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FIRST FINANCIAL CORP /IN/ (THFF)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- EPS of $1.57, up from $0.96 YoY and $1.55 QoQ; beat S&P Global consensus of $1.40 by ~$0.17 per share, driven by record net interest income and margin expansion to 4.15%* *
- Revenue came in below S&P Global consensus ($61.1M actual vs $63.3M estimate*), as noninterest income was modest and deposit costs held steady* *
- Net interest income hit a record $52.7M (+34% YoY), with ROAA at 1.34% and efficiency ratio improving to 59.37%, signaling strong core profitability
- Credit quality improved: NPLs fell to $9.8M (0.25%), net charge-offs down sharply YoY to $1.7M; ACL coverage to NPLs ~481%
- Dividend maintained at $0.51 per share (paid July 15), supporting capital return and signaling confidence; CEO expects “continued improvement in coming quarters”
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Record net interest income ($52.7M) and net interest margin expansion to 4.15%, reflecting loan growth and yield improvement
- Credit metrics strengthened: NPLs down to $9.8M (0.25% of loans) and net charge-offs reduced to $1.7M YoY
- Sustained loan growth (7th consecutive quarter), total loans at $3.90B (+21.6% YoY), supported by SimplyBank acquisition and organic growth; CEO: “We expect continued improvement in coming quarters.”
What Went Wrong
- Noninterest expense rose to $38.3M (+$5.6M YoY) amid higher salaries, equipment and “other” expenses, partially offsetting revenue gains
- Revenue missed S&P Global consensus despite strong NII, as noninterest income was ~flat YoY and deposit costs remained elevated* *
- Effective tax rate increased to 18.58% vs 16.29% YoY, a modest headwind to net income leverage
Financial Results
KPIs and Balance Metrics
Estimates vs Actuals (S&P Global)
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
No earnings call transcript for Q2 2025 was available; Q&A themes are therefore not accessible this quarter.
Management Commentary
- CEO Norman D. Lowery: “We are pleased with our second quarter results, as we have experienced our 7th consecutive quarter of loan growth. We also had another record quarter of net interest income and saw our net margin expand to 4.15%. We expect continued improvement in coming quarters.”
- Q1 context: “We have had six consecutive quarters of loan growth and have had another record quarter of net interest income. Our net interest margin has also continued to expand.”
Q&A Highlights
- No Q2 2025 earnings call transcript was found; therefore, Q&A themes and guidance clarifications are unavailable this quarter.
Estimates Context
- EPS beat: $1.57 actual vs $1.40 consensus*, driven by margin expansion and continued loan growth supporting NII* *
- Revenue miss: $61.1M actual vs $63.3M consensus*, with modest noninterest income and stable deposit costs likely constraining upside* *
- Target price consensus: ~$62, with 2 contributing estimates (contextual reference)*
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Core profitability is strengthening: record NII and NIM at 4.15% underpin EPS outperformance vs consensus, with ROAA at 1.34% and efficiency at 59.37% .
- Credit is a tailwind: NPLs and net charge-offs improved materially YoY, supporting lower provision ($2.0M) and better loss coverage (ACL/NPL ~481%) .
- Growth durability: 7th consecutive quarter of loan growth and stable deposit base suggest sustained NII momentum into 2H25 .
- Expense vigilance: rising noninterest expense (salaries, equipment, other) is a watch item; maintaining efficiency near ~59–60% remains key .
- Capital and returns: dividend maintained at $0.51 with improving tangible common equity to tangible asset ratio to 8.58%, indicating capacity to support growth and shareholder returns .
- Near-term trading: EPS beat vs consensus and stronger NIM are likely positive catalysts; revenue miss could temper reactions, but margin trajectory and credit strength mitigate risk* *
- Medium-term thesis: Integration benefits from SimplyBank plus organic commercial growth, margin tailwinds, and credit discipline set up continued profitability improvements, contingent on deposit costs and macro rate trends .