Form 10-Q

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

FORM 10-Q

QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF

THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the Quarterly Period Ended March 31, 2007

Commission File Number 1-31565

NEW YORK COMMUNITY BANCORP, INC.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

 

Delaware

 

06-1377322

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

615 Merrick Avenue, Westbury, New York 11590

(Address of principal executive offices)

(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code) (516) 683-4100

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.  x Yes     ¨ No

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, or a non-accelerated filer. See definition of “accelerated filer” and “large accelerated filer” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.  Large Accelerated Filer x     Accelerated Filer ¨    Non-Accelerated Filer ¨

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

Par Value: $0.01

Classes of Common Stock

                    313,407,070                     

Number of shares outstanding at

May 3, 2007


NEW YORK COMMUNITY BANCORP, INC.

FORM 10-Q

Quarter Ended March 31, 2007

 

INDEX              Page
  No.  

Part I.

     FINANCIAL INFORMATION   

Item 1.

     Financial Statements   
     Consolidated Statements of Condition as of March 31, 2007 (unaudited) and December 31, 2006    1
     Consolidated Statements of Income and Comprehensive Income for the Three Months Ended March 31, 2007 and 2006 (unaudited)    2
     Consolidated Statement of Changes in Stockholders’ Equity for the Three Months Ended March 31, 2007 (unaudited)    3
     Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the Three Months Ended March 31, 2007 and 2006 (unaudited)    4
     Notes to the Unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements    5

Item 2.

     Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations    12

Item 3.

     Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk    36

Item 4.

     Controls and Procedures    37

Part II.

     OTHER INFORMATION   

Item 1.

     Legal Proceedings    38

Item 1A.

     Risk Factors    39

Item 2.

     Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds    39

Item 3.

     Defaults Upon Senior Securities    39

Item 4.

     Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders    39

Item 5.

     Other Information    40

Item 6.

     Exhibits    40

Signatures

      41

Exhibits

     

 


NEW YORK COMMUNITY BANCORP, INC.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CONDITION

(in thousands, except share data)

 

     March 31,
2007
(unaudited)
    December 31,
2006
 

Assets:

    

Cash and cash equivalents

   $ 247,028     $ 230,759  

Securities available for sale:

    

Mortgage-related securities ($1,534,491 and $1,592,064 pledged, respectively)

     1,607,389       1,664,337  

Other securities ($95,305 and $102,067 pledged, respectively)

     311,986       276,450  

Securities held to maturity:

    

Mortgage-related securities (fair value of $1,270,138 and $1,272,546, respectively; $1,329,077 and $1,374,806 pledged, respectively)

     1,350,118       1,387,817  

Other securities (fair value of $1,472,059 and $1,593,023, respectively; $1,162,990 and $1,155,070 pledged, respectively)

     1,472,280       1,597,380  
                

Total securities

     4,741,773       4,925,984  

Loans, net of deferred loan fees and costs

     19,287,251       19,652,891  

Less:  Allowance for loan losses

     (85,321 )     (85,389 )
                

Loans, net

     19,201,930       19,567,502  

Federal Home Loan Bank of New York stock, at cost

     391,188       404,311  

Premises and equipment, net

     194,599       196,084  

Goodwill

     2,144,642       2,148,108  

Core deposit intangibles

     101,379       106,381  

Bank-owned life insurance (“BOLI”)

     591,095       585,013  

Other assets

     364,280       318,228  
                

Total assets

   $ 27,977,914     $ 28,482,370  
                

Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity:

    

Deposits:

    

NOW and money market accounts

   $ 2,786,687     $ 3,156,988  

Savings accounts

     2,392,204       2,394,145  

Certificates of deposit

     6,076,219       5,944,585  

Non-interest-bearing accounts

     1,158,795       1,123,286  
                

Total deposits

     12,413,905       12,619,004  
                

Official checks outstanding

     29,359       20,158  

Borrowed funds:

    

Wholesale borrowings

     10,670,319       11,070,333  

Junior subordinated debentures

     455,693       455,659  

Other borrowings

     353,469       354,016  
                

Total borrowed funds

     11,479,481       11,880,008  
                

Mortgagors’ escrow

     155,785       74,736  

Other liabilities

     187,778       198,627  
                

Total liabilities

     24,266,308       24,792,533  
                

Stockholders’ equity:

    

Preferred stock at par $0.01 (5,000,000 shares authorized; none issued)

     —         —    

Common stock at par $0.01 (600,000,000 shares authorized; 296,385,458 and 295,350,936 shares issued and outstanding at March 31, 2007 and December 31, 2006, respectively)

     2,964       2,954  

Paid-in capital in excess of par

     3,362,456       3,341,340  

Retained earnings (partially restricted)

     413,190       421,313  

Less:  Unallocated common stock held by Employee Stock Ownership Plan (“ESOP”)

     (4,319 )     (4,604 )

           Common stock held by Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan (“SERP”)

     (3,113 )     (3,113 )

Accumulated other comprehensive loss, net of tax

     (59,572 )     (68,053 )
                

Total stockholders’ equity

     3,711,606       3,689,837  
                

Commitments and contingencies

    
                

Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity

   $ 27,977,914     $ 28,482,370  
                

See accompanying notes to the unaudited consolidated financial statements.

 

1


NEW YORK COMMUNITY BANCORP, INC.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME AND COMPREHENSIVE INCOME

(in thousands, except per share data)

(unaudited)

 

     For the Three Months
Ended March 31,
 
     2007    2006  

Interest Income:

     

Mortgage and other loans

   $ 298,467    $ 255,623  

Securities

     70,688      71,846  

Money market investments

     246      166  
               

Total interest income

     369,401      327,635  
               

Interest Expense:

     

NOW and money market accounts

     23,902      26,349  

Savings accounts

     5,701      2,658  

Certificates of deposit

     70,228      48,492  

Borrowed funds

     123,349      113,184  

Mortgagors’ escrow

     33      54  
               

Total interest expense

     223,213      190,737  
               

Net interest income

     146,188      136,898  

Provision for loan losses

     —        —    
               

Net interest income after provision for loan losses

     146,188      136,898  
               

Non-interest Income:

     

Fee income

     9,753      8,326  

Bank-owned life insurance

     6,082      5,465  

Net securities gains

     —        2,823  

Loss on mark-to-market of interest rate swaps

     —        (6,071 )

Other

     8,246      8,633  
               

Total non-interest income

     24,081      19,176  
               

Non-interest Expense:

     

Operating expenses:

     

Compensation and benefits

     37,203      29,541  

Occupancy and equipment

     15,103      12,060  

General and administrative

     15,328      12,510  

Other

     1,711      1,208  
               

Total operating expenses

     69,345      55,319  

Amortization of core deposit intangibles

     5,002      3,306  
               

Total non-interest expense

     74,347      58,625  
               

Income before income taxes

     95,922      97,449  

Income tax expense

     31,103      31,074  
               

Net Income

   $ 64,819    $ 66,375  
               

Other comprehensive income, net of tax:

     

Change in net unrealized losses on securities

     8,271      (13,445 )

Amortization relating to pension and post- retirement obligations

     210      —    
               

Total comprehensive income, net of tax

   $ 73,300    $ 52,930  
               

Basic earnings per share

   $ 0.22    $ 0.25  
               

Diluted earnings per share

   $ 0.22    $ 0.25  
               

See accompanying notes to the unaudited consolidated financial statements.

 

2


NEW YORK COMMUNITY BANCORP, INC.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY

(in thousands, except share data)

(unaudited)

 

    

Three Months

Ended

March 31, 2007

 

Common Stock (Par Value: $0.01):

  

Balance at beginning of year

   $ 2,954  

Shares issued (1,034,522 shares)

     10  
        

Balance at end of period

     2,964  
        

Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par:

  

Balance at beginning of year

     3,341,340  

Allocation of ESOP stock

     1,237  

Restricted stock activity

     76  

Exercise of stock options

     21,179  

Tax effect of stock plans

     (1,376 )
        

Balance at end of period

     3,362,456  
        

Retained Earnings (partially restricted):

  

Balance at beginning of year

     421,313  

Net income

     64,819  

Dividends paid on common stock ($0.25 per share for the three-month period)

     (73,509 )

Effect of adoption of Financial Accounting Standards Board Interpretation No. 48

     567  
        

Balance at end of period

     413,190  
        

Treasury Stock:

  

Balance at beginning of year

     —    

Purchase of common stock (2,601 shares)

     (44 )

Exercise of stock options (2,601 shares)

     44  
        

Balance at end of period

     —    
        

Unallocated Common Stock Held by ESOP:

  

Balance at beginning of year

     (4,604 )

Earned portion of ESOP

     285  
        

Balance at end of period

     (4,319 )
        

Common Stock Held by SERP:

  

Balance at beginning of year

     (3,113 )
        

Balance at end of period

     (3,113 )
        

Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss, Net of Tax:

  

Balance at beginning of year

     (68,053 )

Change in net unrealized loss on securities available for sale, net of tax of $(5,025)

     7,591  

Amortization of net unrealized loss on securities transferred from available for sale to held to maturity, net of tax of $(450)

     680  

Amortization relating to pension and post-retirement obligations, net of tax of $(140)

     210  
        

Balance at end of period

     (59,572 )
        

Total stockholders’ equity

   $ 3,711,606  
        

See accompanying notes to the unaudited consolidated financial statements.

 

3


NEW YORK COMMUNITY BANCORP, INC.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

(in thousands)

(unaudited)

 

     Three Months Ended
March 31,
 
     2007     2006  

Cash Flows from Operating Activities:

    

Net income

   $ 64,819     $ 66,375  

Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:

    

Depreciation and amortization

     4,085       3,420  

Premium amortization (accretion of discounts), net

     1,898       (1,363 )

Net change in net deferred loan origination costs and fees

     257       (1,265 )

Amortization of core deposit intangibles

     5,002       3,306  

Net securities gains

     —         (2,823 )

Loss on mark-to-market of interest rate swaps

     —         6,071  

Net gains on sales of loans

     (172 )     (276 )

Stock plan-related compensation

     1,598       1,615  

Changes in assets and liabilities:

    

Decrease in deferred income taxes, net

     4,797       5,264  

(Increase) decrease in other assets

     (62,213 )     17,458  

Increase (decrease) in official checks outstanding

     9,201       (22,478 )

Decrease in other liabilities

     (364 )     (889 )

Originations of loans held for sale

     (20,322 )     (18,153 )

Proceeds from sales of loans originated for sale

     19,680       18,639  
                

Net cash provided by operating activities

     28,266       74,901  
                

Cash Flows from Investing Activities:

    

Proceeds from repayments of securities held to maturity

     161,642       73,297  

Proceeds from repayments of securities available for sale

     64,868       83,000  

Proceeds from sales of securities available for sale

     —         66,208  

Purchases of securities available for sale

     (30,434 )     (26 )

Net redemption (purchase) of Federal Home Loan Bank of New York stock

     13,123       (38,035 )

Adjustments to intangible assets, net

     —         249  

Net decrease (increase) in loans

     366,129       (1,113,990 )

Purchases of premises and equipment, net

     (2,600 )     (1,499 )
                

Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities

     572,728       (930,796 )
                

Cash Flows from Financing Activities:

    

Net (decrease) increase in deposits

     (205,099 )     198,283  

Net (decrease) increase in borrowed funds

     (400,527 )     596,689  

Net increase in mortgagors’ escrow

     81,049       75,894  

Tax effect of stock plans

     (1,376 )     19  

Cash dividends paid on common stock

     (73,509 )     (66,952 )

Treasury stock purchases

     (44 )     (2,103 )

Net cash received from stock option exercises

     14,781       14,242  

Cash in lieu of fractional shares

     —         (2 )
                

Net cash (used in) provided by financing activities

     (584,725 )     816,070  
                

Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents

     16,269       (39,825 )

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period

     230,759       231,803  
                

Cash and cash equivalents at end of period

   $ 247,028     $ 191,978  
                

Supplemental information:

    

Cash paid for (received from):

    

Interest

   $ 242,544     $ 196,006  

Income taxes

     18,265       (768 )
                

See accompanying notes to the unaudited consolidated financial statements.

 

4


NEW YORK COMMUNITY BANCORP, INC.

NOTES TO THE UNAUDITED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Note 1. Basis of Presentation

The accompanying unaudited consolidated financial statements include the accounts of New York Community Bancorp, Inc. and subsidiaries (the “Company”), including its two principal banking subsidiaries: New York Community Bank (the “Community Bank”) and New York Commercial Bank (the “Commercial Bank”). The unaudited consolidated financial statements reflect all normal recurring adjustments that, in the opinion of management, are necessary to present a fair statement of the Company’s results for the periods presented. There are no other adjustments reflected in the accompanying consolidated financial statements. The results of operations for the three months ended March 31, 2007 are not necessarily indicative of the results of operations that may be expected for all of 2007.

Certain information and note disclosures normally included in financial statements prepared in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) have been condensed or omitted, pursuant to the rules and regulations of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”).

The unaudited consolidated financial statements include accounts of the Company and other entities in which the Company has a controlling financial interest. All inter-company balances and transactions have been eliminated. These unaudited consolidated financial statements should be read in conjunction with the audited consolidated financial statements and notes thereto included in the Company’s 2006 Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Note 2. Stock-based Compensation

At March 31, 2007, the Company had 8,940,000 shares available for grant as stock options, restricted stock, or other forms of related rights under the New York Community Bancorp, Inc. 2006 Stock Incentive Plan (the “2006 Stock Incentive Plan”), which was approved by the Company’s shareholders at its Annual Meeting on June 7, 2006. During the first quarter of 2007, 12,000 shares of restricted stock were granted under the 2006 Stock Incentive Plan, with a weighted-average fair value of $16.24 per share on the grant date. Such restricted stock vests periodically over three years. As of March 31, 2007, 3,500 shares of restricted stock had vested, with a weighted-average grant date fair value of $16.54 per share and a fair value of $58,000. Included in total stockholders’ equity at March 31, 2007 was unrecognized compensation and benefits expense relating to unvested restricted stock of $868,000. Compensation and benefits expense related to restricted stock grants is recognized on a straight-line basis over the vesting period, and totaled $76,000 for the three months ended March 31, 2007. There was no such expense for the year-earlier three-month period.

In addition, the Company had nine stock option plans at March 31, 2007: the 1993 and 1997 New York Community Bancorp, Inc. Stock Option Plans; the 1993 and 1996 Haven Bancorp, Inc. Stock Option Plans; the 1998 Richmond County Financial Corp. Stock Compensation Plan; the T R Financial Corp. 1993 Incentive Stock Option Plan; the Roslyn Bancorp, Inc. 1997 and 2001 Stock-based Incentive Plans; and the 1998 Long Island Financial Corp. Stock Option Plan (collectively, the “Stock Option Plans”). All stock options granted under the Stock Option Plans expire ten years from the date of grant.

At the time of grant, all options were to have vested in whole or in part over two to five years from the date of issuance, with all options becoming 100% exercisable in the event that employment terminated due to death, disability, normal retirement, or in the event of a change in control of the Community Bank or the Company. On December 30, 2005, the Board of Directors of the Company accelerated the vesting of, and vested, all unvested stock options that were outstanding at that date (the “Acceleration”). A total of 1.4 million options held by 179 individuals were impacted by the Acceleration. No other terms and conditions of the accelerated options were changed. As a result of the Acceleration, the Company was able to avoid recognizing compensation and benefits expense that it otherwise would have had to recognize in 2006, and will be able to avoid such expense in 2007.

In connection with its adoption of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (“SFAS”) No. 123R, “Share-based Payments” on January 1, 2006, and using the modified prospective approach, the Company recognizes compensation and benefits expense related to share-based payments at fair value on the date of grant, and

 

5


recognizes such expense in the financial statements over the vesting period during which the employee provides service in exchange for the award. However, as there were no unvested options in the three months ended March 31, 2007, the Company did not record any compensation and benefits expense relating to stock options during the period.

At the present time, the Company primarily issues new shares of common stock at market value to satisfy the exercise of stock options. On occasion, the Company will utilize common stock held in Treasury to satisfy the exercise of options, in which case the difference between the average cost of Treasury shares and the exercise price is recorded as an adjustment to retained earnings or paid-in-capital on the date of exercise. At March 31, 2007 and December 31, 2006, respectively, there were 17,932,557 and 19,019,717 stock options outstanding. The number of shares available for future issuance under the Stock Option Plans was 252,105 at March 31, 2007.

The status of the Stock Option Plans at March 31, 2007 and the changes that occurred during the quarter ended at that date are summarized below:

 

     For the Three Months
Ended March 31, 2007
     Number of
Stock
Options
    Weighted
Average
Exercise
Price

Stock options outstanding, beginning of period

   19,019,717     $ 15.12

Exercised

   (1,025,123 )     14.41

Forfeited

   (62,037 )     16.94
        

Stock options outstanding, end of period

   17,932,557       15.16

Options exercisable at period-end

   17,932,557       15.16
            

The intrinsic value of stock options outstanding and exercisable at March 31, 2007 was $48.8 million. The intrinsic value of options exercised during the three months ended March 31, 2007 was $2.6 million.

Note 3. Available-for-Sale Securities

The following table summarizes the amortized cost and estimated fair market values of the Company’s available-for-sale securities at the dates indicated:

 

     March 31, 2007    December 31, 2006
(in thousands)    Amortized
Cost
   Fair Market
Value
   Amortized
Cost
   Fair Market
Value

Mortgage-related securities:

           

GSE (1) certificates

   $ 808,614    $ 776,241    $ 835,965    $ 799,490

GSE CMOs (2)

     330,520      317,452      345,558      331,638

Private label CMOs

     525,727      512,532      547,635      532,000

Other mortgage-related securities

     1,164      1,164      1,209      1,209
                           

Total mortgage-related securities

   $ 1,666,025    $ 1,607,389    $ 1,730,367    $ 1,664,337
                           

Other securities:

           

U.S. Government agency obligations

   $ 100,819    $ 102,369    $ 100,607    $ 101,650

U.S. Treasury obligations

     1,096      1,101      1,096      1,099

Corporate bonds

     54,681      52,200      39,673      37,125

State, county, and municipal

     6,645      6,550      6,644      6,554

Foreign government bonds

     1,000      1,000      1,002      1,002

Capital trust notes

     35,291      37,218      20,750      17,297

Preferred stock

     65,930      65,784      65,930      65,785

Common stock

     46,438      45,764      45,904      45,938
                           

Total other securities

   $ 311,900    $ 311,986    $ 281,606    $ 276,450
                           

Total securities available for sale

   $ 1,977,925    $ 1,919,375    $ 2,011,973    $ 1,940,787
                           
(1) Government-sponsored enterprises
(2) Collateralized mortgage obligations

 

6


The Company has determined that the unrealized losses on securities at March 31, 2007 were temporary impairments due to changes in market interest rates and not to significant credit deterioration or other factors. Management currently expects that the unrealized losses on securities will be recovered within a reasonable time through a typical interest rate cycle, and believes that the Company has the ability and intent to retain these securities until recovery of market value.

Note 4. Loans, net

The following table provides a summary of the Company’s loan portfolio at the dates indicated:

 

     March 31, 2007     December 31, 2006  
(dollars in thousands)    Amount     Percent
of Total
    Amount     Percent
of Total
 

Mortgage loans:

        

Multi-family

   $ 14,232,213     73.79 %   $ 14,529,097     73.93 %

Commercial real estate

     3,055,584     15.84       3,114,440     15.85  

Construction

     1,121,007     5.81       1,102,732     5.61  

1—4 family

     220,964     1.15       230,508     1.17  
                            

Total mortgage loans

     18,629,768     96.59       18,976,777     96.56  

Net deferred loan origination costs

     271         651    
                    

Mortgage loans, net

     18,630,039         18,977,428    
                    

Other loans:

        

Commercial and industrial

     627,283         643,116    

Consumer

     25,386         26,598    

Leases, net

     5,750         7,079    
                    

Total other loans

     658,419     3.41       676,793     3.44  

Net deferred loan origination fees

     (1,207 )       (1,330 )  
                    

Total other loans, net

     657,212         675,463    

Less: Allowance for loan losses

     85,321         85,389    
                            

Loans, net

   $ 19,201,930     100.00 %   $ 19,567,502     100.00 %
                            

Note 5. Borrowed Funds

The following table provides a summary of the Company’s borrowed funds at the dates indicated:

 

(in thousands)    March 31,
2007
   December 31,
2006

FHLB-NY advances

   $ 6,990,301    $ 7,240,684

Repurchase agreements

     3,668,018      3,767,649

Federal funds purchased

     12,000      62,000

Junior subordinated debentures

     455,693      455,659

Senior debt

     191,469      192,016

Preferred stock of subsidiaries

     162,000      162,000
             

Total borrowed funds

   $ 11,479,481    $ 11,880,008
             

At March 31, 2007, the Company had $455.7 million of outstanding junior subordinated deferrable interest debentures (“junior subordinated debentures”) held by eight statutory business trusts that issued guaranteed capital securities. The capital securities qualified as Tier 1 capital of the Company at that date. The proceeds of each issuance were invested in a series of junior subordinated debentures of the Company. The underlying asset of each statutory business trust is the relevant debenture. The Company has fully and unconditionally guaranteed each of the obligations under each trust’s capital securities to the extent set forth in the guarantee. Each trust’s capital securities are subject to mandatory redemption, in whole or in part, upon repayment of the debentures at their stated maturity or earlier redemption.

The table that follows provides a summary of the outstanding capital securities issued by each trust and the junior subordinated debentures issued by the Company to each trust as of March 31, 2007.

 

7


Issuer

       Interest Rate
of Capital
Securities
and
Debentures(1)
  Junior
Subordinated
Debenture
Amount
Outstanding
  Capital
Securities
Amount
Outstanding
 

Date of

Original Issue

  Stated Maturity  

Optional

Redemption Date

          (dollars in thousands)               

Haven Capital Trust I

  10.460   $ 18,174   $ 17,400   February 12, 1997   February 1, 2027   February 1, 2007

Haven Capital Trust II

  10.250     23,333     22,550   May 26, 1999   June 30, 2029   June 30, 2009

Queens County Capital Trust I

  11.045     10,309     10,000   July 26, 2000   July 19, 2030   July 19, 2010

Queens Statutory Trust I

  10.600     15,464     15,000   September 7, 2000   September 7, 2030   September 7, 2010

New York Community Capital Trust V

  6.000     191,598     183,093   November 4, 2002   November 1, 2051   November 4, 2007

New York Community Capital Trust X

  6.955     123,712     120,000   December 14, 2006   December 15, 2036   December 15, 2011

Roslyn Preferred Trust I

  8.970     64,861     62,912   March 20, 2002   April 1, 2032   April 1, 2007

LIF Statutory Trust I

  10.600     8,242     8,010   September 7, 2000   September 7, 2030   September 7, 2010
                   
    $ 455,693   $ 438,965      
                   
(1) Excludes the effect of purchase accounting adjustments.

On April 2, 2007, Haven Capital Trust I and Roslyn Preferred Trust I redeemed all of their respective trust preferred securities. Please see “Redemption of Trust Preferred Securities” under “Recent Events” in this report.

Note 6. Pension and Other Post-retirement Benefits

The following table sets forth information regarding the components of net periodic (credit) expense for the Company’s pension and post-retirement plans for the periods indicated:

 

     For the Three Months Ended March 31,
     2007    2006
(in thousands)    Pension
Benefits
    Post-
retirement
Benefits
   Pension
Benefits
    Post-
retirement
Benefits

Components of net periodic (credit) expense:

         

Interest cost

   $ 1,585     $ 285    $ 1,189     $ 241

Service cost

     —         2      —         2

Expected return on plan assets

     (2,581 )     —        (2,028 )     —  

Unrecognized past service liability

     51       11      50       11

Amortization of unrecognized loss

     253       29      381       17
                             

Net periodic (credit) expense

   $ (692 )   $ 327    $ (408 )   $ 271
                             

As discussed in the notes to the consolidated financial statements presented in the Company’s 2006 Annual Report on Form 10-K, the Company expects to contribute $1.7 million to its post-retirement plan in 2007.

Note 7. Computation of Earnings per Share

 

     Three Months Ended March 31,
(in thousands, except share and per share data)    2007    2006

Net income

   $64,819    $66,375

Weighted average common shares outstanding

   293,323,631    266,948,853
         

Basic earnings per common share

   $0.22    $0.25
         

Weighted average common shares outstanding

   293,323,631    266,948,853

Additional dilutive shares under the Treasury stock method for stock options and warrants to purchase common stock issued with Bifurcated Option Note Unit SecuritiES

   1,380,685    1,671,467
         

Total weighted average shares for computation of fully diluted earnings per share

   294,704,316    268,620,320
         

Fully diluted earnings per common share and common share equivalents

   $0.22    $0.25
         

 

8


Note 8. Impact of Accounting Pronouncements

In February 2007, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (the “FASB”) issued SFAS No. 159, “The Fair Value Option for Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities—including an amendment of FASB Statement No. 115.” SFAS No. 159 provides companies with the option of electing fair value as an alternative measurement for most financial assets and liabilities. It also establishes presentation and disclosure requirements designed to facilitate comparisons between companies that choose different measurement attributes for similar types of assets and liabilities. SFAS No. 159 requires companies to provide additional information that will help investors and other users of financial statements to more easily understand the effect of the company’s choice to use fair value on its earnings. It also requires entities to display the fair value of those assets and liabilities for which the company has chosen to use fair value on the face of the balance sheet. Under SFAS No. 159, fair value is used for both the initial and subsequent measurement of the designated assets and/or liabilities, with the changes in value recognized in earnings. SFAS No. 159 is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. The Company has not completed its evaluation of the impact of SFAS No. 159; however, it did not elect early adoption of the Standard, which was permitted as of the beginning of its 2007 fiscal year.

In September 2006, the FASB issued SFAS No. 157, which defines and establishes a framework for measuring fair value, and expands disclosures required for fair value measurements. SFAS No. 157 is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007 and for interim periods within those fiscal years. The provisions of SFAS No. 157 are to be applied prospectively as of the beginning of the fiscal year in which it is initially applied, except in limited circumstances. The Company does not anticipate that the adoption of SFAS No. 157 will have a material impact on its financial condition or results of operations.

In 2006, the Emerging Issues Task Force (“EITF”) of the FASB reached final consensus on accounting for life insurance in Issue No. 06-4, “Accounting for Deferred Compensation and Post-retirement Benefit Aspects of Endorsement Split-Dollar Life Insurance Arrangements” (“EITF Issue No. 06-4”) and Issue No. 06-5, “Accounting for Purchases of Life Insurance – Determining the Amount That Could Be Realized in Accordance with FASB Technical Bulletin (“FTB”) No. 85-4, Accounting for Purchases of Life Insurance” (“EITF Issue No. 06-5”). EITF Issue No. 06-4 concluded that an employer, entering into an endorsement split-dollar life insurance arrangement that provides an employee with a post-retirement benefit, has not effectively settled the obligation by purchasing the life insurance. Therefore, a liability for the future benefits should be recognized in accordance with SFAS No. 106, “Employers’ Accounting for Post-retirement Benefits Other than Pensions,” or Accounting Principles Board (“APB”) Opinion No. 12, “Omnibus Opinion – 1967.” The consensus on EITF Issue No. 06-4 is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2007 and may be recognized as a change in accounting principle through a cumulative-effect adjustment to retained earnings as of the beginning of the year of adoption or by a change in accounting principle through retrospective application to all prior periods. The Company has not completed its evaluation of the impact of adopting EITF Issue No. 06-4.

EITF Issue No. 06-5 concluded that a policyholder should consider other amounts included in the contractual terms of an insurance policy, in addition to cash surrender value, when determining the asset value that could be realized under the terms of the insurance contract in accordance with FTB No. 85-4. These other amounts include non-discretionary amounts (those items that are not contingent as of the balance sheet date) and time-based amounts (i.e., Deferred Acquisition Costs Tax) which would be accounted for on a present-value basis. Items that are subject to the insurance company’s intent to pay would not be included in the asset value. In addition, the amount that could be realized should be determined on an individual policy or certificate level. The consensus on EITF Issue No. 06-5 is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2006 and would be recognized through a cumulative-effect adjustment to retained earnings as of the beginning of the year of adoption for all life insurance contracts currently held or by a change in accounting principle through retrospective application to all prior periods. The Company’s adoption of EITF Issue No. 06-5 on January 1, 2007 did not have an impact on its financial condition or results of operations.

 

9


In March 2006, the FASB issued SFAS No. 156, “Accounting for Servicing of Financial Assets – an Amendment of FASB Statement No. 140,” which is effective for fiscal years beginning after September 15, 2006. SFAS No. 156 was issued to simplify the accounting for servicing rights and to reduce the volatility that results from using different measurement attributes. The Company’s adoption of SFAS No. 156 on January 1, 2007 had no impact on its consolidated statements of financial condition or results of operations.

Note 9. Income Taxes

In July 2006, the FASB issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes – an Interpretation of FASB Statement No. 109.” FIN 48 prescribes a recognition threshold and measurement attribute for use in connection with the obligation of a company to recognize, measure, present, and disclose in its financial statements uncertain tax positions that the company has taken or expects to take on a tax return. Upon adoption of FIN 48, only tax positions that meet a “more likely than not” threshold at the effective date may be recognized or may continue to be recognized. FIN 48 is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2006. The Company’s adoption of FIN 48 on January 1, 2007 decreased its income tax liability for unrecognized tax benefits by $4.1 million through a $3.5 million reduction in the opening balance of goodwill and a $567,000 increase in the opening balance of retained earnings.

After its adoption of FIN 48, the Company had $26.8 million of unrecognized gross tax benefits. Of this amount, $12.9 million, if recognized, would affect the effective tax rate, with the balance of the unrecognized tax benefits relating to potential adjustments to goodwill or paid-in capital. There were no significant changes to these amounts during the quarter ended March 31, 2007.

Interest and penalties (if any) related to the underpayment of income taxes will continue to be classified as a component of income tax expense in the Consolidated Statement of Income. Accrued interest on tax liabilities was $1.9 million as of January 1, 2007, with no significant additional interest accrued during the quarter ended March 31, 2007.

The following significant tax filings are open for examination:

 

   

Federal tax filings of the Company and acquired companies for years 2002 through the present;

 

   

New York State and City tax filings of the Company for the tax years 2000 through the present; and

 

   

New York State and City tax filings of acquired companies for varying tax periods, including 1998 through the present.

In addition, there are federal tax receivables from various carryback claims and amended returns which are also subject to examination and can be disallowed based on findings relating to the determination of tax in the carryback or amended tax years.

The Company does not anticipate that any current examinations will be finalized within the next 12 months, nor does the Company anticipate any significant changes to the levels of its unrecognized tax benefits during this time frame. However, it is reasonably possible that there may be developments in the status of certain audits, including negotiated settlements, such that the amount of the measurement of the unrecognized tax benefits for certain tax positions may increase or decrease during the next 12 months. An estimate of the range of the reasonably possible changes cannot be made at this time.

Note 10. Business Combinations

Acquisition of PennFed Financial Services, Inc.

On April 2, 2007, the Company acquired PennFed Financial Services, Inc. (“PennFed”). Pursuant to the Agreement and Plan of Merger announced on November 2, 2006, PennFed merged with and into the Company, and its primary subsidiary, Penn Federal Savings Bank, merged with and into the Company’s savings bank subsidiary, New York Community Bank. The acquisition added 24 branches to the Community Bank’s franchise in New

 

10


Jersey, including 13 in Essex County, three in each of Ocean and Monmouth counties, two in each of Middlesex and Hudson counties, and one in Union County.

In connection with the transaction, PennFed shareholders received 1.222 shares of Company common stock in a tax-free exchange for each share of PennFed common stock held at the closing date, plus cash-in-lieu of any fractional share.

At the date of acquisition, PennFed had assets of approximately $2.3 billion, including loans of approximately $1.7 billion; and deposits of approximately $1.6 billion, including approximately $584 million of core deposit accounts. Included in the loans acquired were one-to-four family loans of approximately $1.3 billion, the majority of which were sold or securitized on April 30, 2007. The related securities were subsequently sold.

Doral Bank, FSB Branch Acquisition

On March 15, 2007, the Company announced that its commercial bank subsidiary, New York Commercial Bank, and Doral Bank, FSB (“Doral”), the New York City-based subsidiary of Doral Financial Corporation, signed a definitive purchase and assumption agreement, pursuant to which the Commercial Bank will acquire 11 Doral branches in New York City, including two in Manhattan, three in Brooklyn, and six in Queens. In connection with the acquisition, which is expected to be immediately accretive to the Company’s earnings, the Commercial Bank will assume certain of Doral’s assets and liabilities. The price to be paid will be the lesser of $15.0 million or a premium of 4% of deposits acquired at closing. At March 31, 2007, Doral had total deposits of approximately $359 million.

At March 31, 2007, the amount of loans expected to be acquired amounted to approximately $209 million, including approximately $56 million of one-to-four family loans to be acquired at market value. The loans to be acquired also include taxi medallion, commercial real estate, multi-family, consumer, and commercial and industrial loans. The Company also expects to acquire certain other assets at market value when the transaction is completed early in the third quarter of 2007, pending receipt of certain regulatory approvals.

 

11


NEW YORK COMMUNITY BANCORP, INC.

ITEM 2. MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

For the purpose of this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, the words “we,” “us,” “our,” and “the Company” are used to refer to New York Community Bancorp, Inc. and our consolidated subsidiaries, including New York Community Bank and New York Commercial Bank (the “Community Bank” and the “Commercial Bank,” respectively, and collectively, the “Banks.”)

Forward-looking Statements and Associated Risk Factors

This report, like many written and oral communications presented by New York Community Bancorp, Inc. and our authorized officers, may contain certain forward-looking statements regarding our prospective performance and strategies within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. We intend such forward-looking statements to be covered by the safe harbor provisions for forward-looking statements contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, and are including this statement for purposes of said safe harbor provisions.

Forward-looking statements, which are based on certain assumptions and describe future plans, strategies, and expectations of the Company, are generally identified by use of the words “anticipate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “expect,” “intend,” “plan,” “project,” “seek,” “strive,” “try,” or future or conditional verbs such as “will,” “would,” “should,” “could,” “may,” or similar expressions. Our ability to predict results or the actual effects of our plans or strategies is inherently uncertain. Accordingly, actual results may differ materially from anticipated results.

There are a number of factors, many of which are beyond our control, that could cause actual conditions, events, or results to differ significantly from those described in our forward-looking statements. These factors include, but are not limited to:

 

   

General economic conditions and trends, either nationally or in some or all of the areas in which we and our customers conduct our respective businesses;

   

Conditions in the securities markets or the banking industry;

   

Changes in interest rates, which may affect our net income, prepayment penalties and other future cash flows, or the market value of our assets;

   

Changes in deposit flows, and in the demand for deposit, loan, and investment products and other financial services in the markets we serve;

   

Changes in the financial or operating performance of our customers’ businesses;

   

Changes in real estate values, which could impact the quality of the assets securing the loans in our portfolio;

   

Changes in the quality or composition of our loan or investment portfolios;

   

Changes in competitive pressures among financial institutions or from non-financial institutions;

   

Changes in our customer base;

   

Potential exposure to unknown or contingent liabilities of companies we target for acquisition;

   

Our ability to retain key members of management;

   

Our timely development of new lines of business and competitive products or services in a changing environment, and the acceptance of such products or services by our customers;

   

Any interruption or breach of security resulting in failures or disruptions in customer account management, general ledger, deposit, loan, or other systems;

   

Any interruption in customer service due to circumstances beyond our control;

   

The outcome of pending or threatened litigation, or of other matters before regulatory agencies, or of matters resulting from regulatory exams, whether currently existing or commencing in the future;

   

Environmental conditions that exist or may exist on properties owned by, leased by, or mortgaged to the Company;

   

Changes in estimates of future reserve requirements based upon the periodic review thereof under relevant regulatory and accounting requirements;

   

Changes in legislation, regulation, and policies, including, but not limited to, those pertaining to banking, securities, tax, environmental protection, and insurance, and the ability to comply with such changes in a timely manner;

 

12


   

Changes in accounting principles, policies, practices, or guidelines;

   

Operational issues stemming from, and/or capital spending necessitated by, the potential need to adapt to industry changes in information technology systems, on which we are highly dependent;

   

The ability to keep pace with, and implement on a timely basis, technological changes;

   

Changes in the monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. Government, including policies of the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve Board;

   

War or terrorist activities; and

   

Other economic, competitive, governmental, regulatory, and geopolitical factors affecting our operations, pricing, and services.

The following factors, among others, could cause the actual results of the acquisition of PennFed Financial Services, Inc. (“PennFed”) and/or the pending acquisition of 11 branches from Doral Bank, FSB (“Doral”) to differ materially from the expectations stated in this filing: the ability of the Commercial Bank and Doral to obtain the necessary regulatory approvals of the branch acquisition; the ability of the Company to successfully integrate the assets, liabilities, customers, systems, and any personnel it has acquired, or may acquire, into its operations pursuant to the PennFed and Doral branch transactions; and the ability to realize the related revenue synergies and cost savings within the expected time frames.

Furthermore, the timing and occurrence or non-occurrence of events may be subject to circumstances beyond our control.

In addition, it should be noted that we routinely evaluate opportunities to expand through acquisitions and frequently conduct due diligence activities in connection with such opportunities. As a result, acquisition discussions and, in some cases, negotiations, may take place in the future, and acquisitions involving cash, debt, or equity securities may occur.

Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this report. Except as required by applicable law or regulation, we undertake no obligation to update these forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances that occur after the date on which such statements were made.

Reconciliations of Stockholders’ Equity, Tangible Stockholders’ Equity, and Adjusted Tangible Stockholders’ Equity; Total Assets, Tangible Assets, and Adjusted Tangible Assets; and the Related Capital Measures

Although tangible stockholders’ equity, adjusted tangible stockholders’ equity, tangible assets, and adjusted tangible assets are not measures that are calculated in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”), our management uses these non-GAAP measures in its analysis of our performance. We believe that these non-GAAP measures are important indications of our ability to grow both organically and through business combinations and, with respect to tangible stockholders’ equity and adjusted tangible stockholders’ equity, our ability to pay dividends and to engage in various capital management strategies.

We calculate tangible stockholders’ equity by subtracting from stockholders’ equity the sum of our goodwill and core deposit intangibles (“CDI”), and calculate tangible assets by subtracting the same sum from our total assets. To calculate our ratio of tangible stockholders’ equity to tangible assets, we divide our tangible stockholders’ equity by our tangible assets, both of which include after-tax net unrealized losses on securities. We also calculate our ratio of tangible stockholders’ equity to tangible assets excluding our after-tax net unrealized losses on securities, as such losses are impacted by changes in market interest rates and therefore tend to change from day to day. This ratio is referred to in this report as the ratio of “adjusted tangible stockholders’ equity to adjusted tangible assets.”

Neither tangible stockholders’ equity, adjusted tangible stockholders’ equity, tangible assets, adjusted tangible assets, nor the related tangible capital measures should be considered in isolation or as a substitute for stockholders’ equity or any other capital measure prepared in accordance with GAAP. Moreover, the manner in which we calculate these non-GAAP capital measures may differ from that of other companies reporting measures of capital with similar names.

 

13


Reconciliations of our stockholders’ equity, tangible stockholders’ equity, and adjusted tangible stockholders’ equity; our total assets, tangible assets, and adjusted tangible assets; and the related capital measures at March 31, 2007 and December 31, 2006 follow:

 

(dollars in thousands)    March 31,
2007
    December 31,
2006
 

Total stockholders’ equity

   $ 3,711,606     $ 3,689,837  

Less:  Goodwill

     (2,144,642 )     (2,148,108 )

           Core deposit intangibles

     (101,379 )     (106,381 )
                

Tangible stockholders’ equity

   $ 1,465,585     $ 1,435,348  
                

Total assets

   $ 27,977,914     $ 28,482,370  

Less:  Goodwill

     (2,144,642 )     (2,148,108 )

           Core deposit intangibles

     (101,379 )     (106,381 )
                

Tangible assets

   $ 25,731,893     $ 26,227,881  
                

Stockholders’ equity to total assets

     13.27 %     12.95 %
                

Tangible stockholders’ equity to tangible assets

     5.70 %     5.47 %
                

Tangible stockholders’ equity

   $ 1,465,585     $ 1,435,348  

Add back: After-tax net unrealized losses on securities

     43,854       52,125  
                

Adjusted tangible stockholders’ equity

   $ 1,509,439     $ 1,487,473  
                

Tangible assets

   $ 25,731,893     $ 26,227,881  

Add back: After-tax net unrealized losses on securities

     43,854       52,125  
                

Adjusted tangible assets

   $ 25,775,747     $ 26,280,006  
                

Adjusted tangible stockholders’ equity to adjusted tangible assets

     5.86 %     5.66 %
                

Critical Accounting Policies

We have identified the accounting policies below as being critical to understanding our financial condition and results of operations. Certain accounting policies are considered to be important to the portrayal of our financial condition, since they require management to make complex or subjective judgments, some of which may relate to matters that are inherently uncertain. The inherent sensitivity of our consolidated financial statements to these critical accounting policies, and the judgments, estimates, and assumptions used therein, could have a material impact on our financial condition or results of operations.

Allowance for Loan Losses

The allowance for loan losses is increased by the provisions for loan losses charged to operations and reduced by net charge-offs or reversals. A separate loan loss allowance is established for each of the Community Bank and the Commercial Bank and, except as otherwise noted below, the process for establishing the allowance for loan losses is the same for each.

Management establishes the allowances for loan losses through an assessment of probable losses in each of the respective loan portfolios. Several factors are considered in this process, including historical and projected default rates and loss severities; internal risk ratings; loan size; economic, industry, and environmental factors; and loan impairment, as defined under Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (“SFAS”) No. 114, “Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan,” as amended by SFAS No. 118, “Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan/Income Recognition and Disclosures.” Under SFAS Nos. 114 and 118, a loan is classified as “impaired” when, based on current information and events, it is probable that a creditor will be unable to collect all amounts

 

14


due under the contractual terms of the loan. We apply SFAS Nos. 114 and 118 to all loans except smaller balance homogenous loans and loans carried at fair value or the lower of cost or fair value.

In establishing the loan loss allowances, management also considers the Banks’ current business strategies and credit processes, including compliance with stringent guidelines established by the respective Boards of Directors with regard to credit limitations, loan approvals, underwriting criteria, and loan workout procedures.

In accordance with the pertinent policies, the allowances for loan losses are segmented to correspond to the various types of loans in the loan portfolios. These loan categories are assessed with specific emphasis on the internal risk ratings, underlying collateral, credit underwriting, and loan size. These factors correspond to the respective levels of quantified and inherent risk.

The assessments take into consideration loans that have been adversely rated, primarily through the valuation of the collateral supporting each loan. “Adversely rated” loans are loans that are either non-performing or that exhibit certain weaknesses that could jeopardize payment in accordance with the original terms. Larger loans are assigned risk ratings based upon a routine review of the credit files, while smaller loans exceeding 90 days in arrears are assigned risk ratings based upon an aging schedule. Quantified risk factors are assigned for each risk-rating category to provide an allocation to the overall loan loss allowance.

The remainder of each loan portfolio is then assessed, by loan type, with similar risk factors being considered, including the borrower’s ability to pay and our past loan loss experience with each type of loan. These loans are also assigned quantified risk factors, which result in allocations to the allowances for loan losses for each particular loan or loan type in the portfolio.

In order to determine their overall adequacy, each of the respective loan loss allowances is reviewed quarterly by management and by the Mortgage and Real Estate Committee of the Community Bank’s Board of Directors or the Credit Committee of the Board of Directors of the Commercial Bank, as applicable.

Other factors and processes considered in determining the appropriate level of the allowances for loan losses include, but are not limited to:

 

  1. End-of-period levels and observable trends in non-performing loans;
  2. Charge-offs experienced over prior periods, including an analysis of the underlying factors leading to the delinquencies and subsequent charge-offs (if any);
  3. Periodic inspections of the loan collateral by qualified in-house property appraisers/inspectors, as applicable;
  4. Regular meetings of executive management with the pertinent Board committee, during which observable trends in the local economy and/or the real estate market are discussed;
  5. Full assessment by the pertinent Board of Directors of the aforementioned factors when making a business judgment regarding the impact of anticipated changes on the future level of the allowance for loan losses; and
  6. Analysis of the portfolio in the aggregate, as well as on an individual loan basis, taking into consideration payment history, underwriting analyses, and internal risk ratings.

While management uses available information to recognize losses on loans, future additions to the respective loan loss allowances may be necessary, based on changes in economic and local market conditions beyond management’s control. In addition, the Community Bank and/or the Commercial Bank may be required to take certain charge-offs and/or recognize additions to their loan loss allowances, based on the judgment of regulatory agencies with regard to information provided to them during their examinations.

Investment Securities

The securities portfolio consists of mortgage-related securities, and debt and equity (“other”) securities. Securities that are classified as “available for sale” are carried at estimated fair value, with any unrealized gains and losses, net of taxes, reported as accumulated other comprehensive income or loss in stockholders’ equity. Securities

 

15


that we have the positive intent and ability to hold to maturity are classified as “held to maturity” and are carried at amortized cost.

The market values of our securities, particularly our fixed-rate securities, are affected by changes in market interest rates. In general, as interest rates rise, the market value of fixed-rate securities will decline; as interest rates fall, the market value of fixed-rate securities will increase. We conduct a periodic review and evaluation of the securities portfolio to determine if the decline in the fair value of any security below its carrying value is other than temporary. Estimated fair values for securities are based on published or securities dealers’ market values. If we deem any decline in value to be other than temporary, the security is written down to a new cost basis and the resulting loss is charged against earnings.

Goodwill Impairment

Goodwill is presumed to have an indefinite useful life and is tested for impairment, rather than amortized, at the reporting unit level, at least once a year. Impairment exists when the carrying amount of goodwill exceeds its implied fair value. If the fair value of a reporting unit exceeds its carrying amount at the time of testing, the goodwill of the reporting unit is not considered impaired. According to SFAS No. 142, “Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets,” quoted market prices in active markets are the best evidence of fair value and are to be used as the basis for measurement, when available. Other acceptable valuation methods include present-value measurements based on multiples of earnings or revenues, or similar performance measures. Differences in the identification of reporting units and in valuation techniques could result in materially different evaluations of impairment.

For the purpose of goodwill impairment testing, we have identified one reporting unit. We performed our annual goodwill impairment test as of January 1, 2006, and determined that the fair value of the reporting unit was in excess of its carrying value, using the quoted market price of our common stock on the impairment testing date as the basis for determining fair value. As of the annual impairment test date, there was no indication of goodwill impairment. In addition, we found no indication of goodwill impairment when we performed our annual goodwill impairment test as of January 1, 2007.

Income Taxes

We estimate income taxes payable based on the amount we expect to owe the various taxing authorities (i.e., federal, state, and local). Income taxes represent the net estimated amount due to, or to be received from, such taxing authorities. In estimating income taxes, management assesses the relative merits and risks of the appropriate tax treatment of transactions, taking into account statutory, judicial, and regulatory guidance in the context of our tax position. In this process, management also relies on tax opinions, recent audits, and historical experience. Although we use available information to record income taxes, underlying estimates and assumptions can change over time as a result of unanticipated events or circumstances such as changes in tax laws and judicial guidance influencing our overall tax position.

In April 2007, the State of New York enacted new legislation which included a number of tax provisions that are effective for the calendar tax year beginning January 1, 2007 and that will have an impact on the Company. Specifically, the new law phases out, over four years, the favorable adjustment to income received from subsidiary capital attributable to REIT entities that has historically been used by banking corporations in the computation of taxable income. Additionally, corporate income tax rates were reduced from 7.5% to 7.1%. These provisions are not expected to have a material impact on the Company’s 2007 income tax expense. However, we believe that one of the provisions in the legislation, if not corrected, has unintended adverse consequences to the Company. While the banking industry anticipates that a technical correction law will be enacted, there is no guarantee that there will be such a law or if such law, once enacted, will adequately address the specific unintended consequences to the Company. Based on our interpretation of the law as originally enacted, the Company’s income tax expense would be increased by approximately $1.1 million per month, retroactive to January 2007. Although we expect a technical correction law to be enacted, we are taking steps to limit the impact of the original legislation to the first six months of 2007. However, if the original legislation is appropriately modified through a subsequent

 

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technical correction law, there would be no increase in our 2007 income tax expense. Since the original legislation was enacted in the second quarter of 2007, there was no impact on the Company’s financial condition or results of operations at or for the three months ended March 31, 2007.

Recent Events

Dividend Payment

On April 24, 2007, our Board of Directors declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.25 per share, payable on May 15, 2007 to shareholders of record at May 4, 2007.

Redemption and Placement of Trust Preferred Securities

On February 8, 2007, we announced that two of our subsidiaries, Haven Capital Trust I (“Haven Trust I”) and Roslyn Preferred Trust I (“Roslyn Trust I”), would redeem all of their respective trust preferred securities. Subsequently, on April 2, 2007, Haven Trust I redeemed all $17.4 million of its fixed-rate trust preferred securities, and Roslyn Trust I redeemed all $63.0 million of its floating rate trust preferred securities. The Haven Trust I securities had a fixed annual interest rate of 10.46%, while the Roslyn Trust I securities had a floating annual interest rate equal to the six-month London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”) plus 3.60%. As previously disclosed in its 2006 Annual Report on Form 10-K, the Company expects to report a loss on debt redemption in connection with the aforementioned redemptions; however, the loss is expected to be immaterial.

On April 16, 2007, we announced that we had replaced the Haven Trust I and Roslyn Trust I securities through the issuance of $80.0 million of trust preferred securities with a floating annual interest rate equal to the three-month LIBOR plus 1.65%. The new trust preferred securities were issued by a statutory business trust formed by the Company, and were sold to a pooled investment vehicle in a private placement offering, pursuant to an applicable exemption from registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

Doral Bank, FSB Branch Acquisition

On March 15, 2007, the Company announced that its commercial bank subsidiary, New York Commercial Bank, and Doral Bank, FSB (“Doral”), the New York City-based subsidiary of Doral Financial Corporation, signed a definitive purchase and assumption agreement, pursuant to which the Commercial Bank will acquire 11 Doral branches in New York City, including two in Manhattan, three in Brooklyn, and six in Queens. In connection with the acquisition, which is expected to be immediately accretive to the Company’s earnings, the Commercial Bank will assume certain of Doral’s assets and liabilities. The price to be paid will be the lesser of $15.0 million or a premium of 4% of deposits acquired at closing. At March 31, 2007, Doral had total deposits of approximately $359 million.

At March 31, 2007, the amount of loans expected to be acquired amounted to approximately $209 million, including approximately $56 million of one-to-four family loans to be acquired at market value. The loans to be acquired also include taxi medallion, commercial real estate, multi-family, consumer, and commercial and industrial loans. The Company also expects to acquire certain other assets at market value when the transaction is completed early in the third quarter of 2007, pending receipt of certain regulatory approvals.

Acquisition of PennFed Financial Services, Inc.

On April 2, 2007, the Company acquired PennFed Financial Services, Inc. (“PennFed”). Pursuant to the Agreement and Plan of Merger announced on November 2, 2006, PennFed merged with and into the Company, and its primary subsidiary, Penn Federal Savings Bank, merged with and into the Company’s savings bank subsidiary, New York Community Bank. The acquisition added 24 branches to the Community Bank’s franchise in New Jersey, including 13 in Essex County, three in each of Ocean and Monmouth counties, two in each of Middlesex and Hudson counties, and one in Union County.

 

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In connection with the transaction, PennFed shareholders received 1.222 shares of Company common stock in a tax-free exchange for each share of PennFed common stock held at the closing date, plus cash-in-lieu of any fractional share.

At the date of acquisition, PennFed had assets of approximately $2.3 billion, including loans of approximately $1.7 billion; and deposits of approximately $1.6 billion, including approximately $584 million of core deposit accounts. Included in the loans acquired were one-to-four family loans of approximately $1.3 billion, the majority of which were sold or securitized on April 30, 2007. The related securities were subsequently sold.

Executive Summary

New York Community Bancorp, Inc. is a multi-bank holding company with two primary subsidiaries: New York Community Bank, a New York State-chartered savings bank with 160 locations serving customers in all five boroughs of New York City, Long Island, and Westchester County in New York, and Essex, Hudson, Middlesex, Monmouth, Ocean, and Union Counties in New Jersey; and New York Commercial Bank, a New York State-chartered commercial bank with 27 locations serving customers in Manhattan, Queens, and Brooklyn, Westchester County, and Long Island.

We are the fourth largest publicly traded bank holding company headquartered in the New York metropolitan region and also rank among the region’s leading depositories. Reflecting our acquisition of PennFed on April 2, 2007, we currently have assets of approximately $30.3 billion and deposits of approximately $14.0 billion. At March 31, 2007, we had total assets of $28.0 billion and total deposits of $12.4 billion. The PennFed acquisition also added 24 branches to our Community Bank franchise in New Jersey, increasing our network in that state from eight to 32 branches, and making us the fifth largest thrift depository in the six New Jersey counties we serve, combined.

On March 15, 2007, we announced plans to further expand our franchise through the Commercial Bank’s acquisition of 11 branches in New York City from Doral Bank, FSB (“Doral”). The purchase and assumption agreement also calls for us to acquire certain of Doral’s assets and liabilities. The price to be paid will be the lesser of $15.0 million or a premium of 4% of deposits acquired at closing.

At March 31, 2007, Doral had deposits of approximately $359.0 million, and the amount of loans we expect to acquire amounted to approximately $209 million at that date. Included in the latter amount were one-to-four family loans of approximately $56 million to be acquired at market value, with the remainder consisting of taxi medallion, commercial real estate, multi-family, consumer, and commercial and industrial loans. We also expect to acquire certain other assets at market value when the transaction is completed early in the third quarter, pending the receipt of certain regulatory approvals.

In the first quarter of 2007 and the last quarter of 2006, we refrained from growing our loan portfolio rather than compromise our credit standards by competing for product in the current marketplace. Yet despite the resultant reduction in our interest-earning assets, and the continued inversion of the yield curve, we reported an increase in net interest income from the trailing-quarter and year-earlier levels, as well as the expansion of our net interest margin. At $146.2 million, our net interest income was $5.4 million higher on a linked-quarter basis and $9.3 million higher year-over-year. At 2.32%, our margin was up five basis points linked-quarter, and four basis points year-over-year.

The improvements in our net interest income and margin were attributable to two primary factors:

 

   

An increase in refinancing activity and in the sale of properties underlying our multi-family loans, which resulted in a $4.9 million, or 56.5%, linked-quarter increase in income from prepayment penalties to $13.7 million. Year-over-year, the increase was $3.5 million, or 34.9%.

 

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The replenishment of our loan portfolio with higher-yielding loans, which contributed to a 10-basis point rise in the average yield on our interest-earning assets on a linked-quarter basis and a year-over-year increase of 40 basis points, to 5.96%.

We also took steps to lower our funding costs in the current first quarter, reducing our brokered money market accounts by $259.4 million, and our wholesale borrowings by $400.0 million. While brokered CDs rose $303.3 million during this time, the increase was an interim measure, in view of our expectation of adding PennFed’s deposits in April and of generating additional cash flows through the post-merger sale of PennFed’s one-to-four family loans.

Other first-quarter highlights were indicative of our focus on our business model, which emphasizes the production of multi-family loans, the maintenance of solid credit standards, and the efficient operation of the Company:

 

   

Loan Production: While the volume of loan repayments exceeded the volume of loan originations for the reasons already cited, we nonetheless produced $1.2 billion of loans in the first three months of the year. Multi-family loans accounted for $657.0 million, or 55.2%, of the quarter’s loan production, and for $14.2 billion, or 73.8%, of outstanding loans at March 31st.

 

   

Asset Quality: In the first quarter of 2007, charge-offs totaled a modest $68,000, representing 0.0003% of average loans, and non-performing loans totaled $24.6 million, representing 0.13% of total loans.

 

   

Efficiency: While the acquisition of Atlantic Bank of New York (“Atlantic Bank”) on April 28, 2006 and the implementation of our shareholder-approved Management Incentive Compensation Plan contributed to a year-over-year increase in our first quarter 2007 operating expenses, we nonetheless maintained a solid level of efficiency. Our efficiency ratio equaled 40.73% in the current first quarter, well below the 67.10% average reported by SNL Financial for U.S. banks and thrifts.

We also maintained a solid capital position at the close of the current first quarter, with stockholders’ equity rising $21.8 million to $3.7 billion, and tangible stockholders’ equity rising $30.2 million to $1.5 billion from the levels recorded at December 31, 2006. At March 31, 2007, our tangible stockholders’ equity equaled 5.70% of tangible assets; excluding net unrealized losses on securities from both sides of the equation, the ratio of adjusted tangible stockholders’ equity to adjustable tangible assets rose 20 basis points to 5.86%. (Please see the reconciliations of stockholders’ equity, tangible stockholders’ equity, and adjusted tangible stockholders’ equity; total assets, tangible assets, and adjusted tangible assets; and the related capital measures that appear earlier in this report.) The increase in tangible stockholders’ equity largely reflects our first quarter 2007 earnings, which equaled $64.8 million, or $0.22 per diluted share.

In addition, the capital position of our subsidiary banks continued to be solid, with both the Community Bank and the Commercial Bank exceeding the requirements for classification as “well capitalized” banks at March 31, 2007.

Summary of Financial Condition at March 31, 2007

The Company had total assets of $28.0 billion at March 31, 2007, a $504.5 million reduction from the balance recorded at December 31, 2006.

Loans

Loans totaled $19.3 billion and represented 68.9% of total assets at March 31, 2007, as compared to $19.7 billion, representing 69.0% of total assets, at December 31, 2006. While first quarter loan originations totaled $1.2 billion, loan growth was tempered by repayments of $1.6 billion, largely reflecting the aforementioned increase in refinancing activity and sales of underlying properties. The reduction in the loan portfolio also reflects management’s decision to limit lending in the current market, and to utilize more of our cash flows to reduce our higher-cost wholesale borrowings.

 

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Although PennFed had loans of approximately $1.7 billion on April 2, 2007, including one-to-four family loans of approximately $1.3 billion, the impact on our loan portfolio will be immaterial. Consistent with our strategy of repositioning our balance sheet following merger transactions, we sold or securitized the majority of the one-to-four family loans we acquired on April 30, 2007, and subsequently sold the related securities.

Multi-family Loans

Multi-family loans accounted for $657.0 million, or 55.2%, of loan production in the current first quarter, and for $14.2 billion, or 73.8%, of the total loan portfolio at March 31, 2007. The average multi-family loan had a principal balance of $3.6 million at the close of the current first quarter, and the portfolio had an average loan-to-value ratio of 63.8%.

Multi-family loans are typically made to long-term property owners who utilize the funds they borrow to make improvements to the buildings and the apartments therein. The loans in our portfolio generally feature a term of ten years, with a fixed rate of interest for the first five years of the mortgage, and an alternative rate of interest in years six through ten. The rate charged in the first five years is generally based on the five-year Constant Maturity Treasury rate (the “five-year CMT”) plus a margin of 150 basis points. During years six through ten, the borrower has the option of selecting a monthly adjustable rate that is 250 basis points above the prime rate of interest, or a fixed rate that is 275 basis points above the five-year CMT at the time of repricing. The latter option also requires the payment of one percentage point of the then-outstanding loan amount. The minimum rate at repricing is equivalent to the rate in the initial five-year term.

As improvements are made to the collateral property, State and City rent regulations permit an increase in the rents on the apartments, thus creating more cash flows for the owner to borrow against. As the rent roll increases, the property owner has historically opted to refinance the loan, even in a rising interest rate environment. This cycle has repeated itself over the course of many decades, with property values increasing and borrowers typically refinancing before the loan reaches its sixth year. Accordingly, the expected weighted average life of the multi-family loan portfolio was 3.1 years at March 31, 2007.

Multi-family loans that refinance within the first five years are subject to an established prepayment penalty schedule. Depending on the remaining term of the loan at the time of prepayment, the penalties normally range from five percentage points to one percentage point of the original loan balance. Prepayment penalties are recorded as interest income and are therefore reflected in the Company’s net interest margin.

Our emphasis on multi-family loans is driven by several factors, including their structure, which historically has reduced our exposure to interest rate volatility, to some degree. Another factor driving our focus on multi-family loans has been the historically consistent quality of these assets: We have not had a loss of principal on a multi-family loan in this niche for more than twenty-five years. We generally consider multi-family loans to involve a modest degree of credit risk as compared to other types of credits, since the loans we make are typically collateralized by rent-regulated buildings which tend to be stable and fully occupied. Because the buildings securing the loans are generally well maintained, and because the rents are typically below market, occupancy levels generally remain more or less constant, even during times of economic adversity.

Commercial Real Estate Loans

Commercial real estate loans accounted for $3.1 billion, or 15.8%, of total loans at March 31, 2007, and were down $59.0 million from the year-end 2006 balance after first-quarter originations of $86.9 million. The latter amount represented 7.3% of total loans produced during the current three-month period. At March 31st, the average commercial real estate loan had a principal balance of $2.3 million and the portfolio had an average loan-to-value ratio of 57.0%. The majority of our commercial real estate loans are secured by properties in New York City and on Long Island.

We structure our commercial real estate loans along the same lines as our multi-family credits, i.e., with a fixed rate of interest for the first five years of the loan that is generally tied to the five-year CMT, plus a margin

 

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ranging from 165 to 175 basis points. For years six through ten, the borrower has the option of selecting a monthly adjustable rate that is 250 basis points above the prime rate of interest, or a fixed rate that is 300 basis points above the five-year CMT at the time of repricing. The latter option also requires the payment of one percentage point of the then-outstanding loan amount. The minimum rate at repricing is equivalent to the rate featured in the initial five-year term.

Prepayment penalties also apply, with five percentage points generally being charged on loans that refinance in the first year, scaling down to one percentage point on loans that refinance in year five. Our commercial real estate loans tend to refinance within five years of origination, and the expected weighted average life of the portfolio was 3.1 years at March 31, 2007.

Construction Loans

Construction loans accounted for $1.1 billion, or 5.8%, of total loans, at March 31, 2007, signifying an $18.3 million increase from the balance recorded at December 31, 2006. First quarter originations totaled $144.5 million, representing 12.1% of total loans produced in the three-month period. The increase reflects the relationships we have established with several of the leading developers and builders in our region or that were established by our merger partners prior to their joining the Company.

Our construction loans typically feature shorter terms than our multi-family and commercial real estate credits, and are generally originated for the construction of residential subdivisions, owner-occupied one-to-four family homes under contract, multi-family buildings, and commercial real estate properties.

Residential subdivision and multi-family construction loans are typically originated for terms of 18 to 24 months, with a prime-based floating rate of interest. Such loans have had a strong credit history, with no losses recorded for more than a decade. They also generate origination fees that are amortized over the life of the loan and are recorded as interest income.

Loans originated for the construction of owner-occupied one-to-four family homes under contract, and for the acquisition and development of multi-family and commercial real estate properties, are also comparatively short-term in nature, ranging up to two years for one-to-four family home construction and up to three years for the development of multi-family and commercial properties. Such loans feature a daily floating prime-based index and have a minimum floor.

One-to-four Family Loans

Reflecting repayments and our policy of selling the one-to-four family loans we originate shortly after closing, the balance of one-to-four family loans declined $9.5 million over the course of the quarter to $221.0 million at March 31, 2007.

Other Loans

Other loans totaled $658.4 million at March 31, 2007, down $18.4 million from the balance recorded at December 31, 2006. Commercial and industrial (“C&I”) loans accounted for $627.3 million, or 95.3%, of the “other loan” balance at the close of the current first quarter, as compared to $643.1 million, representing 95.0% of other loans, at December 31, 2006. The Company originated $281.5 million of other loans in the current first quarter, including $273.6 million of C&I loans.

A broad range of C&I loans, both collateralized and uncollateralized, are made available to small and mid-size businesses for working capital, business expansion, and the purchase or lease of machinery and equipment. The purpose of the loan is considered in determining its term and structure, and the pricing is tied to the prime rate of interest.

 

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Asset Quality

The Company’s solid record of asset quality was maintained in the first quarter of 2007. Charge-offs totaled $68,000, representing 0.0003% of average loans, in the quarter, and consisted entirely of consumer and unsecured loans.

Non-performing assets totaled $25.5 million at March 31, 2007, as compared to $22.5 million at December 31, 2006. The March 31st amount was equivalent to 0.09% of total assets, while the year-end amount represented 0.08%. Included in non-performing assets at the respective dates were non-performing loans of $24.6 million and $21.2 million, equivalent to 0.13% and 0.11% of total loans.

Properties that are acquired through foreclosure are classified as “other real estate owned,” and recorded at the lower of the unpaid principal balance or fair value at the date of acquisition, less the estimated cost of selling the property at that time. Other real estate owned totaled $899,000 at March 31, 2007, signifying a $442,000 reduction from the balance recorded at December 31, 2006. As such properties are marketed at prices that exceed their respective carrying values, we do not expect to incur a loss of principal when such properties are sold.

Reflecting the aforementioned charge-offs, the allowance for loan losses declined to $85.3 million at the close of the current first quarter, representing 0.44% of total loans and 346.62% of non-performing loans. At December 31, 2006, the loan loss allowance represented 0.43% of total loans and 402.72% of non-performing loans.

The manner in which the allowance for loan losses is established, and the assumptions made in that process, are considered critical to our financial condition and results of operations. Such assumptions are based on judgments that are difficult, complex, and subjective, regarding various matters of inherent uncertainty. Accordingly, the policies that govern management’s assessment of the allowance for loan losses are considered “Critical Accounting Policies” and are discussed under that heading earlier in this report.

The following table presents information regarding our consolidated allowance for loan losses and non-performing assets at March 31, 2007 and December 31, 2006:

 

(dollars in thousands)    At or For the
Three Months Ended
March 31, 2007
    At or For the Year
Ended
December 31, 2006
 

Allowance for Loan Losses:

    

Balance at beginning of period

   $ 85,389     $ 79,705  

Allowance acquired in merger transaction

     —         6,104  

Charge-offs

     (68 )     (420 )
                

Balance at end of period

   $ 85,321     $ 85,389  
                

Non-performing Assets:

    

Non-accrual mortgage loans

   $ 21,710     $ 18,072  

Other non-accrual loans

     2,905       3,131  
                

Total non-accrual loans

     24,615       21,203  

Other real estate owned

     899       1,341  
                

Total non-performing assets

   $ 25,514     $ 22,544  
                

Ratios:

    

Non-performing loans to total loans

     0.13 %     0.11 %

Non-performing assets to total assets

     0.09       0.08  

Allowance for loan losses to non-performing loans

     346.62       402.72  

Allowance for loan losses to total loans

     0.44       0.43  
                

Securities

The strategic reduction of the securities portfolio continued in the current first quarter. Securities declined to $4.7 billion, representing 16.9% of total assets, at March 31, 2007, from $4.9 billion, representing 17.3% of total

 

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assets, at December 31, 2006. While the balance of securities declined $184.2 million, or 3.7%, on a linked-quarter basis, the March 31, 2007 balance reflects a year-over-year reduction of $654.8 million, or 12.1%.

Available-for-sale securities represented $1.9 billion, or 40.5%, of total securities at the close of the current first quarter, and were down $21.4 million from the balance recorded at December 31, 2006. The remainder of the securities portfolio at March 31st consisted of held-to-maturity securities totaling $2.8 billion, signifying a $162.8 million, or 5.5%, reduction from the year-end amount.

The after-tax net unrealized loss on securities available for sale equaled $35.2 million at March 31, 2007, as compared to $42.8 million at December 31, 2006. During this time, the after-tax net unrealized loss on securities transferred to held-to-maturity fell $680,000 to $8.7 million. The improvements were attributable to the reductions in the respective portfolios and, in the case of available-for-sale securities, to movements in market interest rates over the three-month period.

Mortgage-related securities represented $1.6 billion, or 83.7%, of available-for-sale securities at the close of the current first quarter, and $1.4 billion, or 47.8%, of securities held to maturity at that date. Debt and equity (“other”) securities accounted for the remaining $312.0 million of available-for-sale securities and for the remaining $1.5 billion of held-to-maturity securities.

At March 31, 2007, the respective market values of mortgage-related securities and other securities held to maturity were $1.3 billion and $1.5 billion, representing 94.08% and 99.98% of the respective carrying values at that date.

The estimated weighted average life of the available-for-sale securities portfolio was 4.9 years at the close of the current first quarter and 4.7 years at December 31, 2006. The estimated weighted average life of available-for-sale mortgage-related securities was 4.2 years at each of the corresponding dates.

It is currently management’s expectation that the balance of securities at June 30, 2007 will reflect a modest increase from the March 31, 2007 balance, in view of the addition of PennFed’s securities portfolio, which totaled approximately $477 million at the acquisition date.

Sources of Funds

On a stand-alone basis, the Company has four primary funding sources for the payment of dividends, share repurchases, and other corporate uses: dividends paid to the Company by the Banks; capital raised through the issuance of debt instruments; capital raised through the issuance of stock; and repayments of, and income from, investment securities.

On a consolidated basis, the Company’s funding primarily stems from the cash flows generated through the repayment of loans; the cash flows generated through securities sales and repayments; the deposits we gather through our branch network or acquire in merger transactions; and the use of wholesale funding.

Loan repayments generated cash flows of $1.6 billion in the first quarter of 2007, while securities generated cash flows of $226.5 million.

Deposits totaled $12.4 billion at the close of the current first quarter, and were down $205.1 million, or 1.6%, from the balance recorded at December 31, 2006. Core deposits (defined as NOW and money market accounts, savings accounts, and non-interest-bearing accounts) represented $6.3 billion, or 51.1%, of the March 31st total, as compared to $6.7 billion, representing 52.9% of total deposits, at December 31, 2006. The decline in core deposits was primarily due to a $370.3 million reduction in NOW and money market accounts to $2.8 billion, largely reflecting a $259.4 million reduction in brokered deposits to $405.3 million. The reduction in NOW and money market accounts was coupled with a $1.9 million decline in savings accounts to $2.4 billion, and tempered by a $35.5 million increase in non-interest-bearing accounts to $1.2 billion.

The reduction in core deposits was partly offset by a $131.6 million increase in certificates of deposit (“CDs”) to $6.1 billion at March 31, 2007. The increase in CDs was largely attributable to a $303.3 million rise in brokered

 

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CDs to $582.4 million, and tempered by a decline in retail CDs. During the quarter, the Company opted against competing for term deposits in anticipation of the deposits to be acquired in connection with the PennFed transaction on April 2nd.

In view of its decision to limit its lending in the current market, the Company also reduced its balance of wholesale borrowings in the first quarter of this year. Wholesale borrowings totaled $10.7 billion on March 31, 2007, and were down $400.0 million from the balance recorded at December 31, 2006. Included in the March 31st amount were FHLB-NY advances of $7.0 billion and repurchase agreements of $3.7 billion.

Reflecting the reduction in wholesale borrowings, total borrowed funds declined $400.5 million to $11.5 billion at March 31, 2007. Junior subordinated debentures accounted for $455.7 million of the March 31st balance, with senior debt and preferred stock of subsidiaries accounting for $191.5 million and $162.0 million, respectively.

Asset and Liability Management and the Management of Interest Rate Risk

We manage our assets and liabilities to reduce our exposure to changes in market interest rates. The asset and liability management process has three primary objectives: to evaluate the interest rate risk inherent in certain balance sheet accounts; to determine the appropriate level of risk, given our business strategy, operating environment, capital and liquidity requirements, and performance objectives; and to manage that risk in a manner consistent with the Board of Directors’ approved guidelines.

Market Risk

As a financial institution, we are focused on reducing our exposure to interest rate volatility, which represents our primary market risk. Changes in market interest rates represent the greatest challenge to our financial performance, as such changes can have a significant impact on the level of income and expense recorded on a large portion of our interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities, and on the market value of all interest-earning assets, other than those possessing a short term to maturity. To reduce our exposure to changing rates, the Board of Directors and management monitor interest rate sensitivity on a regular or as needed basis so that adjustments in the asset and liability mix can be made when deemed appropriate.

The actual duration of mortgage loans and mortgage-related securities can be significantly impacted by changes in prepayment levels and market interest rates. The level of prepayments may be impacted by a variety of factors, including the economy in the region where the underlying mortgages were originated; seasonal factors; demographic variables; and the assumability of the underlying mortgages. However, the largest determinants of prepayments are market interest rates and the availability of refinancing opportunities.

To manage our interest rate risk in the current first quarter, we continued to pursue certain strategies that are at the heart of our business model, and adopted additional strategies to respond to the specific challenges posed by the interest rate environment. We continued to place an emphasis on the origination and retention of intermediate-term assets, primarily in the form of multi-family, commercial real estate, and construction loans; and continued to originate one-to-four family loans on a pass-through basis, selling such loans to a third-party conduit without recourse. We continued to utilize the cash flows from loans and securities to fund the production of higher-yielding assets; however, in the first quarter of 2007, we also used our cash flows to reduce our balance of higher-cost wholesale borrowings.

Interest Rate Sensitivity Analysis

The matching of assets and liabilities may be analyzed by examining the extent to which such assets and liabilities are “interest rate sensitive” and by monitoring a bank’s interest rate sensitivity “gap.” An asset or liability is said to be interest rate sensitive within a specific time frame if it will mature or reprice within that period of time. The interest rate sensitivity gap is defined as the difference between the amount of interest-earning assets maturing or repricing within a specific time frame and the amount of interest-bearing liabilities maturing or repricing within that same period of time. In a rising interest rate environment, an institution with a negative gap would generally be expected, absent the effects of other factors, to experience a greater increase in the cost of its interest-bearing liabilities than it would in the yield on its interest-earning assets, thus producing a decline in its net interest income.

 

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Conversely, in a declining rate environment, an institution with a negative gap would generally be expected to experience a lesser reduction in the yield on its interest-earning assets than it would in the cost of its interest-bearing liabilities, thus producing an increase in its net interest income.

At March 31, 2007, our cumulative one-year gap was a negative 7.71%, as compared to a negative 11.66% at December 31, 2006. The difference reflects the replacement of borrowings that were called during the quarter with borrowings having a maturity or expected call date greater than one year. In addition, the percentage of total CDs maturing in one year or less decreased from 85.0% at December 31, 2006 to 73.8% at March 31, 2007.

The following table sets forth the amounts of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities outstanding at March 31, 2007 which, based on certain assumptions stemming from our historical experience, are expected to reprice or mature in each of the future time periods shown. Except as stated below, the amounts of assets and liabilities shown as repricing or maturing during a particular time period were determined in accordance with the earlier of (1) the term to repricing, or (2) the contractual terms of the asset or liability. The table provides an approximation of the projected repricing of assets and liabilities at March 31, 2007 on the basis of contractual maturities, anticipated prepayments, and scheduled rate adjustments within a three-month period and subsequent selected time intervals. For loans and mortgage-related securities, prepayment rates were assumed to range up to 20% annually. Savings accounts, Super NOW accounts, and NOW accounts were assumed to decay at an annual rate of 5% for the first five years and 15% for the years thereafter. Money market accounts, with the exception of accounts with specified repricing dates, were assumed to decay at an annual rate of 20% for the first five years and 50% in the years thereafter.

Prepayment and deposit decay rates can have a significant impact on our estimated gap. While we believe our assumptions to be reasonable, there can be no assurance that assumed prepayment and decay rates will approximate actual future loan prepayments and deposit withdrawal activity.

 

25


Interest Rate Sensitivity Analysis

 

     At March 31, 2007
(dollars in thousands)    Three
Months
or Less
    Four to
Twelve
Months
    More Than
One Year
to Three
Years
    More Than
Three
Years to
Five Years
    More Than
Five Years
to 10 Years
    More
Than 10
Years
    Total

INTEREST-EARNING ASSETS:

              

Mortgage and other loans(1)

   $ 3,137,004     $ 4,068,856     $ 7,257,899     $ 3,951,388     $ 804,118     $ 43,371     $ 19,262,636

Mortgage-related securities(2)(3)

     176,506       277,844       634,420       537,757       852,026       478,954       2,957,507

Other securities(2)

     559,212       31,448       184,966       936,533       374,630       88,665       2,175,454

Money market investments

     23,497       —         —         —         —         —         23,497
                                                      

Total interest-earning assets

     3,896,219       4,378,148       8,077,285       5,425,678       2,030,774       610,990       24,419,094
                                                      

INTEREST-BEARING LIABILITES:

              

Savings accounts

     29,903       89,708       221,578       199,974       1,029,725       821,316       2,392,204

NOW and Super NOW accounts

     8,330       24,989       61,722       55,704       286,838       228,784       666,367

Money market accounts

     99,035       436,722       570,443       365,083       628,755       20,282       2,120,320

Certificates of deposit

     1,586,731       2,896,905       1,412,274       95,609       84,700       —         6,076,219

Borrowed funds

     3,005,244       2,254,734       1,563,197       2,782,520       1,505,567       368,219       11,479,481
                                                      

Total interest-bearing liabilities

     4,729,243       5,703,058       3,829,214       3,498,890       3,535,585       1,438,601       22,734,591
                                                      

Interest rate sensitivity gap per period(4)

   $ (833,024 )   $ (1,324,910 )   $ 4,248,071     $ 1,926,788     $ (1,504,811 )   $ (827,611 )   $ 1,684,503
                                                      

Cumulative interest sensitivity gap

   $ (833,024 )   $ (2,157,934 )   $ 2,090,137     $ 4,016,925     $ 2,512,114     $ 1,684,503    
                                                  

Cumulative interest sensitivity gap as a percentage of total assets

     (2.98 )%     (7.71 )%     7.47 %     14.36 %     8.98 %     6.02 %  

Cumulative net interest-earning assets as a percentage of net interest-bearing liabilities

     82.39       79.31       114.66       122.62       111.80       107.41    
                                                  

 

(1) For the purpose of the gap analysis, non-performing loans and the allowance for loan losses have been excluded.
(2) Mortgage-related and other securities, including FHLB-NY stock, are shown at their respective carrying values.
(3) Expected amount based, in part, on historical experience.
(4) The interest rate sensitivity gap per period represents the difference between interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities.

 

26


Certain shortcomings are inherent in the method of analysis presented in the preceding Interest Rate Sensitivity Analysis. For example, although certain assets and liabilities may have similar maturities or periods to repricing, they may react in different degrees to changes in market interest rates. The interest rates on certain types of assets and liabilities may fluctuate in advance of the market, while interest rates on other types may lag behind changes in market interest rates. Additionally, certain assets, such as adjustable-rate loans, have features that restrict changes in interest rates both on a short-term basis and over the life of the asset. Furthermore, in the event of a change in interest rates, prepayment and early withdrawal levels would likely deviate from those assumed in calculating the table. Finally, the ability of some borrowers to repay their adjustable-rate loans may be adversely impacted by an increase in market interest rates.

Management also monitors our interest rate sensitivity through the use of a model that generates estimates of the change in our net portfolio value (“NPV”) over a range of interest rate scenarios. NPV is defined as the net present value of expected cash flows from assets, liabilities, and off-balance sheet contracts. The model assumes estimated loan prepayment rates, reinvestment rates, and deposit decay rates.

To monitor our overall sensitivity to changes in interest rates, we model the effect of instantaneous increases and decreases in interest rates on our assets and liabilities. At March 31, 2007, a 200-basis point increase in interest rates would have reduced the NPV approximately 16.72%, as compared to 16.10% at December 31, 2006. While the NPV analysis provides an indication of our interest rate risk exposure at a particular point in time, such measurements are not intended to, and do not, provide a precise forecast of the effect of changes in market interest rates on our net interest income, and may very well differ from actual results.

In addition to the analyses of gap and NPV, we utilize an internal net interest income simulation to manage our sensitivity to interest rate risk. The simulation incorporates various market-based assumptions regarding the impact of changing interest rates on future levels of our financial assets and liabilities. The assumptions used in the net interest income simulation are inherently uncertain. Actual results may differ significantly from those presented in the table below, due to the frequency, timing, and magnitude of changes in interest rates; changes in spreads between maturity and repricing categories; and prepayments, among other factors, coupled with any actions taken to counter the effects of any such changes.

The following table reflects, based on the information and assumptions in effect at March 31, 2007, the estimated percentage change in future net interest income for the next twelve months, assuming a gradual increase or decrease in interest rates during such time:

 

Changes in

Interest Rates

(in basis points) (1)

 

Estimated Percentage Change in

Future Net Interest Income

+ 200 over one year

     (8.17)%

+ 100 over one year

  (3.34)

- 100 over one year

  3.99

- 200 over one year

  5.49

 

  (1) In general, short- and long-term rates are assumed to increase or decrease in parallel fashion across all four quarters and then remain unchanged.  

Management notes that no assurances can be given that future changes in the Company’s mix of assets and liabilities will not result in greater changes to the gap, NPV, or net interest income simulation.

Liquidity, Off-balance Sheet Arrangements and Contractual Commitments, and Capital Position

Liquidity

We manage liquidity to ensure that our cash flows are sufficient to support our operations and to compensate for any temporary mismatches with regard to sources and uses of funds caused by erratic deposit and loan demand.

As discussed under “Sources of Funds,” we have several funding sources, including principal repayments on loans; cash flows from securities sales and repayments; deposits; and borrowed funds, primarily in the form of

 

27


wholesale borrowings. While borrowed funds and the scheduled amortization of loans and securities are predictable funding sources, deposit flows and loan and securities prepayments are subject to such external factors as market interest rates, competition, and economic conditions, and, accordingly, are less predictable.

Our principal investing activity is mortgage loan production, with a primary focus on the origination of multi-family loans. As previously discussed, the quarter’s loan production, while substantial, was exceeded by the volume of loan repayments. In addition, we continued our strategic reduction of the securities portfolio. As a result, our investing activities provided net cash of $572.7 million during the three months ended March 31, 2007.

Largely reflecting the aforementioned declines in borrowed funds and deposits, our financing activities used net cash of $584.7 million during the current first quarter. Our operating activities provided net cash of $28.3 million during this time.

We monitor our liquidity on a daily basis to ensure that sufficient funds are available to meet our financial obligations, including withdrawals from depository accounts, outstanding loan commitments, contractual long-term debt payments, and operating leases. Our most liquid assets are cash and cash equivalents, which totaled $247.0 million at March 31, 2007, as compared to $230.8 million at December 31, 2006. Additional liquidity stems from our approved line of credit with the FHLB-NY and our portfolio of available-for-sale securities.

CDs due to mature in one year or less from March 31, 2007 totaled $4.5 billion. While our ability to retain and attract CDs depends on various factors, including the competitiveness of the terms and interest rates we offer, our desire to retain and attract CDs depends on our need for such funding, and the availability and attractiveness of other sources of funds. For example, the infusion of deposits through an acquisition could reduce our need for term deposits, particularly in a rising rate environment.

Off-balance Sheet Arrangements and Contractual Commitments

At March 31, 2007, we had outstanding mortgage loan commitments of $588.0 million, including $162.5 million of multi-family loans. We also had outstanding letters of credit totaling $87.6 million at the close of the current first quarter, an increase from $79.1 million at December 31, 2006. In addition, we continue to be obligated under numerous non-cancelable operating lease and license agreements. As the impact of these leases is not material, the amounts involved in our operating lease and license agreements at the close of the current first quarter were comparable to the amounts disclosed at December 31, 2006.

Capital Position

Stockholders’ equity totaled $3.7 billion at March 31, 2007, a $21.8 million increase from the balance recorded at December 31, 2006. The March 31, 2007 amount was equivalent to 13.27% of total assets and a book value of $12.58 per share, based on 295,015,198 shares; the December 31, 2006 amount was equivalent to 12.95% of total assets and a book value of $12.56 per share, based on 293,890,372 shares.

We calculate book value by subtracting the number of unallocated ESOP shares at the end of a period from the number of shares outstanding at the same date. The number of unallocated ESOP shares at March 31, 2007 and December 31, 2006 was 1,370,260 and 1,460,564, respectively. We calculate book value in this manner to be consistent with our calculations of basic and diluted earnings per share, both of which exclude unallocated ESOP shares from the number of shares outstanding.

Excluding goodwill of $2.1 billion and CDI of $101.4 million, we reported tangible stockholders’ equity of $1.5 billion at March 31, 2007, as compared to $1.4 billion at December 31, 2006. The increase in tangible stockholders’ equity was primarily attributable to the level of net income recorded in the current first quarter, which was $64.8 million.

At March 31, 2007 and December 31, 2006, our tangible stockholders’ equity was equivalent to 5.70% and 5.47% of tangible assets, and represented tangible book values of $4.97 and $4.88 per share, respectively.

 

28


Excluding after-tax net unrealized losses on securities of $43.9 million and $52.1 million from the respective totals, our adjusted tangible stockholders’ equity was equivalent to 5.86% and 5.66% of adjusted tangible assets at March 31, 2007 and December 31, 2006, respectively. (Please see the reconciliations of stockholders’ equity, tangible stockholders’ equity, and adjusted tangible stockholders’ equity; total assets, tangible assets, and adjusted tangible assets; and the related capital measures earlier in this report.)

During the first three months of the year, we used $73.5 million of our tangible stockholders’ equity to pay a quarterly cash dividend to our shareholders of $0.25 per share.

Consistent with our historic performance, our capital levels exceeded the minimum federal requirements for a bank holding company at March 31, 2007. On a consolidated basis, our leverage capital equaled $2.2 billion, representing 8.30% of adjusted average assets; and our Tier 1 and total risk-based capital equaled $2.2 billion and $2.3 billion, representing 12.52% and 13.10%, respectively, of risk-weighted assets. At December 31, 2006, our leverage capital, Tier 1 risk-based capital, and total risk-based capital on a consolidated basis amounted to $2.1 billion, $2.1 billion, and $2.2 billion, representing 8.14% of adjusted average assets, 11.76% of risk-weighted assets, and 12.31% of risk-weighted assets, respectively.

In addition, at March 31, 2007, both the Community Bank and the Commercial Bank were categorized as “well capitalized” under the FDIC’s regulatory framework for prompt corrective action. To be categorized as well capitalized, a bank must maintain a minimum leverage capital ratio of 5.00%, a minimum Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of 6.00%, and a minimum total risk-based capital ratio of 10.00%.

The following regulatory capital analyses set forth the Company’s, the Community Bank’s, and the Commercial Bank’s leverage, Tier 1 risk-based, and total risk-based capital levels at March 31, 2007, in comparison with the minimum federal requirements:

Regulatory Capital Analysis (Company)

 

     At March 31, 2007  
                Risk-based Capital  
     Leverage Capital     Tier 1     Total  
(dollars in thousands)    Amount    Ratio     Amount    Ratio     Amount    Ratio  

Total capital

   $ 2,166,953    8.30 %   $ 2,166,953    12.52 %   $ 2,267,274    13.10 %

Regulatory capital requirement

     1,044,829    4.00       692,124    4.00       1,384,248    8.00  
                                       

Excess

   $ 1,122,124    4.30 %   $ 1,474,829    8.52 %   $ 883,026    5.10 %
                                       

Regulatory Capital Analysis (New York Community Bank)

 

     At March 31, 2007  
                Risk-based Capital  
     Leverage Capital     Tier 1     Total  
(dollars in thousands)    Amount    Ratio     Amount    Ratio     Amount    Ratio  

Total capital

   $ 1,813,241    7.46 %   $ 1,813,241    11.55 %   $ 1,891,128    12.05 %

Regulatory capital requirement

     972,113    4.00       627,876    4.00       1,255,751    8.00  
                                       

Excess

   $ 841,128    3.46 %   $ 1,185,365    7.55 %   $ 635,377    4.05 %
                                       

Regulatory Capital Analysis (New York Commercial Bank)

 

     At March 31, 2007  
                Risk-based Capital  
     Leverage Capital     Tier 1     Total  
(dollars in thousands)    Amount    Ratio     Amount    Ratio     Amount    Ratio  

Total capital

   $ 285,480    10.73 %   $ 285,480    12.33 %   $ 292,934    12.66 %

Regulatory capital requirement

     106,433    4.00       92,583    4.00       185,166    8.00  
                                       

Excess

   $ 179,047    6.73 %   $ 192,897    8.33 %   $ 107,768    4.66 %
                                       

 

29


Earnings Summary for the Three Months Ended March 31, 2007

We recorded earnings of $64.8 million, or $0.22 per diluted share, in the current first quarter, as compared to $53.1 million, or $0.18 per diluted share, in the three months ended December 31, 2006 and $66.4 million, or $0.25 per diluted share, in the three months ended March 31, 2006. Our fourth quarter 2006 earnings were reduced by after-tax charges of $8.6 million, or $0.03 per diluted share, related to the write-off of unamortized issuance costs stemming from the redemption of certain trust preferred securities (the “loss on debt redemption”); the retirements of our chairman and senior lending consultant (the “retirement charge”); and the merger-related allocation of ESOP shares in connection with the acquisition of Atlantic Bank (the “merger-related charge”). Our first quarter 2006 earnings were reduced by an after-tax loss of $3.6 million, or $0.01 per diluted share, on the mark-to-market of interest rate swaps.

Net Interest Income

Net interest income is our primary source of income. Its level is largely a function of the average balance of our interest-earning assets, the average balance of our interest-bearing liabilities, and the spread between the yield on such assets and the cost of such liabilities. These factors are influenced by the pricing and mix of our interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities which, in turn, may be impacted by such external factors as economic conditions, competition for loans and deposits, market interest rates, and the monetary policy of the Federal Open Market Committee of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors (the “FOMC”).

The FOMC reduces, maintains, or increases the target federal funds rate (the rate at which banks borrow funds from one another), as it deems necessary. The FOMC raised the federal funds rate four times in the first six months of last year, bringing the rate to 4.75% at March 28, 2006 and to 5.25% at June 29, 2006, where it has since remained.

While the federal funds rate drives the cost of our short-term borrowings and deposits, the yields on our loans and other interest-earning assets are typically driven by intermediate-term market interest rates. As previously indicated, the pricing of our multi-family and commercial real estate loans is based upon the five-year CMT. The five-year CMT averaged 4.64% in the first three months of this year, reaching a high of 4.89% on January 29, 2007, as compared to averages of 4.60% and 4.55%, respectively, in the three months ended December 31 and March 31, 2006.

Despite the challenging yield curve environment, our net interest income rose on a linked-quarter basis and year-over-year. These increases were largely attributable to two significant factors: an increase in refinancing activity, which resulted in a reduction in lower-yielding assets and an increase in income from prepayment penalties; and the replenishment of the asset mix with higher-yielding loans. Prepayment penalties contributed $13.7 million to interest income in the current first quarter, as compared to $8.7 million and $10.1 million, respectively, in the trailing and year-earlier three months.

Reflecting the factors described above, the Company recorded first quarter 2007 net interest income of $146.2 million, up $5.4 million on a linked-quarter basis and up $9.3 million from the level recorded in the first quarter of 2006. The linked-quarter increase was the combined result of a $1.8 million rise in interest income to $369.4 million and a $3.6 million reduction in interest expense to $223.2 million. The year-over-year increase was the net effect of a $41.8 million increase in interest income and a $32.5 million increase in interest expense.

Year-over-year Comparison

The year-over-year increase in interest income was driven by a $1.2 billion rise in the average balance of interest-earning assets to $24.8 billion, together with a 40-basis point rise in the average yield to 5.96%. The rise in the average balance was largely attributable to organic loan production and also reflects the benefit of the loans acquired with Atlantic Bank. The higher yield was primarily due to the rise in market interest rates over the twelve-month period, the increase in prepayment penalty income, and the replenishment of the loan portfolio with higher-yielding loans.

 

30


The interest income produced by loans rose $42.8 million year-over-year to $298.5 million, driven by a $1.9 billion increase in the average balance to $19.5 billion and a 33-basis point increase in the average yield to 6.14%. The level of interest income produced by loans was augmented by the aforementioned increase in prepayment penalties, resulting from the increase in refinancing activity. The increase in interest income was tempered by a $1.2 million decline in the interest income produced by securities, to $70.7 million, the net effect of a $662.9 million reduction in the average balance to $5.3 billion and a 52-basis point rise in the average yield to 5.33%. The increase in the average yield reflects the early redemption of certain held-to-maturity securities during the three months ended March 31, 2007.

The year-over-year increase in interest expense was driven by an $840.5 million rise in the average balance of interest-bearing liabilities to $23.3 billion, together with a 44-basis point rise in the average cost of funds to 3.89%. In addition to the rise in the federal funds rate over the twelve-month period, the year-over-year increase in interest expense was due to an increase in higher-cost funding in the form of CDs and wholesale borrowings, and to a reduction in the mark-to-market accretion on the borrowed funds acquired in our merger with Roslyn Bancorp, Inc. on October 31, 2003.

Interest-bearing deposits accounted for $22.3 million of the increase in interest expense over the past four quarters, as the average balance rose $252.0 million to $11.6 billion and the average cost rose 72 basis points to 3.49%. The bulk of the increase was produced by CDs, which averaged $6.1 billion in the current first quarter, as compared to $5.3 billion in the year-earlier three months. Reflecting the higher average balance and a 93-basis point increase in the average cost to 4.65%, CDs generated first-quarter 2007 interest expense of $70.2 million, a $21.7 million increase from the year-earlier amount.

The interest expense produced by NOW and money market accounts, meanwhile, declined by $2.4 million to $23.9 million, the net effect of a $619.3 million reduction in the average balance to $2.9 billion and a 29-basis point rise in the average cost of such funds to 3.29%. Savings accounts produced interest expense of $5.7 million, signifying an increase of $3.0 million, the combined result of a $13.9 million rise in the average balance to $2.4 billion and a 51-basis point rise in the average cost to 0.96%. The impact of these increases was partly offset by a $262.9 million rise in the average balance of non-interest-bearing deposits to $1.1 billion, largely reflecting the benefit of our transaction with Atlantic Bank.

Borrowed funds generated first quarter 2007 interest expense of $123.3 million, a $10.2 million increase from the level recorded in the first quarter of 2006. The year-over-year rise was attributable to a $588.5 million increase in the average balance to $11.7 billion and a 14-basis point increase in the average cost of such funds to 4.28%.

Net Interest Margin and Interest Rate Spread

The preceding factors also contributed to a year-over-year decline in our interest rate spread and an increase in our net interest margin, which equaled 2.07% and 2.32%, respectively, in the current first quarter, as compared to 2.11% and 2.28%, respectively, in the first quarter of 2006.

Linked-quarter Comparison

The linked-quarter increase in interest income was driven by a ten-basis point rise in the average yield on interest-earning assets and tempered by a $260.6 million decline in the average balance of interest-earning assets over the three-month period. The higher yield largely reflects the $4.9 million increase in prepayment penalties recorded during the quarter and, to a lesser extent, the replenishment of our asset mix with higher-yielding loans. The decline in the average balance was attributable to management’s decision to limit loan production in the current market, and the continued, planned reduction of the securities portfolio.

The average balance of loans declined $27.1 million on a linked-quarter basis, while the average yield on such assets rose six basis points. As a result, the interest income produced by loans rose $1.5 million in the current first quarter from the level recorded in the fourth quarter of the year. During this time, the interest income produced by

 

31


securities rose $273,000, the net effect of a $233.3 million decline in the average balance and a 25-basis point rise in the average yield. The linked-quarter rise in the average yield was attributable to early redemptions of certain held-to-maturity securities.

The linked-quarter reduction in interest expense was driven by a $222.3 million decline in the average balance of interest-bearing liabilities, and tempered by a six-basis point rise in the average cost of funds. The lower average balance was largely attributable to a $436.1 million reduction in the average balance of interest-bearing deposits, as the average balance of NOW and money market accounts declined $335.8 million, and the average balance of CDs declined $50.3 million. The interest expense produced by NOW and money market accounts fell $4.6 million linked-quarter, the result of the reduction in the average balance and a 16-basis point decline in the average cost of such funds. The interest expense produced by CDs fell $943,000, as the decline in the average balance offset the impact of an eight-basis point increase in the average cost. During the quarter, the interest expense produced by savings accounts rose $236,000, the net effect of a $33.5 million reduction in the average balance and a seven-basis point increase in the average cost of such funds. In addition, the average balance of non-interest-bearing deposits declined $24.0 million in the first quarter of 2007.

The linked-quarter reduction in interest expense was partly tempered by a $1.7 million increase in the interest expense produced by borrowed funds, as the average balance rose $213.8 million and the average cost of such funds rose six basis points. Although we reduced our use of wholesale borrowings over the course of the quarter, the bulk of the reduction occurred in March.

Reflecting the same factors that contributed to the linked-quarter decline in net interest income, our spread and margin rose four and five basis points, respectively, in the three months ended March 31, 2007.

The level of prepayment penalties depends on the volume of multi-family loans that refinance or prepay. Such activity is largely dependent on current market conditions, including real estate values; the perceived direction of market interest rates; and the contractual maturity dates of the loans. Accordingly, the level of prepayment penalties is unpredictable in nature. Thus, while the level of prepayment penalty income received in the second quarter of this year is currently expected to exceed the level received in the current first quarter, the amount of prepayment penalty income received in the last two quarters of 2007 may or may not differ significantly from the level received in the first two quarters of the year.

 

32


The following tables set forth certain information regarding our average balance sheet for the periods indicated, including the average yields on our interest-earning assets and the average costs of our interest-bearing liabilities. Average yields are calculated by dividing the interest income produced by the average balance of interest-earning assets. Average costs are calculated by dividing the interest expense produced by the average balance of interest-bearing liabilities. The average balances for the period are derived from average balances that are calculated daily. The average yields and costs include fees that are considered adjustments to such average yields and costs.

Net Interest Income Analysis (Year-over-year Comparison)

(dollars in thousands)

(unaudited)

 

     Three Months Ended March 31,  
     2007     2006  
     Average
Balance
   Interest    Average
Yield/
Cost
    Average
Balance
   Interest    Average
Yield/
Cost
 

Assets:

                

Interest-earning assets:

                

Mortgage and other loans, net (1)

   $ 19,492,078    $ 298,467    6.14 %   $ 17,624,144    $ 255,623    5.81 %

Securities (2) (3)

     5,308,608      70,688    5.33       5,971,553      71,846    4.81  

Money market investments

     20,341      246    4.90       16,814      166    4.00  
                                        

Total interest-earning assets

     24,821,027      369,401    5.96       23,612,511      327,635    5.56  

Non-interest-earning assets

     3,413,781           3,165,196      
                        

Total assets

   $ 28,234,808         $ 26,777,707      
                        

Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity:

                

Interest-bearing deposits:

                

NOW and money market accounts

   $ 2,942,119    $ 23,902    3.29 %   $ 3,561,459    $ 26,349    3.00 %

Savings accounts

     2,403,504      5,701    0.96       2,389,609      2,658    0.45  

Certificates of deposit

     6,127,205      70,228    4.65       5,283,851      48,492    3.72  

Mortgagors’ escrow

     120,250      33    0.11       106,149      54    0.21  
                                        

Total interest-bearing deposits

     11,593,078      99,864    3.49       11,341,068      77,553    2.77  

Borrowed funds

     11,670,369      123,349    4.28       11,081,905      113,184    4.14  
                                        

Total interest-bearing liabilities

     23,263,447      223,213    3.89       22,422,973      190,737    3.45  

Non-interest-bearing deposits

     1,096,095           833,156      

Other liabilities

     269,716           218,653      
                        

Total liabilities

     24,629,258           23,474,782      

Stockholders’ equity

     3,605,550           3,302,925      
                        

Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity

   $ 28,234,808         $ 26,777,707      
                        

Net interest income/interest rate spread

      $ 146,188    2.07 %      $ 136,898    2.11 %
                                

Net interest-earning assets/net interest margin

   $ 1,557,580       2.32 %   $ 1,189,538       2.28 %
                                

Ratio of interest-earning assets to interest-bearing liabilities

         1.07x           1.05x  
                        

 

(1) Amounts are net of net deferred loan origination costs/(fees) and the allowance for loan losses and include loans held for sale and non-performing loans.
(2) Amounts are at amortized cost.
(3) Includes FHLB-NY stock.

 

33


Net Interest Income Analysis (Linked-quarter Comparison)

(dollars in thousands)

(unaudited)

 

     Three Months Ended  
     March 31, 2007     December 31, 2006  
     Average
Balance
   Interest    Average
Yield/
Cost
    Average
Balance
   Interest    Average
Yield/
Cost
 

Assets:

                

Interest-earning assets:

                

Mortgage and other loans, net (1)

   $ 19,492,078    $ 298,467    6.14 %   $ 19,519,215    $ 296,948    6.08 %

Securities (2) (3)

     5,308,608      70,688    5.33       5,541,880      70,415    5.08  

Money market investments

     20,341      246    4.90       20,547      260    5.02  
                                        

Total interest-earning assets

     24,821,027      369,401    5.96       25,081,642      367,623    5.86  

Non-interest-earning assets

     3,413,781           3,442,448      
                        

Total assets

   $ 28,234,808         $ 28,524,090      
                        

Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity:

                

Interest-bearing deposits:

                

NOW and money market accounts

   $ 2,942,119    $ 23,902    3.29 %   $ 3,277,937    $ 28,475    3.45 %

Savings accounts

     2,403,504      5,701    0.96       2,436,975      5,465    0.89  

Certificates of deposit

     6,127,205      70,228    4.65       6,177,519      71,171    4.57  

Mortgagors’ escrow

     120,250      33    0.11       136,793      35    0.10  
                                        

Total interest-bearing deposits

     11,593,078      99,864    3.49       12,029,224      105,146    3.47  

Borrowed funds

     11,670,369      123,349    4.28       11,456,527      121,672    4.22  
                                        

Total interest-bearing liabilities

     23,263,447      223,213    3.89       23,485,751      226,818    3.83  

Non-interest-bearing deposits

     1,096,095           1,120,130      

Other liabilities

     269,716           265,634      
                        

Total liabilities

     24,629,258           24,871,515      

Stockholders’ equity

     3,605,550           3,652,575      
                        

Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity

   $ 28,234,808         $ 28,524,090      
                        

Net interest income/interest rate spread

      $ 146,188    2.07 %      $ 140,805    2.03 %
                                

Net interest-earning assets/net interest margin

   $ 1,557,580       2.32 %   $ 1,595,891       2.27 %
                                

Ratio of interest-earning assets to interest-bearing liabilities

         1.07x           1.07x  
                        

(1) Amounts are net of net deferred loan origination costs/(fees) and the allowance for loan losses and include loans held for sale and non-performing loans.

(2) Amounts are at amortized cost.
(3) Includes FHLB-NY stock.

Provision for Loan Losses

The provision for loan losses is based on management’s assessment of the adequacy of the loan loss allowance. This assessment, made periodically, considers several factors, including the current and historic performance of the loan portfolio and its inherent risk characteristics; the level of non-performing loans and charge-offs; current trends in regulatory supervision; local economic conditions; and the direction of real estate values.

Reflecting said assessment, no provision for loan losses was recorded in the three months ended March 31, 2007, December 31, 2006, or March 31, 2006. As previously indicated in the earlier asset quality discussion, non-performing loans totaled $24.6 million at March 31, 2007 and were equivalent to 0.13% of total loans, as compared to $21.2 million and $25.5 million, representing 0.11% and 0.14% of total loans, at December 31 and March 31, 2006, respectively. Furthermore, charge-offs totaled $68,000 in the current first quarter, as compared to $141,000 and $99,000 in the prior periods. The Company’s charge-offs consisted entirely of consumer loans and other unsecured credits during each of these periods.

 

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Reflecting the charge-offs recorded in the current first quarter, the allowance for loan losses totaled $85.3 million at March 31, 2007, and was equivalent to 0.44% of total loans and 346.62% of non-performing loans.

Please see “Critical Accounting Policies” earlier in this report for a detailed discussion of the factors considered by management in determining the allowance for loan losses, together with our earlier discussion of asset quality.

Non-interest Income

Non-interest income largely consists of fee income (comprised primarily of fees related to retail deposits); and other income, which primarily includes the revenues produced through the sale of third-party investment products; the income generated by our investment in bank-owned life insurance (“BOLI”); and the revenues generated by our subsidiary investment advisory firm, Peter B. Cannell & Co., Inc. (“PBC”).

In the first quarter of 2007, we recorded non-interest income of $24.1 million, as compared to $22.7 million and $19.2 million in the trailing and year-earlier three-month periods. Fee income accounted for $9.8 million of the current first-quarter total, signifying a linked-quarter reduction of $378,000 and a year-over-year increase of $1.4 million.

In the three months ended December 31 and March 31, 2006, our non-interest income was boosted by net securities gains of $210,000 and $2.8 million, respectively. However, in the fourth quarter of 2006, the gains were offset by a $1.9 million loss on debt redemption; in the first quarter of 2006, the gains were offset by a $6.1 million loss on the mark-to-market of interest rate swaps.

Other income accounted for $8.2 million of total non-interest income in the current first quarter, signifying a linked-quarter increase of $3,000 and a year-over-year reduction of $387,000. While revenues from PBC rose on a linked-quarter and year-over-year basis, the linked-quarter rise was tempered, and the year-over-year increase offset, by various factors, including the completion of our real estate joint venture in the fourth quarter of 2006.

The following table summarizes the components of non-interest income for the three months ended March 31, 2007, December 31, 2006, and March 31, 2006:

 

     For the Three Months Ended  
(in thousands)    March 31,
2007
   December 31,
2006
    March 31,
2006
 

Fee income

   $ 9,753    $ 10,131     $ 8,326  

BOLI

     6,082      6,276       5,465  

Net securities gains

     —        210       2,823  

Loss on debt redemption

     —        (1,859 )     —    

Loss on mark-to-market of interest rate swaps

     —        —         (6,071 )

Loss on other-than-temporary impairment of securities

     —        (313 )     —    

Other income:

       

PBC

     3,581      3,505       3,442  

Third-party investment product sales

     2,172      2,182       1,671  

Gain on sale of 1-4 family and other loans

     172      170       276  

Joint venture income

     2      429       1,698  

Other

     2,319      1,957       1,546  
                       

Total other income

     8,246      8,243       8,633  
                       

Total non-interest income

   $ 24,081    $ 22,688     $ 19,176  
                       

Non-interest Expense

Non-interest expense consists of operating expenses, which include compensation and benefits, occupancy and equipment, general and administrative (“G&A”), and other expenses; and the amortization of the CDI stemming from our merger transactions.

 

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We recorded total non-interest expense of $74.3 million in the current first quarter, as compared to $78.5 million and $58.6 million, respectively, in the trailing and year-earlier three months.

Operating expenses accounted for $69.3 million of non-interest expense in the three months ended March 31, 2007, as compared to $73.5 million and $55.3 million, respectively, in the three months ended December 31 and March 31, 2006. Included in the first quarter 2007 amount was compensation and benefits expense of $37.2 million, as compared to $42.2 million and $29.5 million, respectively, in the earlier periods. The level of compensation and benefits expense recorded in the fourth quarter of 2006 includes a $3.1 million charge recorded in connection with the retirements of the Company’s chairman and senior lending consultant and a $5.7 million non-cash charge recorded for the allocation of ESOP shares in connection with our acquisition of Atlantic Bank.

On a year-over-year basis, the increase in first quarter 2007 compensation and benefits expense partly reflects the impact of the Atlantic Bank acquisition, with the number of full-time equivalent employees rising to 2,400 at March 31, 2007 from 2,188 at March 31, 2006. The level of compensation and benefits expense recorded in the current first quarter also reflects the impact of normal salary increases and accruals for incentive compensation in connection with the implementation of our Management Incentive Compensation Plan.

Occupancy and equipment expense totaled $15.1 million in the current first quarter, up $262,000 and $3.0 million, respectively, from the trailing-quarter and year-earlier amounts. The year-over-year increase largely reflects the addition of 17 Atlantic Bank branches. Similarly, the level of G&A expense rose $866,000 on a linked-quarter basis to $15.3 million, and was up $2.8 million year-over-year.

CDI amortization totaled $5.0 million in the current first quarter, down $47,000 on a linked-quarter basis and up $1.7 million year-over-year. The year-over-year increase reflects the CDI recorded in connection with the acquisition of Atlantic Bank.

Income Tax Expense

The Company recorded income tax expense of $31.3 million in the current first quarter, down $721,000 from the trailing-quarter level, but comparable to the level recorded in the three months ended March 31, 2006. The linked-quarter decline was the net effect of an $11.0 million increase in pre-tax income to $95.9 million and a decline in the effective tax rate to 32.43% from 37.46%. In the fourth quarter of 2006, the effective tax rate was increased by the non-deductibility of the pre-tax charge that was recorded in connection with the merger-related allocation of ESOP shares. In the first quarter of 2006, the Company recorded pre-tax income of $97.4 million and an effective tax rate of 31.89%.

Please see the discussion entitled “Income Taxes” under “Critical Accounting Policies” earlier in this report.

ITEM 3. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK

Quantitative and qualitative disclosures about our market risk were presented on pages 75 – 80 of our 2006 Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) on March 1, 2007. Subsequent changes in the Company’s market risk profile and interest rate sensitivity are detailed in the discussion entitled “Asset and Liability Management and the Management of Interest Rate Risk,” in this quarterly report.

 

36


ITEM 4. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

 

(a) Disclosure Controls and Procedures

As of the end of the period covered by this report, the Company carried out an evaluation, under the supervision and with the participation of the Company’s management, including the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, of the effectiveness of the design and operation of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures pursuant to Rule 13a-15(b), as adopted by the SEC under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”). Based upon that evaluation, the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures were effective as of the end of the period covered by this report in ensuring that information required to be disclosed by the Company in the reports that we file or submit under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported, within the time periods specified in the Commission’s rules and forms.

 

(b) Internal Control over Financial Reporting

There have not been any changes in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting (as such term is defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Exchange Act) during the fiscal quarter to which this report relates that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.

 

37


NEW YORK COMMUNITY BANCORP, INC.

PART II – OTHER INFORMATION

Item 1. Legal Proceedings

In the normal course of the Company’s business, there are various outstanding legal proceedings. In the opinion of management, based on consultation with legal counsel, the financial position of the Company will not be affected materially as a result of the outcome of such legal proceedings.

In February 1983, a burglary of the contents of safe deposit boxes occurred at a branch office of CFS Bank, now the Queens County Savings Bank division of the Community Bank. The Community Bank has a lawsuit pending, whereby the remaining eight plaintiffs are seeking recovery of approximately $12.3 million in damages. This amount does not include any statutory prejudgment interest that could be awarded on a judgment amount, if any; such interest accumulates at a rate of 9% per annum from the date of loss. The suit also names as a defendant Wells Fargo. The Company previously settled claims by 21 plaintiffs, alleging damages of $974,000. The Company’s contribution to those settlements totaled $360,000. The ultimate liability, if any, that might arise from the disposition of the pending claims cannot presently be determined.

In 2004, the Company and various executive officers and directors were named in certain putative securities law class action lawsuits brought in the United States District Court, Eastern District of New York, and one class action lawsuit brought in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Kings County, that was later removed by the defendants to federal court. On August 9, 2005, the court consolidated the actions and appointed a Lead Plaintiff. On October 6, 2005, the Lead Plaintiff filed a consolidated amended complaint on behalf of a putative class of persons and entities, other than defendants, who purchased or otherwise acquired the Company’s securities from June 27, 2003 to July 1, 2004, alleging claims under Sections 11 and 12 of the Securities Act of 1933, Sections 10 and 14 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and Rule 10b-5, promulgated pursuant to Section 10 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Plaintiffs allege, among other things, that the Registration Statement issued in connection with the Company’s merger with Roslyn Bancorp, Inc. and other documents and statements made by executive management were inaccurate and misleading, contained untrue statements of material facts, omitted other facts necessary to make the statements made not misleading, and concealed and failed to adequately disclose material facts, pertaining to, among other things, the Company’s business plans and its exposure to interest rate risk. The defendants moved to dismiss the action on December 19, 2005. On September 18, 2006, the Court entered a Memorandum of Decision and Order dismissing the consolidated action in its entirety, finding that the Amended Complaint failed to allege any actionable misstatement or omission. On October 4, 2006, the Lead Plaintiff filed a motion for reconsideration of that Order insofar as it denied plaintiffs’ leave to amend. That motion has not been decided. Also, the plaintiff in the action removed from state court has filed a notice of appeal from the Court’s decision insofar as it declined to remand that action to state court. That appeal has been stayed pending resolution of the reconsideration motion.

Based upon the same facts and allegations described in the prior paragraph, on November 9, 2004, an additional suit was filed in the Eastern District of New York alleging that the Company and various of its officers violated the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended (“ERISA”). The suit was brought on behalf of a putative class of participants in the New York Community Bank Employee Savings Plan. The defendants moved to dismiss the ERISA action. On February 6, 2006, the Court granted in part and denied in part the motion to dismiss. The Court ruled that one of the two putative class representatives did not have standing under ERISA, but found that there were issues of fact concerning the standing of the other putative class representative. After the parties engaged in limited discovery concerning the plaintiff’s standing under ERISA, defendants renewed their motion to dismiss. On October 25, 2006, the Court entered an order dismissing the remaining claims in this action on the ground that the plaintiffs lack standing to pursue the claims. On November 20, 2006, plaintiffs filed a notice of appeal, which is currently pending.

On May 6, 2005, sixteen of the Company’s current or former officers and directors were named as defendants in a putative derivative action filed by an alleged shareholder on behalf of the Company in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York. The same shareholder previously had sent the Company’s

 

38


Board of Directors a letter reciting many of the allegations made in the putative class actions, and demanding that the Board take a variety of actions allegedly required to address those allegations. The Board appointed a committee of independent directors to evaluate what response, if any, to make to this letter. Nevertheless, the putative derivative plaintiff filed this action repeating the same allegations, and purporting to seek on behalf of the Company money damages, restitution, and equitable relief against the defendants for various alleged breaches of duty and alleged corporate waste. On August 15, 2005, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint, repeating the same substantive allegations of fact. On September 30, 2005, the defendants filed motions to dismiss this action, which motions remain pending.

Management believes that the Defendants have meritorious defenses against each of the preceding actions and will vigorously defend both the substantive and procedural aspects of the litigations.

Item 1A. Risk Factors

In addition to the other information set forth in this report, you should carefully consider the factors discussed in Part I, “Item 1A. Risk Factors,” in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2006, which could materially affect the Company’s business, financial condition, or future results. The risks described in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K are not the only risks that the Company faces. Additional risks and uncertainties not currently known to the Company, or that the Company currently deems to be immaterial, also may have a material adverse impact on the Company’s business, financial condition, or results.

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

Share Repurchase Program

During the three months ended March 31, 2007, the Company allocated $44,000 toward the repurchase of shares of its common stock, as outlined in the following table:

 

Period  

(a)

Total Number of
Shares (or Units)
Purchased (1)

 

(b)

Average Price

Paid per Share

(or Unit)

 

(c)

Total Number of
Shares (or Units)
Purchased as Part of
Publicly Announced
Plans or Programs

 

(d)

Maximum Number (or
Approximate Dollar Value)
of Shares (or Units) that May
Yet Be Purchased Under the
Plans or Programs (2)

Month #1:

January 1, 2007 through January 31, 2007

  —     $—     —    

1,475,132  

Month #2:

February 1, 2007 through February 28, 2007

  —     —     —     1,475,132

Month #3:

March 1, 2007 through March 31, 2007

  2,601     17.09   2,601   1,472,531
             

Total

  2,601   $17.09   2,601  

 

(1) All of the shares repurchased in the first quarter of 2007 were purchased on the open market.
(2) On April 20, 2004, with 44,816 shares remaining under the Board of Directors’ five million-share repurchase authorization on February 26, 2004, the Board authorized the repurchase of up to an additional five million shares. At March 31, 2007, 1,472,531 shares remained available under the April 20, 2004 authorization. Under said authorization, shares may be repurchased on the open market or in privately negotiated transactions until completion or upon termination of the repurchase authorization by the Board.

Item 3. Defaults Upon Senior Securities

Not applicable.

Item 4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders

Not applicable.

 

39


Item 5. Other Information

Not applicable.

Item 6. Exhibits

 

Exhibit 3.1:   Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation (1)
Exhibit 3.2:   Certificates of Amendment of Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation (2)
Exhibit 3.3:   Bylaws, as amended (3)
Exhibit 3.4(a):   Amendment to the Bylaws of the Company effective October 31, 2003 (4)
Exhibit 3.4(b):   Amendment to the Bylaws of the Company effective March 16, 2004 (5)
Exhibit 4.1:   Specimen Stock Certificate (6)
Exhibit 4.2:   Registrant will furnish, upon request, copies of all instruments defining the rights of holders of long-term debt instruments of the registrant and its consolidated subsidiaries.
Exhibit 10.1:   Retirement Agreement between Michael F. Manzulli and New York Community Bancorp, Inc.
Exhibit 10.2:   Retirement Agreement between James J. O’Donovan and New York Community Bancorp, Inc.
Exhibit 31.1:   Certification pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a)
Exhibit 31.2:   Certification pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a)
Exhibit 32:   Certifications pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 1350

(1) Incorporated by reference to the Exhibits filed with the Company’s Form 10-Q filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 11, 2001.
(2) Incorporated by reference to Exhibits filed with the Company’s Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2003 (File No. 001-31565).
(3) Incorporated by reference to Exhibits filed with the Company’s Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2001 (File No. 0-22278).
(4) Incorporated by reference to Exhibits filed with the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-4, as amended, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on September 15, 2003 (Registration No. 333-107498).
(5) Incorporated by reference to the Company’s Form 8-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on March 24, 2004.
(6) Incorporated by reference to Exhibits filed with the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 (Registration No. 333-66852).

 

40


NEW YORK COMMUNITY BANCORP, INC.

SIGNATURES

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

 

          New York Community Bancorp, Inc.
      (Registrant)

DATE: May 10, 2007

   BY:    /s/ Joseph R. Ficalora
     

Joseph R. Ficalora

Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer

DATE: May 10, 2007

   BY:    /s/ Thomas R. Cangemi
     

Thomas R. Cangemi

Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

 

41