FORM 10-K
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
(Mark One)
[X] Annual Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2003
or
[ ] Transition Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934
For the transition period from _____________ to _______________
Commission File Number 0-25910
LOGANSPORT FINANCIAL CORP.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
INDIANA 35-1945736
--------------------------------- -------------------------------
(State or other Jurisdiction (I.R.S. Employer Identification
of Incorporation or Organization) Number)
723 East Broadway, Logansport, Indiana 46947
- ---------------------------------------- -------------------------
(Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)
Registrant's telephone number including area code:
(574) 722-3855
Securities Registered Pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
NONE
Securities Registered Pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:
Common Stock, without par value
(Title of Class)
Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant (1) has filed all reports required
to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during
the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the Registrant was
required to file such reports) and (2) has been subject to such filing
requirements for the past 90 days. YES _X_ NO___
Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405
of Regulation S-K (Section 229.405 of this chapter) is not contained herein, and
will not be contained, to the best of Registrant's knowledge, in definitive
proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this
Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K. [X]
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an accelerated filer (as
defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Act). YES ___ NO _X_
The aggregate market value of the issuer's voting stock held by non-affiliates,
computed by reference to the the price at which the common equity was last sold
on June 30, 2003, was $13,430,968.
The number of shares of the Registrant's Common Stock, without par value,
outstanding as of March 1, 2004, was 876,193 shares.
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
Portions of the Annual Report to Shareholders for the year ended December 31,
2003, are incorporated into Part II. Portions of the Proxy Statement for the
2004 Annual Meeting of Shareholders are incorporated in Part I and Part III.
Exhibit Index on Page E-1
Page 1 of 30 Pages
LOGANSPORT FINANCIAL CORP.
Form 10-K
INDEX
Page
----
Forward Looking Statements ....................................................... 1
PART I
Item 1. Business .............................................................. 1
Item 2. Properties ............................................................ 24
Item 3. Legal Proceedings ..................................................... 25
Item 4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders ................... 25
Item 4.5. Executive Officers of Registrant....................................... 25
PART II
Item 5. Market for Registrant's Common Equity and Related Stockholder Matters.. 25
Item 6. Selected Financial Data ............................................... 26
Item 7. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and
Results of Operations ............................................... 26
Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk ............ 26
Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data ........................... 26
Item 9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and
Financial Disclosure ................................................ 27
Item 9A. Controls and Procedures ............................................... 27
PART III
Item 10. Directors and Executive Officers of Registrant ........................ 27
Item 11. Executive Compensation ................................................ 27
Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and
Related Stockholder Matters ......................................... 27
Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions ........................ 28
Item 14. Principal Accountant Fees and Services ................................ 28
PART IV
Item 15. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules, and Reports on Form 8-K ...... 29
Signatures ....................................................................... 30
FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS
This Annual Report on Form 10-K ("Form 10-K") contains statements which
constitute forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements appear in a number of
places in this Form 10-K and include statements regarding the intent, belief,
outlook, estimate or expectations of the Company (as defined below), its
directors or its officers primarily with respect to future events and the future
financial performance of the Company. Readers of this Form 10-K are cautioned
that any such forward looking statements are not guarantees of future events or
performance and involve risks and uncertainties, and that actual results may
differ materially from those in the forward looking statements as a result of
various factors. The accompanying information contained in this Form 10-K
identifies important factors that could cause such differences. These factors
include but are not limited to changes in interest rates; loss of deposits and
loan demand to other savings and financial institutions; substantial changes in
financial markets; changes in real estate values and the real estate market;
regulatory changes; or unanticipated results in pending legal proceedings.
PART I
Item 1. Business.
General
Logansport Financial Corp. (the "Holding Company" and, together with the
Bank (as defined below), the "Company") is an Indiana corporation organized in
February 1995, to become a unitary savings and loan holding company. The Holding
Company became a unitary savings and loan holding company upon the conversion of
Logansport Savings Bank, FSB (the "Bank") from a federal mutual savings bank to
a federal stock savings bank on June 13, 1995. The principal asset of the
Holding Company consists of 100% of the issued and outstanding shares of common
stock, $.01 par value per share, of the Bank. The Bank began operations in
Logansport, Indiana, under the name Logansport Building and Loan Association in
1925. In 1962, the Bank changed its name to Logansport Savings and Loan
Association, and in 1992, the Bank converted to a federally chartered savings
bank known as Logansport Savings Bank, FSB. The Bank serves the needs of
primarily residents of Cass County, Indiana.
The Bank is the oldest financial institution headquartered in Logansport,
Indiana. Management believes the Bank has developed a solid reputation among its
loyal customer base because of its commitment to personal service and its strong
support of the local community. The Bank offers a number of consumer and
commercial financial services. These services include: (i) residential real
estate loans; (ii) home equity loans; (iii) home improvement loans; (iv)
construction loans; (v) commercial real estate loans and other commercial loans,
including operating lines of credit secured by receivables and inventory and
term financing for equipment purchases, and agricultural loans; (vi) commercial
leases, including equipment leases; (vii) multi-family loans; (viii) consumer
loans; (ix) NOW accounts; (x) passbook savings accounts; (xi) certificates of
deposit; (xii) consumer and commercial demand deposit accounts; and (xiii)
individual retirement accounts. The Holding Company and the Bank conduct
business out of their main office located in Logansport, Indiana. The Bank is
and historically has been a significant real estate mortgage lender in Cass
County, Indiana.
The Bank historically has concentrated its lending activities on the
origination of loans secured by first mortgage liens for the purchase,
construction or refinancing of one- to four-family residential real property.
One- to four-family residential mortgage loans continue to be the major focus of
the Bank's loan origination activities, representing 49.1% of the Company's
gross loans at December 31, 2003. The Bank also offers multi-family mortgage
loans, commercial real estate loans, construction loans, commercial loans and
leases and consumer loans. Mortgage loans secured by multi-family properties and
commercial real estate totaled approximately 1.1% and 22.0%, respectively, of
the Company's gross loans at December 31, 2003. Commercial loans constituted
12.4% and commercial leases 3.8% of the gross loans at December 31, 2003.
Residential real estate construction loans constituted approximately .8% of the
Company's gross loans at December 31, 2003. Installment, home equity, and home
improvement loans constituted approximately 4.6%, 1.6%, and 4.6%, respectively,
of the Company's total loan portfolio at December 31, 2003.
Lending Activities
Loan Portfolio Data. The following table sets forth the composition of the
Company's loan portfolio by loan type and security type as of the dates
indicated, including a reconciliation of gross loans receivable after
consideration of the allowance for loan losses and loans in process.
At December 31,
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2003 2002 2001 2000
------------------ ----------------- ------------------ ------------------
Percent Percent Percent Percent
Amount of Total Amount of Total Amount of Total Amount of Total
-------- -------- --------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
(Dollars in thousands)
TYPE OF LOAN
Mortgage loans:
Residential .......................... $ 51,208 49.10% $ 61,717 55.02% $ 63,863 56.25% $ 62,277 59.73%
Commercial real estate ............... 22,910 21.97 20,557 18.33 18,435 16.24 13,230 12.69
Multi-family ......................... 1,094 1.05 1,606 1.43 1,816 1.60 2,050 1.96
Construction:
Residential .......................... 870 .83 1,317 1.17 2,278 2.01 2,814 2.70
Commercial real estate ............... -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
Multi-family ......................... -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
Commercial loans ....................... 12,931 12.40 10,924 9.74 9,586 8.44 7,088 6.80
Commercial leases ...................... 4,000 3.83 4,352 3.88 3,914 3.45 2,228 2.14
Consumer loans:
Installment (1) ...................... 4,784 4.59 5,156 4.60 6,473 5.70 7,045 6.75
Share ................................ 11 .01 62 .06 144 .13 290 .28
Home equity .......................... 1,683 1.61 1,358 1.21 1,199 1.06 1,164 1.12
Home improvement ..................... 4,813 4.61 5,118 4.56 5,819 5.12 6,076 5.83
-------- ------ -------- ------ -------- ------ -------- ------
Gross loans receivable ............. $104,304 100.00% $112,167 100.00% $113,527 100.00% $104,262 100.00%
======== ====== ======== ====== ======== ====== ======== ======
TYPE OF SECURITY
Residential (2) ...................... $ 58,574 56.16% $ 71,320 63.58% $ 74,097 65.27% $ 73,056 70.07%
Commercial real estate ............... 22,910 21.96 20,557 18.33 18,725 16.49 13,606 13.05
Multi-family ......................... 1,094 1.05 1,606 1.43 1,816 1.60 2,050 1.96
Deposits ............................. 11 01 62 .06 144 .13 290 .28
Auto ................................. 2,197 2.11 2,382 2.12 2,857 2.52 3,223 3.09
Consumer (1) ......................... 2,587 2.48 1,646 1.47 2,388 2.10 2,722 2.61
Other security ....................... 16,931 16.23 14,594 13.01 13,500 11.89 9,315 8.94
-------- ------ -------- ------ -------- ------ -------- ------
Gross loans receivable ............. 104,304 100.00% 112,167 100.00% 113,527 100.00% 104,262 100.00%
Deduct:
Allowance for loan losses .............. 1,751 1.68 1,458 1.30 1,132 1.00 760 .73
Loans in process ....................... 200 .19 323 .29 699 .61 1,084 1.04
-------- ------ -------- ------ -------- ------ -------- ------
Net loans receivable ................. $102,353 98.13% $110,386 98.41% $111,696 98.39 $102,418 8.23%
======== ====== ======== ====== ======== ====== ======== ======
Mortgage Loans (including construction):
Adjustable-rate ...................... $ 47,800 62.83% $ 48,068 56.42% $ 52,365 60.61% $ 51,664 64.28%
Fixed-rate ........................... 28,282 37.17 37,129 43.58 34,027 39.39 28,707 35.72
-------- ------ -------- ------ -------- ------ -------- ------
Total .............................. $ 76,082 100.00% $ 85,197 100.00% $ 86,392 100.00% $ 80,371 100.00%
======== ====== ======== ====== ======== ====== ======== ======
(Table is continued on following page.)
(Table is continued from previous page.)
At December 31,
------------------
1999
------------------
Percent
Amount of Total
------ --------
(Dollars in thousands)
TYPE OF LOAN
Mortgage loans:
Residential .......................... $ 57,889 62.23%
Commercial real estate ............... 11,825 12.71
Multi-family ......................... 2,111 2.27
Construction:
Residential .......................... 2,575 2.77
Commercial real estate ............... -- --
Multi-family ......................... -- --
Commercial loans ....................... 4,102 4.41
Commercial leases ...................... 1,609 1.73
Consumer loans:
Installment (1) ...................... 6,107 6.56
Share ................................ 289 .31
Home equity .......................... 974 1.05
Home improvement ..................... 5,544 5.96
-------- ------
Gross loans receivable ............. $ 93,025 100.00%
======== ======
TYPE OF SECURITY
Residential (2) ...................... $ 66,150 71.11%
Commercial real estate ............... 12,334 13.26
Multi-family ......................... 2,088 2.25
Deposits ............................. 289 .31
Auto ................................. 2,477 2.66
Consumer (1) ......................... 1,599 1.72
Other security ....................... 8,088 8.69
-------- ------
Gross loans receivable ............. 93,025 100.00%
Deduct:
Allowance for loan losses .............. 440 .47
Loans in process ....................... 1,685 1.81
-------- ------
Net loans receivable ................. $ 90,900 97.72%
======== ======
Mortgage Loans (including construction):
Adjustable-rate ...................... $ 48,119 64.68%
Fixed-rate ........................... 26,281 35.32
-------- ------
Total .............................. $ 74,400 100.00%
======== ======
- -------------------------
(1) Includes "one-pay" notes due in less than one year.
(2) Includes home equity, residential construction and home improvement loans.
The following table sets forth certain information at December 31, 2003,
regarding the dollar amount of loans maturing in the Company's loan portfolio
based on the date that final payment is due under the terms of the loan. Demand
loans having no stated schedule of repayments and no stated maturity and
overdrafts are reported as due in one year or less. This schedule does not
reflect the effects of possible prepayments or enforcement of due-on-sale
clauses. Management expects prepayments will cause actual maturities to be
shorter.
Balance due during years ending December 31,
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding 2007 2009 2014 2019
at December 31, to to to and
2003 2004 2005 2006 2008 2013 2018 following
--------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- -------- ---------
(In thousands)
Mortgage loans (including construction):
Residential ......................... $ 52,078 $ 746 $ 86 $ 339 $ 1,348 $ 6,029 $ 14,208 $ 29,322
Multi-family ........................ 1,094 178 -- -- -- 916 -- --
Commercial real estate .............. 22,910 2,117 120 408 897 3,273 4,227 11,868
Commercial loans ....................... 12,931 7,853 303 1,239 1,912 1,624 -- --
Commercial leases ...................... 4,000 1,228 987 926 743 116 -- --
Consumer loans:
Home improvement .................... 4,813 66 73 200 879 1,852 1,730 13
Home equity ......................... 1,683 -- -- -- -- -- 1,683 --
Installment ......................... 4,784 1,762 493 809 1,069 423 228 --
Share ............................... 11 11 -- -- -- -- -- --
-------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Total ............................ $104,304 $ 13,961 $ 2,062 $ 3,921 $ 6,848 $ 14,233 $ 22,076 $ 41,203
======== ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== ========
The following table sets forth, as of December 31, 2003, the dollar amount
of all loans due after one year which have fixed interest rates and floating or
adjustable rates.
Due After December 31, 2004
------------------------------------------
Fixed Rates Variable Rates Total
----------- -------------- ------------
(In thousands)
Mortgage loans:
Residential .......... $22,127 $29,205 $51,332
Multi-family ......... 498 418 916
Commercial real estate 5,343 15,450 20,793
Commercial loans ........ 3,902 1,176 5,078
Commercial leases ....... 2,772 -- 2,772
Consumer loans:
Home improvement ..... 4,747 -- 4,747
Home equity .......... -- 1,683 1,683
Installment .......... 3,022 -- 3,022
------- ------- -------
Total ............. $42,411 $47,932 $90,343
======= ======= =======
Residential Loans. Residential loans consist primarily of one- to
four-family loans. Approximately $51.2 million, or 49.1% of the Company's
portfolio of loans at December 31, 2003, consisted of one- to four-family
residential mortgage loans.
The Bank currently offers adjustable-rate one- to four-family residential
mortgage loans ("ARMs") which adjust annually and are indexed to the one-year
U.S. Treasury securities yield adjusted to a constant maturity. These ARMs have
a current margin above such index of 2.75%, or 3.00% for loans in which interest
is amortized and payments are due monthly or bi-weekly. Many of the residential
ARMs in the Company's portfolio at December 31, 2003, provided for a maximum
rate adjustment per year of 1%, although the Bank began originating residential
ARMs which provide for a maximum rate adjustment of 2% per year in 1995. The
Bank's residential ARMs provide for a maximum rate adjustment of 5% over the
life of the loan. These ARMs generally bear terms of between 15 and 30 years.
The Bank also currently offers fixed-rate loans which provide for the
payment of principal and interest over a period that generally does not exceed
15 years. At December 31, 2003, 37.2% of the Company's total mortgage
portfolios, which includes residential, commercial real estate, multi-family
loans and construction loans, had fixed rates of interest and 62.8% had
adjustable rates.
During 2003, the Bank initiated a program to originate certain mortgage
loans for sale in the secondary market, retaining the servicing on loans sold.
These sales transactions were conducted with the Federal Home Loan Bank of
Indianapolis. Sales of loans during 2003 totaled $6.2 million.
The Bank generally does not originate residential mortgage loans if the
ratio of the loan amount to the lesser of current cost or appraised value of the
property (i.e., the "loan-to-value ratio") exceeds 90% on ARMs or 80% on
fixed-rate loans. However, in certain circumstances the Bank may originate loans
exceeding the above loan-to-value ratios. In 2003, if the loan-to-value ratio on
a residential single-family mortgage loan exceeded 90%, the Bank required
private mortgage insurance.
Substantially all of the residential mortgage loans that the Bank
originates include "due-on-sale" clauses, which give the Bank the right to
declare a loan immediately due and payable in the event that, among other
things, the borrower sells or otherwise disposes of the real property subject to
the mortgage and the loan is not repaid.
Historically, the Bank's residential mortgage loans have not been
originated on terms and conditions and using documentation that conform to the
standard underwriting criteria required to sell such loans on the secondary
market. However, during 2003 the Bank conformed its origination process to meet
FHLB of Indianapolis requirements. See "-- Origination, Purchase and Sale of
Loans."
At December 31, 2003, residential loans amounting to $269,000, or .26% of
total loans, were included in non-performing assets. See "Non-Performing and
Problem Assets."
Commercial Real Estate Loans. At December 31, 2003, $22.9 million, or 22.0%
of the Company's total loan portfolio, consisted of commercial real estate
loans. Of these loans, $1.7 million constituted participations in loans secured
by commercial real estate which were purchased from other financial institutions
in 2003. The commercial real estate loans included in the Company's portfolio
are primarily secured by non-residential real estate such as small office
buildings, nursing homes, churches, light manufacturing facilities, retail and
service outlets, warehouses, professional buildings and farm real estate. The
Bank currently originates commercial real estate loans as adjustable-rate loans
indexed to the one-, three- or five-year U.S. Treasury or the prime interest
rate with various margins, or as fixed rate loans. The Bank underwrites these
loans on a case-by-case basis and, in addition to its normal underwriting
criteria, the Bank evaluates the borrower's ability to service the debt from the
net operating income of the property. No single commercial real estate loan at
December 31, 2003, exceeded $2,000,000. One commercial real estate loan was
included in non-performing assets at December 31, 2003, amounting to $543,000.
Loans secured by commercial real estate generally are larger than one- to
four-family residential loans and involve a greater degree of risk. Commercial
real estate loans often involve large loan balances to single borrowers or
groups of related borrowers. Payments on these loans depend to a large degree on
results of operations and management of the properties and may be affected to a
greater extent by adverse conditions in the real estate market or the economy in
general. Accordingly, the nature of the loans makes them more difficult for
management to monitor and evaluate.
Multi-Family Loans. Approximately $1.1 million, or 1.1% of the Company's
portfolio of loans at December 31, 2003, consisted of multi-family loans. These
loans are generally purchased participations and secured by apartment complexes
and other multi-family residential properties. At December 31, 2003, no
multi-family loan was included in non-performing assets.
Construction Loans. The Bank offers construction loans with respect to
owner-occupied residential real estate and, in limited cases, to builders or
developers constructing such properties on a speculative investment basis (i.e.,
before the builder/developer obtains a commitment from a buyer). The Bank may
also purchase participations.
At December 31, 2003, $870,000, or .8%, of the Company's total loan
portfolio consisted of construction loans. All construction loans at December
31, 2003, were one- to four-family residential loans. The largest construction
loan at December 31, 2003, was approximately $225,000. No construction loans
were included in non-performing assets on that date.
Construction loans originated by the Bank are written such that interest
only is payable during the construction phase, which is typically limited to
nine months, and following the construction phase, a permanent loan is made.
Inspections are made prior to any disbursement under a construction loan.
Commercial Loans. At December 31, 2003, $12.9 million, or 12.4% of the
Company's total loan portfolio consisted of commercial loans provided to finance
receivables, inventory or equipment. These loans were originated by the Bank and
provided to existing businesses located primarily in Cass County and its
contiguous counties. Loans are underwritten on a case-by-case basis with
emphasis placed on cash flow analysis and the borrower's debt service capacity.
The majority of the loans are written on a variable rate basis using the Bank's
prime rate as the primary index rate. The weighted-average maturity of the
variable rate portion of the portfolio was 11 months and the weighted-average
maturity of the fixed rate portion of the portfolio was 53 months at December
31, 2003. One commercial loan was included in non-performing assets at December
31, 2003, amounting to $658,000.
Commercial Leases. At December 31, 2003, $4.0 million, or 3.8% of the
Company's total loan portfolio consisted of commercial leases provided to
finance equipment. The Bank's lease portfolio consists of a joint marketing
effort between the Bank and SCI Leasing Group, a Sheridan, Indiana based
concern, with all credit decisions made solely by the Bank and following the
same underwriting standards as are applied to traditional commercial loan
requests. Commercial leases are a fixed rate financing tool with the
weighted-average maturity of the Bank's lease portfolio at 44 months as of
December 31, 2003.
Consumer Loans. Federal laws and regulations permit federally chartered
savings associations to make secured and unsecured consumer loans in an
aggregate amount up to 35% of the association's total assets. In addition, a
federally chartered savings association has lending authority above the 35%
limit for certain consumer loans, such as property improvement loans and deposit
account secured loans. However, the Qualified Thrift Lender test places
additional limitations on a savings association's ability to make consumer
loans. See "Regulation -- Qualified Thrift Lender."
The Company's consumer loans, consisting primarily of installment, share,
home improvement, and home equity loans, aggregated $11.3 million as of December
31, 2003, or 10.8% of the Company's total loan portfolio. The Bank consistently
originates consumer loans to meet the needs of its customers and to assist in
meeting its asset/liability management goals. All of the consumer loans
originated by the Bank, except home equity loans, are fixed-rate loans, and
substantially all are secured loans.
Installment loans, totaling $4.8 million, or 4.6% of total loans at
December 31, 2003, are fixed-rate loans generally secured by collateral,
including automobiles, and are made for maximum terms of up to ten years
(depending on the collateral). The Bank's installment loans also include
"one-pay" notes, some of which are secured by residential real estate and have
maximum terms of six months to one year.
Share loans, totaling $11,000, or .01% of total loans at December 31, 2003,
are made up to 80% of the original account balance and accrue at a rate of 2-3%
over the underlying certificate of deposit rate. Interest on share loans is paid
quarterly. Home improvement loans totaled $4.8 million, or 4.6% of the Company's
total loan portfolio at December 31, 2003, and are close-ended fixed-rate loans
made for maximum terms up to 15 years. The Bank's home improvement loans are
generally made only to those borrowers for whom the Bank holds the primary
mortgage on the property, if any.
The Bank also offers open-ended lines of credit secured by a lien on the
equity in the borrower's home in amounts up to 90% of the appraised value of the
real estate (taking into account any other mortgages on the property). The
Bank's home equity loans are adjustable-rate loans with interest rates equal to
the national prime rate plus 0.5% and payments equal to the greater of 2% of the
outstanding loan balance or $50. The Bank's home equity loans are generally made
only to those borrowers for whom the Bank holds the primary mortgage on the
property, if any, and generally have a maximum term of 15 years. At December 31,
2003, the Bank had approved $2.9 million of home equity loans, of which $1.7
million were outstanding.
As a general rule, consumer loans involve a higher level of risk than one-
to four-family residential mortgage loans because consumer loans are generally
made based upon the borrower's ability to repay the loan, which is subject to
change, rather than the value of the underlying collateral, if any. However, the
relatively higher yields and shorter terms to maturity of consumer loans are
believed to be helpful in reducing interest-rate risk, and compensating the Bank
for assuming this additional credit risk. As of December 31, 2003, consumer
loans totaling $45,000 were included in non-performing assets, which indicates
the Bank's success in managing consumer loan risk.
Letters of Credit Securing Tax-Exempt Bonds. The Bank currently maintains
four letters of credit, each in the amount of $253,000, to secure payments
required under tax-exempt bonds issued to raise funds for low-income housing
projects in Franklin, Kokomo and Michigan City, Indiana and Hamilton, Ohio. The
issuer of the tax-exempt bonds is permitted to draw against these letters of
credit only in the event it defaults in making payments required under the
bonds, and any such draws made against the letters of credit would be secured by
a mortgage on the subject housing project. The Bank also has two letters of
credit totaling $1.5 million associated with the equity investment owned by the
Bank; these also secure payments required for tax-exempt bonds. No draws against
any letters of credit had been made as of December 31, 2003. In addition to the
above, the Bank held $210,000 in standby letters of credit for one commercial
loan customer.
Origination, Purchase and Sale of Loans. In an effort to control costs
incurred by its mortgage customers, the Bank currently originates some mortgage
loans pursuant to its own underwriting standards which are not in conformity
with the standard criteria of the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
("FHLMC") or Federal National Mortgage Association ("FNMA"). If it desired to
sell these mortgage loans, the Bank might therefore experience some difficulty
selling such loans quickly in the secondary market. The Bank did sell selected
loans originated in 2003 through the MPP program of the FHLB of Indianapolis in
the amount of $6.2 million.
The Bank confines its loan origination activities primarily to Cass County,
Indiana. The Bank's loan originations are generated from referrals from real
estate dealers and existing customers, and newspaper and periodical advertising.
Business loan originations also arise from an active business development
calling program. All loan applications are processed and underwritten at the
Bank's main office.
Under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of
1989 ("FIRREA"), a savings association generally may not make any loan to a
borrower or its related entities if the total of all such loans by the savings
association exceeds 15% of its capital (plus up to an additional 10% of capital
in the case of loans fully collateralized by readily marketable collateral);
provided, however, that loans up to $500,000 regardless of the percentage
limitations may be made and certain housing development loans of up to $30
million or 30% of capital, whichever is less, are permitted. The maximum amount
which the Bank could have loaned to one borrower and the borrower's related
entities under the 15% of capital limitation was $2.7 million at December 31,
2003. The Company's portfolio of loans currently contains no loans that exceed
the 15% of capital limitation.
The Bank's loan approval process is intended to assess the borrower's
ability to repay the loan, the viability of the loan and the adequacy of the
value of the property that will secure the loan. To assess the borrower's
ability to repay, the Bank studies the employment and credit history and
information on the historical and projected income and expenses of its
mortgagors.
The Bank generally requires appraisals or loan officer evaluations on all
property securing its loans and requires title insurance and a valid lien on its
mortgaged real estate. Appraisals for residential real property are performed by
a state-licensed residential appraiser or an independent state-licensed
residential appraiser. The Bank also uses the services of certified residential
appraisers for performance of appraisals related to loans in excess of $250,000.
The Bank requires fire and extended coverage insurance in amounts at least equal
to the principal amount of the loan. It also requires flood insurance to protect
the property securing its interest if the property is in a flood plain.
The Bank's underwriting standards for consumer loans are intended to
protect against some of the risks inherent in making consumer loans. Borrower
character, paying habits and financial strengths are important considerations.
The Bank historically had not participated in the secondary market as a
seller of its mortgage loans until 2003, but does occasionally purchase
participations in commercial real estate and multi-family loans from other
financial institutions.
The following table shows loan origination, purchase and repayment activity
for the Bank during the periods indicated.
Year Ended December 31,
--------------------------------------
2003 2002 2001
-------- -------- --------
(In thousands)
Gross loans receivable at beginning of period ...... $112,167 $113,527 $104,262
Originations:
Mortgage loans:
Residential .................................. 13,438 14,737 18,243
Commercial real estate and lines of credit and
multi-family .............................. 37,653 25,554 36,011
-------- -------- --------
Total mortgage loans and commercial loans .... 51,091 40,291 54,254
Consumer loans:
Installment .................................. 3,196 3,176 4,342
Share ........................................ -- -- --
Home improvement ............................. 1,812 1,669 2,260
Home equity .................................. 648 418 226
-------- -------- --------
Total consumer loans ...................... 5,656 5,263 6,828
-------- -------- --------
Total originations ..................... 56,747 45,554 61,082
Purchases:
Commercial real estate and multi-family ......... 1,771 171 499
-------- -------- --------
Total purchases .............................. 1,771 171 499
-------- -------- --------
Total originations and purchases .......... 58,518 45,725 61,581
Sales .............................................. 8,192 -- 416
Repayments and deductions .......................... 58,189 47,085 51,900
-------- -------- --------
Gross loans receivable at end of period ............ $104,304 $112,167 $113,527
======== ======== ========
Origination and Other Fees. The Company realizes income from origination
fees, late charges, checking account service charges, credit card fees, and fees
for other miscellaneous services. The Bank currently charges $300 plus closing
costs on its adjustable-rate mortgage loans. Points may be charged on fixed-rate
loans. Late charges are generally assessed if payment is not received within a
specified number of days after it is due. The grace period depends on the
individual loan documents.
Non-Performing and Problem Assets
Mortgage loans are reviewed by the Bank on a regular basis and are placed
on a non-accrual status when the loans become contractually past due 90 days or
more. At the end of each month, delinquency notices are sent with respect to all
mortgage loans for which payments have not been received. Contact by phone or in
person is made, if feasible, with respect to all such loans. When loans are
sixty days in default, an additional delinquency notice is sent and personal
contact is made with the borrower to establish an acceptable repayment schedule.
When loans are ninety days in default, contact is made with the borrower by the
Senior Loan Officer who attempts to establish an acceptable repayment schedule.
Management is authorized to commence foreclosure proceedings for any loan upon
making a determination that it is prudent to do so. All loans for which
foreclosure proceedings have been commenced are placed on non-accrual status.
Late notices are sent to commercial loan borrowers at five and fifteen days
after which personal contact by the Account Officer is made.
Consumer loans are reviewed by the Bank on a daily basis. Notices are sent
to borrowers when any consumer loan is 5, 10 and 15 days past due. After
consumer loans are 15 days delinquent, a late fee in the amount of 10% of the
payment is imposed until the loan is brought current.
Non-Performing Assets. At December 31, 2003, $1.5 million, or .97% of the
Company's total assets, were non-performing assets (loans delinquent more than
90 days, non-accruing loans, real estate owned ("REO"), troubled debt
restructurings and non-accruing investments), compared to $1.5 million, or .99%,
of the Company's total assets at December 31, 2002. At December 31, 2003,
residential loans accounted for 17.76% and consumer loans accounted for 2.97% of
non-performing assets. Commercial real estate loans accounted for 35.84% and
commercial operating loans accounted for 43.43% of non-performing assets. There
were no non-accruing investments at December 31, 2003.
The table below sets forth the amounts and categories of the Company's
non-performing assets (non-accruing loans and real estate owned) as of the date
indicated. It is the policy of the Company that all earned but uncollected
interest on all loans be reviewed monthly to determine if any portion thereof
should be classified as uncollectible for any loan past due in excess of 90
days.
At December 31,
----------------------------------------------------------------------
2003 2002 2001 2000 1999
--------- --------- ------ ------- -------
(Dollars in thousands)
Non-accruing loans (1) ..................... $ 1,515 $ 1,484 $1,948 $ 336 $ 666
Real estate owned, net ..................... -- -- 65 -- --
--------- --------- ------ ------- -------
Total non-performing assets ............. $ 1,515 $ 1,484 $2,013 $ 336 $ 666
========= ========= ====== ======= =======
Non-performing loans to total loans, net (2) 1.45% 1.34% 1.73% .32% .72%
Non-performing assets to total assets ...... .97 .99 1.46 .25 .57
- ------------------------------
(1) The Company generally places loans on a non-accruing status when the loans
become contractually past due 90 days or more. At December 31, 2003,
$269,000 of non-accruing loans were residential loans, $45,000 were
consumer loans, $543,000 were commercial real estate loans and $658,000
were commercial operating loans. For the year ended December 31, 2003, the
income that would have been recorded had the non-accruing loans not been in
a non-performing status totaled $115,000.
(2) Total loans less loans in process.
Classified Assets. Federal regulations and the Bank's Internal Loan Review
policy provide for the classification of loans and other assets such as debt and
equity securities considered by the OTS to be of lesser quality as
"substandard," "doubtful" or "loss" assets. An asset is considered "substandard"
if it is inadequately protected by the current net worth and paying capacity of
the obligor or of the collateral pledged, if any. "Substandard" assets include
those characterized by the "distinct possibility" that the association will
sustain "some loss" if the deficiencies are not corrected. Assets classified as
"doubtful" have all of the weaknesses inherent in those classified
"substandard," with the added characteristic that the weaknesses present make
"collection or liquidation in full," on the basis of currently existing facts,
conditions, and values, "highly questionable and improbable." Assets classified
as "loss" are those considered "uncollectible" and of such little value that
their continuance as assets without the establishment of a specific loss reserve
is not warranted. Assets which do not currently expose the insured institution
to sufficient risk to warrant classification in one of the aforementioned
categories but possess weaknesses are required to be designated "special
mention" by management.
An insured institution should consider whether to establish general
allowances for loan losses, in an amount deemed prudent by management, for loans
classified substandard or doubtful, as well as for other problem loans. General
allowances represent loss allowances which have been established to recognize
the inherent risk associated with lending activities, but which, unlike specific
allowances, have not been allocated to particular problem assets. When an
insured institution classifies problem assets as "loss," it is required either
to establish a specific allowance for losses equal to 100% of the amount of the
asset so classified or to charge off such amount. An institution's determination
as to the classification of its assets and the amount of its valuation
allowances is subject to review by the OTS, which can order the establishment of
additional general or specific loss allowances.
At December 31, 2003, the aggregate amount of the Company's classified
assets and the Company's general and specific loss allowances were as follows:
At December 31, 2003
--------------------
(In thousands)
Substandard assets ....... $2,254
Doubtful assets .......... 200
Loss assets .............. --
------
Total classified assets $2,454
======
General loss allowances .. $1,551
Specific loss allowances . 200
------
Total allowances ...... $1,751
======
The Company regularly reviews its loan portfolio to determine whether any
loans require classification in accordance with applicable regulations. The
substandard and doubtful loans consist of all nonaccrual loans totaling
$1,515,000, a purchased participation loan secured by multi-family real estate
of $177,000, which is current on payments but considered substandard because of
cash flow and $762,000 of commercial loans which are current on payments but
substandard because of cash flow.
Allowance for Loan Losses
The allowance for loan losses is maintained through the provision for
losses on loans, which is charged to earnings. The provision for losses on loans
is determined in conjunction with management's review and evaluation of current
economic conditions (including those of the Bank's lending area), changes in the
character and size of the loan portfolio, loan delinquencies (current status as
well as past and anticipated trends) and adequacy of collateral securing loan
delinquencies, historical and estimated net charge-offs, and other pertinent
information derived from a review of the loan portfolio. In management's
opinion, the Company's allowance for loan losses is adequate to absorb
anticipated future losses from loans at December 31, 2003. However, there can be
no assurance that regulators, when reviewing the Company's loan portfolio in the
future, will not require increases in its allowance for loan losses or that
changes in economic conditions will not adversely affect the Company's loan
portfolio.
Summary of Loan Loss Experience. The following table analyzes changes in
the allowance for loan losses during the past five one-year periods ended
December 31, 2003.
Year Ended December 31,
---------------------------------------------------------
2003 2002 2001 2000 1999
------ ------ ------ ------ ------
(Dollars in thousands)
Balance of allowance at beginning of period $1,458 $1,132 $ 760 $ 440 $ 285
Recoveries ............................. 6 4 -- 1 --
Less charge-offs:
Residential real estate loans .......... 60 -- -- -- --
Consumer loans ......................... 13 38 20 13 7
------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Net charge-offs ........................... 67 34 20 12 7
Provisions for losses on loans ............ 360 360 392 332 162
------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Balance of allowance at end of period ..... $1,751 $1,458 $1,132 $ 760 $ 440
====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Net charge-offs to total average
loans receivable for period ......... .06% .03% .02% (*) (*)
Allowance at end of period to
net loans receivable at end
of period (1) ....................... 1.68 1.30 1.00 .73 .47
Allowance to total non-performing
loans at end of period .............. 115.58 98.25 58.11 226.19 66.07
- --------------------------
(1) Total loans less loans in process.
(*) Less than .01%.
Allocation of Allowance for Loan Losses. The following table presents an
analysis of the allocation of the Company's allowance for loan losses at the
dates indicated.
At December 31,
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2003 2002 2001 2000 1999
---------------- ----------------- ----------------- ----------------- ----------------
Percent Percent Percent Percent Percent
of loans of loans of loans of loans of loans
in each in each in each in each in each
category category category category category
of total of total of total of total of total
Amount loans Amount loans Amount loans Amount loans Amount loans
------ -------- ------ -------- ------ -------- ------ -------- ------ --------
(Dollars in thousands)
Balance at end of period
applicable to:
Residential ............ $ 37 49.10% $ 11 55.02% $ 16 56.25% $ 12 59.73% $ 270 62.23%
Commercial real estate . 318 21.97 242 18.33 132 16.24 126 12.69 8 12.71
Multi-family ........... 36 1.05 62 1.43 100 1.60 100 1.96 117 2.27
Construction loans ..... -- .83 -- 1.17 -- 2.01 -- 2.70 -- 2.77
Commercial loans ....... 546 12.40 352 9.74 316 8.44 180 6.80 -- 4.41
Commercial leases ...... -- 3.83 -- 3.88 -- 3.45 -- 2.14 -- 1.73
Consumer loans ......... 67 10.82 47 10.43 27 12.01 15 13.98 45 13.88
Unallocated ............ 747 -- 744 -- 541 -- 327 -- -- --
------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ---- ------ ------ ------
Total ................ $1,751 100.00% $1,458 100.00% $1,132 100.00% $760 100.00% $ 440 100.00%
====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ==== ====== ====== ======
Investments and Mortgage- and Other Asset-Backed Securities
Federally chartered savings associations have the authority to invest in
various types of liquid assets, including U.S. Treasury obligations, securities
of various federal agencies, certain certificates of deposit of insured banks
and savings institutions, repurchase agreements and federal funds sold. Subject
to various restrictions, federally chartered savings associations may also
invest a portion of their assets in corporate debt securities and asset-backed
securities. The investment policy of the Bank, which is established and
implemented by the Bank's Investment Committee, is designed primarily to
maximize the yield on the investment portfolio subject to minimal liquidity
risk, default risk and interest rate risk, and prudent asset/liability
management.
The Company's investments consist of U.S. government and other agency
securities which are primarily callable fixed rate notes, mortgage- and other
asset-backed securities, state and municipal bonds, corporate debt obligations,
marketable equity securities, and FHLB stock. At December 31, 2003,
approximately $34.6 million, or 22.08% of the Company's total assets, consisted
of such investments.
At December 31, 2003, the Company had $20.3 million of mortgage- and other
asset-backed securities outstanding, all of which were classified as available
for sale. These fixed-rate and adjustable-rate mortgage- and other asset-backed
securities may be used as collateral for borrowings and through repayments, as a
source of liquidity. Mortgage- and other asset-backed securities offer yields
above those available for investments of comparable credit quality and duration.
Mortgage-backed securities are qualifying thrift investments under the Qualified
Thrift Lender test. See "Regulation--Qualified Thrift Lender."
The following table sets forth the amortized cost and market value of the
Company's investments and mortgage- and other asset-backed securities at the
dates indicated.
At December 31,
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2003 2002 2001
------------------------ -------------------------- -----------------------
Amortized Market Amortized Market Amortized Market
Cost Value Cost Value Cost Value
------------ ------- ----------- -------- ----------- -------
(In thousands)
Securities available for sale:
Federal agencies ................ $ 8,867 $ 8,812 $ 3,051 $ 3,120 $ 1,900 $ 1,908
State and municipal ............. 3,074 3,212 3,028 3,232 2,789 2,901
Mortgage- and other asset-backed
securities ............. 20,437 20,307 10,779 11,009 4,418 4,419
Corporate debt obligations ...... -- -- 907 983 710 731
Marketable equity securities .... 4 218 504 725 4 248
------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Total securities available for
sale ...................... 32,382 32,549 18,269 19,069 9,821 10,207
FHLB stock (1) ..................... 2,080 2,080 2,003 2,003 1,973 1,973
------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Total investments ............ $34,462 $34,629 $20,272 $21,072 $11,794 $12,180
======= ======= ======= ======= ======= =======
- --------------------------------
(1) Market value approximates carrying values.
The following table sets forth investment securities, mortgage- and other
asset-backed securities and FHLB stock which mature during each of the periods
indicated and the weighted-average yields for each range of maturities at
December 31, 2003.
Amount at December 31, 2003, which matures in
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
One One to Five to Over
Year or Less Five Years Ten Years Ten Years (4)
------------------ ------------------ ------------------ ------------------
Weighted Weighted Weighted Weighted
Amortized Average Amortized Average Amortized Average Amortized Average
Cost Yield Cost Yield Cost Yield Cost Yield
--------- -------- --------- -------- --------- -------- --------- --------
(Dollars in thousands)
Securities available for sale (1)(3):
Federal agencies ...................... $ 2,274 3.15% $ 2,500 3.76 $ 3,343 4.70% $ 750 6.05%
State and municipal (2) ............... 783 7.91 641 6.58 1,195 6.61 455 8.46
Mortgage- and other asset-backed
securities .......................... 3,857 3.20 7,796 3.47 4,070 3.59 4,714 3.58
Corporate obligations ................. -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
Marketable equity securities .......... -- -- -- -- -- -- 4 102.17
------- ---- ------- ---- ------- ---- ------- ------
Total securities available for sale 6,914 10,937 8,608 5,923 4.33
FHLB stock ............................... -- -- -- 2,080 4.86
------- ---- ------- ---- ------- ---- ------- ------
Total investments ................ $ 6,914 3.72% $10,937 3.72% $ 8,608 4.44% $ 8,003 4.47%
======= ==== ======= ==== ======= ==== ======= ======
- -----------------------
(1) Securities available for sale are set forth at amortized cost for purposes
of this table.
(2) Fully taxable equivalent basis.
(3) No effect is given for possible prepayments or securities which are
callable.
(4) Includes perpetual marketable equity securities.
Sources of Funds
General. Deposits have traditionally been the Bank's primary source of
funds for use in lending and investment activities. In addition to deposits, the
Company derives funds from scheduled loan payments, loan prepayments, and income
on earning assets. While scheduled loan payments and income on earning assets
are relatively stable sources of funds, deposit inflows and outflows can vary
widely and are influenced by prevailing interest rates, market conditions and
levels of competition. Borrowings from the FHLB of Indianapolis are also used to
compensate for reductions in deposits or deposit inflows at less than projected
levels.
Deposits. Deposits are attracted, principally from within Cass County,
through the offering of a broad selection of deposit instruments including NOW
and other transaction accounts, fixed-rate certificates of deposit, individual
retirement accounts, and savings accounts. The Bank does not actively solicit or
advertise for deposits outside of Cass County. Substantially all of the Bank's
depositors are residents of that county. Deposit account terms vary, with the
principal differences being the minimum balance required, the amount of time the
funds remain on deposit and the interest rate. The Bank does not pay a fee for
any deposits it receives.
Deposits totaled $103.8 million at December 31, 2003.
Interest rates paid, maturity terms, service fees and withdrawal penalties
are established by the Bank on a periodic basis. Determination of rates and
terms are predicated on funds acquisition and liquidity requirements, rates paid
by competitors, growth goals, and federal regulations. The Bank relies, in part,
on customer service and long-standing relationships with customers to attract
and retain its deposits, but also closely prices its deposits in relation to
rates offered by its competitors.
The flow of deposits is influenced significantly by general economic
conditions, changes in money market and prevailing interest rates, and
competition. The variety of deposit accounts offered by the Bank has allowed it
to be competitive in obtaining funds and to respond with flexibility to changes
in consumer demand. The Bank has become more susceptible to short-term
fluctuations in deposit flows as customers have become more interest rate
conscious. The Bank manages the pricing of its deposits in keeping with its
asset/liability management and profitability objectives. Based on its
experience, the Bank believes that its passbook, NOW and non-interest-bearing
checking accounts are relatively stable sources of deposits. However, the
ability of the Bank to attract and maintain certificates of deposit, and the
rates paid on these deposits, has been and will continue to be significantly
affected by market conditions.
An analysis of the Bank's deposit accounts by type, maturity, and rate at
December 31, 2003, is as follows:
Minimum Balance at Weighted
Opening December 31, % of Average
Type of Account Balance 2003 Deposits Rate
- --------------- ----------- ------------ -------- --------
(Dollars in thousands)
Withdrawable:
Passbook savings accounts ........ $ 25 $ 4,635 4.47% 1.02%
Regular money market accounts .... 2,500 651 .63 .59
Hi yield money market accounts ... 10,000 19,536 18.83 1.12
Super NOW accounts ............... 2,500 10,717 10.33 .97
NOW and other transaction accounts 200 6,304 6.07 .43
Non-interest bearing accounts .... 100 4,038 3.89 --
-------- ------ ----
Total withdrawable .................. 45,881 44.22 .88%
Certificates (original terms):
91 days .......................... 1,000 2,725 2.62 1.13
6 months ......................... 1,000 3,141 3.03 1.10
12 months ........................ 1,000 5,793 5.58 1.57
18 months ........................ 500 2,869 2.76 2.19
24 months ........................ 500 2,985 2.88 2.37
30 months ........................ 500 16,777 16.17 4.68
36-60 months ..................... 1,000 15,555 15.00 4.48
IRAs
18 months ........................ 100 8,031 7.74 3.51
-------- ------ ----
Total certificates .................. 57,876 55.78 3.52
-------- ------ ----
Total deposits ...................... $103,757 100.00% 2.35%
======== ====== ====
The following table sets forth by various interest rate categories the
composition of time deposits of the Bank at the dates indicated:
At December 31,
2003 2002 2001
------- ------- -------
(In thousands)
4.00% and under $28,616 $22,082 $ 8,157
4.01 - 6.00 % . 29,000 34,253 42,598
6.01 - 8.00% .. 260 269 888
------- ------- -------
Total ...... $57,876 $56,604 $51,643
======= ======= =======
The following table represents, by various interest rate categories, the
amounts of time deposits maturing during each of the three years following
December 31, 2003, and the total amount maturing thereafter. Matured
certificates which have not been renewed as of December 31, 2003, have been
allocated based upon certain rollover assumptions:
Amounts At
December 31, 2003 Maturing in
--------------------------------------------------
One Year Two Three Greater Than
or Less Years Years Three Years
-------- ------- ------- ------------
(In thousands)
4.00% and under $19,934 $ 6,086 $ 957 $ 1,639
4.01 - 6.00 % . 9,097 6,246 4,435 9,222
6.01 - 8.00% .. 230 30 -- --
------- ------- ------- -------
Total $29,261 $12,362 $ 5,392 $10,861
======= ======= ======= =======
The following table indicates the amount of the Bank's certificates of
deposit of greater than $100,000 by time remaining until maturity as of December
31, 2003.
Maturity (In thousands)
-------- --------------
Three months or less ........................ $2,794
Greater than three months through six months 1,077
Greater than six months through twelve months 2,025
Over twelve months .......................... 3,959
------
Total .................................... $9,855
======
The following table sets forth the dollar amount of savings in the various
types of deposits programs offered by the Bank at the dates indicated, and the
amount of increase or decrease in such deposits as compared to the previous
period.
Deposit Activity
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase Increase
(Decrease) (Decrease)
Balance at from Balance at from
December 31, % of December 31, December 31, % of December 31,
2003 Deposits 2002 2002 Deposits 2001
------------ -------- ------------ ------------ -------- ------------
(Dollars in thousands)
Withdrawable:
Passbook savings accounts .... $ 4,635 4.47% $ 354 $ 4,281 4.35% $ 145
Regular money market accounts 651 .63 (222) 873 .89 (69)
Hi yield money market accounts 19,536 18.83 1,643 17,893 18.20 1,076
Super NOW accounts ........... 10,717 10.33 1,418 9,299 9.46 8,337
NOW accounts ................. 6,304 6.07 (22) 6,326 6.43 269
Non-interest bearing accounts 4,038 3.89 989 3,049 3.10 (294)
-------- ------ -------- -------- ------ --------
Total withdrawable .............. 45,881 44.22 4,160 41,721 42.43 9,464
Certificates (original terms):
91 days ...................... 2,725 2.62 154 2,571 2.62 1,677
6 months ..................... 3,141 3.03 (854) 3,995 4.06 256
12 months .................... 5,793 5.58 (3,263) 9,056 9.21 (4,335)
18 months .................... 2,869 2.76 (2,680) 5,549 5.64 (2,015)
24 months .................... 2,985 2.88 (484) 3,469 3.53 (1,506)
30 months .................... 16,777 16.17 (428) 17,205 17.50 5,526
More than 30 months .......... 15,555 15.00 7,745 7,810 7.94 4,440
IRAs
18 months .................... 8,031 7.74 1,082 6,949 7.07 918
-------- ------ -------- -------- ------ --------
Total certificates .............. 57,876 55.78 1,272 56,604 57.57 4,961
-------- ------ -------- -------- ------ --------
Total deposits .................. $103,757 100.00% $ 5,432 $ 98,325 100.00% $ 14,425
======== ====== ======== ======== ====== ========
Deposit Activity
---------------------------------------
Increase
(Decrease)
Balance at from
December 31, % of December 31,
2001 Deposits 2000
------------ -------- ------------
(Dollars in thousands)
Withdrawable:
Passbook savings accounts .... $ 4,136 4.93% $ 658
Regular money market accounts 942 1.12 (99)
Hi yield money market accounts 16,817 20.04 2,035
Super NOW accounts ........... 962 1.15 348
NOW accounts ................. 6,057 7.22 591
Non-interest bearing accounts 3,343 3.99 66
------- ----- ------
Total withdrawable .............. 32,257 38.45 3,599
Certificates (original terms):
91 days ...................... 894 1.06 226
6 months ..................... 3,739 4.46 (4,200)
12 months .................... 13,391 15.96 (6,439)
18 months .................... 7,564 9.01 6,301
24 months .................... 4,975 5.93 (2,280)
30 months .................... 11,679 13.92 6,254
More than 30 months .......... 3,370 4.02 144
IRAs
18 months .................... 6,031 7.19 841
------- ----- ------
Total certificates .............. 51,643 61.55 847
------- ----- ------
Total deposits .................. $83,900 100.00% $4,446
======= ===== ======
Borrowings. The Bank focuses on generating high quality loans and then
seeks the best source of funding from deposits, investments or borrowings. There
are regulatory restrictions on advances from the FHLBs. See "Regulation --
Federal Home Loan Bank System" and "-- Qualified Thrift Lender." At December 31,
2003, the Company had $3.0 million in borrowings from the FHLB of Indianapolis
which mature within one year and $31.0 million which mature in greater than one
year. The weighted-average interest rate related to these borrowings was 5.47%
at December 31, 2003. The Company does not anticipate any difficulty in
obtaining advances appropriate to meet its requirements in the future. At
December 31, 2003, notes payable consisted of borrowings secured by the Bank's
investment in a real estate partnership which will mature in 2009. The interest
rate on the variable rate borrowing was 1.66% at December 31, 2003. During the
year ended December 31, 2003, the Corporation borrowed an additional $200,000 on
a line of credit with another financial institution to finance corporation
dividends. The Corporation can borrow up to $1.5 million on the line of credit,
which is payable at October 3, 2004. Interest is payable quarterly at a rate of
3.50%, which represents national prime less .50%. The balance at December 31,
2003, was $900,000.
Employees
As of December 31, 2003, the Bank employed twenty-two persons on a
full-time basis and one person on a part-time basis. None of the Bank's
employees are represented by a collective bargaining group. Management considers
its employee relations to be excellent.
The Bank's employee benefits for full-time employees include, among other
things, a defined benefit pension plan, a 401(k) plan and major medical and
long-term disability insurance.
Employee benefits are considered by management to be competitive with those
offered by other financial institutions and major employers in the Bank's market
area. See "Executive Compensation and Related Transactions."
Competition
The Bank operates in North Central Indiana and makes almost all of its
loans to and accepts most of its deposits from residents of Cass County in
Indiana.
The Bank is subject to competition from various financial institutions,
including state and national banks, state and federal savings institutions,
credit unions, certain non-banking consumer lenders, and other companies or
firms, including brokerage houses and mortgage brokers, that provide similar
services in Cass County. The Bank must also compete with money market funds and
with insurance companies with respect to its individual retirement accounts. See
"Regulation--Acquisitions or Dispositions and Branching."
The primary factors in competing for deposits are interest rates and
convenience of office locations. The Bank competes for loan originations
primarily through the efficiency and quality of services it provides borrowers
and through interest rates and loan fees it charges. Competition is affected by,
among other things, the general availability of lendable funds, general and
local economic conditions, current interest rate levels, and other factors which
are not readily predictable.
REGULATION
General
The Bank, as a federally chartered savings bank, is a member of the Federal
Home Loan Bank System ("FHLB System"). Its deposits are insured by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC") and it is a member of the Savings
Association Insurance Fund (the "SAIF"), which is administered by the FDIC. The
Bank is subject to extensive regulation by the OTS. Federal associations may not
enter into certain transactions unless certain regulatory tests are met or they
obtain prior governmental approval and the associations must file reports with
the OTS about their activities and their financial condition. Periodic
compliance examinations of the Bank are conducted by the OTS which has, in
conjunction with the FDIC in certain situations, examination and enforcement
powers. This supervision and regulation are intended primarily for the
protection of depositors and the federal deposit insurance fund. The Bank is
also subject to certain reserve requirements under regulations of the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System ("FRB").
An OTS regulation establishes a schedule for the assessment of fees upon
all savings associations to fund the operations of the OTS. The regulation also
establishes a schedule of fees for the various types of applications and filings
made by savings associations with the OTS. The general assessment, to be paid on
a semiannual basis, is based upon the savings association's total assets,
including consolidated subsidiaries, as reported in a recent quarterly thrift
financial report. The Bank's semiannual assessment under this assessment scheme,
based upon its total assets at December 31, 2003, was approximately $22,000.
The Bank is also subject to federal and state regulation as to such matters
as loans to officers, directors, or principal shareholders, required reserves,
limitations as to the nature and amount of its loans and investments, regulatory
approval of any merger or consolidation, issuances or retirements of its own
securities, and limitations upon other aspects of banking operations. In
addition, the activities and operations of the Bank are subject to a number of
additional detailed, complex and sometimes overlapping federal and state laws
and regulations. These include state usury and consumer credit laws, state laws
relating to fiduciaries, the Federal Truth-In-Lending Act and Regulation Z, the
Federal Equal Credit Opportunity Act and Regulation B, the Fair Credit Reporting
Act, the Community Reinvestment Act, anti-redlining legislation and antitrust
laws.
Holding Company Regulation
The Holding Company is regulated as a "non-diversified unitary savings and
loan holding company" within the meaning of the Home Owners' Loan Act, as
amended ("HOLA"), and subject to regulatory oversight of the Director of the
OTS. As such, the Holding Company is registered with the OTS and thereby subject
to OTS regulations, examinations, supervision and reporting requirements. As a
subsidiary of a savings and loan holding company, the Bank is subject to certain
restrictions in its dealings with the Holding Company and with other companies
affiliated with the Holding Company.
The Holding Company currently operates as a unitary savings and loan
holding company. Prior to the enactment of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (the "GLB
Act") on November 12, 1999, there were no restrictions on the permissible
business activities of a unitary savings and loan holding company. The GLB Act
included a provision that prohibits any new unitary savings and loan holding
company, defined as a company that acquires a thrift after May 4, 1999, from
engaging in commercial activities. This provision also includes a grandfather
clause, however, that permits a company that was a savings and loan holding
company as of May 4, 1999, or had an application to become a savings and loan
holding company on file with the OTS as of that date, to acquire and continue to
control a thrift and to continue to engage in commercial activities. Because the
Holding Company qualifies under this grandfather provision, the GLB Act did not
affect the Holding Company's authority to engage in diversified business
activities.
Notwithstanding the above rules as to permissible business activities of
unitary savings and loan holding companies, if the savings association
subsidiary of such a holding company fails to meet the Qualified Thrift Lender
("QTL") test, then such unitary holding company would be deemed to be a bank
holding company subject to all of the provisions of the Bank Holding Company Act
of 1956 and other statutes applicable to bank holding companies, to the same
extent as if the Holding Company were a bank holding company and the Bank were a
bank. See "-Qualified Thrift Lender." At December 31, 2003, the Bank's asset
composition was in excess of that required to qualify as a Qualified Thrift
Lender.
If the Holding Company were to acquire control of another savings
institution other than through a merger or other business combination with the
Bank, the Holding Company would thereupon become a multiple savings and loan
holding company. Except where such acquisition is pursuant to the authority to
approve emergency thrift acquisitions and where each subsidiary savings
association meets the QTL test, the activities of the Holding Company and any of
its subsidiaries (other than the Bank or other subsidiary savings associations)
would thereafter be subject to further restrictions. The HOLA provides that,
among other things, no multiple savings and loan holding company or subsidiary
thereof which is not a savings association shall commence or continue for a
limited period of time after becoming a multiple savings and loan holding
company or subsidiary thereof, any business activity other than (i) furnishing
or performing management services for a subsidiary savings association, (ii)
conducting an insurance agency or escrow business, (iii) holding, managing, or
liquidating assets owned by or acquired from a subsidiary savings institution,
(iv) holding or managing properties used or occupied by a subsidiary savings
institution, (v) acting as trustee under deeds of trust, (vi) those activities
in which multiple savings and loan holding companies were authorized (by
regulation) to directly engage on March 5, 1987, to be engaged in by multiple
holding companies or (vii) those activities authorized by the FRB as permissible
for bank holding companies, unless the Director of the OTS by regulation
prohibits or limits such activities for savings and loan holding companies.
Those activities described in (vii) above must also be approved by the Director
of the OTS prior to being engaged in by a multiple savings and loan holding
company.
Federal Home Loan Bank System
The Bank is a member of the FHLB system, which consists of 12 regional
banks. The Federal Housing Finance Board ("FHFB"), an independent agency,
controls the FHLB System, including the FHLB of Indianapolis. The FHLB System
provides a central credit facility primarily for member financial institutions.
At December 31, 2003, the Bank's investment in stock of the FHLB of Indianapolis
was $2,080,000. For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2003, the FHLB of
Indianapolis paid approximately $100,000 in dividends to the Bank.
All 12 FHLB's are required to provide funds to establish affordable housing
programs through direct loans or interest subsidies on advances to members to be
used for lending at subsidized interest rates for low-and moderate-income,
owner-occupied housing projects, affordable rental housing, and certain other
community projects. These contributions and obligations could adversely affect
the value of FHLB stock in the future. A reduction in the value of such stock
may result in a corresponding reduction in the Bank's capital.
The FHLB of Indianapolis serves as a reserve or central bank for its member
institutions. It is funded primarily from proceeds derived from the sale of
consolidated obligations of the FHLB System. It makes advances to members in
accordance with policies and procedures established by the FHLB and the Board of
Directors of the FHLB of Indianapolis.
All FHLB advances must be fully secured by sufficient collateral as
determined by the FHLB. Eligible collateral includes first mortgage loans not
more than 90 days delinquent or securities evidencing interests therein,
securities (including mortgage-backed securities) issued, insured or guaranteed
by the federal government or any agency thereof, cash or FHLB deposits, certain
small business and agricultural loans of smaller institutions and real estate
with readily ascertainable value in which a perfected security interest may be
obtained. Other forms of collateral may be accepted as additional security or,
under certain circumstances, to renew outstanding advances. All long-term
advances are required to provide funds for residential home financing and the
FHLB has established standards of community service that members must meet to
maintain access to long-term advances.
Interest rates charged for advances vary depending upon maturity, the cost
of funds to the FHLB of Indianapolis and the purpose of the borrowing.
Federal Reserve System
Under FRB regulations, the Bank is required to maintain reserves against
its transaction accounts (primarily checking and NOW accounts) and non-personal
money market deposit accounts. The effect of these reserve requirements is to
increase the Bank's cost of funds. The Bank is in compliance with its reserve
requirements.
A federal savings bank, like other depository institutions maintaining
reservable accounts, may borrow from the Federal Reserve Bank "discount window,"
but the FRB's regulations require the savings bank to exhaust other reasonable
alternative sources, including borrowing from its regional FHLB, before
borrowing from the Federal Reserve Bank. Certain limitations are imposed on the
ability of undercapitalized depository institutions to borrow from Federal
Reserve Banks.
Insurance of Deposits
The FDIC administers two separate insurance funds, which are not
commingled: one primarily for federally insured banks ("BIF") and one primarily
for federally insured savings associations ("SAIF"). As the federal insurer of
deposits of savings institutions, the FDIC determines whether to grant insurance
to newly-chartered savings institutions, has authority to prohibit unsafe or
unsound activities and has enforcement powers over savings institutions (usually
in conjunction with the OTS or on its own if the OTS does not undertake
enforcement action).
Deposit accounts in the Bank are insured by the SAIF within prescribed
statutory limits which generally provide a maximum of $100,000 coverage for each
insured account. As a condition to such insurance, the FDIC is authorized to
issue regulations and, in conjunction with the OTS, conduct examinations and
generally supervise the operations of its insured members.
The FDIC's deposit insurance premiums are assessed through a risk-based
system under which all insured depository institutions are placed into one of
nine categories and assessed insurance premiums based upon their level of
capital and supervisory evaluation. Under the system, institutions classified as
well-capitalized (i.e. a core capital ratio of at least 5%, a ratio of Tier 1 or
core capital to risk-weighted assets ("Tier 1 risk-based capital") of at least
6% and a total risk-based capital ratio of at least 10%) pay the lowest premium
while institutions that are less than adequately capitalized (i.e. core or Tier
1 risk-based capital ratio of less than 4% or a total risk-based capital ratio
of less than 8%) and considered of substantial supervisory concern pay the
highest premium. Risk classification of all insured institutions is made by the
FDIC semi-annually.
In addition to the assessment for deposit insurance, savings institutions
are required to pay on bonds issued in the late 1980s by the Financing
Corporation to recapitalize the predecessor to the SAIF. By law, payments on
Financing Corporation obligations have been shared equally between the members
of both insurance funds since January 1, 2000. The Bank's annual deposit
insurance premium for the year ended December 31, 2003, including the Financing
Corporation payments, was approximately $15,600 based upon its current risk
classification and the new assessment schedule for SAIF insured institutions.
These premiums are subject to change in future periods.
The FDIC is authorized to increase assessment rates, on a semiannual basis,
if it determines that the reserve ratio of the SAIF will be less than the
designated reserve ratio of 1.25% of SAIF insured deposits. In setting these
increased assessments, the FDIC must seek to restore the reserve ratio to that
designed reserve level, or such higher reserve ratio as established by the FDIC.
The FDIC may also impose special assessments on SAIF members to repay amounts
borrowed from the United States Treasury or for any other reason deemed
necessary by the FDIC.
Regulatory Capital
Currently, savings associations are subject to three separate minimum
capital-to-assets requirements: (i) a leverage limit, (ii) a tangible capital
requirement, and (iii) a risk-based capital requirement. The OTS requires
savings associations that receive the highest supervisory rating for safety and
soundness to maintain "core capital" of at least 3% of total assets. All other
savings associations must maintain core capital of at least 4% of total assets.
Core capital is generally defined as common shareholders' equity (including
retained income), noncumulative perpetual preferred stock and related surplus,
certain minority equity interests in subsidiaries, qualifying supervisory
goodwill, purchased mortgage servicing rights and purchased credit card
relationships (subject to certain limits) less nonqualifying intangibles. Under
the tangible capital requirement, a savings association must maintain tangible
capital (core capital less all intangible assets except purchased mortgage
servicing rights which may be included after making the above-noted adjustment
in an amount up to 100% of tangible capital) of at least 1.5% of total assets.
Under the risk-based capital requirements, a minimum amount of capital must be
maintained by a savings association to account for the relative risks inherent
in the type and amount of assets held by the savings association. The risk-based
capital requirement requires a savings association to maintain capital (defined
generally for these purposes as core capital plus general valuation allowances
and permanent or maturing capital instruments such as preferred stock and
subordinated debt less assets required to be deducted) equal to 8.0% of
risk-weighted assets. Assets are ranked as to risk in one of four categories
(0-100%). A credit risk-free asset, such as cash, requires no risk-based
capital, while an asset with a significant credit risk, such as a non-accrual
loan, requires a risk factor of 100%. Moreover, a savings association must
deduct from capital, for purposes of meeting the core capital, tangible capital
and risk-based capital requirements, its entire investment in and loans to a
subsidiary engaged in activities not permissible for a national bank (other than
exclusively agency activities for its customers or mortgage banking
subsidiaries). At December 31, 2003, the Bank was in compliance with all capital
requirements imposed by law.
If an association is not in compliance with its capital requirements, the
OTS is required to prohibit asset growth and to impose a capital directive that
may restrict, among other things, the payment of dividends and officers'
compensation. In addition, the OTS and the FDIC generally are authorized to take
enforcement actions against a savings association that fails to meet its capital
requirements. These actions may include restricting the operating activities of
the association, imposing a capital directive, cease and desist order, or civil
money penalties, or imposing harsher measures such as appointing a receiver or
conservator or forcing the association to merge into another institution.
Prompt Corrective Action
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991, as
amended ("FedICIA") requires, among other things, that federal bank regulatory
authorities take "prompt corrective action" with respect to institutions that do
not meet minimum capital requirements. For these purposes, FedICIA establishes
five capital tiers: well capitalized, adequately capitalized, undercapitalized,
significantly undercapitalized, and critically undercapitalized. At December 31,
2003, the Bank was categorized as "well capitalized," meaning that its total
risk-based capital ratio exceeded 10%, its Tier I risk-based capital ratio
exceeded 6%, its leverage ratio exceeded 5%, and it was not subject to a
regulatory order, agreement or directive to meet and maintain a specific capital
level for any capital measure.
The FDIC may order savings associations which have insufficient capital to
take corrective actions. For example, a savings association which is categorized
as "undercapitalized" would be subject to growth limitations and would be
required to submit a capital restoration plan, and a holding company that
controls such a savings association would be required to guarantee that the
savings association complies with the restoration plan. "Significantly
undercapitalized" savings associations would be subject to additional
restrictions. Savings associations deemed by the FDIC to be "critically
undercapitalized" would be subject to the appointment of a receiver or
conservator.
Capital Distributions Regulation
An OTS regulation imposes limitations upon all "capital distributions" by
savings institutions, including cash dividends, payments by an institution to
repurchase or otherwise acquire its shares, payments to shareholders of another
institution in a cash-out merger and other distributions charged against
capital. The OTS regulations permit a savings institution to make a capital
distribution to its shareholders in a maximum amount that does not exceed the
institution's undistributed net income for the prior two years plus the amount
of its undistributed income for the current year. The rule requires a savings
institution, such as the Bank, that is a subsidiary of a savings and loan
holding company to file a notice with the OTS thirty days before making a
capital distribution up to the maximum amount described above. The proposed rule
would also require all savings institutions, whether a holding company or not,
to file an application with the OTS prior to making any capital distribution
where the association is not eligible for "expedited processing" under the OTS
"Expedited Processing Regulation," where the proposed distribution, together
with any other distributions made in the same year, would exceed the "maximum
amount" described above, where the institution would be under capitalized
following the distribution or where the distribution would otherwise be contrary
to a statute, regulation or agreement with the OTS.
In addition to these regulatory restrictions, the Bank's Plan of Conversion
imposed additional limitations on the amount of capital distributions it may
make to the Holding Company. The Plan of Conversion by which the Bank converted
from the mutual to the stock form of ownership (the "Plan of Conversion")
required the Bank to establish and maintain a liquidation account for the
benefit of Eligible Account Holders and Supplemental Eligible Account Holders
(as those terms are defined in the Plan of Conversion) and prohibits the Bank
from making capital distributions to the Holding Company if its net worth would
be reduced below the amount required for the liquidation account.
Limitations on Rates Paid for Deposits
Regulations promulgated by the FDIC place limitations on the ability of
insured depository institutions to accept, renew or roll over deposits by
offering rates of interest which are significantly higher than the prevailing
rates of interest on deposits offered by other insured depository institutions
having the same type of charter in the institution's normal market area. Under
these regulations, "well-capitalized" depository institutions may accept, renew
or roll such deposits over without restriction, "adequately capitalized"
depository institutions may accept, renew or roll such deposits over with a
waiver from the FDIC (subject to certain restrictions on payments of rates) and
"undercapitalized" depository institutions may not accept, renew or roll such
deposits over. The regulations contemplate that the definitions of "well
capitalized," "adequately capitalized" and "undercapitalized" will be the same
as the definition adopted by the agencies to implement the corrective action
provisions of FedICIA. The Bank does not believe that these regulations will
have a materially adverse effect on its current operations.
Loans to One Borrower
Under OTS regulations, the Bank may not make a loan or extend credit to a
single or related group of borrowers in excess of 15% of its unimpaired capital
and surplus. Additional amounts may be lent, not in excess of 10% of unimpaired
capital and surplus, if such loans or extensions of credit are fully secured by
readily marketable collateral, including certain debt and equity securities but
not including real estate. In some cases, a savings association may lend up to
30 percent of unimpaired capital and surplus to one borrower for purposes of
developing domestic residential housing, provided that the association meets its
regulatory capital requirements and the OTS authorizes the association to use
this expanded lending authority. At December 31, 2003, the Bank did not have any
loans or extensions of credit to a single or related group of borrowers in
excess of its lending limits. The Bank does not believe that the
loans-to-one-borrower limits will have a significant impact on its business
operations or earnings.
Qualified Thrift Lender
Savings associations must meet a QTL test that requires the association to
maintain an appropriate level of qualified thrift investments ("QTIs")
(primarily residential mortgages and related investments, including certain
mortgage-related securities) and otherwise to qualify as a QTL. The required
percentage of QTIs is 65% of portfolio assets (defined as all assets minus
intangible assets, property used by the association in conducting its business
and liquid assets equal to 10% of total assets). Certain assets are subject to a
percentage limitation of 20% of portfolio assets. In addition, savings
associations may include shares of stock of the FHLBs, FNMA, and FHLMC as QTIs.
Compliance with the QTL test is determined on a monthly basis in nine out of
every twelve months.
A savings association which fails to meet the QTL test must either convert
to a bank (but its deposit insurance assessments and payments will be those of
and paid to SAIF) or be subject to the following penalties: (i) it may not enter
into any new activity except for those permissible for a national bank and for a
savings association; (ii) its branching activities shall be limited to those of
a national bank; and (iii) it shall be bound by regulations applicable to
national banks respecting payment of dividends. Three years after failing the
QTL test the association must dispose of any investment or activity not
permissible for a national bank and a savings association. If such a savings
association is controlled by a savings and loan holding company, then such
holding company must, within a prescribed time period, become registered as a
bank holding company and become subject to all rules and regulations applicable
to bank holding companies (including restrictions as to the scope of permissible
business activities).
A savings association failing to meet the QTL test may requalify as a QTL
if it thereafter meets the QTL test. In the event of such requalification it
shall not be subject to the penalties described above. A savings association
which subsequently again fails to qualify under the QTL test shall become
subject to all of the described penalties without application of any waiting
period.
At December 31, 2003, 81.03% of the Bank's portfolio assets (as defined on
that date) were invested in qualified thrift investments (as defined on that
date), and therefore the Bank's asset composition was in excess of that required
to qualify the Bank as a QTL. Also, the Bank does not expect to significantly
change its lending or investment activities in the near future. The Bank expects
to continue to qualify as a QTL, although there can be no such assurance.
Acquisitions or Dispositions and Branching
The Bank Holding Company Act specifically authorizes a bank holding
company, upon receipt of appropriate regulatory approvals, to acquire control of
any savings association or holding company thereof wherever located. Similarly,
a savings and loan holding company may acquire control of a bank. Moreover,
federal savings associations may acquire or be acquired by any insured
depository institution. Regulations promulgated by the FRB restrict the
branching authority of savings associations acquired by bank holding companies.
Savings associations acquired by bank holding companies may be converted to
banks if they continue to pay SAIF premiums, but as such they become subject to
branching and activity restrictions applicable to banks.
Subject to certain exceptions, commonly controlled banks and savings
associations must reimburse the FDIC for any losses suffered in connection with
a failed bank or savings association affiliate. Institutions are commonly
controlled if one is owned by another or if both are owned by the same holding
company. Such claims by the FDIC under this provision are subordinate to claims
of depositors, secured creditors, and holders of subordinated debt, other than
affiliates.
The OTS has adopted regulations which permit nationwide branching to the
extent permitted by federal statute. Federal statutes permit federal savings
associations to branch outside of their home state if the association meets the
domestic building and loan test in Section7701(a)(19) of the Code or the asset
composition test of Section7701(c) of the Code. Branching that would result in
the formation of a multiple savings and loan holding company controlling savings
associations in more than one state is permitted if the law of the state in
which the savings association to be acquired is located specifically authorizes
acquisitions of its state-chartered associations by state- chartered
associations or their holding companies in the state where the acquiring
association or holding company is located. Moreover, Indiana banks and savings
associations are permitted to acquire other Indiana banks and savings
associations and to establish branches throughout Indiana.
The Director of the OTS may also approve acquisitions resulting in the
formation of a multiple savings and loan holding company which controls savings
associations in more than one state, if the multiple savings and loan holding
company involved controls a savings association which operated a home or branch
office in the state of the association to be acquired as of March 1987, or if
the laws of the state in which the institution to be acquired is located
specifically permit institutions to be acquired by state-chartered institutions
or savings and loan holding companies located in the state where the acquiring
entity is located (or by a holding company that controls such state-chartered
savings institutions). Also, the Director of the OTS may approve an acquisition
resulting in a multiple savings and loan holding company controlling savings
associations in more than one state in the case of certain emergency thrift
acquisitions.
Indiana law permits federal and state savings association holding companies
with their home offices located outside of Indiana to acquire savings
associations whose home offices are located in Indiana and savings association
holding companies with their principal place of business in Indiana ("Indiana
Savings Association Holding Companies") upon receipt of approval by the Indiana
Department of Financial Institutions. Moreover, Indiana Savings Association
Holding Companies may acquire savings associations with their home offices
located outside of Indiana and savings associations holding companies with their
principal place of business located outside of Indiana upon receipt of approval
by the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions.
Finally, The Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act of
1994 (the "Riegle-Neal Act") permits bank holding companies to acquire banks in
other states and, with state consent and subject to certain limitations, allows
banks to acquire out-of-state branches either through merger or de novo
expansion. The State of Indiana enacted legislation establishing interstate
branching provisions for Indiana state-chartered banks consistent with those
established by the Riegle-Neal Act (the "Indiana Branching Law"). The Indiana
Branching Law, which became effective in 1996, authorizes Indiana banks to
branch interstate by merger or de novo expansion, provided that such
transactions are not permitted to out-of-state banks unless the laws of their
home states permit Indiana banks to merge or establish de novo banks on a
reciprocal basis.
Transactions with Affiliates
The Bank and Holding Company are subject to Sections 22(h), 23A and 23B of
the Federal Reserve Act, which restrict financial transactions between banks and
affiliated companies. The statute limits credit transactions between a bank and
its executive officers and its affiliates, prescribes terms and conditions for
bank affiliate transactions deemed to be consistent with safe and sound banking
practices, and restricts the types of collateral security permitted in
connection with a bank's extension of credit to an affiliate.
Federal Securities Law
The shares of Common Stock of the Holding Company are registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Commission") under the Securities and
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "1934 Act"). The Holding Company is
subject to the information, proxy solicitation, insider trading restrictions and
other requirements of the 1934 Act and the rules of the SEC thereunder. If the
Holding Company has fewer than 300 shareholders of record, it may deregister the
shares under the 1934 Act and cease to be subject to the foregoing requirements.
Shares of Common Stock held by persons who are affiliates of the Holding
Company may not be resold without registration unless sold in accordance with
the resale restrictions of Rule 144 under the Securities Act of 1933 (the "1933
Act"). If the Holding Company meets the current public information requirements
under Rule 144, each affiliate of the Holding Company who complies with the
other conditions of Rule 144 (including conditions that require the affiliate's
sale to be aggregated with those of certain other persons) would be able to sell
in the public market, without registration, a number of shares not to exceed, in
any three-month period, the greater of (i) 1% of the outstanding shares of the
Holding Company or (ii) the average weekly volume of trading in such shares
during the preceding four calendar weeks.
Community Reinvestment Act Matters
Federal law requires that ratings of depository institutions under the
Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 ("CRA") be disclosed. The disclosure includes
both a four-unit descriptive rating -- outstanding, satisfactory, unsatisfactory
and needs improvement -- and a written evaluation of each institution's
performance. Each FHLB is required to establish standards of community
investment or service that its members must maintain for continued access to
long-term advances from the FHLBs. The standards take into account a member's
performance under the CRA and its record of lending to first-time home buyers.
The OTS examiners have determined that the Bank has a satisfactory record of
meeting community credit needs.
Recent Legislative Developments
On November 12, 1999, President Clinton signed into law the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999 - federal
legislation which modernizes the laws governing the financial services industry.
The new law establishes a comprehensive framework to permit affiliations among
commercial banks, insurance companies, securities firms and other financial
service providers. As a result of this legislation, bank holding companies will
be permitted to engage in a wider variety of financial activities than permitted
under prior law, particularly with respect to insurance and securities
activities. To the extent the law permits banks, securities firms and insurance
companies to affiliate, the financial services industry may experience further
consolidation. This could result in a growing number of larger financial
institutions that offer wider varieties of financial services than are currently
offered by the Company and that could aggressively compete in the markets
currently served by the Company. The statute grandfathered the Company's status
as a unitary savings and loan holding company and its authority to engage in
commercial activities. The legislation also provides, however, that only a
company engaged in those activities that are permissible for a multiple savings
and loan holding company or for a financial holding company may acquire a
unitary savings and loan holding company through a merger or other business
combination. This provision likely could reduce the number of potential
acquirors of the Company. The law also increases commercial banks' access to
loan funding by the Federal Home Loan Bank System, and includes new provisions
in the privacy area, restricting the ability of financial institutions to share
nonpublic personal customer information with third parties.
On October 26, 2001, President Bush signed the USA Patriot Act of 2001 (the
"Patriot Act"). The Patriot Act is intended to strengthen the ability of U.S.
Law Enforcement to combat terrorism on a variety of fronts. The potential impact
of the Patriot Act on financial institutions is significant and wide-ranging.
The Patriot Act contains sweeping anti-money laundering and financial
transparency laws and requires financial institutions to implement additional
policies and procedures with respect to, or additional measures designed to
address, any or all the following matters, among others: money laundering,
suspicious activities and currency transaction reporting, and currency crimes.
In addition, financial institutions are required under this statute to adopt
reasonable procedures to verify the identity of any person seeking to open an
account and maintain records to verify such person's identity.
On July 30, 2002, President Bush signed into law the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002 (the "Sarbanes-Oxley Act"). The Sarbanes-Oxley Act represents a
comprehensive revision of laws affecting corporate governance, accounting
obligations and corporate reportings. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act is applicable to
all companies with equity or debt securities registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934. In particular, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act establishes: (i) new
requirements for audit committees, including independence, expertise, and
responsibilities; (ii) additional responsibilities regarding financial
statements for the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer of the
reporting company; (iii) new standards for auditors and regulation of audits;
(iv) increased disclosure and reporting obligations for the reporting company
and their directors and executive officers; and (v) new and increased civil and
criminal penalties for violation of the securities laws. Many of the provisions
became effective immediately while other provisions become effective over a
period of 30 to 270 days and are subject to rulemaking by the Securities and
Exchange Commission. Although we anticipate that we will incur additional
expense in complying with the provisions of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the
resulting regulations, management does not expect that such compliance will have
a material impact on our results of operations or financial condition.
TAXATION
Federal Taxation
Historically, savings associations, such as the Bank, have been permitted
to compute bad debt deductions using either the bank experience method or the
percentage of taxable income method. However, for years beginning after December
31, 1995, the Bank is no longer able to use the percentage of taxable income
method of computing its allocable tax bad debt deduction. The Bank is required
to compute its allocable deduction using the experience method. As a result of
the repeal of the percentage of taxable income method, reserves taken after 1987
using the percentage of taxable income method generally must be included in
future taxable income over a six-year period, although a two-year delay was
permitted for institutions meeting a residential mortgage loan origination test.
In addition, the pre-1988 reserve, for which no deferred taxes have been
recorded, will not have to be recaptured into income unless (i) the Bank no
longer qualifies as a bank under the Code, or (ii) excess dividends are paid out
by the Bank.
Depending on the composition of its items of income and expense, a savings
institution may be subject to the alternative minimum tax. A savings institution
must pay an alternative minimum tax equal to the amount (if any) by which 20% of
alternative minimum taxable income ("AMTI"), as reduced by an exemption varying
with AMTI, exceeds the regular tax due. AMTI equals regular taxable income
increased or decreased by certain tax preferences and adjustments, including
depreciation deductions in excess of that allowable for alternative minimum tax
purposes, tax-exempt interest on most private activity bonds issued after August
7, 1986 (reduced by any related interest expense disallowed for regular tax
purposes), the amount of the bad debt reserve deduction claimed in excess of the
deduction based on the experience method and 75% of the excess of adjusted
current earnings over AMTI (before this adjustment and before any alternative
tax net operating loss). AMTI may be reduced only up to 90% by net operating
loss carryovers, but alternative minimum tax paid that is attributable to most
preferences (although not to post-August 7, 1986, tax-exempt interest) can be
credited against regular tax due in later years.
State Taxation
The Bank is subject to Indiana's Financial Institutions Tax ("FIT"), which
is imposed at a flat rate of 8.5% on "adjusted gross income." "Adjusted gross
income," for purposes of FIT, begins with taxable income as defined by Section
63 of the Code and, thus, incorporates federal tax law to the extent that it
affects the computation of taxable income. Federal taxable income is then
adjusted by several Indiana modifications, the most notable of which is the
required addback of interest that is tax-free for federal income tax purposes.
Other applicable state taxes include generally applicable sales and use taxes
plus real and personal property taxes.
Item 2. Properties.
At December 31, 2003, the Bank and the Holding Company conducted business
from a single office at 723 East Broadway, Logansport, Indiana. The following
table provides certain information with respect to the Company's office as of
December 31, 2003:
Total Deposits Net Book Value
at of Property,
Owned or Year December 31, Furniture Approximate
Description and Address Leased Opened 2003 and Fixtures Square Footage
- ----------------------- ---------- ------ --------------- --------------- --------------
(Dollars in thousands)
723 East Broadway Owned 1962 $103,757 $1,694 11,000
Logansport, Indiana 46947
The Company owns computer and data processing equipment which is used for
transaction processing and accounting. The net book value of electronic data
processing equipment owned by the Company was $62,000 at December 31, 2003.
The Bank also has contracted for the data processing and reporting services
of the Intrieve Data Center in Cincinnati, Ohio. The cost of these data
processing services is approximately $16,000 per month.
Item 3. Legal Proceedings.
Neither the Holding Company nor the Bank is a party to any pending legal
proceedings, other than routine litigation incidental to its business.
Item 4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.
No matter was submitted to a vote of the Holding Company's shareholders
during the quarter ended December 31, 2003.
Item 4.5. Executive Officers of the Registrant.
Presented below is certain information regarding the executive officers of
the Holding Company:
Name Position
---- --------
David G. Wihebrink President and Chief Executive Officer
Charles J. Evans Senior Vice President
Dottye Robeson Secretary/Treasurer
David G. Wihebrink (age 56) has served as President and Chief Executive
Officer of the Bank and the Holding Company since April 2000. Prior to that, he
had served as Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of TM Morris
Manufacturing Co., Inc. ("Morris") since 1988. Morris is located in Logansport,
Indiana, and manufactures lead wire assemblies and wiring harnesses and
stampings. Prior to his employment with Morris, Mr. Wihebrink was a member of
the accounting firm Smith, Thompson & Wihebrink (Logansport) for 15 years. Mr.
Wihebrink also currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of the
Neal Home retirement home in Logansport, Indiana; as a member of the Board of
Directors of the North Central Indiana Workforce Investment Board and as a
member of the Board of Directors of the Logansport/Cass County Chamber of
Commerce.
Charles J. Evans (age 57) has served as Senior Vice President of the Bank
since January 2000 and as Vice President of the Holding Company since its
organization. Prior to becoming Senior Vice President, Mr. Evans had served as
Vice President and Senior Loan Officer of the Bank since 1980.
Dottye Robeson (age 53) has served as Chief Financial Officer of the Bank
since 1994 and as Secretary/Treasurer of the Holding Company since its
organization. She has been a certified public accountant since 1987.
Allen Schieber (age 55) has served as Senior Vice President of the Bank
since January 2000. Theretofore he was Vice President of Commercial Lending
since 1998.
PART II
Item 5. Market for Registrant's Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and
Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities.
Page 52 of the 2003 Shareholder Annual Report (the "Shareholder Report") is
herein incorporated by reference.
The Holding Company has established a policy of paying regular periodic
cash dividends, and the Board of Directors intends to continue this policy,
subject to the Holding Company's operating results, financial condition,
capital, income tax considerations, regulatory restrictions, and other relevant
factors.
Since the Holding Company has no independent operations other than
investment-related activities or other subsidiaries to generate income, its
ability to accumulate earnings for the payment of cash dividends to its
shareholders will be directly dependent upon the ability of the Bank to pay
dividends to the Holding Company.
Under OTS regulations, a converted savings institution may not declare or
pay a cash dividend if the effect would be to reduce its net worth below the
amount required for the liquidation account created at the time it converted. In
addition, under OTS regulations, the extent to which a savings institution may
make a "capital distribution," is subject to certain limitations. See
"Regulation -- Capital Distributions Regulation." Prior notice of any dividend
to be paid by the Bank to the Holding Company will have to be given to the OTS.
Income of the Bank appropriated to bad debt reserves and deducted for
federal income tax purposes is not available for payment of cash dividends or
other distributions to the Holding Company without the payment of federal income
taxes by the Bank on the amount of such income deemed removed from the reserves
at the then-current income tax rate. At December 31, 2003, approximately $1.7
million of the Bank's retained income represented bad debt deductions for which
no federal income tax provision had been made. See "Taxation--Federal Taxation."
Unlike the Bank, generally there is no regulatory restriction on the
payment of dividends by the Holding Company. Indiana law, however, would
prohibit the Holding Company from paying a dividend if, after giving effect to
the payment of that dividend, the Holding Company would not be able to pay its
debts as they become due in the usual course of business or the Holding
Company's total assets would be less than the sum of its total liabilities plus
preferential rights of holders of preferred stock, if any.
The Company sold no equity securities during the period covered by this
report that were not registered under the Securities Act of 1933. The Company
repurchased no shares during the fiscal quarter ended December 31, 2003.
The disclosures regarding equity compensation plans required by Reg.
Section 229.201(d) is set forth in Item 12 hereof.
Item 6. Selected Financial Data.
The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to the
material under the heading "Selected Consolidated Financial and Other Data" on
pages 4 and 5 of the Holding Company's 2003 Shareholder Annual Report (the
"Shareholder Annual Report").
Item 7. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results
of Operation.
The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to pages
6 through 19 of the Shareholder Annual Report.
Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to pages
16 through 17 of the Shareholder Annual Report.
Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.
The Holding Company's Consolidated Financial Statements and Notes thereto
contained on pages 20 through 51 in the Shareholder Annual Report are
incorporated herein by reference. The Company's unaudited quarterly results of
operations contained on page 51 in the Shareholder Annual Report are
incorporated herein by reference.
Item 9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and
Financial Disclosure.
Not applicable.
Item 9A. Controls and Procedures.
As of December 31, 2003, an evaluation was carried out under the
supervision and with the participation of the Company's management, including
our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, of the effectiveness of
our disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules
13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934). Based on
their evaluation our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer have
concluded that the Company's disclosure controls and procedures are, to the best
of their knowledge, effective to ensure that information required to be
disclosed by the Company in reports that it files or submits under the Exchange
Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods
specified in Securities and Exchange Commission rules and forms.
Our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer have concluded
that, during the Company's fiscal quarter ended December 31, 2003, there have
been no significant changes in the Company's internal controls or in other
factors that could significantly affect its internal controls, including any
corrective actions with regard to significant deficiencies and material
weaknesses.
PART III
Item 10. Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant.
The information required by this item with respect to directors and
compliance with Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, members of
the Company's Audit Committee, and the Company's Audit Committee Financial
Expert, is incorporated by reference to pages 4, 10 and 12 of the Holding
Company's Proxy Statement for its 2004 Annual Shareholder Meeting (the "2004
Proxy Statement"). Information concerning the Holding Company's executive
officers is included in Item 4.5 in Part I of this report.
The Company has adopted an Ethics Policy that applies to all officers,
employees and directors of the Company and its subsidiaries. A copy of the
Ethics Policy is attached as Exhibit 14 to this Annual Report.
Item 11. Executive Compensation.
The information required by this item with respect to executive
compensation is incorporated by reference to pages 6 through 9 of the Holding
Company's 2004 Proxy Statement.
Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and
Related Stockholder Matters.
The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to pages
1 through 3 of the 2004 Proxy Statement.
The following table provides the information about the Corporation's common
stock that may be issued upon the exercise of options and rights under all
existing equity compensation plans as of December 31, 2003.
Equity Compensation Plan Information
Number of securities
Number of remaining available for
securities to be future issuance under
issued upon exercise Weighted-average equity compensation plans
of outstanding options, exercise price of as of December 31, 2003
warrants and rights outstanding options, (excluding securities
as of December 31, 2003 warrants and rights reflected in column (a))
(a) (b) (c)
----------------------- ------------------- --------------------------
Equity compensation
plans approved by
security holders ... 50,650 $10.63 115,000
Equity compensation
plans not approved
by security holders -- -- --
------ ------ -------
Total 50,650 $10.63 115,000
====== ====== =======
- ---------------------
(1) Includes the following plans: the Company's stock option plan and 1999
stock option plan.
Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.
The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to pages
9 and 10 of the 2004 Proxy Statement.
Item 14. Principal Accountant Fees and Services.
The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to page
11 of the 2004 Proxy Statement.
PART IV
Item 15. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules, and Reports on Form 8-K.
(a) List the following documents filed as part of the report:
Financial Statements
--------------------
Independent Auditor's Report (Grant Thornton LLP) See Shareholder Annual Report
Page 20
Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition
at December 31, 2003 and 2002 See Shareholder Annual Report
Page 21
Consolidated Statements of Earnings for the Years
Ended December 31, 2003, 2002 and 2001 See Shareholder Annual Report
Page 22
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income for
the Years Ended December 31, 2003, 2002 and 2001 See Shareholder Annual Report
Page 23
Consolidated Statements of Shareholders' Equity for
the Years Ended December 31, 2003, 2002 and 2001 See Shareholder Annual Report
Page 24
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the Years
Ended December 31, 2003, 2002 and 2001 See Shareholder Annual Report
Page 25
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements See Shareholder Annual Report
Page 27
(b) Reports on Form 8-K.
The Company filed a Form 8-K dated October 20, 2003, concerning the
Company's earnings release for the quarter ended September 30, 2003.
(c) The exhibits filed herewith or incorporated by reference herein are
set forth on the Exhibit Index on page E-1. Included in those exhibits
are Executive Compensation Plans and Arrangements which are identified
as Exhibits 10(1) through 10(16).
(d) All schedules are omitted as the required information either is not
applicable or is included in the Consolidated Financial Statements or
related notes.
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirement of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the Registrant has duly caused this report to
be signed on behalf of the undersigned, thereto duly authorized.
LOGANSPORT FINANCIAL CORP.
Date: March 29, 2004 By: /s/ David G. Wihebrink
--------------------------
David G. Wihebrink, President and
Chief Executive Officer
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of
the Registrant and in the capacities indicated on this 29th day of March, 2004.
/s/ David G. Wihebrink
- -----------------------------------------------
David G. Wihebrink, President, Chief Executive
Officer and Director
(Principal Executive Officer)
/s/ Dottye Robeson
- -----------------------------------------------
Dottye Robeson, Secretary/Treasurer
(Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)
/s/ Charles J. Evans
- -----------------------------------------------
Charles J. Evans, Vice President and Director
/s/ Susanne S. Ridlen
- -----------------------------------------------
Susanne S. Ridlen, Director
/s/ William Tincher, Jr.
- -----------------------------------------------
William Tincher, Jr., Director
/s/ Brian J. Morrill
- -----------------------------------------------
Brian J. Morrill, Director
/s/ Thomas G. Williams
- -----------------------------------------------
Thomas G. Williams, Director
/s/ Todd S. Weinstein
- -----------------------------------------------
Todd S. Weinstein, Director
/s/ James P. Bauer
- -----------------------------------------------
James P. Bauer, Director
EXHIBIT INDEX
Exhibit Page
------- ----
3(1) The Articles of Incorporation of the Registrant are
incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3(1) to the
Registration Statement on Form S-1 (Registration No.
33-89788).
3(2) The Code of By-Laws of the Registrant are
incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Form
10-Q for the fiscal quarter ended June 30, 2002.
10(1) The Registrant's Stock Option Plan is incorporated by
reference to Exhibit A to the Registrant's Proxy
Statement for its Annual Shareholder Meeting held on
April 9, 1996 and resolutions dated July 14, 1998,
amending the Registrant's Stock Option Plan are
incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Form
10-Q for the period ended September 30, 1998, filed
with the Commission on November 12, 1998.
10(2) Logansport Savings Bank, FSB Recognition and
Retention Plan and Trust is incorporated by reference
to Exhibit B to the Registrant's Proxy Statement for
its Annual Shareholder Meeting held on April 9, 1996,
and resolutions dated July 14, 1998, amending the
Logansport Savings Bank, FSB Recognition and
Retention Plan and Trust are incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Form 10-Q for the
period ended September 30, 1998, filed with the
Commission on November 12, 1998.
10(3) Logansport Savings Bank, FSB Employee Stock Ownership
Plan and Trust Agreement is incorporated by reference
to Exhibit 10(4) to the Registration Statement on
Form S-1 (Registration No. 33-89788).
10(4) Deferred Compensation Agreement between Logansport
Savings Bank, FSB and David G. Wihebrink, dated and
effective as of April 12, 2000, is incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 10.4 of Registrant's Form 10-K
for its fiscal year ended December 31, 2000.
10(5) Employment Agreement between Logansport Savings Bank,
FSB and Charles J. Evans is incorporated by reference
to Exhibit 10(6) to the Registration Statement on
Form S-1 (Registration No. 33-89788).
10(6) Director Deferred Compensation Agreement between
Logansport Savings Bank, FSB and Thomas G. Williams,
effective April 1, 1992 is incorporated by reference
to Exhibit 10(7) to the Registration Statement on
Form S-1 (Registration No. 33-89788).
10(7) Director Deferred Compensation Agreement between
Logansport Savings Bank, FSB and Don Pollitt,
effective April 1, 1992 is incorporated by reference
to Exhibit 10(8) to the Registration Statement on
Form S-1 (Registration No. 33-89788).
10(8) Director Deferred Compensation Agreement between
Logansport Savings Bank, FSB and Norbert Adrian,
effective April 1, 1992 is incorporated by reference
to Exhibit 10(9) to the Registration Statement on
Form S-1 (Registration No. 33-89788).
10(9) Director Deferred Compensation Agreement between
Logansport Savings Bank, FSB and Susanne Ridlen,
effective April 1, 1992 is incorporated by reference
to Exhibit 10(10) to the Registration Statement on
Form S-1 (Registration No. 33-89788).
10(10) Director Deferred Compensation Agreement between
Logansport Savings Bank, FSB and David Wihebrink,
effective April 1, 1992 is incorporated by reference
to Exhibit 10(11) to the Registration Statement on
Form S-1 (Registration No. 33-89788).
10(11) Executive Supplemental Retirement Income Agreement
between Logansport Savings Bank, FSB and Thomas G.
Williams, executed May 7, 1992 is incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 10(12) to the Registration
Statement on Form S-1 (Registration No. 33-89788).
10(12) Executive Supplemental Retirement Income Agreement
between Logansport Savings Bank, FSB and Charles J.
Evans, executed May 7, 1992 is incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 10(13) to the Registration
Statement on Form S-1 (Registration No. 33-89788).
10(13) Employment Agreement dated as of February 11, 2002,
between the Bank and Dottye Robeson is incorporated
by reference to Exhibit 10(13) of Registrant's Form
10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2001.
10(14) Employment Agreement dated as of February 11, 2002,
between the Bank and Allen D. Schieber is
incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10(14) of
Registrant's Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2001.
10(15) Employment Agreement dated as of April 10, 2001,
between the Bank and David G. Wihebrink is
incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10(1) of
Registrant's Form 10-Q for the fiscal quarter ended
March 31, 2001.
10(16) The Registrant's 1999 Stock Option Plan is
incorporated by reference to Exhibit A to Registrant'
Proxy Statement for its Annual Shareholder Meeting
held on April 13, 1999.
13 2003 Shareholder Annual Report
14 Code of Ethics
21 Subsidiaries of the Registrant are incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 21 to the Registration Statement
on Form S-1 (Registration No. 33-89788).
23 Independent Auditor's Consent (Grant Thornton LLP)
31(1) Certification of David G. Wihebrink required by 12
CFR Section 240.13a-14(a)
31(2) Certification of Dottye Robeson required by 12 CFR
Section 240.13a-14(a)
32 Certification pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as
adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act of 2002.