UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                    FORM 10-Q

(Mark One)
[X]  QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE
     ACT OF 1934

For the quarterly period ended                    June 30, 2004
                                                -------------------

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

For the transition period from                         to
                               -----------------------    ----------------------

Commission file number                        0 - 20957                        .
                          ------------------------------------------------------

                                SUN BANCORP, INC.
             ------------------------------------------------------
             (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

           New Jersey                                             52-1382541
- --------------------------------                                ----------------
 (State or other jurisdiction of                                (I.R.S. Employer
 incorporation or organization)                                  Identification)

              226 Landis Avenue, Vineland, New Jersey 08360
              ---------------------------------------------
                (Address of principal executive offices)
                               (Zip Code)

                            (856) 691 - 7700
                            ----------------
              (Registrant's telephone number, including area code)


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

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

         Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an  accelerated  filer
(as defined in Exchange Act Rule 12b-2).
Yes      X       No
     ----------    ---------

                      APPLICABLE ONLY TO CORPORATE ISSUERS

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

$ 1.00 Par Value Common Stock            17,084,463               August 4, 2004
- -----------------------------            ----------              ---------------
         Class                  Number of shares outstanding          Date



                                SUN BANCORP, INC.

                                      INDEX


                                                                            Page
                                                                            ----
PART I - FINANCIAL INFORMATION

       ITEM 1. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

          Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition
          at June 30, 2004 and December 31, 2003                               3

          Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of Income
          for the Three and Six Months Ended June 30, 2004 and 2003            4

          Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statement of Shareholders' Equity
          for the Six Months Ended June 30, 2004                               5

          Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows            6
          for the Six Months Ended June 30, 2004 and 2003

          Notes to Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements       7

       ITEM 2. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS
                OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS              15

       ITEM 3. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES
                ABOUT MARKET RISK                                             24

       ITEM 4. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES                                        26

PART II - OTHER INFORMATION

       ITEM 1. Legal Proceedings                                              27

       ITEM 2. Changes in Securities, Use of Proceeds                         27
                      and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities

       ITEM 3. Defaults upon Senior Securities                                27

       ITEM 4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders            27

       ITEM 5. Other Information                                              28

       ITEM 6. Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K                               28

       SIGNATURES                                                             29

       CERTIFICATIONS                                                         30

                                       2



                         PART I - FINANCIAL INFORMATION

ITEM 1. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

SUN BANCORP, INC.
UNAUDITED CONDENSED  CONSOLIDATED  STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
(Dollars in thousands except par value amounts)




                                                                                            June 30,    December 31,
                                                                                              2004          2003
                                                                                          -----------    -----------
                                                                                                 
ASSETS

Cash and due from banks                                                                   $    83,491    $    78,841
Interest-bearing bank balances                                                                 18,499          2,789
Federal funds sold                                                                                 51            487
                                                                                          -----------    -----------
  Cash and cash equivalents                                                                   102,041         82,117
Investment securities available for sale (amortized cost -
  $820,319; 2004 and $960,877; 2003)                                                          808,472        963,428
Loans receivable (net of allowance for loan losses -
  $18,701; 2004 and $17,614; 2003)                                                          1,480,451      1,364,465
Restricted equity investments                                                                  15,505         12,551
Bank properties and equipment, net                                                             32,215         34,093
Real estate owned, net                                                                          2,211          4,444
Accrued interest receivable                                                                    11,258         11,266
Goodwill                                                                                       50,581         50,600
Intangible assets, net                                                                         23,875         26,195
Deferred taxes, net                                                                            13,564          8,465
Bank owned life insurance                                                                      33,617         32,785
Other assets                                                                                    7,162          9,078
                                                                                          -----------    -----------

TOTAL                                                                                     $ 2,580,952    $ 2,599,487
                                                                                          ===========    ===========

LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY

LIABILITIES
Deposits                                                                                  $ 2,042,984    $ 2,111,125
Advances from the Federal Home Loan Bank                                                      154,418        163,964
Federal funds purchased                                                                             -          2,500
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase - FHLB                                          50,000              -
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase - customers                                     69,425         55,934
Junior subordinated debentures                                                                 72,167         72,167
Other liabilities                                                                               6,517          8,079
                                                                                          -----------    -----------
  Total liabilities                                                                         2,395,511      2,413,769
                                                                                          -----------    -----------

SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Preferred stock, $1 par value,  1,000,000 shares authorized,  none issued
Common stock, $1 par value, 25,000,000 shares authorized,
  issued: 14,077,112; 2004 and 13,381,310; 2003                                                14,077         13,381
Additional paid in capital                                                                    167,293        151,631
Retained earnings                                                                              12,541         20,062
Accumulated other comprehensive (loss) income                                                  (7,424)         1,690
Treasury stock at cost, 90,562 shares                                                          (1,046)        (1,046)
                                                                                          -----------    -----------
  Total shareholders' equity                                                                  185,441        185,718
                                                                                          -----------    -----------

TOTAL                                                                                     $ 2,580,952    $ 2,599,487
                                                                                          ===========    ===========


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
See notes to unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements.

                                       3



SUN BANCORP, INC.
UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME



                                                                For the Three Months            For the Six Months
                                                                   Ended June 30,                 Ended June 30,
                                                            ---------------------------    ---------------------------
                                                                  2004           2003           2004            2003
                                                            ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------

                                                                (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
                                                                                            
INTEREST INCOME:
  Interest and fees on loans                                $     21,895   $     20,998    $     42,945   $     42,104
  Interest on taxable investment securities                        5,821          5,635          12,150         11,418
  Interest on non-taxable investment securities                      505            625           1,011          1,241
  Interest on restricted equity investments                          119            209             225            382
  Interest on federal funds sold                                      21             18              83             29
                                                            ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------
    Total interest income                                         28,361         27,485          56,414         55,174
                                                            ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------

INTEREST EXPENSE:
  Interest on deposits                                             5,217          6,537          10,658         13,337
  Interest on short-term borrowed funds                            1,789          2,243           3,588          4,349
  Interest on debentures                                             812              -           1,621              -
  Interest on guaranteed preferred beneficial interest
    in Company's subordinated debt                                     -          1,048               -          2,106
                                                            ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------

    Total interest expense                                         7,818          9,828          15,867         19,792
                                                            ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------

    Net interest income                                           20,543         17,657          40,547         35,382

PROVISION FOR LOAN LOSSES                                            735            710           1,360          1,385
                                                            ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------
    Net interest income after provision for loan losses           19,808         16,947          39,187         33,997
                                                            ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------

NON-INTEREST INCOME:
  Service charges on deposit accounts                              2,209          1,932           4,371          3,686
  Other service charges                                              210            104             306            206
  Gain (loss) on sale of bank properties and equipment             2,321            (44)          2,321              9
  Gain on sale of loans                                              105              -             111              -
  Gain on sale of investment securities                              578            825             903            870
  Gain on sale of branch deposits                                      -              -               -          1,315
  Other                                                            1,407          1,051           2,592          1,773
                                                            ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------
    Total non-interest income                                      6,830          3,868          10,604          7,859
                                                            ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------

NON-INTEREST EXPENSES:
  Salaries and employee benefits                                   9,099          8,165          18,615         16,181
  Occupancy expense                                                2,702          2,156           5,165          4,611
  Equipment expense                                                1,731          1,414           3,276          2,774
  Data processing expense                                          1,018            838           1,983          1,629
  Amortization of intangible assets                                1,160            925           2,320          1,850
  Other                                                            3,630          2,896           6,472          4,873
                                                            ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------
    Total non-interest expenses                                   19,340         16,394          37,831         31,918
                                                            ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------

INCOME BEFORE INCOME TAXES                                         7,298          4,421          11,960          9,938
INCOME TAXES                                                       2,268          1,294           3,509          3,053
                                                            ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------

NET INCOME                                                  $      5,030   $      3,127    $      8,451   $      6,885
                                                            ============   ============    ============   ============

Basic earnings per share                                    $       0.36   $       0.25    $       0.60   $       0.56
                                                            ============   ============    ============   ============

Diluted earnings per share                                  $       0.33   $       0.24    $       0.56   $       0.53
                                                            ============   ============    ============   ============

Weighted average shares - basic                               13,982,111     12,337,603      13,974,320     12,335,104
                                                            ============   ============    ============   ============

Weighted average shares - diluted                             15,077,659     13,170,022      15,145,872     13,035,406
                                                            ============   ============    ============   ============


- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
See notes to unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements.

                                       4

SUN BANCORP, INC.
UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
For The Six Months Ended June 30, 2004
(In thousands)



                                                                                    Accumulated
                                                       Additional                      Other
                                              Common    Paid-in      Retained      Comprehensive    Treasury
                                               Stock    Capital      Earnings      Income (Loss)     Stock       Total
                                               -----    -------      --------      -------------     -----       -----

                                                                                          
BALANCE, DECEMBER 31, 2003                   $13,381     $151,631     $20,062           $ 1,690    $(1,046)   $185,718
Comprehensive income:
  Net income                                       -            -       8,451                 -           -          -
  Net change in unrealized gain on
    securities available for sale,
    net of taxes of $5,284                         -            -           -            (9,114)          -          -
                                                                                                              --------
      Comprehensive income                         -            -           -                 -           -       (663)
                                                                                                              --------
Exercise of stock options                         21          148           -                 -           -        169
Issuance of common stock                          10          218           -                 -           -        228
Stock dividends                                  665       15,296     (15,961)                -           -          -
Cash paid for fractional interest
   resulting from stock dividend                   -            -         (11)                -           -        (11)
                                             -------     --------     -------           -------    --------   --------
BALANCE, JUNE 30, 2004                       $14,077     $167,293     $12,541           $(7,424)   $ (1,046)  $185,441
                                             =======     ========     =======           =======    ========   ========


- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 See notes to unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements.

                                       5


SUN BANCORP, INC.
UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(In thousands)



                                                                              For the Six Months
                                                                                 Ended June 30,
                                                                             ----------------------
                                                                                2004         2003
                                                                             ---------    ---------
                                                                                  
OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
  Net income                                                                 $   8,451    $   6,885
  Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by
     operating activities:
    Provision for loan losses                                                    1,360        1,385
    Depreciation                                                                 1,685        1,300
    Net amortization of investments securities                                   1,135        1,434
    Amortization of intangible assets                                            2,320        1,850
    Write down of book value of fixed assets                                        76            -
    Gain on sale of investment securities available for sale                      (903)        (870)
    Gain on sale of bank properties and equipment                               (2,321)          (9)
    Gain on sale of branch deposits                                                  -       (1,315)
    Gain on sale of loans                                                         (111)           -
    Increase in cash value of BOLI                                                (832)        (234)
    Deferred income taxes                                                          184          452
    Change in assets and liabilities which (used) provided cash:
      Accrued interest receivable                                                    8           13
      Other assets                                                               1,917        1,341
      Other liabilities                                                         (1,562)      (4,934)
                                                                             ---------    ---------
        Net cash provided by operating activities                               11,407        7,298
                                                                             ---------    ---------

INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
  Purchases of investment securities available for sale                       (327,124)    (322,955)
  Purchases of restricted equity securities                                     (2,954)        (909)
  Proceeds from maturities, prepayments or calls of investment securities
     available for sale                                                        413,102      300,463
  Proceeds from sale of investment securities available for sale                54,348       21,058
  Net increase in loans                                                       (117,235)     (57,276)
  Purchase of bank properties and equipment                                     (2,114)      (1,429)
  Proceeds from the sale of bank properties and equipment                        4,200          121
  Purchase of bank owned life insurance policies                                     -      (25,000)
  Net proceeds from sale of real estate owned                                    2,585          605
                                                                             ---------    ---------
        Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities                     24,808      (85,322)
                                                                             ---------    ---------
FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
  Net (decrease) increase in deposits                                          (68,141)      74,860
  Decrease in cash resulting from branch sale                                        -      (17,886)
  Purchase price adjustment of branch assets purchased                              19            -
  Net borrowings under line of credits, advances and repurchase agreements      51,445       58,387
  Principal payments on loan payable                                                 -       (1,160)
  Proceeds from exercise of stock options                                          169          182
  Payments of fractional interests resulting from stock dividend                   (11)          (7)
  Proceeds from issuance of common stock                                           228          133
                                                                             ---------    ---------
        Net cash (used in) provided by financing activities                    (16,291)     114,509
                                                                             ---------    ---------
NET INCREASE IN CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS                                       19,924       36,485
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, BEGINNING OF PERIOD                                  82,117       65,614
                                                                             ---------    ---------
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, END OF PERIOD                                     $ 102,041    $ 102,099
                                                                             =========    =========


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    See notes to unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements.

                                       6


SUN BANCORP, INC.
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

(All dollar amounts  presented in the tables,  except per share amounts,  are in
thousands.)

(1)      Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

         Basis of Financial  Statement  Presentation  - The unaudited  condensed
         consolidated  financial  statements include the accounts of the Company
         and its  principal  wholly owned  subsidiary,  Sun  National  Bank (the
         "Bank") and the Bank's wholly owned subsidiaries,  Med-Vine,  Inc., Sun
         Financial Services, L.L.C. and 2020 Properties,  L.L.C. All significant
         intercompany   balances  and  transactions   have  been  eliminated  in
         consolidation.  Effective  with  the  adoption  of FASB  Interpretation
         Number ("FIN") 46,  Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities and FIN
         46 (R) on December 31,  2003,  the Company  deconsolidated  Sun Capital
         Trust  (liquidated in April 2002),  Sun Capital Trust II (liquidated in
         December  2003),  Sun  Capital  Trust III,  Sun  Capital  Trust IV, Sun
         Capital  Trust V and Sun Capital  Trust VI,  collectively,  the "Issuer
         Trusts".

         The accompanying  unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements
         were  prepared  in  accordance  with  instructions  to Form  10-Q,  and
         therefore,  do not include  information  or footnotes  necessary  for a
         complete  presentation  of financial  position,  results of operations,
         changes  in  equity  and  cash  flows  in  conformity  with  accounting
         principles generally accepted in the United States of America. However,
         all normal  recurring  adjustments  that, in the opinion of management,
         are necessary for a fair  presentation  of the  consolidated  financial
         statements  have been included.  These financial  statements  should be
         read in conjunction with the audited consolidated  financial statements
         and the  accompanying  notes thereto  included in the Company's  Annual
         Report on Form 10-K for the period ended December 31, 2003. The results
         for the three and six months  ended June 30,  2004 are not  necessarily
         indicative  of the  results  that may be  expected  for the fiscal year
         ending December 31, 2004 or any other period.

         Use of  Estimates  in the  Preparation  of  Financial  Statements - The
         preparation of the consolidated financial statements in conformity with
         accounting  principles  generally  accepted  in the  United  States  of
         America  requires  management to make  estimates and  assumptions  that
         affect the reported  amounts of assets and  liabilities,  disclosure of
         contingent  assets  and  liabilities  at  the  date  of  the  financial
         statements and the reported  amounts of income and expenses  during the
         reporting period.  The significant  estimates include the allowance for
         loan  losses,  goodwill,  core  deposit  and other  intangible  assets,
         deferred  tax  asset  valuation  allowance,  and  derivative  financial
         instruments. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

         Stock  Dividend - On March 18, 2004,  the Company's  Board of Directors
         declared a 5% stock dividend paid on April 20, 2004 to  shareholders of
         record on April 6, 2004. Accordingly, per share data have been adjusted
         for all periods presented.

         Accounting  for  Stock  Options  -  In  December  2002,  the  Financial
         Accounting  Standards  Board  ("FASB")  issued  Statement  of Financial
         Accounting  Standards  ("SFAS")  No. 148,  Accounting  for  Stock-Based
         Compensation   --Transition  and  Disclosure,   an  amendment  of  FASB
         Statement  No.  123.  SFAS  No.  148  amends  SFAS No.  123 to  provide
         alternative  methods of transition  for a voluntary  change to the fair
         value based method of accounting for stock-based employee compensation.
         Prior to the fourth  quarter of 2003,  the  Company  accounted  for its
         granted stock options according to Accounting  Principles Board Opinion
         ("APB") No. 25,  Accounting  for Stock Issued to Employees  and related
         interpretations.  All options  granted  prior to 2003 had an  intrinsic
         value of zero on the date of grant under APB No. 25, and, therefore, no
         stock-based  employee   compensation  expense  was  recognized  in  the
         Company's consolidated financial statements.  During the fourth quarter
         of 2003, the Company adopted, effective January 1, 2003, the fair value
         recognition  provisions of SFAS No. 123. Under the  prospective  method
         provisions of SFAS No. 148, the recognition  provisions of SFAS No. 123
         will be applied to all option awards granted, modified or settled after
         January 1, 2003.

                                       7


         In addition,  SFAS No. 148 amends the disclosure  requirements  of SFAS
         No. 123 to require  prominent  disclosures  in both  annual and interim
         financial  statements  about the method of accounting  for  stock-based
         employee  compensation  and the effect of the method  used on  reported
         results.  This  Statement is effective  for  financial  statements  for
         fiscal years ending after  December 15, 2002.  The Company has provided
         the required disclosures in the tables below.

         At  June  30,  2004,  the  Company  had  three   stock-based   employee
         compensation  plans. The following table  illustrates the effect on net
         income and earnings per share if the Company had applied the fair value
         recognition   provisions  of  SFAS  No.  123  to  stock-based  employee
         compensation.



                                                           For the Three Months Ended   For the Six Months Ended
                                                                      June 30,                 June 30,
                                                           --------------------------   ------------------------
                                                                  2004       2003          2004       2003
                                                                  ----       ----          ----       ----
                                                                                      
           Reported net income available to shareholders        $5,030     $3,127        $8,451     $6,885
           Add: Total stock-based employee compensation
               expense included in reported net income
                  (net of tax)                                      10          -            20          -
           Deduct: Total stock-based employee
               compensation expense determined under
               fair value method (net of tax)                     (206)      (347)         (412)      (692)
                                                                ------     ------        ------     ------
           Pro forma net income available to shareholders       $4,834     $2,780        $8,059     $6,193
                                                                ======     ======        ======     ======

          Earnings per share:
          Basic - as reported                                   $ 0.36     $ 0.25        $ 0.60     $ 0.56
          Basic - pro forma                                     $ 0.35     $ 0.23        $ 0.58     $ 0.50

          Diluted - as reported                                 $ 0.33     $ 0.24        $ 0.56     $ 0.53
          Diluted - pro forma                                   $ 0.32     $ 0.21        $ 0.53     $ 0.48


          Recent  Accounting  Principles  - In March 2004,  the FASB's  Emerging
          Issues Task Force  ("EITF")  reached a consensus  regarding EITF 03-1,
          The Meaning of Other-Than-Temporary  Impairment and Its Application to
          Certain  Investments.  The consensus  provides guidance for evaluating
          whether an investment is other-than-temporarily  impaired and requires
          certain  disclosures  for equity  investments  accounted for under the
          cost method.  The amount of any  other-than-temporary  impairment that
          may need to be recognized upon adoption of EITF 03-1 will be dependent
          on market  conditions and management's  intent and ability at the time
          of the impairment evaluation to hold the underwater  investments until
          a forecasted  recovery in fair value up to (or beyond)  adjusted cost.
          Disclosures  about unrealized  losses that have not been recognized as
          other-than-temporary  impairments  that were required under an earlier
          EITF 03-1  consensus  remain in  effect.  The EITF 03-1  guidance  for
          determining  other-than-temporary  impairment  is  effective  for  the
          Company's  reporting  periods  beginning  after June 15, 2004, and the
          disclosures  for the cost method  investments  are  effective  for the
          Company's  fiscal year ending  December 31, 2004.  Management does not
          expect  the  adoption  of EITF 03-1 to have a  material  effect on the
          Company's operating results or financial condition.

          In March 2004, the Securities and Exchange  Commission  ("SEC") issued
          Staff  Accounting  Bulletin  (SAB) No. 105,  Application of Accounting
          Principles to Loan Commitments, which provides guidance regarding loan
          commitments that are accounted for as derivative instruments.  In this
          SAB, the SEC determined that an interest rate lock  commitment  should
          generally be valued at zero at inception. The rate locks will continue
          to be adjusted for changes in value  resulting  from changes in market
          interest rates.  The Company  adopted this new standard  prospectively
          effective  April 1, 2004.  This SAB did not have a material  effect on
          the Company's operating results or financial condition.

                                        8


(2)      Acquisitions

         On July 8, 2004, the Company acquired  Community  Bancorp of New Jersey
         ("Community")   in  a   stock-for-stock   exchange   merger  valued  at
         approximately  $66  million.  In  the  merger  Community   shareholders
         received  0.8715  shares of common stock of the Company for each issued
         and  outstanding   share  of  Community  common  stock.   Approximately
         3,096,000 shares of the Company common stock have been issued.  At July
         8, 2004, Community's assets totaled $374 million, loan receivables, net
         of  allowances  for  loan  losses,   were  $230  million,   investments
         securities  were $115  million and total  deposits  were $346  million.
         Goodwill of approximately  $31 million was recorded in conjunction with
         this  transaction and will not be amortized in accordance with SFAS No.
         142,  but will be  reviewed  at least  annually  for  impairment.  Core
         Deposit  Intangibles of approximately $14 million was recorded and will
         be amortized over approximately nine years.

 (3)     Loans

         The  components of loans as of June 30, 2004 and December 31, 2003 were
         as follows:

                                          June 30, 2004       December 31, 2003
                                          -------------       -----------------
         Commercial and industrial           $1,271,369              $1,169,164
         Home equity                             93,851                  80,292
         Second mortgages                        47,482                  51,531
         Residential real estate                 30,064                  29,788
         Other                                   56,386                  51,304
                                             ----------              ----------
           Total gross loans                  1,499,152               1,382,079
         Allowance for loan losses             (18,701)                (17,614)
                                             ----------              ----------
           Net Loans                         $1,480,451              $1,364,465
                                             ==========              ==========

         Non-accrual loans                      $20,728                 $21,568
                                                =======                 =======

(4)      Allowance for Loan Losses

         Changes in the allowance for loan losses were as follows:

                                        For the six month
                                             period ended     For the year ended
                                            June 30, 2004      December 31, 2003
                                            -------------      -----------------
         Balance, beginning of period             $17,614               $16,408
         Charge-offs                                 (843)               (4,380)
         Recoveries                                   570                   761
                                                  -------               -------
           Net charge-offs                           (273)               (3,619)
         Provision for loan losses                  1,360                 4,825
                                                  -------               --------
         Balance, end of period                   $18,701               $17,614
                                                  =======               =======

         The  provision  for loan  losses  charged to expense is based upon past
         loan loss  experience  and an  evaluation  of  estimated  losses in the
         current loan  portfolio,  including the  evaluation  of impaired  loans
         under SFAS Nos. 114 and 118. A loan is considered to be impaired  when,
         based upon  current  information  and events,  it is probable  that the
         Company  will be unable to collect  all amounts  due  according  to the
         contractual terms of the loan.

         An insignificant delay or insignificant shortfall in amount of payments
         does not necessarily result in a loan being identified as impaired. For
         this  purpose,   delays  less  than  90  days  are   considered  to  be
         insignificant.


                                        9


         Impairment losses are included in the provision for loan losses.  Large
         groups of smaller balance, homogeneous loans are collectively evaluated
         for impairment,  except for those loans  restructured  under a troubled
         debt restructuring. Loans collectively evaluated for impairment include
         consumer loans and residential  real estate loans, and are not included
         in the data that follow:



                                                             June 30, 2004     December 31, 2003
                                                             -------------     -----------------
                                                                                 
        Impaired loans with related reserve for loan
          losses calculated under SFAS No. 114                     $29,158               $31,463
        Impaired loans with no related reserve for loan
          losses calculated under SFAS No. 114                       7,388                 6,147
                                                                   -------               -------
        Total impaired loans                                       $36,546               $37,610
                                                                   =======               =======
        Valuation allowance related to impaired loans              $ 2,025               $ 3,439
                                                                   =======               =======




                                                           For the six               For the
                                                          months ended            year ended
                                                         June 30, 2004     December 31, 2003
                                                         -------------     -----------------
                                                                             
        Average impaired loans                                 $37,179               $34,715
                                                               =======               =======
        Interest income recognized on impaired loans             $ 808                $2,177
                                                                ======                ======
        Cash basis interest income recognized on
          impaired loans                                         $ 748                $2,311
                                                                 =====                ======


(5)      Real estate owned

                                       June 30, 2004      December 31, 2003
                                       -------------      -----------------
        Commercial properties                 $1,550                 $4,013
        Residential properties                     -                    122
        Bank properties                          661                    309
                                              ------                 ------
        Total                                 $2,211                 $4,444
                                              ======                 ======

         The decrease in real estate owned was due  primarily to the sale of one
         commercial  property which resulted in a pre-tax gain of $188,000.  The
         remaining $1.6 million in commercial  properties consists mainly of one
         property  with a book value of $1.4 million  which is currently  listed
         for sale.  It is  anticipated  that the sale  proceeds of this property
         will exceed its carrying value.

(6)      Deferred taxes



                                                     June 30, 2004       December 31, 2003
                                                     -------------       -----------------
                                                                           
         Deferred tax asset:
           Allowance for loan losses                       $ 7,635                 $ 7,175
           Goodwill amortization                             2,561                   3,040
           Compensation                                         81                      17
           Unrealized loss on investment securities          4,423                       -
                                                           -------                 -------
               Total deferred tax asset                     14,727                  10,232
         Deferred tax liability:
           Property                                           (792)                   (846)
           Deferred loan fees                                 (323)                    (12)
           Unrealized gain on investment securities              -                    (861)
           Other                                               (48)                    (48)
                                                           -------                 -------
               Total deferred tax liability                 (1,163)                 (1,767)
                                                           -------                 -------
                   Net deferred tax asset                  $13,564                 $ 8,465
                                                           =======                 =======


                                       10


         The increase of $5.1 million of deferred  taxes is primarily due to the
         $5.3  million  increase in the  unrealized  gain  (loss) on  investment
         securities  component,  which  is  due to the  increase  in the  market
         interest rates at June 30, 2004 compared to December 31, 2004.


(7)      Deposits

         Deposits consist of the following major classifications:



                                                    June 30, 2004      December 31, 2003
                                                    -------------      -----------------
                                                                       
         Demand deposits - interest bearing             $ 734,469              $ 784,453
         Demand deposits - non-interest bearing           426,307                399,538
         Savings deposits                                 372,873                392,784
         Time certificates under $100,000                 373,888                390,312
         Time certificates $100,000 or more               135,447                144,038
                                                       ----------             ----------
           Total                                       $2,042,984             $2,111,125
                                                       ==========             ==========


(8)      Borrowing

         On June 30, 2004, the Company  entered into a one month,  $50.0 million
         repurchase  agreement  with the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York with
         an interest rate of 1.4%. On July 30, 2004,  the borrowing  matured and
         was repaid.


(9)      Junior Subordinated Debentures Held by Trusts that Issued Capital Debt

         The following is a summary of the outstanding capital securities issued
         by each Issuer Trust and the junior  subordinated  debentures issued by
         the Company to each Trust as of June 30, 2004:



                              Capital Securities                         Junior Subordinated Debentures
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                       Stated   Distribution   Principal                              Redeemable
                                                                                                                -
 Issuer Trust         Issuance Date     Value           Rate      Amount             Maturity           Beginning
 ------------         -------------     -----           ----      ------             --------           ---------
                                                                            
                                                  6-mo LIBOR
 Sun Trust III       April 22, 2002   $20,000     plus 3.70%     $20,619       April 22, 2032      April 22, 2007
                                                  3-mo LIBOR
 Sun Trust IV          July 7, 2002    10,000     plus 3.65%      10,310      October 7, 2032        July 7, 2007
                                                  3-mo LIBOR
 Sun Trust V      December 18, 2003    15,000     plus 2.80%      15,464    December 30, 2033   December 30, 2008
                                                  3-mo LIBOR
 Sun Trust VI     December 19, 2003    25,000     plus 2.80%      25,774     January 23, 2034    January 23, 2009
                                      -------                    -------
     Total                            $70,000                    $72,167
                                      =======                    =======


                                       11


         While the capital  securities  have been  deconsolidated  in accordance
         with GAAP,  they  continue to qualify as Tier 1 capital  under  federal
         regulatory  guidelines.  The change in accounting guidance did not have
         an impact on the Tier 1 regulatory capital of either the Company or the
         Bank.  In July 2003,  the Board of  Governors  of the  Federal  Reserve
         System (the "Fed Board") issued a supervisory  letter  instructing bank
         holding   companies   ("BHCs")  to  continue  to  include  the  capital
         securities  in their Tier 1 capital  for  regulatory  capital  purposes
         until  notice  is given to the  contrary.  In May  2004,  the Fed Board
         issued a Trust Preferred Security Proposal. Under the proposal, after a
         three-year  transition  period, the aggregate amount of trust preferred
         securities  and certain other capital  elements  would be limited to 25
         percent  of tier 1 capital  elements,  net of  goodwill.  The amount of
         trust preferred  securities and certain other elements in excess of the
         limit  could be included  in tier 2 capital,  subject to  restrictions.
         Internationally-active  BHCs would generally be expected to limit trust
         preferred  securities and certain other capital  elements to 15 percent
         of tier 1 capital elements, net of goodwill.  Requested public comments
         on this proposal  were due on July 11, 2004.  The Company will continue
         to monitor this proposal.

         The Issuer Trusts are wholly owned subsidiaries of the Company and have
         no independent  operations.  The obligations of Issuer Trusts are fully
         and  unconditionally  guaranteed  by the Company.  The  debentures  are
         unsecured  and rank  subordinate  and junior in right of payment to all
         indebtedness,  liabilities and obligations of the Company.  Interest on
         the debentures is cumulative and payable in arrears.  Proceeds from any
         redemption of debentures would cause a mandatory  redemption of capital
         securities  having  an  aggregate   liquidation  amount  equal  to  the
         principal amount of debentures redeemed.

         Sun Trust III variable  annual rate will not exceed 11.00% through five
         years from its  issuance.  Sun Trust IV  variable  annual rate will not
         exceed 11.95% through five years from its issuance. Sun Trust V and Sun
         Trust VI do not have interest rate caps.

(10)     Comprehensive Income

         The Company  classifies  items of other  comprehensive  income by their
         nature and  displays  the  accumulated  balance of other  comprehensive
         income separately from retained earnings and additional paid in capital
         in the equity section of the statement of financial  position.  Amounts
         categorized  as other  comprehensive  income  represent net  unrealized
         gains or losses on investment  securities  available  for sale,  net of
         income taxes.  Total  comprehensive  (loss) income for the three-months
         ended June 30, 2004 and 2003 amounted to  ($7,566,000)  and $6,977,000,
         respectively.  Total  comprehensive  (loss)  income for the  six-months
         ended June 30, 2004 and 2003  amounted to ($663,000)  and  $10,219,000,
         respectively.

(11)     Earnings Per Share

         Basic  earnings per share is computed by dividing  income  available to
         shareholders (net income),  by the weighted average number of shares of
         common  stock net of  treasury  shares  outstanding  during the period.
         Diluted  earnings per share is calculated by dividing net income by the
         weighted  average  number of shares  of  common  stock net of  treasury
         shares  outstanding  increased by the number of common  shares that are
         assumed to have been  purchased  with the proceeds from the exercise of
         the options  (treasury stock method) along with the assumed tax benefit
         from the  exercise  of  non-qualified  options.  These  purchases  were
         assumed  to have been made at the  average  market  price of the common
         stock,  which  is  based  on  the  daily  closing  price.   Retroactive
         recognition has been given to market values,  common stock  outstanding
         and  potential  common  shares  for  periods  prior  to the date of the
         Company's stock dividends.

                                       12


          Earnings per share for the periods presented are as follows:



                                                                            For the                  For the
                                                                        Three Months              Six Months
                                                                      Ended June 30,          Ended June 30,
                                                            --------------------------------------------------
                                                                   2004         2003        2004        2003
                                                             ----------   ----------  ----------  ----------

                                                                                    
         Net income                                              $5,030       $3,127      $8,451      $6,885

         Dilutive stock options outstanding                   2,827,942    2,872,307   2,835,172   2,476,671
         Average exercise price per share                         $9.74        $9.66       $9.73       $8.83
         Average market price                                    $21.15       $16.09      $22.89      $14.47

         Average common shares outstanding                   13,982,111   12,337,603  13,974,320  12,335,104
         Increase in shares due to exercise of
         options - diluted basis                              1,095,548      832,419   1,171,552     700,302
                                                             ----------   ----------  ----------  ----------
         Adjusted shares outstanding - diluted               15,077,659   13,170,022  15,145,872  13,035,406
                                                             ==========   ==========  ==========  ==========

         Net earnings per share - basic                           $0.36        $0.25       $0.60       $0.56
         Net earnings per share - diluted                         $0.33        $0.24       $0.56       $0.53

         Options that could potentially dilute
         basic EPS in the future that were not
         included in the computation of diluted
         EPS because to do so would have been
         antidilutive for the period presented                        -        1,385           -     397,600
                                                             ==========   ==========  ==========  ==========


(12)      Commitments

          Standby  letters of credit are conditional  commitments  issued by the
          Company to guarantee the  performance  of a customer to a third party.
          The  guarantees  are  primarily  issued to support  private  borrowing
          arrangements. The credit risk involved in issuing letters of credit is
          essentially  the same as that involved in extending loan facilities to
          customers.  In the event of a draw by the  beneficiary  that  complies
          with the terms of the letter of credit,  the Company would be required
          to  honor  the   commitment.   The  Company  takes  various  forms  of
          collateral, such as real estate assets and customer business assets to
          secure  the  commitment.  Additionally,  all  letters  of  credit  are
          supported by indemnification  agreements executed by the customer. The
          maximum undiscounted exposure related to these commitments at June 30,
          2004 was $44.7 million, and the portion of the exposure not covered by
          collateral was approximately $14.7 million.  The Company believes that
          the  utilization  rate of these  letters of credit will continue to be
          substantially less than the amount of these  commitments,  as has been
          our experience to date.

(13)      Branch Real Estate Sale

          During the quarter ended June 30, 2004, the Company completed the sale
          of the real estate  associated  with its  Atlantic  City,  New Jersey,
          branch office and recognized a pre-tax gain of $2.3 million. The terms
          of the  sale  agreement  provide  that the Bank  will  operate  at the
          existing location until it relocates to a new location. As part of the
          overall  transaction,  the Company acquired the rights to purchase and
          the  obligations  to  develop a certain  parcel  of  undeveloped  land
          located in Atlantic City for the purpose of the new branch. In lieu of
          undertaking  the  responsibility  of  acquiring  and  developing  this
          parcel,   the  Company  entered  into  an  Assignment  and  Assumption
          Agreement with a company  controlled by Bernard A. Brown,  Chairman of
          the Board of  Directors  of the Company  (Related  Party)  whereby the
          Company  assigned  all its  rights,  title and  interest  in this real
          estate to the Related  Party,  and the Related  Party  assumed all the
          covenants,  duties and obligations with respect to the acquisition and
          development  of this  real  estate.  The  Company  believes  that this
          Assignment  and  Assumption  Agreement  entered  into with the Related
          Party was an arms' length transaction.

                                       13



THE  COMPANY  MAY  FROM  TIME  TO TIME  MAKE  WRITTEN  OR ORAL  "FORWARD-LOOKING
STATEMENTS,"  INCLUDING  STATEMENTS  CONTAINED IN THE COMPANY'S FILINGS WITH THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION (INCLUDING THIS QUARTERLY REPORT ON FORM 10-Q
AND  THE  EXHIBITS  THERETO),  IN ITS  REPORTS  TO  SHAREHOLDERS  AND  IN  OTHER
COMMUNICATIONS  BY THE  COMPANY,  WHICH  ARE MADE IN GOOD  FAITH BY THE  COMPANY
PURSUANT TO THE "SAFE HARBOR"  PROVISIONS OF THE PRIVATE  SECURITIES  LITIGATION
REFORM ACT OF 1995.

THESE  FORWARD-LOOKING  STATEMENTS  INVOLVE  RISKS  AND  UNCERTAINTIES,  SUCH AS
STATEMENTS  OF THE  COMPANY'S  PLANS,  OBJECTIVES,  EXPECTATIONS,  ESTIMATES AND
INTENTIONS,  THAT ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE BASED ON VARIOUS IMPORTANT FACTORS (SOME
OF WHICH ARE BEYOND THE COMPANY'S CONTROL). THE FOLLOWING FACTORS, AMONG OTHERS,
COULD CAUSE THE COMPANY'S  FINANCIAL  PERFORMANCE TO DIFFER  MATERIALLY FROM THE
PLANS,  OBJECTIVES,  EXPECTATIONS,  ESTIMATES AND  INTENTIONS  EXPRESSED IN SUCH
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS: THE STRENGTH OF THE UNITED STATES ECONOMY IN GENERAL
AND  THE  STRENGTH  OF  THE  LOCAL  ECONOMIES  IN  WHICH  THE  COMPANY  CONDUCTS
OPERATIONS;  THE EFFECTS OF, AND CHANGES IN, TRADE, MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICIES
AND LAWS,  INCLUDING  INTEREST  RATE  POLICIES OF THE BOARD OF  GOVERNORS OF THE
FEDERAL  RESERVE  SYSTEM,   INFLATION,   INTEREST  RATE,   MARKET  AND  MONETARY
FLUCTUATIONS;  THE TIMELY  DEVELOPMENT  OF AND  ACCEPTANCE  OF NEW  PRODUCTS AND
SERVICES OF THE COMPANY AND THE PERCEIVED  OVERALL  VALUE OF THESE  PRODUCTS AND
SERVICES BY USERS,  INCLUDING  THE  FEATURES,  PRICING  AND QUALITY  COMPARED TO
COMPETITORS' PRODUCTS AND SERVICES; THE IMPACT OF CHANGES IN FINANCIAL SERVICES'
LAWS AND  REGULATIONS  (INCLUDING  LAWS CONCERNING  TAXES,  BANKING,  RISK-BASED
CAPITAL  GUIDELINES  AND  REPORTING  INSTRUCTIONS,  SECURITIES  AND  INSURANCE);
TECHNOLOGICAL  CHANGES;  ACQUISITIONS;  CHANGES IN CONSUMER  SPENDING AND SAVING
HABITS;  AND THE SUCCESS OF THE COMPANY AT  MANAGING  THE RISKS  INVOLVED IN THE
FOREGOING.

THE  COMPANY  CAUTIONS  THAT THE  FOREGOING  LIST OF  IMPORTANT  FACTORS  IS NOT
EXCLUSIVE.  THE  COMPANY  DOES  NOT  UNDERTAKE  TO  UPDATE  ANY  FORWARD-LOOKING
STATEMENT,  WHETHER WRITTEN OR ORAL, THAT MAY BE MADE FROM TIME TO TIME BY OR ON
BEHALF OF THE COMPANY.

                                       14


ITEM 2.    MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF
           FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS



Critical Accounting Policies, Judgments and Estimates

         The discussion  and analysis of the financial  condition and results of
operations  are  based  on the  Consolidated  Financial  Statements,  which  are
prepared in conformity  with  accounting  principles  generally  accepted in the
United States of America. The preparation of these financial statements requires
management to make estimates and assumptions  affecting the reported  amounts of
assets, liabilities,  revenue and expenses. Management evaluates these estimates
and  assumptions on an ongoing basis,  including  those related to the allowance
for loan losses, income taxes,  goodwill,  and derivative financial instruments.
Management  bases its  estimates  on  historical  experience  and various  other
factors  and  assumptions   that  are  believed  to  be  reasonable   under  the
circumstances.  These form the bases for making  judgments on the carrying value
of assets and  liabilities  that are not readily  apparent  from other  sources.
Actual results may differ from these estimates  under  different  assumptions or
conditions.

         Allowance  for loan losses.  Through the Bank,  the Company  originates
loans that it intends to hold for the  foreseeable  future or until  maturity or
repayment. The Bank may not be able to collect all principal and interest due on
these  loans.  Allowance  for loan losses  represents  management's  estimate of
probable  credit losses  inherent in the loan  portfolio as of the balance sheet
date.  Management  performs regular reviews in order to identify inherent losses
and to assess the overall credit risk of the loan  portfolio.  The allowance for
loan losses is determined by management based upon past  experience,  evaluation
of  estimated  loss and  impairment  in the  loan  portfolio,  current  economic
conditions  and  other  pertinent  factors.  The  allowance  for loan  losses is
maintained  at a  level  that  management  considers  adequate  to  provide  for
estimated  losses and impairment  based upon an evaluation of known and inherent
risk in the loan portfolio. Loan impairment is evaluated based on the fair value
of collateral or estimated net realizable value.  While management uses the best
information  available  to make  such  evaluations,  future  adjustments  to the
allowance may be necessary if economic conditions differ  substantially from the
assumptions used in making the evaluations.  The  determination of the allowance
for loan losses involves the monitoring of  delinquency,  default and historical
loss experience.  Management makes estimates and assumptions  regarding existing
but yet  unidentified  losses caused by current  economic  conditions  and other
factors. If the Bank does not adequately reserve for these uncollectible  loans,
it may incur  additional  charges to loan losses in the  consolidated  financial
statements.

         In  determining  the Bank's  allowance for loan losses,  management has
established  both  specific  and general  pooled  allowances.  The amount of the
specific  allowance is  determined  through a  loan-by-loan  analysis of certain
large dollar commercial loans. Loans not individually  reviewed are evaluated as
a group using  expected  loss ratios,  which are based on the Bank's  historical
charge-off experience and current market and economic conditions. In determining
the  appropriate  level of the general pooled  allowance and  projecting  losses
management  makes  estimates  based on internal  risk  ratings,  which take into
account such factors as debt service coverage, loan to value ratios and cost and
timing of  collateral  repossession  and disposal.  Estimates  are  periodically
measured  against  actual  loss  experience.  Adjustments  are  made  to  future
projections as assumptions are revised.

         The determination of the allowance for loan losses requires  management
to make  significant  estimates with respect to the amounts and timing of losses
and market  and  economic  conditions.  Accordingly,  a decline in the  national
economy  or the  local  economies  of the areas in which  the  Bank's  loans are
concentrated could result in an increase in loan delinquencies,  foreclosures or
repossessions  resulting  in  increased  charge-off  amounts  and the  need  for
additional  loan loss  allowances in future  periods.  The Bank will continue to
monitor  its  allowance  for loan  losses  and make  future  adjustments  to the
allowance through the provision for loan losses as economic conditions and other
factors  dictate.  Although the Bank  maintains its allowance for loan losses at
levels considered  adequate to provide for the inherent risk of loss in its loan
portfolio,  there  can be no  assurance  that  future  losses  will  not  exceed
estimated  amounts or that  additional  provisions  for loan  losses will not be
required in future  periods.  In addition,  the Bank's  determination  as to the
amount of its  allowance  for loan  losses is subject  to review by its  primary
regulator, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (the "OCC"), as part of
its examination process,  which may result in the establishment of an additional
allowance  based upon the judgment of the OCC after a review of the  information
available at the time of the OCC examination.

                                       15


         In July 2001,  the Securities  and Exchange  Commission  ("SEC") issued
Staff  Accounting  Bulletin  ("SAB")  No.  102,  Selected  Loan  Loss  Allowance
Methodology  and  Documentation  Issues.  SAB No. 102  expresses the SEC staff's
views  on  the  development,  documentation  and  application  of  a  systematic
methodology  for  determining  the allowance for loan losses in accordance  with
accounting  principles  generally  accepted in the United States of America.  In
addition,  in July 2001, the federal  banking  agencies  issued guidance on this
topic through the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council interagency
guidance,  Policy Statement on Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses Methodologies
and Documentation for Banks and Savings  Institutions.  In management's opinion,
the Bank's  methodology and documentation of the allowance for loan losses meets
the guidance issued.

         Accounting for income taxes.  The Company  accounts for income taxes in
accordance with Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards  ("SFAS") No. 109,
Accounting  for Income Taxes,  which  requires the recording of deferred  income
taxes that  reflect the net tax  effects of  temporary  differences  between the
carrying amounts of assets and liabilities for financial  reporting purposes and
the  amounts  used for income tax  purposes.  Management  exercises  significant
judgment in the  evaluation of the amount and timing of the  recognition  of the
resulting tax assets and  liabilities  and the judgments and estimates  required
for the  evaluation  are  periodically  updated  based upon  changes in business
factors and the tax laws.

         Valuation of goodwill.  The Company assesses the impairment of goodwill
at least annually,  and whenever  events or significant  changes in circumstance
indicate  that the  carrying  value  may not be  recoverable.  Factors  that the
Company  considers  important in  determining  whether to perform an  impairment
review include  significant under performance  relative to forecasted  operating
results and significant  negative  industry or economic  trends.  If the Company
determines that the carrying value of goodwill may not be recoverable,  then the
Company will assess impairment based on a projection of undiscounted future cash
flows and measure the amount of  impairment  based on fair value.  In the fourth
quarter 2003, the Company performed, with the assistance of an independent third
party  other  than its  independent  auditors,  its  annual  impairment  test of
goodwill  as  required  under the SFAS No. 142,  Goodwill  and Other  Intangible
Assets,  and SFAS No. 147,  Acquisitions  of Certain  Financial  Institutions an
amendment of FASB Statements No. 72 and 144 and FASB  Interpretation No. 9. Such
testing is based upon a number of factors,  which are based upon assumptions and
management  judgments.  These factors include among other things,  future growth
rates, discount rates and earnings capitalization rates. The test indicated that
no impairment charge was necessary for the year ended December 31, 2003.

Branch Rationalization Program

         The Company's branch rationalization efforts continued with the closure
of three branches during the second quarter,  for a total of four closed through
the six months ended June 30, 2004.  Total  targeted  closures for the year have
increased from fourteen to fifteen,  with the remaining  closures expected to be
completed  in the third  and  fourth  quarters  of 2004.  By year end 2004,  the
Company will have eliminated twenty-two branches since December 2001. During the
quarter,  the Company  incurred branch closing costs of $454,000.  These closing
costs are part of the  previously  disclosed  estimated  branch  rationalization
closing  costs of $2.3  million.  The Company  believes  that this $2.3  million
remains a reasonable estimate.

         During the second  quarter  2004,  the Company  completed a real estate
sale of its Atlantic City office and  recognized a pre-tax gain of $2.3 million.
The  terms of the sale  agreement  provide  that the Bank  will  operate  at the
existing location until it occupies a new location.

Financial Condition

         Total assets at June 30, 2004  decreased by $18.5  million,  or 0.7% to
$2.58  billion as compared to $2.60  billion at December 31, 2003.  The decrease
was  primarily  the  result of a decrease  in  investment  securities  of $155.0
million,  partially offset by an increase in loans receivable of $116.0 million,
and an increase in cash and cash equivalents of $19.9 million.

         Cash and cash equivalents  increased $19.9 million,  from $82.1 million
at December  31, 2003 to $102.0  million at June 30, 2004,  resulting  primarily
from the increase of interest bearing deposits with the FHLB of $15.7 million.

                                       16


         Investment  securities  available for sale decreased  $155.0 million or
16.1%,  from $963.4  million at December 31, 2003 to $808.5  million at June 30,
2004.  Due  to  the  increased   liquidity  resulting  from  the  December  2003
acquisition  of branches from New York  Community  Bank,  the Company  purchased
approximately $125.0 million of short term investment securities. During the six
months ended June 30, 2004, loan demand outpaced deposit growth and the majority
of these funds were  reinvested into the loan portfolio which saw a net increase
of $116.0 million.

         Net loans  receivable at June 30, 2004 were $1.48 billion,  an increase
of $116.0  million from $1.36  billion at December  31,  2003.  The increase was
primarily in commercial and industrial loans and home equity consumer loans. The
ratio of  allowance  for loan  losses to total  loans was 1.25% at June 30, 2004
compared to 1.27% at December 31, 2003.

         Non-performing  loans were $22.4  million at June 30, 2004  compared to
$21.8  million at December 31, 2003.  The ratio of allowance  for loan losses to
total  non-performing  loans was 83.61% at June 30,  2004  compared to 80.74% at
December  31,  2003.  Other real estate  owned  decreased  $2.2  million to $2.2
million at June 30, 2004,  resulting  from the sale of one  commercial  property
with a carrying  value of $2.5 million and resulting in a gain of $188,000.  The
ratio of non-performing assets to total loans and real estate owned was 1.64% at
June 30, 2004 compared to 1.89% at December 31, 2003.

         Total deposits were $2.04 billion at June 30, 2004,  reflecting a $68.1
million  decrease from December 31, 2003. The Company's  core deposits,  (demand
and  savings  deposits)  decreased  $43.1  million,  or 2.7% while the  non-core
deposits (time deposits)  decreased  $25.0 million,  or 4.7%. The total decrease
from  December  31, 2003 to June 30, 2004 is due to many  factors  including  an
expected  deposit run-off  relating to the December 2003 acquisition of branches
from  New York  Community  Bank,  expected  decreases  in  public  funds  due to
seasonality,  and  non-relationship  deposit  decreases due to promotional rates
offered by other financial institutions. Also noted were offsetting increases in
large commercial accounts due to timing. The Company believes that the aggregate
decrease in total deposits does not represent a continuing trend.

         On June 30, 2004, the Company  entered into a one month,  $50.0 million
repurchase  agreement  with the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York. The interest
rate on the borrowing was 1.4%. On July 30, 2004, the borrowing  matured and was
repaid.

         Total shareholders'  equity decreased $277,000,  from $185.7 million at
December  31,  2003,  to $185.4  million  at June 30,  2004.  The  decrease  was
primarily  the result of net income  amounting to $8.5  million  being more than
offset by a $9.1 million  decrease in accumulated  other  comprehensive  income,
resulting from an increased unrealized net loss on available for sale securities
due to an increase in market interest rates.

Liquidity and Capital Resources

         Liquidity  management is a daily and long-term business  function.  The
Company's  liquidity,  represented  in part by cash and cash  equivalents,  is a
product of its  operating,  investing  and financing  activities.  Proceeds from
repayment  and   maturities  of  loans,   sales  and  maturities  of  investment
securities,  net income and increases in deposits and borrowings are the primary
sources of liquidity of the Company.

         The Company  anticipates  that cash and cash  equivalents  on hand, the
cash flow from assets as well as other  sources of funds will  provide  adequate
liquidity for the Company's future operating,  investing and financing needs. In
addition to cash and cash  equivalents  of $102.0  million at June 30, 2004, the
Company had additional secured borrowing capacity with the FHLB of approximately
$83.8 million and other sources of approximately $57 million.

         The Company's largest cash flows are investing  activities.  During the
six  months  ended  June 30,  2004 the  Company's  primary  source  of cash from
investing  activities  was the proceeds from sales,  maturities,  prepayments or
calls  of  investment  securities.  The  primary  use  of  cash  from  investing
activities was the purchase of investment  securities and the increase in loans.
Financing  activities,  which used $16.3 million of net cash,  was primarily the
result of the net  decrease  in  deposits  offset by a net  increase  short term
borrowings.  The activity  during this period  reflects the Company's  continued
focus on overall balance sheet and capital  management,  concentrating on growth
of its core businesses,  with emphasis on commercial lending and retail banking,
while  managing  the  Company's   liquidity,   interest-rate  risk  and  capital
resources.

                                       17


         Management  has  developed a capital  plan for the Company and the Bank
that should allow the Company and the Bank to grow capital  internally at levels
sufficient  for achieving its internal  growth  projections  while  managing its
operating  and  financial  risks.  The Company has also  considered a contingent
capital  plan,  and when  appropriate,  the  Company's  Board of  Directors  may
consider various capital raising  alternatives.  The principle components of the
capital plan are to generate  additional  capital through retained earnings from
internal  growth,  access the capital  markets for external  sources of capital,
such  as  common  equity  of  trust  preferred  securities,  when  necessary  or
appropriate,  redeem existing capital instruments and refinance such instruments
at lower rates when conditions permit and maintain  sufficient  capital for safe
and sound operations. The capital plan is not expected to have a material impact
on our liquidity.  It is the Company's intention to maintain  "well-capitalized"
risk-based capital levels.

         While the capital  securities  have been  deconsolidated  in accordance
with GAAP,  they continue to qualify as Tier 1 capital under federal  regulatory
guidelines. The change in accounting guidance did not have an impact on the Tier
1 regulatory  capital of either the Company or the Bank. In July 2003, the Board
of  Governors  of  the  Federal  Reserve  System  (the  "Fed  Board")  issued  a
supervisory  letter  instructing bank holding companies  ("BHCs") to continue to
include the capital  securities in their Tier 1 capital for  regulatory  capital
purposes  until  notice is given to the  contrary.  In May  2004,  the Fed Board
issued  a  Trust  Preferred  Security  Proposal.  Under  the  proposal,  after a
three-year transition period, the aggregate amount of trust preferred securities
and  certain  other  capital  elements  would be limited to 25 percent of tier 1
capital elements,  net of goodwill. The amount of trust preferred securities and
certain  other  elements  in  excess of the limit  could be  included  in tier 2
capital, subject to restrictions. Internationally-active BHCs would generally be
expected to limit trust preferred  securities and certain other capital elements
to 15 percent of tier 1 capital  elements,  net of  goodwill.  Requested  public
comments on this proposal  were due on July 11, 2004.  The Company will continue
to monitor this proposal.

         As part  of its  capital  plan,  the  Company  issued  trust  preferred
securities  that qualify as Tier 1 or core capital of the Company,  subject to a
25% capital  limitation under  risk-based  capital  guidelines  developed by the
Federal  Reserve  Board.  The portion  that  exceeds the 25% capital  limitation
qualifies as Tier 2, or supplementary  capital of the Company. At June 30, 2004,
of the Company's $70.0 million trust preferred securities, $64.3 million qualify
as Tier 1 capital and $5.7 million qualify as Tier 2 capital.

Comparison  of  Operating  Results for the Three  Months Ended June 30, 2004 and
2003

         Net income  increased  by $1.9  million,  or 60.8% for the three months
ended June 30, 2004 to $5.0 million from $3.1 million for the three months ended
June 30, 2003. The increase in net income was primarily due to a net of tax gain
on sale of branch  real  estate  of $1.4  million  offset  by net of tax  branch
closing  charges of $300,000.  Excluding  the gain on sale of branch real estate
and the branch closing  charges,  net income  increased  approximately  $200,000
compared to the quarter ended June 30, 2003.

         Net Interest Income.  Net interest income (on a  tax-equivalent  basis)
increased  $2.8  million,  or 15.7% to $20.8  million for the three months ended
June 30,  2004 from $18.0  million  for the same  period in 2003.  Net  interest
income (on a  tax-equivalent  basis)  increased  $2.4  million due to volume the
majority of which is due to an increase of $287.7 million in the average balance
of interest-earning  assets. The rate component increased net interest income by
$411,000.

         The interest rate spread and margin for the three months ended June 30,
2004  was  3.32%  and  3.58%,   respectively,   compared  to  3.18%  and  3.53%,
respectively,   for  the  same   period   2003.   The   yield  on  the   average
interest-earning assets declined 54 basis points from 5.46% for the three months
ended  June 30,  2003 to 4.92% for the same  period  in 2004,  while the cost of
funds on average  interest-bearing  liabilities  decreased  68 basis points from
2.28% for the three  months  ended June 30, 2003 to 1.60% for the same period in
2004.

                                       18


         The  following  table sets forth a summary  of  average  balances  with
corresponding  interest income (on a tax-equivalent  basis) and interest expense
as well as average yield and cost information for the periods presented. Average
balances are derived from daily balances.



                                                   At or for the three months       At or for the three months
                                                             ended                            ended
                                                        June 30, 2004                    June 30, 2003
                                                 -------------------------------  -------------------------------
                                                                      Average                           Average
                                                     Average          Yield/         Average            Yield/
                                                     Balance Interest  Cost          Balance  Interest   Cost
                                                     ------- --------  ----          -------  --------   ----
                                                                                      
Interest-earning assets:
       Loans receivable (1), (2):
          Commercial and industrial               $1,234,073  $18,735  6.07 %      $1,071,011  $17,726   6.62 %
          Home equity                                 90,201      841  3.73            57,518      588   4.09
          Second mortgage                             48,100      749  6.23            49,209      845   6.87
          Residential real estate                     31,410      554  7.06            40,247      762   7.57
          Other                                       54,117    1,016  7.51            52,921    1,077   8.14
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
             Total loans receivable                1,457,901   21,895  6.01         1,270,906   20,998   6.61
       Investment securities (3)                     849,942    6,698  3.15           750,665    6,773   3.61
       Interest-bearing deposit with banks             8,575        6  0.28             9,956       16   0.66
       Federal funds sold                              8,986       21  0.93             6,206       18   1.14
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
          Total interest-earning assets            2,325,404   28,620  4.92         2,037,733   27,805   5.46
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------

       Cash and due from banks                        73,176                           63,909
       Bank properties and equipment                  33,519                           29,498
       Goodwill and intangible assets                 75,182                           38,184
       Other assets                                   62,145                           61,079
                                                  ----------                       ----------
       Non-interest-earning assets                   244,022                          192,670
                                                  ----------                       ----------
          Total Assets                            $2,569,426                       $2,230,403
                                                  ==========                       ==========

Interest-bearing liabilities:
       Interest-bearing deposit accounts:
         Interest-bearing demand deposits         $  764,480    1,497  0.78 %      $  680,610    2,167   1.27 %
         Savings deposits                            378,409      691  0.73           322,365    1,151   1.43
         Time deposits                               502,410    3,029  2.41           396,680    3,219   3.25
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
           Total interest-bearing
             deposit accounts                      1,645,299    5,217  1.27         1,399,655    6,537   1.87
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
       Borrowed money:
         Federal funds purchased                       9,887       36  1.45             9,231       41   1.76
         Securities sold under agreements
           to repurchase                              60,844       58  0.38            75,612      111   0.59
         FHLB advances                               161,276    1,695  4.20           179,921    2,091   4.65
         Junior subordinated debentures               72,167      812  4.50                 -        -      -
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
            Total borrowings                         304,174    2,601  3.42           264,764    2,243   3.39
       Guaranteed preferred beneficial interest in
          Company's subordinated debt                      -        -     -            59,274    1,048   7.08
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
          Total interest-bearing liabilities       1,949,473    7,818  1.60         1,723,693    9,828   2.28
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------

Non-interest-bearing demand deposits                 408,678                          318,936
Other liabilities                                     22,438                           36,283
                                                  ----------                       ----------
          Non-interest-bearing liabilities           431,116                          355,219
                                                  ----------                       ----------
       Total liabilities                           2,380,589                        2,078,912

Shareholders' equity                                 188,837                          151,491
                                                  ----------                       ----------
       Total liabilities and shareholders' equity $2,569,426                       $2,230,403
                                                  ==========                       ==========
Net interest income                                           $20,802                          $17,977
                                                              =======                          =======
Interest rate spread (4)                                               3.32 %                            3.18 %
                                                                       ====                              ====
Net interest margin (5)                                                3.58 %                            3.53 %
                                                                       ====                              ====
Ratio of average interest-earning assets to
    average interest-bearing liabilities                             119.28 %                          118.22 %
                                                                     ======                            ======

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)  Average balances include non-accrual loans.
(2)  Loan fees are  included in interest  income and the amount is not  material
     for this analysis.
(3)  Interest  earned on  non-taxable  investment  securities  is shown on a tax
     equivalent basis assuming a 34% marginal federal tax rate for all periods.
(4)  Interest rate spread represents the difference between the average yield on
     interest-earning   assets  and  the   average   cost  of   interest-bearing
     liabilities.
(5)  Net  interest  margin  represents  net interest  income as a percentage  of
     average interest-earning assets.

                                       19


         The table below sets forth  certain  information  regarding  changes in
interest income and interest  expense of the Company for the periods  indicated.
For each category of interest-earning  assets and interest-bearing  liabilities,
information  is  provided  on  changes  attributable  to (i)  changes  in volume
(changes  in average  volume  multiplied  by old rate) and (ii)  changes in rate
(changes in rate  multiplied  by old average  volume).  The  combined  effect of
changes in both volume and rate has been  allocated to volume or rate changes in
proportion to the absolute dollar amounts of the change in each.



                                                       Three Months Ended June 30,
                                                              2004 vs. 2003
                                                      ------------------------------
                                                           Increase (Decrease)
                                                                  Due to
                                                      ------------------------------
                                                        Volume     Rate        Net
                                                        ------     ----        ---
                                                                 
Interest income
  Loans receivable:
     Commercial and industrial                        $ 2,554    $(1,545)   $ 1,009
     Home equity                                          308        (55)       253
     Second mortgage                                      (19)       (77)       (96)
     Residential real estate                             (159)       (49)      (208)
     Other                                                 24        (85)       (61)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
        Total loans receivable                          2,708     (1,811)       897

  Investment securities                                   838       (913)       (75)
  Interest-bearing deposits accounts                       (2)        (8)       (10)
  Federal funds sold                                        7         (4)         3
                                                      -------    -------    -------
    Total interest-earning assets                     $ 3,551    $(2,736)   $   815
                                                      -------    -------    -------

Interest expense
  Interest-bearing deposit accounts:
    Interest-bearing demand deposit                   $   242    $  (912)   $  (670)
    Savings deposits                                      174       (634)      (460)
    Time deposits                                         746       (936)      (190)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
       Total interest-bearing deposit accounts          1,162     (2,482)    (1,320)
  Borrowed money:
     Federal funds purchased                                3         (8)        (5)
     Securities sold under agreements to repurchase       (19)       (34)       (53)
     FHLB advances                                       (206)      (190)      (396)
     Debentures and trust securities                      197       (433)      (236)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
       Total borrowed money                               (25)      (665)      (690)
    Total interest-bearing liabilities                $ 1,137    $(3,147)   $(2,010)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Net change in net interest income                     $ 2,414    $   411    $ 2,825
                                                      =======    =======    =======



         Interest income (on a tax-equivalent  basis) increased by $815,000,  to
$28.6 million for the three months ended June 30, 2004 compared to $27.8 million
for the same period in 2003.  The  increase  in  interest  income was due to the
combined 14.1% increase in the average balance of loans  receivable,  investment
securities and federal funds sold which produced an increase in interest  income
of $3.6 million offset by a continued drop in interest rates,  which lowered the
yield on average interest-earning assets by 54 basis points, or $2.7 million.

         Interest expense decreased $2.0 million,  or 20.0%, to $7.8 million for
the three  months  ended June 30,  2004  compared  to $9.8  million for the same
period in 2003. The decrease in interest  expense was due in part to a continued
drop in interest  rates,  which  lowered  the yield on average  interest-bearing
liabilities by 68 basis points, or $3.1 million, offset by the 13.1% increase in
the average balance of  interest-earning  deposits which produced an increase in
interest expense $1.2 million.

                                       20



         Provision  for Loan  Losses.  For the three months ended June 30, 2004,
the provision for loan losses was $735,000, an increase of $25,000,  compared to
$710,000 for the same period in 2003. The Company  focuses on its loan portfolio
management  and credit review  process to  effectively  address the current risk
profile of the portfolio and manage  troubled  credits.  This analysis  includes
evaluations of concentrations of credit, past loss experience,  current economic
conditions,  amount and composition of the loan portfolio,  estimated fair value
of underlying collateral, loan commitments outstanding,  delinquencies and other
factors.

         Non-Interest  Income.  Non-interest  income increased $3.0 million,  or
76.6% for the three-month period ended June 30, 2004 compared to the three-month
period ended June 30, 2003.  The  increase  was  primarily  the result of a $2.3
million increase in gain on sale of branch real estate,  a $277,000  increase in
service  charges on deposit  accounts  resulting  primarily  from the  Company's
overdraft  privilege  program,  a revised  ATM service  fee  structure,  and the
December  2003  acquisition  of branches of which  $180,000 is  attributable,  a
$105,000 increase in gain on sale of SBA loans, an increase of $356,000 in other
income  primarily  resulting  from an increase  of  $249,000 in BOLI  investment
income and an  increase of $49,000 in  investment  company  income,  offset by a
decrease in the gain on sale of investment securities of $247,000.

         Non-Interest Expenses. Non-interest expenses increased $2.9 million, or
18.0% to $19.3  million for the three  months ended June 30, 2004 as compared to
$16.4 million for the same period in 2003. Of this increase, $1.1 million is due
to the December  2003 branch  acquisition  consisting  primarily of salaries and
employee  benefits   ($528,000),   amortization  of  intangible  assets  expense
($257,000),  occupancy expense ($199,000) and equipment expense  ($130,000).  Of
the remaining increase, $406,000 was in salaries and employee benefits, $346,000
was in occupancy expense primarily resulting from $378,000 in lease buyout costs
pertaining  to recent branch  closures,  $474,000 was a decrease in gain on sale
other real estate and $178,000  increase was in professional fees in the managed
loan portfolio.

         Income  Taxes.  Income  taxes  increased  $974,000 for the three months
ended  June 30,  2004 as  compared  to the same  period  in 2003.  The  increase
resulted from higher pre-tax earnings.


Comparison of Operating Results for the Six Months Ended June 30, 2004 and 2003

         Net income increased by $1.6 million, or 22.7% for the six months ended
June 30, 2004 to $8.5  million  from $6.9  million for the six months ended June
30, 2003.  The increase in net income was  primarily due to a net of tax gain on
sale of branch real estate of $1.4 million  offset by net of tax branch  closing
charges of  $300,000.  Excluding  the gain on sale of branch real estate and the
branch closing charges,  net income decreased  slightly  compared to the quarter
ended June 30, 2003.

         Net Interest Income.  Net interest income (on a  tax-equivalent  basis)
increased $5.1 million,  or 14.0% to $41.1 million for the six months ended June
30, 2004 from $36.0 million for the same period in 2003. Net interest income (on
a tax-equivalent  basis)  increased $4.6 million due to volume,  the majority of
which  is due to an  increase  of  $312.8  million  in the  average  balance  of
interest-earning  assets.  The rate component  increased net interest  income by
$435,000.

         The  interest  rate spread and margin for the six months ended June 30,
2004  was  3.27%  and  3.52%,   respectively,   compared  to  3.21%  and  3.57%,
respectively,   for  the  same   period   2003.   The   yield  on  the   average
interest-earning  assets  declined 65 basis points from 5.53% for the six months
ended  June 30,  2003 to 4.88% for the same  period  in 2004,  while the cost of
funds on average  interest-bearing  liabilities  decreased  71 basis points from
2.32% for the six  months  ended June 30,  2003 to 1.61% for the same  period in
2004.

                                       21



         The  following  table sets forth a summary  of  average  balances  with
corresponding  interest income (on a tax-equivalent  basis) and interest expense
as well as average yield and cost information for the periods presented. Average
balances are derived from daily balances.



                                                  At or for the six months ended   At or for the six months ended
                                                         June 30, 2004                    June 30, 2003
                                                 -------------------------------  -------------------------------
                                                                      Average                           Average
                                                   Average             Yield/        Average             Yield/
                                                   Balance   Interest   Cost         Balance  Interest    Cost
                                                   -------   --------  -------       -------- --------  --------
                                                                                      
Interest-earning assets:
       Loans receivable (1), (2):
          Commercial and industrial               $1,210,809  $36,656  6.05 %      $1,065,250  $35,652   6.69 %
          Home equity                                 86,543    1,638  3.79            52,253    1,086   4.15
          Second mortgage                             49,263    1,548  6.28            47,463    1,656   6.98
          Residential real estate                     31,020    1,068  6.89            40,664    1,527   7.51
          Other                                       52,925    2,035  7.69            53,053    2,183   8.23
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
             Total loans receivable                1,430,560   42,945  6.00         1,258,683   42,104   6.69
       Investment securities (3)                     876,964   13,891  3.17           748,655   13,648   3.65
       Interest-bearing deposit with banks             7,645       15  0.39             7,816       28   0.71
       Federal funds sold                             17,697       83  0.94             4,888       29   1.19
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
          Total interest-earning assets            2,332,866   56,934  4.88         2,020,042   55,809   5.53
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
       Cash and due from banks                        71,915                           62,142
       Bank properties and equipment                  33,872                           29,500
       Goodwill and intangible assets                 75,764                           38,642
       Other assets                                   68,363                           47,582
                                                  ----------                       ----------
       Non-interest-earning assets                   249,914                          177,866
                                                  ----------                       ----------
          Total Assets                            $2,582,780                       $2,197,908
                                                  ==========                       ==========
Interest-bearing liabilities:
       Interest-bearing deposit accounts:
         Interest-bearing demand deposits         $  770,961    3,023  0.78 %      $  662,448    4,252   1.28 %
         Savings deposits                            382,324    1,420  0.74           323,595    2,420   1.50
         Time deposits                               514,091    6,215  2.42           402,951    6,665   3.31
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
           Total interest-bearing
             deposit accounts                      1,667,376   10,658  1.28         1,388,994   13,337   1.92
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
       Borrowed money:
         Federal funds purchased                       6,449       47  1.46             8,369       72   1.72
         Securities sold under agreements to
           repurchase                                 60,373      111  0.37            69,261      207   0.60
         FHLB advances                               161,057    3,430  4.26           177,474    4,070   4.59
         Junior subordinated debentures               72,167    1,621  4.49                 -        -      -
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
            Total borrowings                         300,046    5,209  3.47           255,104    4,349   6.80
       Guaranteed preferred beneficial interest in
          Company's subordinated debt                      -        -     -            59,274    2,106   7.11
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------
          Total interest-bearing liabilities       1,967,422   15,867  1.61         1,703,372   19,792   2.32
                                                  ----------  -------              ----------  -------

Non-interest-bearing demand deposits                 399,128                          311,139
Other liabilities                                     27,496                           33,841
                                                  ----------                       ----------
          Non-interest-bearing liabilities           426,624                          344,980
                                                  ----------                       ----------
       Total liabilities                           2,394,046                        2,048,352

Shareholders' equity                                 188,734                          149,556
                                                 -----------                      -----------
       Total liabilities and shareholders' equity $2,582,780                       $2,197,908
                                                  ==========                       ==========
Net interest income                                           $41,067                          $36,017
                                                              =======                          =======
Interest rate spread (4)                                               3.27 %                            3.21 %
                                                                       ====                              ====
Net interest margin (5)                                                3.52 %                            3.57 %
                                                                       ====                              ====
Ratio of average interest-earning assets to
    average interest-bearing liabilities                             118.57 %                          118.59 %
                                                                     ======                            ======

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)  Average balances include non-accrual loans.
(2)  Loan fees are  included in interest  income and the amount is not  material
     for this analysis.
(3)  Interest  earned on  non-taxable  investment  securities  is shown on a tax
     equivalent basis assuming a 34% marginal federal tax rate for all periods.
(4)  Interest rate spread represents the difference between the average yield on
     interest-earning   assets  and  the   average   cost  of   interest-bearing
     liabilities.
(5)  Net  interest  margin  represents  net interest  income as a percentage  of
     average interest-earning assets.

                                       22


         The table below sets forth  certain  information  regarding  changes in
interest income and interest  expense of the Company for the periods  indicated.
For each category of interest-earning  assets and interest-bearing  liabilities,
information  is  provided  on  changes  attributable  to (i)  changes  in volume
(changes  in average  volume  multiplied  by old rate) and (ii)  changes in rate
(changes in rate  multiplied  by old average  volume).  The  combined  effect of
changes in both volume and rate has been  allocated to volume or rate changes in
proportion to the absolute dollar amounts of the change in each.


                                                         Six Months Ended June 30,
                                                              2004 vs. 2003
                                                     -------------------------------
                                                            Increase (Decrease)
                                                                 Due to
                                                     -------------------------------
                                                       Volume      Rate        Net
                                                       ------      ----        ---
                                                                 
Interest income
  Loans receivable:
     Commercial and industrial                        $ 4,598    $(3,594)   $ 1,004
     Home equity                                          656       (104)       552
     Second mortgage                                       61       (169)      (108)
     Residential real estate                             (341)      (118)      (459)
     Other                                                 (5)      (143)      (148)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
        Total loans receivable                          4,969     (4,128)       841

  Investment securities                                 2,165     (1,922)       243
  Interest-bearing deposits accounts                       (1)       (12)       (13)
  Federal funds sold                                       61         (7)        54
                                                      -------    -------    -------
    Total interest-earning assets                     $ 7,194    $(6,069)   $ 1,125
                                                      -------    -------    -------

Interest expense
  Interest-bearing deposit accounts:
    Interest-bearing demand deposit                   $   616    $(1,845)   $(1,229)
    Savings deposits                                      380     (1,380)    (1,000)
    Time deposits                                       1,588     (2,038)      (450)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
       Total interest-bearing deposit accounts          2,584     (5,263)    (2,679)
  Borrowed money:
     Federal funds purchased                              (15)       (10)       (25)
     Securities sold under agreements to repurchase       (24)       (72)       (96)
     FHLB advances                                       (361)      (279)      (640)
     Debentures and trust securities                      395       (880)      (485)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
       Total borrowed money                                (5)    (1,241)    (1,246)
    Total interest-bearing liabilities                $ 2,579    $(6,504)   $(3,925)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Net change in net interest income                     $ 4,615    $   435    $ 5,050
                                                      =======    =======    =======



         Interest income (on a tax-equivalent  basis) increased by $1.1 million,
to $56.9  million  for the six months  ended  June 30,  2004  compared  to $55.8
million for the same period in 2003. The increase in interest  income was due to
the  combined  15.5%  increase  in the  average  balance  of  loans  receivable,
investment  securities  and  federal  funds sold which  produced  an increase in
interest  income of $7.2 million offset by a continued  drop in interest  rates,
which lowered the yield on average  interest-earning  assets by 65 basis points,
or $6.1 million.

         Interest expense decreased $3.9 million, or 19.8%, to $15.9 million for
the six months ended June 30, 2004 compared to $19.8 million for the same period
in 2003. The decrease in interest  expense was primarily due to a continued drop
in  interest  rates,  which  lowered  the  yield  on  average   interest-bearing
liabilities by 71 basis points, or $6.5 million, offset by the 20.0% increase in
the average balance of  interest-earning  deposits which produced an increase in
interest expense $2.6 million.

                                       23


         Provision for Loan Losses.  For the six months ended June 30, 2004, the
provision for loan losses was $1.4 million compared to $1.4 million for the same
period in 2003. The Company focuses on its loan portfolio  management and credit
review process to effectively  address the current risk profile of the portfolio
and  manage   troubled   credits.   This  analysis   includes   evaluations   of
concentrations  of credit,  past loss experience,  current economic  conditions,
amount and composition of the loan portfolio, estimated fair value of underlying
collateral, loan commitments outstanding, delinquencies and other factors.

         Non-Interest  Income.  Non-interest  income increased $2.7 million,  or
35.0% for the  six-month  period ended June 30, 2004  compared to the  six-month
period  ended  June 30,  2003.  The  increase  was in part the  result of a $2.3
million increase in gain on sale of branch real estate,  a $685,000  increase in
service  charges on deposit  accounts  resulting  primarily  from the  Company's
overdraft  privilege  program,  changes in ATM pricing,  and the  December  2003
branch acquisition of which $351,000 is attributable, an increase in the gain on
sale of loans of $111,000, and an increase of $819,000 in other income primarily
resulting from an increase of $681,000 in BOLI investment  income.  In addition,
non-interest  income for the six  months  ended  June 30,  2003  included a $1.3
million gain on sale of branches.

         Non-Interest Expenses. Non-interest expenses increased $5.9 million, or
18.5% to $37.8  million  for the six months  ended June 30,  2004 as compared to
$31.9 million for the same period in 2003. Of this increase, $2.3 million is due
to the December  2003 branch  acquisition  consisting  primarily of salaries and
employee  benefits   ($995,000),   amortization  of  intangible  assets  expense
($514,000),  occupancy expense ($372,000) and equipment expense  ($253,000).  Of
the remaining  increase,  $1.4 million was in salaries and employee benefits due
to an  increase in staffing  during  2003,  $181,000  was in  occupancy  expense
primarily  resulting  from  $378,000 in lease buyout costs  pertaining to recent
branch  closures offset by a $206,000  decrease in snow removal costs,  $474,000
was a decrease in gain on sale other real estate and  $225,000  increase  was in
professional fees in the managed loan portfolio.

         Income Taxes.  Income taxes increased $456,000 for the six months ended
June 30, 2004 as compared to the same period in 2003. The increase resulted from
higher pre-tax earnings.


ITEM 3.    QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK

Asset and Liability Management

         Interest  rate,  credit  and  operational  risks  are  among  the  most
significant market risks impacting the performance of the Company. Interest risk
is  reviewed  monthly by the Asset  Liability  Committee  ("ALCO"),  composed of
senior  management  representatives  from a variety of areas within the Company.
ALCO devises  strategies and tactics to maintain the net interest  income of the
Company  within  acceptable  ranges over a variety of interest  rate  scenarios.
Should the Company's risk modeling indicate an undesired  exposure to changes in
interest  rates,  there are a number of  remedial  options  available  including
changing the investment portfolio characteristics, and changing loan and deposit
pricing  strategies.   Two  of  the  tools  used  in  monitoring  the  Company's
sensitivity  to interest  rate changes are gap analysis and net interest  income
simulation.

Gap Analysis

         Banks are  concerned  with the  extent to which  they are able to match
maturities  or  repricing   characteristics  of   interest-earning   assets  and
interest-bearing  liabilities.  Such  matching is  facilitated  by examining the
extent to which such assets and liabilities are  interest-rate  sensitive and by
monitoring the bank's  interest rate  sensitivity  gap. An asset or liability is
considered to be  interest-rate  sensitive if it will mature or reprice within a
specific  time  period,  over  the  interest-bearing   liabilities  maturing  or
repricing  within that same time period.  On a monthly basis the Company and the
Bank monitor  their gap,  primarily  cumulative  through both six months and one
year maturities.

         At June 30, 2004,  the Company had a positive  position with respect to
its exposure to interest rate risk maturing or repricing  within one year. Total
interest-earning   assets  maturing  or  repricing   within  one  year  exceeded
interest-bearing  liabilities  maturing or repricing during the same time period
by $94.9 million, representing a positive one-year gap ratio of 3.68%.

                                       24


         The   following   table  sets   forth  the   maturity   and   repricing
characteristics of the Company's  interest-earning  assets and  interest-bearing
liabilities  at June 30,  2004.  All amounts  are  categorized  by their  actual
maturity,   anticipated   call  or   repricing   date  with  the   exception  of
interest-bearing  demand  deposits  and savings  deposits.  As a result of prior
experience during periods of rate volatility and management's estimate of future
rate sensitivities,  the Company allocates the interest-bearing  demand deposits
and  savings  deposits  into  categories  noted  below,  based on the  estimated
duration of those deposits.



                                                          Maturity/Repricing Time Periods
                                      -------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                         0-3 Months   4-12 Months      1-5 Years    Over 5 Yrs.          Total
                                         ----------   -----------      ---------    -----------          -----
                                                                                     

FHLB interest-bearing deposit              $ 18,499             -              -              -     $   18,499
Loans receivable                            567,930     $ 158,544     $  713,003     $   59,675      1,499,152
Investment securities                       126,089       139,763        509,882         60,091        835,825
Federal funds sold                               51             -              -              -             51
                                           --------     ---------     ----------     ----------     ----------
  Total interest-earning assets             712,569       298,307      1,222,885        119,766      2,353,527
                                           --------     ---------     ----------     ----------     ----------
Interest-bearing demand deposits            236,198        87,238        340,066         70,967        734,469
Savings deposits                             33,613        62,272        231,251         45,737        372,873
Time certificates                           122,147       153,173        221,549         12,466        509,335
Federal Home Loan Bank advances               4,848        24,856        118,908          5,806        154,418
Securities sold under agreements
  to repurchase - FHLB                       50,000             -              -              -         50,000
Securities sold under agreements
  to repurchase                              69,425             -              -              -         69,425
Trust preferred securities                   51,548        20,619              -              -         72,167
                                           --------     ---------     ----------     ----------     ----------
 Total interest-bearing liabilities         567,779       348,158        911,774        134,976      1,962,687
                                           --------     ---------     ----------     ----------     ----------
Periodic Gap                               $144,790     $ (49,851)    $  311,111     $  (15,210)    $  390,840
                                           ========     =========     ==========     ==========     ==========
Cumulative Gap                             $144,790     $  94,939     $  406,050     $  390,840
                                           ========     =========     ==========     ==========
Cumulative Gap Ratio                           5.61%         3.68%         15.73%        15.14%
                                           ========     =========     ==========     =========



Net Interest Income Simulation

         The  Company  also uses  simulation  models to  measure  the  impact of
changing  interest rates on its  operations.  The  simulation  model attempts to
capture the cash flow and repricing  characteristics  of the current  assets and
liabilities on the Company's balance sheet. Assumptions regarding such things as
prepayments,  rate change behaviors,  level and composition of new balance sheet
activity and new product lines are incorporated  into the simulation  model. Net
interest  income is  simulated  over a twelve month  horizon  under a variety of
linear yield curve  shifts,  subject to certain  limits  agreed to by ALCO.  The
Company uses a base  interest  rate scenario  provided by Data  Resources,  Inc.
("DRI") a third party econometric modeling service.

         Actual  results  may  differ  from the  simulated  results  due to such
factors as the timing, magnitude and frequency of interest rate changes, changes
in market  conditions,  management  strategies and  differences in actual versus
forecasted balance sheet composition and activity.

         The following table shows the Company's estimated earnings  sensitivity
profile versus the most likely DRI rate forecast as of June 30, 2004:

        Change in Interest Rates     Percentage Change in Net Interest Income
             (Basis Points)                           Year 1
             --------------                           ------
                  +200                                -2.0%
                  +100                                -1.3%
                  -100                                +1.7%
                  -200                                +2.1%


                                       25


Derivative Financial Instruments

         The  Company  utilizes  certain  derivative  financial  instruments  to
enhance  its  ability  to manage  interest  rate risk that  exist as part of its
ongoing business operations.  Derivative financial  instruments are entered into
for periods that match the related  underlying  exposures and do not  constitute
positions  independent  of these  exposures.  The  Company  does not enter  into
derivative financial instruments for trading purposes,  nor is it a party to any
leveraged derivative financial instruments.  The Company accounts for changes in
the fair value of fair  value  hedges and the  corresponding  hedged  items as a
component of Other Non-Interest Income on the Company's Consolidated  Statements
of  Income.  The  gross  unrealized  gains and  gross  unrealized  losses on the
Company's derivative financial  instruments are included as a component of Other
Assets  or  Other  Liabilities,  respectively,  in  the  Company's  Consolidated
Statements  of  Financial  Condition.  The  gross  unrealized  gains  and  gross
unrealized losses on the corresponding  hedged items are included as part of the
carrying  value of the hedged item in the Company's  Consolidated  Statements of
Financial Condition.

         Net interest  income or net  interest  expense  related to  outstanding
interest  rate swap  agreements  are  accrued and  recognized  in earnings as an
adjustment  to the related  interest  income or  interest  expense of the hedged
asset/liability  over  the  life of the  related  agreement.  Gains  and  losses
associated  with the termination of interest rate swap agreements for identified
positions  are deferred and amortized  over the  remaining  lives of the related
underlying  assets/liabilities  as an adjustment to the yield/rate.  Unamortized
deferred  gains  and  losses  associated  with  terminated  interest  rate  swap
agreements are included in the underlying assets/liabilities hedged.



ITEM 4.    CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

(a) Evaluation of disclosure controls and procedures.  Based on their evaluation
    ------------------------------------------------
of the  Company's  disclosure  controls  and  procedures  (as  defined  in  Rule
13a-15(e) under the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934 (the "Exchange Act")),  the
Company's  principal  executive  officer and  principal  financial  officer have
concluded that as of the end of the period  covered by this Quarterly  Report on
Form 10-Q such  disclosure  controls and procedures are effective to ensure that
information  required to be disclosed by the Company in reports that it files or
submits under the Exchange Act is recorded,  processed,  summarized and reported
within the time periods  specified in Securities and Exchange  Commission  rules
and forms.

(b) Changes in internal  control over  financial  reporting.  During the quarter
    -------------------------------------------------------
under  report,  there was no  change  in the  Company's  internal  control  over
financial  reporting that has materially  affected,  or is reasonably  likely to
materially affect, the Company's internal control over financial reporting.

                                       26


PART II - OTHER INFORMATION


ITEM 1.  Legal Proceedings

            The  Company is not engaged in any legal  proceedings  of a material
            nature at June 30, 2004.  From time to time,  the Company is a party
            to legal  proceedings in the ordinary course of business  wherein it
            enforces its security interest in loans.

ITEM 2.  Changes in Securities, Use of Proceeds and Issuer Purchases  of  Equity
         Securities

           Not applicable

ITEM 3.  Defaults upon Senior Securities

           Not applicable

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

          The Annual Meeting of the shareholders of the Company was held on June
          11, 2004 and the  following  matters  were voted on:

          1)   Approval and adoption of the  Agreement  and Plan of Merger dated
               February  16,  2004,  by and between  the  Company and  Community
               Bancorp of New Jersey


                             FOR                  AGAINST         ABSTAINED
                             ---                  -------         ---------
                           9,984,716             1,259,862          20,001

          2)   Election of directors
                                                    FOR               WITHHELD
                                                    ---               --------
               Thomas A. Bracken                 13,054,823            147,753
               Bernard A. Brown                  13,043,313            159,263
               Ike Brown                         13,027,043            175,533
               Jeffrey S. Brown                  13,042,211            160,365
               Sidney R. Brown                   13,042,211            160,365
               Peter Galetto, Jr.                11,844,621          1,357,955
               Douglas J. Heun                   12,985,730            216,846
               Anne E. Koons                     12,784,598            417,978
               Alfonse M. Mattia                 13,023,746            178,830
               Audrey S. Oswell                  12,811,514            391,062
               George A. Pruitt                  12,847,779            354,797
               Anthony Russo, III                13,034,589            167,987
               Edward H. Salmon                  12,847,432            355,144
               John D. Wallace                   12,847,653            354,923

          3)   Ratification  of the  appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as the
               Company's Independent auditors

                             FOR                  AGAINST         ABSTAINED
                             ---                  -------         ---------
                          13,028,592               151,543          22,441

                                       27


         4)         Approval  and  adoption  of  the  Company's 2004 Stock-Based
                    Incentive Plan:

                             FOR                  AGAINST         ABSTAINED
                             ---                  -------         ---------
                           8,891,430             2,277,237          95,912

ITEM 5.  Other Information

           Not applicable

ITEM 6.  Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K

          Exhibit 31 Certification  Pursuant to ss.302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act
                     of 2003.

          Exhibit 32 Certification  Pursuant to ss.906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act
                     of 2003.

          Form 8-K   The Company  filed a Current  Report on Form 8-K  on  April
                     19, 2004, to  report  earnings  for the quarter ended March
                     31, 2004.

          Form 8-K   The Company filed a Current  Report on Form 8-K on June 11,
                     2004  announcing  the  results  of the  2004 annual meeting
                     of stockholders  including  the  approval  by  stockholders
                     of the  Company's  acquisition  of Community Bancorp of New
                     Jersey.


                                       28



                                   SIGNATURES


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


                                    Sun Bancorp, Inc.
                                    -----------------
                                    (Registrant)


                                   /s/Thomas A. Bracken
                                   ------------------------------------
Date: August 5, 2004               Thomas A. Bracken
                                   President and Chief Executive Officer




Date: August 5, 2004               /s/Dan A. Chila
                                   ------------------------------------
                                   Dan A. Chila
                                   Executive Vice President and
                                   Chief Financial Officer



                                       29