Image source: The Motley Fool. Great Southern Bancorp Inc (NASDAQ: GSBC)Q3 2020 Earnings CallOct 22, 2020, 3:00 p.m. ETContents: Prepared Remarks Questions and Answers Call Participants Prepared Remarks: OperatorLadies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Great Southern Bancorp, Inc. Third Quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]I would now like to hand the conference over to your host today, Kelly Polonus, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.Kelly Polonus -- Director of Corporate Communications & MarketingThank you, Sara. Good afternoon, and welcome. I hope everyone is well. The purpose of this call is to discuss the Company's results for the quarter ending September 30, 2020.Before we begin, I need to remind you that during the course of this call, we may be making forward-looking statements about future events and future financial performance. Please see the forward-looking statements disclosure in our third quarter 2020 earnings release for more information. President and CEO, Joe Turner and Chief Financial Officer, Rex Copeland are on this call with me today.I'll now turn the call over to Joe.Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICEROkay, thank you. Good afternoon. I also would like to thank everybody for joining us today and I hope everyone on our call is well also. As we manage through the pandemic, now in its seventh month, we remain focused on the well-being of our associates, customers and communities. I believe our associates are doing a tremendous job of serving our customers through this difficult time.As we said last quarter, we are actively working with any customers who may be experiencing financial hardships caused by this pandemic. While there is still a lot of uncertainty about the months ahead, we are ready to respond to the challenges produced by the health crisis and are in a position of strength to do so with our strong capital, earnings and liquidity. I'll provide some brief remarks about the company's performance during the quarter and then I'll turn the call over to Rex Copeland who will get into more detail on our financial results. Then we'll open it up for questions.As expected in this operating time, our earnings declined in the third quarter as compared to the year ago quarter. Still, we achieved very good earnings of $0.96 per diluted common share in the third quarter. The primary driver of our earnings decline when comparing it to the year-ago period were number 1, a higher loan loss provision, but 100% or almost 100% of that provision went to grow our allowance for loan loss as we had very low charge-offs during the quarter. We did have a lower net interest income than the year-ago quarter, I think by about maybe $1,800,000 or so, over half of that though was attributable to the result or the effects of the sub-debt that we issued at the end of the second quarter.We had higher non-interest expense, which also affected us, which included $1.1 million related to special bonuses for our associates. As I mentioned earlier, our associates are doing a tremendous job for the company. We know that this is resulting in unprecedentedly -- unprecedented hard times for our associates. Many of our associates have school age children and they're dealing with virtual schools and some of our associates have spouses that have lost their jobs, which is very difficult, we can't solve all their problems, but we do want to show that we're in the boat with them and that's what the special bonus was for.Our performance metrics for the third quarter were good. Our annualized return on common equity and I might add, very high levels of common equity was 8.48%, our annualized return on assets was 0.98%, our annualized reported net interest margin was 3.36% and our efficiency ratio was 59.64%. Our commercial lending production did decline in the third quarter as a result of activity in our markets being a little bit slowed. Retail mortgage lending production has been very strong, continues to be very strong, driven by low interest rates. We typically sell the majority of the fixed-rate mortgages that we produce.Total gross loans, which include unfunded loan amount increased $229.6 million since the end of 2019, but decreased about $11 million during the third quarter. Outstanding net loan balances increased about $260 million from the end of the year and increased $14 million from the end of the second quarter. Our committed pipeline continues to be relatively steady, and was about $1.2 billion at the end of September, a decrease of about $70 million since the end of last quarter.The unfunded portion of our commercial construction loans is about $715 million, a decline of $39 million from the end of June. I would remind you, if you're interested in more information on our loan portfolio we file our loan portfolio presentation each quarter and I think our third quarter presentation was filed yesterday.Asset quality is very, very strong through, September 30, 2020 our non-performing assets are $5.5 million -- as of September 30, 2020, our non-performing assets were $5.5 million. Total net charge-offs during the quarter were $63,000, as I said almost exclusively on our indirect automobile portfolio. We actually had net recoveries, I think, in the commercial categories.One other thing I would mention is our internal loans classification watchlist totals. At June 30, 2020, our loans classified as sub-standard were $9.3 million and loans classified as watch were $73.8 million. At September 30, 2020, our loans classified as sub-standard were $7.5 million and the watch category was down to $64.4 million. The decrease during the third quarter were due to two sub-standard loans that paid off and some payments received on watch category credit.As I mentioned earlier, we fully understand that the difficulties we are in right now will likely persist, and will result in difficult economic conditions as well. So we have been increasing our allowance for loan losses. We've increased it by nearly $14 million since the end of 2019. As a reminder, our provision for loan losses is currently under the incurred loss methodology, we -- had we adopted CECL on January 1, we would have put $11 million to $14 million in our allowance at that time and I think our current expectation would be that at the end of the year, we would put a similar amount into our allowance. And as a reminder that won't flow through earnings that will be a cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle and will be a direct debit to our equity and a credit to the allowance.Loan modifications. At the end of June, we had over $1 billion of loan modifications, that's down to $395.5 million at the end of September, 70% of those are paying interest-only. So the modification was to remove the requirement to pay principal for some period of time, up to maybe a year, but all different times really, three months, six months, and then 7 to 12 months.Our capital continue to be very strong, as I mentioned. From the end of 2019, our total common stockholders' equity increased by about $22 million and our book value -- tangible book value per share increased by $2.71. Our book value increased from $44.50 to $45, at -- $45 at the end of the third quarter, it was $44.50 at the end of the second quarter. Our tangible common equity to tangible assets is very strong as well at 11.4%.During the quarter, we did repurchase 206,400 shares of common stock at an average price of $37.39 per share. Additionally, we paid a $0.34 per share dividend. In spite of the obvious economic challenges caused by COVID, we expect that we will continue to operate profitably, albeit not at 2019 levels and we currently anticipate that our regular quarterly dividend can be maintained for the foreseeable future.Our Board of Directors have approved a new stock purchase program of up to 1 million shares and we may continue to repurchase our common stock over the next several quarters, if conditions warrant. The amount and timing of stock repurchases will be determined by the company in light of overall capital and earnings level, credit quality metrics and the market for our stock and with both -- and we will always maintain open communications regarding our plans with our holding company and bank regulators. And prior to sort of recommencing our stock repurchase program, we did have those conversations with our holding company regulators over the course of about two or three weeks, we're not required to seek the permission of the Federal Reserve in order to repurchase our stock, but we wanted them to know what we were doing. And at the end of those conversations, they said that they had no objection to us repurchasing our stock in the manner that we were doing it.So that concludes my prepared remarks. I'll turn the call over to our CFO, Rex Copeland at this time.Rex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERThank you, Joe. I must start today by speaking a little bit about net interest income and margin. Our net interest income for the third quarter of 2020 decreased about $1.7 million to $44.2 million, that compares to about $45.9 million for the third quarter of 2019. The net interest income was affected negatively by, of course, the Federal Reserve significant rate cuts that were happened in March. We also had some additional lower earning assets, the SBA's paycheck protection program loans, some investment security purchases and also increased balances that we hold at the Federal Reserve and cash and cash equivalents. And then also more recently in this quarter by the cost of the sub-debt that we issued in mid-to-late June.The core net interest margin, if you exclude the yield accretion from our acquired loan pools was 3.27% for the third quarter this year, that compares to 3.75% for the third quarter in 2019 and is the same 3.27% as where we were in the second quarter of 2020. The decrease, as a result of the same things I talked about previously. The one thing that is a little different when you compare Q2 this year to Q3, we did have about on annualized basis, about 8 basis points related to our cost of the sub-debt that we issued in June. So if you look at that on the core comparison, we were at 3.27% in Q2, 3.27% in Q3, but we had 8 basis points of headwind from the sub-debt cost.So we said on previous discussions and filings that the rate cuts would negatively affect our net interest income and margin in the near-term because we have a lot of loans that are indexed to LIBOR. But over the course of the next several months in a few quarters, a lot of our liabilities are time deposits and some of our non-time deposits would reprice lower and that in fact is what we've been seeing in the last quarter or two.If you look back and see where our cost of interest bearing deposits was at second quarter compared to third quarter, our third quarter number was 21 basis points below where we were in the second quarter and we were 62 basis points lower than we were in the fourth quarter of 2019. So our deposit cost continue to come down and we anticipate based on maturities that are coming up in the next couple of quarters, that we will continue to be able -- assuming rates stay where they are right now, we will continue to be able to reduce those deposit costs, maybe not quite as rapidly as we did in the last couple of quarters, but we still, we should see some improvement there on the cost of fund side.We are still having a little bit of impact, positive impact on our net interest margin and income related to the yield accretion on our FDIC acquired loans. That impact in the third quarter of this year was about 9 basis points. We've got about $2.9 million remaining in the unaccreted portion that's going to come into income over the next several quarters. About $930,000 of that will -- should come in to income in the fourth quarter of this year.Non-interest income for the quarter increased about $811,000 to $9.5 million when you compare it to the same quarter in 2019. A lot of that increase came in the form of gain on loan sales. Joe mentioned earlier, we originated a lot of fixed rate, single-family loans. We typically sell those loans in the secondary market, and our gain on sale was about $1.9 million higher in Q3 this year compared to the same quarter a year ago. So quite a lot of originations there and income derived from that as we sold those loans.Service charges, debit card fees, ATM fees, we continue to see a decrease there compared to the prior year, about $927,000 this quarter compared to the year ago quarter. We're seeing that kind of across a variety of things. Overdraft, insufficient fund fees were lower. Customers had opted to -- they're not using those services as much as they were. So our utilization of that is down some -- a little bit of probably also in the second and third quarter of this year, we were pretty proactive in waiving fees and things like that for customers, as part of things that were going on during the pandemic. And I would say in the middle or late part of third quarter, we were probably not waiving as many fees and things like that now, as we were earlier in the year.So I think toward the end of the third quarter that fee income sort of picked up a little bit from there. Also we've seen a little bit less usage and income from our debit card and ATM fees that may start to again expand too, but we kind of saw a little bit of a low there in the middle of the year for that.Other income decreased actually compared to the year ago quarter, about $442,000. We had a larger amount of originations of interest rate swap deals with our loan customers in the year ago quarter compared to where we were this year. Those tend to be a little bit sporadic, we have them throughout the year that's not always at the same time and the same magnitude at each quarter.Non-interest expense, non-interest expense increased $3.3 million to $32 million this year -- this quarter compared to the same quarter in 2019. The largest portion of that was an increase in salary and employee benefits we're up $2.9 million compared to the prior year quarter. The largest part of that increase was, as Joe mentioned, the bonus that we elected to pay to our employees that was about $1.1 million of the increase. We also had probably compared to last year about $700,000 or so higher level of the compensation both salary and incentive and additional people in the mortgage area. So that income that I talked about a minute ago, we did have some offset to that in the form of compensation to the producers and servicers in that area.We've also had a few people out as part -- because they've got exposure to COVID or things like that, they're quarantining at home and we are continuing to pay people in regard to that. And so we have some cost associated with that with people part -- people having to fill in people that we normally wouldn't necessarily be paying but we -- if they are off because of quarantine, we do continue to pay them. So there is a $200,000 or so probably in there, may be a little more that relates to that.So those are the main drivers and then the rest of it, probably 3% to 4% of it is just from a year ago normal merit increases and things of that nature.Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERAnd I think too, Rex, we did have additional insurance costs because we're -- we no longer have the credit on...Rex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERRight.Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICEROn our FDIC insurance.Rex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERRight. We had a full credit, I think last year and then this year, we have set a partial credit and we had to start paying the full amount again...Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERRight.Rex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERThis year. So that's why the insurance cost was higher, occupancy expense was also higher than it was a year ago about $530,000. Some of that was depreciation, we rolled out some new ATM/ITM units late in the -- or in the fourth quarter last year and we've got the depreciation on those is higher this year. Also, just another repairs and maintenance things that occurred in the third quarter were $250,000 or so of it. So we just -- those are the costs that increase the occupancy line.The -- one last thing in non-interest expense, expense on other real estate own and repossessions was lowered by about $400,000 compared to the prior year period. We just -- we've been -- we're doing a good job I think of working down that foreclosed assets that we have the repossessed autos are much lower level than they would have been in last couple of years. So we just got less cost associated with foreclosed real estate and with the repossession of autos and auto portfolio.As mentioned before, our efficiency ratio for this quarter was 59.64% that compared to 52.63% in the third quarter of last year. The higher efficiency ratio is mainly due to the higher level of non-interest expense that I mentioned, some of the reasons that I talked about. Also, we had small decrease in total revenue. Non-interest income was higher, but net interest income was little bit lower.So, despite these increases in cost, our non-interest expense to average assets remained at 2.34% for the quarter this year versus the quarter last year. Assets continue to grow as we talked about and the average assets for this three month period were about $550 million higher or about 11% higher than they were in third quarter of last year.Just a couple of last things I will mention as we wrap up, income taxes, we had a little bit higher than normal effective tax rate in the third quarter 2020, as a little bit higher year-to-date. We have got state taxes that we pay in various states and some of those are a little bit higher this year compared to previous years and probably where we're going to be in future. The gain that we had when we terminated the interest rate swap earlier this year is flowing through in our state taxes and creating a little bit higher taxable income in certain states, some of which have higher tax rate than others. And so we are seeing a little bit higher effective rate there. The federal effective rate is really pretty much the same it's just really been driven by state -- various state rates.So we expect we're going to continue looking at that refining our estimates for that throughout the year, but I think our effective rate for this year maybe a little bit higher more like the nine month effective tax rate and then presumably it may normal -- will go back to little bit lower more normal in 2021.And then just one last thing, Joe mentioned already a little bit about CECL. Again, we anticipate based on what we know today that we will adopt CECL with our fourth quarter information, it will be retroactive basically back to beginning of the year and flow through our full year numbers, but we anticipate right now that that would be the case that the CECL adoption would occur as we finalize our fourth quarter financials.And then like Joe said before, we have previously discussed our CECL impacts in our previous filings, if you look at our June 10-Q that's the most recent, I think, information there. And we don't think there's anything different right now materially than what we've talked about before.So, we will provide additional color on that during the fourth quarter information.Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERThat concludes the prepared remarks we have. At this time, we will entertain questions. And I'd like to ask our operator once again to remind the attendees how to queue in for questions.Questions and Answers:Operator[Operator Instructions] Our first question come from the line of Andrew Liesch with Piper Sandler. Your line is now open.Andrew Liesch -- Piper Sandler & Co. -- AnalystHey, good afternoon, everyone. How are you?Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERHey, Andrew.Rex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERHey, Andrew.Andrew Liesch -- Piper Sandler & Co. -- AnalystHi. So just wanted to focus on expenses right now, little bit higher this quarter than I was forecasting. You guys had a pretty good run rate there below $30 million, it seems like maybe some of it was affected by the mortgage business this quarter. But is this like the new run rate we should be using or do you think it's probably close to that $30 million level?Rex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERWell, I mean, $1.1 million of it was the special bonus, and so that -- you need to back data out I think...Andrew Liesch -- Piper Sandler & Co. -- AnalystRight, right.Rex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERThe other costs -- I mean, there just another COVID cost that relate supplies and cleaning and equipment and that kind of stuff, and that's going to be with us for a while. I think that...Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERYeah, and Rex that -- Andrew the probably $350,000 of our cost during the quarter were payments made to quarantined employees. Yeah, those costs will probably continue until we get out of the pandemic. I mean, I think the two things that could adjust it seems to me is the $1.1 million will adjust as Rex said. And then, we did -- our mortgage-related compensation is up $800,000, I think from -- or $750,000 from where it was during the third quarter of 2019.So you back those two numbers or you normalize the mortgage and you back the $1.1 million off and, yeah, you are at S30 million. But our mortgage volume continues to be strong. So you don't -- it's hard to see that changing as long as our mortgage volume remains strong.Andrew Liesch -- Piper Sandler & Co. -- AnalystOkay, thanks. That's helpful. And then, around the margin, sounds like still some good opportunities on the funding side. It's improved some costs there What are you seeing on yield pressures right now, and is the funding cost benefit is that actually more than what you're seeing on the yield side right now?Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERProbably, I mean, I'd say the funding costs are coming down a little bit more. We have had a little bit of our loans repay, lot of those are typically maybe at higher rates than the new loans that are coming on. So we have seen a little bit of decline in the yield on loans. I mean, if you look at our-- in our press release toward the end and I think on Page 19 you can see for the quarter what our average yields and cost were and then the first column there we give you a yield and cost rates as of 9/30. So those are going to be the point in time numbers.And you can see from there where the yields are on different asset classes and then on the liability side. And you can see on deposits are -- 9/30 cost of deposits is 67 basis points, for the quarter, it was 79 basis point. So clearly, we anticipate we're going to see those costs come down a bit more. The other areas probably not going to change much. I mean, the subordinated notes, those are fixed rate and the sub-debt is flowing, but it's tied to LIBOR and LIBOR hasn't been moving around too much. So the reduction on the funding side going to come on the deposits.And then, on the loan side, the only thing that you don't see in there that the yield that we give you on the loans does exclude -- at the point in time, does exclude the yield accretion. So in the third quarter that was 9 basis points of benefit. So you can kind of analyze that and say that, well, maybe that yield is a little bit higher than what we show here or here will be. But it still is going to come down a little bit from where we were probably.Rex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERThe 9 basis points is in the three months ended September 30, number, but it's not in the point in time the point learnings are derived.Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERCorrect, correct. So... Right. We'll continue to see -- I mean, we've been probably have between $100 million and $125 million a month CD time deposits that are maturing and I think those probably have a weighted-rate of somewhere around 1.40% or something like that. So we're replacing those at substantially lower rates than that, but it just -- at $125 million a month, it takes a little time for it to work through, like we said. So we've got five to six months of that kind of stuff already through the pipeline and we've got six to nine more months probably over time deposits that will roll off that we'll be able to reprice down.Andrew Liesch -- Piper Sandler & Co. -- AnalystOkay, that's very helpful commentary, I really appreciate it. I will step back. Thank you.Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERThank you.Operator[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from the line of Michael Perito with KBW. Your line is now open.Michael Perito -- KBW -- AnalystHi, good afternoon. How is everyone doing?Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERGood, thank you.Rex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERGood, thank you.Michael Perito -- KBW -- AnalystThank you. Good. Good. So fee income in particular mortgage sales were really strong in the quarter, can you just share some color on the mortgage pipeline going forward as well as your outlook for fee income in general?Rex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERI mean, I think, we're still originating quite a lot of mortgage loans and we've got quite a few commitments out there.Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERDo we have on the mortgage pipeline in our pipeline numbers?Rex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERTrying to look back and see if we've got that commitment number in here. Yes. It's about -- well, it's lower here -- no, I'm sorry, it's a little bit lower than it was in the previous quarter-end, but it's still like $94 million in commitments that are not close. We have -- we had a couple of quarter-ends that were higher than that, but substantially higher than we were a year or two ago. And I don't -- I mean, I haven't seen or heard anything that leads me to think that the fourth quarter is going to be much less than the third quarter.Yeah, I mean, we still -- I think, you still be very busy in the mortgage group and I think they're still producing quite a bit of new loan commitment. So I don't know, I mean, we get to the very end of the year around the holidays maybe it will slow down a little bit for that. So we may see a little bit of slowdown late in the quarter, but so far through the first part of the quarter, not really much change.Michael Perito -- KBW -- AnalystAll right, thank you, that helps. And then the release noted some initiatives, the Bank is making toward modernizing and consolidating branch and office space, when you review your overall footprint, do you see further opportunity for like a larger scale of rationalization of offices or branches?Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERI don't really think so, I mean, there may be -- Keep in mind we've probably closed 25% of our branches over the last four or five years.Rex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER35 branches.Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERYeah, I mean, maybe more than that, maybe 30% or something. So, yeah, there could be further consolidation, but it would be one or two banking centers here or there. I don't think there will be kind of large wholesale changes. Now that with customer behavior as it is in 2020, if that continues to change and people start accessing banks for -- they do access, there has been a number of different ways, but we found that for big transactions borrowing money, opening deposit accounts those sorts of things they like to come in and do that in-person. And the long is that the case, I don't know that there will be large scale rationalization.Michael Perito -- KBW -- AnalystOkay, thank you. Last question, so capital is pretty healthy levels and you guys have actively been buying back shares and you refresh your repurchase program, but can you just talk about your capital allocation priorities in terms of M&A, buybacks, dividend, organic growth, etc.?Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERWell, I mean, I think, we see the ability to continue to pay our dividend. Obviously, we're going to the extent we can grow, we want to grow, we think we can grow a lot and that would certainly not impact our ability to pay our dividend.The third priority among those would be buying our stock back and I think we would rather buy our stock back at 80% of book or 90% of book certainly than buy somebody else's stock at some multiple above both. So that's kind of how we would prioritize.Michael Perito -- KBW -- AnalystGreat, thank you. Thanks for taking my questions.Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERThank you.OperatorThank you. We have no further questions in the queue at this time. I would now like to turn the call back to Mr. Joe Turner for closing remarks.Joseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERWell, we appreciate -- as I said earlier, we appreciate everybody being on the call today. We'll look forward to talking to you at the -- after the end of the year. And hopefully, we will have a president and have a vaccine and hopefully things will be looking up. Certainly, hope everybody has a wonderful and healthy holiday season and we'll talk to you in about three months. Thank you.Operator[Operator Closing Remarks]Duration: 34 minutesCall participants:Kelly Polonus -- Director of Corporate Communications & MarketingJoseph W. Turner -- PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERRex A. Copeland -- SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT & CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERAndrew Liesch -- Piper Sandler & Co. -- AnalystMichael Perito -- KBW -- Analyst More GSBC analysis All earnings call transcripts 10 stocks we like better than Great Southern BancorpWhen investing geniuses David and Tom Gardner have a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the newsletter they have run for over a decade, Motley Fool Stock Advisor, has tripled the market.* David and Tom just revealed what they believe are the ten best stocks for investors to buy right now... and Great Southern Bancorp wasn't one of them! That's right -- they think these 10 stocks are even better buys. See the 10 stocks *Stock Advisor returns as of October 20, 2020This article is a transcript of this conference call produced for The Motley Fool. While we strive for our Foolish Best, there may be errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in this transcript. As with all our articles, The Motley Fool does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company's SEC filings. Please see our Terms and Conditions for additional details, including our Obligatory Capitalized Disclaimers of Liability.Motley Fool Transcribers has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.Source