HB
HORIZON BANCORP INC /IN/ (HBNC)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 reported a net loss of $10.9M ($0.25) driven by a strategic $39.1M pre-tax securities loss; core results showed strong NII and NIM improvement (NII $53.1M; FTE NIM 2.97%, +31 bps q/q) as assets remixed to higher-yielding loans and lower-cost deposits .
- Loans rose $108.6M q/q to $4.91B with 22.4% annualized commercial growth; deposits fell $126.4M as management intentionally let higher-cost time deposits roll off, improving funding mix .
- Noninterest expense was elevated ($44.9M) from one-time items (stock comp acceleration, termination of a legacy benefits plan, strategic initiative costs); tax valuation allowance reversal ($5.1M) benefited capital and tangible book .
- 2025 outlook: sequential NIM improvement with exit run-rate targeted at ~3.15–3.20%, mid-teens NII growth, expenses flat to low-single-digit up vs 2024, mid-teens effective tax rate; $200M FHLB advances to be paid down in late March/early April .
- Potential stock catalysts: NIM trajectory, capital build with optionality for buybacks (1.1M shares authorized), Q1 2025 gain on mortgage warehouse sale, and further deposit cost normalization as rates decline .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Core earnings power improved: net interest income rose for the fifth straight quarter to $53.1M; FTE NIM expanded to 2.97% (+31 bps q/q) on asset remix into loans, lower-cost deposits, and modest rate tailwinds; ~5 bps NIM lift came from specific loan interest recoveries .
- Commercial lending momentum: loans +$108.6M q/q (HFI); commercial grew at a 22.4% annualized rate; equipment finance ramped; management reiterated ample in-market opportunities .
- Strategic repositioning completed: $332.2M AFS sale executed to redeploy into higher-yielding loans and reduce high-cost funding; go-forward expense baseline recalibrated; mortgage warehouse division sold for a gain effective Jan 17, to be recognized in Q1 2025 .
- Quote: “We are very pleased with Horizon’s fourth quarter results, which displayed a significantly more profitable core business model…” — CEO Thomas Prame .
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What Went Wrong
- GAAP loss from restructuring: $39.1M pre-tax securities loss drove a $10.9M net loss and negative EPS (-$0.25), overshadowing otherwise stronger core NII/NIM progression .
- Expense spike: noninterest expense rose to $44.9M on one-time compensation/benefits and strategic costs; management expects lower levels in 2025 (normalized ~$39.5–$40.0M quarterly run-rate) .
- Funding and credit optics: total deposits -$126.4M q/q as high-cost CDs rolled off; nonperforming assets/total assets ticked up to 0.35% (from 0.32%); non-accrual loans/HFI rose to 0.53% (from 0.49%), though charge-offs remained low .
Financial Results
Notes: NIM is presented on a fully taxable equivalent (FTE) basis (non-GAAP) with reconciliations provided by the company .
Segment and Balance Mix
KPIs and Credit Quality
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We are very pleased with Horizon’s fourth quarter results, which displayed a significantly more profitable core business model… These actions, combined with an impressive 22.4% annualized growth rate in commercial loans, increased the margin by 31 basis points from the third quarter.” — CEO Thomas Prame .
- “Our Q4 net interest margin was stronger than anticipated, up 31 basis points… strategically redeploy[ed]… proceeds… into… commercial loan growth and… reduction of higher cost… deposits… Fed funds rate [cuts]… were beneficial… ~5 bps [from] interest recoveries.” — CFO John Stewart .
- “We would anticipate sequential quarterly margin improvement over the course of the year… exit run rate… in the 3.15% to maybe 3.20% range.” — CFO John Stewart .
- “Under our base set of assumptions… full-year 2025 net interest income will grow in the mid-teens… expenses for 2025 should be flat to up low single digits relative to… 2024… effective tax rate… in the mid-teens.” — CFO John Stewart .
- “Sold the [mortgage warehouse] business for a gain, effective January 17th, which will be recognized in Q1 2025.” — Management .
- On deposit competition: “We’ve been able to navigate… with a competitive advantage… 70 local branches… relationship banking… 40% more treasury management people…” — CEO Thomas Prame .
Q&A Highlights
- Margin trajectory and drivers: December margin run-rate ~3.03%; 2025 exit ~3.15–3.20%; Q2 2025 uplift from $200M FHLB paydown; liability mix and commercial loan growth vs indirect auto runoff key levers .
- Capital deployment: Building capital in 2025; buybacks are on the table with ~1.1M shares authorized .
- Expense normalization: Ex-Q4 strategic items, run-rate guided to ~$39.5–$40.0M/quarter vs $44.9M reported; additional Q4 items ($2.0–$2.5M) were elevated but not recurring .
- Reserve/credit outlook: ACL/loans (1.07%) seen as appropriate; loan growth and mix (indirect auto runoff) primary drivers; credit trends stable .
- Loan pricing/mix: Fixed-rate commercial loans generally high-6s to 8% depending on term/credit; small-ticket leasing 7.5% to high-8% .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q4 2024 EPS and revenue was unavailable at time of analysis due to system request limits; as a result, we cannot assess beat/miss versus consensus for this quarter [GetEstimates error].
- Implication: The GAAP loss in Q4 stems from the $39.1M securities loss; core revenue/margin trends improved, but we cannot benchmark these against published consensus in this report .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Core earnings power improved materially: five consecutive quarters of NII growth; FTE NIM 2.97% (+31 bps q/q) on remix to loans and lower-cost deposits, positioning for further sequential NIM gains in 2025 .
- 2025 setup is constructive: mid-teens NII growth, expense normalization (flat to LSD up vs 2024), mid-teens ETR, and a balance sheet close to rate-neutral after Q4 actions .
- Capital optionality rising: tangible capital improved; management explicitly flagged buybacks (1.1M shares authorized) alongside organic growth priorities .
- Near-term catalysts: Q1 2025 gain on sale of the mortgage warehouse business; late-Q1/early-Q2 FHLB paydown; ongoing deposit repricing opportunities as rates decline .
- Risk checks: Deposits down 2.2% q/q on CD runoff (by design); NPA/Assets and non-accrual ratios up modestly but remain low; charge-offs contained .
- Watch list: Execution on mid-single-digit loan growth while shrinking indirect auto; maintaining pricing discipline; monitoring deposit competition as peers adjust post-Fed cuts .
- Dividend maintained at $0.16 in Q4; trajectory will likely track core profitability improvements and capital build .