þ | Annual Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. For the Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2008 |
o | Transition Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. |
United States | 23-2900888 | |
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization) | (I.R.S. Employer Identification Number) | |
100 Liberty Street, Warren, Pennsylvania | 16365 | |
(Address of Principal Executive Offices) | Zip Code |
Title of each class | Name of each exchange on which registered | |
Common Stock, $0.10 Par Value | NASDAQ Stock Market, LLC |
Large accelerated filer o | Accelerated filer þ | Non-accelerated filer o | Smaller reporting company o | |||
(Do not check if a smaller reporting company) |
(1) | Proxy Statement for the 2009 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of the Registrant (Part III). |
2
3
At December 31, | At June 30, | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2005 | 2004 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Amount | Percent | Amount | Percent | Amount | Percent | Amount | Percent | Amount | Percent | Amount | Percent | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(Dollars in Thousands) | (Dollars in Thousands) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Real estate:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
One- to four-family
|
$ | 2,492,940 | 47.2 | % | 2,430,117 | 48.9 | % | 2,411,024 | 53.5 | % | 2,805,900 | 59.5 | % | 2,693,174 | 60.3 | % | 2,615,328 | 63.1 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Home equity
|
1,035,954 | 19.6 | % | 992,335 | 20.0 | % | 887,352 | 19.7 | % | 780,451 | 16.5 | % | 737,619 | 16.5 | % | 588,192 | 14.2 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Multifamily and commercial
|
1,100,218 | 20.8 | % | 906,594 | 18.3 | % | 701,951 | 15.6 | % | 594,503 | 12.6 | % | 534,224 | 11.9 | % | 454,606 | 11.0 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total real estate loans
|
$ | 4,629,112 | 87.6 | % | 4,329,046 | 87.2 | % | 4,000,327 | 88.8 | % | 4,180,854 | 88.6 | % | 3,965,017 | 88.7 | % | 3,658,126 | 88.3 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Consumer:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Automobile
|
102,267 | 2.0 | % | 125,298 | 2.5 | % | 138,401 | 3.1 | % | 144,519 | 3.1 | % | 138,102 | 3.1 | % | 120,887 | 2.9 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Education loans
|
38,152 | 0.7 | % | 14,551 | 0.3 | % | 11,973 | 0.3 | % | 120,504 | 2.5 | % | 112,462 | 2.5 | % | 95,599 | 2.3 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Loans on savings accounts
|
11,191 | 0.2 | % | 10,563 | 0.2 | % | 10,313 | 0.2 | % | 9,066 | 0.2 | % | 8,500 | 0.2 | % | 8,038 | 0.2 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other (1)
|
115,913 | 2.2 | % | 117,831 | 2.4 | % | 109,303 | 2.4 | % | 106,390 | 2.3 | % | 102,787 | 2.3 | % | 112,163 | 2.7 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total consumer loans
|
$ | 267,523 | 5.1 | % | 268,243 | 5.4 | % | 269,990 | 6.0 | % | 380,479 | 8.1 | % | 361,851 | 8.1 | % | 336,687 | 8.1 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Commercial business
|
387,145 | 7.3 | % | 367,459 | 7.4 | % | 235,311 | 5.2 | % | 157,572 | 3.3 | % | 142,391 | 3.2 | % | 149,509 | 3.6 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total loans receivable, gross
|
$ | 5,283,780 | 100.0 | % | 4,964,748 | 100.0 | % | 4,505,628 | 100.0 | % | 4,718,905 | 100.0 | % | 4,469,259 | 100.0 | % | 4,144,322 | 100.0 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Deferred loan fees
|
(5,041 | ) | (4,179 | ) | (3,027 | ) | (3,877 | ) | (4,257 | ) | (6,630 | ) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Undisbursed loan proceeds
|
(81,918 | ) | (123,163 | ) | (52,505 | ) | (59,348 | ) | (56,555 | ) | (53,081 | ) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Allowance for loan losses
(real estate loans)
|
(33,760 | ) | (28,854 | ) | (17,936 | ) | (16,875 | ) | (15,918 | ) | (15,113 | ) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Allowance for loan losses
(other loans)
|
(21,169 | ) | (12,930 | ) | (19,719 | ) | (16,536 | ) | (15,645 | ) | (15,557 | ) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total loans receivable, net
|
$ | 5,141,892 | 4,795,622 | 4,412,441 | 4,622,269 | 4,376,884 | 4,053,941 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
(1) | Consists primarily of secured and unsecured personal loans. |
Between | Between | Between | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Within 1 Year | 1-2 Years | 2-3 Years | 3-5 Years | Beyond 5 Years | Total | |||||||||||||||||||
(In Thousands) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Real estate loans:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
One- to four-family residential
|
$ | 194,953 | 128,566 | 117,431 | 234,006 | 1,817,984 | $ | 2,492,940 | ||||||||||||||||
Multifamily and commercial
|
374,641 | 131,556 | 109,381 | 381,377 | 103,263 | 1,100,218 | ||||||||||||||||||
Consumer loans
|
382,501 | 129,440 | 117,265 | 205,306 | 468,965 | 1,303,477 | ||||||||||||||||||
Commercial business loans
|
131,829 | 46,292 | 38,489 | 134,199 | 36,336 | 387,145 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total loans
|
$ | 1,083,924 | 435,854 | 382,566 | 954,888 | 2,426,548 | $ | 5,283,780 | ||||||||||||||||
|
4
Fixed | Adjustable | Total | ||||||||||
(In Thousands) | ||||||||||||
Real estate loans:
|
||||||||||||
One- to four-family residential
|
$ | 2,296,290 | 68,091 | $ | 2,364,381 | |||||||
Mulitfamily and commercial
|
343,645 | 608,986 | 952,631 | |||||||||
Consumer loans
|
879,576 | 159,992 | 1,039,568 | |||||||||
Commercial business loans
|
126,324 | 208,888 | 335,212 | |||||||||
|
||||||||||||
Total loans
|
$ | 3,645,835 | 1,045,957 | $ | 4,691,792 | |||||||
|
5
6
7
8
At December 31, | At June 30, | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2005 | 2004 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Number | Balance | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(Dollars in Thousands) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Loans past due 30 days to 59 days:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
One- to four-family residential loans
|
392 | $ | 32,988 | 27,270 | 24,078 | 26,290 | 3,941 | 5,765 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Multifamily and commercial RE loans
|
99 | 18,901 | 11,331 | 7,975 | 4,924 | 5,198 | 2,201 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Consumer loans
|
1,157 | 11,295 | 10,550 | 9,096 | 12,053 | 5,611 | 4,877 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Commercial business loans
|
86 | 7,700 | 9,947 | 4,325 | 2,450 | 1,000 | 782 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total loans past due 30 days to 59 days
|
1,734 | $ | 70,884 | 59,098 | 45,474 | 45,717 | 15,750 | 13,625 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Loans past due 60 days to 89 days:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
One- to four-family residential loans
|
101 | 7,599 | 6,077 | 5,970 | 9,156 | 4,687 | 4,925 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Multifamily and commercial RE loans
|
54 | 8,432 | 4,984 | 3,846 | 3,399 | 8,156 | 1,023 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Consumer loans
|
379 | 2,836 | 2,676 | 2,833 | 3,773 | 3,134 | 2,032 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Commercial business loans
|
45 | 3,801 | 2,550 | 501 | 263 | 279 | 309 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total loans past due 60 days to 89 days
|
579 | $ | 22,668 | 16,287 | 13,150 | 16,591 | 16,256 | 8,289 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Loans past due 90 days or more (1):
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
One- to four-family residential loans
|
223 | 20,435 | 12,542 | 10,334 | 12,179 | 11,507 | 11,322 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Multifamily and commercial RE loans
|
155 | 43,828 | 24,323 | 18,982 | 21,013 | 15,610 | 13,823 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Consumer loans
|
687 | 9,756 | 7,582 | 4,578 | 8,322 | 5,514 | 4,536 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Commercial business loans
|
114 | 25,184 | 5,163 | 6,631 | 1,502 | 979 | 2,824 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total loans past due 90 days or more
|
1,179 | $ | 99,203 | 49,610 | 40,525 | 43,016 | 33,610 | 32,505 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total loans 30 days or more past due
|
3,492 | $ | 192,755 | 124,995 | 99,149 | 105,324 | 65,616 | 54,419 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total loans 90 days or more past due (1)
|
1,179 | $ | 99,203 | 49,610 | 40,525 | 43,016 | 33,610 | 32,505 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total REO
|
109 | 16,844 | 8,667 | 6,653 | 4,872 | 6,685 | 3,951 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total loans 90 days or more past due
and REO
|
1,288 | $ | 116,047 | 58,277 | 47,178 | 47,888 | 40,295 | 36,456 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total loans 90 days or more past due
to net loans receivable
|
1.93 | % | 1.03 | % | 0.92 | % | 0.93 | % | 0.77 | % | 0.80 | % | ||||||||||||||||
Total loans 90 days or more past due
and REO to total assets
|
1.67 | % | 0.87 | % | 0.72 | % | 0.74 | % | 0.64 | % | 0.57 | % |
(1) | The Company classifies as nonperforming all loans 90 days or more delinquent. |
9
At December 31, | ||||||||||||
2008 | 2007 | 2006 | ||||||||||
(In Thousands) | ||||||||||||
Substandard assets
|
$ | 155,245 | 85,526 | 70,182 | ||||||||
Doubtful assets
|
3,596 | 4,374 | 2,129 | |||||||||
Loss assets
|
64 | 388 | 270 | |||||||||
|
||||||||||||
Total classified assets
|
$ | 158,905 | 90,288 | 72,581 | ||||||||
|
10
Six Months | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ended | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Years Ended December 31, | December 31, | Years Ended June 30, | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2005 | 2004 | |||||||||||||||||||
(In Thousands) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net loans receivable
|
$ | 5,141,892 | 4,795,622 | 4,412,441 | 4,622,269 | 4,376,884 | 4,053,941 | |||||||||||||||||
Average loans outstanding
|
$ | 5,016,694 | 4,660,693 | 4,395,274 | 4,532,523 | 4,234,241 | 3,846,261 | |||||||||||||||||
Allowance for loan losses
balance at beginning of period
|
$ | 41,784 | 37,655 | 33,411 | 31,563 | 30,670 | 27,166 | |||||||||||||||||
Provision for loan losses
|
$ | 22,851 | 8,743 | 8,480 | 4,722 | 9,566 | 6,860 | |||||||||||||||||
Charge-offs:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Real estate loans
|
(3,962 | ) | (2,042 | ) | (1,148 | ) | (282 | ) | (676 | ) | (176 | ) | ||||||||||||
Consumer loans
|
(6,290 | ) | (5,175 | ) | (5,543 | ) | (3,314 | ) | (5,726 | ) | (5,113 | ) | ||||||||||||
Commercial loans
|
(1,358 | ) | (973 | ) | (926 | ) | (43 | ) | (3,071 | ) | (461 | ) | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total charge-offs
|
(11,610 | ) | (8,190 | ) | (7,617 | ) | (3,639 | ) | (9,473 | ) | (5,750 | ) | ||||||||||||
Recoveries:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Real estate loans
|
140 | 250 | 123 | 4 | 1 | | ||||||||||||||||||
Consumer loans
|
1,060 | 1,073 | 1,214 | 455 | 750 | 562 | ||||||||||||||||||
Commercial loans
|
704 | 134 | 62 | 51 | 49 | 502 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total recoveries
|
1,904 | 1,457 | 1,399 | 510 | 800 | 1,064 | ||||||||||||||||||
Acquired through acquistions
|
| 2,119 | 1,982 | 255 | | 1,330 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Allowance for loan losses
balance at end of period
|
$ | 54,929 | 41,784 | 37,655 | 33,411 | 31,563 | 30,670 | |||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Allowance for loan losses as a percentage
of net loans receivable
|
1.07 | % | 0.87 | % | 0.85 | % | 0.72 | % | 0.72 | % | 0.76 | % | ||||||||||||
Net charge-offs as a percentage of average
loans outstanding
|
0.19 | % | 0.14 | % | 0.14 | % | 0.14 | % | 0.20 | % | 0.12 | % | ||||||||||||
Allowance for loan losses as a percentage
of nonperforming loans
|
55.37 | % | 84.22 | % | 92.92 | % | 77.67 | % | 93.91 | % | 94.35 | % | ||||||||||||
Allowance for loan losses as a percentage
of nonperforming loans and REO
|
47.33 | % | 71.70 | % | 79.81 | % | 69.77 | % | 78.33 | % | 84.13 | % |
11
At December 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2008 | 2007 | 2006 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
% of Total | % of Total | % of Total | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Amount | Loans (1) | Amount | Loans (1) | Amount | Loans (1) | |||||||||||||||||||
(Dollars in Thousands) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Balance at end of period
applicable to:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Real estate loans
|
$ | 33,760 | 87.6 | % | 28,854 | 87.2 | % | 17,936 | 88.8 | % | ||||||||||||||
Consumer loans
|
6,125 | 5.1 | % | 6,645 | 5.4 | % | 16,500 | 6.0 | % | |||||||||||||||
Commercial business loans
|
15,044 | 7.3 | % | 6,285 | 7.4 | % | 3,219 | 5.2 | % | |||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total allowance for loan loss
|
$ | 54,929 | 100.0 | % | 41,784 | 100.0 | % | 37,655 | 100.0 | % | ||||||||||||||
|
(1) | Represents percentage of loans in each category to total loans. |
At December 31, | At June 30, | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2005 | 2005 | 2004 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
% of Total | % of Total | % of Total | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Amount | Loans (1) | Amount | Loans (1) | Amount | Loans (1) | |||||||||||||||||||
(Dollars in Thousands) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Balance at end of period
applicable to:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Real estate loans
|
$ | 16,875 | 88.6 | % | 15,918 | 88.7 | % | 15,113 | 88.3 | % | ||||||||||||||
Consumer loans
|
13,991 | 8.1 | % | 13,179 | 8.1 | % | 11,790 | 8.1 | % | |||||||||||||||
Commercial business loans
|
2,545 | 3.3 | % | 2,466 | 3.2 | % | 3,767 | 3.6 | % | |||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total allowance for loan loss
|
$ | 33,411 | 100.0 | % | 31,563 | 100.0 | % | 30,670 | 100.0 | % | ||||||||||||||
|
(1) | Represents percentage of loans in each category to total loans. |
12
At December 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2008 | 2007 | 2006 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Amortized | Amortized | Amortized | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Cost | Market Value | Cost | Market Value | Cost | Market Value | |||||||||||||||||||
(In Thousands) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mortgage-backed securities held to maturity:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Fixed-rate pass through certificates
|
$ | | | | | 9,097 | 8,965 | |||||||||||||||||
Variable-rate pass through certificates
|
| | | | 188,700 | 188,382 | ||||||||||||||||||
Fixed-rate collateralized mortgage
obligations (CMOs)
|
| | | | 4,484 | 4,249 | ||||||||||||||||||
Variable-rate CMOs
|
| | | | 49,374 | 49,335 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total mortgage-backed securities held to maturity
|
| | | | 251,655 | 250,931 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mortgage-backed securities available for sale:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Fixed-rate pass through certificates
|
186,659 | 193,099 | 73,284 | 73,992 | 68,720 | 67,430 | ||||||||||||||||||
Variable-rate pass through certificates
|
276,121 | 277,183 | 306,885 | 309,054 | 199,442 | 198,365 | ||||||||||||||||||
Fixed-rate CMOs
|
60,119 | 57,480 | 73,514 | 71,793 | 87,946 | 85,402 | ||||||||||||||||||
Variable-rate CMOs
|
228,917 | 217,877 | 76,886 | 76,908 | 27,613 | 27,771 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total mortgage-backed securities available for sale
|
751,816 | 745,639 | 530,569 | 531,747 | 383,721 | 378,968 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total mortgage-backed securities
|
$ | 751,816 | 745,639 | 530,569 | 531,747 | 635,376 | 629,899 | |||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment securities held to maturity:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Government, agency and GSEs
|
$ | | | | | 161,755 | 160,580 | |||||||||||||||||
Municipal securities
|
| | | | 269,886 | 273,438 | ||||||||||||||||||
Corporate debt issues
|
| | | | 33,671 | 35,566 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total investment securities held to maturity
|
| | | | 465,312 | 469,584 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment securities available for sale:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Government, agency and GSEs
|
97,884 | 108,908 | 286,359 | 292,546 | 214,031 | 212,525 | ||||||||||||||||||
Municipal securities
|
268,616 | 267,548 | 262,895 | 267,120 | 14,553 | 14,604 | ||||||||||||||||||
Corporate debt issues
|
25,165 | 15,961 | 37,225 | 35,075 | 63,114 | 60,577 | ||||||||||||||||||
Equity securities and mutual funds
|
954 | 1,114 | 6,478 | 6,879 | 95,548 | 100,840 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total investment securities available for sale
|
$ | 392,619 | 393,531 | 592,957 | 601,620 | 387,246 | 388,546 | |||||||||||||||||
|
At December 31, | ||||||||||||
2008 | 2007 | 2006 | ||||||||||
(In Thousands) | ||||||||||||
Mortgage-backed securities:
|
||||||||||||
Fannie Mae
|
$ | 288,082 | 165,391 | 205,127 | ||||||||
Ginnie Mae
|
99,354 | 88,428 | 120,799 | |||||||||
Freddie Mac
|
320,297 | 229,960 | 249,685 | |||||||||
Other (non-agency)
|
37,906 | 47,968 | 55,012 | |||||||||
|
||||||||||||
Total mortgage-backed securities
|
$ | 745,639 | 531,747 | 630,623 | ||||||||
|
13
At December 31, 2008 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
One Year or Less | One to Five Years | Five to Ten Years | More than Ten Years | Total | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Annualized | Annualized | Annualized | Annualized | Annualized | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Amortized | Weighted | Amortized | Weighted | Amortized | Weighted | Amortized | Weighted | Amortized | Weighted | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cost | Average Yield | Cost | Average Yield | Cost | Average Yield | Cost | Average Yield | Cost | Market Value | Average Yield | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(Dollars in Thousands) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment securities available for sale:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Government sponsored entites
|
$ | 2,985 | 5.29 | % | 2,962 | 5.40 | % | 30,352 | 5.32 | % | 61,494 | 5.21 | % | $ | 97,793 | $ | 108,820 | 5.25 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
U.S. Government and agency obligations
|
91 | 2.60 | % | | | | | | | 91 | 88 | 2.60 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Municipal securities
|
| | 460 | 4.22 | % | 43,159 | 4.17 | % | 224,997 | 4.52 | % | 268,616 | 267,548 | 4.46 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Corporate debt issues
|
| | | | | | 25,165 | 5.42 | % | 25,165 | 15,961 | 5.42 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Equity securities and mutual funds
|
| | | | | | 954 | 7.06 | % | 954 | 1,114 | 7.06 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total investment securities available for sale
|
$ | 3,076 | 5.21 | % | 3,422 | 5.24 | % | 73,511 | 4.64 | % | 312,610 | 4.73 | % | $ | 392,619 | $ | 393,531 | 4.72 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mortgage-backed securities available for sale:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Pass through certificates
|
276,557 | 4.96 | % | 13,912 | 4.54 | % | 8,783 | 4.92 | % | 163,528 | 5.37 | % | 462,780 | 470,282 | 5.10 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CMOs
|
228,917 | 1.73 | % | | | 22,636 | 4.76 | % | 37,483 | 4.50 | % | 289,036 | 275,357 | 2.33 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total mortgage-backed securities available for sale
|
$ | 505,474 | 3.50 | % | 13,912 | 4.54 | % | 31,419 | 4.81 | % | 201,011 | 5.21 | % | $ | 751,816 | $ | 745,639 | 4.03 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total investment securities and mortgage-backed
securities
|
$ | 508,550 | 3.51 | % | 17,334 | 4.68 | % | 104,930 | 4.69 | % | 513,621 | 4.92 | % | $ | 1,144,435 | $ | 1,139,170 | 4.27 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
14
At December 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2008 | 2007 | 2006 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Balance | Percent (1) | Rate (2) | Balance | Percent (1) | Rate (2) | Balance | Percent (1) | Rate (2) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(Dollars in Thousands) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Savings accounts
|
$ | 760,245 | 15.1 | % | 1.14 | % | $ | 745,430 | 13.4 | % | 1.20 | % | $ | 807,873 | 15.1 | % | 1.44 | % | ||||||||||||||||||
Checking accounts
|
1,100,131 | 21.8 | % | 0.37 | % | 1,079,093 | 19.5 | % | 0.85 | % | 994,783 | 18.5 | % | 1.05 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||
Money market accounts
|
720,375 | 14.3 | % | 1.58 | % | 681,115 | 12.3 | % | 3.63 | % | 594,472 | 11.1 | % | 3.62 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||
Certificates of deposit | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Maturing within 1 year | 1,285,695 | 25.5 | % | 2.88 | % | 2,541,053 | 45.9 | % | 4.70 | % | 2,024,850 | 37.7 | % | 4.47 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||
Maturing 1 to 3 years
|
829,776 | 16.5 | % | 3.74 | % | 379,183 | 6.8 | % | 4.31 | % | 801,156 | 14.9 | % | 4.50 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||
Maturing more than 3
years
|
341,989 | 6.8 | % | 4.11 | % | 116,460 | 2.1 | % | 4.62 | % | 143,616 | 2.7 | % | 4.56 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total certificates
|
$ | 2,457,460 | 48.8 | % | 3.34 | % | 3,036,696 | 54.8 | % | 4.65 | % | 2,969,622 | 55.3 | % | 4.48 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total deposits
|
$ | 5,038,211 | 100.0 | % | 2.08 | % | $ | 5,542,334 | 100.0 | % | 3.29 | % | $ | 5,366,750 | 100.0 | % | 3.26 | % | ||||||||||||||||||
|
(1) | Represents percentage of total deposits. | |
(2) | Represents weighted average nominal rate at fiscal year end. |
Certificates of | ||||
Maturity Period | Deposits | |||
(In Thousands) | ||||
Three months or less
|
$ | 109,298 | ||
Over three months through six months
|
82,046 | |||
Over six months through twelve months
|
84,492 | |||
Over twelve months
|
257,568 | |||
|
||||
|
||||
Total
|
$ | 533,404 | ||
|
15
During the Years Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2008 | 2007 | 2006 | ||||||||||
(Dollars in Thousands) | ||||||||||||
FHLB-Pittsburgh borrowings:
|
||||||||||||
Average balance outstanding
|
$ | 625,706 | 305,597 | 352,596 | ||||||||
Maximum outstanding at end of any month during period
|
$ | 972,018 | 332,160 | 377,592 | ||||||||
Balance outstanding at end of period
|
$ | 972,018 | 257,025 | 332,196 | ||||||||
Weighted average interest rate during period
|
3.89 | % | 4.59 | % | 4.62 | % | ||||||
Weighted average interest rate at end of period
|
3.49 | % | 4.64 | % | 4.58 | % | ||||||
|
||||||||||||
Reverse repurchase agreements:
|
||||||||||||
Average balance outstanding
|
$ | 88,349 | 70,875 | 44,860 | ||||||||
Maximum outstanding at end of any month during period
|
$ | 98,108 | 83,432 | 55,705 | ||||||||
Balance outstanding at end of period
|
$ | 91,436 | 77,452 | 55,705 | ||||||||
Weighted average interest rate during period
|
1.75 | % | 4.01 | % | 4.03 | % | ||||||
Weighted average interest rate at end of period
|
1.02 | % | 3.25 | % | 4.25 | % | ||||||
|
||||||||||||
Other borrowings:
|
||||||||||||
Average balance outstanding
|
$ | 4,602 | 4,790 | 5,333 | ||||||||
Maximum outstanding at end of any month during period
|
$ | 4,652 | 4,923 | 5,660 | ||||||||
Balance outstanding at end of period
|
$ | 4,491 | 4,638 | 4,913 | ||||||||
Weighted average interest rate during period
|
4.99 | % | 4.99 | % | 4.99 | % | ||||||
Weighted average interest rate at end of period
|
4.99 | % | 4.99 | % | 4.99 | % | ||||||
|
||||||||||||
Total borrowings:
|
||||||||||||
Average balance outstanding
|
$ | 718,657 | 381,262 | 402,789 | ||||||||
Maximum outstanding at end of any month during period
|
$ | 1,067,945 | 408,596 | 424,766 | ||||||||
Balance outstanding at end of period
|
$ | 1,067,945 | 339,115 | 392,814 | ||||||||
Weighted average interest rate during period
|
3.74 | % | 4.52 | % | 4.59 | % | ||||||
Weighted average interest rate at end of period
|
3.29 | % | 4.33 | % | 4.54 | % |
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
\
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
ITEM 5.
MARKET FOR REGISTRANTS COMMON EQUITY, RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS AND ISSUER
PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES
Year ended
Cash Dividends
December 31, 2008
High
Low
Declared
$30.16
23.50
$
0.22
28.10
21.78
0.22
34.34
20.05
0.22
29.86
18.80
0.22
Year ended
Cash Dividends
December 31, 2007
High
Low
Declared
$
28.31
25.26
$
0.20
28.99
26.08
0.20
29.75
25.51
0.22
30.03
25.76
0.22
(c) Total Number of
Shares
(d) Maximum Number of
(a) Total Number
(b) Average
Purchased as Part of
Shares that May Yet
of Shares
Price Paid per
Publicly Announced
Be Purchased Under the
Period
Purchased
Share
Plans or Programs (1)
Plans or Programs (1)
273,600
273,600
273,600
(1)
The Companys Board of Directors approved a repurchase program for up to 5% of publicly traded
common stock, or 1,000,000 shares. The current program has no expiration date.
Table of Contents
6/03
6/04
6/05
12/05
12/06
12/07
12/08
100.00
145.76
138.31
140.19
186.25
185.80
154.67
100.00
128.19
129.34
140.27
157.21
171.64
100.00
100.00
117.32
126.61
128.75
146.64
115.80
88.57
Among Northwest Bancorp, The NASDAQ Composite Index
And The NASDAQ Bank Index
Table of Contents
At December 31,
At June 30,
2008
2007
2006
2005
2005
2004
(In Thousands)
$
6,930,241
6,663,516
6,527,815
6,447,307
6,330,482
6,343,248
465,312
444,407
467,303
209,241
393,531
601,620
388,546
289,871
290,702
444,676
251,655
189,851
235,676
392,301
745,639
531,747
378,968
323,965
384,481
411,003
4,508,393
4,172,850
3,926,859
4,100,754
3,888,287
3,583,302
261,398
261,598
253,490
366,488
348,672
324,897
372,101
361,174
232,092
155,027
139,925
145,742
$
5,141,892
4,795,622
4,412,441
4,622,269
4,376,884
4,053,941
5,038,211
5,542,334
5,366,750
5,228,479
5,187,946
5,191,621
1,067,945
339,115
392,814
417,356
410,344
449,147
$
613,784
612,878
604,561
585,658
582,190
550,472
Six Months
Ended
Years Ended December 31,
December 31,
Years Ended June 30,
2008
2007
2006
2005
2005
2004
(In Thousands)
$
388,659
396,031
368,573
170,449
321,824
300,230
169,293
211,015
191,109
79,414
138,047
134,466
219,366
185,016
177,464
91,035
183,777
165,764
22,851
8,743
8,480
4,722
9,566
6,860
196,515
176,273
168,984
86,313
174,211
158,904
38,752
43,022
46,026
19,851
32,004
31,862
170,128
152,742
143,682
66,317
128,659
128,805
65,139
66,553
71,328
39,847
77,556
61,961
16,968
17,456
19,792
10,998
22,741
19,829
$
48,171
49,097
51,536
28,849
54,815
42,132
$
1.00
1.00
1.03
0.57
1.10
0.88
$
0.99
0.99
1.03
0.56
1.09
0.87
Table of Contents
At or for
the Six
Months
Ended
At or for the Year Ended December 31,
December 31,
At or for the Year Ended June 30,
2008
2007
2006
2005*
2005
2004
0.70
%
0.73
%
0.79
%
0.91
%
0.86
%
0.68
%
7.75
%
8.18
%
8.60
%
9.81
%
9.74
%
8.17
%
9.04
%
8.96
%
9.19
%
9.23
%
8.87
%
8.27
%
8.86
%
9.20
%
9.26
%
9.04
%
9.20
%
8.68
%
3.25
%
2.74
%
2.77
%
2.99
%
3.07
%
2.83
%
3.57
%
3.10
%
3.06
%
3.21
%
3.24
%
2.98
%
2.48
%
2.28
%
2.20
%
2.08
%
2.03
%
2.06
%
1.29
x
1.21
x
1.24
x
1.37
x
1.43
x
1.29
x
88.89
%
84.85
%
67.96
%
53.57
%
44.04
%
45.98
%
1.93
%
1.03
%
0.92
%
0.93
%
0.77
%
0.80
%
1.67
%
0.87
%
0.72
%
0.74
%
0.64
%
0.57
%
55.37
%
84.22
%
92.92
%
77.67
%
93.91
%
94.35
%
1.07
%
0.87
%
0.85
%
0.72
%
0.72
%
0.76
%
1.10
x
1.10
x
1.09
x
1.09
x
1.08
x
1.06
x
167
166
160
153
153
152
51
51
51
50
49
49
*
Ratios are annualized where appropriate
Changes in interest rates which could impact our net interest margin;
Adverse changes in our loan portfolio or investment securities portfolio and the
resulting credit risk-related. losses and/ or market value adjustments;
The adequacy of the allowance for loan losses;
Changes in general economic or business conditions resulting in changes in demand for
credit and other services, among other things;
Changes in consumer confidence, spending and savings habits relative to the bank and
non-bank financial services we provide;
Compliance with laws and regulatory requirements of federal and state agencies;
New legislation affecting the financial services industry;
Competition from other financial institutions in originating loans and attracting
deposits;
Our ability to effectively implement technology driven products and services;
Sources of liquidity;
Changes in costs and expenses; and
Our success in managing the risks involved in the foregoing.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Years Ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
Average
Average
Average
Average
Yield/
Average
Yield/
Average
Yield/
Balance
Interest
Cost
Balance
Interest
Cost
Balance
Interest
Cost
(Dollars in Thousands)
$
5,016,694
328,687
6.50
%
4,660,693
317,321
6.78
%
4,395,274
288,037
6.59
%
732,281
34,694
4.74
%
584,053
29,385
5.03
%
660,986
31,523
4.77
%
478,933
29,250
6.11
%
820,337
47,990
5.85
%
861,411
49,450
5.74
%
48,167
1,428
2.96
%
33,348
2,017
6.05
%
34,292
1,692
4.93
%
104,895
2,756
2.59
%
150,665
7,867
5.15
%
133,218
6,584
4.87
%
$
6,380,970
396,815
6.18
%
6,249,096
404,580
6.45
%
6,085,181
377,286
6.20
%
488,579
453,922
437,607
$
6,869,549
6,703,018
6,522,788
$
778,341
9,159
1.18
%
793,172
10,909
1.38
%
882,974
12,619
1.43
%
732,097
6,434
0.88
%
698,585
11,038
1.58
%
663,046
9,396
1.42
%
720,713
14,726
2.04
%
637,983
23,551
3.69
%
574,820
19,446
3.38
%
2,716,815
106,742
3.93
%
3,076,693
141,042
4.58
%
2,850,548
115,524
4.05
%
718,657
26,893
3.74
%
381,262
17,225
4.52
%
402,789
18,508
4.59
%
108,287
5,339
4.86
%
105,850
7,250
6.76
%
203,413
15,616
7.57
%
$
5,774,910
169,293
2.93
%
5,693,545
211,015
3.71
%
5,577,590
191,109
3.43
%
473,410
409,096
346,016
6,248,320
6,102,641
5,923,606
621,229
600,377
599,182
$
6,869,549
6,703,018
6,522,788
$
227,522
193,565
186,177
3.25
%
2.74
%
2.77
%
$
606,060
555,551
507,591
3.57
%
3.10
%
3.06
%
1.10
x
1.10
x
1.09
x
(1)
Average gross loans receivable includes loans held as available-for-sale and loans placed on
nonaccrual status.
(2)
Interest income includes accretion/amortization of deferred loan fees/expenses, which were not
material.
(3)
Interest income on tax-free loans is presented on a taxable equivalent basis including
adjustments of $1,559, $1,751 and $1,721, respectively.
(4)
Interest income on tax-free investment securities is presented on a taxable equivalent basis
including adjustments of $6,597, $6,798 and $6,992, respectively.
(5)
Average balances do not include the effect of unrealized gains or losses on securities held
as available-for-sale.
(6)
Average balances include Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac stock.
(7)
The FHLB suspended dividends until further notice during the quarter ended December 31, 2008.
(8)
Average balances include the effect of unrealized gains or losses on securities held as
available-for-sale.
(9)
Average balances include FHLB advances, securities sold under agreements to repurchase and other borrowings.
(10)
Net interest rate spread represents the difference between the average yield on interest-earning assets and the average cost of interest-bearing liabilities.
(11)
Net interest margin represents net interest income as a percentage of average interest-earning assets.
Table of Contents
Years Ended December 31,
2008 vs. 2007
2007 vs. 2006
Increase/(Decrease) Due to
Total Increase
Increase/(Decrease) Due to
Total Increase
Rate
Volume
(Decrease)
Rate
Volume
(Decrease)
(In Thousands)
$
(12,864
)
24,230
$
11,366
$
10,072
19,212
$
29,284
(2,149
)
7,458
5,309
1,733
(3,871
)
(2,138
)
2,110
(20,850
)
(18,740
)
943
(2,403
)
(1,460
)
(1,485
)
896
(589
)
382
(57
)
325
(3,314
)
(1,797
)
(5,111
)
396
887
1,283
$
(17,702
)
9,937
$
(7,765
)
$
13,526
13,768
$
27,294
(1,560
)
(190
)
(1,750
)
(451
)
(1,259
)
(1,710
)
(5,134
)
530
(4,604
)
1,109
533
1,642
(11,879
)
3,054
(8,825
)
1,870
2,235
4,105
(18,981
)
(15,319
)
(34,300
)
15,752
9,766
25,518
(5,575
)
15,243
9,668
(302
)
(981
)
(1,283
)
(2,078
)
167
(1,911
)
(1,280
)
(7,086
)
(8,366
)
$
(45,207
)
3,485
$
(41,722
)
$
16,698
3,208
$
19,906
$
27,505
6,452
$
33,957
$
(3,172
)
10,560
$
7,388
Table of Contents
December 31, 2008
December 31, 2007
(Dollars in Thousands)
$
706,610
714,160
22,017
(931
)
(178,758
)
(183,396
)
$
549,869
529,833
54,198
41,952
$
604,067
571,785
$
6,829,557
6,454,343
$
4,329,431
4,053,803
8.05
%
8.21
%
3.00% to 5.00
%
3.00% to 5.00
%
13.95
%
14.10
%
8.00
%
8.00
%
(1)
Tier 2 capital consists of the allowance for loan losses, which is limited to 1.25% of total
risk-weighted assets as detailed under regulations of the FDIC, and 45% of pre-tax net
unrealized gains on securities available-for-sale.
(2)
The FDIC has indicated that the most highly rated institutions which meet certain criteria
will be required to maintain a ratio of 3.00%, and all other institutions will be required to
maintain an additional cushion of 100 to 200 basis points.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Payments due
Three years to
Less than one
One year to less
less than five
Five years or
year
than three years
years
greater
Total
(In Thousands)
$
285,635
196,532
270,000
315,778
$
1,067,945
108,254
108,254
4,280
6,931
4,366
10,310
25,887
$
289,915
203,463
274,366
434,342
$
1,202,086
(1)
See Note 11, Borrowed funds, of the Notes to Consolidated Financial
Statements for additional information.
(2)
See Note 22, Junior Subordinated Debentures/Trust-Preferred Securities, of the
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information.
(3)
See Note 8, Premises and Equipment, of the Notes to Consolidated Financial
Statements for additional information.
Table of Contents
Amounts Maturing or Repricing
Within
1-3
3-5
5-10
10-20
Over 20
1 Year
Years
Years
Years
Years
Years
Total
(Dollars in Thousands)
$
24,107
$
24,107
73,941
82,377
43,044
51,217
250,579
389,569
51,828
53,663
495,060
97,585
83,178
26,499
186,269
393,531
71,984
1,816
73,800
308,773
530,322
450,161
738,575
367,248
2,395,079
163,659
163,659
38,152
38,152
406,776
440,582
205,651
50,950
1,103,959
819,855
433,020
172,320
2,018
1,427,213
2,394,401
1,623,123
951,338
1,029,029
367,248
6,365,139
1,285,695
829,776
327,358
14,367
264
2,457,460
685,642
19,959
705,601
209,000
322,000
244,019
775,019
187,000
254,000
659,131
1,100,131
189,708
196,532
270,000
315,778
972,018
92,319
778
1,978
852
95,927
8,249
25,001
75,004
108,254
2,657,613
1,603,086
624,337
406,001
264,242
659,131
6,214,410
$
(263,212
)
20,037
327,001
623,028
103,006
(659,131
)
$
150,729
$
(263,212
)
(243,175
)
83,826
706,854
809,860
150,729
$
150,729
(3.80
)%
(3.51
)%
1.21
%
10.20
%
11.69
%
2.17
%
2.17
%
90.10
%
94.29
%
101.72
%
113.36
%
114.58
%
102.43
%
102.43
%
Table of Contents
Net income simulation.
Given a parallel shift of 2% in interest rates, the estimated
net income may not decrease by more than 20% within a one-year period.
Market value of equity simulation.
The market value of the Companys equity is the
net present value of the Companys assets and liabilities. Given a parallel shift of 2%
in interest rates, equity may not decrease by more than 35% of total shareholder
equity.
Movements in interest rates from
December 31, 2008 rates
Increase
Decrease
1%
2%
1%
2%
2.3
%
(1.2
)%
5.2
%
5.7
%
0.2
%
(0.1
)%
0.5
%
0.6
%
$
0.03
($0.02
)
$
0.07
$
0.08
(9.6
)%
(17.9
)%
(2.3
)%
(7.1
)%
Table of Contents
/s/ William J. Wagner
/s/ William W. Harvey, Jr.
Chief Financial Officer
Table of Contents
on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
Northwest Bancorp, Inc.:
March 4, 2009
Table of Contents
Northwest Bancorp, Inc.:
March 4, 2009
Table of Contents
December 31
2008
2007
$
55,815
75,905
16,795
153,160
7,312
1,551
1,139,170
1,133,367
5,141,892
4,795,622
27,252
27,084
16,844
8,667
63,143
31,304
115,842
110,894
123,479
118,682
171,363
171,614
7,395
11,782
6,280
8,955
37,659
14,929
$
6,930,241
6,663,516
$
5,038,211
5,542,334
1,067,945
339,115
26,190
24,159
5,194
4,356
70,663
32,354
108,254
108,320
6,316,457
6,050,638
5,124
5,119
218,332
214,606
490,326
458,425
(30,575
)
816
(69,423
)
(66,088
)
613,784
612,878
$
6,930,241
6,663,516
Table of Contents
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
327,128
315,570
286,316
34,694
29,385
31,523
11,828
30,583
31,164
12,253
12,626
12,986
2,756
7,867
6,584
388,659
396,031
368,573
137,061
186,540
156,985
32,232
24,475
34,124
169,293
211,015
191,109
219,366
185,016
177,464
22,851
8,743
8,480
196,515
176,273
168,984
32,432
27,754
24,459
6,718
6,223
5,321
2,376
2,705
2,550
6,037
4,958
368
(16,004
)
(8,412
)
728
4,832
(428
)
(83
)
735
4,797
4,460
4,344
665
1,578
684
(2,165
)
65
(205
)
4,324
3,046
2,938
38,752
43,022
46,026
91,129
84,217
78,611
21,924
21,375
20,368
13,237
12,788
12,411
18,652
15,019
12,051
2,582
2,778
2,877
4,387
4,499
3,876
5,500
3,742
2,818
3,884
663
685
705
3,124
8,128
7,661
6,861
170,128
152,742
143,682
65,139
66,553
71,328
14,739
15,597
16,840
2,229
1,859
2,952
16,968
17,456
19,792
$
48,171
49,097
51,536
$
1.00
1.00
1.03
$
0.99
0.99
1.03
Table of Contents
(Amounts in thousands, excluding share data)
Accumulated
other
Total
Common
Paid-in
Retained
comprehensive
Treasury
shareholders
stock
capital
earnings
income (loss), net
stock
equity
$
5,108
208,132
389,985
(384
)
(17,183
)
$
585,658
51,536
51,536
(859
)
(859
)
51,536
(859
)
50,677
(8,080
)
(8,080
)
(2,770
)
(2,770
)
6
867
873
2,296
2,296
(10,366
)
(10,366
)
(13,727
)
(13,727
)
5,114
211,295
425,024
(11,609
)
(25,263
)
604,561
49,097
49,097
12,425
12,425
49,097
12,425
61,522
(40,825
)
(40,825
)
5
857
862
2,454
2,454
(15,696
)
(15,696
)
5,119
214,606
458,425
816
(66,088
)
612,878
(499
)
572
73
5,119
214,606
457,926
1,388
(66,088
)
612,951
48,171
48,171
(31,963
)
(31,963
)
48,171
(31,963
)
16,208
(3,335
)
(3,335
)
5
995
1,000
2,731
2,731
(15,771
)
(15,771
)
$
5,124
218,332
490,326
(30,575
)
(69,423
)
$
613,784
Table of Contents
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
48,171
49,097
51,536
22,851
8,743
8,480
(3,468
)
(4,638
)
(4,550
)
3,124
16,222
14,572
10,828
(2,007
)
(11,119
)
(10,945
)
3,997
3,799
5,353
(6,382
)
(4,396
)
(1,334
)
2,731
2,454
2,296
16,004
8,412
2,165
(65
)
205
(6,480
)
(750
)
8,775
(234,973
)
(252,810
)
(153,354
)
212,535
250,295
143,340
71,366
63,594
63,754
(201,912
)
(457,776
)
(49,102
)
(280,459
)
151,374
115,550
319,051
182,454
138,640
113,484
105,361
5,333
15,652
(1,649,652
)
(1,489,646
)
(1,334,596
)
1,283,980
1,234,511
1,118,372
481,301
(31,839
)
3,715
(979
)
7,176
5,316
6,771
155
(101
)
66
(15,655
)
(11,411
)
(13,071
)
(25,150
)
(2,605
)
(431,076
)
122,973
32,411
Table of Contents
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
(504,123
)
9,737
54,948
645,000
(84,270
)
(75,180
)
(47,759
)
168,484
9,342
24,025
2,031
1,476
(2,142
)
(3,335
)
(40,825
)
(8,080
)
(102,062
)
(15,771
)
(15,696
)
(13,727
)
1,000
862
873
209,016
(110,284
)
(93,924
)
$
(150,694
)
76,283
2,241
$
230,616
154,333
152,092
(150,694
)
76,283
2,241
$
79,922
230,616
154,333
$
168,455
210,697
191,458
22,541
16,684
6,940
$
211,846
86,673
(25,150
)
(2,605
)
$
186,696
84,068
$
15,780
6,975
7,817
24,827
614
1,013
768
Table of Contents
(1)
Summary of Significant Accounting Policies
(a)
Nature of Operations
The Northwest group of companies is organized in a two-tier holding company structure.
Northwest Bancorp, MHC (MHC) is a federal mutual holding company and, at December 31,
2008 and 2007, owned approximately 63% of the outstanding shares of common stock of
Northwest Bancorp, Inc. (the Company). Annually, the MHC applies for and, for the past
three years, has received approval from the Office of Thrift Supervision to waive its
right to receive dividends from the Company. Dividends waived by MHC during the years
ended December 31, 2008, 2007, and 2006 were $26,872,000, $25,651,000, and $21,376,000,
respectively.
Northwest Bancorp, Inc., which is headquartered in Warren, Pennsylvania, is a federal
savings and loan holding company for its wholly owned subsidiary, Northwest Savings Bank
(Northwest). Northwest offers traditional deposit and loan products through its 167
banking locations in Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, Maryland, and Florida. Northwest,
through its subsidiary Northwest Consumer Discount Company, also offers loan products
through 49 consumer finance offices in Pennsylvania.
(b)
Principles of Consolidation
The consolidated financial statements include the accounts of the Company and its wholly
owned subsidiaries after elimination of all intercompany accounts and transactions.
(c)
Cash and Cash Equivalents
For purposes of the statement of cash flows, cash and cash equivalents include cash and
amounts due from depository institutions, interest-bearing deposits in other financial
institutions, federal funds sold, and other short-term investments.
(d)
Marketable Securities
The Company classifies marketable securities at the time of purchase as
available-for-sale, or trading securities. If it is managements intent at the time of
purchase to hold securities for an indefinite period of time and/or to use such
securities as part of its asset/liability management strategy, the securities are
classified as available-for-sale and are carried at fair value, with unrealized gains and
losses excluded from net earnings and reported as accumulated other comprehensive income,
a separate component of shareholders equity, net of tax. Securities classified as
available-for-sale include securities that may be sold in response to changes in interest
rates, resultant prepayment risk, or other market factors. Securities that are bought and
held principally for the purpose of selling them in the near term are classified as
trading and are reported at fair value, with unrealized gains and losses included in
earnings. The cost of securities sold is determined on a specific identification basis.
The Company held no securities classified as trading at or for the years ended
December 31, 2008 and 2007.
The Company regularly reviews its investment securities for declines in value below
amortized cost that might be considered other than temporary. If a decline in value is
considered other than temporary, an impairment charge is recorded in the income
statement.
Federal law requires a member institution of the Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) system to
hold stock of its district FHLB according to a predetermined formula. This stock is
recorded at cost and may be pledged to secure FHLB advances.
Table of Contents
(e)
Loans Receivable
Loans are stated at their unpaid principal balance net of any deferred origination fees
or costs and the allowance for estimated loan losses. Interest income on loans is
credited to income as earned. Interest earned on loans for which no payments were
received during the month is accrued at month end. Interest accrued on loans more than 90
days delinquent is reversed, and such loans are placed on nonaccrual status.
The Company has identified certain residential loans which will be sold prior to
maturity. These loans are recorded at the lower of amortized cost or fair value and at
December 31, 2008 and 2007 were $18,738,000 and $28,412,000, respectively.
Loan fees and certain direct loan origination costs are deferred, and the net deferred
fee or cost is then recognized using the level-yield method over the contractual life of
the loan as an adjustment to interest income.
(f)
Allowance for Loan Losses and Provision for Loan Losses
Provisions for estimated loan losses and the amount of the allowance for loan losses are
based on losses inherent in the loan portfolio that are both probable and reasonably
estimable at the date of the financial statements. Management believes, to the best of
their knowledge, that all known losses as of the statement of condition dates have been
recorded.
Management considers a loan to be impaired when it is probable that the Company will be
unable to collect all amounts due according to the contractual terms of the loan
agreement. Nonaccrual loans are deemed to be impaired unless fully secured with liquid
collateral. In evaluating whether a loan is impaired, management considers not only the
amount that the Company expects to collect but also the timing of collection. Generally,
if a delay in payment is insignificant (e.g., less than 30 days), a loan is not deemed to
be impaired.
When a loan is considered to be impaired, the amount of impairment is measured based on
the present value of expected future cash flows discounted at the loans effective
interest rate or at the loans market price or fair value of the collateral if the loan
is collateral dependent. Larger loans are evaluated individually for impairment. Smaller
balance, homogeneous loans (e.g., primarily consumer and residential mortgages) are
evaluated collectively for impairment. Impairment losses are included in the allowance
for loan losses. Impaired loans are charged off when management believes that the
ultimate collectibility of a loan is not likely.
Interest income on impaired loans is recognized using the cash basis method. Such
interest ultimately collected is credited to income in the period of recovery or applied
to reduce principal if there is sufficient doubt about the collectibility of principal.
Interest that has been accrued on impaired loans that are contractually past due 90 days
and over is reversed.
(g)
Real Estate Owned
Real estate owned is comprised of property acquired through foreclosure or voluntarily
conveyed by delinquent borrowers. These assets are recorded on the date acquired at the
lower of the related loan balance or market value
of the collateral less disposition cost with the market value being determined by an
appraisal. Subsequently, foreclosed assets are valued at the lower of the amount recorded
at acquisition date or the current market value, less estimated disposition costs. Gains
or losses realized from the disposition of such property are credited or charged to
noninterest income.
Table of Contents
(h)
Premises and Equipment
Premises and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and amortization.
Depreciation is accumulated on a straight-line basis over the estimated useful lives of
the related assets. Estimated lives range from three to thirty years. Amortization of
leasehold improvements is accumulated on a straight-line basis over the terms of the
related leases or the useful lives of the related assets, whichever is shorter.
(i)
Goodwill
In accordance with Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 142,
Goodwill and
Other Intangible Assets
(SFAS 142), goodwill is allocated to various reporting units,
which are either the Companys reportable segments or one level below. Goodwill is no
longer amortized but is tested for impairment on an annual basis and between annual tests
if events occur, or if circumstances change, that would more likely than not reduce the
fair value below its carrying amount. The annual impairment test is based on discounted
cash flow models that incorporate variables including growth in net income, discount
rates, and terminal values. If the carrying amount of goodwill exceeds its fair value, an
impairment loss is recognized as a non-cash charge.
(j)
Core Deposit Intangibles
The Company engages an independent third party expert to analyze and prepare a core
deposit study for all acquisitions. This study reflects the cumulative present value
benefit of acquiring deposits versus an alternative source of funding. Based upon this
analysis, the amount of the premium related to the core deposits of the business
purchased is calculated along with the estimated life of the acquired deposits. The core
deposit intangible, which is recorded in other intangible assets, is then amortized to
expense on an accelerated basis over an approximate life of seven years.
(k)
Bank-Owned Life Insurance
The Company owns insurance on the lives of a certain group of key employees and
directors. The policies were purchased to help offset the increase in the costs of
various fringe benefit plans including healthcare as well as the directors deferred
compensation plan. The cash surrender value of these policies is included as an asset on
the consolidated statements of financial condition, and any increases in the cash
surrender value are recorded as noninterest income on the consolidated statements of
income. In the event of the death of an insured individual under these policies, after
distribution to the insureds beneficiaries the Company would receive a death benefit,
which would be recorded as noninterest income.
(l)
Deposits
Interest on deposits is accrued and charged to expense monthly and is paid or credited in
accordance with the terms of the accounts.
(m)
Pension Plans
The Company has noncontributory defined benefit pension plans. The net periodic pension
cost has been calculated in accordance with Statement of Financial Accounting Standards
No. 87,
Employers Accounting for Pensions
. In conjunction with the adoption of Statement
of Financial Accounting Standards No. 158,
Employers Accounting for
Defined Benefit Pension and Other Postretirement Plans
, the Company changed its
measurement date to December 31 from October 31 for its defined benefit pension plans
effective December 31, 2008.
(n)
Income Taxes
The Company joins with its wholly owned subsidiaries in filing a consolidated federal
income tax return.
Table of Contents
The Company accounts for income taxes using the asset and liability method prescribed by
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 109,
Accounting for Income Taxes
. The
objective of the asset and liability method is to establish deferred tax assets and
liabilities for temporary differences between the financial reporting and tax basis of
the Companys assets and liabilities based on the tax rates expected to be in effect when
such amounts are realized or settled.
(o)
Stock Related Compensation
The Company accounts for its stock-based compensation plans under the provisions of
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 123 (revised 2005),
Share-Based Payments
(SFAS 123(r)). The Black-Scholes-Merton option-pricing model was used to determine the
fair value of each option award, estimated on the grant date. During the year ended
December 31, 2008 the Company awarded 393,777 stock options to employees and 24,000 stock
options to directors. Option awards are generally granted with an exercise price equal
to the market price of the Companys stock at the grant date and options generally vest
over a five-year to seven-year period from the grant date. Expected volatilities are
based on historical volatility of the Companys stock. The expected term of options is
based upon previous option grants. The risk-free rate is based on yields on U.S. Treasury
securities of a similar maturity to the expected term of the options. New shares are
issued when options granted from the 1995, 2000 and 2005 Stock Options Plans are
exercised and treasury shares will be issued when options granted from the 2008 Stock
Option Plan are exercised.
Stock-based employee compensation expense related to the Companys recognition and
retention plan of $1,092,000, $1,251,000 and $1,176,000 was included in income before
income taxes during the years ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006, respectively. The
effect on net income for the years ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006 was a reduction
of $710,000, $813,000 and $765,000, respectively. The Company will recognize the
remaining expense of $1,124,000 over the next three years. Total compensation expense
for unvested stock options of $1,455,000 has yet to be recognized as of December 31,
2008. The weighted average period over which this remaining stock option expense will be
recognized is approximately 2.25 years.
The fair value of each option grant is estimated on the date of grant using the
Black-Scholes-Merton option-pricing model with the following weighted average
assumptions: (1) dividend yields ranging from 1.6% to 3.9% based on historical dividends
and market prices; (2) expected volatility of 17% to 33% based on historical volatility;
(3) risk-free interest rates ranging from 2.8% to 6.5%; and (4) expected lives of seven
to eight years based on previous grants.
(p)
Segment Reporting
Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 131,
Disclosures about Segments of an
Enterprise and Related Information
, requires that public business enterprises report
financial and descriptive information about their reportable operating segments. Based on
the guidance provided by this statement, the Company has identified two reportable
segments, Community Banks and Consumer Finance. See note 21 for related disclosures.
(q)
Derivative financial instruments interest rate swaps
The Company accounts for derivative financial instruments in accordance with Statement of
Financial Accounting Standard No. 133,
Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging
Activities
(SFAS 133), as amended. SFAS 133 requires that an entity recognize all
derivatives as either assets or liabilities in the balance sheet and measure those
instruments at fair value. Pursuant to SFAS 133, the accounting for changes in the fair
value of a derivative depends on the intended use of the derivative and the resulting
designation. An entity that elects to use hedge accounting is required, at inception, to
establish the method it will use for assessing the effectiveness of hedging derivative
and the measurement approach for determining the ineffective aspect of the hedge. Those
methods must be consistent with the Companys approach to managing risk.
Table of Contents
The Company utilizes interest rate swap agreements as part of the management of interest
rate risk to hedge the interest rate risk on the Companys Trust Preferred Debentures.
Amounts receivable or payable are recognized as accrued under the terms of the agreements
and the differential is recorded as an adjustment to interest expense. The interest rate
swaps are designated as cash flow hedges, with the effective portion of the derivatives
unrealized gain or loss is recorded as a component of other comprehensive income. The
ineffective portion of the unrealized gain or loss, if any, would be recorded in other
expense. See note 22 for related disclosures.
(r)
Off-Balance-Sheet Instruments
In the normal course of business, the Company extends credit in the form of loan
commitments, undisbursed lines of credit, and standby letters of credit. These
off-balance-sheet instruments involve, to various degrees, elements of credit and
interest rate risk not reported in the consolidated statement of financial condition.
(s)
Use of Estimates
The preparation of financial statements, in conformity with accounting principles
generally accepted in the United States of America, requires management to make estimates
and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, disclosure of
contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements, and the
reported amount of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. The estimates and
assumptions that we deem important to our financial statements relate to the allowance
for loan losses, the accounting treatment and valuation of our investment securities
portfolio, the analysis of the carrying value of goodwill and income taxes. These
estimates and assumptions are based on managements best estimates and judgment and we
evaluate them using historical experience and other factors, including the current
economic environment. We adjust our estimates and assumptions when facts and
circumstances dictate. Illiquid credit markets and current economic conditions have
increased the uncertainty inherent in our estimates and assumptions. As future events
cannot be determined, actual results could differ significantly from our estimates.
(t)
Reclassification of Prior Years Statements
Certain items previously reported have been reclassified to conform with the current
years reporting format.
(2)
Recent Accounting Pronouncements
In December 2007, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued Statement of
Financial Accounting Standards No. 141 (revised 2007),
Business Combinations (SFAS
141R).
SFAS 141R applies to all transactions or other events in which an entity obtains
control of one or more businesses, including those sometimes referred to as true
mergers or mergers of equals and combinations achieved without the transfer of
consideration. SFAS 141R applies to all business entities, including mutual entities
that previously used the pooling-of-interest method of accounting for some business
combinations. The objective of SFAS 141R is to improve the relevance, representational
faithfulness, and comparability of the information that a reporting entity provides in
its financial
reports about a business combination and its effects. SFAS 141R establishes principles
and requirements for how the acquirer recognizes and measures the identifiable assets
acquired and the liabilities assumed, recognizes and measures the goodwill acquired, and
determines what information to disclose to enable users of the financial statements to
evaluate the nature and financial effect of the business combination. SFAS 141R does not
apply to the acquisition of an asset or a group of assets that does not constitute a
business or a combination between entities under common control. SFAS 141R applies
prospectively to business combinations for which the acquisition date is on or after the
beginning of the first annual reporting period beginning on or after December 15, 2008.
An entity may not apply it before that date.
In February 2007, the FASB issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 159,
The Fair Value Option for Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities Including an
Amendment of FASB Statement No. 115 (SFAS
Table of Contents
159).
SFAS 159 permits entities to choose to
measure many financial instruments and certain other items at fair value. The objective
of SFAS 159 is to improve financial reporting by providing entities with the opportunity
to mitigate volatility in reported earnings caused by measuring related assets and
liabilities differently without having to apply complex hedge accounting provisions.
SFAS 159 is expected to expand the use of fair value measurement, which is consistent
with the FASBs long-term measurement objectives for accounting for financial
instruments. SFAS 159 became effective January 1, 2008. The Company has not elected to
value any assets or liabilities (not otherwise measured at fair value) under SFAS 159.
The Company continues to evaluate the impact of SFAS 159 should we elect fair value
measurement for any asset or liability purchased or assumed in the future.
In September 2006, the FASB issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 158,
Employers Accounting for Defined Benefit Pension and Other Postretirement Plans (SFAS
158
). The Company adopted the measurement date change provision of SFAS 158 effective
January 1, 2008. The measurement date change did not have a material impact on the
financial condition or operations of the Company.
In September 2006, the FASB issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157,
Fair Value Measurements
(
SFAS 157
), which upon adoption will replace various
definitions of fair value in existing accounting literature with a single definition,
will establish a framework for measuring fair value, and will require additional
disclosures about fair value measurements. SFAS 157 clarifies that fair value is the
price that would be received to sell an asset or the price paid to transfer a liability
in the most advantageous market available to the Company and emphasizes that fair value
is a market-based measurement and should be based on the assumptions market participants
would use. SFAS 157 also creates a three-level hierarchy under which individual fair
value estimates are ranked based on the relative reliability of the inputs used in the
valuation. This hierarchy is the basis for the disclosure requirements, with fair value
estimates based on the least reliable inputs requiring more extensive disclosures about
the valuation method used. SFAS 157 is required to be applied whenever another financial
accounting standard requires or permits an asset or liability to be measured at fair
value. SFAS 157 does not expand the use of fair value to any new circumstances. SFAS 157
is effective for years beginning after November 15, 2007 and interim periods within those
fiscal years. In February 2008, the FASB issued FSP 157-2,
Effective Date of FASB
Statement No. 157 (FSP 157-2),
which delays the effective date of SFAS 157 for
non-recurring, non-financial instruments to fiscal years beginning after November 15,
2008. The Company has elected to apply this deferral to all nonfinancial assets and nonfinancial liabilities
that are measured on a nonrecurring basis. Additionally, on October 10, 2008, the FASB issued FSP 157-3,
Determining the Fair
Value of a Financial Asset When the Market for That Asset Is Not Active (FSP 157-3)
,
which clarifies the application of SFAS 157 in a market that is not active. FSP 157-3
was effective upon issuance, including prior periods for which financial statements had
not been issued. The Company adopted SFAS 157, January 1, 2008. See footnote 16 for further information.
In March 2008, the FASB issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 161,
Disclosures about Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities (an amendment to FASB
Statement No. 133) (SFAS 161)
. SFAS 161 requires companies with derivative instruments
to disclose information that should enable financial statement
users to understand how and why a company uses derivative instruments, how derivative
instruments and related hedged items are accounted for under SFAS 133 and related
Interpretations, and how derivative instruments and related hedged items affect a
companys financial position, financial performance and cash flows. The required
disclosures include the fair value of derivative instruments and their gains and losses
in tabular format, information about credit-risk-related contingent features in
derivative agreements, counterparty credit risk and a companys strategies and objectives
for using derivative financial instruments. SFAS 161 also requires entities to disclose
information that would enable users of its financial statements to understand the volume
of its derivative activity. SFAS will be effective for the Company beginning January 1,
2009. The adoption of this standard will not have a material impact on the financial
condition or operations of the Company.
Table of Contents
In January 2009, the FASB issued FASB Staff Position (FSP) No. EITF 99-20-1,
Amendments
to the Impairment Guidance of EITF Issue No. 99-20
. Effective for interim and annual
reporting periods ending after December 15, 2008, FSP EITF 99-20-1 amended EITF 99-20,
Recognition of Interest Income and Impairment on Purchased Beneficial Interests and
Beneficial Interests That Continue to Be Held by a Transferor in Securitized Financial
Assets
, to achieve a more consistent evaluation of whether there is other-than-temporary
impairment for the debt securities under the scope of EITF 99-20 and the debt securities
not within the scope of EITF 99-20 that would fall under the scope of SFAS 115,
Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities
. The adoption of FSP
EITF 99-20-1 did not have a material impact of the financial condition or operations of
the Company.
(3)
Marketable Securities
Marketable securities at December 31, 2008 are as follows:
Gross
Gross
unrealized
unrealized
Amortized
holding
holding
Market
cost
gains
losses
value
$
91
(3
)
88
2,985
50
3,035
2,962
208
3,170
30,352
2,066
32,418
61,494
8,712
(9
)
70,197
954
160
1,114
460
1
461
43,160
822
(86
)
43,896
224,996
2,707
(4,512
)
223,191
25,165
214
(9,418
)
15,961
186,659
6,447
(7
)
193,099
276,121
3,136
(2,074
)
277,183
60,119
445
(3,084
)
57,480
228,917
48
(11,088
)
217,877
751,816
10,076
(16,253
)
745,639
$
1,144,435
25,016
(30,281
)
1,139,170
Table of Contents
Gross
Gross
unrealized
unrealized
Amortized
holding
holding
Market
cost
gains
losses
value
$
368
(3
)
365
6,959
35
6,994
42,352
259
42,611
56,406
194
(50
)
56,550
180,274
5,945
(193
)
186,026
6,478
401
6,879
816
1
817
33,217
388
(63
)
33,542
228,862
4,019
(120
)
232,761
37,225
546
(2,696
)
35,075
73,284
998
(290
)
73,992
306,885
2,263
(494
)
309,054
73,514
248
(1,969
)
71,793
76,886
416
(394
)
76,908
530,569
4,325
(3,147
)
531,747
$
1,123,526
16,113
(6,272
)
1,133,367
Table of Contents
December 31
2008
2007
$
288,082
165,391
99,354
88,428
320,297
229,960
37,906
47,968
$
745,639
531,747
Table of Contents
Less than 12 months
12 months or more
Total
Unrealized
Unrealized
Unrealized
Fair value
losses
Fair value
losses
Fair value
losses
$
1,094
(12
)
$
1,094
(12
)
109,255
(4,598
)
109,255
(4,598
)
8,618
(7,055
)
2,573
(2,363
)
11,191
(9,418
)
285,087
(11,625
)
80,104
(4,628
)
365,191
(16,253
)
$
402,960
(23,278
)
83,771
(7,003
)
$
486,731
(30,281
)
83
%
17
%
100
%
Less than 12 months
12 months or more
Total
Unrealized
Unrealized
Unrealized
Fair value
losses
Fair value
losses
Fair value
losses
$
30,225
(246
)
$
30,225
(246
)
24,775
(96
)
5,928
(87
)
30,703
(183
)
24,533
(2,551
)
847
(145
)
25,380
(2,696
)
59,032
(495
)
130,731
(2,652
)
189,763
(3,147
)
$
108,340
(3,142
)
167,731
(3,130
)
$
276,071
(6,272
)
39
%
61
%
100
%
Table of Contents
securities and potential future other-than-temporary impairment losses.
Events that may trigger material declines in fair values for these securities in the future
would be, but are not limited to; deterioration of credit metrics, significantly higher levels
of default and severity of loss on the underlying collateral, deteriorating credit enhancement
and loss coverage ratios, or further illiquidity. Securities on which there is an unrealized
loss that is deemed to the other than temporary are written down to fair value with the
write-down recorded separately in the income statement. The Company has the ability and
intent to hold these securities until the market value recovers or maturity and the Company
believes the collection of the contractual principal and interest is probable. For these
reasons, the Company considers the unrealized losses to be temporary impairment losses. There
are approximately 355 positions that are temporarily impaired at December 31, 2008. The
aggregate carrying amount of cost-method investments at December 31, 2008 was $1,139,170,000
of which all were evaluated for impairment.
(4)
Loans Receivable
Loans receivable at December 31, 2008 and 2007 are summarized in the table below:
December 31
2008
2007
$
2,492,940
2,430,117
1,035,954
992,335
1,100,218
906,594
4,629,112
4,329,046
102,267
125,298
38,152
14,551
11,191
10,563
115,913
117,831
267,523
268,243
387,145
367,459
5,283,780
4,964,748
(5,041
)
(4,179
)
(54,929
)
(41,784
)
(81,918
)
(123,163
)
$
5,141,892
4,795,622
Table of Contents
December 31
2008
2007
$
116,330
69,851
273,670
328,373
15,821
14,955
$
405,821
413,179
Table of Contents
The Company automatically places loans on nonaccrual status when they become more than 90 days
contractually delinquent or when the paying capacity of the obligor becomes inadequate to meet
the requirements of the contract. When a loan is placed on nonaccrual, all previously accrued
and uncollected interest is reversed against current period interest income. Nonaccrual loans
at December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006 were $99,203,000, $49,610,000, and $40,525,000,
respectively.
A loan is considered to be impaired, as defined by SFAS No. 114,
Accounting by Creditors for
Impairment of a Loan
, when, based on current information and events, it is probable that the
Company will be unable to collect all amounts due according to the contractual terms of the
loan agreement including both contractual principal and interest payments. The amount of
impairment is required to be measured using one of the three methods prescribed by SFAS 114:
(1) the present value of expected future cash flows discounted at the loans effective
interest rate; (2) the loans observable market price; or (3) the fair value of collateral if
the loan is collateral dependent. If the measure of the impaired loan is less than the
recorded investment in the loan, a specific reserve is allocated for the impairment. Impaired
loans at December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006 were $99,203,000, $49,610,000 and $40,525,000,
respectively. Average impaired loans during the years ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006
were $72,434,000, $41,179,000 and $41,625,000, respectively.
There were no commitments to lend additional funds to debtors on nonaccrual status.
(5)
Accrued Interest Receivable
Accrued interest receivable as of December 31, 2008 and 2007 is presented in the following
table:
December 31
2008
2007
$
3,672
5,455
2,997
2,818
20,583
18,811
$
27,252
27,084
Table of Contents
(6)
Allowance for Loan Losses
Changes in the allowance for losses on loans receivable for the years ended December 31, 2008,
2007 and 2006 are presented in the following table:
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
41,784
37,655
33,411
22,851
8,743
8,480
(11,610
)
(8,190
)
(7,617
)
2,119
1,982
1,904
1,457
1,399
$
54,929
41,784
37,655
While management uses available information to provide for losses, future additions to the
allowance may be necessary based on changes in economic conditions. Current economic
conditions have increased the uncertainty inherent in our estimates and assumptions. In
addition, various regulatory agencies, as an integral part of their examination process,
periodically review the Companys allowance for loan losses. Such agencies may require the
Company to recognize additions to the allowance based on their judgments about information
available to them at the time of their examination. Management believes, to the best of their
knowledge, that all known losses as of the balance sheet dates have been recorded.
(7)
Federal Home Loan Bank Stock
The Companys banking subsidiary is a member of the Federal Home Loan Bank system. As a
member, Northwest maintains an investment in the capital stock of the FHLB, at cost, in an
amount not less than 4.75% of borrowings outstanding plus 0.75% of unused FHLB borrowing
capacity. During the quarter ended December 31, 2008, the FHLB suspended paying dividends on
its capital stock. Recent published reports indicate that the FHLB may be subject to
accounting rules and asset quality risks that could result in materially lower regulatory
capital levels. In an extreme situation, it is possible that the capitalization of the FHLB
could be substantially diminished or reduced to zero. Consequently, there is a risk that our
investment in the FHLB common stock could be deemed other-than-temporarily impaired in the
future.
Table of Contents
(8)
Premises and Equipment
Premises and equipment at December 31, 2008 and 2007 are summarized by major classification in
the following table:
December 31
2008
2007
$
14,292
14,139
106,561
99,438
82,574
74,013
10,990
11,186
214,417
198,776
(98,575
)
(87,882
)
$
115,842
110,894
Depreciation and amortization expense for the years ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006 was
$11,984,000, $9,264,000, and $8,706,000, respectively.
Premises used by certain of the Companys branches and offices are occupied under formal
operating lease arrangements. The leases expire on various dates through 2027. Minimum annual
rentals by fiscal year are summarized in the following table:
$
4,280
3,678
3,253
2,438
1,928
10,310
$
25,887
Rental expense for the years ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006 was $5,017,000, $4,555,000
and $4,142,000, respectively.
Table of Contents
(9)
Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets
The following table provides information for intangible assets subject to amortization for the
periods indicated:
December 31
2008
2007
$
30,275
24,475
5,800
(23,172
)
(19,318
)
$
7,103
10,957
$
1,731
831
900
(1,439
)
(906
)
$
292
825
The following information shows the actual aggregate amortization expense for the current and
prior years as well as the estimated aggregate amortization expense, based upon current levels
of intangible assets, for each of the five succeeding fiscal years:
$
3,876
4,499
4,387
2,847
1,896
1,445
693
355
Table of Contents
The following table provides information for the changes in the carrying amount of goodwill:
Community
Consumer
banks
finance
Total
$
154,458
1,312
155,770
15,844
15,844
170,302
1,312
171,614
(251
)
(251
)
$
170,051
1,312
171,363
We have performed the required goodwill impairment tests and have determined that goodwill is
not impaired as of December 31, 2008 and 2007.
(10)
Deposits
Deposit balances at December 31, 2008 and 2007 are shown in the table below:
December 31
2008
2007
$
760,245
745,430
706,120
717,991
394,011
361,102
720,375
681,115
2,457,460
3,036,696
$
5,038,211
5,542,334
The aggregate amount of certificates of deposit with a minimum denomination of $100,000 at
December 31, 2008 and 2007 was $533,404,000 and $681,695,000, respectively.
Table of Contents
The following table summarizes the contractual maturity of the certificate accounts:
December 31
2008
2007
$
1,285,695
2,541,053
590,849
253,957
238,927
125,226
289,001
50,759
37,905
44,959
15,083
20,742
$
2,457,460
3,036,696
The following table summarizes the interest expense incurred on the respective deposits:
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
9,159
10,908
12,619
6,434
11,038
9,396
14,726
23,551
19,446
106,742
141,043
115,524
$
137,061
186,540
156,985
Table of Contents
(11)
Borrowed Funds
Borrowed funds at December 31, 2008 and 2007 are presented in the following table:
December 31
2008
2007
Average
Average
Amount
rate
Amount
rate
$
43,708
3.87
%
84,031
5.00
%
36,532
4.36
%
35,588
4.63
%
160,000
4.11
%
36,567
4.36
%
145,000
3.90
%
65,000
5.02
%
125,000
3.85
%
35,000
4.55
%
315,778
4.11
%
839
2.81
%
826,018
257,025
146,000
0.59
%
4,491
4.99
%
4,638
4.99
%
91,436
1.02
%
77,452
3.25
%
$
1,067,945
339,115
Borrowings from the Federal Home Loan Bank of Pittsburgh are secured by the Companys
mortgage-backed securities and qualifying residential first mortgage loans. Certain of these
borrowings are subject to restrictions or penalties in the event of prepayment.
The revolving line of credit with the Federal Home Loan Bank of Pittsburgh carries a
commitment of $150,000,000 maturing on December 7, 2011. The rate is adjusted daily by the
Federal Home Loan Bank, and any borrowings on this line may be repaid at any time without
penalty.
The securities sold under agreements to repurchase are collateralized by various securities
held in safekeeping by the Federal Home Loan Bank of Pittsburgh. The market value of such
securities exceeds the value of the securities sold under agreements to repurchase. The
average amount of agreements outstanding in the years ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006
was $88,349,000, $70,875,000 and $44,860,000, respectively. The maximum amount of security
repurchase agreements outstanding during the years ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006 was
$98,108,000, $83,432,000 and $55,705,000, respectively.
Table of Contents
(12)
Income Taxes
Table of Contents
The tax effects of temporary differences that give rise to significant portions of the
deferred tax assets and deferred tax liabilities at December 31, 2008 and 2007 are presented
below:
December 31
2008
2007
$
527
499
2,980
1,719
1,352
3,716
14,002
10,438
682
698
375
375
2,078
6,243
665
1,894
844
559
1,013
12,060
3,317
371
1,950
4,590
379
142
48,092
25,376
3,838
2,487
3,451
10,952
9,228
2,198
3,134
6,630
5,993
621
613
22,888
26,257
$
25,204
(881
)
The Company has determined that no valuation allowance is necessary for the deferred tax
assets because it is more likely than not that these assets will be realized through carryback
to taxable income in prior years, future reversals of existing temporary differences, and
through future taxable income. Net deferred tax assets of $877,000 were recorded in 2007
related to the acquisition of CSB Bank. The Company will continue to review the criteria
related to the recognition of deferred tax assets on a regular basis.
Table of Contents
Under provisions of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), Northwest has approximately $3,863,000
of federal net operating losses, which expire in years 2009 through 2027. These net operating
losses, which were acquired as part of the First Carnegie and Maryland Permanent acquisitions,
are subject to annual carryforward limitations imposed by IRC code section 382. The Company
believes the limitations will not prevent the carryforward benefits from being utilized. In
addition, the Company has approximately $371,000 of alternative minimum tax credit
carryforwards, which can be carried forward indefinitely.
The Company adopted the provisions of FASB Interpretation No. 48,
Accounting for Uncertainty
in Income Taxes, an interpretation of FASB Statement No. 109 (FIN 48)
, on January 1, 2007.
FIN 48 prescribes a comprehensive model for how a company should recognize, measure, present
and disclose in its financial statements uncertain tax positions that the company has taken or
expects to take on a tax return. FIN 48 also provides related guidance on derecognition,
classification, interest and penalties, accounting in interim periods, disclosure and
transition. The adoption did not require us to recognize any increase or decrease in our
liability for unrecognized tax benefits. A reconciliation of the beginning and ending amount
of unrecognized tax benefits is as follows:
$
967
(967
)
$
The balance at December 31, 2008 reflects no unrecognized tax benefits that, if recognized,
would favorably affect the effective income tax rate. The Company recognizes interest accrued
and penalties (if any) related to unrecognized tax benefits in income tax expense. During the
year ended December 31, 2008, the Company did not accrue any interest. At December 31, 2008
the Company had no amount accrued for interest or the payment of penalties.
The Company is subject to routine audits of our tax returns by the Internal Revenue Service as
well as all states in which the Company conducts business. The Internal Revenue Service
commenced an examination of our federal income tax returns for the year ended June 30, 2005,
the six-month period ended December 31, 2005 and the years ended December 31, 2006 and 2007 in
January of 2008 that we anticipate will be completed during 2009. We do not anticipate a
material change to our financial position due to the settlement of this audit. The Company is
subject to audit by any state in which we conduct business for the tax periods ended June 30,
2005, December 31, 2005, December 31, 2006 and December 31, 2007.
(13)
Shareholders Equity
Retained earnings are partially restricted in connection with regulations related to the
insurance of savings accounts, which requires Northwest to maintain certain statutory
reserves. Northwest may not pay dividends on or repurchase any of their common stock if the
effect thereof would reduce retained earnings below the level of adequate capitalization as
defined by federal and state regulators.
In tax years prior to fiscal 1997, Northwest was permitted, under the Internal Revenue Code
(the Code), to deduct an annual addition to a reserve for bad debts in determining taxable
income, subject to certain limitations. Bad debt deductions for income tax purposes are
included in taxable income of later years only if the bad debt reserve is used subsequently
for purposes other than to absorb bad debt losses. Because Northwest does not intend to use
the reserve for purposes other than to absorb losses, no deferred income taxes have been
provided prior to fiscal 1987. Retained earnings at December 31, 2008 include approximately
$39,107,000 representing such bad debt deductions for which no deferred income taxes have been
provided.
Table of Contents
(14)
Earnings Per Share
Basic earnings per common share (EPS) is computed by dividing net income available to common
shareholders by the weighted average number of common shares outstanding for the period,
without considering any dilutive items. Diluted EPS reflects the potential dilution that
could occur if securities or other contracts to issue common stock were exercised or converted
into common stock or resulted in the issuance of common stock that then shared in the earnings
of the Company. For the year ended December 31, 2008, 213,686 options with a strike price of
$25.49 per share, 179,806 options with a strike price of $25.89 per share, 2,000 options with
a strike price of $28.09 per share and 191,709 options with a strike price of $25.03 per share
were excluded from the calculation of earnings per share because they were anti-dilutive.
There were no anti-dilutive options during 2007 or 2006. The computation of basic and diluted
earnings per share follows:
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
48,171
49,097
51,536
48,363
49,041
49,879
235
313
257
48,598
49,354
50,136
$
1.00
1.00
1.03
$
0.99
0.99
1.03
(15)
Employee Benefit Plans
(a)
Pension Plans
The Company maintains noncontributory defined benefit pension plans covering
substantially all employees and the members of its board of directors. Retirement
benefits are based on certain compensation levels, age, and length of service.
Contributions are based on an actuarially determined amount to fund not only benefits
attributed to service to date but also for those expected to be earned in the future. In
addition, the Company has an unfunded Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan (SERP) to
compensate those executive participants eligible for the Companys defined benefit
pension plan whose benefits are limited by Section 415 of the Internal Revenue Code.
The Company also sponsors a retirement savings plan in which substantially all employees
participate. The Company provides a matching contribution of 50% of each employees
contribution to a maximum of 6% of the employees compensation.
Table of Contents
Total expense for all retirement plans, including defined benefit pension plans, was
approximately $5,957,000, $6,639,000 and $6,310,000, for the years ended December 31,
2008, 2007 and 2006, respectively.
Components of net periodic pension cost and other amounts recognized in other
comprehensive income:
The following table sets forth the net periodic pension cost for the Companys defined
benefit pension plans:
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
5,022
4,958
4,555
4,559
4,094
3,492
(4,988
)
(4,409
)
(3,601
)
175
825
793
$
4,768
5,468
5,239
The following table sets forth other changes in the Companys defined benefit pension
plans plan assets and benefit obligations recognized in other comprehensive income:
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
25,675
(8,391
)
(2,184
)
(51
)
(77
)
$
23,440
(8,468
)
$
28,208
(3,000
)
5,239
The estimated net loss and prior service cost for the Companys defined benefit pension
plan that will be amortized from accumulated other comprehensive income into net periodic
cost over the next year are $1,677,000 and $125,000, respectively.
Table of Contents
The following table sets forth information for the Companys defined benefit pension
plans funded status at December 31, 2008 and 2007:
December 31
2008
2007
$
73,708
71,891
5,022
4,958
4,559
4,094
(675
)
(5,630
)
(1,845
)
(1,605
)
$
80,769
73,708
$
62,943
55,622
(18,394
)
6,461
6,332
2,465
(1,845
)
(1,605
)
$
49,036
62,943
$
(31,733
)
(10,765
)
The following table sets forth the assumptions used to develop the net periodic pension
cost:
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
6.25
%
5.75
%
5.75
%
8.00
%
8.00
%
8.00
%
4.00
%
4.00
%
4.00
%
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The following table sets forth the assumptions used to determine benefit obligations at
the end of each period:
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
6.00
%
6.25
%
5.75
%
8.00
%
8.00
%
8.00
%
4.00
%
4.00
%
4.00
%
The expected long-term rate of return on assets is based on the expected return of each
of the asset categories, weighted based on the median of the target allocation for each
category.
The accumulated benefit obligation for the funded defined benefit pension plan was
$57,146,000, $51,010,000 and $48,325,000 at December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006,
respectively. The accumulated benefit obligation for all unfunded defined benefit plans
was $3,844,000, $3,659,000 and $4,014,000 at December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006,
respectively.
The following table sets forth information for pension plans with an accumulated benefit
obligation in excess of plan assets:
December 31,
2008
2007
$
80,769
73,708
$
60,990
54,668
$
49,036
62,943
The Company anticipates making contributions to its defined benefit pension plan between
$2 million and $8 million during the fiscal year ending December 31, 2009.
The investment policy as established by the Plan Administrative Committee, to be followed
by the Trustee, is to invest assets based on the target allocations shown in the table
below. To meet target allocation ranges set forth by the Plan Administrative Committee,
periodically, the assets are reallocated by the Trustee. The investment policy is
reviewed periodically to determine if the policy should be changed. Pension assets are
conservatively invested with the goal of providing market or better returns with below
market risks. Assets are invested in a balanced portfolio composed primarily of equities,
fixed income, and cash or cash equivalent investments. The Trustee tries to maintain an
approximate asset mix position of 30% to 60% equities and 20% to 50% bonds.
A maximum of 10% may be invested in any one stock, including the stock of Northwest
Bancorp, Inc. The objective of holding equity securities is to provide capital
appreciation consistent with the ownership of the common stocks of medium to large
companies. Acceptable bond investments are direct or agency obligations of the U.S.
Government or investment grade corporate bonds. The average maturity of the bond
portfolio shall not exceed 10 years.
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The following table sets forth the weighted average asset allocation of defined benefit
plans:
Target
December 31
Asset category
allocation
2008
2007
20 - 50
%
38
%
39
%
30 - 60
%
60
%
58
%
5 - 50
%
2
%
3
%
100
%
100
%
The benefits expected to be paid in each year from 2009 to 2013 are $1,959,000,
$2,144,000, $2,286,000, $2,517,000, and $2,933,000, respectively. The aggregate benefits
expected to be paid in the five years from 2014 to 2018 are $19,823,000. The expected
benefits to be paid are based on the same assumptions used to measure the Companys
benefit obligations at December 31, 2008 and include estimated future employee service.
(b)
Postretirement Healthcare Plan
In addition to pension benefits, the Company provides postretirement healthcare benefits
for certain employees who were employed by the Company as of October 1, 1993 and were at
least 55 years of age on that date. The Company accounts for these benefits in accordance
with Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 106,
Employers Accounting for
Postretirement Benefits Other than Pensions
(SFAS 106). SFAS 106 requires the accrual
method of accounting for postretirement benefits other than pensions.
Components of net periodic benefit cost and other amounts recognized in other
comprehensive income:
The following table sets forth the net periodic benefit cost for the Companys
postretirement healthcare benefits plan:
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
98
93
91
43
42
34
$
141
135
125
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The following table sets forth other changes in the Companys postretirement healthcare
plans plan assets and benefit obligations recognized in other comprehensive income:
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
204
(22
)
$
204
(22
)
$
345
113
125
The estimated net loss for the postretirement healthcare benefit plan that will be
amortized from accumulated other comprehensive income into net periodic benefit cost over
the next year is $57,000.
The following table sets forth the funded status of the Companys postretirement
healthcare benefit plan at December 31, 2008 and 2007:
December 31
2008
2007
$
1,637
1,701
98
93
218
20
(186
)
(177
)
1,767
1,637
$
186
177
(186
)
(177
)
$
$
(1,767
)
(1,637
)
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The assumptions used to develop the preceding information for postretirement healthcare
benefits are as follows:
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
6.00
%
5.75
%
5.75
%
$
305
274
257
4.00
%
4.00
%
4.00
%
(1)
Not in thousands
If the assumed rate of increase in healthcare costs was increased by one percentage point
to 5% from the level of 4% presented above, the service and interest cost components of
net periodic postretirement healthcare benefit cost would increase by $12,000, in the
aggregate, and the accumulated postretirement benefit obligation for healthcare benefits
would increase by $80,000.
The following table sets forth amounts recognized in accumulated other comprehensive
income:
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
204
634
656
The accumulated benefit obligation for the Companys postretirement healthcare benefit
plan at December 31, 2008 and 2007 was $1,767,000 and $1,637,000, respectively.
The following table sets forth information for plans with an accumulated benefit
obligation in excess of plan assets:
December 31,
2008
2007
$
1,767
1,637
$
1,767
1,637
$
(c)
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
The Company has an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) for employees who have attained
age 21 and who have completed a 12-month period of employment with the Company during
which they worked at least 1,000 hours. The Company can make contributions to the ESOP at
the boards discretion. Company shares would then be purchased periodically in the open
market and allocated to employee accounts based on each employees relative portion of
the Companys total eligible compensation recorded during the year.
No contributions were made and no expense was recognized during the years ended December
31, 2008, 2007 and 2006.
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(d)
Recognition and Retention Plan
On November 17, 2004, the Company established a Recognition and Retention Plan for
Employees and Outside Directors (RRP) with 290,220 shares authorized. The objective of
the RRP is to enable the Company to provide directors, officers, and employees with a
proprietary interest in the Company. On March 16, 2005, 278,231 shares were issued with
a weighted average grant date fair value per share of $21.42 (total market value of
$5,959,000 at issuance). Total common shares forfeited were 8,322, of which, 685, 3,058
and 1,644 shares were forfeited during the years ended December 31, 2008, 2007, and 2006,
respectively. During 2007, 4,300 shares were issued with a weighted average grant date
fair value per share of $27.04 (total market value of $116,000 at issuance). Shares of
common stock granted pursuant to the RRP were in the form of restricted stock and
generally vest over a five-year
period at the rate of 20% per year, commencing one year after the award date. As of
December 31, 2008, 60% of the March 16, 2005 issuance have vested and 20% of the 2007
issuances have vested. Once shares have vested, they are no longer restricted.
Compensation expense, in the amount of the fair market value of the common stock at the
date of the grant, will be recognized pro rata over the five years during which the
shares are payable. While restricted, the recipients are entitled to all voting and other
shareholder rights, except that the shares may not be sold, pledged, or otherwise
disposed of and are required to be held in a trust.
(e)
Stock Option Plans
On November 21, 1995, the Company adopted the 1995 Stock Option Plan. The objective of
the Stock Option Plan is to provide an additional performance incentive to the Companys
employees and outside directors. The Stock Option Plan authorized the grant of stock
options and limited stock appreciation rights for 1,380,000 shares of the Companys
common stock. On December 20, 1995, the Company granted 242,000 nonstatutory stock
options to its outside directors at an exercise price of $5.58 per share (95% of the
Companys common stock fair market value per share at grant date) and 923,200 incentive
stock options to employees at an exercise price of $5.875 per share. On March 22, 1996,
the Company granted 122,800 incentive stock options to employees at an exercise price of
$5.625 per share. On December 16, 1998, the Company granted 15,086 incentive stock
options to employees at an exercise price of $9.875 per share. On October 20, 1999, the
Company granted 2,000 nonstatutory stock options to an outside director and 57,700
incentive stock options to employees at an exercise price of $7.812 per share. On
June 21, 2000, the Company granted the remaining 17,214 incentive stock options as well
as 786 previously forfeited options at an exercise price of $6.875 per share. These
options are exercisable for a period of ten years from the grant date with each recipient
vesting at the rate of 20% per year commencing with the grant date.
On November 17, 2000, the Company adopted the 2000 Stock Option Plan. This Plan
authorized the grant of stock options and limited stock rights for 800,000 shares of the
Companys common stock. On October 17, 2001, the Company granted 84,000 nonstatutory
stock options to its outside directors and 143,845 incentive stock options to employees
at an exercise price of $9.780 per share. On August 21, 2002, the Company granted 162,940
incentive stock options to employees at an exercise price of $13.30 per share. On
August 20, 2003, the Company granted 182,000 incentive stock options to employees at an
exercise price of $16.59 per share. On December 15, 2004, the Company granted 220,780
incentive stock options to employees at an exercise price of $25.49 per share. These
options are exercisable for a period of ten years from the grant date with each recipient
vesting at the rate of 20% per year commencing with the grant date.
On November 17, 2005, the Company adopted the 2005 Stock Option Plan. This Plan
authorizes the grant of stock options and limited stock rights for 725,552 shares of the
Companys common stock. On January 19, 2005, the Company granted 70,000 nonstatutory
stock options to its outside directors and 154,546 incentive stock options to employees
at an exercise price of $22.93 per share. On January 18, 2006 the Company granted 158,333
incentive stock options to employees at an exercise price of $22.18 per share. On January
17, 2007 the Company granted 179,806 stock options to employees at an exercise price of
$25.89 per share. On June 20, 2007 the Company granted 2,000 stock options to a new
director at an exercise price of $28.09 per share. On January 16, 2008 the
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Company
granted the remaining 160,867 incentive stock options as well as 30,842 previously
forfeited incentive stock options to employees at an exercise price of $25.03 per share.
These options are exercisable for a period of ten years from the grant date with each
recipient vesting at the rate of 20% per year commencing one year from the grant date.
On May 21, 2008, the Company adopted the 2008 Stock Option Plan. This Plan authorized the
grant of stock options and limited stock rights for 1,750,000 shares of the Companys
common stock. On November 19, 2008 the Company granted 24,000 nonstatutory stock options
to its outside directors and 202,068 incentive stock options to employees at an exercise
price of $22.03 per share. These options are exercisable for a period of ten years from
the grant date with each recipient vesting over a seven year period commencing one year
from the grant date.
The following table summarizes the activity in the Companys option plans during the
years ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006:
Years Ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
Weighted
Weighted
Weighted
average
average
average
exercise
exercise
exercise
Number
price
Number
price
Number
price
1,236,358
$
19.96
1,112,858
$
18.65
1,019,189
$
17.55
417,777
23.41
(a)
181,806
25.91
(a)
158,333
22.18
(a)
(54,367
)
12.20
(b)
(52,572
)
12.66
(b)
(63,064
)
10.14
(b)
0.00
(5,734
)
22.14
(1,600
)
5.63
1,599,768
21.12
1,236,358
19.96
1,112,858
18.65
853,167
18.88
796,270
17.61
651,415
15.78
(a)
Weighted average fair value of options at grant date: $3.05, $5.12, and $4.75, respectively.
(b)
The total intrinsic value of options exercised was $692,000, $773,000 and
$898,000, respectively.
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(All dollar amounts presented in tables are in thousands)
The aggregate intrinsic value of all options expected to vest and fully vested options at
December 31, 2008 is $0 and $3,429,000, respectively. The following table summarizes the
number of options outstanding, number of options exercisable, and weighted average remaining
life of all option grants:
Exercise
Exercise
Exercise
Exercise
Exercise
Exercise
Price
Price
Price
Price
Price
Price
$6.875
$7.812
$9.780
$13.302
$16.590
$22.030
4,800
16,400
134,201
110,054
144,314
226,068
1.50
1.00
2.75
4.00
5.00
9.75
4,800
16,400
134,201
110,054
144,314
1.50
1.00
2.75
4.00
5.00
9.75
Exercise
Exercise
Exercise
Exercise
Exercise
Exercise
Price
Price
Price
Price
Price
Price
Total
$22.180
$22.930
$25.030
$25.490
$25.890
$28.090
$21.120
155,801
220,929
191,709
213,686
179,806
2,000
1,599,768
7.00
6.00
9.00
6.00
8.00
8.00
6.65
61,703
131,648
213,686
35,961
400
853,167
7.00
6.00
9.00
6.00
8.00
8.00
4.19
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(16)
Disclosures About Fair Value of Financial Instruments
SFAS No. 107,
Disclosure about Fair Value of Financial Instruments
(SFAS 107), requires
disclosure of fair value information about financial instruments whether or not recognized in
the consolidated statement of financial condition. SFAS 107 excludes certain financial
instruments and all nonfinancial instruments from its disclosure requirements. Accordingly,
the aggregate fair value amounts presented do not represent the underlying value of the
Company. The carrying amounts reported in the consolidated statement of financial condition
approximate fair value for the following financial instruments: cash on hand, interest-earning
deposits in other institutions, federal funds sold and other short-term investments, accrued
interest receivable, accrued interest payable, and marketable securities available-for-sale.
The following table sets forth the carrying amount and estimated fair value of the Companys
financial instruments included in the consolidated statement of financial condition as of
December 31, 2008 and 2007:
December 31
2008
2007
Carrying
Estimated
Carrying
Estimated
amount
fair value
amount
fair value
$
79,922
79,922
230,616
230,616
1,139,170
1,139,170
1,133,367
1,133,367
5,141,892
5,446,835
4,795,622
4,941,215
27,252
27,252
27,084
27,084
63,143
63,143
31,304
31,304
$
6,451,379
6,756,322
6,217,993
6,363,586
$
2,580,751
2,580,751
2,505,638
2,505,638
2,457,460
2,500,410
3,036,696
3,071,514
1,067,945
1,049,399
339,115
338,671
108,254
116,783
108,320
108,320
13,114
13,114
5,194
5,194
4,356
4,356
$
6,232,718
6,265,651
5,994,125
6,028,499
Fair value estimates are made at a point-in-time, based on relevant market data and
information about the instrument. The following methods and assumptions were used in
estimating the fair value of financial instruments at December 31, 2008 and 2007.
Marketable Securities
Where available, market values are based on quoted market prices, dealer quotes, and prices
obtained from independent pricing services. See the SFAS 157 section of this footnote for
further detail on how fair values of marketable securities are determined. Refer to note 3
for the detail of the type of investment securities.
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Loans Receivable
Loans with comparable characteristics including collateral and repricing structures were
segregated for valuation purposes. Each loan pool was separately valued utilizing a discounted
cash flow analysis. Projected monthly cash flows were discounted to present value using a
market rate for comparable loans. Characteristics of comparable loans included remaining term,
coupon interest, and estimated prepayment speeds. Delinquent loans were evaluated separately,
given the impact delinquency has on the projected future cash flow of the loan and the
approximate discount or market rate.
Deposit Liabilities
SFAS 107 defines the estimated fair value of deposits with no stated maturity, which includes
demand deposits, money market, and other savings accounts, to be the amount payable on demand.
Although market premiums paid for depository institutions reflect an additional value for
these low-cost deposits, SFAS 107 prohibits adjusting fair value for any value expected to be
derived from retaining those deposits for a future period of time or from the benefit that
results from the ability to fund interest-earning assets with these deposit liabilities. The
fair value estimates of deposit liabilities do not include the benefit that results from the
low-cost funding provided by these deposits compared to the cost of borrowing funds in the
market. Fair values for time deposits are estimated using a discounted cash flow calculation
that applies contractual cost currently being offered in the existing portfolio to current
market rates being offered locally for deposits of similar remaining maturities. The valuation
adjustment for the portfolio consists of the present value of the difference of these two cash
flows, discounted at the assumed market rate of the corresponding maturity.
Borrowed Funds
The fixed rate advances were valued by comparing their contractual cost to the prevailing
market cost.
Trust-Preferred Securities
The fair value of the trust-preferred securities are calculated using the discounted cash
flows at the prevailing rate of interest.
Cash flow hedges Interest rate swap agreements (swaps)
The fair values of the swaps is the amount the Company would have expected to pay to terminate
the agreements and is based upon the present value of the expected future cash flows using the
LIBOR swap curve, the basis for the underlying interest rate.
Off-Balance Sheet Financial Instruments
These financial instruments generally are not sold or traded, and estimated fair values are
not readily available. However, the fair value of commitments to extend credit and standby
letters of credit is estimated using the fees currently charged to enter into similar
agreements. Commitments to extend credit issued by the Company are generally short-term in
nature and, if drawn upon, are issued under current market terms. At December 31, 2008 and
2007, there was no significant unrealized appreciation or depreciation on these financial
instruments.
SFAS No. 157 Fair Value Measurements
Effective January 1, 2008, the Company adopted the provisions of SFAS 157 for all financial
assets and liabilities recognized or disclosed at fair value on a recurring basis and certain
financial assets and liabilities on a non-recurring basis. SFAS 157 establishes a three-level
hierarchy of valuation techniques based on whether the inputs to those valuation techniques
are observable or unobservable. The fair value hierarchy gives the highest priority to quoted
prices with readily available independent data in active markets for identical assets or
liabilities (Level 1) and the lowest priority to
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unobservable market inputs (Level 3). When various inputs for measurement fall within
different levels of the fair value hierarchy, the lowest level input that has a significant
impact on fair value measurement is used.
Financial assets and liabilities are categorized based upon the following characteristics or
inputs to the valuation techniques:
Level 1 Financial assets and liabilities for which inputs are observable and are
obtained from reliable quoted prices for identical assets or liabilities in actively
traded markets. This is the most reliable fair value measurement and includes, for
example, active exchange-traded equity securities.
Level 2 Financial assets and liabilities for which values are based on quoted
prices in markets that are not active or for which values are based on similar assets
or liabilities that are actively traded. Level 2 also includes pricing models in
which the inputs are corroborated by market data, for example, matrix pricing.
Level 3 Financial assets and liabilities for which values are based on prices or
valuation techniques that require inputs that are both unobservable and significant to
the overall fair value measurement. Level 3 inputs include the following:
o
Quotes from brokers or other external sources that are not
considered binding;
o
Quotes from brokers or other external sources where it can not
be determined that market participants would in fact transact for the asset or
liability at the quoted price;
o
Quotes and other information from brokers or other external
sources where the inputs are not deemed observable.
The Company is responsible for the valuation process and as part of this process may use data
from outside sources in establishing fair value. The Company performs due diligence to
understand the inputs used or how the data was calculated or derived. The Company corroborates
the reasonableness of external inputs in the valuation process.
The following table represents assets measured at fair value on a recurring basis as of
December 31, 2008:
Total assets at
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
fair value
$
894
220
1,114
1,132,119
5,937
1,138,056
(13,114
)
(13,114
)
$
894
1,119,005
6,157
1,126,056
Debt securities available for sale
Generally, debt securities are valued using pricing for
similar securities, recently executed transactions and other pricing models utilizing
observable inputs. The valuation for most debt securities is classified as Level 2. Securities
within Level 2 include corporate bonds, municipal bonds, mortgage-backed securities and US
government obligations. Certain debt securities which were AAA rated at purchase do not have
an active market and as such the Company has used an alternative method to determine the fair
value of these securities. The fair value has been determined using a discounted cash flow
model using market assumptions, which generally include cash flow,
collateral and other market assumptions. As such, securities which otherwise would have been
classified as level 2 securities if an active market for those assets or similar assets
existed are included herein as level 3 assets. Other debt
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securities, pooled trust preferred
securities rated below AA at purchase, have a fair value based on a discounted cash flow model
using similar assumptions to those noted above and accordingly are classified as level 3
assets.
Equity securities available for sale
Level 1 securities include publicly traded securities
valued using quoted market prices. Level 3 securities include investments in two financial
institutions that provide financial services only to investor banks received as part of
previous acquisitions without observable market data to determine the investments fair values.
These securities can only be sold back to the issuing financial institution at cost.
Interest rate swap agreements (Swaps)
The fair value of the swaps was the amount the Company
would have expected to pay to terminate the agreements and is based upon the present value of
the expected future cash flows using the LIBOR swap curve, the basis for the underlying
interest rate.
The table below presents a reconciliation of all assets and liabilities measured at fair value
on a recurring basis using significant unobservable inputs (Level 3) for the year ended
December 31, 2008:
Equity
securities
Debt securities
$
220
22,369
(9,522
)
(1,234
)
(5,676
)
$
220
5,937
Certain assets and liabilities are measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis after
initial recognition such as loans held for sale, loans measured for impairment and mortgage
servicing rights. The following table represents the fair market measurement for nonrecurring
assets as of December 31, 2008:
Total assets
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
at fair value
$
18,738
18,738
9,130
9,130
5,481
5,481
$
18,738
14,611
33,349
Loans held for sale
Mortgage loans held for sale are recorded at the lower of carrying value
or market value. The fair value of mortgage loans held for sale is based on what secondary
markets are currently offering. As the fair value is
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determined by a quoted price from Freddie Mac, and the Company has open delivery contracts
with Freddie Mac, the Company classifies loans held for sale as nonrecurring Level 1.
Impaired loans
A loan is considered to be impaired when it is probable that all of the
principle and interest due under the original terms of the loan may not be collected.
Impairment is measured based on the fair value of the underlying collateral or discounted cash
flows when collateral does not exist. The Company measures impairment on all nonaccrual
commercial and commercial real estate loans for which it has established specific reserves as
part of the specific allocated allowance component of the allowance for loan losses. The
Company classifies impaired loans as nonrecurring Level 3.
Mortgage servicing rights
Mortgage servicing rights represent the value associated with
servicing residential mortgage loans, when the mortgage loans have been sold into the
secondary market and the related servicing has been retained by the Company. The value is
determined through a discounted cash flow analysis, which uses interest rates, prepayment
speeds and delinquency rate assumptions as inputs. All of these assumptions require a
significant degree of management judgment. Servicing rights and the related mortgage loans are
segregated into categories or homogeneous pools based upon common characteristics. Adjustments
are made when the estimated discounted future cash flows are less than the carrying value, as
determined by individual pool. As such, mortgage servicing rights are classified as
nonrecurring Level 3.
(17)
Regulatory Capital Requirements
The Companys banking subsidiary is subject to various regulatory capital requirements
administered by the federal and state banking agencies. Failure to meet minimum capital
requirements can initiate certain mandatory and possibly additional discretionary actions
by the regulators that, if undertaken, could have a direct material effect on the Companys
financial statements. Under capital adequacy guidelines and the regulatory framework for
prompt corrective action, specific capital guidelines that involve quantitative measures of
assets, liabilities, and certain off-balance sheet items as calculated under regulatory
accounting practices must be met. The capital amounts and classification are also subject to
qualitative judgments by the regulators about components, risk weightings, and other factors.
Quantitative measures established by regulation to ensure capital adequacy require the
Companys banking subsidiary to maintain minimum amounts and ratios (set forth in the table
below) of total and Tier I capital (as defined in the regulations) to risk-weighted assets (as
defined) and of Tier I capital to average assets (as defined). At December 31, 2008 and 2007,
the Companys banking subsidiary exceeded all capital adequacy requirements to which they were
subject. At December 31, 2008, the maximum amount available for dividend payments by Northwest
to the Company, while maintaining its well capitalized status, was approximately
$99,600,000.
As of December 15, 2008, the most recent notification from the FDIC categorized Northwest as
well capitalized under the regulatory framework for prompt corrective action. To be
categorized as well capitalized, the bank must maintain total risk-based, Tier 1 risk-based,
and Tier 1 leverage ratios as set forth in the table. There are no conditions or events since
that notification that management believes have changed the banks categories.
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The actual, required, and well capitalized levels as of December 31, 2008 and 2007 were as
follows:
December 31, 2008
Minimum capital
Well capitalized
Actual
requirements
requirements
Amount
Ratio
Amount
Ratio
Amount
Ratio
$
604,067
13.95
%
$
346,354
8.00
%
$
432,943
10.00
%
549,869
12.70
%
173,177
4.00
%
259,766
6.00
%
549,869
8.05
%
204,887
3.00
%*
341,478
5.00
%
December 31, 2007
Minimum capital
Well capitalized
Actual
requirements
requirements
Amount
Ratio
Amount
Ratio
Amount
Ratio
$
571,785
14.10
%
$
324,304
8.00
%
$
405,380
10.00
%
529,833
13.07
%
162,152
4.00
%
243,228
6.00
%
529,833
8.21
%
193,630
3.00
%*
322,717
5.00
%
*
The FDIC has indicated that the most highly rated institutions, which meet certain
criteria, will be required to maintain a ratio of 3%, and all other institutions will be
required to maintain an additional capital cushion of 100 to 200 basis points. As of
December 31, 2008, the Company had not been advised of any additional requirements in
this regard.
(18)
Contingent Liabilities
The Company and its subsidiaries are subject to a number of asserted and unasserted claims
encountered in the normal course of business. Management believes that the aggregate
liability, if any, that may result from such potential litigation will not have a material
adverse effect on the Companys financial statements.
Table of Contents
(19)
Components of Comprehensive Income
The following table sets forth the components of comprehensive income for the years ended
December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006:
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
(5,957
)
10,184
(466
)
(3,183
)
(2,938
)
(393
)
(8,524
)
(14,330
)
5,132
31
47
$
(31,963
)
12,425
(859
)
(20)
Northwest Bancorp, Inc. (Parent Company Only)
December 31
2008
2007
$
20,695
3,618
73
96
706,610
714,160
8,021
3,582
$
735,399
721,456
$
108,249
108,249
13,366
329
121,615
108,578
613,784
612,878
$
735,399
721,456
Table of Contents
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
359
480
3,891
39,000
49,000
45,000
12,722
4,838
16,551
52,081
54,318
65,442
380
366
378
105
159
182
3,124
5,339
7,250
15,616
5,824
7,775
19,300
46,257
46,543
46,142
(1,914
)
(2,554
)
(5,394
)
$
48,171
49,097
51,536
Table of Contents
Years ended December 31,
2008
2007
2006
$
48,171
49,097
51,536
(12,722
)
(4,838
)
(16,551
)
3,124
2,731
2,454
2,296
(2,997
)
1,636
(3,242
)
35,183
48,349
37,163
5,048
5,048
(15,771
)
(15,696
)
(13,727
)
(3,335
)
(40,825
)
(8,080
)
(102,062
)
1,000
862
873
(18,106
)
(55,659
)
(122,996
)
$
17,077
(2,262
)
(85,833
)
3,618
5,880
91,713
$
17,077
(2,262
)
(85,833
)
$
20,695
3,618
5,880
Table of Contents
(21)
Business Segments
The Company has identified two reportable business segments based upon the operating approach
currently used by management. The Community Banking segment includes the savings bank
subsidiary of the Company, Northwest Savings Bank, as well as the subsidiaries of the savings
bank that provide similar products and services. The savings bank is a community-oriented
institution that offers a full array of traditional deposit and loan products, including
mortgage, consumer, and commercial loans as well as trust, investment management, actuarial
and benefit plan administration, and brokerage services typically offered by a full service
financial institution. The Consumer Finance segment is comprised of Northwest Consumer
Discount Company, a subsidiary of Northwest Savings Bank, which operates offices in
Pennsylvania and New York. This subsidiary compliments the services of the bank by offering
personal installment loans for a variety of consumer and real estate products. This activity
is funded primarily through its intercompany borrowing relationship with Allegheny Services,
Inc. Net income is primarily used by management to measure segment performance. The following
tables provide financial information for these segments. The All Other column represents the
parent company, other nonbank subsidiaries, and elimination entries necessary to reconcile to
the consolidated amounts presented in the financial statements.
At or for the year ended
Community
Consumer
All
December 31, 2008
banking
finance
other*
Consolidated
$
368,201
20,452
6
$
388,659
4,959
(4,959
)
163,922
5,186
185
169,293
19,500
3,351
22,851
36,324
2,269
159
38,752
158,652
10,990
486
170,128
17,646
1,236
(1,914
)
16,968
$
49,764
1,958
(3,551
)
$
48,171
$
6,792,735
115,463
22,043
$
6,930,241
Table of Contents
At or for the year ended
Community
Consumer
All
December 31, 2007
banking
finance
other*
Consolidated
$
375,761
20,266
4
$
396,031
7,991
(7,991
)
195,533
8,232
7,250
211,015
6,000
2,743
8,743
40,250
2,552
220
43,022
143,878
8,339
525
152,742
18,607
1,403
(2,554
)
17,456
$
59,984
2,101
(12,988
)
$
49,097
$
6,629,725
122,657
(88,866
)
$
6,663,516
At or for the year ended
Community
Consumer
All
December 31, 2006
banking
finance
other*
Consolidated
$
349,964
18,605
4
$
368,573
8,234
(8,234
)
178,634
8,494
3,981
191,109
6,000
2,480
8,480
42,988
2,515
523
46,026
131,847
8,150
3,685
143,682
24,435
751
(5,394
)
19,792
$
60,270
1,245
(9,979
)
$
51,536
$
6,493,770
124,993
(90,948
)
$
6,527,815
*
Eliminations consist of intercompany interest income and interest expense.
(22)
Guaranteed Preferred Beneficial Interests in Companys Junior Subordinated Deferrable
Interest Debentures (Trust-Preferred Securities) and Interest Rate Swap Agreements
The Company has three statutory business trusts: Northwest Bancorp Capital Trust III, a
Delaware statutory business trust, and Northwest Bancorp Statutory Trust IV, a Connecticut
statutory business trust and Penn Laurel Financial Corp. Trust I, a Delaware statutory
business trust (the Trusts). The Penn Laurel Financial Corp, Trust I was assumed with the
acquisition of Penn Laurel Financial Corporation in June 2007. These trusts exist solely to
issue preferred securities to third parties for cash, issue common securities to the Company
in exchange for capitalization of the Trusts, invest the proceeds from the sale of trust
securities in an equivalent amount of debentures of the Company, and engage in other
activities that are incidental to those previously listed. The aforementioned trusts are not
consolidated in accordance with FIN 46 (R),
Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities and
Interpretation of ARB No.
51. Northwest Bancorp Capital Trust III issued 50,000 cumulative
trust preferred securities in a private transaction to a pooled investment vehicle on
December 5, 2006 (liquidation value of $1,000 per preferred security or $50,000,000) with a
stated maturity of December 30, 2035 and a floating rate of interest, which is reset
quarterly, equal to three-month LIBOR plus 1.38%. Northwest Bancorp Statutory Trust IV issued
50,000 cumulative trust preferred securities in a private transaction to a pooled investment
vehicle on December 15, 2006
Table of Contents
(liquidation value of $1,000 per preferred security or
$50,000,000) with a stated maturity of December 15, 2035 and a floating rate of interest,
which is reset quarterly, equal to three-month LIBOR plus 1.38%. Penn Laurel Financial Corp.
Trust I issued 5,000 cumulative trust preferred securities in a private transaction to a
pooled investment vehicle on January 23, 2004 (liquidation value of $1,000 per preferred
security or $5,000,000) with a stated maturity of January 23, 2034 and floating rate of
interest, which is reset quarterly, equal to three-month LIBOR plus 2.80%.
The Trusts have invested the proceeds of the offerings in junior subordinated deferrable
interest debentures issued by the Company. The structure of these debentures mirrors the
structure of the trust-preferred securities. Northwest Bancorp Statutory Trust III holds
$51,547,000 of the Companys junior subordinated debentures due December 30, 2035 with a
floating rate of interest, reset quarterly, of three-month LIBOR plus 1.38%. The rate in
effect at December 31, 2008 was 2.85%. Northwest Bancorp Statutory Trust IV holds $51,547,000
of the Companys junior subordinated debentures due December 15, 2035 with a floating rate of
interest, reset quarterly, of three-month LIBOR plus 1.38%. The rate in effect at December 31,
2008 was 3.38%. Penn Laurel Financial Corp. Trust I holds $5,155,000 of the Companys junior
subordinated debentures due January 23, 2034 with a floating rate of interest, reset
quarterly, of three-month LIBOR plus 2.80%. The rate in effect at December 31, 2008 was 6.27%.
These subordinated debentures are the sole assets of the Trusts.
Cash distributions on the trust securities are made on a quarterly basis to the extent
interest on the debentures is received by the Trusts. The Company has the right to defer
payment of interest on the subordinated debentures at any time, or from time-to-time, for
periods not exceeding five years. If interest payments on the subordinated debentures are
deferred, the distributions on the trust securities also are deferred. Interest on the
subordinated debentures and distributions on the trust securities is cumulative. The Company
obligation constitutes a full, irrevocable, and unconditional guarantee on a subordinated
basis of the obligations of the trust under the preferred securities.
The Trusts must redeem the preferred securities when the debentures are paid at maturity or
upon an earlier redemption of the debentures to the extent the debentures are redeemed. All or
part of the debentures may be redeemed at any time on or after December 31, 2010. Also, the
debentures may be redeemed at any time if existing laws or regulations, or the interpretation
or application of these laws or regulations, change causing:
the interest on the debentures to no longer be deductible by the Company for federal
income tax purposes;
the trust to become subject to federal income tax or to certain other taxes or
governmental charges;
the trust to register as an investment company; and
the Company to become subject to capital requirements and the preferred securities do
not qualify as Tier I capital.
The Company may, at any time, dissolve any of the Trusts and distribute the debentures to the
trust security holders, subject to receipt of any required regulatory approval(s).
During the quarter ended September 30, 2008, the Company entered into four interest rate swap
agreements (swaps). The Company designated the swaps as a cash flow hedge and they are
intended to protect against the variability of cash flows associated with Trust III and Trust
IV. The first two swaps hedge the interest rate risk of Trust III, wherein the Company receives
interest of LIBOR from a counterparty and pays a fixed rate of 4.20% to the same counterparty
calculated on a notional amount of $25.0 million and the Company receives interest of LIBOR
from a counterparty and pays a fixed rate of 4.61% to the same counterparty calculated on a
notional amount of $25.0 million. The terms of these two swaps are five years and ten years,
respectively. The second two swaps hedge the interest rate risk of Trust IV, wherein the
Company receives interest of LIBOR from a counterparty and pays a fixed rate of 3.85% to the
same counterparty
Table of Contents
calculated on a notional amount of $25.0 million and the Company receives
interest of LIBOR from a counterparty and pays a fixed rate of 4.09% to the same counterparty
calculated on a notional amount of $25.0 million. The terms of these two swaps are seven years
and ten years, respectively. The swap agreements were entered into with a counterparty that
met the Companys credit standards and the agreements contain collateral provisions protecting
the at-risk party. The Company believes that the credit risk inherent in the contracts is not
significant.
At December 31, 2008, the fair value of the swap agreements was $(13,114,000) and was the
amount the Company would have expected to pay if the contracts were terminated. There was no
material hedge ineffectiveness for this swap.
(23)
Selected Quarterly Financial Data (Unaudited)
Three months ended
March 31
June 30
September 30
December 31
(In thousands, except per share data)
$
96,821
97,152
97,519
97,167
48,387
43,423
39,819
37,664
48,434
53,729
57,700
59,503
2,294
3,395
6,950
10,212
12,891
11,644
4,952
9,265
42,427
41,488
42,739
43,474
16,604
20,490
12,963
15,082
3,982
6,048
3,140
3,798
$
12,622
14,442
9,823
11,284
$
0.26
0.30
0.20
0.23
$
0.26
0.30
0.20
0.23
Table of Contents
Three months ended
March 31
June 30
September 30
December 31
(In thousands, except per share data)
$
95,592
98,827
101,558
100,054
50,857
53,458
54,468
52,232
44,735
45,369
47,090
47,822
2,006
2,066
2,149
2,522
10,489
11,366
5,427
15,920
37,876
37,777
38,481
38,608
15,342
16,892
11,707
22,612
4,045
4,592
2,121
6,698
$
11,297
12,300
9,586
15,914
$
0.23
0.25
0.20
0.33
$
0.23
0.25
0.20
0.33
Three months ended
March 31
June 30
September 30
December 31
(In thousands, except per share data)
$
89,402
91,316
93,365
94,490
43,542
46,532
49,404
51,631
45,860
44,784
43,961
42,859
2,099
2,067
2,237
2,077
13,965
10,207
11,372
10,482
35,203
34,897
35,278
38,304
22,523
18,027
17,818
12,960
6,711
5,000
4,961
3,120
$
15,812
13,027
12,857
9,840
$
0.32
0.26
0.26
0.20
$
0.32
0.26
0.26
0.20
Table of Contents
ITEM 9.
CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL
DISCLOSURE
ITEM 12.
SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT AND RELATED
STOCKHOLDER MATTERS
Table of Contents
Number of securities to
be issued upon exercise
Number of securities
Equity compensation plans
of outstanding options
weighted average
remaining available for
approved by stockholders
and rights
exercise price
issuance under plan
21,200
$
7.60
602,255
17.63
750,245
24.03
226,068
22.03
1,523,932
1,599,768
$
21.12
1,523,932
ITEM 13.
CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS, AND DIRECTOR
INDEPENDENCE
(A)
Managements Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
(B)
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm on Internal Control Over
Financial Reporting
(C)
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
(D)
Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition at December 31, 2008 and 2007
(E)
Consolidated Statements of Income Years ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006
(F)
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareholders Equity Years
ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006
(G)
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows Years ended December 31,
2008, 2007 and 2006
(H)
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
Table of Contents
Regulation
Reference to Prior Filing
S-K Exhibit
or Exhibit Number
Number
Document
Attached Herto
Plan of acquisition, reorganization,
arrangement, liquidation or succession
None
Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws
***
Instruments defining the rights of security
holders, including indentures
*
Voting trust agreement
None
Amendment and Restatement of Deferred
Compensation Plan for Outside Directors
Of Northwest Savings Bank and Eligible
Affiliates
10.1
Retirement Plan for Outside Directors of
Northwest Savings Bank and Eligible
Affiliates
10.2
Amended and Restated Northwest Savings
Bank Nonqualified Supplemental
Retirement Plan
10.3
Employee Stock Ownership Plan
*
Northwest Bancorp, Inc. 2004 Stock
Option Plan
****
Northwest Bancorp, Inc. 2004
Recognition and Retention Plan
****
Management Bonus Plan
10.7
Northwest Bancorp, Inc. 2008 Stock
Option Plan
*****
Amended and Restated Northwest Savings
Bank and Affiliates Upper Managers Bonus
Deferred Compensation Plan
10.9
Employment Agreement for
William J. Wagner
******
Employment Agreement for
William W. Harvey, Jr.
******
Employment Agreement for
Steven G. Fisher
******
Table of Contents
Regulation
Reference to Prior Filing
S-K Exhibit
or Exhibit Number
Number
Document
Attached Herto
Employment Agreement for
Gregory C. LaRocca
******
Employment Agreement for
Robert A. Ordiway
******
Statement re: computation of per share
earnings
None
Statement re: computation of ratios
Not required
Letter re: change in certifying accountant
None
Letter re: change in accounting principles
None
Subsidiaries of Registrant
21
Published report regarding matters submitted to vote of security holders
None
Consent of experts and counsel
23
Power of Attorney
Not Required
Information from reports furnished to State
insurance regulatory authorities
None
Certification pursuant to Rule 13a-14 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
Amended, as adopted pursuant to Section
302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
31.1
Certification pursuant to Rule 13a-14 of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
Amended, as adopted pursuant to Section
302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
31.2
Certification pursuant to 18 U.S.C.
Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to
Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002
32
*
Incorporated by reference to the Companys Registration Statement on Form S-4 (File No.
333-31687), originally filed with the SEC on July 21, 1997, as amended on October 9, 1997 and
November 4, 1997.
***
Incorporated by reference to the Definitive Proxy Statement for the 2000 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders (File No. 000-23817), filed with the SEC on November 21, 2000.
****
Incorporated by reference to the Definitive Proxy Statement for the 2004 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders (File No. 000-23817), filed with the SEC on October 6, 2004.
*****
Incorporated by reference to the Definitive Proxy Statement for the 2008 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders (File No. 000-23817), filed with the SEC on April 11, 2008.
******
Incorporated by reference to the Periodic Report or Form 8-K (File No. 000-23817), filed
with the SEC on September 19, 2007.
Table of Contents
NORTHWEST BANCORP, INC.
Date: March 4, 2009
By:
/s/ William J. Wagner
William J. Wagner, Chairman, President and
Chief Executive Officer (Principal Executive Officer)
Date: March 4, 2009
By:
/s/ William J. Wagner
William J. Wagner, Chairman, President, and
Chief Executive Officer and Director
Date: March 4, 2009
By:
/s/ William W. Harvey, Jr.
William W. Harvey, Jr., Executive Vice President, Finance,
Chief Financial Officer (Principal Financial Officer)
Date: March 4, 2009
By:
/s/ Gerald J. Ritzert
Gerald J. Ritzert, Senior Vice President,
Chief Accounting Officer (Principal Accounting Officer)
Date: March 4, 2009
By:
/s/ John M. Bauer
John M. Bauer, Director
Date: March 4, 2009
By:
/s/ Richard L. Carr
Richard L. Carr, Director
Date: March 4, 2009
By:
/s/ Thomas K. Creal
Thomas K. Creal, III, Director
Date: March 4, 2009
By:
/s/ Robert G. Ferrier
Robert G. Ferrier, Director
Date: March 4, 2009
By:
/s/ A. Paul King
A. Paul King, Director
Date: March 4, 2009
By:
/s/ Joseph F. Long
Joseph F. Long, Director
Date: March 4, 2009
By:
/s/ Richard E. McDowell
Richard E. McDowell, Director
Date: March 4, 2009
By:
/s/ Philip M. Tredway
Philip M. Tredway, Director
2
3
4
(a) | the Participants Change of Deferral Election shall not be effective until the first day of the 13 th month after it is filed with the Plan Administrator, and shall not apply to any payment or series of installment payments treated as a single payment scheduled to be paid under any previously filed Deferral Election prior to the first day of the 13 th month after the Participants Change of Deferral Election is filed with the Plan Administrator; and | ||
(b) | the Change of Deferral Election postpones the date of payment of the Deferral Election to which it relates for a period of at least five years from the date such payment was previously scheduled to be paid, or in the case of a series of installment payments treated as a single payment, five years from the date the first payment in the series was previously scheduled to be paid. |
5
(c) | any Change of Deferral Election that changes only the form of payment must delay the starting date of the originally scheduled payment by at least five years. |
6
7
8
9
(a) | through reimbursement or compensation by insurance or otherwise; or | ||
(b) | by liquidation of the Participants assets, to the extent the liquidation of such assets would not itself cause severe financial hardship; or | ||
(c) | by cessation of deferrals under the Plan. |
(a) | pay an individual other than the Participant to fulfill a domestic relations order, as defined in Code Section 414(p)(1)(B); | ||
(b) | comply with Federal, State, local or foreign ethics laws or conflicts of interest laws; | ||
(c) | provide cashouts of the entirety of the Participants interest under this and related plans of nonqualified deferred compensation of the Bank and its |
10
Eligible Affiliates where such entire interest is not in excess of the applicable dollar amount under Code Section 402(g)(1)(B); | |||
(d) | provide for payment of employment taxes under the Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) and Railroad Retirement Tax Act (RRTA) and other employment taxes imposed on compensation deferred under the Plan; | ||
(e) | provide for payment of the income tax at source on wages imposed under Code Section 3401 or the corresponding withholding provisions of applicable State, local or foreign tax laws as the result of the payment of the FICA or RRTA amount, and for payment of the additional income tax at source on wages attributable to the pyramiding of Code Section 3401 wages and taxes, provided that the total distribution under this acceleration provision does not exceed the aggregate of the FICA or RRTA amount, and the income tax withholding related to such FICA or RRTA amount; | ||
(f) | provide for the payment of the amount required to be included in income as the result of any failure of this Plan to comply with the requirements of Code Section 409A or the regulations finally and lawfully issued thereunder; | ||
(g) | satisfy a debt of the Participant to the Bank which was incurred in the ordinary course of the Participants service relationship to the Bank, provided that the acceleration and application of a Participants compensation deferred hereunder to satisfy such debt is made at the same time and in the same amount as the debt would have been otherwise due and collectible from the Participant and does not exceed $5,000 in any tax year of the Participant. |
11
(h) | make any other acceleration of the time and form of a payment available to the Bank under Code Section 409A and the regulations thereunder. |
(a) | to the extent that the Bank reasonably anticipates that the scheduled payment would not be deductible from the Banks taxable income due to the |
12
application of Code Section 162(m), in which event the payment shall be made, as the Bank decides, either (i) during the Banks first taxable year in which the Bank reasonable anticipates that the deduction of such payment will be allowed under Code Section 162(m), or (ii) during the period beginning with the Participants separation from the service of the Bank and its Eligible Affiliates and ending on the later of the last day of the Banks taxable year in which the Participant separated from such service or the 15 th day of the third month following the Participants separation from such service, or | |||
(b) | in the event that the Participant is a specified employee within the meaning of Section 409A and the regulations issued thereunder at the time, or within six months prior to the time, a payment is otherwise due to be distributed from his/her Deferred Compensation Account in accordance with his/her Deferral Election, then no payment shall be made from his/her Deferred Compensation account until the first day of the seventh month following the date of his/her separation from the service of the Bank and its Eligible Affiliates, unless such separation from service is due to the death of the Participant, or | ||
(c) | to the extent that the Bank reasonably anticipates that the making of the payment will violate Federal securities law or other applicable law, provided that the Bank makes the payment at the earliest date at which it reasonably anticipates that making of the payment will not cause such violation. |
13
14
15
16
17
18
(a) | the specific reason or reasons for the denial; | ||
(b) | specific reference to the pertinent provision of the Plan upon which the denial is based; | ||
(c) | a description of any additional material or information necessary of the claimant to perfect the claim; and | ||
(d) | an explanation of the claim review procedure under the Plan. |
19
(a) | request a review by written application to the Plan Administrator, or its designee, no later than 60 days after receipt by the claimant of written notification of denial of a claim; | ||
(b) | review pertinent documents; and | ||
(a) | submit issues and comments in writing. |
20
NORTHWEST SAVINGS BANK | ||||||||
|
||||||||
December 17, 2008
|
By: | /s/ William Wagner | ||||||
|
|
21
TO:
|
Plan Administrator | FROM: | ||||
|
c/o Human Resources Department | (Name of Eligible Director) | ||||
|
Northwest Savings Bank
108 Liberty Street Warren, Pennsylvania 16365 |
Eligible Affiliate) |
|
(1 | ) | My retirement as a Director on or after age 59 1 / 2 up to age 72. [This option not available for Deferral Elections filed after such retirement eligibility.] | |||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
(2 | ) | My voluntary resignation from the Board of Directors. | |||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
(3 | ) | My failure to be nominated or elected as a member of the Board of Directors. | |||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
(4 | ) | My death. | |||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
(5 | ) | My becoming disabled or incurring a disability, defined as my suffering from a mental or physical disability which prevents me from engaging in the principal duties as a Director of the Bank for a period of six consecutive months. | |||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
(6 | ) | My attainment of age . [Age selected must be above the Participants age when Deferral Election is filed.] | |||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
(7 | ) | The following specific date following the year in which this Deferral Election is filed: 20, ___. | |||
|
1
|
(1 | ) | Lump sum; or | |||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
(2 | ) | Approximately equal monthly installments over a period of years (either five (5) or ten (10)); or | |||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
(3 | ) | Approximately equal quarterly installments over a period of years (either five (5) or ten (10)); or | |||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
(4 | ) | Approximately equal annual installments over a period of years (either five (5) or ten (10)). | |||
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ELIGIBLE DIRECTOR | |||||||
Date:
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Employee Social Security No.: | |||||||
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PLAN ADMINISTRATOR | |||||||
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2
TO:
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Plan Administrator | FROM: | ||||
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c/o Human Resources Department | (Name of Eligible Director) | ||||
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Northwest Savings Bank
108 Liberty Street Warren, Pennsylvania 16365 |
Eligible Affiliate) |
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o | lump sum | ||
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o | five equal installments | ||
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o | ten equal installments |
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o | lump sum | ||
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o | five equal installments | ||
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o | ten equal installments |
1
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ELIGIBLE DIRECTOR | |||||||
Date: , 20 | Signed: | |||||||
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PLAN ADMINISTRATOR | |||||||
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(a) | Plan Administrator means the person or group of persons appointed by the Board of Directors to administer this Plan. In the event there is no person or group of persons appointed by the Board to administer this Plan, or such person or group resigns from or fails to assume the responsibility to administer the Plan, the Human Resources Department of the Bank shall act as Plan Administrator. | ||
(b) | Bank means Northwest Savings Bank, a Pennsylvania corporation, and its corporate successors. | ||
(c) | Board or Board of Directors means the Board of Directors of the Bank. | ||
(d) | Beneficiary means the person whom the Participant has designated pursuant to Section 3.4(c) to receive undistributed Retirement Benefits which the Participant has accrued hereunder at his date of death. |
(e) | Director means a member of the Board of Directors of the Bank or any Eligible Affiliate , or, in the case of Northwest Bancorp Mutual Holding Company, a member of its Board of Trustees. | ||
(f) | Eligible Affiliate means the parent corporation or an affiliated corporation of Northwest Savings Bank which the Board of Northwest Savings Bank has determined by duly adopted resolution to be eligible for the Plan , including Northwest Bancorp Mutual Holding Company and Northwest Bancorp, Inc.. | ||
(g) | Disability Benefit is the amount payable to a Participant in accordance with Section 3.5 hereof upon his becoming Disabled as defined in Treasury Regulations Section 1.409A-3(i)(4). | ||
(h) | Outside Director means a Director who is not an employee of the Bank who is not entitled, either before or after retirement from the Board of the Bank or any Eligible Affiliates, to receive employee pension benefits from the Bank or from any of its subsidiaries or affiliates. | ||
(i) | Participant means any eligible Outside Director of the Bank or any Eligible Affiliates who meets the participation requirements set forth in Section 3.1 of this Plan. | ||
(j) | Retainer means the annual Retainer payable to an Outside Director each Fiscal Year as compensation for membership on the Board of Directors of the Bank or any Eligible Affiliate. | ||
(k) | Retire or Retirement means termination for any reason from service as a Director of the Bank or Eligible Affiliate after five or more Years of Service, provided that such Retirement qualifies as a Separation from Service as defined in Treasury Regulations Section 1.409A-1(h). | ||
(l) | Retirement Benefit is the amount payable to a Participant following his Retirement calculated in accordance with Section 3.3(a) of this Plan. | ||
(m) | Years of Service means the number of consecutive 12-month periods, or fractions thereof, which an Outside Director serves on the Board of Directors of the Bank or any Eligible Affiliate, but not to exceed ten (10) such consecutive 12-month periods. Years of Service shall include service on the Board of Directors of the Bank or of an Eligible Affiliate prior to the establishment of this Plan, and any period during which the Participant is disabled within the meaning of Section 3.5 hereof prior to age 65. However, in no event shall the Years of Service credited under this Plan exceed ten (10). |
2
3
(a) | Amount of Retirement Benefit. Upon a Participants Retirement from the Board of the Bank or an Eligible Affiliate on or after his attainment of age 60, he shall be entitled to an annual Retirement Benefit in an amount equal to: |
(1) | Sixty percent of the annual Retainer payable to an Outside Director as compensation for membership on the applicable Board at the annual rate which was in effect immediately prior to his Retirement; |
(2) | Sixty percent of the annual meeting fees payable to an Outside Director as compensation for his attendance at meetings of the applicable Board at the annual rate which was in effect immediately prior to his Retirement. |
(b) | Upon a Participants Retirement from the applicable Board prior to his attainment of age 60, he shall be entitled to an annual Retirement Benefit equal to one-half of the Retirement Benefit calculated under subparagraphs (1) and (2) of paragraph (a) above. | ||
(c) | Commencement of Payments |
(1) | Retirement prior to Attainment of Age 65. In the event a Participant retires from the applicable Board prior to his attainment of age 65, Retirement Benefits shall commence on the first day of the calendar quarter following his attainment of age 65. | ||
(2) | Retirement after Attainment of Age 65. In the event a Participant retires from the applicable Board after his attainment of age 65, Retirement Benefits shall commence on the first day of the calendar quarter following his Retirement. |
(d) | Duration and Payment of Retirement Benefits. Retirement Benefits shall be paid to each Retired Participant for a period equal to the lesser of the number of his Years of Service, his life or ten years. Retirement Benefits shall be paid in quarterly installments on the first day of each calendar quarter following the Participants Retirement. |
4
(a) | Death While Serving on an Applicable Board. Upon the death of a Participant on or after April 1, 2003 while serving on an applicable Board, the Bank or Eligible Affiliate, as applicable, shall pay to the Participants Beneficiary an amount equal to the benefit described in Section 3.3(a) of this Plan for a period equal to the lesser of the number of his Years of Service or ten (10) Years. The present value of this stream of payments shall be paid to the Participants Beneficiary in a lump sum within 60 days following the Participants death, using a 7.0 percent discount rate. | ||
(b) | Death After Serving on an Applicable Board. Upon the death of a Participant on or after April 1, 2003 following the Participants Retirement from an applicable Board, the Bank or Eligible Affiliate, as applicable, shall pay to the Participants designated Beneficiary the remaining benefit that the Participant was entitled to under this Plan, if any. The present value of any remaining benefits shall be paid to the Participants Beneficiary in a lump sum within 60 days following the Participants death, using a 7.0 percent discount rate. | ||
(c) | Designation of a Beneficiary. The Plan Administrator shall make available to all Participants an appropriate form for their designation of a Beneficiary to receive remaining benefits payable under the Plan in the event of the Participants death. If a Participant has not designated a Beneficiary or the designated Beneficiary has pre-deceased the Participant at the time of his death, any remaining benefits payable under the Plan at the Participants death shall be paid to his estate. |
5
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NORTHWEST SAVINGS BANK | ||||||||
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December 17, 2008
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By: | /s/ William Wagner | ||||||
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9
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NORTHWEST SAVINGS BANK | ||||||||
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December 17, 2008
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By: | /s/ William Wagner | ||||||
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Chief Executive Officer |
-15-
| Management personnel are eligible for consideration | ||
| Employed by the company for a minimum of six months of the fiscal year | ||
| Be actively employed by the company at the time of payment or retired between the last day of the fiscal year and the payment date. Retirees must meet the definition of normal retirement sixty-five years old with a minimum of five years of service with the company | ||
| Rated Meets Expectations or higher on last performance evaluation |
| Bonus percentages are based on a Board approved matrix which consists of eight company performance levels and five categories of management | ||
| Bonus percentages for Category A are 0%, 10%, 18%, 20%, 23%, 27%, 31%, and 35%. | ||
| Bonuses will be calculated on base salaries as of the last day of the fiscal year | ||
| Bonuses will be prorated for those with six but less than twelve months of service in the fiscal year and those promoted to an eligible position during the fiscal year | ||
| Bonuses for those on an approved leave of absence, including disability, will be prorated based upon the number of full months actually worked during the fiscal year | ||
| Bonuses will be rounded to the nearest hundredth up or down |
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(a) | through reimbursement or compensation by insurance or otherwise; | ||
(b) | by liquidation of the Participants assets, to the extent the liquidation of such assets would not itself cause severe financial hardship, or | ||
(c) | cessation of deferrals under this Plan. |
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(a) | the specific reason or reasons for the denial; | ||
(b) | specific reference to the pertinent provision of the Plan upon which the denial is based; | ||
(c) | a description of any additional material or information necessary of the claimant to perfect the claim; and | ||
(d) | an explanation of the claim review procedure under the Plan. |
(a) | request a review by written application to the Plan Administrator, or its designee, no later than 60 days after receipt by the claimant of written notification of denial of a claim; | ||
(b) | review pertinent documents; and |
- 11 -
(c) | submit issues and comments in writing. |
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NORTHWEST SAVINGS BANK | ||||||
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December 17, 2008
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By: | /s/ William Wagner | ||||
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Participants Name:
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Print Name:
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PRIMARY BENEFICIARY: | ||||||||
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SECONDARY BENEFICIARY (if all Primary Beneficiaries pre-decease the Participant): | ||||||||
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Print Name
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- 17 -
| Northwest Savings Bank, a Pennsylvania savings bank | |
| Northwest Bancorp Capital Trust III, a Delaware statutory business trust | |
| Northwest Bancorp Statutory Trust IV, a Connecticut statutory business trust | |
| CSB Trust |
| Northwest Financial Services, Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation | |
| Great Northwest Corporation, a Pennsylvania corporation | |
| Northwest Capital Group Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation | |
| Allegheny Services, Inc., a Delaware corporation | |
| Northwest Settlement Agency, LLC, a Pennsylvania limited liability company | |
| Boetger and Associates, Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation | |
| Northwest Consumer Discount Company, Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation which operates under this name in 15 locations in western and central Pennsylvania and also operates: |
o | d/b/a Northwest Finance Company in Jamestown and Fredonia, NY, a New York corporation | ||
o | d/b/a Butler Consumer Discount Company in six locations in southwestern Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Civic Consumer Discount Company in to locations in southwestern Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Uniontown Financial Services in Uniontown, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Erie Consumer Discount in three locations in Erie, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Corry Consumer Discount in Corry, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Thrift Financial Services in Indiana, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Clearfield Consumer Discount in Clearfield, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Titusville Consumer Discount in Titusville, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Lewistown Consumer Discount in Lewistown, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Jeannette Financial Services in Jeannette, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Zelie Consumer Discount in Zelienople, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Washington Consumer Discount in Washington, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a St. Marys Consumer Discount in St. Marys, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Hazelton Financial Services in Hazelton, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a State College Financial Services in State College, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Pottsville Financial Services in Pottsville, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Williamsport Financial Services in Williamsport, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Altoona Financial Services in Altoona, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Punxsutawney Financial Services in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Huntingdon Financial Services in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Belle Vernon Financial Services in Belle Vernon, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Latrobe Financial Services in Latrobe, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Bloomsburg Financial Services in Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Sunbury Financial Services in Sunbury, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Meadville Financial Services in Meadville, Pennsylvania | ||
o | d/b/a Lock Haven Financial Services in Lock Haven, Pennsylvania |
March 4, 2009
|
/s/ William J. Wagner | |||
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President and Chief Executive Officer |
March 4, 2009
|
/s/ William W. Harvey, Jr. | |||
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Executive Vice President, Finance and
Chief Financial Officer |
1. | the Companys Annual Report on Form 10-K for the Year ended December 31, 2008 (the Report) fully complies with the requirements of section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and | |
2. | that as of the date of this statement, the information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company. |
March 4, 2009
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/s/ William J. Wagner | |||
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President and Chief Executive Officer | |||
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March 4, 2009
|
/s/ William W. Harvey, Jr. | |||
|
||||
Date
|
William W. Harvey, Jr. | |||
|
Executive Vice President, Finance and | |||
|
Chief Financial Officer |