In This Article:
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Net Income: $11 million, or $1.37 per share, a 13% increase from the previous quarter and a 20% increase year-over-year.
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Net Interest Margin (NIM): Expanded to 3.91%, marking the fourth consecutive quarter of growth.
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Return on Assets (ROA): Increased by 17 basis points to 1.29%.
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Loan Growth: Loans grew by $29.1 million, approximately 4% annualized.
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Deposit Growth: Deposits increased at a 7% annualized rate; noninterest-bearing deposits rose by $21.9 million.
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Net Interest Income: Stable at $31.7 million, with expectations for future increases.
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Nonperforming Assets: Increased by $5.9 million to $21.5 million, or 62 basis points of total assets.
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Allowance for Loan Loss Ratio: Stable at 1.21% from the previous quarter.
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Non-interest Income: $4 million, an increase of $400,000 from the prior quarter.
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Non-interest Expense: Decreased by $776,000 to $21.6 million.
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Share Repurchase: 297,000 shares repurchased at an average price of $43.82 per share.
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Dividend and Share Buyback: Increased dividends per share by 21% and repurchased 16% of shares since 2019.
Release Date: April 22, 2025
For the complete transcript of the earnings call, please refer to the full earnings call transcript.
Positive Points
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Home Bancorp Inc (NASDAQ:HBCP) reported a 13% increase in net income from the previous quarter and a 20% increase year-over-year.
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Net interest margin expanded for the fourth consecutive quarter to 3.91%, indicating improved profitability.
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Loan growth was strong, with a $29.1 million increase in the first quarter, and continued growth is expected.
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Deposits increased at a 7% annualized rate, with noninterest-bearing deposits comprising 27% of total deposits.
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The company successfully optimized its Houston market, with plans to expand its physical footprint to drive more business.
Negative Points
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First quarter nonperforming assets increased by $5.9 million, primarily due to the downgrade of two loan relationships.
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The cost of CDs remains elevated, and while there is potential for reduction, it is expected to be incremental.
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The loan-to-deposit ratio is tighter than desired, indicating potential challenges in liquidity management.
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Non-interest expenses are expected to increase by 3.5% in 2025 due to raises and technology-related expenses.
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The company faces potential risks from economic volatility and tariffs, which could impact future performance.
Q & A Highlights
Q: Can you discuss the go-forward margin expectation after the improvement in the first quarter, and how do you expect the NIM to behave with a 25 basis points rate cut? A: John Bordelon, CEO: If the Fed doesn't cut rates, we expect a slowdown in the second quarter of our deposit costs. We don't anticipate much drop in the margin from the deposit side. If the Fed cuts rates, we typically don't get the full reduction. We expect to grow the NIM through loan repricing, as new originations are still higher than our current portfolio. David Kirkley, CFO: March NIM was about 3.95%. A 25 basis points rate cut would likely result in a stable to slightly increasing NIM due to our ability to reprice loans and CDs quickly.