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HANCOCK WHITNEY CORP (HWC)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- EPS of $1.49 beat Wall Street consensus of $1.43*, driven by higher fee income and stable NIM; revenue was below consensus on S&P methodology, while company-reported GAAP revenue rose to $385.7M* .
- NIM (TE) held at 3.49% and efficiency improved to 54.10%; ROA was 1.46% and ROTCE 15.00%, reflecting operating discipline .
- Capital strengthened: CET1 14.08%, TCE 10.01%; the company repurchased 662,500 shares at ~$60.45, and signaled similar buyback dollars in Q4 .
- Guidance largely maintained; Adjusted PPNR growth trimmed to 5–6% (from 6–7% previously), with modest NIM expansion expected in Q4 and NII up 3–4% for FY25 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
- What Went Well
- Fee income strength: noninterest income rose $7.5M QoQ (+8%), with record investment/annuity and higher trust fees (Sabal Trust contribution) . CEO: “another quarter of exceptionally strong performance… continued improvement in profitability” .
- Margin and efficiency stability: NIM (TE) 3.49% flat QoQ; efficiency ratio improved 81 bps to 54.10% . CFO: “our efficiency ratio continued to improve… 54.1% this quarter” .
- Credit moderation: criticized commercial loans decreased to $549M; net charge-offs fell to 0.19% of average loans . CCO: seeing “return to moderation in criticized loans” as resolutions outpace inflows .
- What Went Wrong
- Revenue vs consensus: S&P “actual” revenue printed below consensus*, creating a headline miss despite company-reported GAAP revenue growth .
- Deposits declined $387M LQA; DDA fell $334M due to seasonality and outflows, partly offset by interest-bearing growth .
- Nonaccrual loans increased to $113.6M (0.48% of loans); line utilization fell ~90 bps on early project completions and larger-than-normal client M&A/payoffs .
Financial Results
Noninterest Income Breakdown ($USD Millions)
Balance Sheet & Capital KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategy and performance: “We saw continued improvement in profitability… ROA was a remarkable 1.46%… efficiency ratio improved to 54.10%, and our NIM was stable at 3.49%” — John M. Hairston, CEO .
- Capital deployment: “Earnings contributed to growth in all of our capital ratios, while we continued to deploy capital through… repurchasing 662,500 shares” .
- Organic growth plan: “We remain committed to executing on our organic growth plan… repurchasing… and opening five new locations in the Dallas market” .
- Cost control: “Expenses remained well controlled… efficiency ratio reached 54.1%” — CFO .
- M&A stance: “Our stance on M&A hasn’t changed… we’re not really focused on that right now at all” — CFO .
Q&A Highlights
- Loan growth vs paydowns: Management detailed strong production (up 6% QoQ, +46% YoY) but heavier paydowns (industrial projects finishing early; client sales to larger firms) and intends to add more bankers to offset persistent paydowns .
- Capital return: Expect repurchases at roughly the same dollar level (~$40M) in Q4; potential dividend discussion in January; CET1 operating comfort 11–11.5% longer term, but no active program to reduce capital to that range .
- Deposit pricing and competition: Proactive rate cuts on CDs/MM; spot cost of deposits 1.63% in Sept; competitive landscape “better behaved” than prior cycles; expecting seasonal public fund inflows in Q4 .
- Margin outlook: Modest NIM expansion expected in Q4; loan yields to drift down with rate cuts; deposit costs to decline with repricing .
Estimates Context
Consensus vs Actual (S&P Global)
Estimate Track Record
Note: Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global. Company-reported total GAAP revenue in Q3 2025 was $385.739M, which differs from S&P’s “actual” revenue basis used above .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- EPS beat (1.49 vs 1.43*) with stable NIM and improved efficiency underscores resilient earnings power amid falling rates .
- Fee engines (trust, investment/annuity) are driving top-line diversification; Sabal Trust integration adds incremental trust revenue .
- Credit metrics remain manageable: criticized loans down, NCOs lower; nonaccruals ticked up but coverage (ACL 1.45%) steady .
- Capital robust (CET1 14.08%, TCE 10.01%); continued buybacks (~$40M target in Q4 discussed) provide shareholder return and support per-share metrics .
- Guidance intact except PPNR trimmed to 5–6% from 6–7%; modest NIM expansion expected in Q4, with FY25 NII up 3–4% .
- Near-term trading catalysts: seasonal Q4 deposit inflows, CD repricing lower, and fee seasonality (transaction-related fees lighten into holidays per management) .
- Medium-term thesis: multi-year organic growth plan (Dallas expansion, banker hiring) aims to offset persistent paydowns and sustain loan growth, while fee franchises and disciplined cost management support profitability .
Additional items: The Board declared a regular Q4 2025 dividend of $0.45 per share (payable Dec 15, 2025; record Dec 5, 2025) .