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1895 Bancorp of Wisconsin, Inc. /MD/ (BCOW)·Q2 2022 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2022 delivered a net loss of $0.24 million and diluted EPS of $(0.04), as noninterest income collapsed on market-driven deferred compensation plan losses and lower mortgage banking activity; NIM expanded modestly on securities deployment strategy .
- Net interest income rose year over year (+5.7%) and sequentially (versus Q1), aided by higher interest and dividend income and lower funding costs; NIM was 2.65% (+8 bps YoY) and net interest spread was 2.52% (+8 bps YoY) .
- Balance sheet pivot continued: cash fell sharply as excess liquidity was deployed into AFS securities (+$14.2M YTD) and net loans grew (+$25.8M YTD); stockholders’ equity declined on AOCI from rising rates .
- No formal guidance or call transcript was available; Street consensus via S&P Global was unavailable at the time of retrieval, limiting beat/miss validation. Near‑term stock narrative hinges on NIM trajectory versus mortgage banking headwinds and AOCI impacts from rates .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Net interest income increased to $3.30M (+5.7% YoY), driven by higher interest on taxable securities and lower FHLB interest expense; management reiterated the strategy to deploy excess liquidity into securities to lift earnings .
- Net interest margin expanded to 2.65% (vs. 2.57% YoY), and net interest spread to 2.52% (vs. 2.44% YoY), reflecting improved asset yields and disciplined funding .
- Net loans held for investment rose to $349.6M (+$25.8M YTD), with asset quality stable (nonaccrual loans 0.23% of total; ALLL/loans 0.89%) .
What Went Wrong
- Noninterest income fell 89.6% YoY to $0.12M, driven by a $0.76M decline in the market value of mutual funds in the deferred compensation plan and lower gain on sale of loans, reflecting softer mortgage activity .
- The Company reported a net loss of $0.24M (EPS $(0.04)), compared to a $(0.05)M net loss in Q2 2021 and $(0.06)M in Q1 2022, as noninterest income weakness outweighed NII improvements .
- Stockholders’ equity fell to $81.0M (from $90.9M at 12/31/21) primarily due to higher net unrealized losses on AFS securities amid rising rates, pressuring tangible capital metrics despite core banking stability .
Financial Results
Balance Sheet and KPIs
Notes: Management attributes the equity decline primarily to net unrealized losses on AFS securities due to rising market interest rates .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Note: No Q2 2022 earnings call transcript was found; themes derived from press releases.
Management Commentary
- “Interest and dividend income increased due primarily to an increase in interest earned on taxable securities, as a result of our strategy to deploy excess liquidity into securities.”
- “Non-interest income decreased $1.0 million… The decrease was primarily the result of a $763,000 decline in the market value of marketable equity securities held in our deferred compensation plan and a $241,000 decrease in net gain on sale of loans.”
- “Provision for loan losses… was $105,000… The increase in provision was primarily due to the increase in loans outstanding.”
- “Total stockholders’ equity decreased… primarily due to an $11.9 million increase in net unrealized losses on available-for-sale securities… resulting primarily from changes in market interest rates.”
Q&A Highlights
- No Q2 2022 earnings call transcript was available; consequently, there were no disclosed analyst Q&A exchanges or guidance clarifications for the quarter [ListDocuments result showed none].
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q2 2022 EPS and revenue was unavailable at the time of retrieval due to a request limit, so we cannot assess beats/misses versus Street expectations. Coverage for microcap banks may be limited; investors should focus on sequential/YoY trends and NIM/OCI sensitivity until estimates can be sourced [GetEstimates attempt error].
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Core spread/NIM improved year over year on higher securities yields and lower funding costs, supporting baseline earnings power despite noninterest income volatility .
- Noninterest income is highly sensitive to market valuations of deferred comp plan investments and to mortgage banking volumes; both were significant drags this quarter .
- Balance sheet repositioning continues: cash down materially, AFS securities higher YTD, and net loans up 8% since year‑end, indicating risk‑asset deployment and loan growth .
- Capital optics pressured by AOCI from rising rates; equity declined ~$9.9M YTD, which may constrain buybacks/dividends near term absent rate stabilization .
- Asset quality remains solid (nonaccrual 0.23%; ALLL/loans 0.89%), mitigating credit concerns amid loan growth and providing cushion for continued provisioning .
- With no formal guidance and no transcript, trading narrative will pivot around NIM progression, mortgage banking trends, and rate‑driven OCI impacts; watch rates, mortgage volumes, and securities portfolio marks as catalysts .
- Near term, a stabilization or rebound in noninterest income (market valuations and gain‑on‑sale) would be the clearest upside lever; conversely, further rate increases pressuring AFS marks could weigh on reported equity and sentiment .