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Hilltop Holdings Inc. (HTH)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- EPS diluted rose 24% year over year to $0.55, with net income attributable to Hilltop up 24% to $35.5 million; consolidated NIM compressed to 2.72% from 2.84% in Q3, reflecting higher cash balances and lower loan yields .
- Banking delivered pre-tax income of $50.6 million (ROAA 1.24%); Broker-Dealer net revenue was $126.4 million with a 16.1% pre-tax margin; PrimeLending posted a $9.9 million pre-tax loss despite 24% higher origination volume versus Q4 2023 .
- Hilltop raised the quarterly dividend 6% to $0.18 and authorized a new $100 million buyback through January 2026; it also redeemed $150 million of 5% senior notes in January and expects a $23–$27 million net gain on sale from Moser in Q1 2025 .
- 2025 outlook: average bank loans and deposits growth of 2%–5%, NII down 0%–2% on an asset-sensitive balance sheet assuming two Fed cuts; mortgage volume $9–$10B; effective tax rate 22%–24% .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- PlainsCapital Bank grew average deposits by ~$595 million QoQ and cut the total cost of deposits 31 bps; pre-tax income reached $50.6 million, aided by a $5.7 million provision recapture as criticized loans declined .
- Broker-Dealer delivered $126.4 million net revenue and 16.1% pre-tax margin, with Structured Finance net revenue of $30.2 million supported by down payment assistance programs; Wealth Management net revenues increased QoQ .
- Tangible book value per share rose to $29.49; CET1 ratio improved to 21.23%, underscoring balance sheet strength and capacity for capital return .
“We remain focused on protecting our balance sheet and executing on our strategic plan to further build on Hilltop’s franchise value” — Jeremy B. Ford .
What Went Wrong
- Consolidated NIM fell 12 bps QoQ to 2.72%, driven by immediate repricing of ~$2B excess cash at the Fed and lower loan yields; Bank NIM declined 7 bps to 2.98% .
- PrimeLending’s pre-tax loss of $9.9 million reflected softer lock volumes and continued pressure on origination fees; management expects seasonally slower Q1 2025 to weigh on results .
- A ~$5 million negative valuation adjustment on an owned office facility weighed on expenses; auto note finance credits drove $3.6 million of net charge-offs within the quarter .
Financial Results
Core Financials vs Prior Periods
Estimates vs Actuals (S&P Global)
Note: S&P Global consensus estimates were unavailable for this period due to data access constraints.
Segment Breakdown (Q4 2024)
KPIs and Operating Drivers
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Favorable operating results from the banking and broker-dealer business units helped to produce a quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year increase in pretax income.” — Jeremy B. Ford .
- “Net interest margin declined... we are pleased that net interest income remained stable versus the third quarter as overall deposit costs declined.” — William B. Furr .
- “Asset sensitivity remained elevated… targeting 2–4% asset sensitive position over time.” — Company presentation .
- “PrimeLending realized a 24% increase in origination volume vs Q4 2023 but continued to face a challenging mortgage market.” — Jeremy B. Ford .
Q&A Highlights
- Buybacks/capital: Management plans to be active under the new $100MM authorization during open windows; no ASR planned; priorities unchanged despite expected merchant banking gain .
- Loan growth outlook: Pipelines are stronger but fundings lag; expect retaining $10–$30MM/month of PrimeLending hybrid mortgages ($120–$360MM/year) to support 2%–5% loan growth .
- NII guide sensitivity: Assumes two Fed cuts; fewer cuts would improve NII given asset sensitivity; deposit repricing continues with maturing CDs and lower offered rates .
- Asset sensitivity strategy: Reinvest $250–$300MM of securities cash flows at ~4.50%–4.75% vs ~3.10% current yield; increase retention of 3/5/7-year hybrid ARMs; reduce PCB sweep deposits; lower excess Fed cash to $300–$750MM target .
- Deposits: Q4 benefited from episodic client inflows; expect normalization in Q1; ongoing focus on treasury services and operating accounts .
- Credit: Specific CRE upgrades; cautious stance given rates and utilization; auto note portfolio remains under close watch .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus EPS and revenue estimates for Q4 2024 were unavailable due to data access constraints; therefore, no formal beat/miss assessment is provided. Based on reported results, EPS and pre-tax income improved YoY while NIM compressed QoQ, which could drive mixed estimate revisions (up for EPS, cautious on NIM-sensitive metrics) .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Banking momentum (deposit growth, lower deposit costs) and strong capital ratios provide resilience as NIM pressures persist; asset sensitivity is being methodically reduced via securities reinvestment and mortgage retention .
- Broker-Dealer’s diversified fee streams (public finance, structured finance, wealth) delivered a 16% pre-tax margin; expect continued volatility tied to rates, liquidity, and state DPA programs .
- Mortgage origination volumes improved YoY, but profitability remains challenged; management is resizing fixed costs and leveraging hybrid ARM retention to stabilize earnings .
- Capital return accelerates: dividend increased to $0.18 and $100MM buyback authorization; debt redemption reduces interest expense and adds flexibility; merchant banking sale expected to add $23–$27MM net in Q1 .
- 2025 guide sets realistic guardrails (loans/deposits +2%–5%, NII down 0%–2%, provision 20–30 bps, tax 22%–24%); fewer-than-assumed Fed cuts would be a positive for NII given asset sensitivity .
- Near-term trading: Watch for Q1 deposit normalization and mortgage seasonality; medium-term thesis hinges on executing balance sheet repositioning and sustaining Broker-Dealer margins amid rate path uncertainty .