NASDAQ:EGBN Eagle Bancorp Q4 2025 Earnings Report $24.97 -0.43 (-1.69%) Closing price 05/13/2026 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$24.85 -0.12 (-0.48%) As of 04:06 AM 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 Eagle Bancorp EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.25Consensus EPS -$0.12Beat/MissBeat by +$0.37One Year Ago EPSN/AEagle Bancorp Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$80.50 millionExpected Revenue$67.81 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$12.68 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AEagle Bancorp Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2025Date1/21/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, January 22, 2026Conference Call Time10:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsEagle Bancorp's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Wednesday, July 22, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, July 23, 2026 at 10:00 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)Annual Report (10-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Eagle Bancorp Q4 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJanuary 22, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Fourth-quarter asset quality improved materially — non-performing loans fell to $106.8 million (1.47% of loans) and total NPAs declined to $108.9 million (1.04% of assets), while special mention and substandard loans decreased to $783.4 million (10.6% of loans). Negative Sentiment: Q4 results were pressured by one-time held-for-sale actions and valuation marks: management recognized about $14.7 million of related expenses (including $6.3M disposition costs and $8.4M mark-to-market adjustments) and recorded a $1.1M loss on loans sold. Positive Sentiment: Funding and capital profiles strengthened as brokered deposits were reduced by $602 million while core deposits rose $692 million in 2025; the bank reports $4.7 billion of available liquidity (2x uninsured deposits) and solid capital ratios (TCE/TA 10.87%, CET1 13.83%). Positive Sentiment: Management’s 2026 plan calls for a deliberately smaller average balance sheet but expects a meaningful NIM expansion to 2.6%–2.8%, +15–25% non-interest income, and flat to -4% non-interest expense to drive higher pre-provision net revenue. Neutral Sentiment: Key uncertainties remain: $90.7 million still held-for-sale (about two-thirds aimed for Q1 disposition), an elevated criticized/classified book (~$783M), and a $159.6M ACL (2.19% of loans); management says it will stay cautious on provisioning and capital actions until multi-quarter trends are confirmed. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallEagle Bancorp Q4 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Eagle Bancorp, Inc. Fourth Quarter and Year-End 2025 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Eric Newell, Chief Financial Officer of Eagle Bancorp, Inc. Please go ahead. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:00:46Good morning. This is Eric Newell, Chief Financial Officer of Eagle Bancorp. Before we begin the presentation, I would like to remind everyone that some of the comments made during this call are forward-looking statements. We cannot make any promises about future performance, and we caution you not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. Our Form 10-K for the fiscal year 2024, Form 10-Qs, and current reports on Form 8-K, including the earnings presentation slides, identify important factors that could cause the company's actual results to differ materially from any forward-looking statements made this morning, which speak only as of today. Eagle Bancorp does not undertake to update any forward-looking statements as a result of new information, future events, or developments unless required by law. This morning's commentary will include non-GAAP financial information. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:01:41The earnings release, which is posted in the investor relations section of our website and filed with the SEC, contains reconciliations of this information to the most directly comparable GAAP information. Our periodic reports are available from the company, online at our website, or on the SEC's website. With me today is our President and CEO, Susan Riel, and our Chief Lending Officer for Commercial Real Estate, Ryan Riel. I'll now turn it over to Susan. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:02:09Thank you, Eric. Good morning, and thank you for joining us. The fourth quarter marked an important inflection point for Eagle Bancorp. Over the course of the year, we took actions to diversify our balance sheet, reduce risk, and strengthen the overall quality of the franchise. These efforts became clearly visible in the fourth quarter as asset quality metrics improved meaningfully and our balance sheet mix moved closer to the profile we believe is necessary to sustainably support durable earnings. Importantly, these improvements were the result of intentional decisions, disciplined balance sheet management, and a continued focus on reducing concentration risk. While these steps created near-term expense pressure, they significantly improved the underlying risk profile of the company and enhanced our flexibility going forward. As we enter the new year, our focus shifts from remediation to execution. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:03:12We are operating with a stronger foundation, improved asset quality, and a more disciplined funding approach. This will position us to drive more consistent earnings and improve returns. I'll now turn the call over to Eric to walk through the quarter's results in more detail. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:03:33We reported net income of $7.6 million, or $0.25 per diluted share, compared with a $67.5 million loss, or $2.22 per share, last quarter. Let's start with asset quality. The fourth quarter results reflected the trade-offs we discussed on our prior call. Credit stability supported book value, while planned held-for-sale loan dispositions created some pressure on fourth quarter earnings. In the quarter, $14.7 million was recognized relating to higher expenses associated with the disposition of held-for-sale loans, as well as mark-to-market expenses. At December 31, we had $90.7 million of loans held for sale, a decline of $45.9 million from the prior period, which includes $8.4 million of mark-to-market adjustments due to updated valuations informed by proposed or under contract disposition activities. We recognized $1.1 million of loss on the $77.9 million of loans sold during the quarter. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:04:40At December 31, 2025, non-performing loans declined to $106.8 million, down $12 million from the prior quarter, and represented 1.47% of total loans. Slide 23 of our earnings deck shows the walk between linked quarters for inflows and outflows of non-accrual loans. Total non-performing assets declined $24 million to $108.9 million, representing 1.04% of total assets as compared to 1.23% in the prior quarter. The land loan transferred to OREO in the third quarter was sold during the fourth quarter with a gain of $900,000. Special mention and substandard loans totaled $783.4 million at year-end, declining $175.1 million from the prior quarter. This represents 10.6% of total loans at year-end, declining from 13.1% at September 30. Provision for credit losses declined $97.7 million in the fourth quarter and totaled $15.5 million. Our allowance for credit losses ended the quarter at $159.6 million, or 2.19% of total loans. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:06:02Of that total, we have $73 million of reserves associated with income-producing office loans, representing 13% of the $577.1 million outstanding at year-end. Net charge-offs declined $128.6 million from the third quarter and totaled $12.3 million in the most recent quarter. Loans 30 to 89 days past due totaled $50 million at December 31, up $20.8 million from last quarter, primarily due to a participation loan which was in process of being renewed and was booked yesterday for closure. Office loans totaled $577.1 million. Of that total, $469.2 million are pass-rated. Loans that exceed $5 million and are pass-rated are undergoing quarterly reviews. Smaller office loans have stronger credit enhancements than the larger office loans that we've worked through cycle to date. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:07:04The fourth quarter saw dramatic reductions in our CRE and ADC concentrations, as expected payoffs, resolutions, and the completion of construction projects drove down our CRE concentration ratio, which is a measure of CRE loans to total risk-based capital and reserves. That ratio declined to 322%, and the ADC concentration ratio, which measures acquisition, development, and construction loans over the same denominator, declined to 88% for the company as of year-end. From an earnings standpoint, pre-provision net revenue was $20.7 million. Included in that is $8.4 million in held-for-sale, mark-to-market expenses, and the $6.3 million in disposition costs related to loan sales. Net interest income grew $144,000 to $68.3 million as the decline in deposit and borrowing costs outpaced a modest reduction in income on earning assets. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:08:12NIM declined five basis points to 2.38%, primarily driven by a mix shift between loans and cash, partially offset by improved time deposit costs from reduced brokered time deposit usage. Non-interest income totaled $12.2 million compared to $2.5 million last quarter. The increase was primarily due to losses that did not reoccur in the fourth quarter and other income as a result of SBIC investments and the gain on the sale of OREO. Non-interest expense increased $17.9 million to $59.8 million due to the $6.3 million in costs associated with the disposition of certain held-for-sale loans and $8.4 million in valuation adjustments on proposed transactions for the remaining held-for-sale loan portfolio. Our capital remains strong. Tangible common equity to tangible assets is 10.87%. Tier 1 leverage ratio is 10.17%, and CET1 is 13.83%. Tangible book value per share increased $0.59 to $37.59 as earnings added to capital. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:09:32Continued deposit growth and a rising proportion of insured balances underscore the resilience of our funding base. With $4.7 billion in available liquidity, we maintain 2x coverage of uninsured deposits. During 2025, our teams have reduced brokered deposits by $602 million, while increasing core deposits by $692 million, and we expect continued progress in 2026. The improvement reflects coordinated efforts among our C&I teams, branch network, and digital platform. Finally, turning to 2026, we are optimistic about our ability to expand pre-provision net revenue as outlined in our updated 2026 forecast on slide 11 of our earnings deck. While we expect average deposits, loans, and earning assets to decline on a year-over-year basis, this reflects deliberate balance sheet repositioning rather than operating pressure and reflects prioritization of shareholder returns and profitability. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:10:40Loan balances entering 2026 begin from a lower level due to paydowns and resolutions that occurred throughout 2025, and the investment portfolio runoff in 2025 further reduces average earning assets. On the funding side, lower average deposits in 2026 primarily reflect the continued runoff of brokered funding as we prioritize building core deposit relationships. This shift in funding mix is expected to improve profitability. As a result, we're forecasting a meaningful expansion in net interest margin, with NIM expected to range between 2.6%-2.8% for the year. This improvement is driven largely by a reduction in higher-cost brokered deposits. Non-interest income is expected to increase by approximately 15%-25%, while non-interest expense is expected to decline between flat and 4%. Importantly, this reflects normalization following elevated expense levels in the fourth quarter of 2025, which was previously discussed, and we do not expect to reoccur. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:11:50Taken together, these trends support our confidence in expanding pre-provision net revenue in 2026 despite a smaller average balance sheet. I'll turn it back over to Susan for final comments ahead of the Q&A. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:12:05The fourth quarter tangibly demonstrates the progress we've made at Eagle Bancorp executing on our strategic plan. The actions we took throughout 2025 to address credit risk, reduce loan concentrations, and improve balance sheet quality are now clearly reflected in our results. We exited the year with an improved risk profile, higher core deposits allowing for reduced use of wholesale funding, and improved visibility into the sustainability and trend of our earnings. As we look ahead, our focus will transition from foundational initiatives to consistent performance. While we are not yet where we want to be in terms of bottom-line performance, we're optimistic about the franchise's direction. Before we conclude, I want to thank our employees for their continued dedication and professionalism. Their commitment has been instrumental in navigating a challenging period and positioning the company for the future. With that, we'll be happy to take any questions. Operator00:13:16Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. And our first question comes from Justin Crowley of Piper Sandler. His line is open. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:13:43Hey, good morning, everyone. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:13:45Good morning, Justin. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:13:47I wanted to start off on the asset dispositions, of course. Really encouraging progress, and it's obviously great to see not a whole lot in additional loss through the sales that got done. I was wondering if you could talk just a little more on what's left in Held-for-Sale in terms of the expected timing. I know you mentioned some agreements in place, and you took the additional mark through the expense line. So maybe just the confidence level in the current carrying value of what's left there. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:14:15Hi, Justin. This is Eric. At year-end, we had $90.7 million of loans held for sale, and they're carried at the lower of cost or fair value. We did have that mark that ran through non-interest expense at year-end to take into consideration fair value, which is informed by under contract or negotiating to contract on disposition of approximately two-thirds of that portfolio. Right now, two-thirds of that portfolio is scheduled for resolution and disposition in the first quarter, but it's not done until it's done, so it could bleed into the second quarter. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:15:01Okay, got it. And then, of course, you had the wide-ranging third-party review, but what's the thinking or expectation on the potential, if there is any, for any further moves into held-for-sale? Could this be it, or is there a possibility that as we get through the year and credits with maturities a bit further out, perhaps get a closer look that you could see additional inflow into that bucket? What's kind of the thought there? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:15:27In looking at the total criticized and classified portfolio, which is $783 million at year-end, down from $960 million, there certainly could be situations, Justin, where we might decide that selling the loan is the best strategy to maximize value to the shareholders. So I don't want to say that we're done there. There certainly could be situations that arise. I don't suspect you're going to see it at the pace of what you saw in 2025. And it's a case-by-case assessment. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:16:09Got it. And then, I guess outside of office, and maybe one for you, Ryan, but it was certainly good to see what I thought was stabilization and actually some signs of improvement in multifamily. It looks like a handful of some of these larger watchlist loans got some updated appraisals that show some breathing room. I was just wondering if you could talk a little bit about the trends you're seeing there and if, at this point, we can maybe expect to see things continue to look better in that area. Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:16:36I think that we'll continue to be proactive in the problem loan identification and looking at the portfolio on a regular basis as we have been, so what's in there you've seen, to your point, Justin, there's been some migration positively and negatively in that criticized and classified population. Valuation, again, continues to be strong relative to the office market, where we saw significant losses, obviously, right? The multifamily market, the valuations have held up. Cap rates in our region are still sub-6% when compared to the national average of just over 6%. So we feel good about that and where our exposure is, we're monitoring the income performance. Some of these are in lease-up, recently delivered properties, so my prognostication is that you will continue to see stabilization and improvement within that multifamily portfolio. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:17:41Okay. And then just for the total loan portfolio, just as far as where the reserves shook out this quarter with a movement a bit higher, including the increase in the office ACL, just like bigger picture, how are you thinking about eventually seeing that number move lower and maybe using it to absorb just any further charge-offs without the provisioning to match it? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:18:05The office overlay or the portion of the ACL that's attributed to the performing office did increase. Even though that's a qualitative aspect to the calculation, it's driven quantitatively by experience that we've incurred throughout the prior 12 months in office. And so when you quantitatively put that together, it's driving approximately 45% of reserves in our substandard loans, about 50% of that in our special mention loans, and then 50% of that for watch. So when you put that all together, that's what comprises of the $73 million of reserves associated with the $577 million of performing office. So as we move forward and we have less loss content in our look-back period, you'll see that ease off. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:19:04Okay. So the idea would be lower from here if all goes according to plan as you see it today? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:19:12That is the way the calculation works. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:19:16Okay. And then maybe just one last one. And I know it's one quarter here and there's still some work to do, but obviously a lot of positive signs. And so when you think about capital planning over maybe the more medium term, how do you think about the levels you're at with maybe a clearer picture on loss content? And I don't know if it's a bit premature, but when do you think you could start entertaining a more offensive stance on capital management when you think about things like buybacks or the dividends? Again, I know it's kind of early days here, but just thinking a little bit more medium or long-term. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:19:52We are going to continue to be prudent and use caution in terms of capital management. I would point to the criticized and classified loan level and where we're at. We need to continue to see continued migration down. So a favorable trend. The one quarter is not a trend. So we need to see two or three more quarters. And we also need to see a more absolute level that's acceptable before management would consider talking further to our board about additional changes in our capital management approach. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:20:30Okay. Very helpful. I will leave it there. Thank you all so much. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:20:34Thanks, Justin. By the way, Justin, you asked how we would characterize the level of capital, and I would say it's strong. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:20:43Got it. Understood and agreed. Operator00:20:46Thank you. And our next question comes from David Chiaverini of Jefferies. Your line is open. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:20:57Hi. Thanks for taking the question. So just wanted to follow up on credit quality. Clearly a good update here. Can you talk about your confidence level that credit issues are behind you? Are you seeing any signs of lingering potential deterioration? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:21:16Hey, David. I mean, again, I'd point back to the criticized classified portfolio of $783 million. There's a lot of prudent credit management process that we're putting around that. Finance, credit, special assets teams are looking at that portfolio. We also spend time looking at the watch portfolio to understand any trends that could cause negative migration into the criticized classified. So given the level of review on this portfolio every quarter, as well as pass-rated multifamily and office loans that are greater than $5 million, they're undergoing a quarterly review as well. We're not seeing any developing new trends based on what we see today and what we know today. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:22:09I would just simply add to that. We have given problem loans and just loans in general high attention that we're constantly looking at them. That will not change. We will not slow down on that. So we'll continue to focus on reviewing and monitoring our loans. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:22:29Our expectation, David, will be that the criticized classified loan portfolio continues to decline throughout the year. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:22:39Great. And in terms of the dispositions, you mentioned two-thirds scheduled for the first quarter. Sounds like the level of buyer interest is high. Can you talk about what you're seeing in the secondary market? Are these private credit funds? Are they other banks? And is that a fair characterization that the buyer interest is high for these loans? Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:23:03So, David, this is Ryan Riel. The buyers are a range of types of folks. The two-thirds that you're referencing that Eric referenced in his comments, there's a range in that population too. There's investors that are supporting local developers to convert to an alternate use, some of the historic office properties. There's existing ownership that is looking at their situation and evaluating the go-forward plan and, in some cases, being willing to come in and purchase their own debt. In each and every case, we've said this for a number of quarters now, we are looking at every possible outcome and every possible path and determining on a case-by-case basis what the best path forward is to optimize the results for the bank and its shareholders. That continues to be the game plan in each and every case. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:24:06Great. And then on the loan loss provision on a go-forward basis, Eric, you mentioned back in October that you're hopeful to get to a normalized level in early 2026. How should we think about it from here? Are we kind of at that point of getting to a normalized level? And how would you kind of define that normalized level? Are we talking kind of where we were in the second, third, and fourth quarter of 2024, kind of in that $10 million range? And any comments there? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:24:36Yeah, David. Looking at the criticized classified portfolio level where it's at, I think that that would inform a provision expense level that's a little bit greater than what you were indicating from 2024, just given that that portfolio was smaller at that point. But we're not. I'm going to state the obvious here, but we're not going to see provision levels that we saw in 2025. But I think that there could be some provision expenses that are more heightened than 2024, given the level of where the criticized classified. But it's also important to say what I said last quarter, that capital will continue to, or credit is not going to cause further degradation of book value. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:25:33Got it. That makes sense. Thank you. Operator00:25:37Thank you. And our next question comes from Catherine Mealor of Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. Your line is open. Catherine MealorManaging Director of Equity Research at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods00:25:53Thank you. Good morning. Just want to follow up on the credit. On the special mention, it was great to see that decline. I know it looked like you had maybe an upgrade from substandard and then a new credit, but then you had some come off, and so I was just curious if you could give us a bit more discussion on the credits that were upgraded or came out of special mention, just some stories or color around what those credits were, what caused them to move out, and just so we can kind of understand some of the puts and takes within that category. Thanks. Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:26:24Sure. So, Catherine, this is Ryan. Big categories that helped the positive migration there are improved performance at the property level. And then in certain cases, there are structural enhancements to that loan that may have been under-considered, if you will, in the past. And with updated information and proof of the willingness and capability of those sponsors to stand behind their credits, we made some of those upgrade decisions as well. Catherine MealorManaging Director of Equity Research at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods00:26:58Got it. Okay. Great. And then I guess I'm going to maybe try again on the provisioning piece. I think that's the biggest question we all have is where do we put our provision expense for 2026? And I guess that's the magic number. But as I look at the reserve, I mean, it should be fair that we should see the. I guess the question is, how much of current expectations of losses do you think are in the reserve? And is it fair as you continue to work through this level of classified, which to your point, Eric, is still very high, right? Still 10%. So we still have a lot to work through. But your reserve is also very high, over 2%. Catherine MealorManaging Director of Equity Research at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods00:27:40So as you kind of keep working through that, at what point should we see the reserve start to decline? And where's a fair number to, or at least maybe a range of where that kind of trends to towards the end of the year? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:27:59Given our one quarter of improvement, I think it's prudent for management to be cautious about where we think the provision expense, and telling you all what we think provision expense is. We certainly have our views on it given what we've worked on. And I can tell you that we do expect the ACL coverage to decline this year. We do expect that there is potentially loss content in that $783 million, some of which we've identified and have reserved for through specific reserves. So it is sitting in the ACL. But we also have some unidentified migration, portfolio migration, that are things that we don't know about yet. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:28:54So I guess, Catherine, I probably am going to punt a little bit and try not to answer your questions with specificity until I think next quarter, if we have another continued trend, then I think we could be a little more focused in answering that question for you. Catherine MealorManaging Director of Equity Research at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods00:29:14Yeah. That makes sense. That makes sense. Fair enough. And then maybe my last question is just it was nice to see the inflows of new credits flow dramatically this quarter, which we would have expected just given the portfolio review we saw last quarter. But there were a couple of surprises. You had a couple of inflows, new credits that kind of came into special mention, for example, that $43 million multifamily credit. So for the new credits that came in this quarter, what happened this quarter that your loan review did not catch? And is there anything within that that we should kind of be thinking about that would be a risk of new migration in the next couple of quarters? Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:29:58Yeah. So with specificity on that $43 million loan, Catherine, that's a newly built multifamily property in a particular submarket of Washington, D.C., that saw an inflow or influx of supply. So while this property was nearing stabilization, there was a sort of hiccup in that stabilization process because of that inflow of supply reintroducing concessions in that submarket. Reacting to that, we worked with the sponsor to put in place a go-forward plan that has cash flow sweeps and other mechanisms in it to protect the bank. The reality is that the supply, the new supply under construction in our region, is very, very small. It's less than half of what it's been historically. So with the passage of time, those units will be absorbed. Those concessions will burn off, and the stabilization will occur. And we'll have enhanced credit structure on that particular loan through that stabilization period. Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:31:01So that's what happened in that quarter was just that, right? The information came through on the pickup in supply and the plateauing, frankly, of that stabilization process. Catherine MealorManaging Director of Equity Research at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods00:31:14Great. Very helpful, Cole. All right. Thank you. Operator00:31:18Thank you. Our next question comes from James Abbott of Diligence Capital Management. Your line is open. James AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital Management00:31:30Hey. Good morning, everyone. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:31:33Hi, Jim. James AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital Management00:31:33I wanted to see if we could get some additional color on SNC loan growth. It was about $120 million. That's about a 40% annualized rate. Could you provide a little context as to whether the loans are coming through SNCs? Are they bilaterals? Maybe some yields, that kind of thing, just so that we can understand the color around that type of production? And secondly, is it sustainable? Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:32:00So the growth of our C&I platform is a sustainable expectation that we should all have. The growth level seen in the fourth quarter at that enhanced growth level is probably not a sustainable figure. Speaking to the diversity question, James, the C&I portfolio does not have great concentration really in any industry. There are some syndications and participations in that number. That is not an ongoing strategy that we're going to employ. Evelyn and her team have done an excellent job of bringing in relationships with debt and deposit balances on the other side of the balance sheet. So that's where you see it, and the numbers are reflective of that. You see actually greater in the fourth quarter deposit growth in the C&I book than you do loan growth. James AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital Management00:33:00Sorry, Ryan. Could you just give us some sort of sense for maybe the typical size of those deals that were coming in during the quarter? Are they typically $5 million and $10 million or more $20 million and $30 million sort of relationships? Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:33:14There's a range of it. I'd say more on the higher end of the range that you just cited, probably 15-30. That's an off-the-cuff number. I'm not looking at the portfolio to justify it. But I'd say probably on average, it's in that 15-30 range. James AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital Management00:33:31Okay. Thanks very much. And then also I had a question probably for Eric. Could you maybe give us some context for the cash level that you're holding and then the brokered deposit level? And I suspect it's probably a negative spread at this point, and you're probably working to address that. But could you give us a sense for what the brokered deposit level is today and then how much you anticipate bringing that down? Can you use cash to pay that down, etc.? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:34:04Yeah. A couple of things. When you look at average cash in the fourth quarter, it was definitely higher than normal, and it was in anticipation of paying down a material level of broker deposits that were coming up for stated maturity. So we were holding that cash in anticipation of paying down those broker deposits. On an average basis, we do have a third-party payment processor that does hold some deposits with us in the middle of the month that can cause the averages to increase at a high level. But it generally isn't a period and doesn't impact period-end cash that much. In terms of broker deposits at year-end, we have, excluding two-way deposits, we have $1.56 billion that has a weighted rate of 4%. And we're going to continue to work that down through 2026. James AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital Management00:35:16Eric, are there maturity dates on those that you could give us some sense for? Is it pretty spread out throughout the year? How much do you think you can attack? Do you think you can get rid of half of that in 2026 or just any sort of context on that? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:35:33Yeah. Of the $1.56 billion in brokered, $715 million of that is a brokered CD. So I would say it's probably spread throughout the year and our goal is to reduce a lot of those CDs down to close to zero. James AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital Management00:35:55Okay. Thanks very much. Operator00:35:59Thank you. And our next question comes from Christopher Marinac of Janney Research. Your line is open. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:36:11Hey. Thanks. Good morning. I think that Ryan addressed a little bit of this question in the last few callers. But I was curious about sort of the surprises for pass loans going bad in the future. It would seem that you have smaller loans if that indeed is the case. And I just wanted to sort of talk through sort of where would there be larger loans that could surprise that are pass now, but that could surprise if they were downgraded in the future. Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:36:41Hey, Chris, how are you? The top 25 list shows where they are, shows the type of exposure there is. Again, to Eric's earlier point, multifamily loans that are pass-rated and in size greater than $5 million, we're looking at on a quarterly basis. Office properties are there. There's not an asset. There's some slight headwinds in the multifamily space, which is what we've talked about. Again, with the back-end valuation issue not there relative to what we've seen in office. The surprises coming into the substandard category, there was one particular land loan that we found out had some characteristics in it that came to light during the last quarter, and they were material and impactful. That's still we're working through that situation and coming up with the determination of where it is. Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:37:41The other transaction that came in, the mixed-use residential into the Substandard category, that is a multifamily construction loan that we're a participant in, a 50% participant in, that had some challenges relative to the agency takeout that is committed to on that. The workout plan has already been addressed, and in fact, we anticipate a full payoff of that by the end of this month, so that's a material thing. It's also notable that two of the top 11 loans that are listed in the top 25 loan list in multifamily have been refinanced, and the aggregate balance there is about $130 million, so there's good and positive migration from a balance perspective, and we don't anticipate any fundamental issues like we've seen in office, and therefore, the surprises should be limited with all the risk mitigation structures and processes we've put in place. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:38:45Just to build off what Ryan is saying, the theme here is that the proactive credit risk management characteristic or the behaviors that the management team with credit and the line have deployed this year to reduce the amount of surprises that we may have seen in earlier years and periods and be very thoughtful about and having a high level of attention and identifying the primary source of repayment. If there's weaknesses or issues there, we will appropriately risk rate that loan so we can monitor it. It allows us to intervene much earlier in the process, which will maximize our options to maximize shareholder value in the event that there is some disposition that needs to occur. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:39:39Great. Thank you both for that. I appreciate the additional caller. And then Eric, I know that the guide for 2026 is to have shrinkage of the balance sheet. And I'm just curious if there's a point where you may get to where it's stable and grows slightly before year-end, or do you think you'll be shrinking for the entire calendar year? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:39:57I actually don't believe we're going to shrink for the entire calendar year. I suspect we'll see CRE that continue to decline in the first half of the year, and then there'll be some stabilization in the back half of the year, which will then support period-end growth in the second half of 2026. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:40:22Great. And the last question. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:40:23I just want to. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:40:24Sorry. Go ahead. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:40:25I was just going to add that the period-end is a little different given that we're making money on the averages, and we're comparing the period-end of 2026 compared to the average of last year, so that's why you're seeing that forecast in terms of declines on average earning assets. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:40:47Got it. Great. Thanks again for that. And then just a last question. I know the C&I balances grew quarter on quarter. Are you still hiring producers in that part of the operation? Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:41:00We absolutely are still looking for strong producers in that area. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:41:05Great. Thank you, Susan. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:41:07I think Evelyn has her hand out there constantly reviewing, and there are some candidates that we are exploring. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:41:18Great. Thank you again for taking all of our questions today. Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:41:22Thank you. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:41:23Thanks, Chris. Operator00:41:25Thank you. I'm showing no further questions at this time. I'd like to turn it back to Susan Riel, President and CEO, for closing remarks. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:41:34Thank you very much for your participation and questions during the call, and we look forward to seeing you again next quarter. Operator00:41:43This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating, and you may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesSusan RielPresident and CEORyan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real EstateEric NewellCFOAnalystsJames AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital ManagementJustin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper SandlerChristopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney ResearchCatherine MealorManaging Director of Equity Research at Keefe, Bruyette & WoodsDavid ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at JefferiesPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) Eagle Bancorp Earnings HeadlinesEagle Bancorp Board Appoints Stephen Curley Chief Executive OfficerMay 12 at 8:00 AM | globenewswire.comEagle Bancorp Inc (EGBN) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Highlights: A Return to Profitability Amidst ...April 25, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comRead this warning immediatelyPorter Stansberry, founder of one of the world's largest financial research firms, says he's breaking the biggest story of his 26-year career. A famous historian whose books have sold over 45 million copies in 65 languages is warning of a structural shift so large it has only one historical parallel - 1776. One Stanford economist calls it 'the biggest change ever - bigger than electricity, bigger than the steam engine.' Stansberry outlines the stocks to buy, the stocks to sell, and three money moves to position yourself on the right side of this shift.May 14 at 1:00 AM | Porter & Company (Ad)Eagle Bancorp forecasts 2026 NIM of 2.6%-2.8% while maintaining balance sheet repositioningApril 23, 2026 | seekingalpha.comEagle Bancorp, Inc. (EGBN) Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptApril 23, 2026 | seekingalpha.comEagle Bancorp (EGBN) Q1 2026 Earnings TranscriptApril 23, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comSee More Eagle Bancorp Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Eagle Bancorp? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Eagle Bancorp and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Eagle BancorpEagle Bancorp (NASDAQ:EGBN) is the bank holding company for EagleBank, a commercial bank headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland. Since its founding in 1998, the company has focused on serving businesses and consumers in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. EagleBank operates a network of full-service branches and commercial banking centers, providing personalized financial solutions to corporate, nonprofit, real estate and individual clients. The company’s product portfolio includes commercial real estate lending, construction and land development financing, small business administration (SBA) loans, commercial and industrial credit facilities, and residential mortgage loans. EagleBank also offers deposit products such as checking and savings accounts, money market accounts and certificates of deposit. Supporting its core lending and deposit services, EagleBank provides treasury management, international banking services and online banking tools to help clients manage their day-to-day cash flow and global payment needs. In addition to its branch network in Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia, EagleBank serves commercial borrowers across the United States through its Capital Markets and correspondent banking divisions. Under the leadership of President and Chief Executive Officer Eric A. Horn, the company has pursued steady growth by combining local market expertise with tailored financial solutions. Eagle Bancorp maintains a community-oriented approach while leveraging its regional presence to support both small and mid-sized enterprises in key industry sectors.View Eagle 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 Nebius Upside Expands as AI Feedback Loop IntensifiesOklo Stock Could Be Ready for Another Massive RunD-Wave Earnings Looked Weak, But Investors May Be Missing ThisPlug Power Flips The Switch On ProfitabilityHims & Hers Stock Plunges After Q1 Miss: Is the GLP-1 Pivot Enough to Fuel a Recovery?On Holdings Sets Up for Marathon Rally: New Highs Are ComingShake Shack Stock Gets Shaken After Earnings Miss Upcoming Earnings Mizuho Financial Group (5/15/2026)Palo Alto Networks (5/19/2026)Home Depot (5/19/2026)Keysight Technologies (5/19/2026)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) 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 Operator00:00:00Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Eagle Bancorp, Inc. Fourth Quarter and Year-End 2025 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Eric Newell, Chief Financial Officer of Eagle Bancorp, Inc. Please go ahead. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:00:46Good morning. This is Eric Newell, Chief Financial Officer of Eagle Bancorp. Before we begin the presentation, I would like to remind everyone that some of the comments made during this call are forward-looking statements. We cannot make any promises about future performance, and we caution you not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. Our Form 10-K for the fiscal year 2024, Form 10-Qs, and current reports on Form 8-K, including the earnings presentation slides, identify important factors that could cause the company's actual results to differ materially from any forward-looking statements made this morning, which speak only as of today. Eagle Bancorp does not undertake to update any forward-looking statements as a result of new information, future events, or developments unless required by law. This morning's commentary will include non-GAAP financial information. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:01:41The earnings release, which is posted in the investor relations section of our website and filed with the SEC, contains reconciliations of this information to the most directly comparable GAAP information. Our periodic reports are available from the company, online at our website, or on the SEC's website. With me today is our President and CEO, Susan Riel, and our Chief Lending Officer for Commercial Real Estate, Ryan Riel. I'll now turn it over to Susan. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:02:09Thank you, Eric. Good morning, and thank you for joining us. The fourth quarter marked an important inflection point for Eagle Bancorp. Over the course of the year, we took actions to diversify our balance sheet, reduce risk, and strengthen the overall quality of the franchise. These efforts became clearly visible in the fourth quarter as asset quality metrics improved meaningfully and our balance sheet mix moved closer to the profile we believe is necessary to sustainably support durable earnings. Importantly, these improvements were the result of intentional decisions, disciplined balance sheet management, and a continued focus on reducing concentration risk. While these steps created near-term expense pressure, they significantly improved the underlying risk profile of the company and enhanced our flexibility going forward. As we enter the new year, our focus shifts from remediation to execution. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:03:12We are operating with a stronger foundation, improved asset quality, and a more disciplined funding approach. This will position us to drive more consistent earnings and improve returns. I'll now turn the call over to Eric to walk through the quarter's results in more detail. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:03:33We reported net income of $7.6 million, or $0.25 per diluted share, compared with a $67.5 million loss, or $2.22 per share, last quarter. Let's start with asset quality. The fourth quarter results reflected the trade-offs we discussed on our prior call. Credit stability supported book value, while planned held-for-sale loan dispositions created some pressure on fourth quarter earnings. In the quarter, $14.7 million was recognized relating to higher expenses associated with the disposition of held-for-sale loans, as well as mark-to-market expenses. At December 31, we had $90.7 million of loans held for sale, a decline of $45.9 million from the prior period, which includes $8.4 million of mark-to-market adjustments due to updated valuations informed by proposed or under contract disposition activities. We recognized $1.1 million of loss on the $77.9 million of loans sold during the quarter. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:04:40At December 31, 2025, non-performing loans declined to $106.8 million, down $12 million from the prior quarter, and represented 1.47% of total loans. Slide 23 of our earnings deck shows the walk between linked quarters for inflows and outflows of non-accrual loans. Total non-performing assets declined $24 million to $108.9 million, representing 1.04% of total assets as compared to 1.23% in the prior quarter. The land loan transferred to OREO in the third quarter was sold during the fourth quarter with a gain of $900,000. Special mention and substandard loans totaled $783.4 million at year-end, declining $175.1 million from the prior quarter. This represents 10.6% of total loans at year-end, declining from 13.1% at September 30. Provision for credit losses declined $97.7 million in the fourth quarter and totaled $15.5 million. Our allowance for credit losses ended the quarter at $159.6 million, or 2.19% of total loans. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:06:02Of that total, we have $73 million of reserves associated with income-producing office loans, representing 13% of the $577.1 million outstanding at year-end. Net charge-offs declined $128.6 million from the third quarter and totaled $12.3 million in the most recent quarter. Loans 30 to 89 days past due totaled $50 million at December 31, up $20.8 million from last quarter, primarily due to a participation loan which was in process of being renewed and was booked yesterday for closure. Office loans totaled $577.1 million. Of that total, $469.2 million are pass-rated. Loans that exceed $5 million and are pass-rated are undergoing quarterly reviews. Smaller office loans have stronger credit enhancements than the larger office loans that we've worked through cycle to date. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:07:04The fourth quarter saw dramatic reductions in our CRE and ADC concentrations, as expected payoffs, resolutions, and the completion of construction projects drove down our CRE concentration ratio, which is a measure of CRE loans to total risk-based capital and reserves. That ratio declined to 322%, and the ADC concentration ratio, which measures acquisition, development, and construction loans over the same denominator, declined to 88% for the company as of year-end. From an earnings standpoint, pre-provision net revenue was $20.7 million. Included in that is $8.4 million in held-for-sale, mark-to-market expenses, and the $6.3 million in disposition costs related to loan sales. Net interest income grew $144,000 to $68.3 million as the decline in deposit and borrowing costs outpaced a modest reduction in income on earning assets. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:08:12NIM declined five basis points to 2.38%, primarily driven by a mix shift between loans and cash, partially offset by improved time deposit costs from reduced brokered time deposit usage. Non-interest income totaled $12.2 million compared to $2.5 million last quarter. The increase was primarily due to losses that did not reoccur in the fourth quarter and other income as a result of SBIC investments and the gain on the sale of OREO. Non-interest expense increased $17.9 million to $59.8 million due to the $6.3 million in costs associated with the disposition of certain held-for-sale loans and $8.4 million in valuation adjustments on proposed transactions for the remaining held-for-sale loan portfolio. Our capital remains strong. Tangible common equity to tangible assets is 10.87%. Tier 1 leverage ratio is 10.17%, and CET1 is 13.83%. Tangible book value per share increased $0.59 to $37.59 as earnings added to capital. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:09:32Continued deposit growth and a rising proportion of insured balances underscore the resilience of our funding base. With $4.7 billion in available liquidity, we maintain 2x coverage of uninsured deposits. During 2025, our teams have reduced brokered deposits by $602 million, while increasing core deposits by $692 million, and we expect continued progress in 2026. The improvement reflects coordinated efforts among our C&I teams, branch network, and digital platform. Finally, turning to 2026, we are optimistic about our ability to expand pre-provision net revenue as outlined in our updated 2026 forecast on slide 11 of our earnings deck. While we expect average deposits, loans, and earning assets to decline on a year-over-year basis, this reflects deliberate balance sheet repositioning rather than operating pressure and reflects prioritization of shareholder returns and profitability. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:10:40Loan balances entering 2026 begin from a lower level due to paydowns and resolutions that occurred throughout 2025, and the investment portfolio runoff in 2025 further reduces average earning assets. On the funding side, lower average deposits in 2026 primarily reflect the continued runoff of brokered funding as we prioritize building core deposit relationships. This shift in funding mix is expected to improve profitability. As a result, we're forecasting a meaningful expansion in net interest margin, with NIM expected to range between 2.6%-2.8% for the year. This improvement is driven largely by a reduction in higher-cost brokered deposits. Non-interest income is expected to increase by approximately 15%-25%, while non-interest expense is expected to decline between flat and 4%. Importantly, this reflects normalization following elevated expense levels in the fourth quarter of 2025, which was previously discussed, and we do not expect to reoccur. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:11:50Taken together, these trends support our confidence in expanding pre-provision net revenue in 2026 despite a smaller average balance sheet. I'll turn it back over to Susan for final comments ahead of the Q&A. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:12:05The fourth quarter tangibly demonstrates the progress we've made at Eagle Bancorp executing on our strategic plan. The actions we took throughout 2025 to address credit risk, reduce loan concentrations, and improve balance sheet quality are now clearly reflected in our results. We exited the year with an improved risk profile, higher core deposits allowing for reduced use of wholesale funding, and improved visibility into the sustainability and trend of our earnings. As we look ahead, our focus will transition from foundational initiatives to consistent performance. While we are not yet where we want to be in terms of bottom-line performance, we're optimistic about the franchise's direction. Before we conclude, I want to thank our employees for their continued dedication and professionalism. Their commitment has been instrumental in navigating a challenging period and positioning the company for the future. With that, we'll be happy to take any questions. Operator00:13:16Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. And our first question comes from Justin Crowley of Piper Sandler. His line is open. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:13:43Hey, good morning, everyone. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:13:45Good morning, Justin. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:13:47I wanted to start off on the asset dispositions, of course. Really encouraging progress, and it's obviously great to see not a whole lot in additional loss through the sales that got done. I was wondering if you could talk just a little more on what's left in Held-for-Sale in terms of the expected timing. I know you mentioned some agreements in place, and you took the additional mark through the expense line. So maybe just the confidence level in the current carrying value of what's left there. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:14:15Hi, Justin. This is Eric. At year-end, we had $90.7 million of loans held for sale, and they're carried at the lower of cost or fair value. We did have that mark that ran through non-interest expense at year-end to take into consideration fair value, which is informed by under contract or negotiating to contract on disposition of approximately two-thirds of that portfolio. Right now, two-thirds of that portfolio is scheduled for resolution and disposition in the first quarter, but it's not done until it's done, so it could bleed into the second quarter. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:15:01Okay, got it. And then, of course, you had the wide-ranging third-party review, but what's the thinking or expectation on the potential, if there is any, for any further moves into held-for-sale? Could this be it, or is there a possibility that as we get through the year and credits with maturities a bit further out, perhaps get a closer look that you could see additional inflow into that bucket? What's kind of the thought there? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:15:27In looking at the total criticized and classified portfolio, which is $783 million at year-end, down from $960 million, there certainly could be situations, Justin, where we might decide that selling the loan is the best strategy to maximize value to the shareholders. So I don't want to say that we're done there. There certainly could be situations that arise. I don't suspect you're going to see it at the pace of what you saw in 2025. And it's a case-by-case assessment. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:16:09Got it. And then, I guess outside of office, and maybe one for you, Ryan, but it was certainly good to see what I thought was stabilization and actually some signs of improvement in multifamily. It looks like a handful of some of these larger watchlist loans got some updated appraisals that show some breathing room. I was just wondering if you could talk a little bit about the trends you're seeing there and if, at this point, we can maybe expect to see things continue to look better in that area. Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:16:36I think that we'll continue to be proactive in the problem loan identification and looking at the portfolio on a regular basis as we have been, so what's in there you've seen, to your point, Justin, there's been some migration positively and negatively in that criticized and classified population. Valuation, again, continues to be strong relative to the office market, where we saw significant losses, obviously, right? The multifamily market, the valuations have held up. Cap rates in our region are still sub-6% when compared to the national average of just over 6%. So we feel good about that and where our exposure is, we're monitoring the income performance. Some of these are in lease-up, recently delivered properties, so my prognostication is that you will continue to see stabilization and improvement within that multifamily portfolio. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:17:41Okay. And then just for the total loan portfolio, just as far as where the reserves shook out this quarter with a movement a bit higher, including the increase in the office ACL, just like bigger picture, how are you thinking about eventually seeing that number move lower and maybe using it to absorb just any further charge-offs without the provisioning to match it? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:18:05The office overlay or the portion of the ACL that's attributed to the performing office did increase. Even though that's a qualitative aspect to the calculation, it's driven quantitatively by experience that we've incurred throughout the prior 12 months in office. And so when you quantitatively put that together, it's driving approximately 45% of reserves in our substandard loans, about 50% of that in our special mention loans, and then 50% of that for watch. So when you put that all together, that's what comprises of the $73 million of reserves associated with the $577 million of performing office. So as we move forward and we have less loss content in our look-back period, you'll see that ease off. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:19:04Okay. So the idea would be lower from here if all goes according to plan as you see it today? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:19:12That is the way the calculation works. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:19:16Okay. And then maybe just one last one. And I know it's one quarter here and there's still some work to do, but obviously a lot of positive signs. And so when you think about capital planning over maybe the more medium term, how do you think about the levels you're at with maybe a clearer picture on loss content? And I don't know if it's a bit premature, but when do you think you could start entertaining a more offensive stance on capital management when you think about things like buybacks or the dividends? Again, I know it's kind of early days here, but just thinking a little bit more medium or long-term. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:19:52We are going to continue to be prudent and use caution in terms of capital management. I would point to the criticized and classified loan level and where we're at. We need to continue to see continued migration down. So a favorable trend. The one quarter is not a trend. So we need to see two or three more quarters. And we also need to see a more absolute level that's acceptable before management would consider talking further to our board about additional changes in our capital management approach. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:20:30Okay. Very helpful. I will leave it there. Thank you all so much. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:20:34Thanks, Justin. By the way, Justin, you asked how we would characterize the level of capital, and I would say it's strong. Justin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:20:43Got it. Understood and agreed. Operator00:20:46Thank you. And our next question comes from David Chiaverini of Jefferies. Your line is open. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:20:57Hi. Thanks for taking the question. So just wanted to follow up on credit quality. Clearly a good update here. Can you talk about your confidence level that credit issues are behind you? Are you seeing any signs of lingering potential deterioration? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:21:16Hey, David. I mean, again, I'd point back to the criticized classified portfolio of $783 million. There's a lot of prudent credit management process that we're putting around that. Finance, credit, special assets teams are looking at that portfolio. We also spend time looking at the watch portfolio to understand any trends that could cause negative migration into the criticized classified. So given the level of review on this portfolio every quarter, as well as pass-rated multifamily and office loans that are greater than $5 million, they're undergoing a quarterly review as well. We're not seeing any developing new trends based on what we see today and what we know today. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:22:09I would just simply add to that. We have given problem loans and just loans in general high attention that we're constantly looking at them. That will not change. We will not slow down on that. So we'll continue to focus on reviewing and monitoring our loans. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:22:29Our expectation, David, will be that the criticized classified loan portfolio continues to decline throughout the year. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:22:39Great. And in terms of the dispositions, you mentioned two-thirds scheduled for the first quarter. Sounds like the level of buyer interest is high. Can you talk about what you're seeing in the secondary market? Are these private credit funds? Are they other banks? And is that a fair characterization that the buyer interest is high for these loans? Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:23:03So, David, this is Ryan Riel. The buyers are a range of types of folks. The two-thirds that you're referencing that Eric referenced in his comments, there's a range in that population too. There's investors that are supporting local developers to convert to an alternate use, some of the historic office properties. There's existing ownership that is looking at their situation and evaluating the go-forward plan and, in some cases, being willing to come in and purchase their own debt. In each and every case, we've said this for a number of quarters now, we are looking at every possible outcome and every possible path and determining on a case-by-case basis what the best path forward is to optimize the results for the bank and its shareholders. That continues to be the game plan in each and every case. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:24:06Great. And then on the loan loss provision on a go-forward basis, Eric, you mentioned back in October that you're hopeful to get to a normalized level in early 2026. How should we think about it from here? Are we kind of at that point of getting to a normalized level? And how would you kind of define that normalized level? Are we talking kind of where we were in the second, third, and fourth quarter of 2024, kind of in that $10 million range? And any comments there? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:24:36Yeah, David. Looking at the criticized classified portfolio level where it's at, I think that that would inform a provision expense level that's a little bit greater than what you were indicating from 2024, just given that that portfolio was smaller at that point. But we're not. I'm going to state the obvious here, but we're not going to see provision levels that we saw in 2025. But I think that there could be some provision expenses that are more heightened than 2024, given the level of where the criticized classified. But it's also important to say what I said last quarter, that capital will continue to, or credit is not going to cause further degradation of book value. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:25:33Got it. That makes sense. Thank you. Operator00:25:37Thank you. And our next question comes from Catherine Mealor of Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. Your line is open. Catherine MealorManaging Director of Equity Research at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods00:25:53Thank you. Good morning. Just want to follow up on the credit. On the special mention, it was great to see that decline. I know it looked like you had maybe an upgrade from substandard and then a new credit, but then you had some come off, and so I was just curious if you could give us a bit more discussion on the credits that were upgraded or came out of special mention, just some stories or color around what those credits were, what caused them to move out, and just so we can kind of understand some of the puts and takes within that category. Thanks. Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:26:24Sure. So, Catherine, this is Ryan. Big categories that helped the positive migration there are improved performance at the property level. And then in certain cases, there are structural enhancements to that loan that may have been under-considered, if you will, in the past. And with updated information and proof of the willingness and capability of those sponsors to stand behind their credits, we made some of those upgrade decisions as well. Catherine MealorManaging Director of Equity Research at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods00:26:58Got it. Okay. Great. And then I guess I'm going to maybe try again on the provisioning piece. I think that's the biggest question we all have is where do we put our provision expense for 2026? And I guess that's the magic number. But as I look at the reserve, I mean, it should be fair that we should see the. I guess the question is, how much of current expectations of losses do you think are in the reserve? And is it fair as you continue to work through this level of classified, which to your point, Eric, is still very high, right? Still 10%. So we still have a lot to work through. But your reserve is also very high, over 2%. Catherine MealorManaging Director of Equity Research at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods00:27:40So as you kind of keep working through that, at what point should we see the reserve start to decline? And where's a fair number to, or at least maybe a range of where that kind of trends to towards the end of the year? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:27:59Given our one quarter of improvement, I think it's prudent for management to be cautious about where we think the provision expense, and telling you all what we think provision expense is. We certainly have our views on it given what we've worked on. And I can tell you that we do expect the ACL coverage to decline this year. We do expect that there is potentially loss content in that $783 million, some of which we've identified and have reserved for through specific reserves. So it is sitting in the ACL. But we also have some unidentified migration, portfolio migration, that are things that we don't know about yet. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:28:54So I guess, Catherine, I probably am going to punt a little bit and try not to answer your questions with specificity until I think next quarter, if we have another continued trend, then I think we could be a little more focused in answering that question for you. Catherine MealorManaging Director of Equity Research at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods00:29:14Yeah. That makes sense. That makes sense. Fair enough. And then maybe my last question is just it was nice to see the inflows of new credits flow dramatically this quarter, which we would have expected just given the portfolio review we saw last quarter. But there were a couple of surprises. You had a couple of inflows, new credits that kind of came into special mention, for example, that $43 million multifamily credit. So for the new credits that came in this quarter, what happened this quarter that your loan review did not catch? And is there anything within that that we should kind of be thinking about that would be a risk of new migration in the next couple of quarters? Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:29:58Yeah. So with specificity on that $43 million loan, Catherine, that's a newly built multifamily property in a particular submarket of Washington, D.C., that saw an inflow or influx of supply. So while this property was nearing stabilization, there was a sort of hiccup in that stabilization process because of that inflow of supply reintroducing concessions in that submarket. Reacting to that, we worked with the sponsor to put in place a go-forward plan that has cash flow sweeps and other mechanisms in it to protect the bank. The reality is that the supply, the new supply under construction in our region, is very, very small. It's less than half of what it's been historically. So with the passage of time, those units will be absorbed. Those concessions will burn off, and the stabilization will occur. And we'll have enhanced credit structure on that particular loan through that stabilization period. Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:31:01So that's what happened in that quarter was just that, right? The information came through on the pickup in supply and the plateauing, frankly, of that stabilization process. Catherine MealorManaging Director of Equity Research at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods00:31:14Great. Very helpful, Cole. All right. Thank you. Operator00:31:18Thank you. Our next question comes from James Abbott of Diligence Capital Management. Your line is open. James AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital Management00:31:30Hey. Good morning, everyone. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:31:33Hi, Jim. James AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital Management00:31:33I wanted to see if we could get some additional color on SNC loan growth. It was about $120 million. That's about a 40% annualized rate. Could you provide a little context as to whether the loans are coming through SNCs? Are they bilaterals? Maybe some yields, that kind of thing, just so that we can understand the color around that type of production? And secondly, is it sustainable? Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:32:00So the growth of our C&I platform is a sustainable expectation that we should all have. The growth level seen in the fourth quarter at that enhanced growth level is probably not a sustainable figure. Speaking to the diversity question, James, the C&I portfolio does not have great concentration really in any industry. There are some syndications and participations in that number. That is not an ongoing strategy that we're going to employ. Evelyn and her team have done an excellent job of bringing in relationships with debt and deposit balances on the other side of the balance sheet. So that's where you see it, and the numbers are reflective of that. You see actually greater in the fourth quarter deposit growth in the C&I book than you do loan growth. James AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital Management00:33:00Sorry, Ryan. Could you just give us some sort of sense for maybe the typical size of those deals that were coming in during the quarter? Are they typically $5 million and $10 million or more $20 million and $30 million sort of relationships? Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:33:14There's a range of it. I'd say more on the higher end of the range that you just cited, probably 15-30. That's an off-the-cuff number. I'm not looking at the portfolio to justify it. But I'd say probably on average, it's in that 15-30 range. James AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital Management00:33:31Okay. Thanks very much. And then also I had a question probably for Eric. Could you maybe give us some context for the cash level that you're holding and then the brokered deposit level? And I suspect it's probably a negative spread at this point, and you're probably working to address that. But could you give us a sense for what the brokered deposit level is today and then how much you anticipate bringing that down? Can you use cash to pay that down, etc.? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:34:04Yeah. A couple of things. When you look at average cash in the fourth quarter, it was definitely higher than normal, and it was in anticipation of paying down a material level of broker deposits that were coming up for stated maturity. So we were holding that cash in anticipation of paying down those broker deposits. On an average basis, we do have a third-party payment processor that does hold some deposits with us in the middle of the month that can cause the averages to increase at a high level. But it generally isn't a period and doesn't impact period-end cash that much. In terms of broker deposits at year-end, we have, excluding two-way deposits, we have $1.56 billion that has a weighted rate of 4%. And we're going to continue to work that down through 2026. James AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital Management00:35:16Eric, are there maturity dates on those that you could give us some sense for? Is it pretty spread out throughout the year? How much do you think you can attack? Do you think you can get rid of half of that in 2026 or just any sort of context on that? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:35:33Yeah. Of the $1.56 billion in brokered, $715 million of that is a brokered CD. So I would say it's probably spread throughout the year and our goal is to reduce a lot of those CDs down to close to zero. James AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital Management00:35:55Okay. Thanks very much. Operator00:35:59Thank you. And our next question comes from Christopher Marinac of Janney Research. Your line is open. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:36:11Hey. Thanks. Good morning. I think that Ryan addressed a little bit of this question in the last few callers. But I was curious about sort of the surprises for pass loans going bad in the future. It would seem that you have smaller loans if that indeed is the case. And I just wanted to sort of talk through sort of where would there be larger loans that could surprise that are pass now, but that could surprise if they were downgraded in the future. Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:36:41Hey, Chris, how are you? The top 25 list shows where they are, shows the type of exposure there is. Again, to Eric's earlier point, multifamily loans that are pass-rated and in size greater than $5 million, we're looking at on a quarterly basis. Office properties are there. There's not an asset. There's some slight headwinds in the multifamily space, which is what we've talked about. Again, with the back-end valuation issue not there relative to what we've seen in office. The surprises coming into the substandard category, there was one particular land loan that we found out had some characteristics in it that came to light during the last quarter, and they were material and impactful. That's still we're working through that situation and coming up with the determination of where it is. Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:37:41The other transaction that came in, the mixed-use residential into the Substandard category, that is a multifamily construction loan that we're a participant in, a 50% participant in, that had some challenges relative to the agency takeout that is committed to on that. The workout plan has already been addressed, and in fact, we anticipate a full payoff of that by the end of this month, so that's a material thing. It's also notable that two of the top 11 loans that are listed in the top 25 loan list in multifamily have been refinanced, and the aggregate balance there is about $130 million, so there's good and positive migration from a balance perspective, and we don't anticipate any fundamental issues like we've seen in office, and therefore, the surprises should be limited with all the risk mitigation structures and processes we've put in place. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:38:45Just to build off what Ryan is saying, the theme here is that the proactive credit risk management characteristic or the behaviors that the management team with credit and the line have deployed this year to reduce the amount of surprises that we may have seen in earlier years and periods and be very thoughtful about and having a high level of attention and identifying the primary source of repayment. If there's weaknesses or issues there, we will appropriately risk rate that loan so we can monitor it. It allows us to intervene much earlier in the process, which will maximize our options to maximize shareholder value in the event that there is some disposition that needs to occur. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:39:39Great. Thank you both for that. I appreciate the additional caller. And then Eric, I know that the guide for 2026 is to have shrinkage of the balance sheet. And I'm just curious if there's a point where you may get to where it's stable and grows slightly before year-end, or do you think you'll be shrinking for the entire calendar year? Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:39:57I actually don't believe we're going to shrink for the entire calendar year. I suspect we'll see CRE that continue to decline in the first half of the year, and then there'll be some stabilization in the back half of the year, which will then support period-end growth in the second half of 2026. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:40:22Great. And the last question. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:40:23I just want to. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:40:24Sorry. Go ahead. Eric NewellCFO at Eagle Bancorp00:40:25I was just going to add that the period-end is a little different given that we're making money on the averages, and we're comparing the period-end of 2026 compared to the average of last year, so that's why you're seeing that forecast in terms of declines on average earning assets. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:40:47Got it. Great. Thanks again for that. And then just a last question. I know the C&I balances grew quarter on quarter. Are you still hiring producers in that part of the operation? Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:41:00We absolutely are still looking for strong producers in that area. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:41:05Great. Thank you, Susan. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:41:07I think Evelyn has her hand out there constantly reviewing, and there are some candidates that we are exploring. Christopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney Research00:41:18Great. Thank you again for taking all of our questions today. Ryan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real Estate at Eagle Bancorp00:41:22Thank you. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:41:23Thanks, Chris. Operator00:41:25Thank you. I'm showing no further questions at this time. I'd like to turn it back to Susan Riel, President and CEO, for closing remarks. Susan RielPresident and CEO at Eagle Bancorp00:41:34Thank you very much for your participation and questions during the call, and we look forward to seeing you again next quarter. Operator00:41:43This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating, and you may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesSusan RielPresident and CEORyan RielChief Lending Officer, Commercial Real EstateEric NewellCFOAnalystsJames AbbottFounder, CEO, and CIO at Diligence Capital ManagementJustin CrowleyVP and Senior Research Analyst at Piper SandlerChristopher MarinacDirector of Research at Janney ResearchCatherine MealorManaging Director of Equity Research at Keefe, Bruyette & WoodsDavid ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at JefferiesPowered by