OB
OFG BANCORP (OFG)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 delivered diluted EPS of $1.09 on total core revenues of $181.9M, up vs Q3 ($1.00; $174.1M) and YoY ($0.98; $175.6M), aided by lower taxes and higher non-interest income from MSR valuation and annual insurance commissions .
- Net interest margin held at 5.40% (5.43% in Q3), with loan and investment yields offsetting lower cash balances; pre-provision net revenues were $83.0M (vs $83.1M in Q3) .
- Credit costs rose: provision for credit losses increased to $30.2M (vs $21.4M in Q3), including a $7.6M specific reserve for four U.S. commercial loans and a $5.7M qualitative adjustment for rising auto delinquencies; net charge-offs were 0.82% of average loans, improving vs Q3 (0.90%) .
- Capital return and dividend signals remain supportive: $45.9M buybacks in Q4 (authorization remaining $29.7M) and post-quarter dividend increased 20% to $0.30 per share for Q1 2025, potential near-term stock catalysts alongside NIM guidance stability (5.30–5.40%) and 2025 ETR outlook at ~26% .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strong core revenue and EPS growth: Q4 core revenues rose to $181.9M (+4.5% QoQ; +3.6% YoY) with diluted EPS at $1.09 (+9% QoQ; +11.2% YoY) on lower tax expense and higher fee income; CEO highlighted “consistent and excellent operational execution” and Digital First strategy gains .
- Non-interest income uplift: banking and financial services revenues climbed to $32.8M (+$6.5M QoQ), driven by $4.8M favorable MSR valuation, $2.1M annual insurance commission recognition, and ~$0.8M contribution from acquired PR mortgage servicing portfolio .
- Deposit franchise and digital adoption: commercial/retail deposits increased ex-government; management cited rational competition, traction of Libre and Elite accounts, and 12% YoY growth in digital enrollment supporting low-cost funding and efficiency .
What Went Wrong
- Elevated credit costs and reserves: provision rose to $30.2M (from $21.4M) on loan growth, a $7.6M specific reserve on 4 U.S. C&I loans, and a $5.7M qualitative adjustment for auto delinquency trends; allowance increased to 2.26% of loans .
- Higher operating expenses: total non-interest expense jumped to $99.7M (+$8.1M QoQ), including $3.4M for early retirement/rightsizing and $1.4M annual incentives; efficiency ratio worsened to 54.82% (vs 52.60% in Q3) .
- Demand deposit mix pressure and higher wholesale funding: customer demand deposits fell QoQ, and total borrowings & brokered deposits rose to $557.2M EOP (vs $346.5M in Q3), reflecting liquidity positioning amid government deposit declines .
Financial Results
*Estimates unavailable at time of research due to S&P Global request limit; comparisons to consensus cannot be provided now. Values would be retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment and Fee Components
Key KPIs and Balance Sheet
Credit Quality Snapshot
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We demonstrated consistent and excellent operational execution on our plans, with our Digital First strategy helping to grow our banking franchise and market share.” — CEO José Rafael Fernández .
- “We remain with the similar guidance that we provided in the third quarter. We’re looking at a [NIM] range between 5.3% to 5.40%... the investment portfolio will mitigate most of that impact.” — CFO Maritza Arizmendi .
- “Provision around $18 million to $20 million a quarter… assuming all things remain equal.” — CEO José Rafael Fernández .
- “Credit quality continues to be stable… NCOs benefited from a $2.6 million recovery from the sale of fully charged-off auto and consumer loans.” — CFO Maritza Arizmendi .
- “We love to operate with good capital… deploy in loans, dividends, buybacks… 2025 relatively the same.” — CEO José Rafael Fernández .
Q&A Highlights
- Margin outlook and deposit competition: Management expects NIM 5.30–5.40% into 2025, supported by extended investment portfolio; deposit market rational but competitive (credit unions offering higher yields), with product-led growth in core deposits .
- Expense trajectory: Quarterly non-interest expense expected at $95–$96M in 2025, reflecting tech investment and electronic banking fees; without Q4 one-offs, the efficiency ratio would have been ~52.18% .
- Reserves and credit: $7.6M specific reserve on four U.S. C&I loans (unique borrower issues) and $5.7M qualitative auto overlay; outlook for provision ~$18–$20M per quarter, with PR macro steady and seasonal delinquency expected to improve in Q1 .
- Tax rate guidance: 2025 ETR ~26% (2024 ETR ~24% excluding discrete items) .
- Capital allocation and M&A: Continued emphasis on loan growth, dividend increases, and methodical buybacks; U.S. strategy remains loan participations for diversification rather than bank acquisitions .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus for Q4 2024 EPS and revenue was unavailable during this session due to an API limit; thus, we cannot assess beats/misses vs the Street at this time. We will update comparisons when consensus data can be retrieved. Values would be sourced from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Core earnings quality improved with lower tax expense and diversified non-interest income; NIM guidance stability (5.30–5.40%) plus extended-duration MBS purchases should support margin resilience in a potential easing cycle .
- Watch credit costs: elevated provision tied to specific U.S. C&I credits and auto trends; management proactively increased reserves, guiding to ~$18–$20M quarterly provision run-rate in 2025 .
- Deposit mix normalization: government deposit declines offset by commercial/retail growth; rational competitive environment, with product-led customer growth underpinning sticky core deposits .
- Operating leverage trade-off near term: higher quarterly OpEx ($95–$96M) reflects tech investment and scaling of electronic banking; efficiencies from Digital First execution support medium-term returns .
- Capital return remains constructive: Q4 buybacks ($45.9M) and a 20% dividend increase post-quarter to $0.30 signal confidence in earnings power and capital levels; look for methodical buyback execution through 2025 .
- Puerto Rico macro tailwinds and federal infrastructure funds continue to support loan production and fee opportunities; management views disbursement risk as manageable given obligation levels .
- Near-term trading implications: headline strength from EPS uplift and dividend increase versus caution on higher provision/OpEx; medium-term thesis centers on margin durability, digital-driven efficiency, and disciplined capital deployment .