๐Ÿ“ข New Earnings In! ๐Ÿ”

UVSP (2025 - Q2)

Release Date: Jul 24, 2025

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Stock Data provided by Financial Modeling Prep

Current Financial Performance

UVSP Q2 2025 Financial Highlights

$20M
Net Income
$0.69
EPS
3.2%
Net Interest Margin
$507M
Loan Production YTD

Key Financial Metrics

Core NIM

3.24%

Up 12 bps QoQ

12%

Noninterest Income

$21.3M

Up 2.5% YoY

2.5%

Noninterest Expense

$5M

Up 3.3% YoY

3.3%

Net Charge-offs

$7.8M

Predominantly one credit

Period Comparison Analysis

Net Income

$20M
Current
Previous:$22.4M
10.7% QoQ

EPS

$0.69
Current
Previous:$0.77
10.4% QoQ

Net Interest Margin

3.2%
Current
Previous:3.09%
3.6% QoQ

Noninterest Income

$21.3M
Current
Previous:$20.8M
2.4% YoY

Noninterest Expense

$5M
Current
Previous:$4.83M
3.5% YoY

Financial Guidance & Outlook

Loan Growth Guidance

1% to 3%

Net Interest Income Growth

10% to 12%

Provision for Credit Loss

$12M to $14M

Noninterest Income Growth

1% to 3%

Noninterest Expense Growth

2% to 4%

Income Tax Rate

20% to 20.5%

Surprises

Net Income

$20 million

We reported net income of $20 million during the second quarter or $0.69 per share.

Net Interest Margin Increase

+11 bps

3.2%

Reported NIM of 3.2% increased by 11 basis points from 3.09% in the prior quarter due to increased yields on assets and a reduction in our cost of funds.

Noninterest Income Increase

$521,000

Noninterest income increased by $521,000 or 2.5% compared to the second quarter of 2024.

Noninterest Expense Increase

$1.6 million

Noninterest expense increased $1.6 million or 3.3% compared to the second quarter of 2024.

Loan Outstandings Contraction

$31.9 million

Loan outstandings contracted by $31.9 million during the quarter, despite solid loan production in the first 6 months of the year.

Impact Quotes

Loan activity and loan origination activity is strong. We're consistent with what it has been in the prior year. We were just impacted fairly significantly by payoff activity in the first half of the year.

We will continue to be active on buybacks. And even with the rise in our share price, the earn-back period, while it's gotten longer, it's still well within a 2- to 3-year range even as we go up from here.

Reported NIM of 3.2% increased by 11 basis points from 3.09% in the prior quarter due to increased yields on assets and a reduction in our cost of funds.

We expect core NIM to contract by a few basis points in the third quarter due to the repricing of our 2020 sub debt issuance and the seasonal build of higher cost public funds.

It is a tough environment out there. People continue to fight for the deposit and generate the liquidity necessary to support their growth.

While M&A isn't an immediate strategic priority of ours, we always want to be -- have our eyes open and see what's available out there.

Provision for credit loss guidance remains unchanged at $12 million to $14 million for 2025. However, the provision will continue to be event-driven, including loan growth, changes in economic-related assumptions and the credit performance of the portfolio.

Any time that there's investment in our state, we're obviously very supportive of that and excited to see the money flowing into Pennsylvania.

Notable Topics Discussed

  • Loan outstandings contracted by $31.9 million during the quarter, impacted by early payoffs and paydowns.
  • Year-to-date, loan outstandings decreased by $25.4 million, contrasting with $117.6 million growth in the previous year.
  • Management emphasizes ongoing active situation with a suspicious credit involving $16.4 million, with fraud suspected, and no further comments at this time.
  • Management confirms continued active share buyback program, even as share prices increase.
  • The earn-back period for buybacks remains within 2-3 years, making buybacks a favorable capital deployment.
  • While M&A is not an immediate priority, the company remains open to opportunities, especially on the nonbank side, but currently finds no overly exciting prospects.
  • Deposit levels decreased $75.8 million due to seasonal decline in public funds and broker deposits, but excluding these, deposits increased by $77.5 million.
  • The environment for deposit competition remains challenging, with ongoing efforts to grow deposits through targeted campaigns and niches.
  • Third quarter is expected to be a peak quarter for public funds, with continued management of competitive pressures.
  • Reported NIM increased to 3.2%, with an 11 basis point rise from the previous quarter, driven by higher yields and lower cost of funds.
  • Core NIM expanded by 12 basis points, but is expected to contract slightly in the third quarter due to repricing of sub debt and higher-cost public funds.
  • Management anticipates NIM to stabilize or slightly increase in subsequent quarters if interest rates remain stable, with minimal impact from potential rate cuts.
  • New loan yields on the commercial side have remained relatively stable over the last two quarters.
  • Production remains strong despite the lack of loan growth, which is primarily due to payoff headwinds.
  • Management expects loan yield expansion to slow down as the base re-prices, with no expectation of a pullback, despite ongoing competitive pressures.
  • A significant charge-off of $7.3 million related to one credit, with a remaining $16.4 million on nonaccrual, supported by real estate collateral.
  • The situation is still active, with fraud suspected, and management has no further comments at this time.
  • This credit issue is a notable exception in otherwise strong credit quality, highlighting a specific operational challenge.
  • Management indicates no immediate strategic M&A deals are in the pipeline, with a focus on share buybacks.
  • The company views buybacks as a good use of capital, with a relatively short 2-3 year earn-back period even as share prices rise.
  • Potential interest in nonbank acquisitions, such as insurance or wealth management, remains open but no current opportunities are deemed compelling.
  • Loan growth forecasted at 1% to 3%, with net interest income expected to grow 10% to 12%.
  • Provision for credit losses remains unchanged at $12 million to $14 million, with a focus on economic and portfolio performance.
  • Noninterest income is expected to grow modestly by 1% to 3%, and noninterest expenses by 2% to 4%, reflecting cautious outlook.
  • Discussion of a $90 billion investment in data centers, energy, and power infrastructure in Pennsylvania, including Eastern, Central, and Western regions.
  • Management is supportive of regional investment, noting potential benefits for customers involved in electrical contracting and construction.
  • No significant market chatter yet, but optimistic about future participation as projects develop.
  • Management expects core NIM to be slightly lower in the third quarter due to repricing and higher public fund costs.
  • Long-term, they do not anticipate significant impact from 1-2 rate cuts, assuming interest rates remain relatively stable.
  • Interest rate environment is expected to be relatively neutral, with some short-term volatility but no major long-term margin compression.

Key Insights:

  • Core NIM is expected to contract by a few basis points in Q3 due to repricing of 2020 subordinated debt and seasonal higher cost public funds, with NII expected to be relatively flat with Q2.
  • If 1 or 2 rate cuts occur in the back half of the year, they are not expected to have a significant long-term impact on NIM due to asset-liability management neutrality.
  • For full year 2025, Univest expects loan growth of approximately 1% to 3%.
  • Net interest income growth is expected to be 10% to 12% compared to 2024.
  • Provision for credit losses guidance remains unchanged at $12 million to $14 million for 2025, with provisions continuing to be event-driven.
  • Noninterest income is expected to grow approximately 1% to 3% off the $84.5 million base from 2024, excluding certain gains.
  • Noninterest expense is expected to grow approximately 2% to 4% in 2025.
  • Income tax guidance remains unchanged at 20% to 20.5% based on current statutory rates.
  • Deposit management includes navigating seasonal declines in public funds and broker deposits, with targeted campaigns to grow deposits.
  • Loan production remains solid despite contraction in loan outstandings due to early payoffs and paydowns.
  • Credit quality remains strong aside from one significant credit loss related to suspected fraud, with the remaining balance secured by real estate collateral.
  • The company continues to focus on prudent expense management and discipline to control noninterest expense growth.
  • Univest remains active in share repurchases as a capital deployment strategy despite rising share prices.
  • M&A is not an immediate priority, but the company remains open to opportunities, particularly on the nonbank side such as insurance and wealth management.
  • The company is monitoring competitive pressures in deposit markets and loan yield spreads but has not seen significant compression yet.
  • While M&A is not a current strategic priority, management remains open to opportunities, especially in nonbank sectors.
  • Management expressed confidence in the loan production pipeline and expects prepayment activity to slow in the second half of the year, enabling loan growth.
  • The leadership emphasized the importance of serving customers, communities, and employees, thanking the Univest team for their efforts.
  • Management highlighted the disciplined expense management approach, balancing variable costs like medical expenses with overall expense control.
  • The company plans to continue share buybacks as a good use of capital, with an earn-back period currently within a 2- to 3-year range despite rising share prices.
  • Management is cautiously optimistic about the impact of regional infrastructure investments in Pennsylvania, expecting potential benefits for customers in construction and electrical contracting.
  • Management expects prepayment activity to slow in the second half, supporting loan growth.
  • Loan origination activity remains strong, but loan growth is impacted by significant payoff activity in the first half of the year.
  • Univest is monitoring regional infrastructure projects in Pennsylvania and sees potential benefits for its diversified customer base.
  • Loan growth guidance is 1% to 3% with net interest income growth of 10% to 12%, and expense growth of 2% to 4%.
  • New commercial loan yields have been stable despite competition, but yield expansion is expected to slow as the loan book reprices and competition persists.
  • Management does not expect 1 or 2 rate cuts to have a significant long-term impact on NIM due to asset-liability management neutrality.
  • Core NIM is expected to pull back slightly in Q3 due to subordinated debt repricing and higher cost public funds, then remain flat to slightly up assuming stable rates.
  • The company is actively managing deposit competition with targeted campaigns and expects the third quarter to be a peak for public funds deposits.
  • The credit situation is active and management declined to provide further comments due to the ongoing investigation.
  • The third quarter is seasonally the peak quarter for public funds deposits, which impacts deposit balances and cost of funds.
  • The company excludes certain one-time gains from noninterest income guidance, such as a $3.5 million gain on sale of MSRs and $245,000 of BOLI death benefits from 2024.
  • Management reiterated the forward-looking statements disclaimer and cautioned that actual results may differ materially from expectations.
  • The company recorded a $7.3 million charge-off related to one credit with suspected fraud, with the remaining $16.4 million balance on nonaccrual.
  • The company benefits from a diversified customer base across Eastern, Central, and Western Pennsylvania.
  • Management is optimistic about the long-term stability of net interest income despite short-term NIM fluctuations due to seasonal and debt repricing factors.
  • Share repurchases are viewed as a strategic capital deployment tool alongside monitoring M&A opportunities.
  • The company is actively engaging with customers to manage prepayment risks and loan production.
  • Expense growth is moderated by prudent management despite some uncontrollable variable costs.
  • Univest is focused on maintaining strong credit quality aside from isolated credit issues.
Complete Transcript:
UVSP:2025 - Q2
Operator:
Good morning all, and thank you for joining us for Univest Financial Corporation's Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. My name is Carly, and I'll be coordinating the call today. [Operator Instructions] I'd now like to hand over to our host, Jeff Schweitzer, to begin. The floor is yours. Jeff Sch
Jeff Schweitzer:
Thank you, Carly, and good morning, and thank you to all of our listeners for joining us. Joining me on the call this morning is Mike Keim, our Chief Operating Officer and President of Univest Bank and Trust; and Brian Richardson, our Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone of the forward-looking statements disclaimer. Please be advised that during the course of this conference call, management may make forward-looking statements that express management's intentions, beliefs or expectations within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Univest's actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by these forward-looking statements. I will refer you to the forward-looking cautionary statements in our earnings release and in our SEC filings. Hopefully, everyone had a chance to review our earnings release from yesterday. If not, it can be found on our website at univest.net under the Investor Relations tab. We reported net income of $20 million during the second quarter or $0.69 per share. While loan outstandings contracted by $31.9 million during the quarter, production has remained solid through the first 6 months of the year. However, we continue to be impacted by early payoffs and paydowns. Overall, year-to-date commercial loan production through June 30 was $507 million compared to $402 million in the prior year. However, this has resulted in contraction in loan outstandings year-to-date of $25.4 million compared to growth of $117.6 million in the prior year. While deposits decreased $75.8 million during the quarter, this was predominantly due to the seasonal decline of public funds deposits and a decline in broker deposits. Excluding these declines, deposits increased $77.5 million during the quarter. During the quarter, we recorded $7.8 million of net charge-offs predominantly related to one credit, which accounted for $7.3 million of the charge-offs. The remaining balance of this relationship of $16.4 million has been placed on nonaccrual and is supported by the appraised value of the real estate collateral. As this is still an active situation where fraud is suspected, we will have no further comments at this time. Absent this one relationship, credit quality continues to remain strong. Before I pass it over to Brian, I would like to thank the entire Univest family for the great work they do every day and for their continued efforts serving our customers, communities and each other. I'll now turn it over to Brian for further discussion on our results.
Brian Richardson:
Thank you, Jeff. I would also like to thank everyone for joining us today. I would like to start by highlighting a few items from the earnings release. First, during the quarter, reported NIM of 3.2% increased by 11 basis points from 3.09% in the prior quarter due to increased yields on assets and a reduction in our cost of funds. Core NIM of 3.24%, which excludes the impact of excess liquidity, expanded by 12 basis points compared to the first quarter. We expect core NIM to contract by a few basis points in the third quarter due to the repricing of our 2020 sub debt issuance and the seasonal build of higher cost public funds. However, we expect NII to be relatively in line with the second quarter. Second, noninterest income increased by $521,000 or 2.5% compared to the second quarter of 2024. This was primarily driven by increases in investment management fees, gains on sale of SBA loans and treasury management fees, partially offset by a decrease in net gains on mortgage banking due to elevated interest rate environment and competition. Third, noninterest expense increased $1.6 million or 3.3% compared to the second quarter of 2024. The increase was primarily driven by compensation costs, specifically annual merit increases, medical costs and variable incentives. I believe the remainder of the earnings release was straightforward, and I would now like to provide an update to our 2025 guidance. First, for the full year, we expect loan growth of approximately 1% to 3%, and we expect net interest income growth of 10% to 12% compared to 2024. Second, our provision for credit loss guidance remains unchanged at $12 million to $14 million for 2025. However, the provision will continue to be event-driven, including loan growth, changes in economic-related assumptions and the credit performance of the portfolio, including specific credits. Third, 2024 noninterest income totaled $84.5 million when excluding the $3.5 million gain on sale of MSRs and $245,000 of BOLI death benefits. For 2025, we expect noninterest income growth of approximately 1% to 3% off the $84.5 million base. Fourth, we reported noninterest expense of $198 million for 2024. For 2025, we expect growth of approximately 2% to 4% Lastly, as it relates to income taxes, our guidance remains unchanged at 20% to 20.5% based on current statutory rates. The aggregate impact of these guidance updates when compared to our most recent guidance is accretive to both EPS and PPNR. That concludes my prepared remarks. We will be happy to answer any questions. Carly, would you please begin the question-and-answer session?
Operator:
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Tim Switzer from KBW.
Timothy Switzer:
I apologize, you broke up a little bit on my end on some of the guidance numbers. Could you give me your update for loan growth and expenses?
Brian Richardson:
Sure. Loan growth is 1% to 3% and corresponding net interest income growth is 10% to 12% and then expenses is 2% to 4%.
Timothy Switzer:
Okay. Great. I guess could you maybe talk about some of the changes there? It looks like both those numbers are down a little bit. Could you just talk about what you're seeing from the loan environment? Is there a lot of -- is demand kind of faltering a little bit? Or is it more about competition?
Brian Richardson:
Actually, as Jeff referenced at the beginning of his remarks, Tim, loan activity and loan origination activity is strong. We're consistent with what it has been in the prior year. We were just impacted fairly significantly by payoff activity in the first half of the year. We look to -- we predict that and forecast that and are interacting with our customers to the best of our ability. We're looking for that to slow down, that being prepayment activity in the second half of the year, and we'll continue to produce at the levels that we have, and therefore, that will lead to growth. And then on the expense side, we just continue to see the benefit of our prudent expense management and discipline on that side. Of course, there's some variable expenses like medical costs and some things like that, that aren't directly controllable. But as we trend through the first 6 months of the year, that's what's causing us to ratchet the expense growth down from 4% to 5% down to 2% to 4%.
Timothy Switzer:
Got you. Okay. And you guys are sitting with very healthy capital levels. You haven't seemed all that determined to execute any M&A deals. You guys are doing a little bit of share repurchases, but with the share price coming up, it's going to be a longer earnback. Can you kind of talk about what your strategy is going to be to efficiently deploy that capital and whether you're going to return it to shareholders or find some opportunities to reinvest into the business?
Jeff Schweitzer:
Yes. So Tim, we will continue to be active on buybacks. And even with the rise in our share price, the earn-back period, while it's gotten longer, it's still well -- it's within a 2- to 3-year range even as we go up from here. So we'll continue to stay active on the buyback front. We feel that that's a good use of capital. While M&A isn't an immediate strategic priority of ours, we always want to be -- have our eyes open and see what's available out there. There's nothing that's overly exciting right now. But we also look at on the insurance side, wealth management side, we're always keeping our eyes open there, too. So we're not opposed to M&A. I would say it's probably more on the nonbank side than the bank side at this point that we would be more interested. But in lieu of opportunities like that, we're going to continue to also do share buybacks.
Timothy Switzer:
Okay. And I'm curious what you guys are hearing or seeing in terms of deposit competition out there. There's been some reports from some competitors that it's starting to step up a little bit. And with the Fed not lowering rates this year so far, it sounds like a lot of the deposit repricing has kind of already ran through.
Mike Keim:
No, I would say that that's consistent with what we see, especially on the consumer side with money market rates and CD rates. So yes, it is a tough environment out there. People continue to fight for the deposit and generate the liquidity necessary to support their growth. So we've identified certain things, certain campaigns and certain niches that we continue to push forward with. And we look forward to continue to grow our deposits as the year moves forward. As you well know or most people know as they follow us, the third quarter will be a peak quarter for us on public funds. So that would be expected and we will continue to manage through. But no, it is a tough environment from a competitive perspective.
Timothy Switzer:
Okay. Got you. And last question for me. Could you guys talk about your outlook in terms of the NIM trajectory going forward over the next couple of quarters? You mentioned public funds is going to be seasonally higher next quarter, so that impacts it a little bit. And then what would you guide -- what kind of impact would you expect from 1 or 2 rate cuts in the back half of the year?
Brian Richardson:
Sure, Tim. So as I had guided for the third quarter, we expect core NIM to pull back -- reported NIM to pull back for sure, core NIM to pull back slightly just again, due to our -- the repricing of our sub debt issuance as well as those higher cost public funds coming on, then we expect it to be flat to slightly up thereafter, assuming relatively stable interest rate environment for the next several quarters. If we -- 1 or 2 rate cuts, it really does not expect it to be impactful over a longer term. There might be noise within a given quarter just based on how the timing of when assets and liabilities reprice. But then once that kind of blends itself through, you're not expecting that to be overly impactful due to our relative neutrality from an ALM perspective.
Operator:
[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Tyler Cacciator from Stephens.
Tyler Cacciator:
This is Tyler on for Matt Breese. I just wanted to start, last week, Senator Dave McCormick held Energy and Innovation Summit in Pittsburgh, outlining a number of projects totaling around $90 billion in data centers, energy and power infrastructure and some other projects, some of which are expected in Eastern Pennsylvania. Just curious on if you've heard anything on these projects and if you think there could be some positive benefit in your footprint?
Jeff Schweitzer:
I mean any time that there's investment in our state, we're obviously very supportive of that and excited to see the money flowing into Pennsylvania. We'll benefit more from our customers being able to participate in any projects that are being built out. We have a very diversified customer base, a lot of which are in electrical contracting and construction and things of that nature that could potentially benefit from this. I think it's a little early stages right now as far as that we've heard any significant chatter from our customers in market, but I know that everybody is excited, obviously, to see the investment made in Pennsylvania.
Mike Keim:
And I would just add, wouldn't just be Eastern Pennsylvania for us. We're obviously active in Central Pennsylvania, and we have a presence in Western Pennsylvania. So to Jeff's point, we'd be certainly pleased to participate across our footprint.
Tyler Cacciator:
All right. And then I just had one more. I know you talked about the pipeline a little bit. I was just wondering how yields are holding up. I know you cited some increased competition. But in terms of spread compression, how much are you seeing there?
Brian Richardson:
We really haven't. New loan yields on the commercial side, especially have been relatively stable for the last quarter or 2. And again, as we said, production remained strong, just the lack of loan growth is really driven by the payoff headwinds.
Tyler Cacciator:
Okay. Great. So do you think without any rate cuts, this pace of loan yield expansion is repeatable?
Brian Richardson:
Not repeat. I think that will definitely start to slow down from an expansion perspective because we have the repricing of the book occurs, of course, as that base gets higher, just on a notional basis, that expansion will start to slow down even if you can remain with consistent production volume. So I think it would slow down a little bit and things remain competitive for sure, but nothing that would suggest at this point that it's going to start pulling back in any way.
Operator:
We currently have no further questions. So I'd just like to hand back to Jeff Schweitzer for any further remarks.
Jeff Schweitzer:
I'd just like to thank everyone for participating today. I hope you're having a great summer, and we look forward to talking to everybody after the end of the third quarter.
Operator:
As we conclude today's call, we'd like to thank everyone for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.

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