FNB (FNB) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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DATE

Friday, April 17, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • President & Chief Executive Officer — Vincent J. Delie
  • Chief Financial Officer — Vincent J. Calabrese
  • Chief Credit Officer — Gary L. Guerrieri

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TAKEAWAYS

  • Net Income -- $137 million, with EPS up 19% to $0.38, reflecting increased profitability.
  • Pre-Provision Net Revenue (PPNR) -- Increased 17%, with positive operating leverage of 4.9%.
  • Return on Average Tangible Common Equity -- 13.2%, indicating capital efficiency.
  • Tangible Book Value per Share -- $12.06, up 11% and demonstrating capital growth.
  • Dividend -- Quarterly cash dividend raised 8% to $0.13 per share, first increase since 2007.
  • Share Repurchase -- $250 million new authorization, in addition to $50 million remaining from the prior program and $35 million repurchased in the quarter.
  • Spot Loans and Leases -- $35.1 billion, rising 3.9% annualized linked quarter, driven by $198 million consumer and $136 million commercial growth; C&I spot balances up over 4% annualized.
  • Commercial Real Estate (CRE) Balances -- Declined $110 million due to expected payoffs.
  • Spot Total Deposits -- $38.9 billion, with a $142 million linked quarter increase and noninterest-bearing deposits stable at 26% of total.
  • Loan-to-Deposit Ratio -- Stable at 90%, supporting balance sheet flexibility.
  • Net Interest Margin (NIM) -- 3.25%, down 3 basis points sequentially, with a 3.30% exit margin in March.
  • Deposit Costs -- Interest-bearing deposit cost declined 13 basis points; total deposit beta since September 2024 Fed cuts at 27%.
  • Yield on Earning Assets -- Decreased 11 basis points to 5.14%, including a parallel decline in loan and investment yields.
  • Noninterest Income -- $91 million, up 3.7%, with capital markets rising 27.8% to $6.8 million; wealth management revenue up 2.8% to $21.8 million.
  • Noninterest Expense -- $257.9 million, up 4.5%, with occupancy and equipment expense up $5.1 million and other noninterest expense up $6.8 million due to fraud, litigation, and mortgage assistance program costs.
  • Efficiency Ratio -- 56.1%, improved from 58.5% linked prior year and reflecting expense discipline.
  • Asset Quality Metrics -- Delinquency and NPLs/OREO increased modestly by 3 basis points to 74 and 34 basis points, respectively.
  • Net Charge-Offs -- 18 basis points, down 1 basis point sequentially, signaling continued credit strength.
  • Funded Reserve -- $443 million, or 1.26% of loans unchanged sequentially; NPL coverage at 393% including discounts.
  • CRE Concentration -- 194% of Tier 1 capital plus allowance, with expectation for further decline.
  • Consumer Loan Origination Quality -- Average FICO of 782, with delinquency at 67 basis points and charge-offs at 5 basis points, both at multiyear lows.
  • Noninterest Expense Guidance -- Expected at high end of $1 billion to $1.02 billion full-year range due to franchise growth investments and technology initiatives.
  • Provision Guidance -- $85 million to $105 million for the year, reflecting stable credit conditions and dependent on net loan growth.
  • Second Quarter Net Interest Income Guidance -- Projected $370 million to $380 million; noninterest income $90 million to $95 million; noninterest expense $250 million to $255 million.
  • Capital Ratios -- CET1 at 11.4%, TCE near 9%, and payout ratio reduced to 31%.
  • Penn State Partnership -- New exclusive university banking and primary treasury management provider agreement launching in July, expanding customer reach and fee potential.
  • ATMs with Foreign Currency -- First U.S. ATM offering Canadian and Mexican currencies now operational at Pittsburgh International Airport.
  • AI and Digital Initiatives -- Significant investments continue, including launch of proprietary 360 View and integrated digital onboarding platform intended for rollout end of year.

SUMMARY

F.N.B. Corporation (NYSE:FNB) began 2026 with notable operating momentum, highlighted by a substantial dividend increase and a $250 million expansion of its share repurchase program. Management announced an exclusive partnership with Pennsylvania State University to provide campus banking and treasury services, positioning FNB as a strategic participant in a large institutional market. The company detailed ongoing investment in proprietary digital and AI-driven client solutions, such as the 360 View platform and eStore, as a tactical strategy to drive long-term revenue and efficiency gains. First quarter deposit and C&I loan pipelines reached near record levels, referencing broad-based demand from high-quality clients and new treasury management relationships. Management confirmed no reliance on private credit or NDF-related lending for growth, and minimal nonbank financial exposure was reported.

  • The Board approved an 8% quarterly dividend hike, marking the first such increase in nearly two decades.
  • Total capital returned to shareholders reached $2.4 billion since 2009 through dividends and buybacks, reflecting sustained commitment to shareholder value.
  • Penn State partnership provides exclusive on-campus banking access for 90,000 students, faculty, and staff, and designates FNB as primary treasury manager for all university campuses.
  • Proprietary digital enhancements—including AI-enabled customer analytics and 360 View—will undergo a full launch by early 2027 and are expected to materially impact origination volumes and client cross-sell.
  • First ATM to dispense Canadian dollars and Mexican pesos, a novel industry feature, was launched as part of FNB’s expanded offering at Pittsburgh International Airport.
  • President & Chief Executive Officer Delie said, "I've said it a number of times, we're going to be opportunistic. There's not a lot out there that we see that is high value even if they were available."
  • Commercial deposit pipeline rose from under $1 billion to approximately $1.2 billion, signifying increasing momentum in treasury management wins.
  • Credit spreads and loan yields remained stable quarter over quarter, with first quarter new loans originated at yields close to the overall portfolio rate of 5.61%.
  • CRE concentration fell to 194% of Tier 1 capital plus allowance, with headwinds from secondary market payoffs offset by select growth opportunities.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • PPNR (Pre-Provision Net Revenue): A banking profitability metric calculated before loan loss provisions, used to evaluate core operational earnings strength.
  • NDF (Non-Deposit Funding): Funding sources for loans not derived from customer deposits, such as brokered funds or wholesale borrowings.
  • eStore: FNB’s proprietary digital platform enabling multi-product applications and integrated customer onboarding.
  • CRE (Commercial Real Estate): Loans secured by commercial real estate assets, including office, retail, and industrial properties.
  • 360 View: FNB’s proprietary, AI-backed internal and client-facing customer analytics and relationship management tool.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Vincent J. Delie: Thank you, and welcome to our first quarter earnings call. Joining me today are Vince Calabrese, our Chief Financial Officer; and Gary Guerrieri, our Chief Credit Officer. FNB produced a solid quarter with net income of $137 million. EPS increased 19% over the first quarter of 2025 to $0.38 a Pre-provision net revenue increased 17% from the year ago quarter as we generated positive operating leverage of 4.9%. Our capital ratios remained strong and continue to move favorably, all while producing a strong return on average tangible common equity of 13.2%. Tangible book value per share of $12.06 represents an 11% increase from the year ago quarter.

Since 2009, we expands the tenure of our leadership team's management of the bank and holding company. We have focused on a disciplined and strategic approach to developing and executing our long-term growth plan. Our actions have resulted in the company's robust capital accumulation sustainable, superior financial performance, investments and a resilient risk management framework and a strong balance sheet. Over time, we have grown our capital to record levels and effectively manage the dividend payout ratio from nearly 80% down to 31%, in line with our peers. During that time period, we also grew the balance sheet 477% and with an organic compounded annual growth rate of 8%.

We invested in our enterprise risk management framework, built out our advisory and capital markets businesses to diversify our revenue streams and established FMB as an industry innovator with an award-winning digital and data analytics capability, including the eStore. These significant investments occurred over time while maintaining an industry-leading efficiency ratio in the low to mid-50% range. I can't emphasize enough the hard work and superior execution by our team. to get to where we are today. These efforts have produced sustained levels of increased profitability, significant returns and strong capital generation. This strategy was fully aligned with shareholders' interests.

We recently announced an 8% increase to our quarterly cash dividend to $0.13 per share, starting with the dividend to be paid in June. Our Board of Directors also unanimously approved our management's recommendation for an additional $250 million for the repurchase of our common stock on top of the $50 million remaining in our existing share repurchase program. Inclusive of the March dividend, and $35 million repurchased in the first quarter of 2026. FNB has returned a total of $2.4 billion in capital to shareholders through both dividends and repurchases since 2009, demonstrating our long-term commitment to optimize value for our shareholders while also growing and reinvesting in the company for continued future success.

FNB's financial performance is achieved through consistent execution and sustained growth in our engaged customer base. We were thrilled to recently announce our partnership as the official and exclusive retail bank and financial provider to the Pennsylvania State University. Beginning in July, Penn State's 90,000 students faculty and staff will have exclusive access to FNB's on-campus banking services, including our proprietary eStore. FNB was also selective as the primary treasury management provider to all Penn State campuses. Our continued success of winning despite significant competition, demonstrates our capabilities and leadership in the industry. As a core business, University Banking highlights another differentiated product offering.

In addition to significant investments in AI and digital, FNB's innovative solutions also extend to our ATM network. This month, our first ATM that offers foreign currency disbursement for Canadian dollars and Mexican pesos opened at the new Pittsburgh International Airport. Once again, an industry leader, our ability to offer foreign currency disbursement through an ATM is very rare across the banking industry and builds upon our momentum to improve the ease of banking for current and new customers. We congratulate the airport authority and its leadership on the completion of the new terminal, which includes FNB's state-of-the-art visually stunning banking center. We are proud to play a role in this transformational Pittsburgh asset with our ATMs and sponsorship.

The first quarter reflected a promising start to 2026, with our ability to continue to attract top-tier talent, deploy innovative solutions and deepen customer relationships, period-end loan growth of 3.9% annualized linked quarter was driven by 4 middle market C&I. It is important to note that our growth has not benefited from NDF or lending into private credit, a category that we continue to avoid. With that, I would like to now turn the call over to Gary to discuss all of our credit results for the quarter. Gary?

Gary L. Guerrieri: Thank you, Vince, and good morning, everyone. We ended the quarter with our asset quality metrics remaining at solid levels. Delinquency along with NPLs and OREO increased slightly, each up 3 bps compared to the prior quarter, totaling 74 and 34 basis points, respectively. Net charge-offs continued to show strong performance totaling 18 basis points, down 1 bp compared to the prior quarter. Criticized loans increased slightly, consistent with the seasonality we have seen in the first quarter over the last several years. Total funded provision expense for the quarter stood at $19.4 million, supporting the C&I loan growth and charge-offs.

Our ending funded reserve now stands at $443 million, an increase of $3.5 million, ending at 1.26%, unchanged from the prior quarter. When including acquired unamortized loan discounts, our reserve stands at 1.32%, and our NPL coverage position remained strong at 393%, inclusive of the discounts. While we have not experienced any impact related to tariffs, we are maintaining the related qualitative overlays from a year ago due to the ongoing conflict and uncertainty in the Middle East. Our comprehensive risk management oversight, including concentrations of credit line utilization, proactive CRE management, stress testing and the 360-degree risk view of our client relationships allows us to maintain a strong risk profile throughout economic cycles and during periods of economic uncertainty.

We are monitoring the situation in the Middle East closely, as we have done in the past during the pandemic, the Ukrainian conflict supply chain disruptions, inflationary periods and tariff increases. Throughout all of these periods of disruption, our loan portfolio and customer base have proved resilient and did not experience any material adverse impacts. Our consumer portfolio remains very strong with average origination FICO scores of 782 with delinquency and charge-offs ending the quarter at multiyear lows of 67 and 5 basis points, respectively. We continue to originate loans within our commercial and consumer portfolios under our long-standing and consistent credit underwriting philosophy.

In the quarter, we had solid C&I activity leading to increased loan growth with a slight uptick in line utilization. Additionally, we are seeing increased levels of high-quality CRE opportunities. However, our exposure declined in the quarter, ending at 194% of Tier 1 capital plus allowance. In closing, despite the continued volatility in the markets, we look forward to building on the momentum we had in the first quarter with our pipelines at near record levels across the majority of our portfolios. With the quality and diversification of our portfolio, we are well positioned to achieve our growth objectives in the year ahead. I will now turn the call over to Vince Calabrese, our Chief Financial Officer, for his remarks.

Vincent J. Calabrese: Thanks, Gary, and good morning. Today, I will review the first quarter's financial results and walk through our second quarter and full year guidance. First quarter net income totaled $137 million or $0.38 per share, with total revenues up a strong 9.4% from the year ago period and coupled with prudent management of operating expenses, PPNR increased nearly 17%. Turning to the balance sheet. Loan activity began to accelerate late in the quarter with spot total loans and leases ending the quarter at $35.1 billion, a 3.9% annualized linked quarter increase driven by growth of $198 million in consumer loans and $136 million in commercial loans and leases.

Spot C&I loan balances were up over 4% linked quarter on annualized were $314 million, driven by growth in the Carolinas, Cleveland and the Mid-Atlantic. CRE balances continue to be impacted by expected payoffs and were down $110 million linked quarter. Residential mortgages, indirect and HELOCs all contributed to the consumer loan growth. Spot total deposits ended the quarter at $38.9 billion, a linked quarter increase of $142 million with the first quarter impacted by normal seasonal outflow for corporate deposits. Noninterest-bearing deposits increased $89 million or 3.6% linked quarter annualized and remained stable at 26% of total deposits. The loan-to-deposit ratio held steady at 90%.

First quarter's net interest margin was 3.25% and down 3 basis points sequentially as the timing of the Fed rate cut in December 2025 impacted NIM for the quarter. Additionally, normal seasonal outflows and deposits were funded temporarily with higher cost short-term borrowings. Interest-bearing deposit costs declined 13 basis points linked quarter, driven by lower rates paid on money market CD balances and total borrowing cost decreased 12 basis points. Our cumulative total spot deposit beta since the fed interest rate cuts began in September of 2024, was 27% at quarter end.

The total yield on earning assets declined 11 basis points to 5.14 on an 11 basis point decline in loan yields and a slight 2 basis point decline in investment securities yields. Reinvestment rates on investment securities remained well above the overall portfolio yield. Looking ahead to next quarter, the margin for the month of March was at $3.30 on Net interest income increased nearly 11% from the year ago period as the NIM expanded significantly, increasing 22 basis points with earning asset growth of 3.5% year-over-year. Turning to noninterest income and expense. Noninterest income totaled $91 million, up 3.7% in the first quarter of 2025.

And Capital markets income increased 27.8% to $6.8 million on solid contributions from debt capital markets, swap fees and international banking. Wealth management revenues increased 2.8% year-over-year to $21.8 million, with contributions across the geographic footprint. Noninterest expense totaled $257.9 million, a 4.5% increase from the year ago quarter. Salaries and employee benefits increased less than $1 million or 0.4% as lower performance-based compensation and health care costs offset strategic hiring and normal merit increases. Occupancy and equipment increased $5.1 million or 11%, primarily due to technology-related investments and higher occupancy costs, which included unusually high seasonal snow removal costs.

Other noninterest expense increased $6.8 million or 30% due to a combination of higher fraud losses litigation-related expenses and the impact of our mortgage down payment assistance program. The first quarter efficiency ratio remained solid at 56.1% down meaningfully from 58.5% a year ago, and we continue to manage our expense base in a disciplined manner. FNB continues to actively manage our capital position to support balance sheet growth and optimize shareholder returns while appropriately managing risk. Given the new share repurchase authorization, Vince mentioned earlier, we now have remaining capacity of $300 million after repurchasing a total of $35 million in the first quarter of this year.

The 8% quarterly common dividend increase marks our first quarterly dividend increase since 2007 and reflects our strong financial performance and capital levels as evidenced by the TCE ratio of nearly 9% and the CET1 ratio of 11.4%. Let's now look at guidance for the second quarter and full year of 2026. All guidance is based on current expectations, are remaining cognizant of the highly uncertain macroeconomic and geopolitical environments. We are maintaining our full year balance sheet guidance for spot balances, projecting period-end loans and deposits to grow mid-single digits on a full year basis as balances continue to build on the growth acceleration we experienced late in the first quarter.

Our projected full year income statement guide is largely unchanged with last quarter. Full year net interest income is still expected to be between $1.495 billion and $1.535 billion. We are assuming no Fed interest rate cuts for 2026 versus our previous expectation for 225 basis point cuts, while maintaining our previous net interest income range due to our expectation of continued deposit pricing pressures in an environment with no Fed cuts and accelerating loan growth in the industry. Second quarter net interest income is projected between $370 million and $380 million. The noninterest income full year guide remains $370 million to $390 million with second quarter levels expected between $90 million and $95 million.

The full year guidance range for noninterest expense remains unchanged between $1 billion and $1.02 billion, but we now expect to be at the higher end of that range due to increased investments in franchise growth and new strategic initiatives. Second quarter noninterest expense is expected to be between $250 million and $255 million. We continue to expect strong positive operating leverage for the full year of 2026. Full year provision guidance is maintained at $85 million to $105 million, given the stability in our credit performance to start the year and will be dependent on net loan growth and charge-off activity.

Lastly, the full year effective tax rate should be between 21% and 22%, which does not assume any investment tax credit activity that may occur. With that, I will turn the call back to Vince.

Vincent J. Delie: Thank you. Our team is cultivated in an environment that succeeds through passion, collaboration, hard work and respect. We pair the advantages of our scale with the discipline of agility to win business that is heavily sought after by both large and small competitors. As a regional bank, FNB's differentiated investments in technology and product offerings have enabled us to win against competitors of all sizes to gain market share, drive shareholder value and meet the needs of our commercial and consumer customers. I would also like to thank our Independent Lead Director, Bill Campbell, who announced his upcoming retirement from our Board in May.

I want to extend my great appreciation for his distinguished service independence, dedication, leadership and mentorship to many, including myself. He instilled in all of us a desire to put the shareholders first, and his insight on the Board will be missed. Best wishes to Director Campbell in his future endeavors. His presence will be missed, but his legacy at FNB will live on. In closing, we are proud of our differentiated culture, which continues to be one of the most recognized in the industry for leadership, innovation, employee engagement and client experiences.

This quarter, FNB received numerous awards including America's best customer service and financial services by USA TODAY, America's best financial services by time, America's greatest workplaces for entry-level employees by Newsweek a top workplace U.S.A. by Energage and a Greenwich Excellence Awards winner for client service, a recognition we have earned annually since 2011. These awards and recognition occur because of the dedication and commitment of our employees. On behalf of the Board and executive team, I would like to thank them for their extraordinary accomplishments. With that, I will turn the call over to the operator for questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions]. Our first question comes from Daniel Tamayo with Raymond James.

Daniel Tamayo: Maybe starting on the C&I loan growth, really strong in the first quarter. You made a comment in the release that it accelerated towards the end of the quarter. Maybe you can expand a little bit on what that looked like. And I think Gary made a comment about Vince about near-record pipeline. Just curious what those look like in C&I and kind of the path forward given the strong quarter.

Gary L. Guerrieri: Yes, Dan, we saw a lot of activity. It started building fairly early in the quarter and finished up really strong. The pipelines have increased significantly and are pretty close to near record levels. It's really across the whole company. On top of that, we've seen a lot of high-quality opportunities from very strong investment grade type of larger corporate borrowers. We saw some M&A activity, so it's really been across the board and very diverse. We did have one maturing loan that paid out, which even impacted the growth even further, right at the end of the quarter or that number would have even been stronger.

So we really like the position of the pipeline right now and the activity that we're starting to see we expect it to build throughout the year.

Daniel Tamayo: Great. And maybe one for Vince. Just curious if you can expand on the strategic initiatives comment in the release about, which drove the increase in the expense guide to the higher end of the range?

Vincent J. Calabrese: There's a variety. As you know, we've consistently been investing in our Fit-to-brick strategy. And as part of kind of the normal capital investment that we're doing. I mean there's a variety of things. We've announced that we were going to be launching 30 de novos over the next 5 years. So that's part of it. We're fully launching that with DC Metro as far as the ATMs throughout that network. We continue to invest in the eStore and have some new initiatives looking to create a 360 view of our customers.

We began that initiative to be able to pull in internal data as well as external data so that our customer-facing employees have all the data right at their fingertips on what customers have here and somewhere else and then leverage AI to kind of say, well, what's the next product that would make sense for them. So it's really continuing those key tech investments that we've been making.

Vincent J. Delie: And I would say that we've redesigned how we're approaching development within the company. We moved from a traditional IT development environment where IT coordinates all of the -- with business analysts and interactions with the front line, they coordinate all of the development assets that we have, which includes a large number of consultants. We've kind of changed the model. We're pushing those programmers to the 3 areas that we feel are the most impactful for us from a revenue and efficiency perspective. So that's part of the expense build. We're looking at some AI in incidence that we've invested in. So there's personnel expense related to bringing those development contractors on that's reflected in the guide.

Most of it ends up being capitalized for software applications that we develop and then put it online. Vince mentioned the 360 view of the customer that's essentially both an inward and outward tool, tool for clients to review their relationship within FNB. There is an AI overlay that permits for those clients to see the products and services that they're using and how they can best improve their circumstances, either from a cash flow perspective or from managing risk. It's a really cool product. It's proprietary. I don't see it anywhere. We're slated to put it out by the end of the year.

It should be in production at the end of the year and then into the first quarter of next year. But it will also help internally because what it does is it actually evaluates what's going on. It looks at numerous data fields based on what the customer is doing within our organization. And when we open it up to outside, it will be opened up to bring in external aggregation as well. That will help us guide the customer to better products and services and a better solution within FNB's product offering.

So if they have a high rate mortgage somewhere else and we offer a better product, this tool will actually tell them and they will actually explain that they could save X amount of dollars by refinancing. And then to tie it all together, because we built out this platform that enables us to apply for multiple products simultaneously, which is also being improved with AI.

We will be able to move those clients into an environment where they're seeing their 360 view, they're actually getting recommendations on things that they should be doing to improve their banking relationship, and then they'll be able to purchase the products because tab, and it will actually -- they can just put them in the cart and then proceed to check out. We have automated data flooding and authentication and all that stuff built into the common app. So -- that's the game plan. And that's why there's a little extra we're saying there's going to be a little extra spend in the forecast.

Vincent J. Calabrese: Yes, part of that, we've also baked in investing in treasury management, some of our offerings to make it easier for customers, wealth management, there's initiatives that are part of that as well. And then on top of that, just normal process improvement, I mean, leveraging AI and machine learning -- someone that we've had in place for many years, leveraging those tools to extract costs as we move forward, which will help improve the run rate.

Vincent J. Delie: Yes, some of this is transitory, though. This is not embedded in the run rate of the company. And there's quite a bit of contract expense or contractor expense built into that guide, the change that we're pro Yes.

Operator: The next question comes from Casey Haire with Autonomous.

Casey Haire: Yes. Great. So I wanted to touch on the NIM outlook, the 330 NIM in March, so you get some pretty good momentum entering the second quarter here. I'm guessing that was on the funding side of things, given the seasonal outflows in DDA, but just a little color on where that's trending. Maybe the spot deposit cost rate at the end of the quarter and some thoughts on how the 2Q NIM trends.

Vincent J. Calabrese: I guess just looking at net interest income overall, the $6 million decrease from the fourth quarter, right in the middle, the number we landed out at $359 was right in the middle of our range we provided in January, which was $3.55 to $3.65. The timing of the last Fed cut clearly makes a difference on loan yields for us. As you know, I'm talking about that in the past that 45% or so of our loan portfolio reprices based on SOFR changes. So originally, we had that in January and that coming forward to December kind of affects the net interest income for the first quarter.

The other element is we have our normal trough in deposits that happens every year in the first quarter, and we fund that temporarily with short-term borrowings that's about 2 basis points of margin, $2.5 million in net interest income in the first quarter, and then that kind of goes away as we move forward. But we have been operating with a dual mandate of trying to grow deposits to fund the loan growth that Gary talked about and Vince talked about that we saw to accelerate in March and the expected loan growth as we go forward. So we're trying to balance growing deposits to help fund that loan growth as well as managing the deposit cost down.

So there's clearly a balancing act there. And then, Casey, as you mentioned, the 330 exit margin for the month of March is key. And as we look forward, I mean, our guidance implies that going up gradually a few basis points or so a quarter between the first quarter and the end of the year. And without the Fed cut expected for the rest of the year, at this point, there are several levers we have to support net interest income growth. I mean average earning asset growth, obviously, is the key. In our investment portfolio, we're reinvesting 75 to 125 basis points above the roll-off rate. For CDs, we're still picking up 20 to 25 basis points.

Next quarter alone, that's $3.3 billion worth of CDs maturing. And then in our fixed rate loan portfolio, we're picking up about 35 basis points on $2.5 billion over the next 12 months. So there's a lot of levers there that will kind of work off with that 3/3 launch point. the spot deposit cost of 199.

Casey Haire: 177 total Yes. IBD versus the 240?

Vincent J. Calabrese: That's total deposits?

Casey Haire: Right.

Vincent J. Calabrese: Total IBD 236, Casey, is interest-bearing. $177 million includes noninterest.

Casey Haire: Okay. Great. Just 1 more on the capital front. So very strong buyback this quarter. The CET1 ratio kind of held flat. I'm just wondering, is that -- is that kind of what you guys want to -- you going to manage it here? Just keep it at this level within balancing between loan growth and buyback? And then any thoughts on the Basel III proposal?

Vincent J. Calabrese: Yes. I would say, I mean, with the CET1 ratio at 11.4%, the payout ratio now in the low 30s, combined with our guidance, implying continued strong internal capital generation, -- as we talked about last quarter, we're in the best position to deploy capital, which is why we made the announcement that we made earlier in the week. Beyond supporting the expected balance sheet growth, we continue to see buybacks attractive at current valuation levels, for sure. I think the earn back is maybe 3 years at this point with where the stock is trading. We bought back $50 million for the full year of last year, and I talked about buying at least that or more.

First quarter, we did $35 million -- so I think we'll continue to be opportunistic on the buyback program. We were down to $50 million. So it was the right time to increase the authorization. So kind of have $300 million worth of powder there. And with the earnings generation level, we would expect capital ratios to still build. I mean I would just say, off the cuff, not looking to reduce 11.4%, but being active on the buyback, the dividend another component of that, which isn't a lot in dollars from a capital standpoint, but I think it's important. If you go back to -- last time we had raised dividend was 2007.

And in 2009, for those that were following us when everybody went to a nickel or $0.01, we went from $0.24 to 12%. So our Board made a decision only to go at that point. So we had a super high payout ratio, but investors are getting paid a very nice dividend yield over that entire period. So that was important. And we reached a point with the way capital is building that we were comfortable not only having the buyback but increasing the dividend. -- at this point in time. And the goal would be, over time, to be able to move that up as we grow and as earnings continue to grow.

So I think that's another important point. On Basel III -- II, Casey, I'm sorry, that was the last part of your question. I mean we're studying it. I mean it has a meaningful impact if it gets in place the way it is. I mean we've looked at different ways of analyzing it. And it's definitely meaningful. So I guess we'll see how that plays out in the end. We've studied what's in the proposal. And that's not baked into our plans here as far as capital deployment, right? That would be a new factor if it gets approved way it's proposed.

Operator: And the next question comes from Russell Gunther with Stephens.

Russell Elliott Gunther: I wanted to follow up on the deposit pricing pressure commentary you guys made would be helpful to get a sense for how you would expect deposit cost to trend from here -- the spot rates you gave us were pretty darn close to the full quarter average. And I think in the past, you've talked about a mid-30s terminal deposit beta versus the 27 we've got right now. So it would be helpful to just understand whether we should expect some upward pressure on total deposit cost, but that's what's embedded in that kind of March 30 guide moving higher.

Vincent J. Calabrese: Yes. No, I would say -- I mean, there's still opportunity for that cost of deposits to come down. I mentioned the CDs picking up 20 to 25 basis points on $3.3 billion. So that obviously affects that. Our success bringing in noninterest-bearing deposits which has been a strategy forever, obviously, is key to the overall cost of deposits there and the cost of funds. So I think there's still room for us to bring it down strategically, Russell, is the way I would say it, because without the cover of the fed cuts, you have to be very strategic.

And I think our team has done a very nice job analyzing the different components and maybe customers that don't have as much with us, you're a little more aggressive on how you adjust the rates and it's just a constant day-to-day process for us to look at where there are opportunities. But there's still opportunities for the total deposit cost to come down. And like I said, the focus on noninterest-bearing is key. The -- going after some larger kind of accounts to bring in larger deposit balances has been something we've focused on over the past year and have had some good success bringing in some larger deposit.

Vincent J. Delie: We basically -- we brought some very attractive, large, complex treasury management relationships over. They're in the pipeline. They're moving over to us. And they're coming from all over. I mean, some of the larger banks bank them today. So that's going to have an impact. It will have an impact on our free balances because they use balances to pay for services. So there's quite a bit in that pipeline. That's what Vince is referring to. But if you look at it globally, take a step back, that's one of the only ways we can really control. We're not a price setter. We have to react to the marketplace.

So the way we drive our cost down despite increasing the noninterest-bearing component in the mix. And that's a strategy that we have talked about for a long time, will continue to do. So I think there's some optimism here from a cost funding cost perspective because of those opportunities that we have and some success that we're seeing, particularly in the consumer bank as well. With new clients coming over and increasing share of wallet with the consumer. Some of the things we've done, we've invested in a number of tools to create client primacy and it's really starting to pay off.

And the investment in our AI to analyze lots of data to make pricing decisions is also paying off so.

Russell Elliott Gunther: So -- that was a large corporate following efforts right. It's helping on the loan side as well as the deposit side.

Vincent J. Delie: So we're -- we've got some -- there are some good things coming. But if you look at it overall, what Vince was saying in his comments, if the industry is going to be trying to loan up particularly in C&I. There's going to be the pricing pressure from a funding perspective kind of. That's the expectation. So that's the uncertain part about it is how aggressive do others get from a pricing perspective. We're sitting in one of the best positions we've been in from a loan-to-deposit standpoint, at this point in the year, too. So there's a -- there's definitely -- we're definitely sitting in a much more favorable place to give us some flexibility on pricing.

Russell Elliott Gunther: That's really helpful, guys. I appreciate all of that color. And then let me just follow up on the capital front. If you guys could just remind us of how you think about a CET1 floor and how active you would expect to be with the buyback against your kind of mid-single-digit loan growth expectation.

Vincent J. Calabrese: I mean we've been using 11% as a floor for CET1. We're at 11.4%, and we're not looking to really drive that down. We'd like to have a powder there. if the loan growth and when the loan growth really accelerates and comes on board, we want to have that capital to support the loan growth. So -- but I mean, if I had to state the floor, I would say 11% would be a floor for that level for the CET1 ratio. Previously, we had said 10% and we grew about 10%. Now we're at 4% or so.

Vincent J. Delie: I'd be okay with 10, [indiscernible].

Russell Elliott Gunther: That's true, [indiscernible] 10%.

Operator: And the next question comes from David Smith with Truist Securities.

David Smith: So now that you've taken those cuts out of the outlook seems like it's a little bit of a tougher backdrop for loan growth, although you kept the guidance the same in that mid-single-digit range. Can you talk about any puts and takes there? Has your expectations for where that low loan growth is coming from evolved over the last 3 months?

Vincent J. Delie: Yes. As we've said, our short term -- if you look at the short-term C&I pipeline, commercial pipelines, they're up 10% in the same period. So this is typically a seasonally slower period. So we're starting to see more activity. If you look at our leasing and finance project finance area. They've had -- they continue to have really strong pipelines and had great production last year. There's -- because of the tax law changes, that's going to continue. If you look at the commercial bank or the consumer bank, we -- our pipelines are up significantly in the consumer bank. So I think nearly all correct. So there are some bright spots out there.

On the flip side of that, CRE still continues to trite because we've already gotten into all this, but we pulled back a little bit, and we're just letting those large bonds go to the permanent market. right, Gary.

Gary L. Guerrieri: Yes. And even with that, we are starting to see some extremely strong new CRE credit opportunities. So there is -- there are some shoots there that are starting to show and we've liked what we've seen so far.

Vincent J. Delie: Yes. So as I mentioned on the last call, our capital growth, the reduction in that exposure, we're below 200%. I expect that probably in the different. So it gives us the ability to go out and pick good high-quality projects to do in the CRA space. that's not even reflected in our pipeline yet because that all tons should be coming in the second half of the year. But there are some bright spots. So that's why we're not changing our guide. -- and that's why we still believe pretty strongly in our ability to produce net interest income that we -- that's reflected in our guidance.

David Smith: Okay. And then the fee guidance implies a little bit of a ramp-up in the second half from $90 million in the first quarter and $90 million to $95 million this coming quarter. Can you just unpack your expectations there, like where you see that growth coming from?

Vincent J. Delie: Sure. The investment banking segment should produce some pretty significant fee events. So the public finance and the investment banking group that we brought on -- there are some deals that are slated to happen in the second half of the year that will contribute to that are already in the works. I think that's one contributor. We also think that when there's less interest rate volatility here, if things settle down a little bit, there should be a pickup in derivative activity. We're still pretty optimistic about our ability to grow market share in the mortgage business, so there's gain on sale. Opportunities up and down the Eastern seaboard because those markets are continuing to grow.

We've got wealth growing. We have some great momentum in our wealth shop. So we're building out a group to handle family office, opportunities. So we're going to be moving up market in that space, and there's some promising opportunities there. So I think fee income mortgage treasury management as I've mentioned earlier, we have some fairly significant treasury management clients. Penn States, one of them. There are others that we have won that are even larger that will come over. So fee income in the treasury management space should continue to expand. And then there's interchange. We've seen a pickup lately in interchange activity.

We've not even really spent a lot of time activating our debit portfolio, and it's a fairly sizable fee income stream for us. So there's going to be a focus on that. particularly with the use of AI and some tools that we have to try to drive more activity on our -- in our debit card platform and with our small credit card portfolio, but it's small relative to the debit side. Those are the drivers.

Vincent J. Calabrese: And this is our fourth consecutive quarter with fee income at $90 million or above. So I think that's a key point for us. And I think there's good momentum in the businesses that Vince talked about in debt capital markets and public finance. So there's a lot of excitement about what the rest of the year holds for us on the fee side.

Vincent J. Delie: Yes. And we've been doing really well from an international perspective as well. We just won another word, I'm not like to mention what it is, but those people have done well. the person that runs it, Gener is a long-time associate of mine and respective -- and he's done a terrific job, and that continues to grow, too. So we're seeing more and more opportunities with international banking with hedging and spot transactions for our clients, particularly as we're moving upmarket.

So I'd say given that we have a really low relative share to some of these large players in the capital market space and the revenue lines associated with some of these businesses is relatively small, and it's already reflected in the run rate. There's upside.

Vincent J. Calabrese: Less public finance is another door business.

Vincent J. Delie: So that -- yes, as I mentioned earlier, with investment banking, that's another one. We think hundreds, maybe thousands of municipalities across our footprint. We have a specialization and handling their principal treasury management fees. And I think that, that will open the door, building out that team opens the door to some significant opportunities in the public finance space for us. And that's a highly competitive business, but we have the relationships already. We've been farming it out or turning it over to others, and we now can capitalize on it. So very granular I mentioned all these areas. So there's a lot of granularity.

So it doesn't take much of a number of those areas increase even low single digits. It starts to really drive the total revenue number.

Operator: And the next question comes from Kelly Motta with KBW.

Kelly Motta: We've talked a lot about your capital as well as the organic loan pipeline and the opportunities in C&I, I'd like to circle back to M&A and get another updated thoughts here on your appetite for deals and a reminder of what you look for given it does seem like your organic outlook is quite strong.

Vincent J. Delie: Yes. I've said it a number of times, we're going to be opportunistic. There's not a lot out there that we see that is high value even if they were available. Like there are things that we could look at that would make a lot of sense, but a bank has to be for sale to do a transaction. We're not actively in the market. I'm just referring to deals that have been done, things that I'm hearing in the marketplace. But I think our early drive to do M&A was to gain the scale to get over some of the regulatory hurdles and to be able to do some of the things that we're doing today.

And I think given the size of the organization, we're in the sweet spot, even though some don't believe it, we're able to compete very effectively with everybody, and we have a very deep product set. And I think what you get from us is a $50 billion balance sheet and maybe a $1 trillion banks product offering, at least for our clients, right, because we're not banking Fortune 100 companies as their primary bank.

So the middle market and large middle market clients that we bank, we can do everything that a lot of the other banks that are much, much larger than us to, but we do it in a way that is more boutique-ish there's more attention paid to getting stuff done. There's less bureaucracy. We're a little more creative because we don't have the same level of infrastructure or systemic methods of doing things. So it lets us be a little more entrepreneurial. And I think the customers enjoy that, and we're seeing great opportunities because of that.

And I think that -- and I've said this, I just did a podcast it's not out yet with the ABA, but the smaller banks have an incredible opportunity right now to build product that's unique. Because of AI, because of the changes that are occurring from a tech perspective with cloud-based computing, the speed of computing, the ability to develop software with I think you're going to see some pretty interesting things come about, and I think it's changing the equation on scale, particularly relative to technology.

So that's -- and if you look at our cost of funds and you look at our returns and our return profile and our efficiency ratio, we're right there with the larger banks. So efficiency within the consumer bank was actually better when we did the analysis. So we're able to do that because we're very smart about how we deploy our resources, we're able to do it because we don't have the bureaucracy, we're able to do it because we're not arrogant. There's a bunch of things that we've seen out there that certainly play in our favor. So I'm sorry for the long answer, but we've talked a lot about this internally.

Kelly Motta: I really appreciate all the color. That's very helpful. Maybe to turn back on the margin. I appreciate the commentary about C&I growth being really strong and pipeline to record levels. Hoping, I apologize if I missed it, but if you could provide additional color as to how loan pricing and spreads are holding up. I know you gave some color about the continued repricing opportunities here, but just hoping to get more on pricing.

Vincent J. Delie: Yes, you would expect in this environment for credit spreads to broaden because of the geopolitical environment that we're in, we're not seeing that necessarily in the middle market. I think there's still some pretty significant tailwinds from an economic perspective that keep people optimistic and I think the tax law changes were very favorable for capital investment. So you're not seeing what you typically would see when we have the geopolitical environment that we have. So I would say what that means is that you're not going to see a broadening of credit spreads because of issues with repayment or problems. I don't know, Gary, you could speak to that.

But there is competitive pressure, obviously, but there's always competitive pressure. I've been doing this for a long, long time. I've been in corporate bank and my whole career. And one of my pet peeves is when I sit there with the commercial bankers and they tell me that it's so competitive. I can remember back 30 years ago when I was competing for deals in the upper middle market and transactions were priced at 50 basis points over LIBOR on a sub investment-grade credit opportunity. That's that pricing doesn't exist today so the margins are better today. So it goes through ebbs and flows and changes and credit spreads impact how pricing is impacted.

So we'll see what happens with the economy. We've always benefited because we were more conservative. So when credit spreads were broadening, what that means is that we're going to get paid more for lower risk transactions, because we have the capital and the appetite to deploy capital. And Gary has talked about that many times. Others will get out over their skis from a lending perspective and then have to pull back during those periods. And there during frothy periods, credit spreads are thinner. So I would say if you want to shorten, sorry for all these long answers, Kelly. But the reality is it's a complicated business.

And in certain segments, like if you move deep down into small business lending, I think spreads have come in because there's increased competition for C&I opportunities. When you move up into the larger end of the spectrum. I think spreads are pretty consistent with how they've been underwritten, particularly on syndicated deals. It may have come in a little bit. I don't know, Gary, if you...

Gary L. Guerrieri: Inch you hit it pretty well. Spreads are where you expect them to be today on a transaction-by-transaction basis, you can get squeezed a little bit, but we're very comfortable with the with the spreads that we're seeing in the marketplace today and based on where the economy is, is it going to probably get a little more competitive as we move forward. It wouldn't surprise me, Kelly. So we'll keep an eye on that. Continue to manage it accordingly.

Kelly Motta: Great. I really do appreciate all the color.

Operator: And the next question comes from Manuel Navas with Piper Sandler.

Manuel Navas: Just a quick follow-up on Kelly's question. What are kind of new loans coming in at what yield?

Vincent J. Delie: It depends on the category.

Vincent J. Calabrese: New loans originated during the first quarter came out at $557 million -- if you look at it compared to the fourth quarter on average, I mean, it's 589 in the fourth quarter, you had 2 Fed cuts affecting fourth quarter levels. So on a spot basis, so the overall portfolio yield is at $561 -- it was only down a basis point in total, which includes all of the different categories of loans, no Fed costs during the quarter.

So total moving a basis point the lines have kind of have approached each other now where we have been -- if you go back a few quarters to new loans, we're coming on 25, 30 basis points higher than the portfolio yield. It's kind of more in line based on the mix of what we originated during the first quarter.

Manuel Navas: Okay. I appreciate that. The deposit pipeline, you're speaking to some commercial clients that are going to come on over time with treasury management solutions, -- is that pipeline also -- how does that compare to your current deposit costs?

Vincent J. Delie: Yes, it's a -- that's a hard -- it's a good question. It's a hard 1 to answer on the fly. -- because you're going to have different levels of demand deposits based upon floor balances that are set because they use an earnings credit to pay for services. It depends on the client and the level of services -- so I don't know if I have a good answer for you, but it's a great question. In the pipeline, some of it you really don't know because I mean -- well, I think most of the stuff we're doing, we're the operating bank, right? So you will see higher cost deposits coming on board as well.

But that's the excess balances that are being swept. So if you look at that, typically, they're swept into our standard price, it doesn't change our stated pricing. So we don't exception price that. The focus is on setting the floor balance and whether the client is going to pay with fees or use demand deposits. So -- and the level of -- but the cost is for us.

Vincent J. Calabrese: So I would just add one thing 2-minute well, but the commercial deposit pipeline is up meaningfully. I mean we were a little under $1 billion at the end of the year, and we're around $1.2 billion now. So we convert and we continue to add new names into that.

Manuel Navas: That's great. I appreciate that. Just my last one is can you talk about how quickly some of your investments in account primacy or AI, when they should kind of pay off and how kind of should we track your progress beyond deposit growth, solid returns. You planned to some market share gains. Any other metrics you'd like to point us to kind of see how this is paying off?

Vincent J. Delie: Well, we have mentioned in the past, applications. Our application volume is up considerably. Using the platform that we've developed that utilizes AI and our common app. So I think 38% increase in deposit applications through that network. It's kind of hard to give a global number because you've got disintermediation going on with traditional origination methods. But we track how many come through that channel and it's up significantly. It continues to grow significantly. I think loans were up. I don't remember what the number is 10%. Yes, 5% actually loan application volumes up 5% quarter-over-quarter and 31% is the increase in deposit applications. So you're seeing increases in those categories that should accelerate over time.

The best way to look at this, I think, for any bank would be to look at their overall performance because it's so dispersed throughout the organization. And we're trying to balance obviously, we have limited resources, as I've said earlier. So we don't want our expenses to grow and then not get a benefit right? So we're not a tech company, we can't burn cash and then tell you we're not going to make any money. So we're a bank. So we basically have to gain the efficiency, pick the project, deploy it, gain the efficiency and it's reflected in the numbers. But I will say, we have a number of things that we've already pulled off.

We have upgraded our ability to monitor deposit base and affect deposit betas with analysis that we've done. And we had a system before opportunity. We have a new opportunity Q2, which is much more sophisticated and speedy because we're using AI to assist with it, not just machine learning tools and insights. So I think that's 1 example. We've got a project underway to automate our pulse center. Based on some research that we've done. So we -- there's some pretty spectacular AI software that's available that really can have a significant impact on the customer experience and our cost servicing a customer via the call center.

So we're engaged and looking at that, we are in the throes of building out our 360 View, which has an AI overlay I mentioned it earlier, that we're in, I'd say, mid phase there, and we're moving very quickly. We're building out a proprietary mortgage application that's going to be embedded into the common app. That's coming, which will help us in the long run with cross-sell opportunity because we'll be able to -- as we originate a mortgage loan use those data fields instantly for the customer to purchase other products like in insurance, home insurance, depository products.

And then we've already announced, we have embedded in our mobile app, the ability to move your direct deposit instantly and repetitive ACH transactions. We're working on bill pay. We're going to get there. We're integrating that into the origination platform, and we have pushed that common app origination platform into the field. So the entire branch network is originating on the same digital platform that consumers use online. So there's a lot. We've done a lot. There's a lot that's already done that's reflected in the expense run rate.

And then there are some things that we're finalizing that should come online very shortly here and be additive probably in '27 either from an efficiency perspective or generating additional revenue for us. I don't if that's helpful. But I don't have a precise number to give you. I can only tell you...

Vincent J. Calabrese: Were going to be building out external dashboards where we've been building internal and I think we mentioned before, having more dashboard type data that we'll be sharing as we proceed with these initiatives.

Operator: And the next question comes from Brian Martin with Green Capital.

Brian Martin: Maybe one follow-up for Gary. Just maybe it's Vince. Just on the loan growth, just on the CRE side, in terms of the sales into the secondary market and just kind of managing that. How are you thinking about that? It sounds like there's opportunities, but you're still seeing payoffs just in terms of contribution to growth this year. It sounds like C&I is obviously was strong this quarter. The pipelines are good there. But just on the CRE side, given your capacity and how you're thinking about that in the secondary market.

Gary L. Guerrieri: Yes, Brian, we still have projects that we've been involved with for the last couple of years that are coming on a quarterly basis regularly that are moving into the secondary market. So we'll continue to see that as we work our way through the year ahead there. That being said, we were pleasantly surprised by the ramp-up in new CRE opportunities. And pretty much across the board, those opportunities have been really solid. So we're going to aggressively pursue those solar transactions in that space. I will tell you that, that is, as we talked about competition earlier, it's very competitive because many banks are getting back in the CRE business.

So we're seeing that there's a lot of activity there, and we expect that to build throughout the year. So in terms of those payouts and moves into the secondary market, they will continue. That will be a headwind in that category, but we're going to be very choosy of the assets that we're putting on, and we will see we will see activity from a new booking standpoint there build throughout the year.

Vincent J. Delie: By the way, the C&I growth that we have, does not include MDFR. So I've been saying this for a long time. I think people finally started looking at it. But when you look at the H8 data, it included basically warehouse lending for consumer borrowings that get reflected in the commercial line because you can't segment it out or there's another category that you can't really figure out what's sitting in that bucket when you look at the public disclosures. But we don't have that. So we're not -- we're growing with traditional C&I. So we haven't had any help in any way, right, from and [indiscernible]. And I think that's an important distinction.

So as the economy starts to accelerate, you'll see us perform even better as we continue to build out some of these tools that I mentioned, we'll see better penetration in the small business segment. We should get there. The consumer business that we talked about, we're starting to see pretty explosive opportunities in certain segments and consumers? Right?

Gary L. Guerrieri: Yes. The consumer book has been really strong. The performance of it continues to be exceptional that record low credit metric levels at this point, high-quality paper, and the teams are doing a really good job generating opportunities and those pipelines are very high.

Vincent J. Calabrese: Just as a reference point, too, if you look at our changes since the end of the year, our NDF balances, which were very low, and we're in probably the lowest decile there. Ours came down 5%, 7%. The other -- all banks were up 7%. So it's driving a lot of the loan growth at some of our competitors.

Brian Martin: Perfect. That's a great segue. Just one last one on the CRE Gary. I'm assuming that, that CRE concentration level around 200 pie stands or it's not moving a whole lot based on origination -- potential originations with payoffs. So that's not like it's going to ramp up.

Gary L. Guerrieri: We're at 194% at the end of the quarter, Brian, to Tier 1 plus the allowance. I would tell you that I would expect that to be lower as we move into the second and third quarters before we start to see some stabilization.

Brian Martin: Got you. Okay. And then just to Vince's comment or both Vince's comments on NBFI, can you just remind us that your -- how low that exposure is today, just so we have that clarity in terms of that exposure relative to other banks?

Gary L. Guerrieri: Yes. In terms of our bucket, the largest bucket that we have in there is the other category, which is a mix of wealth management, advisory, family office and insurance companies for nonlending purposes. The credit facilities that we have in place, their support working capital acquisitions and lift-out strategies for our clients. Remaining is a handful of customers, which is a little over $100 million clients that we do C&I business with that have formed some REITs and our PTCs, which we got from an acquisition a number of years ago, and we pared it back to the strongest of the strong. There are 5 of them. They're 4 of them are investment-grade companies.

The balance is $40 million -- so it's really small. Right? Yes. $40 million.

Vincent J. Delie: And again, we've not focused -- that is not a focus of this company. That's the byproduct of acquisitions and clients accommodating certain clients. But we don't have a practice of going out and originating in that space.

Vincent J. Calabrese: And it's only 1% of the total loan book, too. So it's tiny. Minimal.

Brian Martin: Yes. Okay. Good to highlight that. And just maybe the last 1 Yes. Maybe just the last one for me was your comments on the cost of deposits. It sounds like -- it sounds as though they are kind of flat to down maybe over the balance of the year, just with that balance of the C&I potential growth of the -- and I guess that's assuming that there's no rapid growth in loans and no change in rates. But that funding cost trending down. It seems like the outlook we should be looking at. Is that right? And b, just can you talk about the pipeline of commercial deposits.

Is that -- do you see that the baseline of 26% today trending a bit higher given your outlook for that pipeline?

Vincent J. Delie: It's too hard to say given the inflows and outflows in that bucket, what can happen potentially with disintermediation. I think that's a hard thing to say. -- right -- and we've been pretty steady at that level. It's risen and then the yield curve changes and then elaborates away and then comes back. So it's kind of hard to say, but we tend to target that levels, right? So it's reflected in our guide, and that's what you have. If we can do better, it's going to come from the things that I mentioned earlier.

Vincent J. Calabrese: Yes. Just from a higher for longer environment, Brian, I mean there's still some room for the deposits to come down, but it's going to be a function of the overall loan growth and the competitiveness like Vince mentioned earlier on the deposit pricing side. So I think there's room for to come down a little bit from here, but the rest of -- the back half of the year is going to be a function of what's happening with the overall loan growth.

Operator: This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Vince Delie for any closing remarks.

Vincent J. Delie: Thank you. Thank you for the questions. And I want to thank our shareholders for sticking with us for so long. I think I've been in the seat for a long time. I've been here 20 years. So it's pretty amazing how time goes by. But it's great to be able to be here and to really deliver a dividend increase. I know a lot of shareholders -- individual shareholders and one that -- we're finally at a point here where we've accumulated capital. We have capital flexibility. So it gives us the opportunity to defend the company from a risk perspective to invest in some of the great things we're investing in that drive returns, right? We're very return-oriented.

And now because of the capital position we're in. We can continue to repatriate capital at even higher levels. And just so everyone doesn't forget we have returned $2.4 billion in capital since I became CEO here since CFO. So we are focused on taking care of our shareholders. And we did that all while we acquired banks and grew 8% to 9% on an organic basis over a sustained period. So anyway, thank you, and it's a great honor. And I also want to say one more thing. I want to thank Bill Campbell again because he was a tremendous director and a phenomenal advocate to shareholders. He's done a lot of creative things over time.

Early in his Board career, he was focused pretty heavily on governance, and that built the framework for what we have today. So he's kind of ahead of this time he's a great person and a great mentor, and we're going to miss him. So thank you for everything you've done, Bill.

Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.

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