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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 8-K
CURRENT REPORT
Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): July 29, 2024
CARTER BANKSHARES, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
Virginia001-3973185-3365661
(State or other jurisdiction
of incorporation)
(Commission
file number)
(IRS Employer
Identification No.)
1300 Kings Mountain Road, Martinsville, Virginia 24112
(Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)
(276) 656-1776
(Registrant's telephone number, including area code)
Not Applicable
(Former name or former address, if changed since last report)
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions (see General Instruction A.2. below):
 Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)
 Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)
 Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR240.14d-2(b))
 Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each classTrading Symbol(s)Name of each exchange on which registered
Common Stock, $1.00 par valueCARENASDAQ Global Select Market
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an emerging growth company as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 (§230.405 of this chapter) or Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (§240.12b-2 of this chapter).
Emerging growth company 
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. 



ITEM 7.01.    REGULATION FD DISCLOSURE.

The attached investor presentation contains financial data that members of management will use from time to time with investors, analysts and other interested parties to assist in their understanding of Carter Bankshares, Inc. (“the Company”). The investor presentation is also available on the Company’s website at www.CBTCares.com. The presentation is furnished as Exhibit 99.1 to this Current Report on Form 8-K and is incorporated herein by reference.
ITEM 9.01.    FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND EXHIBITS.
(d) Exhibits.
Exhibit No.
Exhibit 99.1    June 30, 2024 Investor Presentation.
The information in this Form 8-K, including Exhibit 99.1 attached hereto, is being furnished under Item 7.01 and shall not be deemed to be “filed” for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”), or otherwise subject to the liability of such section, nor shall it be deemed incorporated by reference in any filing of Carter Bankshares, Inc., under the Securities Act of 1933 or the Exchange Act, regardless of any general incorporation language in such filing, unless expressly incorporated by specific reference in such filing.
Important Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements 
This press release contains certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include statements made in Mr. Van Dyke’s quotes and statements relating to our financial condition, market conditions, results of operations, plans, objectives, outlook for earnings, strategic initiatives and related earn-back periods, revenues, expenses, capital and liquidity levels and ratios, asset levels, asset quality and nonaccrual and nonperforming loans. Forward looking statements are typically identified by words or phrases such as “will likely result,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “estimate,” “forecast,” “project,” “intend,” “ believe,” “assume,” “strategy,” “trend,” “plan,” “outlook,” “outcome,” “continue,” “remain,” “potential,” “opportunity,” “comfortable,” “current,” “position,” “maintain,” “sustain,” “seek,” “achieve” and variations of such words and similar expressions, or future or conditional verbs such as will, would, should, could or may.
These statements are not guarantees of future results or performance and involve certain risks, uncertainties and assumption that are difficult to predict and often are beyond the Company’s control. Although we believe the assumptions upon which these forward-looking statements are based are reasonable, any of these assumptions could prove to be inaccurate and the forward-looking statements based on these assumptions could be incorrect. The matters discussed in these forward-looking statements are subject to various risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results and trends to differ materially from those made, projected, or implied in or by the forward-looking statements including, but not limited to the effects of:
market interest rates and the impacts of market interest rates on economic conditions, customer behavior, and the Company’s loan and securities portfolios;
inflation, market and monetary fluctuations;
changes in trade, monetary and fiscal policies and laws of the U.S. government, including policies of the Federal Reserve, FDIC and Treasury Department;
changes in accounting policies, practices, or guidance, for example, our adoption of Current Expected Credit Losses (“CECL”) methodology, including potential volatility in the Company’s operating results due to application of the CECL methodology;
cyber-security threats, attacks or events;
rapid technological developments and changes;
our ability to resolve our nonperforming assets and our ability to secure collateral on loans that have entered nonaccrual status due to loan maturities and failure to pay in full;
changes in the Company’s liquidity and capital positions;
1


concentrations of loans secured by real estate, particularly commercial real estate, and the potential impacts of changes in market conditions on the value of real estate collateral;
increased delinquency and foreclosure rates on commercial real estate loans;
an insufficient allowance for credit losses;
the potential adverse effects of unusual and infrequently occurring events, such as weather-related disasters, terrorist acts, war and other military conflicts (such as the war between Israel and Hamas and the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine) or public health events (such as the COVID-19 pandemic), and of any governmental and societal responses thereto; these potential adverse effects may include, without limitation, adverse effects on the ability of the Company's borrowers to satisfy their obligations to the Company, on the value of collateral securing loans, on the demand for the Company's loans or its other products and services, on incidents of cyberattack and fraud, on the Company’s liquidity or capital positions, on risks posed by reliance on third-party service providers, on other aspects of the Company's business operations and on financial markets and economic growth;
a change in spreads on interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities;
regulatory supervision and oversight, including our relationship with regulators and any actions that may be initiated by our regulators;
legislation affecting the financial services industry as a whole, and the Company and the Bank, in particular;
the outcome of pending and future litigation and/or governmental proceedings, including the outcome of lawsuits     related to the large NPL relationship;
increasing price and product/service competition;
the ability to continue to introduce competitive new products and services on a timely, cost-effective basis;
managing our internal growth and acquisitions;
the possibility that the anticipated benefits from acquisitions cannot be fully realized in a timely manner or at all, or that integrating acquired operations will be more difficult, disruptive or more costly than anticipated;
the soundness of other financial institutions and any indirect exposure related to recent large bank failures and their impact on the broader market through other customers, suppliers and partners or that the conditions which resulted in the liquidity concerns with those failed banks may also adversely impact, directly or indirectly, other financial institutions and market participants with which the Company has commercial or deposit relationships with;
material increases in costs and expenses;
reliance on significant customer relationships;
general economic or business conditions, including unemployment levels, continuing supply chain disruptions and slowdowns in economic growth;
significant weakening of the local economies in which we operate;
changes in customer behaviors, including consumer spending, borrowing and saving habits;
changes in deposit flows and loan demand;
our failure to attract or retain key employees;
expansions or consolidations in the Company’s branch network, including that the anticipated benefits of the Company’s branch network optimization project are not fully realized in a timely manner or at all;
deterioration of the housing market and reduced demand for mortgages; and
re-emergence of turbulence in significant portions of the global financial and real estate markets that could impact our performance, both directly, by affecting our revenues and the value of our assets and liabilities, and indirectly, by affecting the economy generally and access to capital in the amounts, at the times and on the terms required to support our future businesses.
Many of these factors, as well as other factors, are described in our filings with the SEC including in the “Risk Factors” section of the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023. All risk factors and uncertainties described herein and therein should be considered in evaluating the Company’s forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are based on beliefs and assumptions using information available at the time the statements are prepared. We caution you not to unduly rely on forward-looking statements because the assumptions, beliefs, expectations and projections about future events are expressed in or implied by a forward-looking statement may, and often do, differ materially from actual results. Any forward-looking statement speaks only as to the date on which it is made, and we undertake no obligation to update, revise or clarify any forward-looking statement to reflect developments occurring after the statement is made.
2


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 hereunto duly authorized.
 CARTER BANKSHARES, INC.
 (Registrant)
Date: July 29, 2024By:/s/ Wendy S. Bell
Name:Wendy S. Bell
Title:Chief Financial Officer

SECOND QUARTER 2024 INVESTOR PRESENTATION


 
2 F O R W A R D - L O O K I N G S T A T E M E N T This information contains or incorporates certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include statements that relate to our financial condition, market conditions, results of operations, plans, objectives, outlook for earnings, revenues, expenses, capital and liquidity levels and ratios, asset levels, and asset quality and nonaccrual and nonperforming loans. Forward looking statements are typically identified by words or phrases such as “will likely result,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “estimate,” “forecast,” “project,” “intend,” “ believe,” “assume,” “strategy,” “trend,” “plan,” “outlook,” “outcome,” “continue,” “remain,” “potential,” “opportunity,” “comfortable,” “current,” “position,” “maintain,” “sustain,” “seek,” “achieve” and variations of such words and similar expressions, or future or conditional verbs such as will, would, should, could or may. These statements are not guarantees of future results or performance and involve certain risks, uncertainties and assumption that are difficult to predict and often are beyond the Company’s control. Although we believe the assumptions upon which these forward-looking statements are based are reasonable, any of these assumptions could prove to be inaccurate and the forward-looking statements based on these assumptions could be incorrect. The matters discussed in these forward-looking statements are subject to various risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results and trends to differ materially from those made, projected, or implied in or by the forward-looking statements including, but not limited to the effects of: market interest rates and the impacts of market interest rates on economic conditions, customer behavior, and the Company’s loan and securities portfolios; inflation, market and monetary fluctuations; changes in trade, monetary and fiscal policies and laws of the U.S. government, including policies of the Federal Reserve, FDIC and Treasury Department; changes in accounting policies, practices, or guidance, for example, our adoption of Current Expected Credit Losses (“CECL”) methodology, including potential volatility in the Company’s operating results due to application of the CECL methodology; cyber-security threats, attacks or events; rapid technological developments and changes; our ability to resolve our nonperforming assets and our ability to secure collateral on loans that have entered nonaccrual status due to loan maturities and failure to pay in full; changes in the Company’s liquidity and capital positions; concentrations of loans secured by real estate, particularly commercial real estate, and the potential impacts of changes in market conditions on the value of real estate collateral; increased delinquency and foreclosure rates on commercial real estate loans; an insufficient allowance for credit losses; the potential adverse effects of unusual and infrequently occurring events, such as weather-related disasters, terrorist acts, war and other military conflicts (such as the war between Israel and Hamas and the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine) or public health events (such as the COVID-19 pandemic), and of any governmental and societal responses thereto; these potential adverse effects may include, without limitation, adverse effects on the ability of the Company's borrowers to satisfy their obligations to the Company, on the value of collateral securing loans, on the demand for the Company's loans or its other products and services, on incidents of cyberattack and fraud, on the Company’s liquidity or capital positions, on risks posed by reliance on third-party service providers, on other aspects of the Company's business operations and on financial markets and economic growth; a change in spreads on interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities; regulatory supervision and oversight, including our relationship with regulators and any actions that may be initiated by our regulators; legislation affecting the financial services industry as a whole, and the Company and the Bank, in particular; the outcome of pending and future litigation and/or governmental proceedings, including the outcome of lawsuits related to the large nonperforming lending relationship; increasing price and product/service competition; the ability to continue to introduce competitive new products and services on a timely, cost-effective basis; managing our internal growth and acquisitions; the possibility that the anticipated benefits from acquisitions cannot be fully realized in a timely manner or at all, or that integrating acquired operations will be more difficult, disruptive or more costly than anticipated; the soundness of other financial institutions and any indirect exposure related to recent large bank failures and their impact on the broader market through other customers, suppliers and partners or that the conditions which resulted in the liquidity concerns with those failed banks may also adversely impact, directly or indirectly, other financial institutions and market participants with which the Company has commercial or deposit relationships with; material increases in costs and expenses; reliance on significant customer relationships; general economic or business conditions, including unemployment levels, continuing supply chain disruptions and slowdowns in economic growth; significant weakening of the local economies in which we operate; changes in customer behaviors, including consumer spending, borrowing and saving habits; changes in deposit flows and loan demand; our failure to attract or retain key employees; expansions or consolidations in the Company’s branch network, including that the anticipated benefits of the Company’s branch network optimization project are not fully realized in a timely manner or at all; deterioration of the housing market and reduced demand for mortgages; and re-emergence of turbulence in significant portions of the global financial and real estate markets that could impact our performance, both directly, by affecting our revenues and the value of our assets and liabilities, and indirectly, by affecting the economy generally and access to capital in the amounts, at the times and on the terms required to support our future businesses. Many of these factors, as well as other factors, are described in our filings with the SEC including in the “Risk Factors” section of the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023. All risk factors and uncertainties described herein and therein should be considered in evaluating the Company’s forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are based on beliefs and assumptions using information available at the time the statements are prepared. We caution you not to unduly rely on forward-looking statements because the assumptions, beliefs, expectations and projections about future events are expressed in or implied by a forward-looking statement may, and often do, differ materially from actual results. Any forward-looking statement speaks only as to the date on which it is made, and we undertake no obligation to update, revise or clarify any forward-looking statement to reflect developments occurring after the statement is made.


 
SECTION TITLE SLIDES 1 Overview 4-11 2 Financial Highlights 12-24 3 Asset Quality 25-31 4 Deposit Mix 32-34 5 Commercial Loans 35-44 6 Non-GAAP Reconciliation 45-50 3


 
OVERVIEW S E C T I O N 0 1


 
5 As of June 30, 2024 FOCUSED ON THE FUTURE 65 CORPORATE CENTERS BRANCHES ◦ Strong Deposit Growth in Q2 2024, 5.3%, annualized ◦ Strong and Improving Available Liquidity Position in Q2 2024, 195.7% available liquidity to uninsured deposits ◦ Diversified and granular deposit base, approximately 78.4% Retail Customers ◦ Approximately 82.8% of Deposits, including Collateralized Muni deposits are FDIC Insured ◦ Branch network expansion in strategic growth markets (Charlottesville and Raleigh) with Commercial and Retail Teams CORPORATE HIGHLIGHTS Carter Bank & Trust charter established in 2006 with the merger of ten banks Carter Bankshares, Inc. holding company established in Q4 2020 with the assets of Carter Bank & Trust Bank established denovo in 1974 as First National Bank of Rocky Mount, VA 1974 2006 2020 CORPORATE OFFICES IN VIRGINIA03 MARTINSVILLE, VIRGINIA LOANS $3.5B $4.5B ASSETS $3.9B DEPOSITS A Well-Capitalized Franchise with Momentum


 
6 L E A D E R S H I P T E A M Litz Van Dyke Chief Executive Officer 38 years in Industry 8 years at the Bank Bradford Langs President Chief Strategy Officer 37 years in Industry 7+ years at the Bank Wendy Bell Senior Executive Vice President Chief Financial Officer 39 years in Industry 7+ years at the Bank Loran Adams Tami Buttrey EVP Chief Retail Banking Officer 41 years in Industry 5+ years at the Bank Paul Carney EVP Chief Human Resources Officer 13 years in Industry 5+ years at the Bank Jane Ann Davis EVP Chief Administration Officer 40 years in Industry 40 years at the Bank Tony Kallsen SEVP Chief Credit Officer 33 years in Industry 6+ years at the Bank Phyllis Karavatakis SEVP Special Projects Executive 46 years in Industry 46 years at the Bank Richard Owen EVP Mortgage Banking & Corporate Sales Director 32 years in Industry 6+ years at the Bank Chrystal Parnell EVP Chief Marketing & Communications Officer 17 years in Industry 2+ years at the Bank Matt Speare SEVP Chief Operations Officer 22 years in Industry 6+ years at the Bank Rich Spiker SEVP Chief Lending Officer 35 years in Industry 6+ years at the Bank EVP Director of Regulatory Risk Management 40 years in Industry 8 years at the Bank


 
Branches in Metropolitan Statistical Areas 7 R E G I O N A L F O O T P R I N T V I R G I N I A N O R T H C A R O L I N A 53 BRANCHES TOTAL $3.4 DEPOSITS TOTAL BILLION Washington DC Roanoke Lynchburg Charlottesville Blacksburg- Christiansburg Non MSA VIRGINIA NORTH CAROLINA 12 BRANCHES TOTAL Charlotte Greensboro Raleigh Durham Fayetteville Non MSA $0.5 DEPOSITS TOTAL BILLION June 30, 2024 YEAR END BRANCHES 2018 105 2019 101 2020 92 2021 69 2022 66» » » » 2023 65» 2024 65» DOING MORE WITH LESS:


 
8 R E W A R D I N G R E L A T I O N S H I P S CMO 20% SBA 8% MBS 13% Nurturing Relationships and Rewarding Customers, Associates, and Shareholders Rewarding Relationships Regulators Customers Communities Associates Investors


 
CLASSES FACILITATED FOR 970 STUDENTS 9 * C O R P O R A T E & S O C I A L R E S P O N S I B I L I T Y Associates participated in the Juneteenth “Celebration of Freedom” event hosted by Fayette Area Historical Initiative ("FAHI"). The goal of FAHI is to collect, preserve and interpret the Fayette Street experience through recorded oral history, public forums and workshops, lectures, and other special programs. VOLUNTEER COMMUNITY SERVICE HOURS CHARITABLE DONATIONS & SPONSORSHIPS TO NONPROFITS Beginning January 1, 2024 through June 30, 2024. The United Way of Greater Greensboro presented Carter Bank with the Spirit of North Carolina Award, which celebrates organizations and individuals for their exemplary partnership demonstrated through fundraising, volunteering, outstanding leadership, and creative team building. Throughout the month of April, Associates provided children with financial education inspired Marvel comic books. This bank-wide program was in support of National Financial Literacy month.


 
• Investments in Human Capital & Technology Should Provide Operational Leverage Going Forward • Well Positioned in Virginia & North Carolina including Fast Growing Markets such as Charlottesville, Charlotte & Raleigh • Extraordinarily well-reserved with our other segment reserve for the largest lending relationship • Excluding the largest lending relationship, credit quality remains strong & underwriting remains conservative • Strong Liquidity & Capital Position • CET1 of 10.95% • ACL coverage of 2.72% • $1.3B of total available liquidity • 195.7% total available liquidity/ uninsured deposits Strong Conservative Financial Credit Performance Culture Attractive Executing Markets & Strategic Customers Objectives 10 I N V E S T M E N T H I G H L I G H T S ABS 10% SBA 8% As of June 30, 2024


 
11 S T R A T E G I C I N I T I A T I V E S E N H A N C E E X P A N DI N V E S T We will invest in human capital strategies to enhance the associate experience. We will continue to drive efficiency and process improvement across all levels of the organization, leveraging technology and automation. We will make significant investments in the new brand strategy working on updating and enhancing the image and reputation of the Bank. We will continue to enhance the transformational work that has been done over the past five years. We will focus on initiatives around enhancing technology, operations, customer experience, C&I, corporate & social responsibility, channel delivery, and product development. We will strengthen change management systems and leverage the Board’s ERM Committee. We will continue strategies to deepen existing relationships and acquire new relationships in current markets. We will focus on increasing market share in target growth markets. We will focus on expanding through organic growth and opportunistic acquisition. S U P E R I O R F I N A N C I A L P E R F O R M A N C E & O P E R A T I O N A L E X C E L L E N C E


 
12 8.46% ACL/Total Portfolio Loans 2 NPL/Portfolio Loans 1 Net Chg- offs/Portfolio Loans (YTD) 0.05% Delinquency/Port folio Loans S A F E T Y A N D S O U N D N E S S 2.72% 0.05% Asset Quality Earnings LiquidityCapital Return on Avg Assets (YTD)0.47% 5.99% NIM(FTE)(YTD)2.58% Core Efficiency Ratio (YTD)80.17% Highly Liquid Assets / Uninsured Deposits Highly Liquid Assets / Total Assets Total available liquidity / uninsured deposits 10.1% 195.7% Total Liquidity Sources 69.0% $1.3B Leverage Ratio Total Risk- based Capital Ratio Book Value 12.22% $15.79 Common Equity Tier 1 Ratio ("CET1") 9.43% 10.95% As of June 30, 2024 1 0.17% without the largest NPL relationship, see non-GAAP reconciliation 2 1.23% without the largest NPL relationship, see non-GAAP reconciliation Return on Avg Shareholders' Equity (YTD)


 
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS S E C T I O N 0 2


 
14 $ in thousands 2Q 2024 1Q 2024 QTD Q/Q Change % 2Q 2023 QTD Y/Y Change % Operational Results Net Interest Income $28,092 $28,419 (1.2) % $26,711 5.2 % Provision for Credit Losses 491 16 2,968.8 % 85 477.6 % (Recovery) Provision for Unfunded Commitments (236) (43) 448.8 % 360 (165.6) % Noninterest Income 5,533 5,045 9.7 % 5,028 10.0 % Noninterest Expense 27,446 26,257 4.5 % 25,536 7.5 % Income Tax Provision 1,121 1,423 (21.2) % 54 1975.9 % Net Income $4,803 $5,811 (17.3) % $5,704 (15.8) % Diluted Earnings Per Common Share $0.21 $0.25 (16.0) % $0.24 (12.5) % Balance Sheet Condition Assets $4,532,509 $4,554,946 (0.5) % $4,383,990 3.4 % Portfolio Loans 3,549,521 3,509,071 1.2 % 3,330,442 6.6 % Allowance for Credit Losses (96,686) (96,536) 0.2 % (94,144) 2.7 % Securities Available-for-Sale 746,325 768,832 (2.9) % 821,370 (9.1) % Equity Securities 5,063 — NM — NM Deposits 3,881,301 3,830,521 1.3 % 3,580,103 8.4 % Borrowings 238,000 310,500 (23.3) % 415,035 (42.7) % Shareholders' Equity 364,411 359,066 1.5 % 344,237 5.9 % B A L A N C E S H E E T & I N C O M E S T A T E M E N T 10.0% Noninterest Income up YoY (42.7)% Borrowings down YoY As of June 30, 2024 8.4% Deposits up YoY 5.2% Net Interest Income up YoY 6.6% Loan Growth YoY


 
2Q 2024 1Q 2024 QTD Q/Q Change % 2Q 2023 QTD Y/Y Change % Shareholder Ratios Diluted Earnings Per Share (QTD) $0.21 $0.25 (16.0)% $0.24 (12.5)% Financial Ratios Return on Avg Assets (QTD) 0.43 % 0.52 % (17.3)% 0.52 % (17.3)% Return on Avg Shareholders' Equity (QTD) 5.40 % 6.59 % (18.1)% 6.38 % (15.4)% Net Interest Margin (FTE)(QTD)1 2.56 % 2.60 % (1.5)% 2.54 % 0.8 % Efficiency Ratio (QTD)1 81.33 % 79.01 % 2.9 % 79.77 % 2.0 % Asset Quality Ratios NPL/Portfolio Loans 8.46 % 8.76 % (3.4)% 9.33 % (9.3)% NPA/Total Assets plus OREO 8.52 % 8.82 % (3.4)% 9.42 % (9.6)% ACL/Total Portfolio Loans 2.72 % 2.75 % (1.1)% 2.83 % (3.9)% Net Chg-offs/Portfolio Loans (QTD annualized) 0.04 % 0.06 % (33.3)% 0.08 % (50.0)% 15 F I N A N C I A L / S H A R E H O L D E R R A T I O S As of June 30, 2024 1 Non-GAAP Financial measure - see Non-GAAP reconciliation ◦ Net Interest Margin up YoY ◦ NPL to total portfolio loans declined QoQ and YoY due to $7.8M curtailment payments made by the Bank's largest NPL ◦ Net charge-offs declined QoQ and YoY HIGHLIGHTS


 
16 F I N A N C I A L P E R F O R M A N C E T R E N D S * *A loss of $57.7 million was recognized during the third quarter of 2020 related to a one-time charge resulting from goodwill impairment. This impairment charge reduced net income by $62.2 million, resulting in a net loss for the third quarter of 2020. Excluding the impairment charge of $62.2 million, net income would have been $16.3 million. 2 Net income for the six months ended June 30, 2024 is YTD annualized. 3 Non-GAAP Financial Measure - see Non-GAAP reconciliation 3 * 2 $16,334


 
17 As of June 30, 2024 1 During the second quarter of 2024, $1.4M of the other segment reserve release from the $7.8M curtailment payments resulted in a $0.04 per share increase in book value. 2 Non-GAAP Financial measure - see Non-GAAP reconciliation Regulatory Well Capitalized Carter Bankshares 06/30/2024 Excess ($) (In Thousands) 06/30/2024 Common Equity Tier 1 Ratio ("CET1") 6.50 % 10.95 % $ 176,449 Tier 1 Risk-based Ratio 8.00 % 10.95 % $ 117,004 Total Risk-based Capital Ratio 10.00 % 12.22 % $ 87,900 Leverage Ratio 5.00 % 9.43 % $ 203,907 Critically Undercapitalized Category Tangible equity to total assets ≤2% Capital Conservation Buffer ≥2.5%; composed of CET1 Focus on maintaining a strong regulatory capital position in excess of regulatory thresholds. Ensure capital levels are commensurate with the Company's risk profile and strategic plan objectives. Since December of 2021, 3.8 million shares have been repurchased at a total cost of $59.8 million at an average cost per share of $15.95. 10.95% TIER 1 TOTAL LEVERAGE C A P I T A L M A N A G E M E N T 12.22% 9.43% Actual ($) 06/30/2024 Cumulative AOCI impact 06/30/2024 Other Segment Reserve impact 06/30/2024 1 Book Value per Common Share $ 15.79 $ (3.02) $ (1.86) $(4.88) Adjusted Book Value 2 $ 20.67 REGULATORY CAPITAL


 
$ in thousands June 30, 2024 December 31, 2023 YoY Change Cash and Due From Banks, including Interest-bearing Deposits $ 61,746 $ 54,529 $ 7,217 FHLB Borrowing Availability1 669,474 480,266 189,208 Unsecured Lines of Credit 50,000 50,000 — Collateralized Lines of Credit 45,000 — 45,000 Unpledged Investment Securities 438,225 563,537 (125,312) Excess Pledged Securities 39,444 61,774 (22,330) Total Liquidity Sources $ 1,303,889 $ 1,210,106 $ 93,783 18 As of June 30, 2024 1 For the periods presented above, the Company maintained a secured FHLB Borrowing Facility with FHLB of Atlanta equal to 25% of the Bank's assets approximating $1.1 billion, with available borrowing capacity subject to the amount of eligible collateral pledged at any given time. Continue to maintain a strong liquidity position: • Ongoing FHLB collateral pledging1 • Maintain three unsecured lines of credit • Maintain one secured line of credit • Majority of bond portfolio is unpledged • Available sources to leverage unpledged bonds • Federal Reserve Discount Window • Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta • Secured Federal Funds Lines Strong coverage of uninsured deposits: • Total available liquidity / uninsured deposits 195.7% L I Q U I D I T Y $1.3B TOTAL AVAILABLE LIQUIDITY


 
19 For the Period Ending Variance $ in thousands 06/30/24 03/31/24 06/30/23 Quarter Year Commercial Real Estate $ 1,801,397 $ 1,728,929 $ 1,642,597 $ 72,468 $ 158,800 Commercial and Industrial 240,611 257,176 279,156 (16,565) (38,545) Residential Mortgages 783,903 788,125 707,893 (4,222) 76,010 Other Consumer 31,284 32,428 38,736 (1,144) (7,452) Construction 394,926 397,219 356,805 (2,293) 38,121 Other1 297,400 305,194 305,255 (7,794) (7,855) Total Portfolio Loans2 $ 3,549,521 $ 3,509,071 $ 3,330,442 $ 40,450 $ 219,079 L O A N C O M P O S I T I O N LOAN PORTFOLIO • Total loans increased $219.1M, or 6.58% YoY due to solid loan growth, primarily in the commercial real estate, residential mortgages and construction segments. • Year-to-date loan growth was muted by $80.0M in loan pay-offs of two large commercial real estate loans. 1 Other loans include unique risk attributes considered inconsistent with our current underwriting standards. 2 Total Portfolio Loans is net of loans held-for-sale and Loan Portfolio Segments are sourced from Fed. Call Codes (RC-C). 3 Loan growth for the quarter ended June 30, 2024 is annualized and $ in millions. CRE 51% C&I 7% Residential Mortgages 22% Other Consumer 1% Construction 11% Other 8% 3


 
20 L O A N P O R T F O L I O R E P R I C I N G & I N D E X 2Q 2024 1 Floating Rate Loans are defined as loans with contractual interest rate terms that allow the loan to reprice at lease once each month. 2 Variable Rate Loans are defined as loans with contractual interest rate terms that allow the loan to reprice at least once during the life of the loan agreement, but not more frequently than once per quarter. $ in millions 2 1 $3.55B $3.55B


 
21 For the Periods Ending Change % of Gross Loans % of RBC $ in thousands 06/30/24 12/31/23 1. Hospitality, Agriculture & Energy $ 294,140 $ 301,913 $ (7,773) 8.29% 60.75% 2. Health Care Facility / Long-Term Care 53,297 53,683 (386) 1.50% 11.01% 3. Retail Real Estate & Food Services 52,913 53,576 (663) 1.49% 10.93% 4. Warehouse 50,469 51,185 (716) 1.42% 10.42% 5. Retail 44,851 45,187 (336) 1.27% 9.26% 6. Hospitality 43,612 44,297 (685) 1.23% 9.01% 7. Multifamily 41,834 4,368 37,466 1.18% 8.64% 8. Office 40,529 40,603 (74) 1.14% 8.37% 9. Retail Real Estate 40,476 41,530 (1,054) 1.14% 8.36% 10. Multifamily 38,049 43,157 (5,108) 1.07% 7.85% Top Ten (10) Relationships $ 700,170 $ 679,499 $ 20,671 19.73% 144.60% Total Gross Loans $ 3,549,521 $ 3,505,910 $ 43,611 % of Total Gross Loans 19.73% 19.38% 0.35% Concentration (25% of RBC) $ 121,050 $ 121,231 T O P T E N ( 1 0 ) R E L A T I O N S H I P S ( T O T A L C O M M I T M E N T ) As of June 30, 2024


 
22 6/30/2024 12/31/2023 $ in thousands Amortized Cost Net Unrealized (Losses)/G ains Fair Value Amortized Cost Net Unrealized (Losses)/G ains Fair Value U.S. Government Agency Securities 30,288 (698) 29,590 44,185 (358) 43,827 Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities 108,898 (10,430) 98,468 110,726 (11,576) 99,150 Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities 24,679 (641) 24,038 31,578 (415) 31,163 Other Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities 24,287 (2,521) 21,766 24,522 (2,666) 21,856 Asset Backed Securities 143,208 (10,402) 132,806 150,832 (10,826) 140,006 Collateralized Mortgage Obligations 170,291 (11,109) 159,182 174,396 (12,863) 161,533 States and Political Subdivisions 263,134 (42,872) 220,262 263,557 (41,449) 222,108 Corporate Notes 70,750 (10,537) 60,213 70,750 (11,390) 59,360 Total Debt Securities 835,535 $ (89,210) $ 746,325 870,546 $ (91,543) $ 779,003 B O N D P O R T F O L I O BOND OVERVIEW • The bond portfolio is 100% available-for-sale. • Our portfolio consists of 46.9% of securities issued by United States government sponsored entities and carry an implicit government guarantee. • States and political subdivisions comprise 29.5% of the portfolio and are largely general obligation or essential purpose revenue bonds, which have performed very well historically over all business cycles, and are rated AA and AAA. • At June 30, 2024, the Company held 53.9% fixed rate and 46.1% floating rate securities. • The modest improvement in unrealized losses was largely due to bond maturities and amortizations, somewhat offset by price changes due to higher intermediate interest rates. • Securities comprise 16.5% of total assets at June 30, 2024. • Shorter maturity profile with an average life of 5.6 years; less interest rate risk with an effective duration of 4.3; and higher than peer book yield of 3.65%. CMO 21% Muni 30% ABS 9% SBA 6% Corporates 8%MBS 14% CMBS 11% As of June 30, 2024 1% Agencies & Treasuries


 
23 D E P O S I T C O M P O S I T I O N DEPOSIT STATISTICS • Total deposits increased $301.2M YoY • Diversified and granular deposit base, approximately 78.4% Retail Customers • Approximately 82.8% of Deposits, including Collateralized Muni deposits are FDIC Insured • Partnership with IntraFi for available coverage over $250K FDIC insured limit DDA - Int. Free 17% DDA - Int.- Bearing 15% Money Market 13% Savings 10% CDs 45% 1 Period end balances at June 30, 2024, $ in millions 1 For the Period Ending Variance $ in thousands 06/30/24 03/31/24 06/30/23 Quarter Year Lifetime Free Checking $ 653,296 $ 671,981 $ 689,224 $ (18,685) $ (35,928) Interest-Bearing Demand 565,465 515,614 489,971 49,851 75,494 Money Market 500,475 520,785 422,780 (20,310) 77,695 Savings 399,833 427,461 526,588 (27,628) (126,755) Certificates of Deposits 1,762,232 1,694,680 1,451,540 67,552 310,692 Total Deposits $3,881,301 $3,830,521 $3,580,103 $ 50,780 $ 301,198


 
24 D E P O S I T S Goal is to enhance and diversify funding sources with a focus on lower cost/core relationships (both retail and commercial): • Deposits currently stand at $3.9B • CD Portfolio ($1.8B) is relatively short with 92% of the portfolio scheduled to mature within 12 months and 97% of the portfolio scheduled to mature within 24 months, allowing for opportunities to lower deposit costs quickly when short term rates begin to ease • Multiple strategies are in place to grow all non maturity deposit accounts with a focus on lower cost of funds • Established product road map and working to expand deposit offerings for retail and commercial customers CDs DDA - Int. Free DDA - Int. Bearing Money Markets Savings Past Present Future 56% 45% 30% 15% 13%3% 10% Deposit Mix - 12/31/17 Deposit Mix - 6/30/24 Deposit Mix - Target 20% 10% 20% 7% 17% 25% 14% 15% As of June 30, 2024


 
ASSET QUALITY S E C T I O N 0 3


 
26 A S S E T Q U A L I T Y As of June 30, 2024, $ in millions 1 The Company placed commercial loans in the Other segment of the Company’s loan portfolio, relating to the Bank’s largest lending relationship which has a current principal balance of $294.1 million, on nonaccrual status due to loan maturities and failure to pay in full during the second quarter of 2023. $294 $2, $2, $1, $1 Q2 20241 Nonperforming Loan Breakdown $300 $3 Q2 20241 Nonperforming Assets 1 1 YE 2020 YE 2021 YE 2022 YE 2023 Q2 2024 NPL CRE $ 22 $ 3 $ 2 $ 1 $ 1 C&I 1 1 — — 1 Res. Mtg. 5 1 1 4 2 Other Consumer 4 2 4 — — Construction — — — 3 2 Other — — — 302 294 Total NPL $ 32 $ 7 $ 7 $ 310 $ 300 YE 2020 YE 2021 YE 2022 YE 2023 Q2 2024 NPA NPLs $ 32 $ 7 $ 7 $ 310 $ 300 OREO 16 11 8 2 3 Total NPA $ 48 $ 18 $ 15 $ 312 $ 303 1 1 1 11


 
27 D E L I N Q U E N C Y T R E N D S As of June 30, 2024, $ in thousands


 
28 D E L I N Q U E N C Y T R E N D S 1 Represents the Bank’s largest lending relationship with a current principal balance of $294.1 million placed on nonaccrual status during the second quarter of 2023. Note: Other Real Estate Owned was $2.5M as of Q2 2024. Note: Peers include BHB, CCBG, CHCO, CCNE, CTBI, FCBC, GSBC, HTBI, PEBO, PFIS, FRST, RBCA.A, SHBI, SMBK, SYBT, FBMS, UVSP. June 30, 2024 #s in thousands Current 30-89 Days Past Due NPL Total Portfolio Loans Commercial Real Estate $ 1,800,335 $ 451 $ 611 $ 1,801,397 Commercial and Industrial 239,464 63 1,084 240,611 Residential Mortgages 781,065 887 1,951 783,903 Other Consumer 30,912 342 30 31,284 Construction 392,500 — 2,426 394,926 Other1 3,260 — 294,140 297,400 Total $3,247,536 $ 1,743 $ 300,242 $3,549,521 ◦ The $294.1M commercial loans placed in "other" which comprises the largest lending relationship represents 98.0% of the total nonperforming loans ◦ Excluding the largest lending relationship, the Q2 2024 NPL & delinquency ratios are significantly better than peers (0.17% vs 0.63%) and (0.05% vs 0.19%) COMMENTARY:


 
29 Nonaccrual Balance Change Comments $ in thousands 06/30/24 12/31/23 1. Other 1 $ 294,140 $ 301,913 $ (7,773) Other 2. Residential Construction 2,090 2,090 — Residential Construction 3. Commercial & Industrial 1,065 — 1,065 Purchase Business Equipment 4. CRE 449 689 (240) Commercial Property 5. Residential 402 — 402 Residential Mortgage Loan 6. Residential — 825 (825) Residential Mortgage Loan 7. Residential — 1,142 (1,142) Residential Mortgage Loan 8. Construction — 808 (808) Residential Lot Developer Subtotal: Top Nonaccrual Loans 298,146 307,467 (9,321) Total Nonaccrual Loans 300,242 309,535 (9,293) Top Nonaccrual Loans / Total Nonaccrual Loans 99.30% 99.33% (0.03)% Total Portfolio Loans 3,549,521 3,505,910 43,611 Total Nonaccrual Loans / Total Portfolio Loans 8.46% 8.83% (0.37)% Total Nonaccrual Loans excluding "Other 1" / Total Portfolio Loans 0.17% 0.22% (0.05)% N O N P E R F O R M I N G R E L A T I O N S H I P S As of June 30, 2024 1 The Company placed commercial loans in the Other segment of the Company’s loan portfolio, relating to the Bank’s largest lending relationship which has a current principal balance of $294.1 million, on nonaccrual status due to loan maturities and failure to pay in full during the second quarter of 2023.


 
30 L O A N P O R T F O L I O - R I S K R A T I N G S 8 As of June 30, 2024, $ in millions 1 The Company placed $301.9 million of commercial loans in the Other segment of the Company’s loan portfolio, relating to the Bank’s largest lending relationship which has a current principal balance of $294.1 million, on nonaccrual status due to loan maturities and failure to pay in full during the second quarter of 2023. 1 10 15 4 1 1 1 1


 
31 A C L, N E T C H A R G E - O F F S & P R O V I S I O N E X P E N S E 2 As of June 30, 2024, $ in thousands 1 Included in 2021 is the $61.6 million Day 1 adjustment related to the adoption ASU No. 2016-13, “Financial Instruments – Credit Losses (Topic 326): Measurement of Credit Losses on Financial Instruments”. 2 YTD Net charge-offs for 2021 consist of $9.2 million for nine sold loans that were a part of two relationships in 3Q21 and $6.3 million and $1.9 million in 2Q21 for the resolution of our two largest nonperforming credits, which were previously reserved. 3 The individually evaluated loans increased $53.6 million during the second quarter of 2023 due to our largest lending relationship, that was previously reserved in general reserves within the Other segment, moved to nonperforming status and is currently individually evaluated. 1 3


 
DEPOSIT MIX S E C T I O N 0 4


 
33 D E P O S I T S 1 Period end balances, at June 30, 2024, $ in millions 2 Collateralized Muni deposits are FDIC insured up to $250,000. All balances in excess of $250,000 are fully collateralized with eligible securities 1 2 • Well-diversified deposit base of 213,310 customers – average commercial deposit account balance is $45.9K – average retail deposit account balance is $14.9K • Deposit mix of 78.4% Consumer / 21.6% Business • At June 30, 2024, the Bank had no deposit relationships greater than, or equal to, 2.5% of total deposits. • Partnership with IntraFi for available coverage over $250K FDIC insured limit. 5%


 
34 N E T I N T E R E S T I N C O M E 1 2 Average balances, as of June 30, 2024, $ in millions 1 Cost of Funds incorporates the free funds contribution with the rate on total interest-bearing liabilities to illustrate the impact of noninterest-bearing liabilities on the overall cost of funds. 2 Computed on a fully taxable equivalent basis (FTE) using 21% federal income tax statutory rate for 2020 through 2024. 2 2


 
COMMERCIAL LOANS S E C T I O N 0 5


 
36 C R E S E G M E N T O V E R V I E W As of June 30, 2024, $ in millions 1 Other CRE & Other Commercial Segments include, but are not limited to, Special / Limited Use, Church, Mobile Home Park, Gas Station, Self-Storage Facilities & Auto Shops 2 Includes restaurant loans of $36.1 million By Collateral Type Total CRE: $2,444.7 2 1 Total CRE, excluding "Other": $2,223.3 2 2 1 1


 
37 H O S P I T A L I T Y M E T R I C S As of June 30, 2024 *Relates to the Company's largest lending relationship. 1 Commitment Level • Total portfolio balance $361.3M • Geographic diversification (see map) • Mean loan size in portfolio $6.1M1 • Median of loans in portfolio $4.2M1 • The largest loan in portfolio $51.6M1 • 11.64% are under construction1 • Top 10 borrowers make up 44.25% of the total hospitality commitment1 • No delinquent loans in the hospitality portfolio1 • 12.48% are in nonaccrual status • There are 12.48%* loans in the hospitality portfolio that are adversely classified or NPL1 • 92.21% of hospitality portfolio is funded1 4.78 RISK RATING LTV DEBT/KEY 52.5% $92K AVERAGE


 
38 H O S P I T A L I T Y M E T R I C S As of June 30, 2024, $ in thousands Category Hospitality Portfolio Balance Percentage of Total Balance Hospitality Commitment Balance Weighted Avg. Commitment LTV Avg. GL Balance Size Avg. of Debt per Key - Total Commitment Hilton $124,513 34.5 % $149,475 61.4 % $8,301 $112 IHG 88,493 24.5 100,436 55.4 5,205 92 Upscale Independent/Boutique 61,594 17.0 61,594 29.2 20,531 84 Wyndham 23,753 6.6 23,753 58.3 2,375 41 Marriott 21,022 5.8 35,722 48.4 4,204 79 Independent 15,353 4.2 15,412 51.8 2,559 151 Radisson 10,894 3.0 10,894 51.8 2,723 37 Best Western 7,921 2.2 7,921 37.7 1,980 18 Choice 7,782 2.2 7,782 49.8 1,946 30 Hospitality Totals $361,325 100.0 % $412,989 52.5 % $5,536 $92 Category Hospitality Portfolio Balance Percentage of Total Balance Hospitality Commitment Balance Weighted Avg. Commitment LTV Avg. GL Balance Size Avg. of Debt per Key - Total Commitment North Carolina $175,328 48.5 % $215,944 56.0 % $4,614 $93 South Carolina 75,873 21.0 86,863 61.1 6,898 102 West Virginia 55,878 15.5 55,878 24.5 18,626 69 Virginia 43,621 12.1 43,679 53.6 3,116 104 Georgia 10,625 2.9 10,625 56.1 5,312 62 Hospitality Totals $361,325 100.0 % $412,989 52.5 % $7,713 $92


 
39 M U L T I F A M I L Y M E T R I C S As of June 30, 2024 1Commitment Level • Total portfolio balance $373.1M • Geographic diversification (see map) • Mean loan size in portfolio $3.1M1 • Median of loans in portfolio $224K1 • The largest loan in portfolio $35.5M1 • 42.87% are under construction1 • Top 10 borrowers make up 60.26% of the total multifamily commitment1 • There are no loans in the portfolio that are delinquent1 • There are no loans in the portfolio that are considered NPL1 • 1.82% of the portfolio is considered adversely classified1 • 91.12% of portfolio is funded1 4.72 RISK RATING LTV DEBT/DOOR 52.9% $99K AVERAGE


 
40 M U L T I F A M I L Y M E T R I C S As of June 30, 2024, $ in thousands (1) The Other category consists of multifamily properties for which we do not have the data. Category Multifamily Portfolio Balance Percentage of Total Balance Multifamily Commitment Balance Weighted Avg. Commitment LTV Avg. GL Balance Size Avg. of Debt per Door - Total Commitment Multifamily $291,227 78.1 % $403,346 52.0 % $3,686 $110 Student 71,791 19.2 71,792 63.0 7,788 51 Other(1) — — 50 — — — Participations in Affordable Housing 10,109 2.7 10,928 19.3 191 13 Multifamily Totals $373,127 100.0 % $486,116 52.9 % $2,916 $99 Category Multifamily Portfolio Balance Percentage of Total Balance Multifamily Commitment Balance Weighted Avg. Commitment LTV Avg. GL Balance Size Avg. of Debt per Door - Total Commitment Multifamily North Carolina $151,800 40.7 % $225,541 50.8 % $2,530 $117 South Carolina 39,308 10.5 46,342 52.1 1,572 119 Virginia 110,227 29.5 142,441 51.4 2,250 87 Student Housing Virginia 50,131 13.5 50,131 61.0 5,570 56 South Carolina 19,780 5.3 19,780 68.9 19,780 41 North Carolina 1,881 0.5 1,881 52.3 1,881 8 Multifamily Totals $373,127 100.0 % $486,116 52.9 % $5,597 $99


 
41 R E T A I L M E T R I C S As of June 30, 2024 ** Excludes restaurant loans of $36.1 million 1Commitment Level • Total portfolio balance $422.9M** • Geographic diversification (see map) • Mean loan size in portfolio $2.8M1 • Median of loans in portfolio $1.1M1 • The largest loan in portfolio $28M1 • 15.43% are under construction1 • Top 10 borrowers make up 36.59% of the total retail commitment1 • 0.07% of the portfolio1 is considered delinquent • 0.01% of this portfolio are considered adversely classified1 • 0.01% are in NPL status1 • 95.03% of retail portfolio is funded1 4.28 RISK RATING LTV DEBT/SQ FT 56.2% $133 AVERAGE


 
42 R E T A I L M E T R I C S As of June 30, 2024, $ in thousands (1) Excludes restaurant loans of $36.1 million (2) A Power Center is a large outdoor shopping mall that usually includes three or more "Big Box" stores. Category Retail Portfolio Balance Percentage of Total Balance Retail Commitment Balance Weighted Avg. Commitment LTV Avg. GL Balance Size Avg. of Debt per Square Ft- Total Commitment Anchored Strip Centers $228,745 54.1 % $238,335 59.5 % $4,973 $121 Unanchored Strip Centers 87,819 20.8 103,762 49.4 1,597 168 Outparcels/Single Tenant 75,725 17.9 82,284 53.0 1,306 136 Power Centers 28,126 6.6 28,804 63.2 9,375 105 Big Box 2,464 0.6 2,465 46.1 821 43 Retail Totals $422,879 100.0 % $455,650 56.2 % $3,614 $133 Category Retail Portfolio Balance Percentage of Total Balance Retail Commitment Balance Weighted Avg. Commitment LTV Avg. GL Balance Size North Carolina $252,354 59.7 % $279,997 52.7 % $2,835 Virginia 88,361 20.9 88,361 64.1 1,767 Georgia 34,083 8.1 36,715 64.1 4,260 South Carolina 23,605 5.6 26,101 49.9 1,686 Ohio 10,610 2.5 10,610 58.6 10,610 Florida 9,895 2.3 9,895 76.7 9,895 Maryland 3,581 0.8 3,581 32.6 3,581 West Virginia 390 0.1 390 47.2 389 Retail Totals $422,879 100.0 % $455,650 56.2 % $4,378


 
43 O F F I C E M E T R I C S As of June 30, 2024 1Commitment Level • Total portfolio balance $223.7M • Geographic diversification (see map) • Mean loan size in portfolio $1.84M1 • Median of loans in portfolio $376K1 • The largest loan in portfolio $23M1 • 4.30% are under construction1 • Top 10 borrowers make up 57.61% of the total office commitment1 • 0.08% of this segment is delinquent1 • 0.38% of loans are primarily rated special mention1 • 0.38% are in NPL status1 • 95.11% of office portfolio is funded1 4.30 RISK RATING DEBT/SQ FT $113 AVERAGE


 
44 O F F I C E M E T R I C S As of June 30, 2024, $ in thousands Category Office Portfolio Balance Percentage of Total Balance Office Commitment Balance Avg. GL Balance Size Avg. of Debt per Square Ft- Total Commitment General Office Space $190,575 85.2 % $208,107 $ 2,049 $117 Medical Offices 24,550 11.0 26,123 1,534 82 Veterinary Offices 7,576 3.4 13,543 379 102 Law Offices 992 0.4 992 165 63 Office Totals $223,693 100.0 % $248,765 $ 1,032 $113 Category Office Portfolio Balance Percentage of Total Balance Office Commitment Balance Avg. GL Balance Size Avg. of Debt per Square Ft- Total Commitment Virginia $103,466 46.3 % $106,520 $1,916 $100 North Carolina 65,719 29.4 81,917 1,264 117 South Carolina 30,707 13.7 35,446 10,236 134 Maryland 6,725 3.0 6,725 6,725 123 Georgia 3,966 1.8 5,048 991 172 Tennessee 3,089 1.4 3,089 1,544 55 West Virginia 2,448 1.1 2,448 816 70 Ohio 1,951 0.9 1,951 976 108 Michigan 1,670 0.7 1,670 418 126 Conneticut 1,365 0.6 1,365 455 94 Vermont 942 0.4 942 471 167 Illinois 533 0.2 533 533 133 Maine 378 0.2 377 377 158 Indiana 295 0.1 295 295 46 Kentucky 236 0.1 236 236 75 Florida 203 0.1 203 203 77 Office Totals $223,693 100.0 % $248,765 $1,716 $113


 
NON-GAAP RECONCILIATION S E C T I O N 0 6


 
46 N O N - G A A P S T A T E M E N T Statements in this exhibit include non-GAAP financial measures and should be read along with the accompanying tables in our definitions and reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures. Management uses, and this exhibit references, the efficiency ratio, the adjusted book value, net interest income and net interest margin, each on a fully taxable equivalent, or FTE, basis, which are non-GAAP financial measures. Management believes the efficiency ratio, adjusted book value, net interest income and net interest margin on an FTE basis provide information useful to investors in understanding our underlying business, operational performance and performance trends as they facilitate comparisons with the performance of other companies in the financial services industry. Although management believes that these non-GAAP financial measures enhance investors’ understanding of our business and performance, these non-GAAP financial measures should not be considered alternatives to GAAP or considered to be more important than financial results determined in accordance with GAAP, nor are they necessarily comparable with non- GAAP measures which may be presented by other companies.


 
47 N O N - G A A P R E C O N C I L I A T I O N Net Interest Income (FTE) (Non-GAAP) Quarter-to-Date (Dollars in Thousands) 2Q 2024 1Q 2024 2Q 2023 Interest Income (FTE)(Non-GAAP) Interest and Dividend Income (GAAP) $ 54,583 $ 54,049 $ 43,716 Tax Equivalent Adjustment 3 197 206 257 Interest and Dividend Income (FTE) (Non-GAAP) 54,780 54,255 43,973 Average Earning Assets 4,437,077 4,429,020 4,261,652 Yield on Interest-earning Assets (GAAP) 4.95 % 4.91 % 4.11 % Yield on Interest-earning Assets (FTE) (Non-GAAP) 4.97 % 4.93 % 4.14 % Net Interest Income (GAAP) $ 28,092 $ 28,419 $ 26,711 Tax Equivalent Adjustment 3 197 206 257 Net Interest Income (FTE) (Non-GAAP) 28,289 28,625 26,968 Average Earning Assets 4,437,077 4,429,020 4,261,652 Net Interest Margin (GAAP) 2.55 % 2.58 % 2.51 % Net Interest Margin (FTE) (Non-GAAP) 2.56 % 2.60 % 2.54 % 3 Computed on a fully taxable equivalent basis ("FTE") using a 21% federal income tax rate for the 2024 and 2023 periods. Net interest income (FTE) (non-GAAP) and total Interest and dividend income (FTE) (non-GAAP) , which are used in computing net interest margin (FTE) (non-GAAP), and adjusted efficiency ratio (non-GAAP), respectively, provide valuable additional insight into the net interest margin and the efficiency ratio by adjusting for differences in tax treatment of interest income sources. The entire FTE adjustment is attributable to interest income on earning assets, which is used in computing yield on earning assets. Interest expense and the related cost of interest-bearing liabilities and cost of funds ratios are not affected by the FTE components.


 
48 Adjusted Efficiency Ratio (Non-GAAP) Quarter-to-Date (Dollars in Thousands) 2Q 2024 1Q 2024 2Q 2023 Noninterest Expense $ 27,446 $ 26,257 $ 25,536 Less: Losses on Sales and Write-downs of Branch Premises, net (44) (1) (33) Less: Gains on Sales and Write-downs of OREO, net 8 342 5 Adjusted Noninterest Expense (Non-GAAP) $ 27,410 $ 26,598 $ 25,508 Net Interest Income $ 28,092 $ 28,419 $ 26,711 Plus: Taxable Equivalent Adjustment3 197 206 257 Net Interest Income (FTE) (Non-GAAP) $ 28,289 $ 28,625 $ 26,968 Less: Gains on Sales of Securities, net (36) — (3) Less: OREO Income (20) (8) (18) Noninterest Income 5,533 5,045 5,028 Net Interest Income (FTE) (Non-GAAP) plus Noninterest Income $ 33,703 $ 33,662 $ 31,975 Efficiency Ratio (GAAP) 81.62 % 78.46 % 80.46 % Adjusted Efficiency Ratio (Non-GAAP) 81.33 % 79.01 % 79.77 % N O N - G A A P R E C O N C I L I A T I O N 3 Computed on a fully taxable equivalent basis ("FTE") using a 21% federal income tax rate for the 2024 and 2023 periods. Net interest income (FTE) (non-GAAP) and total Interest and dividend income (FTE) (non-GAAP) , which are used in computing net interest margin (FTE) (non- GAAP) , and adjusted efficiency ratio (non-GAAP), respectively, provide valuable additional insight into the net interest margin and the efficiency ratio by adjusting for differences in tax treatment of interest income sources. The entire FTE adjustment is attributable to interest income on earning assets, which is used in computing yield on earning assets. Interest expense and the related cost of interest- bearing liabilities and cost of funds ratios are not affected by the FTE components. The adjusted efficiency ratio (non-GAAP) excludes gains on sales and write-downs of OREO, net, the gains on sales of securities, net, losses on sales and write-downs of bank premises, net, and OREO income. This measure is similar to the measure utilized by the Company when analyzing corporate performance and is also similar to the measure utilized for incentive compensation. The Company believes this adjusted measure provides investors with important information about the combined economic results of the Company's operations.


 
49 N O N - G A A P R E C O N C I L I A T I O N Adjusted Book Value (Non-GAAP) Quarter-to-Date Q2 2024 (Dollars in Thousands) Adjusted Book Value (Non-GAAP) Total Shareholders' Equity 0 0$ 364,411 Add: AOCI 69,633 Add: Other Segment Reserve Release, net of tax 42,718 Total Shareholders' Equity, excluding AOCI and segment reserve release (Non-GAAP) $ 476,762 Common Shares Outstanding at End of Period 23,072,750 Book Value (GAAP) $ 15.79 Adjusted Book Value (Non-GAAP) $ 20.67 The adjusted book value ratio excludes accumulated other comprehensive loss and adds back the other segment reserve release, net of tax. The Company believes this adjusted measure enables investors to assess the Company's capital levels and capital adequacy without the effects of changes in accumulated other comprehensive income ("AOCI") and the other segment reserve, some of which are uncertain and difficult to predict, or assuming that the Company realized all the previously unrealized losses on available-for-sale securities at the end of the period or the hypothetical release of the other segment reserve.


 
50 N O N - G A A P R E C O N C I L I A T I O N Adjusted Nonperforming Loans ("NPL") to Total Portfolio Loans (Non-GAAP) Quarter-to-Date Q2 2024 (Dollars in Thousands) Adjusted NPLs (Non-GAAP) Total NPL 0 0$ 300,242 Less: Bank's Largest Lending Relationship 294,140 Total NPL, excluding Bank's Largest Lending Relationship (Non-GAAP) $ 6,102 Total Portfolio Loans $ 3,549,521 NPL to Total Portfolio Loans (GAAP) 8.46 % Adjusted NPL to Total Portfolio Loans (Non-GAAP) 0.17 % Adjusted Allowance for Credit Losses ("ACL") to Total Portfolio Loans (Non-GAAP) Quarter-to-Date Q2 2024 (Dollars in Thousands) Adjusted ACL (Non-GAAP) Total ACL 0 0$ 96,686 Less: Bank's Largest Lending Relationship Reserve 52,916 Total ACL, excluding Bank's Largest Lending Relationship Reserve (Non-GAAP) $ 43,770 Total Portfolio Loans $ 3,549,521 ACL to Total Portfolio Loans (GAAP) 2.72 % Adjusted ACL to Total Portfolio Loans (Non-GAAP) 1.23 %


 
v3.24.2
Cover
Jul. 29, 2024
Cover [Abstract]  
Document Type 8-K
Document Period End Date Jul. 29, 2024
Entity Registrant Name CARTER BANKSHARES, INC.
Entity Incorporation, State or Country Code VA
Entity File Number 001-39731
Entity Tax Identification Number 85-3365661
Entity Address, Address Line One 1300 Kings Mountain Road
Entity Address, City or Town Martinsville
Entity Address, State or Province VA
Entity Address, Postal Zip Code 24112
City Area Code 276
Local Phone Number 656-1776
Written Communications false
Soliciting Material false
Pre-commencement Tender Offer false
Pre-commencement Issuer Tender Offer false
Title of 12(b) Security Common Stock, $1.00 par value
Trading Symbol CARE
Security Exchange Name NASDAQ
Entity Emerging Growth Company false
Entity Central Index Key 0001829576
Document Fiscal Period Focus
Document Fiscal Year Focus
Amendment Flag false

Carter Bankshares (NASDAQ:CARE)
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