Bancorp, Inc. (TBBK)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 EPS came in at $1.19, up 12% y/y but below S&P Global consensus of $1.24 (3 estimates), as NIM compressed to 4.07% (vs 5.15% y/y; 4.55% q/q) amid a mix-driven uptick in deposit costs and lower loan yields; management reaffirmed FY25 EPS guidance of $5.25 . EPS actual $1.19 vs consensus $1.2367* (S&P Global); NIM drivers discussed by management .
- Revenue (S&P Global basis) beat: $128.53M actual vs $107.72M consensus*, supported by 26% growth in total fintech fees and recognition of offsetting consumer fintech credit enhancement income; ex-credit enhancement, noninterest income rose 29% y/y to $37.8M and GDV rose 18% y/y to $44.65B .
- Fintech credit sponsorship balances reached ~$574M at quarter-end (up 26% q/q), with management expecting >$1B by YE25; fees largely flow through noninterest income today, with some programs migrating to interest income over time .
- Asset quality remained stable in core books; REBL criticized assets are at/near peak and expected to decline over coming quarters; OREO sale remains on track pending buyer-related ownership change, with management still confident in closing .
- Potential stock catalysts: confirmed FY25 EPS guide of $5.25, expected NIM improvement in Q2 as higher-cost insurance-related deposits roll off and offloading of higher-cost deposits continues, and accelerating fintech credit sponsorship trajectory .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Fintech growth and monetization: GDV +18% y/y to $44.65B, fintech fees +26% y/y (ACH/card/other +13% to $30.8M; consumer credit fintech fees $3.6M), reflecting organic partner growth and new client adds .
- Credit sponsorship scaling: Balances up ~26% q/q to ~$574M; management expects >$1B by YE25; CFO reiterated offsetting accounting (provision and credit enhancement income equal) with no net EPS impact this quarter .
- Capital and deposit quality: 95% of deposits estimated insured; leverage ratio 8.93% at HoldCo; average deposits +28% y/y to $8.31B, supporting liquidity and growth .
“Fintech Solutions continues to show significant momentum in both GDV (up 18% year-over-year) and fee growth (up 26% year-over-year). We are confirming guidance of $5.25 a share for 2025.” — CEO, Damian Kozlowski .
What Went Wrong
- EPS miss vs consensus amid NIM compression: NIM fell to 4.07% (vs 5.15% y/y; 4.55% q/q) as loan yields fell more than deposit costs; deposit mix included a ~$500M insurance-settlement related surge that temporarily lifted funding costs .
- NII down 3% y/y to $91.7M as rates drifted lower in late 2024 and consumer fintech balances shift economics toward fees (noninterest income), mechanically pressuring reported NIM despite profitability .
- Efficiency deteriorated: Efficiency ratio rose to 41% from 38% y/y (non-GAAP definition excluding credit enhancement), as operating expenses grew with scaling payments/compliance/IT and incentive comp .
Financial Results
Headline Actuals vs Consensus and Prior Periods
Notes: “Consensus” metrics from S&P Global; see Estimates Context for details. Ex-credit enhancement noninterest income per company methodology (credit enhancement income equals provision, offsetting P&L impact) .
Profitability and Returns
Fintech KPIs and Payments
Balance Sheet and Capital
Segment/Business Line Snapshot (Balances; yoy growth where provided)
Credit Quality and Allowance
Company emphasized that consumer fintech loan provisions ($45.9M) are offset by equal “credit enhancement” income, net neutral to EPS .
Guidance Changes
No quantitative NIM/expense/revenue guidance provided; commentary suggests Q2 NIM improvement as higher-cost insurance-related deposits roll off and higher-cost deposits are offloaded .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “The Bancorp earned $1.19 per diluted share… 12% increase over the first quarter of '24… Fintech Solutions Group continues to show significant momentum… We are confirming guidance of $5.25 per diluted share for '25.” — CEO, Damian Kozlowski .
- “Net interest income was 3% lower… first quarter NIM of 4.07% compared to 4.55% for the fourth quarter… fees on the majority of our growing consumer fintech loan balances are recorded as noninterest income… Excluding consumer fintech credit enhancement income, noninterest income… was $37.8 million, 29% higher than Q1 2024.” — Interim CFO, Martin Egan .
- “Our programs vary… how it’s split between deposit and fees… one of our programs… deposit-based… ballooned in the first quarter due to insurance payments… about $500 million… will roll off.” — CEO, Damian Kozlowski .
- “We continue to believe that we are at the peak of substandard assets and believe we will show progress in reducing substandard assets over the next several quarters.” — CEO, Damian Kozlowski .
Q&A Highlights
- NIM mechanics and outlook: NIM compressed as loan yields fell more than deposit costs; ~$500M insurance-related deposits temporarily raised costs; management expects NIM improvement in Q2 as these balances roll off and as higher-cost deposits are offloaded .
- Credit sponsorship economics: Many programs recognize economics in fees (with 0% deposit cost on balances and
5% loan yield equivalent framed as fees); one interest-bearing program ($25M at Q4) is growing and will support NIM over time . - Asset sensitivity reduced: Target “slightly asset sensitive” around ~1% after fixed-rate bond purchases; varies with deposit surges .
- BaaS consolidation opportunity: Pullbacks at smaller competitors create room to expand with large partners and add products; management sees potential to sustain GDV growth and reach mid-20s CAGR with credit sponsorship .
- OREO disposition: Buyer ownership change not expected to derail closing; property performance improving (lease-up ~65–70%); management remains confident .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025 EPS: Actual $1.19 vs consensus $1.2367 (3 est.) — slight miss driven by NIM pressure and mix shift toward fees . EPS actual and consensus from S&P Global*.
- Q1 2025 Revenue: Actual $128.53M vs consensus $107.72M (3 est.) — beat aided by stronger noninterest income from fintech fees and recognition of consumer fintech credit enhancement income (offset by provision; net neutral to EPS) . Revenue actual and consensus from S&P Global*.
Values with asterisks (*) are retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Fintech engine intact: Double-digit GDV and fee growth, plus accelerating credit sponsorship (> $1B YE25 target), underpin reaffirmed $5.25 FY25 EPS guide despite NIM pressure .
- Near-term NIM inflection: Q1’s NIM trough reflected temporary insurance-related deposit inflows; management expects Q2 improvement as mix normalizes and as higher-cost deposits are offloaded .
- Quality/liquidity strengths: 95% insured deposits and ample contingent liquidity (~$3.09B credit lines) reduce funding/contagion risk; capital above well-cap thresholds .
- Accounting optics vs economics: Consumer fintech credit enhancement accounting inflates both provision and noninterest income with no net EPS effect; some programs will migrate more into NII over time, smoothing NIM optics .
- Watch REBL de-risking cadence: Management sees criticized assets at/near peak with expected sequential improvement; monitor OREO sale timing and broader multifamily stabilization .
- Capital deployment: $150M buyback authorization maintained; potential refinancing to increase repurchase capacity under consideration, subject to market/Board .
- Medium-term thesis: Sustained GDV growth and product layering (embedded finance, credit sponsorship diversification) support fee growth resilience; migration of some credit programs to interest-earning should re-accelerate NII/NIM as the model matures .
Appendix: Detailed S&P Global Consensus vs Actuals (Q1 2025)
Values with asterisks (*) are retrieved from S&P Global.
Sources:
- Q1 2025 8‑K (Exhibit 99.1) press release, investor presentation, and financial tables .
- Q1 2025 earnings call transcript (prepared remarks and Q&A) .
- Q4 2024 earnings call transcript for prior-quarter context .