MB
Merchants Bancorp (MBIN)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 diluted EPS was $0.93, down 48% year over year and 50% sequentially; results were pressured by delayed originations/permanent loan conversions, lower gain-on-sale, NIM compression, and unfavorable fair value marks on servicing rights and floor derivatives (approx. $0.05 per diluted share drag) .
- Revenue drivers softened: Net interest income fell to $122.2m (−4% YoY, −9% QoQ), total noninterest income fell to $23.7m (−42% YoY, −60% QoQ), and net interest margin compressed to 2.89% (from 3.14% YoY; 2.99% QoQ) .
- Asset quality deteriorated: nonperforming loans rose to $284.6m (2.73% of loans) vs. $131.8m (1.22%) YoY and $279.7m (2.68%) QoQ; charge-offs were $10.5m in Q1, primarily in multi-family; ACL was $83.4m .
- Balance sheet mix improved: core deposits rose to $10.7b (86% of total), brokered deposits fell to $1.7b (−70% YoY), liquidity remained robust with $4.7b of unused borrowing capacity (25% of assets) .
- Stock reaction catalysts: stabilization in NPLs, resumption of permanent loan conversions and gain-on-sale volume, and normalization of fair value marks could support EPS recovery; management emphasized confidence in the pipeline and execution once rate uncertainty clears .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Core deposit growth and funding mix: Core deposits reached $10.7b and 86% of total deposits, the highest since March 2022, while brokered deposits dropped to $1.7b (−70% YoY), improving funding stability .
- Tangible book value per share: TBV rose to a record $34.90 (+19% YoY; +2% QoQ), evidencing capital build despite earnings pressure .
- Liquidity and credit protection: Unused borrowing lines totaled $4.7b; credit-linked note and CDS coverage remained on $2.2b of loans (13–14% coverage on CRT arrangements), providing loss protection and capital efficiency .
Quoted management commentary:
- “Despite some challenges this quarter, we remain confident… Our loan pipeline remains strong, and we are well‑positioned to execute when the uncertain interest rate environment becomes clearer for our borrowers.” — Michael F. Petrie, Chairman & CEO .
- “As we move forward, we are focused on enhancing our operations and investing in our people and processes to ensure long-term success.” — Michael J. Dunlap, President & COO .
What Went Wrong
- Earnings miss vs consensus: EPS $0.93 vs consensus $1.28; company “decrease primarily driven by” lower gain-on-sale, NIM compression, higher noninterest expense, higher loan loss provision, and unfavorable valuation adjustments .
- NIM and spread compression: NIM fell to 2.89% (−25 bps YoY, −10 bps QoQ); interest rate spread decreased to 2.38% (−20 bps YoY, −8 bps QoQ), impacted by mix shift to lower-margin warehouse loans and lower yields .
- Asset quality deterioration: Nonperforming loans increased to $284.6m (2.73% of loans) driven by multi-family and healthcare borrowers facing higher floating-rate payments and sponsor deterioration; Q1 charge-offs were $10.5m .
Financial Results
Income Statement and Margins
Segment Net Income
Key Performance Indicators (Balance Sheet and Credit)
Actual vs Wall Street Consensus (Q1 2025)
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Guidance Changes
Note: Company did not issue quantitative revenue/margin guidance in Q1 materials; capital actions included redemption of Series B preferred on Jan 2, 2025 (~$125m) .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
No Q1 2025 earnings call transcript was available in the document catalog; themes below reflect company disclosures across Q3 2024, Q4 2024, and Q1 2025 press materials.
Management Commentary
- Strategic posture: Management emphasized confidence in strategy and pipeline, viewing lower gain-on-sale and asset quality deterioration as temporary; execution expected to improve as rate uncertainty abates .
- Operational focus: Commitment to enhancing operations and investing in people/processes to ensure long-term success; culture highlighted as a driver of resilience .
- Capital actions: Redemption of Series B preferred (~$125m) reduced net income available to common due to recognition of issuance costs and excise tax impact .
Key quotes:
- “The lower gain on sale of loans and recent deterioration in asset quality are temporary setbacks… we are well‑positioned to execute when the uncertain interest rate environment becomes clearer.” — Michael F. Petrie .
- “Together, we are committed to building a stronger foundation for future growth and delivering value to our stakeholders and communities.” — Michael J. Dunlap .
Q&A Highlights
No Q1 2025 earnings call transcript was available; no Q&A observed in the document set [Search returned none].
Estimates Context
- EPS missed consensus: $0.93 actual vs $1.28 consensus; primary drivers were lower gain-on-sale, NIM compression, higher opex (credit risk transfer premium, deposit insurance), higher loan loss provision, and negative MSR/derivative marks .
- Revenue missed consensus: S&P “Revenue” actual $138.16m vs $169.00m consensus; company-reported “Total income” was $145.9m (net interest income + noninterest income) .
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Where estimates may adjust:
- Potential downward revisions to near-term EPS and revenue if conversion delays persist and asset quality remains elevated; upside if permanent loan conversions resume and fair value marks normalize (management expects execution to improve as rate clarity emerges) .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Earnings reset driven by mix/NIM compression and valuation marks; watch for resumption of permanent loan conversions and multi-family gain-on-sale normalization as key EPS levers .
- Funding strength is improving: core deposits up materially and brokered deposits down; supportive to NIM stabilization over time .
- Asset quality is the near-term swing factor: NPLs higher with multi-family/healthcare variable-rate stress; monitor charge-off cadence and specific reserves vs collateral .
- Credit protection (CRT/CDS) provides a buffer against losses and aids capital efficiency, but underlying loan performance still matters; covered balance ~$2.2b .
- TBV per share continues to build, offering downside support; liquidity and borrowing capacity are ample (25% of assets) .
- Short-term trading: headline misses vs consensus and NPL headlines can pressure the stock; catalysts include improved pipeline closings, positive MSR/derivative marks, and signs of NPL stabilization .
- Medium-term: If deposit mix improvements persist and CRT/CDS strategy contains losses, the model’s earnings power can rebound as loan pipelines convert and fee income (gain-on-sale) recovers .