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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM 8-K
CURRENT REPORT
PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
April 25, 2011
Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported)
FIRST COMMUNITY BANCSHARES, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
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Nevada
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000-19297
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55-0694814 |
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(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation)
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(Commission File Number)
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(IRS Employer Identification No.) |
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P.O. Box 989
Bluefield, Virginia
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24605-0989 |
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(Address of principal executive offices)
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(Zip Code) |
(276) 326-9000
(Registrants telephone number, including area code)
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:
o Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)
o Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)
o Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))
o Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Item 2.02 Results of Operations and Financial Condition.
On April 25, 2011, First Community Bancshares, Inc. (the Company) announced by press release its
earnings for the first quarter of 2011. A copy of the press release is attached hereto as Exhibit
99.1.
Item 7.01 Regulation FD Disclosure
On April 25, 2011, the Company held a public conference call to discuss its financial results for
the quarter ended March 31, 2011. The conference call was previously announced in the earnings
release dated April 25, 2011. The following are the prepared remarks.
John M. Mendez
First let me say that we are pleased with the results for the first quarter and the progress that
we are seeing on earnings and in the area of credit. Certainly there are a number of areas for
improvement as we continue to move toward a normalized environment, but with that ahead of us and
considering the cycle that we have come through, we are generally pleased with our recent results.
In my view, the biggest headline for our first quarter results is the significant reduction in net
charge-offs and the related decrease in the credit provision for the quarter. I would certainly
like to punctuate the $2.1 million reduction in credit provision between the first quarter 2011 and
fourth quarter of 2010. This is a substantial decrease that is led by a five quarter trend of
declining credit losses. First quarter credit results certainly point to improving trends within
the portfolio and continued improvement on a resilient portfolio profile that has consistently
protected our capital and earnings power throughout this cycle.
We began the quarter with a very low level of exposure to acquisition, development and construction
lending and through the quarter that exposure has been further decreased from 7.9% to a very low
level of 6.0% of total loans. In fact, after quarter end, we saw our largest land exposure pay out
at full face, bringing that level even lower. We believe that this low level of construction
exposure, our strong balance sheet reserves and recent loss experience position us for strong
performance ahead.
On the earnings front, we were able to maintain strong profitability for the quarter despite
building infrastructure and the related cost increases that we believe are necessary to position us
to execute on our consolidation objectives. Annualized ROA for the quarter was 1.05% on GAAP
earnings, despite added personnel costs in Credit, Retail Credit, Operations and Technology.
I would also note that we continue to carry substantial liquidity on the balance sheet which
constrains earnings but presents an opportunity for revenue growth as loan demand returns and as we
gain comfort with the price and interest rate risk associated with investment of these funds. At
present we believe that the liquidity position is prudent until we are able to better ascertain the
timing and velocity of what we believe is an eventual rising rate environment. Through the first
quarter we maintained overnight investment funding of $108 million on average balances.
We have reviewed a number of strategies to invest liquidity for current earnings but, short of a
substantial increase in loan demand or a qualified loan purchase, we find in each case that the
level of price and interest rate risk is untenable under current market conditions; accordingly we
continue hold this position until bank or branch transactions present the appropriate opportunity.
Capital remains strong and continues to build through a robust earnings stream. It is our hope
that we will have opportunities in the near term to deploy capital through accretive acquisitions
of whole banks, branches or possibly in FDIC assisted transactions.
David D. Brown
We reported net income for the first quarter of $5.75 million, or $0.32 per share.
We saw first quarter margin move up to 3.96% from fourth quarter at 3.78%. We continue to decrease
both the balance and rate of the CD portfolio, with the cost down 12 basis points versus the last
quarter. We also prepaid a $25 million FHLB advance around the middle of the quarter as we saw the
10-year Treasury sell off and open a window for a very cost effective
payoff. On that prepayment
we incurred a modest $471 thousand penalty to that, but extinguished a liability that was paying
4.0% and should add 5 basis points to margin over the second quarter. We continue to watch the
market for additional margin improvement opportunities in the wholesale debt area as we still hold
$150 million in FHLB debt at over 4% or higher.
As you can also see, we continue to maintain substantial liquidity. Customer deposits keep flowing
in despite significant decline the rates on those funds. The excess liquidity weighs heavily on
margin, at least 22 basis points for the first quarter, but does keep us in a good position in a
rising rate environment.
We made a $1.61 million provision for loan losses during the first quarter, which was down $2.00
million from fourth quarter, and covered charge-offs.
Wealth revenues decreased $128 thousand on a linked basis on lower revenues in both trust and
investment advisory services. Linked-quarter, deposit account service charges decreased nearly
10%. First quarter tends to be lighter, but we also added some top end limits on NSF charges.
Other service charges and fees were up on better interchange income. Insurance revenues were
higher linked-quarter on contingent commission payments, but down year-over-year based on slower
insurance sales. We realized net securities gains of $1.84 million during the quarter, which
helped to fund the FHLB advance prepayment penalty.
In the area of non-interest expense, first quarter efficiency ratio improved to 62.3%. Total
salaries and benefits were down $190 thousand from the fourth quarter. We saw accruals for FDIC
insurance premiums increase $151 thousand. This was due to the FDICs scheduled increases in rates
and asset growth assumptions used in their prepaid assessment information. Other operating
expenses were $4.76 million, which was a decrease of $1.18 million on a linked-quarter basis. Most
notably in that decrease were REO expenses and loss provisions down $795 thousand, travel costs
that were down $63 thousand, and supplies down $78 thousand. Among the increases in that line item
is the staggering increase in the costs of providing debit cards to customers. Those costs were up
$111 thousand over last quarter due mostly to the increasing costs of fraud and loss prevention.
We continue to see a number of assisted and unassisted opportunities and conservatively estimate we
had roughly $80 thousand in hard expenses related to two separate diligence projects.
At the end of the period, total assets decreased by about $3 million. Period-end deposits
increased $16 million, which was offset by the $25 million FHLB debt repayment. On an average
basis, most items were relatively flat. We allowed the CD portfolio to shrink another $19 million
between March 31 and December 31 and $15 million on average. These rates have continued to drop
with the market and we find less and less need for this funding in todays market.
In terms of the outlook for loan growth, we see some potential in the retail mortgage space. Our
portfolio mortgages portfolio began to see some meaningful increases late in the quarter.
Additionally, our retail credit group is receiving roughly 21% more applications over this time
last year.
At March 31, tangible book value per share was $10.48, an increase of 45 cents from year end.
Consolidated total risk-based capital is expected to be approximately 15.8%. The Company and the
Bank continue to be very well-capitalized, with the Banks leverage ratio building to approximately
8.9%.
Gary R. Mills
We were pleased with the asset quality metrics posted by the company for the 1st quarter. Total
delinquency improved to 2.23% as compared to 2.62% as of year-end. This improvement was primarily
the result of loans 30-89 days delinquent decreasing from $17 million, or 1.22% at year-end, to $13
million, or 0.94%, at the end of the quarter. The most significant improvement in the category was
in the owner occupied residential 1-4 family loan segment in which delinquent loans decreased
approximately $3.3 million. Its also noteworthy that total non-accrual loans declined $1.7
million to $17.7 million; resulting in non-accrual loans as a percentage of total loans being
1.29%. Net charge-offs for the quarter were $1.6 million, or 0.47% annualized, continuing a 5
quarter declining trend.
The allowance for loan losses measured $26.5 million, or 1.93% of total loans. At this level, the
allowance provides a 138% coverage ratio to non-performing loans. The provision during quarter
totaled $1.6 million, which represented a 100% coverage of net charge-offs.
The total loan portfolio declined approximately $11 million during the quarter to $1.38 billion at
quarter end. In particular, the construction, land development, vacant land segment declined $25
million and now represents approximately 6% of the portfolio. Approximately $10 million of this
decline was a result of a land loan being re-categorized due to zoning, and it should be noted that
this particular loan was paid off within days after the end of the quarter. Another $12 million of
the decline was a result of commercial construction loans stabilizing and converting to permanent
financing. Loan portfolio segments experiencing growth were the residential real estate 1-4 family
segment which grew approximately $5 million and the commercial real estate segment which grew
approximately $15 million.
Item 9.01 Financial Statements and Exhibits.
(d) The following exhibit is included with this report:
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Exhibit No. |
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Exhibit Description |
99.1
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Earnings press release dated April 25, 2011 |
Forward-Looking Statements
This Current Report on Form 8-K, including the exhibits hereto, may include forward-looking
statements. These forward-looking statements are based on current expectations that involve risks,
uncertainties and assumptions. Should one or more of these risks or uncertainties materialize or
should underlying assumptions prove incorrect, actual results may differ materially. These risks
include: changes in business or other market conditions; the timely development, production and
acceptance of new products and services; the challenge of managing asset/liability levels; the
management of credit risk and interest rate risk; the difficulty of keeping expense growth at
modest levels while increasing revenues; and other risks detailed from time to time in the
Companys Securities and Exchange Commission reports, including but not limited to the Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the most recent year ended. Pursuant to the Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995, the Company does not undertake to update forward-looking statements contained
within this news release.
In accordance with General Instruction B.2 of Form 8-K, the information in this Current Report on
Form 8-K shall not be deemed to be filed for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, as amended, or otherwise subject to the liability of that Section, and shall not be
incorporated by reference into any registration statement or other document filed under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, except as shall be expressly set forth by specific reference in
such filing or document.
SIGNATURE
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused
this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.
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FIRST COMMUNITY BANCSHARES, INC.
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Date: April 25, 2011 |
By: |
/s/ David D. Brown
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David D. Brown |
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Chief Financial Officer |
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