BofI Holding, Inc. Delivers a Solid Quarter, but This 1 Thing Bears Watching

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Internet-only bank BofI Holding, Inc. (NASDAQ: BOFI) reported its third-quarter fiscal 2018 earnings after market close on April 26, delivering a solid 27% increase in earnings per share. Book value per share increased 16.5% in the quarter, spurred higher by 15% growth of its loan portfolio. Deposits also grew an impressive total, up 17% in the quarter, providing BofI with the necessary cash to fund its loan growth.

However, the source of that growth was time deposits, not increased balances in checking and savings accounts. This bears watching closely, since time deposits -- primarily certificates of deposit (CDs) -- carry much higher interest expenses and generally are less "sticky" sources of funding. BofI also continued its recent trend of higher operating expenses as it builds out its internal systems and staffing to continue driving growth across multiple lending and business lines.

A safe with binary code coming out of it.
A safe with binary code coming out of it.

Image source: Getty Images.

Let's take a closer look at what's going on at BofI following its latest earnings release, particularly the items investors may want to pay closest attention to going forward.

A big partnership delivered solid growth for BofI

Here's how BofI compared this quarter to the same period last year:

Metric

Q3 2018

Q3 2017

Change (YoY)

Net income attributable to shareholders

$51.2

$40.9

25.1%

Net interest income

$116.7

$88.6

31.8%

Net non-interest income

$23.5

$23.2

1.5%

Earnings per share

$0.80

$0.63

27%

Tangible book value per share

$14.5

$12.4

16.5%

Efficiency ratio

32.4%

31.7%

(2.1%)

Return on assets

2.1%

1.9%

7.2%

Return on equity

22.8%

21.1%

8.2%

Net income figures in millions. Source: BofI Holding.

With the exception of its efficiency ratio, which measures the percentage of revenues that go toward operating expense (reflected on the earnings statement as non-interest expenses), BofI essentially improved all of the key metrics that measure its profitability and growth.

BofI's loan and lease portfolio increased $1 billion, 14.9% higher year over year. A significant portion of that increase was a product of the company's continued partnership with H&R Block Inc. BofI was the exclusive originator of H&R Block "Refund Advance" tax return loans this tax season, which provided a big boost to loan profitability and represented more than 40% of BofI's loan growth in the quarter. Net interest margin was 4.77%, up from 4.24% last year and 4% in the sequential quarter.

Average yield on the loan portfolio was sharply higher, coming in at 6.61% compared to 5.72% year over year and 5.38% sequentially. This was almost entirely due to the high yields paid on the Refund Advance loans, which give a seasonal boost during tax season.