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FIRST BUSINESS FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. (FBIZ)·Q3 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2024 delivered stable net interest margin at 3.64% (within the 3.60%–3.65% target), record pre-tax, pre-provision earnings ($15.4M), and EPS of $1.24, up vs both Q2 2024 and Q3 2023, supported by double‑digit loan and deposit growth .
- Operating revenue rose to $38.1M, net interest income to $31.0M, and tangible book value per share increased 9.7% annualized vs linked quarter and 12.5% YoY .
- Asset quality remained solid: NPAs were 0.52% of assets (down sequentially as a percent) and allowance coverage of non‑accruals was ~183% despite elevated charge‑offs tied to equipment finance transportation exposures .
- The Board declared a $0.25 dividend (20% payout on Q3 EPS), and the company completed a $20.0M 7.5% subordinated debt issuance to support loan growth and Tier 2 capital .
- Consensus estimates were unavailable from S&P Global during this session due to a daily limit; estimate comparisons therefore cannot be presented (S&P Global consensus unavailable).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strong balance sheet growth with loans +10.3% YoY to $3.05B and core deposits +8.8% YoY to $2.38B; net interest income +8.4% YoY and adjusted NIM improved sequentially to 3.51% .
- Record PTPP adjusted earnings ($15.4M; 1.70% adjusted PTPP ROAA), positive operating leverage, and tangible book value per share growth of 12.5% YoY, underpinned by prudent expense management and revenue diversification .
- Private Wealth AUM&A reached $3.398B (+16.6% YoY), generating $3.3M in fee income (+10.8% YoY) with management highlighting strategic expansion across markets: “We grew Private Wealth assets under management and administration to $3.4 billion… which was up 11% from the third quarter of last year” .
What Went Wrong
- Non‑interest income fell 16.2% YoY and 4.9% QoQ to $7.1M, driven by lower SBIC mezzanine fund returns and weaker swap fee income YoY; SBIC income dropped to $193K vs $1.2M a year ago .
- Provision for credit losses rose to $2.1M (vs $1.7M in Q2 2024), reflecting higher specific reserves in equipment finance and SBA borrowers within C&I; net charge‑offs annualized increased to 0.20% .
- Ongoing sector‑specific weakness in transportation within Equipment Finance persists; management expects similar credit impact near term as the portfolio winds down: “We continue to see weakness in the transportation sector… expect the credit impact… to be in line with the past several quarters” .
Financial Results
Non‑interest income breakdown:
Key balance sheet and KPIs:
Q3 2024 actual vs estimates:
- Consensus EPS (S&P Global): Unavailable (S&P Global daily request limit exceeded; consensus comparison cannot be provided).
- Consensus Revenue (S&P Global): Unavailable (S&P Global daily request limit exceeded; consensus comparison cannot be provided).
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our ability to consistently deliver quality growth was supported by our team’s outstanding balance sheet management, resulting in a strong and stable net interest margin that remained within our target range of 3.60%–3.65%.” — Corey Chambas, CEO .
- “We simply don't have any areas of concern [in office CRE], primarily due to the location of the properties, loan structures and strength of the sponsors… we have no nonperforming loans in the [office] portfolio and almost 90%… have recourse.” — Dave Seiler, President & COO .
- “Adjusted NIM for the third quarter was 3.51%… the majority of the adjusted NIM benefit in the quarter came from the loan portfolio… we wouldn’t expect to see a meaningful change in our margin due to the recent and anticipated rate cuts.” — Brian Spielmann, CFO .
- Strategic plan focus 2024–2028: deposit‑centric growth, positive operating leverage, RPA and AI adoption, and TBV growth ≥10% per year by 2028 .
Q&A Highlights
- Deposit costs: Management is proactively lowering deposit rates, both broad‑based and surgical, while aiming to keep NIM within 3.60%–3.65% and maintain neutral IRR positioning .
- Operating leverage and PPNR: Expect continued double‑digit balance sheet and revenue growth with modest positive operating leverage in 2025 as fee lines normalize (SBA, SBIC); comp growth managed via tech efficiency .
- Wealth fees: Q3 decline vs Q2 due to timing; expect Q4 pickup as fees lag quarter‑end AUM levels .
- Credit/reserves: Reserve levels are appropriate; elevated specific reserves in small‑ticket transportation expected to taper over time absent macro deterioration .
- Expense run‑rate: Q3 comp benefited from
$700K adjustments; Q4 run‑rate expected near Q3 base plus add‑backs ($15.9M) .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global Wall Street consensus estimates for Q3 2024 EPS and revenue were unavailable due to an S&P Global daily request limit exceeded during this session. As a result, we cannot present beat/miss vs consensus for this quarter (values would normally be retrieved from S&P Global).
- Implication: Without consensus, focus shifts to internal trajectory—stable NIM within target, sequential adjusted NIM improvement, record PTPP, and YoY EPS growth suggest resilient fundamentals .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Stable margin strategy is performing: NIM remained within target and adjusted NIM improved QoQ, aided by loan yield increases and active funding optimization—supportive for near‑term NII durability even through rate cuts .
- Growth engine intact: Double‑digit loan and deposit growth with disciplined underwriting and match‑funding should continue to drive top‑line expansion and PTPP in 2025; watch for deposit cost relief as repricing progresses .
- Fee normalization ahead: SBA gains and SBIC realizations are expected to ramp in 2025, adding consistency to non‑interest income after 2024’s softer realized gains; potential incremental support to operating leverage .
- Credit watch: Transportation within Equipment Finance remains the primary credit headwind; expect similar net charge‑offs near term as the portfolio winds down; overall asset quality metrics remain solid with strong allowance coverage .
- Capital and dividend: Sub debt issuance strengthens total capital; dividend maintained at $0.25 (20% payout on Q3 EPS), leaving capacity for organic growth while supporting shareholder returns .
- Tactical focus for trading: Near‑term stock reaction may hinge on evidence of deposit cost moderation in Q4, NIM holding in target band, and visible improvement in SBA gains; downside risk remains tied to transportation credit normalization pace .
- Medium‑term thesis: A deposit‑centric, branch‑lite model with specialty finance and growing Private Wealth offers diversified revenue, scalable efficiency via RPA/AI, and a long track record of TBV growth—positioned to outperform peers on PTPP and TBV compounding through the cycle .
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