FIFTH THIRD BANCORP (FITB) Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Reported diluted EPS was $0.85; adjusted EPS was $0.90 as interchange litigation and a foundation contribution were partly offset by an FDIC special assessment update and a tax benefit . NII rose 1% QoQ and NIM expanded 7 bps to 2.97% on deposit cost reductions and fixed‑rate asset repricing .
- Fee momentum: adjusted noninterest income rose 6% QoQ and 5% YoY; capital markets +11% QoQ/+16% YoY, commercial payments +1% QoQ/+7% YoY, wealth & asset management +3% QoQ/+11% YoY .
- Credit metrics were stable-to-improving: NCO ratio fell 2 bps QoQ to 0.46%, NPL ratio increased to 0.69% with commercial inflows; ACL/loans was ~2.08% and CET1 ended at 10.51% after $300M buyback .
- 2025 outlook: management guided to record NII, full‑year positive operating leverage, loans +3–4%, adjusted fees +3–6%, and adjusted expenses +3–4%; Q1’25 NII flat QoQ with seasonal expense step‑up (~$100MM) .
- Near‑term catalysts: reiterated “record 2025 NII” and positive operating leverage; continued capital return ($300M Q4 repurchase; planned $225M buyback in Q1’25); prime rate cut to 7.50% in Dec supports deposit cost trajectory and floating loan yields reset context .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
- What Went Well
- “We remain confident in achieving record NII in 2025 and delivering full year positive operating leverage across a range of interest rate environments.” – CFO Bryan Preston . NIM rose 7 bps QoQ to 2.97% on a 38 bps decline in interest‑bearing liability costs .
- Fee growth from strategic investments: adjusted noninterest income +6% QoQ/+5% YoY; capital markets syndication/M&A strength and wealth AUM growth to $69B drove double‑digit YoY fee increases .
- Expense discipline: adjusted efficiency ratio improved to 54.7%; adjusted expenses fell 1% QoQ .
- What Went Wrong
- NPL/NPA increased: NPLs rose to $823MM (0.69% of loans) and NPAs to $853MM (0.71%) on commercial inflows; management expects a large NPA inflow to pay down in H1’25, but it pressured coverage ratios sequentially .
- Reported EPS impacted by litigation/foundation items (−$0.05); interchange litigation reduced noninterest income by $51MM and increased expense $4MM .
- CET1 dipped 24 bps QoQ to 10.51% on loan growth/RWA expansion despite buybacks; pro forma CET1 incl. AOCI remains a watchpoint amid long‑end rate volatility .
Financial Results
Segment results (Q4 2024):
KPIs and balance mix:
Estimate comparison:
Note: Wall Street consensus estimates from S&P Global were unavailable at the time of this analysis due to API limit.
Guidance Changes
FY 2024 (actual vs January 2024 guide context): delivered adjusted results in line with early‑year guidance (NII stable/down modestly, fees up, expenses down slightly), and returned $1.6B of capital while increasing capital ratios .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategy and 2025 outlook: “We remain confident in achieving record NII in 2025 and delivering full year positive operating leverage across a range of interest rate environments.” – Bryan Preston . “Our credit portfolio remains well diversified and proactively managed and the risks are well understood.” – Timothy Spence .
- Fee momentum: “Our commercial payments business grew fee revenues by 8% in 2024, and we processed $17 trillion in volume… nearly 40% of all new commercial payments relationships have no credit attached.” – Timothy Spence .
- Deposit costs: “Proactive balance sheet management resulted in a 35 basis point reduction in the cost of interest-bearing deposits… interest‑bearing core deposits peaked at 2.9% in August, and were down to 2.49% in December.” – Bryan Preston .
- Capital return: “We returned $1.6 billion of capital… resumed share repurchases… raised our dividend.” – Timothy Spence .
Q&A Highlights
- Loan demand: Record middle‑market pipelines, modest utilization uptick (~36%); management sees improving backdrop but cautions against extrapolating outsized growth .
- Deposit rate outlook: Further cost relief into Q1 from full‑quarter impact of December Fed cut; ~$8B CDs at ~4.3% maturing in Q1’25 provide flexibility .
- CET1 including AOCI: Target “north of 8%” and improving via pull‑to‑par; buybacks paced against loan growth and CET1 ~10.5% operating target .
- NIM path: Expect a few bps improvement each quarter in 2025; 3.20% NIM seen as achievable in this rate environment over time .
- Expansion/payments: Southeast branch payoff in early innings (weighted average age ~3 years), ramping to ~50 builds in 2025; commercial payments disclosures show overweight payments franchise vs peers .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus EPS and revenue for Q4’24 were unavailable at the time of this analysis due to API request limits; as a result, we cannot quantify a beat/miss versus consensus.
- Given management’s reiterated 2025 NII and operating leverage guidance, and stronger‑than‑expected fee performance (capital markets/wealth/payments), estimates for 2025 NII and fees may need upward adjustment; Q1’25 seasonality in expenses and fees (cards, capital markets) should be reflected in near‑term models .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Core earnings quality improved: NIM expansion (+7 bps QoQ) and adjusted efficiency ratio at 54.7% underpin PPNR momentum heading into 2025 .
- Fee diversification is working: Payments/wealth/capital markets drove adjusted noninterest income +6% QoQ/+5% YoY, reducing cyclicality risk .
- Credit stable; watch commercial NPAs: NCO ratio modestly lower QoQ; NPLs increased on a handful of commercial names with expected resolution in H1’25 .
- Capital return continues with discipline: CET1 10.51% after $300M buyback; planned $225M in Q1’25 buybacks; AOCI accretion supports tangible equity over multi‑year horizon .
- 2025 setup: Loans +3–4%, adjusted NII +5–6%, adjusted fees +3–6%, adjusted expenses +3–4% → positive operating leverage; NIM expected to grind higher .
- Near‑term modeling: Q1’25 NII flat QoQ; fees seasonally down 6–8%; expenses up ~8% with ~$100MM seasonal items; adjust quarterly cadence accordingly .
- Macro sensitivity: Prime rate reductions (7.50% as of Dec 18) and deposit beta management support liability cost tailwinds; curve steepening would be an incremental NII lever .
Additional Notes and Sources
- Q4 2024 earnings release and data tables .
- Q4 2024 earnings presentation & segment detail .
- Q4 2024 earnings call transcript – prepared remarks and Q&A .
- Prior quarters for trend analysis (Q3’24 and Q2’24 8-Ks and calls) .