Q2 2023 Hilltop Holdings Inc Earnings Call

In this article:

Participants

Erik Yohe; EVP of Corporate Development; Hilltop Holdings Inc.

Jeremy Blue Ford; President, CEO & Director; Hilltop Holdings Inc.

William B. Furr; Executive VP & CFO; Hilltop Holdings Inc.

Carl-Harry Doirin; Senior Research Associate; Raymond James & Associates, Inc., Research Division

Stephen Kendall Scouten; MD & Senior Research Analyst; Piper Sandler & Co., Research Division

Thomas Alexander Wendler; Senior Research Associate; Stephens Inc., Research Division

Wood Neblett Lay; Associate; Keefe, Bruyette, & Woods, Inc., Research Division

Presentation

Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Hilltop Holdings Second Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. (Operator Instructions) This call is being recorded on Friday, July 21, 2023.
I would now like to turn the conference over to Erik Yohe, Executive Vice President of Hilltop Holdings. Please go ahead.

Erik Yohe

Thank you. Before we get started, please note that certain statements during today's presentation that are not statements of historical fact, including statements concerning such items as our outlook, business strategy, future plans, financial condition, allowance for credit losses, liquidity and sources of funding, the impact and potential impacts of inflation, stock repurchases and dividends and impacts of interest rate changes as well as such other items referenced in the preface of our presentation are forward-looking statements.
These statements are based on management's current expectations concerning future events that, by their nature, are subject to risks and uncertainties. Our actual results, capital, liquidity and financial condition may differ materially from these statements due to a variety of factors, including the precautionary statements referenced in our presentation and those included in our most recent annual and quarterly reports filed with the SEC.
Please note that the information presented is preliminary and based upon data available at this time. Except to the extent required by law, we expressly disclaim any obligation to update earlier statements as a result of new information. Additionally, this presentation includes certain non-GAAP measures, including tangible common equity and tangible book value per share. A reconciliation of these measures to the nearest GAAP measure may be found in the appendix to this presentation, which is posted on our website at ir.hilltop-holdings.com.
With that, I'd like to now turn the presentation over to Jeremy Ford, President and CEO.

Jeremy Blue Ford

Thank you, Erik, and good morning. For the second quarter, Hilltop reported net income of $18 million or $0.28 per diluted share. Return on average assets for the period was 0.5% and return on average equity was 3.5%. Hilltop's operating results reflect the challenging market conditions in our mortgage origination and Banking segment, offset by profitability growth in our Broker-Dealer segment. We continue to prioritize the strength of our balance sheet by building on our robust capital and liquidity positions and we remain confident in our ability to continue serving our valued clients through various business and interest rate cycles with our synergistic and durable business model.
During the quarter, PlainsCapital Bank generated $40 million of pretax income on $13.8 billion of assets, representing a return on average assets of 0.9%. Average loans at the bank increased by $172 million in the quarter or approximately 9% annualized as core bank commercial loans, mortgage warehouse loans and retained mortgage balances increased. Growth was strong this quarter as a result of the great work by our bankers over the past year.
But we now expect loan growth to slow given the declining pipelines we have realized over the last few months. Though our credit standards are largely unchanged, and market is still competitive and clients, particularly in commercial real estate are pulling back as elevated rates diminish the economics of many projects.
Regarding deposits, we continue to take actions to ensure the bank maintains financial flexibility while also being mindful of margin impact. During the quarter, we increased broker deposits at the bank by $390 million, and continue to access $1.5 billion of core deposits from Hilltop Securities FDIC sweep program. This is an increase of approximately $500 million from the amount that we have historically accessed from the program.
Given the heightened competition in the market for deposits, we were aggressive with deposit rate increases in the quarter to retrain and attract customers. We believe our deposit rates are now competitive but still expect our cost of deposits to moderately increase throughout the second half of 2023. While our deposit base has stabilized, as expected, these actions have led to net interest margin compression.
The bank's results were also impacted by a provision for credit losses of $14.9 million. This provision was driven by a combination of factors, including deterioration in the overall commercial real estate outlook, negative credit migration, particularly in the office portfolio and loan growth. Although we have built up our allowance, we are still yet to realize any notable charge-offs. Overall, our bank continues to operate at a high level and produced solid results despite NIM compression from deposit competition and elevated provisioning given expectations of credit normalization.
Our team of seasoned bankers and tenured leadership are working hard to ensure that the bank maintains the flexibility to still lend to strong credits and long-standing relationships in the current market.
Moving to PrimeLending. The second quarter was another challenging period for the mortgage business. The spring home buying season did not materialize on account of low housing inventory and high home prices coupled with high mortgage rates, which are adversely impacting homebuyer affordability and confidence.
In addition to sidelining many perspective homebuyers, higher rates further reinforced inventory constraints and low refinance volume due to the rate lock-in effect caused by having so many current mortgages with a sub-4% mortgage rate. PrimeLending originated $2.5 billion in volume, a decline of 36% from the same period of prior year, roughly in line with the overall industry volume projections of 32%. Of this originated volume, only 6% was refinance volume compared to 12% during the second quarter of last year.
This reduction in refinance volume can be attributed to the previously mentioned rate lock-in effect that will continue to have a significant impact on volumes until rates decline. We did see some relief in gain on sale margins during the period. As reported, gain on sale margins increased from Q1 2023 by 15 basis points to 201 basis points.
While this is still lower than the same period prior year, it is an encouraging sign of some stabilization in the market. Given the difficulty of projecting future market size due to inventory levels, interest rates and prolonged industry excess capacity, PrimeLending continues to resize the business and correspondingly reduced its expense base. This includes actions such as non-sales headcount reductions, consolidation of unprofitable branches, termination of underperforming originators and renegotiation of leases and vendor contracts.
Additionally, we continue to recruit loan originators and take advantage of some opportunities in areas where other firms have exited by recruiting experienced originators with strong relationships. We also remain focused on improving efficiencies and lowering costs associated with the overall loan fulfillment process. We believe that the arduous resizing, recruiting and process improvement efforts by the PrimeLending team are going to be a substantial tailwind for us when the market does recover.
HilltopSecurities realized pretax income of $19 million on net revenues of $113 million during the second quarter. Pretax profit and margins improved compared to last year's second quarter due to a 13% increase in net revenues and a lower compensation ratio of 58% compared to 64% in Q2 2022. The revenue improvement over the second quarter of 2022 was primarily related to the wealth management business, where money market and FDIC sweep accounts revenues benefited from the higher short-term interest rates, despite weaker transactional production.
After a difficult start last year, HilltopSecurities has performed well over the last 12 months, with nearly all business lines generating revenue growth. I believe this demonstrates the resilience of its established business lines, enhancements made to the firm and the quality of its people.
Moving to Page 4. Hilltop maintained strong capital levels with a common equity Tier 1 capital ratio of 17.6% and our tangible book value per share increased from Q2 2022 by $0.37 to $27.45. In summary, Hilltop's profitability has been challenged in the first half of the year from the macroeconomic environment, and we do expect interest rates to remain elevated. So we will continue to be conservative in our approach. However, we also believe that our demonstrated focus on balance sheet strength and capital preservation will provide opportunities for long-term growth.
With that, I will now turn the presentation over to Will to discuss the financials.

William B. Furr

Thank you, Jeremy. I'll start on Page 5. As Jeremy discussed, for the second quarter of 2023, Hilltop reported consolidated income attributable to common stockholders of $18 million, equating to $0.28 per diluted share. During the quarter, year-over-year net interest income growth was offset by the ongoing headwinds in the mortgage business, increasing cost of deposits and higher provision expenses.
To further address the change in allowance, I'm turning to Page 6. Hilltop's allowance for credit losses increased during the quarter by $12 million to $109 million. Deterioration in the macroeconomic outlook, coupled with the impacts of loan growth and collected portfolio changes resulted in an allowance build for the quarter.
Allowance for credit losses of $109 million, yields an ACL to total loans HFI ratio of 1.31% as of June 30, 2023. As we've seen over time, ACL can be volatile as it is impacted by economic assumptions as well as changes in the mix and makeup of the credit portfolio. We continue to believe that the allowance for credit losses could be volatile and the future changes in the allowance will be driven by net loan growth in the portfolio, credit migration trends and changes to the macroeconomic outlook over time.
Given the current uncertainties regarding inflation, interest rates, the future outlook for GDP growth and unemployment, volatility could be heightened over the coming quarters.
I'm moving to Page 7. For the quarter, we wanted to provide a little more detail on our CRE portfolio in the allowance distribution across some of our key loan segments. At June 30, the CRE portfolio totaled $3.3 billion, which we segregated in the owner and nonowner-occupied or investor real estate. Internally, we view owner-occupied real estate more like C&I lending, for the most part, repayment is driven by the operating business that owns the real estate.
Nonowner-occupied real estate makes up 57% of the CRE book and as is noted in the upper right-hand chart is diversified across multiple income-producing property types. In the table on the lower left, we provide a breakout of nonowner-occupied office and retail within the portfolio to highlight the differentiation in ACL coverage by loan segment type. Our view to date is that the office and retail markets across our footprint represent the highest exposure to both recession, absorption and valuation risk in the portfolio.
As such, you can see that those loan segments maintain larger ACL coverage ratios and other nonowner-occupied real estate products. We're currently monitoring the entire portfolio closely and have not seen any systemic risk emerge as of the second quarter. That said, we do expect that the ongoing cash flow challenges facing existing and new projects, driven by higher interest rates and ongoing inflation to lead to further credit migration over time.
Turning to Page 8. Net interest income in the second quarter equated to $118 million, including $3.3 million of purchase accounting accretion. Versus the prior year second quarter, net interest income increased by $6 million or 6%, primarily driven by higher yields on loans, securities and cash balances. These benefits were largely offset by higher rates on deposits and variable rate borrowings.
As we expected, net interest margin declined versus the first quarter of 2023 by 25 basis points to 303 basis points. Of note, approximately 14 basis points of this change can be attributed to our outsized cash levels, whereby the average cash balance in the quarter was approximately $1.8 billion. Our current outlook reflects a scenario whereby Fed funds moves to between 525 and 575 basis points by the end of the third quarter of 2023 and remain stable for the balance of the year.
Further rate increases, coupled with ongoing deposit competition could cause NII and NIM to decline further during the third and fourth quarters. Turning to Page 9. In the chart, we highlight the approximately $7 billion of available liquidity sources that Hilltop maintained as of June 30. While we consider the Federal Reserve's discount window to be a source of liquidity, we do not plan to leverage that program under our internal liquidity modeling efforts, and as such, it is noted below our other collateralized borrowing sources.
Further, comparable liquidity sources as of December 31 equated to just over $7 billion and remained relatively stable throughout the first half of the year. As is shown in the chart, at June 30, Hilltop maintained $1.4 billion of excess reserves at the Federal Reserve. Given the stabilization in the banking sector over the last weeks and months, we are revising our cash target lower to between $750 million and $1.5 billion at the Federal Reserve. We expect to maintain these levels throughout year-end. Additionally, in the bottom left chart, we provide some detail on the pace of deposit beta changes to date and note our expectations for future changes in interest-bearing deposit rates under the view that the Federal Reserve continues to move short-term rates higher.
Moving to Page 10. Second quarter average total deposits are approximately $11.3 billion and increased by approximately $300 million or 3% versus the first quarter of '23. On an ending balance basis, deposits increased by $67 million to $11.2 billion from the prior quarter. Of note, approximately $370 million of customer deposits remain off balance sheet in our Wealth Management business and PlainsCapital.
Large majority of these balances are in products that will mature by year-end, and we're working diligently to get them move back on balance sheet at competitive rates for our clients. As a result of our ongoing pricing efforts, interest-bearing deposit cost rose to 284 basis points, an increase of 83 basis points from the prior quarter.
It is our expectation that interest-bearing deposit cost will move higher for the balance of 2023 given our stated views on the path of potential rate increases from the Federal Reserve and the updates we've made to our pricing approach. As it relates to deposit balances and costs, we remain focused on balancing our competitive position with our long-term customer relationships, while we continue to focus on prudent management of net interest income over time.
However, the current environment remains challenging. And as noted earlier, we expect the intensity of competition for deposits will continue to pressure rates higher in the short and medium terms. I'm now moving to Page 11. Total noninterest income for the second quarter of 2023 equated to $191 million.
Second quarter mortgage-related income and fees decreased by $50 million versus the second quarter of '22, driven by the ongoing challenges in mortgage banking by the combination of higher interest rates, home price inflation, limited housing supply and ongoing overcapacity in terms of mortgage originators across the U.S. driven volumes and margins materially lower.
Further, versus the prior year second quarter, purchased mortgage volumes decreased by $1 billion or 31% and refinance volumes decreased by $316 million or 68%. During the second quarter of '23, annual sale margins showed further signs of stabilization with gain on sale margin for loans sold to third parties increasing 14 basis points to 207 basis points. While gain on sale margins remain pressured, we are pleased to see a very modest rebound during the quarter.
We expect that a full recovery in margins will occur slowly and likely will not be a straight line as industry capacity and other constraints remain. Other income increased by $6 million, driven primarily by improved trading activity in our fixed income businesses at HilltopSecurities. Further, while TBA lock volumes increased substantially from the second quarter of '22 levels to $1.6 billion during the second quarter of '23, structured finance revenues remained stable as this quarter's results include a negative $8.1 million mark on the pipeline and the prior year results reflected a modest positive mark in the period.
As we've noted in the past, it's important to recognize that both fixed income services and structured finance businesses at HilltopSecurities can be volatile from period-to-period as they are impacted by interest rates, overall market liquidity, volatility and production trends. Turning to Page 12. Noninterest expenses decreased from the same period in the prior year by $31 million to $267 million. The decrease in the expenses versus the prior year's second quarter was driven by decreases in variable compensation of approximately $23 million in PrimeLending and HilltopSecurities, which was linked to lower fee revenue generation in the quarter compared to the same period in the prior year.
Looking forward, we expect expenses over the variable compensation will remain relatively stable as the ongoing focused efforts related to streamlining our operations and improving productivity, continue to support lower head count and improve throughput across our franchise, helping offset the ongoing inflationary pressures that persist in the market.
Turning to Page 13. Second quarter average HFI loans equated to $8 billion, relatively stable with first quarter levels. On a period ending basis, HFI loans grew versus the first quarter of '23 by $161 million driven by improving commercial loan growth particularly in commercial real estate lending, mortgage warehouse lending and the retention of 1 to 4 family mortgages originated by PrimeLending.
We expect that loan growth will slow in the second half of the year as 1 to 4 family retention levels decline and commercial lending activity continues to contract. Currently, we are expecting full year average loan growth of 0% to 2% during '23, excluding mortgage warehouse lending and any retained mortgages from PrimeLending.
Turning to Page 14. For the first period in a number of quarters, we did see NPAs moved slightly higher to $42 million during the second quarter. The change was driven largely by a single credit downgrade in the second quarter. This credit has subsequently paid off early in July. Overall, credit quality has remained solid through the second quarter. And while we do not see any prevailing trends that cause us outsized concern in our portfolio, we are watching the portfolio closely as higher interest rates, potentially lower utilization rates in certain segments of commercial real estate and an expected slowdown in economic activity that have a negative impact on our clients and our portfolio.
As is shown on the graph at the bottom right of the page, the allowance for credit loss coverage to the bank ended the second quarter at 1.36%, including mortgage warehouse lending. Turning to Page 15. As we move into the third quarter of '23, there continues to be a lot of uncertainty in the market regarding interest rates, inflation and the overall health of the economy. We're pleased with the work that our team has delivered to position our company for times like these, and our teammates across our franchise remain focused on delivering great customer service to our clients, attracting new customers to our franchise, supporting the communities where we serve, maintaining a moderate risk profile and delivering long-term shareholder value.
As is noted in the table, our current outlook for 2023 reflects our current assessment of the economy and the markets where we participate. Further, as the market changes, and we adjust our business to respond, we will provide updates to our outlook on future quarterly calls. Operator, that concludes our prepared comments, and we'll turn the call back to you for the Q&A section of the call.

Question and Answer Session

Operator

(Operator Instructions) The first question comes from Thomas Wendler of Stephens Inc.

Thomas Alexander Wendler

I just wanted to start off with the interest-bearing beta, the expectations. So you said the marginal interest-bearing deposit beta expectations are for 75% to 100% beta on any additional federal fund increases. Is this where you expect the cumulative beta to get? And then also that seems like a step down from what we saw in -- for a beta in 2Q. Can you maybe give us an idea of how you plan on managing the tail-end risk for interest-bearing deposit costs?

William B. Furr

Sure. This is Will. During the second quarter coming off of the bank failures and some of the activity that occurred late in the first quarter, we made -- we saw a substantial increase in kind of overall demand for higher rates from our customers and it really awaken the market, I think, to higher rates. As a result, during the quarter -- second quarter, we increased rates pretty substantially on our top tier -- top-tier products.
We moved a CD -- we launched a CD special that was -- had a rate well in excess of 5%. All really out of an abundance of caution to stabilize any otherwise runoff that we might have otherwise been seeing in our deposit base.
And outside of tax activity during the second quarter, we believe we were able to stabilize that. So we did take some pronounced and, I'd say, larger-than-expected moves in the second quarter just to, again, out of an abundance of caution, mitigate any potential runoff. On a go-forward basis, we do think the market remains competitive. We think we're in a competitive position from a rates perspective across our product and pricing suite.
And as a result, we would expect to pass through the vast majority of any future Fed rate increases to our clients, and that's where the 75% to 100% comes from. But to your point, second quarter was higher as we reset to what was a changing marketplace after the bank failures.

Thomas Alexander Wendler

That was great color. And then just kind of sticking with deposits. It looks like you added some broker deposits during the quarter. Can you give us an idea of the rate and term on those?

William B. Furr

They're approximately -- they range, but they're 5% to 510 basis points, and the term was 90 days, 180 days -- 90- to 180-day terms.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Stephen Scouten of Piper Sandler.

Stephen Kendall Scouten

So I'm wondering the improved guide in the Broker-Dealer, if you could give some more color there on what you're seeing. And then in particular, I would think you guys have some interesting visibility into Broker-Dealer deposit balances for your customers. Just kind of curious if you're seeing stability there and how you feel about the strength of those deposits moving forward?

Jeremy Blue Ford

Will, you want to start off and I'll...

William B. Furr

Yes. So I think what we're seeing from an outlook perspective, from a revenue perspective, we're obviously seeing strength in our sweep revenues, as Jeremy has mentioned, over time and during the call today, we -- higher rates have historically benefited the overall sweep revenues. We do think that no different than the deposit discussion we just had with the prior question that we'll be passing along the vast majority of any future rate increases to customers from an overall suite deposit perspective.
But nonetheless, we are seeing -- we've seen an improvement there. We're also seeing strength as we continue to invest in our business around fixed incomes, improving public finance services. We expect to have a stronger second half as they historically do and structured finance, notwithstanding the mark that I mentioned in my prepared comments, is also having a better year than they've had a year of recent. So that's where we start to see the strength in kind of the fee income. From a deposit level perspective, we are seeing customers as we are in our core deposit base searching for higher yields. So we've got a suite of products from FDIC insured products to money market mutual funds to later treasuries and the like.
So we've got a series of options those customers can pursue. And we are seeing customers based on their risk appetite, their appetite for term products move into some of those higher-yielding products to move, I'd say, excess cash out of their brokerage account and into, I'd say, higher-yielding, more term-oriented products in certain cases, just as we're seeing from a deposit base perspective.
So similar activity from a deposit base at HilltopSecurities as we're seeing in the core bank franchise.

Stephen Kendall Scouten

Okay. Extremely helpful. And I guess, as you think about the margin from here, I mean, you noted you think there can be more compression in third quarter, fourth quarter, both the margin and NII. Can you give us a feel for what you think the magnitude of that might be, maybe compared to what we saw this quarter?
And then with noninterest-bearing deposits down to around 31%, do you have any feel for where the floor of that could be or if you see stability there?

William B. Furr

Yes. So I'll answer those in reverse. So from a noninterest-bearing perspective, we -- while the 31% is correct, we generally think about it ex-broker because, again, we don't fully anticipate to hold those brokers for a long period of time, past their maturity unless something changes in the marketplace. So we look at the more normal level here closer to 33%.
Historically, pre-pandemic, we would have been 31% to 32% as a percent NIB to total, we expect we'll revert to that. We may sink a little lower in the short run, but our expectation will be in that 30% to 32% noninterest-bearing over time as the market continues to settle out. As it relates to net interest income and NIM, I think if we see -- the way we're thinking about it, if we see 25 basis points of an increase, for example, we would expect NIM potentially would decline somewhere between 7 and 10 basis points on a quarterly basis for each incremental 25 basis points.
From a net interest income perspective, the variability you're seeing here, we peaked in the third quarter like we would have expected we would, had pretty stable in the fourth quarter.
We do expect NII will continue to decline just as, again, that 75 -- if rates move higher and we have a 75 to 100 basis point deposit beta, obviously, our loan beta won't be able to keep up with that from an overall NII perspective. So we would expect to see NII, again, drift lower, I wouldn't call it a step function lower, but I'd say drift lower through the back half of the year.

Stephen Kendall Scouten

Great. Extremely helpful color. And then just last thing for me, I guess, is you guys were already weighted to that S7 Moody's scenario. So I'm curious, was that just that their scenario dynamics are changed so significantly that drove some of the reserve increase? Or did you guys weighted differently? Or are there some qualitative factors? What's kind of the mechanics of that increase in the reserve? And like you noted, without the charge-offs as of yet.

William B. Furr

Yes. So our -- we don't actually weight scenarios. So we use the S7 on [appearance] basis. We do a pretty, I'd say, onerous evaluation of a series of economic scenarios and management goes through and selects one that we believe best reflects where we think the market is and where we think it's going to go over the coming quarters and years, and we believe the S7 reflected that all in.
Our view continues to be with the Federal Reserve moving as fast and as far as it has the economy being a big ship. And as it starts to turn, we are seeing some signs of a downshift. It will be difficult to avert a recession. And so our view is that, that recession scenario best reflects again what our view of where the overall economy is going. As we've noted since CECL came out, allowance is going to be volatile. It will be principally volatile along this macroeconomic scenario.
We'll continue to evaluate it each quarter as we do. But right now, we feel like we're adequately and appropriately reserved for the environment we believe is forthcoming.

Stephen Kendall Scouten

Got it. So it sounds like most of those changes came just as Moody's worsened that S7 scenario then. Is that fair to say?

William B. Furr

I mean if you look at our chart, $7.7 million of the build was specifically related to macroeconomic and that's pretty direct drive quantitative assessment. So again, over half of the build was driven by that change.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Wood Lay of KBW.

Wood Neblett Lay

Just wanted to follow up on the deposit cost commentary. You noted you raised pretty aggressively during the quarter. Just any color on when those raises occurred?

William B. Furr

Most of the rate increases happened in the month of April and to some extent in May. Again, we were -- we went into a heavy evaluation period when the bank failure started to occur or bank run started to occur. And we also saw a corresponding spike in requests from our customers. Again, we bifurcate it. There was some concern about safety and soundness in the banking sector, we really didn't see or feel a lot of that beyond maybe the first week after the bank failures, but we did see, again, what I'd call it [awaken] customer focused on overall higher yields.
So we moved pretty aggressively in April. And then again, therefore, at the end of April and early May with another set of interest-bearing to product changes just to ensure, again, we were well positioned against the market as it was moving pretty aggressively. So largely the cost of interest-bearing deposits of 284 basis points reflect, I'd say, the vast majority of those changes on a full quarter average basis. But they'll be, as I said in my comments, some drift higher just because it wasn't a perfect full quarter.

Wood Neblett Lay

Got it. That's helpful. And then I wanted to switch over to credit and the breakout of office, I appreciate the breakout that you provided. Any commentary you can provide on just the markets you're most exposed to within that investor office portfolio?

William B. Furr

Our exposure is really across the footprint, but it's going to be in our larger metro areas. So Dallas, Austin, are probably the largest two, then Houston after that. So I mean it's the office portfolio while I'm not -- what I would not characterize it as kind of downtown or urban if you will, but I would call it tangentially related to the larger metro areas where we serve clients.

Wood Neblett Lay

And is it mostly low-rise buildings, is that fair to assume?

William B. Furr

I'd say mid and low rise, but not -- we're not out financing a lot of high-rise buildings.

Wood Neblett Lay

Got it. And then last for me, I just wanted to touch on buybacks. It's been a minute since you've been aggressive on the buybacks. Just any thoughts on the outlook for here?

Jeremy Blue Ford

This is Jeremy. I'd say that it's just not really compelling right now with the macroeconomic environment and other alternative opportunities, and really where our value sits is still higher than where we've transacted on the prior tenders. But if it should dip materially, then we certainly would consider it.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Carl Doirin of Raymond James & Associates.

Carl-Harry Doirin

Just a quick and easy one on -- another question on deposits here. You talked about the positive behaviors and client requesting higher rates as well as being more competitive relative to peers. I just wanted to ask if you could perhaps describe perhaps what you're seeing in terms of the competitive environment in your markets for deposit pricing relative to 2Q. Are you seeing more or less irrational behaviors from competitors? And how would you describe that?

William B. Furr

I don't think we're seeing any more irrational behaviors. I think the competitive landscape, notwithstanding some other -- some additional shocks has stabilized. I mean it's aggressive, banks and others are looking for deposits and I think customers have in there, at least, intellectually, started to move toward a view that 4% and 5% is an earnings rate that they are aspiring to achieve.
So -- but from a competitive perspective, we saw some things early immediately after the bank turmoil occurred that seemed (inaudible), but I'd say, largely speaking, while we do -- while there's certainly some competitors out there that got higher rates than we do, I'd say, generally speaking, it's pretty rational, and it's certainly stabilized here the last 3 to 6 weeks.

Carl-Harry Doirin

Okay. And moving on to the Broker-Dealer business. We saw a pretty nice increase in the pretax margin there. Could you talk about debt moving forward? Is it the sort of seasonality going on?

Jeremy Blue Ford

Well, I think, as Will said earlier, the Broker-Dealer is having a strong year and really had a strong last 12 months. And with the sweep deposits and the rate that we're getting there and the fact that that's a higher margin kind of bedrock to the results, I would expect the second half of the year to be similar to the first.
Albeit, I'd probably say the margin is -- that 16% pretax margin would be on the high side.

Carl-Harry Doirin

I have one last one on the mortgage banking space. You took pretty significant actions over the past few quarters, the rightsized cost at PrimeLending. With the -- I guess, with the updated outlook for lower origination, I guess should we expect additional measures? Or do you think most of the initiatives have already been completed?

William B. Furr

I would say as we evaluate that business, obviously, we're not pleased that -- we're not pleased with the loss that currently is being kind of managed through. So it's our view. We're going to continue to look in every corner to look for opportunities to streamline that business and rightsize it for the market. However, as we've said previously, we're committed to the mortgage business. We're also absolutely focused on making sure we're doing things that position the franchise for long-term success.
So while it is important to us to continue to focus on working towards profitability at a minimum breakeven results, we're going to continue to take steps to do things we think are prudent to improve productivity with a focus on helping position the franchise for long-term success when this market does turn.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, there are no further questions at this time, and this concludes our conference call for today. We thank you for participating. We ask you that you disconnect your lines.

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