株探米国株
英語
エドガーで原本を確認する
false 2024 --12-31 Q1 0001090009 SC 0001090009 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 2024-04-30 0001090009 2024-03-31 0001090009 2023-12-31 0001090009 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommonStockMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:PreferredStockMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 SFST:NonvestedRestrictedStockMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AdditionalPaidInCapitalMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommonStockMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:PreferredStockMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:NonvestedRestrictedStockMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AdditionalPaidInCapitalMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommonStockMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:PreferredStockMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 SFST:NonvestedRestrictedStockMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AdditionalPaidInCapitalMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommonStockMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:PreferredStockMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:NonvestedRestrictedStockMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AdditionalPaidInCapitalMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommonStockMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:PreferredStockMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 SFST:NonvestedRestrictedStockMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AdditionalPaidInCapitalMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommonStockMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:PreferredStockMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:NonvestedRestrictedStockMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AdditionalPaidInCapitalMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CorporateBondSecuritiesMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:USTreasurySecuritiesMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AgencySecuritiesMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:TotalInvestmentSecuritiesMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CorporateBondSecuritiesMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:USTreasurySecuritiesMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AgencySecuritiesMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:TotalInvestmentSecuritiesMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:SecuritiesInvestmentMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:SecuritiesInvestmentMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:CorporateBondsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:USTreasuresMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:CorporateBondsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:USTreasuresMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ResidentialRealEstateMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ResidentialRealEstateMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ResidentialRealEstateMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ResidentialRealEstateMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessLoanMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessLoanMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessLoanMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessLoanMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateLoanMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateLoanMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateLoanMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateLoanMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherConsumerMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherConsumerMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherConsumerMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherConsumerMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:OtherMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:OtherMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:OtherMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:OtherMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:OtherMember SFST:OneYearOrLessMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:OtherMember SFST:AfterOneButWithinFiveYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:OtherMember SFST:AfterFiveButWithinFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:OtherMember SFST:AfterFifteenYearsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ResidentialRealEstateMember us-gaap:PassMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ResidentialRealEstateMember SFST:WatchMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ResidentialRealEstateMember us-gaap:SpecialMentionMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ResidentialRealEstateMember us-gaap:SubstandardMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:PassMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:WatchMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:SpecialMentionMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:SubstandardMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:PassMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:WatchMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:PassMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:WatchMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:SpecialMentionMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:SubstandardMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateLoanMember us-gaap:PassMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateLoanMember SFST:WatchMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateLoanMember us-gaap:SpecialMentionMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateLoanMember us-gaap:SubstandardMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember us-gaap:PassMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember SFST:WatchMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember us-gaap:SpecialMentionMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember us-gaap:SubstandardMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember us-gaap:PassMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember us-gaap:PassMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:WatchMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember us-gaap:SpecialMentionMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember us-gaap:SubstandardMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ResidentialRealEstateMember us-gaap:PassMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ResidentialRealEstateMember SFST:WatchMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ResidentialRealEstateMember us-gaap:SpecialMentionMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ResidentialRealEstateMember us-gaap:SubstandardMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:PassMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:WatchMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:SpecialMentionMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:SubstandardMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:PassMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:WatchMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:PassMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:WatchMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:SpecialMentionMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:SubstandardMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateLoanMember us-gaap:PassMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateLoanMember SFST:WatchMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateLoanMember us-gaap:SpecialMentionMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateLoanMember us-gaap:SubstandardMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember us-gaap:PassMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember SFST:WatchMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember us-gaap:SpecialMentionMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember us-gaap:SubstandardMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionLoansMember us-gaap:PassMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember us-gaap:PassMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:WatchMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember us-gaap:SpecialMentionMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember us-gaap:SubstandardMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:Accruing3059DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:Accruing6089DaysPastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:Accruing90DaysOrMorePastDueMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:NonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:AccruingCurrentMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:BusinessMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithNoAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:NonaccrualLoansWithAnAllowanceMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:TotalNonaccrualLoansMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:CommercialAndConsumerMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:CommercialAndConsumerMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:CommercialAndConsumerMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 SFST:CommercialAndConsumerMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 SFST:CommercialAndConsumerMember 2023-01-01 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:BusinessMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:RealEstateMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:HomeEquitysMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:ConstructionMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember SFST:OtherMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 SFST:CommercialAndConsumerMember 2023-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:OwnerOccupiedReMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:CommercialLoanMember SFST:NonOwnerOccupiedReMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember us-gaap:HomeEquityLoanMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:AllowanceForCreditLossesUnfundedLoanCommitmentsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:AllowanceForCreditLossesUnfundedLoanCommitmentsMember 2022-12-31 0001090009 SFST:AllowanceForCreditLossesUnfundedLoanCommitmentsMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:AllowanceForCreditLossesUnfundedLoanCommitmentsMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 SFST:AllowanceForCreditLossesUnfundedLoanCommitmentsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:PayFixedPortfolioMember 2023-06-30 0001090009 us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:InterestRateSwapMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:FixedRateAssetLiabilityMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 SFST:FixedRateAssetLiabilityMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:SwapMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:SwapMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:InterestRateLockCommitmentsMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:InterestRateLockCommitmentsMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:DerivativeMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:SwapMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:SwapMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:InterestRateLockCommitmentsMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:InterestRateLockCommitmentsMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember 2023-01-01 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:DerivativeMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember 2023-12-31 0001090009 srt:MinimumMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 srt:MaximumMember 2024-01-01 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member 2024-03-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member 2023-12-31 0001090009 us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member 2023-12-31 iso4217:USD xbrli:shares iso4217:USD xbrli:shares xbrli:pure SFST:Integer

Table of Contents

 

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM 10-Q

☒  QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the Quarterly Period Ended March 31, 2024

OR

☐  TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15 (d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the Transition Period from                      to

Commission file number 000-27719

 

Southern First Bancshares, Inc.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

South Carolina   58-2459561
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)   (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
     
6 Verdae Boulevard    
Greenville, S.C.   29607
(Address of principal executive offices)   (Zip Code)

864-679-9000
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)

Not Applicable
(Former name, former address, and former fiscal year, if changed since last report)

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

Title of each class Trading Symbol(s) Name of each exchange on which registered
Common Stock SFST The Nasdaq Global Market

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.  Yes ☒ No ☐

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files).
Yes ☒ No ☐

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company. See definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company,” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.

Large accelerated filer Accelerated filer
Non-accelerated filer Smaller Reporting Company
    Emerging growth company

If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☐

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes ☐ No ☒

Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuer’s classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date:

8,156,109 shares of common stock, par value $0.01 per share, were issued and outstanding as of April 30, 2024.

 

 

Table of Contents 

SOUTHERN FIRST BANCSHARES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
March 31, 2024 Form 10-Q

INDEX

Page
PART I – CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL INFORMATION  
     
Item 1. Consolidated Financial Statements  
     
  Consolidated Balance Sheets 3
     
  Consolidated Statements of Income 4
     
  Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income 5
     
  Consolidated Statements of Shareholders’ Equity 6
     
  Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows 7
     
  Notes to Unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements 8
     
Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations 27
     
Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk 42
     
Item 4. Controls and Procedures 42
     
PART II – OTHER INFORMATION  
     
Item 1. Legal Proceedings 43
     
Item 1A. Risk Factors 43
     
Item 2. Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds 43
     
Item 3. Defaults upon Senior Securities 43
     
Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures 43
     
Item 5. Other Information 43
     
Item 6. Exhibits 43

2

Table of Contents 

PART I. CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Item 1. CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

SOUTHERN FIRST BANCSHARES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS

                 
 
    March 31,     December 31,  
(dollars in thousands, except share data)   2024     2023  
    (Unaudited)     (Audited)  
ASSETS                
Cash and cash equivalents:                
Cash and due from banks   $ 13,925       28,020  
Federal funds sold     144,595       119,349  
Interest-bearing deposits with banks     8,789       8,801  
Total cash and cash equivalents     167,309       156,170  
Investment securities:                
Investment securities available for sale     125,996       134,702  
Other investments     18,499       19,939  
Total investment securities     144,495       154,641  
Mortgage loans held for sale     11,842       7,194  
Loans     3,643,766       3,602,627  
Less allowance for credit losses     (40,441 )     (40,682 )
Loans, net     3,603,325       3,561,945  
Bank owned life insurance     52,878       52,501  
Property and equipment, net     93,007       94,301  
Deferred income taxes, net     12,321       12,200  
Other assets     20,527       16,837  
Total assets   $ 4,105,704       4,055,789  
LIABILITIES                
Deposits   $ 3,460,681       3,379,564  
FHLB advances and related debt     240,000       275,000  
Subordinated debentures     36,349       36,322  
Other liabilities     53,418       52,436  
Total liabilities     3,790,448       3,743,322  
SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY                
Preferred stock, par value $.01 per share, 10,000,000 shares authorized     -       -  
Common stock, par value $.01 per share, 10,000,000 shares authorized, 8,156,109 and 8,088,186 shares issued and outstanding at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively     82       81  
Nonvested restricted stock     (5,257 )     (3,596 )
Additional paid-in capital     124,159       121,777  
Accumulated other comprehensive loss     (11,797 )     (11,342 )
Retained earnings     208,069       205,547  
Total shareholders’ equity     315,256       312,467  
Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity   $ 4,105,704       4,055,789  

See notes to consolidated financial statements that are an integral part of these consolidated statements.

3

Table of Contents 

SOUTHERN FIRST BANCSHARES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
(Unaudited)

                 
 
    For the three months  
    ended March 31,  
(dollars in thousands, except share data)   2024     2023  
Interest income                
Loans   $ 45,605       36,748  
Investment securities     1,478       613  
Federal funds sold and interest-bearing deposits with banks     1,280       969  
Total interest income     48,363       38,330  
Interest expense                
Deposits     26,932       17,179  
Borrowings     2,786       727  
Total interest expense     29,718       17,906  
Net interest income     18,645       20,424  
Provision for (reversal of) credit losses     (175 )     1,825  
Net interest income after provision for (reversal of) credit losses     18,820       18,599  
Noninterest income                
Mortgage banking income     1,164       622  
Service fees on deposit accounts     387       325  
ATM and debit card income     544       555  
Income from bank owned life insurance     377       332  
Other income     192       210  
Total noninterest income     2,664       2,044  
Noninterest expenses                
Compensation and benefits     10,857       10,356  
Occupancy     2,557       2,457  
Outside service and data processing costs     1,846       1,629  
Insurance     955       689  
Professional fees     618       660  
Marketing     369       366  
Other     898       947  
Total noninterest expenses     18,100       17,104  
Income before income tax expense     3,384       3,539  
Income tax expense     862       836  
Net income   $ 2,522       2,703  
Earnings per common share                
Basic   $ 0.31       0.34  
Diluted     0.31       0.33  
Weighted average common shares outstanding                
Basic     8,110,249       8,025,876  
Diluted     8,141,921       8,092,270  
                 

See notes to consolidated financial statements that are an integral part of these consolidated statements.

4

Table of Contents 

SOUTHERN FIRST BANCSHARES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
(Unaudited)

                 
             
    For the three months
ended March 31,
 
(dollars in thousands)   2024     2023  
Net income   $ 2,522       2,703  
Other comprehensive income (loss):                
Unrealized gain (loss) on securities available for sale:                
Unrealized holding gain (loss) arising during the period, pretax     (578 )     2,070  
Tax benefit (expense)     123       (435 )
Other comprehensive income (loss)     (455 )     1,635  
Comprehensive income   $ 2,067       4,338  

See notes to consolidated financial statements that are an integral part of these consolidated statements.

5

Table of Contents 

SOUTHERN FIRST BANCSHARES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY
(Unaudited)

                                                                         
       
    For the three months ended March 31,  
(dollars in thousands,   Common stock     Preferred stock     Nonvested
restricted
    Additional
paid-in
    Accumulated
other
comprehensive
    Retained        
except share data)   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount     stock     capital     income (loss)     earnings     Total  
December 31, 2022     8,011,045     $ 80       -     $ -     $ (3,306 )   $ 119,027     $ (13,410 )   $ 192,121     $ 294,512  
Net income     -       -       -       -       -       -       -       2,703       2,703  
Proceeds from exercise of stock options     1,000       -       -       -       -       17       -       -       17  
Issuance of restricted stock Retained earnings     35,930       -       -       -       (1,521 )     1,521       -       -       -  
Compensation expense related to restricted stock, net of tax     -       -       -       -       365       -       -       -       365  
Compensation expense related to stock options, net of tax Common stock     -       -       -       -       -       118       -       -       118  
Other comprehensive income     -       -       -       -       -       -       1,635       -       1,635  
 Additional paid-in capital                                                                        
March 31, 2023 Preferred stock     8,047,975     $ 80       -     $ -     $ (4,462 )   $ 120,683     $ (11,775 )   $ 194,824     $ 299,350  
December 31, 2023     8,088,186     $ 81       -     $ -     $ (3,596 )   $ 121,777     $ (11,342 )   $ 205,547     $ 312,467  
Net income     -       -       -       -       -       -       -       2,522       2,522  
Proceeds from exercise of stock options     11,000       -       -       -       -       167       -       -       167  
Issuance of restricted stock, net of forfeitures     56,923       1       -       -       (2,112 )     2,111       -       -       -  
Compensation expense related to restricted stock, net of tax     -       -       -       -       451       -       -       -       451  
Compensation expense related to stock options, net of tax     -       -       -       -       -       104       -       -       104  
Other comprehensive loss     -       -       -       -       -       -       (455 )     -       (455 )
 Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)                                                                        
March 31, 2024     8,156,109     $ 82       -     $ -     $ (5,257 )   $ 124,159     $ (11,797 )   $ 208,069     $ 315,256  

 

See notes to consolidated financial statements that are an integral part of these consolidated statements.

6

Table of Contents 

SOUTHERN FIRST BANCSHARES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

(Unaudited)

                 
 
    For the three months ended
March 31,
 
(dollars in thousands)   2024     2023  
Operating activities                
Net income   $ 2,522       2,703  
Adjustments to reconcile net income to cash provided by operating activities:                
Provision for (reversal of) credit losses     (175 )     1,825  
Depreciation and other amortization     1,214       1,203  
Accretion and amortization of securities discounts and premium, net     131       129  
Net change in operating leases     39       53  
Compensation expense related to stock options and restricted stock grants     555       483  
Gain on sale of loans held for sale     (1,014 )     (530 )
Loans originated and held for sale     (36,524 )     (17,892 )
Proceeds from sale of loans held for sale     32,890       15,360  
Increase in cash surrender value of bank owned life insurance     (377 )     (331 )
Increase in other assets     (3,690 )     (508 )
Increase (decrease) in other liabilities     1,505       (1,258 )
Net cash (used for) provided by operating activities     (2,924 )     1,237  
Investing activities                
Increase (decrease) in cash realized from:                
Increase in loans, net     (41,380 )     (144,641 )
Purchase of property and equipment     (280 )     (180 )
Purchase of investment securities:                
Available for sale     (5,191 )     -  
Other investments     (4,302 )     (18,264 )
Payments and maturities, calls and repayments of investment securities:                
Available for sale     13,190       1,252  
Other investments     5,742       19,000  
Net cash used for investing activities     (32,221 )     (142,833 )
Financing activities                
Increase in cash realized from:                
Increase in deposits, net     81,117       292,910  
Decrease in Federal Home Loan Bank advances and other borrowings, net     (35,000 )     (50,000 )
Proceeds from the exercise of stock options     167       17  
Net cash provided by financing activities     46,284       242,927  
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents     11,139       101,331  
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of the period     156,170       170,874  
Cash and cash equivalents at end of the period   $ 167,309       272,205  
Supplemental information                
Cash paid for                
Interest   $ 27,617       16,801  
Schedule of non-cash transactions                
Unrealized gain (loss) on securities, net of income taxes     (455 )     1,635  

See notes to consolidated financial statements that are an integral part of these consolidated statements.

7

Table of Contents 

SOUTHERN FIRST BANCSHARES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

NOTE 1 – Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

Nature of Business

Southern First Bancshares, Inc. (the “Company”) is a South Carolina corporation that owns all of the capital stock of Southern First Bank (the “Bank”) and all of the stock of Greenville First Statutory Trusts I and II (collectively, the “Trusts”). The Trusts are special purpose non-consolidated entities organized for the sole purpose of issuing trust preferred securities. The Bank’s primary federal regulator is the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (the “FDIC”). The Bank is also regulated and examined by the South Carolina Board of Financial Institutions. The Bank is primarily engaged in the business of accepting demand deposits and savings deposits insured by the FDIC, and providing commercial, consumer and mortgage loans to the general public.

Basis of Presentation

The accompanying consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) for interim financial information and with the instructions to Form 10-Q and Article 10 of Regulation S-X. Accordingly, they do not include all the information and footnotes required by accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America for complete financial statements. In the opinion of management, all adjustments (consisting of normal recurring accruals) considered necessary for a fair presentation have been included. Operating results for the three-month period ended March 31, 2024 are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected for the year ending December 31, 2024. For further information, refer to the consolidated financial statements and footnotes thereto included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023 as filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) on March 5, 2024. The consolidated financial statements include the accounts of the Company and the Bank. In accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) Accounting Standards Codification (“ASC”) 810, “Consolidation,” the financial statements related to the Trusts have not been consolidated.

Business Segments

The Company, through the Bank, provides a broad range of financial services to individuals and companies in South Carolina, North Carolina, and Georgia. These services include demand, time and savings deposits, lending services and ATM processing and mortgage banking services. While the Company’s management periodically reviews limited production information for these revenue streams, that information is not complete as it does not include a full allocation of revenue, costs and capital from key corporate functions. Management will continue to evaluate these lines of business for separate reporting as facts and circumstances change.  Accordingly, the Company’s various banking operations are not considered by management to constitute more than one reportable operating segment.

Risk and Uncertainties

In the normal course of its business, the Company encounters two significant types of risks: economic and regulatory. There are three main components of economic risk: interest rate risk, credit risk and market risk. The Company is subject to interest rate risk to the degree that its interest-bearing liabilities mature or reprice at different speeds, or on different bases, than its interest-earning assets. Credit risk is the risk of default within the Company’s loan portfolio that results from borrowers’ inability or unwillingness to make contractually required payments. Market risk reflects changes in the value of collateral underlying loans receivable and the valuation of real estate held by the Company. There were three significant bank failures in the first five months of 2023, primarily due to the failed banks’ lack of liquidity as depositors sought to withdraw their deposits. Due to rising interest rates, the failed banks were unable to sell investment securities held to meet liquidity needs without realizing substantial losses. As a result of the recent bank failures and in an effort to strengthen public confidence in the banking system and protect depositors, regulators announced that any losses to the Deposit Insurance Fund to support uninsured depositors will be recovered by a special assessment on banks, as required by law, which has and could continue to increase the cost of our FDIC insurance assessments. The ultimate impact of these bank failures on the economy, financial institutions and their depositors, as well as any governmental regulatory responses or actions resulting from the same, remains difficult to predict at this time.

8

Table of Contents 

The Company is subject to the regulations of various governmental agencies. These regulations can and do change significantly from period to period. The Company also undergoes periodic examinations by the regulatory agencies, which may subject the Company to changes with respect to the valuation of assets, the amount of required credit loss allowance and operating restrictions resulting from the regulators’ judgments based on information available to them at the time of their examinations.

The Bank makes loans to individuals and businesses in the Upstate, Midlands, and Lowcountry regions of South Carolina as well as the Triangle, Triad and Charlotte regions of North Carolina and Atlanta, Georgia for various personal and commercial purposes. The Bank’s loan portfolio has a concentration of real estate loans. As of March 31, 2024 and 2023, real estate loans represented 84.3% and 84.8%, respectively, of total loans. However, borrowers’ ability to repay their loans is not dependent upon any specific economic sector.

As of March 31, 2024, the Company’s and the Bank’s capital ratios were in excess of all regulatory requirements. While management believes that we have sufficient capital to withstand an extended economic recession, our reported and regulatory capital ratios could be adversely impacted by future credit losses.

The Company maintains access to multiple sources of liquidity, including a $15.0 million holding company line of credit with another bank which could be used to support capital ratios at the subsidiary bank. As of March 31, 2024, the $15.0 million line was unused.

Use of Estimates

The preparation of consolidated financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities as of the date of the consolidated financial statements and the reported amount of income and expenses during the reporting periods. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Material estimates that are particularly susceptible to significant change in the near term relate to the determination of the allowance for credit losses, real estate acquired in the settlement of loans, fair value of financial instruments, and valuation of deferred tax assets.

Reclassifications

Certain amounts, previously reported, have been reclassified to state all periods on a comparable basis and had no effect on shareholders’ equity or net income.

Subsequent Events

Subsequent events are events or transactions that occur after the balance sheet date but before financial statements are issued. Recognized subsequent events are events or transactions that provide additional evidence about conditions that existed at the date of the balance sheet, including the estimates inherent in the process of preparing financial statements. Non-recognized subsequent events are events that provide evidence about conditions that did not exist at the date of the balance sheet but arose after that date.

Newly Issued, But Not Yet Effective Accounting Standards

In December 2022, the FASB issued amendments to defer the sunset date of the Reference Rate Reform Topic of the Accounting Standards Codification from December 31, 2022 to December 31, 2024, because the current relief in Reference Rate Reform Topic may not cover a period of time during which a significant number of modifications may take place. The amendments were effective upon issuance. The Company does not expect these amendments to have a material effect on its financial statements.

In December 2023, the FASB amended the Income Taxes topic in the Accounting Standards Codification to improve the transparency of income tax disclosures. The amendments are effective for annual periods beginning after December 15, 2024. Early adoption is permitted for annual financial statements that have not yet been issued or made available for issuance. The Company does not expect these amendments to have a material effect on its financial statements.

9

Table of Contents 

NOTE 2 – Investment Securities

The amortized costs and fair value of investment securities are as follows:

Schedule of amortized costs and fair value of investment securities                                
 
    March 31, 2024  
    Amortized     Gross Unrealized     Fair  
(dollars in thousands) Corporate bonds [Member]   Cost     Gains     Losses     Value  
Available for sale Asset-backed securities [Member]                                
Corporate bonds   $ 2,140       -       253       1,887  
US treasuries US treasuries [Member]     999       -       111       888  
US government agencies US government agencies [Member]     20,183       -       1,986       18,197  
State and political subdivisions State and political subdivisions [Member]     22,579       -       3,042       19,537  
Asset-backed securities Mortgage-backed securities [Member]     34,247       33       76       34,204  
Mortgage-backed securities     60,782       -       9,499       51,283  
Total investment securities available for sale   $ 140,930       33       14,967       125,996  
                                 
      December 31, 2023  
      Amortized       Gross Unrealized       Fair  
      Cost       Gains       Losses       Value  
Available for sale                                
Corporate bonds   $ 2,147       -       237       1,910  
US treasuries     9,495       1       102       9,394  
US government agencies     20,594       -       1,938       18,656  
State and political subdivisions     22,642       11       2,912       19,741  
Asset-backed securities     33,450       2       216       33,236  
Mortgage-backed securities     60,730       -       8,965       51,765  
Total investment securities available for sale   $ 149,058       14       14,370       134,702  

Contractual maturities and yields on the Company’s investment securities at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023 are shown in the following table. Expected maturities may differ from contractual maturities because issuers may have the right to call or prepay obligations with or without call or prepayment penalties.

Schedule of maturities and yields on the company’s investment securities                                                                                
                               
  March 31, 2024  
    Less than one year     One to five years     Five to ten years     Over ten years     Total  
(dollars in thousands)     Amount       Yield       Amount       Yield       Amount       Yield       Amount       Yield       Amount       Yield  
Available for sale                                                                                
Corporate bonds Corporate bonds [Member]   $ -       -     $ -       -     $ 1,887       2.01 %   $ -       -     $ 1,887       2.01 %
US treasuries     -       -       888       1.27 %     -       -       -       -       888       1.27 %
US government agencies US government agencies [Member]     980       0.45 %     2,380       1.00 %     14,837       4.38 %     -       -       18,197       3.72 %
State and political subdivisions State and political subdivisions [Member]     -       -       902       1.94 %     5,744       1.89 %     12,891       2.15 %     19,537       2.07 %
Asset-backed securities Asset-backed securities [Member]     -       -       211       6.21 %     -       -       33,993       6.61 %     34,204       6.61 %
Mortgage-backed securities Mortgage-backed securities [Member]     -       -       6,626       1.29 %     3,419       1.54 %     41,238       2.04 %     51,283       1.91 %
Total investment securities Total investment securities [Member]   $ 980       0.45 %   $ 11,007       1.37 %   $ 25,887       3.28 %   $ 88,122       3.82 %   $ 125,996       3.47 %
                                                                                 
      December 31, 2023  
      Less than one year       One to five years       Five to ten years       Over ten years       Total  
(dollars in thousands)     Amount       Yield       Amount       Yield       Amount       Yield       Amount       Yield       Amount       Yield  
Available for sale                                                                                
Corporate bonds   $ -       -     $ -       -     $ 1,910       2.01 %   $ -       -     $ 1,910       2.01 %
US treasuries     8,497       5.42 %     897       1.27 %     -       -       -       -       9,394       5.02 %
US government agencies     970       0.45 %     2,385       1.00 %     15,301       4.41 %     -       -       18,656       3.77 %
State and political subdivisions     -       -       906       1.94 %     5,769       1.89 %     13,066       2.15 %     19,741       2.06 %
Asset-backed securities     -       -       296       (6.13 %)     -       -       32,940       6.63 %     33,236       6.57 %
Mortgage-backed securities     -       -       4,795       1.15 %     5,400       1.59 %     41,570       2.00 %     51,765       1.87 %
Total investment securities   $ 9,467       4.91 %   $ 9,279       0.98 %   $ 28,380       3.20 %   $ 87,576       3.76 %   $ 134,702       3.55 %

10

Table of Contents 

The tables below summarize gross unrealized losses on investment securities and the fair market value of the related securities at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, aggregated by investment category and length of time that individual securities have been in a continuous unrealized loss position.

Schedule of gross unrealized losses on investment securities and fair market value of related securities                                                                                
                   
                March 31, 2024  
    Less than 12 months     12 months or longer     Total  
(dollars in thousands)   #     Fair
value
    Unrealized
losses
    #     Fair
value
    Unrealized
losses
    #     Fair
value
    Unrealized
losses
 
Available for sale                                                                        
Corporate bonds     -     $ -     $ -       1     $ 1,887     $ 253       1     $ 1,887     $ 253  
US treasuries     -       -       -       1       888       111       1       888       111  
US government agencies     2       7,133       39       10       11,064       1,947       12       18,197       1,986  
State and political subdivisions     2       759       4       30       18,778       3,038       32       19,537       3,042  
Asset-backed     4       11,343       31       7       4,567       45       11       15,910       76  
Mortgage-backed securities     1       1,387       8       64       49,896       9,491       65       51,283       9,499  
Total investment securities     9     $ 20,622     $ 82       113     $ 87,080     $ 14,885       122     $ 107,702     $ 14,967  
                                                                         
    December 31, 2023  
      Less than 12 months       12 months or longer       Total  
(dollars in thousands)     #       Fair
value
      Unrealized
losses
      #       Fair
value
      Unrealized
losses
      #       Fair
value
      Unrealized
losses
 
Available for sale                                                                        
Corporate bonds     -     $ -     $ -       1     $ 1,910     $ 237       1     $ 1,910     $ 237  
US treasuries     -       -       -       1       897       102       1       897       102  
US government agencies     2       7,533       50       10       11,123       1,888       12       18,656       1,938  
State and political subdivisions     -       -       -       30       18,964       2,912       30       18,964       2,912  
Asset-backed     8       26,746       145       7       4,866       71       15       31,612       216  
Mortgage-backed securities Mortgage-backed securities [Member]     2       2,869       36       62       48,896       8,929       64       51,765       8,965  
Total investment securities     12     $ 37,148     $ 231       111     $ 86,656     $ 14,139       123     $ 123,804     $ 14,370  

At March 31, 2024, the Company had 122 individual investments that were in an unrealized loss position. The unrealized losses were primarily attributable to changes in interest rates, rather than deterioration in credit quality. The individual securities are each investment grade securities. The Company considers factors such as the financial condition of the issuer including credit ratings and specific events affecting the operations of the issuer, volatility of the security, underlying assets that collateralize the debt security, and other industry and macroeconomic conditions. The Company does not intend to sell these securities, and it is more likely than not that the Company will not be required to sell these securities before recovery of the amortized cost. The issuers of these securities continue to make timely principal and interest payments under the contractual terms of the securities. As such, there is no allowance for credit losses on available for sale securities recognized as of March 31, 2024.

Other investments are comprised of the following and are recorded at cost which approximates fair value.

Schedule of other investments            
             
(dollars in thousands)   March 31, 2024     December 31, 2023  
Federal Home Loan Bank stock   $ 14,633       16,063  
Other nonmarketable investments     3,463       3,473  
Investment in Trust Preferred subsidiaries     403       403  
Total other investments   $ 18,499       19,939  

The Company has evaluated other investments for impairment and determined that the other investments are not impaired as of March 31, 2024 and that ultimate recoverability of the par value of the investments is probable. All of the FHLB stock is used to collateralize advances with the FHLB.

At March 31, 2024, there were no securities pledges as collateral for repurchase agreements from brokers.

11

Table of Contents 

NOTE 3 – Mortgage Loans Held for Sale

Mortgage loans originated and intended for sale in the secondary market are reported as loans held for sale and carried at fair value under the fair value option with changes in fair value recognized in current period earnings. At the date of funding of the mortgage loan held for sale, the funded amount of the loan, the related derivative asset or liability of the associated interest rate lock commitment, less direct loan costs becomes the initial recorded investment in the loan held for sale. Such amount approximates the fair value of the loan. At March 31, 2024, mortgage loans held for sale totaled $11.8 million compared to $7.2 million at December 31, 2023.

NOTE 4 – Loans and Allowance for Credit Losses

The following table summarizes the composition of our loan portfolio. Total gross loans are recorded net of deferred loan fees and costs, which totaled $6.9 million as of March 31, 2024 and $7.0 million as of December 31, 2023.

Schedule of composition of our loan portfolio                                
    March 31, 2024     December 31, 2023  
(dollars in thousands)Commercial [Member]   Amount     %  of Total     Amount     %  of Total  
Commercial                                
Owner occupied REOwner occupied RE [Member]   $ 631,047       17.3 %   $ 631,657       17.5 %
Non-owner occupied RENon-owner occupied RE [Member]     944,530       25.9 %     942,529       26.2 %
ConstructionConstruction [Member]     157,464       4.3 %     150,680       4.2 %
BusinessBusiness [Member]     520,073       14.3 %     500,161       13.9 %
Total commercial loansConsumer [Member]     2,253,114       61.8 %     2,225,027       61.8 %
Consumer                                
Real estateReal estate [Member]     1,101,573       30.2 %     1,082,429       30.0 %
Home equityHome equity [Member]     184,691       5.1 %     183,004       5.1 %
Construction     53,216       1.5 %     63,348       1.7 %
OtherOther [Member]     51,172       1.4 %     48,819       1.4 %
Total consumer loans     1,390,652       38.2 %     1,377,600       38.2 %
Total gross loans, net of deferred fees     3,643,766       100.0 %     3,602,627       100.0 %
Less—allowance for credit losses     (40,441 )             (40,682 )        
Total loans, net   $ 3,603,325             $ 3,561,945          

Maturities and Sensitivity of Loans to Changes in Interest Rates

The information in the following tables summarizes the loan maturity distribution by type and related interest rate characteristics based on the contractual maturities of individual loans, including loans which may be subject to renewal at their contractual maturity. Renewal of such loans is subject to review and credit approval, as well as modification of terms upon maturity. Actual repayments of loans may differ from the maturities reflected below, because borrowers have the right to prepay obligations with or without prepayment penalties.

12

Table of Contents 

 

Schedule of loan maturity distribution by type and related interest rate                                        
                         
                March 31, 2024  
(dollars in thousands)   One year
or less
    After one
but within
five years
    After five but
within fifteen
years
    After
fifteen
years
    Total  
Commercial                                        
Owner occupied RE   $ 15,855       185,107       388,424       41,661       631,047  
Non-owner occupied RE     77,445       516,176       326,650       24,259       944,530  
Construction     32,425       61,546       63,493       -       157,464  
Business     117,557       218,031       180,132       4,353       520,073  
Total commercial loans     243,282       980,860       958,699       70,273       2,253,114  
Consumer                                        
Real estate     10,230       52,771       310,383       728,189       1,101,573  
Home equity     2,878       27,460       149,530       4,823       184,691  
Construction     382       901       31,926       20,007       53,216  
Other     12,564       34,683       3,103       822       51,172  
Total consumer loans     26,054       115,815       494,942       753,841       1,390,652  
Total gross loans, net of deferred fees   $ 269,336       1,096,675       1,453,641       824,114       3,643,766  
                                         
    December 31, 2023  
(dollars in thousands)     One year
or less
      After one
but within
five years
      After five
but within
fifteen years
      After
fifteen
years
      Total  
Commercial                                        
Owner occupied RE   $ 17,358       177,203       395,130       41,966       631,657  
Non-owner occupied RE     68,601       517,622       331,727       24,579       942,529  
Construction     26,762       64,432       59,486       -       150,680  
Business     114,432       194,416       186,927       4,386       500,161  
Total commercial loans     227,153       953,673       973,270       70,931       2,225,027  
Consumer                                        
Real estate     10,593       51,956       301,095       718,785       1,082,429  
Home equity     2,716       27,578       147,855       4,855       183,004  
Construction     -       252       39,459       23,637       63,348  
Other     11,157       33,592       3,265       805       48,819  
Total consumer loans     24,466       113,378       491,674       748,082       1,377,600  
Total gross loans, net of deferred fees   $ 251,619       1,067,051       1,464,944       819,013       3,602,627  

 

 

13

Table of Contents 

The following table summarizes the loans due after one year by category.

Schedule of loans due after one year by category                                
                   
    March 31, 2024     December 31, 2023  
    Interest Rate     Interest Rate  
(dollars in thousands)     Fixed       Floating or
Adjustable
      Fixed       Floating or
Adjustable
 
Commercial                                
Owner occupied RE   $ 600,279       14,913       605,199       9,100  
Non-owner occupied RE     746,525       120,560       768,048       105,880  
Construction     96,176       28,863       81,326       42,592  
Business     293,897       108,619       293,920       91,809  
Total commercial loans     1,736,877       272,955       1,748,493       249,381  
Consumer                                
Real estate     1,091,343       -       1,071,836       -  
Home equity     11,485       170,328       11,441       168,847  
Construction     52,834       -       63,348       -  
Other     12,127       26,481       11,525       26,137  
Total consumer loans     1,167,789       196,809       1,158,150       194,984  
Total gross loans, net of deferred fees   $ 2,904,666       469,764       2,906,643       444,365  

Credit Quality Indicators

The Company tracks credit quality based on its internal risk ratings. Upon origination, a loan is assigned an initial risk grade, which is generally based on several factors such as the borrower’s credit score, the loan-to-value ratio, the debt-to-income ratio, etc. After loans are initially graded, they are monitored regularly for credit quality based on many factors, such as payment history, the borrower’s financial status, and changes in collateral value. Loans can be downgraded or upgraded depending on management’s evaluation of these factors. Internal risk-grading policies are consistent throughout each loan type.

A description of the general characteristics of the risk grades is as follows:

Pass—A pass loan ranges from minimal to average credit risk; however, still has acceptable credit risk.
     
Watch—A watch loan exhibits above average credit risk due to minor weaknesses and warrants closer scrutiny by management.
     
Special mention—A special mention loan has potential weaknesses that deserve management’s close attention. If left uncorrected, these potential weaknesses may result in deterioration of the repayment prospects for the loan or the institution’s credit position at some future date.
     
Substandard—A substandard loan is inadequately protected by the current sound worth and paying capacity of the obligor or of the collateral pledged, if any. Loans so classified must have a well-defined weakness, or weaknesses, which may jeopardize the liquidation of the debt. A substandard loan is characterized by the distinct possibility that the Bank will sustain some loss if the deficiencies are not corrected.
     
Doubtful—A doubtful loan has all of the weaknesses inherent in one classified as substandard with the added characteristic that the weaknesses make collection or liquidation in full, on the basis of the currently existing facts, conditions and values, highly questionable and improbable.

14

Table of Contents 

The following table presents loan balances classified by credit quality indicators by year of origination as of March 31, 2024.

Schedule of classified by credit quality indicators by year of origination                                                                        
                                                       
                                        March 31, 2024  
(dollars in thousands)     2024       2023       2022       2021       2020       Prior       Revolving       Revolving
Converted
to Term
      Total  
Commercial                                                                        
Owner occupied RE                                                                        
Pass   $ 11,770       42,283       180,226       134,787       63,949       164,174       85       -       597,274  
Watch     -       -       3,429       456       15,880       10,101       -       -       29,866  
Special Mention     -       -       177       -       -       2,889       -       -       3,066  
Substandard     -       -       -       -       -       841       -       -       841  
Total Owner occupied RE     11,770       42,283       183,832       135,243       79,829       178,005       85       -       631,047  
                                                                         
Non-owner occupied RE                                                                        
Pass     12,575       79,336       303,755       169,028       105,833       226,072       303       -       896,902  
Watch     -       1,002       2,596       448       527       15,911       -       -       20,484  
Special Mention     -       -       967       7,707       -       9,049       -       -       17,723  
Substandard     -       -       -       305       -       9,116       -       -       9,421  
Total Non-owner occupied RE     12,575       80,338       307,318       177,488       106,360       260,148       303       -       944,530  
                                                                         
Construction                                                                        
Pass     3,563       28,027       86,648       26,741       11,087       -       -       -       156,066  
Watch     -       -       1,398       -       -       -       -       -       1,398  
Total Construction     3,563       28,027       88,046       26,741       11,087       -       -       -       157,464  
                                                                         
Business                                                                        
Pass     8,232       52,166       134,401       45,948       18,339       61,981       163,010       -       484,077  
Watch     -       120       17,160       1,814       980       4,600       6,942       5       31,621  
Special Mention     -       231       942       89       500       1,736       101       -       3,599  
Substandard     -       -       -       151       -       625       -       -       776  
Total Business     8,232       52,517       152,503       48,002       19,819       68,942       170,053       5       520,073  
Current period gross write-offs     -       -       -       -       (346 )     -       -       -       (346 )
Total Commercial loans     36,140       203,165       731,699       387,474       217,095       507,095       170,441       5       2,253,114  
                                                                         
Consumer                                                                        
Real estate                                                                        
Pass     18,718       146,761       281,881       276,118       171,468       168,438       -       -       1,063,384  
Watch     -       488       5,615       7,360       3,883       5,876       -       -       23,222  
Special Mention     -       142       2,487       1,905       1,282       5,253       -       -       11,069  
Substandard     -       275       350       631       986       1,656       -       -       3,898  
Total Real estate     18,718       147,666       290,333       286,014       177,619       181,223       -       -       1,101,573  
                                                                         
Home equity                                                                        
Pass     -       -       -       -       -       -       173,125       -       173,125  
Watch     -       -       -       -       -       -       6,103       -       6,103  
Special Mention     -       -       -       -       -       -       5,007       -       5,007  
Substandard     -       -       -       -       -       -       456       -       456  
Total Home equity     -       -       -       -       -       -       184,691       -       184,691  
                                                                         
Construction                                                                        
Pass     664       13,604       30,974       7,974       -       -       -       -       53,216  
Total Construction     664       13,604       30,974       7,974       -       -       -       -       53,216  
                                                                         
Other                                                                        
Pass     1,979       1,171       2,411       2,174       1,387       3,253       37,657       -       50,032  
Watch     -       8       25       345       -       156       51       -       585  
Special Mention     -       32       330       71       -       73       36       -       542  
Substandard     -       -       -       -       -       -       13       -       13  
Total Other     1,979       1,211       2,766       2,590       1,387       3,482       37,757       -       51,172  
Current period gross write-offs     -       -       -       -       -       (38 )     (40 )     -       (78 )
Total Consumer loans     21,361       162,481       324,073       296,578       179,006       184,705       222,448       -       1,390,652  
Total loans   $ 57,501       365,646       1,055,772       684,052       396,101       691,800       392,889       5       3,643,766  
Total Current period gross write-offs     -       -       -       -       (346 )     (38 )     (40 )     -       (424 )

15

Table of Contents 

The following table presents loan balances classified by credit quality indicators by year of origination as of December 31, 2023.

                                                       
    December 31, 2023  
(dollars in thousands)   2023     2022     2021     2020     2019     Prior     Revolving     Revolving Converted to Term     Total  
Commercial                                                                        
Owner occupied RE                                                                        
Pass   $ 42,846       180,654       138,549       64,818       59,880       110,502       85       166       597,500  
Watch     -       3,460       460       15,997       3,525       6,616       -       -       30,058  
Special Mention     -       181       -       -       -       3,057       -       -       3,238  
Substandard     -       -       -       -       -       861       -       -       861  
Total Owner occupied RE     42,846       184,295       139,009       80,815       63,405       121,036       85       166       631,657  
                                                                         
Non-owner occupied RE                                                                        
Pass     84,617       298,063       162,697       107,364       59,260       163,990       9,249       -       885,240  
Watch     1,007       3,260       9,914       533       5,545       10,630       -       -       30,889  
Special Mention     -       -       7,759       -       8,252       879       -       -       16,890  
Substandard     -       -       313       -       8,088       1,109       -       -       9,510  
Total Non-owner occupied RE     85,624       301,323       180,683       107,897       81,145       176,608       9,249       -       942,529  
Current period gross write-offs     -       (200 )     -       -       -       (42 )     -       -       (242 )
                                                                         
Construction                                                                        
Pass     27,262       86,161       24,399       11,459       -       -       -       -       149,281  
Watch     -       1,399       -       -       -       -       -       -       1,399  
Total Construction     27,262       87,560       24,399       11,459       -       -       -       -       150,680  
                                                                         
Business                                                                        
Pass     48,705       134,999       48,557       18,868       17,292       47,708       146,745       1,431       464,305  
Watch     127       15,867       1,833       1,010       842       3,584       7,570       506       31,339  
Special Mention     241       961       98       857       184       447       150       97       3,035  
Substandard     -       -       155       -       132       1,195       -       -       1,482  
Total Business     49,073       151,827       50,643       20,735       18,450       52,934       154,465       2,034       500,161  
Current period gross write-offs     -       -       -       (28 )     -       -       (15 )     (22 )     (65 )
Total Commercial loans     204,805       725,005       394,734       220,906       163,000       350,578       163,799       2,200       2,225,027  
                                                                         
Consumer                                                                        
Real estate                                                                        
Pass     144,179       273,585       278,138       176,395       66,087       105,383       -       -       1,043,767  
Watch     490       5,658       8,230       3,917       2,051       3,890       -       -       24,236  
Special Mention     143       2,499       1,657       1,291       2,220       3,360       -       -       11,170  
Substandard     -       -       635       817       318       1,486       -       -       3,256  
Total Real estate     144,812       281,742       288,660       182,420       70,676       114,119       -       -       1,082,429  
                                                                         
Home equity                                                                        
Pass     -       -       -       -       -       -       171,003       -       171,003  
Watch     -       -       -       -       -       -       6,393       -       6,393  
Special Mention     -       -       -       -       -       -       4,283       -       4,283  
Substandard     -       -       -       -       -       -       1,325       -       1,325  
Total Home equity     -       -       -       -       -       -       183,004       -       183,004  
Current period gross write-offs     -       -       -       -       -       -       (438 )     -       (438 )
                                                                         
Construction                                                                        
Pass     14,339       39,893       9,116       -       -       -       -       -       63,348  
Total Construction     14,339       39,893       9,116       -       -       -       -       -       63,348  
                                                                         
Other                                                                        
Pass     1,278       2,551       2,361       1,457       803       2,604       36,549       -       47,603  
Watch     9       29       348       -       15       163       58       -       622  
Special Mention     33       333       -       -       23       82       41       -       512  
Substandard     -       -       75       -       -       -       7       -       82  
Total Other     1,320       2,913       2,784       1,457       841       2,849       36,655       -       48,819  
Current period gross write-offs     -       -       -       -       -       -       (16 )     -       (16 )
Total Consumer loans     160,471       324,548       300,560       183,877       71,517       116,968       219,659       -       1,377,600  
Total loans   $ 365,276       1,049,553       695,294       404,783       234,517       467,546       383,458       2,200       3,602,627  
Total Current period gross write-offs     -       (200 )     -       (28 )     -       (42 )     (469 )     (22 )     (761 )

16

Table of Contents 

The following tables present loan balances by age and payment status.

Schedule of loan balances by payment status                                                
                         
    March 31, 2024  
(dollars in thousands)   Accruing 30-
59 days past
due
    Accruing 60-89
days past due
    Accruing 90
days or more
past due
    Nonaccrual
loans
    Accruing
current
    Total  
Commercial                                                
Owner occupied RE   $ -       -       -       -       631,047       631,047  
Non-owner occupied RE     8,031       27       -       1,410       935,062       944,530  
Construction     -       -       -       -       157,464       157,464  
Business     428       18       -       488       519,139       520,073  
Consumer                                                
Real estate     2,903       -       -       1,380       1,097,290       1,101,573  
Home equity     231       127       -       367       183,966       184,691  
Construction     -       -       -       -       53,216       53,216  
Other     -       7       -       1       51,164       51,172  
Total loans   $ 11,593       179       -       3,646       3,628,348       3,643,766  
Total loans over 90 days past due     -       -       -       -       -       889  
                                                 
      December 31, 2023  
(dollars in thousands)     Accruing 30-
59 days past
due
      Accruing 60-89
days past due
      Accruing 90
days or more
past due
      Nonaccrual
loans
      Accruing
current
      Total  
Commercial                                                
Owner occupied RE   $ 74       -       -       -       631,583       631,657  
Non-owner occupied RE     8,102       -       -       1,423       933,004       942,529  
Construction     -       -       -       -       150,680       150,680  
Business     567       -       -       319       499,275       500,161  
Consumer                                                
Real estate     1,750       -       -       985       1,079,694       1,082,429  
Home equity     601       30       -       1,236       181,137       183,004  
Construction     -       -       -       -       63,348       63,348  
Other     25       25       -       -       48,769       48,819  
Total loans   $ 11,119       55       -       3,963       3,587,490       3,602,627  
Total loans over 90 days past due     -       -       -       -       -       1,300  

As of March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, loans 30 days or more past due represented 0.36% and 0.37% of the Company’s total loan portfolio, respectively. Commercial loans 30 days or more past due were 0.24% and 0.27% of the Company’s total loan portfolio as of March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively. Consumer loans 30 days or more past due were 0.11% and 0.09% of total loans as of March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively.

17

Table of Contents 

The table below summarizes nonaccrual loans by major categories for the periods presented.

Schedule nonaccrual loans by major categories                                                
                   
    March 31, 2024           December 31, 2023  
    Nonaccrual     Nonaccrual           Nonaccrual     Nonaccrual        
    loans     loans     Total     loans     loans     Total  
    with no     with an     nonaccrual     with no     with an     nonaccrual  
(dollars in thousands)     allowance       allowance       loans       allowance       allowance       loans  
Commercial                                                
Owner occupied RE   $ -       -       -     $ -       -       -  
Non-owner occupied RE     646       764       1,410       653       770       1,423  
Construction     -       -       -       -       -       -  
Business     -       488       488       164       155       319  
Total commercial     646       1,252       1,898       817       925       1,742  
Consumer                                                
Real estate     625       755       1,380       -       985       985  
Home equity     367       -       367       343       893       1,236  
Construction     -       -       -       -       -       -  
Other     -       1       1       -       -       -  
Total consumer     992       756       1,748       343       1,878       2,221  
Total nonaccrual loans   $ 1,638       2,008       3,646     $ 1,160       2,803       3,963  

The Company did not recognize interest income on nonaccrual loans for the three months ended March 31, 2024 and March 31, 2023. The accrued interest reversed during the three months ended March 31, 2024 and March 31, 2023 was not material. Foregone interest income on the nonaccrual loans for the three-month period ended March 31, 2024 and March 31, 2023 was not material.0

The table below summarizes information regarding nonperforming assets.

Schedule of nonperforming assets            
             
(dollars in thousands)   March 31, 2024     December 31, 2023  
Nonaccrual loans   $ 3,646       3,963  
Other real estate owned     -       -  
Total nonperforming assets   $ 3,646       3,963  
Nonperforming assets as a percentage of:                
Total assets     0.09 %     0.10 %
Gross loans     0.10 %     0.11 %
Total loans over 90 days past due   $ 889       1,300  
Loans over 90 days past due and still accruing     -       -  

Modifications to Borrowers Experiencing Financial Difficulty

The Company adopted Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”) 2022-02, Financial Instruments - Credit Losses (Topic 326) Troubled Debt Restructurings and Vintage Disclosures (“ASU 2022-02”) effective January 1, 2023. The amendments in ASU 2022-02 eliminated the recognition and measure of troubled debt restructurings and enhanced disclosures for loan modifications to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty.

The allowance for credit losses incorporates an estimate of lifetime expected credit losses and is recorded on each asset upon origination or acquisition. The starting point for the estimate of the allowance for credit losses is historical loss information, which includes losses from modifications of receivables to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty. The Company uses a probability of default/loss given default model to determine the allowance for credit losses. An assessment of whether a borrower is experiencing financial difficulty is made on the date of a modification.

Because the effect of most modifications made to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty is already included in the allowance for credit losses because of the measurement methodologies used to estimate the allowance, a change to the allowance for credit losses is generally not recorded upon modification.

18

Table of Contents 

There were no loans modified to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty during the three months ended March 31, 2024. The following table shows the amortized cost basis of the loans modified to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty during the twelve months ended December 31, 2023, disaggregated by class of loans and type of concession granted and describes the financial effect of the modifications made to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty.

Schedule of amortized cost basis of loans                
                Term Extension
(dollars in thousands)   Amortized Cost Basis     % of Total Loan Type     Financial Effect
Commercial Business   $ 309       0.06 %   Added a 1-year term to both of the loans modified. One loan was granted an extended amortization due to the inability to pay on a 3-year amortization. The other loan was given an interest only period due to the ability to pay only interest to get the loan renewed.

Neither of the two loans modified had a payment default during the period. The Company closely monitors the performance of the loans that are modified for borrowers experiencing financial difficulty to understand the effectiveness of its modification efforts. Both loans are in current payment status since the loan modification occurred in the third quarter of 2023. There have been no commitments to lend additional funds to the borrowers experiencing financial difficulty as of March 31, 2024.

Allowance for Credit Losses

The Company maintains an allowance for credit losses to provide for expected credit losses. Losses are charged against the allowance when management believes that the principal is uncollectable. Subsequent recoveries, if any, are credited to the allowance. Allocations of the allowance are made for specific loans and for pools of similar types of loans, although the entire allowance is available for any loan that, in management’s judgment, should be charged against the allowance. A provision for credit losses is taken based on management’s ongoing evaluation of the appropriate allowance balance.

A formal evaluation of the adequacy of the credit loss allowance is conducted quarterly. This assessment includes procedures to estimate the allowance and test the adequacy and appropriateness of the resulting balance. The level of the allowance is based upon management's evaluation of historical default and loss experience, current and projected economic conditions, asset quality trends, known and inherent risks in the portfolio, adverse situations that may affect the borrowers' ability to repay a loan, the estimated value of any underlying collateral, composition of the loan portfolio, industry and peer bank loan quality indications and other pertinent factors, including regulatory recommendations. Management believes the level of the allowance for credit losses is adequate to absorb all expected future losses inherent in the loan portfolio at the balance sheet date. The allowance is increased through provision for credit losses and decreased by charge-offs, net of recoveries of amounts previously charged-off.

The Company uses a lifetime probability of default and loss given default modeling approach to estimate the allowance for credit losses on loans. This method uses historical correlations between default experience and the age of loans to forecast defaults and losses, assuming that a loan in a pool shares similar risk characteristics such as loan product type, risk rating and loan age, and demonstrates similar default characteristics as other loans in that pool, as the loan progresses through its lifecycle. The Company calculates lifetime probability of default and loss given default rates based on historical loss experience, which is used to calculate expected losses based on the pool’s loss rate and the age of loans in the pool. Management believes that the Company’s historical loss experience provides the best basis for its assessment of expected credit losses to determine the allowance for credit losses. The Company uses its own internal data to measure historical credit loss experience within the pools with similar risk characteristics over an economic cycle. The probability of default and loss given default method also includes assumptions of observed migration over the lifetime of the underlying loan data. Loans that do not share risk characteristics are evaluated for expected credit losses on an individual basis and excluded from the collective evaluation.

19

Table of Contents 

Management also considers further adjustments to historical loss information for current conditions and reasonable and supportable forecasts that differ from the conditions that exist for the period over which historical information is evaluated as well as other changes in qualitative factors not inherently considered in the quantitative analyses. The Company generally utilizes a four-quarter forecast period in evaluating the appropriateness of the reasonable and supportable forecast scenarios which are incorporated through qualitative adjustments. There is immediate reversion to historical loss rates. The qualitative categories and the measurements used to quantify the risks within each of these categories are subjectively selected by management but measured by objective measurements period over period. The data for each measurement may be obtained from internal or external sources. The current period measurements are evaluated and assigned a factor commensurate with the current level of risk relative to past measurements over time. The resulting qualitative adjustments are applied to the relevant collectively evaluated loan pools. These adjustments are based upon quarterly trend assessments in certain economic factors such as labor, inflation, consumer sentiment and real disposable income, as well as associate retention and turnover, portfolio concentrations, and growth characteristics. The qualitative analysis increases or decreases the allowance allocation for each loan pool based on the assessment of factors described above.

The following tables summarize the activity related to the allowance for credit losses for the three months ended March 31, 2024 and March 31, 2023 under the CECL methodology.

Schedule of activity related to the allowance for credit losses                                                      
                         
                      Three months ended March 31, 2024  
    Commercial     Consumer          
(dollars in thousands)   Owner
occupied
RE
    Non-
owner
occupied
RE
    Construction     Business     Real
Estate
    Home
Equity
    Construction     Other       Total  
Balance, beginning of period   $ 6,118       11,167       1,594       7,385       10,647       2,600       677       494       40,682  
Provision for credit losses     -       -       -       -       -       -       -       -       -  
Loan charge-offs     -       -       -       (346 )     -       -       -       (78 )     (424 )
Loan recoveries     -       -       -       15       -       119       -       49       183  
Net loan recoveries (charge-offs)     -       -       -       (331 )     -       119       -       (29 )     (241 )
Balance, end of period   $ 6,118       11,167       1,594       7,054       10,647       2,719       677       465       40,441  
Net charge-offs to average loans (annualized)                                                                     0.03 %
Allowance for credit losses to gross loans                                                                     1.11 %
Allowance for credit losses to nonperforming loans                                                                     1,109.13 %
                                                                         
                              Three months ended March 31, 2023  
      Commercial                     Consumer          
(dollars in thousands)     Owner occupied RE       Non-owner occupied RE       Construction       Business       Real Estate      

Home

Equity

      Construction       Other       Total  
Balance, beginning of period   $ 5,867       10,376       1,292       7,861       9,487       2,551       893       312       38,639  
Provision for credit losses     117       1,038       (182 )     150       592       53       (83 )     170       1,855  
Loan charge-offs     -       (160 )     -        (1 )     -       -       -       -       (161 )
Loan recoveries     -       31       -       12       -       59       -       -       102  
Net loan recoveries (charge-offs)     -       (129 )     -       11       -       59       -       -       (59 )
Balance, end of period   $ 5,984       11,285       1,110       8,022       10,079       2,663       810       482       40,435  
Net charge-offs to average loans (annualized)                                                                     0.01 %
Allowance for credit losses to gross loans                                                                     1.18 %
Allowance for credit losses to nonperforming loans                                                                     854.33 %

There was no provision for credit losses recorded during the first quarter of 2024, compared to a provision of $1.9 million for the first quarter of 2023. No provision was recorded during the first quarter of 2024 due to continued low net charge-offs and a continued decline of the expected loss rates in the allowance for credit losses.

Collateral dependent loans are loans for which the repayment is expected to be provided substantially through the operation or sale of the collateral and the borrower is experiencing financial difficulty. The Company reviews individually evaluated loans for designation as collateral dependent loans, as well as other loans that management of the Company designates as having higher risk. These loans do not share common risk characteristics and are not included within the collectively evaluated loans for determining the allowance for credit losses.

20

Table of Contents 

Under CECL, for collateral dependent loans, the Company has adopted the practical expedient to measure the allowance for credit losses based on the fair value of collateral. The allowance for credit losses is calculated on an individual loan basis based on the shortfall between the fair value of the loan's collateral, which is adjusted for liquidation costs/discounts, and amortized cost. If the fair value of the collateral exceeds the amortized cost, no allowance is required.

The following tables present an analysis of collateral-dependent loans of the Company as of March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023.

Schedule of analysis of collateral-dependent loans                        
             
          March 31, 2024  
  Real   Business          
(dollars in thousands) estate   assets   Other   Total  
Commercial                        
Owner occupied RE $ -     -     -     -  
Non-owner occupied RE   723     -     -     723  
Construction   -     -     -     -  
Business   -     -     -     -  
Total commercial   723     -     -     723  
Consumer                        
Real estate   789     -     -     789  
Home equity   367     -     -     367  
Construction   -     -     -     -  
Other   -     -     -     -  
Total consumer   1,156     -     -     1,156  
Total $ 1,879     -     -     1,879  
                         
  December 31, 2023  
    Real     Business              
(dollars in thousands)   estate     assets     Other     Total  
Commercial                        
Owner occupied RE $ -     -     -     -  
Non-owner occupied RE   720     -     -     720  
Construction   -     -     -     -  
Business   164     -     -     164  
Total commercial   884     -     -     884  
Consumer                        
Real estate   166     -     -     166  
Home equity   343     -     -     343  
Construction   -     -     -     -  
Other   -     -     -     -  
Total consumer   509     -     -     509  
Total $ 1,393     -     -     1,393  

21

Table of Contents 

Allowance for Credit Losses - Unfunded Loan Commitments

The allowance for credit losses for unfunded loan commitments was $1.7 million and $1.8 million at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively, and is separately classified on the balance sheet within other liabilities. The following table presents the balance and activity in the allowance for credit losses for unfunded loan commitments for the three months ended March 31, 2024 and for the twelve months ended December 31, 2023.

Schedule of allowance for credit losses for unfunded loan commitments            
         
  Three months ended   Twelve months ended  
(dollars in thousands) March 31, 2024   December 31, 2023  
Balance, beginning of period $ 1,831     2,780  
Provision for (reversal of) credit losses   (175 )   (949 )
Balance, end of period $ 1,656     1,831  
Unfunded Loan Commitments $ 710,669     724,606  
Reserve for Unfunded Commitments to Unfunded Loan Commitments   0.23 %   0.25 %

NOTE 5 – Derivative Financial Instruments

The Company utilizes derivative financial instruments primarily to manage its exposure to changes in interest rates. All derivative financial instruments are recognized as either assets or liabilities and measured at fair value.

The Company enters into commitments to originate residential mortgage loans held for sale, at specified interest rates and within a specified period of time, with clients who have applied for a loan and meet certain credit and underwriting criteria (interest rate lock commitments). These interest rate lock commitments (“IRLCs”) meet the definition of a derivative financial instrument and are reflected in the balance sheet at fair value with changes in fair value recognized in current period earnings. Unrealized gains and losses on the IRLCs are recorded as derivative assets and derivative liabilities, respectively, and are measured based on the value of the underlying mortgage loan, quoted mortgage-backed securities (“MBS”) prices and an estimate of the probability that the mortgage loan will fund within the terms of the interest rate lock commitment, net of estimated commission expenses.

The Company manages the interest rate and price risk associated with its outstanding IRLCs and mortgage loans held for sale by entering into derivative instruments such as forward sales of MBS. These derivatives are free- standing derivatives and are not designated as instruments for hedge accounting. Management expects these derivatives will experience changes in fair value opposite to changes in fair value of the IRLCs and mortgage loans held for sale, thereby reducing earnings volatility. The Company takes into account various factors and strategies in determining the portion of the mortgage pipeline (IRLCs and mortgage loans held for sale) it wants to economically hedge. The gain or loss resulting from the change in the fair value of the derivative is recognized in the Company’s statement of income during the period of change.

The Company entered into a pay-fixed portfolio layer method fair value swap, designated as a hedging instrument, with a total notional amount of $200.0 million in the second quarter of 2023. The hedging instrument matures on May 25, 2028. The Company is designating the fair value swap under the portfolio layer method (“PLM”). Under this method, the hedged item is designated as a hedged layer of a closed portfolio of financial loans that is anticipated to remain outstanding for the designated hedged period. Adjustments are made to record the swap at fair value on the consolidated balance sheets, with changes in fair value recognized in interest income. The carrying value of the fair value swap on the consolidated balance sheets will also be adjusted through interest income, based on changes in fair value attributable to changes in the hedged risk.

The following table represents the carrying value of the portfolio layer method hedged asset and liability and the cumulative fair value hedging adjustment included in the carrying value of the hedged asset as of March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023.

Schedule of carrying value of hedged asset and liability and cumulative fair value hedging adjustment        
  March 31, 2024   December 31, 2023  
(dollars in thousands)   Carrying
Amount
    Hedged Asset     Carrying
Amount
    Hedged Liability  
Fixed Rate Asset/Liability1 $ 203,206   $ 3,206   $ 199,518   $ 482  

22

Table of Contents 
1 These amounts included the amortized cost basis of closed portfolios of fixed rate loans used to designate hedging relationships in which the hedged item is the stated amount of the assets in the closed portfolio anticipated to be outstanding for the designated hedged period. As of March 31, 2024, the amortized cost basis of the closed portfolio used in this hedging relationship was $706.9 million, the cumulative basis adjustment associated with this hedging relationship was $3.2 million, and the amount of the designated hedged item was $200.0 million.

The following table summarizes the Company’s outstanding financial derivative instruments at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023.

Schedule of outstanding financial derivative instruments            
          March 31, 2024  
          Fair Value  
(dollars in thousands) Notional   Balance Sheet
Location
  Asset/(Liability)  
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments:                
Fair value swap Fair value swap [Member] $ 200,000   Other assets   $ 3,206  
                 
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:                
Mortgage loan interest rate lock commitments Mortgage loan interest rate lock commitments [Member]   28,986   Other assets     316  
MBS forward sales commitments MBS forward sales commitments [Member]   19,500   Other liabilities     (59 )
Total derivative financial instruments Total derivative financial instruments [Member] $ 248,486       $ 3,463  
                 
              December 31, 2023  
              Fair Value  
(dollars in thousands)   Notional   Balance Sheet
Location
    Asset/(Liability)  
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments:                
Fair value swap $ 200,000   Other liabilities   $ (482 )
                 
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:                
Mortgage loan interest rate lock commitments   12,973   Other assets     159  
MBS forward sales commitments   10,000   Other liabilities     (68 )
Total derivative financial instruments $ 222,973       $ (391 )

Accrued interest receivable related to the interest rate swap as of March 31, 2024 totaled $291,000 and is excluded from the fair value presented in the table above.

The Company assesses the effectiveness of the fair value swap hedge with a regression analysis that compares the changes in forward curves to determine the value. The effective portion of changes in fair value of derivatives designated as fair value hedges is recorded through interest income. The Company does not offset derivative assets and derivative liabilities for financial statement presentation purposes.

The following table summarizes the effect of the fair value hedging relationship recognized in the consolidated statements of income for the three months ended March 31, 2024 and March 31, 2023.

Schedule of summarize the effect of fair value hedging relationship recognized in consolidated statement of income    
  Three months ended
March 31,
 
(dollars in thousands)   2024     2023  
Gain (loss) on fair value hedging relationship:            
Hedged asset $ 3,688     -  
Fair value derivative designated as hedging instrument   (3,738 )   -  
Total gain (loss) recognized in interest income on loans $ (50 )   -  

NOTE 6 – Fair Value Accounting

FASB ASC 820, “Fair Value Measurement and Disclosures,” defines fair value as the exchange price that would be received for an asset or paid to transfer a liability (an exit price) in the principal or most advantageous market for the asset or liability in an orderly transaction between market participants on the measurement date. FASB ASC 820 also establishes a fair value hierarchy which requires an entity to maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable inputs when measuring fair value.

23

Table of Contents 

The standard describes three levels of inputs that may be used to measure fair value:

  Level 1 – Quoted market price in active markets
 

Quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities. Level 1 assets and liabilities include certain debt and equity securities that are traded in an active exchange market.

   
  Level 2 – Significant other observable inputs
 

Observable inputs other than Level 1 prices such as quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities; quoted prices in markets that are not active; or other inputs that are observable or can be corroborated by observable market data for substantially the full term of the assets or liabilities. Level 2 assets and liabilities include fixed income securities and mortgage-backed securities that are held in the Company’s available-for-sale portfolio and valued by a third-party pricing service, as well as certain individually evaluated loans.

   
  Level 3 – Significant unobservable inputs
  Unobservable inputs that are supported by little or no market activity and that are significant to the fair value of the assets or liabilities. Level 3 assets and liabilities include financial instruments whose value is determined using pricing models, discounted cash flow methodologies, or similar techniques, as well as instruments for which the determination of fair value requires significant management judgment or estimation.  These methodologies may result in a significant portion of the fair value being derived from unobservable data.  

The methods of determining the fair value of assets and liabilities presented in this note are consistent with our methodologies disclosed in Note 12 of the Company’s 2023 Annual Report on Form 10-K. See Note 5 for how the derivative asset fair value is determined. The Company’s loan portfolio is initially fair valued using a segmented approach, using the eight categories of loans as disclosed in Note 4 – Loans and Allowance for Credit Losses. Loans are considered a Level 3 classification.

Assets and Liabilities Recorded at Fair Value on a Recurring Basis

The tables below present the recorded amount of assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis as of March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023.

Schedule of assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis                
             
          March 31, 2024  
(dollars in thousands) Level 1   Level 2   Level 3   Total  
Assets                        
Securities available for sale                        
Corporate bonds Level 1 [Member] $ -     1,887     -     1,887  
US treasuries Level 2 [Member]   -     888     -     888  
US government agencies Level 3 [Member]   -     18,197     -     18,197  
State and political subdivisions   -     19,537     -     19,537  
Asset-backed securities   -     34,204     -     34,204  
Mortgage-backed securities   -     51,283     -     51,283  
Mortgage loans held for sale   -     11,842     -     11,842  
Mortgage loan interest rate lock commitments   -     316     -     316  
Derivative asset   -     3,206     -     3,206  
Total assets measured at fair value on a recurring basis $ -     141,360     -     141,360  
Liabilities                        
MBS forward sales commitments $ -     59     -     59  
Total liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis $ -     59     -     59  

24

Table of Contents 

                                 
                         
    December 31, 2023  
(dollars in thousands)   Level 1     Level 2     Level 3     Total  
Assets                                
Securities available for sale:                                
Corporate bonds   $ -       1,910       -       1,910  
US treasuries     -       9,394       -       9,394  
US government agencies     -       18,656       -       18,656  
State and political subdivisions     -       19,741       -       19,741  
Asset-backed securities     -       33,236       -       33,236  
Mortgage-backed securities     -       51,765       -       51,765  
Mortgage loans held for sale     -       7,194       -       7,194  
Mortgage loan interest rate lock commitments     -       159       -       159  
Total assets measured at fair value on a recurring basis   $ -       142,055       -       142,055  
Liabilities                                
Derivative liability   $ -       482       -       482  
MBS forward sales commitments     -       68       -       68  
Total liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis   $ -       550       -       550  

Assets and Liabilities Recorded at Fair Value on a Nonrecurring Basis

The tables below present the recorded amount of assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis as of March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023.

Schedule of assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis                        
                As of March 31, 2024  
(dollars in thousands)   Level 1     Level 2     Level 3     Total  
Assets                        
Individually evaluated loans   $ -       1,638       2,153       3,791  
Total assets measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis   $ -       1,638       2,153       3,791  
                                 
                      As of December 31, 2023  
(dollars in thousands)     Level 1       Level 2       Level 3       Total  
Assets                                
Individually evaluated loans   $ -       1,160       2,976       4,136  
Total assets measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis   $ -       1,160       2,976       4,136  

The Company had no liabilities carried at fair value or measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis.

For Level 3 assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring or nonrecurring basis as of March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, the significant unobservable inputs used in the fair value measurements were as follows:

Schedule of unobservable inputs used in the fair value measurements Valuation Technique Significant Unobservable Inputs Range of Inputs
Individually evaluated loans Appraised Value/ Discounted Cash Flows Discounts to appraisals or cash flows for estimated holding and/or selling costs or age of appraisal 0-25%

Fair Value of Financial Instruments

Financial instruments require disclosure of fair value information, whether or not recognized in the consolidated balance sheets, when it is practical to estimate the fair value. A financial instrument is defined as cash, evidence of an ownership interest in an entity or a contractual obligation which requires the exchange of cash. Certain items are specifically excluded from the disclosure requirements, including the Company’s common stock, premises and equipment and other assets and liabilities.

25

Table of Contents 

The estimated fair values of the Company’s financial instruments at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023 are as follows:

Schedule of estimated fair values of the company's financial instruments                                        
                   
          March 31, 2024  
(dollars in thousands)   Carrying
Amount
    Fair
Value
    Level 1     Level 2     Level 3  
Financial Assets:                                        
Other investments, at cost   $ 18,499       18,499       -       -       18,499  
Loans1     3,598,837       3,269,154       -       -       3,269,154  
Financial Liabilities:                                        
Deposits     3,460,681       2,954,382       -       2,954,382       -  
Subordinated debentures     36,349       40,617       -       40,617       -  

 

    December 31, 2023  
(dollars in thousands)   Carrying
Amount
    Fair
Value
    Level 1     Level 2     Level 3  
Financial Assets:                                        
Other investments, at cost   $ 19,939       19,939       -       -       19,939  
Loans1     3,557,120       3,337,768       -       -       3,337,768  
Financial Liabilities:                                        
Deposits     3,379,564       2,961,182       -       2,961,182       -  
Subordinated debentures     36,322       40,712       -       40,712       -  
1 Carrying amount is net of the allowance for credit losses and individually evaluated loans.

NOTE 7 – Leases

The Company had operating right-of-use (“ROU”) assets, included in property and equipment, of $21.8 million and $22.2 million as of March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively.  The Company had lease liabilities, included in other liabilities, of $24.3 million and $24.6 million as of March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively. We maintain operating leases on land and buildings for various office spaces. The lease agreements have maturity dates ranging from April 2025 to February 2032, some of which include options for multiple five-year extensions. The weighted average remaining life of the lease term for these leases was 5.67 years as of March 31, 2024. The ROU asset and lease liability are recognized at lease commencement by calculating the present value of lease payments over the lease term.  The ROU assets also include any initial direct costs incurred and lease payments made at or before commencement date and are reduced by any lease incentives.

The discount rate used in determining the lease liability for each individual lease was the FHLB fixed advance rate which corresponded with the remaining lease term at implementation of the accounting standard and as of the lease commencement date for leases subsequently entered into. The weighted average discount rate for leases was 2.29% as of March 31, 2024.

The total operating lease costs were $593,000 and $595,000 for the three months ended March 31, 2024 and 2023, respectively.

26

Table of Contents 

Operating lease payments due as of March 31, 2024 were as follows:

Schedule of maturities of lease liabilities        
(dollars in thousands)    

Operating
Leases

 
2024   $ 1,578  
2025     2,157  
2026     2,210  
2027     2,267  
2028     2,015  
Thereafter     20,187  
Total undiscounted lease payments     30,414  
Discount effect of cash flows     6,117  
Total lease liability   $ 24,297  

NOTE 8 – Earnings Per Common Share

The following schedule reconciles the numerators and denominators of the basic and diluted earnings per share computations for the three-month periods ended March 31, 2024 and 2023. Dilutive common shares arise from the potentially dilutive effect of the Company’s stock options that were outstanding at March 31, 2024. The assumed conversion of stock options can create a difference between basic and dilutive net income per common share. At March 31, 2024 and 2023, there were 212,863 and 205,689 options, respectively, that were not considered in computing diluted earnings per common share because they were anti-dilutive.

Schedule of earnings per share calculation            
  Three months ended
March 31,
 
(dollars in thousands, except share data)     2024       2023  
Numerator:                
Net income available to common shareholders   $ 2,522       2,703  
Denominator:                
Weighted-average common shares outstanding – basic     8,110,249       8,025,876  
Common stock equivalents     31,672       66,394  
Weighted-average common shares outstanding – diluted     8,141,921       8,092,270  
Earnings per common share:                
Basic   $ 0.31       0.34  
Diluted     0.31       0.33  

Item 2. MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS.

The following discussion reviews our results of operations for the three month period ended March 31, 2024 as compared to the three month period ended March 31, 2023 and assesses our financial condition as of March 31, 2024 as compared to December 31, 2023. You should read the following discussion and analysis in conjunction with the accompanying consolidated financial statements and the related notes and the consolidated financial statements and the related notes for the year ended December 31, 2023 included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for that period. Results for the three month period ended March 31, 2024 are not necessarily indicative of the results for the year ending December 31, 2024 or any future period.

Unless the context requires otherwise, references to the “Company,” “we,” “us,” “our,” or similar references mean Southern First Bancshares, Inc. and its consolidated subsidiary. References to the “Bank” refer to Southern First Bank.

Cautionary Warning Regarding forward-looking statements

This report contains statements which constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”). Forward-looking statements may relate to our financial condition, results of operations, plans, objectives, or future performance.

27

Table of Contents 

These statements are based on many assumptions and estimates and are not guarantees of future performance. Our actual results may differ materially from those anticipated in any forward-looking statements, as they will depend on many factors about which we are unsure, including many factors which are beyond our control. The words “may,” “would,” “could,” “should,” “will,” “seek to,” “strive,” “focus,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “predict,” “project,” “potential,” “believe,” “continue,” “assume,” “intend,” “plan,” and “estimate,” as well as similar expressions, are meant to identify such forward-looking statements. Potential risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ from those anticipated in any forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to:

Restrictions or conditions imposed by our regulators on our operations;
Increases in competitive pressure in the banking and financial services industries;
Changes in access to funding or increased regulatory requirements with regard to funding, which could impair our liquidity;
Changes in deposit flows, which may be negatively affected by a number of factors, including rates paid by competitors, general interest rate levels, regulatory capital requirements, returns available to clients on alternative investments and general economic or industry conditions;
Credit losses as a result of declining real estate values, increasing interest rates, increasing unemployment, changes in payment behavior or other factors;
Credit losses due to loan concentration;
Changes in the amount of our loan portfolio collateralized by real estate and weaknesses in the real estate market;
Our ability to successfully execute our business strategy;
Our ability to attract and retain key personnel;
The success and costs of our expansion into the Charlotte, North Carolina, Greensboro, North Carolina and Atlanta, Georgia markets and into potential new markets;
Risks with respect to future mergers or acquisitions, including our ability to successfully expand and integrate the businesses and operations that we acquire and realize the anticipated benefits of the mergers or acquisitions;
Changes in the interest rate environment which could reduce anticipated or actual margins;
Changes in political conditions or the legislative or regulatory environment, including new governmental initiatives affecting the financial services industry;
Changes in economic conditions resulting in, among other things, a deterioration in credit quality;
Changes occurring in business conditions and inflation;
Increased cybersecurity risk, including potential business disruptions or financial losses;
Changes in technology;
The adequacy of the level of our allowance for credit losses and the amount of loan loss provisions required in future periods;
Examinations by our regulatory authorities, including the possibility that the regulatory authorities may, among other things, require us to increase our allowance for credit losses or write-down assets;
Changes in U.S. monetary policy, the level and volatility of interest rates, the capital markets and other market conditions that may affect, among other things, our liquidity and the value of our assets and liabilities;
Any increase in FDIC assessments which will increase our cost of doing business;
Risks associated with complex and changing regulatory environments, including, among others, with respect to data privacy, artificial intelligence, information security, climate change or other environmental, social and governance matters, and labor matters, relating to our operations;
The rate of delinquencies and amounts of loans charged-off;

28

Table of Contents 

The rate of loan growth in recent years and the lack of seasoning of a portion of our loan portfolio;
Our ability to maintain appropriate levels of capital and to comply with our capital ratio requirements;
Adverse changes in asset quality and resulting credit risk-related losses and expenses;
Changes in accounting standards, rules and interpretations and the related impact on our financial statements;
Risks associated with actual or potential litigation or investigations by customers, regulatory agencies or others;
Adverse effects of failures by our vendors to provide agreed upon services in the manner and at the cost agreed;
The potential effects of events beyond our control that may have a destabilizing effect on financial markets and the economy, such as epidemics and pandemics, war or terrorist activities, such as the war in Ukraine, the Middle East conflict, and the conflict between China and Taiwan, disruptions in our customers’ supply chains, disruptions in transportation, essential utility outages or trade disputes and related tariffs; and
Other risks and uncertainties detailed in Part I, Item 1A, “Risk Factors” of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023, in Part II, Item 1A, “Risk Factors” of our Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, and in our other filings with the SEC.

If any of these risks or uncertainties materialize, or if any of the assumptions underlying such forward-looking statements proves to be incorrect, our results could differ materially from those expressed in, implied or projected by, such forward-looking statements. We urge investors to consider all of these factors carefully in evaluating the forward-looking statements contained in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q. We make these forward-looking statements as of the date of this document and we do not intend, and assume no obligation, to update the forward-looking statements or to update the reasons why actual results could differ from those expressed in, or implied or projected by, the forward-looking statements, except as required by law.

OVERVIEW

Our business model continues to be client-focused, utilizing relationship teams to provide our clients with a specific banker contact and support team responsible for all of their banking needs. The purpose of this structure is to provide a consistent and superior level of professional service, and we believe it provides us with a distinct competitive advantage. We consider exceptional client service to be a critical part of our culture, which we refer to as “ClientFIRST.”

At March 31, 2024, we had total assets of $4.11 billion, a 1.2% increase from total assets of $4.06 billion at December 31, 2023. The largest component of our total assets is loans which were $3.64 billion and $3.60 billion at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively. Our liabilities and shareholders’ equity at March 31, 2024 totaled $3.79 billion and $315.3 million, respectively, compared to liabilities of $3.74 billion and shareholders’ equity of $312.5 million at December 31, 2023. The principal component of our liabilities is deposits which were $3.46 billion and $3.38 billion at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively.

Like most community banks, we derive the majority of our income from interest received on our loans and investments. Our primary source of funds for making these loans and investments is our deposits, on which we pay interest. Consequently, one of the key measures of our success is our amount of net interest income, or the difference between the income on our interest-earning assets, such as loans and investments, and the expense on our interest-bearing liabilities, such as deposits and borrowings. Another key measure is the spread between the yield we earn on these interest-earning assets and the rate we pay on our interest-bearing liabilities, which is called our net interest spread. In addition to earning interest on our loans and investments, we earn income through fees and other charges to our clients.

Our net income to common shareholders was $2.5 million and $2.7 million for the three months ended March 31, 2024 and 2023, respectively. Diluted earnings per share (“EPS”) was $0.31 for the first quarter of 2024 as compared to $0.33 for the same period in 2023. The decrease in net income was primarily driven by a decrease in net interest income resulting from an increase in deposit and funding costs.

29

Table of Contents 

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

Net Interest Income and Margin

Our level of net interest income is determined by the level of earning assets and the management of our net interest margin. Our net interest income was $18.6 million for the first quarter of 2024, an 8.7% decrease over net interest income of $20.4 million for the first quarter of 2023, driven primarily by an $11.8 million increase in interest expense on our deposit accounts, partially offset by a $10.0 million increase in interest income. In addition, our net interest margin, on a tax-equivalent basis (TE), was 1.94% for the first quarter of 2024 compared to 2.36% for the same period in 2023.

We have included a number of tables to assist in our description of various measures of our financial performance. For example, the “Average Balances, Income and Expenses, Yields and Rates” table reflects the average balance of each category of our assets and liabilities as well as the yield we earned or the rate we paid with respect to each category during the three month periods ended March 31, 2024 and 2023. A review of this table shows that our loans typically provide higher interest yields than do other types of interest-earning assets, which is why we direct a substantial percentage of our earning assets into our loan portfolio. Similarly, the “Rate/Volume Analysis” tables demonstrate the effect of changing interest rates and changing volume of assets and liabilities on our financial condition during the periods shown. We also track the sensitivity of our various categories of assets and liabilities to changes in interest rates, and we have included tables to illustrate our interest rate sensitivity with respect to interest-earning accounts and interest-bearing accounts.

The following tables entitled “Average Balances, Income and Expenses, Yield and Rates” set forth information related to our average balance sheets, average yields on assets, and average costs of liabilities. We derived these yields by dividing income or expense by the average balance of the corresponding assets or liabilities. We derived average balances from the daily balances throughout the periods indicated. During the same periods, we had no securities purchased with agreements to resell. All investments owned have an original maturity of over one year. Nonaccrual loans are included in the following tables. Loan yields have been reduced to reflect the negative impact on our earnings of loans on nonaccrual status. The net of capitalized loan costs and fees are amortized into interest income on loans.

30

Table of Contents 

Average Balances, Income and Expenses, Yields and Rates

    For the Three Months Ended March 31,  
    2024     2023  
(dollars in thousands)     Average
Balance
      Income/
Expense
      Yield/
Rate(1)
      Average
Balance
      Income/
Expense
      Yield/
Rate(1)
 
Interest-earning assets                                                
Federal funds sold and interest-bearing deposits with banks   $ 94,420     $ 1,280       5.44 %   $ 85,966     $ 969       4.57 %
Investment securities, taxable     137,271       1,436       4.20 %     87,521       530       2.46 %
Investment securities, nontaxable(2)     8,097       55       2.70 %     10,266       106       4.21 %
Loans(3)     3,622,972       45,605       5.05 %     3,334,530       36,748       4.47 %
Total interest-earning assets     3,862,760       48,376       5.02 %     3,518,283       38,353       4.42 %
Noninterest-earning assets     155,362                       161,310                  
 Total assets   $ 4,018,122                     $ 3,679,593                  
Interest-bearing liabilities                                                
NOW accounts   $ 295,774       660       0.90 %   $ 303,176       440       0.59 %
Savings & money market     1,620,521       16,299       4.03 %     1,661,878       11,992       2.93 %
Time deposits     801,734       9,973       4.99 %     543,425       4,747       3.54 %
Total interest-bearing deposits     2,718,029       26,932       3.97 %     2,508,479       17,179       2.78 %
FHLB advances and other borrowings     241,319       2,229       3.71 %     18,243       200       4.45 %
Subordinated debentures     36,333       557       6.15 %     36,224       527       5.90 %
Total interest-bearing liabilities     2,995,681       29,718       3.98 %     2,562,946       17,906       2.83 %
Noninterest-bearing liabilities     707,890                       818,123                  
Shareholders’ equity     314,551                       298,524                  
Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity   $ 4,018,122                     $ 3,679,593                  
Net interest spread                     1.04 %                     1.59 %
Net interest income (tax equivalent) / margin           $ 18,658       1.94 %           $ 20,447       2.36 %
Less: tax-equivalent adjustment(2)             13                       23          
Net interest income           $ 18,645                     $ 20,424          
(1) Annualized for the three month period.
(2) The tax-equivalent adjustment to net interest income adjusts the yield for assets earning tax-exempt income to a comparable yield on a taxable basis.
(3) Includes mortgage loans held for sale.

Our net interest margin (TE) decreased 42 basis points to 1.94% during the first quarter of 2024, compared to the first quarter of 2023, primarily due to our deposit and borrowing costs increasing faster than our loan yield as our interest-bearing liabilities have been more sensitive to changes in the federal funds rate over the past two years. Our average interest-bearing liabilities grew by $432.7 million during the first quarter of 2024 from the prior year, while the rate on these liabilities increased 115 basis points to 3.98%. In contrast, our average interest-earning assets grew by $344.5 million during the first quarter of 2024 from the prior year, while the average yield on these assets increased by only 60 basis points to 5.02% during the same period.

The increase in our average interest-bearing liabilities during the first quarter of 2024 resulted primarily from a $209.6 million increase in our interest-bearing deposits from the prior year, while the 115 basis point increase in rate on our interest-bearing liabilities was driven by a 119 basis point increase in deposit rates.

The increase in average interest-earning assets for the first quarter of 2024 related primarily to an increase of $288.4 million in our average loan balances from the prior year. The 60 basis point increase in yield on our interest-earning assets was driven by a 58 basis point increase in loan yield as our loan portfolio has repriced at rates higher than historical rates for the majority of the past 12 months.

Our net interest spread was 1.04% for the first quarter of 2024 compared to 1.59% for the same period in 2023. The net interest spread is the difference between the yield we earn on our interest-earning assets and the rate we pay on our interest-bearing liabilities. The 115 basis point increase in the rate on our interest-bearing liabilities was partially offset by a 60 basis point increase in yield on our interest-earning assets, resulting in a 55 basis point decrease in our net interest spread for the 2024 period. We anticipate continued pressure on our net interest spread and net interest margin in future periods as a significant portion of our loan portfolio is at fixed rates which do not move with the Federal Reserve’s interest rate increases, while our deposit accounts reprice much more quickly.

31

Table of Contents 

Rate/Volume Analysis

Net interest income can be analyzed in terms of the impact of changing interest rates and changing volume. The following tables set forth the effect which the varying levels of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities and the applicable rates have had on changes in net interest income for the periods presented.

       
    Three Months Ended  
      March 31, 2024 vs. 2023       March 31, 2023 vs. 2022  
      Increase (Decrease) Due to       Increase (Decrease) Due to  
(dollars in thousands)     Volume       Rate       Rate/
Volume
      Total       Volume       Rate       Rate/
Volume
      Total  
Interest income                                                                
Loans   $ 3,234       5,168       455       8,857     $ 7,189       4,328       1,300       12,817  
Investment securities     297       382       186       865       (103 )     309       (67 )     139  
Federal funds sold and interest-bearing deposits with banks     45       254       12       311       (2 )     945       (33 )     910  
Total interest income     3,576       5,804       653       10,033       7,084       5,582       1,200       13,866  
Interest expense                                                                
Deposits     503       8,987       263       9,753       253       12,521       3,497       16,271  
FHLB advances and other borrowings     2,444       (31 )     (384 )     2,029       1       170       17       188  
Subordinated debentures     2       28       -       30       1       146       -       147  
Total interest expense     2,949       8,984       (121 )     11,812       255       12,837       3,514       16,606  
Net interest income   $ 627       (3,180 )     774       (1,779 )   $ 6,829       (7,255 )     (2,314 )     (2,740 )

Net interest income, the largest component of our income, was $18.6 million for the first quarter of 2024 and $20.4 million for the first quarter of 2023, a $1.8 million, or 8.7%, decrease year over year. The decrease during 2024 was driven by an $11.8 million increase in interest expense primarily due to higher rates on our interest-bearing deposits, combined with an increase in average FHLB advances and other borrowings. Partially offsetting the increase in interest expense was a $10.0 million increase in interest income which was primarily driven by an increase in yield on our loan portfolio, combined with a $288.4 million increase in average loan balances for the first quarter of 2024.

Provision for Credit Losses

The provision for credit losses, which includes a provision for losses on unfunded commitments, is a charge to earnings to maintain the allowance for credit losses and reserve for unfunded commitments at levels consistent with management’s assessment of expected losses in the loan portfolio at the balance sheet date. We review the adequacy of the allowance for credit losses on a quarterly basis. Please see the discussion included in Note 4 – Loans and Allowance for Credit Losses for a description of the factors we consider in determining the amount of the provision we expense each period to maintain this allowance.

We recorded a $175,000 reversal of the provision for credit losses during the first quarter of 2024, compared to a $1.8 million provision for credit losses in the first quarter of 2023. No provision for credit losses was recorded during the first quarter of 2024 as we continue to experience low net charge-offs, and the expected loss rates in our allowance for credit losses continue to decline. During the first quarter of 2024, we reversed $175,000 of the reserve for unfunded commitments due to a decrease in the balance of unfunded commitments at March 31, 2024, compared to December 31, 2023.

32

Table of Contents 

Noninterest Income

The following table sets forth information related to our noninterest income.

       
    Three months ended
March 31,
 
(dollars in thousands)   2024     2023  
Mortgage banking income   $ 1,164       622  
Service fees on deposit accounts     387       325  
ATM and debit card income     544       555  
Income from bank owned life insurance     377       332  
Other income     192       210  
Total noninterest income   $ 2,664       2,044  

Noninterest income was $2.7 million for the first quarter of 2024, a $620,000, or 30.3%, increase from noninterest income of $2.0 million for the first quarter of 2023. Mortgage banking income continues to be the largest component of our noninterest income at $1.2 million for the first quarter of 2024. The increase in noninterest income resulted primarily from a $542,000, or 87.1%, increase in mortgage banking income over the prior year which was driven by higher mortgage volume during the first quarter of 2024.

Noninterest expenses

The following table sets forth information related to our noninterest expenses.

             
  Three months ended
 March 31,
 
(dollars in thousands)   2024     2023  
Compensation and benefits   $ 10,857       10,356  
Occupancy     2,557       2,457  
Outside service and data processing costs     1,846       1,629  
Insurance     955       689  
Professional fees     618       660  
Marketing     369       366  
Other     898       947  
Total noninterest expense   $ 18,100       17,104  

Noninterest expense was $18.1 million for the first quarter of 2024, a $996,000, or 5.8%, increase from noninterest expense of $17.1 million for the first quarter of 2023. The increase in noninterest expense was driven primarily by the following:

Compensation and benefits expense increased $501,000, or 4.8%, relating primarily to annual salary increases and higher benefit related expenses.
Outside service and data processing costs increased $217,000, or 13.3%, relating primarily to increases in item processing, electronic banking and software licensing and maintenance costs.
Insurance costs increased $266,000, or 38.6%, as a result of higher FDIC insurance premiums.

Our efficiency ratio was 84.9% for the first quarter of 2024, compared to 76.1% for the first quarter of 2023. The efficiency ratio represents the percentage of one dollar of expense required to be incurred to earn a full dollar of revenue and is computed by dividing noninterest expense by the sum of net interest income and noninterest income. The higher ratio during the first quarter of 2024, compared to the first quarter of 2023, relates primarily to the decrease in net interest income combined with higher noninterest expenses.

We incurred income tax expense of $862,000 and $836,000 for the three months ended March 31, 2024 and 2023, respectively. Our effective tax rate was 25.5% and 23.6% for the three months ended March 31, 2024 and 2023, respectively. The higher tax rate during the first quarter of 2024 was driven by the effect of equity compensation transactions during the quarter.

33

Table of Contents 

Balance Sheet Review

Investment Securities

At March 31, 2024, the $144.5 million in our investment securities portfolio represented approximately 3.5% of our total assets. Our available for sale investment portfolio included corporate bonds, US treasuries, US government agency securities, state and political subdivisions, asset-backed securities and mortgage-backed securities with a fair value of $126.0 million and an amortized cost of $140.9 million, resulting in an unrealized loss of $14.9 million. At December 31, 2023, the $154.6 million in our investment securities portfolio represented approximately 3.8% of our total assets, including investment securities with a fair value of $134.7 million and an amortized cost of $149.1 million for an unrealized loss of $14.4 million. In addition, other investments, which include FHLB Stock and other nonmarketable investments, decreased $1.4 million from December 31, 2023 to $18.5 million at March 31, 2024.

Loans

Since loans typically provide higher interest yields than other types of interest earning assets, a substantial percentage of our earning assets are invested in our loan portfolio. Average loans, excluding mortgage loans held for sale, for the three months ended March 31, 2024 and 2023 were $3.62 billion and $3.33 billion, respectively. Before the allowance for credit losses, total loans outstanding at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023 were $3.64 billion and $3.60 billion, respectively.

The principal component of our loan portfolio is loans secured by real estate mortgages. As of March 31, 2024, our loan portfolio included $3.07 billion, or 84.3%, of real estate loans, compared to $3.05 billion, or 84.8%, at December 31, 2023. Most of our real estate loans are secured by residential or commercial property. We obtain a security interest in real estate, in addition to any other available collateral, in order to increase the likelihood of the ultimate repayment of the loan. Generally, we limit the loan-to-value ratio on loans to coincide with the appropriate regulatory guidelines. We attempt to maintain a relatively diversified loan portfolio to help reduce the risk inherent in concentration in certain types of collateral and business types. Home equity lines of credit totaled $184.7 million as of March 31, 2024, of which approximately 48% were in a first lien position, while the remaining balance was second liens. At December 31, 2023, our home equity lines of credit totaled $183.0 million, of which approximately 46% were in first lien positions, while the remaining balance was in second liens. The average home equity loan had a balance of approximately $86,000 and a loan to value of 70% as of March 31, 2024, compared to an average loan balance of $85,000 and a loan to value of approximately 73% as of December 31, 2023. Further, 0.3% and 0.8% of our total home equity lines of credit were over 30 days past due as of March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively.

Following is a summary of our loan composition at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023. During the first three months of 2024, our loan portfolio increased by $41.1 million, or 1.14%, with a $28.1 million increase in commercial loans while consumer loans increased by $13.0 million during the period. The majority of the increase was in loans secured by real estate. Our level of non-owner occupied commercial real estate and multi-family loans represents 271.4% of the Bank’s total risk-based capital at March 31, 2024. Our consumer real estate portfolio grew by $19.1 million and includes high quality 1-4 family consumer real estate loans. Our average consumer real estate loan currently has a principal balance of $468,000, a term of 23 years, and an average rate of 4.18% as of March 31, 2024, compared to a principal balance of $469,000, a term of 23 years, and an average rate of 4.10% as of December 31, 2023.

34

Table of Contents 

             
    March 31, 2024     December 31, 2023  
(dollars in thousands)   Amount     %  of Total     Amount     %  of Total  
Commercial                                
Owner occupied RE   $ 631,047       17.3 %   $ 631,657       17.5 %
Non-owner occupied RE     944,530       25.9 %     942,529       26.2 %
Construction     157,464       4.3 %     150,680       4.2 %
Business     520,073       14.3 %     500,161       13.9 %
Total commercial loans     2,253,114       61.8 %     2,225,027       61.8 %
Consumer                                
Real estate     1,101,573       30.2 %     1,082,429       30.0 %
Home equity     184,691       5.1 %     183,004       5.1 %
Construction     53,216       1.5 %     63,348       1.7 %
Other     51,172       1.4 %     48,819       1.4 %
Total consumer loans     1,390,652       38.2 %     1,377,600       38.2 %
Total gross loans, net of deferred fees     3,643,766       100.0 %     3,602,627       100.0 %
Less—allowance for credit losses     (40,441 )             (40,682 )        
Total loans, net   $ 3,603,325             $ 3,561,945          

Nonperforming assets

Nonperforming assets include real estate acquired through foreclosure or deed taken in lieu of foreclosure and loans on nonaccrual status. Generally, a loan is placed on nonaccrual status when it becomes 90 days past due as to principal or interest, or when we believe, after considering economic and business conditions and collection efforts, that the borrower’s financial condition is such that collection of the contractual principal or interest on the loan is doubtful. A payment of interest on a loan that is classified as nonaccrual is recognized as a reduction in principal when received. Our policy with respect to nonperforming loans requires the borrower to make a minimum of six consecutive payments in accordance with the loan terms and to show capacity to continue performing into the future before that loan can be placed back on accrual status. As of March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, we had no loans 90 days past due and still accruing.

Following is a summary of our nonperforming assets.

             
(dollars in thousands)   March 31, 2024     December 31, 2023  
Commercial   $ 1,898       1,742  
Consumer     1,748       2,221  
Total nonaccrual loans     3,646       3,963  
Other real estate owned     -       -  
Total nonperforming assets   $ 3,646       3,963  

At March 31, 2024, nonperforming assets were $3.6 million, or 0.09% of total assets and 0.10% of gross loans. Comparatively, nonperforming assets were $4.0 million, or 0.10% of total assets and 0.11% of gross loans at December 31, 2023. Nonaccrual loans decreased $317,000 during the first three months of 2024 due primarily to two relationships that returned to accrual status and one relationship that paid off during the quarter.

The amount of foregone interest income on nonaccrual loans in the first three months of 2024 and 2023 was not material. At March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, the allowance for credit losses represented 1,109.13% and 1,026.55% of the total amount of nonperforming loans, respectively. A significant portion of the nonperforming loans at March 31, 2024 were secured by real estate. We have evaluated the underlying collateral on these loans and believe that the collateral on these loans is sufficient to minimize future losses.

As a general practice, most of our commercial loans and a portion of our consumer loans are originated with relatively short maturities of less than ten years. As a result, when a loan reaches its maturity we frequently renew the loan and thus extend its maturity using similar credit standards as those used when the loan was first originated.

35

Table of Contents 

Due to these loan practices, we may, at times, renew loans which are classified as nonaccrual after evaluating the loan’s collateral value and financial strength of its guarantors. Nonaccrual loans are renewed at terms generally consistent with the ultimate source of repayment and rarely at reduced rates. In these cases, we will generally seek additional credit enhancements, such as additional collateral or additional guarantees to further protect the loan. When a loan is no longer performing in accordance with its stated terms, we will typically seek performance under the guarantee.

In addition, at March 31, 2024, 84.3% of our loans were collateralized by real estate and 89.1% of our individually evaluated loans were secured by real estate. Included in our real estate portfolio at March 31, 2024 was $222.1 million of loans, or 6.1% of our total loan portfolio, collateralized by office properties, $172.6 million of loans, or 4.7%, collateralized by retail properties, $147.4 million of loans, or 4.0%, collateralized by hotels, and $112.6 million of loans, or 3.1%, collateralized by multifamily properties. We utilize third party appraisers to determine the fair value of collateral dependent loans. Our current loan and appraisal policies require us to obtain updated appraisals on an annual basis, either through a new external appraisal or an appraisal evaluation. Individually evaluated loans are reviewed on a quarterly basis to determine the level of impairment. As of March 31, 2024, we did not have any individually evaluated real estate loans carried at a value in excess of the appraised value. We typically charge-off a portion or create a specific reserve for individually evaluated loans when we do not expect repayment to occur as agreed upon under the original terms of the loan agreement.

At March 31, 2024, individually evaluated loans totaled $4.5 million with a reserve of approximately $697,000 allocated in the allowance for credit losses. Comparatively, individually evaluated loans totaled $4.8 million at December 31, 2023 for which $3.7 million of these loans had a reserve of approximately $688,000 allocated in the allowance for credit losses.

Allowance for Credit Losses

The allowance for credit losses was $40.4 million, representing 1.11% of outstanding loans and providing coverage of 1,109.13% of nonperforming loans at March 31, 2024 compared to $40.7 million, or 1.13% of outstanding loans and 1,026.58% of nonperforming loans at December 31, 2023. At March 31, 2023, the allowance for credit losses was $40.4 million, or 1.18% of outstanding loans and 854.33% of nonperforming loans.

Deposits and Other Interest-Bearing Liabilities

Our primary source of funds for loans and investments is our deposits and advances from the FHLB. In the past, we have chosen to obtain a portion of our certificates of deposits from areas outside of our market in order to obtain longer term deposits than are readily available in our local market. Our internal guidelines regarding the use of brokered CDs limit our brokered CDs to 30% of total deposits, which allows us to take advantage of the attractive terms that wholesale funding can offer while mitigating the related inherent risk.

Our retail deposits represented $3.00 billion, or 86.7% of total deposits, while our wholesale deposits represented $459.8 million, or 13.3%, of total deposits at March 31, 2024. At December 31, 2023, retail deposits represented $3.00 billion, or 88.8%, of our total deposits and wholesale deposits were $379.4 million, representing 11.2% of our total deposits. Our loan-to-deposit ratio was 105% at March 31, 2024 and 107% at December 31, 2023.

The following is a detail of our deposit accounts:

             
    March 31,     December 31,  
(dollars in thousands)   2024     2023  
Non-interest bearing   $ 671,708       674,167  
Interest bearing:                
NOW accounts     293,064       310,218  
Money market accounts     1,603,796       1,605,278  
Savings     32,248       31,669  
Time, less than $250,000     206,657       190,167  
Time and out-of-market deposits, $250,000 and over     653,208       568,065  
Total deposits   $ 3,460,681       3,379,564  

36

Table of Contents 

Our primary focus is on increasing core deposits, which exclude out-of-market deposits and time deposits of $250,000 or more, in order to provide a relatively stable funding source for our loan portfolio and other earning assets. Our core deposits were stable at $2.81 billion at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023. In addition, at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, we estimate that we have approximately $1.3 billion, or 37.8% and 38.7% of total deposits, respectively, in uninsured deposits, including related interest accrued and unpaid. Since it is not reasonably practicable to provide a precise measure of uninsured deposits, the amounts above are estimates and are based on the same methodologies and assumptions used by the FDIC for the Bank’s regulatory reporting requirements.

The following table shows the average balance amounts and the average rates paid on deposits.

             
    Three months ended
March 31,
 
    2024     2023  
(dollars in thousands)   Amount     Rate     Amount     Rate  
Noninterest-bearing demand deposits   $ 653,223       0.00 %   $ 766,916       0.00 %
Interest-bearing demand deposits     295,774       0.90 %     303,176       0.59 %
Money market accounts     1,588,788       4.11 %     1,621,885       3.01 %
Savings accounts     31,734       0.17 %     39,993       0.06 %
Time deposits less than $250,000     146,477       4.41 %     59,469       4.57 %
Time deposits greater than $250,000     655,256       5.12 %     483,956       3.43 %
Total deposits   $ 3,371,252       3.20 %   $ 3,275,395       2.13 %

During the first three months of 2024, our average transaction account balances decreased by $162.5 million, or 6.0%, from the prior year, while our average time deposit balances increased by $258.3 million, or 47.5%.

All of our time deposits are certificates of deposits. The maturity distribution of our time deposits $250,000 or more at March 31, 2024 was as follows:

       
(dollars in thousands)   March 31, 2024  
Three months or less   $ 84,482  
Over three through six months     65,646  
Over six  through twelve months     144,396  
Over twelve months     358,684  
 Total   $ 653,208  

Time deposits that meet or exceed the FDIC insurance limit of $250,000 at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023 were $653.2 million and $568.1 million, respectively. We have a relationship with IntraFi Promontory Network, allowing us to provide deposit customers with access to aggregate FDIC insurance in amounts exceeding $250,000. This gives us the ability, as and when needed, to attract and retain large deposits from insurance conscious customers. With IntraFi, we have the option to keep deposits on balance sheet or sell them to other members of the network.

At March 31, 2024, the Company had $240.0 million of convertible fixed rate FHLB advances with a weighted average rate of 3.65%, while at December 31, 2023, the Company had $275.0 million in FHLB Advances. Of the $275.0 million outstanding at December 31, 2023, $35.0 million was at a variable rate and $240.0 million was at fixed rates. The $240.0 million was secured with approximately $1.30 billion of mortgage loans and $14.6 million of stock in the FHLB at March 31, 2024. The $275.0 million was secured with approximately $1.25 billion of mortgage loans and $16.1 million of stock in the FHLB at December 31, 2023.

Listed below is a summary of the terms and maturities of the advances outstanding at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023.

37

Table of Contents 

             
    March 31,     December 31,  
(dollars in thousands)   2024     2023  
Maturity   Amount     Rate     Amount     Rate  
February 29, 2024   $ -       -     $ 35,000       5.57 %
April 28, 2028     40,000       3.51 %     40,000       3.51 %
May 15, 2028     35,000       3.13 %     35,000       3.13 %
June 28, 2028     40,000       3.54 %     40,000       3.54 %
July 10, 2028     45,000       3.78 %     45,000       3.78 %
July 10, 2028     40,000       3.87 %     40,000       3.87 %
July 10, 2028     40,000       3.96 %     40,000       3.96 %
    $ 240,000       3.65 %   $ 275,000       3.89 %

Liquidity and Capital Resources

Liquidity is our ability to fund operations, to meet depositor withdrawals, to provide for customers’ credit needs, and to meet maturing obligations and existing commitments. Our liquidity principally depends on our cash flows from operating activities, investment in and maturity of assets, changes in balances of deposits and borrowings, and our ability to borrow funds. The bank failures in the first five months of 2023 exemplify the potential serious results of the unexpected inability of insured depository institutions to obtain needed liquidity to satisfy deposit withdrawal requests, including how quickly such requests can accelerate once uninsured depositors lose confidence in an institution’s ability to satisfy its obligations to depositors. We seek to ensure our funding needs are met by maintaining a level of liquidity through asset and liability management. Liquidity management involves monitoring our sources and uses of funds in order to meet our day-to-day cash flow requirements while maximizing profits. Liquidity management is made more complicated because different balance sheet components are subject to varying degrees of management control. For example, the timing of maturities of our investment portfolio is fairly predictable and subject to a high degree of control at the time investment decisions are made. However, net deposit inflows and outflows are far less predictable and are not subject to the same degree of control.

At March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, our cash and cash equivalents totaled $167.3 million and $156.2 million, respectively, or 4.1% and 3.9% of total assets, respectively. Our investment securities at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023 amounted to $144.5 million and $154.6 million, respectively, or 3.5% and 3.8% of total assets, respectively. Investment securities traditionally provide a secondary source of liquidity since they can be converted into cash in a timely manner.

Our ability to maintain and expand our deposit base and borrowing capabilities serves as our primary source of liquidity. We plan to meet our future cash needs through the liquidation of temporary investments, the generation of deposits, loan payoffs, and from additional borrowings. In addition, we will receive cash upon the maturity and sale of loans and the maturity of investment securities. We maintain five federal funds purchased lines of credit with correspondent banks totaling $108.5 million for which there were no borrowings against the lines of credit at March 31, 2024. We also had $236.1 million pledged and available with the Federal Reserve Discount Window at March 31, 2024. Comparatively, at December 31, 2023, we had $227.1 million pledged and available with the Federal Reserve Discount Window. At December 31, 2023, we had $13.0 million of marketable investment securities pledged in the Federal Reserve’s Bank Term Funding Program which closed on March 11, 2024.

We are also a member of the FHLB, from which applications for borrowings can be made. The FHLB requires that securities, qualifying mortgage loans, and stock of the FHLB owned by the Bank be pledged to secure any advances from the FHLB. The unused borrowing capacity currently available from the FHLB at March 31, 2024 was $590.0 million, based primarily on the Bank’s qualifying mortgages available to secure any future borrowings. However, we are able to pledge additional securities to the FHLB in order to increase our available borrowing capacity. In addition, at March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023 we had $386.8 million and $388.3 million, respectively, of letters of credit outstanding with the FHLB to secure client deposits.

We have a relationship with IntraFi Promontory Network, allowing us to provide deposit customers with access to aggregate FDIC insurance in amounts exceeding $250,000. This gives us the ability, as and when needed, to attract and retain large deposits from insurance conscious customers. With IntraFi, we have the option to keep deposits on balance sheet or sell them to other members of the network. Additionally, subject to certain limits, the Bank can use IntraFi to purchase cost-effective funding without collateralization and in lieu of generating funds through traditional brokered CDs or the FHLB.

38

Table of Contents 

In this manner, IntraFi can provide us with another funding option. Thus, it serves as a deposit-gathering tool and an additional liquidity management tool. Under the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act, a well capitalized bank with a CAMELS rating of 1 or 2 may hold reciprocal deposits up to the lesser of 20% of its total liabilities or $5 billion without those deposits being treated as brokered deposits.

We also have a line of credit with another financial institution for $15.0 million, which was unused at March 31, 2024. The line of credit was issued on December 28, 2023 at an interest rate of the U.S. Prime Rate plus 0.25% and a maturity date of February 28, 2025.

We believe that our existing stable base of core deposits, federal funds purchased lines of credit with correspondent banks, availability with the Federal Reserve Discount Window, and borrowings from the FHLB will enable us to successfully meet our long-term liquidity needs. However, as short-term liquidity needs arise, we have the ability to sell a portion of our investment securities portfolio to meet those needs.

Total shareholders’ equity was $315.3 million at March 31, 2024 and $312.5 million at December 31, 2023. The $2.8 million increase from December 31, 2023 is primarily related to net income of $2.5 million during the first three months of 2024 and stock option exercises and equity compensation expenses of $722,000, partially offset by a $455,000 loss in other comprehensive income related to our available for sale securities.

The following table shows the return on average assets (net income divided by average total assets), return on average equity (net income divided by average equity), equity to assets ratio (average equity divided by average assets), and tangible common equity ratio (total equity less preferred stock divided by total assets) annualized for the three months ended March 31, 2024 and the year ended December 31, 2023. Since our inception, we have not paid cash dividends.

             
    March 31, 2024     December 31, 2023  
Return on average assets     0.25 %     0.34 %
Return on average equity     3.22 %     4.44 %
Return on average common equity     3.22 %     4.44 %
Average equity to average assets ratio     7.83 %     7.71 %
Tangible common equity to assets ratio     7.68 %     7.70 %

Under the capital adequacy guidelines, regulatory capital is classified into two tiers. These guidelines require an institution to maintain a certain level of Tier 1 and Tier 2 capital to risk-weighted assets. Tier 1 capital consists of common shareholders’ equity, excluding the unrealized gain or loss on securities available for sale, minus certain intangible assets. In determining the amount of risk-weighted assets, all assets, including certain off-balance sheet assets, are multiplied by a risk-weight factor of 0% to 100% based on the risks believed to be inherent in the type of asset. Tier 2 capital consists of Tier 1 capital plus the general reserve for credit losses, subject to certain limitations. We are also required to maintain capital at a minimum level based on total average assets, which is known as the Tier 1 leverage ratio.

Regulatory capital rules, which we refer to as Basel III, impose minimum capital requirements for bank holding companies and banks. The Basel III rules apply to all national and state banks and savings associations regardless of size and bank holding companies and savings and loan holding companies other than “small bank holding companies,” generally holding companies with consolidated assets of less than $3 billion. In order to avoid restrictions on capital distributions or discretionary bonus payments to executives, a covered banking organization must maintain a “capital conservation buffer” on top of our minimum risk-based capital requirements. This buffer must consist solely of common equity Tier 1, but the buffer applies to all three measurements (common equity Tier 1, Tier 1 capital and total capital). The capital conservation buffer consists of an additional amount of CET1 equal to 2.5% of risk-weighted assets.

39

Table of Contents 

To be considered “well capitalized” for purposes of certain rules and prompt corrective action requirements, the Bank must maintain a minimum total risked-based capital ratio of at least 10%, a total Tier 1 capital ratio of at least 8%, a common equity Tier 1 capital ratio of at least 6.5%, and a leverage ratio of at least 5%. As of March 31, 2024 our capital ratios exceed these ratios and we remain “well capitalized.”

The following table summarizes the capital amounts and ratios of the Bank and the regulatory minimum requirements.

             
          March 31, 2024  
    Actual     For capital
adequacy purposes
minimum plus the
capital conservation
buffer
    To be well capitalized
under prompt
corrective
action provisions
minimum
 
(dollars in thousands)   Amount     Ratio     Amount     Ratio     Amount     Ratio  
Total Capital (to risk weighted assets)   $ 393,470       12.29 %   $ 256,023       8.00 %   $ 320,029       10.00 %
Tier 1 Capital (to risk weighted assets)     353,461       11.04 %     192,017       6.00 %     256,023       8.00 %
Common Equity Tier 1 Capital (to risk weighted assets)     353,461       11.04 %     144,013       4.50 %     208,019       6.50 %
Tier 1 Capital (to average assets)     353,461       8.77 %     161,255       4.00 %     201,569       5.00 %

 

          December 31, 2023  
    Actual     For capital
adequacy purposes
minimum plus the
capital conservation
buffer
    To be well capitalized
under prompt
corrective
action provisions
minimum
 
(dollars in thousands)   Amount     Ratio     Amount     Ratio     Amount     Ratio  
Total Capital (to risk weighted assets)   $ 390,197       12.28 %   $ 254,278       8.00 %   $ 317,847       10.00 %
Tier 1 Capital (to risk weighted assets)     350,455       11.03 %     190,708       6.00 %     254,278       8.00 %
Common Equity Tier 1 Capital (to risk weighted assets)     350,455       11.03 %     143,031       4.50 %     206,601       6.50 %
Tier 1 Capital (to average assets)     350,455       8.47 %     165,414       4.00 %     206,767       5.00 %

The following table summarizes the capital amounts and ratios of the Company and the minimum regulatory requirements. 

             
          March 31, 2024  
    Actual     For capital
adequacy purposes
minimum plus the
capital conservation
buffer (1)
  To be well capitalized
under prompt
corrective
action provisions
minimum
 
(dollars in thousands)   Amount     Ratio     Amount     Ratio     Amount   Ratio  
Total Capital (to risk weighted assets)   $ 403,062       12.59 %   $ 256,023       8.00 %   N/A     N/A  
Tier 1 Capital (to risk weighted assets)     340,053       10.63 %     192,017       6.00 %   N/A     N/A  
Common Equity Tier 1 Capital (to risk weighted assets)     327,053       10.22 %     144,013       4.50 %   N/A     N/A  
Tier 1 Capital (to average assets)     340,053       8.44 %     161,255       4.00 %   N/A     N/A  

 

          December 31, 2023  
    Actual     For capital
adequacy purposes
minimum plus the
capital conservation
buffer (1)
    To be well capitalized
under prompt
corrective
action provisions
minimum
 
(dollars in thousands)   Amount     Ratio     Amount     Ratio     Amount   Ratio  
Total Capital (to risk weighted assets)   $ 399,551       12.57 %   $ 254,278       8.00 %   N/A     N/A  
Tier 1 Capital (to risk weighted assets)     336,809       10.60 %     190,708       6.00 %   N/A     N/A  
Common Equity Tier 1 Capital (to risk weighted assets)     323,809       10.19 %     143,031       4.50 %   N/A     N/A  
Tier 1 Capital (to average assets)     336,809       8.14 %     165,436       4.00 %   N/A     N/A  

40

Table of Contents 

(1) The prompt corrective action provisions are only applicable at the Bank level. The Bank exceeded the general minimum regulatory requirements to be considered “well capitalized.”

The ability of the Company to pay cash dividends to shareholders is dependent upon receiving cash in the form of dividends from the Bank. The dividends that may be paid by the Bank to the Company are subject to legal limitations and regulatory capital requirements. Since our inception, we have not paid cash dividends to shareholders.

Effect of Inflation and Changing Prices

The effect of relative purchasing power over time due to inflation has not been taken into account in our consolidated financial statements. Rather, our financial statements have been prepared on an historical cost basis in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.

Unlike most industrial companies, our assets and liabilities are primarily monetary in nature. Therefore, the effect of changes in interest rates will have a more significant impact on our performance than will the effect of changing prices and inflation in general. In addition, interest rates may generally increase as the rate of inflation increases, although not necessarily in the same magnitude. As discussed previously, we seek to manage the relationships between interest sensitive assets and liabilities in order to protect against wide rate fluctuations, including those resulting from inflation.

Off-Balance Sheet Risk

Commitments to extend credit are agreements to lend money to a client as long as the client has not violated any material condition established in the contract. Commitments generally have fixed expiration dates or other termination clauses and may require the payment of a fee. At March 31, 2024 unfunded commitments to extend credit were $710.7 million, of which $116.0 million were at fixed rates and $595.0 million were at variable rates. At December 31, 2023, unfunded commitments to extend credit were $724.6 million, of which approximately $145.6 million were at fixed rates and $579.0 million were at variable rates. A significant portion of the unfunded commitments related to commercial business loans and consumer home equity lines of credit. We evaluate each client’s credit worthiness on a case-by-case basis. The amount of collateral obtained, if deemed necessary by us upon extension of credit, is based on our credit evaluation of the borrower. The type of collateral varies but may include accounts receivable, inventory, property, plant and equipment, and commercial and residential real estate. As of March 31, 2024, the reserve for unfunded commitments was $1.7 million or 0.23% of total unfunded commitments. As of December 31, 2023, the reserve for unfunded commitments was $1.8 million or 0.25% of total unfunded commitments.

At March 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, there were commitments under letters of credit for $12.0 million and $16.1 million, respectively. The credit risk and collateral involved in issuing letters of credit is essentially the same as that involved in extending loan facilities to customers. Since most of the letters of credit are expected to expire without being drawn upon, they do not necessarily represent future cash requirements.

Except as disclosed in this report, we are not involved in off-balance sheet contractual relationships, unconsolidated related entities that have off-balance sheet arrangements or transactions that could result in liquidity needs or other commitments that significantly impact earnings.

Critical Accounting Estimates

We have adopted various accounting policies that govern the application of accounting principles generally accepted in the United States and with general practices within the banking industry in the preparation of our financial statements.

Certain accounting policies inherently involve a greater reliance on the use of estimates, assumptions and judgments and, as such, have a greater possibility of producing results that could be materially different than originally reported, which could have a material impact on the carrying values of our assets and liabilities and our results of operations. Of the significant accounting policies used in the preparation of our consolidated financial statements, we have identified certain items as critical accounting policies based on the associated estimates, assumptions, judgments and complexity. See “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations—Critical Accounting Estimates” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023, for a description our significant accounting policies that use critical accounting estimates.

41

Table of Contents 

Accounting, Reporting, and Regulatory Matters

See Note 1 – Summary of Significant Accounting Policies in the accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements included elsewhere in this report for details of recently issued accounting pronouncements and their expected impact on our consolidated financial statements.

Other accounting standards that have been issued or proposed by the FASB or other standards-setting bodies that do not require adoption until a future date are not expected to have a material impact on the consolidated financial statements upon adoption.

Item 3. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK.

Market risk is the risk of loss from adverse changes in market prices and rates, which principally arises from interest rate risk inherent in our lending, investing, deposit gathering, and borrowing activities. Other types of market risks, such as foreign currency exchange rate risk and commodity price risk, do not generally arise in the normal course of our business.

We actively monitor and manage our interest rate risk exposure in order to control the mix and maturities of our assets and liabilities utilizing a process we call asset/liability management. The essential purposes of asset/liability management are to seek to ensure adequate liquidity and to maintain an appropriate balance between interest sensitive assets and liabilities in order to minimize potentially adverse impacts on earnings from changes in market interest rates. Our asset/liability management committee (“ALCO”) monitors and considers methods of managing exposure to interest rate risk. We have both an internal ALCO consisting of senior management that meets no less than quarterly and a board risk committee that meets quarterly. These committees are responsible for maintaining the level of interest rate sensitivity of our interest sensitive assets and liabilities within board-approved limits.

As of March 31, 2024, the following table summarizes the forecasted impact on net interest income using a base case scenario given upward and downward movements in interest rates of 100, 200, and 300 basis points based on forecasted assumptions of prepayment speeds, nominal interest rates and loan and deposit repricing rates. Estimates are based on current economic conditions, historical interest rate cycles and other factors deemed to be relevant. However, underlying assumptions may be impacted in future periods which were not known to management at the time of the issuance of the Consolidated Financial Statements. Therefore, management’s assumptions may or may not prove valid. No assurance can be given that changing economic conditions and other relevant factors impacting our net interest income will not cause actual occurrences to differ from underlying assumptions. In addition, this analysis does not consider any strategic changes to our balance sheet which management may consider as a result of changes in market conditions.

Interest rate scenario   Change in net interest
income from base
 
Up 300 basis points     (7.17 )%
Up 200 basis points     (4.75 )%
Up 100 basis points     (2.36 )%
Base     -  
Down 100 basis points     3.99 %
Down 200 basis points     6.87 %
Down 300 basis points     9.51 %

Item 4. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES.

Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures

Management, including our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, has evaluated the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) as of the end of the period covered by this report.

42

Table of Contents 

Based upon that evaluation, our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures were effective to ensure that information required to be disclosed in the reports we file and submit under the Exchange Act is (i) recorded, processed, summarized and reported as and when required and (ii) accumulated and communicated to our management, including our Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.

Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting

There has been no change in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting during the three months ended March 31, 2024, that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.

PART II. OTHER INFORMATION

Item 1. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS.

We are a party to claims and lawsuits arising in the course of normal business activities. Management is not aware of any material pending legal proceedings against the Company which, if determined adversely, would have a material adverse impact on the company’s financial position, results of operations or cash flows.

Item 1A. RISK FACTORS.

Investing in shares of our common stock involves certain risks, including those identified and described in Item 1A. of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2023, as well as cautionary statements contained in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, including those under the caption “Cautionary Warning Regarding Forward-Looking Statements” set forth in Part I, Item 2 of this Form 10-Q, risks and matters described elsewhere in this Form 10-Q, and in our other filings with the SEC.

There have been no material changes to the risk factors previously disclosed in the Company’s (i) Annual Report on Form 10-K for fiscal year ended December 31, 2023.

Item 2. UNREGISTERED SALES OF EQUITY SECURITIES, USE OF PROCEEDS, AND ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES.

(a) Sales of Unregistered Securities - None
(b) Use of Proceeds – Not applicable
(c) Issuer Purchases of Securities

As of March 31, 2024, the Company does not have an authorized share repurchase program.

Item 3. DEFAULTS UPON SENIOR SECURITIES.

None.

Item 4. MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES.

Not applicable.

Item 5. OTHER INFORMATION.

Trading Plans

During the three months ended March 31, 2024, no director or “officer” of the Company adopted or terminated a “Rule 10b5-1 trading arrangement” or a “non-Rule 10b5-1 trading arrangement,” as each term is defined in Item 408 of Regulation S-K of the Securities Act of 1933.

Item 6. EXHIBITS.

The exhibits required to be filed as part of this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q are listed in the Index to Exhibits attached hereto and are incorporated herein by reference.

43

Table of Contents 

INDEX TO EXHIBITS

 
Exhibit
Number
Description
   
31.1 Rule 13a-14(a) Certification of the Principal Executive Officer.
   
31.2 Rule 13a-14(a) Certification of the Principal Financial Officer.  
   
32 Section 1350 Certifications.
   
101 The following materials from the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q of Southern First Bancshares, Inc. for the quarter ended March 31, 2024, formatted in iXBRL (Inline eXtensible Business Reporting Language): (i) Consolidated Balance Sheets, (ii) Consolidated Statements of Income, (iii) Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income, (iv) Consolidated Statement of Changes in Shareholders’ Equity, (v) Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows and (vi) Notes to Unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements.
   
104 Cover Page Interactive Data File (embedded within the Inline XBRL document)

44

Table of Contents 

SIGNATURES

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.

 
    SOUTHERN FIRST BANCSHARES, INC.
    Registrant
     
     
Date: April 30, 2024   /s/R. Arthur Seaver, Jr.  
    R. Arthur Seaver, Jr.
    Chief Executive Officer (Principal Executive Officer)
     
     
Date: April 30, 2024   /s/R. Arthur Seaver, Jr.  
     
    (Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)

45

EX-31.1 2 sfst4329051-ex31_1.htm RULE 13A-14(A) CERTIFICATION OF THE PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICER.

Exhibit 31.1

Rule 13a-14(a) Certification of the Principal Executive Officer.

 

 

 

Exhibit 31.1

Rule 13a-14(a) Certification of the Principal Executive Officer.

I, R. Arthur Seaver, Jr., certify that:

1. I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of Southern First Bancshares, Inc.;
2. Based on my knowledge, this quarterly report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;
3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;
4. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have:
a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;
b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;
c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and
d) Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and
5. The registrant’s other certifying officers and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):
a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal controls over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and
b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.
Date:  April 30, 2024 By: /s/ R. Arthur Seaver, Jr.  
    R. Arthur Seaver, Jr.  
    Chief Executive Officer  

 

     

EX-31.2 3 sfst4329051-ex31_2.htm RULE 13A-14(A) CERTIFICATION OF THE PRINCIPAL FINANCIAL OFFICER.

Exhibit 31.2

Rule 13a-14(a) Certification of the Principal Financial Officer.

 

 

 

Exhibit 31.2

Rule 13a-14(a) Certification of the Principal Financial Officer.

I, R. Arthur Seaver, Jr., certify that:

1. I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of Southern First Bancshares, Inc.;
2. Based on my knowledge, this quarterly report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;
3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;
4. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have:
a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;
b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;
c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and
d) Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and
5. The registrant’s other certifying officers and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):
a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal controls over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and
b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.

 

Date:  April 30, 2024 By: /s/ R. Arthur Seaver, Jr.  
    R. Arthur Seaver, Jr.  
    Principal Financial Officer  

 

     

EX-32 4 sfst4329051-ex32.htm SECTION 1350 CERTIFICATIONS.

Exhibit 32

Section 1350 Certifications.

 

 

 

Exhibit 32

  

CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO 18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350,
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO
SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

The undersigned, the Chief Executive Officer and the Principal Financial Officer of Southern First Bancshares, Inc. (the “Company”), each certify that, to his knowledge on the date of this certification:

1. The quarterly report of the Company for the period ended March 31, 2024 as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on this date (the “Report”) fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and
2. The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.

 

  /s/ R. Arthur Seaver, Jr.  
  R. Arthur Seaver, Jr.  
  Chief Executive Officer  
  Date: April 30, 2024  
     
  /s/ R. Arthur Seaver, Jr.  
  R. Arthur Seaver, Jr.  
  Principal Financial Officer  
  Date: April 30, 2024