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CAMDEN NATIONAL CORP (CAC)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 adjusted diluted EPS was $0.89 and GAAP diluted EPS was $0.83; versus S&P Global consensus EPS of $1.09*, results were a miss. S&P’s revenue actual of $55.4M also missed consensus $61.1M*, despite company-reported net interest + non-interest income totaling ~$62.3M, up 4% sequentially .*
- Efficiency ratio improved materially: GAAP to 60.37% and non-GAAP to 55.47% (from 74.02% and 58.72% in Q1), driven by Northway synergy capture and lower merger costs .
- Net interest margin expanded 2 bps to 3.06% (core NIM 2.70%); management guided another 5–10 bps potential expansion in Q3, contingent on rates .
- A $12M syndicated C&I credit entered bankruptcy, elevating provision expense ($6.9M) and lifting NPLs to 0.37% of loans; management expects resolution later in 2025 .
- Shares fell ~11% on the print, with concern around the NPL uptick; management flagged potential buyback optionality post-window .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Non-GAAP efficiency ratio improved to 55.47%, the best since Q2 2022, as merger costs declined and synergy realization progressed; pre-tax, pre-provision income rose 13% QoQ to $26.1M .
- Net interest margin expanded to 3.06% (core 2.70%), with CFO targeting further core margin expansion in Q3 on seasonal deposit flows and earning asset yield momentum .
- Loan pipelines strengthened: committed pipeline reached ~$149.5M (+40% QoQ), with home equity balances growing $16.7M in Q2 and strong commercial activity in ME/NH .
- Tangible book value per share increased 3% QoQ to $26.90; TCE ratio rose to 6.77% .
- Management emphasized digital wins (Round Up, Zogo) and wealth/brokerage fee growth (+16% YoY fiduciary/brokerage), indicating diversification of revenue .
Quotes:
- “Pre-tax, pre-provision income… increased 13% over the prior quarter. This performance reflects achievement of cost synergies and solid revenue growth…” — CEO Simon Griffiths .
- “We remain on track to deliver the financial targets outlined as part of the acquisition, including achieving our targeted cost reductions.” — CFO Mike Archer .
What Went Wrong
- Consensus miss: S&P Global EPS consensus $1.09* vs actual $0.89*, and revenue consensus $61.1M* vs actual $55.4M*, reflecting elevated provisioning and an NPL-related NIM impact (~1 bp) .*
- Credit event: a $12M syndicated C&I loan entered bankruptcy, raising provision to $6.9M and NPLs to 0.37% of loans (from 0.15% in Q1) .
- Deposits declined 1% QoQ to $5.5B; loan-to-deposit ratio rose to 89% (from 87% in Q1), albeit with management citing normal seasonal outflows early in the quarter .
- Non-interest income had valuation-related volatility (BOLI, mortgage pipeline fair value), prompting cautious Q3 guidance .
Financial Results
Core P&L and Margin Trends
Estimates vs Actuals (S&P Global)
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Note: Company-reported “total revenues” (net interest income + non-interest income) were ~$62.3M, up 4% QoQ ; S&P’s revenue taxonomy differs from bank reporting, hence the variance.*
Loan Composition (Period-End)
KPIs and Asset Quality
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategy and synergies: “Early success in realizing cost synergies… positioning us for continued net interest margin expansion and earnings growth in the second half of 2025.” — CEO Simon Griffiths .
- Margin outlook: “We do see continued momentum… plus minus 5, 10 basis points for the next quarter, dependent… on where the Fed goes.” — CEO Simon Griffiths .
- Expense outlook: “Non-interest expenses… to land closer to $34 million [in Q3], as we realize a full quarter of cost synergy savings.” — CFO Mike Archer .
- Credit event specifics: “A borrower under a syndicated loan… Camden’s participation totaled $12 million… we carried an allowance… of $6 million… the driver of elevated provision expense.” — CFO Mike Archer .
Q&A Highlights
- Credit clarity: Analysts probed the $12M syndicated C&I credit; management characterized it as a “service company” and noted a ~1 bp NIM impact, with anticipated resolution later this year .
- Margin trajectory: Management sees 5–10 bps sequential NIM expansion potential in Q3, subject to rate path .
- Fee income and valuation sensitivity: CFO cautioned on BOLI and mortgage pipeline valuation volatility; guided Q3 non-interest income to $12–$13M .
- Expense run-rate: Target Q3 non-interest expense (ex-M&A, CDI) closer to ~$34M, reflecting synergy capture .
- Buyback tone: With stock down ~11% day-of, management acknowledged buyback optionality post-window .
Estimates Context
- EPS: Adjusted EPS of $0.89 fell below S&P Global consensus of ~$1.09*, implying a miss. Drivers included elevated provision ($6.9M) and a one-off credit event impacting NIM modestly .*
- Revenue: S&P Global revenue actual ~$55.4M vs consensus ~$61.1M*, a miss. Note that bank-reported “total revenues” (net interest + non-interest) was ~$62.3M (+4% QoQ), reflecting taxonomy differences in “revenue” definitions for banks .*
- Revisions: Efficiency gains and margin expansion guidance could support upward adjustments to out-quarter margin assumptions; however, near-term models likely reflect higher credit costs and NPLs until resolution.*
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term headwind from an idiosyncratic C&I credit drove provisioning and an EPS/revenue miss vs S&P consensus*, but underlying margin/efficiency trends improved and management guides further NIM expansion .*
- Cost synergies from Northway are flowing through: non-GAAP efficiency at 55.47% and Q3 Opex ex-M&A/CDI targeted ~$34M, improving operating leverage .
- Loan growth and pipeline strength (+40% QoQ to ~$149.5M) coupled with home equity momentum support earning asset yield and core NIM expansion .
- Deposits eased 1% QoQ (seasonal), pushing L/D to 89%; watch deposit pricing, seasonal inflows, and funding mix as margin sensitivity remains .
- Capital rebuild continues (CET1 10.88%; TCE 6.77%); buyback optionality exists, but prudence around credit resolution likely dominates near-term capital deployment .
- Trading: The ~11% post-earnings drop reflects credit/NPL optics; resolution of the syndicated credit and delivery on Q3 margin/Opex guidance are potential catalysts for sentiment repair .
- Medium term: Digital/customer engagement and fee diversification (wealth/brokerage) plus ME/NH commercial expansion underpin a margin/efficiency-led EPS recovery trajectory if credit normalizes .