TFS Financial CORP (TFSL)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- EPS was $0.07, in line with consensus, while revenue beat: $77.62M* vs $75.95M* consensus as NIM expanded 9 bps q/q to 1.75% and spread improved 11 bps to 1.45% .
- Net interest income rose 5.4% q/q to $72.0M as the weighted average cost of interest-bearing liabilities fell 14 bps; partially offset by higher non-interest expense (+$3.2M q/q) and a $1.5M provision vs a $1.5M release in Q1 .
- Balance sheet mix continued to pivot toward home equity (HE) with HE balances up $193.7M q/q to $4.32B and deposits up $190.4M (CD-led), allowing $69M reduction in FHLB borrowings; Tier 1 leverage rose to 10.92% .
- No formal guidance and no earnings call; dividend maintained at $0.2825 per share with MHC waiver in place, supporting income investors .
Note: Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Margin stabilization: NIM increased to 1.75% (+9 bps q/q) and interest rate spread to 1.45% (+11 bps q/q), driven by a 14 bps decline in the cost of interest-bearing liabilities. “Our net interest margin increased nearly 10 basis points to 1.75%...” — CEO Marc A. Stefanski .
- Funding progress: Retail CD growth lifted deposits +$190.4M q/q to $10.40B, enabling $69.0M reduction in FHLB advances; brokered deposits fell to $1.03B vs $1.22B at FY-end .
- Loan demand pockets: Commitments to originate/acquire first mortgages and equity loans/lines rose ~40% q/q; HE balances +$193.7M q/q to $4.32B; credit quality remained solid with delinquencies at 0.20% and non-accruals at 0.24% of loans .
What Went Wrong
- Expense pressure: Non-interest expense increased $3.2M q/q (+6.7%) on higher salaries/benefits (+$1.1M), marketing (+$1.0M) and data processing (+$0.8M) .
- Provision normalization: Shifted to a $1.5M provision vs a $1.5M release in Q1, reflecting higher allowance for unfunded commitments tied to stronger loan commitments; total ACL up to $99.9M (0.65% of loans) .
- Residential mortgage runoff: Core residential portfolio declined $175.9M q/q to $10.99B as repayments/sales outpaced originations amid a still-high rate environment .
Financial Results
Core P&L and Margin vs Prior Periods and Estimates
Notes: Revenue (company-derived) for Q2 2024 and Q1 2025 equals Net interest income after provision + Total non-interest income from the company’s 8-K tables. Values with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Selected KPIs and Balance Sheet (period-end unless stated)
— indicates not disclosed for that period.
Segment breakdown: Not applicable; TFSL reports as a single segment.
Guidance Changes
No formal quantitative guidance was provided; the company did not host an earnings call this quarter .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Note: The company did not host a Q2 FY25 earnings call; themes below reflect disclosures across Q4 FY24, Q1 FY25, and Q2 FY25 press materials .
Management Commentary
- “Our second quarter earnings reflect our ability to successfully operate in any economic climate… Our net interest margin increased nearly 10 basis points to 1.75% and commitments… have increased 40% over last quarter.” — Marc A. Stefanski, Chairman & CEO .
- “We continue to exceed the threshold to be considered well-capitalized, our Tier 1 leverage ratio at 10.92% improved by three basis points compared to last quarter.” — Marc A. Stefanski .
Additional context: The company highlighted improved funding mix, deposit growth via competitive retail CDs, and steady credit metrics while acknowledging expense increases tied to staffing and technology .
Q&A Highlights
- No earnings call or Q&A session was held for Q2 FY25; the company stated it would not host a call to discuss operating results .
Estimates Context
- Q2 FY25 EPS: $0.07 actual vs $0.07 consensus (2 estimates) — in line . Consensus EPS Mean and estimate count from S&P Global*.
- Q2 FY25 Revenue: $77.62M* actual vs $75.95M* consensus (2 estimates) — beat by ~$1.67M (~2.2%)*.
- With NIM expansion and lower funding costs, revenue modestly exceeded expectations despite higher opex and a provision; estimate models may nudge up revenue/NII run-rate assumptions while holding EPS largely unchanged given expense normalization .
Q2 FY25 vs Consensus (S&P Global)
Note: Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Margin inflection: NIM up to 1.75% and spread to 1.45% as deposit pricing relief and mix shift aided NII; sustaining these trends is key to further EPS leverage .
- Funding mix improving: Retail CD growth (+$190M q/q) and lower brokered balances reduce reliance on FHLB borrowings (−$69M q/q), supporting margin resilience .
- Loan growth via HE: Continued expansion in home equity balances (+$194M q/q) with 40% q/q increase in commitments positions TFSL to capture consumer lending demand as rates normalize .
- Credit quality stable: Low delinquencies (0.20%) and manageable non-accruals (0.24%) underpin modest ACL build; watch unfunded commitments as a swing factor for provision .
- Expense watch: Q2 opex uptick tied to staffing/tech and marketing; monitor for reversion toward prior run-rate to support operating leverage in 2H FY25 .
- Capital and dividend steady: Tier 1 leverage at 10.92% and dividend maintained at $0.2825 with MHC waiver — supportive for income-oriented holders .
- No call, limited guidance: Absent formal guidance, focus on quarterly NIM trajectory, deposit competition, and HE momentum as the primary stock catalysts into Q3 .