Interview with: Robert E. James, Jr., President, CEO and Director - featuring: their First Charter Bank that operates 58 financial centers, four insurance offices and 139 ATMs located throughout North Carolina and First Charter also operates loan origination offices in Asheville, North Carolina and Reston, Virginia.

First Charter Corp. (NC) (FCTR-NASDAQ)

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The last twelve months have been an exciting transition for First Charter Corp. (Charlotte, NC)…building a new management team and entering the Raleigh and Atlanta markets

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Financial
Regional Southeast Banks
(FCTR-NASDAQ)

First Charter Corp. (NC)

10200 David Taylor Drive
Charlotte, NC 28262-2373
Phone: 704-688-4300

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Robert E. James, Jr.
President, CEO and Director

Interview conducted by:
Walter Banks, Publisher
CEOCFOinterviews.com
August 2006

BIO:
Robert E. James, Jr.

President and CEO
First Charter Corporation

Bob James has been in banking for 33 years. He became President and Chief Executive Officer of First Charter Corporation in 2005. 

Bob joined First Charter in 1999 and was responsible for all customer contact areas, including: Community Banking, Commercial Banking, Mortgage Services, Brokerage Services, Insurance Services and Wealth Management. The Marketing and Training teams also reported to him.

Bob became President and CEO of First Charter Bank in 2004. In addition to the aforementioned areas, he assumed responsibility for Human Resources, Information Technology, Bank Operations and Credit Risk Management.

Prior to joining First Charter, Bob was with Centura Bank of Rocky Mount, North Carolina for 25 years, last serving as Executive Vice President managing Commercial and Small Business Lending, Alternative Channels and Marketing.

Bob graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1973 with a bachelor’s degree in business administration. He is also a graduate of the Louisiana State University Graduate School of Banking.

Bob serves on the Advisory Boards of CharlotteSaves, and the Charlotte Chamber of Commerce. He is Vice Chairman of the North Carolina Bankers Association and served as Provost for the 2005 North Carolina School of Banking.

Company Profile:
First Charter Corporation is a regional financial services company with assets of $4.3 billion and is the holding company for First Charter Bank. First Charter operates 58 financial centers, four insurance offices and 139 ATMs located throughout North Carolina. First Charter also operates loan origination offices in Asheville, North Carolina and Reston, Virginia. First Charter provides businesses and individuals with a broad range of financial services, including banking, financial planning, wealth management, investments, insurance, mortgages and a broad array of employee benefit programs.

CEOCFO: Mr. James, how long have you been with First Charter and what attracted you?
Mr. James: “I joined First Charter in January of 1999, a little over seven years ago. I have spent most of my banking career in North Carolina. I was with another North Carolina bank for 25 years prior to joining First Charter. The thing that attracted me initially was that the CEO at the time who recruited me had a great vision for the company. It was an opportunity for me to use all that I had learned over 25 years to help a smaller company transition their growth and performance. It seemed like a lot of fun and Charlotte, North Carolina was a great place to live, so I accepted the opportunity.”

CEOCFO: How has that been going, and will you tell us about your vision when you started and how it has changed?
Mr. James: “The last six of my seven years here have been very interesting. We completed a number of mergers, as well as suffered through some asset quality issues. In the past eighteen months, we have had a total change in company leadership. The CEO that was here when I joined the company has since retired, as did the CFO. In addition to a new CEO and CFO, we also have a new Chief Information Officer. We also engineered entries into two new markets and refined the growth strategy for our company. We embarked upon a financial transition, as well. This company has been a good performer over the past several years. However, our new management team wants First Charter to be a higher performing company, so it is very much focused on performance, and that includes the way each one of us performs our jobs day in and day out, and the way we serve customers.”

CEOCFO: Could you elaborate on your strategy?
Mr. James: “We have traditionally been a Charlotte area company. We have been in this market for about 100 years if you trace our roots back to the first bank that was part of this organization. We have always focused on the Charlotte, North Carolina market. It is a great market. Charlotte is the 26th largest city in the United States, and is expected to grow about 17% over the next five years. We made a decision to enter additional markets. In October of 2005, we entered the Raleigh, North Carolina market with one de novo branch. Raleigh is the 2nd largest city in North Carolina. Demographically it is a bit stronger than Charlotte and its growth rate is as good as Charlotte. We opened three more de novo branches on February 13th of this year. We now have four branches in Raleigh, as well as a commercial lending team, a construction loan team and a mortgage team. A year ago, we had nothing in Raleigh and now we have a franchise there.”

CEOCFO: How did you accomplish that?
Mr. James: “After studying all the markets in North and South Carolina that have at least 75,000 people, we decided to go to Raleigh. Our decision was based not only on Raleigh’s growth potential and strong demographics, but also on the competitive banking analysis, including average deposits per bank branch and the rate of deposit growth over the last five years. We started in February of 2005 with a loan production office. Our plan was to operate that office for approximately a year, then look for a branch site and build a branch. Something interesting happened along the way. Wachovia acquired SouthTrust and they closed six branches in Raleigh. We were able to acquire four of those six branches, which accelerated our de novo entry.  We knew that if we didn’t acquire these branches quickly, they were not going to be available down the road. We moved into a Wachovia (NYSE: WB) office in October and then moved into three former SouthTrust offices in February of this year (2006).”

CEOCFO: You all have been very busy beavers!
Mr. James: “We have been very busy! On June 1st of this year (2006), we announced an agreement to acquire Gwinnett Banking Company in North Atlanta. It is a nine-year-old commercial bank with about $420 million in assets. It is a highly profitable company, with a net interest margin of 4.75%, ROA about 1.80% and ROE in the 21% range. It is a well-run, high performing company, and this will put us in the north Atlanta market. In the last twelve months, we have gone from just focusing on Charlotte to now being in Raleigh and preparing to enter Atlanta…three of the best growth markets in the entire Southeast.”

CEOCFO: When you expand, how do you deal with your staffing?
Mr. James: “In Raleigh, we took one of our key managers located here in Charlotte who had been with our company for some time, who knew our culture, and we put him in-charge of staffing in Raleigh. We used some search firms, ran some ads in the paper, and we were very selective in our hiring. For example, we interviewed forty branch manager candidates before opening, so we were very selective. We took six months to find the right person to be our City Executive. The person we ultimately hired had spent ten years in the market and we were able to hire him from another bank. He then was able to go in and hire a number of commercial lenders that were already in the market from various other organizations. I think that is one reason why our loan growth in Raleigh is ahead of where we thought it would be at this point.”

CEOCFO: How will you manage and communicate within your organization, as it gets larger?
Mr. James: “Our growth strategy is based on a community-banking model, so we are organized like a community bank. We have decentralized management with decisions made locally as much as possible. A City Executive leads each of our markets and is responsible for First Charter in that market. We push as many decisions as possible down to that City Executive, including credit decisions. We also place our Risk Managers out in the market with the City Executives. They are in the same offices and locked arm-in-arm, so to speak. They have the same loan growth goals and the same loan quality goals. We find that this close working partnership allows us to grow quality loans in all those markets. In addition, you cannot over communicate. We conduct company-wide conference calls each month with all of our teammates in which the executive management team and I are on the phone for about 45 minutes. We take questions from the field in advance. We spend time talking to all of our folks about what is going on in the company, our challenges and the places where we need to improve. Then we answer their questions. That is the key challenge: the larger you get the harder you have to work to find new and compelling ways to communicate and keep everyone on the same page.”

CEOCFO: What types of customers are you looking for, and what enables you to meet the needs of your customers in a competitive environment?
Mr. James: “We are excited about the markets we serve. The Charlotte and Raleigh markets are both growing and the north Atlanta market is estimated to grow 23% over the next five years. So you can see that we are in excellent markets. The other reasons we like these markets is that they have a rich combination of consumers and small businesses. Our company caters to small and mid-size businesses. We target businesses with annual sales anywhere from $1 million to $50 million…companies that borrow anywhere from $250 thousand up to 10 or $12 million. We also cater to the full range of individual consumers; from the basic checking customer that uses our branches to the wealthy individuals we serve through our private banking division. We cater to both individuals and businesses by providing exceptional service and a comprehensive product set that meets all of their financial needs. We are in the insurance business, with the third largest insurance agency in the state of North Carolina. We can offer individuals and businesses all of the insurance products they need to meet their needs. We also offer full service brokerage throughout our franchise. We have a wealth management division that manages about $460 million in assets and offers traditional trust services, as well as asset management and private banking. Finally, we have a very robust mortgage operation with over 30 mortgage originators throughout our franchise. By offering great service and a comprehensive product set, and being proactive in our sales and marketing, we can attract new customers and build market share for our company.”

CEOCFO: What is your growth vision for the next few years?
Mr. James: “We want to be a great bank. We have three constituencies we think we have to be great with to be a great company.  The first constituency is our teammates. Our goal is to be a preferred employer and we are actively looking at how we can serve our teammates better. Secondly, we have to be excellent with our customers. We have to deliver exceptional service - not just good service, and we think we do a good job of that. Last, but not least, we have to deliver superior returns to our shareholders. We are a public company and our shareholders expect a good return on their investment. However, coming back to your question…our vision is to be a regional financial services company. This is what led us to go to Raleigh and to look at Atlanta. To be a growth company you have to be in growth markets and we think we are in three of the best growth markets in the Southeast. Regarding our size, we have not set a specific target for the next few years. We want to be large enough to be able to afford the technology and the quality people we need to compete successfully, and we think we are already there. We are much more focused on profitability than growth.”

CEOCFO: What is the financial picture?
Mr. James: “We started a financial transition a little over a year ago in July (2005). Our margin was slipping 3% and that was creating a low ROA. We looked at what we could do immediately. We reduced expenses by consolidating offices. We renegotiated contracts with our suppliers, including things as mundane as office supplies. We found that by re-bidding those contracts we could save as much as a half a million dollars a year. Then we did a balance sheet repositioning in the 4th Quarter. We sold about $460 million worth of securities that were yielding about 3.50% and used those funds to pay off debt costing us 5.28%, thereby eliminating about an $8 million negative drag on earnings. The repositioning cost us about $20 million after tax for prepayment penalties and unwinding some swaps. Our margin immediately improved by about 40 basis points. All of our ratios got better. Our ROA went up, ROE got better, and our capital ratios improved because we were a smaller company, but still had good capital. We have not completed our financial transition. We are still looking for ways to improve the profitability of the company. For example, most recently we offered our corporate headquarters campus for sale. First Charter bought a hundred acres of land in north Charlotte and built a 275,000 square foot corporate center, which we moved into about five years ago. We now feel that this is not the most effective use of our shareholders money and we have put the building and land on the market. Hopefully, it will sell and save us a lot of money.”

CEOCFO: In closing, tell us why should potential investors should be interested in First Charter?
Mr. James: “I think these are exciting times. We operate in vibrant markets and all of them are growing. In these markets, it is not just a take-away game. That is, we do not have to steal customers from other banks to grow. We are in markets where the pie is getting larger and if we just get our piece of the pie, we are going to grow each year. In addition, we are proactively growing our customer base. We open a lot of checking accounts and that allows us to cross sell other products and services. We have a successful Community Banking model that has worked for us here in Charlotte, which is home to Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) and Wachovia. If it can work here, we think it can work in any growing market. Finally, we have a new management team that is committed to improving the financial performance of this company.”


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“We have been very busy! On June 1st of this year (2006), we announced an agreement to acquire Gwinnett Banking Company in North Atlanta. It is a nine-year-old commercial bank with about $420 million in assets. It is a highly profitable company, with a net interest margin of 4.75%, ROA about 1.80% and ROE in the 21% range. It is a well-run, high performing company, and this will put us in the north Atlanta market. In the last twelve months, we have gone from just focusing on Charlotte to now being in Raleigh and preparing to enter Atlanta…three of the best growth markets in the entire Southeast.” - Robert E. James, Jr.

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