WI
WAFD INC (WAFD)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- EPS was $0.54, down 24% QoQ and 36% YoY; adjusted EPS was $0.62 after restructuring/non-operating items. Net interest margin compressed to 2.39% (vs. 2.62% in Q4) due to faster asset repricing than liabilities as the Fed cut rates .
- Management announced an exit from single‑family mortgage originations and HELOCs, targeting approximately $17 million annual expense savings by June 2025 and an 8% workforce reduction; Pike Street Labs technology will be brought in‑house to drive efficiency .
- Credit quality remained strong: non‑performing assets were 0.29% of total assets, delinquencies 0.30%, and net charge‑offs were minimal ($0.231 million) .
- Dividend raised to $0.27 per share (paid March 7, 2025), up from $0.26 in December, extending the streak to the 168th consecutive quarterly dividend; deposits held steady at $21.4B, and borrowings declined to $2.9B .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Credit quality resilient: NPA at 0.29% of assets, delinquencies at 0.30%, and no provision booked; net charge‑offs were minimal. “Credit quality remains strong with minimal net charge‑offs” .
- Capital strengthened: tangible equity to tangible assets increased from 8.31% to 9.45% since the LBC acquisition; TCE per share reached $27.93 .
- Operational streamlining: exit from mortgage lending and in‑house tech via Pike Street Labs expected to enhance efficiency and reduce FDIC costs as balance sheet shrinks; ~$17M annual savings by June 2025 .
Quotes:
- “Our results were impacted by greater than expected margin compression… Excluding a valuation adjustment… margin would have been 2.45%” .
- “We are exiting the single‑family mortgage lending market… anticipate annual expense savings of approximately $17 million” .
- “We will bring back in‑house… digital account opening technology and teams from Archway Software… aid us in becoming more efficient” .
What Went Wrong
- Margin compression: NIM fell to 2.39% from 2.62%, driven by 36 bps decline in asset yields vs. only 14 bps decline in liability costs following Fed rate cuts .
- Higher operating costs: non‑interest expense rose to $111.3M (+3.1% QoQ) due to $5.4M restructuring charges; efficiency ratio deteriorated to 65.0% (vs. 57.2%) .
- Earnings decline: net income fell to $47.3M (-23% QoQ; -19% YoY); diluted EPS to $0.54 (-24% QoQ; -36% YoY) before adjustments .
Financial Results
Segment composition (loans held for investment, period‑end):
Loan originations (Q1 FY25):
KPIs and balance sheet:
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Note: A Q1 FY25 earnings call transcript was not available in the company document catalog.
Management Commentary
- “Our results were impacted by greater than expected margin compression… yield on earning assets declined by 36 bps, while the yield on paying liabilities decreased by only 14 bps” — Brent Beardall, President & CEO .
- “We are exiting the single‑family mortgage lending market… anticipate annual expense savings of approximately $17 million” .
- “We will bring back in‑house… technology and teams from Archway Software… aid us in becoming more efficient over time” .
- Q4 tone on balance‑sheet resilience: “Optionality is a beautiful thing… capacity to be relevant and a nimbleness to adapt” .
Q&A Highlights
- A Q1 FY25 earnings call transcript was not found, so Q&A specifics are unavailable.
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus estimates (EPS/revenue) from S&P Global could not be retrieved due to access limitations at the time of analysis; therefore, comparisons to consensus are unavailable. We attempted to fetch current and forward quarterly EPS and revenue consensus for WAFD but were unable to obtain data.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Margin pressure was the primary driver of the EPS decline; management frames compression as driven by rapid asset repricing post‑Fed cuts and slower deposit repricing, suggesting relief as deposit costs catch up and hedging impacts normalize .
- Strategic exit from mortgage originations and HELOCs plus in‑house tech should lower run‑rate expenses (~$17M by June 2025) and improve efficiency ratios over time; monitor execution milestones (workforce reduction, Pike Street Labs transition) .
- Credit quality remains a support: NPA at 0.29%, minimal net charge‑offs, and ACL steady at 1.00%; limits downside risk as business mix shifts toward floating‑rate commercial loans .
- Funding remains stable with core deposits at ~78% and uninsured deposits ~25%; borrowings fell ~$0.4B QoQ and effective borrowing rate declined to 3.62% — positive for funding cost trajectory .
- Dividend increase to $0.27 signals confidence in capital/earnings durability despite near‑term margin pressures; watch capital ratios and tangible equity trends for continued support .
- Regulatory scrutiny (CRA rating “Needs to Improve”) adds an overhang; management plans to appeal — assess any operational constraints or reputational impacts that could affect growth objectives .
- Near‑term trading lens: sensitivity to NIM headlines remains high; any signs of deposit cost catch‑up, fee growth, or early efficiency gains could catalyze sentiment, while further rate declines without liability repricing would be a negative .
Citations:
*Estimates unavailable: Values would be retrieved from S&P Global if accessible.