NASDAQ:HBCP Home Bancorp Q3 2025 Earnings Report $63.18 +0.81 (+1.30%) As of 10:15 AM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Home Bancorp EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.59Consensus EPS $1.37Beat/MissBeat by +$0.22One Year Ago EPS$1.18Home Bancorp Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$37.84 millionExpected Revenue$33.33 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$4.52 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AHome Bancorp Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2025Date10/20/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, October 21, 2025Conference Call Time11:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsHome Bancorp's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Monday, July 20, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Tuesday, July 21, 2026 at 11:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Home Bancorp Q3 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 21, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Q3 net income $12.4M (EPS $1.59) with NIM expanding to 4.1% and efficiency below 60%, as revenue growth outpaced expenses. Negative Sentiment: Loans declined $58M in the quarter (large payoffs from long‑term clients) and management trimmed 2025 loan growth guidance to 1–2%, signaling slower near‑term loan momentum. Positive Sentiment: Deposits strengthened, rising 9% annualized in Q3 with core deposit growth (including Texas), lowering loan‑to‑deposit to 91% and keeping overall deposit cost attractive (~1.88%). Negative Sentiment: Nonperforming assets increased to $30.9M (0.88% of assets) Positive Sentiment: Strong capital management — tangible book and EPS have grown since 2019, dividends up 36% and ~17% of shares repurchased — leaving capacity for M&A and shareholder returns. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallHome Bancorp Q3 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:08Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Home Bancorp's third quarter 2025 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note this call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Home Bancorp's Chairman, President, and CEO John Bordelon, and Chief Financial Officer David Kirkley. Please go ahead, Mr. Kirkley. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:00:38Thank you, Konstantin. Good morning and welcome to Home Bank's third quarter 2025 earnings call. Our earnings release and investor presentation are available on our website. I'd ask that everyone please refer to the disclaimer regarding forward-looking statements in our investor presentation and our SEC filings. Now I'll hand it over to John to make a few comments about the quarter. John? John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:01:02Thanks, David. Good morning, and thank you for joining our earnings call today. We appreciate your interest in Home Bank as we discuss our results, expectations for the future, and our approach to creating long-term shareholder value. Yesterday afternoon, we reported third quarter net income of $12.4 million or $1.59 per share, up $0.14 per share from the second quarter and $0.41 from a year ago. Net interest margin expanded for the sixth consecutive quarter to 4.10%, and our return on assets increased by 10 basis points to 1.41%. Home Bank's efficiency ratio also improved in the third quarter and is now back down below 60%. We've been able to grow revenues significantly faster than expenses over the last couple of years, with revenues increasing twice as fast as expenses. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:01:57Loans decreased by $58 million in the third quarter, as we saw payoffs and paydowns that were $52 million higher than average paydowns over the last six quarters. This was driven by a number of long-term customers selling their businesses or property. I think it's worth mentioning that we're not losing them to other banks. Eight customers alone that sold their businesses or property in the third quarter made up $45 million of the decline. In almost every case, Home Bank remains these customers' primary banking relationship, which bodes well for the future but challenges our near-term growth. Customers are always waiting for a lower rate before they move ahead with their projects that require financing. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:02:40We have a lot of great conversations going on, but the media coverage over the last 10 months has convinced many that big rate cuts are coming, and so people are choosing to remain on the sidelines until there's more clarity on rates. While we are hopeful that we'd see 4%-6% loan growth this year, we're now expecting more moderate growth of 1%-2% in 2025. We've always maintained loan structure discipline and have prioritized risk-adjusted returns over growth, and we don't intend to abandon our principles now. On a high note, deposits increased 9% annualized in the third quarter, with good growth in relatively low-cost money market accounts. Thanks to a concerted effort and a focus on building franchise value, we've increased deposits by 17% in the last nine quarters versus loans, which also grew a respectable 8%. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:03:34Most of this increase has been in core deposits and includes good growth in Texas, which we entered back in 2022. Our loan-to-deposit ratio is now 91%, which positions us well for when loan growth picks up. Non-performing loans have increased in 2025, but our charge-offs remain very low. We don't expect for that to change due to low loan-to-values, our conservative underwriting standards, and proactive credit management. As a reminder, you can see on Slide 16, our net charge-offs have averaged about six basis points over the last six-plus years. M&A activity nationwide has accelerated, and we continue to look for the right opportunity to leverage our acquisition experience. We are confident in Home Bank's future and our ability to meet our high standards. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:04:25Our senior leadership team has 981 years of cumulative experience for an average of 26.6 years, and we have a track record of outperformance in all economic climates. With that, I will turn it back over to David, our Chief Financial Officer. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:04:42Thanks, John. Slide 5 in our investor presentation has a summary of the last six quarters. Net income totaled $12.4 million, a 9% increase from the prior quarter and a 31% increase from a year ago. Net interest income increased $754,000 quarter-over-quarter, as NIM increased 6 basis points to 4.10%. Yield on loans increased 3 basis points quarter-over-quarter, as the contractual rate on new loan originations was 7.35%, which continues to support an expanding NIM as lower-yielding loans reprice. Slides 14 and 17 provide additional details on cash flows from our loan and investment securities portfolio, and we think we can continue to increase asset yields even if there are rate cuts. Excluding floating-rate loans repricing in the next three months, 41% of loans with a blended rate of 5.7% are expected to reprice or refinance over the next three years. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:05:46Over that same time period, paydown of our investment portfolio is projected to be paid off with a roll-off yield of 2.56%, which is well below current available yields of approximately 4%. Slides 15 and 16 of our investor presentation provide some additional detail on credit. We had $376,000 in net charge-offs in the quarter related to smaller C&I loans. Year-to-date, our net charge-offs totaled $743,000, which is a very low 4 basis points of total loans and $58,000 less than a prior year. Third quarter non-performing assets increased $5.5 million to $30.9 million, or 88 basis points of total assets. The increase was primarily due to the downgrade of five relationships and partially offset by payment. The largest was a $5.1 million relationship with two separate land development loans in Houston. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:06:44We feel between the loan-to-value on these properties and the guarantor strength that there will be no material losses on this relationship. The second largest was a $1.2 million acquired CRE loan that was placed on non-accrual status in September that was made current as of 9/30. Once again, we believe we are well collateralized on this loan as well as other loans classified as non-accrual and/or substandard. We had a negative $229,000 provision expense during the quarter as a result of loan balance declines, which was partially offset by $376,000 of net charge-offs. We feel very confident in reserves as our allowance for loan loss ratio was stable from the second quarter at 1.21%. The cost of interest-bearing liabilities decreased two basis points to 2.69% as continued strong deposit growth allowed us to pay down more expensive short-term advances. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:07:41Interest-bearing deposit costs increased five basis points in Q3 due to changes in the deposit mix, but we will see decreases when we get some additional Fed rate cuts. The cost of CDs declined one basis point to 3.85% even as balances increased $15 million during the quarter. We are keeping CD terms short with 77% of our CD portfolio maturing in the next six months and 97% within a year, so we will have the opportunity to react quickly when rates decline. Non-interest-bearing deposits, which represent 27% of total deposits, increased $5 million in Q3 and $69 million, or 9.4% year-to-date. Our overall cost of deposits in Q3 was an attractive 1.88%. This was an increase of four basis points quarter-over-quarter, but once again, we were able to pay off FHLB advances and reduce our total cost of interest-bearing liabilities by two basis points. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:08:42Short-term advances from the FHLB declined $75 million quarter-to-date and $137 million year-to-date. Slide 22 of the presentation has some additional details on noninterest income and expenses. Third quarter noninterest income was $3.7 million, which was in line with expectations. We expect noninterest income to be between $3.6 and $3.8 million over the next several quarters. Noninterest expenses increased by $124,000 to $22.5 million and was in line with expectations. Noninterest expenses expected to be between $22.5 and $23 million per quarter for the next two quarters. Slides 23 and 24 summarize the impact our capital management strategy has had on Home Bank. Since 2019, we grew tangible book value per share adjusted for AOCI at a 9.5% annualized growth rate. Over the same period, we also increased EPS at an 11.2% annualized growth rate. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:09:47We increased our dividends per share by 36% and repurchased 17% of our shares outstanding, and we've done this while maintaining robust capital ratios. This positions us to be successful in varying economic environments and to take advantage of any opportunities as they arise. With that, operator, please open the line for Q&A. Operator00:10:08We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then the number one on your touch-tone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then the number two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble a roster. Your first question comes from the line of Joseph Yanchunis from Raymond James. Please go ahead. Joseph YanchunisManaging Director at Raymond James00:10:45Good morning. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:10:47Hey, good morning, Joseph. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:10:48Hey, Joseph. Joseph YanchunisManaging Director at Raymond James00:10:49So I thought we could start with the NIM here. So how should we think about the NIM trajectory, particularly as we think about the yield curve and your increased asset sensitivity? And at what point do you think the NIM peaks? David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:11:06All right, so the increased asset sensitivity is more so due to the cash on hand on our balance sheet, so that's increasing the sensitivity as cash reprices daily. I would say as far as NIM, I think we have a great opportunity to keep NIM at least flat and grow a couple of basis points quarter-over-quarter. We have highlighted that we have a lot of loans and investment securities repricing, and we still think we have room to reprice upwards, and also, with Fed rate cuts, we did lower some of our deposit rates, and we think as the Fed continues to cut, we have the opportunity to lower deposit rates even further, and that has the ability to offset the reduction in loan yield due to Fed rate cuts as our adjustable rate loans reprice downward. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:12:04So I think we're really well positioned to continue to keep NIM at least flat to increase a couple of basis points. Joseph YanchunisManaging Director at Raymond James00:12:17I appreciate that. And your updated 2025 loan growth guide implies a pretty big step up in forward-looking loan growth. What levels of payoffs and paydowns are implied in this guide, and how does the loan pipeline currently compare to recent history? Just trying to get a sense of the jumping-off point as we get into 2026. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:12:40Sure. Third quarter was the beginning of the decline of new loan originations. We see a little healthier portfolio coming forth in the fourth quarter. Maybe not all of that gets closed in the fourth quarter, but so it is a little healthier than what we had in third quarter originations. So those numbers were down probably about, without the exact amount, but probably about $30-something million in the quarter from prior quarters. So we do think we'll see some pickup. Hopefully, we can pick up all that $36 million and be more normalized in the fourth quarter. But I think definitely, if we get a couple more rate cuts, the first quarter should be very strong. Joseph YanchunisManaging Director at Raymond James00:13:31All right. Well, thank you for taking my questions. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:13:33Thank you, Joseph. Operator00:13:38Again, if you have a question, please press star then the number one. Your next question comes from the line of Feddie Strickland from Janney Montgomery Scott. Please go ahead. Feddie StricklandVP and Equity Research Analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott00:13:50Hey, good morning, John, David. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:13:52Good morning, Fed. Feddie StricklandVP and Equity Research Analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott00:13:53I appreciate the commentary and the relief that you don't expect losses on the credits that migrated non-accrual this quarter. You gave some more color on the call. So it sounds like we shouldn't necessarily see charge-offs from that, but I'm just curious, as you work through some of these credits, could we start to see the direction of non-performers reverse and maybe start to see those come down some? John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:14:16Yeah. I think if you, as we look at it, there's no, I guess, similarity in what's starting to have problems. It's just some one-offs here or there. We have one of our classifieds that called us this week and said they're going to be paying us off by the end of the month. So we would hope, but the worst part about NPAs is sometimes it takes them a little bit longer to fix themselves. What we're happy about is we're not seeing a lot of them going into bankruptcy, which really takes anywhere a little bit faster in Texas, but slower in Louisiana. In some cases, up to a year to be able to move on that. So we're working through them. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:14:59One of our problem assets that we had from a couple of years ago, we finally are getting out of bankruptcy, and we'll be able to take those properties back and begin the process of selling them. So it's kind of a longer-term situation when you have the bankruptcies, but fortunately, most of ours are not in bankruptcy. So hopefully, they can either sell or upgrade their business and be able to start paying as agreed. Feddie StricklandVP and Equity Research Analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott00:15:28Appreciate that. And just shifting gears to deposits, can you talk about the level of deposit competition you're seeing today versus maybe a quarter ago? And how are you thinking about deposit betas on the way down if we do get rate cuts? John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:15:44So our deposit betas are going to be a little bit, I would say, less than peers. We will continue to see our deposit betas increase from where they are over time. And I think they're going to be a little bit less than peers because we didn't raise our deposit rates as much as some of our competitors did and have the overall lower cost of funds to start off with. So that's going to give us less room to go down, but we still have room to adjust as yields come down. As far as competition goes, I would say there are a couple, count on one hand, banks that are kind of out of the norm of our peer grouping. They pop up here and there, and I would say mostly in the Texas market, one or two banks in Louisiana that have some outlying pricing. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:16:47Overall, we're able to retain most customers. We are able to offer competitive rates, and I don't feel like the pricing is as fierce as it has been in the past. I feel like banks are some of our competitors in the market. They are very quick to lower their deposit costs and looking to lower their liability costs, and that bodes well for us given our NIM position and our desire to continue to increase our liquidity. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:17:22Also adding to that, with a 91% loan-to-deposit ratio, it should be a little bit easier for us to lower our deposit costs. When we were at 98, we were very much kind of in the lead as far as the price of CDs and such. I think a little bit of that pressure will be taken off. Feddie StricklandVP and Equity Research Analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott00:17:46Got it. Thanks. I'll step back in the queue. Operator00:17:55This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to John for closing remarks. Sir, please go ahead. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:18:03Thank you. Once again, thank you all today for joining us. We look forward to speaking to you in many days and weeks ahead. Thank you for your interest in Home Bancorp. Have a great day. Operator00:18:16The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDavid KirkleySenior EVP and CFOJohn BordelonChairman, President, and CEOAnalystsJoseph YanchunisManaging Director at Raymond JamesFeddie StricklandVP and Equity Research Analyst at Janney Montgomery ScottPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckEarnings Release(8-K)Quarterly Report(10-Q) Home Bancorp Earnings HeadlinesHome Bancorp Shareholders Back Board, Pay and AuditorMay 14, 2026 | tipranks.comHow The Home Bancorp (HBCP) Investment Story Is Shifting With Mixed Analyst SignalsApril 27, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comTicker Revealed: Pre-IPO Access to "Next Elon Musk" CompanyWe’ve found The Next Elon Musk… and what we believe to be the next Tesla. It’s already racked up $26 billion in government contracts. Peter Thiel just bet $1 Billion on it.May 19 at 1:00 AM | Banyan Hill Publishing (Ad)Piper Sandler downgrades Home Bancorp over lack of loan growthApril 24, 2026 | seekingalpha.comHome Bancorp Inc (HBCP) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Highlights: Record Net Interest Income and ...April 24, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comHome Bancorp, Inc. (HBCP) Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptApril 21, 2026 | seekingalpha.comSee More Home Bancorp Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Home Bancorp? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Home Bancorp and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Home BancorpHome Bancorp (NASDAQ:HBCP) is the bank holding company for The Home National Bank, a full-service financial institution headquartered in Lafayette, Louisiana. The company operates as a regional commercial bank serving individuals, small businesses and municipalities across Louisiana and East Texas. Through its network of branches and digital banking platforms, Home Bancorp offers a range of deposit and lending solutions designed to meet the needs of its local markets. The company’s core offerings include retail deposit products such as checking, savings and money market accounts, as well as a variety of commercial and consumer lending services. Home Bancorp provides commercial real estate lending, construction financing, small business loans and mortgage services. In addition to traditional banking services, the company supports clients with treasury and cash management, merchant services and online banking capabilities to facilitate seamless financial operations. Committed to community banking principles, Home Bancorp emphasizes personalized service and local decision-making. Its leadership maintains a community-focused strategy, aiming to foster long-term relationships with customers, support economic development initiatives and contribute to the growth of the regions it serves. The company continues to invest in technology and service enhancements to improve customer experience and expand its presence in key markets within Louisiana and Southeast Texas.View Home Bancorp ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Dillard’s Posted a Huge Earnings Beat—So Why Did the Rally Fade?Why Applied Optoelectronics Stock May Be Near a Turning PointIs Everspin Technologies the Next AI Edge Breakout?Peloton Stock Gives Back Gains After Upbeat Earnings ReportDatavault Gains Traction: 5 Reasons to Sell NowTMC Stock: Why This Pre-Revenue Miner Is Worth WatchingRobinhood, SoFi, and Webull Are Telling Very Different Stories Upcoming Earnings Analog Devices (5/20/2026)Intuit (5/20/2026)NVIDIA (5/20/2026)Lowe's Companies (5/20/2026)Medtronic (5/20/2026)Target (5/20/2026)TJX Companies (5/20/2026)NetEase (5/21/2026)Ross Stores (5/21/2026)Walmart (5/21/2026) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:08Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Home Bancorp's third quarter 2025 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note this call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Home Bancorp's Chairman, President, and CEO John Bordelon, and Chief Financial Officer David Kirkley. Please go ahead, Mr. Kirkley. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:00:38Thank you, Konstantin. Good morning and welcome to Home Bank's third quarter 2025 earnings call. Our earnings release and investor presentation are available on our website. I'd ask that everyone please refer to the disclaimer regarding forward-looking statements in our investor presentation and our SEC filings. Now I'll hand it over to John to make a few comments about the quarter. John? John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:01:02Thanks, David. Good morning, and thank you for joining our earnings call today. We appreciate your interest in Home Bank as we discuss our results, expectations for the future, and our approach to creating long-term shareholder value. Yesterday afternoon, we reported third quarter net income of $12.4 million or $1.59 per share, up $0.14 per share from the second quarter and $0.41 from a year ago. Net interest margin expanded for the sixth consecutive quarter to 4.10%, and our return on assets increased by 10 basis points to 1.41%. Home Bank's efficiency ratio also improved in the third quarter and is now back down below 60%. We've been able to grow revenues significantly faster than expenses over the last couple of years, with revenues increasing twice as fast as expenses. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:01:57Loans decreased by $58 million in the third quarter, as we saw payoffs and paydowns that were $52 million higher than average paydowns over the last six quarters. This was driven by a number of long-term customers selling their businesses or property. I think it's worth mentioning that we're not losing them to other banks. Eight customers alone that sold their businesses or property in the third quarter made up $45 million of the decline. In almost every case, Home Bank remains these customers' primary banking relationship, which bodes well for the future but challenges our near-term growth. Customers are always waiting for a lower rate before they move ahead with their projects that require financing. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:02:40We have a lot of great conversations going on, but the media coverage over the last 10 months has convinced many that big rate cuts are coming, and so people are choosing to remain on the sidelines until there's more clarity on rates. While we are hopeful that we'd see 4%-6% loan growth this year, we're now expecting more moderate growth of 1%-2% in 2025. We've always maintained loan structure discipline and have prioritized risk-adjusted returns over growth, and we don't intend to abandon our principles now. On a high note, deposits increased 9% annualized in the third quarter, with good growth in relatively low-cost money market accounts. Thanks to a concerted effort and a focus on building franchise value, we've increased deposits by 17% in the last nine quarters versus loans, which also grew a respectable 8%. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:03:34Most of this increase has been in core deposits and includes good growth in Texas, which we entered back in 2022. Our loan-to-deposit ratio is now 91%, which positions us well for when loan growth picks up. Non-performing loans have increased in 2025, but our charge-offs remain very low. We don't expect for that to change due to low loan-to-values, our conservative underwriting standards, and proactive credit management. As a reminder, you can see on Slide 16, our net charge-offs have averaged about six basis points over the last six-plus years. M&A activity nationwide has accelerated, and we continue to look for the right opportunity to leverage our acquisition experience. We are confident in Home Bank's future and our ability to meet our high standards. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:04:25Our senior leadership team has 981 years of cumulative experience for an average of 26.6 years, and we have a track record of outperformance in all economic climates. With that, I will turn it back over to David, our Chief Financial Officer. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:04:42Thanks, John. Slide 5 in our investor presentation has a summary of the last six quarters. Net income totaled $12.4 million, a 9% increase from the prior quarter and a 31% increase from a year ago. Net interest income increased $754,000 quarter-over-quarter, as NIM increased 6 basis points to 4.10%. Yield on loans increased 3 basis points quarter-over-quarter, as the contractual rate on new loan originations was 7.35%, which continues to support an expanding NIM as lower-yielding loans reprice. Slides 14 and 17 provide additional details on cash flows from our loan and investment securities portfolio, and we think we can continue to increase asset yields even if there are rate cuts. Excluding floating-rate loans repricing in the next three months, 41% of loans with a blended rate of 5.7% are expected to reprice or refinance over the next three years. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:05:46Over that same time period, paydown of our investment portfolio is projected to be paid off with a roll-off yield of 2.56%, which is well below current available yields of approximately 4%. Slides 15 and 16 of our investor presentation provide some additional detail on credit. We had $376,000 in net charge-offs in the quarter related to smaller C&I loans. Year-to-date, our net charge-offs totaled $743,000, which is a very low 4 basis points of total loans and $58,000 less than a prior year. Third quarter non-performing assets increased $5.5 million to $30.9 million, or 88 basis points of total assets. The increase was primarily due to the downgrade of five relationships and partially offset by payment. The largest was a $5.1 million relationship with two separate land development loans in Houston. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:06:44We feel between the loan-to-value on these properties and the guarantor strength that there will be no material losses on this relationship. The second largest was a $1.2 million acquired CRE loan that was placed on non-accrual status in September that was made current as of 9/30. Once again, we believe we are well collateralized on this loan as well as other loans classified as non-accrual and/or substandard. We had a negative $229,000 provision expense during the quarter as a result of loan balance declines, which was partially offset by $376,000 of net charge-offs. We feel very confident in reserves as our allowance for loan loss ratio was stable from the second quarter at 1.21%. The cost of interest-bearing liabilities decreased two basis points to 2.69% as continued strong deposit growth allowed us to pay down more expensive short-term advances. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:07:41Interest-bearing deposit costs increased five basis points in Q3 due to changes in the deposit mix, but we will see decreases when we get some additional Fed rate cuts. The cost of CDs declined one basis point to 3.85% even as balances increased $15 million during the quarter. We are keeping CD terms short with 77% of our CD portfolio maturing in the next six months and 97% within a year, so we will have the opportunity to react quickly when rates decline. Non-interest-bearing deposits, which represent 27% of total deposits, increased $5 million in Q3 and $69 million, or 9.4% year-to-date. Our overall cost of deposits in Q3 was an attractive 1.88%. This was an increase of four basis points quarter-over-quarter, but once again, we were able to pay off FHLB advances and reduce our total cost of interest-bearing liabilities by two basis points. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:08:42Short-term advances from the FHLB declined $75 million quarter-to-date and $137 million year-to-date. Slide 22 of the presentation has some additional details on noninterest income and expenses. Third quarter noninterest income was $3.7 million, which was in line with expectations. We expect noninterest income to be between $3.6 and $3.8 million over the next several quarters. Noninterest expenses increased by $124,000 to $22.5 million and was in line with expectations. Noninterest expenses expected to be between $22.5 and $23 million per quarter for the next two quarters. Slides 23 and 24 summarize the impact our capital management strategy has had on Home Bank. Since 2019, we grew tangible book value per share adjusted for AOCI at a 9.5% annualized growth rate. Over the same period, we also increased EPS at an 11.2% annualized growth rate. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:09:47We increased our dividends per share by 36% and repurchased 17% of our shares outstanding, and we've done this while maintaining robust capital ratios. This positions us to be successful in varying economic environments and to take advantage of any opportunities as they arise. With that, operator, please open the line for Q&A. Operator00:10:08We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then the number one on your touch-tone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then the number two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble a roster. Your first question comes from the line of Joseph Yanchunis from Raymond James. Please go ahead. Joseph YanchunisManaging Director at Raymond James00:10:45Good morning. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:10:47Hey, good morning, Joseph. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:10:48Hey, Joseph. Joseph YanchunisManaging Director at Raymond James00:10:49So I thought we could start with the NIM here. So how should we think about the NIM trajectory, particularly as we think about the yield curve and your increased asset sensitivity? And at what point do you think the NIM peaks? David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:11:06All right, so the increased asset sensitivity is more so due to the cash on hand on our balance sheet, so that's increasing the sensitivity as cash reprices daily. I would say as far as NIM, I think we have a great opportunity to keep NIM at least flat and grow a couple of basis points quarter-over-quarter. We have highlighted that we have a lot of loans and investment securities repricing, and we still think we have room to reprice upwards, and also, with Fed rate cuts, we did lower some of our deposit rates, and we think as the Fed continues to cut, we have the opportunity to lower deposit rates even further, and that has the ability to offset the reduction in loan yield due to Fed rate cuts as our adjustable rate loans reprice downward. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:12:04So I think we're really well positioned to continue to keep NIM at least flat to increase a couple of basis points. Joseph YanchunisManaging Director at Raymond James00:12:17I appreciate that. And your updated 2025 loan growth guide implies a pretty big step up in forward-looking loan growth. What levels of payoffs and paydowns are implied in this guide, and how does the loan pipeline currently compare to recent history? Just trying to get a sense of the jumping-off point as we get into 2026. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:12:40Sure. Third quarter was the beginning of the decline of new loan originations. We see a little healthier portfolio coming forth in the fourth quarter. Maybe not all of that gets closed in the fourth quarter, but so it is a little healthier than what we had in third quarter originations. So those numbers were down probably about, without the exact amount, but probably about $30-something million in the quarter from prior quarters. So we do think we'll see some pickup. Hopefully, we can pick up all that $36 million and be more normalized in the fourth quarter. But I think definitely, if we get a couple more rate cuts, the first quarter should be very strong. Joseph YanchunisManaging Director at Raymond James00:13:31All right. Well, thank you for taking my questions. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:13:33Thank you, Joseph. Operator00:13:38Again, if you have a question, please press star then the number one. Your next question comes from the line of Feddie Strickland from Janney Montgomery Scott. Please go ahead. Feddie StricklandVP and Equity Research Analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott00:13:50Hey, good morning, John, David. David KirkleySenior EVP and CFO at Home Bancorp00:13:52Good morning, Fed. Feddie StricklandVP and Equity Research Analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott00:13:53I appreciate the commentary and the relief that you don't expect losses on the credits that migrated non-accrual this quarter. You gave some more color on the call. So it sounds like we shouldn't necessarily see charge-offs from that, but I'm just curious, as you work through some of these credits, could we start to see the direction of non-performers reverse and maybe start to see those come down some? John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:14:16Yeah. I think if you, as we look at it, there's no, I guess, similarity in what's starting to have problems. It's just some one-offs here or there. We have one of our classifieds that called us this week and said they're going to be paying us off by the end of the month. So we would hope, but the worst part about NPAs is sometimes it takes them a little bit longer to fix themselves. What we're happy about is we're not seeing a lot of them going into bankruptcy, which really takes anywhere a little bit faster in Texas, but slower in Louisiana. In some cases, up to a year to be able to move on that. So we're working through them. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:14:59One of our problem assets that we had from a couple of years ago, we finally are getting out of bankruptcy, and we'll be able to take those properties back and begin the process of selling them. So it's kind of a longer-term situation when you have the bankruptcies, but fortunately, most of ours are not in bankruptcy. So hopefully, they can either sell or upgrade their business and be able to start paying as agreed. Feddie StricklandVP and Equity Research Analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott00:15:28Appreciate that. And just shifting gears to deposits, can you talk about the level of deposit competition you're seeing today versus maybe a quarter ago? And how are you thinking about deposit betas on the way down if we do get rate cuts? John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:15:44So our deposit betas are going to be a little bit, I would say, less than peers. We will continue to see our deposit betas increase from where they are over time. And I think they're going to be a little bit less than peers because we didn't raise our deposit rates as much as some of our competitors did and have the overall lower cost of funds to start off with. So that's going to give us less room to go down, but we still have room to adjust as yields come down. As far as competition goes, I would say there are a couple, count on one hand, banks that are kind of out of the norm of our peer grouping. They pop up here and there, and I would say mostly in the Texas market, one or two banks in Louisiana that have some outlying pricing. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:16:47Overall, we're able to retain most customers. We are able to offer competitive rates, and I don't feel like the pricing is as fierce as it has been in the past. I feel like banks are some of our competitors in the market. They are very quick to lower their deposit costs and looking to lower their liability costs, and that bodes well for us given our NIM position and our desire to continue to increase our liquidity. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:17:22Also adding to that, with a 91% loan-to-deposit ratio, it should be a little bit easier for us to lower our deposit costs. When we were at 98, we were very much kind of in the lead as far as the price of CDs and such. I think a little bit of that pressure will be taken off. Feddie StricklandVP and Equity Research Analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott00:17:46Got it. Thanks. I'll step back in the queue. Operator00:17:55This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to John for closing remarks. Sir, please go ahead. John BordelonChairman, President, and CEO at Home Bancorp00:18:03Thank you. Once again, thank you all today for joining us. We look forward to speaking to you in many days and weeks ahead. Thank you for your interest in Home Bancorp. Have a great day. Operator00:18:16The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDavid KirkleySenior EVP and CFOJohn BordelonChairman, President, and CEOAnalystsJoseph YanchunisManaging Director at Raymond JamesFeddie StricklandVP and Equity Research Analyst at Janney Montgomery ScottPowered by