form10q.htm


UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
 
FORM 10-Q

(Mark One)
x
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended September 30, 2012
 
or
 
o
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
 
For the transition period from _________________ to  _____________
                  
Commission File Number: 000-12896
 
OLD POINT FINANCIAL CORPORATION
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

VIRGINIA
54-1265373
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)

1 West Mellen Street, Hampton, Virginia 23663
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code)

(757) 728-1200
(Registrant's telephone number, including area code)

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

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  o No

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

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

 
Large accelerated filer o
Accelerated filer o
 
       
 
Non-accelerated filer o
(Do not check if a smaller reporting company)
Smaller reporting company ■
 

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

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

4,959,009 shares of common stock ($5.00 par value) outstanding as of October 31, 2012
 


 
 

 
 
OLD POINT FINANCIAL CORPORATION

FORM 10-Q

INDEX

PART I - FINANCIAL INFORMATION

   
Page
     
Item 1
1
     
 
1
     
 
2
     
 
3
     
 
4
     
 
5
     
 
6
     
Item 2.
29
     
Item 3.
40
     
Item 4.
41
     
 
PART II - OTHER INFORMATION
 
     
Item 1.
42
     
Item 1A.
42
     
Item 2.
42
     
Item 3.
42
     
Item 4.
42
     
Item 5.
43
     
Item 6.
43
     
 
43

 
 

 
PART I – FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Item 1. Financial Statements.

Old Point Financial Corporation and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Balance Sheets
             
   
September 30,
   
December 31,
 
   
2012
   
2011
 
   
(unaudited)
       
Assets
           
             
Cash and due from banks
  $ 14,206,468     $ 9,523,279  
Interest-bearing due from banks
    34,657,124       13,977,625  
Federal funds sold
    712,811       1,353,752  
Cash and cash equivalents
    49,576,403       24,854,656  
Securities available-for-sale, at fair value
    312,420,450       236,598,688  
Securities held-to-maturity (fair value approximates $620,373 and $1,525,624)
    615,000       1,515,000  
Restricted securities
    2,561,900       3,451,000  
Loans, net of allowance for loan losses of $7,300,855 and $8,497,731
    456,242,657       511,829,008  
Premises and equipment, net
    31,079,465       30,263,937  
Bank-owned life insurance
    21,627,402       21,593,464  
Foreclosed assets, net of valuation allowance of $1,913,573 and $1,851,160
    6,841,857       9,390,130  
Other assets
    6,920,744       10,007,712  
Total assets
  $ 887,885,878     $ 849,503,595  
                 
Liabilities & Stockholders' Equity
               
                 
Deposits:
               
Noninterest-bearing deposits
  $ 176,190,771     $ 163,639,321  
Savings deposits
    247,765,416       232,348,196  
Time deposits
    307,718,253       294,891,492  
Total deposits
    731,674,440       690,879,009  
Overnight repurchase agreements
    37,265,471       35,000,910  
Term repurchase agreements
    1,277,783       1,480,103  
Federal Home Loan Bank advances
    25,000,000       35,000,000  
Accrued expenses and other liabilities
    2,272,553       1,278,858  
Total liabilities
    797,490,247       763,638,880  
                 
Commitments and contingencies
               
                 
Stockholders' equity:
               
Common stock, $5 par value, 10,000,000 shares authorized;4,959,009 and 4,959,009 shares issued and outstanding
    24,795,045       24,795,045  
Additional paid-in capital
    16,391,043       16,309,983  
Retained earnings
    47,156,113       45,109,268  
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss), net
    2,053,430       (349,581 )
Total stockholders' equity
    90,395,631       85,864,715  
Total liabilities and stockholders' equity
  $ 887,885,878     $ 849,503,595  
 
See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
 
- 1 -


Old Point Financial Corporation and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Income
   
Three Months Ended
   
Nine Months Ended
 
   
September 30,
   
September 30,
 
   
2012
   
2011
   
2012
   
2011
 
   
(unaudited)
         
(unaudited)
       
Interest and Dividend Income:
                       
Interest and fees on loans
  $ 6,494,629     $ 7,923,224     $ 20,313,095     $ 24,516,542  
Interest on due from banks
    16,871       2,772       43,151       4,070  
Interest on federal funds sold
    401       6,855       1,164       21,011  
Interest on securities:
                               
Taxable
    1,229,204       1,010,473       3,830,104       2,809,242  
Tax-exempt
    201,758       31,843       443,967       109,250  
Dividends and interest on all other securities
    15,364       16,756       60,556       48,852  
Total interest and dividend income
    7,958,227       8,991,923       24,692,037       27,508,967  
                                 
Interest Expense:
                               
Interest on savings deposits
    95,052       101,393       283,291       309,742  
Interest on time deposits
    975,014       1,070,753       2,914,970       3,480,563  
Interest on federal funds purchased, securities sold under agreements to repurchase and other borrowings
    6,479       17,170       37,524       87,859  
Interest on Federal Home Loan Bank advances
    337,550       429,717       1,187,642       1,275,138  
Total interest expense
    1,414,095       1,619,033       4,423,427       5,153,302  
Net interest income
    6,544,132       7,372,890       20,268,610       22,355,665  
Provision for loan losses
    750,000       600,000       1,950,000       2,900,000  
Net interest income, after provision for loan losses
    5,794,132       6,772,890       18,318,610       19,455,665  
                                 
Noninterest Income:
                               
Income from fiduciary activities
    776,615       713,946       2,396,266       2,244,842  
Service charges on deposit accounts
    1,050,152       1,090,057       3,153,461       3,156,810  
Other service charges, commissions and fees
    853,989       726,866       2,531,050       2,285,238  
Income from bank-owned life insurance
    693,745       207,984       1,142,626       612,900  
Gain on sale of available-for-sale securities, net
    619,936       386,091       1,703,805       437,046  
Other operating income
    111,195       75,802       327,157       218,874  
Total noninterest income
    4,105,632       3,200,746       11,254,365       8,955,710  
                                 
Noninterest Expense:
                               
Salaries and employee benefits
    5,259,880       4,834,750       15,440,042       14,360,119  
Occupancy and equipment
    1,110,635       1,090,300       3,273,568       3,226,185  
Data processing
    448,854       358,774       1,222,757       1,025,173  
FDIC insurance
    284,042       271,462       851,194       942,941  
Customer development
    189,037       223,733       595,925       663,203  
Legal and audit expense
    174,672       176,161       582,784       539,188  
Other outside service fees
    135,881       163,336       429,248       464,174  
Advertising
    138,733       131,340       430,345       417,874  
Employee professional development
    125,844       136,185       455,828       448,392  
Postage and courier expense
    118,179       123,365       361,490       366,649  
Foreclosed assets expense
    143,807       151,399       311,172       399,269  
Loss on write-down/sale of foreclosed assets
    99,960       368,213       736,594       825,763  
Other operating expense
    522,706       509,492       1,557,371       1,525,371  
Total noninterest expense
    8,752,230       8,538,510       26,248,318       25,204,301  
Income before income taxes
    1,147,534       1,435,126       3,324,657       3,207,074  
Income tax expense
    73,346       391,847       533,961       783,841  
Net income
  $ 1,074,188     $ 1,043,279     $ 2,790,696     $ 2,423,233  
                                 
Basic Earnings per Share:
                               
Average shares outstanding
    4,959,009       4,957,623       4,959,009       4,950,056  
Net income per share of common stock
  $ 0.22     $ 0.21     $ 0.56     $ 0.49  
                                 
Diluted Earnings per Share:
                               
Average shares outstanding
    4,959,009       4,957,623       4,959,009       4,950,056  
Net income per share of common stock
  $ 0.22     $ 0.21     $ 0.56     $ 0.49  
 
See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
 
- 2 -

 
Old Point Financial Corporation
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
   
Three Months Ended
   
Nine Months Ended
 
   
September 30,
   
September 30,
 
   
2012
   
2011
   
2012
   
2011
 
   
(unaudited)
   
(unaudited)
 
                         
Net income
  $ 1,074,188     $ 1,043,279     $ 2,790,696     $ 2,423,233  
Other comprehensive income, net of tax
                               
Unrealized gains on securities
                               
Unrealized holding gains arising during the period
    3,882,973       971,423       5,344,731       3,987,701  
Less reclassification adjustment for gains recognized in income
    (619,936 )     (386,091 )     (1,703,805 )     (437,046 )
Less tax expense
    (1,109,433 )     (199,013 )     (1,237,915 )     (1,207,223 )
Net unrealized gains on securities
    2,153,604       386,319       2,403,011       2,343,432  
                                 
Other comprehensive income
    2,153,604       386,319       2,403,011       2,343,432  
Comprehensive income
  $ 3,227,792     $ 1,429,598     $ 5,193,707     $ 4,766,665  
 
See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 
- 3 -


Old Point Financial Corporation and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Stockholders' Equity
                           
Accumulated
       
   
Shares of
         
Additional
         
Other
       
   
Common
   
Common
   
Paid-in
   
Retained
    Comprehensive        
(unaudited)
 
Stock
   
Stock
   
Capital
   
Earnings
   
Income (Loss)
   
Total
 
                                     
NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 2012
                               
                                     
Balance at beginning of period
    4,959,009     $ 24,795,045     $ 16,309,983     $ 45,109,268     $ (349,581 )   $ 85,864,715  
Net income
    0       0       0       2,790,696       0       2,790,696  
Other comprehensive income, net of tax
    0       0       0       0       2,403,011       2,403,011  
Stock compensation expense
    0       0       81,060       0       0       81,060  
Cash dividends ($0.15 per share)
    0       0       0       (743,851 )     0       (743,851 )
                                                 
Balance at end of period
    4,959,009     $ 24,795,045     $ 16,391,043     $ 47,156,113     $ 2,053,430     $ 90,395,631  

NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 2011
                   
                                     
Balance at beginning of period
    4,936,989     $ 24,684,945     $ 16,026,062     $ 42,809,769     $ (2,569,127 )   $ 80,951,649  
Net income
    0       0       0       2,423,233       0       2,423,233  
Other comprehensive income, net of tax
    0       0       0       0       2,343,432       2,343,432  
Exercise of stock options
    22,020       110,100       174,105       0       0       284,205  
Stock compensation expense
    0       0       82,466       0       0       82,466  
Cash dividends ($0.15 per share)
    0       0       0       (742,563 )     0       (742,563 )
                                                 
Balance at end of period
    4,959,009     $ 24,795,045     $ 16,282,633     $ 44,490,439     $ (225,695 )   $ 85,342,422  
 
See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 
- 4 -


Old Point Financial Corporation and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
       
   
Nine Months Ended
 
   
September 30,
 
   
2012
   
2011
 
   
(unaudited)
 
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
           
Net income
  $ 2,790,696     $ 2,423,233  
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:
         
Depreciation and amortization
    1,411,040       1,364,475  
Provision for loan losses
    1,950,000       2,900,000  
Net gain on sale of available-for-sale securities
    (1,703,805 )     (437,046 )
Net amortization of securities
    1,142,043       152,189  
Net (gain) loss on disposal of premises and equipment
    396       (1,294 )
Net loss on write-down/sale of foreclosed assets
    736,594       825,763  
Income from bank owned life insurance
    (1,142,626 )     (612,900 )
Stock compensation expense
    81,060       82,466  
Deferred tax expense
    110,235       860,930  
(Increase) decrease in other assets
    1,653,149       (675,180 )
Increase in other liabilities
    993,695       184,421  
Net cash provided by operating activities
    8,022,477       7,067,057  
                 
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
               
Purchases of available-for-sale securities
    (277,741,641 )     (146,849,456 )
Purchases of held-to-maturity securities
    0       (2,000,000 )
Proceeds from sales of restricted securities
    889,100       640,300  
Proceeds from maturities and calls of securities
    59,843,643       97,722,651  
Proceeds from sales of available-for-sale securities
    147,178,925       51,405,975  
Decrease in loans made to customers
    53,071,871       53,208,573  
Proceeds from sales of foreclosed assets
    2,461,219       772,601  
Purchases of bank-owned life insurance
    0       (2,750,000 )
Proceeds from payout on bank-owned life insurance policy
    1,109,296       0  
Purchases of premises and equipment
    (2,226,964 )     (1,822,389 )
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities
    (15,414,551 )     50,328,255  
                 
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
               
Increase in noninterest-bearing deposits
    12,551,450       29,955,076  
Increase in savings deposits
    15,417,220       6,873,986  
Increase (decrease) in time deposits
    12,826,761       (25,640,915 )
Increase (decrease) in federal funds purchased, repurchase agreements and other borrowings
    2,062,241       (50,036,100 )
Decrease in Federal Home Loan Bank advances
    (10,000,000 )     0  
Proceeds from exercise of stock options
    0       284,205  
Cash dividends paid on common stock
    (743,851 )     (742,563 )
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities
    32,113,821       (39,306,311 )
                 
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents
    24,721,747       18,089,001  
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period
    24,854,656       28,431,149  
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period
  $ 49,576,403     $ 46,520,150  
                 
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION
               
Cash payments for:
               
Interest
  $ 4,526,922     $ 5,374,688  
Income tax
  $ 600,000     $ 0  
                 
SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE OF NONCASH TRANSACTIONS
               
Unrealized gain on securities available-for-sale
  $ 3,640,925     $ 3,550,655  
Loans transferred to foreclosed assets
  $ 564,480     $ 2,197,810  
 
See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 
- 5 -


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited)

Note 1. General
The accompanying unaudited consolidated financial statements of Old Point Financial Corporation (the Company) and its subsidiaries have been prepared in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) for interim financial information. All significant intercompany balances and transactions have been eliminated. In the opinion of management, the accompanying unaudited consolidated financial statements contain all adjustments and reclassifications of a normal and recurring nature considered necessary to present fairly the financial positions at September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, the results of operations and statements of comprehensive income for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2012 and 2011, and statements of changes in stockholders’ equity and of cash flows for the nine months ended September 30, 2012 and 2011. The results of operations for the interim periods are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected for the full year.

These financial statements should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and notes thereto included in the Company's 2011 annual report on Form 10-K. Certain previously reported amounts have been reclassified to conform to current period presentation.

AVAILABLE INFORMATION
The Company maintains a website on the Internet at www.oldpoint.com. The Company makes available free of charge, on or through its website, its proxy statements, annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K, and any amendments to those reports as soon as reasonably practicable after such material is electronically filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The information available on the Company’s Internet website is not part of this Form 10-Q or any other report filed by the Company with the SEC. The public may read and copy any documents the Company files at the SEC’s Public Reference Room at 100 F Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. 20549. The public may obtain information on the operation of the Public Reference Room by calling the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330. The Company’s SEC filings can also be obtained on the SEC’s website on the Internet at www.sec.gov.

SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
In accordance with ASC 855-10, “Subsequent Events,” the Company evaluates subsequent events that have occurred after the balance sheet date but before the financial statements are issued. There are two types of subsequent events: (1) recognized, or those that provide additional evidence about conditions that existed at the date of the balance sheet, including the estimates inherent in the process of preparing financial statements, and (2) nonrecognized, or those that provide evidence about conditions that did not exist at the date of the balance sheet but arose after that date.

The Company is expanding the building of a current branch office. The Company signed a contract with a general contractor on April 19, 2012. The contract entitles the contractor to $2.1 million for Phase I of the construction, which includes site work and construction of the building shell. The Company signed an amendment to the contract with the general contractor on October 16, 2012 for the remainder of the construction. The revised contract entitles the contractor to $12.2 million for the construction of the building. As of the writing of this quarterly report on Form 10-Q, $1.0 million had been disbursed to the contractor. The Company anticipates that the project will likely cost between $13.0 million and $15.0 million over the next one to one and a half years.

Other than those discussed above, the Company did not identify any recognized or nonrecognized subsequent events that would have required adjustment to or disclosure in the financial statements.
 
 
- 6 -

 
Note 2. Securities
Amortized costs and fair values of securities held-to-maturity as of the dates indicated are as follows:

         
Gross
   
Gross
       
   
Amortized
   
Unrealized
   
Unrealized
   
Fair
 
   
Cost
   
Gains
   
Losses
   
Value
 
   
(in thousands)
 
September 30, 2012
                       
Obligations of  U.S. Government agencies
  $ 470     $ 4     $ 0     $ 474  
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
    145       1       0       146  
Total
  $ 615     $ 5     $ 0     $ 620  
                                 
December 31, 2011
                               
Obligations of  U.S. Government agencies
  $ 1,370     $ 8     $ 0     $ 1,378  
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
    145       3       0       148  
Total
  $ 1,515     $ 11     $ 0     $ 1,526  
 
 
- 7 -

 
Amortized costs and fair values of securities available-for-sale as of the dates indicated are as follows:

         
Gross
   
Gross
       
   
Amortized
   
Unrealized
   
Unrealized
   
Fair
 
   
Cost
   
Gains
   
Losses
   
Value
 
   
(in thousands)
 
September 30, 2012
                       
Obligations of U.S. Government agencies
  $ 30,675     $ 1,337     $ 0     $ 32,012  
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
    32,989       643       (77 )     33,555  
Mortgage-backed securities
    241,206       4,050       0       245,256  
Money market investments
    1,198       0       0       1,198  
Corporate bonds and other securities
    400       0       (1 )     399  
Total
  $ 306,468     $ 6,030     $ (78 )   $ 312,420  
                                 
December 31, 2011
                               
U.S. Treasury securities
  $ 250     $ 0     $ 0     $ 250  
Obligations of U.S. Government agencies
    117,848       1,706       0       119,554  
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
    11,999       266       (4 )     12,261  
Mortgage-backed securities
    102,884       396       (52 )     103,228  
Money market investments
    1,306       0       0       1,306  
Total
  $ 234,287     $ 2,368     $ (56 )   $ 236,599  
 
OTHER-THAN-TEMPORARILY IMPAIRED SECURITIES
Management assesses whether the Company intends to sell or it is more-likely-than-not that the Company will be required to sell a security before recovery of its amortized cost basis less any current-period credit losses. For debt securities that are considered other-than-temporarily impaired and that the Company does not intend to sell and will not be required to sell prior to recovery of the amortized cost basis, the Company separates the amount of the impairment into the amount that is credit related (credit loss component) and the amount due to all other factors. The credit loss component is recognized in earnings and is the difference between the security’s amortized cost basis and the present value of its expected future cash flows. The remaining difference between the security’s fair value and the present value of future expected cash flows is due to factors that are not credit related and is recognized in other comprehensive income.
 
 
- 8 -

 
 
The present value of expected future cash flows is determined using the best-estimate cash flows discounted at the effective interest rate implicit to the security at the date of purchase or the current yield to accrete an asset-backed or floating rate security. The methodology and assumptions for establishing the best-estimate cash flows vary depending on the type of security. The asset-backed securities cash flow estimates are based on bond specific facts and circumstances that may include collateral characteristics, expectations of delinquency and default rates, loss severity and prepayment speeds, and structural support, including subordination and guarantees.

The Company has a process in place to identify debt securities that could potentially have a credit or interest-rate related impairment that is other-than-temporary. This process involves monitoring late payments, pricing levels, downgrades by rating agencies, key financial ratios, financial statements, revenue forecasts, and cash flow projections as indicators of credit issues. On a quarterly basis, management reviews all securities to determine whether an other-than-temporary decline in value exists and whether losses should be recognized. Management considers relevant facts and circumstances in evaluating whether a credit or interest rate-related impairment of a security is other-than-temporary. Relevant facts and circumstances considered include: (a) the extent and length of time the fair value has been below cost; (b) the reasons for the decline in value; (c) the financial position and access to capital of the issuer, including the current and future impact of any specific events; and (d) for fixed maturity securities, the Company’s intent to sell a security or whether it is more-likely-than-not the Company will be required to sell the security before the recovery of its amortized cost which, in some cases, may extend to maturity and for equity securities, the Company’s ability and intent to hold the security for a period of time that allows for the recovery in value.

The Company has not recorded impairment charges on securities for the quarter or nine months ended September 30, 2012 or the year ended December 31, 2011.

TEMPORARILY IMPAIRED SECURITIES
The following table shows the gross unrealized losses and fair value of the Company’s investments with unrealized losses that are deemed to be temporarily impaired, aggregated by investment category and length of time that individual securities have been in a continuous unrealized loss position as of the dates indicated. The Company had no held-to-maturity securities with unrealized losses at September 30, 2012 or December 31, 2011.

   
September 30, 2012
 
   
Less Than Twelve Months
   
More Than Twelve Months
   
Total
 
   
Gross
         
Gross
         
Gross
         
Number
 
   
Unrealized
   
Fair
   
Unrealized
   
Fair
   
Unrealized
   
Fair
   
of
 
   
Losses
   
Value
   
Losses
   
Value
   
Losses
   
Value
   
Securities
 
   
(in thousands)
Securities Available-for-Sale
                                         
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
  $ 77     $ 5,414     $ 0     $ 0     $ 77     $ 5,414       10  
Corporate bonds and other securities
    1       298       0       0       1       298       3  
Total securities available-for-sale
  $ 78     $ 5,712     $ 0     $ 0     $ 78     $ 5,712     $ 13  
 
 
- 9 -

 
 
 
 
December 31, 2011
   
Less Than Twelve Months
   
More Than Twelve Months
   
Total
   
Gross
         
Gross
         
Gross
         
Number
 
   
Unrealized
   
Fair
   
Unrealized
   
Fair
   
Unrealized
   
Fair
   
of
 
   
Losses
   
Value
   
Losses
   
Value
   
Losses
   
Value
   
Securities
 
   
(in thousands)
Securities Available-for-Sale
                                         
Debt securities:
                                         
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
  $ 4     $ 1,706     $ 0     $ 0     $ 4     $ 1,706       2  
Mortgage-backed securities
    52       29,364       0       0       52       29,364       3  
Total securities available-for-sale
  $ 56     $ 31,070     $ 0     $ 0     $ 56     $ 31,070       5  
 
Certain investments within the Company’s portfolio had unrealized losses at September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, as shown in the tables above. The unrealized losses were caused by increases in market interest rates. Because the Company does not intend to sell the investments and management believes it is unlikely that the Company will be required to sell the investments before recovery of their amortized cost basis, which may be maturity, the Company does not consider the investments to be other-than-temporarily impaired at September 30, 2012 or December 31, 2011.

Restricted Securities
The restricted security category is comprised of stock in the Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta (FHLB) and the Federal Reserve Bank (FRB). These stocks are classified as restricted securities because their ownership is restricted to certain types of entities and the securities lack a market. Therefore, FHLB and FRB stock is carried at cost and evaluated for impairment. When evaluating these stocks for impairment, their value is determined based on the ultimate recoverability of the par value rather than by recognizing temporary declines in value. Restricted stock is viewed as a long-term investment and management believes that the Company has the ability and the intent to hold this stock until its value is recovered.

Note 3. Loans and the Allowance for Loan Losses
The following is a summary of the balances in each class of the Company’s loan portfolio as of the dates indicated:

   
September 30,
   
December 31,
 
   
2012
   
2011
 
   
(in thousands)
 
Mortgage loans on real estate:
           
Residential 1-4 family
  $ 74,965     $ 77,588  
Commercial
    270,772       288,108  
Construction
    13,789       19,981  
Second mortgages
    14,758       16,044  
Equity lines of credit
    32,288       34,220  
Total mortgage loans on real estate
    406,572       435,941  
Commercial loans
    25,800       35,015  
Consumer loans
    13,904       17,041  
Other
    17,268       32,330  
Total loans
    463,544       520,327  
Less: Allowance for loan losses
    (7,301 )     (8,498 )
Loans, net of allowance and deferred fees
  $ 456,243     $ 511,829  
 
Overdrawn deposit accounts are reclassified as loans and included in the Other category in the table above. Overdrawn deposit accounts totaled $937 thousand and $583 thousand at September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, respectively.

CREDIT QUALITY INFORMATION
The Company uses internally-assigned risk grades to estimate the capability of borrowers to repay the contractual obligations of their loan agreements as scheduled or at all. The Company’s internal risk grade system is based on experiences with similarly graded loans. Credit risk grades are updated at least quarterly as additional information becomes available, at which time management analyzes the resulting scores to track loan performance.

The Company’s internally assigned risk grades are as follows:
 
·
Pass: Loans are of acceptable risk.
 
·
Other Assets Especially Mentioned (OAEM): Loans have potential weaknesses that deserve management’s close attention.
 
·
Substandard: Loans reflect significant deficiencies due to several adverse trends of a financial, economic or managerial nature.
 
·
Doubtful: Loans have all the weaknesses inherent in a substandard loan with added characteristics that make collection or liquidation in full based on currently existing facts, conditions and values highly questionable or improbable.
 
·
Loss: Loans have been charged off because they are considered uncollectible and of such little value that their continuance as bankable assets is not warranted.

 
- 10 -

 
CREDIT QUALITY INFORMATION
The Company uses internally-assigned risk grades to estimate the capability of borrowers to repay the contractual obligations of their loan agreements as scheduled or at all. The Company’s internal risk grade system is based on experiences with similarly graded loans. Credit risk grades are updated at least quarterly as additional information becomes available, at which time management analyzes the resulting scores to track loan performance.

The Company’s internally assigned risk grades are as follows:
 
·
Pass: Loans are of acceptable risk.
 
·
Other Assets Especially Mentioned (OAEM): Loans have potential weaknesses that deserve management’s close attention.
 
·
Substandard: Loans reflect significant deficiencies due to several adverse trends of a financial, economic or managerial nature.
 
·
Doubtful: Loans have all the weaknesses inherent in a substandard loan with added characteristics that make collection or liquidation in full based on currently existing facts, conditions and values highly questionable or improbable.
 
·
Loss: Loans have been charged off because they are considered uncollectible and of such little value that their continuance as bankable assets is not warranted.
 
The following table presents credit quality exposures by internally assigned risk ratings as of the dates indicated:
 
Credit Quality Information
As of September 30, 2012
(in thousands)
   
Pass
   
OAEM
   
Substandard
   
Doubtful
   
Total
 
Mortgage loans on real estate:
                             
Residential 1-4 family
  $ 68,837     $ 913     $ 5,215     $ 0     $ 74,965  
Commercial
    254,391       4,844       11,537       0       270,772  
Construction
    10,250       386       3,153       0       13,789  
Second mortgages
    14,150       244       364       0       14,758  
Equity lines of credit
    31,492       232       564       0       32,288  
Total mortgage loans on real estate
    379,120       6,619       20,833       0       406,572  
Commercial loans
    23,623       1,136       1,041       0       25,800  
Consumer loans
    13,757       0       147       0       13,904  
Other
    17,268       0       0       0       17,268  
Total
  $ 433,768     $ 7,755     $ 22,021     $ 0     $ 463,544  

Credit Quality Information
As of December 31, 2011
(in thousands)
   
Pass
   
OAEM
   
Substandard
   
Doubtful
   
Total
 
Mortgage loans on real estate:
                             
Residential 1-4 family
  $ 74,839     $ 677     $ 2,072     $ 0     $ 77,588  
Commercial
    258,610       11,803       17,695       0       288,108  
Construction
    19,548       396       37       0       19,981  
Second mortgages
    15,212       0       832       0       16,044  
Equity lines of credit
    33,390       182       648       0       34,220  
Total mortgage loans on real estate
    401,599       13,058       21,284       0       435,941  
Commercial loans
    29,455       4,295       1,265       0       35,015  
Consumer loans
    16,955       0       86       0       17,041  
Other
    32,330       0       0       0       32,330  
Total
  $ 480,339     $ 17,353     $ 22,635     $ 0     $ 520,327  

As of September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011 the Company did not have any loans internally classified as Loss.
 
 
- 11 -

 
AGE ANALYSIS OF PAST DUE LOANS BY CLASS
All classes of loans are considered past due if the required principal and interest payments have not been received as of the date such payments were due. Interest and fees continue to accrue on past due loans until the date the loan is placed in nonaccrual status, if applicable. The following table includes an aging analysis of the recorded investment in past due loans as of the dates indicated. Also included in the table below are loans that are 90 days or more past due as to interest and principal and still accruing interest, because they are well-secured and in the process of collection. Loans in nonaccrual status that are also past due are included in the aging categories in the table below.
 
Age Analysis of Past Due Loans as of September 30, 2012
   
30 - 59
Days
Past Due
   
60 - 89
Days
 Past Due
   
90 or More
Days Past
 Due
   
Total Past
Due
   
Total
Current
Loans (1)
   
Total
Loans
   
Recorded
Investment
> 90 Days
Past Due
and
Accruing
 
   
(in thousands)
                               
Mortgage loans on real estate:
                                         
Residential 1-4 family
  $ 3,396     $ 0     $ 831     $ 4,227     $ 70,738     $ 74,965     $ 224  
Commercial
    1,179       883       1,918       3,980       266,792       270,772       0  
Construction
    36       0       2,976       3,012       10,777       13,789       0  
Second mortgages
    0       0       272       272       14,486       14,758       0  
Equity lines of credit
    60       0       381       441       31,847       32,288       15  
Total mortgage loans on real estate
    4,671       883       6,378       11,932       394,640       406,572       239  
Commercial loans
    100       160       0       260       25,540       25,800       0  
Consumer loans
    202       47       15       264       13,640       13,904       15  
Other
    44       9       3       56       17,212       17,268       3  
Total
  $ 5,017     $ 1,099     $ 6,396     $ 12,512     $ 451,032     $ 463,544     $ 257  

(1) For purposes of this table, Total Current Loans includes loans that are 1 - 29 days past due.

Age Analysis of Past Due Loans as of December 31, 2011
   
30 - 59
Days
 Past Due
   
60 - 89
 Days
 Past Due
   
90 or More
 Days Past
 Due
   
Total Past
 Due
   
Total
 Current
 Loans (1)
   
Total
Loans
   
Recorded
Investment
 > 90 Days
Past Due
and
Accruing
 
   
(in thousands)
                               
Mortgage loans on real estate:
                                         
Residential 1-4 family
  $ 75     $ 0     $ 627     $ 702     $ 76,886     $ 77,588     $ 0  
Commercial
    0       0       1,123       1,123       286,985       288,108       510  
Construction
    148       0       0       148       19,833       19,981       0  
Second mortgages
    104       0       469       573       15,471       16,044       0  
Equity lines of credit
    159       0       369       528       33,692       34,220       0  
Total mortgage loans on real estate
    486       0       2,588       3,074       432,867       435,941       510  
Commercial loans
    101       0       0       101       34,914       35,015       0  
Consumer loans
    58       89       2       149       16,892       17,041       2  
Other
    44       0       5       49       32,281       32,330       5  
Total
  $ 689     $ 89     $ 2,595     $ 3,373     $ 516,954     $ 520,327     $ 517  
 
(1) For purposes of this table, Total Current Loans includes loans that are 1 - 29 days past due.

Past due loans increased $9.1 million between December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2012. Of this increase, $6.4 million was due to increases in nonaccrual loans that were also past due. Of the $9.3 million in past due nonaccrual loans at September 30, 2012, all but $502 thousand have been written down to their net realizable value. At December 31, 2011, loans past due, excluding loans on nonaccrual status, were at $1.3 million or 0.25% of total loans, the lowest year-end level since December 31, 2008. At September 30, 2012, loans past due, excluding loans on nonaccrual status, were $3.3 million or 0.71% of total loans.

 
- 12 -

 
NONACCRUAL LOANS
The Company generally places non-consumer loans in nonaccrual status when the full and timely collection of interest or principal becomes uncertain, part of the principal balance has been charged off and no restructuring has occurred or the loan reaches 90 days past due, unless the credit is well-secured and in the process of collection. Under regulatory rules, consumer loans, which are loans to individuals for household, family and other personal expenditures, and loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties are not required to be placed in nonaccrual status. Although consumer loans and loans secured by 1-4 family residential property are not required to be placed in nonaccrual status, the Company may place a consumer loan or loan secured by 1-4 family residential property in nonaccrual status, if necessary to avoid a material overstatement of interest income.

Generally, consumer loans not secured by real estate are placed in nonaccrual status only when part of the principal has been charged off. These loans are charged off or written down to the net realizable value of the collateral when deemed uncollectible, due to bankruptcy or other factors, or when they are past due based on loan product, industry practice, terms and other factors.

When management places a loan in nonaccrual status, the accrued unpaid interest receivable is reversed against interest income and the loan is accounted for by the cash or cost recovery method, until it qualifies for return to accrual status or is charged off. Generally, management returns a loan to accrual status if (a) all delinquent interest and principal payments become current under the terms of the loan agreement or (b) the loan is both well-secured and in the process of collection and collectability is no longer doubtful.

The following table presents loans in nonaccrual status by class of loan as of the dates indicated:
 
Nonaccrual Loans by Class
(in thousands)  
   
September 30, 2012
   
December 31, 2011
 
             
Mortgage loans on real estate:
           
Residential 1-4 family
  $ 3,752     $ 748  
Commercial
    3,190       6,719  
Construction
    3,116       0  
Second mortgages
    272       499  
Equity lines of credit
    466       368  
Total mortgage loans on real estate
    10,796       8,334  
Commercial loans
    100       129  
Consumer loans
    5       12  
Total
  $ 10,901     $ 8,475  
 
The following table presents the interest income that the Company would have earned under the original terms of its nonaccrual loans and the actual interest recorded by the Company on nonaccrual loans for the periods presented:

   
Nine Months Ended September 30,
 
   
2012
   
2011
 
   
(in thousands)
 
Interest income that would have been recorded under original loan terms
  $ 823     $ 1,202  
Actual interest income recorded for the period
    235       515  
Reduction in interest income on nonaccrual loans
  $ 588     $ 687  
 
 
- 13 -

 
TROUBLED DEBT RESTRUCTURINGS
The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued Accounting Standards Update (ASU) 2011-02 “A Creditor’s Determination of Whether a Restructuring Is a Troubled Debt Restructuring” (ASU 2011-02). The Company’s loan portfolio includes certain loans that have been modified in a troubled debt restructuring (TDR), where economic concessions have been granted to borrowers who are experiencing financial difficulties. These concessions typically result from the Company’s loss mitigation activities and could include reduction in the interest rate below current market rates, payment extensions, forgiveness of principal, forbearance or other actions intended to maximize collection. A TDR that is on nonaccrual status or is 30 days or more past due is considered to be nonperforming. Beginning with the second quarter of 2012, the Company changed its method for determining when a TDR is considered to be nonperforming. Prior to the second quarter of 2012, the Company classified TDRs as nonperforming at the time of restructure and a TDR could only be returned to performing status after considering the borrower’s sustained repayment performance in accordance with the restructured terms for a reasonable period, generally six months. Beginning with the second quarter of 2012, the Company defines a TDR as nonperforming only if the TDR is in nonaccrual status or 30 days or more past due at the report date. The reason for this change is that the Company found that some new TDRs, including those with favorable repayment performance for a reasonable period prior to the restructuring, were being classified as nonperforming solely because six months had not yet passed since the restructuring.

When the Company modifies a loan, management evaluates any possible impairment as stated in the impaired loan section below.

The following table presents TDRs during the period indicated, by class of loan:
 
Troubled Debt Restructurings by Class
For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2012
(dollars in thousands)
   
Number of
Modifications
   
Recorded
Investment
Prior to
Modification
   
Recorded
 Investment
After
Modification
   
Current Investment on
September 30, 2012
 
Mortgage loans on real estate:
                       
Residential 1-4 family
    1     $ 93     $ 87     $ 72  
Commercial
    3       3,486       2,928       2,782  
Second mortgages
    1       111       145       139  
Total
    5     $ 3,690     $ 3,160     $ 2,993  
 
Three loans in the table above were given principal reductions, with the principal forgiveness on these loans totaling $530 thousand. Three loans were given below-market rates for debt with similar risk characteristics.  One loan was given both a principal reduction and a below-market rate.

The following table presents TDRs for which there was a payment default as of September 30, 2012, where the default occurred within twelve months of restructuring.
 
Restructurings that Subsequently Defaulted
As of September 30, 2012
(in thousands)
   
Recorded
Investment in
Defaulting
Loans
 
Mortgage loans on real estate:
     
Commercial
  $ 253  
Total
  $ 253  
 
 
IMPAIRED LOANS
A loan is considered impaired when, based on current information and events, it is probable that the Company will be unable to collect all amounts due from the borrower in accordance with the contractual terms of the loan. Impaired loans include nonperforming commercial loans and loans modified in a TDR. When management identifies a loan as impaired, the impairment is measured based on the present value of expected future cash flows, discounted at the loan’s effective interest rate, except when the sole or remaining source of repayment for the loan is the operation or liquidation of the collateral. In these cases, management uses the current fair value of the collateral, less selling costs, when foreclosure is probable, instead of the discounted cash flows. If management determines that the value of the impaired loan is less than the recorded investment in the loan (net of previous charge-offs, deferred loan fees or costs and unamortized premium or discount), impairment is recognized through an allowance estimate or a charge-off to the allowance.

 
- 14 -

 
When the ultimate collectability of the total principal of an impaired loan is in doubt and the loan is in nonaccrual status, all payments are applied to principal under the cost-recovery method. For financial statement purposes, the recorded investment in the loan is the actual principal balance reduced by payments that would otherwise have been applied to interest. When reporting information on these loans to the applicable customers, the unpaid principal balance is reported as if payments were applied to principal and interest under the original terms of the loan agreements. Therefore, the unpaid principal balance reported to the customer would be higher than the recorded investment in the loan for financial statement purposes. When the ultimate collectability of the total principal of the impaired loan is not in doubt and the loan is in nonaccrual status, contractual interest is credited to interest income when received under the cash-basis method.

The following table includes the recorded investment and unpaid principal balances for impaired loans with the associated allowance amount, if applicable, as of the dates presented. Also presented are the average recorded investments in the impaired loans and the related amount of interest recognized for the periods presented. The average balances are calculated based on daily average balances.
 
Impaired Loans by Class
(in thousands)
   
As of September 30, 2012
   
Nine Months Ended
September 30, 2012
 
         
Recorded Investment
                   
   
Unpaid
Principal
Balance
   
Without
Valuation
Allowance
   
With
Valuation
Allowance
   
Associated
 Allowance
   
Average
Recorded
Investment
   
Interest
Income
Recognized
 
 
Mortgage loans on real estate:
                                   
Residential 1-4 family
  $ 4,062     $ 729     $ 3,276     $ 334     $ 1,809     $ 127  
Commercial
    11,495       5,124       3,488       138       10,313       211  
Construction
    3,834       3,117       0       0       3,404       (10 )
Second mortgages
    483       372       48       6       510       5  
Equity lines of credit
    470       109       357       145       400       1  
Total mortgage loans on real estate
  $ 20,344     $ 9,451     $ 7,169     $ 623     $ 16,436     $ 334  
Commercial loans
    119       0       100       13       106       0  
Consumer loans
    21       21       0       0       26       2  
Total
  $ 20,484     $ 9,472     $ 7,269     $ 636     $ 16,568     $ 336  
 
Impaired Loans by Class
(in thousands)
   
As of December 31, 2011
   
For the Year Ended
December 31, 2011
 
          Recorded Investment                
   
Unpaid
Principal
Balance
   
Without
Valuation
Allowance
   
With
Valuation
Allowance
   
Associated
Allowance
   
Average
Recorded
Investment
   
Interest
Income
Recognized
 
 
Mortgage loans on real estate:
                                   
Residential 1-4 family
  $ 486     $ 391     $ 91     $ 6     $ 3,753     $ 554  
Commercial
    8,263       4,734       3,371       968       8,911       456  
Construction
    0       0       0       0       0       0  
Second mortgages
    520       250       258       31       603       24  
Equity lines of credit
    371       369       0       0       392       21  
Total mortgage loans on real estate
  $ 9,640     $ 5,744     $ 3,720     $ 1,005     $ 13,659     $ 1,055  
Commercial loans
    142       19       110       23       130       2  
Total
  $ 9,782     $ 5,763     $ 3,830     $ 1,028     $ 13,789     $ 1,057  
 
MONITORING OF LOANS AND EFFECT OF MONITORING FOR THE ALLOWANCE FOR LOAN LOSSES
Loan officers are responsible for continual portfolio analysis and prompt identification and reporting of problem loans, which includes assigning a risk grade to each applicable loan at its origination and revising such grade as the situation dictates. Loan officers maintain frequent contact with borrowers, which should enable the loan officer to identify potential problems before other personnel. In addition, meetings with loan officers and upper management are held to discuss problem loans and review risk grades. Nonetheless, in order to avoid over-reliance upon loan officers for problem loan identification, the Company’s loan review system provides for review of loans and risk grades by individuals who are independent of the loan approval process. Risk grades and historical loss rates by risk grades are used as a component of the calculation of the allowance for loan losses.

 
- 15 -

 
ALLOWANCE FOR LOAN LOSSES
Management has an established methodology to determine the adequacy of the allowance for loan losses that assesses the risks and losses inherent in the loan portfolio. For purposes of determining the allowance for loan losses, the Company has segmented certain loans in the portfolio by product type. Loans are segmented into the following pools: commercial, real estate-construction, real estate-mortgage, consumer and other loans. The Company also sub-segments the real estate-mortgage segment into four classes: residential 1-4 family, commercial real estate, second mortgages and equity lines of credit. The Company uses an internally developed risk evaluation model in the estimation of the credit risk process. The model and assumptions used to determine the allowance are independently validated and reviewed to ensure that the theoretical foundation, assumptions, data integrity, computational processes and reporting practices are appropriate and properly documented.

Each portfolio segment has risk characteristics as follows:
 
·
Commercial: Commercial loans carry risks associated with the successful operation of a business or project, in addition to other risks associated with the ownership of a business. The repayment of these loans may be dependent upon the profitability and cash flows of the business. In addition, there is risk associated with the value of collateral other than real estate which may depreciate over time and cannot be appraised with as much precision.
 
·
Real estate-construction: Construction loans carry risks that the project will not be finished according to schedule, the project will not be finished according to budget and the value of the collateral may at any point in time be less than the principal amount of the loan. Construction loans also bear the risk that the general contractor, who may or may not be the loan customer, may be unable to finish the construction project as planned because of financial pressure unrelated to the project.
 
·
Real estate-mortgage: Residential mortgage loans and equity lines of credit carry risks associated with the continued credit-worthiness of the borrower and changes in the value of the collateral. Commercial real estate loans carry risks associated with the successful operation of a business if owner occupied. If non-owner occupied, the repayment of these loans may be dependent upon the profitability and cash flow from rent receipts.
 
·
Consumer loans: Consumer loans carry risks associated with the continued credit-worthiness of the borrowers and the value of the collateral. Consumer loans are more likely than real estate loans to be immediately adversely affected by job loss, divorce, illness or personal bankruptcy.
 
·
Other loans: Other loans are loans to mortgage companies, loans for purchasing or carrying securities, and loans to insurance, investment and finance companies. These loans carry risks associated with the successful operation of a business. In addition, there is risk associated with the value of collateral other than real estate which may depreciate over time, may depend on interest rates or may fluctuate in active trading markets.

To determine the balance of the allowance account for each segment of the loan portfolio, management pools each segment by risk grade individually and applies a historical loss percentage. At September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, the historical loss percentage was based on losses sustained in each segment of the portfolio over the previous eight quarters.

Management also provides an allocated component of the allowance for loans that are classified as impaired. An allocated allowance is established when the discounted value of future cash flows from the impaired loan (or the collateral value or observable market price of the impaired loan) is lower than the carrying value of that loan.

Based on credit risk assessments and management’s analysis of qualitative factors, additional loss factors are applied to loan balances. These additional qualitative factors include: economic conditions, trends in growth, concentrations, changes in certain loans, changes in underwriting, changes in management and changes in the legal and regulatory environment.

The Company implemented two changes to the qualitative factors component of its allowance for loan loss in the second quarter of 2012. See the quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the second quarter of 2012, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on August 14, 2012 for details. The Company implemented one change to the qualitative factors component of its allowance for loan loss in the third quarter of 2012. This change was made to the allocations for the qualitative factors for changes in past due loans, nonaccrual loans and loans risk rated substandard or doubtful.  The allocation was increased to account for increases in past due and nonaccrual loans in the real estate categories, as seen in the tables above under “Age Analysis of Past Due Loans by Class.”

 
- 16 -

 
THE COMPANY’S ESTIMATION PROCESS
The allowance for loan losses is the accumulation of various components that are calculated based on independent methodologies. Management’s estimate is based on certain observable, historical data that management believes are most reflective of the underlying credit losses being estimated. In addition, impaired loans are separately identified for evaluation and are measured based on the present value of expected future cash flows, the observable market price of the loans or the fair value of the collateral. Also, various qualitative factors are applied to each segment of the loan portfolio.
 
ALLOWANCE FOR LOAN LOSSES BY SEGMENT
The total allowance reflects management’s estimate of loan losses inherent in the loan portfolio at the balance sheet date. The Company considers the allowance for loan losses of $7.3 million adequate to cover loan losses inherent in the loan portfolio at September 30, 2012.

The following table presents, by portfolio segment, the changes in the allowance for loan losses and the recorded investment in loans for the periods presented. Allocation of a portion of the allowance to one category of loans does not preclude its availability to absorb losses in other categories.
 
ALLOWANCE FOR LOAN LOSSES AND RECORDED INVESTMENT IN LOANS
(in thousands)
For the Nine Months Ended           
September 30, 2012
 
Commercial
   
Real Estate -
Construction
   
Real Estate -
Mortgage
   
Consumer
   
Other
   
Total
 
Allowance for Loan Losses:
                                   
Balance at the beginning of period
  $ 1,011     $ 323     $ 6,735     $ 300     $ 129     $ 8,498  
Charge-offs
    (86 )     (780 )     (2,232 )     (182 )     (130 )     (3,410 )
Recoveries
    54       0       103       55       51       263  
Provision for loan losses
    (374 )     674       1,585       51       14       1,950  
Ending balance
  $ 605     $ 217     $ 6,191     $ 224     $ 64     $ 7,301  
Ending balance individually evaluated for impairment
  $ 13     $ 0     $ 623     $ 0     $ 0     $ 636  
Ending balance collectively evaluated for impairment
    592       217       5,568       224       64       6,665  
Ending balance
  $ 605     $ 217     $ 6,191     $ 224     $ 64     $ 7,301  
Loan Balances:
                                               
Ending balance individually evaluated for impairment
  $ 100     $ 3,117     $ 13,503     $ 21     $ 0     $ 16,741  
Ending balance collectively evaluated for impairment
    25,700       10,672       379,280       13,883       17,268       446,803  
Ending balance
  $ 25,800     $ 13,789     $ 392,783     $ 13,904     $ 17,268     $ 463,544  

 
- 17 -


For the Year Ended
December 31, 2011
 
Commercial
   
Real Estate -
Construction
   
Real Estate -
Mortgage
   
Consumer
   
Other
   
Total
 
Allowance for Loan Losses:
                               
Balance at the beginning of period
  $ 799     $ 441     $ 11,498     $ 357     $ 133     $ 13,228  
Charge-offs
    (942 )     0       (7,822 )     (333 )     (210 )     (9,307 )
Recoveries
    141       0       575       102       59       877  
Provision for loan losses
    1,013       (118 )     2,484       174       147       3,700  
Ending balance
  $ 1,011     $ 323     $ 6,735     $ 300     $ 129     $ 8,498  
                                                 
Ending balance individually evaluated for impairment
  $ 23     $ 0     $ 1,005     $ 0     $ 0     $ 1,028  
                                                 
Ending balance collectively evaluated for impairment
    988       323       5,730       300       129       7,470  
Ending balance
  $ 1,011     $ 323     $ 6,735     $ 300     $ 129     $ 8,498  
Loan Balances:
                                               
                                                 
Ending balance individually evaluated for impairment
  $ 129     $ 0     $ 9,464     $ 0     $ 0     $ 9,593  
                                                 
Ending balance collectively evaluated for impairment
    34,886       19,981       406,496       17,041       32,330       510,734  
Ending balance
  $ 35,015     $ 19,981     $ 415,960     $ 17,041     $ 32,330     $ 520,327  

CHANGES IN ACCOUNTING METHODOLOGY
There were no changes in the Company’s accounting methodology for the allowance for loan losses in the first nine months of 2012.

Note 4. Share-Based Compensation
Share-based compensation arrangements include stock options, restricted stock awards, performance-based awards, stock appreciation rights and employee stock purchase plans. Accounting standards require all share-based payments to employees to be valued using a fair value method on the date of grant and to be expensed based on that fair value over the applicable vesting period.

There were no options granted in the first nine months of 2012.

On March 9, 2008, the Company’s 1998 Stock Option Plan expired. Options to purchase 156,960 shares of common stock were outstanding under the Company’s 1998 Stock Option Plan at September 30, 2012. The exercise price of each option equals the market price of the Company’s common stock on the date of the grant and each option’s maximum term is ten years.

Stock option activity for the nine months ended September 30, 2012 is summarized below:
 
     
Shares
     
Weighted
Average
Exercise
Price
   
Weighted
Average
Remaining
Contractual
Life
(in years)
   
Aggregate
Intrinsic
Value
(in thousands)
 
Options outstanding, January 1, 2012
    165,710     $ 21.64              
Granted
    0       0              
Exercised
    0       0              
Canceled or expired
    (8,750 )     21.67              
Options outstanding, September 30, 2012
    156,960     $ 21.63       3.71     $ 0  
Options exercisable, September 30, 2012
    138,718     $ 21.84       3.53     $ 0  
 
The aggregate intrinsic value of a stock option in the table above represents the total pre-tax intrinsic value (the amount by which the current market value of the underlying stock exceeds the exercise price of the option) that would have been received by the option holders had all option holders exercised their options on September 30, 2012. This amount changes based on changes in the market value of the Company’s common stock. As of September 30, 2012, the outstanding options had no intrinsic value because the exercise prices of all outstanding options were above the market value of a share of the Company’s common stock.

 
- 18 -

 
No options were exercised during the nine months ended September 30, 2012.

As of September 30, 2012, there was $1 thousand of unrecognized compensation cost related to nonvested options. This cost was recognized in October 2012.

Note 5. Pension Plan
The Company provides pension benefits for eligible participants through a non-contributory defined benefit pension plan. The plan was frozen effective September 30, 2006; therefore, no additional participants will be added to the plan. The components of net periodic pension plan cost are as follows for the periods indicated:

Three months ended September 30,
 
2012
   
2011
 
   
Pension Benefits
 
Interest cost
  $ 72,889     $ 76,031  
Expected return on plan assets
    (82,743 )     (104,964 )
Loss related to early retirement plan
    291,829       0  
Amortization of net loss
    84,330       42,585  
Net periodic pension plan cost
  $ 366,305     $ 13,652  
 
Nine months ended September 30,
    2012       2011  
   
Pension Benefits
 
Interest cost
  $ 216,389     $ 228,095  
Expected return on plan assets
    (277,743 )     (314,893 )
Loss related to early retirement plan
    291,829       0  
Amortization of net loss
    196,830       127,756  
Net periodic pension plan cost
  $ 427,305     $ 40,958  
 
The pension was in a loss position when the plan was frozen, with the loss amortized over several years.  The Company offered an early retirement plan to certain employees in the first quarter of 2012, including to some employees who were eligible to receive pension benefits.  The remaining unamortized loss associated with these employees’ pensions was fully recognized in the third quarter of 2012, causing an additional $292 thousand in pension expense.

At September 30, 2012, management had not yet determined the amount, if any, that the Company will contribute to the plan in the year ending December 31, 2012.

Note 6. Earnings per Share
Basic earnings per share is computed by dividing net income by the weighted average number of common shares outstanding during the period. Diluted earnings per share is computed using the weighted average number of common shares outstanding during the period, including the effect of dilutive potential common shares attributable to outstanding stock options.

The Company did not include an average of 162 thousand potential common shares attributable to outstanding stock options in the diluted earnings per share calculation for the first nine months of 2012 because they were antidilutive.

Note 7. Recent Accounting Pronouncements
In April 2011, the FASB issued ASU 2011-03, “Transfers and Servicing (Topic 860): Reconsideration of Effective Control for Repurchase Agreements.” The amendments in this ASU remove from the assessment of effective control (1) the criterion requiring the transferor to have the ability to repurchase or redeem the financial assets on substantially the agreed terms, even in the event of default by the transferee and (2) the collateral maintenance implementation guidance related to that criterion. The amendments in this ASU were effective for the first interim or annual period beginning on or after December 15, 2011. The guidance was applied prospectively to transactions or modifications of existing transactions that occurred on or after the effective date. The adoption of the new guidance did not have a material impact on the Company’s consolidated financial statements.

 
- 19 -

 
In May 2011, the FASB issued ASU 2011-04, “Fair Value Measurement (Topic 820): Amendments to Achieve Common Fair Value Measurement and Disclosure Requirements in U.S. GAAP and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs).” This ASU is the result of joint efforts by the FASB and International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) to develop a single, converged fair value framework on how (not when) to measure fair value and what disclosures to provide about fair value measurements. The ASU is largely consistent with existing fair value measurement principles in U.S. GAAP (Topic 820), with many of the amendments made to eliminate unnecessary wording differences between U.S. GAAP and IFRSs. The amendments were effective for interim and annual periods beginning after December 15, 2011 with prospective application. The Company has included the required disclosures in its consolidated financial statements.

In June 2011, the FASB issued ASU 2011-05, “Comprehensive Income (Topic 220): Presentation of Comprehensive Income.” The objective of this ASU is to improve the comparability, consistency and transparency of financial reporting and to increase the prominence of items reported in other comprehensive income by eliminating the option to present components of other comprehensive income as part of the statement of changes in stockholders’ equity. The amendments in this ASU require that all non-owner changes in stockholders’ equity be presented either in a single continuous statement of comprehensive income or in two separate but consecutive statements. The single statement of comprehensive income should include the components of net income, a total for net income, the components of other comprehensive income, a total for other comprehensive income, and a total for comprehensive income. In the two-statement approach, the first statement should present total net income and its components followed consecutively by a second statement that should present all the components of other comprehensive income, a total for other comprehensive income, and a total for comprehensive income. The amendments do not change the items that must be reported in other comprehensive income, the option for an entity to present components of other comprehensive income either net of related tax effects or before related tax effects, or the calculation or reporting of earnings per share. The amendments in this ASU should be applied retrospectively. The amendments were effective for fiscal years and interim periods within those years beginning after December 15, 2011. The amendments do not require transition disclosures. The Company has included the required disclosures in its consolidated financial statements.

In December 2011, the FASB issued ASU 2011-11, “Balance Sheet (Topic 210): Disclosures about Offsetting Assets and Liabilities.” This ASU requires entities to disclose both gross information and net information about both instruments and transactions eligible for offset in the balance sheet and instruments and transactions subject to an agreement similar to a master netting arrangement. An entity is required to apply the amendments for annual reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2013, and interim periods within those annual periods. An entity should provide the disclosures required by those amendments retrospectively for all comparative periods presented. The Company does not expect the adoption of ASU 2011-11 to have a material impact on its consolidated financial statements.

In December 2011, the FASB issued ASU 2011-12, “Comprehensive Income (Topic 220): Deferral of the Effective Date for Amendments to the Presentation of Reclassifications of Items Out of Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income in Accounting Standards Update No. 2011-05.” The amendments in this ASU are being made to allow the FASB time to redeliberate whether to present on the face of the financial statements the effects of reclassifications out of accumulated other comprehensive income on the components of net income and other comprehensive income for all periods presented. While the FASB is considering the operational concerns about the presentation requirements for reclassification adjustments and the needs of financial statement users for additional information about reclassification adjustments, entities should continue to report reclassifications out of accumulated other comprehensive income consistent with the presentation requirements in effect before ASU 2011-05. All other requirements in ASU 2011-05 are not affected by ASU 2011-12, including the requirement to report comprehensive income either in a single continuous financial statement or in two separate but consecutive financial statements. Public entities should apply these requirements for fiscal years, and interim periods within those years, beginning after December 15, 2011. The Company has included the required disclosures in its consolidated financial statements.

In July 2012, the FASB issued ASU 2012-02, “Intangibles – Goodwill and Other (Topic 350): Testing Indefinite-Lived Intangible Assets for Impairment.”  The amendments in this ASU apply to all entities that have indefinite-lived intangible assets, other than goodwill, reported in their financial statements.  The amendments in this ASU provide an entity with the option to make a qualitative assessment about the likelihood that an indefinite-lived intangible asset is impaired to determine whether it should perform a quantitative impairment test. The amendments also enhance the consistency of impairment testing guidance among long-lived asset categories by permitting an entity to assess qualitative factors to determine whether it is necessary to calculate the asset’s fair value when testing an indefinite-lived intangible asset for impairment.  The amendments are effective for annual and interim impairment tests performed for fiscal years beginning after September 15, 2012. Early adoption is permitted.  The Company does not expect the adoption of ASU 2012-02 to have a material impact on its consolidated financial statements.

 
- 20 -

 
In October 2012, the FASB issued ASU 2012-06, “Business Combinations (Topic 805): Subsequent Accounting for an Indemnification Asset Recognized at the Acquisition Date as a Result of a Government-Assisted Acquisition of a Financial Institution.”  The amendments in this ASU clarify the applicable guidance for subsequently measuring an indemnification asset recognized as a result of a government-assisted acquisition of a financial institution.  In addition, the amendments should resolve current diversity in practice on the subsequent measurement of these types of indemnification assets.  The amendments are effective for fiscal years, and interim periods within those years, beginning on or after December 15, 2012.  Early adoption is permitted. The amendments should be applied prospectively to any new indemnification assets acquired after the date of adoption and to indemnification assets existing as of the date of adoption arising from a government-assisted acquisition of a financial institution.  The Company does not expect the adoption of ASU 2012-06 to have a material impact on its consolidated financial statements.

Note 8. Fair Value Measurements
The Company uses fair value measurements to record fair value adjustments to certain assets and liabilities and to determine fair value disclosures. In accordance with the “Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures” topics of FASB ASU 2010-06 and FASB ASU 2011-04, the fair value of a financial instrument is the price that would be received in the sale of an asset or transfer of a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. Fair value is best determined based upon quoted market prices. However, in many instances, there are no quoted market prices for the Company’s various financial instruments. In cases where quoted market prices are not available, fair values are based on estimates using present value or other valuation techniques. Those techniques are significantly affected by the assumptions used, including the discount rate and estimate of future cash flows. Accordingly, the fair value estimates may not be realized in an immediate settlement of the instrument.

The fair value guidance provides a consistent definition of fair value, which focuses on exit price in an orderly transaction (that is, not a forced liquidation or distressed sale) between market participants at the measurement date under current market conditions. If there has been a significant decrease in the volume and level of activity for the asset or liability, a change in valuation technique or the use of multiple valuation techniques may be appropriate. In such instances, determining the price at which willing market participants would transact at the measurement date under current market conditions depends on the facts and circumstances and requires the use of significant judgment. The fair value can be a reasonable point within a range that is most representative of fair value under current market conditions.

In accordance with ASC 820, “Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures,” the Company groups its financial assets and financial liabilities generally measured at fair value into three levels, based on the markets in which the assets and liabilities are traded and the reliability of the assumptions used to determine fair value.
 
 
Level 1 –
Valuation is based on quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities that the reporting entity has the ability to access at the measurement date. Level 1 assets and liabilities generally include debt and equity securities that are traded in an active exchange market. Valuations are obtained from readily available pricing sources for market transactions involving identical assets or liabilities.
 
 
Level 2 –
Valuation is based on inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. The valuation may be based on quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities; quoted prices in markets that are not active; or other inputs that are observable or can be corroborated by observable market data for substantially the full term of the asset or liability.
 
 
Level 3 –
Valuation is based on unobservable inputs that are supported by little or no market activity and that are significant to the fair value of the assets or liabilities. Level 3 assets and liabilities include financial instruments whose value is determined using pricing models, discounted cash flow methodologies, or similar techniques, as well as instruments for which determination of fair value requires significant management judgment or estimation.
 
 
- 21 -

 
An instrument’s categorization within the valuation hierarchy is based upon the lowest level of input that is significant to the fair value measurement.

ASSETS MEASURED AT FAIR VALUE ON A RECURRING BASIS
Debt and equity securities with readily determinable fair values are classified as “available-for-sale” and recorded at fair value, with unrealized gains and losses excluded from earnings and reported in other comprehensive income. Securities available-for-sale are recorded at fair value on a recurring basis. Fair value measurement is based upon quoted market prices, when available (Level 1). If quoted market prices are not available, fair values are measured utilizing independent valuation techniques of identical or similar securities for which significant assumptions are derived primarily from or corroborated by observable market data. Third party vendors compile prices from various sources and may determine the fair value of identical or similar securities by using pricing models that consider observable market data (Level 2). In certain cases where there is limited activity or less transparency around inputs to the valuation, securities are classified within Level 3 of the valuation hierarchy. Currently, all of the Company’s available-for-sale securities are considered to be Level 2 securities.

The following table presents the balances of certain assets measured at fair value on a recurring basis as of the dates indicated:

         
Fair Value Measurements at September 30, 2012 Using
 
         
(in thousands)
 
         
 
Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for Identical
Assets
   
Significant
Other
Observable
 Inputs
   
Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
 
Description   Balance     (Level 1)     (Level 2)     (Level 3)  
                   
Available-for-sale securities
                       
Obligations of  U.S. Government agencies
  $ 32,012     $ 0     $ 32,012     $ 0  
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
    33,555       0       33,555       0  
Mortgage-backed securities
    245,256       0       245,256       0  
Money market investments
    1,198       0       1,198       0  
Corporate Bonds
    399       0       399       0  
Total available-for-sale securities
  $ 312,420     $ 0     $ 312,420     $ 0  
 
         
Fair Value Measurements at December 31, 2011 Using
 
         
(in thousands)
 
         
 
Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for Identical
Assets
   
Significant
 Other
Observable
 Inputs
   
Significant
Unobservable
 Inputs
 
Description   Balance     (Level 1)     (Level 2)     (Level 3)  
Available-for-sale securities
                       
U.S. Treasury securities
  $ 250     $ 0     $ 250     $ 0  
Obligations of  U.S. Government agencies
    119,554       0       119,554       0  
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
    12,261       0       12,261       0  
Mortgage-backed securities
    103,228       0       103,228       0  
Money market investments
    1,306       0       1,306       0  
Total available-for-sale securities
  $ 236,599     $ 0     $ 236,599     $ 0  
 
ASSETS MEASURED AT FAIR VALUE ON A NONRECURRING BASIS
Under certain circumstances, adjustments are made to the fair value for assets and liabilities although they are not measured at fair value on an ongoing basis.

 
- 22 -

 
Impaired loans
Loans are designated as impaired when, in the judgment of management based on current information and events, it is probable that all amounts due according to the contractual terms of the loan agreement will not be collected. The measurement of loss associated with impaired loans can be based on either the observable market price of the loan or the fair value of the collateral. Fair value is measured based on the value of the collateral securing the loans. Collateral may be in the form of real estate or business assets including equipment, inventory, and accounts receivable. The vast majority of the collateral is real estate. The value of real estate collateral is determined utilizing an income or market valuation approach based on an appraisal conducted by an independent, licensed appraiser outside of the Company using observable market data (Level 2). However, if the collateral is a house or building in the process of construction or if an appraisal of the real estate property is over two years old, then the fair value is considered Level 3. The value of business equipment is based upon an outside appraisal if deemed significant, or the net book value on the applicable business’ financial statements if not considered significant using observable market data. Likewise, values for inventory and accounts receivable collateral are based on financial statement balances or aging reports (Level 3). Impaired loans allocated to the allowance for loan losses are measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis. Any fair value adjustments are recorded in the period incurred as part of the provision for loan losses on the Consolidated Statements of Income.

Foreclosed assets
Loans are transferred to foreclosed assets when the collateral securing them is foreclosed on. The measurement of loss associated with foreclosed assets is based on the fair value of the collateral compared to the unpaid loan balance and anticipated costs to sell the property. If there is a contract for the sale of a property, and management reasonably believes the transaction will be consummated in accordance with the terms of the contract, fair value is based on the sale price in that contract (Level 1). Lacking such a contract, the value of real estate collateral is determined utilizing an income or market valuation approach based on an appraisal conducted by an independent, licensed appraiser outside of the Company using observable market data (Level 2). However, if the collateral is a house or building in the process of construction or if an appraisal of the real estate property is over two years old, then the fair value is considered Level 3. Any fair value adjustments to foreclosed assets are recorded in the period incurred and expensed against current earnings.

The following table presents the assets carried on the consolidated balance sheets by caption and by level in the fair value hierarchy for which a nonrecurring change in fair value has been recorded as of the dates indicated:

         
Carrying Value at September 30, 2012 Using
 
         
(in thousands)
 
Description
 
Fair Value
   
 
Quoted Prices in
Active Markets for
Identical Assets
(Level 1)
   
Significant Other
 Observable Inputs
(Level 2)
 
Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
 
Assets:
                       
Impaired loans
  $ 6,633     $ 0     $ 3,604     $ 3,029  
Foreclosed assets
  $ 6,842     $ 0     $ 6,842     $ 0  
 
         
Carrying Value at December 31, 2011 Using
 
         
(in thousands)
 
Description
 
Fair Value
   
 
Quoted Prices in
 Active Markets for
Identical Assets
(Level 1)
   
Significant Other
Observable Inputs
(Level 2)
 
Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
 
Assets:
                       
Impaired loans
  $ 2,802     $ 0     $ 2,572     $ 230  
Foreclosed assets
  $ 9,390     $ 0     $ 9,390     $ 0  

 
- 23 -


The changes in Level 3 assets measured at estimated fair value on a nonrecurring basis during the nine months ended September 30, 2012 were as follows:
 
Nine months ended September 30, 2012
(in thousands)
       
Balance as of December 31, 2011
  $ 230  
Net (charge-offs) recoveries
    (97 )
Additions
    2,942  
Sales
    0  
Net payments and upgrades
    (46 )
Ending balance
  $ 3,029  
 
The following table displays quantitative information about Level 3 Fair Value Measurements as of the date indicated (dollars in thousands):

   
Quantitative Information About Level 3 Fair Value Measurements at September 30, 2012
 
      Fair Value  
Valuation Techniques
Unobservable Input
 
Range (Average)
 
Assets
               
Impaired Loans
  $ 3,029  
Market comparables
Selling costs
    6% - 10%(6%)  
         
Discounted cash flows
Yield
    7.75%  

ASC 825, “Financial Instruments,” requires disclosure about fair value of financial instruments for interim periods and excludes certain financial instruments and all non-financial instruments from its disclosure requirements. Accordingly, the aggregate fair value amounts presented may not necessarily represent the underlying fair value of the Company.

The following methods and assumptions were used by the Company in estimating fair value disclosures for financial instruments:

CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
The carrying amounts of cash and short-term instruments, including interest-bearing due from banks, approximate fair values.

INVESTMENT SECURITIES
Where quoted prices are available in an active market, securities are classified within Level 1 of the valuation hierarchy. Securities are classified as Level 2 if quoted market prices are not available. Fair value is estimated using pricing models and discounted cash flows that consider standard input factors such as observable market data, benchmark yields, interest rate volatilities, broker/dealer quotes and credit spreads. In certain cases where there is limited activity or less transparency around inputs to the valuation, securities are classified in Level 3.

RESTRICTED SECURITIES
The restricted security category is comprised of FHLB and FRB stock. These stocks are classified as restricted securities because their ownership is restricted to certain types of entities and they lack a market. Therefore, the carrying amounts of restricted securities approximate fair value.

LOANS RECEIVABLE
For variable-rate loans that reprice frequently and with no significant change in credit risk, fair values are based on carrying values. Fair values for other loans (e.g., commercial real estate and investment property mortgage loans, commercial and industrial loans) are estimated using discounted cash flow analyses, using interest rates currently being offered for loans with similar terms to borrowers of similar credit quality. Fair values for non-performing loans are estimated using discounted cash flow analyses or underlying collateral values, where applicable.


 
- 24 -

 
BANK-OWNED LIFE INSURANCE
Bank-owned life insurance represents insurance policies on certain officers of the Company. The cash value of the policies is estimated using information provided by the insurance carrier. These policies are carried at their cash value, which approximates the fair value.
 
DEPOSIT LIABILITIES
The fair value of demand deposits, savings and certain money market deposits is the amount payable on demand at the reporting date. The fair value of certificates of deposits is estimated by discounting the future cash flows using the rates currently offered for deposits of similar remaining maturities.

SHORT-TERM BORROWINGS
The carrying amounts of federal funds purchased, overnight repurchase agreements, and other short-term borrowings maturing within 90 days approximate their fair values. Fair values of other short-term borrowings are estimated using discounted cash flow analyses based on the Company's current incremental borrowing rates for similar types of borrowing arrangements.

LONG-TERM BORROWINGS
The fair values of the Company's long-term borrowings are estimated using discounted cash flow analyses based on the Company's current incremental borrowing rates for similar types of borrowing arrangements.

ACCRUED INTEREST
The carrying amounts of accrued interest approximate fair value.

COMMITMENTS TO EXTEND CREDIT AND IRREVOCABLE LETTERS OF CREDIT
The fair value of commitments is estimated using the fees currently charged to enter into similar agreements, taking into account the remaining terms of the agreements and the present credit-worthiness of the counterparties. For fixed-rate loan commitments, fair value also considers the difference between current levels of interest rates and the committed rates. The fair value of letters of credit is based on fees currently charged for similar agreements or on the estimated cost to terminate them or otherwise settle the obligations with the counterparties at the reporting date. At September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, the fair value of fees charged for loan commitments and irrevocable letters of credit was immaterial.


 
- 25 -

 
The estimated fair values, and related carrying or notional amounts, of the Company's financial instruments as of the dates indicated are as follows:
 
         
Fair Value Measurements at September 30, 2012 Using
(in thousands)
 
   
Carrying
Value
   
 
Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
for Identical
Assets
(Level 1)
   
Significant Other
Observable
Inputs
(Level 2)
   
Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
 
Assets
                       
Cash and cash equivalents
  $ 49,576     $ 49,576     $ 0     $ 0  
Securities available-for-sale
    312,420       0       312,420       0  
Securities held-to-maturity
    615       0       620       0  
Restricted securities
    2,562       0       2,562       0  
Loans, net of allowances for loan losses
    456,243       0       455,823       3,029  
Bank owned life insurance
    21,627       0       21,627       0  
Accrued interest receivable
    2,397       0       2,397       0  
                                 
Liabilities
                               
Deposits
  $ 731,674     $ 0     $ 733,554     $ 0  
Overnight repurchase agreements
    37,265       0       37,265       0  
Term repurchase agreements
    1,278       0       1,279       0  
Federal Home Loan Bank advances
    25,000       0       28,957       0  
Accrued interest payable
    473       0       473       0  
         
Fair Value Measurements at December 31, 2011 Using
(in thousands)
 
             
     
Carrying
Value
   
Quoted Prices in
Active Markets
 for Identical
Assets
(Level 1)
   
Significant Other
Observable
Inputs
(Level 2)
   
Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
 
                   
Assets
                       
Cash and cash equivalents
  $ 24,855     $ 24,855     $ 0     $ 0  
Securities available-for-sale
    236,599       0       236,599       0  
Securities held-to-maturity
    1,515       0       1,526       0  
Restricted securities
    3,451       0       3,451       0  
Loans, net of allowances for loan losses
    511,829       0       514,875       230  
Bank owned life insurance
    21,593       0       21,593       0  
Accrued interest receivable
    2,528       0       2,528       0  
                                 
Liabilities
                               
Deposits
  $ 690,879     $ 0     $ 692,539     $ 0  
Overnight repurchase agreements
    35,001       0       35,001       0  
Term repurchase agreements
    1,480       0       1,481       0  
Federal Home Loan Bank advances
    35,000       0       39,341       0  
Accrued interest payable
    577       0       577       0  
 
Note 9. Segment Reporting
The Company operates in a decentralized fashion in three principal business segments: The Old Point National Bank of Phoebus (the Bank), Old Point Trust & Financial Services, N. A. (Trust), and the Company as a separate segment (for purposes of this Note, the Parent). Revenues from the Bank’s operations consist primarily of interest earned on loans and investment securities and service charges on deposit accounts. Trust’s operating revenues consist principally of income from fiduciary activities. The Parent’s revenues are mainly interest and dividends received from the Bank and Trust companies. The Company has no other segments.

The Company’s reportable segments are strategic business units that offer different products and services. They are managed separately because each segment appeals to different markets and, accordingly, requires different technologies and marketing strategies.

 
- 26 -

 
Information about reportable segments, and reconciliation of such information to the consolidated financial statements as of and for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2012 and 2011 follows:

   
Three Months Ended September 30, 2012
       
   
Bank
   
Trust
   
Unconsolidated
Parent
   
Eliminations
   
Consolidated
 
Revenues
                             
Interest and dividend income
  $ 7,950,468     $ 7,488     $ 1,105,705     $ (1,105,434 )   $ 7,958,227  
Income from fiduciary activities
    0       776,615       0       0       776,615  
Other income
    3,224,829       119,464       165,000       (180,276 )     3,329,017  
Total operating income
    11,175,297       903,567       1,270,705       (1,285,710 )     12,063,859  
                                         
Expenses
                                       
Interest expense
    1,414,414       0       1,585       (1,904 )     1,414,095  
Provision for loan losses
    750,000       0       0       0       750,000  
Salaries and employee benefits
    4,600,299       531,492       128,089       0       5,259,880  
Other expenses
    3,356,522       243,821       72,283       (180,276 )     3,492,350  
Total operating expenses
    10,121,235       775,313       201,957       (182,180 )     10,916,325  
                                         
Income before taxes
    1,054,062       128,254       1,068,748       (1,103,530 )     1,147,534  
                                         
Income tax expense (benefit)
    35,348       43,438       (5,440 )     0       73,346  
                                         
Net income
  $ 1,018,714     $ 84,816     $ 1,074,188     $ (1,103,530 )   $ 1,074,188  
                                         
Total assets
  $ 883,610,555     $ 5,335,378     $ 90,524,865     $ (91,584,920 )   $ 887,885,878  
 
   
Three Months Ended September 30, 2011
       
   
Bank
   
Trust
   
Unconsolidated
Parent
   
Eliminations
   
Consolidated
 
Revenues
                             
Interest and dividend income
  $ 8,980,855     $ 10,139     $ 1,134,786     $ (1,133,857 )   $ 8,991,923  
Income from fiduciary activities
    0       713,946       0       0       713,946  
Other income
    2,437,145       65,431       75,000       (90,776 )     2,486,800  
Total operating income
    11,418,000       789,516       1,209,786       (1,224,633 )     12,192,669  
                                         
Expenses
                                       
Interest expense
    1,619,245       0       3,089       (3,301 )     1,619,033  
Provision for loan losses
    600,000       0       0       0       600,000  
Salaries and employee benefits
    4,195,687       510,582       128,481       0       4,834,750  
Other expenses
    3,500,412       223,337       70,787       (90,776 )     3,703,760  
Total operating expenses
    9,915,344       733,919       202,357       (94,077 )     10,757,543  
                                         
Income before taxes
    1,502,656       55,597       1,007,429       (1,130,556 )     1,435,126  
                                         
Income tax expense (benefit)
    408,793       18,904       (35,850 )     0       391,847  
                                         
Net income
  $ 1,093,863     $ 36,693     $ 1,043,279     $ (1,130,556 )   $ 1,043,279  
                                         
Total assets
  $ 848,274,180     $ 4,882,446     $ 85,589,149     $ (86,177,039 )   $ 852,568,736  
 
 
- 27 -

 
   
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2012
       
   
Bank
   
Trust
   
Unconsolidated
Parent
   
Eliminations
   
Consolidated
 
Revenues
                             
Interest and dividend income
  $ 24,664,745     $ 26,440     $ 2,866,213     $ (2,865,361 )   $ 24,692,037  
Income from fiduciary activities
    0       2,396,266       0       0       2,396,266  
Other income
    8,520,811       383,816       495,000       (541,528 )     8,858,099  
Total operating income
    33,185,556       2,806,522       3,361,213       (3,406,889 )     35,946,402  
                                         
Expenses
                                       
Interest expense
    4,424,381       0       4,719       (5,673 )     4,423,427  
Provision for loan losses
    1,950,000       0       0       0       1,950,000  
Salaries and employee benefits
    13,413,051       1,632,145       394,846       0       15,440,042  
Other expenses
    10,445,457       728,845       175,502       (541,528 )     10,808,276  
Total operating expenses
    30,232,889       2,360,990       575,067       (547,201 )     32,621,745  
                                         
Income before taxes
    2,952,667       445,532       2,786,146       (2,859,688 )     3,324,657  
                                         
Income tax expense (benefit)
    387,534       150,977       (4,550 )     0       533,961  
                                         
Net income
  $ 2,565,133     $ 294,555     $ 2,790,696     $ (2,859,688 )   $ 2,790,696  
                                         
Total assets
  $ 883,610,555     $ 5,335,378     $ 90,524,865     $ (91,584,920 )   $ 887,885,878  
 
   
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2011
       
   
Bank
   
Trust
   
Unconsolidated
Parent
   
Eliminations
   
Consolidated
 
Revenues
                             
Interest and dividend income
  $ 27,476,064     $ 30,119     $ 2,678,818     $ (2,676,034 )   $ 27,508,967  
Income from fiduciary activities
    0       2,244,842       0       0       2,244,842  
Other income
    6,503,875       253,421       225,000       (271,428 )     6,710,868  
Total operating income
    33,979,939       2,528,382       2,903,818       (2,947,462 )     36,464,677  
                                         
Expenses
                                       
Interest expense
    5,153,941       0       9,267       (9,906 )     5,153,302  
Provision for loan losses
    2,900,000       0       0       0       2,900,000  
Salaries and employee benefits
    12,444,063       1,524,632       391,424       0       14,360,119  
Other expenses
    10,255,450       682,616       177,544       (271,428 )     10,844,182  
Total operating expenses
    30,753,454       2,207,248       578,235       (281,334 )     33,257,603  
                                         
Income before taxes
    3,226,485       321,134       2,325,583       (2,666,128 )     3,207,074  
                                         
Income tax expense (benefit)
    772,305       109,186       (97,650 )     0       783,841  
                                         
Net income
  $ 2,454,180     $ 211,948     $ 2,423,233     $ (2,666,128 )   $ 2,423,233  
                                         
Total assets
  $ 848,274,180     $ 4,882,446     $ 85,589,149     $ (86,177,039 )   $ 852,568,736  
 
The accounting policies of the segments are the same as those described in the summary of significant accounting policies reported in the Company’s 2011 annual report on Form 10-K. The Company evaluates performance based on profit or loss from operations before income taxes, not including nonrecurring gains or losses.

The Bank extends a line of credit to the Parent. This line of credit may be used, from time to time and among other purposes, to repurchase the Parent’s publicly traded stock. As of September 30, 2012, $124 thousand was drawn under the line of credit and $7 thousand remained available. Interest is charged at the Wall Street Journal Prime Rate minus 0.5%, with a floor of 5.0%. This loan is secured by a held-to-maturity security with a book value of $145 thousand and a market value of $146 thousand at September 30, 2012. Both the Parent and the Trust companies maintain deposit accounts with the Bank, on terms substantially similar to those available to other customers. These transactions are eliminated to reach consolidated totals.

 
- 28 -

 
Note 10. Commitments and Contingencies
There have been no material changes in the Company’s commitments and contingencies from those disclosed in the Company’s 2011 annual report on Form 10-K. For a discussion of the Company’s branch office expansion, see Note 1 of the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this quarterly report on Form 10-Q.

Item 2. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.

The following discussion is intended to assist readers in understanding and evaluating the financial condition, changes in financial condition and the results of operations of the Company. The Company consists of the parent company and its wholly-owned subsidiaries, The Old Point National Bank of Phoebus (the Bank) and Old Point Trust & Financial Services, N. A. (Trust), collectively referred to as the Company. This discussion should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and other financial information contained elsewhere in this report.

Caution About Forward-Looking Statements
In addition to historical information, this report may contain forward-looking statements. For this purpose, any statement that is not a statement of historical fact may be a forward-looking statement. These forward-looking statements may include, but are not limited to, statements regarding expected trends in rates paid on interest-bearing liabilities and on earning assets, profitability, liquidity, the loan portfolio, the allowance for loan losses, the securities portfolio, interest-rate sensitivity, asset quality, levels of net loan charge-offs and nonperforming assets, noninterest expense (and components of noninterest expense), noninterest income (and components of noninterest income), income taxes, expected impact of efforts to restructure the balance sheet, market risk, growth strategy, investment strategy, credit quality review processes, product and service offerings and financial and other goals. Forward-looking statements often use words such as “believes,” “expects,” “plans,” “may,” “will,” “should,” “projects,” “contemplates,” “anticipates,” “forecasts,” “intends” or other words of similar meaning. Forward-looking statements can also be identified by the fact that they do not relate strictly to historical or current facts. Forward-looking statements are subject to numerous assumptions, risks and uncertainties, and actual results could differ materially from historical results or those anticipated by such statements.

There are many factors that could have a material adverse effect on the operations and future prospects of the Company including, but not limited to, changes in interest rates, general economic and business conditions, the quality or composition of the loan or investment portfolios, including the effects of the Company’s efforts to restructure the investment portfolio, the success of the Company’s expanded product and service offerings, the size of the provision for loan losses, the adequacy of the allowance for loan losses, the level of nonperforming assets, impaired loans and charge-offs, the local real estate market, results of internal assessments and external bank regulatory examinations, the value of collateral securing loans, the value of and the Company’s ability to sell foreclosed assets, the cost to expand a current branch office and to combine two other branch offices, the adequacy of the Company’s credit quality review processes, volatility and disruption in national and international financial markets, government intervention in the U.S. financial system, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) premiums and/or assessments, demand for loan and other products, deposit flows, competition, and accounting principles, policies and guidelines. The Company could also be adversely affected by monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. Government, as well as any regulations or programs implemented pursuant to the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) or other legislation or policies of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve Board.

The Company has experienced reduced earnings compared to pre-recession levels due to changes in the current economic climate. Dramatic declines in the residential and commercial real estate markets in the past few years have resulted in significant write-downs of asset values by the Company as well as by other financial institutions in the U.S. Concerns about future economic conditions and financial markets generally have reduced the availability of funding to certain financial institutions, leading to a tightening of credit and reduction of business activity.

In July 2010, the President signed into law the Dodd-Frank Act, which implements far-reaching changes across the financial regulatory landscape. It is not clear what other impacts the Dodd-Frank Act, regulations promulgated thereunder and other regulatory initiatives of the U.S. Treasury and other bank regulatory agencies will have on the financial markets and the financial services industry.

These risks and uncertainties, in addition to the risks and uncertainties identified in the Company’s annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2011, should be considered in evaluating the forward-looking statements contained herein, and readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such statements. Any forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date on which it is made, and the Company undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statement to reflect events or circumstances after the date on which it is made. In addition, past results of operations are not necessarily indicative of future results.

 
- 29 -

 
General
The Company is the parent company of the Bank and Trust. The Bank is a locally managed community bank serving the Hampton Roads localities of Hampton, Newport News, Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Williamsburg/James City County, York County and Isle of Wight County. The Bank currently has 21 branch offices, but is in the process of combining two of its branches located in Williamsburg, which is expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2013. Trust is a wealth management services provider.

Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates
As of September 30, 2012, there have been no significant changes with regard to the critical accounting policies and estimates disclosed in the Company’s 2011 annual report on Form 10-K. That disclosure included a discussion of the accounting policy that requires management’s most difficult, subjective or complex judgments: the allowance for loan losses. For a discussion of the Company’s policies for calculating the allowance for loan losses, see Note 3 of the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this quarterly report on Form 10-Q.

Earnings Summary
In the third quarter of 2012, net income increased slightly to $1.1 million or $0.22 per diluted share as compared to net income of $1.0 million, or $0.21 per diluted share for the third quarter of 2011. Although net income between the two quarters was very similar, the composition of income and expenses shifted considerably in certain areas. Net interest income after the provision for loan losses was down $979 thousand between the two quarters, mainly due to lower interest income on loans in 2012.  In contrast, noninterest income was up $905 thousand as a result of higher net gains on sales of available-for-sale securities and higher income from bank-owned life insurance policies in 2012.
 
Net income for the nine months ended September 30, 2012 was $2.8 million, or $0.56 per diluted share, an increase of $367 thousand over the same period in 2011. The increase in net income was primarily due to an increase in net gains on sales of available-for-sale securities, from $437 thousand in the nine months ended September 30, 2011 to $1.7 million in the same period in 2012.  A reduction in the provision for loan losses, from $2.9 million to $2.0 million when comparing the first nine months of 2011 and 2012, also contributed significantly to the increase in net income between the two periods.  Decreases in loans and net charge-offs between the two periods allowed management to reduce the provision.
 
Net Interest Income
The principal source of earnings for the Company is net interest income. Net interest income is the difference between interest and fees generated by earning assets and interest expense paid to fund them. Changes in the volume and mix of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities, as well as their respective yields and rates, have a significant impact on the level of net interest income. The net interest yield is calculated by dividing tax-equivalent net interest income by average earning assets. Although both total interest and dividend income and total interest expense decreased during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2012, as compared to the same periods in 2011, total interest and dividend income decreased more than total interest expense, causing net interest income to decrease for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2012 compared to the three and nine months ended September 30, 2011.

Net interest income, on a fully tax-equivalent basis, was $6.7 million in the third quarter of 2012, a decrease of $745 thousand from the third quarter of 2011. Net interest income, on a fully tax-equivalent basis, was $20.5 million for the first nine months of 2012, a decrease of $1.9 million from the same period in 2011.

The net interest margin for the third quarter of 2012 was 3.33%, down 54 basis points from the third quarter of 2011. The year-to-date net interest margin for 2012 was 3.47%, down 36 basis points from 3.83% for the first nine months of 2011. Until recently, the Company’s net interest margin had improved as higher-cost time deposits repriced to the current, lower market rates. While the average rate on liabilities continued to decrease, the rate of change slowed over the last year as most longer-term deposits had already repriced. In addition, the average yield on loans decreased from 5.95% for the third quarter of 2011 to 5.54% for the third quarter of 2012, as higher-yielding loans paid off or were renewed at current, lower rates. More significantly, the composition of earning assets has shifted: as average total loans have decreased from a lack of quality loan demand, a larger percent of earning assets have been invested in lower-yielding investment securities. Because investment securities typically yield less than loans, this shift to lower-yielding investment securities has negatively impacted the Company’s net interest margin in 2012.

 
- 30 -

 
Tax-equivalent interest income decreased by $950 thousand in the third quarter of 2012 and $2.6 million in the first nine months of 2012, compared to the same periods of 2011. Average earning assets for the third quarter of 2012 increased $34.3 million and increased $8.8 million for the first nine months of 2012 compared to the same periods in 2011. Interest expense decreased for the third quarter and first nine months of 2012 as compared to those periods in 2011. The decrease in interest expense is primarily a result of the 15 basis-point and the 14 basis-point decreases in the average rate on interest-bearing liabilities in the third quarter and first nine months of 2012, respectively, compared to the same periods in 2011.

The yield on average earning assets and cost of average interest-bearing liabilities both decreased due to the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) lowering the Federal Funds Target Rate during 2008 from 4.25% to a range of 0.00% to 0.25%. The FOMC has kept the Federal Funds Target Rate unchanged through September 30, 2012. As higher-yielding earning assets and higher-cost interest-bearing liabilities that were opened prior to 2008 mature, they are being replaced with lower-yielding earning assets and lower-cost interest-bearing liabilities. Assuming that the FOMC keeps interest rates at current levels, management believes that the decrease of the average rate on interest-bearing liabilities will continue to slow as a high percentage of the Company’s interest-bearing liabilities have already repriced. Management also believes that the average rate on loans will continue to decline due to increased competition for loans in the Company’s markets, and as loans are renewed or refinanced at lower current market rates.

 
- 31 -

 
The following table shows an analysis of average earning assets, interest-bearing liabilities and rates and yields for the periods indicated. Nonaccrual loans are included in loans outstanding.

AVERAGE BALANCE SHEETS, NET INTEREST INCOME* AND RATES*
 
   
For the quarter ended September 30,
             
   
2012
   
2011
 
         
Interest
               
Interest
       
   
Average
   
Income/
   
Yield/
   
Average
   
Income/
   
Yield/
 
   
Balance
   
Expense
   
Rate**
   
Balance
   
Expense
   
Rate**
 
      (in thousands)        
ASSETS
                                   
Loans*
  $ 469,487     $ 6,508       5.54 %   $ 533,960     $ 7,940       5.95 %
Investment securities:
                                               
Taxable
    263,325       1,229       1.87 %     201,208       1,010       2.01 %
Tax-exempt*
    29,382       306       4.17 %     2,684       49       7.30 %
Total investment securities
    292,707       1,535       2.10 %     203,892       1,059       2.08 %
Interest-bearing due from banks
    32,203       17       0.21 %     4,243       3       0.28 %
Federal funds sold
    1,581       0       0.00 %     18,863       7       0.15 %
Other investments
    3,757       16       1.70 %     4,472       17       1.52 %
Total earning assets
    799,735     $ 8,076       4.04 %     765,430     $ 9,026       4.72 %
Allowance for loan losses
    (7,378 )                     (10,163 )                
Other nonearning assets
    79,293                       85,484                  
Total assets
  $ 871,650                     $ 840,751                  
                                                 
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                                 
Time and savings deposits:
                                               
Interest-bearing transaction accounts
  $ 11,852     $ 1       0.03 %   $ 10,941     $ 1       0.04 %
Money market deposit accounts
    181,677       80       0.18 %     169,873       88       0.21 %
Savings accounts
    53,398       14       0.10 %     48,473       12       0.10 %
Time deposits, $100,000 or more
    134,959       441       1.31 %     126,433       437       1.38 %
Other time deposits
    174,072       534       1.23 %     175,187       634       1.45 %
Total time and savings deposits
    555,958       1,070       0.77 %     530,907       1,172       0.88 %
Federal funds purchased, repurchase agreements and other borrowings
    25,269       6       0.09 %     33,925       17       0.20 %
Federal Home Loan Bank advances
    27,391       338       4.94 %     35,000       430       4.91 %
Total interest-bearing liabilities
    608,618       1,414       0.93 %     599,832       1,619       1.08 %
Demand deposits
    172,308                       154,338                  
Noninterest-bearing repurchase agreements
    0                       0                  
Other liabilities
    2,346                       1,934                  
Stockholders' equity
    88,378                       84,647                  
Total liabilities and stockholders' equity
  $ 871,650                     $ 840,751                  
Net interest income/yield
          $ 6,662       3.33 %           $ 7,407       3.87 %

 
- 32 -

 
   
For the nine months ended September 30,
 
   
2012
   
2011
 
         
Interest
               
Interest
       
   
Average
   
Income/
   
Yield/
   
Average
   
Income/
   
Yield/
 
   
Balance
   
Expense
   
Rate**
   
Balance
   
Expense
   
Rate**
 
      (dollars in thousands)      
ASSETS
                                   
Loans*
  $ 482,014     $ 20,363       5.63 %   $ 552,864     $ 24,566       5.92 %
Investment securities:
                                               
Taxable
    251,878       3,830       2.03 %     201,845       2,809       1.86 %
Tax-exempt*
    21,771       673       4.12 %     3,031       166       7.30 %
Total investment securities
    273,649       4,503       2.19 %     204,876       2,975       1.94 %
Interest-bearing due from banks
    29,001       43       0.20 %     2,153       4       0.25 %
Federal funds sold
    1,755       1       0.08 %     17,171       21       0.16 %
Other investments
    4,100       61       1.98 %     4,637       49       1.41 %
Total earning assets
    790,519     $ 24,971       4.21 %     781,701     $ 27,615       4.71 %
Allowance for loan losses
    (7,897 )                     (10,828 )                
Other nonearning assets
    79,620                       85,098                  
Total assets
  $ 862,242                     $ 855,971                  
                                                 
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                                 
Time and savings deposits:
                                               
Interest-bearing transaction accounts
  $ 11,617     $ 5       0.06 %   $ 11,541     $ 5       0.06 %
Money market deposit accounts
    176,865       238       0.18 %     169,650       268       0.21 %
Savings accounts
    52,476       40       0.10 %     47,753       36       0.10 %
Time deposits, $100,000 or more
    129,353       1,271       1.31 %     130,749       1,440       1.47 %
Other time deposits
    172,853       1,644       1.27 %     179,489       2,041       1.52 %
Total time and savings deposits
    543,164       3,198       0.79 %     539,182       3,790       0.94 %
                                                 
Federal funds purchased, repurchase agreements and other borrowings
    29,442       37       0.17 %     42,927       88       0.27 %
Federal Home Loan Bank advances
    32,445       1,188       4.88 %     35,000       1,275       4.86 %
Total interest-bearing liabilities
    605,051       4,423       0.97 %     617,109       5,153       1.11 %
Demand deposits
    167,701                       142,208                  
Noninterest-bearing repurchase agreements
    0                       12,265                  
Other liabilities
    2,133                       1,703                  
Stockholders' equity
    87,357                       82,686                  
Total liabilities and stockholders' equity
  $ 862,242                     $ 855,971                  
Net interest income/yield
          $ 20,548       3.47 %           $ 22,462       3.83 %

*Computed on a fully tax-equivalent basis using a 34% rate
     
**Annualized
           
 
Provision for Loan Losses
The provision for loan losses is a charge against earnings necessary to maintain the allowance for loan losses at a level consistent with management’s evaluation of the portfolio. This expense is based on management’s estimate of credit losses that may be sustained in the loan portfolio. Management’s evaluation included credit quality trends, collateral values, the findings of internal credit quality assessments and results from external bank regulatory examinations. These factors, as well as identified impaired loans, historical losses and current economic and business conditions, were used in developing estimated loss factors for determining the loan loss provision.

The provision for loan losses was $750 thousand in the third quarter of 2012, as compared to $600 thousand in the third quarter of 2011 and was $2.0 million for the first nine months of 2012, as compared to $2.9 million in the first nine months of 2011. Management concluded that the provision was appropriate based on its analysis of the adequacy of the allowance for loan losses. The higher provision in the third quarter of 2012 as compared to the third quarter of 2011 was due to increased net charge-offs. The lower provision for the first nine months of 2012, as compared to the provision for the first nine months of 2011, was due to a reduction in total loans from $527.0 million at September 30, 2011 to $463.5 million at September 30, 2012 and a reduction in year-to-date net charge-offs.

Net loans charged off were $1.1 million for the third quarter of 2012 as compared to $822 thousand for the third quarter of 2011. For the first nine months of 2012, net loans charged off were $3.1 million, or $3.2 million less than net loans charged off in the first nine months of 2011. On an annualized basis, net loan charge-offs were 0.91% of total loans for the first nine months of 2012 compared with 1.61% for the same period in 2011. Net loans charged off for the first nine months of 2012 were relatively low as compared to net charge-offs of the past few years. Management anticipates that net charge-offs for the fourth quarter of 2012 will be below the elevated level of net charge-offs that occurred in 2010 and 2011 due to stabilization of the economy and housing prices.

 
- 33 -

 
Nonperforming assets consist of nonaccrual loans, loans past due 90 days or more and accruing interest, restructured loans that are accruing interest and not performing according to their modified terms, and foreclosed assets. See Note 3 of the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this quarterly report on Form 10-Q for an explanation of these categories. Foreclosed assets consist of real estate from foreclosures on loan collateral. The majority of the loans 90 days or more past due but still accruing interest are classified as substandard. Substandard loans are a component of the allowance for loan losses. When a loan changes from “past due 90 days or more and accruing interest” status to “nonaccrual” status, the loan is reviewed for impairment. In most cases, if the loan is considered impaired, then the difference between the value of the collateral and the principal amount outstanding on the loan is charged off. If the Company is waiting on an appraisal to determine the collateral’s value or is in negotiations with the borrower or other parties that may affect the value of the collateral, management allocates funds to cover the deficiency to the allowance for loan losses based on information available to management at that time. In the case of TDRs, the restructuring may be to modify to an unsecured loan (e.g., a short sale) that the borrower can afford to repay. In these circumstances, the entire balance of the loan would be specifically allocated for, unless the present value of expected future cash flows was more than the current balance on the loan. It would not be charged off if the loan documentation supports the borrower’s ability to repay the modified loan.

 
- 34 -

 
 
The following table presents information on nonperforming assets, as of the dates indicated:
 
NONPERFORMING ASSETS
   
September 30,
   
December 31,
   
Increase
 
   
2012
   
2011
   
(Decrease)
 
   
(in thousands)
       
Nonaccrual loans
                 
Commercial
  $ 100     $ 129     $ (29 )
Real estate-construction
    3,116       0       3,116  
Real estate-mortgage (1)
    7,680       8,334       (654 )
Consumer loans
    5       12       (7 )
Total nonaccrual loans
  $ 10,901     $ 8,475     $ 2,426  
Loans past due 90 days or more and accruing interest
                       
Real estate-mortgage (1)
  $ 239     $ 510       (271 )
Consumer loans
    15       2       13  
Other
    3       5       (2 )
Total loans past due 90 days or more and accruing interest
  $ 257     $ 517     $ (260 )
Restructured loans
                       
Real estate-mortgage (1)
  $ 6,905     $ 4,326     $ 2,579  
Consumer loans
    17       18       (1 )
Total restructured loans
  $ 6,922     $ 4,344     $ 2,578  
Less nonaccrual restructured loans (included above)
    1,118       2,756       (1,638 )
Less restructured loans currently in compliance (2)
    5,551       1,588       3,963  
Net nonperforming, accruing restructured loans
  $ 253     $ 0     $ 253  
                         
Foreclosed assets
  $ 6,842     $ 9,390     $ (2,548 )
                         
Total nonperforming assets
  $ 18,253     $ 18,382     $ (129 )
 
(1) The real estate-mortgage segment includes residential 1 – 4 family, commercial real estate, second mortgages and equity lines of credit.
(2) As of December 31, 2011, all of the Company's restructured accruing loans were performing in compliance with their modified terms.
 
Nonperforming assets as of September 30, 2012 were $18.3 million, $129 thousand lower than nonperforming assets as of December 31, 2011. The nonperforming assets category of nonaccrual loans increased $2.4 million while foreclosed assets decreased by $2.5 million, when comparing the balances as of September 30, 2012 to December 31, 2011.

The majority of the balance of nonaccrual loans at September 30, 2012 was related to a few large credit relationships. Of the $10.9 million of nonaccrual loans at September 30, 2012, $8.8 million or approximately 80.73% was comprised of four credit relationships: $2.9 million, $2.9 million, $1.9 million, and $1.1 million. One of the credit relationships of $2.9 million was the majority of the increase in real estate construction loans in nonaccrual between December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2012. The loans that make up the nonaccrual balance have been written down to their net realizable value, or the Company is in the process of obtaining new appraisals to determine if any charge-offs need to be recorded during the fourth quarter of 2012 for such loans. As shown in the table above, the majority of the nonaccrual loans were collateralized by real estate at September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011. The increase in troubled debts restructured between December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2012 was due to the Company’s efforts to modify problem credits to assist borrowers and return the loans to performing status. This is evident from the net nonperforming, accruing restructured loans in the table above, which increased only $253 thousand between the two periods.

Past due loans at September 30, 2012 appear elevated when compared to past due loans at December 31, 2011. However, the historically low levels of past due loans seen at December 31, 2011 are difficult to maintain, and at September 30, 2012 past dues excluding nonaccrual loans were still within acceptable levels at $3.3 million or 0.71% of total loans.
 
 
- 35 -

 
Management believes the Company has excellent credit quality review processes in place to identify problem loans quickly. The quality of the Company’s loan portfolio has improved since the end of 2010, with nonperforming assets generally stabilizing since that time due to charge-offs and non-recourse sales of nonaccrual loans. Management remains cautious about the future and is well aware that if the economy does not improve, nonperforming assets could increase in future periods. As was seen in 2010 and 2011, the effect of a sustained increase in nonperforming assets would be lower earnings caused by larger contributions to the loan loss provision, which in turn would be driven by larger impairments in the loan portfolio and higher levels of loan charge-offs.

As of September 30, 2012, the allowance for loan losses was 40.00% of nonperforming assets and 63.98% of nonperforming loans. The allowance for loan losses as a percentage of nonperforming assets and nonperforming loans has decreased between September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011 due to improved credit quality, as indicated in Note 3 of the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this quarterly report on Form 10-Q. Note 3 shows that loans rated OAEM decreased $9.6 million between the two periods. The definition of nonperforming loans is nonperforming assets less foreclosed assets. The allowance for loan losses was 1.58% of total loans on September 30, 2012 and 1.63% of total loans on December 31, 2011.

Allowance for Loan Losses
The allowance for loan losses is based on several components. Historical loss is one of these components. Historical loss is based on the Company’s loss experience during the past eight quarters, which management believes reflects the risk related to each segment of loans in the current economic environment. The historical loss component of the allowance amounted to $5.3 million and $5.6 million as of September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, respectively. This decrease is due to lower charge-offs for the first nine months of 2012 as compared to the level of charge-offs in certain quarters included in past historical loss periods. The Company uses a rolling eight-quarter average to calculate the historical loss component of the allowance, so higher charge-offs in the first nine months of 2010 are no longer included in the calculation as of September 30, 2012, which has caused the historical loss component to decrease.

In evaluating the adequacy of the allowance, each segment of the loan portfolio is divided into several pools of loans based on the Company’s internally assigned risk grades and on whether the loans must be specifically identified for an impairment analysis:

 
1.
Specific identification (regardless of risk rating)
 
2.
Pool–substandard
 
3.
Pool–other assets especially mentioned (rated just above substandard)
 
4.
Pool–pass loans (all other loans)
 
Historical loss rates are applied to the above pools of loans for each segment of the loan portfolio, except for impaired loans which have losses specifically calculated on an individual loan basis. In the past, specific identification loans were always risk-rated substandard or doubtful. Recent guidance from the FASB emphasized that TDRs must be included in the impaired loans section (specific identification) of the Company’s allowance. For example, a TDR that was rated substandard and was upgraded to a pass rating after sustained performance would still be included in the specific identification section of the allowance.

In addition, nonperforming loans and both performing and nonperforming TDRs are analyzed for impairment under U.S. GAAP and are allocated based on this analysis. The impairment amounts determined for the Company’s TDRs and nonperforming loans are included in the specific identification pool above. Therefore, changes in TDRs and nonperforming loans affect the dollar amount of the allowance. Unless the TDR or nonperforming loan does not require a specific allocation (i.e. the present value of expected future cash flows or the collateral value is considered sufficient), increases in the impairment analysis for TDRs and nonperforming loans are reflected as an increase in the allowance for loan losses.

The majority of the Company’s TDRs and nonperforming loans are collateralized by real estate. When reviewing loans for impairment, the Company obtains current appraisals when applicable. If the Company has not yet received a current appraisal on loans being reviewed for impairment, any loan balance that is in excess of the estimated appraised value is allocated in the allowance. As of September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, the impaired loan component of the allowance for loan losses amounted to $636 thousand and $1.0 million, respectively. As shown in the impaired loan tables in Note 3 of the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this quarterly report on Form 10-Q, the recorded investment in impaired loans at September 30, 2012 was $16.7 million, compared to a recorded investment in impaired loans at December 31, 2011 of $9.6 million. The impaired loan component of the allowance declined by $364 thousand, when comparing the component’s balance as of September 30, 2012 to its balance as of December 31, 2011. Even though the recorded investment in impaired loans increased, the total amount of the impairment associated with those loans decreased, therefore a smaller allocation was appropriate.
 
 
- 36 -

 

The final component of the allowance consists of qualitative factors and includes items such as the economy, growth trends, loan concentrations, changes in certain loans and legal and regulatory changes. The qualitative component of the allowance amounted to $1.4 million and $1.9 million as of September 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, respectively. The major reason for the $500 thousand reduction in this component is due to management’s reduced the allocation for the qualitative factors for economic conditions and collateral-dependent loans during the quarter ended June 30, 2012 as detailed in Note 3 of the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in the June 30, 2012 quarterly report on Form 10-Q. These reduced allocations during the second quarter of 2012 were partially offset by management’s increase during the third quarter of 2012 in the allocation for the qualitative factors for changes in past due loans, nonaccrual loans and loans risk rated substandard or doubtful, as discussed in Note 3 of the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this quarterly report on Form 10-Q.

As a result of management’s analysis, the Company added, through the provision, $750 thousand and $2.0 million to the allowance for loan losses in the three and nine months ended September 30, 2012, respectively. Management believes that the allowance has been appropriately funded for additional losses on existing loans, based on currently available information. Past due loans at September 30, 2012 appear elevated when compared to past due loans at December 31, 2011. However, the historically low levels of past due loans seen at December 31, 2011 are difficult to maintain, and at September 30, 2012 past dues excluding nonaccrual loans were still within acceptable levels at $3.3 million or 0.71% of total loans. The Company will continue to monitor the loan portfolio and levels of nonperforming loans closely and make changes to the allowance for loan losses when management concludes such changes are necessary.

Noninterest Income
In the third quarter and the first nine months of 2012, noninterest income increased $905 thousand and $2.3 million, respectively, when compared to the same periods in 2011. All categories of noninterest income except service charges on deposit accounts increased in both the three and nine month comparisons between 2011 and 2012.  The largest increases were in income from bank-owned life insurance and net gains on the sale of available-for-sale securities. Income from bank-owned life insurance was significantly impacted by the receipt of $475 thousand in proceeds from the death benefit on an insured former officer. Net gains on available-for-sale securities increased due to a restructuring of the investment portfolio.  During 2012, the Company sold government agency securities and low yielding mortgage-backed securities and reinvested the proceeds in higher-yield mortgage-backed securities and municipal bonds. These investment transactions improved the portfolio’s cash flows and increased the yields, while only marginally increasing the duration of the portfolio.
 
Noninterest income improved in other areas as well, including the categories of income from fiduciary activities and other service charges, commissions and fees. Income from fiduciary activities increased $63 thousand for the third quarter of 2012 and $151 thousand for the first nine months of 2012, as compared to the same periods in 2011. During the past year, Trust opened new accounts and expanded service offerings to existing customers, including an improved 401(k) product. A portion of the increase in income from fiduciary activities was from a nonrecurring event related to a new customer, but management anticipates that income from fiduciary activities will continue to increase due to sales efforts for the 401(k) daily valuation product. Other service charges, commissions and fees grew $127 thousand and $246 thousand for the third quarter and first nine months of 2012, respectively, over the same periods in 2011. The increases in other service charges, commissions and fees were due to increased revenues from merchant processing services and investment brokerage services. The Company has been focusing on diversifying noninterest income in response to declining interest income and regulatory restrictions on some sources of noninterest income.

Management anticipates that noninterest income will continue to increase as the Company adds new services. The Company is developing and marketing other income-producing products, such as remote deposit capture, lockbox services, positive pay and online payables to help drive future noninterest income. Positive pay is a fraud prevention tool utilized by commercial customers to reduce fraud exposure on checking accounts and identifies checks that are mismatched against the company’s register. Online payables is an integrated payments system offering outsourced print and mail solutions for the delivery of a variety of check payments, including checks for payroll, accounts payable payments, rebates, commissions, refunds, and dividends.
 
 
- 37 -

 
 
Noninterest Expense
The Company’s noninterest expense increased by $214 thousand in the third quarter of 2012 as compared to the third quarter of 2011 and increased $1.0 million when comparing the first nine months of 2012 to the same period of 2011. These increases were mainly due to growth in salaries and employee benefits, which was impacted by several management decisions made during the first nine months of 2012. In 2012, the Company made early retirement offers to eligible employees and initiated a reduction in work force program to eliminate positions that had become unnecessary due to improvements in technology and efficiencies. Both the early retirement offer and the reduction in work force program provided severance packages to employees, which increased salaries and employee benefits expense in 2012, but will decrease such expenses in future years. Salaries and employee benefits expense was also impacted by the filling of several higher-paid positions in 2011 and 2012. Many of these newly-hired employees are in the Company’s private banking, corporate banking and commercial lending areas and were hired to increase small business lending, treasury services, and lending in areas other than commercial real estate as part of management’s focus on increasing loans and noninterest income.

A smaller increase in noninterest expense was also seen in the category of data processing for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2012, as compared to the same periods in 2011. Data processing expenses increased as the Company added new services at both the Bank and Trust.

The increase in noninterest expense for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2012 was partially offset by decreases in expenses related to foreclosed assets.  On a combined basis, losses on write-downs/sales of foreclosed assets and foreclosed assets expense decreased $276 thousand and $177 thousand for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2012, respectively, when compared to the same periods in 2011. These expenses have declined as the Company has worked successfully to sell these assets. Between September 30, 2011 and September 30, 2012, foreclosed assets decreased $4.2 million, or 38.01%, causing foreclosed asset expenses to decline accordingly.

Balance Sheet Review
Assets as of September 30, 2012 were $887.9 million, an increase of $38.4 million or 4.52%, compared to assets as of December 31, 2011. This growth in assets has been driven by increased deposits, particularly low-cost deposits, which increased $28.0 million between December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2012. As quality loan demand has decreased in recent years, the Company has been investing excess funds in securities that can be readily liquidated when loan demand recovers. Between December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2012, cash and cash equivalents and securities available for sale increased $100.5 million or 38.46%.
 
The Company’s holdings of “Alt-A” type mortgage loans such as adjustable rate and nontraditional type loans were inconsequential, amounting to less than 1.00% of the Company’s loan portfolio as of September 30, 2012.

The Company does not have a formal program for subprime lending. The Company is required by law to comply with the requirements of the Community Reinvestment Act (the CRA), which imposes on financial institutions an affirmative and ongoing obligation to meet the credit needs of their local communities, including low- and moderate-income borrowers. In order to comply with the CRA and meet the credit needs of its local communities, the Company finds it necessary to make certain loans with subprime characteristics.

For the purposes of this discussion, a “subprime loan” is defined as a loan to a borrower having a credit score of 660 or below. The majority of the Company’s subprime loans are to customers in the Company’s local market area. The following table details the Company’s loans with subprime characteristics that were secured by 1-4 family first mortgages, 1-4 family open-end loans and 1-4 family junior lien loans for which the Company has recorded a credit score in its system.
 
 
- 38 -

 
Loans Secured by 1 - 4 Family First Mortgages,
1 - 4 Family Open-end and 1 - 4 Family Junior Liens
As of September 30, 2012
(dollars in thousands)
 
   
Amount
   
Percent
 
Subprime
  $ 19,640       19.3 %
Non-subprime
    82,023       80.7 %
    $ 101,663       100.0 %
                 
Total loans
  $ 463,544          
Percentage of Real Estate-Secured Subprime Loans to Total Loans       4.24 %
 
In addition to the subprime loans secured by real estate discussed above, as of September 30, 2012, the Company had an additional $2.0 million in subprime consumer loans that were either unsecured or secured by collateral other than real estate. Together with the subprime loans secured by real estate, the Company’s total subprime loans as of September 30, 2012 were $21.6 million, amounting to 4.67% of the Company’s total loans at September 30, 2012.

Additionally, the Company has no investments secured by “Alt-A” type mortgage loans such as adjustable rate and nontraditional type mortgages or subprime loans.

Average assets for the first nine months of 2012 were $862.2 million compared to $856.0 million for the first nine months of 2011. The increase in average assets for the first nine months of 2012 as compared to average assets for the first nine months of 2011 was due mainly to the increase in average investment securities of $68.8 million, due to the current economic environment, lack of quality loan demand and growth of low cost deposits, as well as the increase in average interest-bearing due from banks of $26.8 million.  This increase in average assets was partially offset by the decrease in average loans of $70.9 million and federal funds sold of $15.4 million.

Total available-for-sale and held-to-maturity securities at September 30, 2012 was $313.0 million, an increase of 31.46% from $238.1 million at December 31, 2011. The Company’s goal is to provide maximum return on the investment portfolio within the framework of its asset/liability objectives. The objectives include managing interest sensitivity, liquidity and pledging requirements.

At September 30, 2012, total deposits were $40.8 million higher than total deposits at December 31, 2011. The Company has focused on building customer relationships, which generated growth in all balance sheet deposit categories during the first nine months of 2012. A portion of the growth in noninterest-bearing and savings deposits was due to the sale of high-quality treasury services, such as positive pay and online payables. Customers pay for these services either with compensating deposit balances or with fees which flow to noninterest income. As seen by the growth in deposits, these efforts are working.

Capital Resources
Total stockholders’ equity as of September 30, 2012 was $90.4 million, up $4.5 million or 5.28% from $85.9 million at December 31, 2011. Under applicable banking regulations, Total Capital is comprised of core capital (Tier 1) and supplemental capital (Tier 2). Tier 1 capital consists of common stockholders’ equity and retained earnings less goodwill. Tier 2 capital consists of certain qualifying debt and a qualifying portion of the allowance for loan losses. The following is a summary of the Company’s capital ratios at September 30, 2012. As shown below, these ratios were all well above the regulatory minimum levels, and demonstrate that the Company’s capital position remains strong.
 
 
2012
 
 
Regulatory
September 30, 2012
 
Minimums
 
Tier 1
4.00%
15.89%
Total Capital
8.00%
17.14%
Tier 1 Leverage
4.00%
10.14%
 
 
- 39 -

 
Book value per share was $18.23 at September 30, 2012 up from $17.21 at September 30, 2011. Cash dividends were $248 thousand or $0.05 per share in the third quarter of 2012 the third quarter of 2011. The common stock of the Company has not been extensively traded.

Liquidity
Liquidity is the ability of the Company to meet present and future financial obligations through either the sale or maturity of existing assets or the acquisition of additional funds through liability management. Liquid assets include cash, interest-bearing deposits with banks, federal funds sold, investments in securities and loans maturing within one year.

A major source of the Company’s liquidity is its large, stable deposit base. In addition, secondary liquidity sources are available through the use of borrowed funds if the need should arise, including secured advances from the FHLB. As of the end of the third quarter of 2012, the Company had $240.1 million in FHLB borrowing availability. The Company has available short-term, unsecured borrowed funds in the form of federal funds lines with correspondent banks. As of the end of the third quarter of 2012, the Company had $43.0 million available in federal funds lines to handle any short-term borrowing needs.

Although the Company remains very liquid, one potential source of liquidity utilized by the Company has become more limited. In 2010, the FHLB instituted more stringent requirements for securing advances. The FHLB is now applying a discount rate to loans used as collateral to simulate the falling value of properties securing those loans. Even with these additional collateral requirements, the Company still has more than sufficient collateral to pledge against outstanding FHLB advances. In the third quarter of 2012, a $10 million FHLB advance matured. Due to the Company’s significant liquidity, management chose not to replace the advance.

Other than the more stringent requirements for the FHLB advances, management is not aware of any market or institutional trends, events or uncertainties that are expected to have a material effect on the liquidity, capital resources or operations of the Company. Nor is management aware of any current recommendations by regulatory authorities that would have a material affect on liquidity, capital resources or operations. The Company’s internal sources of such liquidity are deposits, loan and investment repayments and securities available-for-sale. As of September 30, 2012, the Company’s unpledged, available-for-sale securities totaled $245.7 million. The Company’s primary external source of liquidity is advances from the FHLB.

As a result of the Company’s management of liquid assets, the availability of borrowed funds and the ability to generate liquidity through liability funding, management believes that the Company maintains overall liquidity sufficient to satisfy its depositors’ requirements and to meet its customers’ future borrowing needs.

Contractual Obligations
In the normal course of business there are various outstanding contractual obligations of the Company that will require future cash outflows. In addition, there are commitments and contingent liabilities, such as commitments to extend credit that may or may not require cash outflows.

The Company has plans to expand the building of a current branch office. The contract for this expansion was amended on October 16, 2012. See the subsequent events disclosure in Note 1 of the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this quarterly report on Form 10-Q.
 
As of September 30, 2012, other than those disclosed above, there have been no material changes outside the ordinary course of business in the Company’s contractual obligations disclosed in the Company’s 2011 annual report on Form 10-K.

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements
As of September 30, 2012, there were no material changes in the Company's off-balance sheet arrangements disclosed in the Company’s 2011 annual report on Form 10-K.

Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk.

An important element of earnings performance and the maintenance of sufficient liquidity is proper management of the interest sensitivity gap. The interest sensitivity gap is the difference between interest sensitive assets and interest sensitive liabilities in a specific time interval. This gap can be managed by repricing assets or liabilities, which are variable rate instruments, by replacing an asset or liability at maturity or by adjusting the interest rate during the life of the asset or liability. Matching the amounts of assets and liabilities maturing in the same time interval helps to offset interest rate risk and to minimize the impact of rising or falling interest rates on net interest income.
 
 
- 40 -

 
The Company determines the overall magnitude of interest sensitivity risk and then formulates policies governing asset generation and pricing, funding sources and pricing, and off-balance sheet commitments. These decisions are based on management’s expectations regarding future interest rate movements, the state of the national and regional economy, and other financial and business risk factors. The Company uses computer simulations to measure the effect of various interest rate scenarios on net interest income. This modeling reflects interest rate changes and the related impact on net interest income and net income over specified time horizons.

Based on scheduled maturities only, the Company was liability sensitive as of September 30, 2012. It should be noted, however, that non-maturing deposit liabilities, which consist of interest checking, money market, and savings accounts, are less interest sensitive than other market driven deposits. At September 30, 2012, non-maturing deposit liabilities totaled $424.0 million or 57.94% of total deposit liabilities.

In a rising rate environment, changes in these deposit rates have historically lagged behind the changes in earning asset rates, thus mitigating the impact from the liability sensitivity position. The asset/liability model allows the Company to reflect the fact that non-maturing deposits are less rate sensitive than other deposits by using a decay rate. The decay rate is a type of artificial maturity that simulates maturities for non-maturing deposits over the number of months that more closely reflects historic data. Using the decay rate, the model reveals that the Company is asset sensitive.

When the Company is asset sensitive, net interest income should improve if interest rates rise since assets will reprice faster than liabilities. Conversely, if interest rates fall, net interest income should decline, depending on the optionality (prepayment speeds) of the assets. When the Company is liability sensitive, net interest income should fall if rates rise and rise if rates fall.

The most likely scenario represents the rate environment as management forecasts it to occur. Management uses a “static” test to measure the effects of changes in interest rates, or “shocks”, on net interest income. This test assumes that management takes no steps to adjust the balance sheet to respond to the shock by repricing assets/liabilities, as discussed in the first paragraph of this section.

Under the rate environment forecasted by management, rate shocks in 50 to 100 basis point increments are applied to assess the impact on the Company’s earnings at September 30, 2012. The rate shock model reveals that a 50 basis point decrease in rates would cause an approximate 0.41% annual decrease in net interest income. The rate shock model reveals that a 50 basis point rise in rates would cause an approximate 0.82% annual increase in net interest income and that a 100 basis point rise in rates would cause an approximate 2.08% increase in net interest income.
 
Item 4. Controls and Procedures.

Disclosure Controls and Procedures. Management evaluated, with the participation of the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, the effectiveness of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 13a-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the Exchange Act)) as of the end of the period covered by this report. Based on that evaluation, the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures are effective as of the end of the period covered by this report to ensure that information required to be disclosed in the reports that the Company files or submits under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the SEC’s rules and forms and that such information is accumulated and communicated to management, including the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.

In designing and evaluating its disclosure controls and procedures, management recognized that disclosure controls and procedures, no matter how well conceived and operated, can provide only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the objectives of the disclosure controls and procedures are met. The design of any disclosure controls and procedures also is based in part upon certain assumptions about the likelihood of future events, and there can be no assurance that any design will succeed in achieving its stated goals under all potential future conditions.
 
 
- 41 -

 
Internal Control over Financial Reporting. Management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 13a-15(f) under the Exchange Act). No changes in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting occurred during the fiscal quarter ended September 30, 2012 that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting. Because of its inherent limitations, a system of internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.
 
PART II - OTHER INFORMATION

Item 1. Legal Proceedings.

There are no pending legal proceedings to which the Company, or any of its subsidiaries, is a party or to which the property of the Company or any of its subsidiaries is subject that, in the opinion of management, may materially impact the financial condition of the Company.

Item 1A. Risk Factors.

There have been no material changes in the risk factors faced by the Company from those disclosed in the Company’s 2011 annual report on Form 10-K.

Item 2. Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds.

Pursuant to the Company’s stock option plans, participants may exercise stock options by surrendering shares of the Company’s common stock that the participants already own. Shares surrendered by participants of these plans are repurchased at current market value pursuant to the terms of the applicable stock options. During the quarter ended September 30, 2012, the Company did not repurchase any shares related to the exercise of stock options.

During the quarter ended September 30, 2012, the Company did not repurchase any shares pursuant to the Company’s stock repurchase program.

Item 3. Defaults Upon Senior Securities.

None.

Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures.

None.

 
- 42 -

 
Item 5. Other Information.

The Company has made no changes to the procedures by which security holders may recommend nominees to its board of directors.

Item 6. Exhibits.
 
Exhibit No.  
Description
3.1  
Articles of Incorporation of Old Point Financial Corporation, as amended effective June 22, 2000 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to Form 10-K filed March 12, 2009)
     
3.2  
Bylaws of Old Point Financial Corporation, as amended and restated March 8, 2011 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.2 to Form 8-K filed March 10, 2011)
     
10.6
 
Base Salaries of Named Executive Officers of the Registrant (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 to Form 10-Q filed August 14, 2012)
     
 
Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
     
 
Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
     
 
Certification of Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
     
101
 
 
The following materials from Old Point Financial Corporation’s quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2012, formatted in XBRL (Extensible Business Reporting Language), furnished herewith: (i) Consolidated Balance Sheets (unaudited for September 30, 2012), (ii) Consolidated Statements of Income (unaudited), (iii) Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (unaudited), (iv) Consolidated Statements of Changes in Stockholders’ Equity (unaudited), (v) Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows (unaudited), and (vi) Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements (unaudited)

 
SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.

   
OLD POINT FINANCIAL CORPORATION
 
       
November 14, 2012
  /s/Robert F. Shuford, Sr.  
   
Robert F. Shuford, Sr.
 
   
Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer
 
   
(Principal Executive Officer)
 

November 14, 2012
  /s/Laurie D. Grabo  
    Laurie D. Grabo  
   
Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer
 
   
(Principal Executive Officer)
 
 
 
 - 43 -