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First Internet Bancorp (INBK 3.71%)
Q2 2021 Earnings Call
Jul 22, 2021, 12:00 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good day, everyone, and welcome to the First Internet Bancorp Earnings Conference Call for the Second Quarter of 2021. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] And please note, today's event is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to Larry Clark from Financial Profiles, Inc. Please go ahead, Mr. Clark.

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Larry Clark -- Senior Vice President

Thank you, Sarah. Good day, everyone, and thank you for joining us to discuss First Internet Bancorp's financial results for the second quarter of 2021. The Company issued its earnings press release yesterday afternoon and it's available on the Company's website. In addition, the Company has included a slide presentation that you can refer to during the call. You can also access these slides on the website.

Joining us today from the management team are Chairman and CEO, David Becker; and Executive Vice President and CFO, Ken Lovik. David will provide an overview and a Company update, and Ken will discuss the financial results. Then we'll open up the call to your questions.

Before we begin, I'd like to remind you that this conference call contains forward-looking statements with respect to the future performance and financial condition of First Internet Bancorp that involve risks and uncertainties. Various factors could cause actual results to be materially different from any future results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. These factors are discussed in the Company's SEC filings, which are available on the Company's website. The Company disclaims any obligation to update any forward-looking statements made during the call.

Additionally, management may refer to non-GAAP measures, which are intended to supplement but not substitute the most directly comparable GAAP measures. This -- the press release available on the website contains the financial and other quantitative information to be discussed today, as well as a reconciliation of the GAAP to non-GAAP measures.

At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to David.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Larry, and good afternoon, everyone. And thanks for joining us today. We produced strong operating results for the second quarter of 2021, driven by net interest margin expansion and disciplined expense management. Reported net income was a record $13.1 million and diluted earnings per share was a record $13.1 -- excuse me $1.31.

Included in our results for the quarter was a $2.5 million pre-tax gain on the sale of our corporate headquarters. Excluding this amount, adjusted net income was $11.1 million, which would still be our highest quarterly result ever, and adjusted earnings per share was $1.11, $0.01 shy of our quarterly record.

The strong performance enabled us to generate an adjusted return on average assets of 1.06%, demonstrating continuous improvement from the beginning of the pandemic crisis, and we increased our tangible common equity to tangible assets ratio by 31 basis points to just over 8.4%.

Compared to the second quarter of 2020, performance has increased significantly due to the strong growth in net interest income and net interest margin, as well as from the investments we have made in our fee revenue lines of business. Using the adjusted earnings results, both net income and earnings per share are up 182% and 178%, respectively, while adjusted total revenue is up 45%.

Our national SBA platform gained momentum during the quarter, producing $3 million of gain on sale revenue, up significantly from the first quarter. Due to the disruption in the small business lending market earlier in the year and the time it took to rebuild pipelines, our level of forecasted originations for the year is down slightly from our prior forecast. However, loan pipelines have recovered. We are actively engaged and meeting strong demand for the traditional SBA 7A loan, as the economic recovery accelerates. Therefore, we still feel very confident in the growth of our SBA business with expected gain on sale revenue between $13 million to $14 million for the full year.

Looking at the lending activity for the second quarter, total loan balances were down just over $100 million as prepayment activity remained elevated in the healthcare finance and single-tenant leasing financing portfolios.

Looking forward though, loan pipelines across other commercial lines of business began to grow significantly during the second quarter. For example, the single-tenant lease financing pipeline is at its highest level in 15 months, as relationship borrowers are increasingly coming to us to finance additional opportunities. In total, our commercial pipeline is up over 20% from the end of the first quarter.

Another area of focus for us has been increasing our presence in construction lending. Funding balances are up over 50% from one year ago, and our team is actively sourcing new projects. Moreover, as of June 30th, unfunded commitments on our construction line of business totaled $159 million, an increase of 39% over the balance at the end of the first quarter.

With regard to healthcare finance, balances were down over $50 million from the first quarter, driven by elevated prepayment activity and a very low level of new originations. New origination activity during 2021 has been light as a low interest rate environment and heightened competition drove pricing well below the floors we have in place. Additionally, in June, our partner in this line of business, Provide, formerly known as Lendeavor, announced that it was going to be acquired by Fifth Third Bank, who already have an ownership stake in the company. Going forward, we expect that Fifth Third will retain most, if not all, of Provide's new origination activity.

However, we continue to explore new lines of business and partnerships. For example, during the second quarter, we finalized a partnership with fintech-oriented specialty lender that focuses on high-quality loans through the franchise industry, and we will fill the gap created by the decline in healthcare finance balances. Through this relationship, we expect to begin funding portfolio loans with attractive yields during the third quarter and have committed to fund up to $100 million of originations over the next 12 months. This relationship will also provide SBA 7A lending opportunities to supplement our own origination activities.

On the lending front overall, we feel really good about how pipelines increased during the second quarter, leaving us well positioned to deploy the elevated levels of cash on the balance sheet and capitalize on loan growth opportunities in the second half of 2021.

Our credit quality, meanwhile, remains among the best in the industry. During the quarter, non-performing loans declined $5.4 million or 37% and non-performing assets declined $4.1 million or 28%, due primarily to positive developments on a single-tenant lease financing relationship and a commercial and industrial relationship, both of which were previously classified as non-accrual.

At quarter end, the ratio of non-performing loans to total loans has declined to 31%, and the ratio of non-performing assets to total assets has declined to 25 basis points. Additionally, delinquencies dropped significantly during the quarter, representing only 7 basis points of the total loan balances. We are especially proud of the fact that as of June 30th, we had no delinquencies in our originated consumer loan portfolio.

Turning now to the consumer and small business banking. Demand for digital banking services is at an all-time high. We have leveraged our customer-focused products, which include the nation's best checking account for small business as awarded by Newsweek magazine and expertise in digital service delivery. We have 22 years of experience in providing not just a robust customer-facing interface, but also the processes behind the scenes to support a seamless experience.

During the first half of 2021, we have grown our small business checking relationships by more than 25%. And to continue to win and retain these relationships, we are close to being able to announce several collaborative partnerships with fintech companies. We look forward to sharing with you in the future call more details about our next-generation customer experience that will also power internal efficiencies.

In summary, we generated excellent results for our shareholders in the second quarter. We are in great financial position to serve our customers and help fuel the broader economy as the country emerges from the pandemic.

Before I turn it over to Ken, I would like to thank the entire First Internet team for the diligent efforts in delivering record earnings this quarter. We continue to challenge ourselves to imagine more, and First Internet Bank has fostered a workplace culture that promotes innovation, collaboration, and customer focus, which is reflected in being named one of the Top Workplaces in Indiana for the eighth consecutive year. We are confident in the strength of our franchise and the momentum we have built heading into the back half of 2021.

With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Ken to discuss our financial results for the quarter.

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, David. As David mentioned, it was a strong quarter with record net income of $13.1 million and $1.31 diluted earnings per share, which included a $2.5 million pre-tax gain on the sale of our corporate headquarters. After taking into account this one-time item, adjusted net income came in at $11.1 million and adjusted diluted earnings per share was $1.11, increases of 6.2% and 5.7%, respectively, from the first quarter.

Profitability continued to improve with fully taxable equivalent net interest margin increasing 7 basis points sequentially to 2.25% and adjusted return on average assets of 1.06%, and an adjusted return on average tangible common equity of 12.79%.

Looking at Slide 4 related to revenue and drivers of revenue growth, we have outperformed the peer group of similarly sized institutions on a year-over-year basis and we expect this trend to continue once each of the peer institutions have reported results for the second quarter.

Turning to Slide 6. Total loans at the end of the second quarter were $3 billion, a 3.3% decline from the first quarter and relatively comparable to June 30, 2020. The decline in loan balances from the first quarter was driven largely by net payoffs in our healthcare finance, single-tenant lease financing, and public finance portfolios, as balances were down $54.3 million, $28.2 million and $25.5 million, respectively.

Additionally, small business lending balances were down $9.2 million, largely due to $16.2 million of PPP loan forgiveness, but partially offset by new production. Increases of $24.4 million in commercial and industrial and $14 million in investor commercial real estate loan balances, partially offset the overall decrease in the loan portfolio. Consumer loans decreased modestly compared to the first quarter due primarily to continued prepayment activity in the residential mortgage portfolio. We did, however, see an increase in origination activity within our specialty consumer lending business with trailer balances increasing $5.3 million or 3.7% from the first quarter.

Moving on to deposits on Slide 7, overall deposit balances were down slightly from the end of the first quarter. And again, we saw improvement in the composition of our deposit base. During the quarter, CDs and broker deposits decreased $75.5 million or 5.1% on a combined basis, while non-time deposit balances increased $64.1 million or 3.7% on a combined basis. CDs and broker deposit balances continued to decline as higher cost CD maturities were either funded with on balance sheet liquidity or replaced with much more attractively priced money market accounts, checking accounts and lower rate CDs. This deposit migration lowered our cost of interest-bearing deposits 13 basis points in the quarter, and we expect to experience continued reductions in deposit costs throughout the second half of the year. Compared to the first half of 2020, we've realized $16.6 million of deposit interest expense savings to date and expect to realize around $26 million for the full year based on the current deposit pricing environment.

Turning to Slides 8 and 9, despite loan balances declining over the quarter, net interest income and net interest margin on both a GAAP and fully taxable equivalent basis continued to increase compared to last quarter. As you can see from the net interest margin bridge on Slide 9, deposit pricing had the largest effect on margin during the quarter with a positive impact of 11 basis points. Although loan yields were up 3 basis points from the prior quarter, the all-in effect of the loan portfolio was a negative impact of 6 basis points, driven by volume as average loan balances were down $62.8 million or 2% from the first quarter.

The average balance of interest-earning assets was relatively flat compared to the first quarter but a shift in the mix of interest-earning assets resulted in a 5 basis point decrease in the yield. The decrease in the average balance of loans was essentially offset by growth in average cash balances, which increased $69.2 million from the prior quarter. As cash balances continued to increase during the quarter, we deployed about $200 million of liquidity into 15 and 20-year agency mortgage-backed securities in mid-June, which should have a positive impact on the earning asset mix in the near term.

Looking ahead to the second half of 2021, we project our yield on interest-earning assets to remain relatively stable as we expect to deploy liquidity to fund new loan originations as pipelines continue to build. Overall, we are pleased to have delivered 7 basis point improvement in our fully taxable equivalent net interest margin during the quarter and expect the upward trend to continue throughout the second half of the year.

Turning to non-interest income on Slide 10. Non-interest income for the quarter was $9 million, up from $8.4 million in the first quarter. However, as mentioned earlier, included in those results was a one-time pre-tax gain of $2.5 million due to the sale of the Company's corporate headquarters. Adjusted for that sale, non-interest income was $6.4 million, down $1.9 million from the prior quarter. The decrease was driven primarily by lower revenues from mortgage banking activities but was partially offset by an increase in gain on sale of loans. Mortgage banking revenue totaled $2.7 million for the second quarter, down $3.1 million from the prior quarter.

Interest rate locks and origination volumes during the quarter were off the record high levels we saw in the past few quarters, mostly due to lower refinance activity as well as limited housing inventory in the marketplace. Furthermore, competition has intensified, which has put significant pressure on our margins. Although there may be volatility in mortgage banking revenue, we expect it to stabilize during the second half of the year.

Gain on sale of loans totaled $3 million for the quarter, up $1.3 million or 75% from the first quarter as we sold a larger amount of the U.S. Small Business Administration 7(a) guaranteed loans at higher premiums. With respect to non-interest expenses shown on Slide 11, the decrease on a linked-quarter basis was driven primarily by a decline in salaries and employee benefits and deposit insurance premium, which was partially offset by increases in marketing, advertising and promotion expense. The decrease in salaries and employee benefits was due mainly to a decrease in medical claims expense during the quarter, while the decrease in deposit insurance premium was due to the decline in total assets year-over-year. The increase in marketing expenses was due to higher mortgage lead generation costs and increased sponsorship initiatives.

Now let's turn to asset quality on Slide 12. The credit quality improved during the quarter, mainly due to the resolution of a number of legacy non-performing loans. Non-performing loans declined $5.4 million or 37% compared to the linked quarter due primarily to positive developments related to a single tenant lease financing relationship and a commercial and industrial relationship, both of which have been classified as non-accrual. The single-tenant lease financing relationship included two loans, one of which was paid off at net book value and the other was transferred to other real estate owned. The commercial and industrial relationship included four loans, two of which paid off during the quarter. As a result, non-performing loans now represent 31 basis points of total loans, down from 48 basis points in the prior quarter.

In addition, we eliminated $2.9 million of specific reserves related to these loans. Net charge-offs increased by $2.5 million in the quarter and net charge-offs total to average loans increased to 35 basis points from 2 basis points in the first quarter. The increase in net charge-offs was due primarily to the single-tenant lease financing relationship that was resolved as the loan payoff and the transfer to other real estate owned were recorded at net book value, which consisted of unpaid principal balance, less specific reserves.

The provision for loan losses in the second quarter was $21,000 compared to $1.3 million for the prior quarter. The decrease was due primarily to the $101.1 million decrease in loan balances, but was partially offset by continued upward adjustments to certain qualitative factors in the allowance model. Although the economic outlook continues to improve, and we have seen positive credit quality trends within our portfolio, we recognize that certain aspects of the economy have yet to fully recover and the potential still insist for future pandemic-related disruption. Because of this, we felt it was important to continue to maintain a larger qualitative reserve until there is a greater consensus on the overall health and direction of the economy. I would like to point out that had we not made these further adjustments to the qualitative factors in our model, we would have recorded a negative provision of about $800,000 for the quarter.

Overall, the allowance for loan losses decreased $2.6 million during the quarter and the ratio of the allowance to total loans decreased to 95 basis points from 1% as of the prior quarter. Excluding PPP loans, which totaled $39.7 million at quarter end, the allowance coverage ratio was 96 basis points, down 6 basis points from the linked quarter. The decline in the allowance was driven primarily by the removal of the specific reserves discussed earlier as well as the decrease in total loan balances, which included declines in certain commercial loan portfolio -- portfolios with higher allowance coverage ratios. These items were partially offset by the upward adjustments to the qualitative factors in the model, which resulted in a 6 basis point increase to the allowance coverage ratio related to the general reserve on the Company's commercial loan portfolio.

With respect to liquidity and capital, as shown on Slide 13, our overall capital levels improved and remain healthy at both the Company and the Bank. With the strong earnings performance this quarter, our tangible common equity to tangible assets ratio increased 31 basis points to 8.43% from 8.2% in the first quarter. Additionally, tangible book value per share increased to $35.92 up from $34.60 in the first quarter and just over 16% higher than one year ago.

I would like to wrap up my comments with a few thoughts on the balance sheet and revenue initiatives we have implemented over the last several quarters that position us much better to perform well in a variety of interest rate environments as shown on Slide 14. First, as compared to the last time interest rates began to consistently increase. We have significantly improved the composition of our deposit base. Our efforts to drive growth in small business and consumer money market and checking accounts, have reduced the need to fund loan growth with CDs, which experienced much higher pricing betas in the last rate tightening cycle.

Second, we have made a substantial investment in building a sustainable SBA lending platform that has grown and diversified our non-interest income and should provide a level of stability to overall revenue in times of interest rate volatility that may compress net interest income. And third, we have increased our focus on building lines of business with higher yielding variable rate and shorter duration loan originations. Retained SBA 7(a) balances priced at healthy spreads over the prime rate and our growing construction line of business are examples of these efforts and are expected to become larger components of our loan portfolio.

Overall, we believe that our balance sheet and sources of fee revenue are in a much better position than they were several years ago, and we will continue to build off the improvements made over the last several quarters to create a franchise that will deliver high performance regardless of the interest rate environment.

With that, I'll turn it back to the operator so we can take your questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Michael Perito with KBW. Please go ahead.

Michael Perito -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods -- Analyst

Hey, good afternoon, guys. Thanks for taking my questions.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Good afternoon, Mike.

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hey, Mike.

Michael Perito -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods -- Analyst

Dave, I'm sure that you're limited in what you can say in terms of some of those fintech partnerships you alluded to coming in the near future here. But I was just curious if maybe you can give us some more structure behind that in terms of what type of opportunities we should expect to see financially? Are they primarily lending opportunities where you're using your balance sheet or deposit opportunities where you're offering insure checking accounts? Or just any color there would be helpful just so we know how you guys are thinking about those opportunities probably moving forward.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Technically from the partnership discussed there, that's really internal software and infrastructure clean-ups in the small business category. So it should provide both. Like I said, we've had great growth since the first of the year with commercial checking accounts going up 25%. But we think we're going to add some additional features on the back end, make smoother access, faster performance that will help both on the lending and the saving side of things and deposit base. So that is technically infrastructure updates. But obviously with the fintech companies that we're partnering with, they also bring opportunity to the table and channels for delivery. But the real focus of the first plus[Phonetic] year, Michael is going to be on the small business community and making a better service and better feature for them.

Michael Perito -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods -- Analyst

Helpful. Thanks, Dave. And then the -- on the SBA side, the -- I guess, can you comment maybe a little bit more specifically about what the margin you're seeing in the secondary market there are? And you guys maintained a $13 million to $14 million for the full year. Is the volume driving that similar or is it stronger margins that get you there? Or just can you explain the dynamics a little bit in that market right now and what gives you guys the confidence of hitting the revenue print?

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I'll take the first stab and then let Ken back me up here. The margins that we're making over the gain on sale, we've actually had a couple of loans in the 15% to 16% level. We're averaging probably about 1.13% on gain on sale. As we say, gross volume of loans will be down, but the fact that we're selling 90% versus 75% and the margins when we say 1.13%, 1.14%, we have to get half of it over 10% to the SBA. So that's a little -- smaller figure. But we're up probably at least 3% on the margin in selling 90% versus 75%. Even though volume is going to be down, we'll be very close to what we projected for total earnings for the year a year ago.

Michael Perito -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods -- Analyst

Got it. Helpful. And just lastly for me. Looking at the balance sheet, [Technical Issues] $4.2 billion, TCE ratio has got a handle on it, you got some capacity on a loan to deposit ratio, obviously a much different position than a few years ago. Should we be expecting some balance sheet growth from here now? I mean, it sounds like you guys are working to add some new lending partnerships and verticals, pipelines are decent shaped. I mean, the balance sheet has been flat for the better part of 10 quarters now. I mean, are we close to reaching an inflection now? Or do you think there is still more remixing that can happen behind the scenes and more capital building that needs to happen before that switches kind of turn?

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Mike, I think we've obviously been pretty pleased with how capital is built and can certainly support growth. And as David talked about in his comments, we feel pretty good about pipelines and starting to see pipelines build. So I think we should expect to see loan growth between now and the end of the year, I think, in terms of the total balance sheet would probably offset that a bit as we still have a lot of excess cash in the balance sheet. So we continue to remix the deposit composition, which in this quarter was kind of a wash and didn't really produce much growth. But we have that, I guess, the cushion there with the excess cash to redeploy the excess liquidity on the balance sheet. So while it's probably, maybe, like what we've talked about in the past, we may see a higher percentage of loan growth between now and the end of the year, but not a lot of overall balance sheet growth.

And I would also say probably the little bit of a wildcard to offset that would be what prepayment activity is going to look like in the second half of the year. It was elevated in single-tenant and healthcare, certainly, in the second quarter. But right now, I'd say, at least, quarter-to-date, which we're really not that far into the quarter, but prepayment activity seems to have slowed in single-tenant and seems to have slowed a bit in healthcare as well. So that would be the only kind of the offset to overall loan growth would be the estimated prepayment activity.

Michael Perito -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods -- Analyst

Maybe asking the question a little bit differently. I guess, there's clearly still some dynamics in the market, right, that are impacting the balance sheet size and as you alluded to, Ken. But as we look to next year, I mean would you guys be surprised if kind of flat balance sheet you've been operating with holds further? Or you have much more appetite for growth than maybe you did 18 months ago?

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

We have a higher appetite without question, Mike.

Michael Perito -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods -- Analyst

Okay. Very helpful. Thanks...

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

And we're looking at partnerships...

Michael Perito -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods -- Analyst

Sorry.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. I was going to say we're looking at partnerships internally and externally to help push that up. As Ken said, we're still -- there's a lot of market forces as you pointed out too that are kind of beating on us right now, but we're open to offset that with some external partnerships that will help drive volume. Even though our existing channels are getting better, we're still looking for other opportunities too that should come to fruition between now and year-end. So we do anticipate growth next year.

Michael Perito -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods -- Analyst

Helpful. Thank you guys for taking my question.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Appreciate it, Mike. Thank you.

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Mike.

Operator

Our next question comes from Brett Rabatin with Hovde Group. Please go ahead.

Brett Rabatin -- Hovde Group -- Analyst

Hey, good afternoon, guys.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Hey. Good afternoon, Brett.

Brett Rabatin -- Hovde Group -- Analyst

Wanted to first ask, you just mentioned your strong capital ratios and obviously the outlook for the balance sheet. Why not -- given where the stock is here, why not do a buyback at these levels? It would seem like it would be pretty huge good use of capital at these prices.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

As I stated on many, many occasions, I would much rather put it to work to buy something and acquire something and gather more opportunities. We have a couple of fairly solid opportunities that we're looking at that could gain leaks between now and year-end. But I tell you, Brett, if it doesn't happen and the share price stays where it is, obviously trading in the $31, $32 range with the book value of almost $36, it wouldn't make a lot of sense to buy back some shares. And we do have capital capacity for the first time in a long time to do that. So we want to play out a couple of opportunities we're looking at, but if they don't come to fruition, we will do a buyback somewhere at year-end or early 2022.

Brett Rabatin -- Hovde Group -- Analyst

Okay. And then wanted to follow up on the points you made about the payoffs decreasing so far at least this quarter. I mean it seems like there are some large regionals out there that are doing some pretty aggressive fixed rate stuff on the healthcare business. And I guess I'm just trying to make sure I understand the dynamics of your expectations for pipelines and single-tenant leasing to maybe offset any additional pressure you might see in the other portfolios, particularly healthcare, public finance.

What kind of gives you the confidence that those payoffs are going to abate, or I guess they have this quarter? But what visibility do you have on that?

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Well, I think, certainly in the first half of the year, when rates -- even the longer end of the curve was still down very low, I mean there was quite a bit of competition across all areas of our business, whether it's single-tenant finance or healthcare finance, C&I lending. And we've had floors in place and really made the decision not to chase rates down to the bottom. So that certainly impacted loan growth and pipelines here in the first quarter and certainly in the second quarter.

I think as rates have come up a bit, the economy has improved somewhat. We've just seen more activity. In single-tenant, for example, you've had kind of the back end of the curve come up a little bit on the rate side, which helps our pricing and gets pricing on new deals more in line with at least where our floors are, if not higher. We've seen a lot more activity in this space as well. We've seen borrowers -- customers already who had new opportunities come to approach us with new opportunities. And we're just kind of seeing what our sweet spot is in that space in terms of just more transactional, like kind of smaller dollar levels kind of in that $1 million to $1.5 million range come into play. So in single-tenant, as David said in his comments, that pipeline is the highest it's been in 15 months rather.

And then also on the other side, the new partnership we talked about in the franchise space, we've got a pipeline building there that, again, over the next 12 months could provide up to $100 million of new loan volume. And even in public finance, we've seen some payoffs there too, just scheduled maturities and some prepayments there. We continue to look at limited opportunities in that space, trying to keep the duration short. There is a ton of competition in that vertical. You do have large regionals who compete in public finance, who've driven -- we see kind of what the final rates are on deals and our team goes in and tries to bid at it and look at it at a reasonable rate and we're getting outbid by sometimes hundreds of basis points there.

So the competition is there, but I think the backup in rates and kind of the reopening of the economy is kind of -- things have kind of moved a little bit toward where we feel comfortable doing deals from a pricing perspective.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

One big plus for us is spread on the single-tenant side of things. About 95% of those loans have some kind of 1031 exchange involved in it. And with what's going on in Congress and discussion about change in capital gains, maybe eliminating 1031 an awful lot of people are reevaluating their portfolios and selling and moving and doing a lot of transactions in anticipation of possibly a negative impact from Congress. So that's really driving pipelines. They're getting better on a day-in and day-out basis.

It's an interesting time in the marketplace. We had the change in the Fannie/Freddie penalties come out on the mortgage side, they accept 50 basis points and lots have jumped up in the mortgage side double, triple what they were two weeks ago. So it's just -- even though the economy, I think, is very stable, very strong, it's also very chaotic in a whole lot of different places. So, one day something is top, the next day it's something else. But overall, as Kenneth said, we look -- the second half of the year, we think we'll be very strong at loan origination.

Brett Rabatin -- Hovde Group -- Analyst

Okay. One last quick one. Just the sale of the headquarters, I thought that was -- I guess, I wasn't expecting that. Can you maybe talk about that transaction?

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. We've been in a building here for about five years that we acquired. We were really in the middle of the crisis when the markets were gone kind of nuts. And we are tapped out on space. We're kind of thankful in some respects that the pandemic came along because we got about 25% to 30% of our people working remotely because we don't have space here in the building. We are building a new facility in downtown Fishers, should come online either at the very end of this year or early next year.

We did a partnership with the city and some land cost abatements from the city as well as a parking garage into it. So, should be online at the end of the year. We're a 23 -- 22, 23 year-old company. We made six moves during that time. And the size that we're at today, a move estimate is going to cost us about $1 million to do it. So we built a little more space than we need, we're going to sublease part of the building and should be a facility that will last to us for 10 years to 15 years into the future.

Brett Rabatin -- Hovde Group -- Analyst

Okay. Great. Thanks. Appreciate all the color.

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Brett.

Operator

Your next question comes from Nathan Race with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.

Nathan Race -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Yup. Hi guys. Afternoon.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Hey, Nate.

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hey, Nate.

Nathan Race -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Not to beat a dead horse on the balance sheet and capital discussion. It sounds like with the healthcare book likely running off, just given the sale of that platform recently, that's going to be somewhat of a growth headwind going forward. But also it sounds like from a capital deployment perspective there is the opportunity to maybe add another production platform to offset some of that run-off on top of the other growth that you'll be seeing across the other parts of the portfolio, and that's kind of the reason why a buyback is maybe less of a possibility near term. Is that the right thinking, David?

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Correct. Yeah.

Nathan Race -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Okay. Got you. Great. And then just maybe kind of changing gears a little bit and thinking about just where the reserve can traject to you over the next few quarters here, it sounds like the charge-offs here in the second quarter were somewhat of an anomaly. How are you guys thinking about providing for some expectations for net growth just given where the reserve stands today?

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. I mean, obviously, from a dollar amount, the reason why the allowance came down was just the removal of the specific reserves, associated with it the positive developments on the single-tenant lease financing relationship. And those were -- I mean, those were big dollars, those were in excess of $2.5 million. So the dollar amount went down. The overall coverage ratio went down. But I think as we pointed out in the release and in the note, we continue to bump up the qualitative factors.

I would say that if loan growth and loan opportunities come in and the stuff that we've been talking about here on the call come in where we believe them to do that, that coverage ratio is going to migrate upwards because what we're talking about our commercial-oriented businesses that have allowance coverage ratio is in excess of 1% to begin with. So it's kind of like the rate volume thing. If we have a higher rate on new volume, the overall allowance itself is just going to migrate upwards and back toward the 1% -- in excess of 1% depending on how strong the growth is in those categories.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

And Nate, again, just to reinforce, as Ken talked in his comments and earlier, the loss that we had this quarter really goes back to a loan that went sideways back in 2019. The principal we see of the buildings filed bankruptcy closed down. I think we put them into nonaccrual status in middle of '19. So, we've gone through for closure. One building is sold. We have two other proposals out there to buy the second building. It should hopefully clear up here into this quarter or very early fourth quarter.

So that goes back from the long term. The portfolio as a whole is rock solid. We have absolutely no delinquency in the portfolio as it exists out there today. So, you hit the nail on the head, this is kind of a normal number for us, and we do have a potential to recover some dollars on that loss as well, but we're being kind of conservative, flushing it out and then we're going to go after the sponsors. So...

Nathan Race -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Got it. That's great color. And maybe just last one on the expense run rate from here. It's great to see it flat sequentially. How are you guys thinking about the run rate going forward? It sounds like maybe there's a little bit of pressure from the headquarter relocation and so forth and that's built out going forward. But just any kind of high-level thoughts on kind of the run rate going forward and expectations for expense growth in 2022 as well would be helpful.

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. I think probably over the course of the remainder of this year, you'll probably -- we'd expect to see expenses probably tick up a little bit from where they are right now. We have continued to add to our headcount in certain areas across the bank, continue to add folks in SBA, as well as certain areas. So we probably should expect to see a bit of -- the headcount go up a bit and as kind of mortgage comes back a little bit and SBA continues to ramp up, we'll probably see overall commissions continue to increase a little bit as well. And certainly, in the next year or two, we'll see a little bit of a pickup having to do with the new building coming online.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

We also have some activity going on, on the software side of things and some of these new programs and pieces we're putting in. A lot of that is incremental, it's build out. It's a SaaS model. So we're paying for it as we use it. It won't have tremendous impact, but there will be a little stuff kind of latter part of fourth quarter. We think, as Ken said, the cost should stay very stable through the course. And then actually, once it all gets installed and up and running, we'll actually see a savings over some of the expenses we have out there today.

So, I think the net play with a lot of the kind of fintech tools we're looking at are actually going to help the bottom line on the ongoing expense and we're getting fairly stable. We're still adding to the BDO component on the SBA side and the support staff for them, but that's stabilizing and as Ken said, we're adding some -- a few bodies in other areas, say, commercial real estate is picking up, etc. So we don't want to have a service fault here as things start to kick back into gear, but it should be very stable for this year. And then once we get our arms around the building and final numbers, we'll give you indications next quarter as to what impact that will have for 2022.

Nathan Race -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Okay, perfect. I appreciate all the color. Thank you, guys.

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Nate.

Operator

Our next question comes from George Sutton with Craig Hallum. Please go ahead.

George Sutton -- Craig Hallum -- Analyst

Thank you. David, you referred to two to three opportunities by year-end that could be areas of capital use. And I just wanted to confirm, these are the same two to three opportunities that you had discussed last quarter and my sense at that time was these could be new verticals or expanded vertical opportunities for you. Is that correct?

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

That's correct, George. One is -- the one we talked about last quarter that's moving along and the other is a new one that's presented in the, I guess, second one, if you want to refer to that, that we talked about last quarter, we couldn't come to terms on the price. One is a continuation that we've been talking to for a while and one is relatively new.

George Sutton -- Craig Hallum -- Analyst

Okay. And just to make sure I'm not conflating other things, you last quarter mentioned 40 CTO projects that were occurring and now you're talking about collaborative partnerships. Are those related -- those would be the -- that's why there's more of an internal improvement focus?

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Yeah, we have two external actual acquisition opportunities, and then we have just a whole lot of activity, and we'll have a seat we'll try and release probably during the fourth quarter, showing all the different components of the internal pieces of software and things we've been working on through the pandemic and pulling the stuff together that will come into play probably early on in 2022. So it is -- it's both channels, external acquisitions and new verticals as well as internal -- and software to run those businesses as well as internal improvements and back office operation feature functionality due to some of the fintech partners that we're working with.

George Sutton -- Craig Hallum -- Analyst

Great. Finally, I want to make sure I understood the change with provide. I understand what happened there, and you are now backfilling with a new partnership that you've made some commitments to. Can you just give us a sense of the strength of that partner relative to the provide relationship?

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. Yeah, we're pretty excited about it. It's a specialty lender focused on in the franchise finance space, who's got a really good track record. They're helping franchisees finance both new locations and existing locations in kind of retail franchise space, think quick service restaurants, things like gyms, salons, things of that nature. The volume we've committed to funding up to $100 million over the next 12 months. What we like about this space too is, in the franchise space, pricing is a little bit more attractive. So relative to healthcare finance, we might not see the volume because healthcare finance was such a strong growth engine last year. We won't match that volume exactly, but what we will see are much higher yields.

So it's a pretty good -- I think it's a pretty good trade-off, a pretty good opportunity to backfill some of that growth we've had in the past and feel pretty optimistic about the partnership we've entered into with them.

George Sutton -- Craig Hallum -- Analyst

Got you. Helpful color. All right. Thanks, guys.

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, George.

Operator

Our next question comes from John Rodis with Janney. Please go ahead.

John Rodis -- Janney -- Analyst

Good afternoon, guys.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Hey, John. How are you.

John Rodis -- Janney -- Analyst

I am good. How are you doing, David?

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Doing good.

John Rodis -- Janney -- Analyst

Most of my questions have been asked and answered. But Ken, I just wanted to make sure I heard you say, did you say that mortgage -- I guess, mortgage revenues you expect it to sort of stabilize in the second half of the year, so I guess, stabilized with the second quarter?

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. I think second quarter, obviously, it was down quite a bit. I mean I think in the second and third quarters -- excuse me, in the third and fourth quarters, I mean, I think we probably feel comfortable with probably somewhere in the $3 million to $3.5 million range of revenue. So up from where we were and up a little bit from the second quarter as kind of the market has stabilized a bit.

John Rodis -- Janney -- Analyst

Okay. So it sounds like, I think in your press release, you said it sounds like, I guess, toward the back end -- back half of the quarter or back end of the quarter, the trends were better in mortgage, I guess.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

It jumped all over, John, during the course of the quarter. Probably our weakest month was actually May in activity, where -- overall volume is pretty solid on a year-over-year basis. But our margins, if we go back to second quarter of last year, and I know everybody calculates margins on a different level, and Ken tells me not to talk about this because I'll confuse everybody, but we kind of look at a net gain on the mortgages, and we were somewhere around 3.4% to 3.5% per loan. And during the second quarter, we were at 1.48%.

So the margins were cut by over half. Volume is still fairly strong, but it's kind of the same game that happened back in 2013, a little bit in 2016 as the refi gain slows down. The independent brokers that just give the shop away to try and maintain their staff and keep their volume up and keep their mortgage folks happy. So, that is what we're starting to see stabilize. Pricing is getting a little more consistent. I mean we could see swings in the market of 25 basis points, 30 basis points a day up or down, and it's starting to stabilize a little bit. I think some of the folks are realizing that the new normal is going to be probably 60% -- 50% to 60% new construction and 40% on the refi gains. So change, obviously, from what it was last year.

John Rodis -- Janney -- Analyst

Yep. Ken, just on the provision. I think you said it could have been negative this quarter. Do you think going forward, it's more close -- similar to, I guess, the first quarter? Or could we still see some reserve release?

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Well, yeah, I don't know if I classify what we did this quarter as reserve release because we had resolution on specific reserves and we continue -- and we offset that with continued increases to qualitative factors. In the general kind of the reserve, the allowance coverage ratio related to the unallocated part of the portfolio continued to go up. I mean, I think -- I don't think -- I really don't expect us to have a negative provision. I think we'll continue to adjust qualitative factors. And again, if we hit the growth in these loan portfolios. I mean, if you think single-tenant, you have growth there, we're reserving in excess of 100 basis points there. This franchise finance opportunity is going to be in excess of 100 basis points. Any growth in any commercial line of business outside of public finance is going to have a coverage ratio in excess of 1%. So, the provision as an expense piece will really be dictated by loan growth and then secondarily by adjustments to -- additional adjustments to qualitative factors going forward.

John Rodis -- Janney -- Analyst

Okay. Makes sense. And then just, Ken, one other question, the securities portfolio, you talked about the growth in the quarter. Do you sort of expect it to, I guess, level out here if you do see the loan growth play out?

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. The growth in the securities portfolio was really just kind of -- I don't want to say one-time thing, but we were sitting on a lot of cash and that cash balance was continuing to build throughout the quarter. I mean, we were in excess of $500 million, $550 million and put the cash to work in basically plain vanilla mortgage-backed securities that have strong cash flow characteristics, relatively short duration. And the portfolio as a whole is going to spit out over $100 million of cash over the next 12 months anyway. So, really, we don't expect the portfolio to grow from this -- that securities level to grow. It was really just putting cash to work here in the near term to help -- kind of help give earning asset yields a boost while not really tying up cash over the long term. We'll probably -- we continue to buy securities here and there for things like CRA purposes, etc., but I wouldn't expect the securities balance to grow from here or be flat. It's going to decline more than anything else.

John Rodis -- Janney -- Analyst

Okay. Makes sense. Thank you, guys.

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, John.

Operator

Our next question is a follow-up from Michael Perito with KBW. Please go ahead.

Michael Perito -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods -- Analyst

Hey, guys. Sorry to probably make you repeat yourselves here, but I was just scanning my notes, and I apologize that I missed it. But Ken, do you mind just offering some consolidated thoughts on where the NIM -- I think you provided some high-level commentary, but where the NIM might move near term here? And do you still think there's some legs for some multi-quarter expansion as long as rates remain where they are?

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, most definitely. I think our outlook on net interest margin is very similar to what it was last quarter. I think probably in a quarter-over-quarter basis between now and the end of the year, we're probably still looking at anywhere from maybe a 5 basis point to 10 basis point increase. It's going to be impacted by things such as prepayment levels or loan growth opportunities.

But I think we still feel good and targeting that kind of somewhere in the range of 2.4% on a fully taxable equivalent basis in the fourth quarter. So we still feel good about those numbers. And I think next year as well, there's still going to be some ability to generate NIM growth next year as well. And again, some of that is going to be dictated by how well some of these loan opportunities continue --develop over the course of 2022. But I think there's still an opportunity to expand NIM next year.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Michael, to carry that one just a little different angle, we have over the next 12 months -- we don't run past 12 months in our internal projections, but we have over $750 million in CDs that will either run off or reprice. Now the rate has dropped geometrically from what it was 18 months ago, but there's still average cost of about 145 and then the new stuff coming on the books today ranges from 39 basis points to 41 basis points.

So, there's still a big tickup on the CDs on rollover and pricing as well as bringing in the checking account balances and the small business accounts that are much lower cost to us than our traditional costs. So, savings on the interest side and as well as Ken pointed out, hopefully, some pickup on the loan side, too.

Michael Perito -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods -- Analyst

Helpful, guys. Thank you for taking the follow-up.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Appreciate it.

Operator

This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to David Becker for any closing remarks.

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Sarah, and I'd like to thank all of you for joining us today. This is a great Q&A session. We hope you have a great balance of the day and continued success. Thank you very much.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 57 minutes

Call participants:

Larry Clark -- Senior Vice President

David B. Becker -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Kenneth J. Lovik -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Michael Perito -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods -- Analyst

Brett Rabatin -- Hovde Group -- Analyst

Nathan Race -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

George Sutton -- Craig Hallum -- Analyst

John Rodis -- Janney -- Analyst

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