SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

FORM 10-Q

 

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

EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

 

FOR THE QUARTERLY PERIOD ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 2012

 

Commission file number: 000-33063

 

Sierra Bancorp

(Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)

 

  California 33-0937517  
  (State of Incorporation) (IRS Employer Identification No)  

 

86 North Main Street, Porterville, California  93257
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code)

 

(559) 782-4900

(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)

 

Not Applicable

(Former name, former address and former fiscal year, if changed since last report)

 

Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15 (d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the Registrant was required to file such reports) and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.

Yes  R                    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  R                    No  £

 

Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company.

Large accelerated filer £ Accelerated filer R
Non-accelerated filer £ (Do not check if a smaller reporting company) Smaller Reporting Company £

 

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

Yes  £                    No  R

 

Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuer’s classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date.

 

Common stock, no par value, 14,106,889 shares outstanding as of October 31, 2012

 

 
 

 

FORM 10-Q

 

Table of Contents

 

  Page
Part I - Financial Information 1
Item 1. Financial Statements (Unaudited) 1
Consolidated Balance Sheets 1
Consolidated Statements of Income 2
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income 3
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows 4
Notes to Unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements 5
   
Item 2. Management’s Discussion & Analysis of Financial Condition & Results of Operations 28
Forward-Looking Statements 28
Critical Accounting Policies 28
Overview of the Results of Operations and Financial Condition 29
Earnings Performance 31
Net Interest Income and Net Interest Margin 31
Provision for Loan and Lease Losses 36
Non-interest Revenue and Operating Expense 37
Provision for Income Taxes 40
Balance Sheet Analysis 40
Earning Assets 40
Investments 40
Loan Portfolio 41
Nonperforming Assets 43
Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses 45
Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements 47
Other Assets 47
Deposits and Interest-Bearing Liabilities 48
Deposits 48
Other Interest-Bearing Liabilities 50
Non-Interest Bearing Liabilities 50
Liquidity and Market Risk Management 50
Capital Resources 53
   
Item 3. Qualitative & Quantitative Disclosures about Market Risk 54
   
Item 4. Controls and Procedures 54
   
Part II - Other Information 55
Item 1. - Legal Proceedings 55
Item 1A. - Risk Factors 55
Item 2. - Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds 55
Item 3. - Defaults upon Senior Securities 55
Item 4. - (Removed and Reserved) 55
Item 5. - Other Information 55
Item 6. - Exhibits 56
   
Signatures 57

 

 
 

 

PART I - FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Item 1 – Financial Statements

 

SIERRA BANCORP

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS

(dollars in thousands)

 

   September 30, 2012   December 31, 2011 
   (unaudited)   (audited) 
ASSETS          
Cash and due from banks  $41,744   $42,805 
Interest-bearing deposits in banks   3,351    20,231 
Total Cash & Cash Equivalents   45,095    63,036 
Investment securities available for sale   414,635    406,471 
Loans held for sale   618    1,354 
Loans and leases:          
Gross loans and leases   847,130    757,591 
Allowance for loan and lease losses   (12,806)   (17,283)
Deferred loan and lease fees, net   926    621 
Net Loans and Leases   835,250    740,929 
Premises and equipment, net   22,218    20,721 
Operating leases, net   268    384 
Foreclosed assets   19,835    15,364 
Goodwill   5,544    5,544 
Other assets   79,839    81,602 
TOTAL ASSETS  $1,423,302   $1,335,405 
           
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY          
LIABILITIES          
Deposits:          
Non-interest bearing  $323,184   $300,045 
Interest bearing   822,669    786,223 
Total Deposits   1,145,853    1,086,268 
Federal funds purchased and repurchase agreements   3,634    3,037 
Short-term borrowings   47,900    17,120 
Long-term borrowings   5,000    15,000 
Junior subordinated debentures   30,928    30,928 
Other liabilities   15,514    14,488 
TOTAL LIABILITIES   1,248,829    1,166,841 
SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY          
Common stock, no par value; 24,000,000 shares          
authorized; 14,103,849 and 14,101,609 shares issued          
and outstanding at September 30, 2012 and          
December 31, 2011, respectively   64,344    64,321 
Additional paid in capital   2,364    2,221 
Retained earnings   101,877    98,174 
Accumulated other comprehensive income   5,888    3,848 
TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY   174,473    168,564 
           
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND          
SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY  $1,423,302   $1,335,405 

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements

 

1
 

 

SIERRA BANCORP

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME

(dollars in thousands, except per share data, unaudited)

 

   Three Months Ended September 30,   Nine Months Ended September 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Interest income:                    
Interest and fees on loans  $11,954   $11,780   $34,251   $35,480 
Interest on investment securities:                    
Taxable   1,523    2,420    5,159    6,621 
Tax-exempt   700    716    2,052    2,153 
Interest on federal funds sold and interest-bearing deposits   15    23    51    56 
Total interest income   14,192    14,939    41,513    44,310 
                     
Interest expense:                    
Interest on deposits   796    1,063    2,490    3,279 
Interest on short-term borrowings   23    7    41    46 
Interest on long-term borrowings   51    143    231    425 
Interest on mandatorily redeemable trust preferred securities   193    179    586    540 
Total interest expense   1,063    1,392    3,348    4,290 
                     
Net Interest Income   13,129    13,547    38,165    40,020 
                     
Provision for loan losses   4,700    3,000    10,610    9,600 
                     
Net Interest Income after Provision for Loan Losses   8,429    10,547    27,555    30,420 
                     
Non-interest revenue:                    
Service charges on deposit accounts   2,525    2,439    7,229    7,140 
Gains on investment securities available-for-sale   90    -    161    - 
Other income, net   1,281    930    4,831    3,278 
Total other operating income   3,896    3,369    12,221    10,418 
                     
Other operating expense:                    
Salaries and employee benefits   5,278    4,849    15,855    15,760 
Occupancy expense   1,669    1,787    4,721    4,987 
Other   4,064    3,932    13,059    13,078 
Total other operating expenses   11,011    10,568    33,635    33,825 
                     
  Income before income taxes   1,314    3,348    6,141    7,013 
                     
Provision for income taxes   (321)   822    54    774 
                     
Net Income  $1,635   $2,526   $6,087   $6,239 
                     
PER SHARE DATA                    
Book value  $12.37   $11.97   $12.37   $11.97 
Cash dividends  $0.06   $0.06   $0.18   $0.18 
Earnings per share basic  $0.12   $0.18   $0.43   $0.45 
Earnings per share diluted  $0.12   $0.18   $0.43   $0.44 
Average shares outstanding, basic   14,103,543    14,051,614    14,102,880    14,015,583 
Average shares outstanding, diluted   14,138,682    14,097,368    14,114,962    14,081,936 
                     
Total shareholder Equity (in thousands)  $174,473   $168,325   $174,473   $168,325 
Shares outstanding   14,103,849    14,062,259    14,103,849    14,062,259 
Dividends Paid  $846,193   $842,800   $2,538,482   $2,521,643 

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements

 

2
 

 

SIERRA BANCORP

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME

(dollars in thousands, unaudited)

 

   Three Months Ended September 30,   Nine Months Ended September 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
                 
Net Income  $1,635   $2,526   $6,087   $6,239 
Other comprehensive income, before tax:                    
Unrealized gains on securities:                    
Unrealized holding gains arising during period   1,926    1,838    3,635    7,127 
Less: reclassification adjustment for gains included in net income   (90)   -    (161)   - 
Other comprehensive income, before tax   1,836    1,838    3,474    7,127 
Income tax expense related to items of other comprehensive income, net of tax   (756)   765    (1,434)   2,928 
Other comprehensive income   1,080    1,073    2,040    4,199 
                     
Comprehensive income  $2,715   $3,599   $8,127   $10,438 

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements

3
 

 

SIERRA BANCORP

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

(dollars in thousands, unaudited)

 

   Nine Months Ended September 30, 
   2012   2011 
Cash flows from operating activities:          
Net income  $6,087   $6,239 
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:          
Gain on investment of securities   (161)   - 
Gain on sales of loans   (139)   (93)
Loss (Gain) on disposal of fixed assets   10   (12)
Loss on sale on foreclosed assets   709    569 
Writedowns on foreclosed assets   1,610    1,656 
Share-based compensation expense   183    166 
Provision for loan losses   10,610    9,600 
Depreciation and amortization   1,813    1,971 
Net amortization on securities premiums and discounts   6,214    4,031 
Increase in unearned net loan fees   (304)   (291)
Increase in cash surrender value of life insurance policies   (30)   (5,538)
Proceeds from sales of loans portfolio   5,717    3,440 
Net (Increase) Decrease in loans held-for-sale   (4,842)   59 
(Increase) Decrease in interest receivable and other assets   (677)   1,362 
Increase (Decrease) in other liabilities   1,179    (389)
Net Decrease in FHLB Stock   670    996 
Deferred Income Tax Provision (Benefit)   318    (105)
Excess tax (provision) benefit from equity based compensation   (39)   4 
Net cash provided by operating activities   28,928    23,665 
           
Cash flows from investing activities:          
Maturities of securities available for sale   1,080    2,664 
Proceeds from sales/calls of securities available for sale   11,319    3,119 
Purchases of securities available for sale   (99,084)   (154,229)
Principal pay downs on securities available for sale   75,953    53,430 
Net (Increase) Decrease in loans receivable, net   (125,316)   28,709 
Purchases of premises and equipment, net   (3,204)   (830)
Proceeds from sales of foreclosed assets   13,898    4,681 
Net cash used in investing activities   (125,354)   (62,456)
           
Cash flows from financing activities:          
Increase in deposits   59,585    41,345 
Increase in borrowed funds   20,780    10,350 
Increase in repurchase agreements   597    4,633 
Cash dividends paid   (2,538)   (2,522)
Repurchases of common stock   -    (23)
Stock options exercised   22    672 
Excess tax provision (benefit) from equity based compensation   39   (4)
Net cash provided by financing activities   78,485    54,451 
           
(Decrease) Increase in cash and due from banks   (17,941)   15,660 
           
Cash and Cash Equivalents          
Beginning of period   63,036    42,645 
End of period  $45,095   $58,305 

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements

 

4
 

 

Sierra Bancorp

NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

September 30, 2012

 

Note 1 – The Business of Sierra Bancorp

 

Sierra Bancorp (the “Company”) is a California corporation headquartered in Porterville, California, and is a registered bank holding company under federal banking laws. The Company was formed to serve as the holding company for Bank of the Sierra (the “Bank”), and has been the Bank’s sole shareholder since August 2001. The Company exists primarily for the purpose of holding the stock of the Bank and of such other subsidiaries it may acquire or establish. At the present time, the Company’s only other direct subsidiaries are Sierra Statutory Trust II and Sierra Capital Trust III, which were formed in March 2004 and June 2006, respectively, solely to facilitate the issuance of capital trust pass-through securities (TRUPS). Pursuant to the Financial Accounting Standards Board’s (FASB’s) standard on the consolidation of variable interest entities, these trusts are not reflected on a consolidated basis in the financial statements of the Company. References herein to the “Company” include Sierra Bancorp and its consolidated subsidiary, the Bank, unless the context indicates otherwise.

 

The Bank is a California state-chartered bank headquartered in Porterville, California, that offers a full range of retail and commercial banking services to communities in the central and southern sections of the San Joaquin Valley. Our branch footprint stretches from Fresno on the north to Bakersfield on the south, and on the southern end extends east through the Tehachapi plateau and into the northwestern tip of the Mojave Desert. The Bank was incorporated in September 1977 and opened for business in January 1978, and in the ensuing years has grown to be the largest independent bank headquartered in the South San Joaquin Valley. Our growth has primarily been organic, but includes the acquisition of Sierra National Bank in 2000. We currently operate 25 full service branch offices throughout our geographic footprint, as well as an internet branch which provides the ability to open deposit accounts online. The Bank’s most recent branch expansion activity includes a new branch which opened for business in the city of Selma in February 2011, and the relocation of our Clovis branch to a larger facility in a more convenient location in the third quarter of 2012. In addition to our full-service branches, the Bank has an agricultural credit division with lending staff domiciled in Porterville, Bakersfield and Visalia, an SBA lending unit located at our corporate headquarters, and offsite ATM’s at six different non-branch locations. The Bank’s deposit accounts are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) up to maximum insurable amounts.

 

Note 2 – Basis of Presentation

 

The accompanying unaudited consolidated financial statements have been prepared in a condensed format, and therefore do not include all of the information and footnotes required by U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) for complete financial statements. The information furnished in these interim statements reflects all adjustments that are, in the opinion of management, necessary for a fair statement of the results for such period. Such adjustments are of a normal recurring nature, unless otherwise disclosed in this Form 10-Q. In preparing the accompanying consolidated financial statements, management has taken subsequent events into consideration and recognized them where appropriate. The results of operations in the interim statements are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected for any other quarter, or for the full year. Certain amounts reported for 2011 have been reclassified to be consistent with the reporting for 2012. The interim financial information should be read in conjunction with the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2011, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

 

Note 3 – Current Accounting Developments

 

In September 2011, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) issued Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”) 2011-08, Intangibles—Goodwill and Other (Topic 350) - Testing Goodwill for Impairment. The objective of ASU 2011-08 is to simplify how entities test goodwill for impairment. Topic 350 requires an entity to test goodwill for impairment on at least an annual basis, by comparing the fair value of a reporting unit with its carrying amount, including goodwill (step one). If the fair value of a reporting unit is less than its carrying amount, then the second step of the test must be performed to measure the amount of the impairment loss, if any. Pursuant to ASU 2011-08, an entity will not be required to calculate the fair value of a reporting unit and perform step one unless, after assessing qualitative factors, the entity determines that it is more likely than not that its fair value is less than its carrying amount. The more-likely-than-not threshold is defined as having a likelihood of more than 50 percent. This update is effective for annual and interim goodwill impairment tests performed for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2011. The adoption of ASU 2011-08 did not have an impact on the Company’s financial statements, as the Company has not been required to perform the second step of the goodwill impairment test since the first step has, to date, determined that the fair value of the reporting unit, Bank of the Sierra, is greater than its carrying amount.

 

5
 

 

In June 2011, the FASB issued ASU 2011-05, Comprehensive Income (Topic 220) - Presentation of Comprehensive Income. Current U.S. generally accepted accounting principles allow reporting entities several alternatives for displaying other comprehensive income and its components in financial statements, and ASU 2011-05 is intended to improve the consistency of this reporting issue. The amendments in this ASU require all non-owner changes in stockholders’ equity to be presented either in a single continuous statement of comprehensive income, or in two separate but consecutive statements. In a single continuous statement, the entity is required to present the components of net income and total net income, the components of other comprehensive income and a total for other comprehensive income, along with the total of comprehensive income in that statement. In the two-statement approach, an entity is required to present components of net income and total net income in the statement of net income. The statement of other comprehensive income should immediately follow the statement of net income and include the components of other comprehensive income and a total for other comprehensive income, along with a total for comprehensive income. Furthermore, the entity is required to present, on the face of the financial statements, adjustments for items that are reclassified from other comprehensive income to net income in the statements, where the components of net income and the components of other comprehensive income are presented. The amendments in the ASU do not change the following: 1) items that must be reported in other comprehensive income; 2) when an item of other comprehensive income must be reclassified to net income; 3) the option to present components of other comprehensive income either net of related tax effects or before related tax effects; or, 4) how earnings per share is calculated or presented. The amendments in ASU 2011-05 should be applied retrospectively. For public entities, such as the Company, the amendments are effective for fiscal years, and interim periods within those years, beginning after December 15, 2011. The Company’s adoption of this ASU impacted our presentation of comprehensive income, but not the calculation of such.

 

In May 2011, the FASB issued ASU No. 2011-04, Fair Value Measurement (Topic 820): Amendments to Achieve Common Fair Value Measurement and Disclosure Requirements in U.S. GAAP and IFRSs, to substantially converge the fair value measurement and disclosure guidance in U.S. GAAP with International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”). The amended guidance changes several aspects of current fair value measurement guidance, including the following provisions: 1) the application of the concepts of “highest and best use” and “valuation premise”; 2) the introduction of an option to measure groups of offsetting assets and liabilities on a net basis; 3) the incorporation of certain premiums and discounts in fair value measurements; and, 4) the measurement of the fair value of certain instruments classified in shareholders’ equity. In addition, the amended guidance includes several new fair value disclosure requirements, including, among other things, information about valuation techniques and unobservable inputs used in Level 3 fair value measurements and a narrative description of Level 3 measurements’ sensitivity to changes in unobservable inputs. For public entities such as the Company, the provisions of ASU 2011-04 are effective for interim and annual periods beginning after December 15, 2011, and are to be applied prospectively. The implementation of ASU 2011-04 enhanced our footnote disclosures, but did not change fair value measurements for any of the Company’s assets or liabilities carried at fair value and thus did not impact the Company’s statements of income and condition.

 

Note 4 – Supplemental Disclosure of Cash Flow Information

 

During the nine months ended September 30, 2012 and 2011, cash paid for interest due on interest-bearing liabilities was $3.087 million and $3.991 million, respectively. There was no cash paid for income taxes during the nine months ended September 30, 2012, and $1.643 million for the same time frame in 2011. Assets totaling $20.724 million and $4.663 million were acquired in settlement of loans for the nine months ended September 30, 2012 and September 30, 2011, respectively. We received $10.134 million in cash from the sale of foreclosed assets during the first nine months of 2012 relative to $2.779 million during the first nine months of 2011, which represents sales proceeds less loans extended to finance such sales totaling $3.735 million for the first nine months of 2012 and $1.506 million for the first nine months of 2011.

 

6
 

 

Note 5 – Share Based Compensation

 

The 2007 Stock Incentive Plan (the “2007 Plan”) was adopted by the Company in 2007. Our 1998 Stock Option Plan (the “1998 Plan”) was concurrently terminated, although options to purchase 171,550 shares that were granted prior to the termination of the 1998 Plan were still outstanding as of September 30, 2012 and remain unaffected by the termination. The 2007 Plan provides for the issuance of both “incentive” and “nonqualified” stock options to officers and employees, and of “nonqualified” stock options to non-employee directors of the Company. The 2007 Plan also provides for the potential issuance of restricted stock awards to these same classes of eligible participants, on such terms and conditions as are established at the discretion of the Board of Directors or the Compensation Committee. The total number of shares of the Company’s authorized but unissued stock reserved for issuance pursuant to awards under the 2007 Plan was initially 1,500,000 shares, although options have been granted since the inception of the plan and the number remaining available for grant as of September 30, 2012 was 911,640. The dilutive impact of stock options outstanding is discussed below in Note 6, Earnings per Share. No restricted stock awards have been issued by the Company.

 

Pursuant to FASB’s standards on stock compensation, the value of each option granted is reflected in our income statement as share-based compensation expense or directors’ expense, by amortizing it over the vesting period of such option or by expensing it as of the grant date for immediately vested options. The Company is utilizing the Black-Scholes model to value stock options, and the “multiple option” approach is used to allocate the resulting valuation to actual expense. Under the multiple option approach, an employee’s options for each vesting period are separately valued and amortized. This appears to be the preferred method for option grants with multiple vesting periods, which is the case for most options granted by the Company. A pre-tax charge of $61,000 was reflected in the Company’s income statement during the third quarter of 2012 and $48,000 was charged during the third quarter of 2011, as expense related to stock options. For the first nine months, the charges amounted to $183,000 in 2012 and $166,000 in 2011.

 

Note 6 – Earnings per Share

 

The computation of earnings per share, as presented in the Consolidated Statements of Income, is based on the weighted average number of shares outstanding during each period. There were 14,103,543 weighted average shares outstanding during the third quarter of 2012, and 14,051,614 during the third quarter of 2011. There were 14,102,880 weighted average shares outstanding during the first nine months of 2012, and 14,015,583 during the first nine months of 2011.

 

Diluted earnings per share include the effect of the potential issuance of common shares, which for the Company is limited to shares that would be issued on the exercise of “in-the-money” stock options. The dilutive effect of options outstanding was calculated using the treasury stock method, excluding anti-dilutive shares and adjusting for unamortized expense and windfall tax benefits. For the third quarter and first nine months of 2012, the dilutive effect of options outstanding calculated under the treasury stock method totaled 35,139 and 12,082, respectively, which were added to basic weighted average shares outstanding for purposes of calculating diluted earnings per share. Likewise, for the third quarter and first nine months of 2011 shares totaling 45,754 and 66,353, respectively, were added to basic weighted average shares outstanding in order to calculate diluted earnings per share.

 

Note 7 – Comprehensive Income

 

Comprehensive income, as presented in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income, includes net income and other comprehensive income. The Company’s only source of other comprehensive income is unrealized gains and losses on available-for-sale investment securities. Gains or losses on investment securities that were realized and included in net income of the current period, which had previously been included in other comprehensive income as unrealized holding gains or losses in the period in which they arose, are considered to be reclassification adjustments that are excluded from comprehensive income of the current period.

 

Note 8 – Financial Instruments with Off-Balance-Sheet Risk

 

The Company is a party to financial instruments with off-balance-sheet risk in the normal course of business, in order to meet the financing needs of its customers. Those financial instruments consist of commitments to extend credit, and standby letters of credit. They involve, to varying degrees, elements of risk in excess of the amount recognized in the balance sheet. The Company’s exposure to credit loss in the event of nonperformance by counterparties for commitments to extend credit and letters of credit is represented by the contractual amount of those instruments. The Company uses the same credit policies in making commitments and issuing letters of credit as it does for originating loans included on the balance sheet. The following financial instruments represent off-balance-sheet credit risk (dollars in thousands):

 

7
 

 

   September 30, 2012   December 31, 2011 
Commitments to extend credit  $239,849   $154,323 
Standby letters of credit  $6,059   $11,113 
Commercial letters of credit  $8,543   $8,991 

 

Commitments to extend credit consist primarily of the following: Unfunded home equity lines of credit; commercial real estate construction loans, which are established under standard underwriting guidelines and policies and are secured by deeds of trust, with disbursements made over the course of construction; commercial revolving lines of credit, which have a high degree of industry diversification; the unused portions of mortgage warehouse lines of credit; and the unused portions of formalized (disclosed) deposit account overdraft lines. Commitments generally have fixed expiration dates or other termination clauses and may require payment of a fee. Since many commitments are expected to expire without being drawn upon, the total commitment amounts do not necessarily represent future cash requirements. Standby letters of credit are generally unsecured and are issued by the Company to guarantee the performance of a customer to a third party, while commercial letters of credit represent the Company’s commitment to pay a third party on behalf of a customer upon fulfillment of contractual requirements. The credit risk involved in issuing letters of credit is essentially the same as that involved in extending loans to customers.

 

The Company is also utilizing a $74 million letter of credit issued by the Federal Home Loan Bank on the Company’s behalf as security for certain deposits. The letter of credit is backed by specific loans which are pledged to the Federal Home Loan Bank by the Company.

 

Note 9 – Fair Value Disclosures and Reporting, the Fair Value Option and Fair Value Measurements

 

FASB’s standards on financial instruments, and on fair value measurements and disclosures, require all entities to disclose the estimated fair value of financial instruments for which it is practicable to estimate fair values. In addition to those footnote disclosure requirements, FASB’s standard on investments requires that our debt securities, which are classified as available for sale, and our equity securities that have readily determinable fair values, be measured and reported at fair value in our statement of financial position. Certain impaired loans are also reported at fair value, as explained in greater detail below, and foreclosed assets are carried at the lower of cost or fair value. While the fair value option outlined under FASB’s standard on financial instruments permits companies to report certain other financial assets and liabilities at fair value, we have not elected the fair value option for any additional financial assets or liabilities.

 

Fair value measurements and disclosure standards also establish a framework for measuring fair value. Fair value is defined as the exchange price that would be received for an asset or paid to transfer a liability (an exit price) in the principal or most advantageous market for the asset or liability, in an orderly transaction between market participants on the measurement date. Further, they establish a fair value hierarchy that requires an entity to maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable inputs when measuring fair value. The standards describe three levels of inputs that may be used to measure fair value:

 

·Level 1: Quoted prices (unadjusted) for identical assets or liabilities in active markets that the entity has the ability to access as of the measurement date.

 

·Level 2: Significant observable inputs other than Level 1 prices, such as quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities, quoted prices in markets that are not active, and other inputs that are observable or can be corroborated by observable market data.

 

·Level 3: Significant unobservable inputs that reflect a company’s own assumptions about the factors that market participants would likely consider in pricing an asset or liability.

 

8
 

 

Fair value estimates are made at a specific point in time based on relevant market data and information about the financial instruments. The estimates do not reflect any premium or discount that could result from offering the Company’s entire holdings of a particular financial instrument for sale at one time, nor do they attempt to estimate the value of anticipated future business related to the instruments. In addition, the tax ramifications related to realized gains and losses could have a significant effect on fair value estimates but have not been considered in any estimates. Because no market exists for a significant portion of the Company’s financial instruments, fair value disclosures are based on judgments regarding current economic conditions, risk characteristics of various financial instruments and other factors. The estimates are subjective and involve uncertainties and matters of significant judgment, and therefore cannot be determined with precision. Changes in assumptions could significantly affect the fair values presented. The following methods and assumptions were used by the Company to estimate the fair value of its financial instruments disclosed at September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011:

 

·Cash and cash equivalents and short-term borrowings: For cash and cash equivalents and short-term borrowings, the carrying amount is estimated to be fair value.

 

·Investment securities: The fair values of investment securities are determined by obtaining quoted prices on nationally recognized securities exchanges or by matrix pricing, which is a mathematical technique used widely in the industry to value debt securities by relying on their relationship to other benchmark quoted securities when quoted prices for specific securities are not readily available.

 

·Loans and leases: For variable-rate loans and leases that re-price frequently with no significant change in credit risk or interest rate spread, fair values are based on carrying values. Fair values for other loans and leases are estimated by discounting projected cash flows at interest rates being offered at each reporting date for loans and leases with similar terms, to borrowers of comparable creditworthiness. The carrying amount of accrued interest receivable approximates its fair value.

 

·Loans held for sale: Since loans designated by the Company as available-for-sale are typically sold shortly after making the decision to sell them, realized gains or losses are usually recognized within the same period and fluctuations in fair values are thus not relevant for reporting purposes. If available-for-sale loans stay on our books for an extended period of time, the fair value of those loans is determined using quoted secondary-market prices.

 

·Collateral dependent impaired loans: Impaired loans carried at fair value are those for which it is probable that the bank will be unable to collect all amounts due (including both interest and principal) according to the contractual terms of the original loan agreement, and the carrying value has been written down to the fair value of the loan. The carrying value is equivalent to the fair value of the collateral, net of expected disposition costs where applicable, for collateral-dependent loans.

 

·Cash surrender value of life insurance policies: The fair values are based on net cash surrender values at each reporting date.

 

·Investments in, and capital commitments to, limited partnerships: The fair values of our investments in WNC Institutional Tax Credit Fund Limited Partnerships and any other limited partnerships are estimated using quarterly indications of value provided by the general partner. The fair values of undisbursed capital commitments are assumed to be the same as their book values.

 

·Other investments: Certain long-term investments for which no secondary market exists are carried at cost, and the carrying amount for those investments approximates their estimated fair value.

 

·Deposits: Fair values for demand deposits and other non-maturity deposits are equal to the amount payable on demand at the reporting date, which is the carrying amount. Fair values for fixed-rate certificates of deposit are estimated using a cash flow analysis, discounted at interest rates being offered at each reporting date by the Bank for certificates with similar remaining maturities. The carrying amount of accrued interest payable approximates its fair value.

 

9
 

 

·Short-term borrowings: The carrying amounts approximate fair values for federal funds purchased, overnight FHLB advances, borrowings under repurchase agreements, and other short-term borrowings maturing within ninety days of the reporting dates. Fair values of other short-term borrowings are estimated by discounting projected cash flows at the Company’s current incremental borrowing rates for similar types of borrowing arrangements.

 

·Long-term borrowings: The fair values of the Company’s long-term borrowings are estimated using projected cash flows discounted at the Company’s current incremental borrowing rates for similar types of borrowing arrangements.

 

·Subordinated debentures: The fair values of subordinated debentures are determined based on the current market value for like instruments of a similar maturity and structure.

 

·Commitments to extend credit and letters of credit: If funded, the carrying amounts for currently unused commitments would approximate fair values for the newly created financial assets at the funding date. However, because of the high degree of uncertainty with regard to whether or not those commitments will ultimately be funded, fair values for loan commitments and letters of credit in their current undisbursed state cannot reasonably be estimated, and only notional values are disclosed in the table below.

 

10
 

 

Estimated fair values for the Company’s financial instruments at the periods noted are as follows:

 

Fair Value of Financial Instruments                
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)  September 30, 2012 
       Estimated Fair Value 
   Carrying
Amount
   Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for
Identical Assets
(Level 1)
   Significant
Observable
Inputs
(Level 2)
   Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
   Total 
       (Dollars in thousands) 
Financial Assets:                         
Cash and cash equivalents  $45,095   $45,095   $-   $-   $45,095 
Investment securities available for sale   414,635    1,911    412,724    -    414,635 
Loans and leases, net   823,850    -    867,484    -    867,484 
Collateral dependent impaired loans   11,401    -    9,044    -    9,044 
Loans held-for-sale   618    618    -    -    618 
Cash surrender value of life insurance policies   37,687    -    37,687    -    37,687 
Other investments   6,370    -    6,370    -    6,370 
Investment in Limited Partnership   10,537    -    10,537    -    10,537 
Accrued interest receivable   5,228    -    5,228    -    5,228 
                          
Financial Liabilities:                         
Deposits:                         
Noninterest-bearing  $323,184   $323,184   $-   $-   $323,184 
Interest-bearing   822,669    -    745,132    -    745,132 
Fed Funds Purchased and Repurchase Agreements   3,634    -    3,634    -    3,634 
Short-term borrowings   47,900    -    47,900    -    47,900 
Long-term borrowings   5,000    -    5,084    -    5,084 
Subordinated debentures   30,928    -    12,141    -    12,141 
Limited partnership capital commitment   1,138    -    1,138    -    1,138 
Accrued Interest Payable   252    -    252    -    252 
                          
   Notional Amount                     
Off-balance-sheet financial instruments:                         
Commitments to extend credit  $239,849                     
Standby letters of credit   6,059                     
Commercial lines of credit   8,543                     

 

   December 31, 2011 
       Estimated Fair Value 
   Carrying
Amount
   Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for
Identical Assets
(Level 1)
   Significant
Observable
Inputs
(Level 2)
   Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
   Total 
       (Dollars in thousands) 
Financial Assets:                         
Cash and cash equivalents  $63,036   $63,036   $-   $-   $63,036 
Investment securities available for sale   406,471    1,347    405,124    -    406,471 
Loans and leases, net   726,302    -    771,192    -    771,192 
Collateral dependent impaired loans   14,627    -    11,016    285    11,301 
Loans held-for-sale   1,354    1,354    -    -    1,354 
Cash surrender value of life insurance policies   37,657    -    37,657    -    37,657 
Other Investments   7,040    -    7,040    -    7,040 
Investment in Limited Partnership   9,927    -    9,927    -    9,927 
Accrued Interest Receivable   5,368    -    5,368    -    5,368 
                          
Financial Liabilities:                         
Deposits:                         
Noninterest-bearing  $300,045   $300,045   $-   $-   $300,045 
Interest-bearing   786,223    -    702,270    -    702,270 
Fed Funds Purchased and Repurchase Agreements   3,037    -    3,037    -    3,037 
Short-term borrowings   17,120    -    17,120    -    17,120 
Long-term borrowings   15,000    -    15,000    -    15,000 
Subordinated debentures   30,928    -    12,262    -    12,262 
Limited partnership capital commitment   353    -    353    -    353 
Accrued Interest Payable   514    -    514    -    514 
                          
   Notional Amount                     
Off-balance-sheet financial instruments:                         
Commitments to extend credit  $154,323                     
Standby letters of credit   11,113                     
Commercial lines of credit   8,991                     

 

11
 

 

For each financial asset category that was actually reported at fair value at September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, the Company used the following methods and significant assumptions:

 

·Investment Securities: The fair values of securities available for sale are determined by obtaining quoted prices on nationally recognized securities exchanges or by matrix pricing, which is a mathematical technique used widely in the industry to value debt securities by relying on the their relationship to other benchmark quoted securities.

 

·Loans held for sale: Since loans designated by the Company as available-for-sale are typically sold shortly after making the decision to sell them, realized gains or losses are usually recognized within the same period and fluctuations in fair values are thus not relevant for reporting purposes. If available-for-sale loans stay on our books for an extended period of time, the fair value of those loans is determined using quoted secondary-market prices.

 

·Impaired loans: Impaired loans carried at fair value are those for which it is probable that the bank will be unable to collect all amounts due (including both interest and principal) according to the contractual terms of the original loan agreement, and the carrying value has been written down to the fair value of the loan. The carrying value is equivalent to the fair value of the collateral, net of expected disposition costs where applicable, for collateral-dependent loans.

 

·Foreclosed assets: Repossessed real estate (OREO) and other assets are carried at the lower of cost or fair value. Fair value is the appraised value less expected selling costs for OREO and some other assets such as mobile homes, and for all other assets fair value is represented by the estimated sales proceeds as determined using reasonably available sources. Foreclosed assets for which appraisals can be feasibly obtained are periodically measured for impairment using updated appraisals. Fair values for other foreclosed assets are adjusted as necessary, subsequent to a periodic re-evaluation of expected cash flows and the timing of resolution. If impairment is determined to exist, the book value of a foreclosed asset is immediately written down to its estimated impaired value through the income statement, thus the carrying amount is equal to the fair value and there is no valuation allowance.

 

12
 

 

Assets reported at fair value on a recurring basis are summarized below:

 

Fair Value Measurements - Recurring                    
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)                    
   Fair Value Measurements at September 30, 2012, Using 
   Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for
Identical Assets
(Level 1)
   Significant
Observable
Inputs
(Level 2)
   Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
   Total   Realized
Gain/(Loss)
 
Investment Securities                         
U.S. Government agencies  $-   $1,134   $-   $1,134   $- 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions   -    80,963    -    80,963    - 
U.S. Government agencies collateralized by mortgage obligations   -    330,627    -    330,627    - 
Other Securities   1,911    -    -    1,911    - 
                          
Total available-for-sale securities  $1,911   $412,724   $-   $414,635   $- 

 

   Fair Value Measurements at December 31, 2011, Using 
   Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for
Identical Assets
(Level 1)
   Significant
Observable
Inputs
(Level 2)
   Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
   Total   Realized
Gain/(Loss)
 
Investment Securities                         
U.S. Government agencies  $-   $2,026   $-   $2,026   $- 
Obligations of states and political subdivisions   -    71,340    -    71,340    - 
U.S. Government agencies collateralized by mortgage obligations   -    331,758    -    331,758    - 
Other Securities   1,347    -    -    1,347    (1,370)
                          
Total available-for-sale securities  $1,347   $405,124   $-   $406,471   $(1,370)

 

13
 

 

Assets reported at fair value on a nonrecurring basis are summarized below:

 

Fair Value Measurements - Nonrecurring            
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)                
   Fair Value Measurements at September 30, 2012, Using 
   Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for
Identical Assets
(Level 1)
   Significant
Observable
Inputs
(Level 2)
   Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
   Total 
Collateral Dependent Impaired Loans  $-   $9,044   $-   $9,044 
Foreclosed Assets  $-   $19,835   $-   $19,835 

 

   Fair Value Measurements at December 31, 2011, Using 
   Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for
Identical Assets
(Level 1)
   Significant
Observable
Inputs
(Level 2)
   Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
   Total 
Collateral Dependent Impaired Loans  $-   $11,016   $285   $11,301 
Foreclosed Assets  $-   $14,777   $587   $15,364 

 

The table above only includes impaired loan balances for which a specific reserve has been established or on which a write-down has been taken. Information on the Company’s total impaired loan balances, and specific loss reserves associated with those balances, is included in Note 11 below, and in Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operation in the “Nonperforming Assets” and “Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses” sections.

 

The unobservable inputs are based on management’s best estimates of appropriate discounts in arriving at fair market value. Significant increases or decreases in any of those inputs could result in a significantly lower or higher fair value measurement. For example, a change in either direction of actual loss rates would have a directionally opposite change in the calculation of the fair value of impaired unsecured loans.

 

Note 10 – Investments

 

Although the Company currently has the intent and the ability to hold the securities in its investment portfolio to maturity, the securities are all marketable and are classified as “available for sale” to allow maximum flexibility with regard to interest rate risk and liquidity management. Pursuant to FASB’s guidance on accounting for debt and equity securities, available for sale securities are carried on the Company’s financial statements at their estimated fair market values, with monthly tax-effected “mark-to-market” adjustments made vis-à-vis accumulated other comprehensive income in shareholders’ equity. The Company’s available-for-sale investment securities totaled $415 million at September 30, 2012, and $406 million at December 31, 2011.

 

14
 

 

Amortized Cost And Estimated Fair Value

 

The amortized cost and estimated fair value of investment securities available-for-sale are as follows

(Dollars in thousands, unaudited):

 

   September 30, 2012 
   Amortized
Cost
   Gross
Unrealized
Gains
   Gross
Unrealized
Losses
   Estimated
Fair Value
 
                 
U.S. Government agencies  $1,129   $5   $-   $1,134 
Obligations of state and political subdivisions   76,558    4,480    (75)   80,963 
U.S. Government agencies collateralized by mortgage obligations   325,605    5,763    (741)   330,627 
Equity Securities   1,336    575    -    1,911 
   $404,628   $10,823   $(816)  $414,635 

 

   December 31, 2011 
   Amortized
Cost
   Gross
Unrealized
Gains
   Gross
Unrealized
Losses
   Estimated
Fair Value
 
                 
U.S. Government agencies  $2,008   $18   $-   $2,026 
Obligations of state and political subdivisions   67,851    3,634    (145)   71,340 
U.S. Government agencies collateralized by mortgage obligations   328,751    4,467    (1,460)   331,758 
Equity Securities   1,336    11    -    1,347 
   $399,946   $8,130   $(1,605)  $406,471 

 

At September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, the Company had 76 securities and 80 securities, respectively, with unrealized losses. Management has evaluated those securities as of the respective dates, and does not believe that any of the associated unrealized losses are other than temporary. Information pertaining to our investment securities with unrealized losses, aggregated by investment category and length of time that individual securities have been in a continuous loss position, is disclosed in the table below.

 

15
 

 

Investment Portfolio - Unrealized Losses                
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)  September 30, 2012 
   Less than Twelve Months   Over Twelve Months 
   Gross
Unrealized
Losses
   Fair Value   Gross
Unrealized
Losses
   Fair Value 
                 
U.S. Government Agencies  $-   $-   $-   $- 
Obligations of State and Political Subdivisions   (75)   5,881    -    - 
U.S. Government agencies collateralized by mortgage obligations   (591)   90,344    (150)   14,363 
TOTAL  $(666)  $96,225   $(150)  $14,363 

 

   December 31, 2011 
   Less than Twelve Months   Over Twelve Months 
   Gross
Unrealized
Losses
   Fair Value   Gross
Unrealized
Losses
   Fair Value 
                 
Obligations of State and Political Subdivisions  $(26)  $1,735   $(119)  $1,978 
U.S. Government agencies collateralized by mortgage obligations   (1,432)   144,953    (28)   949 
TOTAL  $(1,458)  $146,688   $(147)  $2,927 

 

Note 11 – Credit Quality and Nonperforming Assets

 

Credit Quality Classifications

 

The Company monitors the credit quality of loans on a continuous basis using the regulatory and accounting classifications of pass, special mention, substandard and impaired to characterize the associated credit risk. Balances classified as “loss” are immediately charged off. The Company uses the following definitions of risk classifications:

 

·Pass: Loans listed as pass include larger non-homogeneous loans not meeting the risk rating definitions below and smaller, homogeneous loans that are not assessed on an individual basis.

 

·Special Mention: Loans classified as special mention have potential issues that deserve the close attention of management. If left uncorrected, those potential weaknesses could eventually diminish the prospects for full repayment of principal and interest according to the contractual terms of the loan agreement, or could result in deterioration of the Company’s credit position at some future date.

 

·Substandard: Loans classified as substandard have at least one clear and well-defined weakness which could jeopardize the ultimate recoverability of all principal and interest, such as a borrower displaying a highly leveraged position, unfavorable financial operating results and/or trends, uncertain repayment sources or a deteriorated financial condition.

 

·Impaired: A loan is considered impaired when, based on current information and events, it is probable that the Company will be unable to collect all amounts due according to the contractual terms of the loan agreement. Impaired loans include all nonperforming loans, loans classified as restructured troubled debt, and certain other loans that are still being maintained on accrual status. If the Bank grants a concession to a borrower in financial difficulty, the loan falls into the category of a troubled debt restructuring (TDR). A TDR may be nonperforming or performing, depending on its accrual status and the demonstrated ability of the borrower to comply with restructured terms.

 

16
 

 

Credit quality classifications for the Company’s loan balances were as follows, as of the dates indicated:

 

Credit Quality Classifications                    
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)                    
   September 30, 2012 
   Pass   Special
Mention
   Substandard   Impaired   Total 
Real Estate:                         
1-4 Family residential construction  $2,004   $3,450   $-   $1,558   $7,012 
Other construction/Land   19,771    3,191    3,693    8,289    34,944 
1-4 Family - closed-end   75,048    6,487    736    19,329    101,600 
Equity Lines   58,527    23    1,931    1,411    61,892 
Multi-family residential   4,590    611    -    -    5,201 
Commercial real estate - owner occupied   137,460    21,838    5,786    10,083    175,167 
Commercial real estate - non-owner occupied   64,770    7,642    540    18,863    91,815 
Farmland   55,523    916    3,552    1,943    61,934 
Total Real Estate   417,693    44,158    16,238    61,476    539,565 
                          
Agricultural   19,915    30    25    999    20,969 
Commercial and Industrial   221,773    4,166    2,973    2,242    231,154 
Small Business Administration   14,511    1,671    624    3,422    20,228 
Direct finance leases   4,515    38    -    190    4,743 
Consumer loans   25,254    603    224    4,390    30,471 
Total Gross Loans and Leases  $703,661   $50,666   $20,084   $72,719   $847,130 

 

   December 31, 2011 
   Pass   Special
Mention
   Substandard   Impaired   Total 
Real Estate:                         
1-4 Family residential construction  $4,240   $2,004   $-   $2,244   $8,488 
Other construction/Land   18,185    8,873    1,015    11,987    40,060 
1-4 Family - closed-end   75,765    7,574    1,354    20,260    104,953 
Equity Lines   62,867    456    1,795    1,379    66,497 
Multi-family residential   4,620    618    -    2,941    8,179 
Commercial real estate - owner occupied   141,245    23,289    8,878    9,658    183,070 
Commercial real estate - non-owner occupied   64,746    7,463    4,514    29,120    105,843 
Farmland   47,719    1,878    3,626    6,919    60,142 
Total Real Estate   419,387    52,155    21,182    84,508    577,232 
                          
Agricultural   15,477    1,574    27    -    17,078 
Commercial and Industrial   83,780    7,529    3,078    5,021    99,408 
Small Business Administration   16,251    -    852    3,903    21,006 
Direct finance leases   6,089    63    -    591    6,743 
Consumer loans   30,004    1,006    808    4,306    36,124 
Total Gross Loans and Leases  $570,988   $62,327   $25,947   $98,329   $757,591 

 

17
 

 

Past Due and Nonperforming Assets

 

Nonperforming assets are comprised of loans for which the Company is no longer accruing interest, and foreclosed assets, including mobile homes and other real estate owned (“OREO”). OREO consists of properties acquired by foreclosure or similar means, which the Company is offering or will offer for sale. Nonperforming loans and leases result when reasonable doubt exists with regard to the ability of the Company to collect all principal and interest on a loan or lease. At that point, we stop accruing interest on the loan or lease in question, and reverse any previously-recognized interest to the extent that it is uncollected or associated with interest-reserve loans. Any asset for which principal or interest has been in default for 90 days or more is also placed on non-accrual status, even if interest is still being received, unless the asset is both well secured and in the process of collection. An aging of the Company’s loan balances, by number of days past due as of the indicated dates, is presented in the following tables:

 

Loan Portfolio Aging                            
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)                            
   September 30, 2012 
   30-59 Days
Past Due
   60-89 Days Past
Due
   90 Days Or More
Past Due
   Total Past
Due
   Current   Total
Financing
Receivables
   Non-Accrual
Loans(1)
 
Real Estate:                                   
1-4 Family residential construction  $1,558   $-   $-   $1,558   $5,454   $7,012   $1,558 
Other construction/Land   689    -    572    1,261    33,683    34,944    1,349 
1-4 Family - closed-end   1,294    173    1,466    2,933    98,667    101,600    5,590 
Equity Lines   24    290    66    380    61,512    61,892    732 
Multi-family residential   -    -    -    -    5,201    5,201    - 
Commercial real estate - owner occupied   594    734    1,845    3,173    171,994    175,167    6,409 
Commercial real estate - non-owner occupied   -    22    711    733    91,082    91,815    5,193 
Farmland   232    -    -    232    61,702    61,934    1,943 
Total Real Estate   4,391    1,219    4,660    10,270    529,295    539,565    22,774 
                                    
Agricultural   162    -    -    162    20,807    20,969    999 
Commercial and Industrial   1,060    219    292    1,571    229,583    231,154    1,307 
Small Business Administration   854    845    1,701    3,400    16,828    20,228    2,331 
Direct finance leases   38    -    190    228    4,515    4,743    190 
Consumer loans   354    69    111    534    29,937    30,471    1,253 
Total Gross Loans and Leases  $6,859   $2,352   $6,954   $16,165   $830,965   $847,130   $28,854 

 

(1) Included in Total Financing Receivables

 

   December 31, 2011 
   30-59 Days
Past Due
   60-89 Days Past
Due
   90 Days Or More
Past Due(2)
   Total Past
Due
   Current   Total
Financing
Receivables
   Non-Accrual
Loans(1)
 
                 
Real Estate:                                   
1-4 Family residential construction  $-   $-   $-   $-   $8,488   $8,488   $2,244 
Other construction/Land   1,354    -    1,417    2,771    37,289    40,060    4,083 
1-4 Family - closed-end   1,777    1,835    1,661    5,273    99,680    104,953    7,605 
Equity Lines   253    511    640    1,404    65,093    66,497    1,309 
Multi-family residential   -    -    2,941    2,941    5,238    8,179    2,941 
Commercial real estate - owner occupied   3,070    1,038    5,581    9,689    173,381    183,070    7,086 
Commercial real estate - non-owner occupied   1,031    577    7,128    8,736    97,107    105,843    13,958 
Farmland   6,436    -    188    6,624    53,518    60,142    6,919 
Total Real Estate   13,921    3,961    19,556    37,438    539,794    577,232    46,145 
                                    
Agricultural   -    -    -    -    17,078    17,078    - 
Commercial and Industrial   701    386    3,160    4,247    95,161    99,408    3,778 
Small Business Administration   828    917    2,715    4,460    16,546    21,006    3,452 
Direct finance leases   63    -    591    654    6,089    6,743    591 
Consumer loans   520    619    838    1,977    34,147    36,124    2,144 
Total Gross Loans and Leases  $16,033   $5,883   $26,860   $48,776   $708,815   $757,591   $56,110 

 

(1) Included in Total Financing Receivables

(2) Includes Small Business Administration loans over 90 days past due and still accruing in the amount of $48,000.

 

18
 

 

Troubled Debt Restructurings

 

A loan that is modified for a borrower who is experiencing financial difficulty is classified as a troubled debt restructuring (“TDR”), if the modification constitutes a concession. At September 30, 2012, the Company had a total of $50.7 million in TDR’s, including $13.8 million in TDR’s that were on non-accrual status. Generally, a non-accrual loan that has been modified as a TDR remains on non-accrual status for a period of at least six months to demonstrate the borrower’s ability to comply with the modified terms. However, performance prior to the modification, or significant events that coincide with the modification, could result in a loan’s return to accrual status after a shorter performance period or even at the time of loan modification. TDR’s may have the TDR designation removed in the calendar year following the restructuring, if the loan is in compliance with all modified terms and is yielding a market rate of interest. Regardless of the period of time that has elapsed, if the borrower’s ability to meet the revised payment schedule is uncertain then the loan will be kept on non-accrual status. Moreover, a TDR is generally considered to be in default when it appears that the customer will not likely be able to repay all principal and interest pursuant to the terms of the restructured agreement.

 

The Company may agree to different types of concessions when modifying a loan or lease. The tables below summarize TDR’s which were modified during the noted periods, by type of concession:

 

Troubled Debt Restructurings, by Type of Loan Modification

(dollars in thousands, unaudited) 

   For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2012 
   Rate
Modification
   Term
Modification
   Interest Only
Modification
   Rate & Term
Modification
   Rate &
Interest Only
Modification
   Term &
Interest Only
Modification
   Rate, Term
& Interest
Only
Modification
   Total 
Trouble Debt Restructurings                                        
Real Estate:                                        
Other construction/Land  $-   $158   $-   $309   $-   $-   $-   $467 
1-4 family - closed-end   -    228    -    41    -    222    -    491 
Equity Lines   -    29    -    -    -    -    -    29 
Commercial real estate - owner occupied   -    2,305    -    1,184    -    -    -    3,489 
Commercial real estate - non owner occupied   -    328    -    60    -    -    -    388 
Total Real Estate Loans   -    3,048    -    1,594    -    222    -    4,864 
Agricultural Products   -    -    -    -    -    -    -    - 
Commercial and Industrial   -    251    -    531    -    -    -    782 
Consumer loans   -    1,042    -    225    -    -    47    1,314 
Small Business Administration Loans   -    200    -    475    -    -    -    675 
   $-   $4,541   $-   $2,825   $-   $222   $47   $7,635 

 

   For the Year Ended December 31, 2011 
   Rate
Modification
   Term
Modification
   Interest Only
Modification
   Rate & Term
Modification
   Rate &
Interest Only
Modification
   Term &
Interest Only
Modification
   Rate, Term
& Interest
Only
Modification
   Total 
Trouble Debt Restructurings                                        
Real Estate:                                        
Other construction/Land  $-   $555   $-   $754   $-   $6,188   $-   $7,497 
1-4 family - closed-end   -    6,419    -    151    561    48    421    7,600 
Equity Lines   -    71    426    -    78    -    -    575 
Commercial real estate - owner occupied   -    1,893    1,231    297    542    -    -    3,963 
Commercial real estate - non owner occupied   7,400    -    -    1,069    6,420    -    -    14,889 
Total Real Estate Loans   7,400    8,938    1,657    2,271    7,601    6,236    421    34,524 
Agricultural Products   -    -    -    -    -    -    12    12 
Commercial and Industrial   19    342    23    1,188    -    384    -    1,956 
Consumer loans   278    495    -    2,069    282    -    85    3,209 
Small Business Administration Loans   -    621    106    46    -    -    -    773 
   $7,697   $10,396   $1,786   $5,574   $7,883   $6,620   $518   $40,474 

 

19
 

 

The following tables present, by class, additional details related to loans classified as TDR’s during the three-month and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2012, including the recorded investment in the loan both before and after modification and balances that were modified during those periods:

 

Troubled Debt Restructurings                    
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)                    
   For the Three Months Ended September 30, 2012 
       Pre-
Modification
   Post-
Modification
  
    
   Number of
Loans
   Outstanding
Recorded
Investment
   Outstanding
Recorded
Investment
   Reserve
Difference(1)
   Reserve 
Real Estate:                         
Other Construction/Land   4   $361   $355   $(153)  $9 
1-4 family - closed-end   2    159    159    (7)   11 
Equity Lines   0    -    -    -    - 
Commercial real estate- owner occupied   3    889    889    15    360 
Commercial real estate- non-owner occupied   1    60    60    -    1 
Total Real Estate Loans        1,469    1,463    (145)   381 
                          
Agricultural products   0    -    -    -    - 
Commercial and Industrial   7    389    382    (80)   7 
Consumer loans   13    459    455    41    62 
Small Business Administration Loans   1    200    200    6    50 
        $2,517   $2,500   $(178)  $500 

 

(1) This represents the change in the ALLL reserve for these credits measured as the difference between the specific post-modification impairment reserve and the pre-modification reserve calculated under our general allowance for loan loss methodology.

 

   For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2012 
       Pre-
Modification
   Post-
Modification
       
   Number of
Loans
   Outstanding
Recorded
Investment
   Outstanding
Recorded
Investment
   Reserve
Difference(1)
   Reserve 
Real Estate:                         
Other Construction/Land   6   $472   $467   $(143)  $20 
1-4 family - closed-end   5    503    491    20    57 
Equity Lines   1    29    29    13    29 
Commercial real estate- owner occupied   6    3,489    3,489    (57)   411 
Commercial real estate- non-owner occupied   3    390    388    (45)   8 
Total Real Estate Loans        4,883    4,864    (212)   525 
                          
Agricultural products   0    -    -    -    - 
Commercial and Industrial   14    796    782    (107)   79 
Consumer loans   27    1,320    1,314    (167)   207 
Small Business Administration Loans   2    668    675    8    169 
        $7,667   $7,635   $(478)  $980 

 

(1) This represents the change in the ALLL reserve for these credits measured as the difference between the specific post-modification impairment reserve and the pre-modification reserve calculated under our general allowance for loan loss methodology.

 

20
 

 

The table below summarizes TDR’s that defaulted during the period noted, and any charge-offs on those TDR’s resulting from such default.

 

Troubled Debt Restructurings(1)            
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)            
   Subsequent default three months ended September 30, 2012 
   Number of Loans   Recorded
Investment
   Charge-Offs 
Real Estate:               
Other Construction/Land   0   $-   $- 
1-4 family - closed-end   1    222    - 
Equity Lines   0    -    - 
Commercial real estate- owner occupied   1    332    - 
Commercial real estate- non owner occupied   0    -    - 
Total Real Estate Loans        554    - 
                
Agricultural products   0    -    - 
Commercial and Industrial   1    66    66 
Consumer Loans   0    -    - 
Small Business Administration Loans   0    -    - 
        $620   $66 

 

   Subsequent default nine months ended September 30, 2012 
   Number of Loans   Recorded
Investment
   Charge-Offs 
Real Estate:               
Other Construction/Land   0   $-   $- 
1-4 family - closed-end   1    222    - 
Equity Lines   0    -    - 
Commercial real estate- owner occupied   1    332    - 
Commercial real estate- non owner occupied   0    -    - 
Total Real Estate Loans        554    - 
                
Agricultural products   0    -    - 
Commercial and Industrial   2    175    175 
Consumer Loans   0    -    - 
Small Business Administration Loans   0    -    - 
        $729   $175 

 

(1) Troubled Debt Restructurings within the previous 12 months for which there was a payment default in the periods noted.

 

21
 

 

Note 12 – Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses

 

The allowance for loan and lease losses, a contra-asset, is established through a provision for loan and lease losses. It is maintained at a level that is considered adequate to absorb probable losses on certain specifically identified loans, as well as probable incurred losses inherent in the remaining loan portfolio. Specifically identifiable and quantifiable losses are immediately charged off against the allowance; recoveries are generally recorded only when cash payments are received subsequent to the charge off. We employ a systematic methodology, consistent with FASB guidelines on loss contingencies and impaired loans, for determining the appropriate level of the allowance for loan and lease losses and adjusting it at least quarterly. Pursuant to that methodology, impaired loans and leases are individually analyzed and a criticized asset action plan is completed specifying the financial status of the borrower and, if applicable, the characteristics and condition of collateral and any associated liquidation plan. A specific loss allowance is created for each impaired loan, if necessary. The following tables disclose the unpaid principal balance, recorded investment (including accrued interest), average recorded investment, and interest income recognized for impaired loans on our books as of the dates indicated. Balances are shown by loan type, and are further broken out by those that required an allowance and those that did not, with the associated allowance disclosed for those that required such. Included in the valuation allowance for impaired loans shown in the tables below are specific reserves allocated to TDR’s, totaling $3.131 million at September 30, 2012 and $3.635 million at December 31, 2011.

 

Impaired Loans  September 30, 2012 
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)  Unpaid
Principal
Balance(1)
   Recorded
Investment(2)
   Related
Allowance
   Average
Recorded
Investment
   Interest Income
Recognized(3)
 
With an Allowance Recorded                         
Real Estate:                         
1-4 family residential construction  $-   $-   $-   $-   $- 
Other Construction/Land   1,432    1,432    435    1,451    24 
1-4 Family - closed-end   10,197    10,197    1,150    10,236    256 
Equity Lines   1,087    1,087    483    1,089    7 
Multifamily residential   -    -    -    -    - 
Commercial real estate- owner occupied   3,452    3,451    628    3,475    74 
Commercial real estate- non-owner occupied   6,882    6,883    545    7,380    241 
Farmland   91    91    3    95    - 
Total Real Estate   23,141    23,141    3,244    23,726    602 
Agricultural   1,363    999    2    945    - 
Commercial and Industrial   2,277    2,242    571    2,334    35 
Small Business Administration   2,559    2,559    768    2,559    37 
Direct finance leases   190    190    92    190    - 
Consumer loans   4,418    4,390    951    4,502    134 
    33,948    33,521    5,628    34,256    808 
With no Related Allowance Recorded                         
Real Estate:                         
1-4 family residential construction  $4,350   $1,558   $-   $1,579   $- 
Other Construction/Land   7,510    6,857    -    6,894    244 
1-4 Family - closed-end   9,423    9,132    -    9,178    87 
Equity Lines   324    324    -    330    1 
Multifamily residential   -    -    -    -    - 
Commercial real estate- owner occupied   7,554    6,632    -    6,867    66 
Commercial real estate- non-owner occupied   12,135    11,980    -    12,107    493 
Farmland   1,852    1,852    -    1,861    - 
Total Real Estate   43,148    38,335    -    38,816    891 
Agricultural   -    -    -    -    - 
Commercial and Industrial   -    -    -    -    - 
Small Business Administration   863    863    -    863    - 
Direct finance leases   -    -    -    -    - 
Consumer loans   -    -    -    6    - 
    44,011    39,198    -    39,685    891 
  Total  $77,959   $72,719   $5,628   $73,941   $1,699 

 

(1)Contractual principal balance due from customer.

(2)Principal balance on Company's books, less any direct charge offs.

(3)Interest income is recognized on performing balances on a regular accrual basis.

 

22
 

 

Impaired Loans  December 31, 2011 
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)  Unpaid
Principal
Balance(1)
   Recorded
Investment(2)
   Related
Allowance
   Average
Recorded
Investment
   Interest Income
Recognized(3)
 
With an Allowance Recorded                         
Real Estate:                         
1-4 family residential construction  $188   $188   $13   $188   $- 
Other Construction/Land   3,477    2,906    735    2,925    89 
1-4 Family - closed-end   8,086    8,057    821    8,071    222 
Equity Lines   1,072    1,072    243    1,069    - 
Multifamily residential   2,941    2,941    850    2,950    - 
Commercial RE- owner occupied   3,628    3,628    834    3,645    24 
Commercial RE- non-owner occupied   17,454    17,454    1,733    17,842    274 
Farmland   -    -    -    -    - 
Total Real Estate   36,846    36,246    5,229    36,690    609 
Agriculture   -    -    -    -    - 
Commercial and Industrial   4,135    4,106    1,481    4,197    24 
Small Business Administration   3,902    3,903    1,212    3,903    2 
Direct finance leases   591    591    291    591    - 
Consumer loans   3,896    3,858    541    3,920    56 
    49,370    48,704    8,754    49,301    691 
With no Related Allowance Recorded                         
Real Estate:                         
1-4 family residential construction  $4,784   $2,056   $-   $2,069   $- 
Other Construction/Land   11,740    9,081    -    9,326    193 
1-4 Family - closed-end   12,467    12,203    -    12,250    101 
Equity Lines   307    307    -    318    - 
Multifamily residential   -    -    -    -    - 
Commercial RE- owner occupied   6,049    6,030    -    6,136    17 
Commercial RE- non-owner occupied   11,818    11,666    -    12,033    190 
Farmland   7,468    6,919    -    6,956    - 
Total Real Estate   54,633    48,262    -    49,088    501 
Agriculture   -    -    -    -    - 
Commercial and Industrial   916    915    -    965    11 
Small Business Administration   -    -    -    -    - 
Direct finance leases   -    -    -    -    - 
Consumer loans   448    448    -    462    11 
    55,997    49,625    -    50,515    523 
  Total  $105,367   $98,329   $8,754   $99,816   $1,214 

 

(1)Contractual principal balance due from customer

(2)Principal balance on Company's books, less any direct charge offs.

(3)Interest income is recognized on performing balances on a regular accrual basis

 

23
 

 

Similar but condensed information as of the dates noted is provided in the following table:

 

Impaired Loans        
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)        
   September 30, 2012   December 31, 2011 
         
Impaired loans without a valuation allowance  $39,198   $49,625 
Impaired loans with a valuation allowance   33,521    48,704 
Total impaired loans (1)  $72,719   $98,329 
Valuation allowance related to impaired loans  $5,628   $8,754 
Total non-accrual loans  $28,854   $56,110 
Total loans past-due ninety days or more and still accruing  $-   $48 

 

(1) Principal balance on Company's books less any direct charge-off

 

The specific loss allowance for an impaired loan represents the difference between the face value of the loan and either its current appraised value less estimated disposition costs, or its net present value as determined by a discounted cash flow analysis. The discounted cash flow approach is used to measure impairment on loans for which it is anticipated that repayment will be provided from cash flows other than those generated solely by the disposition or operation of underlying collateral. Any change in impairment attributable to the passage of time is accommodated by adjusting the loss allowance accordingly.

 

For loans where repayment is expected to be provided by the disposition or operation of the underlying collateral, impairment is measured using the fair value of the collateral. If the collateral value, net of the expected costs of disposition where applicable, is less than the loan balance, then a specific loss reserve is established for the shortfall in collateral coverage. If the discounted collateral value is greater than or equal to the loan balance, no specific loss reserve is required. At the time a collateral-dependent loan is designated as nonperforming, a new appraisal is ordered and typically received within 30 to 60 days if a recent appraisal was not already available. We generally use external appraisals to determine the fair value of the underlying collateral for nonperforming real estate loans, although the Company’s licensed staff appraisers may update older appraisals based on current market conditions and property value trends. Until an updated appraisal is received, the Company uses the existing appraisal to determine the amount of the specific loss allowance that may be required, and adjusts the specific loss allowance, as necessary, once a new appraisal is received. Updated appraisals are generally ordered at least annually for collateral-dependent loans that remain impaired. Current appraisals were available for 83% of the Company’s impaired real estate loan balances at September 30, 2012. Furthermore, the Company analyzes collateral-dependent loans on at least a quarterly basis, to determine if any portion of the recorded investment in such loans can be identified as uncollectible and would therefore constitute a confirmed loss. All amounts deemed to be uncollectible are promptly charged off against the Company’s allowance for loan and lease losses, with the loan then carried at the fair value of the collateral, as appraised, less estimated costs of disposition if applicable. Once a charge-off or write-down is recorded, it will not be restored to the loan balance on the Company’s accounting books.

 

Our methodology also provides that a “general” allowance be established for probable incurred losses inherent in loans and leases that are not impaired. Unimpaired loan balances are segregated by credit quality, and are then evaluated in pools with common characteristics. At the present time, pools are based on the same segmentation of loan types presented in our regulatory filings. While this methodology utilizes historical loss data and other measurable information, the classification of loans and the establishment of the allowance for loan and lease losses are both to some extent based on management’s judgment and experience. Our methodology incorporates a variety of risk considerations, both quantitative and qualitative, in establishing an allowance for loan and lease losses that management believes is appropriate at each reporting date. Quantitative information includes our historical loss experience, delinquency and charge-off trends, and current collateral values. Qualitative factors include the general economic environment in our markets and, in particular, the state of the agricultural industry and other key industries in the Central San Joaquin Valley. Lending policies and procedures (including underwriting standards), the experience and abilities of lending staff, the quality of loan review, credit concentrations (by geography, loan type, industry and collateral type), the rate of loan portfolio growth, and changes in legal or regulatory requirements are additional factors that are considered. The total general reserve established for probable incurred losses on unimpaired loans was $7.2 million at September 30, 2012.

 

24
 

 

During the nine months ended September 30, 2012 we adjusted certain qualitative factors used in determining our allowance for loan and lease losses pursuant to our assessment that default risk in non-impaired loans is declining, and further refined the methodology for determining proxy loss rates that are incorporated into the model when there is insufficient data to utilize the Bank’s own historical loan rates. Other than those adjustments, there have been no material changes implemented in 2012 to the methodology used to determine our allowance for loan and lease losses. As we add new products and expand our geographic coverage, and as the economic environment changes, we expect to continue to enhance our methodology to keep pace with the size and complexity of the loan and lease portfolio and respond to pressures created by external forces. We engage outside firms on a regular basis to assess our methodology and perform independent credit reviews of our loan and lease portfolio. In addition, the Company’s external auditors, the FDIC, and the California DFI review the allowance for loan and lease losses as an integral part of their audit and examination processes. Management believes that the current methodology is appropriate given our size and level of complexity. The tables that follow detail the activity in the allowance for loan and lease losses for the periods noted:

 

25
 

 

Allowance for Credit Losses and Recorded Investment in Financing Receivables

(dollars in thousands, unaudited)

   For the Three Months Ended September 30, 2012 
   Real Estate   Agricultural
Products
   Commercial and
Industrial
   Small Business
Administration
   Direct Finance
Leases
   Consumer   Total 
                             
Allowance for credit losses:                                   
Beginning Balance  $7,926   $18   $2,919   $1,165   $212   $1,623   $13,863 
Charge-offs   (3,778)   (634)   (675)   (335)   -    (526)   (5,948)
Recoveries   33    -    70    35    -    53    191 
Provision   2,423    629    550    79    (17)   1,036    4,700 
                                    
Ending Balance  $6,604   $13   $2,864   $944   $195   $2,186   $12,806 

 

   For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2012 
   Real Estate   Agricultural
Products
   Commercial and
Industrial
   Small Business
Administration
   Direct Finance
Leases
   Consumer   Total 
                             
Allowance for credit losses:                                   
Beginning Balance  $8,260   $19   $4,638   $1,447   $311   $2,608   $17,283 
Charge-offs   (9,179)   (634)   (3,215)   (753)   (198)   (1,873)   (15,852)
Recoveries   222    -    262    82    -    199    765 
Provision   7,301    628    1,179    168    82    1,252    10,610 
                                    
Ending Balance  $6,604   $13   $2,864   $944   $195   $2,186   $12,806 
                                    
Reserves:                                   
Specific  $3,244   $2   $571   $768   $92   $951   $5,628 
General   3,360    11    2,293    176    103    1,235    7,178 
                                    
Ending Balance  $6,604   $13   $2,864   $944   $195   $2,186   $12,806 
                                    
Loans evaluated for impairment:                                   
Individually  $61,476   $999   $2,242   $3,422   $190   $4,390   $72,719 
Collectively   478,089    19,970    228,912    16,806    4,553    26,081    774,411 
                                    
Ending Balance  $539,565   $20,969   $231,154   $20,228   $4,743   $30,471   $847,130 

 

   For the Year Ended December 31, 2011 
   Real Estate   Agricultural
Products
   Commercial and
Industrial
   Small Business
Administration
   Direct Finance
Leases
   Consumer   Total 
                             
Allowance for credit losses:                                   
Beginning Balance  $10,143   $62   $6,379   $1,274   $284   $2,996   $21,138 
Charge-offs   (10,596)   -    (3,407)   (148)   (82)   (2,754)   (16,987)
Recoveries   418    -    323    71    57    263    1,132 
Provision   8,295    (43)   1,343    250    52    2,103    12,000 
                                    
Ending Balance  $8,260   $19   $4,638   $1,447   $311   $2,608   $17,283 
                                    
Reserves:                                   
Specific  $5,229   $-   $1,481   $1,212   $291   $541   $8,754 
General   3,031    19    3,157    235    20    2,067    8,529 
                                    
Ending Balance  $8,260   $19   $4,638   $1,447   $311   $2,608   $17,283 
                                    
Loans evaluated for impairment:                                   
Individually  $84,508   $-   $5,021   $3,903   $591   $4,306   $98,329 
Collectively   492,724    17,078    94,387    17,103    6,152    31,818    659,262 
                                    
Ending Balance  $577,232   $17,078   $99,408   $21,006   $6,743   $36,124   $757,591 

 

 

26
 

 

Note 13 – Recent Developments

 

On June 12, 2012, banking regulators issued a notice of proposed rulemaking outlining potential new regulatory capital guidelines which conform to Basel III requirements. While there is lingering uncertainty with regard to exemptions that might apply to community banks, if ultimately adopted as proposed the new rules would, among other things:

1)add a new regulatory capital component referred to as “common equity tier 1 capital”, and establish threshold ratios for this new component (e.g., 6.5% to be “well-capitalized”);
2)impose a new “capital conservation buffer” of at least 2.5% of risk-weighted assets to be added to common equity tier 1 capital, and limit dividend payments, share buybacks, and certain discretionary bonus payments to executive officers if the capital conservation buffer is not achieved;
3)provide a phase-out period for the inclusion of trust-preferred securities as tier 1 capital (although TRUPS would reportedly still be includible in tier 2 capital);
4)require us to include accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI) in tier 1 capital, which could significantly increase capital volatility;
5)impose additional constraints on the inclusion of minority interests, mortgage servicing assets, and deferred tax assets in regulatory capital;
6)adjust risk-weightings for certain assets, such as the assignment of a risk weighting of 150% to certain acquisition/development and construction loans, a risk weighting of 150% for loans that are more than 90-days past due or are on non-accrual status, and risk weightings for residential mortgages based on loan-to-value ratios and certain other loan characteristics; and
7)increase minimum required ratios over a phase-in period, and increase the threshold for a “well-capitalized” classification for the Tier 1 Risk-Based Capital Ratio from 6% to 8%.

 

The largest impact on the consolidated Company would likely come from the exclusion of $30 million in TRUPS from tier 1 capital. Other potential changes that could materially affect us include the additional constraints on the inclusion of deferred tax assets in capital, increased risk weightings for nonperforming loans and acquisition/development loans, and the inclusion of accumulated other comprehensive income in regulatory capital. The inclusion of AOCI would benefit us as long as we have a net unrealized gain on securities, but would lower our regulatory capital ratios if interest rates increase and our unrealized gain becomes an unrealized loss.

 

The aggregate effect of these regulatory changes on Sierra Bancorp and Bank of the Sierra cannot yet be determined with any degree of certainty, but our preliminary estimates indicate that if the changes are implemented and when they become fully phased-in they could have a material impact on our Tier 1 Leverage Ratio and our consolidated Tier 1 Risk-Based Capital Ratio. Nevertheless, given our current level of capital we should be well-positioned to absorb the impact of Basel III without constraining our organic growth plans, although no assurance can be provided in that regard.

 

27
 

 

PART I - FINANCIAL INFORMATION

ITEM 2

MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND

ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION

AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

 

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

 

This Form 10-Q includes forward-looking statements that involve inherent risks and uncertainties. Words such as “expects”, “anticipates”, “believes”, “projects”, and “estimates” or variations of such words and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. These statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict. Therefore, actual outcomes and results may differ materially from what is expressed, forecast in, or implied by such forward-looking statements.

 

A variety of factors could have a material adverse impact on the Company’s financial condition or results of operations, and should be considered when evaluating the potential future financial performance of the Company. They include, but are not limited to, further deterioration in economic conditions in the Company’s service areas; risks associated with fluctuations in interest rates; liquidity risks; increases in nonperforming assets and net credit losses that could occur, particularly in times of weak economic conditions or rising interest rates; the Company’s ability to secure buyers for foreclosed properties; declines in the market value of available-for-sale securities that could result if interest rates change substantially or an issuer has real or perceived financial difficulties; the Company’s ability to attract and retain skilled employees; the Company’s ability to successfully deploy new technology; the success of branch expansion; and risks associated with the multitude of current and prospective laws and regulations to which the Company is and will be subject.

 

CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES

 

The Company’s financial statements are prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States. The financial information and disclosures contained within those statements are significantly impacted by Management’s estimates and judgments, which are based on historical experience and various other assumptions that are believed to be reasonable under current circumstances. Actual results may differ from those estimates under divergent conditions.

 

Critical accounting policies are those that involve the most complex and subjective decisions and assessments, and have the greatest potential impact on the Company’s stated results of operations. In Management’s opinion, the Company’s critical accounting policies deal with the following areas: the establishment of the Company’s allowance for loan and lease losses, as explained in detail in Note 12 to the consolidated financial statements and the “Provision for Loan and Lease Losses” and “Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses” sections of this discussion and analysis; the valuation of impaired loans and foreclosed assets, which is discussed in Note 11 to the consolidated financial statements and in the “Nonperforming Assets” and “Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses” sections of this discussion and analysis; income taxes, especially with regard to the ability of the Company to recover deferred tax assets, as discussed in the “Provision for Income Taxes” and “Other Assets” sections of this discussion and analysis; goodwill, which is evaluated annually for impairment based on the fair value of the Company as discussed in the “Other Assets” section of this discussion and analysis; and equity-based compensation, which is discussed in greater detail in Note 5 to the consolidated financial statements. Critical accounting areas are evaluated on an ongoing basis to ensure that the Company’s financial statements incorporate the most recent expectations with regard to those areas.

 

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OVERVIEW OF THE RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

AND FINANCIAL CONDITION

 

results of operations Summary

 

Third quarter 2012 compared to Third quarter 2011

 

Net income for the quarter ended September 30, 2012 was $1.635 million, representing a decline of $891,000, or 35%, relative to net income of $2.526 million for the quarter ended September 30, 2011. Basic and diluted earnings per share for the third quarter of 2012 were $0.12, compared to $0.18 basic and diluted earnings per share for the third quarter of 2011. The Company’s annualized return on average equity was 3.74% and annualized return on average assets was 0.46% for the quarter ended September 30, 2012, compared to a return on equity of 6.00% and return on assets of 0.74% for the quarter ended September 30, 2011. The primary drivers behind the variance in third quarter net income are as follows:

 

·Net interest income was down $418,000, or 3%, due to a 29 basis point drop in the Company’s net interest margin that was partially offset by a $44 million increase in average interest-earning assets. Factors contributing to the negative variance in the net interest margin include a shift from real estate and consumer loan balances into lower-yielding commercial loan balances, and lower loan yields resulting from increased competition for quality loans. However, those unfavorable factors were partially offset by a $15 million drop in the average balance of nonperforming loans, sizeable increases in the average balances of non-interest bearing demand deposits and equity, a shift in average interest-bearing deposit balances from higher-cost time deposits into lower-cost non-maturity deposits, and a drop in deposit rates due to the general lack of competitive pressures.

 

·The Company’s loan loss provision was increased by $1.7 million, or 57%. The $4.7 million loan loss provision in the third quarter of 2012 was used to provide specific reserves for newly-impaired loans, replenish reserves subsequent to charge-offs, and establish general reserves for net growth in loan balances.

 

·Total non-interest revenue increased by $527,000, or 16%, due in large part to an increase in income on bank-owned life insurance (BOLI) associated with deferred compensation plans, which was partially offset by higher net losses on the sale of OREO in the third quarter of 2012.

 

·Total operating expense increased by $443,000, or 4%. The largest variances in operating expense include increases in deferred compensation accruals for officers and directors (related to the increase in BOLI income discussed above), lower marketing costs related to the timing of payments, a drop in expenses associated with OREO, higher regulatory assessments due to accrual adjustments made in the third quarter of 2011, an increase in fraud losses on debit cards, and lower occupancy costs resulting in part from the purchase of our headquarters office building in the fourth quarter of 2011.

 

·The Company had a tax benefit of $321,000 in the third quarter of 2012, relative to a tax provision of $822,000 in the third quarter of 2011 which was 25% of pre-tax income. The negative tax provisioning rate for the third quarter of 2012 is primarily the result of lower taxable income relative to the Company’s available tax credits, and was impacted further by a sizeable increase in tax-exempt BOLI income for that quarter.

 

First Nine months 2012 compared to First Nine months 2011

 

Net income for the first nine months of 2012 was $6.087 million, representing a decline of $152,000, or 2%, relative to net income of $6.239 million for the first nine months of 2011. Basic and diluted earnings per share for the first nine months of 2012 were $0.43, compared to $0.45 basic earnings per share and $0.44 diluted earnings per share for the first nine months of 2011. The Company’s annualized return on average equity was 4.73% and annualized return on average assets was 0.59% for the nine months ended September 30, 2012, compared to a return on equity of 5.09% and return on assets of 0.63% for the nine months ended September 30, 2011. The primary drivers behind the variance in year-to-date net income are as follows:

 

·Net interest income declined $1.855 million, or 5%, due to a 35 basis point drop in the Company’s net interest margin partially offset by a $33 million increase in average interest-earning assets. Factors contributing to the negative variance in the net interest margin include a proportionately small increase in average loans relative to the increase in lower-yielding investments, a shift from real estate and consumer loan balances into lower-yielding commercial loan balances, and lower loan yields resulting from increased competition for quality loans. However, as with the quarterly comparison, those unfavorable factors were partially offset by a drop in the average balance of nonperforming loans, sizeable increases in the average balances of non-interest bearing demand deposits and equity, a shift in average interest-bearing deposit balances from higher-cost time deposits into lower-cost non-maturity deposits, and a drop in deposit rates due to the general lack of competitive pressures.

 

29
 

 

·The Company’s loan loss provision was increased by $1.010 million, or 11%. As with the quarter, the $10.610 million loan loss provision for the year-to-date period was used to provide specific reserves for newly-impaired loans, replenish reserves subsequent to charge-offs, and establish general reserves for net growth in loan balances.

 

·Total non-interest revenue increased by $1.803 million, or 17%, due in large measure to an increase in BOLI income associated with deferred compensation plans, and accrual adjustments which caused a drop in expenses associated with low-income housing tax credit investments and other limited partnerships (those expenses are accounted for as a reduction in income). Debit card interchange income was also up for the year-to-date comparison, and we had $161,000 in gains on the sale of investments during the first nine months of 2012. Another favorable variance came from risk-adjusted fees on certain deposits accounts which were implemented in the fourth quarter of 2011, although that increase was offset to a great extent by a drop in fee income on returned item and overdraft charges.

 

·Total operating expense declined by $190,000, or 1%. Favorable variances in operating expense include lower marketing costs related to the timing of payments, a drop in occupancy expense, lower regulatory assessments, and declining OREO costs. Unfavorable variances include higher deferred compensation accruals for officers and directors (related to the increase in BOLI income discussed above), higher data processing costs due to $181,000 in non-recurring vendor credits received in the first quarter of 2011, higher telecommunications expense, and higher debit card losses caused by a surge in fraud-related incidents in the third quarter of 2012.

 

·Because of the tax benefit recorded in the third quarter of 2012, the Company’s provision for income taxes dropped for the year-to-date period to only $54,000, or less than 1% of pre-tax income. The Company’s tax provision was $774,000 for the first nine months of 2011, which equates to 11% of pre-tax income.

 

Financial Condition Summary

 

September 30, 2012 relative to December 31, 2011

 

The most significant characteristics of, and changes in, the Company’s balance sheet during the first nine months of 2012 are outlined below:

 

·The Company’s assets totaled $1.423 billion at September 30, 2012, an increase of $88 million, or 7%, relative to total assets of $1.335 billion at December 31, 2011. Total assets increased due mainly to growth in loans, comprised primarily of an increase in balances outstanding on mortgage warehouse lines that was partially offset by a $27 million drop in nonperforming loans.

 

·Total nonperforming assets fell by $23 million, or 32%, to $49 million at September 30, 2012 from $71 million at December 31, 2011. In addition to nonperforming assets, the Company had $37 million in performing troubled debt restructurings (TDR’s) as of September 30, 2012, a slight increase relative to year-end 2011.

 

·The Company’s allowance for loan and lease losses was $12.8 million as of September 30, 2012, a decline of over $4 million, or 26%, relative to year-end 2011. The drop was due to write-downs on certain impaired collateral-dependent loans against previously-established specific reserves, which did not directly lead to the need for reserve replenishment, as well as a reduction in general reserves consistent with the Company’s improvement in asset quality. Net loans charged off against the allowance totaled $15.087 million in the first nine months of 2012 relative to net charge-offs of $10.246 million in the first nine months of 2011. Because of the decline in the overall allowance and the increase in total loans, the allowance fell to 1.51% of total loans at September 30, 2012 from 2.28% at December 31, 2011.

 

30
 

 

·Total deposits increased by $60 million, or 5%. Core non-maturity deposits increased by $47 million, or 7%, including sizeable increases in non-interest bearing demand deposits, interest-bearing transaction accounts, and savings deposits. The only non-maturity deposit category that declined was money market deposits, which were down $4 million, or 5%, for the first nine months of 2012. Customer time deposits, including reciprocal deposits obtained via the Certificate of Deposit Account Registry Service (CDARS), increased by $12 million, or 4%.

 

·Despite strong growth in deposits, additional funding was obtained for loan growth via borrowings from the Federal Home Loan Bank, which increased by $21 million.

 

·Total capital increased by $6 million, or 4%, to $174 million at September 30, 2012, but risk-based capital ratios declined since capital was leveraged for organic loan growth. Our consolidated total risk-based capital ratio fell to 19.96% at September 30, 2012 from 21.72% at year-end 2011. Our tier one risk-based capital ratio was 18.70% and our tier one leverage ratio was 13.50% at September 30, 2012.

 

EARNINGS PERFORMANCE

 

The Company earns income from two primary sources. The first is net interest income, which is interest income generated by earning assets less interest expense on interest-bearing liabilities. The second is non-interest income, which consists mainly of customer service charges and fees but also comes from non-customer sources such as bank-owned life insurance. The majority of the Company’s non-interest expenses are operating costs that relate to providing a full range of banking services to our customers.

 

Net interest income AND NET INTEREST MARGIN

 

For the third quarter of 2012 relative to the third quarter of 2011 net interest income declined by $418,000, or 3%. For the year-to-date comparison, net interest income declined by $1.855 million, or 5%. The level of net interest income depends on several factors in combination, including growth in earning assets, yields on earning assets, the cost of interest-bearing liabilities, the relative volume of earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities, and the mix of products which comprise the Company’s earning assets, deposits, and other interest-bearing liabilities. Net interest income can also be impacted by the reversal of interest for loans placed on non-accrual status during the reporting period, and by the recovery of interest on loans that have been on non-accrual and are either sold or returned to accrual status.

 

The following tables show the average balance of each significant balance sheet category, and the amount of interest income or interest expense associated with each applicable category, for the noted periods. The tables also display the calculated yields on each major component of the Company’s investment and loan portfolios, the average rates paid on each key segment of the Company’s interest-bearing liabilities, and our net interest margin.

 

31
 

 

Average Balances and Rates  For the Three Months   For the Three Months 
(dollars in thousands, except per share data)  Ended September 30, 2012   Ended September 30, 2011 
   Average
Balance (1)
   Income/
Expense
   Average
Rate/Yield (2)(3)
   Average
Balance (1)
   Income/
Expense
   Average
Rate/Yield (2)(3)
 
Assets                        
Investments:                              
Federal funds sold/Due from time  $22,858   $15    0.26%  $35,763   $23    0.25%
Taxable   335,979    1,513    1.76%   340,428    2,420    2.78%
Non-taxable   81,521    700    5.09%   74,630    716    5.69%
Equity   1,840    10    2.13%   1,564    -    0.00%
Total Investments   442,198    2,238    2.30%   452,385    3,159    3.05%
                               
Loans and Leases:(4)                              
Agricultural   17,905    232    5.15%   14,455    162    4.45%
Commercial   201,435    2,662    5.26%   101,487    1,465    5.73%
Real Estate   527,474    8,402    6.34%   550,405    9,093    6.55%
Consumer   30,239    605    7.96%   38,658    971    9.97%
Direct Financing Leases   3,983    53    5.29%   6,240    89    5.66%
Nonperforming Loans   32,926    -    0.00%   48,267    -    0.00%
Total Loans and Leases   813,962    11,954    5.84%   759,512    11,780    6.15%
Total Interest Earning Assets (5)   1,256,160    14,192    4.61%   1,211,897    14,939    5.01%
Other Earning Assets   6,389              7,528           
Non-Earning Assets   143,075              131,936           
Total Assets  $1,405,624             $1,351,361           
                               
Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity                              
Interest Bearing Deposits:                              
Demand Deposits  $67,331   $60    0.35%  $28,206   $58    0.82%
NOW   194,628    123    0.25%   181,317    203    0.44%
Savings Accounts   109,070    61    0.22%   88,388    53    0.24%
Money Market   79,184    32    0.16%   130,938    85    0.26%
CDAR's   18,768    16    0.34%   43,912    58    0.52%
Certificates of Deposit<$100,000   112,412    157    0.56%   136,079    244    0.71%
Certificates of Deposit>$100,000   225,905    297    0.52%   207,012    311    0.60%
Brokered Deposits   15,000    50    1.33%   15,000    51    1.35%
Total Interest Bearing Deposits   822,298    796    0.39%   830,852    1,063    0.51%
Borrowed Funds:                              
Federal Funds Purchased   -    -    0.00%   1    -    0.00%
Repurchase Agreements   5,434    8    0.59%   4,842    7    0.57%
Short Term Borrowings   24,019    15    0.25%   638    -    0.00%
Long Term Borrowings   5,000    51    4.06%   15,000    143    3.78%
TRUPS   30,928    193    2.48%   30,928    179    2.30%
Total Borrowed Funds   65,381    267    1.62%   51,409    329    2.54%
Total Interest Bearing Liabilities   887,679    1,063    0.48%   882,261    1,392    0.63%
Non-interest Bearing Demand Deposits   327,368              285,114           
Other Liabilities   16,513              16,821           
Shareholders' Equity   174,064              167,165           
Total Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity  $1,405,624             $1,351,361           
                               
Interest Income/Interest Earning Assets             4.61%             5.01%
Interest Expense/Interest Earning Assets             0.34%             0.46%
  Net Interest Income and Margin(6)       $13,129    4.27%       $13,547    4.56%

 

(1)Average balances are obtained from the best available daily or monthly data and are net of deferred fees and related direct costs.
(2)Yields and net interest margin have been computed on a tax equivalent basis utilizing a 34% effective tax rate.
(3)Annualized
(4)Loan costs have been included in the calculation of interest income. Loan costs were approximately $(81) thousand and $94 thousand for the quarters ended September 30, 2012 and 2011.

Loans are gross of the allowance for possible loan losses.

(5)Non-accrual loans have been included in total loans for purposes of total earning assets.
(6)Net interest margin represents net interest income as a percentage of average interest-earning assets.

 

32
 

 

Average Balances and Rates  For the Nine Months   For the Nine Months 
(dollars in thousands, except per share data)  Ended September 30, 2012   Ended September 30, 2011 
   Average
Balance (1)
   Income/
Expense
   Average
Rate/Yield (2)(3)
   Average
Balance (1)
   Income/
Expense
   Average
Rate/Yield (2)(3)
 
Assets                        
Investments:                              
Federal funds sold/Due from time  $26,694   $51    0.25%  $29,447   $56    0.25%
Taxable   339,873    5,116    1.98%   310,225    6,621    2.81%
Non-taxable   77,146    2,052    5.30%   73,290    2,153    5.87%
Equity   1,698    43    3.33%   1,570    -    0.00%
Total Investments   445,411    7,262    2.45%   414,532    8,830    3.16%
                               
Loans and Leases:(4)                              
Agricultural   15,985    547    4.57%   13,485    493    4.89%
Commercial   150,343    6,157    5.47%   103,557    4,585    5.92%
Real Estate   528,233    25,326    6.40%   558,791    27,233    6.52%
Consumer   31,674    2,042    8.61%   41,237    2,861    9.28%
Direct Financing Leases   4,416    179    5.41%   7,096    308    5.80%
Nonperforming Loans   44,744    -    0.00%   48,813    -    0.00%
Total Loans and Leases   775,395    34,251    5.90%   772,979    35,480    6.14%
Total Interest Earning Assets (5)   1,220,806    41,513    4.66%   1,187,511    44,310    5.11%
Other Earning Assets   6,650              7,916           
Non-Earning Assets   141,799              132,800           
Total Assets  $1,369,255             $1,328,227           
                               
Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity                              
Interest Bearing Deposits:                              
Demand Deposits  $67,862   $190    0.37%  $9,505   $58    0.82%
NOW   193,977    457    0.31%   178,029    623    0.47%
Savings Accounts   104,793    178    0.23%   83,391    148    0.24%
Money Market   80,011    97    0.16%   150,744    467    0.41%
CDAR’s   18,583    43    0.31%   41,980    183    0.58%
Certificates of Deposit<$100,000   105,548    482    0.61%   151,758    790    0.70%
Certificates of Deposit>$100,000   224,064    892    0.53%   198,446    884    0.60%
Brokered Deposits   15,000    151    1.34%   12,308    126    1.37%
Total Interest Bearing Deposits   809,838    2,490    0.41%   826,161    3,279    0.53%
Borrowed Funds:                              
Federal Funds Purchased   -    -    0.00%   2    -    0.00%
Repurchase Agreements   3,994    18    0.60%   2,176    12    0.74%
Short Term Borrowings   12,871    23    0.24%   1,898    34    2.40%
Long Term Borrowings   7,628    231    4.05%   15,000    425    3.79%
TRUPS   30,928    586    2.53%   30,928    540    2.33%
Total Borrowed Funds   55,421    858    2.07%   50,004    1,011    2.70%
Total Interest Bearing Liabilities   865,259    3,348    0.52%   876,165    4,290    0.65%
Non-interest Bearing Demand Deposits   314,804              272,296           
Other Liabilities   17,133              15,961           
Shareholders’ Equity   172,059              163,805           
Total Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity  $1,369,255             $1,328,227           
                               
Interest Income/Interest Earning Assets             4.66%             5.11%
Interest Expense/Interest Earning Assets             0.37%             0.48%
  Net Interest Income and Margin(6)       $38,165    4.29%       $40,020    4.64%

 

(1)Average balances are obtained from the best available daily or monthly data and are net of deferred fees and related direct costs.
(2)Yields and net interest margin have been computed on a tax equivalent basis utilizing a 34% effective tax rate.
(3)Annualized
(4)Loan costs have been included in the calculation of interest income. Loan costs were approximately $149 thousand and $432 thousand for the nine months ended September 30, 2012 and 2011.

Loans are gross of the allowance for possible loan losses.

(5)Non-accrual loans have been included in total loans for purposes of total earning assets.
(6)Net interest margin represents net interest income as a percentage of average interest-earning assets.

 

33
 

 

The Volume and Rate Variances table below sets forth the dollar difference in interest earned or paid for each major category of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities for the noted periods, and the amount of such change attributable to changes in average balances (volume) or changes in average interest rates. Volume variances are equal to the increase or decrease in average balance multiplied by prior period rates, and rate variances are equal to the increase or decrease in rate times prior period average balances. Variances attributable to both rate and volume changes are calculated by multiplying the change in rate by the change in average balance, and have been allocated to the rate variance.

 

Volume & Rate Variances  Three Months Ended September 30,   Nine Months Ended September 30, 
(dollars in thousands)  2012 over 2011   2012 over 2011 
   Increase(decrease) due to   Increase(decrease) due to 
   Volume   Rate   Net   Volume   Rate   Net 
Assets:                              
Investments:                              
Federal funds sold / Due from time  $(8)  $0   $(8)  $(5)  $0   $(5)
Taxable   (32)   (875)   (907)   633    (2,138)   (1,505)
Non-taxable(1)   66    (82)   (16)   113    (214)   (101)
Equity   -    10    10    -    43    43 
Total Investments   26    (947)   (921)   741    (2,309)   (1,568)
Loans and Leases:                              
Agricultural   39    31    70    91    (37)   54 
Commercial   1,443    (246)   1,197    2,071    (499)   1,572 
Real Estate   (379)   (312)   (691)   (1,489)   (418)   (1,907)
Consumer   (211)   (155)   (366)   (663)   (156)   (819)
Direct Financing Leases   (32)   (4)   (36)   (116)   (13)   (129)
Other   -    -    -    -    -    - 
Total Loans and Leases   859    (685)   174    (106)   (1,123)   (1,229)
Total Interest Earning Assets  $885   $(1,632)  $(747)  $635   $(3,432)  $(2,797)
Liabilities                              
Interest Bearing Deposits:                              
Demand Deposits  $80   $(78)  $2   $356   $(224)  $132 
NOW   15    (95)   (80)   56    (222)   (166)
Savings Accounts   12    (4)   8    38    (8)   30 
Money Market   (34)   (19)   (53)   (219)   (151)   (370)
CDAR's   (33)   (9)   (42)   (102)   (38)   (140)
Certificates of Deposit < $100,000   (42)   (45)   (87)   (241)   (67)   (308)
Certificates of Deposit > $100,000   28    (42)   (14)   114    (106)   8 
Brokered Deposits   -    (1)   (1)   28    (3)   25 
Total Interest Bearing Deposits   28    (295)   (267)   30    (819)   (789)
Borrowed Funds:                              
Federal Funds Purchased   -    -    -    -    -    - 
Repurchase Agreements   (0)   1    1    10    (4)   6 
Short Term Borrowings   -    15    15    197    (208)   (11)
Long Term Borrowings   (95)   3    (92)   (209)   15    (194)
TRUPS   -    14    14    -    46    46 
Total Borrowed Funds   (95)   33    (62)   (2)   (151)   (153)
Total Interest Bearing Liabilities   (69)   (260)   (329)   28    (970)   (942)
Net Interest Margin/Income  $954   $(1,371)  $(418)  $607   $(2,462)  $(1,855)

 

(1) Yields on tax exempt income have not been computed on a tax equivalent basis.

 

As shown above, the volume variance for the third quarter of 2012 relative to the third quarter of 2011 was a favorable $954,000, due primarily to growth of $44 million in average interest-earning assets. We experienced a net increase of $54 million in average loans, but the positive impact from loan growth was muted to some extent by the fact that it was generally concentrated in lower-yielding agricultural and commercial loans, while higher-yielding real estate loans and consumer loans declined. Also impacting the volume variance was a $10 million decline in the average balance of investments and a $15 million reduction in nonperforming loans. The shift from lower-yielding investments into loans and the reduction in nonperforming loans enhanced the positive impact of balance sheet growth on our volume variance for the quarter, as did favorable changes in average liability and equity balances. While average wholesale borrowings were $14 million higher, the increase was in relatively inexpensive overnight borrowings and the average balance of higher-cost term borrowings actually declined by $10 million. We also experienced migration out of aggregate time deposits into lower-cost non-maturity deposits for the comparative quarters, including a $42 million increase in the average balance of non-interest bearing demand deposits. A $7 million increase in average equity further reduced our reliance on interest-bearing liabilities.

 

34
 

 

In contrast to the favorable volume variance for the quarterly comparison, the impact of interest rate changes created a $1.371 million unfavorable rate variance in net interest income. Our weighted average yield on interest-earning assets was 40 basis points lower due to growth in lower-yielding loan categories, as well as a general decline in loan interest rates due to intense competition for quality loans. In addition to lower loan rates, our yield on investments fell by 75 basis points due to the reinvestment of cash from prepayments and maturing balances into lower-yielding investments, in a historically low rate environment. By comparison, our weighted average cost of interest-bearing liabilities was just 15 basis points lower, with the drop due primarily to the lack of competitive pressures on deposit rates and an improving deposit mix. The negative rate variance is exacerbated by our sizeable net interest position, which is the difference between interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities. Our average net interest position for the third quarter of 2011, which is the base period for the rate variance calculation, was $330 million, meaning that the yield decrease for interest-earning assets was applied to a much higher balance than the rate decrease for interest-bearing liabilities and had a greater impact on net interest income. Helping offset some of the negative pressures on our rate variance for the quarterly comparison was the fact that we had $2,000 in net interest recoveries in the third quarter of 2012, relative to $215,000 in net interest reversals in the third quarter of 2011.

 

The Company’s net interest margin, which is tax-equivalent net interest income as a percentage of average interest-earning assets, is affected by the same factors discussed above relative to rate and volume variances. Our net interest margin was 4.27% in the third quarter of 2012, a decline of 29 basis points relative to the third quarter of 2011. The principal negative factors impacting our net interest margin in the third quarter of 2012 include growth in lower-yielding loan balances and lower average balances for higher-yielding loan categories, as well as competitive pressures on loan yields. Developments favorably impacting our net interest margin include migration in average balances from higher-cost time deposits into lower-cost non-maturity deposits, increases in non-interest bearing demand deposits and equity that were sufficient to fund growth in earning assets, and the favorable differential in net interest recoveries/reversals.

 

For the first nine months of 2012 relative to the first nine months of 2011, the favorable variance in net interest income attributable purely to volume changes was $607,000, although there was a negative rate variance of $2.462 million. The volume variance for the year-to-date period was due to a $33 million increase in average interest-earning assets, and would have been more significant if not for the fact that the year-to-date results do not reflect the full impact of our recent loan growth. For the year-to-date comparison, average loan balances are up by only $2 million, while the average balance of lower-yielding investments is $31 million higher. Furthermore, the year-to-date comparison reflects a shift within loans from higher-yielding real estate and consumer loans into lower-yielding commercial and agricultural loans. As with the quarterly comparison, relatively strong growth in the average balances of low-cost customer deposits and equity helped compensate for some of the unfavorable pressures on the volume variance.

 

The same factors discussed for the quarterly rate variance were applicable with regard to the rate variance for the year-to-date period. For the first nine months of 2012 relative to the first nine months of 2011 the weighted average yield on earning assets was 45 basis points lower, while the weighted average cost of interest-bearing liabilities fell by only 13 basis points. Also impacting the rate variance for the year-to-date period were interest reversals on loans placed on non-accrual status, and interest recoveries on loans that were removed from non-accrual status. As with the comparative quarters, the impact was favorable for the year-to-date comparison since net interest recoveries totaled $146,000 in the first nine months of 2012 as opposed to net interest reversals of $145,000 in the first nine months of 2011.

 

The Company’s net interest margin for the first nine months of 2012 was 4.29%, a drop of 35 basis points relative to the net interest margin of 4.64% in the first nine months of 2011. For the year-to-date period, negative forces include the concentration of asset growth in lower yielding investment securities, lower yields on reinvested investment balances, and a 24 basis point drop in the weighted average yield on loans. Positive developments include movement from higher-cost time deposits into lower-cost core deposits, including a $43 million increase in the average balance of non-interest bearing demand deposits, an $8 million increase in average equity, and the favorable differential in net interest recoveries/reversals.

 

35
 

 

Provision for loan and LEASE losses

 

Credit risk is inherent in the business of making loans. The Company sets aside an allowance for loan and lease losses, a contra-asset account, through periodic charges to earnings which are reflected in the income statement as the provision for loan and lease losses. The severity of economic challenges has contributed to higher loan loss provisions for the past several years than in prior periods of strong economic growth, due to the negative impact of recessionary conditions on many of our borrowers and the resulting credit challenges in our loan portfolio. The Company’s loan loss provision totaled $4.700 million for the third quarter of 2012, and $10.610 million for the first nine months of 2012. The loss provision was increased by $1.700 million, or 57%, in the third quarter of 2012 relative to the third quarter of 2011, and reflects an increase of $1.010 million, or 11% for the first nine months of 2012 relative to the first nine months of 2011.

 

The Company’s loan loss provision has been sufficient to maintain an allowance for loan and lease losses at a level that, in management’s judgment, is adequate to absorb probable loan losses related to specifically-identified impaired loans, as well as probable incurred losses in the remaining loan portfolio. Specifically identifiable and quantifiable loan losses are immediately charged off against the allowance, and net loans charged off in the third quarter of 2012 totaled $5.757 million relative to $3.219 million in the third quarter of 2011. For the first nine months, net loans charged off totaled $15.087 million in 2012 relative to $10.246 million in 2011. The Company’s loan loss provision has been lower than loan charge-offs thus far in 2012, since many of the charge-offs were taken against previously-established specific reserves and did not directly result in the need for reserve replenishment via the loan loss provision. The level of charge-offs also affects historical loss factors used in calculating general reserves for non-impaired loans, and higher loss factors can lead to a larger loan loss provision if it is determined that general reserves require enhancement. While this occurred to some extent in 2012, the impact was partially offset by the adjustment of qualitative factors pursuant to management’s determination that credit risk in non-impaired loans has declined, as discussed in further detail below under “Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses.” Our loan loss provision in 2012 and 2011 has been utilized primarily to establish specific reserves on loans migrating into impaired status and enhance specific reserves on other impaired collateral-dependent loans that might have experienced deterioration in the value of their underlying collateral, but it has also been used in part to build general reserves due to higher historical loss factors and to establish reserves for net growth in performing loan balances.

 

The Company’s policies for monitoring the adequacy of the allowance and determining loan amounts that should be charged off, and other detailed information with regard to changes in the allowance, are discussed in note 12 to the consolidated financial statements and below under “Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses.” The process utilized to establish an appropriate allowance for loan and lease losses can result in a high degree of variability in the Company’s loan loss provision, and consequently in our net earnings.

 

36
 

 

NON-INTEREST INCOME and OPERATING expense

 

The following table provides details on the Company’s non-interest income and operating expense for the third quarter and first nine months of 2012, as well as the third quarter and first nine months of 2011:

 

Non Interest Income/Expense                                
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)        
   Three Months Ended September 30,   Nine Months Ended September 30, 
   2012   % of Total   2011   % of Total   2012   % of Total   2011   % of Total 
OTHER OPERATING INCOME:                                        
Service charges on deposit accounts  $2,525    64.81%  $2,439    72.39%  $7,229    59.15%  $7,140    68.53%
Other service charges, commissions & fees   1,329    34.11%   1,320    39.18%   3,968    32.47%   3,212    30.83%
Gains on sales of loans   45    1.16%   40    1.19%   139    1.14%   93    0.89%
Gains on securities   90    2.31%   -    0.00%   161    1.32%   -    0.00%
Loan servicing income   4    0.10%   4    0.12%   10    0.08%   11    0.11%
Bank owned life insurance   392    10.06%   (197)   -5.85%   1,135    9.29%   433    4.16%
Other   (489)   -12.55%   (237)   -7.03%   (421)   -3.45%   (471)   -4.52%
Total non-interest income  $3,896    100.00%  $3,369    100.00%  $12,221    100.00%  $10,418    100.00%
As a % of average interest-earning assets (1)        1.23%        1.10%        1.34%        1.17%
                                         
OTHER OPERATING EXPENSES:                                        
Salaries and employee benefits  $5,278    47.93%  $4,849    45.88%  $15,855    47.14%  $15,760    46.59%
Occupancy costs                                        
Furniture & equipment   529    4.80%   640    6.06%   1,533    4.56%   1,689    4.99%
Premises   1,140    10.35%   1,147    10.85%   3,188    9.48%   3,298    9.75%
Advertising and marketing costs   372    3.38%   599    5.67%   1,323    3.93%   1,515    4.48%
Data processing costs   480    4.36%   444    4.20%   1,327    3.95%   1,107    3.27%
Deposit services costs   574    5.21%   666    6.30%   1,743    5.18%   1,913    5.65%
Loan services costs                                        
Loan processing   304    2.76%   255    2.41%   862    2.56%   700    2.07%
Foreclosed assets   282    2.56%   469    4.44%   2,028    6.03%   2,193    6.48%
Other operating costs                                        
Telephone & data communications   378    3.43%   302    2.86%   1,109    3.30%   959    2.84%
Postage & mail   175    1.59%   155    1.47%   517    1.54%   441    1.30%
Other   185    1.68%   219    2.07%   558    1.65%   641    1.90%
Professional services costs                                        
Legal & accounting   298    2.71%   381    3.61%   1,021    3.04%   1,197    3.54%
Other professional service   617    5.60%   104    0.99%   1,592    4.73%   1,585    4.69%
Stationery & supply costs   151    1.38%   198    1.87%   562    1.67%   533    1.58%
Sundry & tellers   248    2.26%   140    1.32%   417    1.24%   294    0.87%
Total non-interest Expense  $11,011    100.00%  $10,568    100.00%  $33,635    100.00%  $33,825    100.00%
As a % of average interest-earning assets (1)        3.49%        3.46%        3.68%        3.81%
Efficiency Ratio (2)   61.45%        60.54%        64.20%        64.61%     

 

(1) Annualized

(2) Tax Equivalent

 

The Company’s results reflect an increase in total non-interest income of $527,000, or 16%, for the third quarter of 2012 relative to the third quarter of 2011. For the first nine months of 2012 the increase in non-interest income was $1.803 million, or 17%, relative to the first nine months of the prior year. As discussed in greater detail below, significant variances contributing to the increases for the third quarter and year-to-date period in 2012 include favorable fluctuations in income on bank-owned life insurance (BOLI) associated with deferred compensation plans, and higher interchange fees on debit card transactions. The year-to-date comparison was further impacted by accrual adjustments on low-income housing tax credit investment costs and other limited partnership investments. Despite a substantially higher level of average interest-earning assets, total other operating income increased to an annualized 1.23% of average interest-earning assets in the third quarter of 2012 from 1.10% in the third quarter of 2011, and was an annualized 1.34% of average earning assets for the first nine months of 2012 relative to 1.17% for the first nine months of 2011.

 

Service charge income on deposits increased by $86,000, or 4%, for the quarterly comparison, and by $89,000, or 1%, for the year-to-date comparison. Fees for higher risk deposit accounts were instituted in the fourth quarter of 2011 and totaled $143,000 in the third quarter of 2012 and $434,000 for the first nine months of 2012, but those fees were offset to a great extent by a drop in returned item and overdraft charges totaling $98,000 for the quarter and $309,000 for the first nine months. Other service charges, commissions, and fees increased by $9,000, or 1%, for the quarter and were up by $756,000, or 24%, for the year-to-date period, due in part to fluctuations in pass-through operating costs associated with our investments in low-income housing tax credit funds and other limited partnership investments. Those expenses, which are netted out of non-interest income, increased by $85,000 for the quarter (thus reducing income by a like amount), but reflect a drop of $396,000 for the year-to-date comparison (thus increasing income), due mainly to accrual adjustments. We also had quarterly and year-to-date increases in debit card point-of-sale interchange fees, rental income on OREO properties, and various other fee income categories.

 

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The Company realized investment gains of $90,000 in the third quarter and $161,000 for the first nine months of 2012, due to the successful third-quarter sale of a few municipal bonds that were below our desired ratings and the first-quarter “clean-up” sale of a large number of odd-lot mortgage-backed securities. There were no gains on securities during the first nine months of 2011. Loan servicing income remained at minimal levels, but loan sale income reflects a modest increase in 2012 due to an increase in mortgage loans originated and subsequently sold.

 

Bank-owned life insurance income increased by $589,000, or 299%, in the third quarter, and by $702,000, or 162%, for the first nine months of 2012 relative to 2011. The fluctuations are primarily the result of income and losses on BOLI associated with deferred compensation plans, which is classified as “separate account” BOLI. The Company owns and derives income from two basic types of BOLI: “general account,” and “separate account.” At September 30, 2012 the Company had $34.5 million invested in single-premium general account BOLI, which includes a $5.0 million BOLI purchase consummated at the end of the third quarter of 2011. Income from our general account BOLI is used to fund expenses associated with executive salary continuation plans, director retirement plans and other employee benefits, and is typically fairly consistent with interest credit rates that do not change frequently. In addition to general account BOLI, the Company had $3.2 million invested in separate account BOLI at September 30, 2012, the earnings on which help offset deferred compensation accruals for certain directors and senior officers. These deferred compensation BOLI accounts have returns pegged to participant-directed investment allocations which can include equity, bond, or real estate indices, and are thus subject to gains or losses which often contribute to significant fluctuations in income from period to period. There was a gain on separate account BOLI totaling $126,000 in the third quarter of 2012 relative to a loss of $439,000 in the third quarter of 2011, for a net increase of $565,000 in deferred compensation BOLI income for the quarter. For the first nine months, net gains on separate account BOLI were $321,000 in 2012 while we had net losses of $306,000 in 2011, resulting in an increase of $627,000 for the comparative periods. As noted, gains and losses on separate account BOLI are related to participant gains and losses on deferred compensation balances. Participant gains are accounted for as expense accruals which, combined with their associated tax impact, effectively offset income on separate account BOLI, while participant losses result in expense accrual reversals that effectively offset losses on separate account BOLI.

 

The “Other” category under non-interest income includes gains and losses on the disposition of real properties and other assets, life insurance proceeds, and rental income generated by the Company’s alliance with Investment Centers of America (ICA). Other non-interest income declined by $252,000 in the third quarter of 2012 in comparison to the third quarter of 2011, but was up by $50,000 for the year-to-date comparison. The fluctuations are due in part to larger net losses on the sale of OREO in 2012. The net loss on OREO sales totaled $555,000 in the third quarter of 2012 relative to a net loss of $274,000 in the third quarter of 2011, and the net loss on the sale of OREO was $579,000 for the first nine months of 2012 relative to a loss of $569,000 in the first nine months of 2011. Partially offsetting higher OREO losses was non-recurring income of $87,000, representing life insurance proceeds received in the third quarter of 2012.

 

Total operating expense (non-interest expense) was $11.011 million for the quarter ended September 30, 2012, an increase of $443,000, or 4%, relative to total operating expense in the third quarter of 2011. As detailed below, a principle factor in this increase was higher accruals for deferred compensation (related to the increase in BOLI income discussed above). Non-interest expense increased to an annualized 3.49% of average interest-earning assets for the third quarter of 2012 from 3.46% in the third quarter of 2011. For the comparative year-to-date periods, non-interest expense fell by $190,000, or 1%, primarily due to favorable variances in occupancy expense, marketing expense, deposit services expense, foreclosed asset costs, and legal costs associated with loan collections, partially offset by higher deferred compensation accruals and the unfavorable variance resulting from $181,000 in non-recurring vendor credits received in the first quarter of 2011 for prior-year overcharges. Non-interest expenses were an annualized 3.68% of average earning assets for the first nine months of 2012, relative to 3.81% in the first nine months of 2011.

 

The largest component of non-interest expense, salaries and employee benefits, increased by $429,000, or 9%, for the quarter, and by $95,000, or 1%, for the year-to-date comparison. The increase in salaries and benefits is due in large part to higher deferred compensation accruals, which were up by $376,000 for the comparative quarters and by $293,000 for the year-to-date period. There were also fluctuations in the level of salaries that are directly related to successful loan originations and are thus deferred and amortized over the life of the related loans. Those deferrals declined by $41,000 for the quarter, but increased by $96,000 for the first nine months. The quarterly and year-to-date increases in salaries and benefits were further impacted by regular annual salary increases, and the limited addition of staff to accommodate loan growth. Salaries and benefits increased to 47.93% of total non-interest expense for the third quarter of 2012 from 45.88% in the third quarter of 2011, and to 47.14% of total non-interest expense for the first nine months of 2012 from 46.59% in the first nine months of 2011.

 

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Total occupancy expense reflects declines of $118,000, or 7%, for the third quarter of 2012 and $266,000, or 5%, for the first nine months of 2012, due in part to lower costs resulting from the purchase of our headquarters office building in the fourth quarter of 2011. Marketing costs declined by $227,000, or 38%, for the quarter and by $192,000, or 13%, for the first nine months, with the fluctuations due in large part to the timing of payments. Data processing costs reflect a small increase for the quarter, but were up by $220,000, or 20%, for the comparative year-to-date periods due mainly to $181,000 in non-recurring vendor credits received in the first quarter of 2011, as noted above. Deposit services costs fell by $92,000, or 14%, for the quarter and $170,000, or 9%, for the year-to-date period, due in part to a $75,000 non-recurring expense offset in the third quarter of 2012 in conjunction with the renewal of our contract for processing debit card transactions. The variance in deposit costs was also favorably impacted by lower operating costs associated with online deposit products, debit card processing and other miscellaneous deposit cost categories.

 

Loan processing costs increased by $49,000, or 19%, for the quarter and by $162,000, or 23%, for the year-to-date period, due in large part to higher foreclosure costs. The year-to-date variance was further impacted by a $37,000 addition to our reserve for unfunded commitments in the first quarter of 2012. Foreclosed asset costs declined by $187,000, or 40%, for the quarter, and by $165,000, or 8%, for the first nine months. The drop for the quarter is due to a $136,000 reduction in OREO write-downs and a $51,000 decline in OREO operating expense, while for the year-to-date comparison the reduction in OREO write-downs was $46,000 and the decline in OREO operating expense was $119,000. OREO write-downs totaled $215,000 and $1.610 million for the third quarter and first nine months of 2012, respectively, while OREO operating expense was $67,000 and $418,000 for the third quarter and first nine months of 2012, respectively.

 

Telecommunications costs increased by $76,000, or 25%, for the quarter and by $150,000, or 16%, for the first nine months, due to costs associated with the addition and enhancement of data circuits. Postage and mail costs increased by $20,000, or 13%, for the quarter and by $76,000, or 17%, for the first nine months, due in large part to increased mailings for required overdraft disclosures and costs associated with a direct-mail marketing campaign targeting commercial loans. The small drop in the “other” category under other operating costs is due in part to lower depreciation expense on operating leases where the Bank is lessor, as the result of the maturity of certain leases.

 

Under professional services costs, legal and accounting costs declined by $83,000, or 22%, for the quarter and by $176,000, or 15%, for the first nine months, due in large part to a drop in legal costs associated with loan collections. The cost of other professional services increased by $513,000, or 493%, for the third quarter but was up by only $7,000 for the first nine months. The increase for the quarter is the result of a $373,000 increase in directors’ deferred compensation accruals (related to the increase in BOLI income discussed above), and a $215,000 increase in regulatory assessment accruals resulting from an accrual adjustment in the third quarter of 2011, partially offset by reductions in various other professional services costs. For the comparative year-to-date periods, a $338,000 increase in directors’ deferred compensation accruals was offset by a $167,000 decline in the accrual for regulatory assessments, as well as reductions in various other professional services costs. Our year-to-date accruals for regulatory assessments declined due to lower overall assessment rates and the Company’s reduced risk profile. The cost of supplies fell by $47,000 for the third quarter due to the timing of payments, but increased by $29,000 for the first nine months of 2012 due primarily to the restocking of operations-related forms and supplies earlier in the year. Sundry and teller losses increased by $108,000, or 77%, for the third quarter and by $123,000, or 42%, for the year-to-date comparison, due to a surge in debit card fraud in the third quarter of 2012. Our debit card processor implemented additional fraud detection and prevention capabilities in October 2012 which should reduce losses from levels experienced in the third quarter of 2012, although no assurance can be provided in that regard.

 

The Company’s tax-equivalent overhead efficiency ratio increased to 61.45% in the third quarter of 2012 from 60.54% in the third quarter of 2011, but fell slightly to 64.20% for the first nine months of 2012 from 64.61% for the first nine months of 2011. The overhead efficiency ratio represents total operating expense divided by the sum of fully tax-equivalent net interest and non-interest income, with the provision for loan losses, investment gains and losses, and other extraordinary gains and losses excluded from the equation.

 

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PROVISION FOR INCOME TAXES

 

The Company sets aside a provision for income taxes on a monthly basis. The amount of the tax provision is determined by applying the Company’s statutory income tax rates to pre-tax book income, adjusted for permanent differences between pre-tax book income and actual taxable income. Such permanent differences include but are not limited to tax-exempt interest income, increases in the cash surrender value of BOLI, California Enterprise Zone deductions, certain expenses that are not allowed as tax deductions, and tax credits. Our tax credits consist primarily of those generated by a $9.0 million investment in low-income housing tax credit funds, and California state employment tax credits. Because of the relatively high portion of the Company’s pretax income that consists of tax-exempt interest income and BOLI income, and the level of tax credits available in relation to our pre-credit tax liability, as calculated for book purposes, our tax accrual rate is currently very sensitive to changes in pretax income. The referenced factors resulted in a tax benefit of $321,000 in the third quarter of 2012 and a tax provision of $822,000, or 25% of pre-tax income, in the third quarter of 2011. The tax benefit in the third quarter of 2012 reduced the year-to-date tax provision to just $54,000, or slightly less than 1% of pre-tax income, while the provision was 11% of pre-tax income for the first nine months of 2011. The lower tax provisioning rate for 2012 is primarily the result of lower taxable income relative to the Company’s available tax credits, and the third quarter of 2012 was impacted further by a sizeable increase in tax-exempt BOLI income.

 

balance sheet analysis

 

EARNING ASSETS

 

INVESTMENTS

 

The major components of the Company’s earning assets are its investments and loans, and the detailed composition and growth characteristics of both are significant determinants of the financial condition of the Company. The Company’s investments are analyzed in this section, while the loan and lease portfolio is discussed in a later section of this Form 10-Q.

 

The Company’s investments consist of debt and marketable equity securities (together, the “investment portfolio”), investments in the time deposits of other banks, surplus interest-earning balances in our Federal Reserve Bank account, and overnight fed funds sold. Surplus Federal Reserve Bank balances and fed funds sold to correspondent banks represent the investment of temporary excess liquidity. The Company’s investments serve several purposes: 1) they provide liquidity to even out cash flows from the loan and deposit activities of customers; 2) they provide a source of pledged assets for securing public deposits, bankruptcy deposits and certain borrowed funds which require collateral; 3) they constitute a large base of assets with maturity and interest rate characteristics that can be changed more readily than the loan portfolio, to better match changes in the deposit base and other funding sources of the Company; 4) they are an alternative interest-earning use of funds when loan demand is light; and 5) they can provide partially tax exempt income. Aggregate investments were 29% of total assets at September 30, 2012, compared to 32% at December 31, 2011.

 

We had no fed funds sold at September 30, 2012 or December 31, 2011. Our balance of interest-bearing balances at other banks was $3 million at September 30, 2012, down from $20 million at the end of 2011 as excess balance sheet liquidity was utilized to help fund growth in loan balances in the second and third quarters of 2012. In the first quarter of 2012, surplus liquidity which was generated from growth in deposits and loan runoff was deployed into longer-term, agency-issued mortgage-backed securities and municipal bonds, hence the book balance of the Company’s investment portfolio reflects an increase of $8 million, or 2%, for the first nine months of 2012. The book balance of our investment securities was $415 million at September 30, 2012. Although the Company currently has the intent and the ability to hold the securities in its investment portfolio to maturity, the securities are all marketable and are classified as “available for sale” to allow maximum flexibility with regard to interest rate risk and liquidity management.

 

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The following table sets forth the Company’s investment portfolio by investment type as of the dates noted:

 

Investment Portfolio        
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)  September 30, 2012   December 31, 2011 
   Amortized   Fair Market   Amortized   Fair Market 
   Cost   Value   Cost   Value 
Available for Sale                    
US Government Agencies & Corporations  $1,129   $1,134   $2,008   $2,026 
Mortgage-backed securities   325,605    330,627    328,751    331,758 
State & political subdivisions   76,558    80,963    67,851    71,340 
Equity securities   1,336    1,911    1,336    1,347 
Total Investment Securities  $404,628   $414,635   $399,946   $406,471 

 

U.S. Government agency securities were down by close to $1 million, or 44%, for the first nine months of 2012, due to balances that matured but were not reinvested. Mortgage-backed securities declined by slightly more than $1 million, or less than 1%, during the same time frame, as purchases were not of sufficient volume to make up for the “clean-up” sale of a large number of odd-lot mortgage-backed securities totaling $3.1 million in book value, as well as prepayments. The balance of municipal bonds increased by $10 million, or 13%, as the Company has taken advantage of relative value in that sector. It should be noted that all newly purchased municipal bonds have strong underlying ratings. No equity securities were bought or sold during the first nine months of 2012, although the market value of those securities increased by $564,000, or 42%. Investment portfolio securities that were pledged as collateral for FHLB borrowings, repurchase agreements, public deposits and for other purposes as required or permitted by law totaled $227 million at September 30, 2012 and $208 million at December 31, 2011, leaving $185 million in unpledged debt securities at September 30, 2012 and $197 million at December 31, 2011. Securities pledged in excess of actual pledging needs, and thus available for liquidity purposes if necessary, totaled $124 million at September 30, 2012 and $112 million at December 31, 2011.

 

Loan Portfolio

 

The Company’s loans and leases, gross of the associated allowance for losses and deferred fees and origination costs but not including loans held for sale, totaled $847 million at September 30, 2012, an increase of $90 million, or 12%, since December 31, 2011. Loan balances had been declining for the past few years due to reductions associated with the resolution of impaired loans and runoff in the normal course of business, but they experienced a significant increase in the second and third quarters of 2012 due to growth in balances outstanding on mortgage warehouse lines (a subcomponent of commercial and industrial loans). A comparative schedule of the distribution of the Company’s loans at September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, by outstanding balance as well as by percentage of total loans, is presented in the following Loan and Lease Distribution table. The balances shown for each loan type are before deferred or unamortized loan origination, extension, or commitment fees, and deferred origination costs.

 

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Loan and Lease Distribution        
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)        
  September 30, 2012   December 31, 2011 
Real Estate:          
1-4 family residential construction  $7,012   $8,488 
Other Construction/Land   34,944    40,060 
1-4 family - closed-end   101,600    104,953 
Equity Lines   61,892    66,497 
Multi-family residential   5,201    8,179 
Commercial real estate- owner occupied   175,167    183,070 
Commercial real estate- non-owner occupied   91,815    105,843 
Farmland   61,934    60,142 
Total Real Estate   539,565    577,232 
Agricultural products   20,969    17,078 
Commercial and Industrial   231,154    99,408 
Small Business Administration Loans   20,228    21,006 
Direct finance leases   4,743    6,743 
Consumer loans   30,471    36,124 
Total Loans and Leases  $847,130   $757,591 
Percentage of Total Loans and Leases          
Real Estate:          
1-4 family residential construction   0.83%   1.12%
Other Construction/land   4.12%   5.29%
1-4 family - closed-end   11.99%   13.85%
Equity Lines   7.31%   8.78%
Multi-family residential   0.61%   1.08%
Commercial real estate- owner occupied   20.68%   24.16%
Commercial real estate- non-owner occupied   10.84%   13.97%
Farmland   7.31%   7.94%
Total Real Estate   63.69%   76.19%
Agricultural products   2.48%   2.26%
Commercial and Industrial   27.29%   13.12%
Small Business Administration Loans   2.39%   2.77%
Direct finance leases   0.55%   0.89%
Consumer loans   3.60%   4.77%
Total Loans and Leases   100.00%   100.00%

 

As shown above, commercial loans increased by $132 million, or 133%, during the first nine months of 2012. Balances outstanding on mortgage warehouse lines were up $126 million, with net growth of about $6 million in other commercial loan categories. With that growth, commercial loans increased to 27.29% of total loans at September 30, 2012 from 13.12% at December 31, 2011. While the Company has engaged in mortgage warehouse lending on a limited basis for the past seven years, the recent surge in balances is primarily the result of hiring an experienced mortgage warehouse lender with contacts throughout California, our implementation of new software to automate the process and provide additional internal controls, and recent market opportunities created by an increase in refinancing activity and the decision by certain competitors to focus principally on larger mortgage lenders. Since mortgage lending activity is strongly correlated to interest rates and has historically been subject to significant fluctuations, no assurance can be provided with regard to our ability to maintain or continue to grow mortgage warehouse balances. Agricultural production loans also increased by $4 million, or 23%, for the first nine months. Most other major loan categories show declining balances, or at best very little growth, due in part to reductions related to the resolution of nonperforming loans. Total real estate loans, in particular, declined by $38 million, or 7%, with $23 million of the decline due to a reduction in nonperforming real estate loans. Consumer loans fell by $6 million, or 16%, due to a general lack of activity in the consumer lending arena.

 

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Management has made selective personnel changes over the past several quarters and has established branch objectives weighted toward high-quality loan growth, to help ensure that growth is not concentrated solely in one segment of the portfolio and to counter factors that have impeded the Company’s loan growth for the past few years, such as weak loan demand, tightened credit criteria for real estate loans, and heightened competition. Furthermore, there is anecdotal evidence that certain sectors of the local economy are beginning to improve, which could also benefit loan growth. We have seen a recent increase in lending activity in areas other than mortgage warehouse loans, but no assurance can be provided that this will be sustained and that loan growth will continue, especially in the near term.

 

Although not reflected in the loan totals above and not currently comprising a material segment of our lending activities, the Company occasionally originates and sells, or participates out portions of, certain commercial real estate loans, agricultural or residential mortgage loans, and other loans to non-affiliated investors, and we currently provide servicing for a small number of SBA loans.

 

NONPERFORMING ASSETS

 

Nonperforming assets are comprised of loans for which the Company is no longer accruing interest, and foreclosed assets, including mobile homes and other real estate owned (“OREO”). OREO consists of properties acquired by foreclosure or similar means, which the Company is offering or will offer for sale. Nonperforming loans and leases result when reasonable doubt exists with regard to the ability of the Company to collect all principal and interest on a loan or lease. At that point, we stop accruing interest on the loan or lease in question and reverse any previously-recognized interest to the extent that it is uncollected or associated with interest-reserve loans. Any asset for which principal or interest has been in default for a period of 90 days or more is also placed on non-accrual status, even if interest is still being received, unless the asset is both well-secured and in the process of collection. If the Bank grants a concession to a borrower in financial difficulty, the loan falls into the category of a troubled debt restructuring (TDR). TDR’s may be classified as either nonperforming or performing loans depending on their accrual status. The following table presents comparative data for the Company’s nonperforming assets and performing TDR’s, as of the dates noted:

 

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Nonperforming Assets and Performing TDR's            
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)  September 30, 2012   December 31, 2011   September 30, 2011 
NON-ACCRUAL LOANS:               
Real Estate:               
1-4 family residential construction  $1,558   $2,244   $3,846 
Other Construction/Land   1,349    4,083    5,227 
1-4 family - closed-end   5,591    7,605    6,412 
Equity Lines   732    1,309    2,481 
Multi-family residential   -    2,941    - 
Commercial real estate- owner occupied   6,409    7,086    8,921 
Commercial real estate- non-owner occupied   5,193    13,958    10,425 
Farmland   1,943    6,919    492 
TOTAL REAL ESTATE   22,775    46,145    37,804 
Agriculture Products   999    -    - 
Commercial and Industrial   1,307    3,778    4,432 
Small Business Administration Loans   2,331    3,452    3,776 
Direct finance leases   190    591    707 
Consumer loans   1,252    2,144    1,825 
TOTAL NONPERFORMING LOANS   28,854    56,110    48,544 
                
Foreclosed assets   19,835    15,364    18,185 
Total nonperforming assets  $48,689   $71,474   $66,729 
Performing TDR's (1)  $36,888   $36,058   $34,426 
Nonperforming loans as a % of total gross loans and leases   3.41%   7.41%   6.40%
Nonperforming assets as a % of total gross loans and leases and foreclosed assets   5.62%   9.25%   8.59%

 

(1) Performing TDRs are not included in nonperforming loans above, nor are they included in the numerators used to calculate the ratios disclosed in this table.

 

Total nonperforming assets dropped by $22.8 million, or 32%, during the first nine months of 2012. Nonperforming loans were down by $27.3 million, or 49%, however foreclosed assets increased by $4.5 million, or 29%. The balance of nonperforming loans at September 30, 2012 includes $14.5 million in TDR’s and other loans that were paying as agreed under modified terms or forbearance agreements but were still classified as nonperforming. As shown in the table, we also had $36.9 million in loans classified as performing TDR’s for which we were still accruing interest at September 30, 2012, a slight increase relative to the balance of $36.1 million at December 31, 2011.

 

Non-accruing loan balances secured by real estate comprised $22.8 million of total nonperforming loans at September 30, 2012, and reflect a net decrease of $23.4 million, or 51%, during the first nine months of 2012. The reduction includes net pay-downs on nonperforming real estate loans of $8.8 million, transfers to OREO from nonperforming real estate loans totaling $19.4 million, charge-offs on nonperforming real estate loans of $7.2 million, and $1.7 million in balances returned to accrual status. Those reductions were partially offset by $13.6 million in gross additions to nonperforming real estate loans for the first nine months of 2012.

 

Nonperforming commercial and SBA loans declined by a combined $3.6 million, or 50%, during the first nine months of 2012, ending the period at $3.6 million. Gross additions to nonperforming commercial and SBA loans totaled $794,000 for the nine months ended September 30, 2012, but this was more than offset by net pay-downs of $1.7 million, the charge-off of $2.6 million in loan balances, and the return to accrual status of $175,000 in loans. Non-accrual direct finance leases declined by $401,000, or 68%, during first nine months of 2012, due primarily to charge-offs; and, nonperforming consumer loans, which are largely unsecured, dropped by $892,000, or 42%, also due largely to charge-offs.

 

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As noted above, foreclosed assets increased by $4.5 million, or 29%, during the first nine months of 2012, due to the migration of $19.4 million in nonperforming real estate loans into OREO, less OREO sold during that period and any write-downs. A few large loans, in particular, which were foreclosed on during the first nine months of 2012 were subsequently sold as OREO during the same period. The balance of foreclosed assets at September 30, 2012 had an aggregate carrying value of $19.8 million, and was comprised of 73 properties classified as OREO and two mobile homes. Much of our OREO consists of vacant lots or land, but there are also 11 residential properties totaling $1.5 million and ten commercial buildings with a combined book balance of $7.2 million. At the end of 2011 foreclosed assets totaled $15.4 million, comprised of 66 properties in OREO and five mobile homes. All foreclosed assets are periodically evaluated and written down to their fair value less expected disposition costs, if lower than the then-current carrying value.

 

Total nonperforming assets were 5.62% of gross loans and leases plus foreclosed assets at September 30, 2012, down substantially from 9.25% at December 31, 2011 due to the reduction in nonperforming assets and growth in loans. An action plan is in place for each of our non-accruing loans and foreclosed assets and they are all being actively managed. Collection efforts are continuously pursued for all nonperforming loans, but we cannot provide assurance that all will be resolved in a timely manner or that nonperforming balances will not increase further.

 

Allowance for loan and lease Losses

 

The allowance for loan and lease losses, a contra-asset, is established through a provision for loan and lease losses. It is maintained at a level that is considered adequate to absorb probable losses on certain specifically identified loans, as well as probable incurred losses inherent in the remaining loan portfolio. Specifically identifiable and quantifiable losses are immediately charged off against the allowance; recoveries are generally recorded only when cash payments are received subsequent to the charge off. An allowance for potential losses inherent in unused commitments, totaling $197,000 at September 30, 2012, is included in other liabilities.

 

At September 30, 2012, the Company’s allowance for loan and lease losses was $12.8 million, or 1.51% of gross loans, relative to the $17.3 million allowance at December 31, 2011 which was 2.28% of gross loans. The $4.5 million reduction in the first nine months of 2012 was due in part to the write-down of certain impaired collateral-dependent loan balances against previously-established specific reserves, which did not directly lead to the need for reserve replenishment, as well as a reduction in general reserves consistent with the Company’s improvement in asset quality. Relative to its balance at September 30, 2011 the allowance declined by $7.7 million, or 38%, due again in large part to the charge-off of balances with previously-established specific reserves during the latter part of 2011 and the first nine months of 2012. The Company’s total allowance was 44.38% of nonperforming loans at September 30, 2012, an increase relative to 30.80% at December 31, 2011 and 42.21% at September 30, 2011 due to the drop in nonperforming loans.

 

In addition to the reduction in the overall allowance for loan and lease losses, its composition shifted somewhat during the first nine months of 2012. Despite a significant level of charge-offs against previously-established specific reserves, reserves for impaired loans declined by only $3 million during the first nine months of 2012, since the impact of charge-offs was partially offset by the establishment of specific reserves for loans migrating to impaired status and by enhancements to reflect updated expectations with regard to realizable values. Moreover, notwithstanding the increase in outstanding loan balances, general reserves for incurred losses on performing loans declined by $1 million, or 16%. The decline in general reserves is due to the adjustment of qualitative factors, to reflect management’s assessment that default risk has declined as certain higher-risk balances originated prior to the recession have migrated out of performing loans due to payoffs or performance issues, and the remaining loans, many of which were originated subsequent to the beginning of the recession using more stringent credit criteria, have become better seasoned and are less likely to experience losses. The decline in the allowance for loan and lease losses resulting from the adjustment of qualitative factors was partially offset by the establishment of loss reserves for new loan growth, and the refinement of proxy loss rates which are incorporated into the model when there is insufficient data to utilize the Bank’s own historical loan rates.

 

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The table that follows summarizes the activity in the allowance for loan and lease losses for the noted periods:

 

Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses                    
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)  For the Three Months   For the Three Months   For the Nine Months   For the Nine Months   For the Year 
   Ended September 30,   Ended September 30,   Ended September 30,   Ended September 30,   Ended December 31, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011   2011 
Balances:                         
Average gross loans and leases outstanding during period(1)  $813,962   $759,512   $775,395   $772,979   $767,901 
Gross loans and leases outstanding at end of period  $847,130   $757,783   $847,130   $757,783   $757,591 
                          
Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses:                         
Balance at beginning of period  $13,863   $20,711   $17,283   $21,138   $21,138 
Provision charged to expense   4,700    3,000    10,610    9,600    12,000 
Charge-offs                         
Real Estate                         
1-4 family residential construction   46    -    46    -    1,389 
Other Construction/Land   1,117    74    1,856    1,170    1,807 
1-4 family - closed-end   205    119    1,239    408    795 
Equity Lines   60    280    982    820    1,776 
Multi-family residential   102    -    1,262    -    - 
Commercial real estate- owner occupied   906    186    1,530    977    1,306 
Commercial real estate- non-owner occupied   1,342    1,470    2,093    2,875    3,027 
Farmland   -    -    171    -    496 
TOTAL REAL ESTATE   3,778    2,129    9,179    6,250    10,596 
  Agricultural products   634    -    634    -    - 
  Commercial & industrial loans   675    592    3,215    2,402    3,407 
  Small Business Administration Loans   335    3    753    128    148 
  Direct Finance Leases   -    23    198    33    82 
  Consumer Loans   526    718    1,873    2,048    2,754 
  Total  $5,948   $3,465   $15,852   $10,861   $16,987 
Recoveries                         
Real Estate                         
1-4 family residential construction   -    -    -    -    133 
Other Construction/Land   10    -    14    38    38 
1-4 family - closed-end   6    7    30    16    23 
Equity Lines   3    1    16    3    4 
Multi-family residential   -    -    -    -    - 
Commercial real estate- owner occupied   2    -    93    1    71 
Commercial real estate- non-owner occupied   12    1    12    1    148 
Farmland   -    1    57    2    1 
TOTAL REAL ESTATE   33    10    222    61    418 
  Agricultural products   -    -    -    -    323 
  Commercial and Industrial   70    120    262    245    71 
  Small Business Administration Loans   35    -    82    69    57 
  Direct Finance Leases   -    31    -    45    263 
  Consumer Loans   53    85    199    195    - 
  Total  $191   $246   $765   $615   $1,132 
Net loan charge offs (recoveries)  $5,757   $3,219   $15,087   $10,246   $15,855 
Balance at end of period  $12,806   $20,492   $12,806   $20,492   $17,283 
                          
RATIOS                         
Net Charge-offs to Average Loans and Leases (annualized)   2.81%   1.68%   2.60%   1.77%   2.06%
Allowance for Loan Losses to                         
Gross Loans and Leases at End of Period   1.51%   2.70%   1.51%   2.70%   2.28%
Allowance for Loan Losses to                         
NonPerforming Loans at end of period   44.38%   42.21%   44.38%   42.21%   30.80%
Net Loan Charge-offs to Allowance                         
for Loan Losses at End of Period   44.96%   15.71%   117.81%   50.00%   91.74%
Net Loan Charge-offs to                         
Provision for Loan Losses   122.49%   107.30%   142.20%   106.73%   132.13%

 

(1) Average balances are obtained from the best available daily or monthly data and are net of deferred fees and related direct costs.

 

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As shown in the table immediately above, the Company’s provision for loan and lease losses was increased by $1.700 million, or 57%, for the third quarter of 2012 relative to the third quarter of 2011, and by 1.010 million, or 11%, for the first nine months of 2012 relative to the first nine months of 2011. Net loans charged off were up by $2.538 million, or 79%, for the quarterly comparison, and increased by $4.841 million, or 47%, for the first nine months in 2012, for the reasons noted above. Real estate loan charge-offs experienced the largest increase among our major loan categories, rising by $1.649 million, or 77%, for the comparative quarters, and by $2.929 million, or 47%, for the year-to-date comparison, since many of charge-offs in 2012 were write-downs on collateral-dependent loans. Including write-downs taken in the first nine months of 2012, we have taken a cumulative total of $4.4 million in write-downs on collateral-dependent loans still on our books at September 30, 2012, most of which were on construction loans. A higher level of principal recoveries on nonperforming loans that were resolved in the first nine months of 2012 provided a small offset to the increase in gross charge-offs, including an increase of $161,000 in recoveries on real estate loans. Since our allowance for loan and lease losses is maintained at a level to cover probable losses on specifically identified loans as well as probable incurred losses in the remaining loan portfolio, any shortfall in the allowance created by loan charge-offs is typically covered by month-end, and always by quarter-end. Additional details on our provision for loan and lease losses and its relationship to actual charge-offs is contained above in the “Provision for Loan and Lease Losses” section.

 

The Company’s allowance for loan and lease losses at September 30, 2012 represents management’s best estimate of probable losses in the loan portfolio as of that date. Fluctuations in credit quality, changes in economic conditions, or other factors could induce us to augment or reduce the allowance, however, and no assurance can be given that the Company will not experience substantial losses relative to the size of the allowance.

 

OFF-BALANCE SHEET ARRANGEMENTS

 

In the normal course of business, the Company maintains commitments to extend credit as long as there are no violations of any conditions established in the outstanding contractual arrangements. Unused commitments to extend credit totaled $240 million at September 30, 2012 and $154 million at December 31, 2011, although it is not likely that all of those commitments will ultimately be drawn down. The increase during the first nine months of 2012 was primarily due to an increase in undisbursed commitments on mortgage warehouse lines, and the addition of the unused portions of deposit account overdraft lines that were formalized during 2012. Unused commitments represented approximately 28% of gross loans outstanding at September 30, 2012, and 20% at December 31, 2011. In addition to unused loan commitments, the Company had undrawn letters of credit totaling $15 million at September 30, 2012 and $20 million at December 31, 2011.

 

The effect on the Company’s revenues, expenses, cash flows and liquidity from the unused portion of the commitments to provide credit cannot be reasonably predicted because there is no guarantee that the lines of credit will ever be used. For more information regarding the Company’s off-balance sheet arrangements, see Note 8 to the financial statements located elsewhere herein.

 

OTHER ASSETS

 

The balance of non-interest earning cash and due from banks was $42 million at September 30, 2012, compared to $43 million at December 31, 2011. Since the actual balance of cash and due from banks depends on the timing of collection of outstanding cash items (checks), it is subject to significant fluctuation in the normal course of business. While cash flows are normally predictable within limits, those limits are fairly broad and the Company manages its short-term cash position through the utilization of overnight loans to and borrowings from correspondent banks, including the Federal Reserve Bank and the Federal Home Loan Bank. Should a large “short” overnight position persist for any length of time, the Company typically raises money through focused retail deposit gathering efforts or by adding brokered time deposits. If a “long” position is prevalent, the Company will let brokered deposits or other wholesale borrowings roll off as they mature, or might invest excess liquidity in higher-yielding, longer-term bonds.

 

Because of frequent balance fluctuations, a more accurate gauge of cash management efficiency is the average balance for the period. The $37 million average of non-earning cash and due from banks for the first nine months of 2012 was higher than the $34 million average for the year in 2011, due in part to extra cash kept on hand to accommodate greater day-to-day fluctuations associated with a higher level of lending activity.

 

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Net premises and equipment increased by $1.5 million, or 7%, during the first nine months of 2012, due mainly to the replacement of our ATM’s in order to accommodate new compliance requirements, and tenant improvements associated with our relocated Clovis branch. Operating leases declined to $268,000 at September 30, 2012, from $384,000 at December 31, 2011. Foreclosed assets are discussed above, in the section titled “Nonperforming Assets.” Goodwill did not change during the period, ending the first nine months of 2012 with a balance of about $6 million. The Company’s goodwill is evaluated annually for potential impairment, and because the estimated fair value of the Company exceeded its book value (including goodwill) as of the measurement date and no impairment was indicated, no further testing was deemed necessary and it was determined that no goodwill impairment exists. “Other assets” declined by $1.8 million, or 2%, due primarily to a $1.3 million reduction in the net cash surrender value of bank-owned life insurance resulting from our receipt of insurance proceeds in conjunction with the passing of a retired employee. At September 30, 2012, the $79.8 million balance of other assets included as its largest components $37.7 million in bank-owned life insurance (see discussion of BOLI in “Non-Interest Revenue and Operating Expense” section above), a $9.0 million investment in low-income housing tax credit funds, a $6.4 million investment in restricted stock, a net deferred tax asset of $10.6 million, current prepaid income taxes totaling $3.3 million, accrued interest receivable totaling $5.2 million, and a prepaid regulatory assessment of $2.0 million. Restricted stock is comprised primarily of Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco (“FHLB”) stock that would typically experience balance fluctuations in conjunction with changes in our FHLB borrowings. However, the FHLB suspended stock repurchases for a period of time and is currently repurchasing stock at minimal levels, thus our restricted stock investment is not expected to drop significantly even with a lower level of borrowings. Our FHLB stock is not deemed to be marketable or liquid and is thus not grouped with the Company’s investments described above. Our net deferred tax asset is evaluated as of every reporting date pursuant to FASB guidance, and we have determined that no impairment exists.

 

DEPOSITS AND INTEREST BEARING LIABILITIES

 

DEPOSITS

 

Another key balance sheet component impacting the Company’s net interest margin is our deposits. Deposits provide liquidity to fund growth in earning assets, and the Company’s net interest margin is improved to the extent that growth in deposits is concentrated in less volatile and typically less costly non-maturity deposits, which include demand deposit accounts, NOW accounts, savings accounts, and money market demand accounts. Information concerning average balances and rates paid on deposits by deposit type for the quarters and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2012 and 2011 is contained in the Average Rates and Balances tables appearing above in the section titled “Net Interest Income and Net Interest Margin.” A comparative schedule of the distribution of the Company’s deposits at September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, by outstanding balance as well as by percentage of total deposits, is presented in the following Deposit Distribution table.

 

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Deposit Distribution        
(dollars in thousands, unaudited)        
   September 30, 2012   December 31, 2011 
Interest Bearing Demand Deposits  $67,938   $68,777 
Non-interest Bearing Demand Deposits   323,184    300,045 
NOW   195,634    187,155 
Savings   112,025    91,376 
Money Market   72,266    76,396 
CDAR's < $100,000   976    943 
CDAR's ≥ $100,000   17,723    17,119 
Customer Time deposit < $100,000   114,734    106,610 
Customer Time deposits ≥ $100,000   226,373    222,847 
Brokered Deposits   15,000    15,000 
Total Deposits  $1,145,853   $1,086,268 
           
Percentage of Total Deposits          
Interest Bearing Demand Deposits   5.93%   6.33%
Non-interest Bearing Demand Deposits   28.20%   27.62%
NOW   17.07%   17.23%
Savings   9.78%   8.41%
Money Market   6.31%   7.03%
CDAR's < $100,000   0.09%   0.09%
CDAR's $100,000   1.55%   1.58%
Customer Time deposit < $100,000   10.01%   9.81%
Customer Time deposits > $100,000   19.75%   20.52%
Brokered Deposits   1.31%   1.38%
Total Deposits   100.00%   100.00%

 

Total deposit balances increased by $60 million, or 5%, during the first nine months of 2012, with most of that growth occurring during the first six months of the year. Our deposit mix has improved in 2012 since most of the growth came in core non-maturity deposits, which were up by $47 million, or 7%, for the first nine months of the year. Our customers appear to have a propensity to save due to lingering economic uncertainties, but the growth in non-maturity deposits is also due in part to an intensified focus on business relationships and our ongoing deposit acquisition programs, including our highly successful direct mail initiatives. Those factors contributed to increases of $23 million, or 8%, in non-interest bearing demand deposits, and $8 million, or 5%, in NOW accounts. We also experienced a significant increase in savings deposits, which were up $21 million, or 23%, during the first nine months of 2012. The only non-maturity deposit category that shows a decline for the year-to-date period is money market deposits, which were down $4 million, or 5%.

 

Management is of the opinion that a relatively high level of core customer deposits is one of the Company’s key strengths, and we continue to focus energy toward deposit account retention and growth. Based on management’s analysis of trends in monthly average deposit balances, savings account balances appear to be on a fairly steady and consistent growth trend while transaction account and money market deposit balances seem to have leveled off over the past few months. Recent historical performance, however, is not a gauge for future performance, and no assurance can be provided that current growth trends will continue.

 

Customer time deposits under $100,000 increased by $8 million for the first nine months of 2012, due mainly to time deposits obtained by our Treasury department to help fund loan growth. CDAR’s deposits, which are also time deposits that are primarily sourced from customers in our market areas, were relatively flat for the first nine months. Customer time deposits over $100,000 experienced growth of $4 million, or 2%, while the outstanding balance of wholesale-sourced brokered deposits remained at $15 million.

 

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OTHER INTEREST-BEARING LIABILITIES

 

The Company’s other interest-bearing liabilities include overnight borrowings from other banks (“fed funds purchased”), borrowings from the Federal Home Loan Bank, securities sold under agreement to repurchase, and junior subordinated debentures that consist entirely of long-term borrowings from trust subsidiaries formed specifically to issue trust preferred securities (see Capital Resources section for a more detailed explanation of trust-preferred securities). In aggregate, we increased non-deposit interest-bearing liabilities by $21 million, or 32%, in the first nine months of 2012 to help fund loan growth during the second and third quarters of 2012.

 

The Company uses overnight and short-term FHLB advances and fed funds purchased on uncommitted lines from correspondent banks to support liquidity needs created by seasonal deposit flows, to temporarily satisfy funding needs from increased loan demand, and for other short-term purposes. The FHLB line is committed, but the amount of available credit is dependent on the level of pledged collateral. We had no overnight fed funds purchased on our books at September 30, 2012 or December 31, 2011, but repurchase agreement balances totaled approximately $4 million at September 30, 2012 and $3 million at December 31, 2011. Repurchase agreements represent customer “sweep accounts”, where deposit balances above a specified threshold are transferred at the close of every business day into non-deposit accounts secured by investment securities. We had $48 million in overnight FHLB advances at September 30, 2012, a $31 million increase relative to the $17 million balance at the end of 2011, but long-term FHLB advances declined by $10 million during the same time frame due to balances that matured. There were no other short-term FHLB advances outstanding at September 30, 2012 or December 31, 2011. The Company had $31 million in junior subordinated debentures at September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011.

 

OTHER NON-INTEREST BEARING LIABILITIES

 

Other non-interest bearing liabilities are principally comprised of accrued interest payable, accrued income taxes, other accrued but unpaid expenses, and certain clearing amounts. Other liabilities increased by $1 million, or 7%, during the first nine months of 2012, due in large part to a liability established in the first quarter for our $1 million capital commitment as a limited partner in a newly-launched Small Business Investment Corporation.

 

liquidity and market RisK MANAGEMENT

 

LIQUIDITY

 

Liquidity refers to the Company’s ability to maintain cash flows that are adequate to fund operations and meet other obligations and commitments in a timely and cost-effective manner. Detailed cash flow projections are reviewed by management on a monthly basis, with various scenarios applied to simulate our ability to meet liquidity needs under adverse conditions, and liquidity ratios are also calculated and reviewed on a regular basis. While these ratios are merely indicators and are not measures of actual liquidity, they are monitored closely and we are focused on maintaining adequate liquidity resources to draw upon should unexpected liquidity needs arise.

 

The Company, on occasion, experiences cash needs as the result of loan growth, deposit outflows, asset purchases or liability repayments. To meet short-term needs, the Company can borrow overnight funds from other financial institutions, draw advances against Federal Home Loan Bank lines of credit, or solicit brokered deposits if deposits are not immediately obtainable from local sources. Availability on lines of credit from correspondent banks, including the FHLB, totaled $196 million at September 30, 2012. An additional $151 million in credit is available from the Federal Home Loan Bank if the Company pledges sufficient additional collateral and maintains the required amount of FHLB stock. The Company is also eligible to borrow approximately $53 million at the Federal Reserve Discount Window, if necessary, based on pledged assets at September 30, 2012. Furthermore, funds can be obtained by drawing down the Company’s correspondent bank deposit accounts, or by liquidating unpledged investments or other readily saleable assets. In addition, the Company can raise immediate cash for temporary needs by selling under agreement to repurchase those investments in its portfolio which are not pledged as collateral. As of September 30, 2012, unpledged debt securities, plus pledged securities in excess of current pledging requirements, comprised $310 million of the Company’s investment portfolio balances, up slightly from $309 million at December 31, 2011. Other forms of balance sheet liquidity include but are not necessarily limited to any outstanding fed funds sold and vault cash. The Company has a higher level of actual balance sheet liquidity than might otherwise be the case, since we utilize a letter of credit from the FHLB rather than investment securities for certain pledging requirements. The FHLB letter of credit totaled $74 million at September 30, 2012. Management is of the opinion that available investments and other potentially liquid assets, along with the standby funding sources it has arranged, are more than sufficient to meet the Company’s current and anticipated short-term liquidity needs.

 

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The Company’s net loans to assets and net non-core funding dependence ratios were 60% and 23%, respectively, at September 30, 2012, as compared to internal policy guidelines of “less than 78%” and “less than 50%.” Other liquidity ratios reviewed by management and the Board include net loans to total deposits, wholesale funding to total assets (including ratios and sub-limits for the various components comprising wholesale funding), and available investments to assets, all of which were well within policy guidelines at September 30, 2012. Strong growth in core deposits and growth in investments has had a positive impact on our liquidity position in recent periods, although loan growth has absorbed much of the liquidity generated during 2012 and no assurance can be provided that our liquidity position will continue at current robust levels.

 

INTEREST RATE RISK MANAGEMENT

 

Market risk arises from changes in interest rates, exchange rates, commodity prices and equity prices. The Company does not engage in the trading of financial instruments, nor does it have exposure to currency exchange rates. Our market risk exposure is primarily that of interest rate risk, and we have established policies and procedures to monitor and limit our earnings and balance sheet exposure to changes in interest rates. The principal objective of interest rate risk management is to manage the financial components of the Company’s balance sheet in a manner that will optimize the risk/reward equation for earnings and capital under a variety of interest rate scenarios. To identify areas of potential exposure to rate changes, the Company performs an earnings simulation analysis on a monthly basis and calculates the market value of portfolio equity under varying interest rate scenarios at least once every quarter.

 

The Company uses Sendero modeling software in order to simulate the effects of potential interest rate changes on net interest income and on the estimated fair values of the Company’s financial instruments. The model imports balances, interest rates, maturity dates and re-pricing information for individual financial instruments, and incorporates assumptions on the characteristics of embedded options along with pricing and duration for new volumes to calculate the expected effect of a given interest rate change on the Company’s projected interest income and interest expense. Rate scenarios consisting of key rate and yield curve projections are applied to the Company’s investments, loans, deposits and borrowed funds. The rate projections can be shocked (an immediate and parallel change in all base rates, up or down), ramped (an incremental increase or decrease in rates over a specified time period), economic (based on current trends and econometric models) or stable (unchanged from current actual levels).

 

The Company uses eight standard interest rate scenarios in conducting its simulations: “stable,” upward shocks of 100, 200, 300 and 400 basis points, and downward shocks of 100, 200, and 300 basis points. Our policy is to limit any projected decline in net interest income relative to the stable rate scenario for the next 12 months to less than 5% for a 100 basis point (b.p.) shock, 10% for a 200 b.p. shock, 15% for a 300 b.p. shock, and 20% for a 400 b.p. shock in interest rates. As of September 30, 2012 the Company had the following estimated net interest income sensitivity profile, without factoring in any potential negative impact on spreads resulting from competitive pressures:

 

   Immediate Change in Rate 
   -300 b.p.   -200 b.p.   -100 b.p.   +100 b.p.   +200 b.p.   +300 b.p.   +400 b.p. 
Change in Net Int. Inc. (in $000’s)  $-7,700   $-5,425   $-2,788   $+1,329   $+1,978   $+2,486   $+2,335 
% Change   -14.91%   -10.51%   -5.40%   +2.57%   +3.83%   +4.81%   +4.52%

 

Our current net interest income simulations indicate that the Company has an asset-sensitive profile, meaning that net interest income increases in rising interest rate scenarios but a drop in interest rates could have a negative impact. We have seen this profile steepen somewhat over the past couple of years, as we have benefited from an increasing proportion of lower-cost non-maturity deposits. The scenarios factor in the strong loan growth which occurred in the second and third quarters of 2012. This boosted net interest income for all projections, but the gain relative to base case declined for rising rate scenarios due to the subsequent adjustment of future balance sheet growth assumptions.

 

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If there were an immediate and sustained downward adjustment of 100 basis points in interest rates, all else being equal, net interest income over the next twelve months would likely be around $2.788 million lower than in a stable interest rate scenario, a drop of 5.40%. The unfavorable variance increases when rates drop 200 or 300 basis points, due to the fact that certain deposit rates are already relatively low (on NOW accounts and savings accounts, for example), and will hit a natural floor of close to zero while variable-rate loan yields continue to drop. This effect is exacerbated by the fact that prepayments on fixed-rate loans and mortgage-backed securities tend to increase as rates decline, although rate floors on some of our variable-rate loans partially offset other negative pressures. While we view declining interest rates as highly unlikely, the potential percentage reduction in net interest income slightly exceeds our internal policy guidelines in two of the three declining interest rate scenarios, and we will continue to monitor our interest rate risk profile and take corrective action as appropriate.

 

If interest rates were to increase by 100 basis points, net interest income would likely improve by $1.329 million, or 2.57%, relative to a stable interest rate scenario. The initial increase in rising rate scenarios is limited to some extent by the fact that many of our variable-rate loans are currently at rate floors, creating a re-pricing lag while variable rates are increasing to floored levels, and is further affected by the impact of certain variable-rate time deposits lifting off of rate floors.

 

The economic value (or “fair value”) of financial instruments on the Company’s balance sheet will also vary under the interest rate scenarios previously discussed. This variance is essentially a gauge of longer-term exposure to interest rate risk. It is measured by simulating changes in the Company’s economic value of equity (EVE), which is basically derived by subtracting the fair value of liabilities from the fair value of assets. Fair values for financial instruments are estimated by discounting projected cash flows (principal and interest) at current replacement interest rates for each account type, while the fair value of non-financial accounts is assumed to equal their book value for all rate scenarios. An economic value simulation is a static measure for balance sheet accounts at a given point in time, and the measurement can change substantially over time as the characteristics of the Company’s balance sheet evolve and as interest rate and yield curve assumptions are updated.

 

The amount of change in economic value under different interest rate scenarios depends on the characteristics of each class of financial instrument, including the stated interest rate or spread relative to current market rates or spreads, the likelihood of prepayment, whether the rate is fixed or floating, and the maturity date of the instrument. As a general rule, fixed-rate financial assets become more valuable in declining rate scenarios and less valuable in rising rate scenarios, while fixed-rate financial liabilities gain in value as interest rates rise and lose value as interest rates decline. The longer the duration of the financial instrument, the greater the impact a rate change will have on its value. In our economic value simulations, estimated prepayments are factored in for financial instruments with stated maturity dates, and decay rates for non-maturity deposits are projected based on historical patterns and management’s best estimates. We have found that model results are highly sensitive to changes in the assumed decay rate for non-maturity deposits, in particular. The table below shows estimated changes in the Company’s EVE as of September 30, 2012, under different interest rate scenarios relative to a base case of current interest rates:

 

   Immediate Change in Rate 
   -300 b.p.   -200 b.p.   -100 b.p.   +100 b.p.   +200 b.p.   +300 b.p. 
Change in EVE (in $000’s)  $-19,215   $-43,006   $-33,692   $+38,980   $+59,923   $+73,467 
% Change   -6.15%   -13.76%   -10.78%   +12.47%   +19.17%   +23.51%

 

The table shows that our EVE will generally deteriorate in declining rate scenarios, but will benefit from rising rates. The changes in EVE are not symmetrical, however, due to the optionality inherent in certain financial instruments. Our EVE profile has changed substantially in recent periods, shifting from unfavorable exposure to a benefit in a rising interest rate environment, due in part to growth in non-maturity deposits and adjustments applied to deposit decay rates and loan prepayment rates in order to better reflect historical patterns. Effectively, lower deposit decay rates mean that we have a longer period to benefit from low-cost deposits, which are even more valuable when the cost of replacing them becomes greater as would be the case in a rising rate environment. However, the same changes that have improved our profile in rising rate scenarios have created greater exposure to declining rates. That negative impact is exacerbated by the acceleration of loan prepayment speeds in declining rate scenarios. While still negative relative to the base case, we see a favorable swing in EVE as interest rates drop from 200 basis points to 300 basis points. This is due to the longer duration of our fixed-rate assets relative to our fixed-rate liabilities, and the resulting impact of a significant rate decline on financial instrument fair values. As noted previously, however, management is of the opinion that the probability of a significant rate decline is low.

 

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CAPITAL RESOURCES

 

At September 30, 2012, the Company had total shareholders’ equity of $174.5 million, comprised of $64.3 million in common stock, $2.4 million in additional paid-in capital, $101.9 million in retained earnings, and $5.9 million in accumulated other comprehensive income. Total shareholders’ equity at the end of 2011 was $168.6 million. The increase in shareholders’ equity during the first nine months of 2012 was due in large part to the addition of $6.1 million in net earnings, less $2.5 million in dividends paid. Accumulated other comprehensive income, representing the change in the mark-to-market differential of our investment securities (net of the tax impact), also increased by $2.0 million due to increasing market values.

 

The Company uses a variety of measures to evaluate its capital adequacy, with risk-based capital ratios calculated separately for the Company and the Bank. Management reviews these capital measurements on a quarterly basis and takes appropriate action to ensure that they meet or surpass established internal and external guidelines. Refer to Notes to Unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements, Note 13 – Recent Developments, for a summary of changes to risk-based capital calculations which have been proposed by federal banking regulators. The Company and the Bank are both currently classified as “well capitalized,” the highest rating of the categories defined under the Bank Holding Company Act and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act (FDICIA) of 1991. Each of the federal regulators has established risk based and leverage capital guidelines for the bank holding companies or banks it regulates, which set total capital requirements and define capital in terms of “core capital elements,” or Tier 1 capital; and “supplemental capital elements,” or Tier 2 capital. Tier 1 capital is currently defined as the sum of core capital elements less goodwill and certain other deductions, notably disallowed deferred tax assets and the unrealized net gains or losses (after tax adjustments) on available-for-sale investment securities. The following items are defined as core capital elements: (i) common shareholders’ equity; (ii) qualifying non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock and related surplus (and, in the case of holding companies, senior perpetual preferred stock issued to the U.S. Treasury Department pursuant to the Troubled Asset Relief Program); (iii) qualified minority interests in consolidated subsidiaries and similar items; and (iv) qualifying trust preferred securities up to a specified limit. All of the $30 million in junior subordinated debentures on the Company’s balance sheet at September 30, 2012 was included in Tier 1 capital; however, if the restrictions proposed under the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking recently issued by our primary regulators are ultimately adopted, the inclusion of these debentures as Tier 1 capital will be phased out.

 

Tier 2 capital can currently include: (i) the allowance for loan and lease losses plus the reserve for unused commitments (but not more than 1.25% of an institution’s risk-weighted assets); (ii) perpetual preferred stock and related surplus not qualifying as Tier 1 capital; (iii) hybrid capital instruments, perpetual debt and mandatory convertible debt instruments; (iv) a certain level of unrealized gains on available-for-sale equity securities; and (v) qualifying subordinated debt and redeemable preferred stock (but not more than 50% of Tier 1 capital). Because of the limitation on the allowance for loan and lease losses plus the reserve for unused commitments, $408,000 of the total is currently not includible in Tier 2 capital for Sierra Bancorp’s consolidated calculations. The maximum amount of Tier 2 capital that is allowable for risk-based capital purposes is limited to 100% of Tier 1 capital, net of goodwill. The following table sets forth the Company’s and the Bank’s regulatory capital ratios as of the dates indicated.

 

Regulatory Capital Ratios        
   September 30, 2012   December 31, 2011 
Sierra Bancorp          
Total Capital to Total Risk-weighted Assets   19.96%   21.72%
Tier 1 Capital to Total Risk-weighted Assets   18.70%   20.46%
Tier 1 Leverage Ratio   13.50%   14.11%
           
Bank of the Sierra          
Total Capital to Total Risk-weighted Assets   19.56%   20.89%
Tier 1 Capital to Total Risk-weighted Assets   18.31%   19.63%
Tier 1 Leverage Ratio   13.22%   13.53%

 

At the current time, there are no commitments that would necessitate the use of material amounts of the Company’s capital.

 

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PART I – FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Item 3

 

QUALITATIVE & QUANTITATIVE DISCLOSURES

ABOUT MARKET RISK

 

The information concerning quantitative and qualitative disclosures about market risk is included in Part I, Item 2 above. See “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations – Liquidity and Market Risk Management.”

 

PART I – FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Item 4

 

CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

 

Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures

 

The Company’s Chief Executive Officer and its Chief Financial Officer, after evaluating the effectiveness of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) as of the end of the period covered by this report (the “Evaluation Date”) have concluded that as of the Evaluation Date, the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures were adequate and effective to ensure that material information relating to the Company and its consolidated subsidiaries would be made known to them by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this quarterly report was being prepared.

 

Disclosure controls and procedures are designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed by us in the reports that we file or submit under the Exchange Act is accumulated and communicated to our management, including our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure, and that such information is recorded, processed, summarized, and reported within the time periods specified by the SEC.

 

Changes in Internal Controls

 

There were no significant changes in the Company’s internal controls over financial reporting that occurred in the third quarter of 2012 that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.

 

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PART II - OTHER INFORMATION

 

ITEM 1: LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

 

In the normal course of business, the Company is involved in various legal proceedings. In the opinion of management, any liability resulting from such proceedings would not have a material adverse effect on the Company’s financial condition or results of operation.

 

ITEM 1A: RISK FACTORS

 

There were no material changes from the risk factors disclosed in the Company’s Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2011.

 

ITEM 2: UNREGISTERED SALES OF EQUITY SECURITIES AND USE OF PROCEEDS

 

(c)Stock Repurchases

 

The Company’s current stock repurchase plan became effective July 1, 2003 and has no expiration date. Of the aggregate 1,250,000 shares authorized for repurchase since the effective date of the plan, there were 100,669 remaining shares available for repurchase as of September 30, 2012. There were no stock repurchases during the third quarter of 2012.

 

ITEM 3: DEFAULTS UPON SENIOR SECURITIES

 

Not applicable

 

ITEM 4: (REMOVED AND RESERVED)

  

Item 5: Other Information

 

Not applicable

 

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Item 6: Exhibits

 

Exhibit #   Description
3.1   Restated Articles of Incorporation of Sierra Bancorp (1)
3.2   Amended and Restated By-laws of the Company (2)
10.1   1998 Stock Option Plan (3)
10.2   Salary Continuation Agreement for Kenneth R. Taylor (4)
10.3   Salary Continuation Agreement for James C. Holly (4)
10.4   Salary Continuation Agreement and Split Dollar Agreement for James F. Gardunio (5)
10.5   Split Dollar Agreement for Kenneth R. Taylor (6)
10.6   Split Dollar Agreement and Amendment thereto for James C. Holly (6)
10.7   Director Retirement Agreement and Split dollar Agreement for Vincent Jurkovich (6)
10.8   Director Retirement Agreement and Split dollar Agreement for Robert Fields (6)
10.9   Director Retirement Agreement and Split dollar Agreement for Gordon Woods (6)
10.10   Director Retirement Agreement and Split dollar Agreement for Morris Tharp (6)
10.11   Director Retirement Agreement and Split dollar Agreement for Albert Berra (6)
10.12   401 Plus Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Plan (6)
10.13   Indenture dated as of March 17, 2004 between U.S. Bank N.A., as Trustee, and Sierra Bancorp, as Issuer (7)
10.14   Amended and Restated Declaration of Trust of Sierra Statutory Trust II, dated as of March 17, 2004 (7)
10.15   Guarantee Agreement between Sierra Bancorp and U.S. Bank National Association dated as of March 17, 2004 (7)
10.16   Indenture dated as of June 15, 2006 between Wilmington Trust Co., as Trustee, and Sierra Bancorp, as Issuer (8)
10.17   Amended and Restated Declaration of Trust of Sierra Capital Trust III, dated as of June 15, 2006 (8)
10.18   Guarantee Agreement between Sierra Bancorp and Wilmington Trust Company dated as of June 15, 2006 (8)
10.19   2007 Stock Incentive Plan (9)
10.20   Sample Retirement Agreement Entered into with Each Non-Employee Director Effective January 1, 2007 (10)
10.21   Salary Continuation Agreement for Kevin J. McPhaill (10)
10.22   First Amendment to the Salary Continuation Agreement for Kenneth R. Taylor (10)
11   Statement of Computation of Per Share Earnings (11)
31.1   Certification of Chief Executive Officer (Section 302 Certification)
31.2   Certification of Chief Financial Officer (Section 302 Certification)
32   Certification of Periodic Financial Report (Section 906 Certification)

___________________________

 

(1)Filed as Exhibit 3.1 to the Form 10-Q filed with the SEC on August 7, 2009 and incorporated herein by reference.

(2)Filed as an Exhibit to the Form 8-K filed with the SEC on February 21, 2007 and incorporated herein by reference.

(3)Filed as an Exhibit to the Registration Statement of Sierra Bancorp on Form S-4 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) (Registration No. 333-53178) on January 4, 2001 and incorporated herein by reference.

(4)Filed as Exhibits 10.5 and 10.7 to the Form 10-Q filed with the SEC on May 15, 2003 and incorporated herein by reference.

(5)Filed as an Exhibit to the Form 8-K filed with the SEC on August 11, 2005 and incorporated herein by reference.

(6)Filed as Exhibits 10.10, 10.12, and 10.15 through 10.20 to the Form 10-K filed with the SEC on March 15, 2006 and incorporated herein by reference.

(7)Filed as Exhibits 10.9 through 10.11 to the Form 10-Q filed with the SEC on May 14, 2004 and incorporated herein by reference.

(8)Filed as Exhibits 10.26 through 10.28 to the Form 10-Q filed with the SEC on August 9, 2006 and incorporated herein by reference.

(9)Filed as Exhibit 10.20 to the Form 10-K filed with the SEC on March 15, 2007 and incorporated herein by reference.

(10)Filed as an Exhibit to the Form 8-K filed with the SEC on January 8, 2007 and incorporated herein by reference.

(11)Computation of earnings per share is incorporated by reference to Note 6 of the Financial Statements included herein.

 

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SIGNATURES

 

Pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Company has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized:

 

November 8, 2012 /s/ James C. Holly
Date SIERRA BANCORP
  James C. Holly
  President & Chief Executive Officer
  (Principal Executive Officer)

 

November 8, 2012 /s/ Kenneth R. Taylor
Date SIERRA BANCORP
  Kenneth R. Taylor
  Chief Financial Officer
  (Principal Financial and Principal Accounting Officer)

 

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