National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance Corporation 5.5% SUB NT 64 (NYSE:NRUC) Q3 2024 Results Conference Call April 17, 2024 10:00 AM ET
Company Participants
Heesun Choi – Vice President, Capital Market Relations
Andrew Don – Chief Executive Officer
Ling Wang – Chief Financial Officer
Conference Call Participants
Chris Haberlin – Agincourt Capital Management
Operator
Good afternoon, and welcome to the National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance Corporation Fiscal Year 2024 Third Quarter Investor Call. Today’s conference is being recorded. At this time, I’d like to turn the conference over to Heesun Choi, Vice President, Capital Market Relations.
Heesun Choi
Thank you, operator. Welcome to our investor conference call for our third quarter of fiscal year 2024. Joining with me today are Andrew Don, our Chief Executive Officer; and Ling Wang, our Chief Financial Officer. Andrew and Ling will discuss our financial and operating results during the 3 months and 9 months ended February 29, 2024.
Today’s presentation slides and financial reports filed with the SEC are available on our website, www.nrucfc.coop under Investor Relations. This call is being recorded and a replay and call transcript will be made available under Investor Relations.
Our presentation today will include forward-looking statements and certain non-GAAP financial measures. Please review the disclosures on Slide 2 and Slide 3 of the presentation regarding these statements and measures. I would like to remind you that any forward-looking statements that we make during today’s call as of April 17, 2024, are subject to risks and uncertainties. Factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from expectations are described on Slide 2 of today’s presentation, as well as in our annual and quarterly reports filed with the SEC.
Information about any non-GAAP financial measures referenced during the presentation including reconciliations to GAAP measures can also be found in our Form 10-Q filed with the SEC on April 12, 2024, as well as in the appendix of the presentation slides. At the end of the presentation, we will open the call and Andrew and Ling will take your questions. You can ask any questions over the phone or submit your questions online.
With that, I will turn this call over to Andrew.
Andrew Don
Thank you, Heesun. Good morning, and thank you for joining our call today to review our business and operating results during the 9 months ended February 29, 2024, which is our third fiscal quarter of 2024. I’m moving to Slide 5 to discuss highlights during the quarter. We experienced another strong quarter marked by robust loan growth. We strategically manage the growth by effectively utilizing our various funding sources, resulting in superior financial metrics and maintaining a high-quality loan portfolio.
Our loans to members continue to grow and reached $34.4 billion, reflecting an increase of approximately $1.9 billion or 6% during the 9 months ended February 29, 2024. We had no charge-offs during the fiscal year, and our loan portfolio remained pristine with only 25 basis points of loans classified as nonperforming at the quarter end. We also successfully maintained a strong financial position. Our adjusted tier was 1.25x during the 9 months ended February 29, 2024, well above our goal of 1.1x. We remain committed to growing our members’ equity to support the loan growth. Our members’ equity stood at $2.3 billion at February 29, 2024.
Our liquidity position remains sound as we maintain diverse, well-established funding sources to minimize the risk of being dependent on any single source or market. Our diverse liquidity sources consist of cash, investments, committed bank lines, committed loan facilities under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program, a revolving note purchase agreement with Farmer Mac and access to repo facilities.
We remain committed to maintaining strong investment-grade ratings from Fitch, Moody’s and S&P. Our short-term and long-term credit ratings and outlook are unchanged. During the quarter, S&P and Moody’s affirmed all the CFC’s credit ratings with a stable outlook.
Now I’m turning to Slide 6 to discuss our loan portfolio. As I mentioned, our loans to members increased by $1.9 billion at $34.4 billion at February 29, 2024, compared to $32.5 billion at May 31, 2023. Specifically, during the third quarter, we recorded an addition of $858 million or loans to members, which accounts for nearly 46% of the fiscal year-to-date loan growth. 92% or $1.7 billion of the net loan increase was driven by increases in loans to our distribution of power supply borrowers. At February 29, 2024, our loans to distribution members totaled $26.9 billion, and our loans to power supply members totaled $5.7 billion, accounting for 94% of total loans to members.
As we mentioned on a prior quarterly call, the sale of RTFC’s business to NCSC was finalized and effective on December 1, 2023. Consequently, beginning this quarter, we will refer to the RTFC loans as NCSC telecom loans and the electric loans previously under NCSC portfolio as NCSC electric loans. During the 9 months ended February 29, 2024, we experienced increases in loans outstanding across all member classes.
Our distribution loan portfolio increased by $1.4 billion, and our power supply loan portfolio increased by $294 million. We also experienced increases in NCSC telecom loans of $61 million, CFC state-wide and associate loans of $58 million and NCSC electric loans of $28 million during the 9 months ended February 29, 2024.
In terms of the loan type, long-term loans increased by $1.5 billion to $30.9 billion and line of credit loans increased by $407 million to $3.5 billion at February 29, 2024, compared to the levels of May 31, 2023. During the 9-month period, we made long-term loan advances for a total of $2.7 billion.
Approximately $2.5 billion or 95% of the advances were for capital expenditure purposes, the remaining balance being for other purposes, primarily business acquisitions. Additionally, of the $2.7 billion total long-term loans advanced, $2.5 billion were fixed rate loan advances with a weighted average fixed rate term of 12 years. In comparison, the fixed rate term was 18 years for long-term loans advanced during the same period from our prior fiscal year.
Our members continue to show a preference for slightly shorter fixed-rate term loans given the prevailing higher interest rate environment. Our loan growth is partially driven by increased loans outstanding for broadband projects. We estimate that there are over 200 electric cooperatives engaged in rural broadband projects at various stages of development. Generally speaking, these projects are financed through a mix of grants and debt funding. At February 29, 2024, CFC’s total outstanding loans associated with these broadband projects was approximately $2.9 billion, an increase of $512 million compared to the May 31, 2023, level of $2.4 billion. We typically fund our members’ broadband projects through their electric balance sheet rather than extending loans to a separate broadband subsidiary.
With that, I will now turn the call over to Ling, who will review our financial results in greater detail. Thank you.
Ling Wang
Thank you, Andrew, and good morning, everyone. I am going to move on to Slide 8 to discuss our financial results for the 9 months ended February 29, 2024, which I am going to refer to it as the current fiscal quarter end. Our total assets at the current fiscal quarter end were approximately $35.9 billion. an increase of $1.9 billion or 6% from the prior fiscal year-end level. The primary driver of this growth was a $1.9 billion increase in loans to members. Our total liabilities increased by $1.6 billion or 5% to $33 billion at the current fiscal quarter end as we issued debt primarily to fund the loan growth.
Our members’ equity, which excludes cumulative derivative forward value gains and accumulated other comprehensive income increased by $111 million to $2.3 billion from the prior fiscal year-end primarily due to the adjusted net income of $224 million during the first 9 months of this fiscal year, partially offset by the CFC Board of Directors authorized Patronage Capital Retirement of $113 million. The $113 million Patronage Capital Retirement comprised of a $72 million paid to members in September 2023, and $41 million paid from CFC to RTFC in December 2023, in connection with the RTFC sale transaction.
Our adjusted debt-to-equity ratio was 6.29:1 at the current fiscal quarter end, a decrease from 6.38:1 at November 30, 2023, but an increase from 6.04:1 at May 31, 2023. The decrease from the November 30, 2023, level was driven by an increase of an additional $100 million subordinated deferrable debt and the redemption of the $400 million in short-term time deposits to pay down a portion of our maturing long-term debt. We expect our adjusted debt-to-equity ratio will remain above our target of 6:1 as we project an increase in total debt outstanding to fund anticipated loan growth.
Looking at Slide 9 for our loan portfolio. The composition of our loan portfolio remained largely unchanged from the prior fiscal year-end. Our loan portfolio consists mainly of long-term fixed rate secured loans to rural electric cooperatives. At the current fiscal quarter end, $34 billion or 98% of our loans consist of loans to rural electric systems and $549 million or 2% to the telecommunications sector.
Our long-term fixed rate loans were 88% of total loans outstanding at the current fiscal quarter end, similar to the level of 87% at May 31, 2023. Our long-term loans are typically secured by substantially all assets of the borrowers. We typically lend to our members on a senior secured basis, with approximately 91% of our loans being senior secured at the current fiscal quarter end, similar to the level of 92% at May 31, 2023. We generally offer long-term amortized loans to our members for up to 35 years. The average remaining maturity of our long-term loans, which accounted for 90% of total loans outstanding in the current fiscal quarter end was 19 years.
Slide 10 represents historical performance of our loan portfolio for the past 5 years. The quality of our loan portfolio continued to demonstrate strength and we observed positive trends in our credit metrics. We had only 1 nonperforming loan outstanding at the current fiscal quarter end, totaling $85 million or 0.25% of total loans outstanding. This loan was made to an electric power supply borrower. In comparison, we had loans to 2 CFC electric power supply borrowers totaling $89 million classified as nonperforming as of May 31, 2023.
During the first quarter of this fiscal year, we received $4 million in loan principal payments from one of the nonperforming borrowers, which paid off the outstanding balance of its nonperforming loan. Subsequent to February 29, 2024, we received a $36 million payment on the one nonperforming loan we have on our book, reducing the outstanding balance to $49 million.
Our allowance for credit losses decreased by $4 million to $49 million at the current fiscal quarter end compared to $53 million at May 31, 2023. The allowance coverage ratio decreased to 14 basis points at the current fiscal quarter end from 16 basis points at May 31, 2023. The $4 million decrease in the allowance for credit losses reflected an $8 million reduction in the asset-specific allowance, partially offset by a $4 million increase in the collective allowance due to loan growth and a slight decline in the overall credit quality and risk profile of our loan portfolio.
During the 9 months ended February 29, 2024, we had no loan charge-offs. We recorded a $1 million in net loan recoveries to a previously charge-off loan amount during fiscal year 2024. We believe that the overall quality of our loan portfolio remains strong at the current fiscal quarter end, evidenced by the limited defaults and losses in our electric utility portfolio since the inception of CFC. We celebrated our 55th year in business last week. And in our 55-year history, we have experienced only 18 defaults in our electric utility portfolio. Out of the 18 defaults, 1 is in the process of being resolved, 9 had no losses and 8 led to cumulative net charge-offs of only $100 million.
Moving on to Slide 11. During the third quarter, our adjusted net income increased by $8 million or 11% primarily due to a $13 million increase in adjusted net interest income and a $6 million favorable shift from losses to gains recorded on our investment securities, partially offset by a reduction in the benefit from credit losses of $5 million and a $5 million increase in operating and noninterest expenses.
For the 9-month period, our adjusted net income increased by $39 million or 21% primarily due to a $29 million increase in adjusted net interest income, $14 million favorable shift from losses to gains recorded on our investment securities, a $9 million favorable shift from provision to benefit for credit losses and a $3 million increase in fee and other income, partially offset by a $16 million increase in operating and other noninterest expenses.
The $13 million increase in adjusted net interest income during the third quarter and the $29 million increase in adjusted net interest income for the 9-month period was driven by a 7% increase in our average interest earning assets and increases in adjusted net interest yield of 7 basis points and 4 basis points for the third quarter and for the 9-month period, respectively. Specifically, our adjusted net interest yield was 1.18% for the third quarter compared to 1.11% for the same prior year quarter. And our adjusted net interest yield was 1.13% for the 9-month period compared to the 1.09% for the same prior year period.
Being a member-owned Finance Cooperative Association, our primary finance goal focuses on earning annual minimum adjusted time interest earned ratio or Tier of 1.1x. For the third quarter and 9-month period, our adjusted Tier decreased by 0.01x to 1.29x and 1.25x, respectively, compared to the same prior year period both comfortably exceeding our target of 1.1x.
Our total debt outstanding was $32.5 billion at the current fiscal quarter end, an increase of $1.5 billion or 5% from May 31, 2023, level, primarily to fund the loan growth in our portfolio. We continue to maintain diverse funding sources, including funding from our members as well as capital markets and noncapital markets funding.
At the current fiscal quarter end, $4.7 billion of CFC’s funding came from our members in the form of short-term and long-term investments, a slight decrease of $100 million or 2% from the May 31, 2023, level. Our member investments represented 15% of our total debt outstanding at the current fiscal quarter end, a slight decrease from 16% at May 31, 2023.
At the current fiscal quarter end, our funding under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program and notes payable with Farmer Mac totaled $11 billion or 33% of our total debt outstanding, $854 million or a 9% increase from the May 31, 2023, level. And this is primarily driven by net increases of $733 million in borrowings on the Farmer Mac note purchase program and $122 million under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program.
Our capital markets-related funding sources totaled $17 billion at the current fiscal quarter end, a $787 million or a 5% increase from the May 31, 2023, level. The increase was primarily due to a net increase of $2 billion in dealer medium-term notes offset by net decreases of $842 million in collateral trust bond and $394 million in dealer commercial paper outstanding. Dealer commercial paper outstanding decreased to $899 million at the current fiscal quarter end compared to $1.3 billion at May 31, 2023.
At the current fiscal quarter end, capital markets-related funding sources accounted for 52% of our total funding, unchanged from the May 31, 2023, level. Also at the current fiscal quarter end, 54% of our total debt was secured and 46% was unsecured, slightly shifted from 56% for secured and 44% for unsecured at May 31, 2023.
Our short-term borrowings increased by $59 million to $4.6 billion, accounting for 14% of our total debt outstanding at the current fiscal quarter end compared to $4.5 billion or 15% of total outstanding at May 31, 2023. The decrease in short-term borrowings was driven by a $500 million short-term borrowing from Farmer Mac, partially offset by $394 million decrease in dealer commercial paper and a $47 million decrease in short-term member investment.
In the current fiscal quarter end, a total of $3.2 billion or 70% of our short-term borrowings come from short-term investments made by our members compared to $3.3 billion or 72% at May 31, 2023. As we have consistently stated, the investments from our members are a very reliable funding source with little reinvestment risk as our members continue to invest a large portion of their access fund with us. Our member short-term investments have averaged around $3.5 billion over the last 12 fiscal quarter end reporting period.
Slide 13 shows various sources of liquidity, CFC had in place at the current fiscal quarter end. Our available liquidity includes cash, investments, committed bank lines, committed loan facility under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program and Farmer Mac revolving note purchase agreement totaling $6.6 billion at February 29, 2024. As I mentioned in the prior call, in December 2023, we closed an additional $450 million committed loan facility under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program, resulting in an increase of the total availability under this program from $750 million to $1.2 billion.
As indicated in the table on the right side, at the current fiscal quarter end, we had a total of $7 billion in debt maturities over the next 12 months, with 46% or $3.2 billion of these debt maturities representing short-term investments from our members. Because our members have traditionally rolled over a large portion of their short-term investments with us and maturity, we consider our member investments to be a very stable and reliable source of funding for CFC.
The remaining $3.8 billion in debt maturities include $899 million dealer commercial paper, a $500 million short-term notes payable to Farmer Mac and $2.4 billion long-term and subordinated debt obligation. These obligations are well covered by $6.6 billion liquidity discussed previously. It is also worth noting that the $6.6 billion liquidity does not include a $1.5 billion scheduled repayment and amortization on our long-term loans that we expect to receive from our members over the next 12 months.
Slide 14 summarizes CFC’s projected debt issuance needs over the next 18 months subsequent to the current fiscal quarter end. Our cash needs are derived from 2 primary areas: refinancing existing debt maturities and funding loan advances to our members, partially offset by the amortization and repayment of loans from our members. Our funding needs are also driven by our member investment levels.
During the third quarter, we issued a total of $1.85 billion in fixed and floating rate medium-term notes ranging from 3 to 7 years and $100 million in subordinated deferrable debt to fund our loan growth and to refinance maturing long-term debt. Over the next 18 months from March 2024 through August 2025, we have a total of $4.5 billion of long-term debt maturities and amortization consisting of $2.6 billion in capital markets debt and $1.9 billion in noncapital market debt.
We expect our loan growth over the same period to be approximately $2.6 billion. As indicated in the chart, we project to issue approximately $5.1 billion in long-term debt over this period to refinance existing debt maturities and to fund our expected loan growth.
Thank you again for joining us today to review our results for our third fiscal quarter ended February 29, 2024. We appreciate your interest in CFC and look forward to discussing our financial performance and funding plans in the future.
I would like to ask the operator to open the lines for questions and also suggest that you may submit your questions via web service so we may respond to those as well. Thank you.
Question-and-Answer Session
Operator
[Operator Instructions]
And we do have a question from Chris Haberlin with Agincourt Capital Management.
Chris Haberlin
First question on the nonperforming loans. I think you had a balance of $85 million at the end of the quarter and receives a payment after the end of the quarter, leaving you with around $50 million outstanding on the nonperforming loan. What’s the outlook there for that remaining balance on that loan? Are you expecting to recover that over time? Or was the payment that you received in the third quarter just a one-off?
Andrew Don
I mean — well, it’s a complicated loan structure and as I said, it is — we did put it on nonperforming, I think, in 2020. And it’s under the restructuring agreement we have with this borrower. They’re required to make certain kind of minimum payments really based on their cash flow. It’s not a very typical kind of loan arrangement. So that’s the structure. So it’s kind of hard to — because it’s really — it is based on, to be frank, how the borrower performs from a cash flow perspective.
Having said that, yes, they have consistently outperformed in terms of cash flow from operations, which has resulted in these kinds of payments that have exceeded what was anticipated. So to answer your question, I think that we expect — we would expect to potentially recover a reasonable portion of the amount that’s still outstanding. Again, but it is highly dependent on their cash flow from operations which is dependent on market conditions, primarily utility market conditions, not capital market conditions or interest rate environment conditions. But it’s really related to the cash flow of that particular borrower.
Chris Haberlin
Great. And then just second question. I wanted to ask about ratings and specifically the rating at S&P. I know they had downgraded, I think, in March of 2021 following Winter Storm Uri. Obviously, with the Brazos Sandy Creek issues kind of largely in the rearview mirror. And I think you took relatively minimal charge-offs as a result of those storms. Can you just talk about the dialogue you’ve had with them in getting the rating return back to, I believe it was at A plus there prior to the downgrade. Just any outlook or update on discussions with S&P.
Andrew Don
Sure. Well, I think it was — we were at A, not A+, because S&P some time ago, equalized our senior secured and unsecured rating. So — but they did go from A to A-. Obviously, we were disappointed in that action because I think what we told the agency at that time is we believe that the issues related to winter storm Uri were not widespread to Texas was something specific to that borrower, and we felt that it was very likely that would be resolved appropriately as it has been.
So to answer your question, yes, we have had a very frank robust discussion with the analyst at Standard & Poor’s, pointing out the history, pointing out the way this has worked out. And to be frank, it’s disappointing that they are not reflecting the outcome to date. So if you’d like to share your view with them, we would certainly welcome that. But yes, we have — and we believe — we have told them as well that we don’t believe it’s reflective of, again, what’s happened and how people view the result in terms of the way this has worked out.
But yes, we continue to have a discussion with them. It continues to be very frank. But as I said, it’s disappointing that they won’t change their view.
Chris Haberlin
I understand your disappointment, I share your disappointment and certainly agree with where you’re coming from.
Operator
[Operator Instructions]
Ling Wang
So we do have a couple of questions that’s submitted to the web. So one of them is to ask us to comment on the leverage and the trend and leverage.
So at the end of February 29, 2024, our adjusted debt-to-equity ratio is about 6.29:1. That is a decrease from 6.38:1 from the last fiscal quarter, but it is an increase from 6.04:1 at May — from May 31, 2023. I think we have publicly stated that our target is 6:1, and we believe that we will be above our target because we do project an increase in our total outstanding in order to support our loan growth. So that’s the comment on the leverage.
I think another question from the web. I think the question is what triggers a member to not roll over their short-term investments.
Andrew Don
For loans. Is it loans?
Ling Wang
I don’t believe it’s short-term loans…
Andrew Don
Well, it’s I guess maybe…
Ling Wang
Yes, whoever asked the question…
Andrew Don
Are you interested in short-term loans or short-term investments?
Ling Wang
Short-term loans will be the line of credit loans and short-term investment will be the — point — deposit with us. Maybe I’ll just comment on short-term investments…
Andrew Don
We can respond to both, I guess, just to make it clear.
Ling Wang
Sure. So for short-term investments, I think our members, they have pretty consistently invested their excess cash with us. What will make them not to reinvest will be if they have cash needs so they don’t have excess cash, and that will impact our member investment level. So it is investment, yes. So the other reason will be maybe — if they want to compare rates, maybe if their local bank offers higher rate, which I think is unlikely, we tend to offer pretty attractive rates to our members in terms of member investment. So I think from our perspective, historically, members if they don’t roll over is typically because they have used for that cash.
Andrew Don
I mean sometimes they will get a — especially if they’re an RUS borrower, as an example, they might get a large funding and it might be for an upcoming project that they haven’t fully funded yet, so they’ll put it on deposit with us. There’s some timing issues that might drive a large investment amount.
Operator
And at this time, there are no further phone questions.
Andrew Don
Okay. Great. Thanks for joining us this morning and look forward to talking to you in the future. Have a nice day.
Operator
Well, thank you. And that does conclude today’s conference. We do thank you for your participation. Have an excellent day.