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1895 Bancorp of Wisconsin, Inc. /MD/ (BCOW)·Q1 2022 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2022 produced a small net loss of $0.06M (–$0.01 diluted EPS) versus net income of $0.52M ($0.11 diluted EPS) in Q1 2021, driven by a sharp decline in mortgage banking-related noninterest income despite solid net interest margin expansion .
- Net interest income rose 12.2% YoY to $3.55M, with net interest margin improving 18 bps to 2.85% as deposit costs fell; however, noninterest income fell 75.7% YoY to $0.39M due to lower loan sale gains/servicing fees and deferred comp market impacts .
- Balance sheet repositioning accelerated: available-for-sale securities increased $20.3M QoQ while cash declined $16.2M; equity fell $5.7M QoQ, largely from unrealized losses in the AFS portfolio amid rate moves .
- No formal guidance or earnings call transcript was provided; near-term stock reaction catalysts center on mortgage volume trends, rate-driven NIM trajectory, and AFS marks through OCI .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Net interest income and margin expanded: NII +$384K YoY to $3.55M; net interest margin rose to 2.85% on lower deposit costs and securities deployment strategy .
- Strategic redeployment of excess liquidity: “the Company’s strategy to deploy excess liquidity into securities” lifted interest income, with taxable securities income +$281K YoY and AFS balances +$73.7M YoY .
- Operating discipline: noninterest expense decreased 3.5% YoY (–$143K), primarily from lower salaries/benefits tied to deferred comp market value movements, partially offset by higher bonus accruals .
What Went Wrong
- Severe mortgage banking slowdown: noninterest income fell 75.7% YoY to $0.39M, led by a $489K drop in loan sale gains and a $397K decline in servicing fees; mortgage loans sold decreased from $40.4M to $6.8M YoY .
- Mark-to-market headwinds: “a $341,000 decline in the market value of marketable equity securities” in deferred comp weighed on both noninterest income and compensation expense .
- Provision normalized: $105K provision in Q1 2022 vs. zero in Q1 2021, modestly offsetting NII gains, amid a loan book that was broadly flat QoQ .
Financial Results
Note: Q4 2021 quarter-specific P&L was not disclosed in the March 11, 2022 press release, which provided annual results only .
KPIs
Guidance Changes
The company did not issue formal guidance in the Q1 2022 press release .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Note: No Q1 2022 earnings call transcript was available; themes derived from press releases .
Management Commentary
- “This increase was primarily due to the Company’s strategy to deploy excess liquidity into securities” (referring to interest income growth and securities balance expansion) .
- “Interest expense decreased… primarily due to a decline in the cost of our interest-bearing deposits, which decreased 13 basis points” .
- “Non-interest income decreased… primarily the result of a $489,000 decrease in net gain on sale of loans, a $397,000 decrease in loan servicing fees and a $341,000 decline in the market value of marketable equity securities” .
- “Available-for-Sale Securities increased $20.3 million… purchases consisted primarily of government-sponsored mortgage-backed securities and U.S. Treasury notes” .
Q&A Highlights
- No earnings call transcript was available; the Q1 2022 8-K press release did not include call details .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates for Q1 2022 EPS and revenue were unavailable during this session; therefore, no comparison to Street expectations can be provided. Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Earnings pressure came from the mortgage banking slowdown and servicing fee headwinds; despite NIM expansion, the steep drop in noninterest income drove a small net loss .
- Balance sheet repositioning into AFS securities is boosting interest income but increases OCI sensitivity; equity fell $5.7M QoQ on unrealized AFS losses as rates moved .
- Funding cost discipline remains a positive: deposit costs fell to 0.24%, supporting NIM uplift to 2.85% even as loan growth was flat QoQ .
- Credit remains stable: nonaccruals declined YoY and ALLL coverage improved; provision resumed at a modest $105K .
- Near-term trading implications: watch mortgage volumes and secondary market conditions for loan sale gains; rates/curve will drive NIM and AFS marks, creating P&L and equity volatility .
- Medium-term thesis: if mortgage banking remains subdued, earnings mix leans to NII; continued securities deployment can support income but elevates OCI swings—focus on duration/hedging and deposit mix .
- No formal guidance/call leaves the narrative anchored to reported metrics; monitor subsequent quarters for signs of sustained NIM expansion and stabilization in fee income .