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WAFD INC Interim / Quarterly Report 2015

May 8, 2015

31517_10-q_2015-05-08_6798723f-323a-4fc9-845d-f8b2abb2b20f.zip

Interim / Quarterly Report

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10-Q 1 wafd331201510-q.htm 10-Q html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd" Document created using Wdesk 1 Copyright 2015 Workiva WAFD 3.31.2015 10-Q

Table of Contents

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM 10-Q

(Mark One)

x QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the quarterly period ended March 31, 2015

or

o TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the transition period from to

Commission file number 001-34654

WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

Washington 91-1661606
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization) (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
425 Pike Street Seattle, Washington 98101
(Address of principal executive offices and zip code)
(206) 624-7930
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)

(Former name, former address and former fiscal year, if changed since last report.)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes x No o

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

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

Large accelerated filer x Accelerated filer o
Non-accelerated filer o Smaller reporting company o

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

APPLICABLE ONLY TO CORPORATE ISSUERS

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

Title of class: at May 6, 2015
Common stock, $1.00 par value 94,832,451

Table of Contents

WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

PART I — Item 1. Financial Statements (Unaudited)
The Consolidated Financial Statements of Washington Federal, Inc. and Subsidiaries filed as a part of the report are as follows:
Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition as of March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 3
Consolidated Statements of Operations for the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2015 and March 31, 2014 4
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income for the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2015 and March 31, 2014 5
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity for the six months ended March 31, 2015 and March 31, 2014 6
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the six months ended March 31, 2015 and March 31, 2014 7
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 9
Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations 42
Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk 52
Item 4. Controls and Procedures 52
PART II
Item 1. Legal Proceedings 54
Item 1A. Risk Factors 54
Item 2. Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds 54
Item 3. Defaults Upon Senior Securities 54
Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures 54
Item 5. Other Information 54
Item 6. Exhibits 54
Signatures 56

2

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION

(UNAUDITED)

March 31, 2015 September 30, 2014
(In thousands, except share data)
ASSETS
Cash and cash equivalents $ 675,064 $ 781,843
Available-for-sale securities, at fair value 2,756,906 3,049,442
Held-to-maturity securities, at amortized cost 1,479,781 1,548,265
Loans receivable, net 8,420,988 8,148,322
Covered loans, net 138,005 176,476
Interest receivable 40,359 52,037
Premises and equipment, net 264,063 257,543
Real estate held for sale 60,822 55,072
Real estate held for investment 4,068 4,808
Covered real estate held for sale 15,668 24,082
FDIC indemnification asset 23,115 36,860
FHLB & FRB stock 150,918 158,839
Bank owned life insurance 100,961
Intangible assets, net 300,903 302,909
Federal and state income tax assets, net 7,908 16,515
Other assets 171,490 143,028
$ 14,611,019 $ 14,756,041
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
Liabilities
Customer accounts
Transaction deposit accounts $ 5,707,797 $ 5,490,687
Time deposit accounts 4,984,828 5,226,241
10,692,625 10,716,928
FHLB advances 1,830,000 1,930,000
Advance payments by borrowers for taxes and insurance 18,008 29,004
Accrued expenses and other liabilities 102,246 106,826
12,642,879 12,782,758
Stockholders’ equity
Common stock, $1.00 par value, 300,000,000 shares authorized; 133,622,663 and 133,322,909 shares issued; 95,088,294 an d 98,404,705 shares outstanding 133,623 133,323
Paid-in capital 1,640,984 1,638,211
Accumulated other comprehensive income, net of taxes 23,485 20,708
Treasury stock, at cost; 38,534,369 and 34,918,204 shares (602,463 ) (525,108 )
Retained earnings 772,511 706,149
1,968,140 1,973,283
$ 14,611,019 $ 14,756,041

SEE NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

3

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS

(UNAUDITED)

Quarter Ended March 31, — 2015 2014 Six Months Ended March 31, — 2015 2014
(In thousands, except per share data)
INTEREST INCOME
Loans & covered assets $ 109,274 $ 106,334 $ 217,567 $ 213,561
Mortgage-backed securities 18,143 20,968 37,318 40,360
Investment securities and cash equivalents 5,213 5,049 11,029 9,688
132,630 132,351 265,914 263,609
INTEREST EXPENSE
Customer accounts 12,574 14,780 26,018 30,279
FHLB advances and other borrowings 16,176 16,935 33,832 34,383
28,750 31,715 59,850 64,662
Net interest income 103,880 100,636 206,064 198,947
Reversal of provision for loan losses (3,949 ) (4,336 ) (9,449 ) (8,936 )
Net interest income after reversal of provision for loan losses 107,829 104,972 215,513 207,883
OTHER INCOME
Loan fee income 2,048 1,324 4,112 3,370
Deposit fee income 5,405 3,381 11,383 5,084
Other income 3,388 1,997 726 4,036
10,841 6,702 16,221 12,490
OTHER EXPENSE
Compensation and benefits 30,469 27,836 59,629 52,962
Occupancy 8,239 7,346 16,374 14,396
FDIC insurance premiums 2,380 2,767 3,055 5,701
Information technology 3,882 3,931 7,912 6,860
Product delivery 5,420 4,066 11,047 5,384
Other expense 6,934 6,113 12,909 10,876
57,324 52,059 110,926 96,179
Gain (loss) on real estate acquired through foreclosure, net 1,473 553 1,788 (1,398 )
Income before income taxes 62,819 60,168 122,596 122,796
Income tax provision 22,458 21,511 43,828 43,903
NET INCOME $ 40,361 $ 38,657 $ 78,768 $ 78,893
PER SHARE DATA
Basic earnings $ 0.42 $ 0.38 $ 0.81 $ 0.77
Diluted earnings 0.42 0.38 0.81 0.77
Dividends paid on common stock per share 0.13 0.10 0.28 0.20
Basic weighted average number of shares outstanding 96,373,366 102,013,857 97,270,403 102,173,829
Diluted weighted average number of shares outstanding, including dilutive stock options 96,725,234 102,488,844 97,635,201 102,652,984

SEE NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME

(UNAUDITED)

Quarter Ended March 31, — 2015 2014 Six Months Ended March 31, — 2015 2014
(In thousands)
Net income $ 40,361 $ 38,657 $ 78,768 $ 78,893
Other comprehensive income (loss) net of tax:
Net unrealized gain on available-for-sale securities 5,063 16,277 13,623 6,501
Net unrealized (loss) on long-term borrowing hedge (4,985 ) (9,233 )
Related tax expense (28 ) (5,982 ) (1,613 ) (2,389 )
Other comprehensive income net of tax 50 10,295 2,777 4,112
Comprehensive income $ 40,411 $ 48,952 $ 81,545 $ 83,005

SEE NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

(UNAUDITED)

Common Stock Paid-in Capital Retained Earnings Treasury Stock Total
(In thousands)
Balance at October 1, 2014 $ 133,323 $ 1,638,211 $ 706,149 $ 20,708 $ (525,108 ) $ 1,973,283
Net income 78,768 78,768
Other comprehensive income 2,777 2,777
Dividends on common stock (12,406 ) (12,406 )
Compensation expense related to common stock options 600 600
Proceeds from exercise of common stock options 35 457 492
Restricted stock expense 265 1,716 1,981
Treasury stock acquired (77,355 ) (77,355 )
Balance at March 31, 2015 $ 133,623 $ 1,640,984 $ 772,511 $ 23,485 $ (602,463 ) $ 1,968,140
Common Stock Paid-in Capital Retained Earnings Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income Treasury Stock Total
(In thousands)
Balance at October 1, 2013 $ 132,573 $ 1,625,051 $ 594,450 $ 6,378 $ (420,817 ) $ 1,937,635
Net income 78,893 78,893
Other comprehensive income 4,112 4,112
Dividends on common stock (20,372 ) (20,372 )
Compensation expense related to common stock options 600 600
Proceeds from exercise of common stock options 727 9,184 9,911
Restricted stock expense 1,680 1,680
Treasury stock acquired (31,776 ) (31,776 )
Balance at March 31, 2014 $ 133,300 $ 1,636,515 $ 652,971 $ 10,490 $ (452,593 ) $ 1,980,683

SEE NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

(UNAUDITED)

Six Months Ended March 31, — 2015 2014
(In thousands)
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net income $ 78,768 $ 78,893
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:
Depreciation and amortization 10,566 5,993
Cash received from (paid to) FDIC under loss share (738 ) 1,629
Stock option compensation expense 600 600
Reversal of provision for loan losses (9,449 ) (8,936 )
Gain on real estate held for sale (12,338 ) (1,042 )
Decrease (increase) in accrued interest receivable 11,678 (2,066 )
Increase in FDIC loss share receivable 1,795 (1,896 )
Decrease in federal and state income tax 6,995 5,043
Increase in cash surrender value in bank owned life insurance (961 )
Decrease (increase) in other assets (28,462 ) 6,113
Increase (decrease) in accrued expenses and other liabilities 586 (7,753 )
Net cash provided by operating activities 59,040 76,578
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
Net loan originations (78,301 ) (127,918 )
Loans purchased (146,832 )
FHLB & FRB stock redemption 7,921 5,682
Available-for-sale securities purchased (163,126 ) (930,476 )
Principal payments and maturities of available-for-sale securities 466,991 185,050
Principal payments and maturities of held-to-maturity securities 65,913 42,253
Net cash received from acquisitions 1,254,517
Proceeds from sales of real estate owned and held for investment 28,354 28,489
Proceeds from sales of covered REO 9,050 17,216
Purchase of bank owned life insurance (100,000 )
Premises and equipment purchased and REO improvements (16,897 ) (19,659 )
Net cash provided by investing activities 73,073 455,154
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
Net decrease in customer accounts (24,227 ) (59,630 )
Repayments of borrowings (100,000 )
Proceeds from exercise of common stock options and related tax benefit 492 9,911
Dividends paid on common stock (26,806 ) (20,372 )
Treasury stock purchased (77,355 ) (31,776 )
Decrease in advance payments by borrowers for taxes and insurance (10,996 ) (25,192 )
Net cash used in financing activities (238,892 ) (127,059 )
Increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents (106,779 ) 404,673
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period 781,843 203,563
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period $ 675,064 $ 608,236

(CONTINUED)

SEE NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS (CONTINUED)

(UNAUDITED)

Six Months Ended March 31, — 2015 2014
(In thousands)
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION
Non-cash investing activities
Non-covered real estate acquired through foreclosure $ 18,991 $ 20,898
Covered real estate acquired through foreclosure 936 836
Cash paid during the period for
Interest 62,193 65,499
Income taxes 32,517 37,572
The following summarizes the non-cash activities related to acquisitions
Fair value of assets and intangibles acquired, including goodwill $ — $ 63,111
Fair value of liabilities assumed (1,317,628 )
Net fair value of assets (liabilities) $ — $ (1,254,517 )

SEE NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 AND 2014

(UNAUDITED)

NOTE A – Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

Nature of Operations - Washington Federal, Inc. is a Washington corporation headquartered in Seattle, Washington. The Company is a bank holding company that conducts its operations through a federally-insured national bank subsidiary. The Bank is principally engaged in the business of attracting deposits from the general public and investing these funds, together with borrowings and other funds, in one-to-four family residential real estate loans, multi-family real estate loans and commercial loans. As used throughout this document, the terms "Washington Federal" or the "Company" refer to Washington Federal, Inc. and its consolidated subsidiaries and the term "Bank" refers to the operating subsidiary Washington Federal, National Association.

Basis of Presentation - The consolidated unaudited interim financial statements included in this report have been prepared by Washington Federal. All intercompany transactions and accounts have been eliminated in consolidation. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“GAAP”) requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect amounts reported in the financial statements. Actual results could differ from these estimates. In the opinion of management, all adjustments (consisting only of normal recurring adjustments) necessary for a fair presentation are reflected in the interim financial statements. The September 30, 2014 Consolidated Statement of Financial Condition was derived from audited financial statements.

The information included in this Form 10-Q should be read in conjunction with the financial statements and related notes in the Company's 2014 Annual Report on Form 10-K (“ 2014 Form 10-K”) as filed with the SEC. Interim results are not necessarily indicative of results for a full year.

Summary of Significant Accounting Policies - The significant accounting policies used in preparation of the Company's consolidated financial statements are disclosed in its 2014 Form10-K. Other than the reclassifications discussed below, there have not been any material changes in our significant accounting policies compared to those contained in our 2014 Form 10-K disclosure for the year ended September 30, 2014 .

Correction of Immaterial Errors Related to Prior Periods - During the three months ended December 31, 2014, the Company made an $8,200,000 adjustment which increased the value of real estate owned and other income to correct an error in prior years. The adjustment reflects a one-time correction necessary to change the accounting for real estate owned to be in conformity with GAAP. The Company also made an $8,900,000 adjustment which decreased accrued interest receivable and other income as a result of the Company identifying a reconciliation error which had overstated interest income and accrued interest receivable. Based upon an evaluation of all relevant factors, management believes these correcting adjustments did not have a material impact on the Company’s current quarter financial statement or on any previously reported quarterly or yearly results.

Off-Balance-Sheet Credit Exposures – The only material off-balance-sheet credit exposures are loans in process and unused lines of credit, which had a combined balance at March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 , of $613,219,000 and $583,838,000 , respectively. The Company estimates losses on off-balance-sheet credit exposures by allocating a loss percentage derived from historical loss factors for each asset class.

Reclassifications - Reclassification of Other Expenses into Product Delivery and Information Technology line items have been made to the financial statements for years prior to September 30, 2014 to conform to current year classifications.

NOTE B - Acquisitions

There were no acquisitions completed during the six months ended March 31, 2015 . During the 2014 fiscal year, the Bank acquired seventy-four branches from Bank of America, National Association. Effective as of the close of business on October 31, 2013, the Bank completed the acquisition of eleven branches that are located in New Mexico. Effective as of the close of business on December 6, 2013, the Bank completed the acquisition of another forty branches that are located in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. Effective as of the close of business on May 2, 2014, the Bank completed the acquisition of another twenty-three branches that are located in Arizona and Nevada. Management believes that these transactions represent a significant enhancement of our branch network. These transactions have brought new customers to the Company and improved the deposit mix and reduced overall funding costs.

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

The combined acquisitions provided $1,853,798,000 in deposit accounts, $12,881,000 of loans, and $25,097,000 in branch properties. The Bank paid a 1.99% premium on the total deposits and received $1,776,660,000 in cash from the transactions. The acquisition method of accounting was used to account for the acquisitions. The purchased assets and assumed liabilities are recorded at their respective acquisition date estimated fair values. The Bank recorded $11,040,000 in core deposit intangible and $31,225,000 in goodwill related to these transactions.

The operating results of the Company include the operating results produced by the first eleven branches for the period from November 1, 2013 to March 31, 2015 , for the additional forty branches from December 7, 2013 to March 31, 2015 , and for the most recent twenty-three branches from May 3, 2014 to March 31, 2015 .

The table below displays the adjusted fair value as of the acquisition date for each major class of assets acquired and liabilities assumed during fiscal year 2014 :

Adjusted Fair Value Recorded by
Washington Federal
(In thousands)
Assets:
Cash $ 1,776,660
Loans receivable, net 12,881
Property and equipment, net 25,097
Core deposit intangible 11,040
Goodwill 31,225
Other assets 70
Total Assets 1,856,973
Liabilities:
Customer accounts 1,853,798
Other liabilities 3,175
Total Liabilities 1,856,973
Net assets acquired $ —

NOTE C – Dividends

On February 16, 2015, the Company paid its 128th consecutive quarterly cash dividend on common stock. Dividends per share were $ .13 and $ .10 for the quarters ended March 31, 2015 and 2014 , respectively.

On May 4, 2015, the Company announced its 129th consecutive quarterly cash dividend on common stock of $0.13 per share. The current dividend will be paid on May 29, 2015, to common shareholders of record on May 14, 2015. The Company also announced the authorization of an additional 5 million shares that may be repurchased under Washington Federal's share repurchase program. For the six months ending March 31, 2105, the Company has repurchased 3.9 million shares or 4.0 percent of the shares that were outstanding at the beginning of the year at an average price of $21.44 . The last authorization of 10 million shares was made in September 2013, and had 1.1 million shares remaining authorized to be repurchased as of May 4, 2015.

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

NOTE D – Loans Receivable (excluding Covered Loans)

March 31, 2015 September 30, 2014
(In thousands)
Non-acquired loans
Single-family residential $ 5,535,104 61.4 % $ 5,560,203 64.1 %
Construction - speculative 163,657 1.8 140,060 1.6
Construction - custom 370,693 4.1 385,824 4.5
Land - acquisition & development 105,058 1.2 77,832 0.9
Land - consumer lot loans 102,082 1.2 108,623 1.3
Multi-family 1,010,003 11.2 917,286 10.6
Commercial real estate 741,137 8.2 591,336 6.9
Commercial & industrial 408,358 4.6 379,226 4.4
HELOC 120,901 1.3 116,042 1.4
Consumer 218,680 2.5 132,590 1.5
Total non-acquired loans 8,775,673 97.5 8,409,022 97.2
Non-impaired acquired loans
Single-family residential 10,977 0.1 11,716 0.1
Construction - speculative
Construction - custom
Land - acquisition & development 728 905
Land - consumer lot loans 2,476 2,507
Multi-family 2,912 2,999
Commercial real estate 87,313 1.0 97,898 1.1
Commercial & industrial 55,659 0.6 51,386 0.6
HELOC 6,700 0.1 8,274 0.1
Consumer 2,794 5,670 0.1
Total non-impaired acquired loans 169,559 1.8 181,355 2.0
Credit-impaired acquired loans
Single-family residential 322 325
Construction - speculative
Land - acquisition & development 1,395 1,622
Multi-family
Commercial real estate 56,727 0.6 63,723 0.7
Commercial & industrial 2,190 3,476
HELOC 8,838 0.1 10,139 0.1
Consumer 51 55
Total credit-impaired acquired loans 69,523 0.7 79,340 0.8
Total loans
Single-family residential 5,546,403 61.5 5,572,244 64.2
Construction - speculative 163,657 1.8 140,060 1.6
Construction - custom 370,693 4.1 385,824 4.5
Land - acquisition & development 107,181 1.2 80,359 0.9
Land - consumer lot loans 104,558 1.2 111,130 1.3
Multi-family 1,012,915 11.2 920,285 10.6
Commercial real estate 885,177 9.8 752,957 8.7
Commercial & industrial 466,207 5.2 434,088 5.0

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

HELOC 136,439 1.5 134,455 1.6
Consumer 221,525 2.5 138,315 1.6
Total Loans 9,014,755 100 % 8,669,717 100 %
Less:
Allowance for probable losses 108,323 112,347
Loans in process 426,836 346,172
Discount on acquired loans 20,845 25,391
Deferred net origination fees 37,763 37,485
593,767 521,395
$ 8,420,988 $ 8,148,322

Changes in the carrying amount and accretable yield for acquired non-impaired and credit-impaired loans (excluding covered loans) for the six months ended March 31, 2015 and the fiscal year ended September 30, 2014 were as follows:

March 31, 2015 Acquired Impaired — Accretable Yield Net Carrying Amount of Loans Acquired Non-impaired — Accretable Yield Carrying Amount of Loans
(In thousands)
Balance as of beginning of period $ 32,591 $ 57,771 $ 4,254 $ 177,440
Additions 346
Accretion (6,036 ) 6,036 (1,810 ) 1,810
Transfers to REO
Payments received, net (12,362 ) (12,516 )
Balance as of end of period $ 26,555 $ 51,445 $ 2,790 $ 166,734
September 30, 2014 Acquired Impaired — Accretable Yield Net Carrying Amount of Loans Acquired Non-impaired — Accretable Yield Carrying Amount of Loans
(In thousands)
Balance as of beginning of period $ 37,236 $ 69,718 $ 4,977 $ 245,373
Reclassification from nonaccretable balance, net (1) 7,300
Accretion (11,945 ) 11,945 (723 ) 723
Transfers to REO (1,188 ) (4,710 )
Payments received, net (22,704 ) (63,946 )
Balance as of end of period $ 32,591 $ 57,771 $ 4,254 $ 177,440
(1) reclassification due to improvements in expected cash flows of the underlying loans.

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

The following table sets forth information regarding non-accrual loans (excluding covered loans) held by the Company as of the dates indicated:

March 31, 2015 September 30, 2014
(In thousands)
Non-accrual loans:
Single-family residential $ 59,948 79.0 % $ 74,067 84.8 %
Construction - speculative 1,152 1.5 1,477 1.7
Land - acquisition & development 811 0.9
Land - consumer lot loans 2,246 3.0 2,637 3.0
Multi-family 1,742 2.0
Commercial real estate 5,735 7.6 5,106 5.8
Commercial & industrial 5,018 6.6 7
HELOC 1,175 1.5 795 0.9
Consumer 576 0.8 789 0.9
Total non-accrual loans $ 75,850 100 % $ 87,431 100 %

The Company recognized interest income on nonaccrual loans of approximately $4,220,000 in the six months ended March 31, 2015 . Had these loans performed according to their original contract terms, the Company would have recognized interest income of approximately $3,108,000 for the six months ended March 31, 2015 . The recognized interest income may include more than six months of interest for some of the loans that were brought current.

In addition to the nonaccrual loans reflected in the above table, the Company had $77,912,000 of loans that were less than 90 days delinquent at March 31, 2015 but which it had classified as substandard for one or more reasons.

The following tables provide an analysis of the age of loans (excluding covered loans) in past due status as of March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 , respectively.

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

March 31, 2015 — Type of Loan Amount of Loans — Net of LIP & Chg.-Offs Days Delinquent Based on $ Amount of Loans — Current 30 60 90 Total % based on $
(In thousands)
Non-acquired loans
Single-Family Residential $ 5,532,553 $ 5,450,820 $ 19,822 $ 8,082 $ 53,829 $ 81,733 1.48 %
Construction - Speculative 105,392 103,044 2,348 2,348 2.23
Construction - Custom 201,777 200,608 355 814 1,169 0.58
Land - Acquisition & Development 90,838 90,838
Land - Consumer Lot Loans 102,003 98,717 466 478 2,342 3,286 3.22
Multi-Family 941,122 940,175 620 327 947 0.10
Commercial Real Estate 627,843 627,209 62 93 479 634 0.10
Commercial & Industrial 407,763 407,698 65 65 0.02
HELOC 120,904 120,098 150 74 582 806 0.67
Consumer 218,700 218,084 414 160 42 616 0.28
Total non-acquired loans 8,348,895 8,257,291 24,302 9,701 57,601 91,604 1.10 %
Non-impaired acquired loans
Single-Family Residential 10,976 10,819 133 24 157 1.43 %
Land - Acquisition & Development 728 728
Land - Consumer Lot Loans 2,474 2,139 218 117 335 13.54
Multi-Family 2,912 2,912
Commercial Real Estate 87,290 85,063 492 1,561 174 2,227 2.55
Commercial & Industrial 55,670 55,670
HELOC 6,700 6,201 275 224 499 7.45
Consumer 2,774 2,326 54 394 448 16.15
Total non-impaired acquired loans 169,524 165,858 1,172 1,561 933 3,666 2.16 %
Credit-impaired acquired loans
Single-Family Residential 322 322 — %
Land - Acquisition & Development 1,395 1,395
Commercial Real Estate 56,717 54,366 387 516 1,448 2,351 4.15
Commercial & Industrial 2,179 2,179
HELOC 8,836 8,748 88 88 1.00
Consumer 51 51
Total credit-impaired acquired loans 69,500 67,061 387 516 1,536 2,439 3.51 %
Total Loans $ 8,587,919 $ 8,490,210 $ 25,861 $ 11,778 $ 60,070 $ 97,709 1.14 %

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

September 30, 2014 — Type of Loan Amount of Loans — Net of LIP & Chg.-Offs Days Delinquent Based on $ Amount of Loans — Current 30 60 90 Total % based on $
(In thousands)
Non-acquired loans
Single-Family Residential $ 5,557,753 $ 5,467,239 $ 15,926 $ 9,139 $ 65,449 $ 90,514 1.63 %
Construction - Speculative 87,035 87,035
Construction - Custom 192,098 191,262 836 836 0.44
Land - Acquisition & Development 68,066 67,911 155 155 0.23
Land - Consumer Lot Loans 108,589 104,571 1,246 304 2,468 4,018 3.70
Multi-Family 892,196 891,372 205 16 603 824 0.09
Commercial Real Estate 529,453 513,409 67 15,118 859 16,044 3.03
Commercial & Industrial 379,226 377,848 53 1,318 7 1,378 0.36
HELOC 116,262 115,262 335 292 373 1,000 0.86
Consumer 132,686 131,642 654 262 128 1,044 0.79
Total non-acquired loans 8,063,364 7,947,551 19,477 26,449 69,887 115,813 1.44 %
Non-impaired acquired loans
Single-Family Residential 11,716 11,693 23 23 0.20 %
Land - Acquisition & Development 905 905
Land - Consumer Lot Loans 2,502 2,132 370 370 14.79
Multi-Family 2,999 2,999
Commercial Real Estate 97,715 96,948 104 663 767 0.78
Commercial & Industrial 51,329 51,229 100 100 0.19
HELOC 8,056 8,056
Consumer 5,670 4,983 22 4 661 687 12.12
Total non-impaired acquired loans 180,892 178,945 126 474 1,347 1,947 1.08 %
Credit-impaired acquired loans
Single-Family Residential 325 325 — %
Land - Acquisition & Development 1,581 1,581
Commercial Real Estate 63,713 61,713 152 909 939 2,000 3.14
Commercial & Industrial 3,477 3,470 7 7 0.20
HELOC 10,138 9,641 75 422 497 4.90
Consumer 54 54
Total credit-impaired acquired loans 79,288 76,784 159 984 1,361 2,504 3.16 %
Total Loans $ 8,323,544 $ 8,203,280 $ 19,762 $ 27,907 $ 72,595 $ 120,264 1.44 %

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

Most loans restructured in troubled debt restructurings ("TDRs") are accruing and performing loans where the borrower has proactively approached the Company about modification due to temporary financial difficulties. Each request is individually evaluated for merit and likelihood of success. The concession for these loans is typically a payment reduction through a rate reduction of between 100 to 200 basis points for a specific term, usually six to twelve months . Interest-only payments may also be approved during the modification period. Principal forgiveness is not an available option for restructured loans. As of March 31, 2015 , single-family residential loans comprised 85.6% of TDRs.

The Company reserves for restructured loans within its allowance for loan loss methodology by taking into account the following performance indicators: 1) time since modification, 2) current payment status and 3) geographic area.

The following tables provide information related to loans that were restructured during the periods indicated:

Quarter Ended March 31,
2015 2014
Pre-Modification Post-Modification Pre-Modification Post-Modification
Outstanding Outstanding Outstanding Outstanding
Number of Recorded Recorded Number of Recorded Recorded
Contracts Investment Investment Contracts Investment Investment
(In thousands) (In thousands)
Troubled Debt Restructurings:
Single-Family Residential 14 $ 2,664 $ 2,664 23 $ 4,218 $ 4,218
Land - Consumer Lot Loans 4 720 720 1 83 83
Commercial Real Estate 3 3,175 3,175
21 $ 6,559 $ 6,559 24 $ 4,301 $ 4,301
Six Months Ended March 31,
2015 2014
Pre-Modification Post-Modification Pre-Modification Post-Modification
Outstanding Outstanding Outstanding Outstanding
Number of Recorded Recorded Number of Recorded Recorded
Contracts Investment Investment Contracts Investment Investment
(In thousands) (In thousands)
Troubled Debt Restructurings:
Single-Family Residential 49 12,264 12,264 38 7,067 7,067
Construction - Speculative 2 718 718
Construction - Custom
Land - Consumer Lot Loans 6 1,252 1,252 4 358 358
Commercial Real Estate 3 3,175 3,175
Consumer 1 85 85
61 $ 17,494 $ 17,494 42 $ 7,425 $ 7,425

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(UNAUDITED)

The following tables provide information on restructured loans for which a payment default occurred during the periods indicated that had been modified as a TDR within 12 months or less of the payment default:

Quarter Ended March 31, — 2015 2014
Number of Recorded Number of Recorded
Contracts Investment Contracts Investment
(In thousands) (In thousands)
Troubled Debt Restructurings That Subsequently Defaulted:
Single-Family Residential 2 $ 304 23 $ 4,218
Land - Consumer Lot Loans 2 301 1 83
4 $ 605 24 $ 4,301
Six Months Ended March 31,
2015 2014
Number of Recorded Number of Recorded
Contracts Investment Contracts Investment
(In thousands) (In thousands)
Troubled Debt Restructurings That Subsequently Defaulted:
Single-Family Residential 7 $ 1,237 38 $ 7,067
Land - Consumer Lot Loans 3 389 4 358
10 $ 1,626 42 $ 7,425

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(UNAUDITED)

NOTE E – Allowance for Losses on Loans

The following table summarizes the activity in the allowance for loan losses (excluding acquired and covered loans) for the three and six months ended March 31, 2015 and 2014 :

Three Months Ended March 31, 2015 Beginning Allowance Charge-offs Recoveries Provision & Transfers Ending Allowance
(In thousands)
Single-family residential $ 55,495 $ (1,409 ) $ 4,122 $ (3,446 ) $ 54,762
Construction - speculative 5,451 75 (81 ) 5,445
Construction - custom 965 3 968
Land - acquisition & development 6,671 204 530 7,405
Land - consumer lot loans 3,113 (52 ) 34 (60 ) 3,035
Multi-family 4,500 173 4,673
Commercial real estate 5,872 453 409 6,734
Commercial & industrial 23,328 (355 ) 18 (1,845 ) 21,146
HELOC 892 (42 ) 850
Consumer 2,413 (701 ) 734 859 3,305
$ 108,700 $ (2,517 ) $ 5,640 $ (3,500 ) $ 108,323
Three Months Ended March 31, 2014 Beginning Allowance Charge-offs Recoveries Provision & Transfers Ending Allowance
(In thousands)
Single-family residential $ 67,692 $ (2,444 ) $ 2,088 $ (3,988 ) $ 63,348
Construction - speculative 8,142 (488 ) $ — (881 ) 6,773
Construction - custom 1,474 125 1,599
Land - acquisition & development 7,084 (85 ) 299 (1,271 ) 6,027
Land - consumer lot loans 3,274 (231 ) (69 ) 2,974
Multi-family 4,109 78 4,187
Commercial real estate 5,868 (73 ) 129 5,924
Commercial & industrial 16,505 (444 ) 2,852 1,490 20,403
HELOC 943 32 975
Consumer 3,067 (1,010 ) 1,059 (395 ) 2,721
$ 118,158 $ (4,775 ) $ 6,298 $ (4,750 ) $ 114,931

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(UNAUDITED)

Six Months Ended March 31, 2015 Beginning Allowance Charge-offs Recoveries Provision & Transfers Ending Allowance
(In thousands)
Single-family residential $ 62,763 $ (3,103 ) $ 6,675 $ (11,573 ) $ 54,762
Construction - speculative 6,742 (388 ) $ 75 (984 ) 5,445
Construction - custom 1,695 (727 ) 968
Land - acquisition & development 5,592 (38 ) 205 1,646 7,405
Land - consumer lot loans 3,077 (87 ) 34 11 3,035
Multi-family 4,248 220 205 4,673
Commercial real estate 7,548 (27 ) 481 (1,268 ) 6,734
Commercial & industrial 16,527 (355 ) 52 4,922 21,146
HELOC 928 (78 ) 850
Consumer 3,227 (1,128 ) 1,349 (143 ) 3,305
$ 112,347 $ (5,126 ) $ 9,091 $ (7,989 ) $ 108,323
Six Months Ended March 31, 2014 Beginning Allowance Charge-offs Recoveries Provision & Transfers Ending Allowance
(In thousands)
Single-family residential $ 64,184 $ (4,777 ) $ 10,913 $ (6,972 ) $ 63,348
Construction - speculative 8,407 (938 ) $ 95 (791 ) 6,773
Construction - custom 882 717 1,599
Land - acquisition & development 9,165 (541 ) 738 (3,335 ) 6,027
Land - consumer lot loans 3,552 (474 ) 22 (126 ) 2,974
Multi-family 3,816 371 4,187
Commercial real estate 5,595 (73 ) 402 5,924
Commercial & industrial 16,614 (692 ) 3,273 1,208 20,403
HELOC 1,002 (27 ) 975
Consumer 3,524 (2,091 ) 2,085 (797 ) 2,721
$ 116,741 $ (9,586 ) $ 17,126 $ (9,350 ) $ 114,931

The Company recorded a $ 3,949,000 reversal of the provision for loan losses during the quarter ended March 31, 2015 , while a $ 4,336,000 reversal was recorded for the same quarter one year ago. The reason is that the credit quality of the portfolio has been improving significantly and economic conditions are more favorable. During the fiscal year ended September 30, 2014 , there was a transfer of $2,910,000 from the general allowance to establish a reserve for unfunded commitments. This reserve was $1,898,000 as of March 31, 2015 .

Non-performing assets (“NPAs”) amounted to $143,223,000 , or 0.98% , of total assets at March 31, 2015 , compared to $ 147,311,000 , or 1.00% , of total assets as of September 30, 2014 . Including the covered assets from the Horizon Bank acquisition in 2010 that will not be covered after March 31, 2015, the NPAs would amount to $153,202,000 or 1.05% of total assets.

Acquired loans, including covered loans, are usually not classified as non-performing loans because at acquisition, the carrying value of these loans is adjusted to reflect fair value. As of March 31, 2015 , $34,695,000 in acquired loans were subject to the general allowance as the discount related to these balances is no longer sufficient to absorb potential losses. There was a $449,000 reversal of provision for loan losses recorded on acquired or covered loans during the quarter ended March 31, 2015 . The reversal of allowance for credit losses related to the acquired loans resulted increased expectations of future cash flows due to decreased credit losses for certain acquired loan pools.

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

Non-accrual loans decreased from $87,431,000 at September 30, 2014 , to $75,850,000 at March 31, 2015 , a 13.2% decrease.

A loan is charged-off when the loss is estimable and it is confirmed that the borrower will not be able to meet its contractual obligations. The Company had net recoveries of $3,123,000 for the quarter ended March 31, 2015 , compared with $1,523,000 of net recoveries for the same quarter one year prior.

As of March 31, 2015 , $108,323,000 of the allowance was calculated under the formulas contained in our general allowance methodology. As of September 30, 2014 , $112,287,000 of the allowance was calculated under the formulas contained in our general allowance methodology and the remaining $60,000 was made up of specific reserves on loans which were deemed to be impaired.

The following tables shows a summary of loans collectively and individually evaluated for impairment and the related allocation of general and specific reserves as of March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 :

March 31, 2015 Loans Collectively Evaluated for Impairment — General Reserve Allocation Gross Loans Subject to General Reserve (1) Ratio Loans Individually Evaluated for Impairment — Specific Reserve Allocation Gross Loans Subject to Specific Reserve (1) Ratio
(In thousands) (In thousands)
Single-family residential $ 54,762 $ 5,476,667 1.0 % $ — $ 55,886 — %
Construction - speculative 5,445 97,987 5.6 7,405
Construction - custom 968 201,777 0.5
Land - acquisition & development 7,405 87,541 8.5 3,298
Land - consumer lot loans 3,035 89,279 3.4 12,723
Multi-family 4,673 936,010 0.5 5,112
Commercial real estate 6,734 617,633 1.1 10,210
Commercial & industrial 21,146 442,459 4.8
HELOC 850 119,235 0.7 1,669
Consumer 3,305 218,605 1.5 95
$ 108,323 $ 8,287,193 1.3 % $ — $ 96,398 — %

(1) Excludes acquired loans with discounts sufficient to absorb potential losses and covered loans

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

September 30, 2014 Loans Collectively Evaluated for Impairment — General Reserve Allocation Gross Loans Subject to General Reserve (1) Ratio Loans Individually Evaluated for Impairment — Specific Reserve Allocation Gross Loans Subject to Specific Reserve (1) Ratio
(In thousands) (In thousands)
Single-family residential $ 62,067 $ 5,487,331 1.1 % $ — $ 72,869 — %
Construction - speculative 6,682 130,901 5.5 60 9,159 0.7
Construction - custom 1,695 385,464 0.5 360
Land - acquisition & development 5,592 73,999 7.6 3,833
Land - consumer lot loans 3,077 95,684 3.2 12,939
Multi-family 4,248 911,162 0.5 6,124
Commercial real estate 7,548 563,534 1.4 27,802
Commercial & industrial 17,223 421,816 4.6
HELOC 928 114,393 0.9 1,650
Consumer 3,227 132,590 2.4
$ 112,287 $ 8,316,874 1.4 % $ 60 $ 134,736 — %

(1) Excludes acquired loans with discounts sufficient to absorb potential losses and covered loans

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

The Company has an asset quality review function that analyzes its loan portfolios and reports the results of the review to the Board of Directors on a quarterly basis. The single-family residential, HELOC and consumer portfolios are evaluated based on their performance as a pool of loans, since no single loan is individually significant or judged by its risk rating, size or potential risk of loss. The construction, land, multi-family, commercial real estate and commercial and industrial loans are risk rated on a loan by loan basis to determine the relative risk inherent in specific borrowers or loans. Based on that risk rating, the loans are assigned a grade and classified as follows:

• Pass – the credit does not meet one of the definitions below.

• Special mention – A special mention credit is considered to be currently protected from loss but is potentially weak. No loss of principal or interest is foreseen; however, proper supervision and Management attention is required to deter further deterioration in the credit. Assets in this category constitute some undue and unwarranted credit risk but not to the point of justifying a risk rating of substandard. The credit risk may be relatively minor yet constitutes an unwarranted risk in light of the circumstances surrounding a specific asset.

• Substandard – A substandard credit is an unacceptable credit. Additionally, repayment in the normal course is in jeopardy due to the existence of one or more well defined weaknesses. In these situations, loss of principal is likely if the weakness is not corrected. A substandard asset is inadequately protected by the current sound worth and paying capacity of the borrower or of the collateral pledged, if any. Assets so classified will have a well defined weakness or weaknesses that jeopardize the liquidation of the debt. Loss potential, while existing in the aggregate amount of substandard assets, does not have to exist in individual assets risk rated substandard.

• Doubtful – A credit classified doubtful has all the weaknesses inherent in one classified substandard with the added characteristic that the weakness makes collection or liquidation in full, on the basis of currently existing facts, conditions and values, highly questionable and improbable. The probability of loss is high, but because of certain important and reasonably specific pending factors that may work to the advantage and strengthening of the asset, its classification as an estimated loss is deferred until its more exact status may be determined. Pending factors include proposed merger, acquisition, or liquidation procedures, capital injection, perfecting liens on additional collateral, and refinancing plans.

• Loss – Credits classified loss are considered uncollectible and of such little value that their continuance as a bankable asset is not warranted. This classification does not mean that the asset has absolutely no recovery or salvage value, but rather it is not practical or desirable to defer writing off this asset even though partial recovery may be affected in the future. Losses should be taken in the period in which they are identified as uncollectible. Partial charge-off versus full charge-off may be taken if the collateral offers some identifiable protection.

The following tables provide information on loans (excluding covered loans) based on credit quality indicators as defined above as of March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 .

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

March 31, 2015 Internally Assigned Grade — Pass Special mention Substandard Doubtful Loss Total — Gross Loans
(In thousands)
Non-acquired loans
Single-family residential $ 5,426,579 $ 2,343 $ 106,182 $ — $ — $ 5,535,104
Construction - speculative 157,847 5,810 163,657
Construction - custom 370,693 370,693
Land - acquisition & development 99,686 5,372 105,058
Land - consumer lot loans 101,505 577 102,082
Multi-family 1,004,149 5,854 1,010,003
Commercial real estate 728,274 12,863 741,137
Commercial & industrial 353,998 13,949 35,542 4,869 408,358
HELOC 120,653 248 120,901
Consumer 218,500 180 218,680
8,581,884 16,292 172,628 4,869 8,775,673
Non-impaired acquired loans
Single-family residential 10,977 10,977
Land - acquisition & development 343 385 728
Land - consumer lot loans 2,476 2,476
Multi-family 2,912 2,912
Commercial real estate 81,059 514 5,740 87,313
Commercial & industrial 53,666 1,870 123 55,659
HELOC 6,700 6,700
Consumer 2,794 2,794
160,927 2,384 6,248 169,559
Credit-impaired acquired loans
Pool 1 - Construction and land A&D 1,146 249 1,395
Pool 2 - Single-family residential 322 322
Pool 3 - Multi-family
Pool 4 - HELOC & other consumer 8,889 8,889
Pool 5 - Commercial real estate 45,472 1,773 9,482 56,727
Pool 6 - Commercial & industrial 2,190 2,190
Total credit impaired acquired loans 58,019 1,773 9,731 69,523
Total gross loans $ 8,800,830 $ 20,449 $ 188,607 $ 4,869 $ — $ 9,014,755
Total grade as a % of total gross loans 97.6 % 0.2 % 2.1 % 0.1 % — %

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(UNAUDITED)

September 30, 2014 Internally Assigned Grade — Pass Special mention Substandard Doubtful Loss Total — Gross Loans
(In thousands)
Non-acquired loans
Single-family residential $ 5,426,895 $ 2,793 $ 130,515 $ — $ — $ 5,560,203
Construction - speculative 134,950 5,110 140,060
Construction - custom 385,824 385,824
Land - acquisition & development 71,692 6,140 77,832
Land - consumer lot loans 108,013 610 108,623
Multi-family 912,728 4,558 917,286
Commercial real estate 557,914 1,971 31,451 591,336
Commercial & industrial 359,221 14,740 5,265 379,226
HELOC 115,794 248 116,042
Consumer 132,349 241 132,590
8,205,380 19,504 184,138 8,409,022
Non-impaired acquired loans
Single-family residential 11,716 11,716
Land - acquisition & development 503 402 905
Land - consumer lot loans 2,507 2,507
Multi-family 2,999 2,999
Commercial real estate 88,974 2,571 6,353 97,898
Commercial & industrial 36,311 13,642 1,375 58 51,386
HELOC 8,274 8,274
Consumer 5,670 5,670
156,954 16,213 8,130 58 181,355
Credit-impaired acquired loans
Pool 1 - Construction and land A&D 1,292 330 1,622
Pool 2 - Single-family residential 325 325
Pool 3 - Multi-family
Pool 4 - HELOC & other consumer 10,194 10,194
Pool 5 - Commercial real estate 48,878 2,143 12,702 63,723
Pool 6 - Commercial & industrial 643 2,833 3,476
Total credit impaired acquired loans 61,332 2,143 15,865 79,340
Total gross loans $ 8,423,666 $ 37,860 $ 208,133 $ 58 $ — $ 8,669,717
Total grade as a % of total gross loans 97.2 % 0.4 % 2.4 % — % — %

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

Credit Risk Profile Based on Payment Activity (excludes acquired and covered loans):

March 31, 2015 Performing Loans — Amount % of Total Gross Loans Non-Performing Loans — Amount % of Total Gross Loans
(In thousands)
Single-family residential $ 5,474,323 98.9 % $ 60,781 1.1 %
Construction - speculative 162,505 99.3 1,152 0.7
Construction - custom 370,693 100.0
Land - acquisition & development 105,058 100.0
Land - consumer lot loans 99,624 97.6 2,458 2.4
Multi-family 1,010,003 100.0
Commercial real estate 735,402 99.2 5,735 0.8
Commercial & industrial 403,340 98.8 5,018 1.2
HELOC 119,726 99.0 1,175 1.0
Consumer 218,104 99.7 576 0.3
$ 8,698,778 99.1 % $ 76,895 0.9 %
September 30, 2014 Performing Loans — Amount % of Total Gross Loans Non-Performing Loans — Amount % of Total Gross Loans
(In thousands)
Single-family residential $ 5,486,136 98.7 % $ 74,067 1.3 %
Construction - speculative 138,583 98.9 1,477 1.1
Construction - custom 385,824 100.0
Land - acquisition & development 77,021 99.0 811 1.0
Land - consumer lot loans 105,986 97.6 2,637 2.4
Multi-family 915,544 99.8 1,742 0.2
Commercial real estate 586,230 99.1 5,106 0.9
Commercial & industrial 379,219 100.0 7
HELOC 115,247 99.3 795 0.7
Consumer 131,801 99.4 789 0.6
$ 8,321,591 99.0 % $ 87,431 1.0 %

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(UNAUDITED)

The following table provides information on impaired loan balances and the related allowances by loan types as of March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 :

March 31, 2015 Recorded Investment Unpaid Principal Balance Related Allowance Average Recorded Investment
(In thousands)
With no related allowance recorded:
Single-family residential $ 23,164 $ 25,986 $ — $ 21,135
Construction - speculative 997 1,192 1,001
Land - acquisition & development 685 1,229 738
Land - consumer lot loans 1,353 1,451 1,144
Multi-family 1,079 1,079 1,080
Commercial real estate 9,768 14,145 9,587
Commercial & industrial 6,988 18,865 5,091
HELOC 1,112 1,898 931
Consumer 414 614 369
45,560 66,459 41,076
With an allowance recorded:
Single-family residential 290,951 295,408 8,597 289,495
Construction - speculative 6,408 7,198 6,260
Land - acquisition & development 4,179 5,119 4,208
Land - consumer lot loans 12,501 12,884 12,376
Multi-family 3,862 3,862 3,547
Commercial real estate 20,673 21,323 19,160
HELOC 1,394 1,394 1,390
Consumer 123 293 124
340,091 347,481 8,597 (1) 336,560
Total:
Single-family residential 314,115 321,394 8,597 310,630
Construction - speculative 7,405 8,390 7,261
Land - acquisition & development 4,864 6,348 4,946
Land - consumer lot loans 13,854 14,335 13,520
Multi-family 4,941 4,941 4,627
Commercial real estate 30,441 35,468 28,747
Commercial & industrial 6,988 18,865 5,091
HELOC 2,506 3,292 2,321
Consumer 537 907 493
$ 385,651 $ 413,940 $ 8,597 (1) $ 377,636

(1) Included in the general reserves.

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(UNAUDITED)

September 30, 2014 Recorded Investment Unpaid Principal Balance Related Allowance Average Recorded Investment
(In thousands)
With no related allowance recorded:
Single-family residential $ 24,044 $ 26,628 $ — $ 16,843
Construction - speculative 1,603 2,173 1,804
Land - acquisition & development 837 2,325 1,038
Land - consumer lot loans 974 1,072 713
Multi-family 1,111 1,111 327
Commercial real estate 13,234 20,085 11,720
Commercial & industrial 3,195 17,166 3,900
HELOC 1,019 1,730 612
Consumer 663 833 517
46,680 73,123 37,474
With an allowance recorded:
Single-family residential 322,320 327,869 10,527 316,348
Construction - speculative 7,556 7,986 60 7,532
Land - acquisition & development 4,696 5,636 4,114
Land - consumer lot loans 13,002 13,385 12,858
Multi-family 5,243 5,463 4,957
Commercial real estate 34,159 35,028 18,572
HELOC 1,486 1,486 1,204
Consumer 43 214 79
388,505 397,067 10,587 (1) 365,664
Total:
Single-family residential 346,364 354,497 10,527 333,191
Construction - speculative 9,159 10,159 60 9,336
Land - acquisition & development 5,533 7,961 5,152
Land - consumer lot loans 13,976 14,457 13,571
Multi-family 6,354 6,574 5,284
Commercial real estate 47,393 55,113 30,292
Commercial & industrial 3,195 17,166 3,900
HELOC 2,505 3,216 1,816
Consumer 706 1,047 596
$ 435,185 $ 470,190 $ 10,587 (1) $ 403,138

(1) Includes $60,000 of specific reserves and $10,527,000 included in the general reserves.

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(UNAUDITED)

NOTE F – New Accounting Pronouncements

In January 2015, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued Accounting Standards Update ("ASU") 2015-01,

Income Statement - Extraordinary and Unusual Items (Subtopic 225-20): Simplifying Income Statement Presentation by Eliminating the Concept of Extraordinary Items. The ASU eliminates the concept of extraordinary items. The amendments in this ASU are effective for interim and annual periods beginning after December 15, 2015. A reporting entity may apply the amendments prospectively. Early adoption is permitted. The Company does not expect this guidance to have a material impact on its consolidated financial statements.

In June 2014, the FASB issued ASU 2014-11, Transfers and Servicing (Topic 860) - Repurchase to Maturity Transactions, Repurchase Financings, and Disclosures. Under this new accounting guidance, repurchase-to-maturity transactions will be accounted for as secured borrowings rather than sales of an asset, and transfers of financial assets with contemporaneous repurchase financings will no longer be evaluated to determine whether they should be accounted for on a combined basis as forward contracts. The new guidance also prescribes additional disclosures particularly on the nature of collateral pledged in repurchase financings accounted for as secured borrowings. The amendments in this update was effective for the first interim or annual period beginning after December 31, 2014, with the exception of the collateral disclosures which will be effective for interim periods beginning after March 15, 2015. This guidance does not have a material impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.

In May 2014, the FASB issued ASU 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606). This new accounting guidance clarifies the principles for recognizing revenue from contracts with customers. The new accounting guidance does not apply to financial instruments. For public companies, this update will be effective for interim and annual periods beginning after December 15, 2017. The Company does not expect the new guidance to have a material impact on its consolidated financial statements.

In January 2014, the FASB issued ASU 2014-04, Receivables - Troubled Debt Restructurings by Creditors (Subtopic 310-40) - Reclassification of Residential Real Estate Collateralized Consumer Mortgage Loans upon Foreclosure. The new guidance clarifies that an in substance repossession or foreclosure occurs, and a creditor is considered to have received physical possession of residential real estate property collateralizing a consumer mortgage loan, upon either: (a) the creditor obtaining legal title to the residential real estate property upon completion of a foreclosure; or (b) the borrower conveying all interest in the residential real estate property to the creditor to satisfy that loan through completion of a deed in lieu of foreclosure or through a similar legal agreement. ASU 2014-04 is effective for annual and interim reporting periods within those annual periods, beginning after December 15, 2014. Adoption of the new guidance is not expected to have a significant impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.

NOTE G – Fair Value Measurements

U.S. GAAP defines fair value as the exchange price that would be received for an asset or paid to transfer a liability (an exit price) in the principal or most advantageous market for the asset or liability in an orderly transaction between market participants on the measurement date. U.S. GAAP also establishes a fair value hierarchy which requires an entity to maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable inputs when measuring fair value. The standard describes three levels of inputs that may be used to measure fair value:

Level 1: Quoted prices (unadjusted) for identical assets or liabilities in active exchange markets that the entity has the ability to access as of the measurement date.

Level 2: Significant other observable inputs other than Level 1 prices, such as quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities, quoted prices in markets that are not active and other inputs that are observable or can be corroborated by observable market data.

Level 3: Significant unobservable inputs that reflect a company’s own assumptions about the assumptions that market participants would use in pricing an asset or liability.

We have established and documented the Company's process for determining the fair values of the Company's assets and liabilities, where applicable. Fair value is based on quoted market prices, when available, for identical or similar assets or liabilities. In the absence of quoted market prices, fair value is determined using valuation models or third-party appraisals. The following is a description of the valuation methodologies used to measure and report the fair value of financial assets and liabilities on a recurring or nonrecurring basis:

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Measured on a Recurring Basis

Securities

Securities available for sale are recorded at fair value on a recurring basis. Most securities at fair value are priced using model pricing based on the securities' relationship to other benchmark quoted prices as provided by an independent third party, and under the provisions of the Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures topic of the FASB Accounting Standards Codification are considered a Level 2 input method. Securities that are traded on active exchanges are considered a Level 1 input method.

The following tables present the balance of assets measured at fair value on a recurring basis at March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 :

Fair Value at March 31, 2015 — Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
(In thousands)
Financial Assets
Available-for-sale securities
Equity securities $ 102,277 $ — $ — $ 102,277
Obligations of U.S. government 534,445 534,445
Obligations of states and political subdivisions 24,013 24,013
Corporate debt securities 528,564 528,564
Agency pass-through certificates 1,456,945 1,456,945
Other Commercial MBS 110,662 110,662
Total available-for-sale securities 102,277 2,654,629 2,756,906
Bank owned life insurance 100,961 100,961
Total financial assets $ 102,277 $ 2,755,590 $ — $ 2,857,867
Financial Liabilities
FDIC liability 29,825 29,825
Long term borrowing hedge (9,503 ) (9,503 )
Total financial liabilities $ — $ 20,322 $ — $ 20,322

There were no transfers between, into and/or out of Levels 1, 2 or 3 during the quarter ended March 31, 2015 .

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Fair Value at September 30, 2014 — Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
(In thousands)
Financial Assets
Available-for-sale securities
Equity securities $ 101,387 $ — $ — $ 101,387
Obligations of U.S. government 731,943 731,943
Obligations of states and political subdivisions 23,681 23,681
Obligations of foreign governments
Corporate debt securities 509,007 509,007
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates 1,584,508 1,584,508
Other Commercial MBS 98,916 98,916
Total financial assets $ 101,387 $ 2,948,055 $ — $ 3,049,442
Financial Liabilities
FDIC liability 28,823 28,823
Long term borrowing hedge (268 ) (268 )
Total financial liabilities $ — $ 28,555 $ — $ 28,555

There were no transfers between, into and/or out of Levels 1, 2 or 3 during the fiscal year ended September 30, 2014 .

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Measured on a Nonrecurring Basis

Impaired Loans & Real Estate Held for Sale

From time to time, and on a nonrecurring basis, fair value adjustments to collateral-dependent loans and real estate held for sale are recorded to reflect write-downs of principal balances based on the current appraised or estimated value of the collateral.

Real estate held for sale consists principally of properties acquired through foreclosure. From time to time, and on a nonrecurring basis, fair value adjustments are recorded to reflect write-downs or write-ups, but only up to the fair value of the real estate owned as of the initial transfer date, of principal balances based on the current appraisal or estimated value of the collateral.

When management determines that the fair value of the collateral or the real estate held for sale requires additional adjustments, either as a result of a non-current appraisal value or when there is no observable market price, the Company classifies the impaired loan or real estate held for sale as Level 3. Level 3 assets recorded at fair value on a nonrecurring basis at March 31, 2015 included loans for which a specific reserve allowance was established or a partial charge-off was recorded based on the fair value of collateral, as well as covered REO and real estate held for sale for which fair value of the properties was less than the cost basis.

The following tables present the aggregated balance of assets that were measured at estimated fair value on a nonrecurring basis at March 31, 2015 and March 31, 2014 , and the total losses (gains) resulting from those fair value adjustments for the quarters and six months ended March 31, 2015 and March 31, 2014 . These estimated fair values are shown gross of estimated selling costs.

March 31, 2015 — Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total Quarter Ended March 31, 2015 — Total Losses (Gains) Six Months Ended March 31, 2015
(In thousands)
Impaired loans (1) $ — $ — $ 3,478 $ 3,478 $ 515 $ 580
Covered REO (2) 1,558 1,558 112 188
Real estate held for sale (2) 46,697 46,697 (2,645 ) (10,957 )
Balance at end of period $ — $ — $ 51,733 $ 51,733 $ (2,018 ) $ (10,189 )

(1) The losses represent remeasurements of collateral-dependent loans.

(2) The gains represents net valuation adjustments on real estate held for sale.

March 31, 2014 — Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total Quarter Ended March 31, 2014 — Total Losses (Gains) Six Months Ended March 31, 2014
(In thousands)
Impaired loans (1) $ — $ — $ 7,066 $ 7,066 $ 269 $ (536 )
Covered REO (2) 2,760 2,760 64 129
Real estate held for sale (2) 26,725 26,725 2,657 6,382
Balance at end of period $ — $ — $ 36,551 $ 36,551 $ 2,990 $ 5,975

(1) The losses represents remeasurements of collateral-dependent loans.

(2) The losses represent aggregate net writedowns and charge-offs on real estate held for sale.

Impaired loans - The Company adjusts the carrying amount of impaired loans when there is evidence of probable loss and the expected fair value of the loan is less than its contractual amount. The amount of the impairment may be determined based on the estimated present value of future cash flows or the fair value of the underlying collateral. Impaired loans with a specific reserve allowance based on cash flow analysis or the value of the underlying collateral are classified as Level 3 assets.

The evaluations for impairment are prepared by the Problem Loan Review Committee, which is chaired by the Chief Credit Officer and includes the Loan Review manager and Special Credits manager, as well as senior credit officers, division managers and group

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executives, as applicable. These evaluations are performed in conjunction with the quarterly allowance for probable loan & lease losses process.

Applicable loans that were included in the previous quarter's review are reevaluated and if their values are materially different from the prior quarter evaluation, the underlying information (loan balance and collateral value) are compared. Material differences are evaluated for reasonableness and discussions are held between the relationship manager and their division manager to understand the difference and determine if any adjustment is necessary.

The inputs are developed and substantiated on a quarterly basis, based on current borrower developments, market conditions and collateral values. The following method is used to value impaired loans:

• The fair value of the collateral, which may take the form of real estate or personal property, is based on internal estimates, field observations, assessments provided by third-party appraisers and other valuation models. The Company performs or reaffirms valuations of collateral-dependent impaired loans at least annually. Adjustments are made if management believes that more recent information is available and relevant with respect to the fair value of the collateral.

Real estate held for sale ("REO") - These assets are valued based on inputs such as appraisals and third-party price opinions, less estimated selling costs. Assets that are acquired through foreclosure are recorded initially at the lower of the loan balance or fair value at the date of foreclosure. After foreclosure, valuations are updated periodically, and current market conditions may require the assets to be written down further to a new cost basis. The following method is used to value real estate held for sale:

• The fair value of REO assets is re-evaluated quarterly and the REO asset is adjusted to reflect the lower of cost or fair value less selling costs as necessary. After foreclosure, valuations are updated periodically and current market conditions may require the assets to be written down further or up to the cost basis established on the date of transfer. The carrying balance of REO assets are also written down or up once a bona fide offer is contractually accepted, through execution of a Purchase and Sale Agreement, where the accepted price is lower than the cost established on the transfer date.

Fair Values of Financial Instruments

U. S. GAAP requires disclosure of fair value information about financial instruments, whether or not recognized on the statement of financial condition, for which it is practicable to estimate those values. Certain financial instruments and all non-financial instruments are excluded from the disclosure requirements. Accordingly, the aggregate fair value estimates presented do not reflect the underlying fair value of the Company. Although management is not aware of any factors that would materially affect the estimated fair value amounts presented below, such amounts have not been comprehensively revalued for purposes of these financial statements since the dates shown, and therefore, estimates of fair value subsequent to those dates may differ significantly from the amounts presented below.

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Level in Fair Value Hierarchy March 31, 2015 — Carrying Amount Estimated Fair Value September 30, 2014 — Carrying Amount Estimated Fair Value
(In thousands)
Financial assets
Cash and cash equivalents 1 $ 675,064 $ 675,064 $ 781,843 $ 781,843
Available-for-sale securities
Equity securities 1 102,277 102,277 101,387 101,387
Obligations of U.S. government 2 534,445 534,445 731,943 731,943
Obligations of states and political subdivisions 2 24,013 24,013 23,681 23,681
Corporate debt securities 2 528,564 528,564 509,007 509,007
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates 2 1,456,945 1,456,945 1,584,508 1,584,508
Other Commercial MBS 2 110,662 110,662 98,916 98,916
Total available-for-sale securities 2,756,906 2,756,906 3,049,442 3,049,442
Held-to-maturity securities
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates 2 1,479,781 1,480,477 1,548,265 1,499,218
Total held-to-maturity securities 1,479,781 1,480,477 1,548,265 1,499,218
Loans receivable 3 8,420,988 9,038,242 8,148,322 8,667,771
Covered loans 3 138,005 144,672 176,476 176,761
FDIC indemnification asset 3 23,115 22,543 36,860 35,976
FHLB and FRB stock 2 150,918 150,918 158,839 158,839
Bank owned life insurance 1 100,961 100,961
Financial liabilities
Customer accounts 2 10,692,625 10,057,164 10,716,928 9,946,586
FHLB advances 2 1,830,000 1,962,356 1,930,000 2,054,437
FDIC liability 2 29,825 29,825 28,823 28,823
Other liabilities - long term borrowing hedge 2 (9,503 ) (268 )

The following methods and assumptions were used to estimate the fair value of financial instruments:

Cash and cash equivalents – The carrying amount of these items is a reasonable estimate of their fair value.

Available-for-sale securities and held-to-maturity securities – Securities at fair value are primarily priced using model pricing based on the securities' relationship to other benchmark quoted prices as provided by an independent third party, and under the provisions of the Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures topic of the FASB Accounting Standards Codification are considered a Level 2 input method. Equity securities which are exchange traded are considered a Level 1 input method.

Loans receivable and covered loans – For certain homogeneous categories of loans, such as fixed- and variable-rate residential mortgages, fair value is estimated for securities backed by similar loans, adjusted for differences in loan characteristics, using the same methodology described above for AFS and HTM securities. The fair value of other loan types is estimated by discounting the future cash flows and estimated prepayments using the current rates at which similar loans would be made to borrowers with similar credit ratings and for the same remaining term. Some loan types were valued at carrying value because of their floating rate or expected maturity characteristics. Net deferred loan fees are not included in the fair value calculation but are included in the carrying amount.

FDIC indemnification asset and liability – The fair value of the indemnification asset is estimated by discounting the expected future cash flows using the current rates.

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FHLB and FRB stock – The fair value is based upon the par value of the stock which equates to its carrying value.

Bank owned life insurance – Fair values of insurance policies owned are based on the insurance contracts' cash surrender values.

Customer accounts – The fair value of demand deposits, savings accounts, and money market accounts is the amount payable on demand at the reporting date. The fair value of fixed-maturity certificates of deposit is estimated by discounting the estimated future cash flows using the rates currently offered for deposits with similar remaining maturities.

FHLB advances – The fair value of FHLB advances and other borrowings is estimated by discounting the estimated future cash flows using rates currently available to the Company for debt with similar remaining maturities.

Long Term Borrowing Hedges – The fair value of the forward starting interest rate swaps are estimated by a third party pricing service using a discounted cash flow technique.

The following tables provide a reconciliation of amortized cost to fair value of available-for-sale and held-to-maturity securities as of March 31, 2015 , and September 30, 2014 :

March 31, 2015 — Amortized Cost Gross Unrealized Fair Value Yield
Gains Losses
(In thousands)
Available-for-sale securities
U.S. government and agency securities due
1 to 5 years $ 142,283 $ 2,300 $ (119 ) $ 144,464 1.41 %
5 to 10 years 107,717 403 108,120 1.19
Over 10 years 281,951 436 (526 ) 281,861 1.14
Equity Securities
Within 1 year 500 17 517 1.80
1 to 5 years 100,000 1,760 101,760 1.90
5 to 10 years
Corporate bonds due
Within 1 year 15,000 (15 ) 14,985 1.00
1 to 5 years 327,715 1,860 329,575 0.74
5 to 10 years 133,271 1,432 (949 ) 133,754 1.48
Over 10 years 50,000 250 50,250 3.00
Municipal bonds due
Over 10 years 20,392 3,621 24,013 6.45
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates 1,420,784 38,053 (1,892 ) 1,456,945 2.57
Other Commercial MBS 110,662 110,662 1.45
2,710,275 50,132 (3,501 ) 2,756,906 1.99 %
Held-to-maturity securities
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates 1,479,781 11,732 (11,036 ) 1,480,477 3.13
$ 4,190,056 $ 61,864 $ (14,537 ) $ 4,237,383 2.39 %

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September 30, 2014 — Amortized Cost Gross Unrealized Fair Value Yield
Gains Losses
(In thousands)
Available-for-sale securities
U.S. government and agency securities due
1 to 5 years $ 171,154 $ 2,585 $ (748 ) $ 172,991 1.26 %
5 to 10 years 203,317 300 (102 ) 203,515 1.45
Over 10 years 354,828 1,028 (419 ) 355,437 1.25
Equity Securities
1 to 5 years 100,500 887 101,387 1.90
Corporate bonds due
Within 1 year 15,000 75 15,075 1.00
1 to 5 years 302,540 2,372 304,912 0.71
5 to 10 years 138,201 1,789 (970 ) 139,020 1.43
Over 10 years 50,000 50,000 3.00
Municipal bonds due
Over 10 years 20,402 3,279 23,681 6.45
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates 1,561,639 24,893 (2,024 ) 1,584,508 2.57
Other Commercial MBS 98,851 65 98,916 1.49
3,016,432 37,273 (4,263 ) 3,049,442 1.99 %
Held-to-maturity securities
Mortgage-backed securities
Agency pass-through certificates 1,548,265 4,855 (53,902 ) 1,499,218 3.13
$ 4,564,697 $ 42,128 $ (58,165 ) $ 4,548,660 2.38 %

During the quarter ended March 31, 2015 , there were no available-for-sale securities sold. There were also no available-for-sale securities sold during the quarter ended March 31, 2014 . Substantially all of the agency mortgage-backed securities have contractual due dates that exceed 10 years .

The following tables show the unrealized gross losses and fair value of securities as of March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 , by length of time that individual securities in each category have been in a continuous loss position. The decline in fair value is attributable to changes in interest rates. Because the Company does not intend to sell these securities and does not consider it more likely than not that it will be required to sell these securities before the recovery of amortized cost basis, which may be upon maturity, the Company does not consider these investments to be other than temporarily impaired.

March 31, 2015 Less than 12 months — Unrealized Gross Losses Fair Value 12 months or more — Unrealized Gross Losses Fair Value Total — Unrealized Gross Losses Fair Value
(In thousands)
Corporate bonds due $ (15 ) $ 14,985 $ (949 ) $ 34,051 $ (964 ) $ 49,036
U.S. government and agency securities due (533 ) 182,146 (112 ) 58,083 (645 ) 240,229
Agency pass-through certificates (252 ) 14,489 (12,676 ) 1,431,457 (12,928 ) 1,445,946
$ (800 ) $ 211,620 $ (13,737 ) $ 1,523,591 $ (14,537 ) $ 1,735,211

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September 30, 2014 Less than 12 months — Unrealized Gross Losses Fair Value 12 months or more — Unrealized Gross Losses Fair Value Total — Unrealized Gross Losses Fair Value
(In thousands)
Corporate bonds due $ (125 ) $ 24,875 $ (845 ) $ 24,155 $ (970 ) $ 49,030
U.S. government and agency securities due (472 ) 316,578 (797 ) 109,354 (1,269 ) 425,932
Agency pass-through certificates (215 ) 19,212 (55,711 ) 1,509,209 (55,926 ) 1,528,421
$ (812 ) $ 360,665 $ (57,353 ) $ 1,642,718 $ (58,165 ) $ 2,003,383

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NOTE H – Covered Assets

Covered assets represent loans and real estate held for sale acquired from the FDIC that are subject to loss sharing agreements and these net balances were $153,673,000 as of March 31, 2015 compared to $200,558,000 as of September 30, 2014 . The FDIC loss share coverage for the acquired commercial loans will expire during fiscal year 2015. There are $83,077,000 of covered assets from the former Horizon Bank that will lose their FDIC loss share coverage after March 31, 2015 . As of March 31, 2015 , there are $53,181,000 of commercial loans from the former Home Valley Bank which are scheduled to expire on September 30, 2015. The FDIC loss share coverage for single family residential loans will continue for another five years .

Changes in the net carrying amount and accretable yield for acquired impaired and non-impaired covered loans for the year to date period ended March 31, 2015 and the fiscal year ended September 30, 2014 were as follows:

March 31, 2015 Acquired Impaired — Accretable Yield Net Carrying Amount of Loans Acquired Non-impaired — Accretable Yield Net Carrying Amount of Loans
(In thousands)
Balance at beginning of period $ 64,534 $ 78,055 $ 10,259 $ 98,422
Reclassification from nonaccretable balance, net 6,307
Accretion (9,392 ) 9,392 (4,016 ) 4,016
Transfers to REO (936 )
Payments received, net (11,049 ) (40,452 )
Balance at end of period $ 61,449 $ 75,462 $ 6,243 $ 61,986
September 30, 2014 Acquired Impaired — Accretable Yield Net Carrying Amount of Loans Acquired Non-impaired — Accretable Yield Carrying Amount of Loans
(In thousands)
Balance at beginning of period $ 78,277 $ 138,091 $ 17,263 $ 157,856
Reclassification from nonaccretable balance, net 10,186 (2,069 )
Accretion (23,929 ) 23,929 (7,004 ) 7,004
Transfers to REO (8,943 )
Payments received, net (72,953 ) (66,438 )
Balance at end of period $ 64,534 $ 78,055 $ 10,259 $ 98,422

At March 31, 2015 , none of the acquired impaired or non-impaired covered loans were classified as non-performing assets. Therefore, interest income, through accretion of the difference between the carrying amount of the loans and the expected cash flows, was recognized on all acquired loans. The allowance for credit losses related to the acquired loans as of September 30, 2014 results from decreased expectations of future cash flows due to increased credit losses for certain acquired loan pools.

The outstanding principal balance of acquired covered loans was $159,018,000 and $213,203,000 as of March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 , respectively. The discount balance related to the acquired covered loans was $21,013,000 and $34,483,000 as of March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 , respectively. There is no allowance for covered loans as of March 31, 2015. There was an allowance of $2,244,000 as of September 30, 2014.

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The following table shows the year to date activity for the FDIC indemnification asset:

March 31, 2015 September 30, 2014
(In thousands)
Balance at beginning of fiscal year 2015 and 2014 $ 36,860 $ 64,615
Additions and deletions (1) (1,795 ) 1,795
Payments made (received) 738 (2,502 )
Amortization (12,972 ) (27,850 )
Accretion 284 802
Balance at end of period $ 23,115 $ 36,860
(1) reclassification of ALLL allowance due to changes in cash flows

The following tables provide information on covered loans based on credit quality indicators (defined in Note E ) as of March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 :

March 31, 2015 Internally Assigned Grade — Pass Special mention Substandard Doubtful Loss Total Net Loans
(In thousands)
Acquired non-impaired loans:
Single-family residential $ 19,975 $ — $ 775 $ — $ — $ 20,750
Construction - speculative
Construction - custom
Land - acquisition & development 349 349
Land - consumer lot loans 72 72
Multi-family 903 903
Commercial real estate 14,188 8,779 22,967
Commercial & industrial 2,241 2,142 4,383
HELOC 10,093 10,093
Consumer 336 336
$ 48,157 $ — $ 11,696 $ — $ — $ 59,853
Total grade as a % of total net loans 80.5 % — % 19.5 % — % — %
Acquired credit-impaired loans:
Pool 1 - Construction and land A&D $ 6,639 $ — $ 9,424 $ — $ — $ 16,063
Pool 2 - Single-family residential 14,700 228 14,928
Pool 3 - Multi-family 49 409 458
Pool 4 - HELOC & other consumer 2,728 581 3,309
Pool 5 - Commercial real estate 32,425 685 24,224 1,734 59,068
Pool 6 - Commercial & industrial 3,423 1,916 5,339
$ 59,964 $ 685 $ 36,782 $ 1,734 $ — 99,165
Total covered loans 159,018
Discount (21,013 )
Allowance
Covered loans, net $ 138,005

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September 30, 2014 Internally Assigned Grade — Pass Special mention Substandard Doubtful Loss Total Net Loans
(In thousands)
Acquired non-impaired loans:
Single-family residential $ 21,311 $ — $ 1,756 $ — $ — $ 23,067
Construction - speculative
Construction - custom
Land - acquisition & development 972 392 1,364
Land - consumer lot loans 73 73
Multi-family 6,598 6,598
Commercial real estate 26,940 115 24,281 51,336
Commercial & industrial 2,801 2,691 5,492
HELOC 11,777 11,777
Consumer 454 454
$ 70,926 $ 115 $ 29,120 $ — $ — $ 100,161
Total grade as a % of total net loans 70.8 % 0.1 % 29.1 % — % — %
Acquired credit-impaired loans:
Pool 1 - Construction and land A&D $ 8,349 $ — $ 11,912 $ — $ — $ 20,261
Pool 2 - Single-family residential 15,585 379 15,964
Pool 3 - Multi-family 52 471 523
Pool 4 - HELOC & other consumer 2,804 1,173 3,977
Pool 5 - Commercial real estate 33,909 700 29,782 64,391
Pool 6 - Commercial & industrial 3,509 3,892 525 7,926
$ 64,208 $ 700 $ 47,609 $ 525 $ — 113,042
Total covered loans 213,203
Discount (34,483 )
Allowance (2,244 )
Covered loans, net $ 176,476

The following tables provide an analysis of the age of acquired non credit-impaired covered loans in past due status as of March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 :

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March 31, 2015 — Type of Loans Amount of Loans Net of LIP & Chg.-Offs Days Delinquent Based on $ Amount of Loans — Current 30 60 90 Total % based on $
Single-Family Residential $ 20,750 $ 20,068 $ 122 $ — $ 560 $ 682 3.29 %
Construction - Speculative
Construction - Custom
Land - Acquisition & Development 349 349
Land - Consumer Lot Loans 72 72
Multi-Family 903 903
Commercial Real Estate 22,967 22,092 875 875 3.81
Commercial & Industrial 4,383 2,315 2,068 2,068 47.18
HELOC 10,093 10,035 58 58 0.57
Consumer 336 327 9 9 2.68
$ 59,853 $ 56,161 $ 189 $ 2,068 $ 1,435 $ 3,692 6.17 %
September 30, 2014 — Type of Loans Amount of Loans Net of LIP & Chg.-Offs Days Delinquent Based on $ Amount of Loans — Current 30 60 90 Total % based on $
Single-Family Residential $ 23,067 $ 22,391 $ 230 $ 40 $ 406 $ 676 2.93 %
Construction - Speculative
Construction - Custom
Land - Acquisition & Development 1,364 1,328 36 36 2.64
Land - Consumer Lot Loans 73 73
Multi-Family 6,598 6,598
Commercial Real Estate 51,336 50,240 1,096 1,096 2.13
Commercial & Industrial 5,492 5,492
HELOC 11,777 11,777
Consumer 454 443 11 11 2.42
$ 100,161 $ 98,342 $ 241 $ 40 $ 1,538 $ 1,819 1.82 %

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 2015 and 2014

(UNAUDITED)

NOTE I – Derivatives and Hedging Activities

The Bank periodically enters into certain commercial loan interest rate swap agreements in order to provide commercial loan customers the ability to convert from variable to fixed interest rate payments, while the Bank retains a variable rate loan. Under these agreements, the Bank enters into a variable rate loan agreement and a swap agreement with the client. The swap agreement effectively converts the client’s variable rate loan into a fixed rate. The Bank enters into a corresponding swap agreement with a third party in order to offset its exposure on the variable and fixed components of the client's swap agreement. The interest rate swap agreements with the clients and third parties are not designated as hedges under ASC 815, the Derivatives and Hedging topic; the instruments are marked to market in earnings.

The notional amount of open interest rate swap agreements at March 31, 2015 was $158,421,000 compared to $264,169,000 as of September 30, 2014 . There was no impact to the statement of operations for the six months ended March 31, 2015 as the asset and liability side of the swaps offset each other. The fee income related to swaps was $754,897 for the six months ended March 31, 2015 .

Additionally, the Bank had $300,000,000 in forward starting interest rate swaps to hedge future borrowing rates as of March 31, 2015. Their impact on accumulated other comprehensive income as of March 31, 2015 was an after-tax loss of $6,010,354 . These derivatives are designated as cash flow hedging instruments in accordance with ASC 815.

The following table presents the fair value and balance sheet classification of derivatives at March 31, 2015 and September 30, 2014 :

Asset Derivatives — March 31, 2015 September 30, 2014 Liability Derivatives — March 31, 2015 September 30, 2014
Balance Sheet Balance Sheet Balance Sheet Balance Sheet
Location Fair Value Location Fair Value Location Fair Value Location Fair Value
(In thousands)
Interest rate contracts Other assets $ 8,562 Other assets $ 2,879 Other liabilities $ 8,562 Other liabilities $ 2,879
Long term borrowing hedge Other assets Other assets Other liabilities 9,503 Other liabilities 268

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

PART I – Financial Information

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

FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS

In addition to historical information, this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q includes certain “forward-looking statements,” as defined in the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as amended (the "Exchange Act"), based on current management expectations. Actual results could differ materially from those management expectations. Such forward-looking statements include statements regarding the Company’s intentions, beliefs or current expectations as well as the assumptions on which such statements are based. Stockholders and potential stockholders are cautioned that any such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties, and that actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by such forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause future results to vary from current management expectations include, but are not limited to: general economic conditions; legislative and regulatory changes, including without limitation the potential effect of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and regulations being promulgated thereunder; monetary fiscal policies of the federal government; changes in tax policies; rates and regulations of federal, state and local tax authorities; changes in interest rates; deposit flows; cost of funds; demand for loan products; demand for financial services; competition; changes in the quality or composition of the Company’s loan and investment portfolios; changes in accounting principles; policies or guidelines and other economic, competitive, governmental and technological factors affecting the Company’s operations, markets, products, services and fees. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements to reflect changed assumptions, the occurrence of unanticipated events or changes to future operating results over time.

GENERAL

Washington Federal, Inc. is a Washington corporation headquartered in Seattle, Washington. The Company is a bank holding company that conducts its operations through the Bank, a federally-insured national bank subsidiary, Washington Federal, National Association. The Bank converted from a federal savings association to a national bank charter with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency on July 17, 2013. At the same time, the Company which had previously been a savings and loan holding company, became a bank holding company under the Bank Holding Company Act.

The Company's fiscal year end is September 30th. All references to 2014 represent balances as of September 30, 2014 or activity for the fiscal year then ended.

The results discussed below were impacted by the acquisition on close of business October 31, 2013 of eleven branches from Bank of America, National Association; these branches are located in New Mexico. Effective as of the close of business on December 6, 2013, the Bank completed the acquisition of another forty branches from Bank of America, National Association; these branches are located in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. Effective as of the close of business on May 2, 2014, the Bank completed the acquisition of an additional twenty-three branches from Bank of America, National Association; these branches are located in Arizona and Nevada. The combined acquisitions provided $1,853,798,000 in deposit accounts, $12,881,000 of loans, and $25,097,000 in branch properties. Washington Federal paid a 1.99% premium on the total deposits and received $1,776,660,000 in cash from the transactions.

The operating results of the Company include the operating results produced by the first eleven branches for the period from November 1, 2013 to March 31, 2015 , the additional forty branches from December 7, 2013 to March 31, 2015 and the twenty-three branches from May 3, 2014 to March 31, 2015 .

INTEREST RATE RISK

Based on Management's assessment of the current interest rate environment, the Bank has taken steps to reduce its interest rate risk profile compared to its historical norms, including growing shorter-term business loans, transaction deposit accounts and extending the maturity on borrowings. The recent branch acquisitions have accelerated these efforts. The mix of transaction accounts is now approximately 53% of total deposits. The Bank has also been purchasing more variable rate investments. The composition of the investment portfolio is 44% variable and 56% fixed rate. In addition, $1,479,781,000 of its purchased 30-year fixed rate mortgage-backed securities have been designated as held-to-maturity. With rising interest rates, these securities may be subject to unrealized losses. As of March 31, 2015 , the net unrealized gain on these securities was $696,000. The net unrealized gain on the $2,710,275,000 of available-for-sale securities was $46,631,000 as of March 31, 2015 . The Bank has executed $300,000,000 in forward starting interest rate swaps to hedge future borrowing rates as of March 31, 2015. The net unrealized loss on the interest rate swaps as of March 31, 2015 was $9,503,000 . All of the above are pre-tax net unrealized gains/(losses).

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PART I – Financial Information

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

The Company relies on various measures of interest rate risk, including an asset/liability maturity gap analysis, modeling of changes in forecasted net interest income under various rate change scenarios, and the impact of interest rate changes on the net portfolio value (“NPV”) of the Company.

Repricing Gap Analysis. At March 31, 2015 , the Company had approximately $1,507,912,000 more in liabilities subject to maturity or repricing in the next year than assets, which resulted in a negative one-year maturity gap of 10.3% of total assets. This was a decrease from the 11.3% negative gap as of September 30, 2014 . A negative maturity gap implies that funding costs will change more rapidly than interest income on earning assets with movements in interest rates. A negative maturity gap typically results in lower margins when interest rates rise and higher margins when interest rates decline. Gap analysis provides management with a high-level indication of interest rate risk, but it is considered less reliable than more detailed modeling.

Net Interest Income Sensitivity. The potential impact of rising interest rates on net interest income in the future under various rate change scenarios is estimated using a model that is based on account level detail for loans and deposits. In the event of an immediate and parallel increase of 200 basis points in both short and long-term interest rates, the model estimates that net interest income will decrease by 1.1% in the next year. This compares to an estimated decrease of 1.5% as of the September 30, 2014 analysis. This analysis assumes zero balance sheet growth and a constant percentage composition of assets and liabilities for consistency. It also assumes that loan and deposit prices respond in full to the increase in market rates. Actual results will differ from the assumptions used in this model, as Management monitors and adjusts loan and deposit pricing and the size and composition of the balance sheet to respond to changing interest rates. It is noted that a flattening yield curve due to a greater increase in short term rates as compared to long term rates would likely result in a more significant decrease in net interest income.

NPV Sensitivity. The NPV is an estimate of the market value of shareholder's equity. It is derived by calculating the difference between the present value of expected cash flows from interest-earning assets and the present value of expected cash flows from interest-paying liabilities and off-balance-sheet contracts. The sensitivity of the NPV to changes in interest rates provides a longer term view of interest rate risk as it incorporates all future expected cash flows. In the event of an immediate and parallel increase of 200 basis points in interest rates, the NPV is estimated to decline by $515,000,000 or 18.3% and the NPV to total assets ratio to decline to 16.50% from a base of 18.79%. As of September 30, 2014 , the NPV in the event of a 200 basis point increase in rates was estimated to decline by $598,000,000 or 21.7% and the NPV to total assets ratio to decline to 15.68% from a base of 18.53%. The decreased NPV sensitivity and higher base NPV ratio is due to lower interest rates and higher prices as of March 31, 2015 .

Interest Rate Spread. The interest rate spread is measured as the difference between the rate on total loans and investments and the rate on costing liabilities at the end of each period. The interest rate spread increased to 2.71% at March 31, 2015 from 2.66% at September 30, 2014 . The spread increased primarily due to lower rates on deposits and borrowings. As of March 31, 2015 , the weighted average rate on customer deposit accounts and borrowings decreased by 5 basis points compared to September 30, 2014 , while the weighted average rate on earning assets remained the same at 3.63%.

Net Interest Margin. The net interest margin is measured using the interest income and expense over the average assets and liabilities for the period. The net interest margin increased to 3.10% for the quarter ended March 31, 2015 from 3.03% for the quarter ended March 31, 2014 . The yield on earning assets decreased 3 basis points to 4.01% and the cost of interest bearing liabilities declined 12 basis points to 0.93% . The yield on earning assets benefited from higher loan interest income as a result of improving credit quality and a shift from investments to higher yielding loans. The decrease in interest costs was a combination of continued downward repricing of time deposits and the prepayment of a $100 million FHLB advance in the prior quarter.

The following table sets forth the information explaining the changes in the net interest margin for the period indicated compared to the same period one year ago.

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

PART I – Financial Information

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

Quarter Ended March 31, 2015 — Average Balance Interest Average Rate Quarter Ended March 31, 2014 — Average Balance Interest Average Rate
(In thousands) (In thousands)
Assets
Loans and covered loans $ 8,487,458 $ 109,274 5.22 % $ 7,899,864 $ 106,334 5.46 %
Mortgaged-backed securities 3,070,002 18,143 2.40 3,305,428 21,071 2.59
Cash & Investments 1,688,076 4,814 1.16 1,915,724 4,540 0.96
FHLB & FRB stock 154,342 399 1.05 170,945 406 0.96
Total interest-earning assets 13,399,878 132,630 4.01 % 13,291,961 132,351 4.04 %
Other assets 1,150,996 1,101,299
Total assets $ 14,550,874 $ 14,393,260
Liabilities and Equity
Customer accounts $ 10,659,570 $ 12,574 0.48 % $ 10,355,866 $ 14,780 0.58 %
FHLB advances 1,830,000 16,176 3.58 1,930,000 16,935 3.56
Other borrowings
Total interest-bearing liabilities 12,489,570 28,750 0.93 % 12,285,866 31,715 1.05 %
Other liabilities 114,628 126,711
Total liabilities 12,604,198 12,412,577
Stockholder's equity 1,946,676 1,980,683
Total liabilities and equity $ 14,550,874 $ 14,393,260
Net interest income $ 103,880 $ 100,636
Net interest margin 3.10 % 3.03 %

As of March 31, 2015 , total assets had declined by $145,022,000 to $14,611,019,000 from $14,756,041,000 at September 30, 2014 . For the quarter ended March 31, 2015 , compared to the quarter ended September 30, 2014 , loans (including covered loans) increased $234,195,000 or 2.81% . Investment securities decreased $361,020,000 , or 7.85% .

Cash and cash equivalents of $675,064,000 and stockholders’ equity of $1,968,140,000 as of March 31, 2015 provides management with flexibility in managing interest rate risk going forward.

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

The Company’s net worth at March 31, 2015 was $1,968,140,000 , or 13.47% of total assets. This was a decrease of $5,143,000 from September 30, 2014 when net worth was $1,973,283,000 , or 13.40% of total assets. The Company’s net worth was impacted in the six months ended March 31, 2015 by net income of $78,768,000 , the payment of $26,806,000 in cash dividends, treasury stock purchases of $77,355,000 , as well as an increase in other comprehensive income of $2,777,000 .

Management believes this strong net worth position will help the Company manage its inherent risks and resultant profitability and provide the capital support needed for controlled growth in a regulated environment. To be categorized as well capitalized, Washington Federal must maintain minimum total risk-based, Tier 1 risk-based and Tier 1 leverage ratios as set forth in the following table.

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

Actual — Capital Ratio Capital Adequacy Guidelines — Capital Ratio Categorized as Well Capitalized Under Prompt Corrective Action Provisions — Capital Ratio
(In thousands)
March 31, 2015
Total capital (to risk-weighted assets)
The Company $ 1,752,575 21.31 % $ 658,080 8.00 % NA NA
The Bank 1,745,636 21.23 % 657,806 8.00 % $822,258 10.00 %
Tier I capital (to risk-weighted assets)
The Company 1,648,859 20.04 % 493,560 6.00 % NA NA
The Bank 1,641,962 19.97 % 493,355 6.00 % 657,806 8.00 %
Tier I Capital (to average assets)
The Company 1,648,859 11.57 % 570,284 4.00 % NA NA
The Bank 1,641,962 11.52 % 570,201 4.00 % 712,751 5.00 %
Common Equity Tier I Capital
The Company 1,648,859 11.57 % 641,569 4.50 % NA NA
The Bank 1,641,962 11.52 % 641,476 4.50 % 926,576 6.50 %
September 30, 2014
Total capital (to risk-weighted assets)
The Company 1,739,658 23.97 % 580,671 8.00 % NA NA
The Bank 1,750,179 24.11 % 580,772 8.00 % 725,965 10.00 %
Tier I capital (to risk-weighted assets)
The Company 1,648,199 22.71 % 290,335 4.00 % NA NA
The Bank 1,658,704 22.85 % 290,386 4.00 % 435,579 6.00 %
Tier I Capital (to average assets)
The Company 1,648,199 11.39 % 578,804 4.00 % NA N/A
The Bank 1,658,704 11.46 % 578,816 4.00 % 723,520 5.00 %

In July 2013, federal banking agencies released new regulatory capital rules which became effective January 1, 2015. These new rules raise the minimum capital ratios and establish new criteria for regulatory capital. New minimum capital ratios for four measures are established. The common equity Tier 1 Capital Ratio is new; it recognizes common equity as the highest form of capital. The denominator for all except the leverage ratio is risk weighted assets. The new rules also sets forth a “capital conservation buffer” of up to 2.5%. In the event that a bank’s capital levels fall below minimum ratios plus these buffers, restrictions can be placed on the bank by regulators. These restrictions include reducing dividend payments, share-backs, and staff bonus payments. The purpose of these buffers is to require banks to build up capital outside of periods of stress that can be drawn down during periods of stress. As a result, even during periods where losses are incurred, the minimum capital ratios can still be met.

The new capital rules detail a phase-in period for the new minimum ratios and the capital buffers, before the full minimum ratios take effect in 2019. There are also new standards for Adequate and Well Capitalized criteria that are used for “Prompt Corrective Action” purposes. These new standards are indicated in the table above. The Company has calculated its capital ratios using the new rules as of March 31, 2015. This did not have a material impact on its consolidated financial statements.

The Company's cash and cash equivalents amounted to $675,064,000 at March 31, 2015 , a decrease from $781,843,000 at September 30, 2014 . The Company continues to hold higher than normal amounts of liquidity due to concern about potentially rising interest rates. Additionally, see "Interest Rate Risk" above and the "Statement of Cash Flows" included in the financial statements.

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

CHANGES IN FINANCIAL CONDITION

Available-for-sale and held-to-maturity securities : Available-for-sale securities decreased $292,536,000 , or 9.6% , during the six months ended March 31, 2015 , due to prepayments, calls and maturities which were partially offset by the purchase of $163,126,000 of available-for-sale securities. There were no available-for-sale securities sold during the six months ended March 31, 2015 . During the same period, there were no held-to-maturity securities purchased or sold. As of March 31, 2015 , the Company had net unrealized gains on available-for-sale securities and long term borrowing hedges of $23,485,000 , net of tax, which were recorded as part of other comprehensive income. This includes a net unrealized gain of $29,495,000 on available for sale securities and a net unrealized loss of $6,010,000 on long term borrowing hedges.

Loans receivable : During the six months ended March 31, 2015 , the balance of net loans receivable increased to $8,420,988,000 compared to $8,148,322,000 at September 30, 2014 . This increase includes net loan activity (originations less principal payments and maturities) for non-covered loans of $128,057,000 and loan purchases of $146,832,000. During the six month period, $18,991,000 of non-covered loans were transferred to REO.

Covered loans : As of March 31, 2015 , FDIC covered loans decreased 21.8% , or $38,471,000 to $138,005,000 , compared to September 30, 2014 due primarily to $50,257,000 of net principal payments, maturities and transfers to REO which were partially offset by $11,786,000 in accretable yield.

The FDIC loss share coverage for the acquired commercial loans will expire during fiscal year 2015. The FDIC loss share coverage for single family residential loans will continue for another five years. There are $83,077,000 of covered assets from the former Horizon Bank that will lose their FDIC loss share coverage after March 31, 2015 . Including these loans as of March 31, 2015 , the NPA ratio would rise from 0.98% to 1.05% and the delinquency rate would rise to 1.20% from 1.14%. There are also $53,181,000 of covered assets from the former Home Valley Bank as of March 31, 2015 that will lose their FDIC loss share coverage as of September 30, 2015 . If all FDIC loss share coverage had expired as of March 31, 2015 , the NPA ratio would increase from 0.98% to 1.22% and the delinquency rate would rise from 1.14% to 1.31%.

The following table shows the loan portfolio by category for the last three quarters.

Loan Portfolio by Category * March 31, 2015 December 31, 2014 September 30, 2014
Non-Acquired loans (In thousands)
Single-family residential $ 5,535,104 61.4 % $ 5,608,208 63.9 % $ 5,560,203 64.1 %
Construction - speculative 163,657 1.8 152,450 1.7 140,060 1.6
Construction - custom 370,693 4.1 377,561 4.3 385,824 4.5
Land - acquisition & development 105,058 1.2 84,000 1.0 77,832 0.9
Land - consumer lot loans 102,082 1.2 104,492 1.2 108,623 1.3
Multi-family 1,010,003 11.2 977,752 11.2 917,286 10.6
Commercial real estate 741,137 8.2 597,436 6.8 591,336 6.9
Commercial & industrial 408,358 4.6 391,327 4.5 379,226 4.4
HELOC 120,901 1.3 118,047 1.3 116,042 1.4
Consumer 218,680 2.5 126,929 1.4 132,590 1.5
Total non-acquired loans 8,775,673 97.5 8,538,202 97.3 8,409,022 97.2
Non-impaired acquired loans
Single-family residential 10,977 0.1 11,163 0.1 11,716 0.1
Land - acquisition & development 728 872 905
Land - consumer lot loans 2,476 2,496 2,507
Multi-family 2,912 2,954 2,999
Commercial real estate 87,313 1.0 92,133 1.0 97,898 1.1
Commercial & industrial 55,659 0.6 58,836 0.7 51,386 0.6
HELOC 6,700 0.1 7,749 0.1 8,274 0.1
Consumer 2,794 4,369 5,670 0.1
Total non-impaired acquired loans 169,559 1.8 180,572 1.9 181,355 2.0

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

Credit-impaired acquired loans — Single-family residential 322 323 325
Land - acquisition & development 1,395 1,533 1,622
Commercial real estate 56,727 0.6 60,287 0.7 63,723 0.7
Commercial & industrial 2,190 3,255 3,476
HELOC 8,838 0.1 9,202 0.1 10,139 0.1
Consumer 51 54 55
Total credit-impaired acquired loans 69,523 0.7 74,654 0.8 79,340 0.8
Total Loans
Single-family residential 5,546,403 61.5 5,619,694 64.0 5,572,244 64.2
Construction - speculative 163,657 1.8 152,450 1.7 140,060 1.6
Construction - custom 370,693 4.1 377,561 4.3 385,824 4.5
Land - acquisition & development 107,181 1.2 86,405 1 80,359 0.9
Land - consumer lot loans 104,558 1.2 106,988 1.2 111,130 1.3
Multi-family 1,012,915 11.2 980,706 11.2 920,285 10.6
Commercial real estate 885,177 9.8 749,856 8.5 752,957 8.7
Commercial & industrial 466,207 5.2 453,418 5.2 434,088 5.0
HELOC 136,439 1.5 134,998 1.5 134,455 1.6
Consumer 221,525 2.5 131,352 1.4 138,315 1.6
Total Loans 9,014,755 100 % 8,793,428 100 % 8,669,717 100 %
Less:
Allowance for probable losses 108,323 108,700 112,347
Loans in process 426,836 370,655 346,172
Discount on acquired loans 20,845 22,535 25,391
Deferred net origination fees 37,763 37,621 37,485
593,767 539,511 521,395
$ 8,420,988 $ 8,253,917 $ 8,148,322

  • Excludes covered loans

Non-performing assets (excludes discounted acquired assets) : NPAs decreased during the quarter ended March 31, 2015 to $143,223,000 from $147,311,000 at September 30, 2014 , a 2.8% decrease. The decrease is due to improving credit conditions and credit quality. Non-performing assets as a percentage of total assets was 0.98% at March 31, 2015 compared to 1.00% at September 30, 2014 . This level of NPAs is slightly higher than the 0.96% average in the Company's 29+ year history as a public company. Including the covered assets from the Horizon Bank acquisition in 2010 that will not be covered after March 31, 2015, the NPAs would amount to $153,202,000 or 1.05% of total assets.

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

PART I – Financial Information

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

The following table sets forth information regarding restructured and non-accrual loans and REO held by the Company at the dates indicated.

March 31, 2015 September 30, 2014
(In thousands)
Restructured loans:
Single-family residential $ 290,950 85.6 % $ 323,732 86.3 %
Construction - speculative 6,408 1.9 7,360 2.0
Land - acquisition & development 4,179 1.2 4,737 1.3
Land - consumer lot loans 12,501 3.7 13,002 3.5
Multi - family 3,862 1.1 5,243 1.4
Commercial real estate 20,673 6.1 19,140 5.1
HELOC 1,394 0.4 1,486 0.4
Consumer 122 43
Total restructured loans (1) $ 340,089 100 % $ 374,743 100 %
Non-accrual loans:
Single-family residential $ 59,948 79.0 % $ 74,067 84.8 %
Construction - speculative 1,152 1.5 1,477 1.7
Land - acquisition & development 811 0.9
Land - consumer lot loans 2,246 3.0 2,637 3.0
Multi-family 1,742 2.0
Commercial real estate 5,735 7.6 5,106 5.8
Commercial & industrial 5,018 6.6 7
HELOC 1,175 1.5 795 0.9
Consumer 576 0.8 789 0.9
Total non-accrual loans (2) 75,850 100 % 87,431 100 %
Total REO (3) 63,305 55,072
Total REHI (3) 4,068 4,808
Total non-performing assets $ 143,223 $ 147,311
Total non-performing assets and performing restructured loans as a percentage of total assets 3.22 % 3.37 %
(1) Restructured loans were as follows:
Performing $ 327,387 96.3 % $ 350,653 93.6 %
Non-performing (included in non-accrual loans above) 12,702 3.7 24,090 6.4
$ 340,089 100 % $ 374,743 100 %

(2) The Company recognized interest income on nonaccrual loans of approximately $4,220,000 in the six months ended March 31, 2015 . Had these loans performed according to their original contract terms, the Company would have recognized interest income of approximately $3,108,000 for the six months ended March 31, 2015 . The recognized interest income may include more than six months of interest for some of the loans that were brought current. In addition to the nonaccrual loans reflected in the above table, the Company had $77,912,000 of loans that were less than 90 days delinquent at March 31, 2015 but which it had classified as substandard for one or more reasons. If these loans were deemed non-performing, the Company’s ratio of total NPAs and performing restructured loans as a percent of total assets would have increased to 3.75% at March 31, 2015 .

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(3) Total REO and REHI includes real estate held for sale acquired in settlement of loans or acquired from purchased institutions in settlement of loans. Includes net exposure to covered REO.

Restructured single-family residential loans are reserved for under the Company’s general reserve methodology. If any individual loan is significant in balance, the Company may establish a specific reserve as warranted.

Most restructured loans are accruing and performing loans where the borrower has proactively approached the Company about modifications due to temporary financial difficulties. Each request is individually evaluated for merit and likelihood of success. Single-family residential loans comprised 85.6% of restructured loans as of March 31, 2015 . The concession for these loans is typically a payment reduction through a rate reduction of from 100 to 200 bps for a specific term, usually six to twelve months. Interest-only payments may also be approved during the modification period.

For commercial loans, six consecutive payments on newly restructured loan terms are required prior to returning the loan to accrual status. In some instances after the required six consecutive payments are made, a management assessment will conclude that collection of the entire principal balance is still in doubt. In those instances, the loan will remain on non-accrual. Homogeneous loans may or may not be on accrual status at the time of restructuring, but all are placed on accrual status upon the restructuring of the loan. Homogeneous loans are restructured only if the borrower can demonstrate the ability to meet the restructured payment terms; otherwise, collection is pursued and the loan remains on non-accrual status until liquidated. If the homogeneous restructured loan does not perform it will be placed in non-accrual status when it is 90 days delinquent.

A loan that defaults and is subsequently modified would impact the Company’s delinquency trend, which is part of the qualitative risk factors component of the general reserve calculation. Any modified loan that re-defaults and is charged-off would impact the historical loss factors component of the Company's general reserve calculation.

Allocation of the allowance for loan losses : The following table shows the allocation of the Company’s allowance for loan losses at the dates indicated.

March 31, 2015 — Amount Loans to Total Loans (1) Coverage Ratio (2) September 30, 2014 — Amount Loans to Total Loans (1) Coverage Ratio (2)
(In thousands) (In thousands)
Single-family residential $ 54,762 66.0 % 1.0 % $ 62,763 65.6 % 1.1 %
Construction - speculative 5,445 1.3 5.2 6,742 1.7 5.2
Construction - custom 968 2.4 0.5 1,695 4.6 0.5
Land - acquisition & development 7,405 1.1 8.2 5,592 0.9 7.2
Land - consumer lot loans 3,035 1.2 3.0 3,077 1.3 2.8
Multi-family 4,673 11.2 0.5 4,248 10.9 0.5
Commercial real estate 6,734 7.5 1.1 7,548 7.0 1.3
Commercial & industrial 21,146 5.3 4.8 16,527 5.0 4.6
HELOC 850 1.4 0.7 928 1.4 0.9
Consumer 3,305 2.6 1.5 3,227 1.6 2.4
$ 108,323 100 % $ 112,347 100 %

(1) Represents the total amount of the loan category as a % of total gross loans, excluding non-acquired and non-covered loans outstanding not subject to the allowance for loan loss.

(2) Represents the allocated allowance of the loan category as a % of total gross loans, excluding non-acquired and non-covered loans outstanding not subject to the allowance for loan loss, for the same loan category.

Real Estate Held for Sale : Real estate held for sale increased during the six months ended March 31, 2015 by $5,750,000 to $60,822,000. This includes upward net market value adjustments from prior period corrections of $8,164,000 that were made in the prior quarter which were partially offset by a net decline in balances due to current period activities.

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

PART I – Financial Information

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

Interest Receivable: Interest receivable decreased by $11,678,000 as compared to September 30, 2014, primarily as a result of the correction for the over-accrual of interest income of $8,872,000 that was made in the prior quarter that had accumulated since fiscal 2011 and was detected during this fiscal year. Management believes this error and its correction had no material impact to any prior reporting period.

Bank Owned Life Insurance: The Company purchased $100,000,000 in bank-owned life insurance, with a pro forma 2015 pre-tax equivalent yield of 5.14%, in the quarter ended December 31, 2014 to assist in funding the growth of employee benefit costs.

Customer accounts : Customer accounts decreased $24,303,000 , or 0.2% , to $10,692,625,000 at March 31, 2015 compared with $10,716,928,000 at September 30, 2014 .

The following table shows the composition of the Bank’s customer accounts by deposit type as of the dates shown:

March 31, 2015 — Deposit Account Balance As a % of Total Deposits Wtd. Avg. Rate September 30, 2014 — Deposit Account Balance As a % of Total Deposits Wtd. Avg. Rate
(In thousands) (In thousands)
Non-interest checking $ 922,589 8.6 % — % $ 883,601 8.2 % — %
Interest checking 1,574,294 14.8 0.06 % 1,447,569 13.5 0.09 %
Savings (passbook/stmt) 663,863 6.2 0.10 % 622,546 5.8 0.10 %
Money Market 2,547,051 23.8 0.14 % 2,536,971 23.7 0.18 %
CD’s 4,984,828 46.6 0.92 % 5,226,241 48.8 0.92 %
Total $ 10,692,625 100 % 0.48 % $ 10,716,928 100 % 0.51 %

FHLB advances and other borrowings : Total borrowings were $1,830,000,000 as of March 31, 2015 which is lower than the balance as of September 30, 2014 by $100,000,000 due to repayment of a FHLB advance with a maturity date in September 2015, resulting in a prepayment penalty of $2,600,000.

The Bank has a credit line with the FHLB of Seattle equal to 50% of total assets, providing a substantial source of liquidity if needed. FHLB advances are collateralized as provided for in the Advances, Pledge and Security Agreement by all FHLB stock owned by the Bank, deposits with the FHLB and certain mortgages or deeds of trust securing such properties as provided in the agreements with the FHLB. On June 1, 2015, the FHLB of Seattle will be merged into the FHLB of Des Moines to create a larger, financially stronger, member-owned cooperative. The resulting institution will be headquartered in Des Moines with a smaller presence maintained in Seattle for members of the former Seattle Bank. This merger will benefit Washington Federal due to the return of excess FHLB stock and projected improvements in the cash dividends on the remaining activity based stock that will be required.

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

Net Income : The quarter ended March 31, 2015 produced net income of $40,361,000 compared to $38,657,000 for the same quarter one year ago. For the six months ended March 31, 2015 , net income totaled $78,768,000 compared to $78,893,000 for the same period one year ago. Net income for the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2015 benefited from higher net interest income and overall lower credit costs, which included the reversal of loan loss provision and net gains rather than losses on real estate acquired through foreclosure for the six month period. Some of this benefit was offset by higher other expenses during these periods. Please see related discussion below about these changes.

Net Interest Income : For the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2015 , net interest income was higher by $3,244,000 and $7,117,000 for the same periods in the prior year, respectively. The increase was driven by an increase in average earning assets of $107,917,000 since March 31, 2014. The net interest margin increased to 3.10% from 3.03% in the same quarter of the prior year as the decline in the yield on interest earning assets of 3 basis points has been less than the decline in the cost of funds of 12 basis points.

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

PART I – Financial Information

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

The following table sets forth certain information explaining changes in interest income and interest expense for the periods indicated compared to the same periods one year ago. For each category of interest-earning asset and interest-bearing liability, information is provided on changes attributable to (1) changes in volume (changes in volume multiplied by old rate) and (2) changes in rate (changes in rate multiplied by old volume). The change in interest income and interest expense attributable to changes in both volume and rate has been allocated proportionately to the change due to volume and the change due to rate.

Rate / Volume Analysis:

Comparison of Quarters Ended 3/31/15 and 3/31/14 — Volume Rate Total Comparison of Six months Ended 3/31/15 and 3/31/14 — Volume Rate Total
(In thousands) (In thousands)
Interest income:
Loans and covered loans $ 7,511 $ (4,571 ) $ 2,940 $ 14,603 $ (10,597 ) $ 4,006
Mortgaged-backed securities (1,749 ) (1,180 ) (2,929 ) (1,325 ) (1,797 ) (3,122 )
Investments (1) (363 ) 631 268 998 423 1,421
All interest-earning assets 5,399 (5,120 ) 279 14,276 (11,971 ) 2,305
Interest expense:
Customer accounts 431 (2,637 ) (2,206 ) 2,081 (6,342 ) (4,261 )
FHLB advances and other borrowings (759 ) (759 ) (1,482 ) 931 (551 )
All interest-bearing liabilities (328 ) (2,637 ) (2,965 ) 599 (5,411 ) (4,812 )
Change in net interest income $ 5,727 $ (2,483 ) $ 3,244 $ 13,677 $ (6,560 ) $ 7,117

(1) Includes interest on cash equivalents and dividends on FHLB & FRB stock

Provision (Reversal) for Loan Losses : The provision for loan losses amounted to a reversal of $3,949,000 and $9,449,000 for the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2015 , respectively, as compared to a provision of $4,336,000 and $8,936,000 for the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2014 , respectively. The reversal of provision for loan losses in the recent quarter quarter and six month period, are the result of the continued improvement of the Company's loan portfolio. The Company had net recoveries of $3,123,000 for the quarter ended March 31, 2015 , compared with $1,523,000 of net recoveries for the same quarter one year ago. The improvement in the provision for loan losses is in response to three primary factors: first, the amount of NPAs improved year-over-year; second, non-accrual loans as a percentage of net loans decreased from 1.30% at March 31, 2014 , to 0.91% at March 31, 2015 ; and third, the percentage of loans 30 days or more delinquent decreased from 1.57% at March 31, 2014 , to 1.14% at March 31, 2015 .

Non-performing assets amounted to $143,223,000 , or 0.98% , of total assets at March 31, 2015 , compared to $174,789,000 , or 1.22% of total assets at March 31, 2014 . Non-accrual loans decreased from $100,198,000 at March 31, 2014 , to $75,850,000 at March 31, 2015 , a 24.3% decrease. Management believes the allowance for loan losses plus the reserve for unfunded commitments, totaling $110,221,000, or 1.22% of gross loans, is sufficient to absorb estimated losses inherent in the portfolio. See Note E for further discussion and analysis of the allowance for loan losses for the quarter ended March 31, 2015 .

Other Income : For the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2015 , total other income was $10,841,000 and $16,221,000 compared to $6,702,000 and $12,490,000 for the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2014 . Deposit fee income was $5,405,000 and $11,383,000 for the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2015 compared to $3,381,000 and $5,084,000 for the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2014 . The increase was primarily due to the increase in branches and customers obtained through acquisitions during fiscal 2014 . Loan fee income of $2,048,000 and $4,112,000 for the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2015 was also higher than the same quarter and six months of the prior year.

The remaining other income was $3,388,000 in the current quarter compared to $1,997,000 in the same quarter of the prior year. For the six months ended March 31, 2015, it was $726,000 compared to $4,036,000 in the same period of the prior year. This decrease was due primarily to four unusual items in the quarter ending December 31, 2014. First, Management corrected an over-accrual of interest income on loans of $8,872,000 that had accumulated since fiscal 2011 and was detected during the current fiscal year. Second, there was an upward net market value adjustment of REO of $8,164,000 which was a correction from prior periods. Management believes that these errors and their corrections were not material to any reporting period.

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

PART I – Financial Information

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

Third, there was a prepayment charge of $2,600,000 on a $100,000,000 Federal Home Loan Bank advance that was accruing interest at 4% and scheduled to mature in September 2015. The prepayment charge will be offset by a corresponding reduction in interest expense over the remaining nine months of the fiscal year. Fourth, Management recorded a $2,000,000 FDIC indemnification asset write-down related to the commercial loans acquired from Horizon Bank in 2010. The portion of that agreement related to commercial loans expired on March 31, 2015.

Other Expense : The quarter ended March 31, 2015 produced total other expense of $57,324,000 compared to $52,059,000 for the same quarter one year ago, a 10.1% increase. This increase was driven primarily by an increase in employees as well as occupancy, product delivery and marketing expenses related to branch acquisitions from Bank of America during the 2014 fiscal year. FDIC insurance premiums are lower by $387,000 this quarter due to improvements in credit quality.

Total other expense for the quarters ended March 31, 2015 and 2014 equaled 1.58% and 1.45% , respectively, of average assets. The number of staff, including part-time employees on a full-time equivalent basis, was 1,865 and 1,846 at March 31, 2015 and 2014 , respectively. Higher staff and occupancy expense were both due to an increase in the number of branches from 231 as of March 31, 2014 to 247 as of March 31, 2015 .

Gain (Loss) on Real Estate Acquired Through Foreclosure: Gains (losses) recognized on real estate acquired through foreclosure was a net gain of $1,473,000 and $1,788,000 for the quarter and six months ended March 31, 2015 , respectively, as compared to a net gain of $553,000 and a net loss of $1,398,000 for the quarter and six month periods one year ago, respectively. The table below indicates some of the activity in the gain (loss) on real estate acquired through foreclosure in the periods indicated above.

Quarter Ended March 31, — 2015 2014 Six Months Ended March 31, — 2015 2014
(In thousands) (In thousands)
Net Gain on Sale $ 2,888 $ 2,362 $ 5,476 $ 4,695
REO Writedowns (720 ) (879 ) (1,537 ) (3,098 )
REO Operating Expenses (695 ) (930 ) (2,151 ) (2,995 )
Gain (loss) on real estate acquired through foreclosure, net $ 1,473 $ 553 $ 1,788 $ (1,398 )

Taxes : Income taxes increased to $22,458,000 for the quarter ended March 31, 2015 , as compared to $21,511,000 for the same period one year ago. Income taxes for the six months ended March 31, 2015 were $43,828,000 which was similar to the six months ended March 31, 2014 as income before taxes was similar. The effective tax rate for both the quarters and six months ended March 31, 2015 and March 31, 2014 was 35.75% . The Company expects an effective tax rate of 35.75% going forward.

Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk

Management believes that there have been no material changes in the Company’s quantitative and qualitative information about market risk since September 30, 2014 . For a complete discussion of the Company’s quantitative and qualitative market risk, see “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” in the Company’s 2014 Form 10-K.

Item 4. Controls and Procedures

(a) Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures . The Company maintains a set of disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Exchange Act that are designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed by the Company in the reports it files or submits under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the Securities and Exchange Commission's rules and forms, and that such information is accumulated and communicated to the Company's management, including the Company’s President and Chief Executive Officer along with the Company’s Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure. Management has evaluated, with the participation of the Company’s President and Chief Executive Officer along with the Company’s Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, the effectiveness of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures as of the end of the period covered by this quarterly report (the "Evaluation Date"). Based on the evaluation, the Company’s President and Chief Executive Officer along with the Company’s Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer have concluded that, as of the Evaluation Date, the Company's disclosure controls and procedures are effective.

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

PART I – Financial Information

Item 4. Controls and Procedures

(b) Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting . During the period to which this report relates, there have not been any changes in the Company's internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Exchange Act) that have materially affected, or that are reasonably likely to materially affect, such controls.

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

PART II – Other Information

Item 1. Legal Proceedings

From time to time the Company or its subsidiaries are engaged in legal proceedings in the ordinary course of business, none of which are considered to have a material impact on the Company’s financial position or results of operations.

Item 1A. Risk Factors

In addition to the other information set forth in this report, you should carefully consider the factors discussed under "Part I--Item 1A--Risk Factors" in the 2014 Form 10-K for the year ended September 30, 2014 . These factors could materially and adversely affect the Company's business, financial condition, liquidity, results of operations and capital position, and could cause its actual results to differ materially from our historical results or the results contemplated by the forward-looking statements contained in this report.

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

The following table provides information with respect to purchases made by or on behalf of the Company of the Company’s common stock during the three months ended March 31, 2015 .

Period Total Number of Shares Purchased Average Price Paid Per Share Total Number of Shares Purchased as Part of Publicly Announced Plan (1) Maximum Number of Shares That May Yet Be Purchased Under the Plan at the End of the Period
January 1, 2015 to January 31, 2015 1,191,000 $ 20.84 1,191,000 2,735,287
February 1, 2015 to February 28, 2015 311,070 20.76 311,070 2,424,217
March 1, 2015 to March 31, 2015 997,948 21.79 997,948 1,426,269
Total 2,500,018 $ 21.21 2,500,018 1,426,269

(1) The Company's only stock repurchase program was publicly announced by its Board of Directors on February 3, 1995 and has no expiration date. Under this ongoing program, a total of 41,956,264 shares have been authorized for repurchase.

Item 3. Defaults Upon Senior Securities

Not applicable

Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures

Not applicable

Item 5. Other Information

Not applicable

Item 6. Exhibits

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(a)
31.1 Section 302 Certification by the Chief Executive Officer
31.2 Section 302 Certification by the Chief Financial Officer
32 Section 906 Certification by the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer
101 Financial Statements from the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the fiscal quarter ended March 31, 2015 formatted in XBRL

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WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES

SIGNATURES

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

May 8, 2015 / S / R OY M. W HITEHEAD
ROY M. WHITEHEAD Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer
May 8, 2015 /S/ DIANE L. KELLEHER
DIANE L. KELLEHER Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

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