FW
First Western Financial Inc (MYFW)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 delivered sequential operating improvement: diluted EPS rose to $0.28 from $0.22 in Q3, supported by 8.3% q/q growth in net interest income and 13 bps NIM expansion to 2.45% .
- “Gross revenue” (non‑GAAP) increased 4.6% q/q to $23.8M; efficiency ratio improved ~425 bps q/q to 80.7% on higher NII and expense discipline despite a $1.1M OREO write-down (≈$0.08 EPS drag) .
- Credit trends improved: NPAs fell to 1.68% of assets (from 1.79% in Q3), NPLs declined to $13.1M; the largest OREO property is under contract with expected 1Q25 close, a catalyst to redeploy cash into interest‑earning assets .
- Deposits increased modestly q/q and average deposits rose 4% q/q; deposit costs continued to fall (spot cost of deposits exited Q4 at ~3.05%), positioning for further NIM expansion in 2025 even without rate cuts, per management .
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q4 2024 was unavailable at query time; beats/misses cannot be assessed and should be monitored post‑print (we will track once available).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- NIM expansion and NII growth: NIM rose to 2.45% from 2.32% in Q3 (December spot ~2.47%); NII grew 8.3% q/q as deposit costs fell faster than asset yields .
- Fee momentum in insurance: Record risk management & insurance fees of $1.14M (2x y/y) offset seasonal mortgage softness; management sees this as a lever to restore fee/NII balance over time .
- Credit and balance sheet progress: NPLs fell to $13.1M and NPAs to 1.68% of assets; largest OREO property under contract for an early‑February close, enabling redeployment into earning assets .
- CEO: “We…had another quarter of immaterial charge-offs…[and] continued to make progress on resolving the large nonperforming relationship…the largest…is now under contract for sale” .
What Went Wrong
- OREO write-down: $1.1M OREO write-down from updated appraisals pressured expenses and EPS by ~8c in Q4 .
- Mortgage seasonality and rates: Higher rates and typical Q4 seasonality drove a 35% decline in mortgage lock volume q/q, reducing mortgage gains .
- Expense level still elevated: Non‑interest expense rose 5.5% q/q to $20.4M (incl. OREO charge); while management targets ~$20M quarterly opex in 2025, this is higher than the ~$19.5M indicated previously .
Financial Results
Note: “Gross revenue” is a non‑GAAP measure defined by the company.
Revenue mix and select fees:
Key balance sheet and credit KPIs (period end unless noted):
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “We…generated further improvement in…profitability…growth in net interest income…highest level of insurance fees we have ever recorded…strong expense control…[and] positive trends in our asset quality” .
- CEO (outlook): “We believe…well positioned to deliver improved financial performance in 2025…driven by…loan and deposit growth, net interest margin, non-interest income, and more operating leverage…plus redeployment of cash from OREO sales” .
- CFO: “We feel…opportunity to continue to expand our margin through 2025 without rate cuts…roughly $1M of annualized NII increase per 25 bps reduction” .
- CFO (exit rates): “For the month of December, [NIM] was at 2.47%…we will continue to see NIM expansion in 2025” .
- CEO (deposit costs): “Spot rate on deposits at end of December was 3.05%” .
- CEO (OREO): “We’re carrying the ranch below the price…under contract…that would be a first quarter impact” .
- CEO (strategy): “The shift to offense at First Western will make 2025 a really good year…with modest growth, improved margins, fewer non‑earning assets, improved fee income and limiting expense growth” .
Q&A Highlights
- OREO resolution pathway: Largest ranch property under contract with expected early‑Feb close; carried below contract price; remaining two properties are smaller and may sell post‑winter, timing uncertain .
- NIM/Deposit costs: December NIM ~2.47%; deposit spot cost ~3.05%; money market beta ~85% on the way down as cuts flow through, supporting 2025 NIM expansion .
- Expense outlook: Q4 non‑interest expense elevated by OREO write‑down; 2025 quarterly opex “reasonable guesstimate” ~$20M (vs. prior ~$19.5M target) .
- Loan pipelines: Material increase in C&I and owner‑occupied CRE pipelines; conservative underwriting maintained .
- Fee income: Record insurance fees; mortgage expected to benefit from additional MLOs if demand improves in 2025 .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global (Capital IQ) consensus estimates for Q4 2024 were unavailable at the time of query due to provider limits; consequently, we cannot assess beats/misses vs. Street this quarter. We will update when SPGI consensus becomes accessible.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- NIM inflecting with tangible tailwinds: falling deposit costs (spot ~3.05%), deposit mix improvement, and OREO cash redeployment should support continued NIM expansion through 2025 even absent further cuts; every 25 bps cut adds ~+$1M annualized NII .
- Credit/capital overhang easing: NPAs and NPLs declined; largest OREO under contract with expected 1Q25 close—catalyst to convert non‑earning assets into loans/securities and lift earnings power .
- Expense trajectory manageable: OREO write‑down obscured underlying cost control; 2025 opex guided around $20M/quarter with potential operating leverage from revenue growth and tech/process initiatives .
- Fee diversification: Record insurance fees offset mortgage seasonality—scope to move back toward a more balanced fee/NII mix as Wealth Management initiatives and MLO additions contribute .
- Deposit franchise strengthening: Average deposits rose 4% q/q; management focused on DDA growth and disciplined pricing; deposit betas indicate room for further cost improvement .
- Medium‑term setup: With NIM expansion, lower NPAs, and balance sheet repositioning, MYFW appears positioned for sequential EPS improvement in 2025; key watch items are OREO monetization timing and expense discipline .
- Trading implications: Near‑term stock moves may hinge on confirmation of OREO close and NIM trajectory in Q1 updates; continued insurance fee strength and mortgage green shoots would add upside optionality .