds purchased is summarized as follows as of December 31, 2015 and 2014:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 
                 

Average daily balance during the period

  $ 32,826,489     $ 33,876,815  

Average daily interest rate during the period

    0.41 %     0.40 %

Maximum month-end balance during the period

  $ 126,220,000     $ 131,100,000  

Weighted average rate as of end of period

    0.57 %     0.51 %

 

Note 9.     FHLB Advances

 

The subsidiary banks are members of the FHLB of Des Moines or Chicago. As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, the subsidiary banks held $9,135,900 and $11,279,000, respectively, of FHLB stock, which is included in restricted investment securities on the consolidated balance sheet.

 

There were no FHLB advance prepayments or modifications during 2014.

 

During the second quarter of 2015, QCBT and CRBT prepaid a total of $75,500,000 of fixed rate FHLB advances with a weighted average interest rate of 4.36% and maturity dates ranging from May 2016 to June 2019. The prepayment fees associated with these advances totaled $5,692,185 and are included in losses on debt extinguishment in the statements of income. The prepayments were a part of the Company’s balance sheet restructuring, which is described in Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

Additionally, during the fourth quarter of 2015, RBT prepaid a $3,000,000 fixed rate FHLB advance with an interest rate of 3.98% and a maturity date in May 2018. The prepayment fees associated with this advance totaled $209,416 and are included in losses on debt extinguishment in the statements of income. This transaction is part of the Company’s ongoing balance sheet restructuring strategy, which will continue to be evaluated in the future as a way to reduce reliance on wholesale funding. The Company continued this strategy in early 2016, as described in Note 25 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

 
108

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 9.     FHLB Advances (continued)

 

Maturity and interest rate information on advances from FHLB as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 is as follows:

 

   

December 31, 2015

 
   

Amount Due

   

Weighted

Average

Interest Rate

at Year-End

   

Amount Due

with

Putable Option *

   

Weighted

Average

Interest Rate

at Year-End

 

Maturity:

                               

Year ending December 31:

                               

2016

  $ 103,000,000     0.56 %     $ 2,000,000     4.00 %  

2017

    18,000,000     2.89         -     -    

2018

    30,000,000     3.27         5,000,000     2.84    

Total FHLB advances

  $ 151,000,000     1.37 %     $ 7,000,000     3.17 %  

 

 

   

December 31, 2014

 
   

Amount Due

   

Weighted

Average

Interest Rate

at Year-End

   

Amount Due

with

Putable Option *

   

Weighted

Average

Interest Rate

at Year-End

 

Maturity:

                               

Year ending December 31:

                               

2015

  $ 63,000,000     0.87 %     $ -     - %  

2016

    44,500,000     3.81         32,500,000     4.56    

2017

    33,000,000     3.59         15,000,000     4.42    

2018

    43,000,000     3.49         5,000,000     2.84    

2019

    20,000,000     4.12         -     -    

Total FHLB advances

  $ 203,500,000     2.83 %     $ 52,500,000     4.36 %  

 

*Of the advances outstanding, a portion have putable options which allow the FHLB, at its discretion, to terminate the advances and require the subsidiary banks to repay at predetermined dates prior to the stated maturity date of the advances.

 

Advances are collateralized by loans of $480,466,274 and $499,084,047 as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively, in aggregate. On pledged loans, the FHLB applies varying collateral maintenance levels from 125% to 333% based on the loan type. Although advance balances have decreased significantly in 2015, the Company continues to pledge loans under blanket liens to provide off balance sheet liquidity.

 

As of December 31, 2015 and included with the 2016 maturity grouping above are $84.0 million of short-term advances from the FHLB. These advances have maturities ranging from 1 day to 1 month. Short-term and overnight advances totaled $37.0 million as of December 31, 2014 and had maturities ranging from 2 weeks to 1 month.

 

 
109

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 10.     Other Borrowings and Unused Lines of Credit

 

Other borrowings as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 are summarized as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 
                 

Wholesale structured repurchase agreements

  $ 110,000,000     $ 130,000,000  

Term note

    -       17,625,000  

Series A subordinated notes

    -       2,657,492  
    $ 110,000,000     $ 150,282,492  

 

The Company’s wholesale structured repurchase agreements are collateralized by investment securities with carrying values as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 

U.S. govt. sponsored agency securities

  $ 129,824,128     $ 153,757,514  

Less: overcollateralized position

    19,824,128       23,757,514  
    $ 110,000,000     $ 130,000,000  

 

Inherent in the wholesale structured repurchase agreements is a risk that the fair value of the collateral pledged on the agreements could decline below the amount obligated under the agreements. The Company considers this risk minimal. The Company maintains an overcollateralized position that is sufficient to cover any minor interest rate movements.

 

Maturity and interest rate information concerning wholesale structured repurchase agreements is summarized as follows:

 

   

December 31, 2015

   

December 31, 2014

 
   

Amount Due

   

Weighted

Average

Interest Rate

at Year-End

   

Amount Due

   

Weighted

Average

Interest Rate

at Year-End

 

Maturity:

                               

Year ending December 31:

                               

2015

  $ -     0.00 %     $ 5,000,000     2.77 %  

2016

    -     -         -     -    

2017

    10,000,000     3.00         10,000,000     3.00    

2018

    10,000,000     3.97         10,000,000     3.97    

2019

    45,000,000     3.40         60,000,000     3.57    

2020

    45,000,000     2.66         45,000,000     2.66    

Total Wholesale Structured Repurchase Agreements

  $ 110,000,000     3.11 %     $ 130,000,000     3.21 %  

 

Each wholesale structured repurchase agreement has a one-time put option, at the discretion of the counterparty, to terminate the agreement and require the subsidiary bank to repay at predetermined dates prior to the stated maturity date of the agreement. Of the $110.0 million in wholesale structured repurchase agreements outstanding at December 31, 2015, $45.0 million no longer have put options, $45.0 million are putable in 2016 and $20.0 million are putable in 2017.

 

 
110

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 10.          Other Borrowings and Unused Lines of Credit (continued)

 

During the second quarter of 2015, CRBT prepaid a $10,000,000 wholesale structured repurchase agreement with an interest rate of 4.40% and a maturity in May 2019. The prepayment fee associated with the transaction totaled $1,202,000. This amount is included in losses on debt extinguishment in the statements of income. The wholesale structured repurchase agreement prepayments were a part of the Company’s balance sheet restructuring, which is described in Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

Also during the fourth quarter of 2015, RBT prepaid a $5,000,000 wholesale structured repurchase agreement with an interest rate of 3.46% and a maturity in May 2019. The prepayment fee associated with the transaction totaled $382,000. This amount is included in losses on debt extinguishment in the statements of income. This transaction is part of the Company’s ongoing balance sheet restructuring strategy, which will continue to be evaluated in the future as a way to reduce reliance on wholesale funding. The Company continued this strategy in early 2016, as described in Note 25 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

During 2013, the Company modified $50,000,000 of fixed rate wholesale structured repurchase agreements with a weighted average interest rate of 3.21% and a weighted average maturity of February 2016 into new fixed rate wholesale structured repurchase agreements with a weighted average interest rate of 2.65% and a weighted average maturity of May 2020. There were no modifications of borrowings during 2015 or 2014.

 

At December 31, 2014, the Company had a 4-year term note with principal and interest due quarterly. Interest was calculated at the effective LIBOR rate plus 3.00% per annum (3.23% at December 31, 2014) and the balance totaled $17,625,000 at December 31, 2014. After two quarterly principal payments totaling $2,350,000 were made in January and April 2015, the resulting balance of the term debt was $15,275,000. In May 2015, the Company repaid this term note in its entirety without prepayment penalty and using proceeds from a common stock offering. Additional information regarding the common stock offering and balance sheet restructuring is described in Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

Additionally, as of December 31, 2014, the Company maintained a $10.0 million revolving line of credit note where the interest is calculated at the effective LIBOR rate plus 2.50% per annum. At December 31, 2014, the Company had not borrowed on this revolving credit note and had the full amount available. At the renewal date in June 2015, the note was amended to increase the maximum amount available. The Company now maintains a $40.0 million revolving line of credit note, with interest calculated at the effective LIBOR rate plus 2.50% per annum (3.10% at December 31, 2015). At December 31, 2015, the Company had not borrowed on this revolving credit note and had the full amount available. The current revolving note agreement contains certain covenants that place restrictions on additional debt and stipulate minimum capital and various operating ratios.

 

As of December 31, 2014, the Company had Series A subordinated notes outstanding totaling $2.7 million with a maturity date of September 1, 2018 and interest payable semi-annually, in arrears, on June 30 and December 30 of each year. This debt was at a fixed rate of 6.00% per year. In June 2015, the Company redeemed all of these subordinated notes using proceeds from a common stock offering, leaving no remaining balance as of December 31, 2015. There was no penalty related to this redemption. The Series A redemption was part of the Company’s balance sheet restructuring, which is described in Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

Unused lines of credit of the subsidiary banks as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 are summarized as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 
                 

Secured

  $ 14,601,432     $ 17,050,159  

Unsecured

    332,000,000       329,500,000  
    $ 346,601,432     $ 346,550,159  

 

The Company pledges the eligible portion of its municipal securities portfolio and select C&I and CRE loans to the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago for borrowing at the Discount Window.

 

 
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QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 11.              Junior Subordinated Debentures

 

Junior subordinated debentures are summarized as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 
                 

Note Payable to QCR Holdings Capital Trust II

  $ 10,310,000     $ 12,372,000  

Note Payable to QCR Holdings Capital Trust III

    8,248,000       8,248,000  

Note Payable to QCR Holdings Capital Trust IV

    5,155,000       5,155,000  

Note Payable to QCR Holdings Capital Trust V

    10,310,000       10,310,000  

Note Payable to Community National Trust II

    3,093,000       3,093,000  

Note Payable to Community National Trust III

    3,609,000       3,609,000  

Market Value Discount per ASC 805 (see Note 2)

    (2,225,948 )     (2,363,265 )
    $ 38,499,052     $ 40,423,735  

 

A schedule of the Company’s non-consolidated subsidiaries formed for the issuance of trust preferred securities including the amounts outstanding as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, is as follows:

 

Name

Date Issued

 

Amount

Outstanding

 

Interest Rate

 

Interest Rate

as of

12/31/2015

   

Interest Rate

as of

12/31/2014

 
                             

QCR Holdings Statutory Trust II*

February 2004

  $ 10,310,000  

2.85% over 3-month LIBOR

    3.18%       3.08%  

QCR Holdings Statutory Trust III

February 2004

    8,248,000  

2.85% over 3-month LIBOR

    3.18%       3.08%  

QCR Holdings Statutory Trust IV

May 2005

    5,155,000  

1.80% over 3-month LIBOR

    2.12%       2.03%  

QCR Holdings Statutory Trust V

February 2006

    10,310,000  

1.55% over 3-month LIBOR

    1.87%       1.78%  

Community National Statutory Trust II

September 2004

    3,093,000  

2.17% over 3-month LIBOR

    2.74%       2.42%  

Community National Statutory Trust III

March 2007

    3,609,000  

1.75% over 3-month LIBOR

    2.26%       1.99%  
      $ 40,725,000  

Weighted Average Rate

    2.60%       2.50%  

 

*Original amount issued for QCR Holdings Statutory Trust II was $12,372,000.

 

Securities issued by all of the trusts listed above mature 30 years from the date of issuance, but all are currently callable at par at any time. Interest rate reset dates vary by Trust.

 

During 2015, the Company acquired and extinguished $2.1 million of the QCR Holdings Statutory Trust II junior subordinated debentures and recorded a $300,000 gain on the extinguishment, which is included in the statements of income. The Company was able to acquire the related security at a discount through auction, which resulted in the gain. The interest rate on this debenture floated at LIBOR plus 2.85% and had a rate of 3.18% at the time of extinguishment. The Company completed a similar transaction in early 2016, which is described in Note 25 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

 
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QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 12.     Common Stock Offering and Balance Sheet Restructuring

 

On May 13, 2015, the Company announced the closing of an underwritten public offering of 3,680,000 shares of its common stock at a price of $18.25 per share. The net proceeds to the Company, after deducting the underwriting discount and offering expenses, totaled $63.5 million. As a result of the capital raise, the Company’s regulatory capital ratios increased significantly. Additional information regarding regulatory capital is described in Note 16 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

The Company utilized the proceeds from the common stock offering to restructure certain debt obligations and to bolster overall capital levels. Specifically, the Company repaid $15.3 million of holding company senior debt at an interest rate of 3.27%, and $2.7 million of Series A subordinated debt at an interest rate of 6.00%. Additionally, $85.5 million of FHLB advances and wholesale structured repurchase agreements at a weighted average interest rate of 4.36% were prepaid at QCBT and CRBT. As a result of this planned restructuring, the Company incurred $6.9 million (pre-tax) in losses for debt extinguishment that were recognized in the second quarter of 2015.

 

Of the $103.5 million in debt extinguishments, $63.5 million was funded with the proceeds from the common stock issuance. Approximately $27.7 million was funded through the maturity of low-yielding securities. Brokered certificates of deposits and overnight FHLB advances were utilized to fund the remaining $12.3 million. The weighted average interest rate on these new borrowings was approximately 0.90%.

 

This restructuring and deleveraging significantly reduced the wholesale borrowings portfolio of the Company, which includes FHLB advances, wholesale structured repurchase agreements, and brokered certificates of deposits. The table below presents the maturity schedule including weighted average cost for the Company’s combined wholesale borrowings portfolio.

 

   

December 31, 2015

   

December 31, 2014

 
           

Weighted

           

Weighted

 
           

Average

           

Average

 
           

Interest Rate

           

Interest Rate

 

Maturity:

 

Amount Due

   

at Year-End

   

Amount Due

   

at Year-End

 
    (dollar amounts in thousands)  

Year ending December 31:

                               

2015

  $ -     0.00 %     $ 117,300     0.86 %  

2016

    125,038     0.59         50,642     3.51    

2017

    49,055     2.07         53,965     2.96    

2018

    57,283     2.87         60,042     3.41    

2019

    50,089     3.14         83,152     3.59    

2020

    45,000     2.66         45,000     2.66    

Thereafter

    3,641     2.51         6,141     2.54    

Total Wholesale Borrowings

  $ 330,106     1.89 %     $ 416,242     2.59 %  

 

The Company continued to execute further balance sheet restructuring strategies in late 2015 and early 2016, as described in Notes 9, 10 and 25 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

 
113

 

 

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Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 13.     Federal and State Income Taxes

 

Federal and state income tax expense was comprised of the following components for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013:

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Current

  $ 5,673,774     $ 4,203,979     $ 5,639,933  

Deferred

    (2,004,532 )     (1,165,009 )     (1,021,991 )
    $ 3,669,242     $ 3,038,970     $ 4,617,942  

 

A reconciliation of the expected federal income tax expense to the income tax expense included in the consolidated statements of income was as follows for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013:

 

   

Years Ended December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
   

Amount

   

% of

Pretax

Income

   

Amount

   

% of

Pretax

Income

   

Amount

   

% of

Pretax

Income

 
                                                 

Computed "expected" tax expense

  $ 7,208,993       35.0 %   $ 6,297,027       35.0 %   $ 6,844,665       35.0 %

Effect of graduated tax rates

    (76,973 )     (0.4 )     (79,529 )     (0.4 )     (123,868 )     (0.6 )

Tax exempt income, net

    (3,461,438 )     (16.8 )     (2,646,275 )     (14.7 )     (1,790,049 )     (9.2 )

Bank-owned life insurance

    (616,737 )     (3.0 )     (585,312 )     (3.3 )     (624,847 )     (3.2 )

State income taxes, net of federal benefit, current year

    767,557       3.7       497,068       2.8       758,695       3.9  

Change in unrecognized tax benefits

    223,668       1.1       (55,728 )     (0.3 )     63,941       0.3  

Acquisition costs

    -       -       -       -       248,952       1.3  

Other

    (375,828 )     (1.8 )     (388,281 )     (2.1 )     (759,547 )     (3.9 )
    $ 3,669,242       17.8 %   $ 3,038,970       17.0 %   $ 4,617,942       23.6 %

 

Changes in the unrecognized tax benefits included in other liabilities are as follows for the years ended December 31, 2015 and 2014:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 
                 

Balance, beginning

  $ 1,002,291     $ 1,058,019  

Impact of tax positions taken during current year

    468,055       234,475  

Gross increase related to tax positions of prior years

    16,965       16,915  

Reduction as a result of a lapse of the applicable statute of limitations

    (261,352 )     (307,118 )

Balance, ending

  $ 1,225,959     $ 1,002,291  

 

Included in the unrecognized tax benefits liability at December 31, 2015 are potential benefits of approximately $1,005,000 that, if recognized, would affect the effective tax rate.

 

The liability for unrecognized tax benefits includes accrued interest for tax positions, which either do not meet the more-likely-than-not recognition threshold or where the tax benefit is measured at an amount less than the tax benefit claimed or expected to be claimed on an income tax return. At December 31, 2015 and 2014, accrued interest on uncertain tax positions was approximately $221,000 and $260,000, respectively. Estimated interest related to the underpayment of income taxes is classified as a component of “income taxes” in the statements of income.

 

 
114

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 13.     Federal and State Income Taxes (continued)

 

The Company’s federal income tax returns are open and subject to examination from the 2012 tax return year and later. Various state franchise and income tax returns are generally open from the 2011 and later tax return years based on individual state statute of limitations.

 

The net deferred tax assets (liabilities) consisted of the following as of December 31, 2015 and 2014:

 

   

2015

   

2014

 

Deferred tax assets:

               

Alternative minimum tax credits

  $ 5,475,062     $ 5,018,008  

New markets tax credits

    2,700,000       2,100,000  

Net unrealized losses on securities available for sale and derivative instruments

    1,268,068       1,186,544  

Compensation

    8,687,856       8,266,896  

Loan/lease losses

    8,802,271       7,393,437  

Net operating loss carryforwards, federal and state

    2,069,093       2,415,284  

Other

    452,854       496,444  
      29,455,204       26,876,613  

Deferred tax liabilities:

               

Premises and equipment

    1,173,966       1,216,080  

Equipment financing leases

    25,059,159       24,701,676  

Acquisition fair value adjustments

    1,755,874       1,774,157  

Investment accretion

    44,462       45,580  

Deferred loan origination fees, net

    137,461       -  

Other

    678,227       619,121  
      28,849,149       28,356,614  

Net deferred tax asset (liability)

  $ 606,055     $ (1,480,001 )

 

At December 31, 2015, the Company had $5.6 million of federal tax net operating loss carryforwards which are set to expire in varying amounts between 2029 and 2033. At December 31, 2015, the Company had $3.8 million of state tax net operating loss carryforwards which are set to expire in varying amounts between 2023 and 2028. All of the federal tax net operating loss carryforwards and the majority of the state tax net operating loss carryforwards were acquired from Community National and CNB.    

 

The change in deferred income taxes was reflected in the consolidated financial statements as follows for the years

ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013:

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Provision for income taxes

  $ (2,004,532 )   $ (1,165,009 )   $ (1,021,991 )

Statement of stockholders' equity- Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)

    (81,524 )     7,281,574       (11,373,902 )
    $ (2,086,056 )   $ 6,116,565     $ (12,395,893 )

 

 
115

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 14.     Employee Benefit Plans

 

The Company has a profit sharing plan which includes a provision designed to qualify under Section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, to allow for participant contributions. All employees are eligible to participate in the plan. The Company matches 100% of the first 3% of employee contributions, and 50% of the next 3% of employee contributions, up to a maximum amount of 4.5% of an employee's compensation. Additionally, at its discretion, the Company may make additional contributions to the plan which are allocated to the accounts of participants in the plan based on relative compensation. Company contributions for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013 were as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Matching contribution

  $ 1,314,276     $ 1,179,979     $ 1,129,726  

Discretionary contribution

    -       198,800       186,000  
    $ 1,314,276     $ 1,378,779     $ 1,315,726  

 

The Company has entered into nonqualified SERPs with certain executive officers. The SERPs allow certain executives to accumulate retirement benefits beyond those provided by the qualified plans. During the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013, the Company expensed $297,826, $650,016, and $264,672, respectively, related to these plans. As part of the acquisition of Community National, the Company assumed the liability related to a SERP for one CNB executive. The assumed SERP liability was $317,418 at acquisition. As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, the liability related to the SERPs, included in other liabilities, was $3,934,605 and $3,800,603, respectively. Payments to former executives in the amounts of $163,824, $117,000 and $117,000 were made in 2015, 2014 and 2013, respectively.

 

The Company has entered into deferred compensation agreements with certain executive officers. Under the provisions of the agreements, the officers may defer compensation and the Company matches the deferral up to certain maximums. The Company’s matching contribution varies by officer and is a maximum of between $8,000 and $25,000 annually. Interest on the deferred amounts is earned at The Wall Street Journal’s prime rate subject to a minimum of 4% and a maximum of 12% with such limits differing by officer. The Company has also entered into deferred compensation agreements with certain other officers. Under the provisions of the agreements the officers may defer compensation and the Company matches the deferral up to certain maximums. The Company’s matching contribution differs by officer and is a maximum between 4% and 10% of officer’s compensation. Interest on the deferred amounts is earned at The Wall Street Journal’s prime rate plus one percentage point, and has a minimum of 4% and shall not exceed 8%. Upon retirement, the officer will receive the deferral balance in 180 equal monthly installments. As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, the liability related to the agreements totaled $8,875,025 and $7,503,692, respectively.

 

Changes in the deferred compensation agreements, included in other liabilities, are as follows for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013:

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Balance, beginning

  $ 7,503,692     $ 6,224,368     $ 5,151,630  

Company expense

    726,001       661,611       557,663  

Employee deferrals

    693,656       628,589       525,469  

Cash payments made

    (48,324 )     (10,876 )     (10,394 )

Balance, ending

  $ 8,875,025     $ 7,503,692     $ 6,224,368  

 

 
116

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 15.     Stock-Based Compensation

 

Stock-based compensation expense was reflected in the consolidated financial statements as follows for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013.

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Stock option and incentive plans

  $ 885,524     $ 832,845     $ 734,827  

Stock purchase plan

    55,945       58,774       57,452  
    $ 941,469     $ 891,619     $ 792,279  

 

Stock option and incentive plans:

 

The Company’s Board of Directors adopted in January 2008, and the stockholders approved in May 2008, the QCR Holdings, Inc. 2008 Equity Incentive Plan (“2008 Equity Incentive Plan”). The Company’s Board of Directors adopted in February 2010, and the stockholders approved in May 2010, the QCR Holdings, Inc. 2010 Equity Incentive Plan (“2010 Equity Incentive Plan”). The Company’s Board of Directors adopted in February 2013, and the stockholders approved in May 2013, the QCR Holdings, Inc. 2013 Equity Incentive Plan (“2013 Equity Incentive Plan”). Up to 250,000, 350,000 and 350,000 shares of common stock, respectively, may be issued to employees and directors of the Company and its subsidiaries pursuant to the exercise of nonqualified stock options and restricted stock granted under these plans.

 

The 2008 Equity Incentive Plan, the 2010 Equity Incentive Plan, and the 2013 Equity Incentive Plan (collectively, “the stock option plans”) are administered by the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors (the “Committee”). As of December 31, 2015, there were 89,073 remaining options available for grant under the stock option plans.

 

The number and exercise price of options granted under the stock option plans are determined by the Committee at the time the option is granted. In no event can the exercise price be less than the value of the common stock at the date of the grant for incentive stock options. All options have a 10-year life and will vest and become exercisable from 3-to-7 years after the date of the grant. Only nonqualified stock options have been issued to date.

 

In the case of nonqualified stock options, the stock option plans provide for the granting of "Tax Benefit Rights" to certain participants at the same time as these participants are awarded nonqualified options. Each Tax Benefit Right entitles a participant to a cash payment, which is expensed by the Company, equal to the excess of the fair market value of a share of common stock on the exercise date over the exercise price of the related option multiplied by the difference between the rate of tax on ordinary income over the rate of tax on capital gains (federal and state).

 

 
117

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 15.     Stock-Based Compensation (continued)

 

A summary of the stock option plans as of December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013 and changes during the years then ended is presented below:

 

   

December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
   

Shares

   

Weighted

Average

Exercise

Price

   

Shares

   

Weighted

Average

Exercise

Price

   

Shares

   

Weighted

Average

Exercise

Price

 
                                                 

Outstanding, beginning

    661,771     $ 13.89       662,506     $ 13.82       608,852     $ 13.27  

Granted

    73,403       17.63       82,609       17.11       96,232       15.68  

Exercised

    (79,638)       14.70       (23,659)       10.22       (41,258)       10.06  

Forfeited

    (32,360)       20.69       (59,685)       19.02       (1,320)       10.53  

Outstanding, ending

    623,176       13.88       661,771       13.89       662,506       13.82  
                                                 

Exercisable, ending

    405,832               420,429               419,735          
                                                 

Weighted average fair value per option of options granted during the period

  $ 5.11             $ 5.68             $ 5.14          

 

A further summary of options outstanding as of December 31, 2015 is presented below:

 

            Options Outstanding        
                   

 

           

Options Exercisable

 

Range of

Exercise Prices

   

Number

Outstanding

   

Weighted

Average

Remaining

Contractual

Life

   

Weighted

Average

Exercise

Price

   

 

Number

Exercisable

   

Weighted

Average

Exercise

Price

 
                                                 
$ 7.99 to $8.93       45,165       4.90     $ 8.19       34,290     $ 8.19  
$ 9.00 to $9.30       179,547       4.82       9.21       149,193       9.21  
$ 13.25 to $16.85       214,585       4.10       15.88       170,335       15.88  
$ 17.00 to $18.48       165,629       7.94       17.42       35,764       17.42  
$ 19.05 to $21.71       18,250       1.09       19.05       16,250       19.05  
              623,176                       405,832          

 

 
118

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 15.     Stock-Based Compensation (continued)

 

Stock purchase plan:

 

The Company’s Board of Directors and its stockholders adopted in October 2002 the QCR Holdings, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the “Purchase Plan”). On May 2, 2012, the Company’s stockholders approved a complete amendment and restatement of the Purchase Plan. As of January 1, 2015, there were 230,040 shares of common stock available for issuance under the Purchase Plan. For each six-month offering period, the Board of Directors will determine how many of the total number of available shares will be offered. The purchase price is the lesser of 90% of the fair market value at the date of the grant or the investment date. The investment date, as established by the Board of Directors, is the date common stock is purchased after the end of each calendar quarter during an offering period. The maximum dollar amount any one participant can elect to contribute in an offering period is $7,500. Additionally, the maximum percentage that any one participant can elect to contribute is 8% of his or her compensation for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013. Information for the stock purchase plan for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013 is presented below:

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Shares granted

    23,408       24,811       27,415  

Shares purchased

    24,033       25,321       27,110  

Weighted average fair value per share granted

  $ 2.39     $ 2.37     $ 2.10  

 

 
119

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 16.     Regulatory Capital Requirements and Restrictions on Dividends

 

The Company (on a consolidated basis) and the subsidiary banks are subject to various regulatory capital requirements administered by the federal banking agencies. Failure to meet minimum capital requirements can initiate certain mandatory and possibly additional discretionary actions by regulators that, if undertaken, could have a direct material effect on the Company and subsidiary banks’ financial statements.

 

Under capital adequacy guidelines and the regulatory framework for prompt corrective action, the Company and the subsidiary banks must meet specific capital guidelines that involve quantitative measures of their assets, liabilities, and certain off-balance-sheet items as calculated under regulatory accounting practices. The capital amounts and classification are also subject to qualitative judgments by the regulators about components, risk weightings, and other factors. Quantitative measures established by regulation to ensure capital adequacy require the Company and the subsidiary banks to maintain minimum amounts and ratios (set forth in the following table) of total common equity Tier 1 and Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets and of Tier 1 capital to average assets, each as defined by regulation. Management believes, as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, that the Company and the subsidiary banks met all capital adequacy requirements to which they are subject.

 

Under the regulatory framework for prompt corrective action, to be categorized as “well capitalized,” an institution must maintain minimum total risk-based, Tier 1 risk-based, Tier 1 leverage and common equity Tier 1 ratios as set forth in the following tables. The Company and the subsidiary banks’ actual capital amounts and ratios as of December 31, 2015 and 2014 are also presented in the following table (dollars in thousands). As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, the subsidiary banks met the requirements to be “well capitalized”.  

 

   

Actual

   

For Capital

Adequacy Purposes*

   

To Be Well

Capitalized Under

Prompt Corrective

Action Provisions

 
   

Amount

   

Ratio

   

Amount

   

Ratio

   

Amount

   

Ratio

 

As of December 31, 2015:

                                               

Company:

                                               

Total risk-based capital

  $ 280,273       13.11 %   $ 170,969     > 8.0 %   $ 213,711     > 10.0 %

Tier 1 risk-based capital

    253,891       11.88 %     128,227     > 6.0       170,969     > 8.0  

Tier 1 leverage

    253,891       9.75 %     104,163     > 4.0       130,203     > 5.0  

Common equity Tier 1

    220,800       10.33 %     96,170     > 4.5       138,912     > 6.5  

Quad City Bank & Trust:

                                               

Total risk-based capital

  $ 135,477       12.50 %   $ 86,726     > 8.0 %   $ 108,407     > 10.0 %

Tier 1 risk-based capital

    123,498       11.39 %     65,044     > 6.0       86,726     > 8.0  

Tier 1 leverage

    123,498       8.87 %     55,718     > 4.0       69,648     > 5.0  

Common equity Tier 1

    123,498       11.39 %     48,783     > 4.5       70,465     > 6.5  

Cedar Rapids Bank & Trust:

                                               

Total risk-based capital

  $ 105,285       14.39 %   $ 58,537     > 8.0 %   $ 73,172     > 10.0 %

Tier 1 risk-based capital

    96,118       13.14 %     43,903     > 6.0       58,537     > 8.0  

Tier 1 leverage

    96,118       10.96 %     35,079     > 4.0       43,848     > 5.0  

Common equity Tier 1

    96,118       13.14 %     32,927     > 4.5       47,562     > 6.5  

Rockford Bank & Trust:

                                               

Total risk-based capital

  $ 38,544       11.96 %   $ 25,772     > 8.0 %   $ 32,216     > 10.0 %

Tier 1 risk-based capital

    34,514       10.71 %     19,329     > 6.0       25,772     > 8.0  

Tier 1 leverage

    34,514       9.59 %     14,401     > 4.0       18,001     > 5.0  

Common equity Tier 1

    34,514       10.71 %     14,497     > 4.5       20,940     > 6.5  

 

*The minimums under Basel III phase in higher by .625% (the capital conservation buffer) annually until 2019. The fully phased-in minimums are 10.5% (Total risk-based capital), 8.5% (Tier 1 risk-based capital), and 7.0% (Common equity Tier 1). Currently, the New Basel III minimums mirror the minimums required for capital adequacy purposes. The first phase-in of the Basel III capital conservation buffer will occur in 2016.

 

 
120

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 16.     Regulatory Capital Requirements and Restrictions on Dividends (continued)

 

   

Actual

   

For Capital

Adequacy Purposes

   

To Be Well

Capitalized Under

Prompt Corrective

Action Provisions

 
   

Amount

   

Ratio

   

Amount

   

Ratio

   

Amount

   

Ratio

 

As of December 31, 2014:

                                               

Company:

                                               

Total risk-based capital

  $ 204,376       10.91 %   $ 149,876     > 8.0 %     N/A       N/A  

Tier 1 risk-based capital

    178,364       9.52 %     74,938     > 4.0       N/A      N/A  

Tier 1 leverage

    178,364       7.62 %     93,658     > 4.0       N/A     N/A  

Quad City Bank & Trust:

                                               

Total risk-based capital

  $ 104,869       11.26 %   $ 74,495     > 8.0 %   $ 93,119     > 10.0 %

Tier 1 risk-based capital

    93,785       10.07 %     37,248     > 4.0       55,872     > 6.0  

Tier 1 leverage

    93,785       7.10 %     52,817     > 4.0       66,021     > 5.0  

Cedar Rapids Bank & Trust:

                                               

Total risk-based capital

  $ 76,662       11.54 %   $ 53,126     > 8.0 %   $ 66,407     > 10.0 %

Tier 1 risk-based capital

    68,772       10.36 %     26,563     > 4.0       39,844     > 6.0  

Tier 1 leverage

    68,772       8.21 %     33,525     > 4.0       41,906     > 5.0  

Rockford Bank & Trust:

                                               

Total risk-based capital

  $ 35,906       12.56 %   $ 22,875     > 8.0 %   $ 28,594     > 10.0 %

Tier 1 risk-based capital

    32,325       11.30 %     11,438     > 4.0       17,156     > 6.0  

Tier 1 leverage

    32,325       9.16 %     14,112     > 4.0       17,640     > 5.0  

 

The Company’s ability to pay dividends to its stockholders may be affected by both general corporate law considerations and policies of the Federal Reserve applicable to bank holding companies.

 

The payment of dividends by any financial institution or its holding company is affected by the requirement to maintain adequate capital pursuant to applicable capital adequacy guidelines and regulations, and a financial institution generally is prohibited from paying any dividends if, following payment thereof, the institution would be undercapitalized. Notwithstanding the availability of funds for dividends, however, the Federal Reserve may prohibit the payment of any dividends by the subsidiary banks if the Federal Reserve determines such payment would constitute an unsafe or unsound practice.

 

The Company also has certain contractual restrictions on its ability to pay dividends. The Company has issued junior subordinated debentures in four private placements and assumed two issues of junior subordinated debentures in connection with the Community National acquisition. Under the terms of the debentures, the Company may be prohibited, under certain circumstances, from paying dividends on shares of its common stock. These circumstances did not exist at December 31, 2015 or 2014.

 

 
121

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 16.     Regulatory Capital Requirements and Restrictions on Dividends (continued)

 

In July 2013, the U.S. federal banking authorities approved the implementation of the Basel III regulatory capital reforms and issued rules effecting certain changes required by the Dodd-Frank Act.  The Basel III Rules are applicable to all U.S. banks that are subject to minimum capital requirements, as well as to bank and savings and loan holding companies other than “small bank holding companies” (generally bank holding companies with consolidated assets of less than $1 billion). 

 

The Basel III Rules not only increased most of the required minimum regulatory capital ratios, but they introduced a new Common Equity Tier 1 Capital ratio and the concept of a capital conservation buffer.  Failure to maintain capital levels above the Basel III minimums may lead to restrictions on dividends, share buybacks, discretionary payments on Tier I instruments and discretionary bonus payouts.

 

The Basel III Rules also permit smaller banking organizations (including the Company and the subsidiary banks) to retain, through a one-time election, the existing treatment for AOCI, which excluded the effect of AOCI from regulatory capital.  The Company made this election in the first quarter of 2015.

 

On August 27, 2015, the Company filed a universal shelf registration statement on Form S-3 with the SEC. This registration statement, declared effective by the SEC on October 5, 2015, will allow the Company to issue various types of securities, including common stock, preferred stock, debt securities or warrants, from time to time, up to an aggregate amount of $100.0 million. The specific terms and prices of the securities will be determined at the time of any future offering and described in a separate prospectus supplement, which would be filed with the SEC at the time of the particular offering, if any.

 

Note 17.     Earnings per Share

 

The following information was used in the computation of basic and diluted EPS for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013:

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Net income

  $ 16,927,881     $ 14,952,537     $ 14,938,245  

Less: Preferred stock dividends

    -       1,081,877       3,168,302  

Net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc. common stockholders

  $ 16,927,881     $ 13,870,660     $ 11,769,943  
                         

EPS attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc. common stockholders

                       

Basic

  $ 1.64     $ 1.75     $ 2.13  

Diluted

  $ 1.61     $ 1.72     $ 2.08  
                         

Weighted average common shares outstanding*

    10,345,286       7,925,220       5,531,948  

Weighted average common shares issuable upon exercise of stock options and under the employee stock purchase plan**

    154,555       123,441       114,978  

Weighted average common and common equivalent shares outstanding

    10,499,841       8,048,661       5,646,926  

 

*The increase in weighted average common shares outstanding from 2014 to 2015 was primarily due to the common stock issuance discussed in Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

**Excludes anti-dilutive shares of 36,572, 124,983, and 116,324 at December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013, respectively.

 

 
122

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 18.     Commitments and Contingencies

 

In the normal course of business, the subsidiary banks make various commitments and incur certain contingent liabilities that are not presented in the accompanying consolidated financial statements. The commitments and contingent liabilities include various guarantees, commitments to extend credit, and standby letters of credit.

 

Commitments to extend credit are agreements to lend to a customer as long as there is no violation of any condition established in the contract. Commitments generally have fixed expiration dates or other termination clauses and may require payment of a fee. Since many of the commitments are expected to expire without being drawn upon, the total commitment amounts do not necessarily represent future cash requirements. The subsidiary banks evaluate each customer's creditworthiness on a case-by-case basis. The amount of collateral obtained, if deemed necessary by the subsidiary banks upon extension of credit, is based upon management's credit evaluation of the counterparty. Collateral held varies but may include accounts receivable, marketable securities, inventory, property, plant and equipment, and income-producing commercial properties.

 

Standby letters of credit are conditional commitments issued by the subsidiary banks to guarantee the performance of a customer to a third party. Those guarantees are primarily issued to support public and private borrowing arrangements and, generally, have terms of one year or less. The credit risk involved in issuing letters of credit is essentially the same as that involved in extending loan facilities to customers. The subsidiary banks hold collateral, as described above, supporting those commitments if deemed necessary. In the event the customer does not perform in accordance with the terms of the agreement with the third party, the subsidiary banks would be required to fund the commitments. The maximum potential amount of future payments the subsidiary banks could be required to make is represented by the contractual amount. If the commitment is funded, the subsidiary banks would be entitled to seek recovery from the customer. At December 31, 2015 and 2014, no amounts had been recorded as liabilities for the subsidiary banks’ potential obligations under these guarantees.

 

As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, commitments to extend credit aggregated $480,475,033 and $499,267,717, respectively. As of December 31, 2015 and 2014, standby letters of credit aggregated $13,067,100 and $12,896,428, respectively. Management does not expect that all of these commitments will be funded.

 

The Company has also executed contracts for the sale of mortgage loans in the secondary market in the amount of $565,850 and $553,000 as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively. These amounts are included in loans held for sale at the respective balance sheet dates.

 

 
123

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 18.     Commitments and Contingencies (continued)

 

Residential mortgage loans sold to investors in the secondary market are sold with varying recourse provisions. Essentially, all loan sales agreements require the repurchase of a mortgage loan by the seller in situations such as breach of representation, warranty, or covenant, untimely document delivery, false or misleading statements, failure to obtain certain certificates of insurance, unmarketability, etc. Certain loan sales agreements contain repurchase requirements based on payment-related defects that are defined in terms of the number of days/months since the purchase, the sequence number of the payment, and/or the number of days of payment delinquency. Based on the specific terms stated in the agreements of investors purchasing residential mortgage loans from the Company’s subsidiary banks, the Company had $524,400 and $9,049,519 of sold residential mortgage loans with recourse provisions still in effect at December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively. The subsidiary banks did not repurchase any loans from secondary market investors under the terms of loans sales agreements during the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013. In the opinion of management, the risk of recourse and the subsequent requirement of loan repurchase to the subsidiary banks is not significant, and accordingly no liabilities have been established related to such.

 

Aside from cash on-hand and in-vault, the majority of the Company's cash is maintained at upstream correspondent banks. The total amount of cash on deposit, certificates of deposit, and federal funds sold exceeded federal insured limits by approximately $101.0 million and $101.6 million as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, respectively. In the opinion of management, no material risk of loss exists due to the financial condition of the upstream correspondent banks.

 

In an arrangement with Goldman Sachs, CRBT offers a cash management program for select customers. Based on a predetermined minimum balance, which must be maintained in the account, excess funds are automatically swept daily to an institutional money market fund administered by Goldman Sachs. At December 31, 2015 and 2014, the Company had $105,290,874 and $89,006,285, respectively of customer funds invested in this cash management program. In the opinion of management, no material risk of loss exists due to the financial condition of Goldman Sachs.

 

 
124

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 19.     Quarterly Results of Operations (Unaudited)

 

   

Year Ended December 31, 2015

 
   

March

2015

   

June

2015

   

September

2015

   

December

2015

 
                                 

Total interest income

  $ 21,901,730     $ 22,050,612     $ 23,141,112     $ 22,909,799  

Total interest expense

    4,119,513       3,559,776       3,003,586       3,023,654  

Net interest income

    17,782,217       18,490,836       20,137,526       19,886,145  

Provision for loan/lease losses

    1,710,456       2,348,665       1,635,263       1,176,516  

Noninterest income

    6,221,778       5,461,234       6,368,807       6,477,904  

Noninterest expense

    17,204,161       24,101,634       15,913,212       16,139,417  

Income (loss) before taxes

    5,089,378       (2,498,229 )     8,957,858       9,048,116  

Federal and state income tax expense (benefit)

    911,489       (1,974,411 )     2,468,871       2,263,293  

Net income (loss)

  $ 4,177,889     $ (523,818 )   $ 6,488,987     $ 6,784,823  
                                 

EPS:

                               

Basic

  $ 0.52     $ (0.05 )   $ 0.55     $ 0.58  

Diluted

  $ 0.52     $ (0.05 )   $ 0.55     $ 0.57  

 

 

   

Year Ended December 31, 2014

 
   

March

2014

   

June

2014

   

September

2014

   

December

2014

 
                                 

Total interest income

  $ 21,035,211     $ 21,105,376     $ 21,796,642     $ 22,028,027  

Total interest expense

    4,185,970       4,140,033       4,321,311       4,246,814  

Net interest income

    16,849,241       16,965,343       17,475,331       17,781,213  

Provision for loan/lease losses

    1,094,162       1,001,879       1,063,323       3,647,636  

Noninterest income

    4,766,827       5,327,059       4,985,288       6,078,181  

Noninterest expense

    16,160,408       16,089,374       16,305,756       16,874,440  

Income before taxes

    4,361,500       5,201,148       5,091,541       3,337,318  

Federal and state income tax expense

    472,285       1,193,312       1,028,876       344,497  

Net income

  $ 3,889,215     $ 4,007,836     $ 4,062,665     $ 2,992,821  
                                 

EPS:

                               

Basic

  $ 0.40     $ 0.46     $ 0.51     $ 0.38  

Diluted

  $ 0.40     $ 0.45     $ 0.50     $ 0.37  

 

 
125

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 20.     Parent Company Only Financial Statements

 

The following is condensed financial information of QCR Holdings, Inc. (parent company only):

 

Condensed Balance Sheets

December 31, 2015 and 2014

 

Assets

 

2015

   

2014

 
                 

Cash and due from banks

  $ 3,650,133     $ 4,499,139  

Interest-bearing deposits at financial institutions

    701       190,127  

Securities available for sale, at fair value

    1,398,255       1,724,353  

Investment in bank subsidiaries

    256,709,890       198,881,739  

Investment in nonbank subsidiaries

    1,318,227       1,388,361  

Premises and equipment, net

    4,502,435       3,160,035  

Other assets

    12,797,292       6,765,109  

Total assets

  $ 280,376,933     $ 216,608,863  
                 

Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity

               

Liabilities:

               

Other borrowings

  $ -     $ 21,745,116  

Junior subordinated debentures

    38,499,052       40,423,735  

Other liabilities

    15,992,131       10,361,503  

Total liabilities

    54,491,183       72,530,354  
                 

Stockholders' Equity:

               

Common stock

    11,761,083       8,074,443  

Additional paid-in capital

    123,282,851       61,668,968  

Retained earnings

    92,965,645       77,876,824  

Accumulated other comprehensive loss

    (2,123,829 )     (1,935,216 )

Treasury stock

    -       (1,606,510 )

Total stockholders' equity

    225,885,750       144,078,509  

Total liabilities and stockholders' equity

  $ 280,376,933     $ 216,608,863  

 

 
126

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 20.     Parent Company Only Financial Statements (continued)

 

Condensed Statements of Income

Years Ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
                         

Total interest income

  $ 69,774     $ 40,815     $ 43,476  

Equity in net income of bank subsidiaries

    22,059,086       20,333,194       20,499,070  

Equity in net income of nonbank subsidiaries

    32,823       32,675       31,540  

Securities gains

    262,800       -       -  

Gain on debt extinguishment

    300,000       -       -  

Bargain purchase gain on Community National acquisition

    -       -       1,841,385  

Other

    (4,436 )     7,486       7,942  

Total income

    22,720,047       20,414,170       22,423,413  
                         

Interest expense

    1,679,909       1,986,752       1,714,814  

Salaries and employee benefits

    4,847,507       4,671,719       4,765,762  

Professional fees

    1,121,094       1,100,714       977,571  

Acquisition and data conversion costs

    -       -       2,037,684  

Other

    949,041       635,081       642,044  

Total expenses

    8,597,551       8,394,266       10,137,875  
                         

Income before income tax benefit

    14,122,496       12,019,904       12,285,538  
                         

Income tax benefit

    2,805,385       2,932,633       2,652,707  

Net income

  $ 16,927,881     $ 14,952,537     $ 14,938,245  

 

 
127

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 20.     Parent Company Only Financial Statements (continued)

 

Condensed Statements of Cash Flows

Years Ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 

Cash Flows from Operating Activities:

                       

Net income

  $ 16,927,881     $ 14,952,537     $ 14,938,245  

Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:

                       

Distributions in excess of (less than) earnings of:

                       

Bank subsidiaries

    (12,359,086 )     166,806       5,500,930  

Nonbank subsidiaries

    (128 )     9       (103 )

Bargain purchase gain on Community National acquisition

    -       -       (1,841,385 )

Accretion of acquisition fair value adjustments

    137,317       133,905       79,655  

Depreciation

    174,757       100,158       75,182  

Stock-based compensation expense

    941,469       891,619       792,279  

Securities gains, net

    (262,801 )     -       -  

Gain on debt extinguishment

    (300,000 )     -       -  

Decrease (increase) in other assets

    (5,929,110 )     1,912,597       (725,105 )

(Decrease) increase in other liabilities

    5,502,390       2,644,458       (2,978,106 )

Net cash provided by operating activities

    4,832,689       20,802,089       15,841,592  
                         

Cash Flows from Investing Activities:

                       

Net increase in interest-bearing deposits at financial institutions

    189,426       (2,726 )     (2,288 )

Activity in securities portfolio:

                       

Purchases

    (1,764,137 )     (40,523 )     (34,040 )

Calls, maturities and redemptions

    1,772,719       71,429       -  

Sales

    489,828       -       -  

Capital infusion, bank subsidiaries

    (45,600,000 )     -       -  

Net cash paid for Community National acquisition

    -       -       (6,261,684 )

Purchase of premises and equipment

    (1,517,157 )     (16,618 )     -  

Net cash (used in) provided by investing activities

    (46,429,321 )     11,562       (6,298,012 )
                         

Cash Flows from Financing Activities:

                       

Activity in other borrowings:

                       

Proceeds from other borrowings

    -       10,000,000       10,000,000  

Calls, maturities and scheduled principal payments

    (2,350,000 )     (2,359,207 )     (373,446 )

Prepayments

    (19,395,116 )     -       (9,550,000 )

Retirement of junior subordinated debentures

    (1,762,000 )     -       -  

Payment of cash dividends on common and preferred stock

    (782,054 )     (1,964,608 )     (4,062,726 )

Net proceeds from common stock offering, 3,680,000 shares issued

    63,484,123       -       -  

Redemption of 29,867 shares of Series F Noncumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock, net

    -       (29,823,922 )     -  

Proceeds from issuance of common stock, net

    1,552,673       620,641       582,742  

Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities

    40,747,626       (23,527,096 )     (3,403,430 )
                         

Net increase (decrease) in cash and due from banks

    (849,006 )     (2,713,445 )     6,140,150  
                         

Cash and due from banks:

                       

Beginning

    4,499,139       7,212,584       1,072,434  

Ending

  $ 3,650,133     $ 4,499,139     $ 7,212,584  

 

 
128

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 21.     Fair Value

 

Accounting guidance on fair value measurements uses a hierarchy intended to maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable inputs. This hierarchy includes three levels and is based upon the valuation techniques used to measure assets and liabilities. The three levels are as follows:

 

 

Level 1 – Inputs to the valuation methodology are quoted prices (unadjusted) for identical assets or liabilities in markets;

 

Level 2 – Inputs to the valuation methodology include quoted prices for similar assets and liabilities in active markets and inputs that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly, for substantially the full term of the financial instrument; and

 

Level 3 – Inputs to the valuation methodology are unobservable and significant to the fair value measurement

 

Assets measured at fair value on a recurring basis comprised the following at December 31, 2015 and 2014:

 

           

Fair Value Measurements at Reporting Date Using

 
           

Quoted Prices

   

Significant

         
           

in Active

   

Other

   

Significant

 
           

Markets for

   

Observable

   

Unobservable

 
           

Identical Assets

   

Inputs

   

Inputs

 
   

Fair Value

   

(Level 1)

   

(Level 2)

   

(Level 3)

 
                                 

December 31, 2015:

                               

Securities available for sale:

                               

U.S. govt. sponsored agency securities

  $ 213,537,379     $ -     $ 213,537,379     $ -  

Residential mortgage-backed securities

    80,670,135       -       80,670,135       -  

Municipal securities

    27,578,588       -       27,578,588       -  

Other securities

    1,648,880       411       1,648,469       -  

Derivative instruments

    856,024       -       856,024       -  
    $ 324,291,006     $ 411     $ 324,290,595     $ -  
                                 

December 31, 2014:

                               

Securities available for sale:

                               

U.S. govt. sponsored agency securities

  $ 307,869,572     $ -     $ 307,869,572     $ -  

Residential mortgage-backed securities

    111,423,224       -       111,423,224       -  

Municipal securities

    30,399,981       -       30,399,981       -  

Other securities

    1,966,853       345,952       1,620,901       -  

Derivative instruments

    1,487,387       -       1,487,387       -  
    $ 453,147,017     $ 345,952     $ 452,801,065     $ -  

 

There were no transfers of assets or liabilities between Levels 1, 2, and 3 of the fair value hierarchy during the years ended December 31, 2015 or 2014.

 

A small portion of the securities available for sale portfolio consists of common stock issued by various unrelated bank holding companies and mutual funds. The fair values used by the Company are obtained from an independent pricing service, which represent quoted market prices for the identical securities (Level 1 inputs).

 

 
129

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 21.     Fair Value (continued)

 

The remainder of the securities available for sale portfolio consists of securities whereby the Company obtains fair values from an independent pricing service. The fair values are determined by pricing models that consider observable market data, such as interest rate volatilities, LIBOR yield curve, credit spreads and prices from market makers and live trading systems (Level 2 inputs).

 

Derivative instruments consist of interest rate caps that are used for the purpose of hedging interest rate risk. See Note 6 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for the details of these instruments. The fair values are determined by pricing models that consider observable market data for derivative instruments with similar structures (Level 2 inputs).

 

Certain financial assets are measured at fair value on a non-recurring basis; that is, the assets are not measured at fair value on an ongoing basis but are subject to fair value adjustments in certain circumstances (for example, when there is evidence of impairment).

 

Assets measured at fair value on a non-recurring basis comprised the following at December 31, 2015 and 2014:

 

           

Fair Value Measurements at Reporting Date Using

 
           

Quoted Prices

   

Significant

         
           

in Active

   

Other

   

Significant

 
           

Markets for

   

Observable

   

Unobservable

 
           

Identical Assets

   

Inputs

   

Inputs

 
   

Fair Value

   

(Level 1)

   

(Level 2)

   

(Level 3)

 

December 31, 2015:

                               

Impaired loans/leases

  $ 4,545,966     $ -     $ -     $ 4,545,966  

Other real estate owned

    7,722,711       -       -       7,722,711  
    $ 12,268,677     $ -     $ -     $ 12,268,677  
                                 

December 31, 2014:

                               

Impaired loans/leases

  $ 12,467,362     $ -     $ -     $ 12,467,362  

Other real estate owned

    13,789,047       -       -       13,789,047  
    $ 26,256,409     $ -     $ -     $ 26,256,409  

 

Impaired loans/leases are evaluated and valued at the time the loan/lease is identified as impaired, at the lower of cost or fair value and are classified as a Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy.  Fair value is measured based on the value of the collateral securing these loans/leases.  Collateral may be real estate and/or business assets including equipment, inventory and/or accounts receivable and is determined based on appraisals by qualified licensed appraisers hired by the Company.  Appraised and reported values may be discounted based on management’s historical knowledge, changes in market conditions from the time of valuation, and/or management’s expertise and knowledge of the client and client’s business.  

 

Other real estate owned in the table above consists of property acquired through foreclosures and settlements of loans.  Property acquired is carried at the estimated fair value of the property, less disposal costs, and is classified as a Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy.   The estimated fair value of the property is determined based on appraisals by qualified licensed appraisers hired by the Company.  Appraised and reported values are discounted based on management’s historical knowledge, changes in market conditions from the time of valuation, and/or management’s expertise and knowledge of the property.

 

 
130

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 21.     Fair Value (continued)

 

The following table presents additional quantitative information about assets measured at fair value on a non-recurring basis for which the Company has utilized Level 3 inputs to determine fair value:

 

   

Quantitative Information about Level Fair Value Measurements

 
   

December 31, 2015

Fair Value

   

December 31, 2014

Fair Value

 

Valuation Technique

Unobservable Input

 

Range

 
                               

Impaired loans/leases

  $ 4,545,966     $ 12,467,362  

Appraisal of collateral

Appraisal adjustments

  -10.00% to -50.00%  

Other real estate owned

    7,722,711       13,789,047  

Appraisal of collateral

Appraisal adjustments

  0.00% to -35.00%  

 

For impaired loans/leases and other real estate owned, the Company records carrying value at fair value less disposal or selling costs. The amounts reported in the tables above are fair values before the adjustment for disposal or selling costs.

 

There have been no changes in valuation techniques used for any assets measured at fair value during the years ended December 31, 2015 or 2014.

 

The following table presents the carrying values and estimated fair values of financial assets and liabilities carried on the Company’s consolidated balance sheet, including those financial assets and liabilities that are not measured and reported at fair value on a recurring basis or non-recurring basis:

 

 

Fair Value

 

As of December 31, 2015

   

As of December 31, 2014

 
 

Hierarchy

Level

 

Carrying

Value

   

Estimated

Fair Value

   

Carrying

Value

   

Estimated

Fair Value

 
                                   

Cash and due from banks

Level 1

  $ 41,957,855     $ 41,957,855     $ 38,235,019     $ 38,235,019  

Federal funds sold

Level 2

    19,850,000       19,850,000       46,780,000       46,780,000  

Interest-bearing deposits at financial institutions

Level 2

    36,098,431       36,098,431       35,334,682       35,334,682  

Investment securities:

                                 

Held to maturity

Level 2

    253,674,159       255,691,285       199,879,574       201,113,796  

Available for sale

See Previous Table

    323,434,982       323,434,982       451,659,630       451,659,630  

Loans/leases receivable, net

Level 3

    4,209,228       4,545,966       11,543,853       12,467,362  

Loans/leases receivable, net

Level 2

    1,767,672,541       1,764,178,772       1,595,384,852       1,606,646,146  

Derivative instruments

Level 2

    856,024       856,024       1,487,387       1,487,387  

Deposits:

                                 

Nonmaturity deposits

Level 2

    1,516,599,081       1,516,599,081       1,304,044,099       1,304,044,099  

Time deposits

Level 2

    364,067,103       364,192,000       375,623,914       376,509,000  

Short-term borrowings

Level 2

    144,662,716       144,662,716       268,351,670       268,351,670  

Federal Home Loan Bank advances

Level 2

    151,000,000       153,143,000       203,500,000       208,172,000  

Other borrowings

Level 2

    110,000,000       116,061,000       150,282,492       159,741,000  

Junior subordinated debentures

Level 2

    38,499,052       27,642,093       40,423,735       28,585,294  

 

 
131

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 21.     Fair Value (continued)

 

The methodologies for estimating the fair value of financial assets and liabilities that are measured at fair value on a recurring or non-recurring basis are discussed above. For certain financial assets and liabilities, carrying value approximates fair value due to the nature of the financial instrument. These instruments include: cash and due from banks, federal funds sold, interest-bearing deposits at financial institutions, non-maturity deposits, and short-term borrowings. The Company used the following methods and assumptions in estimating the fair value of the following instruments:

 

Securities held to maturity: The fair values are estimated using pricing models that consider certain observable market data and some observable inputs, such as rate and term.

 

Loans/leases receivable: The fair values for all types of loans/leases are estimated using discounted cash flow analyses, using interest rates currently being offered for loans/leases with similar terms to borrowers with similar credit quality. The fair value of loans held for sale is based on quoted market prices of similar loans sold in the secondary market.

 

Deposits: The fair values disclosed for demand deposits equal their carrying amounts, which represent the amount payable on demand. Fair values for time deposits are estimated using a discounted cash flow calculation that applies interest rates currently being offered on time deposits to a schedule of aggregate expected monthly maturities on time deposits.

 

FHLB advances and junior subordinated debentures: The fair value of these instruments is estimated using discounted cash flow analyses, based on the Company's current incremental borrowing rates for similar types of borrowing arrangements.

 

Other borrowings: The fair value for the wholesale repurchase agreements and fixed rate other borrowings is estimated using rates currently available for debt with similar terms and remaining maturities. The fair value for variable rate other borrowings is equal to its carrying value.

 

Commitments to extend credit: The fair value of these commitments is not material.

 

Note 22.     Business Segment Information

 

Selected financial and descriptive information is required to be disclosed for reportable operating segments, applying a “management perspective” as the basis for identifying reportable segments. The management perspective is determined by the view that management takes of the segments within the Company when making operating decisions, allocating resources, and measuring performance. The segments of the Company have been defined by the structure of the Company’s internal organization, focusing on the financial information that the Company’s operating decision-makers routinely use to make decisions about operating matters.

 

The Company’s primary segment, Commercial Banking, is geographically divided by markets into the secondary segments which are the three subsidiary banks wholly-owned by the Company: QCBT, CRBT, and RB&T. CRBT includes CNB’s operations from acquisition date (May 13, 2013) forward. Each of these secondary segments offer similar products and services, but are managed separately due to different pricing, product demand, and consumer markets. Each offers commercial, consumer, and mortgage loans and deposit services.

 

The Company’s Wealth Management segment represents trust and asset management and investment management and advisory services offered at the Company’s three subsidiary banks in aggregate. This segment generates income primarily from fees charged based on assets under administration for corporate and personal trusts, custodial services, and investments managed. No assets of the subsidiary banks have been allocated to the Wealth Management segment.

 

 
132

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 

 

Note 22.     Business Segment Information (continued)

 

The Company’s All Other segment includes the corporate operations of the parent and operations of all other consolidated subsidiaries and/or defined operating segments that fall below the segment reporting thresholds.

 

Selected financial information on the Company's business segments, with all intercompany accounts and transactions eliminated, is presented as follows as of and for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013:

 

   

Commercial Banking

                                 
   

Quad City

Bank & Trust

   

Cedar Rapids

Bank & Trust

   

Rockford

Bank & Trust

   

Wealth

Management

   

All other

   

Intercompany

Eliminations

   

Consolidated

Total

 
                                                         

Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2015

                                                       

Total revenue

  $ 52,859,118     $ 37,515,641     $ 14,816,300     $ 9,103,173     $ 663,432     $ (424,688 )   $ 114,532,976  

Net interest income

    40,416,563       26,635,659       10,854,637       -       (1,610,135 )     -       76,296,724  

Net income

    10,333,111       7,695,867       2,402,522       1,627,586       (5,131,205 )     -       16,927,881  

Total assets

    1,336,571,694       866,872,406       367,471,639       -       27,605,704       (5,323,168 )     2,593,198,275  

Provision for loan/lease losses

    4,367,234       1,750,000       753,666       -       -       -       6,870,900  

Goodwill

    3,222,688       -       -       -       -       -       3,222,688  

Core deposit intangible

    -       1,471,409       -       -       -       -       1,471,409  
                                                         

Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2014

                                                       

Total revenue

  $ 48,827,714     $ 35,899,702     $ 14,286,757     $ 8,513,322     $ 80,978     $ (485,860 )   $ 107,122,613  

Net interest income

    36,539,635       24,215,815       10,261,615       -       (1,945,937 )     -       69,071,128  

Net income

    9,065,183       7,562,252       2,149,676       1,556,082       (5,380,656 )     -       14,952,537  

Total assets

    1,320,684,456       840,331,777       353,448,134       -       17,727,123       (7,233,390 )     2,524,958,100  

Provision for loan/lease losses

    3,800,667       1,855,333       1,151,000       -       -       -       6,807,000  

Goodwill

    3,222,688       -       -       -       -       -       3,222,688  

Core deposit intangible

    -       1,670,921       -       -       -       -       1,670,921  
                                                         

Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2013

                                                       

Total revenue

  $ 49,701,389     $ 35,946,233     $ 13,732,076     $ 7,521,821     $ 1,924,329     $ (108,214 )   $ 108,717,634  

Net interest income

    33,892,035       22,239,329       9,645,411       -       (1,671,338 )     -       64,105,437  

Net income

    9,310,779       7,953,230       1,855,672       1,379,402       (5,560,838 )     -       14,938,245  

Total assets

    1,245,128,136       804,223,453       339,375,139       -       22,394,401       (16,168,205 )     2,394,952,924  

Provision for loan/lease losses

    3,391,406       1,531,014       1,008,000       -       -       -       5,930,420  

Goodwill

    3,222,688       -       -       -       -       -       3,222,688  

Core deposit intangible

    -       1,870,433       -       -       -       -       1,870,433  

 

 
133

 

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. and Subsidiaries

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 


 

Note 23.     Acquisition of Noncontrolling Interest in m2 Lease Funds

 

On August 27, 2012, the Company’s largest subsidiary bank, QCBT, entered into an amendment to the operating agreement of m2 and purchased the remaining 20% noncontrolling interest in m2 for $4,501,442. The purchase price and related acquisition costs exceeded the book value by $2,133,417. This excess was reflected as a reduction in additional paid in capital on the Company’s consolidated financial statements until the final payout in 2015. The acquisition was structured in two payments with the initial payment of $1,653,755 made on September 11, 2012 and the final payment of $3,307,509 due in September 2015. QCBT calculated the present value of this future payment using a discount rate of 5% and recorded a resulting liability of $2,847,687. QCBT accreted the discount of $459,822 using the effective yield method over the three year period to the final payment date. Accretion totaled $80,820, $155,716 and $148,137 for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013, respectively. The liability related to the final payment due totaled $3,199,298 and $3,043,582 at December 31, 2014 and 2013, respectively. The final payment made in 2015 eliminated any further liability.

 

In conjunction with the purchase agreement, the Company also entered into an agreement with the Chief Executive Officer and former 20% owner of m2, whereby he was provided additional consideration equal to 20% of the earnings of m2 for the period from September 2012 through the earlier of August 2015 or his separation from service. The payment under this arrangement was also due in September 2015. Because the payment was contingent upon future service, QCBT was accruing the liability and related compensation expense over the service period. Expense totaled $593,611, $701,634, $725,483 for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013, respectively. The liability related to this future payment totaled $1,622,832 and $921,198 at December 31, 2014 and 2013, respectively. The final payment made in 2015 eliminated any further liability.

 

Note 24.     Sale of Credit Card Loan Receivables and Credit Card Issuing Operations for QCBT

 

On January 31, 2013, QCBT entered into an agreement to sell its credit card loan receivables totaling $10,179,318. This transaction closed on February 15, 2013 and resulted in a pre-tax gain of $495,405. As part of the agreement, QCBT also agreed to sell its credit card issuing operations to the purchaser. The gain recognized on this transaction was $355,268. QCBT incurred pre-tax expenses related to these transactions of $257,476, resulting in a net pre-tax gain on the transactions of $593,197.

 

Note 25.     Subsequent Event - Junior Subordinated Debentures Retirement and Balance Sheet Restructuring

 

In January 2016, the Company extinguished $5.1 million of the QCR Holdings Capital Trust IV junior subordinated debentures (the full balance outstanding) and recorded a $1.2 million gain on extinguishment (pre-tax), as the Company was able to acquire the related security at a discount through auction. This gain will be included in the statements of income for the first quarter of 2016. The interest rate on these debentures floated at 3-month LIBOR plus 1.80% and had a rate of 2.42% at the time of extinguishment. QCR Holdings Capital Trust IV was dissolved after the extinguishment.

 

Also in January 2016, the Company executed balance sheet restructuring strategies at QCBT and CRBT, which included the repayment of $10.0 million of wholesale structured repurchase agreements and $10.0 million of FHLB advances with a combined weighted average interest rate of 3.92%. As a result of this restructuring, the Company incurred $1.3 million (pre-tax) in losses on debt extinguishment that will be included in the statements of income for the first quarter of 2016. The weighted average duration of this combined debt was 2.17 years, with $10.0 million maturing in 2017 and $10.0 maturing in 2018. This funding was replaced with short-term borrowings at an average interest rate of 0.50%.

 

 
134

 

 

Item 9.

Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure

 

None.

 

Item 9A.

Controls and Procedures

 

Evaluation of disclosure controls and procedures. An evaluation was performed under the supervision and with the participation of the Company’s management, including the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, of the effectiveness of the design and operation of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 13a-15(e) and 15d – 15(e) promulgated under the Exchange Act) as of December 31, 2015. Based on that evaluation, the Company’s management, including the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, concluded that the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures were effective to ensure that information required to be disclosed in the reports filed and submitted under the Exchange Act was: (1) accumulated and communicated to our management, including the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, to allow for timely decisions regarding required disclosures; and (2) recorded, processed, summarized and reported as and when required.

 

Management’s Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting. The Company’s management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) of the Exchange Act). Internal control over financial reporting includes controls and procedures designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that: (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions of the Company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the Company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the Company; and (3) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use or disposition of the Company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.

 

All internal control systems, no matter how well designed, have inherent limitations, including the possibility of human error and the circumvention of overriding controls. Accordingly, even effective internal control can provide only reasonable assurance with respect to financial statement preparation. Further, because of changes in conditions, the effectiveness of internal control may vary over time.

 

The Company’s management assessed the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2015. Management’s assessment is based on the criteria established in the Internal Control — Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission in 2013 and was designed to provide reasonable assurance that the Company maintained effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2015. Based on this assessment, management believes that the Company maintained effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2015.

 

RSM US LLP, the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm has issued an attestation report on the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2015, which is included on the following pages of this Form 10-K.

 

 
135

 

  

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

 

To the Board of Directors and Stockholders

QCR Holdings, Inc.

 

 

We have audited QCR Holdings, Inc. and subsidiaries’ internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2015, based on criteria established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission in 2013. QCR Holdings, Inc. and subsidiaries’ management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting included in the accompanying Management’s Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the company's internal control over financial reporting based on our audit.

 

We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects. Our audit included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, and testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk. Our audit also included performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

 

A company's internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company's internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (a) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (b) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (c) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company's assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.

 

Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

 

In our opinion, QCR Holdings, Inc. and subsidiaries maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2015, based on criteria established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission in 2013.

 

 
136

 

  

We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the consolidated balance sheets of QCR Holdings, Inc. and subsidiaries as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, and the related consolidated statements of income, comprehensive income (loss), changes in stockholders’ equity and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2015 and our report dated March 11, 2016 expressed an unqualified opinion.

 

Davenport, Iowa

March 11, 2016 

 

 
137

 

 

Changes in Internal Control Over Financial Reporting. There have been no significant changes to the Company’s internal control over financial reporting during the period covered by this report that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting. On May 14, 2013, COSO issued an updated version of its Internal Control – Integrated Framework (“2013 Framework”). Originally issued in 1992 (“1992 Framework”), the framework helps organizations design, implement and evaluate the effectiveness of internal control concepts and simplify their use and application. The 1992 Framework remained effective during the transition, which extended to December 15, 2014, after which time COSO considered it as superseded by the 2013 Framework. The Company transitioned to the 2013 Framework as of December 31, 2014.

 

Item 9B.

Other Information

 

None.

 

Part III

 

Item 10.

Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance

 

The information required by this item is set forth under the captions “Proposal 1: Election of Directors,” “Corporate Governance and the Board of Directors” and “Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance” in the Company’s 2016 Proxy Statement and is incorporated herein by reference.

 

Item 11.

Executive Compensation

 

The information required by this item is set forth under the captions “Executive Compensation” and “Director Compensation” in the Company’s 2016 Proxy Statement and is incorporated herein by reference.

 

Item 12.

Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters

 

The information required by this item is set forth under the caption “Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners” in the Company’s 2016 Proxy Statement and is incorporated herein by reference.

 

The table below sets forth the following information as of December 31, 2015 for (i) all compensation plans previously approved by the Company’s stockholders and (ii) all compensation plans not previously approved by the Company’s stockholders:

 

 

(a)

The number of securities to be issued upon the exercise of outstanding options, warrants, and rights;

 

(b)

The weighted-average exercise price of such outstanding options, warrants, and rights; and

 

(c)

Other than securities to be issued upon the exercise of such outstanding options, warrants, and rights, the number of securities remaining available for future issuance under the plans.

 

EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION

Plan category

Number of securities to be issued

upon exercise of outstanding

options, warrants, and rights

Weighted-average exercise

price of outstanding options,

warrants, and rights

Number of securities remaining

available for future issuance

under equity compensation plans

(excluding securities reflected in column (a))

 
 

(a)

(b)

(c)

 
         

Equity compensation plans approved by stockholders

                                            628,230

$13.92

                                            295,705

(1)

         

Equity compensation plans not approved by stockholders

                                                      -

                                                      -

                                                      -

 
         

Total

                                            628,230

$13.92

                                            295,705

(1)

         

 

 

(1)

Includes 206,632 shares available under the QCR Holdings, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan.

 

 
138

 

 

Item 13.

Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence

 

The information required by this item is set forth under the captions “Corporate Governance and the Board of Directors” and “Transactions with Management and Directors” in the Company’s 2016 Proxy Statement and is incorporated herein by reference.

 

Item 14.

Principal Accountant Fees and Services

 

The information required by this item is set forth under the caption “Proposal 4: Ratification of Selection of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm” in the Company’s 2016 Proxy Statement and is incorporated herein by reference.

 

Part IV

 

Item 15.

Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules

 

 

(a)

1. Financial Statements

 

These documents are listed in the Index to Consolidated Financial Statements under Item 8.

 

 

(a)

2. Financial Statement Schedules

 

Financial statement schedules are omitted, as they are not required or are not applicable, or the required information is shown in the consolidated financial statements and the accompanying notes thereto.

 

 

(a)

3. Exhibits

 

The following exhibits are either filed as a part of this Annual Report on Form 10-K or are incorporated herein by reference:

 

Exhibit

Number

 

Exhibit Description

     

3.1

 

Certificate of Incorporation of QCR Holdings, Inc., as amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 of the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q/A Amendment No. 1 for the period ended September 30, 2011).

     

3.2

 

Bylaws of QCR Holdings, Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 of the Registrant's Form 8-K dated November 20, 2015).

     

4.1

 

Amended and Restated Rights Agreement between QCR Holdings, Inc. and Quad City Bank and Trust Company dated May 8, 2013 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 of Registrant’s Form 8-K filed May 8, 2013).

     

4.2

 

First Amendment to Amended and Restated Rights Agreement between QCR Holdings, Inc. and Quad City Bank and Trust Company dated February 11, 2016 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 of Registrant’s Form 8-K filed on February 18, 2016).

     

4.3

 

Certain instruments defining the rights of holders of long-term debt of the Company, none of which authorize a total amount of indebtedness in excess of 10% of the total assets of the Company and its subsidiaries on a consolidated basis, have not been filed as exhibits.  The Company hereby agrees to furnish a copy of any of these agreements to the Securities and Exchange Commission upon request. 

 

 
139

 

 

10.1

 

Employment Agreement between QCR Holdings, Inc., Quad City Bank and Trust Company and Douglas M. Hultquist dated January 1, 2004 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 of Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2003).

     

10.2

 

Employment Agreement between Cedar Rapids Bank and Trust Company and Larry J. Helling dated January 1, 2004 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 of Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2003).

     

10.3

 

Employment Agreement between QCR Holdings, Inc. and Todd A. Gipple dated January 1, 2004 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.11 of Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2003).

     

10.4

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 of Registrant’s Form S-8, file No. 333-101356 dated November 20, 2002).

     

10.5

 

Dividend Reinvestment Plan of QCR Holdings, Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 of Registrant’s Form S-3D, File No. 333-102699 dated January 24, 2003).

     

10.6

 

Second Amended and Restated Operating Agreement between Quad City Bank and Trust Company and John Engelbrecht dated August 26, 2005 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 of Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2005).

     

10.7

 

First Amendment to the Employment Agreement among QCR Holdings, Inc., Quad City Bank and Trust Company and Douglas M. Hultquist dated December 27, 2008 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.19 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008).

     

10.8

 

First Amendment to the Employment Agreement between Cedar Rapids Bank and Trust Company and Larry J. Helling dated December 30, 2008 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.20 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008).

     

10.9

 

First Amendment to the Employment Agreement between QCR Holdings, Inc. and Todd A. Gipple dated December 30, 2008 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.21 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008).

     

10.10

 

Executive Deferred Compensation Plan of QCR Holdings, Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.22 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008).

     

10.11

 

Amended and Restated Executive Deferred Compensation Plan Participation Agreement among QCR Holdings, Inc., Quad City Bank and Trust Company and Douglas M. Hultquist dated December 19, 2013 (filed as an exhibit to the 10-K filed on March 12, 2015).

     

10.12

 

Amended and Restated Executive Deferred Compensation Plan Participation Agreement between Cedar Rapids Bank and Trust Company and Larry J. Helling dated December 19, 2013 (filed as an exhibit to the 10-K filed on March 12, 2015).

     

10.13

 

Amended and Restated Executive Deferred Compensation Plan Participation Agreement between QCR Holdings, Inc. and Todd A. Gipple dated December 19, 2013 (filed as an exhibit to the 10-K filed on March 12, 2015).

     

10.14

 

Amended and Restated Non-Qualified Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan of QCR Holdings, Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.27 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008).

 

 
140

 

 

10.15

 

Non-Qualified Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan Joinder Agreement among QCR Holdings, Inc., Quad City Bank and Trust Company and Douglas M. Hultquist dated December 31, 2008 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.28 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008).

     

10.16

 

First Amendment to the Non-Qualified Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan Joinder Agreement among QCR Holdings, Inc., Quad City Bank and Trust Company and Douglas M. Hultquist dated December 29, 2015 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 of the Registrant's Form 8-K dated December 31, 2015).

     

10.17

 

Non-Qualified Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan Joinder Agreement between Cedar Rapids Bank and Trust Company and Larry J. Helling dated December 31, 2008 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.29 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008).

     

10.18

 

Non-Qualified Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan Joinder Agreement between QCR Holdings, Inc. and Todd A. Gipple dated December 31, 2008 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.30 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008).

     

10.19

 

Non-Qualified Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan Joinder Agreement among QCR Holdings, Inc., Quad City Bank and Trust Company and Michael A. Bauer dated December 31, 2008 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.31 of the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008).

     

10.20

 

Amended and Restated Employee Stock Purchase Plan (incorporated by reference to Appendix A to the Registrant’s Definitive Proxy Statement on Schedule 14A dated March 21, 2012).

     

10.21

 

Amendment No. 1 to the Second Amended and Restated Operating Agreement between Quad City Bank and Trust Company and John Engelbrecht, dated August 26, 2012 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2012).

     

10.22

 

Agreement and Plan of Merger among QCR Holdings, Inc., QCR Acquisition, LLC and Community National Bancorporation, dated February 13, 2013 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1 of the Registrant’s Form 8-K dated February 14, 2013).

     

10.23

 

QCR Holdings, Inc. 2013 Equity Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Appendix A to the Registrant’s Definitive Proxy Statement on Schedule 14A dated March 20, 2013).

     

10.24

 

Form of Participation Agreement under the QCR Holdings, Inc. Executive Deferred Compensation Plan (filed as an exhibit to the 10-K filed on March 12, 2015).

     

10.25

 

Employment Agreement between Quad City Bank and Trust Company and John Anderson dated October 30, 2009 (filed as an exhibit to the 10-K filed on March 12, 2015).

     

10.26

 

First Amendment to the Employment Agreement between Quad City Bank and Trust Company and John Anderson dated December 18, 2012 (filed as an exhibit to the 10-K filed on March 12, 2015).

     

10.27

 

Employment Agreement between Rockford Bank and Trust Company and Thomas Budd dated December 30, 2008 (filed as an exhibit to the 10-K filed on March 12, 2015).

 

 
141

 

 

10.28

 

First Amendment to the Employment Agreement between Rockford Bank and Trust Company and Thomas Budd dated December 30, 2008 (filed as an exhibit to the 10-K filed on March 12, 2015).

     

10.29

 

Employment Agreement between QCR Holdings, Inc. and Cathie Whiteside dated August 27, 2007 (filed as an exhibit to the 10-K filed on March 12, 2015).

     

10.30

 

First Amendment to the Employment Agreement between QCR Holdings, Inc. and Cathie Whiteside dated December 28, 2008 (filed as an exhibit to the 10-K filed on March 12, 2015).

     

10.31

 

Underwriting Agreement, dated May 7, 2015 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 of the Registrant's Form 10-Q filed on August 7, 2015).

     

21.1

 

Subsidiaries of QCR Holdings, Inc. (exhibit is being filed herewith).

     

23.1

 

Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm — RSM US LLP (exhibit is being filed herewith).

     

31.1

 

Certification of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a) (exhibit is being filed herewith).

     

31.2

 

Certification of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a) (exhibit is being filed herewith).

     

32.1

 

Certification of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (exhibit is being filed herewith).

     

32.2

 

Certification of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (exhibit is being filed herewith).

     

101

 

Interactive Data File

   

Interactive data files pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T: (i) Consolidated Balance Sheets at December 31, 2015 and December 31, 2014; (ii) Consolidated Statements of Income for the years ended December 31, 2015, December 31, 2014 and December 31, 2013; (iii) Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the years ended December 31, 2015, December 31, 2014, and December 31, 2013; (iv) Consolidated Statements of Changes in Stockholders’ Equity for the years ended December 31, 2015, December 31, 2014 and December 31, 2013; (v) Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 2015, December 31, 2014 and December 31, 2013; and (vi) Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

 
142

 

 

 SIGNATURES

 

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

 

 

QCR HOLDINGS, INC.

 

 

 

 

 

Dated: March 11, 2016

By:

/s/ Douglas M. Hultquist

 

 

 

Douglas M. Hultquist

 

 

 

President and Chief Executive Officer

 

 

Dated: March 11, 2016

By:

/s/ Todd A. Gipple

 

 

 

Todd A. Gipple

 

 

 

Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer and

 

    Chief Financial Officer  

 

Dated: March 11, 2016

By:

/s/ Elizabeth A. Grabin

 

 

 

Elizabeth A. Grabin

 

 

 

Vice President, Controller & Director of Financial

 

    Reporting  
    (Principal Accounting Officer)  

                 

 
143

 

 

SIGNATURES

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed by the following persons on behalf of the Registrant in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

 

Signature

 

Title

Date

       

/s/ James J. Brownson

 

Chairman of the Board of Directors

March 11, 2016

James J. Brownson

     
       

/s/ Douglas M. Hultquist

 

President, Chief Executive

March 11, 2016

Douglas M. Hultquist

 

Officer and Director

 
       

/s/ Patrick S. Baird

 

Director

March 11, 2016

Patrick S. Baird

     
       

/s/ John Paul E. Besong

 

Director

March 11, 2016

John Paul E. Besong

     
       

/s/ Lindsay Y. Corby

 

Director

March 11, 2016

Lindsay Y. Corby

     
       

/s/ Todd A. Gipple

 

Executive Vice President, Chief

March 11, 2016

Todd A. Gipple

 

Operating Officer, Chief Financial

 

Officer and Director

     
       

/s/ Larry J. Helling

 

Director

March 11, 2016

Larry J. Helling

     
       

/s/ Mark C. Kilmer

 

Director

March 11, 2016

Mark C. Kilmer

     
       

/s/ Linda K. Neuman

 

Director

March 11, 2016

Linda K. Neuman

     
       

/s/ Michael L. Peterson

 

Director

March 11, 2016

Michael L. Peterson

     
       

/s/ Ronald G. Peterson

 

Director

March 11, 2016

Ronald G. Peterson

     
       

/s/ George T. Ralph III

 

Director

March 11, 2016

George T. Ralph III

     
       

/s/ Donna J. Sorensen, J.D.

 

Director

March 11, 2016

Donna J. Sorensen, J.D.

     
       

/s/ Marie Z. Ziegler

 

Director

March 11, 2016

Marie Z. Ziegler

     

 

 
144

 

 

Appendix A 

 

SUPERVISION AND REGULATION

 

General

 

FDIC-insured institutions, their holding companies and their affiliates are extensively regulated under federal and state law. As a result, the growth and earnings performance of the Company may be affected not only by management decisions and general economic conditions, but also by the requirements of federal and state statutes and by the regulations and policies of various bank regulatory agencies, including the Iowa Superintendent, the Illinois DFPR, the Federal Reserve, the FDIC and the CFPB. Furthermore, taxation laws administered by the Internal Revenue Service and state taxing authorities, accounting rules developed by the Financial Accounting Standards Board, securities laws administered by the SEC and state securities authorities, and anti-money laundering laws enforced by the Treasury have an impact on the business of the Company. The effect of these statutes, regulations, regulatory policies and accounting rules are significant to the operations and results of the Company and its subsidiary banks, and the nature and extent of future legislative, regulatory or other changes affecting FDIC-insured institutions are impossible to predict with any certainty.

 

Federal and state banking laws impose a comprehensive system of supervision, regulation and enforcement on the operations of FDIC-insured institutions, their holding companies and affiliates that is intended primarily for the protection of the FDIC-insured deposits and depositors of banks, rather than stockholders. These federal and state laws, and the regulations of the bank regulatory agencies issued under them, affect, among other things, the scope of business, the kinds and amounts of investments banks may make, reserve requirements, capital levels relative to operations, the nature and amount of collateral for loans, the establishment of branches, the ability to merge, consolidate and acquire, dealings with insiders and affiliates and the payment of dividends. In the last several years, the Company and the Bank have experienced heightened regulatory requirements and scrutiny following the global financial crisis and as a result of the Dodd-Frank Act. Although the reforms primarily targeted systemically important financial service providers, their influence filtered down in varying degrees to community banks over time, and the reforms have caused the Company’s compliance and risk management processes, and the costs thereof, to increase.

 

This supervisory and regulatory framework subjects FDIC-insured institutions and their holding companies to regular examination by their respective regulatory agencies, which results in examination reports and ratings that are not publicly available and that can impact the conduct and growth of their business. These examinations consider not only compliance with applicable laws and regulations, but also capital levels, asset quality and risk, management ability and performance, earnings, liquidity, and various other factors. The regulatory agencies generally have broad discretion to impose restrictions and limitations on the operations of a regulated entity where the agencies determine, among other things, that such operations are unsafe or unsound, fail to comply with applicable law or are otherwise inconsistent with laws and regulations or with the supervisory policies of these agencies.  

 

The following is a summary of the material elements of the supervisory and regulatory framework applicable to the Company and its subsidiaries, beginning with a discussion of the continuing regulatory emphasis on capital levels. It does not describe all of the statutes, regulations and regulatory policies that apply, nor does it restate all of the requirements of those that are described. The descriptions are qualified in their entirety by reference to the particular statutory and regulatory provision.

 

Regulatory Emphasis on Capital

 

Regulatory capital represents the net assets of a banking organization available to absorb losses. Because of the risks attendant to their business, FDIC-insured institutions are generally required to hold more capital than other businesses, which directly affects the Company’s earnings capabilities. Although capital has historically been one of the key measures of the financial health of banks, its role became fundamentally more important in the wake of the global financial crisis, as the banking regulators recognized that the amount and quality of capital held by banks prior to the crisis was insufficient to absorb losses during periods of severe stress. Certain provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act and Basel III, discussed below, establish strengthened capital standards for banking organizations, require more capital to be held in the form of common stock and disallow certain funds from being included in capital determinations. These standards represent regulatory capital requirements that are meaningfully more stringent than those in place previously.

 

Minimum Required Capital Levels. Bank holding companies have historically had to comply with less stringent capital standards than their bank subsidiaries and have been able to raise capital with hybrid instruments such as trust preferred securities. The Dodd-Frank Act mandated that the Federal Reserve establish minimum capital levels for holding companies on a consolidated basis as stringent as those required for FDIC-insured institutions. As a consequence, the components of holding company permanent capital known as “Tier 1 Capital” were restricted to those capital instruments that were considered Tier 1 Capital for FDIC-insured institutions. A result of this change is that the proceeds of hybrid instruments, such as trust preferred securities, are being excluded from Tier 1 Capital over a phase-out period. However, if such securities were issued prior to May 19, 2010 by bank holding companies with less than $15 billion of assets, they may be retained, subject to certain restrictions. Because the Company has assets of less than $15 billion, the Company is able to maintain its trust preferred proceeds as Tier 1 Capital but the Company has to comply with new capital mandates in other respects and will not be able to raise Tier 1 Capital in the future through the issuance of trust preferred securities.

 

 
1

 

 

The capital standards for the Company and the Banks changed on January 1, 2015 to add the requirements of Basel III, discussed below. The minimum capital standards effective prior to and including December 31, 2014 are:

 

 

A leverage requirement, consisting of a minimum ratio of Tier 1 Capital to total adjusted average quarterly assets of 3% for the most highly-rated banks with a minimum requirement of at least 4% for all others, and

 

 

A risk-based capital requirement, consisting of a minimum ratio of Total Capital to total risk-weighted assets of 8% and a minimum ratio of Tier 1 Capital to total risk-weighted assets of 4%.

 

For these purposes, “Tier 1 Capital” consists primarily of common stock, noncumulative perpetual preferred stock and related surplus less intangible assets (other than certain loan servicing rights and purchased credit card relationships). Total Capital consists primarily of Tier 1 Capital plus “Tier 2 Capital,” which includes other non-permanent capital items, such as certain other debt and equity instruments that do not qualify as Tier 1 Capital, and each Bank’s allowance for loan losses, subject to a limitation of 1.25% of risk-weighted assets. Further, risk-weighted assets for the purpose of the risk-weighted ratio calculations are balance sheet assets and off-balance sheet exposures to which required risk weightings of 0% to 100% are applied.  

 

The Basel International Capital Accords. The risk-based capital guidelines described above are based upon the 1988 capital accord known as “Basel I” adopted by the international Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, a committee of central banks and bank supervisors, as implemented by the U.S. federal banking regulators on an interagency basis. In 2008, the banking agencies collaboratively began to phase-in capital standards based on a second capital accord, referred to as “Basel II,” for large or “core” international banks (generally defined for U.S. purposes as having total assets of $250 billion or more, or consolidated foreign exposures of $10 billion or more).  On September 12, 2010, the Group of Governors and Heads of Supervision, the oversight body of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, announced agreement on a strengthened set of capital requirements for banking organizations around the world, known as Basel III, to address deficiencies recognized in connection with the global financial crisis.  Because of Dodd-Frank Act requirements, Basel III essentially layers a new set of capital standards on the previously existing Basel I standards.

 

The Basel III Rule. In July 2013, the U.S. federal banking agencies approved the implementation of the Basel III regulatory capital reforms in pertinent part, and, at the same time, promulgated rules effecting certain changes required by the Dodd-Frank Act (the “Basel III Rule”). In contrast to capital requirements historically, which were in the form of guidelines, Basel III was released in the form of regulations by each of the regulatory agencies. The Basel III Rule is applicable to all banking organizations that are subject to minimum capital requirements, including federal and state banks and savings and loan associations, as well as to bank and savings and loan holding companies, other than “small bank holding companies” (generally bank holding companies with consolidated assets of less than $1 billion which are not publically traded companies).

 

The Basel III Rule not only increased most of the required minimum capital ratios effective January 1, 2015, but it introduced the concept of Common Equity Tier 1 Capital, which consists primarily of common stock, related surplus (net of treasury stock), retained earnings, and Common Equity Tier 1 minority interests subject to certain regulatory adjustments. The Basel III Rule also expanded the definition of capital by establishing more stringent criteria that instruments must meet to be considered Additional Tier 1 Capital (Tier 1 Capital in addition to Common Equity) and Tier 2 Capital. A number of instruments that qualified as Tier 1 Capital do not qualify, or their qualifications will change. For example, noncumulative perpetual preferred stock, which qualified as simple Tier 1 Capital, does not qualify as Common Equity Tier 1 Capital, but qualifies as Additional Tier 1 Capital. The Basel III Rule also constrained the inclusion of minority interests, mortgage-servicing assets, and deferred tax assets in capital and requires deductions from Common Equity Tier 1 Capital in the event that such assets exceed a certain percentage of a banking organization’s Common Equity Tier 1 Capital.

 

The Basel III Rule requires minimum capital ratios beginning January 1, 2015, as follows:

 

 

A new ratio of minimum Common Equity Tier 1 equal to 4.5% of risk-weighted assets;

 

 
2

 

 

 

An increase in the minimum required amount of Tier 1 Capital to 6% of risk-weighted assets;

 

A continuation of the current minimum required amount of Total Capital (Tier 1 plus Tier 2) at 8% of risk-weighted assets; and

 

A minimum leverage ratio of Tier 1 Capital to total adjusted quarterly average assets equal to 4% in all circumstances.

 

Not only did the capital requirements change but the risk weightings (or their methodologies) for bank assets that are used to determine the capital ratios changed as well. For nearly every class of assets, the Basel III Rule requires a more complex, detailed and calibrated assessment of credit risk and calculation of risk weightings.

 

Banking organizations (except for large, internationally active banking organizations) became subject to the new rules on January 1, 2015. However, there are separate phase-in/phase-out periods for: (i) the capital conservation buffer; (ii) regulatory capital adjustments and deductions; (iii) nonqualifying capital instruments; and (iv) changes to the prompt corrective action rules. The phase-in periods commenced on January 1, 2016 and extend until 2019.

 

Well-Capitalized Requirements. The ratios described above are minimum standards in order for banking organizations to be considered “adequately capitalized” under the Prompt Corrective Action rules discussed below. Bank regulatory agencies uniformly encourage banking organizations to hold more capital and be “well-capitalized” and, to that end, federal law and regulations provide various incentives for such organizations to maintain regulatory capital at levels in excess of minimum regulatory requirements. For example, a banking organization that is well-capitalized may: (i) qualify for exemptions from prior notice or application requirements otherwise applicable to certain types of activities; (ii) qualify for expedited processing of other required notices or applications; and (iii) accept, roll-over or renew brokered deposits. Higher capital levels could also be required if warranted by the particular circumstances or risk profiles of individual banking organizations. Moreover, the Federal Reserve’s capital guidelines contemplate that additional capital may be required to take adequate account of, among other things, interest rate risk, or the risks posed by concentrations of credit, nontraditional activities or securities trading activities. Further, any banking organization experiencing or anticipating significant growth would be expected to maintain capital ratios, including tangible capital positions (i.e., Tier 1 Capital less all intangible assets), well above the minimum levels.

 

Under the capital regulations of the Federal Reserve, in order to be well-capitalized, a banking organization must maintain:

 

 

A new Common Equity Tier 1 Capital ratio to risk-weighted assets of 6.5% or more;

 

A minimum ratio of Tier 1 Capital to total risk-weighted assets of 8% (6% under Basel I);

 

A minimum ratio of Total Capital to total risk-weighted assets of 10% (the same as Basel I); and

 

A leverage ratio of Tier 1 Capital to total adjusted quarterly average assets of 5% or greater.

 

In addition, banking organizations that seek the freedom to make capital distributions (including for dividends and repurchases of stock) and pay discretionary bonuses to executive officers without restriction must also maintain 2.5% in Common Equity Tier 1 attributable to a capital conservation buffer to be phased in over three years beginning in 2016. The purpose of the conservation buffer is to ensure that banking organizations maintain a buffer of capital that can be used to absorb losses during periods of financial and economic stress. Factoring in the fully phased-in conservation buffer increases the minimum ratios depicted above to:

 

 

7% for Common Equity Tier 1,

 

8.5% for Tier 1 Capital and

 

10.5% for Total Capital.

 

It is possible under the Basel III Rule to be well-capitalized while remaining out of compliance with the capital conservation buffer.

 

As of December 13, 2015: (i) none of the Banks was subject to a directive from the Federal Reserve to increase its capital to an amount in excess of the minimum regulatory capital requirements; and (ii) each Bank was “well-capitalized,” as defined by Federal Reserve regulations. As of December 13, 2015, the Company had regulatory capital in excess of the Federal Reserve’s requirements and met the Dodd-Frank Act requirements.

 

 
3

 

 

Prompt Corrective Action. An FDIC-insured institution’s capital plays an important role in connection with regulatory enforcement as well. This regime applies to FDIC-insured institutions, not holding companies, and provides escalating powers to bank regulatory agencies as a bank’s capital diminishes. Federal law provides the federal banking regulators with broad power to take prompt corrective action to resolve the problems of undercapitalized institutions. The extent of the regulators’ powers depends on whether the institution in question is “adequately capitalized,” “undercapitalized,” “significantly undercapitalized” or “critically undercapitalized,” in each case as defined by regulation. Depending upon the capital category to which an institution is assigned, the regulators’ corrective powers include: (i) requiring the institution to submit a capital restoration plan; (ii) limiting the institution’s asset growth and restricting its activities; (iii) requiring the institution to issue additional capital stock (including additional voting stock) or to sell itself; (iv) restricting transactions between the institution and its affiliates; (v) restricting the interest rate that the institution may pay on deposits; (vi) ordering a new election of directors of the institution; (vii) requiring dismissal of senior executive officers or directors; (viii) prohibiting the institution from accepting deposits from correspondent banks; (ix) requiring the institution to divest certain subsidiaries; (x) prohibiting the payment of principal or interest on subordinated debt; and (xi) ultimately, appointing a receiver for the institution.

 

Regulation and Supervision of the Company

 

General. The Company, as the sole stockholder of the Banks, is a bank holding company. As a bank holding company, the Company is registered with, and is subject to regulation by, the Federal Reserve under the BHCA. In accordance with Federal Reserve policy, and as now codified by the Dodd-Frank Act, the Company is legally obligated to act as a source of financial strength to the Banks and to commit resources to support the Banks in circumstances where the Company might not otherwise do so. Under the BHCA, the Company is subject to periodic examination by the Federal Reserve. The Company is required to file with the Federal Reserve periodic reports of the Company’s operations and such additional information regarding the Company and its subsidiaries as the Federal Reserve may require.

 

Acquisitions, Activities and Change in Control. The primary purpose of a bank holding company is to control and manage banks. The BHCA generally requires the prior approval of the Federal Reserve for any merger involving a bank holding company or any acquisition by a bank holding company of another bank or bank holding company. Subject to certain conditions (including deposit concentration limits established by the BHCA and the Dodd-Frank Act), the Federal Reserve may allow a bank holding company to acquire banks located in any state of the United States. In approving interstate acquisitions, the Federal Reserve is required to give effect to applicable state law limitations on the aggregate amount of deposits that may be held by the acquiring bank holding company and its FDIC-insured institution affiliates in the state in which the target bank is located (provided that those limits do not discriminate against out-of-state depository institutions or their holding companies) and state laws that require that the target bank have been in existence for a minimum period of time (not to exceed five years) before being acquired by an out-of-state bank holding company. Furthermore, in accordance with the Dodd-Frank Act, bank holding companies must be well-capitalized and well-managed in order to effect interstate mergers or acquisitions. For a discussion of the capital requirements, see “Regulatory Emphasis on Capital” above.

 

The BHCA generally prohibits the Company from acquiring direct or indirect ownership or control of more than 5% of the voting shares of any company that is not a bank and from engaging in any business other than that of banking, managing and controlling banks or furnishing services to banks and their subsidiaries. This general prohibition is subject to a number of exceptions. The principal exception allows bank holding companies to engage in, and to own shares of companies engaged in, certain businesses found by the Federal Reserve prior to November 11, 1999 to be “so closely related to banking ... as to be a proper incident thereto.” This authority would permit the Company to engage in a variety of banking-related businesses, including the ownership and operation of a savings association, or any entity engaged in consumer finance, equipment leasing, the operation of a computer service bureau (including software development) and mortgage banking and brokerage services. The BHCA does not place territorial restrictions on the domestic activities of nonbank subsidiaries of bank holding companies.

 

Additionally, bank holding companies that meet certain eligibility requirements prescribed by the BHCA and elect to operate as financial holding companies may engage in, or own shares in companies engaged in, a wider range of nonbanking activities, including securities and insurance underwriting and sales, merchant banking and any other activity that the Federal Reserve, in consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury, determines by regulation or order is financial in nature or incidental to any such financial activity or that the Federal Reserve determines by order to be complementary to any such financial activity and does not pose a substantial risk to the safety or soundness of depository institutions or the financial system generally. The Company does not currently operate as a financial holding company.

 

Federal law also prohibits any person or company from acquiring “control” of an FDIC-insured depository institution or its holding company without prior notice to the appropriate federal bank regulator. “Control” is conclusively presumed to exist upon the acquisition of 25% or more of the outstanding voting securities of a bank or bank holding company, but may arise under certain circumstances between 10% and 24.99% ownership.

 

 
4

 

 

Capital Requirements. Bank holding companies are required to maintain capital in accordance with Federal Reserve capital adequacy requirements, as impacted by the Dodd-Frank Act and Basel III. For a discussion of capital requirements, see “—Regulatory Emphasis on Capital” above.

 

Small Business Lending Fund and CPP Redemption. Under the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, the Treasury established a SBLF, a $30 billion fund that encouraged lending to small businesses by providing capital to qualified community banks with assets of less than $10 billion. The Company applied for the SBLF program, was accepted, and on September 15, 2011, entered into a Securities Purchase Agreement (the “Purchase Agreement”) with the Treasury, pursuant to which it issued and sold to the Treasury 40,090 shares of its Senior Non-Cumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock, Series F (the “Series F Preferred Stock”), having a liquidation preference of $1,000 per share (the “Liquidation Amount”), for aggregate proceeds of $40,090,000. On the same date, the Company redeemed from the Treasury the Preferred Stock issued under the CPP. As a result of its redemption of the Treasury’s Preferred Stock, the Company was no longer subject to the limits on executive compensation and other restrictions stipulated under the CPP. The Company also repurchased the warrant issued to the Treasury in November of 2011 for an aggregate purchase price of $1.1 million.

 

On June 30, 2014, the Company redeemed the remaining 14,867 shares of the Series F Preferred Stock from the Treasury for an aggregate redemption amount of $14,823,922, plus unpaid dividends to the date of redemption of $373,869. Previously, on June 29, 2012, the Company redeemed 10,223 shares of Series F Preferred Stock and on March 31, 2014, the Company redeemed an additional 15,000 shares.

 

Dividend Payments. The Company’s ability to pay dividends to its stockholders may be affected by both general corporate law considerations and policies of the Federal Reserve applicable to bank holding companies. As a Delaware corporation, the Company is subject to the limitations of the DGCL, which allow the Company to pay dividends only out of its surplus (as defined and computed in accordance with the provisions of the DGCL) or if the Company has no such surplus, out of its net profits for the fiscal year in which the dividend is declared and/or the preceding fiscal year. In addition, under the Basel III Rule, institutions that seek the freedom to pay dividends will have to maintain 2.5% in Common Equity Tier 1 attributable to the capital conservation buffer to be phased in over three years beginning in 2016. See “—Regulatory Emphasis on Capital” above.

 

As a general matter, the Federal Reserve has indicated that the board of directors of a bank holding company should eliminate, defer or significantly reduce dividends to stockholders if: (i) the company’s net income available to stockholders for the past four quarters, net of dividends previously paid during that period, is not sufficient to fully fund the dividends; (ii) the prospective rate of earnings retention is inconsistent with the company’s capital needs and overall current and prospective financial condition; or (iii) the company will not meet, or is in danger of not meeting, its minimum regulatory capital adequacy ratios. The Federal Reserve also possesses enforcement powers over bank holding companies and their non-bank subsidiaries to prevent or remedy actions that represent unsafe or unsound practices or violations of applicable statutes and regulations. Among these powers is the ability to proscribe the payment of dividends by banks and bank holding companies.

 

Monetary Policy. The monetary policy of the Federal Reserve has a significant effect on the operating results of financial or bank holding companies and their subsidiaries. Among the tools available to the Federal Reserve to affect the money supply are open market transactions in U.S. government securities, changes in the discount rate on bank borrowings and changes in reserve requirements against bank deposits. These means are used in varying combinations to influence overall growth and distribution of bank loans, investments and deposits, and their use may affect interest rates charged on loans or paid on deposits.

 

Federal Securities Regulation. The Company’s common stock is registered with the SEC under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the Exchange Act. Consequently, the Company is subject to the information, proxy solicitation, insider trading and other restrictions and requirements of the SEC under the Exchange Act.

 

Corporate Governance. The Dodd-Frank Act addressed many investor protection, corporate governance and executive compensation matters that will affect most U.S. publicly traded companies. The Dodd-Frank Act increased stockholder influence over boards of directors by requiring companies to give stockholders a non-binding vote on executive compensation and so-called “golden parachute” payments, and authorizing the SEC to promulgate rules that would allow stockholders to nominate and solicit voters for their own candidates using a company’s proxy materials. The legislation also directed the Federal Reserve to promulgate rules prohibiting excessive compensation paid to executives of bank holding companies, regardless of whether such companies are publicly traded.

 

 
5

 

 

Supervision and Regulation of the Banks

 

General. The Company owns three subsidiary banks: QCBT and CRBT are chartered under Iowa law (collectively, the “Iowa Banks”) and RB&T is chartered under Illinois law. The deposit accounts of the Banks are insured by the FDIC’s DIF to the maximum extent provided under federal law and FDIC regulations. The Banks are also members of the Federal Reserve System (“member banks”).

 

As Iowa-chartered, FDIC-insured member banks, the Iowa Banks are subject to the examination, supervision, reporting and enforcement requirements of the Iowa Superintendent, as the chartering authority for Iowa banks. As an Illinois-chartered, FDIC-insured member bank, RB&T is subject to the examination, supervision, reporting and enforcement requirements of the DFPR, as the chartering authority for Illinois banks. The Banks are also subject to the examination, reporting and enforcement requirements of the Federal Reserve, as the primary federal regulator of member banks. In addition, the FDIC, as administrator of the DIF, has regulatory authority over the Banks.

 

Deposit Insurance. As FDIC-insured institutions, the Banks are required to pay deposit insurance premium assessments to the FDIC.  The FDIC has adopted a risk-based assessment system whereby FDIC-insured institutions pay insurance premiums at rates based on their risk classification.  An institution’s risk classification is assigned based on its capital levels and the level of supervisory concern the institution poses to the regulators.   For deposit insurance assessment purposes, an FDIC-insured institution is placed in one of four risk categories each quarter. An institution’s assessment is determined by multiplying its assessment rate by its assessment base. The total base assessment rates range from 2.5 basis points to 45 basis points. The assessment base is calculated using average consolidated total assets minus average tangible equity. At least semi-annually, the FDIC will update its loss and income projections for the DIF and, if needed, will increase or decrease the assessment rates, following notice and comment on proposed rulemaking.

 

Amendments to the Federal Deposit Insurance Act revised the assessment base against which an FDIC-insured institution’s deposit insurance premiums paid to the DIF are calculated to be its average consolidated total assets less its average tangible equity. This change shifted the burden of deposit insurance premiums toward those large depository institutions that rely on funding sources other than U.S. deposits.  Additionally, the Dodd-Frank Act altered the minimum designated reserve ratio of the DIF, increasing the minimum from 1.15% to 1.35% of the estimated amount of total insured deposits and eliminating the requirement that the FDIC pay dividends to FDIC-insured institutions. In lieu of dividends, the FDIC has adopted progressively lower assessment rate schedules that will take effect when the reserve ratio exceeds 1.15%, 2%, and 2.5%. As a consequence, premiums will decrease once the 1.15% threshold is exceeded. The FDIC has until September 3, 2020 to meet the 1.35% reserve ratio target. Several of these provisions could increase the Bank’s FDIC deposit insurance premiums. 

 

The Dodd-Frank Act also permanently established the maximum amount of deposit insurance for banks, savings institutions and credit unions to $250,000 per insured depositor.

 

FICO Assessments.   In addition to paying basic deposit insurance assessments, FDIC-insured institutions must pay FICO assessments. FICO is a mixed-ownership governmental corporation chartered by the former Federal Home Loan Bank Board pursuant to the Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1987 to function as a financing vehicle for the recapitalization of the former Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. FICO issued 30-year noncallable bonds of approximately $8.1 billion that mature in 2017 through 2019. FICO’s authority to issue bonds ended on December 12, 1991. Since 1996, federal legislation has required that all FDIC-insured institutions pay assessments to cover interest payments on FICO’s outstanding obligations. The FICO assessment rate is adjusted quarterly and for the fourth quarter of 2015 was 0.60 basis points (60 cents per $100 dollars of assessable deposits).

 

Supervisory Assessments. Each of the Banks is required to pay supervisory assessments to its respective state banking regulator to fund the operations of that agency. The amount of the assessment payable by each Bank is calculated on the basis of that Bank’s total assets. During the year ended December 13, 2015, the Iowa Banks paid supervisory assessments to the Iowa Superintendent totaling $179,567 and RB&T paid supervisory assessments to the DFPR totaling $47,651.

 

Capital Requirements. Banks are generally required to maintain capital levels in excess of other businesses. For a discussion of capital requirements, see “—Regulatory Emphasis on Capital” above.

 

 
6

 

 

Liquidity Requirements. Liquidity is a measure of the ability and ease with which bank assets may be converted to cash. Liquid assets are those that can be converted to cash quickly if needed to meet financial obligations. To remain viable, FDIC-insured institutions must have enough liquid assets to meet their near-term obligations, such as withdrawals by depositors. Because the global financial crisis was in part a liquidity crisis, Basel III also included a liquidity framework that requires FDIC-insured institutions to measure their liquidity against specific liquidity tests. One test, referred to as the LCR, is designed to ensure that the banking entity has an adequate stock of unencumbered high-quality liquid assets that can be converted easily and immediately in private markets into cash to meet liquidity needs for a 30-calendar day liquidity stress scenario. The other test, known as the NSFR, is designed to promote more medium- and long-term funding of the assets and activities of FDIC-insured institutions over a one-year horizon. These tests provide an incentive for banking organizations to increase their holdings in Treasury securities and other sovereign debt as a component of assets, increase the use of long-term debt as a funding source and rely on stable funding like core deposits (in lieu of brokered deposits).

 

In addition to liquidity guidelines already in place, the U.S. bank regulatory agencies implemented the LCR in September 2014, which requires large financial firms to hold levels of liquid assets sufficient to protect against constraints on their funding during times of financial turmoil. While the LCR only applies to the largest banking organizations in the country, certain elements are expected to filter down to all insured depository institutions. The Company and the Banks are reviewing their liquidity risk management policies in light of the LCR and NSFR.

 

Stress Testing. A stress test is an analysis or simulation designed to determine the ability of a given FDIC-insured institution to deal with an economic crisis. In October 2012, U.S. bank regulators unveiled new rules mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act that require the largest U.S. banks to undergo stress tests twice per year, once internally and once conducted by the regulators, and began recommending portfolio stress testing as a sound risk management practice for community banks. Although stress tests are not officially required for banks with less than $10 billion in assets, they have become part of annual regulatory exams even for banks small enough to be officially exempted from the process. The bank regulatory agencies now recommend stress testing as means to identify and quantify loan portfolio risk and the Banks have begun the process.

 

Liability of Commonly Controlled Institutions. Under federal law, institutions insured by the FDIC may be liable for any loss incurred by, or reasonably expected to be incurred by, the FDIC in connection with the default of commonly controlled FDIC-insured depository institutions or any assistance provided by the FDIC to commonly controlled FDIC-insured depository institutions in danger of default. Because the Company controls each of the Banks, the Banks are commonly-controlled for purposes of these provisions of federal law.

 

Dividend Payments.   The primary source of funds for the Company is dividends from the Banks. In general, the Banks may only pay dividends either out of their historical net income after any required transfers to surplus or reserves have been made or out of their retained earnings. The Federal Reserve Act also imposes limitations on the amount of dividends that may be paid by state member banks, such as the Banks. Without prior Federal Reserve approval, a state member bank may not pay dividends in any calendar year that, in the aggregate, exceed the bank’s calendar year-to-date net income plus the bank’s retained net income for the two preceding calendar years.

 

The payment of dividends by any FDIC-insured institution is affected by the requirement to maintain adequate capital pursuant to applicable capital adequacy guidelines and regulations, and an FDIC-insured institution generally is prohibited from paying any dividends if, following payment thereof, the institution would be undercapitalized. As described above, each of the Banks exceeded its minimum capital requirements under applicable guidelines as of December 13, 2015. Notwithstanding the availability of funds for dividends, however, the Federal Reserve, DFPR and Iowa Superintendent may prohibit the payment of dividends by one of the Banks if it determines such payment would constitute an unsafe or unsound practice. In addition, under the Basel III Rule, institutions that seek the freedom to pay dividends will have to maintain 2.5% in Common Equity Tier 1 attributable to the capital conservation buffer to be phased in over three years beginning in 2016. See “—Regulatory Emphasis on Capital” above.

 

Insider Transactions. The Banks are subject to certain restrictions imposed by federal law on “covered transactions” between each Bank and its “affiliates.” The Company is an affiliate of the Banks for purposes of these restrictions, and covered transactions subject to the restrictions include extensions of credit to the Company, investments in the stock or other securities of the Company and the acceptance of the stock or other securities of the Company as collateral for loans made by any of the Banks. The Dodd-Frank Act enhances the requirements for certain transactions with affiliates as of July 21, 2011, including an expansion of the definition of “covered transactions” and an increase in the amount of time for which collateral requirements regarding covered transactions must be maintained.

 

Limitations and reporting requirements are also placed on extensions of credit by each Bank to its directors and officers, to directors and officers of the Company and its subsidiaries, to principal stockholders of the Company and to “related interests” of such directors, officers and principal stockholders. In addition, federal law and regulations may affect the terms upon which any person who is a director or officer of the Company or the Banks, or a principal stockholder of the Company, may obtain credit from banks with which the Banks maintains a correspondent relationship.

 

 
7

 

 

Safety and Soundness Standards/Risk Management. The federal banking agencies have adopted guidelines that establish operational and managerial standards to promote the safety and soundness of federally insured depository institutions. The guidelines set forth standards for internal controls, information systems, internal audit systems, loan documentation, credit underwriting, interest rate exposure, asset growth, compensation, fees and benefits, asset quality and earnings.

 

In general, the safety and soundness guidelines prescribe the goals to be achieved in each area, and each FDIC-insured institution is responsible for establishing its own procedures to achieve those goals. If an FDIC-insured institution fails to comply with any of the standards set forth in the guidelines, the FDIC-insured institution’s primary federal regulator may require the FDIC-insured institution to submit a plan for achieving and maintaining compliance. If an FDIC-insured institution fails to submit an acceptable compliance plan, or fails in any material respect to implement a compliance plan that has been accepted by its primary federal regulator, the regulator is required to issue an order directing the FDIC-insured institution to cure the deficiency. Until the deficiency cited in the regulator’s order is cured, the regulator may restrict the FDIC-insured institution’s rate of growth, require the FDIC-insured institution to increase its capital, restrict the rates the FDIC-insured institution pays on deposits or require the FDIC-insured institution to take any action the regulator deems appropriate under the circumstances. Noncompliance with the standards established by the safety and soundness guidelines may also constitute grounds for other enforcement action by the federal bank regulatory agencies, including cease and desist orders and civil money penalty assessments.

 

During the past decade, the bank regulatory agencies have increasingly emphasized the importance of sound risk management processes and strong internal controls when evaluating the activities of the FDIC-insured institutions they supervise.  Properly managing risks has been identified as critical to the conduct of safe and sound banking activities and has become even more important as new technologies, product innovation, and the size and speed of financial transactions have changed the nature of banking markets.  The agencies have identified a spectrum of risks facing a banking institution including, but not limited to, credit, market, liquidity, operational, legal, and reputational risk. In particular, recent regulatory pronouncements have focused on operational risk, which arises from the potential that inadequate information systems, operational problems, breaches in internal controls, fraud, or unforeseen catastrophes will result in unexpected losses. New products and services, third-party risk management and cybersecurity are critical sources of operational risk that FDIC-insured institutions are expected to address in the current environment. Each Bank is expected to have active board and senior management oversight; adequate policies, procedures, and limits; adequate risk measurement, monitoring, and management information systems; and comprehensive internal controls.

 

Branching Authority. The Iowa Banks have the authority under Iowa law to establish branches anywhere in the State of Iowa, subject to receipt of all required regulatory approvals. In 1997, the Company formed a de novo Illinois bank that was merged into QCBT, resulting in QCBT establishing a branch office in Illinois. Under Illinois law, QCBT may continue to establish offices in Illinois to the same extent permitted for an Illinois bank (subject to certain conditions, including certain regulatory notice requirements). Similarly, RB&T has the authority under Illinois law to establish branches anywhere in the State of Illinois, subject to receipt of all required regulatory approvals.

 

Federal law permits state and national banks to merge with banks in other states subject to: (i) regulatory approval; (ii) federal and state deposit concentration limits; and (iii) state law limitations requiring the merging bank to have been in existence for a minimum period of time (not to exceed five years) prior to the merger. The establishment of new interstate branches or the acquisition of individual branches of a bank in another state (rather than the acquisition of an out-of-state bank in its entirety) has historically been permitted only in those states the laws of which expressly authorize such expansion. The Dodd-Frank Act permits well-capitalized and well-managed banks to establish new branches across state lines without these impediments.

 

State Bank Investments and Activities. The Banks are permitted to make investments and engage in activities directly or through subsidiaries as authorized by Iowa or Illinois law, as applicable. However, under federal law, FDIC-insured state banks are prohibited, subject to certain exceptions, from making or retaining equity investments of a type, or in an amount, that are not permissible for a national bank. Federal law also prohibits FDIC-insured state banks and their subsidiaries, subject to certain exceptions, from engaging as principal in any activity that is not permitted for a national bank unless the bank meets, and continues to meet, its minimum regulatory capital requirements and the FDIC determines that the activity would not pose a significant risk to the DIF. These restrictions have not had, and are not currently expected to have, a material impact on the operations of the Banks.

 

 
8

 

 

Transaction Account Reserves. Federal Reserve regulations require FDIC-insured institutions to maintain reserves against their transaction accounts (primarily NOW and regular checking accounts). For 2016: the first $15.2 million of otherwise reservable balances are exempt from reserves and have a zero percent reserve requirement; for transaction accounts aggregating more than $15.2 million to $110.2 million, the reserve requirement is 3% of total transaction accounts; and for net transaction accounts in excess of $110.2 million, the reserve requirement is 3% up to $110.2 million plus 10% of the aggregate amount of total transaction accounts in excess of $110.2 million. These reserve requirements are subject to annual adjustment by the Federal Reserve.

 

Federal Home Loan Bank System. The Banks are each a member of the FHLB, which serves as a central credit facility for its members. The FHLB is funded primarily from proceeds from the sale of obligations of the FHLB system. It makes loans to member banks in the form of FHLB advances. All advances from the FHLB are required to be fully collateralized as determined by the FHLB.

 

Community Reinvestment Act Requirements. The Community Reinvestment Act requires the Banks to have a continuing and affirmative obligation in a safe and sound manner to help meet the credit needs of the entire community, including low- and moderate-income neighborhoods. Federal regulators regularly assess each Bank’s record of meeting the credit needs of its communities. Applications for additional acquisitions would be affected by the evaluation of the Bank’s effectiveness in meeting its Community Reinvestment Act requirements.

 

Anti-Money Laundering. The USA Patriot Act, along with AML-BSA, are designed to deny terrorists and criminals the ability to obtain access to the U.S. financial system and has significant implications for FDIC-insured institutions, brokers, dealers and other businesses involved in the transfer of money. The laws mandate financial services companies to have policies and procedures with respect to measures designed to address any or all of the following matters: (i) customer identification and ongoing due diligence programs; (ii) money laundering; (iii) terrorist financing; (iv) identifying and reporting suspicious activities and currency transactions; (v) currency crimes; and (vi) cooperation among FDIC-insured institutions and law enforcement authorities.

 

Concentrations in Commercial Real Estate. Concentration risk exists when FDIC-insured institutions deploy too many assets to any one industry or segment. A concentration in commercial real estate is one example of regulatory concern. The interagency Concentrations in Commercial Real Estate Lending, Sound Risk Management Practices guidance (“CRE Guidance”) provides supervisory criteria, including the following numerical indicators, to assist bank examiners in identifying banks with potentially significant commercial real estate loan concentrations that may warrant greater supervisory scrutiny: (i) commercial real estate loans exceeding 300% of capital and increasing 50% or more in the preceding three years; or (ii) construction and land development loans exceeding 100% of capital. The CRE Guidance does not limit banks’ levels of commercial real estate lending activities, but rather guides institutions in developing risk management practices and levels of capital that are commensurate with the level and nature of their commercial real estate concentrations. On December 18, 2015, the federal banking agencies issued a statement to reinforce prudent risk-management practices related to CRE lending, having observed substantial growth in many CRE asset and lending markets, increased competitive pressures, rising CRE concentrations in banks, and an easing of CRE underwriting standards. The federal bank agencies reminded FDIC-insured institutions to maintain underwriting discipline and exercise prudent risk-management practices to identify, measure, monitor, and manage the risks arising from CRE lending. In addition, FDIC-insured institutions must maintain capital commensurate with the level and nature of their CRE concentration risk. Based on their respective loan portfolios, none of the Banks exceeds these guidelines.

 

Consumer Financial Services. The historical structure of federal consumer protection regulation applicable to all providers of consumer financial products and services changed significantly on July 21, 2011, when the CFPB commenced operations to supervise and enforce consumer protection laws. The CFPB has broad rulemaking authority for a wide range of consumer protection laws that apply to all providers of consumer products and services, including the Bank, as well as the authority to prohibit “unfair, deceptive or abusive” acts and practices. The CFPB has examination and enforcement authority over providers with more than $10 billion in assets. FDIC-insured institutions with $10 billion or less in assets, like the Bank, continue to be examined by their applicable bank regulators.

 

Because abuses in connection with residential mortgages were a significant factor contributing to the global financial crisis, many new rules issued by the CFPB and required by the Dodd-Frank Act address mortgage and mortgage-related products, their underwriting, origination, servicing and sales. The Dodd-Frank Act significantly expanded underwriting requirements applicable to loans secured by 1-4 family residential real property and augmented federal law combating predatory lending practices. In addition to numerous disclosure requirements, the Dodd-Frank Act imposed new standards for mortgage loan originations on all lenders, including all FDIC-insured institutions, in an effort to strongly encourage lenders to verify a borrower’s “ability to repay,” while also establishing a presumption of compliance for certain “qualified mortgages.” In addition, the Dodd-Frank Act generally required lenders or securitizers to retain an economic interest in the credit risk relating to loans that the lender sells, and other asset-backed securities that the securitizer issues, if the loans have not complied with the ability-to-repay standard. The Banks do not currently expect the CFPB’s rules to have a significant impact on their respective operations, except for higher compliance costs.

 

 
9

 

 

Appendix B

 

  

Guide 3 Information

                 

The following tables and schedules show selected comparative financial information required by the SEC Securities Act Guide 3, regarding the business of the Company for the periods shown.

 
 

I. Distribution of Assets, Liabilities and Stockholders Equity; Interest Rates and Interest Differential

 

   A. and B. Consolidated Average Balance Sheets and Analysis of Net Interest Earnings

 
 

The information requested is disclosed in MD&A section of the Company's Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015.

 

 
 

C. Analysis of Changes of Interest Income/Interest Expense

 
 

The information requested is disclosed in MD&A section of the Company's Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015.

 

 
B-1

 

  

II. Investment Portfolio

     
             

A. Investment Securities

     
             
The following tables present the amortized cost and fair value of investment securities as of

 

December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013

               
                                 
           

Gross

   

Gross

         
   

Amortized

   

Unrealized

   

Unrealized

   

Fair

 
   

Cost

   

Gains

   

(Losses)

   

Value

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                                 

December 31, 2015

                               
                                 

Securities held to maturity:

                               

Municipal securities

  $ 252,624     $ 3,190     $ (1,173 )   $ 254,641  

Other bonds

    1,050       -       -       1,050  
                                 

Totals

  $ 253,674     $ 3,190     $ (1,173 )   $ 255,691  
                                 

Securities available for sale:

                               

U.S. gov't.sponsored agency securities

  $ 216,282     $ 105     $ (2,850 )   $ 213,537  

Residential mortgage-backed and related securities

    81,442       511       (1,283 )     80,670  

Municipal securities

    26,765       873       (59 )     27,579  

Other securities

    1,108       541       -       1,649  
                                 

Totals

  $ 325,597     $ 2,030     $ (4,192 )   $ 323,435  
                                 

December 31, 2014

                               
                                 

Securities held to maturity:

                               

Municipal securities

  $ 198,830     $ 2,420     $ (1,186 )   $ 200,064  

Other bonds

    1,050       -       -       1,050  
                                 

Totals

  $ 199,880     $ 2,420     $ (1,186 )   $ 201,114  
                                 

Securities available for sale:

                               

U.S. gov't.sponsored agency securities

  $ 312,960     $ 174     $ (5,264 )   $ 307,870  

Residential mortgage-backed and related securities

    110,456       1,508       (541 )     111,423  

Municipal securities

    29,409       1,053       (62 )     30,400  

Other securities

    1,342       626       (1 )     1,967  
                                 

Totals

  $ 454,167     $ 3,361     $ (5,868 )   $ 451,660  
                                 

December 31, 2013

                               
                                 

Securities held to maturity:

                               

Municipal securities

  $ 144,402     $ 300     $ (7,112 )   $ 137,590  

Other bonds

    1,050       -       -       1,050  
                                 

Totals

  $ 145,452     $ 300     $ (7,112 )   $ 138,640  
                                 

Securities available for sale:

                               

U.S. gov't.sponsored agency securities

  $ 376,574     $ 42     $ (20,143 )   $ 356,473  

Residential mortgage-backed and related securities

    160,110       1,153       (3,834 )     157,429  

Municipal securities

    35,814       923       (778 )     35,959  

Other securities

    1,372       525       -       1,897  
                                 

Totals

  $ 573,870     $ 2,643     $ (24,755 )   $ 551,758  
                                 

 

NOTE: Stock of the Federal Home Loan Bank and Federal Reserve Bank are NOT included in the above. The Company carries these investments within restricted investment securities on the consolidated balance sheets. Following is a summary of the carrying value of all of the Company's restricted investment securities as of December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013:

 

   

As of December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                         

Federal Home Loan Bank

  $ 9,136     $ 11,279     $ 12,344  

Federal Reserve Bank

    5,646       4,227       4,630  

Other

    54       54       54  

Totals

  $ 14,836     $ 15,560     $ 17,028  

 

 
B-2

 

 

B. Investment Securities, Maturities, and Yields

               

The following table presents the maturity of securities held on December 31, 2015 and the weighted average stated coupon rates by range of maturity:

 

           

Weighted

 
   

Amortized

   

Average

 
   

Cost

   

Yield

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                 

U.S. gov't.sponsored agency securities:

               

Within 1 year

  $ 1,004       1.19 %

After 1 but within 5 years

    110,288       1.56 %

After 5 but within 10 years

    98,962       2.21 %

After 10 years

    6,028       3.30 %
                 

Total

  $ 216,282       1.90 %
                 

Residential mortgage-backed and related securities:

               

After 5 but within 10 years

    15,400       3.55 %

After 10 years

    66,042       3.11 %
                 

Total

  $ 81,442       3.19 %
                 

Municipal securities:

               

Within 1 year

  $ 4,656       2.78 %

After 1 but within 5 years

    30,224       2.89 %

After 5 but within 10 years

    66,168       3.04 %

After 10 years

    178,340       3.67 %
                 

Total

  $ 279,388       3.42 %
                 

Other bonds:

               

After 1 but within 5 years

  $ 550       2.81 %

After 5 but within 10 years

    500       4.39 %
                 

Total

  $ 1,050       3.56 %
                 

Other securities with no maturity or stated face rate

  $ 1,108          

 

NOTE: Yields above are NOT computed on a tax equivalent basis.

               

C. As of December 31, 2015, there were no securities with aggregate book value and market value purchased from a single issuer (as defined by Section 2(4) of the Securities Act of 1933) that exceeded 10% of stockholders' equity.

 

 
B-3

 

 

III. Loan/Lease Portfolio

 

A. Types of Loans/Leases

 

The information requested is disclosed in MD&A section of the Company's Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015.

 

B. Maturities and Sensitivities of Loans/Leases to Changes in Interest Rates

 

The information requested is disclosed in MD&A section of the Company's Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015.

 

C. Risk Elements

 

1. Nonaccrual, Past Due and Restructured Loans/Leases

 

The gross interest income that would have been recorded if nonaccrual loans/leases and performing troubled debt restructurings had been current in accordance with their original terms was $493,104 and $13,081 respectively, for the year ended December 31, 2015. The amount of interest collected on nonaccrual loans/leases and performing troubled debt restructurings that was included in interest income was none and $38,676, respectively, for the year ended December 31, 2015.

 

The remaining information requested is disclosed in MD&A section of the the Company's Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015.

 

2. Potential Problem Loans/Leases.

 

To management's best knowledge, there are no such significant loans/leases that have not been disclosed in the table presented in the MD&A section of the Company's Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015.

 

3. Foreign Outstandings. None.

 

4. Loan/Lease Concentrations.

 

As of December 31, 2015, there was a single concentration of loans/leases exceeding 10% of total loans/leases, which is not otherwise disclosed in Item III. A. That concentration is Lessors of Non-Residential Buildings & Dwellings at 17%.

 

D. Other Interest-Bearing Assets

 

As of December 31, 2015, there are no interest-bearing assets required to be disclosed in this Appendix.

 

IV. Summary of Loan/Lease Loss Experience

 

A. Analysis of the Allowance for Estimated Losses on Loans/Leases

 

The information requested is disclosed in MD&A section of the Company's Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015.

 

B. Allocation of the Allowance for Estimated Losses on Loans/Leases

 

The information requested is disclosed in MD&A section of the Company's Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015.

 

 

 
B-4

 

 

V. Deposits.

 

The average amount of and average rate paid for the categories of deposits for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013 are included in the consolidated average balance sheets and can be found in the MD&A section of the Company's Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015.

 

The Company has no deposits by foreign depositors in domestic offices as of December 31, 2015.

 

Included in interest bearing deposits at December 31, 2015, were certificates of deposit totaling $297,059,000 that were $100,000 or greater. Maturities of these certificates were as follows:

 

   

December 31,

 
   

2015

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
         

One to three months

  $ 91,395  

Three to six months

    69,736  

Six to twelve months

    64,314  

Over twelve months

    71,614  
         

Total certificates of deposit

       

greater than or equal to $100,000

  $ 297,059  

 

VI. Return on Equity and Assets.

 

The following tables present the return on assets and equity and the equity to assets ratio of the Company:

 

   

Years ended

 
   

December 31,

 
   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
   

(dollars in thousands)

 
                         

Average total assets

  $ 2,549,921     $ 2,453,678     $ 2,330,604  

Average equity

    192,489       142,734       145,906  

Net income attributable to QCR Holdings, Inc.

    16,928       14,953       14,938  

Return on average assets

    0.66 %     0.61 %     0.64 %

Return on average common equity

    8.79 %     10.49 %     11.48 %

Return on average total equity

    8.79 %     10.48 %     10.24 %

Dividend payout ratio

    4.88 %     4.57 %     3.76 %

Average equity to average assets ratio

    7.55 %     5.82 %     6.26 %

 

 
B-5

 

 

VII. Short Term Borrowings.

 
 

The following tables present the information requested on short-term borrowings of the Company:

 

Short-term borrowings as of December 31, 2015, 2014, and 2013 are summarized as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
           

(dollars in thousands)

         

Overnight repurchase agreements with customers

  $ 73,873     $ 137,252     $ 98,823  

Federal funds purchased

    70,790       131,100       50,470  
    $ 144,663     $ 268,352     $ 149,293  

 

Information

concerning overnight repurchase agreements with customers is summarized as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
           

(dollars in thousands)

         

Average daily balance during the period

  $ 121,186     $ 128,818     $ 123,543  

Average daily interest rate during the period

    0.11 %     0.12 %     0.12 %

Maximum month-end balance during the period

  $ 159,407     $ 147,624     $ 146,075  

Weighted average rate as of end of period

    0.11 %     0.11 %     0.16 %
                         

Securities underlying the agreements as of end of period:

                       

Carrying value

  $ 95,389     $ 165,360     $ 143,262  

Fair value

    95,389       165,360       143,262  

 

Information

concerning federal funds purchased is summarized as follows:

 

   

2015

   

2014

   

2013

 
           

(dollars in thousands)

         

Average daily balance during the period

  $ 32,826     $ 33,877     $ 41,157  

Average daily interest rate during the period

    0.41 %     0.40 %     0.40 %

Maximum month-end balance during the period

  $ 126,220     $ 131,100     $ 95,380  

Weighted average rate as of end of period

    0.57 %     0.51 %     0.25 %

 

 

 

 

 B-6