Third Coast (TCBX) Q1 2026
2026-04-23 00:00:00
Operator:
Greetings, and welcome to the Third Coast Bank First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host for today, Natalie Harrison, Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.
Natalie Hairston:
Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us for Third Coast Bancshares conference call and webcast to review our first quarter 2026 results. With me today is Bart Caraway, Founder, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer; John McCarter, Chief Financial Officer; and Audrey Spaulding, Chief Credit Officer. First, a few housekeeping items. There will be a replay of today's call, and it will be available by webcast on the Investors section of our website at ir.thirdcoast.bank. There will also be a telephonic replay available until April 30 and more information on how to access these replay features was included in yesterday's earnings release. Please note that the information reported on this call speaks only as of today, April 23, 2026, and therefore, you are advised that time-sensitive information may no longer be accurate as of the time of any replay listening or transcript reading. In addition, the comments made by management during this conference call may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the United States federal securities laws. These forward-looking statements reflect the current views of management. However, various risks, uncertainties and contingencies could cause actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially from those expressed in the statements made by management. The listener or reader is encouraged to read the annual report on Form 10-K to better understand those risks, uncertainties and contingencies. The comments made today will also include certain non-GAAP financial measures. Additional details and reconciliation to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures were included in yesterday's earnings release, which can be found on the Third Coast website. Now I would like to turn the call over to Third Coast Founder, Chairman, President and CEO, Mr. Bart Caraway. Bart?
Bart Caraway:
Good morning, everyone, and thank you, Natalie. Welcome to the TCBX First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call. I'll begin by discussing the company's progress in the quarter. John will cover the financial performance in more detail, then Audrey will provide a credit quality update. Then I'll close with a few thoughts on management's outlook. As we look at our first quarter, let's start with the broader context. This quarter marked a significant milestone for Third Coast highlighted by a successful addition of Keystone Bank shares to our platform. The Keystone merger acquisition had a substantial impact on our results this quarter, driving solid growth in loans and deposits, expanding our customer base and strengthening our presence in the key markets in Central Texas. which translated into an expanded balance sheet. Specifically, assets increased by 23.2%, loans by 19.5% and deposits by 23.5% from year-end. Equally important is the strength of our underlying business. Our loan pipelines are robust, customer activity is healthy and the strategic investments we continue to make in our platform are already gaining traction. This includes enhancements to our leadership team and the purposeful build-out of several key divisions. Within our corporate banking group, we have added seasoned best-in-class relationship bankers in Houston and Dallas, including experienced teams focused on select dedicated verticals. We also launched our asset-based lending platform, adding to our credit product suite. We believe these will be an important contributor to our loan growth and fee income. In addition, we have expanded our public funds and correspondent banking teams, further diversifying our funding base and expanding our reach across Texas and Beyond. While many of these teams are still early in the ramp up, we believe these combined investments position us to drive organic growth at meaningful levels. reinforcing our long-term goals of scalability, disciplined growth and sustainable profitability. Overall, we believe the first quarter demonstrates headway in building a stronger franchise while staying true to our fundamentals that have consistently driven our success and performance. With that, I'll turn the call over to John to walk through the financial results and provide additional details on the quarter. John?
John McWhorter:
Thank you, Bart, and good morning, everyone. As Bart mentioned, the Keystone transaction is the primary factor influencing the quarter-over-quarter changes in our financial results. Keystone added roughly 20% to our loans and deposits and roughly $3.3 million in merger-related nonrecurring noninterest expense. I'll focus my comments on providing clarity around those impacts, along with our underlying trends. Starting with expenses. Our noninterest expenses were higher during the quarter, largely due to Keystone related items as well as sign-on bonuses for several recent senior-level hires. During the first quarter of 2026, the company recorded $3.3 million in Keystone merger-related noninterest expenses, primarily consisting of $1.6 million in legal and professional, $1.3 million of salary and benefits and $400,000 miscellaneous. Additionally, the company recorded $644,000 in salary and benefits attributable to sign-on bonuses during the first quarter. This is the second consecutive quarter of above average hiring. These expenses are nonrecurring and reflect the near-term cost of integrating Keystone and onboarding new talent. Diluted earnings per share for the quarter was $0.88, but excluding merger expenses, would have been $102 million. Also excluding merger expenses, return on average assets would have been 1.25%. Net interest income was $53.6 million for the first quarter, marking a 2.7% increase from the previous quarter. driven by higher than average earning assets following the merger and offset by a lower net interest margin. The margin decline resulted primarily from the merger, but also from the reversal of $996,000 in accrued interest from 2 loans placed on nonaccrual. Turning to loan growth. Excluding Keystone, loans were up approximately $45 million for the quarter, whereas quarterly average balances were up over $100 million. and the second quarter has started even stronger with April month-to-date loans already up over $100 million. Pipelines are full, and some of our new lenders are just getting started. Lastly, I might mention that tangible book value ended the quarter at $31.7 which compares favorably to 31.69, which was the guidance that we gave in October of last year when we announced the acquisition. Most of our expense savings will be realized in the third and fourth quarters of this year. With that, I'll turn the call over to Audrey to discuss asset quality.
Audrey Duncan:
Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. I'd like to provide a summary of asset quality for the first quarter. Nonperforming assets to total assets increased by 11 basis points from the prior quarter. The increase in nonperforming assets was primarily due to 1 CRE loan of approximately $17.1 million being placed on nonaccrual as well as the addition of $1.8 million in purchased credit impaired loans from the Keystone acquisition, which are on nonaccrual. This increase was partially offset by a $5 million decline in loans over 90 days past due and still accruing. When placing the $17.1 million loan on nonaccrual as well as a $602,000 loan, we reversed $996,000 in accrued interest which impacted our margin. On April 7, the bank foreclosed on the property securing the $17.1 million CRE loan. Our LTV on the property based upon a 2026 appraisal is just under 70%. It is also worth noting that $5.3 million of our nonaccrual loans are fully guaranteed by the SBA. The allowance for credit losses totaled $51.5 million, representing 0.98% of gross loans as of March 31, 2026. compared to $43.9 million or 1% as of the previous quarter end. The increase was primarily due to the day 1 allowance related to the Keystone acquisition. We recorded net recoveries of $4,000 in the first quarter. Our loan portfolio remains well diversified and reflects organic production as well as contributions from the Keystone portfolio with actions consistent with the prior year. Commercial and industrial loans are 42% of total loans while construction development and land loans were 17%, owner-occupied CRE was 11% and nonowner-occupied CRE was 18%. I'd be happy to answer any questions regarding asset quality during our question-and-answer session. With that, I'll turn the call back to Bart. Bart?
Bart Caraway:
Thank you, Audrey. As we move further into 2026, we are increasingly confident in the direction of the franchise and the strategic foundation we have put in place. We believe we are building 1 of the best platforms in the country and across our footprint. With our expanded corporate banking, including ABL, along with our public funds and correspondent banking capabilities, which position us to continue scaling the company in a disciplined and thoughtful way. We believe these groups combined with our core teams represent durable long-term growth engines that will drive organic growth, diversify our balance sheet and deepen client relationships over time. We believe when these teams gain scale, they will drive even stronger pipelines and profitability, with the potential to generate over $1 million in fees per month and extend our quarterly loan growth target range to $75 million to $125 million. Underpinning all of this is our continuous improvement mindset, which is now deeply embedded across the organization. was started as a 1% improvement challenge has evolved into a culture centered on execution, accountability and delivering consistency across outcomes for our stakeholders. And we believe that continues to be a key differentiator for Third Coast. Ongoing consolidation across the banking sector continues to strengthen our scarcity value and positions us at the early stages of unlocking additional upside for our franchise. Finally, I want to thank our team for their exceptional work this quarter and extend a warm welcome to our Keystone customers and shareholders. We appreciate your continued support in Third Coast and look forward to building on this momentum. With that, I'll turn the call back over to the operator to begin the question-and-answer session.
Operator:
[Operator Instructions] And your first question comes from Matt Olney with Stephens.
Matt Olney:
I'll start with the net interest margin as you guys mentioned some noisy results this quarter with Keystone, and I heard the commentary about the nonaccrual impact to the margin as well. Any color you can give us as far as expectations for the margin in the near term?
John McWhorter:
Sure. So Matt, this is John. Last quarter, I guided to a number in kind of the 390 range. And I think Third Coast stand-alone before this interest reversal, that's exactly where we were. So the interest reversal is worth about 4 basis points. And then, of course, we merged with Keystone. their margin was about 350. So you average kind of all that out and assuming nothing unusual next quarter, and I think we're about 3.75 for the margin going forward.
Matt Olney:
Okay. Perfect. Appreciate that, John. And then on the loan growth front, it sounds like 2Q is up to a really strong start. We'd love to hear more about the drivers of what you're seeing there. Any of this from the new producers hired or market disruption? Just more commentary on the pipeline would be helpful.
Bart Caraway:
Yes. That very observational obi. I think it's both what you mentioned. One, we have both some new team members and some team members that are last year that are obviously have some good volumes. And at the same time, we are seeing some opportunities from some of the disruption in the market. And I think the combination has actually basically really got a -- really robust pipeline. A matter of fact, I think the first quarter maybe have masked a little bit of how good it was because we had an exceptional number of payoffs or otherwise, our loans would have been up quite a bit more. So we're still seeing the pipelines grow right now, and we feel pretty good where we stand. The market is good. These producers that we're bringing are highly productive and have a loyal customer base. And at the same time, some of the disruption is starting to play out, where we're able to basically compete and win some business that we've been after for a while. So all in all, despite all the other macro headwinds, it's actually looking really good for us in terms of our growth and volumes.
John McWhorter:
Yes. And Matt, I might add that with the market disruption, that's really what's given us the opportunity to hire a lot of these people that we've talked about over the last couple of quarters. So we've paid sign-on bonuses to some of these people, again, 2 quarters in a row, I don't necessarily envision that happening in the second quarter of this year, but many of the people that we hired were exceptional. They were great opportunities, just ones that we couldn't pass up that will very much contribute to our growth going forward. But it's not an every quarter sort of thing. I think, I said the expenses related to that were about $650,000 and we likely -- I mean, who knows, maybe we have other opportunities, but I don't think it will be of that magnitude. I think most of who we wanted to hire recently, we've hired in the last 6 months.
Bart Caraway:
And if I could add on to that, like the folks that we've hired are people that have had long-term relationships with the existing leadership here. So these aren't new people that are unknown to us or people that either worked with before or had long-time relationships with, that we've been after for a while. And once again, similar to what happened right after the pandemic, there's a lot of dislocation and disruption that's allowed us to finally get them over the fence.
Matt Olney:
Yes. Okay. Makes sense. And you guys seem to be in a nice spot to take advantage of all disruption. All back in the queue. Thank you.
Operator:
Your next question comes from Michael Rose with Raymond James.
Michael Rose:
Maybe just following up on mass loan growth. Question, it looks like in the quarter, if I exclude Keystone, you were kind of below that $75 million to $100 million range that you talked about previously. Was there any sort of elevated pay downs or anything that may have impacted the organic growth? Or maybe if you can just parse out what it is. And then, I think, Bart, I heard you say given some of the hires that you've made over the past couple of quarters that, that -- maybe that range on a go-forward basis is $75 million to $125 million. So a nice kind of uptick there. I assume that there's some time that it will take for some of the newer hires to get ramped up. So should we expect an acceleration to kind of the mid to higher point of that range in the back half of the year? Just trying to frame out the loan growth outlook?
Bart Caraway:
Yes. Good comments. Early in the quarter, we actually had such strong loan growth that we thought were going to be above budget on it. But then we had some significant paydowns that came through, and it was -- the timing of it we thought was going to be kind of spread out over a few quarters, and it just happened to be kind of all in 1 quarter. And they were significant enough that they offset a lot of that growth. So I don't expect that to continue. Those headwinds probably kind of came first quarter. We'll maybe have a few -- I always have a few surprise paydowns of somebody sales or what have you. But I think the pipeline has grown that if we even mirror what we did last quarter, we're going to have pretty strong net loan growth. So that's why John and I in order talking that we feel like it's probably going to be this year is going to turn out to be a little better than what we even anticipated on the loan growth. Having said that, obviously, it's always lumpy. I can't control the timing of when these loans close. But prospectively, we look like it's going to be a very strong loan year for us.
Michael Rose:
Very, very helpful. And then just as it relates to the $17.1 million credit that was added to the nonaccruals. Is that a credit that you previously talked about? I just -- I don't remember or recall and then it seems like you have an appraisal on the property. I mean, what's kind of the expectation here for resolution? Is it a couple of quarters? I know it's hard to kind of parsed out individual credits, but just given the magnitude of size here, just trying to better understand the -- when it could eventually come out of the run rate.
Audrey Duncan:
Sure. I can give you some more color on that. I don't think we have talked about the loan previously, but it is a seasoned loan and we originated it in 2021. So it's been on the books and paying for many years. They had a significant decline in occupancy due to a tenant bankruptcy. So that kind of precipitated the issue there. The LTV adds just under 70% based on a new appraisal within the last 90 days, and that's the as-is value. on the current occupancy. We're getting ready to list it with a national broker, and we're working on some additional leases to increase the occupancy. But yes, I would think, yes, it's probably going to be a couple of quarters.
Michael Rose:
Okay. Perfect. I appreciate that, Audrey. Maybe if I could just slip in 1 more. It looks like on the deposit side, the growth on an organic basis was actually pretty strong. Obviously, some of the mix change was due to the acquisition. But just as we kind of think about deposit growth as we move forward, I think, Bart, you previously talked about it kind of somewhat matching loan growth. Is that kind of still the expectation there?
John McWhorter:
Yes. So Michael, 1 thing that I wanted to point out there, we had a lot more cash at quarter end. And the reason for that is we sold the Keystone investment portfolio, 100% of it. thinking that we were going to fund up a bunch of loans and replace it before quarter end and that didn't happen because we had those big loan payoffs. But -- so their investment portfolio, it was roughly $75 million in April. Our loans were up more than $100 million. So that's going to be a big help to the margin. And just the fact that the loan-to-deposit ratio was lower for the quarter. We do try to fund to the extent that we can just in time funding, and we really thought we were going to have more loan fundings. We weren't expecting the payoffs. They almost all came out of 1 lenders portfolio who's no longer with the bank, and we weren't sad to see those loans pay off. But going forward, I'd expect the loan-to-deposit ratio to creep up a little bit more and we've already reallocated that cash into loans, so that should help the margin as well.
Operator:
And your next question comes from Wood Lay with KBW.
Wood Lay:
I had a couple of follow-ups on credit. I was just curious, are there any trends to note and criticized or classified loans this quarter?
Audrey Duncan:
Well, obviously, the $17.1 million, that was an increase in classifieds for the quarter. We had a couple of CRE loans that were downgraded during the quarter, but they are both current now. We've got low LTVs on current appraisals. Those LTVs are closer to the 50%, 60%, and we're not expecting any issues there. Those are actually moving in the right direction.
Wood Lay:
If you take out $17 million, it really is pretty moderate.
Audrey Duncan:
Yes. If you take out the $17 million, in fact, classifieds were up about $15 million. So we actually had some net reduction there if you excluded that $17 million. Our NPAs actually would have declined 15 basis points had it not been for the $17 million loan.
Bart Caraway:
So I think I would comment that I still feel the portfolio looks really good. I mean, we're not seeing any macro trends or any micro trends on it. I think the story was the 1 property we took back other than that, I think we're seeing some really strong economic environment for us. We're seeing basically our customers pretty stable and navigating through all the chaos and disruption that's out there. portfolio looks pretty good, I think.
Wood Lay:
That's great to hear. And maybe just last for me. We're just looking for an update on how the integration of Keystone is going, when core conversion is scheduled? And do you still feel good about all the assumptions that were laid out at deal announcement.
Bart Caraway:
Yes. I mean I think it's actually going better than expected. It's a good cultural fit. We love the market. And thus far, the teams really kind of rallied and kind of worked well together. I'd say the conversion is going to be in July. And thus far, it's been going very, very well. If you remember, we did do a core conversion last summer. And so I guess everybody is already acclimated to change, and we're very familiar with our system. So converting a bank onto our system versus doing a whole bank conversion is a whole lot easier. So -- and by the way, we have a whole ERM team and project management team that kind of rides heard on this. And so it's very organized and we feel like everybody has the up-to-date training to be able to make this pretty seamless.
John McWhorter:
Yes. And Woody, as far as the assumptions and the cost saves, we're running 2 different banks today on 2 different systems. So obviously, that's more expensive. So we won't realize any of the cost saves from data processing until August, will be the first month of savings there. Keystone needed a full-blown financial statement audit, so we didn't have any savings there. So going forward, we do expect more. We obviously don't need auditors out there anymore. We won't have examiners obviously, the data processing will happen in the third quarter. So most of the expense saves are are still to come. I think we had forecast $6 million in savings and a lot of it is those couple of categories is the professional fees and the data processing fees and things like that.
Operator:
Your next question comes from Bernard Van Gist with Deutsche Bank.
Bernard Von Gizycki:
Maybe just on expenses from here, how do we think about maybe whether it's the quarterly run rate for the rest of the year? Or how to think about it just from here until the end of the year, just given some of the lumpy M&A-related costs, which I believe they're nonrecurring that you've highlighted. I'm not sure if there's any spillover in other merger-related costs that you want to highlight. And then just as those cost saves as they come in, are they fully realized in 3Q and 4Q? Or does that spill over in 2017? Just any thoughts you can break out in expenses.
John McWhorter:
Yes. So the last thing first. I think by January 1 of the next year, we will have 100% of the cost saves, but some of them we won't have until year-end, some things that we're accruing for an some expenses. But as far as expense run rate, it's hard to put a handle on. I mean, obviously, you could take this quarter and minus out the $3.3 million and then maybe the extra bonuses that we paid out, that's another $650,000. I mean that's kind of a good starting point for that, but we're spending time and effort on conversion, merger-related stuff. So we're not quite to a point where I can give you a good run rate number, but it's certainly this quarter minus the merger expenses and probably more than that.
Bernard Von Gizycki:
Okay. Got it. And then what about like fee income? Just any thoughts on -- with the new hires, obviously, the Keystone. Just anything we should be thinking about going forward or how we can think about for the rest of the year in fee income?
John McWhorter:
Yes. So we guided to $4 million for the quarter, and that's almost exactly where we were, I think it will be a little bit higher going forward. But again, we're not a huge fee income shop. So it's not going to be materially different. I think it's going to be between that $4 million and $4.5 million range.
Operator:
Your next question comes from Matt Olney with Stephens.
Matt Olney:
Just want to go back to the net adverse margin outlook. John, I think you said that $3.75. I was struggling to get to that number. I heard your commentary about the liquidity and the impact of that kind of late in the quarter and so far, early what you're seeing in April? Any other color that can help us get to that $3.75 number. Was there any impact of securitization or anything else that can help -- can I speak to the noise that we saw in -- moving from the results in the first quarter to that $3.75 million in 2Q?
John McWhorter:
Yes. I think if you add back the reversal of interest, that's going to be worth about 4 basis points. So it's not too terribly far from the $3.75 million, just to start with. I think the rest of where I'm thinking we get there is through better loan fees. The loan fees were a little late this quarter. It looks like they're running heavier. We didn't talk about securitizations. We obviously didn't do 1 in the first quarter, but we are -- we're always looking at it working on them. I can't say for sure that we'll do 1 in the second quarter, but I think the odds are probably more likely than not that we will be able to do another securitization this quarter. And if -- if we do, it will look similar to the last ones where there's a fair amount of fee income associated with it, and that goes into the margin. And I'm not considering that in the $3.75 number that would push it even higher if we were able to do that.
Bart Caraway:
And when we start running a little bit higher loan-to-deposit ratio, that will certainly help. Again, we had such a strong start, the first part of the quarter, had the payoffs. I think that would have made somewhat of a difference on the margin as well. And as we're able to kind of dial that in a little bit, I think that's going to kind of help our margin over the next couple of quarters.
Matt Olney:
Yes. Well, definitely some noisy trends given all the moving parts, but I appreciate you kind of walking through all the items.
Operator:
Your next question comes from Dave Storms with Stonegate.
David Storms:
Just wanted to maybe start with maybe some underwriting following the merger. Has there been anything that's been learned either from the Keystone way doing things or doing things or maybe any synergies that can be picked up in underwriting?
Bart Caraway:
I think it's all kind of in process. So they had a few products a little different from ours. It's been kind of interesting that we might be able to take and evolve at the same time, I think being able to overlay our bigger legal lending limit and some of the things that we do, particularly on the corporate side of it is going to open up some business for them on some probably bigger loans and bigger relationships. So -- but it's only been a few weeks since we brought them on board. And I think that's going to play out as we kind of get this thing integrated. And it will be a lot easier when they're on our system as well.
David Storms:
Understood. And then just thinking about the long-term NIM trends, before Keystone, you're trending in the plus 4% range. I guess what would it take to get the portfolio back to that again, thinking over the longer term?
John McWhorter:
I'm sorry, I didn't follow the question, Dave.
David Storms:
No, sorry. Just long-term NIM trends. I know you're talking about maybe 3 quarters, but just before the merger, you were around 4%, low north of that, is it possible to get back to that range? And kind of what would that take?
John McWhorter:
That's probably optimistic at that point because we have a relatively high cost of funds. I mean, the way we would get there would be through more loan fees, which we think is possible. I mean that certainly would be a goal and an aspirational sort of goal number. We think as we get bigger and lead more deals, there'll be more loan fees associated with it that will help the margin, but 4% is probably pretty optimistic for our way of doing business. And I think it's a way of upper anyway.
Operator:
Thank you. And there are no further questions at this time. I'll hand the floor back to Mr. Caraway for closing remarks.
Bart Caraway:
Well, thank you, Diego, and thank you, everybody, for joining us for our earnings call for 2026 and look forward to talking to you all next quarter. Thank you for your support.
Operator:
Thank you. This concludes today's call. All parties may disconnect.