FI
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS INC (FISI)·Q3 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2024 EPS was $0.84 vs $1.62 in Q2 (boosted by an insurance-sale gain) and $0.88 in Q3 2023; sequential decline driven by lower noninterest income and higher provision, while core NIM expanded to 2.89% from 2.87% .
- Net interest income slipped to $40.7M on nonaccrual interest reversal, but deposit growth of $173M enabled paydown of short-term borrowings; NIM expanded 2 bps QoQ as asset yields outpaced cost of funds .
- Credit quality mixed: annualized NCOs rose to 0.15% (0.10% in Q2), and NPLs/loans increased to 0.93% due to one commercial relationship; management emphasized reserves and idiosyncratic nature of the two large commercial NPLs .
- Guidance updated: full-year 2024 NIM narrowed to 2.85–2.90% (from 2.85–2.95%), loan growth expected at the low end of 1–3%, and net charge-offs lowered to 20–30 bps (from 30–40 bps). No material one-time costs expected from the orderly wind-down of BaaS in 2025, which management views as immaterial to financials .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- NIM expansion and deposit execution: “strong deposit growth, incremental net interest margin expansion, solid expense management,” with NIM at 2.89% and deposit growth supporting reduced borrowings .
- Capital build and AOCI improvement: CET1 rose to 10.28% (up 25 bps QoQ) and TCE ratio to 6.93%; AOCI improved by $23.7M QoQ; tangible book per share rose 8% QoQ to $27.28 .
- Expense discipline: Noninterest expense fell to $32.5M (down $0.6M QoQ, $2.2M YoY) with lower FDIC assessment and other items; run-rate discipline continues .
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What Went Wrong
- Noninterest income normalized lower after Q2’s insurance gain: fell to $9.4M from $24.0M; swap fees and limited partnership income softened; tax credit line turned to a net loss .
- Credit metrics: NPLs/loans rose to 0.93% (from 0.57% in Q2) tied to two commercial relationships; provision increased to $3.1M; annualized NCOs moved up to 0.15% .
- Loans declined sequentially: Total loans fell $58.5M QoQ; competition and borrowers’ use of cash weighed on growth; management expects better demand with future rate cuts .
Financial Results
Note: Total revenue calculated as Net interest income + Noninterest income; components cited above .
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Balance Sheet and Mix
- Loans and Deposits (End of Period)
- Loans by Category (End of Period)
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Credit Quality and Capital
- Credit Metrics
- Capital and Book Value
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KPIs
- Courier Capital assets under management: $3.2B as of Sep 30, 2024; YTD AUM +$319M with $44M positive net inflows .
- Recurring noninterest income run-rate: ~$9.1M in Q3 (ex-limited partnerships, tax credits, security gains/losses, and insurance) .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “Our third quarter results were highlighted by strong deposit growth, incremental net interest margin expansion, solid expense management, and continued build in our regulatory and tangible capital ratios.”
- CEO on BaaS: “…strategic decision to begin to wind-down our Banking-as-a-Service… we intend to redeploy our investments of time and talent… to support the significant opportunities we have in Five Star Bank’s community banking franchise.”
- CFO: “We reported [NIM] of 289 bps… up 2 bps… NIM was negatively impacted by the commercial relationship placed on nonaccrual… which reduced margin by 3 bps.”
- CFO on guidance: “We’re narrowing our expected range for full year 2024 NIM to 2.85% to 2.9%… we now expect 2024 annual loan growth to come in at the low end of our guided range of 1% to 3%… [and] full year net charge-offs… 20 to 30 bps.”
- CEO closing: “The actions we’ve taken… have allowed us to expand capital ratios meaningfully… focused around supporting our core community banking franchise.”
Q&A Highlights
- Margin sensitivity: Management expects to remain fairly neutral to the first 50 bps of Fed cuts given pricing dynamics; deposit repricing already underway across segments .
- Loan outlook: Commercial pipelines rebuilding; management aims for mid-single-digit growth in 2025 as rate environment eases .
- Expenses: Focused on prudent expense management; BaaS team of 14 FTEs to be redeployed, supporting growth without incremental hiring .
- Betas on the way down: Expect betas to be neutral near term, then converge toward historical patterns with additional cuts .
- BaaS wind-down costs: “No material one-time costs” expected .
Estimates Context
- We attempted to retrieve S&P Global consensus for Q3 2024 EPS and revenue, but access was unavailable at the time of analysis (SPGI daily limit exceeded). As a result, we cannot present definitive “vs. consensus” comparisons for this quarter. We will update when S&P Global data becomes accessible.
- Absent consensus, results should be framed against internal guidance and sequential/YoY trends: NIM expanded 2 bps QoQ; efficiency ratio normalized from Q2’s sale-related boost; credit costs rose modestly while capital strengthened .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Core spread resilience: Despite a nonaccrual hit to interest income, FISI delivered sequential NIM expansion; sustained deposit gathering and funding optimization remain tailwinds into Q4. Watch for rate-cut pass-through precision to protect NIM in 2025 .
- Credit watchlist is idiosyncratic: Higher NPLs stem from two commercial relationships; reserves ticked up to 1.01% of loans and management is “comfortable” with coverage—monitor resolution timelines and any migration to losses .
- Expense discipline and capital momentum: Operating expense trajectory remains controlled; CET1 at 10.28% and improving AOCI support book value accretion and optionality .
- Strategic focus on core banking: BaaS wind-down reduces complexity and reallocates talent to core growth, with immaterial financial drag and no expected material one-time costs—positive for risk-adjusted returns .
- 2024 guide de-risked: Narrowing NIM range and lowering NCOs to 20–30 bps suggests visibility; loan growth at the low end reflects conservatism amid competition and rate dynamics .
- Dividend maintained: $0.30 per share sustained, underscoring confidence in capital and earnings trajectory .
- 2025 setup: As pipelines rebuild and rate cuts emerge, management targets improved loan growth; monitor deposit beta behavior downward and the pace of redeployment of BaaS resources to core .