NASDAQ:MNSB MainStreet Bank Q2 2025 Earnings Report $23.50 -0.01 (-0.04%) Closing price 05/8/2026 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$23.45 -0.05 (-0.21%) As of 05/8/2026 04:04 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast MainStreet Bank EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.53Consensus EPS $0.44Beat/MissBeat by +$0.09One Year Ago EPSN/AMainStreet Bank Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$19.86 millionExpected Revenue$18.90 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$956.00 thousandYoY Revenue GrowthN/AMainStreet Bank Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2025Date7/22/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, July 22, 2025Conference Call Time2:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsMainStreet Bank's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Tuesday, July 28, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Tuesday, July 21, 2026 at 2:00 PM 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 MainStreet Bank Q2 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 22, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Net interest margin rose to 3.75% and is expected to hold steady or improve as $152 M in CDs reprice and a robust loan pipeline drives margin expansion. Positive Sentiment: Earnings per share increased to $0.53 with a return on average assets of 0.86% and return on average tangible common equity of 8.84%, or $0.56 EPS and 0.91% ROAA on a core basis after adjusting for non-recurring items. Positive Sentiment: Asset quality improved as nonperforming loans declined, accrued interest was recovered, and stress tests estimate worst-case losses that remain well covered by strong capitalization. Positive Sentiment: Core deposit mix strengthened with a $6 M increase in non-interest and low-cost deposits and a 19% reduction in higher-cost non-core funding. Neutral Sentiment: The bank continues to target operating expense reductions, having incurred $1.8 M in non-recurring expenses this quarter, and projects further cost savings to support its community banking strategy. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallMainStreet Bank Q2 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xThere are 4 speakers on the call. Speaker 200:00:00Good afternoon and thank you for joining our second quarter 2025 earnings webcast. My name is Jeff Dick. I am the Chairman and CEO of MainStreet Bancshares, Inc. and MainStreet Bank. With me today is our Bank Chief Financial Officer, Alex Vari, our Chief Lending Officer, Tom Floyd, and our Company Chief Financial Officer, Tom Chmelik. Chris Marinac, Director of Research for Janney Montgomery Scott, will join us at the end of the call today with his questions. If you'd like, you can also submit written questions throughout the presentation using the web portal. We'll address your questions at the end of the presentation. If for some reason we miss your question during the discussion, please reach out to us after the webcast. I'd like to take a moment to point you to our Safe Harbor page that describes the context of forward-looking statements that we may make today. Speaker 200:00:52Please also know that we may use certain non-GAAP measures, which are identified as such, within the presentation materials. The Washington, DC metropolitan area is much more than host to just the federal government. With our major universities, tourism, data centers, world-class medical facilities, and Fortune 500 companies, it is a great place to do business. We still have low unemployment and good median household income. Housing is still undersupplied, and it remains a seller's market. While the market is vibrant and we see good opportunities, we are affected by the actions taken by the federal and DC government. We monitor those actions to assess their impact on our business strategy. You'll see that slide four recaps our growth story, and there's not a whole lot more to say on that slide. The next slide, we're a Virginia community bank serving the Washington, DC metropolitan area for over 21 years. Speaker 200:01:52We have a great organic growth story using a branch-like strategy. MNSB is a small cap stock that trades on the NASDAQ Capital Markets Exchange and is listed on the Russell 2000 Index. As of quarter end, we traded at 78% of tangible book value. During today's presentation, you'll hear good news about our net interest margin expansion, our solid earnings, and our strong asset quality. At this point, I'll turn the presentation over to our Bank CFO, Alex Vari. Speaker 300:02:23Thank you, Jeff. On slide seven, we summarize our financial performance over the last five quarters, with this last quarter illustrating our commitment to be a high-achieving community bank. Earnings per share increased to $0.53, our return on average assets to 0.86%, our return on average tangible common equity to 8.84%, and our net interest margin to 3.75%. We are very excited to report such strong quarterly results. Contributing factors during the quarter included improvement to non-performing loans while recovering a meaningful amount of accrued interest, continuing to lower our cost of funds, and improve our net interest margin. We are seeing good loan opportunities as we look at our third and fourth quarter pipeline. On slide eight, we recognize it's important to understand expectations for future quarters and want to call out a few one-time non-recurring transactions during the quarter on both the revenue and expense side. Speaker 300:03:25You can see we had non-recurring revenue of $1.5 million, consisting of a recovery of accrued interest and fees on a previous loan and recognition of some non-interest income gains. Focusing on core community banking, we had non-recurring expenses of $1.8 million related to personnel downsizing, contract terminations, and realigning certain accruals. Without these non-recurring adjustments, our EPS would have been $0.56, and our return on average assets would have been 0.91%. Slide nine highlights our intentional management of our loan-to-deposit ratio to maximize our net interest income, which has increased for the third consecutive quarter. Our liquidity position remains strong with ample funding sources, particularly in our secured credit availability. As of the quarter end, we have liquidity and available credit facilities to match 38% of our deposit portfolio. Moving to slide 10, you will see continued improvement to our net interest margin. Speaker 300:04:28While we are reporting a quarterly net interest margin of 3.75%, our core net interest margin also showed meaningful expansion quarter over quarter. Our net interest margin rose primarily as our cost of funds continued to contract. Our total funding cost reduced 20 basis points to 3.29% during the quarter. Looking at where the net interest margin is headed, we believe the margin will hold steady and could see progress as we have $152 million in certificates of deposit repricing in the second half of the year and a robust loan pipeline. Slide 11 shows resilience and consistency in our deposit portfolio mix. On slide 12, you will see our business banking team continues to attract and grow non-interest and low-cost deposits, helping to replace higher-cost funding and expand our net interest margin. Speaker 300:05:25Core deposits remain consistent with the prior quarter, while non-interest-bearing and low-cost deposits grew by $6 million during the quarter. We also reduced our reliance on non-core deposits by 19%, which was accreted to our net interest margin. Slide 13 lays out our estimated expense run rate for the remainder of the year. We continue to be committed to driving operating expense down as we focus on core community banking. We were able to achieve our strong quarterly performance at the current operating level. While we are projecting additional expense reductions, we have revised our estimations for the second half of the year that include operating costs of a community bank in a major metropolitan market. Attracting and retaining talented bankers, expanding our customer footprint, and the ever-growing regulatory burden are costs all community banks must face. Speaker 300:06:19We believe we are well positioned in the marketplace to build on our strong quarterly performance for the second half of the year. On slide 14, we typically get questions about stock buybacks. We have an active buyback plan in place with a capacity of just over $3 million to repurchase shares. We will continue to look at opportunities to execute buybacks in line with our strategy. At this point, I'll turn the presentation over to Tom Floyd, our Chief Lending Officer, to discuss our loan portfolio and loan performance. Operator00:06:50Thank you, Alex. I'm incredibly proud of the hard work everyone on the team put in during the second quarter, and our consistent strong performance is a testament to that effort. Over the next few minutes, I'm excited to delve into the details and trends about our portfolio composition. I'll also highlight the proactive steps we're taking to actively manage risk. We've experienced positive trends in our workout credits, and I look forward to sharing more specifics on that as well. Our commitment to serving our community remains unwavering, and we are optimistic about what the future holds. Slide 15 provides an overview of our diversified loan portfolio as of the end of the quarter. Operator00:07:34Our total loan outstanding is $1.8 billion, distributed as follows: 30% is non-owner occupied commercial real estate, 21% is owner occupied commercial real estate, 18% is construction, 14% is multifamily, 11% is residential real estate, and 6% is commercial and industrial. Additionally, it's worth noting that nearly all of our construction portfolio has a suitable interest reserve held at the bank. Slide 16 highlights our commercial real estate concentration over the last seven quarters. We've always effectively managed our exposure here and finished the quarter at 366% of capital. Our board sets our limit at 375%, so we've been strategically building our pipeline to maximize our opportunity to grow assets. Based on the pipeline and the number of quality opportunities in our market, we're confident we can continue to operate at our comfort threshold. Operator00:08:40You may be familiar with the asset on slide 17 as we've discussed it in the last few presentations. Not all stories have a happy ending, but I'm happy to report this one does. We've collected 100% of principal, interest at the default rate, and all fees. This is the outcome we anticipated, and it's excellent to see this resolution come to pass. Slide 18 is a lens into our government contracting portfolio. Before I dive into this slide, I want to assure you that we're in constant contact with our borrowers in this highly dynamic space to ensure we're appropriately supporting our clients and effectively managing risk. Our portfolio has 29 asset-based lines of credit in place, where all advances are supported by a borrowing base of billed receivables. Operator00:09:27These receivables are deposited directly into our bank from our clients' respective customers, and the funds are used to automatically curtail their corresponding credit lines. As you can see, these 29 lines have balances of $13 million outstanding, with total commitments of $79.2 million, which equates to a 16% utilization rate. Over the average line's lifetime, this is relatively consistent. Our entire government contracting book only has $2.5 million in outstanding term debt. These loans are amortizing rapidly with an average remaining term of 30 months. It's worth noting that the average deposit relationship attributable to this portfolio is $75.5 million over the quarter, which equates to 580% of outstandings and 95% of commitments. The next slide highlights that our loan portfolio is well positioned for stable or falling rates. 70% of our portfolio has rate resets beyond six months, with the remaining 30% with rate resets within six months. Operator00:10:32Of those loans with a faster reset, 45% have a weighted average floor rate of 6.5%. As we progress in 2025, we anticipate this will help our net interest margin as rates are expected to remain stable or decrease. Slide 20 is a snapshot of our year-to-date production and volume of loans participated to other banks. As you'll see, our originations have resulted in $97 million outstanding in loans year to date, and we participated out $13 million over the same period. This is a testament to our lending process, which is relationship-driven and supported by superior credit underwriting, resulting in strong market demand for our organic loan production. Slide 21 shows our trend in average new loan size moving downward while our legal lending limit has increased. This highlights that in the current environment, we're sticking to smaller-sized opportunities within our market. Operator00:11:33Slide 22 shows we have a nominal level of classified loans and non-performing assets. Slide 23 shows the trend in stress tests over the past eight quarters and the resulting impact to capital. The Q2 stress test for all earning assets reflects a worst-case stress loss estimated at $46.79 million. In all quarters, we've remained strongly capitalized. The stress test includes loan level testing for all construction and investor commercial real estate. For all other loan categories, we use the balance in each call report category multiplied by our worst-ever loss for that call report category. For investments, we use the market price. Finally, for banco and life insurance, we determine the liquidation value. Operator00:12:18In summary, our team has done an excellent job serving our clients while managing risk over the second quarter of 2025, and we continue to see our efforts with our workout credits pay off, no pun intended. We're passionate about serving our community, and we love seeing it thrive, and we are optimistic about the future. That wraps it up for our loan presentation. Back to you, Jeff. Speaker 200:12:38Thanks, Tom. As I indicated at the top of the hour, and as you've heard during this brief presentation, we've shared good news about our net interest margin expansion, our solid earnings, and our strong asset quality. We'll address the questions that have been submitted through the portal after we hear from Chris Marinac, Director of Research at Janney Montgomery Scott. Chris, good morning, or good afternoon, I'm sorry. Speaker 100:13:03Hey Jeff, can you hear me okay? Speaker 200:13:05I can, yes. Speaker 100:13:06All right, great. I wanted to ask about sort of loan pipelines and loan growth and kind of what's a sustainable pace both in the next couple of quarters as well as as you think through your business plan the next couple of years. Speaker 200:13:19Okay, Tom Floyd, do you want to take that? Speaker 300:13:21Great question, Chris. In the beginning of the year, we had given guidance for low single-digit loan growth, and we still feel like that's good guidance. We've had a little bit of a retraction in the first quarter, which we view as normal just based on the timing of payoffs and when we can get the right opportunities closed and booked. We're looking for not just growth for growth's sake, but the right opportunities, and we are very encouraged with what we have in the pipeline. Speaker 200:13:46Yeah, you'll remember too, in the first part of the year, the first half of the year, with the new change in administration and the effects of DOJ and other things, we did try to constrain our lending while we waited to see the total impact on the economy that was going to come from that. We think things have settled down now. Speaker 100:14:18With that pace and growth, I mean, there seems to be limited pressure on funding. Do you see the funding mix continuing to get more favorable and perhaps giving you further relief on the margin? Speaker 300:14:31Yeah, as I mentioned in the presentation, we're going to have opportunities to reprice some of our funding. Deposits in our market, of course, are challenging, but our business bankers are doing a great job getting out there, growing relationships, picking up new relationships. I think between what we're able to do, repricing certificates of deposit and developing new relationships and new deposits, that's going to help us on the funding side here in the back half of the year. Speaker 100:15:01I think the business bankers focusing on the core deposits that they're focusing on, the non-interest bearing, is really helping out. We're seeing some of those things that they're working on right now. Speaker 200:15:12Yeah, on the total balance sheet management side, it's funny, there are times over the years where you could just focus on growing one side over the other. This is a time where we're really looking at growing both sides in a fairly lockstep manner. As Tom Floyd alluded to earlier, looking a little bit more at what loans are going to help to maximize the earnings power of the company. Likewise, on the deposit side, do we need to bring in those deposits right now? Can we let some of the other higher cost deposits run off, keep our loan-to-deposit ratio right around 100%, and not just growing for growth's sake, but really trying to manage the balance sheet to maximize our earnings power of the company. Speaker 100:16:09Great. My other question just has to do with asset quality in general. My impression is that the criticizing classifieds are moving in a positive direction. I'm just kind of curious what else you see on the horizon, either for new issues that could fester or just general valuation trends as we're now at the midpoint of the year. Speaker 300:16:27Yeah, great question. We are pleased with what we're seeing in terms of credit quality across the board. We're continuing to monitor asset prices of underlying real estate. As we've discussed previously, we have a very low exposure to office space, but we still keep an eye on all of the asset levels in our market. We're seeing a slight uptick in days on market for residential real estate, but it's still not at a level that is concerning. It's still a seller's market. We are going to continue to monitor these things very closely, but right now we are pleased with the trend we're seeing. No one knows exactly what the future holds, but we are pleased with the trends we're seeing with regards to credit quality. Speaker 100:17:13I'm just going to sneak one more in. Just in general, you know, the government contracting business that you see, whether it's in your bank or just around you in the marketplace, is that stabilizing or is the uncertainty that existed earlier this year kind of still in place? Speaker 300:17:30We do believe that it's stabilizing. It's a dynamic marketplace, and there's lots of news coming out constantly. It's something we have to make sure that we don't get comfortable with or take our eye off the ball. The key is just continually to be in communication with our customers to make sure we're appropriately managing risk. Overall, I do think that there's a sense that there's a little more stability than there was a few months ago. Speaker 100:17:59Great. I'll cede the floor. Thank you very much for taking my questions. Speaker 200:18:03Yeah, Chris, as always, thank you as well. The one thing I would tag on to the government contracting question, because I think it's a really good one, is we've actually changed our borrowing-based certificate. One of the things that we ask the customer to do is to really attest that there's not been any change to their contract structures. We get that on at least a monthly basis. The lenders are in fairly frequent conversation with those borrowers as well. Tom, I don't know if you have. Speaker 100:18:38We're only advancing on billed receivables. We don't advance on unbilled receivables at all. Speaker 200:18:44I think for our term debt structure in the GovCom portfolio, Tom indicated that it was like $2.5 million outstanding. That's also very strong. At this point in time, we'll turn to a few questions from you all on the phone this afternoon. Speaker 300:19:07We've got some good questions in the queue today. First up, can you talk about efforts on growing core deposits since Avenue has been shut down? Yeah, you know, kind of what we talked about a little bit earlier. We like to keep the loan-to-deposit ratio high to maximize the earnings potential of the company. Where we're focusing, the business bankers are really engaged in getting into some of the markets where maybe they didn't have as much of a presence before, really trying to get new relationships and grow those deposits. You can see their efforts there by over the last quarter, we had growth in our non-interest and low-cost deposits, which is really beneficial to, or really speaking to the efforts that they're doing there. Speaker 300:19:58I would also say the lending team is really engaged with their customers and bringing in deposits as we're looking at deals and making sure we're really focused on that as well. I don't know if there's anything you want to add to that, Tom, from the lending side. Operator00:20:15Absolutely. I appreciate that. We are at our best when we work as a team with the business banking and lending side, working in concert with expanding existing relationships and identifying the right opportunities. It is something that we take very seriously in terms of focusing on teamwork and working together to build relationships. We are very excited, like I said, about the pipeline that we've built and the diversified industries that we have an opportunity to serve and work with. Speaker 200:20:46Yeah, you know, anecdotally, I've heard just the referrals that the lenders are giving the business bankers and vice versa, and really collaborating to penetrate more into the market than we have before and kind of build those have been successful. I think we're seeing good opportunities on that side. Speaker 300:21:14Will there be any costs associated with closing down Avenue in future quarters? Speaker 200:21:19I'll take that one. The bulk of the costs with staffing and the different systems that we're utilizing in order to run that have been all incurred. We're in strictly a maintenance mode at this point in time as we look to see if there's any future value that we can find from the solution. We're always trying to get those maintenance costs as low as possible, but you're not going to see anything, I believe, significant in the future. Do you agree, Alex? Speaker 300:21:56Yeah, I agree with that. Speaker 200:21:58Okay. Speaker 300:22:02How many shares were repurchased in the second quarter? Yeah, good question. We didn't see any block trades occur in the second quarter, other than when we were admitted to the Russell 2000 and the reconstitution. There just wasn't a lot of opportunity for those. With regulatory limits on commercial real estate, will the bank's growth be limited? Operator00:22:28No, we've always done a good job operating within our board-set policy. I will say that with the opportunities in our pipeline right now, we have a very wide range of industries that are non-CRE, with owner-occupied CRE being a major component, which obviously doesn't count against that ratio. We are very excited about that. With low single digit, as what we've discussed is our guidance, we see no issue there. Speaker 200:23:00I think the growth in capital too, as we're going to see in the coming quarters, will obviously augment some of those ratios. Speaker 300:23:10Did you repurchase any shares in the quarter? If not? Speaker 200:23:14No, I already asked that one. Speaker 300:23:15Oh, sorry. My apologies. What are your profitability goals for 2026? ROA and ROE? Yeah. Great question. I think our quarterly results show that we're well on our way to a 1% ROA. There's always uncertainty with market conditions and what the rate environment is going to look like. We're seeing good loan opportunities. We're seeing good deposit opportunities. We're trending in a very positive way. I think those things are going to put us on that trajectory to be where we want to be. Speaker 200:23:56I think on the return on equity, if we get close to the 1%, that's going to be back into the double-digit numbers where we were historically. Speaker 300:24:13What levels of profitability do you need to produce to justify the bank's independence? Speaker 200:24:19That's a great question. You know, we feel like it certainly has to be 1% or more as the standard. We don't look at it as much as justifying the bank's independence as we do looking at the opportunities that are right for the bank at this time. As we consider good corporate alternatives, that's really one of the key things that we hone in on: do we feel like we can produce a better income stream independently than we can with whatever opportunity we might be looking at, whether it's a merger or an acquisition, either way. That's really what drives us more than anything else, constantly seeing what opportunities there are in the market and then sort of determining, okay, what does this look like compared to what we could produce on our own? Speaker 200:25:18That's really the best way to answer that because, as you know, there's not a magic number inside of that other than if you can't get at least back up into that 1% range, it probably doesn't make sense for a bank in a major metropolitan area. Just to kind of refocus a bit, we've always talked about, in our recent quarters, the deposit getting is one of the more difficult, low-cost deposit getting is one of the most difficult challenges that we have in front of us. The team is doing an excellent job. As Tom indicated, the business bankers and the lenders are working in lockstep to try to sort of shake any opportunity that they have. Ironically, the large banks can sometimes be our better friends because in certain cases, they're using AI now to decision funds availability on check deposits. Speaker 200:26:17We've heard some interesting stories from our customers or our new customers who have come to us because they've had a deposit, sizable deposit go through. They know the funds cleared on the other side, and they automatically got an email out of the blue that said your funds are going to be held for 21 days. They learned that it was a decision made with artificial intelligence. You take the good with the bad, but in those cases, it's a bad outcome for the customer at that institution. It's a great outcome for a community bank that deals more with relationships. We don't do anything foolish either. We make sure funds clear, but it certainly doesn't take 21 days. Again, we find the opportunities where we can. Speaker 200:27:05A lot of our business bankers came out of the large banks, and they just do a terrific job for us in maintaining those relationships and digging into the community. I very much appreciate everybody's comments today and look forward to reporting, hopefully, you know, quarters like this as we go forward. We're on track to do so, but we never know what the economy might do. Thank you very much, and we appreciate your investment in MainStreet Bank, and we look forward to talking in the future. As always, if you have any other questions or comments, please feel free to reach out. We're happy to talk with you. Thank you.Read morePowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) MainStreet Bank Earnings HeadlinesMainStreet Bancshares Inc (MNSB) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Highlights: Strong Financial Performance ...April 21, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comMainStreet Bancshares, Inc. (MNSB) Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptApril 21, 2026 | seekingalpha.comElon’s AI supercomputer just went live. Here’s my #1 stock.Is Elon about to trigger another 315X opportunity? Elon gave Tesla investors the chance to make more than 315 times their money when he revived the electric vehicle industry. $1 billion fund manager Louis Navellier believes Elon's "Project Apex" will mint a new generation of millionaires.May 10 at 1:00 AM | InvestorPlace (Ad)MainStreet Bancshares, Inc. Announces First Quarter 2026 ResultsApril 20, 2026 | globenewswire.comMainStreet Bank Elevates David Murrell to Executive VP & Chief Banking OfficerApril 13, 2026 | globenewswire.comMainStreet Bank Appoints Morgan Higgins to Board of DirectorsMarch 25, 2026 | globenewswire.comSee More MainStreet Bank Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like MainStreet Bank? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on MainStreet Bank and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About MainStreet BankMainStreet Bank (NASDAQ:MNSB) Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: MNSB) is the bank holding company for MainStreet Bank, a community bank headquartered in Westborough, Massachusetts. Through its subsidiary, the company provides a full range of commercial and consumer banking services designed to meet the financial needs of individuals, small businesses, and non-profit organizations. Its core focus is on building long‐term relationships within the communities it serves. MainStreet Bank’s product suite includes deposit accounts such as checking, savings, money market and certificate of deposit offerings, as well as a variety of lending solutions. The bank extends commercial real estate, business term and line-of-credit loans to support local enterprises, and offers residential mortgage, home equity and consumer installment loans for personal borrowing needs. Complementing these offerings are digital banking platforms, mobile deposit, online bill pay and treasury management services to streamline cash flow for both retail and commercial clients. Established in 1981 and based in Westborough, Massachusetts, MainStreet Bank operates multiple branch offices throughout central Massachusetts. The bank’s community-oriented approach emphasizes local decision-making and personalized service. By focusing on regional markets, MainStreet Bank aims to deliver tailored financial solutions while maintaining strong ties with the businesses and households in its service area.View MainStreet Bank 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 MarketBeat Week in Review – 05/04 - 05/08Quantum Earnings Season Is Ramping Up—What to Watch From 2 Major PlayersRocket Lab Posts Record Q1 Revenue, Raises Q2 Guidance3 Under-The-Radar Small Caps Making New All-Time HighsFlutter Sees Post-Earnings Boost as FanDuel Shows Signs of RecoveryHims & Hers Earnings Preview: The Novo Nordisk Shift Puts GLP-1 Strategy in FocusWater Infrastructure: Why This Boring Sector Could Get Exciting Upcoming Earnings Constellation Energy (5/11/2026)Barrick Mining (5/11/2026)Petroleo Brasileiro S.A.- Petrobras (5/11/2026)Simon Property Group (5/11/2026)SEA (5/12/2026)Cisco Systems (5/13/2026)Alibaba Group (5/13/2026)Manulife Financial (5/13/2026)Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (5/13/2026)Takeda Pharmaceutical (5/13/2026) 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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There are 4 speakers on the call. Speaker 200:00:00Good afternoon and thank you for joining our second quarter 2025 earnings webcast. My name is Jeff Dick. I am the Chairman and CEO of MainStreet Bancshares, Inc. and MainStreet Bank. With me today is our Bank Chief Financial Officer, Alex Vari, our Chief Lending Officer, Tom Floyd, and our Company Chief Financial Officer, Tom Chmelik. Chris Marinac, Director of Research for Janney Montgomery Scott, will join us at the end of the call today with his questions. If you'd like, you can also submit written questions throughout the presentation using the web portal. We'll address your questions at the end of the presentation. If for some reason we miss your question during the discussion, please reach out to us after the webcast. I'd like to take a moment to point you to our Safe Harbor page that describes the context of forward-looking statements that we may make today. Speaker 200:00:52Please also know that we may use certain non-GAAP measures, which are identified as such, within the presentation materials. The Washington, DC metropolitan area is much more than host to just the federal government. With our major universities, tourism, data centers, world-class medical facilities, and Fortune 500 companies, it is a great place to do business. We still have low unemployment and good median household income. Housing is still undersupplied, and it remains a seller's market. While the market is vibrant and we see good opportunities, we are affected by the actions taken by the federal and DC government. We monitor those actions to assess their impact on our business strategy. You'll see that slide four recaps our growth story, and there's not a whole lot more to say on that slide. The next slide, we're a Virginia community bank serving the Washington, DC metropolitan area for over 21 years. Speaker 200:01:52We have a great organic growth story using a branch-like strategy. MNSB is a small cap stock that trades on the NASDAQ Capital Markets Exchange and is listed on the Russell 2000 Index. As of quarter end, we traded at 78% of tangible book value. During today's presentation, you'll hear good news about our net interest margin expansion, our solid earnings, and our strong asset quality. At this point, I'll turn the presentation over to our Bank CFO, Alex Vari. Speaker 300:02:23Thank you, Jeff. On slide seven, we summarize our financial performance over the last five quarters, with this last quarter illustrating our commitment to be a high-achieving community bank. Earnings per share increased to $0.53, our return on average assets to 0.86%, our return on average tangible common equity to 8.84%, and our net interest margin to 3.75%. We are very excited to report such strong quarterly results. Contributing factors during the quarter included improvement to non-performing loans while recovering a meaningful amount of accrued interest, continuing to lower our cost of funds, and improve our net interest margin. We are seeing good loan opportunities as we look at our third and fourth quarter pipeline. On slide eight, we recognize it's important to understand expectations for future quarters and want to call out a few one-time non-recurring transactions during the quarter on both the revenue and expense side. Speaker 300:03:25You can see we had non-recurring revenue of $1.5 million, consisting of a recovery of accrued interest and fees on a previous loan and recognition of some non-interest income gains. Focusing on core community banking, we had non-recurring expenses of $1.8 million related to personnel downsizing, contract terminations, and realigning certain accruals. Without these non-recurring adjustments, our EPS would have been $0.56, and our return on average assets would have been 0.91%. Slide nine highlights our intentional management of our loan-to-deposit ratio to maximize our net interest income, which has increased for the third consecutive quarter. Our liquidity position remains strong with ample funding sources, particularly in our secured credit availability. As of the quarter end, we have liquidity and available credit facilities to match 38% of our deposit portfolio. Moving to slide 10, you will see continued improvement to our net interest margin. Speaker 300:04:28While we are reporting a quarterly net interest margin of 3.75%, our core net interest margin also showed meaningful expansion quarter over quarter. Our net interest margin rose primarily as our cost of funds continued to contract. Our total funding cost reduced 20 basis points to 3.29% during the quarter. Looking at where the net interest margin is headed, we believe the margin will hold steady and could see progress as we have $152 million in certificates of deposit repricing in the second half of the year and a robust loan pipeline. Slide 11 shows resilience and consistency in our deposit portfolio mix. On slide 12, you will see our business banking team continues to attract and grow non-interest and low-cost deposits, helping to replace higher-cost funding and expand our net interest margin. Speaker 300:05:25Core deposits remain consistent with the prior quarter, while non-interest-bearing and low-cost deposits grew by $6 million during the quarter. We also reduced our reliance on non-core deposits by 19%, which was accreted to our net interest margin. Slide 13 lays out our estimated expense run rate for the remainder of the year. We continue to be committed to driving operating expense down as we focus on core community banking. We were able to achieve our strong quarterly performance at the current operating level. While we are projecting additional expense reductions, we have revised our estimations for the second half of the year that include operating costs of a community bank in a major metropolitan market. Attracting and retaining talented bankers, expanding our customer footprint, and the ever-growing regulatory burden are costs all community banks must face. Speaker 300:06:19We believe we are well positioned in the marketplace to build on our strong quarterly performance for the second half of the year. On slide 14, we typically get questions about stock buybacks. We have an active buyback plan in place with a capacity of just over $3 million to repurchase shares. We will continue to look at opportunities to execute buybacks in line with our strategy. At this point, I'll turn the presentation over to Tom Floyd, our Chief Lending Officer, to discuss our loan portfolio and loan performance. Operator00:06:50Thank you, Alex. I'm incredibly proud of the hard work everyone on the team put in during the second quarter, and our consistent strong performance is a testament to that effort. Over the next few minutes, I'm excited to delve into the details and trends about our portfolio composition. I'll also highlight the proactive steps we're taking to actively manage risk. We've experienced positive trends in our workout credits, and I look forward to sharing more specifics on that as well. Our commitment to serving our community remains unwavering, and we are optimistic about what the future holds. Slide 15 provides an overview of our diversified loan portfolio as of the end of the quarter. Operator00:07:34Our total loan outstanding is $1.8 billion, distributed as follows: 30% is non-owner occupied commercial real estate, 21% is owner occupied commercial real estate, 18% is construction, 14% is multifamily, 11% is residential real estate, and 6% is commercial and industrial. Additionally, it's worth noting that nearly all of our construction portfolio has a suitable interest reserve held at the bank. Slide 16 highlights our commercial real estate concentration over the last seven quarters. We've always effectively managed our exposure here and finished the quarter at 366% of capital. Our board sets our limit at 375%, so we've been strategically building our pipeline to maximize our opportunity to grow assets. Based on the pipeline and the number of quality opportunities in our market, we're confident we can continue to operate at our comfort threshold. Operator00:08:40You may be familiar with the asset on slide 17 as we've discussed it in the last few presentations. Not all stories have a happy ending, but I'm happy to report this one does. We've collected 100% of principal, interest at the default rate, and all fees. This is the outcome we anticipated, and it's excellent to see this resolution come to pass. Slide 18 is a lens into our government contracting portfolio. Before I dive into this slide, I want to assure you that we're in constant contact with our borrowers in this highly dynamic space to ensure we're appropriately supporting our clients and effectively managing risk. Our portfolio has 29 asset-based lines of credit in place, where all advances are supported by a borrowing base of billed receivables. Operator00:09:27These receivables are deposited directly into our bank from our clients' respective customers, and the funds are used to automatically curtail their corresponding credit lines. As you can see, these 29 lines have balances of $13 million outstanding, with total commitments of $79.2 million, which equates to a 16% utilization rate. Over the average line's lifetime, this is relatively consistent. Our entire government contracting book only has $2.5 million in outstanding term debt. These loans are amortizing rapidly with an average remaining term of 30 months. It's worth noting that the average deposit relationship attributable to this portfolio is $75.5 million over the quarter, which equates to 580% of outstandings and 95% of commitments. The next slide highlights that our loan portfolio is well positioned for stable or falling rates. 70% of our portfolio has rate resets beyond six months, with the remaining 30% with rate resets within six months. Operator00:10:32Of those loans with a faster reset, 45% have a weighted average floor rate of 6.5%. As we progress in 2025, we anticipate this will help our net interest margin as rates are expected to remain stable or decrease. Slide 20 is a snapshot of our year-to-date production and volume of loans participated to other banks. As you'll see, our originations have resulted in $97 million outstanding in loans year to date, and we participated out $13 million over the same period. This is a testament to our lending process, which is relationship-driven and supported by superior credit underwriting, resulting in strong market demand for our organic loan production. Slide 21 shows our trend in average new loan size moving downward while our legal lending limit has increased. This highlights that in the current environment, we're sticking to smaller-sized opportunities within our market. Operator00:11:33Slide 22 shows we have a nominal level of classified loans and non-performing assets. Slide 23 shows the trend in stress tests over the past eight quarters and the resulting impact to capital. The Q2 stress test for all earning assets reflects a worst-case stress loss estimated at $46.79 million. In all quarters, we've remained strongly capitalized. The stress test includes loan level testing for all construction and investor commercial real estate. For all other loan categories, we use the balance in each call report category multiplied by our worst-ever loss for that call report category. For investments, we use the market price. Finally, for banco and life insurance, we determine the liquidation value. Operator00:12:18In summary, our team has done an excellent job serving our clients while managing risk over the second quarter of 2025, and we continue to see our efforts with our workout credits pay off, no pun intended. We're passionate about serving our community, and we love seeing it thrive, and we are optimistic about the future. That wraps it up for our loan presentation. Back to you, Jeff. Speaker 200:12:38Thanks, Tom. As I indicated at the top of the hour, and as you've heard during this brief presentation, we've shared good news about our net interest margin expansion, our solid earnings, and our strong asset quality. We'll address the questions that have been submitted through the portal after we hear from Chris Marinac, Director of Research at Janney Montgomery Scott. Chris, good morning, or good afternoon, I'm sorry. Speaker 100:13:03Hey Jeff, can you hear me okay? Speaker 200:13:05I can, yes. Speaker 100:13:06All right, great. I wanted to ask about sort of loan pipelines and loan growth and kind of what's a sustainable pace both in the next couple of quarters as well as as you think through your business plan the next couple of years. Speaker 200:13:19Okay, Tom Floyd, do you want to take that? Speaker 300:13:21Great question, Chris. In the beginning of the year, we had given guidance for low single-digit loan growth, and we still feel like that's good guidance. We've had a little bit of a retraction in the first quarter, which we view as normal just based on the timing of payoffs and when we can get the right opportunities closed and booked. We're looking for not just growth for growth's sake, but the right opportunities, and we are very encouraged with what we have in the pipeline. Speaker 200:13:46Yeah, you'll remember too, in the first part of the year, the first half of the year, with the new change in administration and the effects of DOJ and other things, we did try to constrain our lending while we waited to see the total impact on the economy that was going to come from that. We think things have settled down now. Speaker 100:14:18With that pace and growth, I mean, there seems to be limited pressure on funding. Do you see the funding mix continuing to get more favorable and perhaps giving you further relief on the margin? Speaker 300:14:31Yeah, as I mentioned in the presentation, we're going to have opportunities to reprice some of our funding. Deposits in our market, of course, are challenging, but our business bankers are doing a great job getting out there, growing relationships, picking up new relationships. I think between what we're able to do, repricing certificates of deposit and developing new relationships and new deposits, that's going to help us on the funding side here in the back half of the year. Speaker 100:15:01I think the business bankers focusing on the core deposits that they're focusing on, the non-interest bearing, is really helping out. We're seeing some of those things that they're working on right now. Speaker 200:15:12Yeah, on the total balance sheet management side, it's funny, there are times over the years where you could just focus on growing one side over the other. This is a time where we're really looking at growing both sides in a fairly lockstep manner. As Tom Floyd alluded to earlier, looking a little bit more at what loans are going to help to maximize the earnings power of the company. Likewise, on the deposit side, do we need to bring in those deposits right now? Can we let some of the other higher cost deposits run off, keep our loan-to-deposit ratio right around 100%, and not just growing for growth's sake, but really trying to manage the balance sheet to maximize our earnings power of the company. Speaker 100:16:09Great. My other question just has to do with asset quality in general. My impression is that the criticizing classifieds are moving in a positive direction. I'm just kind of curious what else you see on the horizon, either for new issues that could fester or just general valuation trends as we're now at the midpoint of the year. Speaker 300:16:27Yeah, great question. We are pleased with what we're seeing in terms of credit quality across the board. We're continuing to monitor asset prices of underlying real estate. As we've discussed previously, we have a very low exposure to office space, but we still keep an eye on all of the asset levels in our market. We're seeing a slight uptick in days on market for residential real estate, but it's still not at a level that is concerning. It's still a seller's market. We are going to continue to monitor these things very closely, but right now we are pleased with the trend we're seeing. No one knows exactly what the future holds, but we are pleased with the trends we're seeing with regards to credit quality. Speaker 100:17:13I'm just going to sneak one more in. Just in general, you know, the government contracting business that you see, whether it's in your bank or just around you in the marketplace, is that stabilizing or is the uncertainty that existed earlier this year kind of still in place? Speaker 300:17:30We do believe that it's stabilizing. It's a dynamic marketplace, and there's lots of news coming out constantly. It's something we have to make sure that we don't get comfortable with or take our eye off the ball. The key is just continually to be in communication with our customers to make sure we're appropriately managing risk. Overall, I do think that there's a sense that there's a little more stability than there was a few months ago. Speaker 100:17:59Great. I'll cede the floor. Thank you very much for taking my questions. Speaker 200:18:03Yeah, Chris, as always, thank you as well. The one thing I would tag on to the government contracting question, because I think it's a really good one, is we've actually changed our borrowing-based certificate. One of the things that we ask the customer to do is to really attest that there's not been any change to their contract structures. We get that on at least a monthly basis. The lenders are in fairly frequent conversation with those borrowers as well. Tom, I don't know if you have. Speaker 100:18:38We're only advancing on billed receivables. We don't advance on unbilled receivables at all. Speaker 200:18:44I think for our term debt structure in the GovCom portfolio, Tom indicated that it was like $2.5 million outstanding. That's also very strong. At this point in time, we'll turn to a few questions from you all on the phone this afternoon. Speaker 300:19:07We've got some good questions in the queue today. First up, can you talk about efforts on growing core deposits since Avenue has been shut down? Yeah, you know, kind of what we talked about a little bit earlier. We like to keep the loan-to-deposit ratio high to maximize the earnings potential of the company. Where we're focusing, the business bankers are really engaged in getting into some of the markets where maybe they didn't have as much of a presence before, really trying to get new relationships and grow those deposits. You can see their efforts there by over the last quarter, we had growth in our non-interest and low-cost deposits, which is really beneficial to, or really speaking to the efforts that they're doing there. Speaker 300:19:58I would also say the lending team is really engaged with their customers and bringing in deposits as we're looking at deals and making sure we're really focused on that as well. I don't know if there's anything you want to add to that, Tom, from the lending side. Operator00:20:15Absolutely. I appreciate that. We are at our best when we work as a team with the business banking and lending side, working in concert with expanding existing relationships and identifying the right opportunities. It is something that we take very seriously in terms of focusing on teamwork and working together to build relationships. We are very excited, like I said, about the pipeline that we've built and the diversified industries that we have an opportunity to serve and work with. Speaker 200:20:46Yeah, you know, anecdotally, I've heard just the referrals that the lenders are giving the business bankers and vice versa, and really collaborating to penetrate more into the market than we have before and kind of build those have been successful. I think we're seeing good opportunities on that side. Speaker 300:21:14Will there be any costs associated with closing down Avenue in future quarters? Speaker 200:21:19I'll take that one. The bulk of the costs with staffing and the different systems that we're utilizing in order to run that have been all incurred. We're in strictly a maintenance mode at this point in time as we look to see if there's any future value that we can find from the solution. We're always trying to get those maintenance costs as low as possible, but you're not going to see anything, I believe, significant in the future. Do you agree, Alex? Speaker 300:21:56Yeah, I agree with that. Speaker 200:21:58Okay. Speaker 300:22:02How many shares were repurchased in the second quarter? Yeah, good question. We didn't see any block trades occur in the second quarter, other than when we were admitted to the Russell 2000 and the reconstitution. There just wasn't a lot of opportunity for those. With regulatory limits on commercial real estate, will the bank's growth be limited? Operator00:22:28No, we've always done a good job operating within our board-set policy. I will say that with the opportunities in our pipeline right now, we have a very wide range of industries that are non-CRE, with owner-occupied CRE being a major component, which obviously doesn't count against that ratio. We are very excited about that. With low single digit, as what we've discussed is our guidance, we see no issue there. Speaker 200:23:00I think the growth in capital too, as we're going to see in the coming quarters, will obviously augment some of those ratios. Speaker 300:23:10Did you repurchase any shares in the quarter? If not? Speaker 200:23:14No, I already asked that one. Speaker 300:23:15Oh, sorry. My apologies. What are your profitability goals for 2026? ROA and ROE? Yeah. Great question. I think our quarterly results show that we're well on our way to a 1% ROA. There's always uncertainty with market conditions and what the rate environment is going to look like. We're seeing good loan opportunities. We're seeing good deposit opportunities. We're trending in a very positive way. I think those things are going to put us on that trajectory to be where we want to be. Speaker 200:23:56I think on the return on equity, if we get close to the 1%, that's going to be back into the double-digit numbers where we were historically. Speaker 300:24:13What levels of profitability do you need to produce to justify the bank's independence? Speaker 200:24:19That's a great question. You know, we feel like it certainly has to be 1% or more as the standard. We don't look at it as much as justifying the bank's independence as we do looking at the opportunities that are right for the bank at this time. As we consider good corporate alternatives, that's really one of the key things that we hone in on: do we feel like we can produce a better income stream independently than we can with whatever opportunity we might be looking at, whether it's a merger or an acquisition, either way. That's really what drives us more than anything else, constantly seeing what opportunities there are in the market and then sort of determining, okay, what does this look like compared to what we could produce on our own? Speaker 200:25:18That's really the best way to answer that because, as you know, there's not a magic number inside of that other than if you can't get at least back up into that 1% range, it probably doesn't make sense for a bank in a major metropolitan area. Just to kind of refocus a bit, we've always talked about, in our recent quarters, the deposit getting is one of the more difficult, low-cost deposit getting is one of the most difficult challenges that we have in front of us. The team is doing an excellent job. As Tom indicated, the business bankers and the lenders are working in lockstep to try to sort of shake any opportunity that they have. Ironically, the large banks can sometimes be our better friends because in certain cases, they're using AI now to decision funds availability on check deposits. Speaker 200:26:17We've heard some interesting stories from our customers or our new customers who have come to us because they've had a deposit, sizable deposit go through. They know the funds cleared on the other side, and they automatically got an email out of the blue that said your funds are going to be held for 21 days. They learned that it was a decision made with artificial intelligence. You take the good with the bad, but in those cases, it's a bad outcome for the customer at that institution. It's a great outcome for a community bank that deals more with relationships. We don't do anything foolish either. We make sure funds clear, but it certainly doesn't take 21 days. Again, we find the opportunities where we can. Speaker 200:27:05A lot of our business bankers came out of the large banks, and they just do a terrific job for us in maintaining those relationships and digging into the community. I very much appreciate everybody's comments today and look forward to reporting, hopefully, you know, quarters like this as we go forward. We're on track to do so, but we never know what the economy might do. Thank you very much, and we appreciate your investment in MainStreet Bank, and we look forward to talking in the future. As always, if you have any other questions or comments, please feel free to reach out. We're happy to talk with you. Thank you.Read morePowered by