Title: Howe Barnes Hoefer
1- Howe Barnes Hoefer Arnett, Inc.
- 13th Annual Community Bank Conference
- Chicago, Illinois
- August 19 20, 2008
- Presented by Gary Douglass Chief Executive
Officer
2Forward-Looking Disclaimer
- This presentation contains forward-looking
statements within the meaning of Section 27A of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and
Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, as amended. The Company intends such
forward-looking statements to be covered by the
safe harbor provisions for forward-looking
statements contained in the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995 as amended, and is
including this statement for purposes of these
safe harbor provisions. Forward-looking
statements, which are based on certain
assumptions and describe future plans, strategies
and expectations of Pulaski Financial Corp., are
generally identifiable by use of the words
believe, expect, intend, anticipate,
estimate, project, or similar expressions.
The Companys ability to predict results or the
actual effect of future plans or strategies is
inherently uncertain. Factors which could have a
material adverse affect on the operations and
future prospects of the Company include, but are
not limited to, changes in interest rates
general economic conditions legislative/regulator
y provisions monetary and fiscal policies of the
U.S. Government, including policies of the U.S.
Treasury and the Federal Reserve Board the
quality and composition of the loan or investment
portfolios demand for loan products deposit
flows competition demand for financial services
in the Companys market area and accounting
principles, policies, and guidelines. These
risks and uncertainties should be considered in
evaluating forward-looking statements and undue
reliance should not be placed on such statements.
Further information concerning the Company and
its business, including additional factors that
could materially affect the Companys financial
results, is included in the Companys filings
with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Statements herein are made only as of the date of
this presentation. Pulaski Financial Corp.
undertakes no obligation to release revisions to
update forward-looking statements or reflect
events or circumstances after the date of this
presentation.
3Who Are We?
Profitable, full-service 1.3 billion Community
Bank serving the needs of St. Louis
- Conservative, in-market commercial lender to
small and medium-sized businesses with a niche in
1 to 5 million relationships - Expanding retail and commercial deposit base
served through 12 full-service banking centers
in St. Louis - Profitable and leading direct, in-market mortgage
originator in both our St. Louis and Kansas City
markets on pace for 1.5 billion of mortgage loan
sales generating 7 million of mortgage
non-interest income - Strong organic growth model less than 5 of
assets acquired through merger - A Bank that is prospering while many others are
suffering
4Pulaskis Evolution into a St. Louis-Based
Community Bank
- Founded in 1922 as a mutual thrift serving the
Polish community of St. Louis - Pulaski Financial Corp. formed as a holding
company in 1998 to access capital through a
public stock offering at that time, the Banks
assets were 168 million - Reached a significant milestone during fiscal
2007 when total assets crossed the 1 billion
threshold - Today a 1.3 billion full service Community Bank
with twelve bank locations in metropolitan St.
Louis and three loan production offices in Kansas
City and the Illinois portion of the St. Louis
metropolitan area - Building the Companys residential and commercial
lending operations - Opening de novo branches in key areas of the
market - Hiring experienced bankers with existing
in-market customer relationships - Crucial to the strategic plan was/is growth in
five key products commercial, residential and
home equity loans and checking and money market
deposit accounts
5Pulaskis Evolution 1998 to 2007
6Locations Opened or Acquired Since 2005 in the
Central Corridor of St. Louis
Two-thirds of St. Louis Deposits Come from its
Central Corridor
- As a thrift, Pulaski historically focused on
banking locations that served retail customers - Prior to 2005, only the Creve Coeur location was
positioned to serve small-to-medium sized
business customers - New strategy to enhance the convenience of bank
locations in St. Louis commercial districts - Since 2005, opened or acquired six new,
full-service locations all in the Central
Corridor convenient to metropolitan commercial
and financial centers
7St. Louis Demographics
- 18th largest MSA in the United States
- Population of 2.8 million
- Average household income of approximately
49,000, 5 higher than national average - Stable and diverse economy healthcare 20,
manufacturing 11 - Pulaski is the 12th largest bank in the
metropolitan area based on total deposits with a
1.7 market share hence the market opportunity
8Market Opportunity
- St. Louis market has experienced heavy
consolidation with more than 94 billion in
deposits acquired by regional and national banks
in a market with just over 52 billion in total
deposits - Locally-based community banks like Pulaski have
gained market share by recruiting experienced
bankers who have been displaced by mergers with
larger, out of area banks - These displaced bankers have strong customer
relationship who are often willing to follow them
to another local financial institution - St. Louisans favor doing business with local
companies, creating opportunities for Pulaski - While all of this has resulted in substantial
market share growth for Pulaski, we still only
control 1.7 of the MSAs total deposits
9Our Community Bank Strategy
- Emphasizes high-quality, responsive and
personalized customer service - Consolidation in our market has created larger
banks, which are perceived by many customers as
impersonal or unresponsive - Creating a significant opportunity for a
community-focused bank to provide services to
retail customers and small-to-medium sized
businesses - Distinguish ourselves from larger regional banks
operating in our market area - Quicker decision making
- Customized products
- Access to senior decision makers
- Conversely, our larger capital base and product
mix enable us to compete effectively against
smaller banks with limited services and
capabilities - Our efforts to grow assets and earnings are
focused upon the growth of our five core
products commercial, residential and home equity
loans and checking and money market deposit
accounts
10Execution of our Strategic Plan Produced Strong
Growth in Key Indicators
From 2003 to 2007 we have
- Increased our net interest income from 13.7
million to 29.0 million, representing a 21
compound annual growth rate (CAGR) - Increased our total assets from 401.4 million to
1.1 billion, representing a 29 CAGR - Increased our total loan portfolio from 276.9
million to 949.8 million, representing a 36
CAGR - Increased our total deposits from 313.6 million
to 835.5 million, representing a 28 CAGR - Reduced our ratio of non-interest expense to
average assets from 3.34 to 2.38 - Expanded the number of residential and commercial
loan officers from 18 to more than 85 - Expanded our St. Louis bank network from seven to
twelve full-service locations
11Net Interest Income vs. Loans Receivable
- Earnings becoming progressively less dependent on
non-interest income sources - Up to 2003, principally a residential lender with
94 of portfolio consisting of residential and
home equity loans - Late 2003, hired our first group of commercial
lenders with focus on small-to-medium sized
businesses
12Commercial Loans Outstanding
- Since 2003, 56 of loan portfolio growth has come
from commercial lending - The Commercial Division has grown from just two
employees at the end of 2003 to over 30 at the
end of 2007 many of whom have brought us new
business from their pre-existing customer
relationships
13Loan Portfolio Composition
Portfolio Composition 9/30/07
Portfolio Composition 9/30/03
14Loans Sold vs. Mortgage Revenues
- Conforming, residential mortgage lender who
originates loans directly through
commission-based sales staff in St. Louis and
Kansas City - We do not engage in subprime or option arm type
lending - Majority of loans originated are
one-to-four-family which we sell to investors on
a servicing released basis, generating mortgage
revenue, which is our largest source of
non-interest income
15Home Equity Loans Outstanding
- Typically offered to only the most credit worthy
borrowers and are generally approved in
conjunction with their first mortgage loan
application - Loans represent prime-based assets with low
interest rate risk characteristics and attractive
yields, lending stability to our net interest
margin - Because generally subordinated to first mortgage
loans, the risk of loss increases when the
combined loan to value ratio increases
16Checking Account Balances
- Represents the cornerstone product in a customer
relationship and the Banks most valuable source
of low-cost deposits - Strong growth driven by combination of commercial
and retail growth - Not only a low cost funding source but also
generates valuable fee income through service
charges
17Retail Banking Fees
- Driven off growth in the number of checking
accounts
18Money Market Deposit Balances
- A core deposit product that carries an adjustable
interest rate making it an ideal funding source
for our prime-adjusting commercial and home
equity loans
192008 Highlights Strong Performancein a
Challenging Environment
- Diluted YTD EPS of 0.68 including 0.10 CEO
separation costs compared to 0.65 in 2007 - Core earnings expected to reach double digit
growth for the full 2008 year - Net interest income rises 31 for the third
quarter and 26 YTD - YTD loans and core deposits increase 18 and 30,
respectively - Commercial loan portfolio crosses 500 million
threshold - Net interest margin expands to 3.23 at June 30,
2008 - 20bp linked quarter increase and 36bp year over
year increase - YTD provision for loan losses totaled 4.9
million versus net charge-offs of 3.5 million
resulting in reserve build of 1.4 million - Mortgage revenues increase 18 YTD
- Retail banking fees increase 19 YTD
- Efficiency ratio improves to 54
- Bank maintains well-capitalized status,
including 8.29 Tier 1 leverage capital ratio at
June 30, 2008
20Asset Quality Understanding the Quality
- Commercial Loans
- Direct origination, in-market to borrowers we
know - Collateral-based lender
- Personal guarantees from substantive principals
- Residential Loans
- Direct origination, in-market to owner
occupiers - Two economically stable lending markets
- Consciously avoided sub-prime and option arm
lending - Underwrote customers on credit and affordability,
not on an anticipation of collateral appreciation
21Asset QualityLoan Portfolio Composition at June
30, 2008
Portfolio Composition 6/30/08
- All of our net portfolio growth is
commercial-related - Only 31 basis points of total commercial balances
are non-accrual - Limited exposure to residential developments
Commercial Composition 6/30/08
22Asset QualityNon-Performing Assets and
Allowance for Loan Losses
- Strong commercial asset quality performance
- YTD 2008 net charge-offs primarily attributable
to HELOC and second mortgage - Only 1 of HELOC portfolio is non-performing
- 160 million of HELOC portfolio has CLTV of less
than 80 - Aggressively charge-off losses while
strengthening reserves
23Asset Quality Takeaway
- Do not see the current market place improving
significantly in the near-term - Expect provision levels for the next several
quarters to be comparable to that of the last two
quarters - Despite the challenging times, we believe we have
a good handle on asset quality and are well
positioned to work through this environment
24Near-Term Focus
- Profitability improvement as we digest recent
rapid growth - Disciplined allocation of capital through balance
sheet management - Assets must earn their way onto our balance
sheet - Growth will be measured and profitable
- Expanding net interest margin
- Selective origination and disciplined pricing
- Continued cost of funds improvement through core
deposit growth - Aggressively charging-off problem assets while
strengthening reserves - Establishing a cost management culture
- Investing in talent
- Remaining selectively opportunistic
- Accretive acquisitions
- Branch acquisitions
- Talent acquisitions
25Closing
- Our core earnings through the first three
quarters of 2008 have exceeded the unadjusted
guidance we provided at the beginning of the year
and we are on pace for double digit earnings
growth for the year something not many banks
can say! - We have maintained sound and manageable asset
quality in the midst of this challenging
environment as we continue to aggressively
charge-off problem loans while prudently building
reserves - We remain well capitalized and in late June we
increased our quarterly dividend by 6 at a time
when many other banking institutions are either
slashing or eliminating theirs - We are open for business at a time when many
others are retreating, thus are well positioned
to benefit from the current environment as new
and existing customers continue to choose us as a
flight to quality
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