INTRODUCTION AND FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

Introduction



The following is management's discussion and analysis of the significant changes
in the financial condition, results of operations, comprehensive income, capital
resources, and liquidity presented in its accompanying consolidated financial
statements for ACNB Corporation (the Corporation or ACNB), a financial holding
company. Please read this discussion in conjunction with the consolidated
financial statements and disclosures included herein. Current performance does
not guarantee, assure or indicate similar performance in the future.

Forward-Looking Statements



In addition to historical information, this Form 10-Q may contain
forward-looking statements. Examples of forward-looking statements include, but
are not limited to, (a) projections or statements regarding future earnings,
expenses, net interest income, other income, earnings or loss per share, asset
mix and quality, growth prospects, capital structure, and other financial terms,
(b) statements of plans and objectives of Management or the Board of Directors,
and (c) statements of assumptions, such as economic conditions in the
Corporation's market areas. Such forward-looking statements can be identified by
the use of forward-looking terminology such as "believes", "expects", "may",
"intends", "will", "should", "anticipates", or the negative of any of the
foregoing or other variations thereon or comparable terminology, or by
discussion of strategy. Forward-looking statements are subject to certain risks
and uncertainties such as local economic conditions, competitive factors, and
regulatory limitations. Actual results may differ materially from those
projected in the forward-looking statements. Such risks, uncertainties and other
factors that could cause actual results and experience to differ from those
projected include, but are not limited to, the following: short- and long-term
effects of inflation and rising costs on the Corporation, customers and economy;
effects of governmental and fiscal policies, as well as legislative and
regulatory changes; effects of new laws and regulations (including laws and
regulations concerning taxes, banking, securities and insurance) and their
application with which the Corporation and its subsidiaries must comply; impacts
of the capital and liquidity requirements of the Basel III standards; effects of
changes in accounting policies and practices, as may be adopted by the
regulatory agencies, as well as the Financial Accounting Standards Board and
other accounting standard setters; ineffectiveness of the business strategy due
to changes in current or future market conditions; future actions or inactions
of the United States government, including the effects of short- and long-term
federal budget and tax negotiations and a failure to increase the government
debt limit or a prolonged shutdown of the federal government; effects of
economic conditions particularly with regard to the negative impact of severe,
wide-ranging and continuing disruptions caused by the spread of Coronavirus
Disease 2019 (COVID-19) and any other pandemic, epidemic or health-related
crisis and the responses thereto on the operations of the Corporation and
current customers, specifically the effect of the economy on loan customers'
ability to repay loans; effects of competition, and of changes in laws and
regulations on competition, including industry consolidation and development of
competing financial products and services; inflation, securities market and
monetary fluctuations; risks of changes in interest rates on the level and
composition of deposits, loan demand, and the values of loan collateral,
securities, and interest rate protection agreements, as well as interest rate
risks; difficulties in acquisitions and integrating and operating acquired
business operations, including information technology difficulties; challenges
in establishing and maintaining operations in new markets; effects of technology
changes; effect of general economic conditions and more specifically in the
Corporation's market areas; failure of assumptions underlying the establishment
of reserves for loan losses and estimations of values of collateral and various
financial assets and liabilities; acts of war or terrorism or geopolitical
instability; disruption of credit and equity markets; ability to manage current
levels of impaired assets; loss of certain key officers; ability to maintain the
value and image of the Corporation's brand and protect the Corporation's
intellectual property rights; continued relationships with major customers; and,
potential impacts to the Corporation from continually evolving cybersecurity and
other technological risks and attacks, including additional costs, reputational
damage, regulatory penalties, and financial losses. We caution readers not to
place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. They only reflect
Management's analysis as of this date. The Corporation does not revise or update
these forward-looking statements to reflect events or changed
circumstances. Please carefully review the risk factors described in other
documents the Corporation files from time to time with the Securities and
Exchange Commission, including the Annual Reports on Form 10-K, Quarterly
Reports on Form 10-Q. Please also carefully review any Current Reports on Form
8-K filed by the Corporation with the Securities and Exchange Commission.




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CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES



The accounting policies that the Corporation's management deems to be most
important to the portrayal of its financial condition and results of operations,
and that require management's most difficult, subjective or complex judgment,
often result in the need to make estimates about the effect of such matters
which are inherently uncertain. The following policies are deemed to be critical
accounting policies by management:

The allowance for loan losses represents management's estimate of probable
losses inherent in the loan portfolio. Management makes numerous assumptions,
estimates and adjustments in determining an adequate allowance. The Corporation
assesses the level of potential loss associated with its loan portfolio and
provides for that exposure through an allowance for loan losses. The allowance
is established through a provision for loan losses charged to earnings. The
allowance is an estimate of the losses inherent in the loan portfolio as of the
end of each reporting period. The Corporation assesses the adequacy of its
allowance on a quarterly basis. The specific methodologies applied on a
consistent basis are discussed in greater detail under the caption, Allowance
for Loan Losses, in a subsequent section of this Management's Discussion and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.

The evaluation of securities for other-than-temporary impairment requires a
significant amount of judgment. In estimating other-than-temporary impairment
losses, management considers various factors including the length of time the
fair value has been below cost, the financial condition of the issuer, and the
Corporation's intent to sell, or requirement to sell, the security before
recovery of its value. Declines in fair value that are determined to be other
than temporary are charged against earnings.

Accounting Standard Codification (ASC) Topic 350, Intangibles - Goodwill and
Other, requires that goodwill is not amortized to expense, but rather that it be
assessed or tested for impairment at least annually. Impairment write-downs are
charged to results of operations in the period in which the impairment is
determined. The Corporation did not identify any impairment on ACNB Insurance
Services, Inc.'s outstanding goodwill from its most recent testing, which was
performed as of October 1, 2021. A qualitative assessment on the Bank's
outstanding goodwill, resulting from the 2017 acquisition of New Windsor
Bancorp, Inc. (New Windsor), was performed on the anniversary date of the merger
which showed no impairment. Subsequent to that evaluation, ACNB concluded that
it would be preferable to evaluate goodwill in the fourth quarter at year-end.
This date was preferable from the anniversary date measurement as events
happening nearer to year-end could be factored in if necessary. The second
evaluation again revealed no impairment and it was agreed to continue to
evaluate goodwill for the Bank at or near year-end. If certain events occur
which might indicate goodwill has been impaired, the goodwill is tested for
impairment when such events occur. The Corporation has not identified any such
events and, accordingly, has not tested goodwill resulting from the acquisition
of New Windsor for impairment during the six months ended June 30, 2022. Other
acquired intangible assets that have finite lives, such as core deposit
intangibles, customer relationship intangibles and renewal lists, are amortized
over their estimated useful lives and subject to periodic impairment testing.
Core deposit intangibles are primarily amortized over ten years using
accelerated methods. Customer renewal lists are amortized using the straight
line method over their estimated useful lives which range from eight to fifteen
years.

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

Quarter ended June 30, 2022, compared to Quarter ended June 30, 2021

Executive Summary



Net income for the three months ended June 30, 2022, was $8,630,000, compared to
a net income of $8,508,000 for the second quarter in 2021, an increase of
$122,000 or 1.4%. Basic earnings per share for the three months ended June 30,
2022 and 2021, was $0.99 and $0.98, respectively, an 1.0% increase. The increase
in net income for the second quarter of 2022 was driven by an increase in net
interest income and commissions from insurance sales, as compared to the second
quarter of 2021. Net interest income for the quarter ended June 30, 2022
increased $1,235,000, or 6.7%. The increase in net interest income was driven by
a higher net interest margin of 8 basis points and higher average earnings
assets of $96,303,000. Commissions from insurance sales for the quarter ended
June 30, 2022 increased $955,000, or 51.5%, from the comparable quarter of
June 30, 2021, driven by the first quarter of 2022 acquisition of Hockley &
O'Donnell Agency. The acquisition added $719,000 commissions during the second
quarter of 2022. The provision for loan losses was $0 for the quarter ended
June 30, 2022, compared to $0 for the same quarter in 2021, based on the
adequacy analysis, resulting in an allowance to total loans of 1.25% (1.56% of
non-acquired loans) at June 30, 2022. Other income increased $120,000, or 2.0%,
driven by increased commissions from insurance sales partially offset by a
reduction in fees from selling mortgages into the secondary market.

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Other expenses increased $1,275,000, or 9.3%, due, in part, to the acquisition of the Hockley & O'Donnell Agency, general merit increases and additional expenses related to the recruitment process and hiring of the Corporation's successor Chief Financial Officer.

Net Interest Income



Net interest income totaled $19,804,000 for the three months ended June 30,
2022, compared to $18,569,000 for the same period in 2021, an increase of
$1,235,000, or 6.7%. The increase in net interest income was driven by a higher
net interest margin of 8 basis points and higher average earnings assets of
approximately $96,303,000. The net interest margin increased due to a reduction
in interest expense, a change in mix of average earning assets and a general
increase in interest rates as a result of the actions taken by the Federal
Reserve. Interest expense declined by $1,172,000 for three months ended June 30,
2022 compared to the three months ended June 30, 2021 driven by a reduction in
long-term borrowings of $30,050,000 and a reduction in deposit costs. The cost
of interest-bearing liabilities declined to 0.15% for the three months ended
June 30, 2022 compared to 0.34% for the three months ended June 30, 2021.
Average earnings assets grew year-over-year due to growth in investment
securities despite a decline in loans outstanding. This was a result of 2021
loan paydowns and payoffs (including Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans).
Late in the first quarter of 2022, excess cash of approximately $185,000,000 was
invested into higher-yielding securities. The new purchases were consistent with
the current portfolio and investment policy. PPP fees and purchase accounting
accretion totaled $1,011,000 for the three months ended June 30, 2022 compared
to $3,035,000 for the three months ended June 30, 2021.

Provision for Loan Losses



The provision for loan losses was $0 in the second quarter of 2022 and $0 in the
second quarter of 2021. The determination of the provision was a result of the
analysis of the adequacy of the allowance for loan losses calculation. The
allowance for loan and lease losses generally does not include the loans
acquired from the Frederick County Bancorp, Inc. acquisition completed in 2020,
which were recorded at fair value as of the acquisition date. Total impaired
loans at June 30, 2022 were 12.9% lower when compared to December 31, 2021.
Nonaccrual loans decreased by 20.2%, or $1,111,000, since December 31, 2021; all
substandard loans decreased by 7.9% in that period. Each quarter, the
Corporation assesses risk in the loan portfolio compared with the balance in the
allowance for loan losses and the current evaluation factors. As a result of
stable loan risk metrics, combined with low credit losses in the portfolio, the
provision for loan losses for the second quarter of 2022 was $0. ACNB charges
confirmed loan losses to the allowance and credits the allowance for recoveries
of previous loan charge-offs. For the second quarter of 2022, the Corporation
had net charge-offs of $20,000 as compared to net charge-offs of $30,000 for the
second quarter of 2021. For more information, please refer to Allowance for Loan
Losses in the following Financial Condition section of this Management's
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.

Other Income



Total other income was $6,076,000 for the three months ended June 30, 2022, up
$120,000, or 2.0%, from the second quarter of 2021. Fees from deposit accounts
increased by $252,000, or 33.4%, due to modest resumption of economic activity
that produces fee generating activity. Fee volume varies with balance levels,
account transaction activity, and customer-driven events such as overdrawing
account balances. Revenue from ATM and debit card transactions decreased by
$31,000 or 3.5%, to $865,000 due to variations in volume and mix. The longer
term trend had been increases resulting from consumer desire to use more
electronic delivery channels (Internet and mobile applications); however,
regulations or legal challenges for large financial institutions may impact
industry pricing for such transactions and fees in connection therewith in
future periods, the effects of which cannot be currently quantified. Income from
fiduciary, investment management and brokerage activities, which includes fees
from both institutional and personal trust, investment management services,
estate settlement and brokerage services, totaled $816,000 for the three months
ended June 30, 2022, as compared to $823,000 for the second quarter of 2021, a
0.9% net decrease due to lower asset valuations due to market conditions and
lower commission based transaction volume. Earnings on bank-owned life insurance
decreased by $9,000, or 2.4%, as a net result of varying crediting rates and
administrative cost. At the Corporation's wholly-owned insurance subsidiary,
ACNB Insurance Services, Inc., commissions from insurance sales was up by
$955,000, or 51.5%, to $2,808,000 during the three month period due primarily to
the acquisition of Hockley & O'Donnell Agency and, to a lesser extent, an
increase in contingent commissions during the period. A continuing risk to ACNB
Insurance Service, Inc.'s revenue is nonrenewal of large commercial accounts and
actions by insurance carriers to reduce commissions paid to agencies such as
ACNB Insurance Services, Inc. Contingent or extra commission payments from
insurance carriers are received in the second quarter of each year. Contingent
commissions vary from prior periods, due to specific claims experienced at ACNB
Insurance Services, Inc. and trends in the entire insurance marketplace in
general. Heightened pressure on commissions is expected to continue in this
business line from insurance company actions. Contingent commissions were
$924,000 for the three months ended June 30, 2022 compared to $388,000 for the
three months ended June 30, 2021. See Note 12 for discussion of the insurance
book of business purchase on February 28,
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2022. Income for sold mortgages included in other income, decreased by $769,000
or 84.1% due to less demand for refinancing in the current much higher rate
environment; such demand is rate dependent and therefore volatile. There were no
realized gains or losses on sales of securities during the second quarter of
2022 and 2021. A $148,000 net fair value loss was recognized on local bank and
CRA-related equity securities during the second quarter of 2022 due to normal
variations in market value on publicly-traded local bank stocks, compared to a
$12,000 net fair value gain during the second quarter of 2021 when these stocks
recovered from pandemic lows. No equity securities were sold in either period.
Other income in the three months ended June 30, 2022, was down by $111,000, or
33.4%, to $221,000 due to a variety of other fee income variances.

Other Expenses



Other expenses for the quarter ended June 30, 2022 were $15,006,000, an increase
of $1,275,000 or 9.3%, driven by an increase in salaries and benefits. The
largest component of other expenses is salaries and employee benefits, which
increased by $644,000, or 7.4%, when comparing the second quarter of 2022 to the
same period a year ago. Overall, the increase in salaries and employee benefits
can be attributed to all or some of the following factors:

•additional expenses related to the recruitment process and hiring of the Corporation's successor Chief Financial Officer;

•normal merit increases to employees and associated payroll taxes;

•increased organic and inorganic growth initiatives at ACNB Insurance Services, Inc.;

•challenges and cost in replacing and maintaining customer-facing staff due to a competitive labor market;

•costs in back-office staff due to the marketplace high demand for employees;

•maintaining staff in support functions and higher skilled mix of employees necessitated by regulations and growth;

•varying and timing on other performance-based commissions and incentives;

•market changes in actively managing employee benefit plan costs, including health insurance;

•varying cost of 401(k) plan and non-qualified retirement plan benefits; and,



•defined benefit pension expense, which was down by $292,000, or 442.4%, when
comparing the three months ended June 30, 2022, to the three months ended June
30, 2021, resulting from the change in discount rates which increases or
decreases the future pension obligations (creating volatility in the expense),
return on assets at the latest annual evaluation date due to market conditions
and changes in actuarial assumptions reflecting increased longevity.

The Corporation's overall pension plan investment strategy is to achieve a mix
of investments to meet the long-term rate of return assumption and near-term
pension obligations with a diversification of asset types, fund strategies, and
fund managers. The mix of investments is adjusted periodically by retaining an
advisory firm to recommend appropriate allocations after reviewing the
Corporation's risk tolerance on contribution levels, funded status, plan
expense, as well as any applicable regulatory requirements. However, the
determination of future benefit expense is also dependent on the fair value of
assets and the discount rate on the year-end measurement date, which in recent
years has experienced fair value volatility and low discount rates. The expense
could also be higher in future years due to volatility in the discount rates at
the latest measurement date, lower plan returns, and change in mortality tables
utilized.

Net occupancy expense increased by $34,000, or 3.8% during the period due to set
up cost for a temporary facility pending expected completion of a new office in
2022. Equipment expense increased by $216,000, or 16.5%, due to additional
ongoing expenses related to the September 2021 upgrade to a new core application
system that was a major step in the Corporation's Digital Transformation
Strategy. Equipment expense is subject to ever-increasing technology demands and
the need for system upgrades for security and reliability purposes. Technology
investments and training allowing staff to work from home continues to prove
invaluable in the pandemic, but also in attracting a broader talent pool.

Professional services expense totaled $430,000 during the second quarter of
2022, as compared to $244,000 for the same period in 2021, an increase of
$186,000, or 76.2%. This category includes expenses related to executive
recruiters, legal, corporate governance, risk, compliance management and audit
engagements, and legal counsel matters in connection with loans. It varies with
specific engagements that occur at different times of each year, such as loan
and compliance reviews.
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Marketing and corporate relations expenses were $67,000 for the second quarter
of 2022, or 8.1% higher, as compared to the same period of 2021. Marketing
expense varies with the timing and amount of planned advertising production and
media expenditures, typically related to the promotion of certain in-market
banking and trust products.

Other tax expense increased by $11,000, or 2.8%, comparing the three months
ended June 30, 2022 and 2021, including higher Pennsylvania Bank Shares Tax. The
Pennsylvania Bank Shares Tax is a shareholders' equity-based tax and is subject
to increases based on state government parameters and the level of the
stockholders' equity base that increased during the three months ended June 30,
2022 when compared to the same time period in 2021. Supplies and postage expense
increased by 9.6% due to variation in the timing of necessary replenishments.
FDIC and regulatory expense increased 16.8% due to variations in asset base.
FDIC expense varies with changes in net asset size, risk ratings, and FDIC
derived assessment rates. Intangible amortization increased 31.0% due to the
acquisition of the Hockley & O'Donnell Agency. Other operating expenses
increased by $31,000, or 2.1%, in the second quarter of 2022, as compared to the
second quarter of 2021. Increases included corporate governance, electronic
banking and consulting related costs. In addition, other expenses include the
expense of reimbursing checking and debit card customers for unauthorized
transactions to their accounts and other third-party fraudulent use, which added
approximately $30,000 to other expenses in the second quarter of 2022 compared
to $17,000 in the second quarter of 2021. The expense related to reimbursements
is unpredictable and varying, but ACNB has policies and procedures to limit
exposure recognizing the value of electronic and other banking channels to
customers and the significant revenue generated especially in the debit card
arena.

Provision for Income Taxes

The Corporation recognized income taxes of $2,244,000, or 20.6% of pretax
income, during the second quarter of 2022, as compared to $2,286,000, or 21.2%
of pretax income, during the same period in 2021. The variances from the federal
statutory rate of 21% in the respective periods are generally due to tax-exempt
income from investments in and loans to state and local units of government at
below-market rates (an indirect form of taxation), investment in bank-owned life
insurance, and investments in low-income housing partnerships (which qualify for
federal tax credits). In addition, both years include Maryland corporation
income taxes. Low-income housing tax credits were $70,000 for the three months
ended June 30, 2022 and 2021.

Six Months ended June 30, 2022, compared to Six Months ended June 30, 2021

Executive Summary



Net income for the six months ended June 30, 2022, was $15,229,000, compared to
$15,979,000 for the same six months in 2021, a decrease of $750,000 or
4.7%. Basic earnings per share for the six month period was $1.75 in 2022 and
$1.83 in 2021 or a 4.4% decrease over the prior period. The lower net income for
the first half of 2022 was primarily a result of lower income from residential
mortgage loans sold of $1,771,000. Net interest income for the six months ended
June 30, 2022 increased $963,000, or 2.7%, as total interest expense declined
more than interest income. PPP fees and purchase accounting accretion totaled
$2,071,000 for the six months ended June 30, 2022 compared to $4,868,000 for the
six months ended June 30, 2021. Provision for loan losses was $0 for the six
months ended June 30, 2022, compared to $50,000 for the same six months in 2021,
based on the adequacy analysis, resulting in an allowance to total loans of
1.25% (1.56% of non-acquired loans) at June 30, 2022. Other income decreased
$1,334,000, or 11.2%, driven by lower income from residential mortgage loans
sold of $1,771,000. Other expenses increased $770,000, or 2.8%, due to a higher
expense structure for the new core processing system and higher professional
fees. Salaries and benefits decreased largely due to a partial reversal of prior
year end incentive accrual as $750,000 in restricted stock was issued in lieu of
accrued cash rewards. Restricted stock is accounted for in a prospective expense
based on vesting.

Net Interest Income

Net interest income totaled $36,857,000 for the six months ended June 30, 2022,
compared to $35,894,000 for the same period in 2021, an increase of $963,000, or
2.7%. Interest income decreased $1,230,000, or 3.1%, driven by a reduction in
PPP fees and purchase accounting accretion of $2,797,000. The net interest
margin for the first half of 2022 was 2.90%, compared to 2.96% for the same
period of 2021. Average earnings assets grew $121,816,000 year-over-year due to
growth in investment securities and, to a lesser extent, interest bearing cash
despite a decline in loans outstanding due to 2021 loan paydowns and payoffs
(including PPP loans). Late in the first quarter of 2022, excess cash of
approximately $185,000,000 was invested into higher-yielding securities. The new
purchases were consistent with the current portfolio and investment policy.

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Provision for Loan Losses



The provision for loan losses was $0 in the first six months of 2022 and $50,000
in the first six months of 2021. The determination of the provision was a result
of the analysis of the adequacy of the allowance for loan losses calculation.
The allowance for loan and lease losses generally does not include the loans
acquired from the FCBI acquisition, which were recorded at fair value as of the
acquisition dates. Total impaired loans at June 30, 2022 were 12.9% lower
compared to December 31, 2021. Nonaccrual loans decreased by 20.2%, or
$1,111,000, since December 31, 2021; all substandard loans decreased by 7.9% in
that period. Each quarter, the Corporation assesses risk in the loan portfolio
and reserve required compared with the balance in the allowance for loan losses
and the current evaluation factors. As a result of stable loan risk metrics,
combined with low credit losses in the portfolio, the provision for loan losses
for the first six months of 2022 was $0. ACNB charges confirmed loan losses to
the allowance and credits the allowance for recoveries of previous loan
charge-offs. For the first six months of 2022, the Corporation had net
charge-offs of $90,000, as compared to net charge-offs of $69,000 for the first
six months of 2021. For more information, please refer to Allowance for Loan
Losses in the following Financial Condition section of this Management's
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.

Other Income



Total other income was $10,535,000 for the six months ended June 30, 2022, down
$1,334,000, or 11.2%, from the first six months of 2021. Fees from deposit
accounts increased by $436,000, or 28.5%, due to modest resumption of economic
activity that produces fee generating activity. Fee volume varies with balance
levels, account transaction activity, and customer-driven events such as
overdrawing account balances. Revenue from ATM and debit card transactions
decreased by $56,000 or 3.3%, to $1,618,000 due to variations in volume and mix.
The longer term trend had been increases resulting from consumer desire to use
more electronic delivery channels (Internet and mobile applications); however,
regulations or legal challenges for large financial institutions may impact
industry pricing for such transactions and fees in connection therewith in
future periods, the effects of which cannot be currently quantified. Income from
fiduciary, investment management and brokerage activities, which includes fees
from both institutional and personal trust, investment management services,
estate settlement and brokerage services, totaled $1,626,000 for the six months
ended June 30, 2022, as compared to $1,526,000 for the first six months of 2021,
a 6.6% net increase driven by new client acquisition and retention. Earnings on
bank-owned life insurance decreased by $20,000, or 2.8%, as a net result of
varying crediting rates and administrative cost. At the Corporation's
wholly-owned insurance subsidiary, ACNB Insurance Services, Inc., commissions
from insurance sales was up by $772,000, or 23.9%, to $4,008,000 during the
period due to the acquisition of Hockley & O'Donnell Agency. A continuing risk
to ACNB Insurance Services, Inc.'s revenue is nonrenewal of large commercial
accounts and actions by insurance carriers to reduce commissions paid to
agencies such as ACNB Insurance Services, Inc. Contingent or extra commission
payments from insurance carriers are received in the second quarter of each
year. Contingent commissions vary from prior periods, due to specific claims
experienced at ACNB Insurance Services, Inc. and trends in the entire insurance
marketplace in general. Heightened pressure on commissions is expected to
continue in this business line from insurance company actions. Contingent
commissions were $999,000 for the six months ended June 30, 2022 compared to
$463,000 for the six months ended June 30, 2021. See Note 12 for discussion of
the insurance book of business purchase on February 28, 2022. Income for sold
mortgages included in other income, decreased by $1,771,000 or 80.6% due to less
demand for refinancing in the current much higher rate environment; such demand
is rate dependent and therefore volatile. A $257,000 net fair value loss was
recognized on local bank and CRA-related equity securities during the first six
months of 2022 due to normal variations in market value on publicly-traded local
bank stocks, compared to a $377,000 net fair value gain during the first six
months of 2021 when these stocks recovered from pandemic lows. No equity
securities were sold in either quarter. There were no realized gains or losses
on sales of securities during the first six months of 2022 and 2021. Other
income in the six months ended June 30, 2022, was down by $161,000, or 25.9%, to
$460,000 due to a variety of other fee income variances.

Other Expenses



Other expenses for the six months ended June 30, 2022 were $28,288,000, an
increase of $770,000 or 2.8%, driven by increases in professional, equipment and
other expenses. Salaries and employee benefits, which is the largest component
of other expenses decreased by $465,000, or 2.7%, when comparing the first six
months of 2022 to the same period a year ago. The six months ended June 30, 2022
was impacted by a partial reversal of prior year end incentive compensation
accrual as $750,000 in restricted stock was issued in lieu of accrued cash
awards. Restricted stock is accounted for in a prospective expense based on
vesting. Net occupancy expense increased by $26,000, or 1.3% during the period,
due to set up costs for a temporary facility pending expected completion of a
new office in 2022. Equipment expense increased by $443,000, or 17.0%, due to
additional ongoing expenses related to the September 2021 upgrade to a new core
processing system that was a major step in the Corporation's Digital
Transformation Strategy. Equipment expense is subject to ever-increasing
technology demands and the
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need for system upgrades for security and reliability purposes. Technology investments and training allowing staff to work from home continues to prove invaluable in the pandemic, but also in attracting a broader talent pool.



Professional services expense totaled $739,000 during the first six months of
2022, as compared to $468,000 for the same period in 2021, an increase of
$271,000, or 57.9%. Professional services includes expenses related to executive
recruiters, legal, corporate governance, risk, compliance management and audit
engagements, and legal counsel matters in connection with loans. It varies with
specific engagements that occur at different times of each year, such as loan
and compliance reviews.

Marketing and corporate relations expenses were $170,000 for the first six
months of 2022, or 22.3% higher, as compared to the same period of
2021. Marketing expense varies with the timing and amount of planned advertising
production and media expenditures, typically related to the promotion of certain
in-market banking and trust products.

Other tax expense increased by $34,000, or 4.3%, comparing the six months ended
June 30, 2022 and 2021, including higher Pennsylvania Bank Shares Tax. The
Pennsylvania Bank Shares Tax is a shareholders' equity-based tax and is subject
to increases based on state government parameters and the level of the
stockholders' equity base that increased during the six months ended June 30,
2022 when compared to the same time period in 2021. Supplies and postage expense
increased by 10.3% due to variation in the timing of necessary replenishments.
FDIC and regulatory expense increased 16.8% due to variations in asset base.
FDIC expense varies with changes in net asset size, risk ratings, and FDIC
derived assessment rates. Intangible amortization increased 17.7% on bank
acquisition calculations while ACNB Insurance Services, Inc. increased on the
books of business purchase. Other operating expenses increased by $211,000, or
7.7%, in the first six months of 2022, as compared to the first six months of
2021. Increases included corporate governance, electronic banking and consulting
related costs. In addition, other expenses include the expense of reimbursing
checking and debit card customers for unauthorized transactions to their
accounts and other third-party fraudulent use, which added approximately
$131,000 to other expenses in the first six months of 2022 compared to $93,000
in the first six months of 2021. The expense related to reimbursements is
unpredictable and varying, but ACNB has policies and procedures in place to
limit exposure recognizing the value of electronic and other banking channels to
customers and the significant revenue generated especially in the debit card
arena.

Provision for Income Taxes

The Corporation recognized income taxes of $3,875,000, or 20.3% of pretax
income, during the first six months of 2022, as compared to $4,216,000, or 20.9%
of pretax income, during the same period in 2021. The variances from the federal
statutory rate of 21% in the respective periods are generally due to tax-exempt
income from investments in and loans to state and local units of government at
below-market rates (an indirect form of taxation), investment in bank-owned life
insurance, and investments in low-income housing partnerships (which qualify for
federal tax credits). In addition, both years include Maryland corporation
income taxes. Low-income housing tax credits were $140,000 for the six months
ended June 30, 2022 and 2021.


FINANCIAL CONDITION



Assets totaled $2,683,162,000 at June 30, 2022, compared to $2,786,987,000 at
December 31, 2021, and $2,708,520,000 at June 30, 2021. Average earning assets
during the six months ended June 30, 2022, increased to $2,567,000,000 from
$2,445,000,000 during the same period in 2021. Average interest bearing
liabilities increased in 2022 to $1,832,000,000 from $1,749,000,000 in 2021.

Investment Securities



ACNB uses investment securities to generate interest and dividend income, manage
interest rate risk, provide collateral for certain funding products, and provide
liquidity. The changes in the securities portfolio were the net result of
purchases and matured securities to provide proper collateral for public
deposits. The investment portfolio is comprised of U.S. Government agency,
municipal, and corporate securities. These securities provide the appropriate
characteristics with respect to credit quality, yield and maturity relative to
the management of the overall balance sheet.

At June 30, 2022, the securities balance included a net unrealized loss on
available for sale securities of $37,613,000, net of taxes, on amortized cost of
$572,948,000 versus a net unrealized loss of $3,474,000, net of taxes, on
amortized cost of $441,565,000 at December 31, 2021, and a net unrealized gain
of $742,000, net of taxes, on amortized cost of $384,880,000 at June 30, 2021.
The change in fair value of available for sale securities during 2022 was a
result of the greater amount of investments in the available for sale portfolio
and by a decrease in fair value due to a rise in market interest rates.

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At June 30, 2022, the securities balance included held to maturity securities
with an amortized cost of $66,329,000 and a fair value of $61,542,000, as
compared to an amortized cost of $6,454,000 and a fair value of $6,652,000 at
December 31, 2021, and an amortized cost of $8,139,000 and a fair value of
$8,452,000 at June 30, 2021. During the six months ending June 30, 2022,
approximately $39.7 million of municipal securities were transferred from
available for sale to held to maturity to mitigate the unrealized loss on
available for sale securities. The held to maturity securities also include U.S.
government pass-through mortgage-backed securities in which the full payment of
principal and interest is guaranteed.

The Corporation does not own investments consisting of pools of Alt-A or subprime mortgages, private label mortgage-backed securities, or trust preferred investments.



Late in the quarter ended March 31, 2022, the Corporation deployed excess
liquidity by moving approximately $185,000,000 from cash into higher-yielding
securities with a tax equivalent yield of approximately 2.80%. These new
purchases were consistent with the current investment portfolio, but with higher
yields to enhance the net interest margin and net interest income in future
quarters. Purchases were primarily in government sponsored enterprise (GSE)
pass-through instruments issued by the Federal National Mortgage Association
(FNMA), Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA) or Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC), which guarantee the timely payment of principal on
these investments.

The fair values of securities available for sale (carried at fair value) are
determined by obtaining quoted market prices on nationally recognized securities
exchanges (Level 1) or by matrix pricing (Level 2), which is a mathematical
technique used widely in the industry to value debt securities without relying
exclusively on quoted market prices for the specific security but rather by
relying on the security's relationship to other benchmark quoted prices. The
Corporation uses independent service providers to provide matrix pricing. Please
refer to Note 7 - "Securities" in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
for more information on the security portfolio and Note 9 - "Fair Value
Measurements" in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for more
information about fair value.

Loans



Loans outstanding decreased by $47,984,000, or 3.1%, at June 30, 2022 from
June 30, 2021, and increased by $41,365,000, or 2.8%, from December 31, 2021, to
June 30, 2022. The increase in loans year to date is largely attributable to
strong loan originations on the commercial and government lending portfolios.
Year over year, loan declines was primarily a result of active participation and
subsequent payoffs in the PPP loans and a reduction in residential loans.
Despite the intense competition in the Corporation's market areas, management
continues to focus on asset quality and disciplined underwriting standards in
the loan origination process. Total commercial purpose segments increased
$48,530,000, or 4.8%, as compared to December 31, 2021. During this period
$18,299,000 of PPP loans paid off. Commercial loans are spread among diverse
categories that include municipal governments/school districts, commercial real
estate, commercial real estate construction, and commercial and industrial.
Included in the commercial, financial and agricultural category are loans to
Pennsylvania school districts, municipalities (including townships) and
essential purpose authorities. In most cases, these loans are backed by the
general obligation of the local municipal body. In many cases, these loans are
obtained through a bid process with other local and regional banks. These loans
are predominantly bank qualified for mostly tax-free interest income treatment
for federal income taxes. These loans totaled $76,032,000 at June 30, 2022, an
increase of 21.0% from $62,823,000 held at the end of 2021; these loans are
especially subject to refinancing in certain rate environments. Residential real
estate mortgage lending decreased by $9,823,000, or 2.2%, as compared to
December 31, 2021. Of the $432,064,000 total in residential mortgage loans at
June 30, 2022, $119,341,000 were secured by junior liens or home equity loans,
which are also in many cases junior liens. Junior liens inherently have more
credit risk by virtue of the fact that another financial institution may have a
senior security position in the case of foreclosure liquidation of collateral to
extinguish the debt. Generally, foreclosure actions could become more prevalent
if the real estate market weakens, property values deteriorate, or rates
increase sharply. Non-real estate secured consumer loans comprise 0.9% of the
portfolio, with automobile-secured loans representing less than 0.1% of the
portfolio.

The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) was signed
into law on March 27, 2020, and provided over $2.0 trillion in emergency
economic relief to individuals and businesses impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The CARES Act authorized the SBA to temporarily guarantee loans under a new 7(a)
loan program called the PPP. As a qualified SBA lender, the Corporation was
automatically authorized to originate PPP loans. As of June 30, 2022, the
Corporation had an outstanding balance of $242,000 under the PPP program, net of
repayments and forgiveness to date. As of June 30, 2022, the Corporation had
originated an aggregate total of 2,217 loans in the amount of $223,036,703 under
the PPP. Deferred fee income was approximately $9.5 million, before costs. The
Corporation recognized $2,875,000 of PPP fee income during 2020, $5,627,000
during 2021, and $950,000 during the six months ended June 30, 2022. The
remaining amount will be recognized in future quarters as an adjustment of
interest income yield.

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Most of the Corporation's lending activities are with customers located within
southcentral Pennsylvania and in the northern Maryland area. This region
currently and historically has lower unemployment rates than the U.S. as a
whole. Included in commercial real estate loans are loans made to lessors of
non-residential properties that total $427,955,000, or 28.3% of total loans, at
June 30, 2022. These borrowers are geographically dispersed throughout ACNB's
marketplace and are leasing commercial properties to a varied group of tenants
including medical offices, retail space, and other commercial purpose
facilities. Because of the varied nature of the tenants, in aggregate,
management believes that these loans present an acceptable risk when compared to
commercial loans in general. ACNB does not originate or hold Alt-A or subprime
mortgages in its loan portfolio.

Allowance for Loan Losses



ACNB maintains the allowance for loan losses at a level believed to be adequate
by management to absorb probable losses in the loan portfolio, and it is funded
through a provision for loan losses charged to earnings. On a quarterly basis,
ACNB utilizes a defined methodology in determining the adequacy of the allowance
for loan losses, which considers specific credit reviews, past loan losses,
historical experience, and qualitative factors. This methodology results in an
allowance that is considered appropriate in light of the high degree of judgment
required and that is prudent and conservative, but not excessive.

Management assigns internal risk ratings for each commercial lending
relationship. Utilizing historical loss experience, adjusted for changes in
trends, conditions, and other relevant factors, management derives estimated
losses for non-rated and non-classified loans. When management identifies
impaired loans with uncertain collectibility of principal and interest, it
evaluates a specific reserve on a quarterly basis in order to estimate potential
losses. Management's analysis considers:

•adverse situations that may affect the borrower's ability to repay;

•the current estimated fair value of underlying collateral; and,

•prevailing market conditions.



Loans not tested for impairment do not require a specific reserve
allocation. Management places these loans in a pool of loans with similar risk
factors and assigns the general loss factor to determine the reserve. For
homogeneous loan types, such as consumer and residential mortgage loans,
management bases specific allocations on the average loss ratio for the previous
twelve quarters for each specific loan pool. Additionally, management adjusts
projected loss ratios for other factors, including the following:

•lending policies and procedures, including underwriting standards and collection, charge-off and recovery practices;

•national, regional and local economic and business conditions, as well as the condition of various market segments, including the impact on the value of underlying collateral for collateral dependent loans;

•nature and volume of the portfolio and terms of loans;

•experience, ability and depth of lending management and staff;

•volume and severity of past due, classified and nonaccrual loans, as well as other loan modifications;

•existence and effect of any concentrations of credit and changes in the level of such concentrations; and,



•In 2020, a special allowance was developed to quantify a current expected
incurred loss as a result of the COVID-19 crisis. The factor considered the loan
mix effects of businesses likely to be harder hit by quarantine closure orders,
the relative amount of COVID-19 related modifications requested to date, the
estimated regional infection stage and geopolitical factors. A large unknown in
this factor is the expected duration of the quarantine period.

Management determines the unallocated portion of the allowance for loan losses,
which represents the difference between the reported allowance for loan losses
and the calculated allowance for loan losses, based on the following criteria:

•the risk of imprecision in the specific and general reserve allocations;

•the perceived level of consumer and small business loans with demonstrated weaknesses for which it is not practicable to develop specific allocations;


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•other potential exposure in the loan portfolio;

•variances in management's assessment of national, regional and local economic conditions; and,

•other internal or external factors that management believes appropriate at that time, such as COVID-19.



The unallocated portion of the allowance is deemed to be appropriate as it
reflects an uncertainty that remains in the loan portfolio; specifically
reserves where the Corporation believes that tertiary losses are probable above
the loss amount derived using appraisal-based loss estimation, where such
additional loss estimates are in accordance with regulatory and GAAP guidance.
Appraisal-based loss derivation does not fully develop the loss present in
certain unique, ultimately bank-owned collateral. The Corporation has determined
that the amount of provision in 2022 and the resulting allowance at June 30,
2022, are appropriate given management's current analysis of the continuing
level of risk in the loan portfolio. Management also believes the unallocated
allowance is appropriate. In addition, there are certain loans that, although
they did not meet the criteria for impairment, management believes there was a
strong possibility that these loans represented potential losses at June 30,
2022. The amount of the unallocated portion of the allowance was $148,000 at
June 30, 2022, as management concluded that the loan portfolio was better
reflected in metrics used in the allocated evaluation. Otherwise, the assessment
concluded that credit quality was stable, COVID-19 related charge-offs were
relatively low and past due loans manageable.

Management believes the above methodology materially reflects losses inherent in
the portfolio. Management charges actual loan losses to the allowance for loan
losses. Management periodically updates the methodology and the assumptions
discussed above.

Management bases the provision for loan losses, or lack of provision, on the
overall analysis taking into account the methodology discussed above, which is
consistent with recent quarters' improvement in the credit quality in the loan
portfolio, and with lessened risk from the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. The
provision for year-to-date June 30, 2022 and 2021, was $0 and $50,000,
respectively. The decrease in the allowance for loan losses as a percentage of
total loans of 1.30% at June 30, 2021 to 1.25% at June 30, 2022 was primarily
related to the decrease in non-acquired loans, such reduction did not
necessarily reduce the risk in the portfolio in direct proportion. More
specifically, as total loans decreased from year-end 2021 and the provision
expense decreased year over year, the allowance for loan losses was derived with
data that most existing impaired credits were, in the opinion of management,
adequately collateralized.

Federal and state regulatory agencies, as an integral part of their examination
process, periodically review the Corporation's allowance for loan losses and may
require the Corporation to recognize additions to the allowance based on their
judgments about information available to them at the time of their examination,
which may not be currently available to management. Based on management's
comprehensive analysis of the loan portfolio and economic conditions, management
believes the current level of the allowance for loan losses is adequate.

In June 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-13, "Financial Instruments-Credit Losses
(Topic 326): Measurement of Credit Losses on Financial Instruments." ASU 2016-13
requires credit losses on most financial assets measured at amortized cost and
certain other instruments to be measured using an expected credit loss model
(referred to as the current expected credit loss (CECL) model). Under this
model, entities will estimate credit losses over the entire contractual term of
the instrument (considering estimated prepayments, but not expected extensions
or modifications unless reasonable expectation of a troubled debt restructuring
exists) from the date of initial recognition of that instrument. Upon adoption,
the change in this accounting guidance could result in an increase in the
Corporation's allowance for loan losses and require the Corporation to record
loan losses more rapidly. In October 2019, FASB voted to delay implementation of
the CECL standard for certain companies, including those companies that qualify
as a smaller reporting company under SEC rules until January 1, 2023. As a
result ACNB used the deferral period to develop the proper procedure, data
sources and testing for implementation.

The allowance for loan losses at June 30, 2022, was $18,943,000, or 1.25% of
total loans (1.56% of non-acquired loans), as compared to $20,207,000, or 1.30%
of loans, at June 30, 2021, and $19,033,000, or 1.30% of loans, at December 31,
2021. The decrease from year-end resulted from charge-offs of $90,000 net of
recoveries and $0 in provisions, as shown in the table below. In the following
discussion, acquired loans from FCBI and New Windsor were recorded at fair value
at the acquisition date and are not included in the tables and information
below, see more information in Note 8 - "Loans" in the Notes to Consolidated
Financial Statements.

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Changes in the allowance for loan losses were as follows:




                                                   Six Months Ended             Year Ended              Six Months Ended
In thousands                                        June 30, 2022            December 31, 2021           June 30, 2021
Beginning balance - January 1                     $        19,033          $           20,226          $        20,226
Provisions charged to operations                                -                          50                       50
Recoveries on charged-off loans                                30                          75                       26
Loans charged-off                                            (120)                     (1,318)                     (95)
Ending balance                                    $        18,943          $           19,033          $        20,207



Loans past due 90 days and still accruing were $848,000 and nonaccrual loans
were $4,378,000 as of June 30, 2022. $0 of the nonaccrual balance at June 30,
2022, were in troubled debt restructured loans. $3,517,000 of the impaired loans
were accruing troubled debt restructured loans. Loans past due 90 days and still
accruing were $636,000 at June 30, 2021, while nonaccruals were $7,120,000.
$95,000 of the nonaccrual balance at June 30, 2021, was in troubled debt
restructured loans. $3,627,000 of the impaired loans were accruing troubled debt
restructured loans. Loans past due 90 days and still accruing were $730,000 at
December 31, 2021, while nonaccruals were $5,489,000. $63,000 of the nonaccrual
balance at December 31, 2021, were in troubled debt restructured loans.
$3,574,000 of the impaired loans were accruing troubled debt restructured loans.

Because of the manageable level of nonaccrual and substandard loans in 2022, no
addition to the allowance was necessary even with year to date net charge-offs
of $90,000.

The Corporation implemented numerous initiatives to support and protect
employees and customers during the COVID-19 pandemic. These efforts continue
with current information and guidelines related to ongoing COVID-19 initiatives.
As of September 30, 2021, the Corporation no longer had any temporary loan
modifications or deferrals for either commercial or consumer customers,
furthering the positive trend of improvement in 2021. In comparison, as of June
30, 2021, the Corporation had eight temporary modifications with principal
balances totaling $17,431,231.

As to nonaccrual and substandard loans, management believes that adequate
collateralization generally exists for these loans in accordance with GAAP. Each
quarter, the Corporation assesses risk in the loan portfolio compared with the
balance in the allowance for loan losses and the current evaluation factors.

Information on nonaccrual loans, by collateral type rather than loan class, at June 30, 2022, as compared to December 31, 2021, is as follows:



                                              Number of                                                         Current
                                               Credit                                 Specific Loss              Year
Dollars in thousands                        Relationships           Balance            Allocations            Charge-Offs            Location               Originated
June 30, 2022

Owner occupied commercial real
estate                                            5                $ 3,376          $          832          $          -             In market             2008 - 2017
Investment/rental residential real
estate                                            1                    107                       -                     -             In market                 2016
Commercial and industrial                         3                    895                     742                     -             In market             2008 - 2019
Total                                             9                $ 4,378          $        1,574          $          -

December 31, 2021

Owner occupied commercial real
estate                                            7                $ 3,890          $          600          $          -             In market             2008 - 2019
Investment/rental residential real
estate                                            1                    112                       -                     -             In market                 2016
Commercial and industrial                         3                  1,487                     855                   970             In market             2008 - 2019
Total                                            11                $ 5,489          $        1,455          $        970

Management deemed it appropriate to provide this type of more detailed information by collateral type in order to provide additional detail on the loans.


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All nonaccrual impaired loans are to borrowers located within the market area
served by the Corporation in southcentral Pennsylvania and Maryland. All
nonaccrual impaired loans were originated by ACNB's banking subsidiary, except
for one participation loan discussed below, for purposes listed in the
classifications in the table above.

The Corporation had no impaired and nonaccrual loans included in commercial real estate construction at June 30, 2022.



Owner occupied commercial real estate at June 30, 2022, includes five unrelated
loan relationships. A $886,000 relationship in food service that was performing
when acquired was added in the first quarter of 2020 after becoming 90 days past
due early in the year, subsequent payments have been received. Collateral
valuation resulted in no specific allocations. Another $807,000 merger-acquired
loan relationship for a light manufacturing enterprise which was performing when
acquired is working through bankruptcy and has no specific allocation. The other
unrelated loans in this category have balances of less than $193,000 each, for
which the real estate is collateral and is used in connection with a business
enterprise that is suffering economic stress or is out of business. The loans in
this category were originated between 2008 and 2019 and are business loans
impacted by specific borrower credit situations. Most loans in this category are
making principal payments. Collection efforts will continue unless it is deemed
in the best interest of the Corporation to initiate foreclosure procedures.

A $1,306,000 (after partial payoff in the third quarter of 2020) 2017-acquired
commercial real estate participation loan was added in the fourth quarter of
2019 and has been currently assigned a $831,000 specific allocation at June 30,
2022. The Corporation is currently working through a Sheriff/Trustee sale which
is anticipated to settle in the third quarter of 2022.

Investment/rental residential real estate at June 30, 2022, includes one loan
relationship (which is deemed to be adequately collateralized) totaling $107,000
for which the real estate is collateral and the purpose of which is for
speculation, rental, or other non-owner occupied uses; this relationship is
making principal reductions.

A $1,795,000 commercial and industrial loan was added in the fourth quarter of
2020 after ceasing operations, with a current balance of $164,000. Liquidation
is mostly complete with a specific allocation of $13,000 after a $970,000 third
quarter of 2021 charge-off. A related $441,000 owner occupied real estate loan
was also in nonaccrual but settled in the first quarter of 2022. An unrelated
commercial and industrial loan at June 30, 2022 with a balance of $1,000 (after
numerous principal payments) is currently continuing making payments. A third
unrelated loan relationship was added in the first quarter 2021 with an
outstanding balance of $783,000 and a specific allocation $730,000 due to
concerns on collateralization and liens.

The Corporation utilizes a systematic review of its loan portfolio on a
quarterly basis in order to determine the adequacy of the allowance for loan
losses. In addition, ACNB engages the services of an outside independent loan
review function and sets the timing and coverage of loan reviews during the
year. The results of this independent loan review are included in the systematic
review of the loan portfolio. The allowance for loan losses consists of a
component for individual loan impairment, primarily based on the loan's
collateral fair value and expected cash flow. A watch list of loans is
identified for evaluation based on internal and external loan grading and
reviews. Loans other than those determined to be impaired are grouped into pools
of loans with similar credit risk characteristics. These loans are evaluated as
groups with allocations made to the allowance based on historical loss
experience adjusted for current trends in delinquencies, trends in underwriting
and oversight, concentrations of credit, and general economic conditions within
the Corporation's trading area. The provision expense was based on the loans
discussed above, as well as current trends in the watch list and the local
economy as a whole. The charge-offs discussed elsewhere in this Management's
Discussion and Analysis create the recent loss history experience and result in
the qualitative adjustment which, in turn, affects the calculation of losses
inherent in the portfolio. The provision for loan losses for 2022 and 2021 was a
result of the measurement of the adequacy of the allowance for loan losses at
each period.

Premises and Equipment

ACNB valued six buildings acquired from New Windsor at $8,624,000 at July 1,
2017 and five properties acquired from FCBI at $7,514,000 at January 11, 2020.
As a part of an ongoing delivery and branch system optimization strategy, two
community offices closed in the second quarter of 2021 resulted in a small net
gain in 2021. On January 12, 2022, ACNB Bank announced plans to build a
full-service community banking office to serve the Upper Adams area of Adams
County, PA. Upon completion of construction of the Upper Adams Office in Fall
2022, the plan is to consolidate operations of the three current ACNB Bank
offices in the Upper Adams geography as part of the Bank's branch optimization
strategy and continued endeavors to enhance operational efficiencies.

Foreclosed Assets Held for Resale

Foreclosed assets held for resale consists of the fair value of real estate acquired through foreclosure on real estate loan


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collateral or the acceptance of ownership of real estate in lieu of the
foreclosure process. These fair values, less estimated costs to sell, become the
Corporation's new cost basis. Fair values are based on appraisals that consider
the sales prices of similar properties in the proximate vicinity less estimated
selling costs.

Deposits

ACNB relies on deposits as a primary source of funds for lending activities with
total deposits of $2,363,773,000 as of June 30, 2022. Deposits increased by
$25,738,000, or 1.1%, from June 30, 2021, to June 30, 2022, and decreased by
$62,616,000, or 2.6%, from December 31, 2021, to June 30, 2022. Deposits
increased in the first half of 2022 from the same period in the prior year due
to increased balances in a broad base of accounts due primarily to tepid
economic activity resulting from the effects of the current economic activity.
Since December 31, 2021, the decrease in deposits was due to customers beginning
to seek alternative investments as market interest rates rose during the first
half of 2022. Otherwise, deposits vary between quarters mostly reflecting
different levels held by local government and school districts during different
times of the year. ACNB's deposit pricing function employs a disciplined pricing
approach based upon alternative funding rates, but also strives to price
deposits to be competitive with relevant local competition, including a local
government investment trusts, credit unions and larger regional banks. Continued
periods where rates rise, or when the equity markets are high, funds could leave
the Corporation or be priced higher to maintain deposits.

Borrowings

Short-term Bank borrowings are comprised primarily of securities sold under
agreements to repurchase and short-term borrowings from the FHLB. As of June 30,
2022, short-term Bank borrowings were $28,959,000, as compared to $35,202,000 at
December 31, 2021, and $29,758,000 at June 30, 2021. Agreements to repurchase
accounts are within the commercial and local government customer base and have
attributes similar to core deposits. Investment securities are pledged in
sufficient amounts to collateralize these agreements. In comparison to year-end
2021, repurchase agreement balances were down $6,243,000, or 17.7%, due to
changes in the cash flow position of ACNB's commercial and local government
customer base and lack of competition from non-bank sources. There were no
short-term FHLB borrowings at June 30, 2022 and 2021, or December 31, 2021.
Short-term FHLB borrowings are used to even out Bank funding from seasonal and
daily fluctuations in the deposit base. Long-term borrowings consist of
longer-term advances from the FHLB that provides term funding of loan assets,
and Corporate borrowings that were acquired or originated in regards to the
acquisitions and to refund or extend such Corporation borrowings. Long-term
borrowings totaled $24,650,000 at June 30, 2022, versus $34,700,000 at
December 31, 2021, and $54,700,000 at June 30, 2021. Long-term borrowings
decreased 54.9% from June 30, 2021 as excess liquidity was used to pay down
higher cost funding. ACNB Insurance Services, Inc. borrowed $1.5 million from a
local bank in the first quarter of 2022 to fund its book of business purchase.
Please refer to the Liquidity discussion below for more information on the
Corporation's ability to borrow.

Capital



ACNB's capital management strategies have been developed to provide an
appropriate rate of return, in the opinion of management, to shareholders, while
maintaining its "well-capitalized" regulatory position in relationship to its
risk exposure. Total shareholders' equity was $247,032,000 at June 30, 2022,
compared to $272,114,000 at December 31, 2021, and $266,366,000 at June 30,
2021. Shareholders' equity decreased in the first six months of 2022 by
$25,082,000 primarily due to a net decrease in the fair value of the investment
portfolio given rising market rates.

The primary source of additional capital to ACNB is earnings retention, which
represents net income less dividends declared. During the first six months of
2022, ACNB earned $15,229,000 and paid dividends of $4,521,000 for a dividend
payout ratio of 29.7%. During the first six months of 2021, ACNB earned
$15,979,000 and paid dividends of $4,530,000 for a dividend payout ratio of
28.3%.

ACNB Corporation has a Dividend Reinvestment and Stock Purchase Plan that
provides registered holders of ACNB Corporation common stock with a convenient
way to purchase additional shares of common stock by permitting participants in
the plan to automatically reinvest cash dividends on all or a portion of the
shares owned and to make quarterly voluntary cash payments under the terms of
the plan. Participation in the plan is voluntary, and there are eligibility
requirements to participate in the plan. Year-to-date June 30, 2022, 11,119
shares were issued under this plan with proceeds in the amount of $367,000.
Year-to-date June 30, 2021, 11,955 shares were issued under this plan with
proceeds in the amount of $359,000. Proceeds were used for general corporate
purposes.

ACNB Corporation has a Restricted Stock plan available to selected officers and
employees of the Bank, to advance the best interest of ACNB Corporation and its
shareholders. The plan provides those persons who have responsibility for its
growth with
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additional incentive by allowing them to acquire an ownership in ACNB
Corporation and thereby encouraging them to contribute to the success of the
Corporation. As of June 30, 2022, there were 25,945 shares of common stock
granted as restricted stock awards to employees of the subsidiary bank. The
restricted stock plan expired by its own terms after 10 years on February 24,
2019, and no further shares may be issued under the plan. Proceeds are used for
general corporate purposes.

On May 1, 2018, stockholders approved and ratified the ACNB Corporation 2018
Omnibus Stock Incentive Plan, effective as of March 20, 2018, in which awards
shall not exceed, in the aggregate, 400,000 shares of common stock, plus any
shares that are authorized, but not issued, under the 2009 Restricted Stock
Plan. As of June 30, 2022, 57,822 shares were issued under this plan and 516,233
shares were available for grant. Proceeds are used for general corporate
purposes.

On February 25, 2021, the Corporation announced that the Board of Directors
approved on February 23, 2021, a plan to repurchase, in open market and
privately negotiated transactions, up to 261,000, or approximately 3%, of the
outstanding shares of the Corporation's common stock. This new stock repurchase
program replaces and supersedes any and all earlier announced repurchase plans.
There were 54,071 shares purchased under this plan as of December 31, 2021.
There were 88,225 shares purchased under the plan during the quarter ended
June 30, 2022.

On June 2, 2022, the Corporation entered into an issuer stock repurchase
agreement with an independent third-party broker under which the broker is
authorized to repurchase the Corporation's common stock on behalf of the
Corporation, subject to certain price, market and volume constraints specified
in the agreement. The agreement was established in accordance with Rule 10b5-1
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (Exchange Act), and shall
become effective 30 days after the date of the agreement or on July 5, 2022, and
shall terminate, subject to certain other conditions set forth in the agreement,
on July 28, 2022. The shares will be purchased pursuant to the Corporation's
previously announced stock repurchase program and in a manner consistent with
applicable laws and regulations, including the provisions of the safe harbor
contained in Rule 10b-18 under the Exchange Act.

ACNB is subject to various regulatory capital requirements administered by the
federal banking agencies. Failure to meet minimum capital requirements can
initiate certain mandatory and possibly additional discretionary actions by
regulators that, if undertaken, could have a direct material effect on ACNB.
Under capital adequacy guidelines and the regulatory framework for prompt
corrective action, ACNB must meet specific capital guidelines that involve
quantitative measures of its assets, liabilities, and certain off-balance sheet
items as calculated under regulatory accounting practices. The capital amounts
and reclassifications are also subject to qualitative judgments by the
regulators about components, risk weightings, and other factors.

Quantitative measures established by regulation to ensure capital adequacy
require ACNB to maintain minimum amounts and ratios of total and Tier 1 capital
to average and risk adjusted assets. Management believes, as of June 30, 2022,
and December 31, 2021, that ACNB's banking subsidiary met all minimum capital
adequacy requirements to which it is subject and is categorized as "well
capitalized" for regulatory purposes. There are no subsequent conditions or
events that management believes have changed the banking subsidiary's category.

Regulatory Capital Changes



In July 2013, the federal banking agencies issued final rules to implement the
Basel III regulatory capital reforms and changes required by the Dodd-Frank Act.
The phase-in period for community banking organizations began January 1, 2015,
while larger institutions (generally those with assets of $250 billion or more)
began compliance effective January 1, 2014. The final rules call for the
following capital requirements:

•a minimum ratio of common Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets of 4.5%;

•a minimum ratio of Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets of 6.0%;

•a minimum ratio of total capital to risk-weighted assets of 8.0%; and,

•a minimum leverage ratio of 4.0%.



In addition, the final rules establish a common equity Tier 1 capital
conservation buffer of 2.5% of risk-weighted assets applicable to all banking
organizations. If a banking organization fails to hold capital above the minimum
capital ratios and the capital conservation buffer, it will be subject to
certain restrictions on capital distributions and discretionary bonus payments.
The phase-in period for the capital conservation and countercyclical capital
buffers for all banking organizations began on January 1, 2016.
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Under the initially proposed rules, accumulated other comprehensive income
(AOCI) would have been included in a banking organization's common equity Tier 1
capital. The final rules allow community banks to make a one-time election not
to include these additional components of AOCI in regulatory capital and instead
use the existing treatment under the general risk-based capital rules that
excludes most AOCI components from regulatory capital. The opt-out election must
be made in the first call report or FR Y-9 series report that is filed after the
financial institution becomes subject to the final rule. The Corporation elected
to opt-out.

The rules permanently grandfather non-qualifying capital instruments (such as
trust preferred securities and cumulative perpetual preferred stock) issued
before May 19, 2010, for inclusion in the Tier 1 capital of banking
organizations with total consolidated assets of less than $15 billion as of
December 31, 2009, and banking organizations that were mutual holding companies
as of May 19, 2010.

The proposed rules would have modified the risk-weight framework applicable to
residential mortgage exposures to require banking organizations to divide
residential mortgage exposures into two categories in order to determine the
applicable risk weight. In response to commenter concerns about the burden of
calculating the risk weights and the potential negative effect on credit
availability, the final rules do not adopt the proposed risk weights, but retain
the current risk weights for mortgage exposures under the general risk-based
capital rules.

Consistent with the Dodd-Frank Act, the new rules replace the ratings-based
approach to securitization exposures, which is based on external credit ratings,
with the simplified supervisory formula approach in order to determine the
appropriate risk weights for these exposures. Alternatively, banking
organizations may use the existing gross-up approach to assign securitization
exposures to a risk weight category or choose to assign such exposures a 1,250
percent risk weight.

Under the new rules, mortgage servicing assets and certain deferred tax assets
are subject to stricter limitations than those applicable under the current
general risk-based capital rule. The new rules also increase the risk weights
for past due loans, certain commercial real estate loans, and some equity
exposures, and makes selected other changes in risk weights and credit
conversion factors.

The Corporation calculated regulatory ratios as of June 30, 2022, and confirmed
no material impact on the capital, operations, liquidity, and earnings of the
Corporation and the banking subsidiary from the changes in the regulations.

Risk-Based Capital

ACNB Corporation considers the capital ratios of the banking subsidiary to be the relevant measurement of capital adequacy.



In 2019, the federal banking agencies issued a final rule to provide an optional
simplified measure of capital adequacy for qualifying community banking
organizations, including the community bank leverage ratio (CBLR) framework.
Generally, under the CBLR framework, qualifying community banking organizations
with total assets of less than $10 billion, and limited amounts of off-balance
sheet exposures and trading assets and liabilities, may elect whether to be
subject to the CBLR framework if they have a CBLR of greater than 9%
(subsequently reduced to 8% as a COVID-19 relief measure). Qualifying community
banking organizations that elect to be subject to the CBLR framework and
continue to meet all requirements under the framework would not be subject to
risk-based or other leverage capital requirements and, in the case of an insured
depository institution, would be considered to have met the well capitalized
ratio requirements for purposes of the FDIC's Prompt Corrective Action
framework. The CBLR framework was available for banks to use in their March 31,
2020 Call Report. The Corporation has performed changes to capital adequacy and
reporting requirements within the quarterly Call Report, and it opted out of the
CBLR framework.

The banking subsidiary's capital ratios are as follows:



                                                                                                                 To Be Well Capitalized
                                                                                                                      Under Prompt
                                                                                                                    Corrective Action
                                                       June 30, 2022             December 31, 2021                     Regulations
Tier 1 leverage ratio (to average assets)                        9.38  %                     8.81  %                                   5.00  %
Common Tier 1 capital ratio (to risk-weighted
assets)                                                         15.89  %                    16.32  %                                   6.50  %
Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio (to risk-weighted
assets)                                                         15.89  %                    16.32  %                                   8.00  %
Total risk-based capital ratio                                  17.09  %                    17.57  %                                  10.00  %



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Liquidity

Effective liquidity management ensures the cash flow requirements of depositors and borrowers, as well as the operating cash needs of ACNB, are met.



ACNB's funds are available from a variety of sources, including assets that are
readily convertible such as interest bearing deposits with banks, maturities and
repayments from the securities portfolio, scheduled repayments of loans
receivable, the core deposit base, and the ability to borrow from the FHLB. At
June 30, 2022, ACNB's banking subsidiary had a borrowing capacity of
approximately $799,000,000 from the FHLB, of which $783,000,000 was
available. Because of various restrictions and requirements on utilizing the
available balance, ACNB considers $584,000,000 to be the practicable additional
borrowing capacity, which is considered to be sufficient for operational needs.
The FHLB system is self-capitalizing, member-owned, and its member banks' stock
is not publicly traded. ACNB creates its borrowing capacity with the FHLB by
granting a security interest in certain loan assets with requisite credit
quality. ACNB has reviewed information on the FHLB system and the FHLB of
Pittsburgh, and has concluded that they have the capacity and intent to continue
to provide both operational and contingency liquidity. The FHLB of Pittsburgh
instituted a requirement that a member's investment securities must be moved
into a safekeeping account under FHLB control to be considered in the
calculation of maximum borrowing capacity. The Corporation currently has
securities in safekeeping at the FHLB of Pittsburgh; however, the safekeeping
account is under the Corporation's control. As better contingent liquidity is
maintained by keeping the securities under the Corporation's control, the
Corporation has not moved the securities which, in effect, lowered the
Corporation's maximum borrowing capacity. However, there is no practical
reduction in borrowing capacity as the securities can be moved into the
FHLB-controlled account promptly if they are needed for borrowing purposes.

Another source of liquidity is securities sold under repurchase agreements to
customers of ACNB's banking subsidiary totaling approximately $28,959,000 and
$35,202,000 at June 30, 2022, and December 31, 2021, respectively. These
agreements vary in balance according to the cash flow needs of customers and
competing accounts at other financial organizations.

The liquidity of the parent company also represents an important aspect of
liquidity management. The parent company's cash outflows consist principally of
dividends to shareholders and corporate expenses. The main source of funding for
the parent company is the dividends it receives from its subsidiaries. Federal
and state banking regulations place certain legal restrictions and other
practicable safety and soundness restrictions on dividends paid to the parent
company from the subsidiary bank.

ACNB manages liquidity by monitoring projected cash inflows and outflows on a
daily basis, and believes it has sufficient funding sources to maintain
sufficient liquidity under varying degrees of business conditions for liquidity
and capital resource requirements for all material short- and long-term cash
requirements from known contractual and other obligations.

 On March 30, 2021, the Corporation issued $15 million of subordinated debt in
order to pay off existing higher rate debt, to potentially repurchase ACNB
common stock and to use for inorganic growth opportunities. Otherwise, the $15
million of subordinated debt qualifies as Tier 2 capital at the Holding Company
level, but can be transferred to the Bank where it qualifies as Tier 1 Capital.
The debt has a 4.00% fixed-to-floating rate and a stated maturity of March 31,
2031. The debt is redeemable by the Corporation at its option, in whole or in
part, on or after March 30, 2026, and at any time upon occurrences of certain
unlikely events such as receivership insolvency or liquidation of ACNB or ACNB
Bank.

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements



The Corporation is party to financial instruments with off-balance sheet risk in
the normal course of business to meet the financing needs of its
customers. These financial instruments include commitments to extend credit and,
to a lesser extent, standby letters of credit. At June 30, 2022, the Corporation
had unfunded outstanding commitments to extend credit of approximately
$405,735,000 and outstanding standby letters of credit of approximately
$9,310,000. Because these commitments generally have fixed expiration dates and
many will expire without being drawn upon, the total commitment level does not
necessarily represent future cash requirements.

Market Risks



Financial institutions can be exposed to several market risks that may impact
the value or future earnings capacity of the organization. These risks involve
interest rate risk, foreign currency exchange risk, commodity price risk, and
equity market price risk. ACNB's primary market risk is interest rate
risk. Interest rate risk is inherent because, as a financial institution, ACNB
derives a significant amount of its operating revenue from "purchasing" funds
(customer deposits and wholesale borrowings) at various terms and rates. These
funds are then invested into earning assets (primarily loans and investments) at
various terms and rates.
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RECENT LEGAL AND REGULATORY DEVELOPMENTS



Management has reviewed the recent development sections that were previously
disclosed in the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal period ended December
31, 2021 and the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended March 31,
2022. There are no material changes in the recent legal and regulatory
development section as previously disclosed in the recent developments section
on the Form 10-K and 10-Q.

SUPERVISION AND REGULATION

Dividends

ACNB is a legal entity separate and distinct from its subsidiary bank. ACNB's
revenues, on a parent company only basis, result primarily from dividends paid
to the Corporation by its subsidiaries. Federal and state laws regulate the
payment of dividends by ACNB's subsidiary bank. For further information, please
refer to Regulation of Bank below.

Regulation of Bank



The operations of the subsidiary bank are subject to statutes applicable to
banks chartered under the banking laws of Pennsylvania, to state nonmember banks
of the Federal Reserve, and to banks whose deposits are insured by the FDIC. The
subsidiary bank's operations are also subject to regulations of the Pennsylvania
Department of Banking and Securities, Federal Reserve, and FDIC.

The Pennsylvania Department of Banking and Securities, which has primary
supervisory authority over banks chartered in Pennsylvania, regularly examines
banks in such areas as reserves, loans, investments, management practices, and
other aspects of operations. The subsidiary bank is also subject to examination
by the FDIC for safety and soundness, as well as consumer compliance. These
examinations are designed for the protection of the subsidiary bank's depositors
rather than ACNB's shareholders. The subsidiary bank must file quarterly and
annual reports to the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, or
FFIEC.

Monetary and Fiscal Policy

ACNB and its subsidiary bank are affected by the monetary and fiscal policies of
government agencies, including the Federal Reserve and FDIC. Through open market
securities transactions and changes in its discount rate and reserve
requirements, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve exerts considerable
influence over the cost and availability of funds for lending and
investment. The nature and impact of monetary and fiscal policies on future
business and earnings of ACNB cannot be predicted at this time. From time to
time, various federal and state legislation is proposed that could result in
additional regulation of, and restrictions on, the business of ACNB and the
subsidiary bank, or otherwise change the business environment. Management cannot
predict whether any of this legislation will have a material effect on the
business of ACNB.

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