SM
SOUTHERN MISSOURI BANCORP, INC. (SMBC)·Q1 2026 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- SMBC delivered Q1 FY26 diluted EPS of $1.38, up 25.5% year over year and down $0.01 sequentially, as net interest margin expanded to 3.57% and net interest income grew 15.7% YoY; efficiency improved to 51.1% from 59.0% a year ago .
- Against S&P Global consensus, EPS beat by ~$0.07 ($1.38 vs $1.31*), while standardized “revenue” missed by ~$4.1M ($44.5M* actual vs $48.6M* est.); note SPGI’s revenue methodology may differ from company presentation. Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Credit costs elevated: PCL rose to $4.5M (vs $2.2M YoY and $2.5M QoQ) amid higher reserves and specific charges, with NPLs at 0.62% and net charge-offs of 0.36% annualized; management expects charge-offs and provisioning to trend lower than the past two quarters absent new issues .
- Loans grew $91.2M (+2.2%) QoQ on non-owner-occupied CRE, 1-4 family, multifamily and C&I; deposits were flat QoQ as the bank leaned less on promotional pricing; TBV/share rose to $43.35; quarterly dividend of $0.25 declared .
- Potential near-term stock catalysts: continued NIM expansion despite seasonal margin headwinds, visible buyback appetite (~200k shares authorized), and stabilization of credit metrics; management guides to mid-single-digit FY26 loan growth and expects to remain a net beneficiary of potential rate cuts .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Pre-provision earnings momentum: NIM expanded to 3.57% (up 10 bps QoQ; +23 bps YoY) and net interest income rose to $42.4M (+5.2% QoQ; +15.7% YoY), driving improved efficiency (51.1%) despite fee headwinds .
- Expense discipline and accounting refinements: Noninterest expense fell 3.1% YoY to $25.1M; ASC 310‑20 changes deferred ~$1.6M of fee income but more than offset by ~$1.9M of deferred expenses, with only a ~$55k net income benefit; management called this a new baseline for run-rate expenses .
- Strategic contract renegotiation: $572k consulting cost (after-tax $444k; ~$0.04 per share) to renegotiate a key vendor contract, with expected payback <18 months via higher bank card interchange revenue; “we estimate a less than 18‑month earned back of the expense” (Matt Funke) .
What Went Wrong
- Higher credit costs and problem assets: PCL rose to $4.5M as allowance coverage adjusted and specific loans migrated to nonaccrual; NPLs increased to $26.0M (0.62% of loans) with net charge-offs of $3.7M (0.36% annualized), primarily a special‑purpose CRE relationship charge‑off .
- Fee income pressure: Noninterest income decreased 8.4% YoY to $6.6M, driven by lower SBA production/sales and ASC 310‑20 fee recognition changes; bank card interchange also normalized QoQ after a Q4 network incentive .
- Seasonal/structural margin headwinds ahead: Management flagged typical December/March seasonal deposit inflows and slower loan growth that can weigh on reported margin, even as they still expect net interest income to grow through the year (liability-sensitive profile but more neutral near term) .
Financial Results
Sequential trend (Q3 FY25 → Q4 FY25 → Q1 FY26)
Year-over-year comparison (Q1 FY25 → Q1 FY26)
Loan portfolio composition (period-end balances)
Key KPIs and balance sheet
Estimates vs Actuals (S&P Global standardization)
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Note: S&P Global “revenue” may differ from company-presented totals due to standardization.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We feel we have good momentum on pre-provision net revenue to start the year, and we're optimistic about how we'll perform in the new fiscal year.” – Matt Funke .
- “Overall, through the seasonal cycle, we expect to remain liability-sensitive and a net beneficiary of rate cuts over a four-year period.” – Stefan Chkautovich .
- “We would be surprised if charge-off activity remained at the level of the last two quarters… we’re not anticipating, based on what we know today, provisioning to be as high as it was this quarter.” – Greg Steffens .
- “We would anticipate [being] more active [on] buybacks… we still have ~200,000 shares authorized for repurchase.” – Management Q&A .
- “ASC 310‑20 changes… defer more fees and expenses… resulted in recognizing $55,000 in additional net income this quarter… this is a good baseline to start from.” – Stefan Chkautovich .
Q&A Highlights
- Credit outlook: Management expects charge-offs and provisioning to decline from the last two quarters absent unforeseen issues; specific special‑purpose CRE charge-offs largely realized .
- Margin and rate sensitivity: Still liability-sensitive overall; more neutral near term with deposit inflows; ~1–3% NII benefit per 100 bps cuts .
- Expense run-rate: ASC 310‑20 creates a new lower baseline for noninterest expense; modest step-up expected with annual merit increases in Q3 .
- Loan growth and pipeline: Pipeline remains strong (~$195M to fund in 90 days), but seasonality implies slower growth in the December/March quarters; mid-single-digit FY26 target reiterated .
- Deposits and funding mix: Less aggressive on CDs, plan to reduce brokered deposits; seasonal ag/public unit inflows expected next quarter .
Estimates Context
- EPS beat: $1.38 vs $1.31* consensus; beat driven by NIM expansion (+10 bps QoQ), stronger NII (+5.2% QoQ), and lower operating expenses, partially offset by higher PCL and lower fee income .
- Revenue miss (SPGI standardization): $44.5M* vs $48.6M*; company-reported net interest income of $42.4M and noninterest income of $6.6M reflect different presentation vs SPGI’s standardized “revenue” . Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Revisions risk: Seasonal margin headwinds (Dec/Mar) and elevated (but declining) credit costs could temper near-term revenue lines, though management expects NII growth and mid-single-digit loan growth through FY26 .
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Core profitability improved: NIM at 3.57% and efficiency at 51.1% underpin solid pre-provision earnings power despite fee pressure; EPS up 25.5% YoY .
- Credit normalization ongoing but contained: NPLs 0.62%, net charge-offs 0.36% annualized; management anticipates lower charge-offs/provisioning ahead absent new issues .
- Loan growth durable: +2.2% QoQ with a healthy near-term pipeline and mid-single-digit FY26 outlook; deposit strategy reduces rate-paid risk while lowering brokered reliance .
- Rate path leverage: Liability-sensitive balance sheet implies 1–3% NII uplift per 100 bps rate cuts over time, though near-term seasonality can weigh on margin .
- Capital return: Dividend maintained at $0.25; repurchases likely to be more active given valuation and 3-year earn-back discipline; ~200k shares authorized .
- Watch list: Seasonal margin pressure in Q2/Q3 (Dec/Mar), ag borrower cash flows under lower commodity prices, and CRE-specific workouts are the key near-term swing factors .
- Stock setup: Catalysts include continued NIM expansion/NII growth, visible buyback execution, and signs of credit stabilization; misses would likely stem from sharper-than-expected fee softness or renewed credit migration .
Notes on non-GAAP/other items:
- Tangible book value/share rose to $43.35 (+13.3% YoY) **[916907_0001104659-25-101604_smbc-20251022xex99d1.htm:11]**.
- $572k consulting cost in Q1 reduced EPS by ~$0.04; management expects <18-month payback via higher interchange fees **[916907_0001104659-25-101604_smbc-20251022xex99d1.htm:1]** **[0000916907_2199325_1]**.
- ASC 310‑20 changes shift timing of fee and expense recognition, minimally impacting net income this quarter (~$55k) and establishing a new expense baseline **[0000916907_2199325_6]**.