Dime Community Bancshares joined a growing list of lenders that repositioned their securities portfolios in 2024 by selling low-yielding holdings at losses. The moves create near-term hits to earnings but generate proceeds the banks can reinvest into profitable endeavors.
The Hauppauge, New York-based Dime said in a press release late Thursday that it sold $379 million of debt securities that had a weighted average yield of 1.20% and a duration of just over three years. The
Dime said it expects to recognize a $43 million pretax loss from the sale in the fourth quarter, though the more than fourfold gain in yield on the new investments was projected to bolster earnings in coming quarters. The bank in November disclosed
Analyst Steve Moss of Raymond James said that, while the action creates near-term earnings pain, it should drive long-term improvement. He estimated the securities reinvestment would prove $14.7 million accretive to annual net interest income and bolster Dime's net interest margin by 10 basis points.
The Dime move came in the same week that First Hawaiian in Honolulu
Other banks that have announced similar restructurings this year include
Upbound currently focuses on lease-to-own products. Brigit will help it expand its offerings, but the fintech faced an FTC complaint last year.
Securities yields climbed following the sharp increase in interest rates during 2022 and 2023. The Federal Reserve
Dime also said it was unwinding an employee pension plan by distributing payments. Ending the plan is expected to cost the bank about $1 million in the fourth quarter and another $2 million in the first quarter of 2025.
Dime dived into aggressive growth mode over the past two years, hiring commercial lenders at a rapid clip to capitalize in part on the disruption caused by the failure of Signature Bank in New York last year and the potential for stronger loan demand in the year ahead as interest rates decline. The Fed twice cut rates this fall and could again next week, when it meets for the final time this year.
Dime has hired at least 15 banker teams since last year. The recruiting spree paid off in the form of loan and deposit growth. But the staffing expansion boosted operating expenses, and the loan growth was accompanied by higher credit costs.
Dime reported a 17% annual increase in commercial-and-industrial and owner-occupied commercial real estate loans with its third-quarter earnings. Its deposits increased more than 8% year over year. The bank reported
"The momentum in our business is extremely strong," Stuart Lubow, Dime's president and CEO, said during the company's latest earnings call. He acknowledged the rising costs, however, and said the bank expected to "keep expense levels relatively flat in the fourth quarter and into 2025 as we are working on a number of efficiency optimization initiatives."