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DATE

Wednesday, April 22, 2026 at 6 p.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • President and Chief Executive Officer — Chang Liu
  • Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer — Albert Wang

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TAKEAWAYS

  • Net Income -- $86.9 million, representing a 4% decline sequentially from the prior quarter due to lower noninterest income, partially offset by reduced noninterest expense.
  • Diluted EPS -- $1.29, which would have been $0.02 lower excluding offsetting securities gains and impairments.
  • Net Interest Margin (NIM) -- 3.43%, up 7 basis points sequentially, boosted by lower deposit costs and a securities portfolio repositioning.
  • Net Interest Income (NII) -- $194 million, a decrease of $0.8 million from the previous quarter, explained by day count impact.
  • Efficiency Ratio -- 40.4%, improving by 100 basis points quarter over quarter; adjusted efficiency ratio at 36.9%, down 1.5 percentage points.
  • Book Value Per Share -- Increased by 2% compared to last quarter and 9% year over year.
  • Loans -- Period-end loans of $20.2 billion, up 0.2% from the prior quarter; average loan balances increased 1% annualized linked quarter.
  • Deposits -- Period-end deposits of $20.7 billion, down 1% from the prior quarter, primarily from a $71 million reduction in brokered deposits.
  • Dividend -- Quarterly cash dividend increased to $0.38 per share, an 11.8% rise.
  • Share Repurchase -- Completed $150 million program by repurchasing 244,000 shares at an average price of $51.31; Board authorized a new $150 million repurchase program, pending regulatory approval.
  • Securities Portfolio Repositioning -- Realized a $17.3 million gain on equity securities and a $15.7 million impairment on available-for-sale debt securities; moved $210 million from lower-yielding to $197 million in higher-yield securities, resulting in an estimated $4 million increase in NII for 2026.
  • Allowance for Credit Losses -- Increased by $13 million to $209 million, covering 1.03% of all loans and 1.30% excluding residential mortgages, due to model adjustments and a modest macroeconomic outlook softening.
  • Nonperforming Asset Ratio -- Improved to 51 basis points from 59 basis points previous quarter.
  • Commercial Real Estate (CRE) Concentration -- Declined 9 percentage points to 278% and remains below regulatory guidance.
  • Core Deposit Outflows -- Largely seasonal and attributed to regular commercial client cash management.
  • Uninsured Deposit Ratio -- Held steady at 45%.
  • Capital Levels -- Remain well above “well-capitalized” regulatory thresholds with modest sequential increase.
  • Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Amortization -- Expense fell by $4.5 million sequentially, expected to run $7 million to $8 million per quarter going forward.
  • Outlook -- Management continues to expect full-year loan growth of 3.5%-4.5%, deposit growth of 4%-5%, and adjusted noninterest expense growth of 3.5%-4.5%.
  • Interest Rate Assumptions -- Current guidance removes any 2026 rate cuts, but management maintains confidence in NIM target of 3.40%-3.50%.
  • Tax Rate -- Anticipates an effective tax rate near 21% for the year.
  • M&A Strategy -- Management stated, “we're always going to focus more on just our organic growth and executing the business plan,” indicating opportunistic, but not prioritized, acquisition activity.

SUMMARY

Cathay General Bancorp (CATY +0.41%) delivered stable results, characterized by prudent cost and risk management amid a muted loan growth environment. Management addressed declining net income by emphasizing operating efficiency improvement and positive impacts from a major securities portfolio repositioning. Loan growth trajectories remain in line with internal guidance, supported by resilient customer demand and relationship banking. The completed $150 million share repurchase and an 11.8% dividend increase reinforce the company’s proactive capital return approach.

  • Noninterest expense declined primarily due to reductions in amortization related to low-income housing and alternative energy partnerships, as well as lower compensation and benefits.
  • The loan growth softness resulted from elevated paydowns, particularly in construction, as clients took advantage of refinancing options with alternative lenders.
  • Average deposit decreases were mainly attributable to seasonal commercial cash flow dynamics and brokered deposit run-off, with uninsured deposit levels unchanged.
  • Valuation enhancements within the securities portfolio are expected to generate an estimated 2-2.5 basis point lift to 2026 NIM.
  • Changes in allowance methodology emphasized coastal office portfolio risks, as model weightings were raised for these exposures to reflect economic sensitivities specific to core geographies.
  • The company expects the majority of growth in both loans and customer activity to be weighted toward mid- and late-year periods, tracking last year’s pattern.
  • Regarding regulatory developments, management stated revised Fed capital rules could provide “a huge win” with an estimated $150 million-$175 million boost to capital ratios.
  • Fee income stability is anchored by wealth management performance, with management citing optimistic momentum from referral activity and new leadership.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • Net Interest Margin (NIM): The difference between interest income generated and interest paid out, expressed as a percentage of average earning assets.
  • Available-for-Sale (AFS) Securities: Debt or equity securities not classified as held-to-maturity or trading, marked to market and changes recognized through other comprehensive income unless impaired.
  • Brokered Deposits: Large, often non-retail deposits placed through a third party or broker, typically at a higher cost than core deposits.
  • CRE Concentration Ratio: The ratio of commercial real estate loans to total capital, used to assess regulatory compliance and portfolio risk.
  • Proportional Amortization Method: An accounting approach for recognizing tax credit investment amortization and related tax benefits within income tax expense.
  • NDFI Loans: Loans made to Non-Depository Financial Institution borrowers, representing private credit exposures.
  • Special Mention Loans: Loans that exhibit potential weakness but do not yet warrant classified status per regulatory standards.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Chang Liu, our President and Chief Executive Officer; and Mr. Al Wang, our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, we wish to remind you that the speakers on this call may make forward-looking statements within the meaning of the applicable provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 concerning future results and events and that these statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. .

These results and uncertainties are further described in the company's annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2025, at Item 1A in particular, and in other reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission from time to time. As such, we caution you not to place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements. Any forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date on which is made and except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update or review any forward-looking statements to reflect future circumstances, developments or events or the occurrence of unanticipated events. This afternoon, Cathay General Bancorp issued an earnings release outlining its first quarter 2026 results.

To obtain a copy of our earnings release as well as our earnings presentation, please visit our website at cathaygeneralbancorp.com. After comments on management today, we will open up this call for questions. I will now turn the call over to our President and Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Chang Liu.

Chang Liu: Thank you, Georgia. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us today. I will begin on Slide 3. We delivered solid financial performance in the first quarter. Reporting net income of $86.9 million and diluted earnings per share of $1.29. We also delivered another quarter of net interest margin expansion, driven by disciplined deposit cost management in a competitive environment. Our results reflect 2 noteworthy items that largely offset each other. The first was a $17.3 million valuation gain on equity securities and the other was a $15.7 million impairment on AFS debt securities from balance sheet repositioning.

We sold lower yielding securities and reinvested at current market rates, a move that supports margin expansion and accelerate tangible book value recovery. Excluding these items, diluted EPS would have been $0.02 lower. Credit quality was stable overall this quarter. We saw improvement in nonperforming loans in net charge-offs, while criticized and classified levels remain steady, reflecting continued credit discipline across the portfolio. We remain focused on maintaining a prudent risk profile given the broader economic and geopolitical backdrop. We continue to generate positive operating leverage. Our efficiency ratio improved to 40.4%, down 100 basis points from the prior quarter, supported by ongoing expense management and steady core performance.

On an adjusted basis, our efficiency ratio decreased by 1.5% to 36.9% from last quarter. Capital management remains a priority. During the quarter, we increased our quarterly cash dividend to $0.38 per share, reflecting an 11.8% increase. We also completed the $150 million share repurchase program announced in June 2025 by repurchasing 244,000 shares at an average cost of $51.31. In addition, our Board approved a new $150 million share repurchase program, subject to regulatory approval, underscoring our commitment to returning capital to shareholders in a balanced and controlled way. Loan growth was softer than we anticipated, but this reflects our disciplined underwriting approach.

Our focus remains on supporting our loyal customers and deepening long-standing relationships rather than pursuing volume that will require taking on additional credit risk in this unpredictable economic environment. This relationship-driven strategy has served us well through many cycles and positions us well going forward. I will now turn the call over to Mr. Al Wang to walk through our first quarter results in more detail. I'll provide some closing comments before we open the call up to Q&A.

Albert Wang: Thank you, Chang. I'll start with our balance sheet on Slide 4. We decreased our on balance sheet cash and short-term investments by $219 million to stay aligned with shifts in our funding profile. Period-end loans of $20.2 billion grew 0.2% linked quarter, reflecting our focus on relationship lending. Period-end deposits of $20.7 billion declined by 1% linked quarter, led by $71 million in broker deposits. Capital levels remained in excess of regulatory well-capitalized thresholds and our internal limits. And we continue to grow book value per share by 2% linked quarter and 9% year-over-year. Slide 5 breaks down our loan and deposit mix.

Average loan balances increased 1% on an annualized basis linked quarter while the composition remains stable and well diversified. CRE concentration of 278% declined by 9 points and continue to stay below regulatory guidelines. In addition, our exposure to private credit is minimal with NDFI loans making up less than 2% of total loans. Average deposits decreased 3% linked quarter on an annualized basis, driven by the decline in brokered deposits. Core deposit outflows were largely seasonal and reflected normal cash management activity by our commercial customers. Our uninsured deposit ratio stayed consistent at 45%. Slide 6 is a new slide to illustrate the strong liquidity, credit and interest rate risk profile of our available-for-sale investment portfolio.

In Q1, we recognized a $15.7 million impairment loss on our AFS securities portfolio as part of a securities repositioning initiative. During the first week of April, we sold $210 million of lower-yielding mortgage-backed securities and reinvested $197 million into similar duration securities at significantly higher yields. This trade carried an earn back under 3 years while keeping our overall duration and credit profile essentially unchanged. We keep the overall portfolio short and high quality. Duration is just under 2 years, and nearly 2/3 of the cash flows will come back this year. Unrealized losses have been improving as rates move and over 90% of the portfolio is U.S. government backed with the rest in investment-grade securities.

Slide 7 highlights our income statement. Net income of $86.9 million decreased 4% linked quarter due to lower noninterest income, offset by lower noninterest expense, which I will discuss in more detail on the following slides. Slide 8 summarizes our yield and funding costs. Net interest income of $194 million declined $0.8 million compared to last quarter due to day count, offset by margin expansion. Net interest margin of 3.43% grew 7 basis points compared to last quarter as deposit costs decreased, offset by a decline in loan yields driven by the Federal Reserve's latest interest rate cuts in the fourth quarter. Slide 9 highlights noninterest income.

Noninterest income decreased $7.1 million linked quarter, driven by the notable items Chang mentioned previously. Specifically, we recognized $17.3 million in valuation gains in our equity securities portfolio, offset by the $15.7 million AFS securities impairment repositioning loss. Adjusting for these items, including the gain on equity securities in both periods, noninterest income would have been $19.1 million compared to $18.1 million in the prior quarter reflected an increase of 5.52%. Moving to Slide 10. Noninterest expense decreased from $92.2 million to $86.7 million this quarter, this decline was driven by $4.5 million of lower amortization expense on our low-income housing and alternative energy partnerships, along with lower compensation and benefit costs.

It's worth noting that most peer banks record the amortization of tax credit investments and income tax expense under the proportional amortization method rather than in noninterest expense as we do. When adjusting for this difference and other noncore items, adjusted noninterest expense would have been $78.7 million, which is [ $3 million ] lower than last quarter. On the same basis, our adjusted efficiency ratio improved to 36.9% compared to 38.4% in the prior quarter. On Slide 11, you'll see that our asset quality stayed solid. We increased our allowance by $13 million to $209 million, which puts coverage at 1.03% or 1.30% excluding residential mortgages.

That increase was driven by model updates, including a slight softening in the macroeconomic outlook. Net charge-offs improved dropping from $5.4 million last quarter to $2.1 million this quarter Classified loans were up $39 million, while special mentioned loans came down $55 million. And importantly, our nonperforming asset ratio continued to trend in the right direction, improving from 59 to 51 basis points. Turning to Slide 12. Capital levels remain strong and well above well-catalyzed regulatory thresholds with a modest increase from last quarter. I'll wrap up on Slide 13 with our outlook. We continue to expect full year loan growth in the 3.5% to 4.5% range and deposit growth of 4% to 5%.

Adjusted noninterest expense is still expected to increase between 3.5% to 4.5% for the year. Our NIM and NII outlook no longer assumes any rate cuts in 2026. But even with that change, we remain confident in achieving our NIM target of 340% to 350%. We expect an effective tax rate of roughly 21%. And with that, I'll turn the call back over to Chang.

Chang Liu: Thank you, Al. Overall, we feel very good about how we started the year, notwithstanding geopolitical tensions and uncertainty in the macro environment. We delivered solid financial performance by growing tangible book value per share to $30.95, expanding NIM by 7 basis points and continuing to manage capital prudently to expand the buyback capacity and dividend increases. Looking ahead, we are entering the second quarter with good momentum. Similar to last year, we saw a slower start to the first quarter, but activity strengthened meaningfully as the year progressed, and we expect a similar pattern as we move through 2026. Finally, I want to thank our team members for everything they do for our company, our communities and our clients.

With that, we can now open it up for questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from David Chiaverini with Jefferies.

David Chiaverini: I wanted to start on the net interest margin. So it was very strong in the quarter. Can you talk about -- and you reiterated the guide. So I'm curious about the outlook kind of sequentially from here? And then to your point about rate cuts being eliminated from your assumptions, whether that would take us either to the high end or the low end or if you're still kind of thinking the midpoint of that range. Can you talk about that?

Albert Wang: Yes. Obviously, the -- without any cuts forecasted in, that's obviously going to put pressure and point us down slightly. But remember, we did the securities reposition, so that should help by a few basis points for the year. And when I look at kind of our loan portfolio, right? So we -- our yield was $6.01 for the quarter. But when I take a look at kind of the origination rates for the commercial real estate book in the first quarter and kind of the origination rates in mortgage. Those came in at like 6.15% and 6.12% respectively. So higher than kind of the NIM. So I think, obviously, there is more pressure on C&I.

But I think with the mortgage and CRE kind of repricing and kind of what we're repricing on, I think that will support. So I think if the loan yield -- I don't -- we don't expect it to drop off very much, if at all. So I think that's going to help support. On the deposit side, we still have room to run also. I mean we had a $2.96 cost for interest-bearing this past quarter. But if you think about it, we've got -- that was -- a lot of the expansion was that I think we said last quarter that we had almost $4 billion of CDs rolling off at a 3.80 weighted average rate.

So obviously, that -- those came on favorably this quarter. And if I look at next quarter, for example, we've got close to $3 billion with the 362 handle or kind of weighted average rate -- so we think that there's definitely -- I think, most of the benefits from the lower rate environment and the cuts are kind of behind us. But we still think there's still some room there to manage those costs down slightly. So between the 2, I think we still feel comfortable with the overall kind of guide for the year.

We do acknowledge that if I look at brokered rates, for example, at the beginning of the year, it was like in the $3.60 to $3.70 for CDs for large CDs. Today, that's 4% to 4.05%. So there's definitely a lot more pressure and competition with deposits. But -- but right now, when we look at kind of the profile, we think that there's still a little bit of room for expansion through this year. Obviously, depending on -- if rates are cut, and there actually are cuts later in the year, that will be beneficial to us. But for now, I think we're good for the year for our guidance.

David Chiaverini: Very helpful color on that. And on that securities repositioning, held in isolation, can you estimate how much that should contribute to NIM. You gave the sizing of it. Maybe you can help us with how much -- what the yield was that rolled off or was sold and what the yield was that came on?

Albert Wang: Yes. It was -- I think about $245 was the yield that we sold, and we put on -- they were -- the coupon was like 5.5% and they were mostly kind of long-dated mortgage-backed securities. I think the effective yield on that is like 5.33 or something around that range. So a little over $5.5 million annually. So if you think about for 2026, we take -- the trade happened early in the quarter. So will take 3 quarters of that amount into this year. So probably about 2 to 3 basis points or 2 to 2.5 basis points to NIM. And then for the year and then maybe $4 million, let's call it, of additional boost to NII.

Operator: Next question comes from Matthew Clark with Piper Sandler.

Matthew Clark: Just want to get the amount of prepay and any interest recoveries in net interest income, I think it was around $3 million last quarter.

Chang Liu: Yes. So it was about 3.5% this quarter, which was about 6 basis points. So we -- for the quarter, our reported NIM was $343 million. It would have been $337 million for those items. We also had a small FHLB dividend -- special dividend as well included in that number.

Matthew Clark: Within that $3.5 million?

Chang Liu: Yes.

Matthew Clark: Okay. Okay. And then the low-income housing tax credit amortization came down more so relative to your guide coming into the year. Just want to get your updated thoughts on that run rate for the balance of the year. .

Albert Wang: Yes. It's -- I mean, that's a fluid number. Obviously, it depends on kind of the timing of tax credits and the performance of the projects in the portfolio. We think that it's probably going to be in the $7 million to $8 million range for the next few quarters throughout the year.

Matthew Clark: Okay. Good. And then just on the loan growth commentary in your prepared remarks and I think in the release that has just been a little more cautious, but sticking to the guide for the year. Is that -- is it because you're seeing the pipeline building? Or is it because you're a little -- you feel like at this point, you're a little more open or not as cautious as maybe you were during the first quarter? Just wanted to get some thoughts there.

Chang Liu: Yes. So for us, on the loan growth side, we saw some sort of some increased paydowns in our construction loan portfolio. So some of our customers took advantage of some of the refinancing opportunities with the life companies and the Fannies that have much better competitive longer-term rates than we had. Our originations were healthy, but not enough to offset the timing of the paydowns. But today, our pipelines are still healthy and strong and the customer engagement has improved. So we expect the growth to be sort of more weighted towards the middle and the back end of the half. .

Operator: The next question comes from Gary Tenner with D.A. Davidson.

Gary Tenner: I just wanted to follow up a little bit on the funding side of the equation. I appreciate the color on the second quarter CD maturities. Can you give us an idea of where the first quarter ones that rolled off at 380 where they were renewed?

Albert Wang: Yes. So as you know, we had a literally a new year promotion at I think 365 for 6 months and 350 for 12. So I think we extended that program by a couple of weeks -- and then like I said in my commentary, we had -- you can see there's been a lot more pressure, especially since kind of February and even since the war started the pressure on rates has been kind of pushing upwards. So we think it's around kind of the mid-350s is kind of in the first quarter of what we kind of put on.

Gary Tenner: Okay. And so that would suggest that the [ $360 million ] rolling off in the second quarter, even without the specials, probably not too much of a benefit. Is that fair...

Albert Wang: Yes, we think there'll be a marginal benefit from that. Again, it's probably around [ $350 million ] with the rate that we put on last quarter.

Gary Tenner: Okay. Appreciate that. So -- in terms of the -- and you talked about that in a little bit. I appreciate the color there. I guess just to encapsulate it. I mean with no cuts, pretty flat in bias ex the securities repositioning? I mean, is that kind of in a nutshell, what you think about it?

Albert Wang: Yes. Yes, that's right. Again, I think the lending side, we shouldn't see much degradation in terms of the yields on that side. Again, we have some -- we have mortgages, for example, that we put on 5 years ago in a lower rate environment, for example, 5-plus years ago. So when those come back and get booked back on, that will help support kind of our NIM.

Gary Tenner: Okay. Great. If I could ask 1 more. Just on the asset quality front. I mean, the metrics overall were good and you increased the allowance by 6 basis points, and you kind of commented about model recalibration and deterioration and macro conditions. Can you change weightings in your model in terms of building the allowance? Or maybe just kind of give us a sense of how you were thinking about that.

Albert Wang: Yes. The biggest move was just kind of a recalibration of 1 of the inputs in the model. And in terms of the weightings, I would say, for the overall book, we kept the weightings the same, but we did change the weightings for certain portfolios within the book that pushed the reserves up for those particular portfolios and obviously, overall as a result.

Gary Tenner: Can you comment just which portfolios you increased or changed the weightings on.

Albert Wang: Yes. So we so basically -- yes, so the way we thought about it is, in our models, we use kind of a national kind of economic forecasts. But obviously, as you know, we're very coastal, right? We've got a lot of motor portfolio in kind of California and New York. So we look specifically at kind of the office portfolio and said, Hey, we have a lot of office kind of on the coast. And I don't know if the national forecast kind of are doing those portfolios justice. So we kind of stress those portfolios a little bit more.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Andrew Terrell with Stephens.

Andrew Terrell: I just wanted to start on the operating expenses. It looks like holding the amortization side relatively flat quarter-on-quarter. We annualize the first quarter kind of tracks to low end of your adjusted expense growth guide for '26. I'm just curious if any seasonality impacts in the first quarter? Do you grow off this operating expense base throughout the year? Just any kind of expectation around expense run rate would be helpful.

Albert Wang: Yes. I think the first quarter was slightly lower on the comp and benefit, especially compared to year-end. Year-end, we had a little bit more in kind of the incentive compensation accruals. So that's kind of what's driving the why it's lower versus fourth quarter, for example. So we think kind of where we are now, the run rate is pretty good. We do -- we are projecting in kind of headcount, open positions, things like that. But yes, I think it's -- I think our current kind of where we ended Q3 with the growth rates that we are projecting. That's kind of our expectation right now.

Andrew Terrell: Yes. Okay. And then I wanted to ask around -- I know it's just proposed, but any thoughts behind the Fed's proposed capital rules any kind of benefit that could provide to you guys in terms of CET1 or risk-weighted release?

Albert Wang: Yes. I mean we think it's -- it would be a huge win for us, obviously. We've got a decently sized mortgage portfolio with very low LTVs. So I think we'll get an upsized benefit from that. So it could be in the low kind of double-digit in terms of the reduction in risk-weighted assets for us. And anywhere from, let's call it, $150 to $175 million kind of boost to our capital ratios depending on the ratio.

Andrew Terrell: No. Okay. Great. Yes, that's pretty solid. If I could just ask lastly, 1 of your competitors commented maybe around M&A recently. Just would love to hear kind of your thoughts on the M&A landscape today. And how you see it fitting into the puzzle for Cathay?

Chang Liu: Yes. So for us, we're always going to kind of think about looking at things more opportunistically just based on what's presented to us. we're always going to focus more on just our organic growth and executing the business plan. If there's a candidate out there that makes sense for us. But it's not the top priority at this point. We want to just make sure we strengthen our franchise and make strategic decisions and meet the financial plan that we laid out to our investors.

Operator: The next question comes from Kelly Motta with KBW.

Kelly Motta: Thanks for the question. Turning to fees, excluding the noise of the securities repositioning and that the other gains Core fee income still came in pretty strong. And I think in your prepared remarks, you hit on that being in part tribute 12th management. Just wondering if you could talk a bit about that business and what you're seeing more broadly on the fee income side is this, call it, $19 million core operating run rate is a good line that could hold or if there's kind of puts and takes there.

Chang Liu: Kelly, our core strength in the fee income is really the sort of the wealth business that drives that income. We're obviously trying to find other ancillary fee income as well. There's things such as foreign exchange, international fee some of our swapping fee income, but that kind of sporadic based on the rate environment as well. The treasury management functions also drive some of the fee income as well, but the bulk of it is really from the wealth side of the business. .

Kelly Motta: Got it. And is this 19 million units that it's a step up. It's an approximate $1 million step up from the back half of last year. Is this a good level to kind of hold here? Or was this particularly strong. Just trying to parse out how to...

Albert Wang: Yes. I mean we think so. I mean, we do have some new leadership in Wilton. So we think that with -- we've gotten a decent amount of referrals as well. So we're optimistic that wealth is going to hold in there kind of and how it performed in Q1.

Kelly Motta: Okay. Great. Most of mine have otherwise been after an answer. So thanks for the time. .

Operator: Thank you for your participation. I will now turn the call back over to Cathay Bancorp's management for closing remarks.

Chang Liu: I want to thank everyone for joining us and your interest in Cathay. We look forward to speaking with you on our next quarterly earnings release call. .

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your participation in today's conference. This concludes the presentation. You may now disconnect.