OCFC (2025 - Q3)

Release Date: Oct 23, 2025

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Stock Data provided by Financial Modeling Prep

Current Financial Performance

OCFC Q3 2025 Financial Highlights

$0.30
EPS (GAAP)
$0.36
EPS (Core)
Increased by $3M QoQ
Net Interest Income
$76M
Operating Expenses

Key Financial Metrics

Capital & Asset Quality Ratios

10.6%
Common Equity Tier 1 Capital Ratio
$19.52
Tangible Book Value per Share
0.39%
Nonperforming Loans to Total Loans
0.34%
Nonperforming Assets to Total Assets
$617,000 (2 bps of loans)
Net Charge-offs

Loan Growth

$373M (14% annualized)

Driven by $1B originations

Deposit Growth

$203M

Organic growth $321M, brokered CDs down $118M

Provision for Credit Losses

Driven by loan growth and unfunded commitments

Period Comparison Analysis

EPS (GAAP)

$0.30
Current
Previous:$0.28
7.1% QoQ

EPS (GAAP)

$0.30
Current
Previous:$0.42
28.6% YoY

Operating Expenses

$76M
Current
Previous:$71M
7% QoQ

Common Equity Tier 1 Capital Ratio

10.6%
Current
Previous:11%
3.6% QoQ

Tangible Book Value per Share

$19.52
Current
Previous:$19.34
0.9% QoQ

Net Interest Income

Increased by $3M
Current
Previous:Increased by $1M
200% QoQ

Earnings Performance & Analysis

Core Pre-tax Earnings Growth

$4M increase

15% growth QoQ

Net Interest Margin

2.91%

Stable QoQ

Net Charge-offs

$617,000

2 bps of loans

EPS vs Guidance

Actual:$0.30
Estimate:$0.28
BEAT

Financial Guidance & Outlook

2026 Loan Growth Guidance

7% to 9% annualized

Net Interest Income Growth

High single-digit growth

Operating Expenses Guidance

$275M to $285M

CET1 Ratio Guidance

At or above 10.5%

Return on Average Assets

90+ bps by Q4 2026

ROA Target

1% in early 2027

Surprises

Strong Loan Growth in Q3

$373 million increase in total loans

Total loans increased by $373 million, representing a 14% annualized growth rate, driven by $1 billion in originations.

Stable Net Interest Margin Despite Growth

2.91% NIM

Net interest margin remained stable at 2.91% despite $3 million increase in net interest income and loan growth.

15% Reduction in Classified Loans

15%

$124 million classified loans (1.2% of total loans)

Special mention and substandard loans decreased 15%, placing the company in the top decile of its peer group.

Outsourcing Residential Loan Origination

$4 million restructuring charges in Q3

Strategic decision to outsource residential loan origination and underwriting functions, expecting $10 million pretax benefit in 2026.

Premier Bank Deposit Growth Acceleration

$128 million new deposits in Q3

Premier banking teams contributed $128 million of new deposits, with over 1,100 new accounts opened since April onboarding.

Net Charge-Offs Remain Low

$617,000 net charge-offs (2 basis points of total loans)

Net charge-offs were benign at 2 basis points, bringing year-to-date run rate to 5 basis points, reflecting strong credit quality.

Impact Quotes

We expect NIM crossing over 3% in the first half of next year, coupled with loan growth, driving a glide path to 90 basis points ROA by Q4 2026.

The Premier banking teams remain on track to achieve our 2025 target of $500 million in deposits by year-end, with strong commercial loan contributions.

We prefunded next year's securities portfolio with highly liquid, low credit risk assets to enhance ROA without affecting our neutral interest rate positioning.

The residential mortgage outsourcing will provide a $10 million pretax benefit starting in 2026, despite a $4 million revenue headwind this year.

We expect operating expenses to decline slightly in Q4 to $70-$71 million, with $8 million more restructuring charges related to outsourcing.

We balance hiring great talent with maintaining return hurdles, aiming for double-digit return on tangible common equity by next year.

Notable Topics Discussed

  • OceanFirst announced a strategic decision to outsource its residential loan origination and underwriting functions, incurring $4 million in restructuring charges in Q3 2025.
  • The outsourcing initiative is expected to improve operating leverage and earnings starting in 2026, with a full benefit realization projected early next year.
  • Management emphasized that the transition involves careful customer support and maintaining origination capabilities to support existing clients.
  • The company expects a $4 million headwind to noninterest income in Q4 due to the outsourcing, offset by a $10 million pretax benefit from restructuring.
  • The transition period includes severance, contract terminations, and modifications, with full benefits anticipated by January 2026.
  • This move marks a significant shift from the company's long-standing presence in residential lending since 1902, indicating a strategic pivot.
  • OceanFirst reported a strong loan origination quarter with $1 billion in new loans, leading to a total loan increase of $373 million.
  • Commercial and industrial loans grew by 12% for the quarter, supported by favorable market conditions and talent recruitment.
  • The commercial pipeline remains strong at over $700 million, only 10% below the previous high, indicating sustained growth momentum.
  • Loan growth is expected to average around $1 billion annually in 2026, with a focus on C&I sectors, partially offset by residential runoff.
  • The company highlighted that the momentum in commercial lending is driven by new bankers and a healthy pipeline, supporting future growth.
  • Asset quality remains strong, with criticized and substandard loans decreasing 15%, and low net charge-offs of 2 basis points.
  • Management expects net interest income to grow at or above high single digits in 2026, driven by loan growth and margin expansion.
  • The company anticipates approaching or exceeding a 3% net interest margin (NIM) by mid-2026, supported by rate cuts and balance sheet management.
  • Balance sheet growth is projected at high single digits, primarily from loan expansion, with securities holdings being relatively stable.
  • The company prefunded next year's growth with low-credit-risk securities, which will be accretive to ROA without affecting interest rate positioning.
  • The guidance implies a net interest income range of approximately $380 million or higher for 2026, with a focus on steady revenue growth.
  • The company expects a glide path to a 1% ROA by early 2027, with NIM crossing 3% in the first half of 2026.
  • The outsourcing of residential and title platforms is expected to reduce fee and service income by about $2 million in Q4 2025.
  • Despite the reduction in fee income, the company anticipates a modest gain on loan sales as pipelines wind down.
  • The title company, acquired three years ago, contributed approximately $10 million annually in expenses and revenues but was more of a conduit than a profit center.
  • The restructuring aims to streamline operations and reduce expenses, with full benefits beginning in January 2026.
  • Management highlighted that the move is part of a broader strategic shift to focus on core banking activities.
  • The transition involves careful customer support and maintaining origination capabilities to support existing clients.
  • OceanFirst's common equity Tier 1 capital ratio remains robust at 10.6%, despite loan growth during the quarter.
  • The company did not repurchase shares in Q3 as capital was allocated to support loan growth.
  • Management is evaluating opportunities to optimize capital further while supporting near-term loan expansion.
  • The Board approved a quarterly dividend of $0.20 per share, marking the 115th consecutive quarterly dividend.
  • The company is focused on maintaining a CET1 ratio above 10.5% in 2026, balancing capital adequacy with growth needs.
  • Earnings from new assets are expected to enhance internal capital generation, supporting future growth.
  • Premier banking contributed $128 million in new deposits during Q3 2025, supporting overall deposit growth.
  • Total deposits increased by $203 million, with organic growth of $321 million before brokered CD declines.
  • Premier clients now represent a significant portion of new commercial originations, totaling $85 million this year.
  • The bank's strategy includes onboarding new bankers and expanding client relationships to reach a target of $2-3 billion in deposits by 2027.
  • Deposit costs remain stable at 2.6%, with an increasing percentage of noninterest-bearing DDA accounts.
  • The company expects the mix of deposit types to gradually shift as operational balances convert to transactional accounts.
  • OceanFirst projects 7% to 9% annualized loan growth in 2026, mainly in C&I sectors.
  • Deposit growth is expected to align with loan growth, maintaining a loan-to-deposit ratio of around 100%.
  • The company anticipates that the continued growth in earning assets will support net interest income growth.
  • Management expects the NIM to exceed 3% by mid-2026, supported by rate cuts and balance sheet management.
  • The outlook includes a focus on expense discipline, with operating expenses projected between $275 million and $285 million.
  • The company aims to achieve a 90-plus basis point ROA by Q4 2026, improving to 1% in early 2027.
  • Asset quality remains strong, with nonperforming loans at 0.39% of total loans and NPAs at 0.34%.
  • Criticized and classified loans decreased 15%, indicating improving credit metrics.
  • The company’s reserve model is sensitive to criticized and classified loan levels, with potential reserve adjustments if these increase.
  • Management uses qualitative assessments and external economic indicators to guide reserve levels.
  • The company’s credit risk remains among the best in its peer group, with low net charge-offs of 2 basis points for the quarter.
  • Any material increase in criticized loans could prompt a review of reserve levels, but current outlook remains stable.
  • The company monitors regulatory guidelines closely, especially regarding NDFI exposures, which are small and focused on commercial lending.
  • NDFI exposures are primarily in equipment finance and do not involve consumer lending, reducing regulatory concern.
  • The company has about $100 million exposure to mission-critical government contractors, with confidence in their liquidity and resilience.
  • Management highlighted that recent government shutdowns have been factored into client risk assessments.
  • The company remains vigilant about external risks, including economic conditions and regulatory changes, but currently sees no material threats.
  • Close client communication and risk management are ongoing to mitigate external uncertainties.

Key Insights:

  • Anticipate modest short-term NIM compression in Q4 2025 due to seasonality and deposit repricing.
  • Capital ratio expected to remain at or above 10.5% CET1 throughout 2026.
  • Deposit growth expected to align with loan growth, maintaining loan-to-deposit ratio near 100%.
  • Expect 7% to 9% annualized loan growth in 2026, driven mainly by commercial and industrial loans.
  • Modeling three 25 basis point rate cuts in 2026 could push NIM above 3% by mid-2026.
  • Net interest income projected to grow in line with or exceed high single-digit loan growth.
  • Operating expenses forecasted between $275 million and $285 million in 2026, reflecting expense discipline.
  • Targeting 90+ basis points return on average assets by Q4 2026 and crossing 1% ROA in early 2027.
  • Deposits increased by $203 million, with organic growth of $321 million offset by $118 million decline in brokered CDs.
  • Expect $2 million reduction in fee and service income in Q4 due to outsourcing, with modest gain on sale of loans.
  • Originated $1 billion in loans in Q3, with strong commercial and industrial loan growth of 12%.
  • Outsourcing residential loan origination and underwriting functions to improve operating leverage and earnings in 2026.
  • Premier banking accounts now total over 1,100 with $242 million in deposits, 20% noninterest-bearing DDA.
  • Premier banking pipeline remains strong with $700 million commercial pipeline and $50 million from Premier clients.
  • Premier banking team onboarded in April, contributing $128 million in new deposits and $85 million in commercial originations year-to-date.
  • CEO emphasized balance between hiring talent and maintaining profitability targets.
  • CEO emphasized strong loan growth momentum and stable net interest margin despite market challenges.
  • CFO noted prefunding of 2026 securities portfolio with low-risk, liquid assets to enhance ROA without impacting interest rate positioning.
  • Executives underscored strong asset quality and conservative credit loss provisioning despite growth.
  • Leadership confident in achieving double-digit return on tangible common equity by 2026 through disciplined growth and expense management.
  • Management committed to maintaining robust capital levels while prioritizing loan growth over share repurchases.
  • Management highlighted the strategic decision to outsource residential mortgage business to focus on core strengths.
  • Management stressed cautious but optimistic outlook on deposit costs and competitive funding environment.
  • Clarified that 3% NIM target refers to early 2026, with net interest income growth expected to meet or exceed loan growth.
  • Deposit costs expected to decline gradually with lag due to contractual agreements; CD book repricing to impact costs in coming months.
  • NDFI exposure limited to commercial lending with no consumer risk; government contractor exposure about $100 million, focused on mission-critical clients.
  • Premier Bank commercial loan originations of $85 million year-to-date exceeded expectations; pipeline remains strong.
  • Premier Bank deposit growth driven by new teams and operational account conversions; long-term target of $2-3 billion by end of 2027.
  • Residential mortgage outsourcing expected to yield $10 million pretax savings, with $4 million revenue headwind and reduced title revenues.
  • Board approved 115th consecutive quarterly cash dividend of $0.20 per share.
  • Competitive deposit market causing lag in deposit cost reductions despite rate cuts.
  • Loan portfolio risk ratings stable with net charge-offs benign at 2 basis points of total loans.
  • Loan-to-deposit ratio targeted at approximately 100% to maintain balance sheet stability.
  • Market conditions allowed prefunding of securities portfolio for 2026 growth opportunities.
  • No significant exposure to government shutdown risk due to careful client selection.
  • Regulatory and state-level requirements influencing residential mortgage outsourcing transition timeline.
  • Title company ownership contributes approximately $10 million in expenses and revenues, both expected to decline due to outsourcing.
  • Expect gradual improvement in deposit cost dynamics as rate cuts roll through and customer accounts mature.
  • Growth strategy balances adding bankers with maintaining return on equity targets.
  • Loan growth pipeline remains robust despite residential portfolio runoff.
  • Management uses qualitative factors and external economic indicators to guide credit loss provisioning beyond model outputs.
  • Noninterest income growth driven by swap demand linked to commercial loan growth.
  • Operating expense benefits from restructuring expected to materialize in early 2026 due to timing of headcount reductions.
  • Premier banking clients currently have about 20% noninterest-bearing deposits, expected to increase.
  • Subordinated debt repricing increased borrowing costs by 12 basis points, impacting NIM.
Complete Transcript:
OCFC:2025 - Q3
Operator:
Thank you for attending the OceanFirst Financial Corp. Third Quarter 202 Earnings Call. My name is Brika and I will be your moderator for today. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to pass the conference over to your host, Alfred Goon, Investor Relations. Thank you. You may proceed, Alfred. Thank you all for attending the OceanFirst Financial Corp. Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. My name is Brika and I will be your operator for today. [Operator Instructions] [Technical Difficulty] We now have the speaker line reconnected. And I would like to thank you all for attending the OceanFirst Financial Corp. Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. My name is Brika and I will be your moderator for today. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to pass the conference over to your host, Alfred Goon, Investor Relations. So thank you. You may proceed, Alfred. Alfred G
Alfred Goon:
Thank you, Brika. Good morning and welcome to the OceanFirst Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. I am Alfred Goon, SVP of Corporate Development and Investor Relations. Before we kick off the call, we'd like to remind everyone that our quarterly earnings release and related earnings supplement can be found on the company website, oceanfirst.com. Our remarks today may contain forward-looking statements and may refer to non-GAAP financial measures. All participants should refer to our SEC filings, including those found on Forms 8-K, 10-Q and 10-K for a complete discussion of forward-looking statements and any factors that could cause actual results to differ from those statements. Thank you. And now I will turn the call over to Christopher Maher, Chairman and CEO.
Christopher Maher:
Thank you, Alfred. Good morning and thank you to all who've been able to join our third quarter 2025 earnings conference call. This morning, I'm joined by our President, Joe Lebel; and our Chief Financial Officer, Pat Barrett. We appreciate your interest in our performance and this opportunity to discuss our results with you. This morning, we will provide brief remarks about the financial and operating performance for the quarter and some color regarding the outlook for our business. We may refer to the slides filed in connection with the earnings release throughout the call. After our discussion, we look forward to taking your questions. We reported our financial results for the third quarter, which included earnings per share of $0.30 on a fully diluted GAAP basis and $0.36 on a core basis. In terms of performance indicators, we are pleased to report a fourth consecutive quarter of growth of net interest income, which increased by $3 million as compared to the prior quarter and was fueled by an increase in average net loans of $242 million. Net interest margin of 2.91% remained stable compared to the second quarter. Total loans for the quarter increased to $373 million, representing a 14% annualized growth rate, driven by strong originations of $1 billion. Joe will have more to add regarding our growth strategy in a few minutes. Asset quality remained very strong as total loans classified as special mention and substandard decreased 15% to just $124 million or 1.2% of total loans. This places us among the top decile of our peer group. The quarterly provision was primarily driven by net loan growth and an increase in unfunded loan balances and commitments. Operating expenses for the quarter were $76 million, which includes $4 million of restructuring charges related to our strategic decision to outsource residential loan originations and underwriting functions. This initiative is expected to meaningfully improve operating leverage and earnings in 2026. Pat will provide a detailed update on our financial outlook in a moment. Lastly, capital levels remain robust with an estimated common equity Tier 1 capital ratio of 10.6% and tangible book value per share of $19.52. We did not repurchase any shares this quarter under the existing plan as our capital was deployed for loan growth. This week, our Board also approved the quarterly cash dividend of $0.20 per common share. This is the company's 115th consecutive quarterly cash dividend. At this point, I'll turn the call over to Joe for additional color on these businesses.
Joseph Lebel:
Thanks, Chris. I'll start with loan originations for the quarter, which totaled $1 billion and resulted in loan growth of $373 million. The value of our continued recruitment of talent, coupled with favorable conditions for many of our borrowers has resulted in momentum in commercial and industrial, which increased 12% for the quarter. Despite the large origination and loan growth for the quarter, the commercial pipeline continues to be strong at over $700 million, only 10% below the high from the linked quarter. Turning to our residential business. During the quarter, we made the decision to outsource this business line. As we wind down the existing pipeline, we expect to see some modest growth in the fourth quarter before the portfolio begins to run off. Total deposits in the third quarter increased $203 million, although organic growth was higher at $321 million before decreases in brokered CDs, which declined by $118 million. Growth was primarily driven by government banking and Premier banking. Premier bankers contributed $128 million of new deposits for the quarter. The Premier banking teams, all of which we onboarded in April, remain on track to achieve our 2025 target of $500 million by the end of the year. Deposit balances as of September 30 totaled $242 million across more than 1,100 accounts, representing nearly 300 new customer relationships to date. Approximately 20% of those balances are in noninterest-bearing DDA and the overall weighted average costs of those deposits was 2.6%. The percentage of DDA is increasing as these accounts become fully operational, which should continue to offset new customer acquisition costs. We remain pleased with their results thus far. Also of note is the Premier Bank's contribution to commercial lending. Premier clients represent $85 million of commercial originations this year and the Premier commercial pipeline totals $50 million. Lastly, noninterest income increased 5% to $12.3 million during the quarter, primarily driven by strong swap demand linked to our commercial growth. With the outsourcing of our residential and title platforms, we anticipate a reduction in fee and service income of approximately $2 million in the fourth quarter and a modest gain on sale of loans in the fourth quarter as we close out the remaining pipeline. With that, I'll turn the call over to Pat to review the remaining areas for the quarter.
Patrick Barrett:
Thanks, Joe. And we've got a lot of good stuff going on but a little noisy. So apologies in advance for taking a little bit longer with my prepared remarks. So as Chris noted, net interest income grew and margin remained stable this quarter. Furthermore, pretax pre-provision core earnings grew 15% or $4 million linked quarter with the addition of earning assets at the end of the second quarter and through the third quarter, improving earnings power. On the rate side, loan yields increased 8 basis points, while total deposit costs remained flat. While our core NIM remained flat, it was negatively impacted by lower loan fees and a full quarter of higher interest costs on our subordinated debt. Absent these 2 factors, our overall NIM would have improved to 2.95%. Borrowing costs increased 12 basis points, primarily due to the second quarter repricing of our subordinated debt. Average interest-earning assets increased during the quarter, reflecting increases in both the securities and loan portfolios. Chris and Joe have already spoken about the loan growth but I'll add that we took advantage of market conditions to essentially prefund next year's anticipated growth in the securities book with highly liquid, very low credit risk and capital-efficient securities that will be accretive to our ROA, all without meaningfully affecting our neutral interest rate positioning. Looking ahead, we expect positive expansion in net interest income in line with or higher than loan growth but modest short-term compression on margin in the fourth quarter due to seasonality and some residual repricing of a handful of large legacy deposit relationships. Asset quality remained strong with nonperforming loans to total loans at 0.39% and NPAs to total assets at 0.34%. Delinquency levels continued to remain at the low end of historical levels, while criticized and classified loans declined noticeably. Risk ratings across our commercial portfolio were stable, while net charge-offs of $617,000 were benign and represented only 2 basis points of total loans, bringing our year-to-date net charge-off run rate to only 5 basis points. Overall, credit quality continued to perform in line with our company's strong historical experience and remains among one of the best in our peer group. Our provision for credit losses in the quarter was driven by both on and off-balance sheet loan growth, partly offset by overall improvements in asset quality levels. Core noninterest expenses increased from $71.5 million to $72.4 million, driven by increased comp and occupancy expenses. This excludes the impact of noncore restructuring charges totaling $4.1 million in the third quarter. The increase in comp expenses and occupancy expenses were driven by recent commercial banking hires, combined with modest increased variable spend during the quarter. Looking ahead, we expect our fourth quarter core operating expense run rate to move downward slightly to the $70 million to $71 million range. Turning to the noncore charges. We do anticipate a final $8 million in nonrecurring restructuring charges in the fourth quarter related to our outsourcing initiatives. Note that the reduction in headcount associated with the residential outsourcing will not be completed until late in the year, pushing the operating expense benefit from that initiative into the beginning of 2026. To be clear, we expect the pretax improvement in annual operating results to be approximately $10 million. Capital levels remain robust with our CET1 ratio moving down to 10.6%, driven by loan growth during the quarter. While the CET1 ratio remains strong, we continue to evaluate opportunities to further optimize our capital in the near term as we wait for the earnings from newly added earning assets to increase internal capital generation rates. We continue to focus capital priorities on supporting loan growth in the near term and do not expect to prioritize share repurchases. Finally, we've resumed our annual guidance, as you can see in our supplemental earnings materials. At this time, for the full year 2026, we expect 7% to 9% annualized loan growth for the year, predominantly driven by growth in C&I, which will be partly offset by runoff in our residential portfolio. We expect deposits to grow in line with loans as we continue to maintain a loan-to-deposit ratio of approximately 100%. The continued growth in earning assets should drive steady net interest income growth in line with or exceeding high single-digit growth rate, while our modeled 3 rate cuts of 25 basis points each throughout the year could drive a NIM trajectory well above 3% by mid-2026. Other income is expected to be $25 million to $35 million, reflecting reduced gain on sale and title revenues resulting from our outsourcing initiatives. 2026 operating expenses should range between $275 million to $285 million, reflecting the impact of our focus on expense discipline to offset any inflationary pressures. Capital should remain strong with our CET1 ratio at or above 10.5% for the year. These firm-wide targets should result in an annualized return on average assets of 90-plus basis points by the fourth quarter of 2026, with a glide path to achieving a 1% return on assets in early 2027, continuing to improve thereafter. At this point, we'll begin the question-and-answer portion of the call.
Operator:
[Operator Instructions] The first question we have comes from Daniel Tamayo with Raymond James.
Daniel Tamayo:
Yes. Maybe we could just start on the net interest income guidance. Just to clarify because there's a few things happening. I think in the slide deck, there was a comment about reaching 3% by the end of -- or maybe it was a terminal 3% rate in 2026. And then, Pat, you just mentioned potentially reaching 3% by mid-2026. The 8%-ish guidance for NII growth in 2026 pretty much implies that, that would be more of an end of the year story. And then that also implies kind of a reduction in the balance sheet from the end of the year. So sorry to pile all that into one question but maybe you can just unpack the NII guidance from a balance sheet compared to a margin story for next year, would be helpful.
Patrick Barrett:
Sure. So I'll do my best. So hang with me on this. But the 3% terminal rate was referring to our assumption around Fed rate cuts, not our NIM margin. So that's assuming 2 more rate cuts during the rest of this year and 3 next year. So just to kind of take that off the table. We do expect that we will approach or breach a 3% NIM sometime in the first, second quarter of next year, so in the near -- very near term and continue to expand with a pretty modest but steady expansion as we move forward. We expect the balance sheet to continue to grow in the high single-digit levels, almost entirely from loan growth. And that should result -- look, this is all things being equal, so deposit costs, a big question mark, competition, yields and spreads, a big question mark. But our best estimate right now is that, that should result in steady revenue growth, at least commensurate with the loan growth, high single digits. So by revenue, I'm really talking about net interest income. So we see that growing at or better than the pace of loan growth, which is high single digit.
Daniel Tamayo:
Okay. I appreciate what you said on the terminal rate. First of all, that was obviously a mistake on my side. But -- so that -- I guess if the margin is up at that level, that would imply the balance sheet is going to come down, not down in the fourth quarter but down relative. There were some pretty significant growth on overall balances in assets in the third quarter. It sounds like you prefunded some growth with securities for next year. So there's some dynamic with the average earning assets coming down relative to the size of the overall balance sheet in the fourth quarter. Is that the way to think about it?
Christopher Maher:
Maybe. It's Chris. Maybe I'll just kind of try and draw a clear path. So to take the noise out of the third quarter, we did buy some securities and we don't anticipate doing that again. It was a pretty unique opportunity to prefund 2026. So the securities portfolio, you should consider being relatively stable as we go into '26 and throughout '26. On the loan side, though, we expect to continue to see growth. So very good quarter this quarter, $373 million. That was a particularly strong quarter. Maybe I would think closer to $250 million, plus or minus. Some quarters better, some quarters worse. But as Joe mentioned, his pipeline is very strong. We've got a lot of momentum. The new bankers are producing. So if you were to just use kind of back of the envelope and assume that over the course of '26, we're growing plus or minus $1 billion on the balance sheet, driven by loan growth, coupled with deposit growth. So that's the part of the balance sheet that would move. And then as we pointed out earlier, NIM crossing over that 3% in the first half of the year and you put those 2 things together and that's how you kind of get the glide path to the 90 basis point or better ROA by Q4.
Daniel Tamayo:
That's helpful. Okay. But ultimately, the NII numbers that you guys are talking about, just putting the guidance together, is my math correct here, it gets me to kind of the [ 3 80s ] range for 2026 for net interest income. Is that what we should be looking at?
Patrick Barrett:
Or better, maybe a little bit higher.
Daniel Tamayo:
Okay. Okay. So that -- the -- this 7% to 9% NII off of 2025 is kind of a floor. Is that the way, that or better?
Patrick Barrett:
Yes. Look, we haven't had annual guidance in a while, quite frankly, the uncertainty in the environment, the funding environment and the growth environment being a big part of that. So this is our best estimate now and we're trying to probably err on the conservative side. And I know it's frustrating for us to give ranges of things. But we know we'll probably be wrong in our estimates but this is our best estimate today. And so we're trying to be a bit on the conservative side from a growth perspective, given that this is our first quarter of really meaningful growth in 2 to 3 years.
Operator:
Your next question comes from Tim Switzer with KBW.
Timothy Switzer:
So the first question I have is around the Premier Bank. And sorry if you guys touched on this on the call but you doubled deposits this quarter. It looks like you got to double it again from a larger base for Q4. What's driving the acceleration there? And I'm sure you already have a good amount in the pipeline kind of embedded for you but just curious what's driving that? And is there any color you can provide on this trajectory as you try to get that $2 billion to $3 billion by the end of [ '27 ]?
Joseph Lebel:
So Tim, it's Joe. I'll answer the first part of the question relative to what's driving deposit growth. It's the teams we've hired and their acclimation not only to the bank but their customers' acclimation to the bank. I think we referenced the 1,100-plus new accounts that have been opened. A lot of those operational accounts are in the process of being converted to funding. So what we've seen early on is the excess cash come across paying a little bit higher rate for those dollars. And as the actual operational balances start to come, we'll start to see more of that transactional opportunity come across at lower dollar cost. So that's really the value short term. And then, of course, long term, clients come in pieces, right? They don't come altogether and they don't come all at once. So as these teams mature, they'll generate more and more activity from their former book, hence, the value of those deposits over the last couple of years -- over the next couple of years, getting to that $1.5 billion, $2 billion, $2.5 billion, $3 billion number.
Timothy Switzer:
I'm sorry, I was on mute. It was also great to see the $85 million of loan originations related to Premier Bank. That seems like that's a bit above kind of what you guys are expecting, at least in terms of like an LDR. But it's early -- it certainly can move around but can you maybe provide an update on your expectations there?
Joseph Lebel:
Yes. Actually, we've been really pleased with the activity of the Premier bankers so far. And Tim, I expect that we'll see more of that. I think it's a little too early to try to forecast what the percentage of loans versus their deposits will be. Obviously, historically, it's been a pretty low number. But we have some seasoned folks that have been around a long period of time and I think we're going to do pretty well in that space. And that sort of goes across some of the CRE space, some of the C&I space. So I think we'll be pleased with the outcomes as we go forward.
Timothy Switzer:
Okay. Great. And then I want to make sure I heard this correctly. I think you guys said the restructuring of the residential mortgage business will provide about a $10 million pretax benefit. So if that's a $14 million expense savings, that implies about a $4 million headwind to revenue. Are there other headwinds expected in noninterest income that gets you that $25 million to $35 million guide because that's obviously a bit below where you guys are trending for this year.
Christopher Maher:
Yes. Let me just -- Tim, I'll mention a couple of things on residential and then Pat will get to the noninterest income. Just on residential, this is a business that we were in since 1902. So restructuring it is something we're doing very carefully. We're making sure that we meet and support all of our customers in the transition. We've made sure that we have an ability to produce residential loans for those customers going forward. And then because of the size of the reduction in force, which is about 10% of our headcount, we have modification requirements at the state level. So that all kind of combines for a transition period that's going between [Technical Difficulty]. So you saw some of those onetime expenses for everything from severance to contract terminations and all that. That will all be wrapped up by December. So the benefit will really show beginning in January. We'll get that full benefit. And you're right about the $4 million headwind in residential. So all your numbers are right with that. And Pat, maybe you could talk about the noninterest income.
Patrick Barrett:
Yes. So the piece that's missing from what Chris just said, which is really focused on our operating residential origination and underwriting platform, the people, the severance associated with it, the costs of paying the people, et cetera, is what generates the $10 million net, $14 million of expense reduction, $4 million of kind of our current run rate of gain on sale per quarter of $1 million, times 4 quarters. So that's your $10 million. The piece that's missing from this that maybe hangs in your models a little bit awkwardly is our majority ownership in the title company that we had acquired about 3 years ago. That hasn't been material from a bottom line perspective. But it did contribute somewhere in the neighborhood of $10 million of consolidated expenses and about $10 million of consolidated title fee revenues annually in our run rates. It just didn't pop up from a discussion standpoint because it was essentially a conduit to facilitate origination business more than it was a profit earner. So that will bring down -- those are headwinds in the revenue side but also positive benefit in the expense side that will come out of it.
Operator:
Your next question comes from David Bishop with Hovde Group.
David Bishop:
Chris, Joe, appreciate the color on the NDFI exposure there. Obviously, that's been in the headlines a bit. Any color you can provide there in terms of the nature of that lending, how it sort of bifurcates with the sort of the regulatory guidelines? And then secondly, on the loan side, any update on [ gov con ] exposure with the shutdown, how that portfolio might be holding up on the -- on a credit perspective?
Christopher Maher:
Sure, Dave. Just on the NDFI, probably the most important distinction I'd make other than it's a very small piece of what we do is that we really aren't engaged in NDFIs that lend to the consumer. So we're -- these are more NDFIs that do commercial lending. So if you think about our Auxilior Capital, for example, which is an equipment finance business that we have an equity ownership in but we also use within the company and we provide some credit facilities to. So stuff that is very closely followed and where we've got our hands on things. So we're not concerned about any of those and those exposures, I think, are all in pretty good shape. Obviously, given the other experience this quarter, we went out and just brushed up and made sure there's nothing there to be concerned about. So does that answer that part of the question?
David Bishop:
Yes.
Unknown Executive:
All right.
Christopher Maher:
I'm sorry, the second -- that was.
David Bishop:
On the [ gov con ] exposure.
Christopher Maher:
[ Gov con ], not a big exposure for us today. Today, it's about $100 million worth of exposure and that is squarely focused on mission-critical contractors and decisions we've made over the course of the last year. So we were really thoughtful about entering those kind of relationships with folks that understand government shutdowns. They've been through this before. They've got plenty of liquidity. So we feel pretty comfortable about that. But we stay in close touch with that and Joe, anything you've heard from clients you might pass along?
Joseph Lebel:
No, I think you summarized it well, Chris. I'd just add the comment that we've been pretty close to it. We didn't have historical exposure and presence there. So a lot of our stuff, as Chris mentioned, has been in the last 12 to 14 months. So that's been a benefit to us because we don't have any legacy risk.
David Bishop:
Got it. And maybe, Pat, an update in terms of thoughts on the sub debt and that sort of reset. Any thoughts on sort of refi-ing or paying off?
Patrick Barrett:
Yes. We're not going to really go into the details of that on the call today but those details are available to anybody that's interested elsewhere.
Operator:
Your next question comes from Tyler Cacciatori with Stephens Inc.
Tyler Cacciatori:
This is Tyler on for Matt Breese. The cost of deposits were stable again quarter-over-quarter despite strong deposit growth, including demand deposits. And I know you talked about competition a little bit but when do you think we start seeing some of the benefits from the team in terms of lower all-in costs there?
Christopher Maher:
On the Premier side, you'll see that kind of go down gradually, as Joe said, as those noninterest accounts become activated and balances come in, the mix will shift a little bit but I would think a pretty gradual change there. And then in terms of the rest of the base, deposit betas and the Fed rate cut, there's a lag in the -- or kind of roll-through of deposit rates because we have some contractual agreements with various commercial accounts and things like that. So if you think about what happened last year, rates came down towards the end of the year. We didn't really see the benefit until the first quarter of '25. So sometimes there's about a 90-day lag and that contributes to Pat's guidance that NIM would be flattish, maybe even down a little bit in Q4. And we did have some contractual repricings of accounts that were pretty much at or near 0. So that kind of counterbalanced some of the positive movement elsewhere. So I think flattish, maybe down a little bit in -- for NIM in Q4 but then returning to expansion in Q1 and kind of sequentially thereafter.
Patrick Barrett:
Yes, that's a little -- this is Pat, Tyler. This is -- that's a little bit of the other side of the double-edged sword of growth, which we're very happy to deal with is that we need to raise deposit funding to fund loan growth. And so we're kind of a little bit bound by whatever the competition in the markets are today. We're seeing the same kind of lag though on deposit cost declines that we saw with increases when we were in the upgrade cycle. It was slow to get going and then it kind of picked up pace as the Fed continued to raise interest rates. We're expecting to see the same kind of behavior, slow, unfortunately, slower to come down initially and then picking up pace as we kind of move into the down rate cycle into next year.
Christopher Maher:
Also the CD book is pretty short duration. So it's under 6 months. So we'll see a lot of that repricing roll through the CD book in the coming months.
Tyler Cacciatori:
Great. And then my next question is about the ROA. When do you guys think you can hit a 1% ROA here?
Christopher Maher:
So I think to kind of knit together our comments earlier, we think we're better than 0.9% by the end of next year, fourth quarter '26, crossing over above 1% in the first quarter of '27 and then for the full year, continuing to grow throughout that year. So it's going to be at or around fourth quarter next year, first quarter '27. And as Pat said, there's a lot of unknowns out there about Fed policy and rates and all that but that's our best guess today.
Tyler Cacciatori:
Great. And then just my last question here. I think you said it in the prepared remarks, sorry if I missed it, about the deposit composition of the deposits the Premier team is bringing on and if the expectations of that 30% DDA target has changed at all?
Unknown Executive:
They're about 20% today and the expectations haven't changed.
Operator:
[Operator Instructions] And we now have a question from Christopher Marinac with Janney Montgomery Scott.
Christopher Marinac:
Just a quick one on the allowance. If you were to see an increase in criticized loans still not big in the scheme of things, would that drive a change in the reserve? Or does that sort of have tolerance? I mean it's been low on criticized for several quarters. I'm just curious if that were to go back up a little bit, that would be anything material to how you provision?
Christopher Maher:
Chris, you're right. The model is sensitive to the levels of criticized and classified. So if we saw a material movement in those numbers. We have a little bit of pressure on the ACL. In fact, if we had just taken the mechanics this past quarter, the decrease in criticized and classified would have caused a reserve release. We didn't think that was the right decision given the external environment and our shift over to C&I. So the model may say that on the way down or on the way up but we try and use our qualitative assessment and the exterior -- the indications of the economy that we get from, say, Moody's and others to drive our final decisions. So there's a little bit of sensitivity there but we've been trying to be thoughtful about the provision to reserve using our qualitative factors.
Christopher Marinac:
Perfect. No, that's great, Chris. And a separate follow-up question just is, if we see more changes among some of the regional bank competitors in your footprint, would that change the hiring? And I'm thinking above and beyond the Premier initiative. Or could -- would you just want to go after more business with the existing team?
Christopher Maher:
It's always a balance. We -- look, whenever we find great talent, we don't want to pass it up because that's what drives our business. On the other hand, we're very much focused on hitting the return hurdles that we've outlined today. So it's a trade-off. You've got to have -- if you find very good people, you don't want to pass them up. But we're very mindful that we need to get our return on tangible common equity into the double digits. We see doing that next year and we want to stay on course to do that. So we'll be balancing out the quality of opportunities to bring on bank [Technical Difficulty]. We love the bankers we brought on. We will probably always add bankers from time to time but the number of bankers will be determined by us continuing our steady march in improvements to profitability.
Operator:
[Operator Instructions] I can confirm that does conclude the question-and-answer session here. And I would like to hand it back to Chris Maher for some final closing comments.
Christopher Maher:
Thank you. We appreciate your time today and your continued support of OceanFirst Financial Corp. We look forward to speaking with you in January. And as we kind of head off into the holiday season, we wish you and your families all the best. Thank you.
Operator:
Thank you. That does conclude the OceanFirst Financial Corp.'s Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. Thank you all for your participation. You may now disconnect and please enjoy the rest of your day.

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