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Tompkins Financial completes Pennsylvania acquisition
ITHACA — Tompkins Financial Corp. (NYSE Amex: TMP) closed its acquisition of VIST Financial Corp. (NASDAQ: VIST) of Wyomissing, Pa. on Aug. 1 and Tompkins’ leader says the banking company’s top priority moving ahead is clear. “Our job one is to get this right,” Tompkins Financial President and CEO Stephen Romaine says. “We need to […]
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ITHACA — Tompkins Financial Corp. (NYSE Amex: TMP) closed its acquisition of VIST Financial Corp. (NASDAQ: VIST) of Wyomissing, Pa. on Aug. 1 and Tompkins’ leader says the banking company’s top priority moving ahead is clear.
“Our job one is to get this right,” Tompkins Financial President and CEO Stephen Romaine says. “We need to integrate this properly and make it grow and make sure it provides all the benefits we feel there will be.”
Tompkins Financial first announced its plans to acquire VIST in January in an all-stock deal worth $86 million. It’s the first push into Pennsylvania for Ithaca–based Tompkins.
Although the priority in the months ahead will be integration, more acquisitions in the market could emerge in the future, Romaine says.
“We feel we will be well positioned to take advantage of other opportunities down the line in that market,” he says.
Tompkins Financial was able to retain most of VIST’s 300 employees and add them to its work force of 750. Romaine also expects to retain “the lion’s share” of VIST deposits.
Tompkins Financial, based in Ithaca, operates 46 offices in the Central, Western, and Hudson Valley regions of New York through three subsidiary banks: Tompkins Trust Co., The Bank of Castile, and Mahopac National Bank. The company also owns insurance and wealth-management subsidiaries and has total assets of more than $3.5 billion.
VIST Financial had $1.4 billion in total assets, $1.2 billion in deposits, and
$960 million in loans. It’s the parent of VIST Bank, VIST Insurance, and VIST Capital Management.
VIST Bank operates as a community bank with 21 branch offices in southeastern Pennsylvania, serving Berks, Montgomery, Philadelphia, Chester, Delaware, and Schuylkill counties. VIST now operates as a Tompkins subsidiary with local leadership.
Tompkins Financial now has $5 billion in total assets, $3.8 billion in deposits,
$2.9 billion in loans, and 67 branches.
Tompkins Financial and VIST employees have been working together since the companies publicly announced the deal, Romaine notes. Bank leaders have been encouraged by the cultural fit between the organizations, he says.
That fit is one of Tompkins’ prime filters when considering acquisitions, Romaine adds.
“We feel good about where it’s headed,” he says.
Southeast Pennsylvania had been on Tompkins Financial’s radar screen for several years, Romaine says. It’s about the same distance as Mahopac National Bank’s market area in the Hudson Valley.
For the second quarter, Tompkins Financial earned $8.8 million, down 6.1 percent from a year earlier. Earnings per share for the period totaled 72 cents, down from 85 cents in the second quarter of 2011.
Expenses of $703,000 related to the VIST acquisition helped push profit down. The company also recorded $243,000 after-tax income related to reversal of a liability involved with a recent settlement of litigation between VISA, Inc. and certain merchants.
Excluding the merger expenses and after-tax income, Tompkins earned $9.3 million, or 76 cents per share, for the quarter.
VIST hasn’t released earnings for the first or second quarter this year.
Acquiring HSBC branches helps Community Bank build “density”
DeWITT — The addition of 16 HSBC branches across Western, Central, and Northern New York will help Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU) grow in markets where it already has a strong foothold, the company’s CFO says. DeWitt–based Community Bank completed its acquisition of the locations in July. All the branches are in markets where
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DeWITT — The addition of 16 HSBC branches across Western, Central, and Northern New York will help Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU) grow in markets where it already has a strong foothold, the company’s CFO says.
DeWitt–based Community Bank completed its acquisition of the locations in July. All the branches are in markets where the bank is already a player or where it has a nearby presence, CFO Scott Kingsley says.
Community Bank leaders say they know their approach works in those markets and the acquisition will help the bank grow its business in those communities.
“We’re big believers in the power of density,” Kingsley says.
The new branch offices are in Adams, Alexandria Bay, Avon, Fulton, Geneseo, Gowanda, Lowville, Newark, Oswego, Palmyra, Plattsburgh, Springville, Watertown, Watkins Glen, and Westfield. The branches brought Community Bank $697 million in deposits and $107 million in loans.
All of the offices were part of the recently completed acquisition of 195 HSBC locations in upstate New York, Westchester County, and Connecticut by First Niagara Bank of Buffalo.
First Niagara made deals with Community Bank, KeyBank, and Five Star Bank (based in Warsaw, NY — east of Buffalo) to sell off some of the HSBC branches involved as well as some of its own offices. The bank made the divestitures to comply with anti-trust rules.
First Niagara leaders also said some of the branches were in markets, including the North Country, where they were not interested in competing.
In addition to the HSBC locations, Community Bank will acquire three First Niagara locations in Geneva and Canandaigua in September as part of the same deal. Community Bank leaders decided to separate the two groups of branches because the acquisition involves conversions from two different technical systems, Kingsley says.
It made sense to space them out, he notes.
After adding the HSBC locations, Community Bank has $7.5 billion in assets and 190 branches in upstate New York and northeastern Pennsylvania. The banking company also operates subsidiaries in employee benefits, insurance, investment management and advising, and wealth management.
Community Bank has a strong track record of retaining the customers it picks up in acquisitions, Kingsley says. A year after Community Bank’s 2011 purchase of Wilber National Bank of Oneonta and its 22 branches, the deposit base at those locations was actually higher, he adds.
And in Community Bank’s 2008 acquisition of 18 branches in Northern New York from Citizens Financial Group, Inc., the bank retained 99 percent of the deposit base.
The HSBC deal includes somewhat higher risk for customer defections, Kingsley says. The acquisition involved a number of moving parts and the multiple deals sparked confusion among some customers over whether they would end up at First Niagara, KeyBank, Five Star, or Community Bank.
The deal added 120 employees to Community Bank, which now employs more than 1,800 people. Community Bank was able to retain nearly all of the HSBC employees involved, Kingsley says.
The bank may look to consolidate some of the branches in the deal with existing locations, but Community leaders generally prefer to make those decisions after they have a chance to gauge customer traffic and response at the new branches, Kingsley says.
Even if some locations close down the line, Kingsley says Community Bank would probably have a spot for all affected employees.
Community Bank has been able to expand in the current banking and economic environment even as other banks have pulled back by paring their branch networks or trimming expenses.
“We haven’t been slowed down by that,” Kingsley says.
Community’s performance has been stable and earnings have increased in one of the more challenging periods for the banking industry in recent years, he adds. In addition, bank leaders talk with potential acquisition targets even before a definite opportunity to buy them arises.
It’s not a conversation to be had with just anyone, Kingsley says, but if Community’s executives see a potential match, they explore it proactively.
The strategy has positioned the banking company well for expansion, he contends.
First Niagara absorbs loss on HSBC acquisition costs
After completing four acquisitions in three years and pushing into new geographies, First Niagara Financial Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: FNFG) plans to focus on running the business it has as well as possible. “We’re now equally excited to be in execution mode,” First Niagara President and CEO John Koelmel said during a July 27 conference call
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After completing four acquisitions in three years and pushing into new geographies, First Niagara Financial Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: FNFG) plans to focus on running the business it has as well as possible.
“We’re now equally excited to be in execution mode,” First Niagara President and CEO John Koelmel said during a July 27 conference call on the banking company’s second-quarter results. “We’re completely focused on maximizing the organic platform we’ve built.”
That will include exploring ways to increase efficiency and reduce costs, he said. As well run as bank leaders believe their business is, the current environment forces them to do even better, Koelmel noted.
First Niagara could look to divest some branches at some point, he added.
For the second quarter, Buffalo–based First Niagara posted a loss to common shareholders of $18.5 million, or 5 cents a share, compared with net income to common shareholders of $13.6 million, or 5 cents a share, a year earlier.
Operating income available to shareholders, which excludes acquisition costs, was $59.1 million for the quarter, down from $71.2 million in the second quarter of 2011.
The bank’s acquisition of 195 HSBC branches in upstate New York, Westchester County, and Connecticut led to more than $135 million in acquisition costs during the earnings period. The costs were in line with First Niagara’s expectation and the one-time charge represents the bulk of the expenses associated with the deal, CFO Gregory Norwood said during the conference call.
The acquisition, which closed in May, made First Niagara a major force in the Syracuse, Utica, and Binghamton markets. Overall, it netted First Niagara 100 new branches, following planned closures and divestitures, and added more than 1,200 new employees to the bank’s work force.
Many of those employees have strong ties in their communities as some date back to Marine Midland Bank, Norwood said.
The branches brought $9.8 billion in deposits and $1.6 billion in loans. First Niagara now has nearly 430 branches with $38 billion in assets, $29 billion in deposits, and about 6,000 employees in New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and Massachusetts.
The bank was able to retain more than 97 percent of the HSBC deposit base and even had a number of customers join up before the deal closed. First Niagara first announced the acquisition in July 2011.
“Many HSBC customers that moved weren’t running away from us,” Koelmel said. “They wanted to get a head start on building a relationship with us.”
In addition to completing the HSBC deal, First Niagara also generated strong loan growth during the second quarter. Average commercial loans rose $429 million for the period, up 17 percent on an annualized basis.
Average total loans increased by $349 million, or 8 percent annualized, from the first quarter, excluding the effect of the HSBC deal.
Norwood also noted that First Niagara’s indirect auto business got off to a strong start with originations of $170 million during the quarter. The bank announced the new auto-lending business earlier this year and now expects $600 million in loan balances in that portfolio by the end of the year.
That’s 15 percent above earlier expectations, Norwood said.
M&T Q2 profit dips; bank expects no further merger expenses
M&T Bank Corp. (NYSE: MTB) earned $233 million in the second quarter, down 28 percent from the same period in 2011. Last year’s second-quarter results included $67 million in gains from investment sales as M&T repositioned its balance sheet after its May 2011 acquisition of Wilmington Trust Corp. The second quarter of 2011 also included
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M&T Bank Corp. (NYSE: MTB) earned $233 million in the second quarter, down 28 percent from the same period in 2011.
Last year’s second-quarter results included $67 million in gains from investment sales as M&T repositioned its balance sheet after its May 2011 acquisition of Wilmington Trust Corp. The second quarter of 2011 also included another $42 million gain related to the acquisition.
Earnings per share for 2012’s second quarter totaled $1.71, down from $2.42 a year earlier.
The bank expects no further expenses related to the Wilmington deal, M&T CFO Rene Jones said during a July 17 conference call on the company’s second-quarter results. In fact, M&T is expecting savings as a result of the merger in the second half of 2012.
The $351 million deal brought 55 new branches and $10.7 billion in new assets. Wilmington also offered strong corporate trust and wealth-advisory businesses, according to M&T.
Buffalo–based M&T is the leading bank in the Syracuse–area deposit market with 30 branch offices, more than $2.2 billion in deposits, and a market share of more than 21.2 percent. It is number two in the Utica–Rome market with 13 branches, more than
$615 million in deposits, and a market share of about 16.8 percent.
M&T also leads the Binghamton–area market with a deposit market share of 48.7 percent, 16 branches, and more than
$1.2 billion in deposits, according to the latest statistics from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
The bank has $80.8 billion in total assets and more than 780 branches in New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, Delaware, and Washington, D.C.
Net interest income for the second quarter totaled $655 million at M&T, up 10 percent from the same period in 2011. Noninterest income was $392 million, down from $502 million a year earlier.
Noninterest income in the second quarter last year included $84 million in gains from investment securities, compared with a loss of $17 million this year, according to M&T.
Noninterest expenses for the period totaled $627 million, compared with $577 million in the second quarter of 2011.
Loans and leases rose 7 percent from a year earlier to $62.9 billion as of June 30. The bank saw increases in commercial and industrial loans, commercial real-estate loans, and residential real-estate loans, Jones said.
Consumer loans dipped in the face of fewer auto loans, home equity loans, and lines of credit, he added.
M&T continued to benefit from some customer upheaval in the wake of First Niagara Bank’s acquisition in May of 195 HSBC locations in upstate New York, Westchester County, and Connecticut, Jones said. Loans in M&T’s Western New York region rose 8 percent on an annualized basis from the first quarter, he said.
Deposits in the region increased by an annualized rate of 15 percent from the previous quarter, he added.
Total deposits at M&T increased 6 percent from a year earlier to $62.5 billion as of June 30.
M&T’s loan-loss provision was $60 million in the second quarter, down from $63 million a year earlier. Net charge-offs for the period totaled $52 million, down from $59 million in the second quarter of 2011.
Nonaccruing loans totaled $968 million as of June 30, down from $1.12 billion a year earlier.
KeyBank plans to shutter up to 5 percent of its branches
SYRACUSE — KeyBank’s plan to close as much as 5 percent of its nationwide branch network over the next 18 months isn’t likely to hit Central New York too hard, the bank’s local leader says. The branch closings will probably have an “incremental” impact locally, says Stephen Fournier, president of KeyBank’s Central New York district.
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SYRACUSE — KeyBank’s plan to close as much as 5 percent of its nationwide branch network over the next 18 months isn’t likely to hit Central New York too hard, the bank’s local leader says.
The branch closings will probably have an “incremental” impact locally, says Stephen Fournier, president of KeyBank’s Central New York district. He notes the bank has worked steadily to keep its area branches in line with business conditions.
Key closed a location in Dannemora (near Plattsburgh) earlier this year, for example. Based in Cleveland, Ohio, Key has more than 1,000 branches in 14 states and assets of more than $87 billion.
The bank has looked to invest in Central New York in the past and will continue to do so, Fournier says. KeyBank is currently adding a new branch office in Manlius and has relocated branches in Cazenovia and Fayetteville to new sites in recent years.
Fournier declined to discuss any specific details of local branch closings or job cuts. When branches do close, the bank tries to find positions for affected employees elsewhere within Key, he says.
Closing some locations will help Key reposition its network to better fit where customer traffic and population trends are headed, Fournier adds.
“We’re pretty pleased as far as where we are,” he says of Key’s Central New York business. “We’re pretty bullish in light of demand and what’s going on nationally.”
The bank has continued to see loan growth and improving credit quality, he says.
The branch closures are part of a broader effort at KeyCorp (NYSE: KEY) to save the banking company $150 million to
$200 million in expenses by the end of 2013. The company announced the initiative when it released its second-quarter earnings on July 19.
The cost-cutting moves will also include a focus on organizational design and strategic sourcing, according to Key.
“This is a proactive and purposeful response to the changes that continue to take place in our industry,” Key Chairwoman and CEO Beth Mooney said during a conference call on the company’s second-quarter results.
The effort will help Key become more efficient and allow the bank to respond more quickly to changes in its markets, she added.
“In the face of the present environment, we recognize the need to rationalize branches while repositioning them in a way that allows us to provide convenience for customers where they are,” William Koehler, president of Key’s community bank operations, said during the conference call.
The bank will continue to invest in priority markets, he added. Key has already taken steps to close 17 branches as part of the cost-cutting effort, he said.
KeyBank is number two in the Syracuse–area deposit market with 28 branch offices, more than $1.7 billion in deposits, and a market share of more than 16 percent. In the Utica–Rome area, Key has two branches, more than $64.4 million in deposits, and a deposit market share of more than 1.7 percent, according to the latest statistics from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
For the second quarter, Key generated net income from continuing operations attributable to common shareholders of
$221 million in the second quarter, down from $243 million a year earlier.
Earnings per share for the period totaled 23 cents, down from 26 cents in the second quarter of 2011.
During the quarter, Key completed an acquisition of 37 HSBC locations in the Buffalo and Rochester markets.
Community Bank Q2 profit rises on loan growth
DeWITT — Loan growth helped push profit up more than 17 percent in the second quarter at DeWitt–based Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU) Net income at the banking company totaled $21.1 million, or 53 cents a share, for the period, up from $18 million, or 49 cents a share, a year earlier. Total loans
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DeWITT — Loan growth helped push profit up more than 17 percent in the second quarter at DeWitt–based Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU)
Net income at the banking company totaled $21.1 million, or 53 cents a share, for the period, up from $18 million, or 49 cents a share, a year earlier. Total loans increased $100.9 million from the first quarter to $3.56 billion.
Loans totaled $3.48 billion at the end of the second quarter in 2011.
Loans increased in all categories, Community Bank CFO Scott Kingsley said during a July 25 conference call on the bank’s second-quarter results.
Consumers were the main spark for the loan growth, President and CEO Mark Tryniski added. Only about $16 million of the loan increase was related to business lending and much of that was driven by enterprise-level customers, he said.
The bank has yet to see much demand for credit from small businesses, Tryniski said. He also said Community expects strong loan growth in the months ahead.
“The consumer opportunities in our markets are strong,” he said. “We expect a continuation of solid mortgage growth into the third quarter.”
The bank’s pipeline of new commercial loans is strong as well, he noted. The loan growth in the second quarter included a mix of business from existing customers and new relationships, Tryniski said.
Community Bank has $7.5 billion in assets and 190 branches in upstate New York and northeastern Pennsylvania. The company also operates subsidiaries in employee benefits, insurance, investment management and advising, and wealth management.
Net interest income for the second quarter rose 6.6 percent from a year earlier to $57.8 million. Noninterest income was $23.7 million, up from $22.8 million in the second quarter of 2011. That increase was helped by last year’s acquisition of CAI Benefits, based in the New York City area, by Community’s employee-benefits subsidiary.
The acquisition contributed to a 10.3 percent increase in employee-benefits revenue.
Noninterest income was also helped by an increase of 11.5 percent in wealth-management fees, driven by gains in trust services and asset management, according to Community.
Also during the second quarter, Community Bank closed an acquisition of 16 HSBC branches across Western, Central, and Northern New York. The bank will pick up three more First Niagara Bank branches in Geneva and Canandaigua in September.
Total deposits increased to $4.91 billion at the end of the quarter, up from $4.76 billion a year earlier.
Operating expenses for the second quarter totaled $49.4 million, down from $51.1 million a year earlier. Last year’s second quarter included more than $3.6 million in acquisition costs, compared with $164,000 this year.
Net charge-offs in the second quarter totaled $2.1 million, up from $2 million in the first quarter this year and $700,000 a year earlier. The provision for loan losses was $2.2 million, up $500,000 from the first quarter and $1.1 million higher than the second quarter of 2011.
Nonperforming loans totaled $32 million at the end of the second quarter, down from $34 million in the first quarter and up from $20.3 million a year earlier.
Dereszynski returns to lead Brown & Brown Empire State
SYRACUSE — Brown & Brown Empire State reintroduced Nick Dereszynski as its president this morning, marking his return after a year in Seattle. Dereszynski, who
Income moves higher at Community Bank System
DeWITT — Profit jumped more than 17 percent in the second quarter at DeWitt–based Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU). Net income at the banking
Community Bank completes acquisition of HSBC locations
DeWITT — Community Bank has completed its acquisition of 16 HSBC branches across Western, Central, and Northern New York. The locations opened today as Community
Somebody Else Built My Business
It was years ago when my wife and I were having dinner with cousin Shelly. At some point, the conversation turned to the economy and the role of business. Shelly informed me that America was built on the back of government and the faithful bureaucrats who toil in anonymity, those who taught our children and
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It was years ago when my wife and I were having dinner with cousin Shelly. At some point, the conversation turned to the economy and the role of business. Shelly informed me that America was built on the back of government and the faithful bureaucrats who toil in anonymity, those who taught our children and built our bridges and roads.
I can’t remember what I was eating, but I must have swallowed it whole. There was total silence. I then asked Shelly if I had understood her correctly. She confirmed that my auditory receptors were functioning properly. Those intrepid risk-takers we call entrepreneurs are not critical in growing the economy and creating jobs; rather, the government was the fount of any economic success.
I tried to explain the fundamental role of government was to provide security, a system of laws that were fair and enforced, an educated citizenry, and infrastructure. This ensures all Americans with the level playing field that allows each of us to apply our God-given talents in the pursuit of our individual happiness. I cited inventors like Eli Whitney, Samuel F. B. Morse, Henry Ford, the Wright brothers, Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, all to no avail.
Shelly was unconvinced by my argument. For her there were no heroes, no American genius. There was just a collective effort.
Last year, Elizabeth Warren made the same argument as cousin Shelly. Warren is currently running for a U.S. Senate seat in Massachusetts. “There is nobody in this country who got rich on his own,” she contends. If you are a factory owner, you moved your goods to market on the roads “… the rest of us paid for … You hired workers the rest of us paid to educate. You were safe in your factory because of police and fire forces that the rest of us paid for….” I didn’t invite Ms. Warren to dinner to explain that the hypothetical factory owner undoubtedly paid substantial taxes to support all of the functions she mentioned in her collectivist rationale.
Flash forward to July 13 — President Barack Obama is in Roanoke, Va. on the campaign trail without his teleprompter. The 5,000-word message: “If you’ve got a business, you didn’t build that. Somebody else made that happen.” Total silence on my part. Cousin Shelly, Elizabeth Warren, and now the president of the United States.
Finally, I understand. I didn’t contribute to my business success. The thousands of owners and entrepreneurs we interviewed at The Business Journal didn’t contribute to their business success. All success is due to society’s collectivist efforts. All businesses are indebted to government agencies like the Energy Department, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Food & Drug Administration, which gave us the foundation to prosper. Government is the ultimate risk-taker and provider of sustenance.
Mr. President, I wish you had told me sooner that my success would be a result of someone else’s efforts or gifts. I could have avoided those decades of 75-hour weeks while I tried to build the business. Now, I find out there was no need to max out my credit cards, invade my savings, or remortgage the house to raise funds for the business. All the concern I had about meeting payroll was unnecessary or the nights I lay awake wondering how to grow the business. And if I failed, the government would surely be there to rescue me.
How foolish of me. I could have joined the president for over 100 rounds of golf in the last three-and-a-half years rather than work at my business, since all success flows from others.
Soon, I will instruct my editorial staff to review the 17,000 business stories in our archives and strike the words “entrepreneur,” “free enterprise,” and “risk-taker.” Going forward, we will attribute business success only to the government and its minions and denigrate all those phony dreamers who think they are instrumental in creating success. I shall also recommend to my board of directors that we change the name of our corporate entity to the George Orwell Business Journal.
Thank you Cousin Shelly, Ms. Warren, and President Obama for explaining how to build a business. Since somebody else built my business, my only request is that you introduce me to them so I can thank them for my success.
Norman Poltenson is the publisher of The Central New York Business Journal. Contact him at npoltenson@cnybj.com
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