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FARMERS NATIONAL BANC CORP /OH/ (FMNB)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 EPS of $0.36 GAAP and $0.39 adjusted; EPS beat S&P consensus of $0.34 on an adjusted basis, while “revenue” (NII + fees as tracked by S&P) of ~$44.9m was just below ~$45.2m consensus. Drivers: margin expansion to 2.85%, stronger fee income, and a modest provision recovery; partially offset by $1.3m pretax losses on security/asset sales (2.2-year earn-back) . EPS beat and revenue miss vs S&P Global consensus marked with asterisks below (S&P Global)*
- Net interest margin expanded 15 bps YoY to 2.85% and 13 bps QoQ, aided by Fed cuts reducing funding costs and asset yields continuing to reprice higher; management expects further NIM expansion in 2025, magnitude dependent on future cuts .
- Credit quality improved: NPLs to loans fell to 0.64% (0.70% in Q4), annualized net charge-offs 0.04%, and ACL/loans steady at 1.09%; management actively managing singled-out relationships (one moved to held-for-sale) .
- Balance sheet mix and liquidity improved: deposits rose $214.5m QoQ (incl. +$85m brokered CDs and +$129.5m customer), loan/deposit ratio fell to 72.6%, and FHLB capacity stood at ~$749m; entering Columbus with a new commercial LPO to support growth .
- Potential stock catalysts: continued NIM expansion, realization of securities restructuring earn-back (2.2 years), fee-income momentum (trust, insurance, retirement services), and resolution/sale of select NPLs; watch tariff/macro uncertainty impacting loan demand .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Margin expansion and earnings quality: NIM rose to 2.85% (from 2.72% in Q4 and 2.70% in Q1’24) on lower funding costs and rising asset yields; adjusted EPS of $0.39 reflected core improvements despite realized losses .
- Fee income breadth: Noninterest income increased to $10.5m from $8.4m YoY on stronger service charges, BOLI, trust, insurance, retirement consulting (Crest acquisition), and debit card volumes .
- Credit stabilization: NPLs/loans improved to 0.64% (0.70% prior quarter), annualized NCOs at 0.04%, and a small provision recovery; management expects sale of a designated NPL in Q2 .
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What Went Wrong
- Securities restructuring cost: Realized $1.3m pretax losses to restructure $23.8m AFS, though reinvestment yield is 260 bps higher and earn-back is ~2.2 years .
- Efficiency ratio ticked higher sequentially (59.6% vs 56.4% in Q4) on seasonality and higher operating expenses (notably salaries/benefits and occupancy from weather/timing) even as it improved YoY .
- Loan balances down slightly QoQ (C&I/CRE softness), with management citing borrower uncertainty and incremental tariff risk, though pipeline improved into Q2 .
Financial Results
Core P&L and Profitability (company-reported)
Notes: Adjusted (non-GAAP) EPS was $0.39 in Q1 2025 (vs $0.34 in Q1 2024), reflecting add-back of after-tax net losses on security/asset sales .
Estimate Comparison (S&P Global consensus) – Q1 2025
Values retrieved from S&P Global*
Noninterest Income Mix
Balance Sheet and Risk KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends (narrative across quarters)
Management Commentary
- “We entered 2025 from a position of strength with a legacy of profitability, strong asset quality and robust liquidity levels… [and] the Company’s exciting entrance into the growth market of greater Columbus.” — Kevin J. Helmick, President & CEO .
- “The net interest margin improved to 2.85%… The year-over-year increase… was due to higher yields on earning assets and lower funding costs… The Company expects its net interest margin will continue to expand in 2025 but the degree… will depend on future Federal Reserve cuts…” .
- “The Company… restructured $23.8 million of available for sale securities and reinvested… with yields approximately 260 bps higher… The earn back on the $1.3 million loss… is approximately 2.2 years.” .
- “The pipeline for the second quarter currently shows improvement but the introduction of tariffs adds more uncertainty to the decision making of borrowers.” .
Q&A Highlights
- A full Q1 2025 earnings call transcript was not available in our document set; the press release indicates a standard earnings process and provides detailed commentary on NIM trajectory, credit, deposits, and ALM actions . Any call clarifications on guidance were not accessible via transcript in our search window.
Estimates Context
- EPS beat: Adjusted EPS $0.39* vs S&P consensus $0.34* (+$0.05); note GAAP diluted EPS was $0.36 with $1.3m pretax security/asset sale losses recognized (2.2-year earn-back) . Values retrieved from S&P Global*
- Revenue slight miss: S&P “Revenue” actual $44.88m* vs $45.20m* consensus (-$0.32m); company-reported components were NII $34.2m and fees $10.5m (total $44.7m) . Values retrieved from S&P Global*
- Estimate breadth: Q1 2025 had ~3 EPS estimates and ~2 revenue estimates in S&P Global, indicating modest coverage for this regional bank.*
Values retrieved from S&P Global*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- NIM expansion is the core near-term earnings lever; Fed path and asset repricing cadence drive magnitude. Continued decline in funding costs and lagged asset yield benefits support sequential EPS resilience .
- Fee-income breadth offers diversification: trust, insurance, retirement consulting (Crest), and cards are growing; this reduces dependence on spread income into 2025 .
- Credit normalization is progressing: NPL ratio down QoQ, very low NCOs, and targeted resolution/sale of specific credits; watch office/CRE and any macro spillover .
- ALM repositioning is accretive with a defined payback: the AFS restructuring should lift run-rate yields; a 2.2-year earn-back limits risk while enhancing future NII .
- Funding strength and liquidity provide flexibility: deposit growth (incl. public funds seasonality and brokered CDs), lower L/D, and substantial FHLB capacity position FMNB for selective growth or further balance sheet optimization .
- Columbus expansion is a wedge for loan and fee growth; near-term macro/tariff uncertainty could weigh on C&I/CRE demand, but pipeline improvement suggests potential Q2 recovery .
- Dividend appears steady at $0.17; capital ratios improved QoQ (CET1 11.48%); watch TBV accretion as unrealized losses moderate and securities repositioning earns back .
Citations:
- Q1 2025 press release and financial tables
- Q4 2024 press release and financial tables
- Q3 2024 press release and financial tables
- Other relevant Q1 press releases: Dividend (Feb 26, 2025) , Chief Banking Officer (Jan 15, 2025)
S&P Global consensus and actuals marked with asterisks; Values retrieved from S&P Global*