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Sterling Bancorp, Inc. (SBT)·Q3 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2024 results were essentially flat to slightly negative: net loss of $0.1M (diluted EPS $0.00) as higher deposit costs compressed NIM to 2.30% from 2.44% in Q2; noninterest expense rose on deal-related professional fees .
- Net interest income fell to $13.6M (−5% q/q; −15% y/y) as average interest-bearing deposit balances rose $42.0M and deposit rates increased 15 bps; partially offset by higher yields on loans/securities .
- Strategic catalyst: on September 15 the Company agreed to sell Sterling Bank & Trust to EverBank for $261.0M and adopted a plan of dissolution, with closing expected in Q1 2025, driving focus on capital preservation and liquidity .
- Asset quality remained solid though nonperforming loans rose modestly to $13.2M (1.08% of total loans; 0.54% of assets); allowance coverage of nonaccruals declined to 189% as the CRE allowance was reduced amid strong portfolio credit quality .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Commercial real estate loan yields increased 46 bps q/q, with CRE balances up $29.7M (11%), reflecting origination at higher yields and portfolio growth .
- Liquidity and capital remained strong: cash and due from banks increased to $710.4M; consolidated leverage ratio at 14.18% and the Bank at 13.72% (both well-capitalized) .
- Strategic clarity: announced sale of the Bank to EverBank and plan of dissolution to unlock value and streamline structure, aligning with prior management emphasis on protecting book value and financial position. “Our focus remains fixed on protecting book value… and increase net income… Credit quality remains strong as do our capital ratios.” — Thomas M. O’Brien (Q2) .
What Went Wrong
- Margin compression persisted: NIM fell to 2.30% (−14 bps q/q; −32 bps y/y) as time deposits rose $67.0M and the rate paid on deposits increased 15 bps q/q, lifting interest expense by $1.3M .
- Noninterest expense increased to $15.6M (+5% q/q) driven by $0.9M higher professional fees (deal-related), and salary/benefits +$0.3M; efficiency ratio deteriorated to 111.52% .
- Tax expense of $0.9M included a $0.6M correction to reverse a prior state tax position on U.S. government interest deductibility, pressuring bottom line despite credit loss recoveries .
Financial Results
Segment breakdown — Loans held for investment:
Key KPIs — Asset quality and capital:
Deposits and liquidity:
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Note: No Q3 2024 earnings call transcript found in company filings; Q1 and Q2 had calls/webcasts.
Management Commentary
- “Sterling’s first quarter of 2024 financial results are essentially break-even… We believe Sterling’s credit quality, liquidity and capital levels are robust… market interest rate movements continue to exert pressure on the margin as deposit costs have increased somewhat faster than earning asset yields” — Thomas M. O’Brien, Chairman, President & CEO (Q1) .
- “Our focus remains fixed on protecting book value and Sterling’s financial position… Credit quality remains strong as do our capital ratios… Deposit levels remain essentially flat… residential portfolio continues to decline… growth in our commercial portfolio” — Thomas M. O’Brien (Q2) .
- Q3 press release emphasized underlying drivers: higher interest expense from deposit rate/balance increases, improved yields on loans/securities, and deal-related professional fees, as well as a tax correction impacting results .
Q&A Highlights
- No Q3 2024 earnings call transcript was available in company filings or the investor relations press release; Q1 and Q2 featured calls/webcasts but none was identified for Q3 .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus EPS and revenue estimates for Q3 2024 were unavailable for SBT in our SPGI mapping; as a result, comparisons to Wall Street consensus could not be performed. Actual diluted EPS was $0.00; net interest income $13.6M; NIM 2.30% .
- Implication: With no formal consensus, buyside will anchor on sequential and y/y trends; margin trajectory and deposit cost dynamics are the primary variables for forward expectations .
Values retrieved from S&P Global were unavailable for this ticker due to missing mapping.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term EPS pressure is driven by deposit repricing and mix (time deposits up $67.0M; rate paid +15 bps q/q) compressing NIM to 2.30%; watch rate path and deposit competition for relief .
- CRE growth at higher yields (balances +11%; yield +46 bps q/q) partially offsets residential runoff and supports NII stabilization into Q4 absent further rate spikes .
- Strong liquidity ($710.4M cash) and well-capitalized status provide resiliency amid strategic transition; balance sheet optionality remains high .
- Deal execution is the primary catalyst: $261.0M EverBank sale and post-close dissolution expected Q1 2025; monitor shareholder/regulatory approvals and any updated timeline signals .
- Credit remains controlled (recoveries; ACL/loans 2.04%) though NPLs ticked up; coverage of nonaccruals declined as CRE allowance was right-sized — a sign of confidence in portfolio credit quality .
- Noninterest expense bears deal-related costs (+$0.9M professional fees); expect elevated opex through closing, then normalization post-transaction .
- Tax items can be lumpy (state tax correction +$0.6M); modelers should account for potential one-offs in tax lines near-term .
Additional Relevant Press Releases (Q3 2024 period)
- Sterling Bancorp Reports Third Quarter 2024 Financial Results — October 30, 2024 .
- Sterling Bancorp Announces Sale of Sterling Bank and Trust, F.S.B. to EverBank Financial Corp and Adoption of Plan of Dissolution — September 16, 2024 .
Appendix: Data Drivers and Explanations
- NII decline q/q: +$1.3M interest expense from higher deposit balances/rates, partially offset by +$0.6M interest income from higher securities/other earning assets; loan yields up with CRE contribution .
- Opex uptick: +$0.9M professional fees (transaction-related), +$0.3M salaries; offset by lower other expenses (−$0.5M) .
- Tax: $0.9M expense includes $0.6M reversal of a prior state tax position (U.S. government interest deductibility), impacting bottom line .