CB
CROSSFIRST BANKSHARES, INC. (CFB)·Q1 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2024 delivered solid results: net income $18.2M and diluted EPS $0.36, with ROAA 1.00% and ROCE 10.36% .
- Loans grew 2.0% (+$121M) to $6.2B and deposits rose 1.5% (+$96M) to $6.6B; NIM was stable at 3.20% (down 3 bps QoQ; hedge impact ~7 bps) while loan yields increased and deposit cost pressure moderated .
- Noninterest income expanded to $5.6M (+26% YoY) on treasury, credit card and SBA contributions; management reaffirmed 2024 guidance (NIM 3.20–3.25%, 8–10% loan and deposit growth, adjusted OpEx $36–37M/quarter, ACL/Loans 1.25–1.35%, tax 20–22%) .
- Credit remained resilient: NPAs/Assets fell to 0.27% (from 0.34% in Q4); ACL/Loans held at 1.20% and net charge-offs were 0.10% annualized .
- Capital build continues with total risk-based 11.4% and CET1 10.2%; buybacks restarted with 112K shares repurchased at $13.10 (below TBV $13.70), a potential catalyst for investor sentiment .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “Strong organic loan and deposit growth, stable credit quality, expansion of noninterest income and an increase in earnings” (CEO prepared remarks) .
- New loan production yield was 8.58%, supporting asset-yield expansion; loan growth was broad-based across markets and lines of business .
- Noninterest income grew 26% YoY led by treasury, credit card and SBA; management expects sustained momentum via pricing actions and scaling of fee platforms .
What Went Wrong
- Deposit costs rose 13 bps QoQ to 3.87%; NIM slipped 3 bps to 3.20%, with a 7 bps drag from the hedge becoming effective .
- Classified loans increased modestly to 15.8% of capital plus reserves; NIB deposits declined to $954M (14.5% of deposits) versus 15% in Q4 .
- ORE rose to $5.3M due to foreclosure on previously identified nonperforming loan; past dues ticked up on administrative timing but expected to revert .
Financial Results
YoY snapshot (Q1 2024 vs Q1 2023)
Segment/KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our company had a solid first quarter with strong organic loan and deposit growth, stable credit quality, expansion of noninterest income and an increase in earnings.” — Michael Maddox, CEO .
- “The average loan yield on new production in the quarter was a strong 8.58%… growth was broad-based across our markets.” — Randy Rapp, President, CrossFirst Bank .
- “Noninterest income was $5.6 million for the quarter… on a year-over-year basis, noninterest income grew 26% with contributions from treasury, credit card and SBA.” — Ben Clouse, CFO .
- “Fully tax equivalent net interest margin was down 3 basis points… We expect our NIM to improve modestly with any rate cuts this year, and we remain slightly liability sensitive.” — Ben Clouse, CFO .
- “We restarted share buybacks… 112,000 shares at a weighted average cost of $13.10 compared to tangible book value per share of $13.70.” — Ben Clouse, CFO .
Q&A Highlights
- Credit comfort and underwriting: Management emphasized conservative grading, frequent third‑party reviews, strong sponsors and resilient Midwest footprint; ACL/Loans 1.20% and classifieds at 15.8% were described as acceptable levels .
- Margin sensitivity and hedge: Deposit cost pressure ebbing; loan yields keeping pace; SOFR‑linked collar effective, taken into run‑rate; margin stability expected even in static rates; modest expansion with cuts .
- Fee income trajectory vs expenses: Year‑over‑year fee growth near 30%; investments in card/treasury/SBA largely made; management sees operating leverage with $37M quarterly OpEx run‑rate .
- CRE churn outlook: Expect higher churn as stabilized properties move to permanent markets; recent rate moves may pause timing, but guidance intact and potential NIM benefit from recycling into higher‑yield opportunities .
- Liquidity and funding: Liquidity ~33% of assets with ~$2.5B capacity; brokered funding kept flat; cash balances managed with deposit growth mainly organic .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates for EPS and revenue were not available due to missing CIQ mapping for CFB, so we cannot assess beats/misses versus Wall Street consensus at this time [SpgiEstimatesError].
- Management’s commentary indicates results were in line with internal expectations (NIM range, loan/deposit growth, fee momentum); however, we cannot anchor any estimate comparison without SPGI consensus .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Earnings quality improving: EPS up sequentially to $0.36 with ROAA 1.00% and ROCE 10.36%; fee engines (treasury, SBA, card) add diversification and are scaling without material incremental cost .
- NIM durability: Despite a modest hedge drag, loan repricing/new production yields (8.58%) and moderating deposit betas support NIM stability in the low‑3.20s, with optionality to expand if rate cuts materialize .
- Credit resilient: NPAs/Assets fell to 0.27%; ACL/Loans steady at 1.20%; classifieds modestly higher but described as acceptable and diversified; watch administrative past‑due normalization .
- Capital deployment: With TRBC 11.4% and CET1 10.2%, modest buybacks below TBV resumed—balanced approach to capital build and shareholder return can support valuation .
- Deposit-led growth: Management will pace loan growth to core deposit generation; deposit growth was organic in Q1, a positive signal for funding and margin defense .
- CRE churn is a lever: Anticipated churn can recycle capital into higher‑yielding assets, potentially aiding NIM and risk-weight optimization; monitor permanent market activity and cap rate trends .
- Execution focus: 2024 guidance maintained across NIM, growth, OpEx, ACL and tax rate; continued efficiency initiatives (core renegotiation) targeted to sustain operating leverage .
Notes:
- We read the full Q1 2024 earnings call transcript and the Q1 2024 earnings slide deck; no separate Q1 2024 8‑K 2.02 press release was available in the document catalog during the specified window, so quantitative details reference slides and call remarks .
- Prior‑quarter context was taken from Q4 2023 and Q3 2023 earnings call transcripts and the Q1 2024 slide historical series .