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WINTRUST FINANCIAL CORP (WTFC)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Record Q2 2025 results: net income $195.5M and diluted EPS $2.78; net interest income rose to $546.7M on strong average earning asset growth, with NIM stable at 3.52% .
- EPS beat S&P Global consensus by roughly $0.17 (2.78 vs 2.615*), and net revenue exceeded internal Q1 trend; management guided to higher NII in Q3 on continued balance sheet growth and stable NIM .
- Loans grew $2.3B QoQ (19% annualized) and deposits grew $2.2B (17% annualized), funding growth with loans-to-deposits at 91.4% .
- Credit quality remained solid: net charge-offs 11 bps annualized, NPLs at 0.37% of loans, ACL $457.5M; provision eased to $22.2M, reflecting macro and portfolio growth dynamics .
- Catalysts: expected NII increase in Q3, consistent deposit gathering, and visibility on preferred redemption mechanics; modest expense seasonality (low $380M run-rate in 2H) supports efficiency .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Broad-based loan and deposit growth with stable margins: “Net Interest Income…a quarterly record…loan growth of $2.3B…Net Interest Margin…3.54%” (CEO) .
- Clear outlook for NII: “We remain confident that our Net Interest Margin will continue to be relatively stable…we would again expect to increase Net Interest Income in the third quarter” (CFO) .
- Disciplined credit: “Charge-offs…11 basis points, unchanged…NPLs remained at a very low level, increasing slightly from 0.20% to 0.25% (CRE)” (CLO) .
What Went Wrong
- Seasonal/non-core expense pressure: Advertising and marketing rose $6.5M QoQ due to sponsorships; salaries/benefits up $8.0M from health claims and commissions .
- Mortgage banking still muted vs year-ago; Q2 up QoQ but down YoY (23.2M vs 29.1M) amid rate environment; MSR fair value marks were unfavorable .
- Slight uptick in NPLs (0.35%→0.37% QoQ) with isolated CRE office and one C&I credit moving to non-performing; management views as granular and manageable .
Financial Results
Note: Company-reported “Net revenue” equals net interest income + non-interest income . S&P Global’s revenue actuals can differ by classification; see Estimates Context.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “Net Interest Income…a quarterly record…loan growth of $2.3 billion…Net Interest Margin…3.54%…pipelines are strong, and we expect continued mid-to-high single-digit loan growth for the second half of the year.” .
- CFO: “We remain confident that our Net Interest Margin will continue to be relatively stable throughout the remainder of 2025…we would again expect to increase Net Interest Income in the third quarter.” .
- CLO: “Charge-offs for the quarter were 11 basis points, unchanged from Q1…CRE NPLs remained at a very low level, increasing slightly from 0.20% to 0.25%.” .
- CEO on deposits: “Commercial growth in deposits is particularly helpful…This was a very solid deposit growth quarter…$2B should not be the norm going forward.” .
- CFO on preferreds: “Third quarter…Series F preferred dividends…more than a quarter’s worth…issuance costs…recorded through net income available to common shareholders…will not impact third quarter operating net income.” .
- Q2 earnings release: “Net interest margin…3.52% (3.54% FTE)…We expect a relatively stable net interest margin coupled with continued balance sheet growth to drive net interest income higher in the third quarter.” .
Q&A Highlights
- Loan growth trajectory: Management reiterated mid-to-high single-digit growth for 2H, with Q2 period-end loans already ~$1.5B higher than Q2 averages, setting up Q3 NII growth .
- Deposit gathering/costs: Deposit costs stable; ability to pass through 25bps cuts on discretionary accounts if Fed cuts; CDs mostly sub-12 months .
- CRE/Office: Slight uptick from a few small office credits and one C&I moved to NPL; portfolio granular and appropriately marked; continued deep-dive reviews .
- Expenses: Expect low $380M per quarter run-rate in Q3–Q4; seasonal marketing in Q2–Q3; investing prudently .
- Hedging strategy: Buckets well-filled for next year; will opportunistically add for 2027–2028 maturities .
Estimates Context
- EPS: Beats in Q4, Q1, and Q2 versus S&P Global consensus; Q2 beat approx $0.17 (2.78 vs 2.6152*).
- Revenue: Company “Net revenue” (NII + non-interest income) exceeded S&P’s consensus in Q2; note S&P’s actual revenue classification may differ from company “net revenue” definition .
Values retrieved from S&P Global*.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Earnings power: Stable NIM (~3.5%) plus tangible average asset growth points to higher Q3 NII and sustained EPS momentum in 2H 2025 .
- Balance sheet engine: Robust, diversified loan growth (PF P&C seasonal boost, CRE, warehouse, leasing) funded by core deposits; loans/deposits ~91% remains disciplined .
- Credit resilience: Low charge-offs (11 bps) and modest NPL ratio (0.37%) with granular office exposure; reserves appropriate at $457.5M .
- Expense control: Seasonal Q2 marketing uplift should normalize to low $380M per quarter; efficiency ratio supportive amid revenue growth .
- Capital clarity: Preferred recap (Series F issuance; D&E redeemed) provides rate optimization; Q3 EPS math impacted but operating income unaffected .
- Near-term trade: Positive bias into Q3 on NII growth and EPS beats; watch deposit pricing discipline and any competitive loan pricing compression .
- Medium-term thesis: Diversified specialty platforms and core-market share gains support durable growth with rate neutrality from hedges; optionality in M&A discipline .
Additional Q2 2025 Press Releases
- Quarterly cash dividend of $0.50 per common share, payable Aug 21, 2025 (record Aug 7, 2025); Series F preferred dividend payable Oct 15, 2025 (record Oct 1, 2025) .
Notes and Clarifications
- Company “Net revenue” equals net interest income + non-interest income; S&P Global revenue metrics may differ in classification, causing reported vs S&P “actual” differences .
- Management expects Q3 NII to increase due to higher average earning assets and stable margins; Q2 period-end loans already set a favorable starting point .
- Seasonal expense patterns: Q2–Q3 advertising/marketing higher due to sponsorship calendars; expect normalization in 2H run-rate .