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Waterstone Financial, Inc. (WSBF)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- WSBF delivered consolidated net income of $5.2M and diluted EPS of $0.28 in Q4 2024, reversing a Q4 2023 net loss of ~$0.0M and < $0.01 EPS; ROAA was 0.94% and ROAE was 6.05% .
- Net interest margin expanded materially to 2.42% (from 2.13% in Q3 and 2.25% in Q4 2023) as loan yields improved and borrowing costs fell, while deposit costs moderated sequentially .
- Community Banking pre-tax income rose to $6.7M (+26% YoY), with stronger NII and improved efficiency ratio (51.54%), while Mortgage Banking posted a narrower pre-tax loss of $0.6M alongside higher loan sale margins (3.74%) despite lower QoQ originations .
- Capital return remained active: $0.15 dividend declared Dec 19, 2024 (payable Feb 3, 2025) and
194K shares repurchased for $2.8M ($14.43/share) in Q4; book value per share ended at $17.53 . - Street consensus via S&P Global for Q4 2024 EPS and revenue was unavailable due to data access limits; estimates comparison not possible. If coverage resumes, the NIM trajectory and stable asset quality—offset by higher past due loans—likely drive estimate revisions mix .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Net interest margin expanded to 2.42% QTD, reflecting higher loan yields and lower borrowing costs QoQ; this supported NII growth to $12.835M .
- Community Banking segment: pre-tax income $6.687M (+26% YoY), NII $12.886M (+6.9% YoY), efficiency ratio improved to 51.54%; CEO emphasized core deposit growth and strong asset quality .
- Mortgage Banking: gross margin on loans sold rose to 3.74% (from 3.51% YoY), and compensation expenses fell 7.4% YoY via headcount reductions and fewer new branches; segment remained close to breakeven .
- Quote: “We achieved loan growth, achieved core deposit growth (excluding brokered certificates of deposit), and continued to maintain strong asset quality metrics… [Mortgage Banking] remained profitable due in large part to our continued focus on cost control” — CEO William Bruss .
What Went Wrong
- Total noninterest income declined sequentially to $19.005M (vs. $22.552M in Q3 and $26.497M in Q2), reflecting lower mortgage banking volumes relative to prior quarters .
- Past due loans increased to 0.95% of total loans (vs. 0.63% in Q3 and 0.68% in Q4 2023); Community Banking past due balances rose to $12.8M from $8.0M in Q3 .
- Mortgage originations fell QoQ to $470.650M (from $558.729M in Q3 and $634.109M in Q2); purchase mix dropped to 82.1% (from 88.9% in Q3), signaling softer demand despite margin resilience .
- Provisioning lifted: consolidated provision for credit losses turned positive at $367K (vs. negative $377K in Q3), including $270K provision for unfunded commitments tied to an increase in construction loans waiting to be funded .
Financial Results
Consolidated Performance vs Prior Quarters
YoY Highlights (Q4 2024 vs Q4 2023)
- Diluted EPS: $0.28 vs < $0.01; Net income: $5.210M vs $(0.040)M; NIM: 2.42% vs 2.25% .
- Noninterest income: $19.005M vs $16.876M; Total noninterest expense: $25.267M vs $29.662M .
Segment Breakdown (Q4 2024)
Key Performance Indicators (Q4 2024)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
No Q4 2024 earnings call transcript was available in the document set despite searches; theme tracking below draws from press releases and 8-K disclosures.
Management Commentary
- “We achieved loan growth, achieved core deposit growth (excluding brokered certificates of deposit), and continued to maintain strong asset quality metrics… The Mortgage Banking segment remained profitable due in large part to our continued focus on cost control as funding volumes are still facing headwinds from the higher fixed-rate mortgage rates.” — William Bruss, CEO .
- Community Banking: “Net interest margin increased 17 basis points YoY to 2.42%… primarily driven by an increase in weighted average yield on loans receivable… and a decrease in weighted average cost of borrowings QoQ” .
- Mortgage Banking: “Gross margin on loans sold totaled 3.74%… compensation and benefits decreased 7.4% YoY due to reduced headcount and fewer new branches” .
Q&A Highlights
- No Q4 2024 earnings call transcript was found; therefore Q&A themes, guidance clarifications, and tone shifts vs prior quarters are not available in the document set [List: 0 transcripts found].
Estimates Context
- S&P Global Wall Street consensus estimates for Q4 2024 EPS and revenue were unavailable due to data access limits at the time of retrieval; as a result, we cannot quantify beats/misses vs Street for this quarter. Values would normally be retrieved from S&P Global; unavailable here.
- Directionally, NIM expansion and lower noninterest expenses support the bank-side earnings cadence, while lower QoQ mortgage originations could temper near-term mortgage segment revenue expectations; any Street updates should weigh margin resilience against volume softness .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- NIM inflection: 2.42% QTD (up 29bp QoQ) on rising loan yields and lower borrowing costs suggests improving core profitability into 2025 as rate cuts flow through liabilities .
- Operating leverage: Consolidated noninterest expense fell to $25.3M from $28.6M in Q3 and $30.3M in Q2, bolstering earnings quality despite lower mortgage volumes .
- Mortgage margins resilient: Gross margin 3.74% and lower compensation costs indicate disciplined execution; watch for volumes to stabilize before margin expansion fully converts to earnings growth .
- Asset quality watchlist: PD loans rose to 0.95% and NPAs to 0.28%; not alarming, but trend bears monitoring against CRE exposure commentary and provisioning for unfunded commitments .
- Capital return supports valuation: $0.15 dividend maintained and stepped-up buybacks in Q4; book value per share at $17.53 provides tangible support .
- Mix shift impacts revenue optics: Lower QoQ noninterest income (mortgage) offsets higher NII; traders should focus on NIM trajectory and expense discipline as near-term drivers .
- Data gap on Street estimates: With S&P Global consensus unavailable, price reactions may center on internal metrics (NIM, expenses, credit) rather than beat/miss headlines; monitor for subsequent estimate updates.