NYSE:RF Regions Financial Q1 2026 Earnings Report $27.86 +0.16 (+0.56%) Closing price 05/22/2026 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$27.84 -0.03 (-0.11%) As of 05/22/2026 07:33 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 Regions Financial EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.62Consensus EPS $0.61Beat/MissBeat by +$0.01One Year Ago EPS$0.54Regions Financial Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.87 billionExpected Revenue$1.92 billionBeat/MissMissed by -$48.15 millionYoY Revenue Growth+5.00%Regions Financial Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date4/17/2026TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateFriday, April 17, 2026Conference Call Time10:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsRegions Financial's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Friday, July 17, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled 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)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Regions Financial Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrApril 17, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Strong quarter: Reported $539 million in net income ($0.62/share), up 11%/15% vs. adjusted prior year, with adjusted pre‑tax, pre‑provision income of $805 million and a return on tangible common equity of 18%. Positive Sentiment: Loan and deposit growth continued—ending loans +2% (average loans +1%) driven by broad-based C&I (about two‑thirds investment‑grade); full‑year average loan growth still expected to be low single digits. Positive Sentiment: Net interest income and margin outlook intact: NII was down sequentially but management expects ~2% NII growth in 2Q and 2.5%–4% for 2026, with NIM exiting in the low 3.70s and deposit costs declining (exit interest‑bearing deposit cost 1.69%). Positive Sentiment: Credit metrics improving: allowance for credit losses declined $39 million to a 1.68% allowance ratio, non‑performing loans fell to 71 bps, coverage remains 238%, and management expects 2026 net charge‑offs of 40–50 bps. Positive Sentiment: Capital and shareholder returns maintained: executed $401 million of buybacks and $227 million of dividends, and proposed regulatory capital changes (AOCI + RWA updates) could lift pro‑forma CET1 to ~10.4%, giving the bank additional capital flexibility while still targeting a 9.25%–9.75% operating range. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallRegions Financial Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning and welcome to the Regions Financial Corporation's quarterly earnings call. My name is Chris and I'll be your operator for today's call. I would like to remind everyone that all participant phone lines have been placed on listen-only. At the end of the call, there will be a question and answer session. If you wish to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. I will now turn the call over to Dana Nolan to begin. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:00:30Thank you, Chris. Welcome to Regions' first quarter 2026 earnings call. John and Anil will provide high-level commentary regarding our results. Earnings documents, which include our forward-looking statement disclaimer and non-GAAP reconciliations, are available in the Investor Relations section of our website. These disclosures cover our presentation materials, today's prepared remarks and Q&A. I will now turn the call over to John. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:00:58Thank you, Dana and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining our call today. Before we turn to the quarter, I want to take a moment and personally thank Dana for her service and leadership. After a nearly 40-year career at Regions, she's made the decision to retire. Dana's been a steady and trusted voice for our company and an important link between our leadership team and the investment community. Her deep understanding of our business, paired with her clear and straightforward communication style, helped strengthen our credibility with investors and earn widespread respect across the industry. We're incredibly grateful for Dana's leadership and the standard she set and we wish her nothing but the very best going forward. Turning to our financial results, this morning, we reported strong first-quarter earnings of $539 million, or $0.62 per share. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:01:54This represents an 11% and 15% increase, respectively, versus adjusted prior year results. Adjusted pre-tax, pre-provision income was $805 million, up 4% year-over-year and we generated a return on tangible common equity of 18%. The momentum we saw at the end of last year-end carried into the first quarter. We grew loans and deposits on both an average and ending basis and our credit metrics continue to improve as we resolve our portfolios of interest. Conversations with customers suggest that despite recent volatility, sentiment remains generally optimistic. Businesses are continuing to manage their balance sheets and income statements prudently with strong liquidity and solid capital positions. On the consumer side, fundamentals remain relatively sound. Aggregate balance and spending trends for Regions customers are stable to modestly positive. The labor markets are not showing signs of material weakness. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:03:00We are seeing some pressure among lower-income customers, but larger income tax refunds compared to last year have helped offset a portion of that impact. Importantly, our consumer loan portfolio continues to be primarily prime to super prime. We continue to make good progress on our core transformation, including investments in artificial intelligence. We're on track to deploy our commercial lending system and small business digital origination platform this summer and system testing on the core deposit system is also underway. We expect to launch a pilot in the third quarter and begin conversion in 2027. At the same time, we remain focused on near-term drivers of growth. Our strategic growth hiring initiative is on track and we continue to make targeted investments in products and services across all three of our lines of business. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:03:56There's a lot of internal energy and excitement around our technology enablement initiatives and we're motivated to continue building on that momentum. I'll just conclude by saying that we're pleased with our first quarter results and are excited about the opportunities that lie ahead. With that, I'll hand it over to Anil to walk through the quarter in more detail. Anil? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:04:18Thank you, John. Let's start with the balance sheet. Ending loans grew 2%, while average loans increased approximately 1%. Growth was driven by broad-based C&I lending, including power and utilities, manufacturing, healthcare and asset-based lending. Roughly half of this quarter's growth came from higher loan utilization, with the balance driven by new loans, approximately 80% of which were to existing clients. Almost two-thirds of the growth was investment-grade credits, with the majority of the remaining growth near investment grade, so very high quality. While the macroeconomic outlook remains volatile, we experienced strong loan growth in the latter half of the quarter. As John noted earlier, client sentiment remains broadly positive, loan pipelines and commitments remain strong and overall lending activity remains at a good pace. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:05:07An area that has not been a meaningful growth driver over the past year is NBFI-related lending. These loans reflect long-standing client relationships with predominantly investment-grade credits, with nearly half of balances associated with our long-standing REIT business. Private credit exposure remains limited. Less than 2% of total loans, largely investment grade, well enhanced and existing client pay-downs exceed withdrawals during the quarter. With respect to our full-year growth expectations, we continue to expect full-year average loans to be at low single digits versus 2025. Turning to deposits. Average balances increased modestly, while ending balances increased approximately 1%, reflecting normal seasonal patterns associated with tax refunds and payments. Balances grew while total deposit costs continued to decline, supported by our strong deposit franchise and focus on customer acquisition and retention. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:06:01Through deliberate product management, we continue to see a shift from CDs into money market accounts across both our consumer and wealth businesses. Let's end the comment on balances. Our non-interest-bearing deposit mix remained in the low 30% range, consistent with our target and reflective of the operational nature of our deposit base. As a result, we continue to expect 2026 average deposits to be up low single digits versus the prior year. Let's shift to net interest income. As expected, net interest income was lower linked-quarter, driven primarily by two fewer days in the quarter and the absence of non-recurring items that benefited the fourth quarter. The net interest margin of 3.67% continues to evidence Regions' profitability advantage. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:06:46That said, margin came in below expectations for the quarter, reflecting tighter asset spreads as a result of market conditions, pay downs of higher yielding loans and remixing into higher quality credits. The core balance sheet performed well during the quarter and provides a solid foundation for net interest income growth over the remainder of the year. Our neutral interest rate positioning once again performed as designed in the quarter, with minimal impact to net interest income from the Fed's fourth quarter interest rate cuts. During the first quarter, interest-bearing deposit costs declined 13 basis points. The following cycle, interest-bearing deposit beta stands at 35% and we remain confident in a mid-thirties beta with the potential to outperform over time. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:07:33Net interest income also continued to benefit from fixed rate asset turnover with elevated long-term rates supporting pricing on term loans and securities. At current rate levels, we would expect balance sheet repricing to support margin expansion over multiple years. Finally, recent loan growth acceleration positions us well for future interest income growth. Subsequent to quarter end, higher interest rates created an opportunity to sell approximately $900 million of shorter duration securities that no longer support our balance sheet management objectives at a $40 million loss, repositioning those into longer duration product types. The transaction is also well aligned with our overall capital deployment priorities, carrying a short, approximately two-year payback period and enhancing overall security yields. In the second quarter, we expect a strong rebound with approximately 2% net interest income growth, followed by additional expansion in subsequent quarters. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:08:32Fixed rate asset turnover, seasonal average deposit inflows, accelerating loan growth and continued discipline in funding costs will drive net interest income growth in a stable Fed Funds environment. For full year 2026, we reiterate our net interest income expectation of between 2.5% and 4% growth and for the net interest margin to exit the year in the low 3.70s. Now let's turn to fee revenue performance for the quarter. Adjusted non-interest revenue declined 2% on a linked-quarter basis as seasonally lower card and ATM fees and a decline in other non-interest income were partially offset by higher capital markets revenue. Capital markets income increased 5% during the quarter, driven by improvements in commercial swap, loan syndication and securities underwriting activity, partially offset by lower real estate capital markets and M&A fees. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:09:26Despite ongoing headwinds associated with market volatility and elevated interest rates, we continue to expect capital markets' quarterly revenue to increase within our $90 million-$105 million range, trending near the lower end of the range in the second quarter and moving higher thereafter. Wealth management remains a good story for us, supported primarily by continued sales momentum, with revenue up 9% year-over-year and we expect this business to continue to be a steady contributor to fee revenue growth. Card and ATM fees declined 5% from the prior quarter, reflecting typical seasonal patterns. We expect this line item to follow normal patterns, peaking next quarter and moderating throughout the second half of the year. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:10:09Other non-interest income declined 29%, driven primarily by commercial lease sales activity with $6 million of gains recognized in the fourth quarter and $7 million of losses recognized in the current quarter. Service charges remained stable during the quarter as record treasury management fees offset seasonally lower consumer revenue. Overall, treasury management grew 6% on a linked-quarter basis, including strong growth in core payments revenue. We continue to invest in talent and innovation within the treasury management space with a focus on embedded payments and digital client experiences. We expect this business to remain a source of growth within overall service charges. For full year 2026, we continue to expect adjusted non-interest income to grow between 3%-5% versus 2025. Let's move on to non-interest expense. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:11:02While we continue to make meaningful investments across the franchise to support long-term growth, we remain focused on maintaining a disciplined approach to expense management. Adjusted non-interest expense declined 4% linked quarter, reflecting broad-based improvement across most expense categories. Salaries and benefits remained relatively stable as lower incentives and declines in market value adjustments for employee benefits liabilities offset the seasonal increases associated with payroll taxes, 401(k) match and merit. For full year 2026, we expect adjusted non-interest expense to be up between 1.5% and 3.5% and we expect to deliver full year adjusted positive operating leverage. Annualized net charge-offs as a percentage of average loans decreased 5 basis points to 54 basis points, reflecting continued progress on resolutions within previously identified portfolios of interest, which were reserved for in prior periods. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:12:01Business services criticized and total non-performing loans remained relatively stable during the quarter as risk rating upgrades continued to outpace downgrades. The resulting NPL ratio declined 2 basis points to 71 basis points and the business services criticized ratio declined 16 basis points to 5.15%. Allowance increases tied to loan growth and greater macroeconomic uncertainty were more than offset by meaningful progress in resolving loans within previously identified portfolios of interest, sustained risk rating upgrades exceeding downgrades and continued improvement in the business services criticized and total non-performing loan ratios. As a result, the allowance for credit losses declined $39 million. Strengthening asset quality across portfolios, combined with high-quality loan growth, drove an 8-basis-point reduction in the allowance ratio to 1.68%, while coverage of non-performing loans remained solid at 238%. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:13:03We expect full-year 2026 net charge-offs to be between 40 and 50 basis points. Let's turn to capital and liquidity. We ended the quarter with an estimated common equity Tier 1 ratio of 10.7%, while executing $401 million in share repurchases and paying $227 million in common dividends. We are encouraged by the proposed changes to the regulatory capital framework, which would revise the definition of capital to include AOCI and implement broad updates to risk-weighted asset calculations under the standardized approach. Including AOCI reduces our reported CET1 ratio to an estimated 9.4%. However, based on our preliminary assessment, the proposed changes are also expected to result in an estimated 10% reduction in risk-weighted assets, contributing to an approximate 100 basis point increase in capital. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:14:00Taken together, the proposed changes are expected to result in a fully implemented Basel III common equity Tier 1 ratio of approximately 10.4% on a pro forma basis. Importantly, our capital priorities remain unchanged. Once finalized, we expect to continue managing our fully implemented Basel III common equity Tier 1 ratio around the midpoint of our established 9.25%-9.75% operating range. Finally, liquidity remains stable and robust with ample capacity to support future growth. As John indicated, we are pleased with our quarterly performance, particularly given the evolving market dynamics and believe we remain well positioned to continue delivering consistent, sustainable long-term performance for our shareholders. This covers our prepared remarks. We will now move to the Q&A portion of the call. Operator00:14:53Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. Please hold while we compile the Q&A roster. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Ryan Nash with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:15:25Morning, Ryan. Ryan NashManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:15:25Good morning, everyone. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:15:26Morning. Ryan NashManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:15:26Hey, good morning, everyone and welcome to the call, Anil. It was good to see that you reiterated the guidance across the board despite a slightly softer start. I wanted to focus on revenues, whether it's NII or fees, given 1Q along with some of the 2Q commentary. Can you maybe just give us a sense of how you're tracking relative to your ranges and what is your confidence in terms of reaching the middle or the upper part of the NII range and what do we need to see that happen? I have a follow-up. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:15:57First of all, we're very confident in hitting the ranges. Let me start with net interest income. I think, importantly, exiting the quarter with the strong loan growth that we saw, $2.3 billion point-to-point, is really a great tailwind for us heading into the second quarter. Our deposit performance, the growth that we saw during the quarter, was also really strong. Our ability to continue to bring down deposit costs. We exited the quarter on an interest-bearing deposit cost of 1.69%. That's another good tailwind for us. As we've talked about before, we still have fixed asset turnover that will benefit us over the course of the remainder of the year. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:16:33All those things coming together is really what gives us the confidence in terms of what we expect to see for NII, both in the second quarter and going forward through the year. I'd say loan trends still look good. We're confident that what we're seeing will continue to persist. With respect to non-interest revenue, a couple of things there. First, cyclically, the first quarter is typically low for some of the consumer fee items, consumer service charges, card and ATM fees. Those tend to be lower in the first quarter. We expect that to rebound in the second quarter, so that'll be a nice tailwind. We've talked about capital markets and gave our guide for the second quarter and for the rest of the year. Then Treasury Management wealth just continue to be good growth stories for us. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:17:20We continue to expect to see growth there. It's great to see another record quarter out of Treasury Management. Wealth Management up 9% year-over-year. All these things are really pulling in the right direction. What we're seeing right now really gives us confidence that we'll operate within the range that we've given. Ryan NashManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:17:37Thanks, Anil. Then I have a follow-up and a comment. First on my follow-up, you noted that you still expect to manage to the midpoint of your range on capital, but I think you noted that it creates meaningful flexibility. Just given the coming changes, maybe just talk about the potential to manage towards the low end or even below, given that these changes are coming and maybe expand on the flexibility comment. What else could we see for leveraging the capital? That's my question. Then my comment. Dana, I just want to say thank you for all the help over the years and enjoy taking care of your grandchild and doing some traveling. Thank you. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:18:15Thank you, Ryan. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:18:16Yeah. Great question, Ryan. We don't want to get too far ahead of the proposed rule. As we indicated, based on the proposal, when you include AOCI and then the expected benefit and risk-weighted assets, we expect to be around 10.4%. The timing of each component, the phase-in schedule, things of that nature will matter a lot and so we're not going to get ahead of that. We're going to continue to manage capital the way you've seen us. Our capital distribution priorities are unchanged. We'll monitor these proposals and once finalized, it'll be our plan to continue to manage capital within that range. That is unchanged. We don't want to get too far ahead of this. We're fortunate. We generate enough capital to do everything we want to do today to grow the business. We don't have to distribute capital ahead of this. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:19:04We'll take our time. When we get final rules, our distribution priorities are unchanged and we still believe our targets are where we should be. Ryan NashManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:19:13Got it. Well, I figured I'd try. Thank you. Operator00:19:18Our next question comes from the line of Scott Siefers with Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your question. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:19:24Morning, Scott. Scott SiefersManaging Director at Piper Sandler00:19:25Morning, guys. Thanks. Hey. Thanks for taking the question. Maybe Anil, I was hoping you could sort of address in a little more detail the moving parts in the margin outlook for the remainder of the year. I think you touched on combination of the tighter asset spreads and loan remixing as factors in the first quarter. Maybe just going forward, how much will those need to find relief, or is there simply enough balance sheet repricing opportunity going forward that you can absorb continued pressure from those dynamics that hit the first quarter but still see both the margin and NII in this? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:19:58Sure. First of all, managing deposit costs is still the primary mechanism that we have to continue to meet our margin objectives for the year. It's already alluded to where we exited the quarter from an interest-bearing deposit cost. The opportunity there is still going to be a meaningful driver in terms of where we go over the balance of the year. Talked about the fixed asset repricing opportunities that we have, about $9 billion looking forward. That'll be helpful. We did see, as we alluded to, some investment-grade credit draws late in the quarter. We like that credit. It's lower credit risk, great returns. But we also saw good kind of middle market growth throughout the first part of the quarter. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:20:40We expect to see that over the course of the year and that's going to benefit the margin as well as we look forward. Deposit growth is going to continue to grow. I already mentioned we had good growth this quarter. We're going to see seasonal uptick in the second quarter. All those factors coming together really are going to be positive in terms of where our margin goes from here over the course of the year. Scott SiefersManaging Director at Piper Sandler00:21:00Terrific. Okay. Thank you. John, your commentary on customer sentiment sounded pretty good. I think, Anil, you mentioned that about half the first quarter loan growth came from higher line utilization. Maybe a thought on where are utilization rates versus, say, 90 days ago. Where would you hope to see those advance to as the year unfolds? John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:21:22Yeah. Utilization rates are up for about 200 basis points, I guess, across both the corporate banking markets or customer base and our middle-market customers. We'd expect to see a little more activity as the year goes along. It's based upon the constructive feedback we're getting from customers. I will say that we observe liquidity. Customer liquidity is up, at least in Regions, by about 7% year-over-year. Customers are still creating additional liquidity. At the same time, we are seeing borrowing activity, which is positive. Scott SiefersManaging Director at Piper Sandler00:22:00Okay. All right. Perfect. Thank you. Just final, Dana, same thing. Thanks for all the help. Best wishes. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:22:07Thank you. Operator00:22:10Our next question comes to the line of John Pancari with Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your question. John PancariSenior Managing Director at Evercore ISI00:22:17Morning. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:22:18Morning, John. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:22:18Morning. John PancariSenior Managing Director at Evercore ISI00:22:19On the deposit backdrop, I know you had indicated some pretty good deposit dynamics, but I want to see if you can elaborate on the competitive backdrop that you're seeing in the Southeast. You've had a number of banks flag seemingly intensifying competitive pressures on the deposit front from not only some incumbents, but some newer entrants to the markets. What are you seeing in terms of deposit pricing dynamics? Has that been impacting your expectation at all underlying the margin? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:22:53Sure, John. Yeah. We've been in a highly competitive deposit backdrop, I'd say for north of a year. The one thing I'd say that's been consistent is we are seeing banks and we are as well, offering promotional offers in certain key markets where everyone is looking to grow customers. What I'll also say is banks are also being prudent in terms of how they think about the back book of their deposit base to manage that in the context of their overall deposit costs. The strategies are very similar to what we've seen over the past year. We've adopted an approach that we think is appropriate where we can continue to grow new customers, especially in these high-growth markets. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:23:34Also take advantage of our back book to price that in a way that's able to manage our deposit cost where we think it should be over time. We're seeing the same thing among our peers. We think that dynamic will continue to hold. As loans continue to grow, I'm optimistic in terms of what we're seeing in the capital markets, the debt capital markets where banks are accessing liquidity there. From what I see now, the way banks are managing their deposit base and other funding sources, I think will continue as we all have opportunities to grow loans from here. John PancariSenior Managing Director at Evercore ISI00:24:08Great. All right. Thank you. On the margin, I know you cited the pressure from tighter asset spreads. If you could give us a little more color there. On where spreads stand, what loan types are you seeing that compression? Is that competitive pressures? You also mentioned the pay-down of some higher-yielding loans. If you can just give us a little more color on that and is there any incremental actions you expect on the portfolio reshaping? Thank you. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:24:36Yeah. Really on the tighter spreads, it's primarily in larger C&I where we saw line utilization late in the quarter. That's a primary area. We also saw just earlier in the quarter, broadly across the balance sheet in terms of tighter mortgage spreads for some of the action the government's taking, as well as refi, too, that we saw earlier in the first quarter. Primarily where we're seeing the tighter spreads is in IG within the C&I space. John PancariSenior Managing Director at Evercore ISI00:25:03Got it. Okay and in the portfolio reshaping efforts, anything incremental that you expect on that front? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:25:09I think all that's proceeding just as planned and as we alluded to last quarter, a lot of that is behind us. We'll continue going down that path as we have. John PancariSenior Managing Director at Evercore ISI00:25:19Got it. Thank you very much, Anil and best of luck to you in retirement. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:25:24Thank you, John. Operator00:25:26Our next question comes from the line of Manan Gosalia with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:25:33Morning. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:25:34Morning. Manan GosaliaEquity Research Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:25:34Hi, good morning. Anil, you spoke about line draws. It sounds like it's good fundamental demand coming through. Just wanted to see if you've seen any defensive line draws and any reason that utilization rates may flatten or even decline from here. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:25:54Yeah. The line draws that we saw were predominantly late in the quarter when there's volatility in the capital markets, so that's really where we saw most of that come in. I wouldn't call it defensive in nature. I would just say given where the capital markets were, as we saw uncertainty in the market, customers drew on bank lines. I'd expect that to abate through time as capital markets reopen, but nothing defensive in terms of what we're seeing. Manan GosaliaEquity Research Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:26:20Got it. Maybe on the capital markets side, I guess you're expecting that trends to the lower end given volatility and rates. Most of your comments in the environment have been fairly constructive. I guess what market conditions would move you back towards the $100 million-plus range on capital markets revenues? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:26:39Well, the primary business that's impacted is our real estate capital markets business and it's been soft now for four or five quarters based on just the rate environment. As longer term rates come down, we would see, we believe, a benefit in real estate capital markets business, which would be important and that would more than offset any impacts on other parts of the business. Manan GosaliaEquity Research Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:27:04Got it. Great. Thank you. Dana, all the very best. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:27:07Thank you, Manan. Operator00:27:11Our next question comes from the line of Gerard Cassidy with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:27:17Hey, John. Hi, Anil. Anil, in talking about the loan loss reserve, I think you pointed out that the increases were tied to loan growth, but also the macro uncertainty out there. If the conflict in the Middle East takes a decided turn for the better, the straits opened up today, as you probably saw the headlines, what would that do for the second or third quarter allowance? Does that start to reduce the allowance as that macro risk drops meaningfully and kind of surprises all of us that it's maybe going to be resolved sooner than expected? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:27:56Yeah. If you look on the waterfall that we included in the appendix, we attributed about $17 million of growth quarter-over-quarter to macro uncertainty. That's primarily what we're seeing in the Middle East. To the extent that gets resolved and the other kind of second-order effects resolve in a positive to neutral way, we could see a modest release in the allowance of that. I wouldn't say it's overly material, but we did feel appropriate to put up a little bit in terms of macroeconomic uncertainty. That's the part of the allowance that I'd point you to. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:28:25Very good. Then to follow up on the commercial loan conversation that you guys have presented, you're not really big NBFI lenders as a regional bank. You're down at the bottom of kind of the group, which lowers the risk, of course. I guess why haven't you maybe pursued it as aggressively as some of your peers in terms of the different categories of NBFI lending? What do you guys see there that makes you maybe a little more cautious? John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:28:58I think we just generally are more cautious, Gerard, as we think about our lending activities. They're principally based on relationships that are established within our footprint. We have some businesses where we have specialized capabilities and we actually do lend out of footprint. This would be an area where we're getting our feet wet, learning a little more about it. Today, we have relationships with about just in excess of 25 funds and those funds are fairly broadly distributed in terms of the businesses, the sectors that they're lending into. Total exposure, I think, is just above $3 billion to those funds within private credit, about $1.8 billion. So we're just in exposure, I mean, in outstanding's. I think we're just trying to learn to understand, can we build relationships? Can we gain deposits? John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:29:54Can we participate in capital markets activity? Because that's fundamental to how we want to operate our business. If we can't do that, then it's just not an appropriate allocation of capital for us. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:30:05Very good. Dana, hopefully you have tons of fun in retirement. Thank you. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:30:10Thank you, Gerard. Operator00:30:13Our next question comes from the line of Ken Usdin with Autonomous Research. Please proceed with your question. Ken UsdinManaging Director at Autonomous Research00:30:23Hey, good morning, all. First quarter credit quality was exactly as expected, taking care of that already expected stuff. Then your outlook for the year looks good and there was good stability in the NPAs and some of the other metrics. Just, are you kind of through that piece of taking care of some of that legacy stuff and just your general line of sight on some of those other portfolios that you've mentioned in the past? Thanks. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:30:56Yeah, I would say, Ken, we previously identified office, multifamily, transportation and communications as portfolios where we have some credits we're working through or working out. We have generally seen most of that activity has been completed, but we still have a few credits of some size that we're working on. While we are indicating that we expect charge-offs over the course of the year to be between 40-50 basis points, the timing of which we get back within that range is still not entirely clear. We think credit quality is continuing to improve as indicated, reflected in our metrics, non-performing loans down to 71 basis points, criticized loans continuing to decline. Charge-offs should follow as they're a trailing indicator of improving credit quality. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:31:54I'd just add, as all that happens, our 1.68% allowance ratio should approximate down to the 1.62% that we disclose our kind of day one. That assumes we resolve the credits that John mentioned and that assumes that the macroeconomic uncertainty gets resolved in a positive way. The timing of which that happens, we'll see. That's where we think we'll end up based on the composition of our loan portfolio. Ken UsdinManaging Director at Autonomous Research00:32:19Understood. Okay, the second thing on, Anil, you're starting right off of the bat following David on the hedging and securities portfolio repositioning activity. Is that at all any adjustment to that higher for longer? Or is this more just kind of normal course of moving some stuff further out to later time periods? Just wondering if it's just like normal course of any adjustments you're making because of the environment. Thanks. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:32:45No, it's just normal course. As securities shorten, they don't accomplish our balance sheet management objectives as they once did. We'll extend duration on the new securities that we purchase. Just an extension of what you've seen us do before. Ken UsdinManaging Director at Autonomous Research00:33:00All right, great. Thanks a lot. Operator00:33:05Our next question comes from the line of Matthew O'Connor with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:33:11Good morning. I just wanted to follow up on the fees. I guess some of these categories, if we look year-over-year, the growth was a little bit less than I would've thought. Like the consumer service charges flat, corporate up a little bit, card flat. Maybe just talk about kind of some of those dynamics and maybe give some guidance for card in 2Q. Just kind of thinking about those categories maybe more medium term. Thanks. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:33:39Yes, I'd say in terms of medium-term guidance, they are cyclically lower in the first quarter. They tend to peak in the second quarter and then kind of hold flat from there. From a year-over-year comparison standpoint, we do have some kind of one-off items if you just look quarter-over-quarter, in particular, in terms of how we treated certain expenses associated with some of those programs. There are some one-time changes that if you just look year over year would mute the growth. In terms of path from here, we expect to peak next quarter and then hold at that level throughout the rest of the year. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:34:15That would be for the card and ATM fees, right? For the peak quarter? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:34:19Consumer, yes. The consumer service charges portion. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:34:24Okay. All right. Thank you. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:34:27Sure. Operator00:34:30Our next question comes from the line of Ebrahim Poonawala with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:34:37Morning. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director at Bank of America00:34:38Hey. Morning, John. Morning, Anil. I guess first question, just around listening to your sort of messaging on the drawdowns towards the end of the quarter due to market volatility. Does that create a risk of payoffs? I'm just wondering if some of the macro subsides markets are less volatile, do you see customers paying off and that credit then moves off balance sheet? Secondly, as we think about just capital markets, obviously it's a little more real estate biased, in your case. Without getting any rate cuts for the year, do you think just CRE lending real estate capital markets can still have a good year? John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:35:24Maybe I'll answer the second question first. Yes, we continue to lean into that opportunity. We have actually a fairly significant portion of our portfolio that's maturing toward the back end of the year. There'll be some opportunities within that portfolio to help customers with permanent placement of those obligations. Additionally, we see other opportunities with customers who have debt in other places that they'll need to refinance. I think the real estate capital markets business can still have a good year even if we don't get a lot of improvement in rate. If we do, it gets materially better, we think. With respect to line utilization, about half of the increase in line utilization was attributable to our larger corporate customers. The other half to our middle market customers who are continuing to invest in their businesses and grow. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:36:20While there is some risk that we'll see some paydowns amongst those larger corporate customers, we expect the middle market customers again, to continue to borrow as they invest in their businesses. Pipelines are up for the year fairly significantly. We also expect new originations to overcome any paydowns that we might experience in the corporate space. All in all, we feel really good about our ability to deliver the loan growth that we've guided to. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director at Bank of America00:36:53Got it. Just maybe, Anil, for you or both of you, as we think about the declining RWA density on the back of the capital proposals, how sensitive are you to managing to a certain level of tangible common equity ratio? Just any thoughts there? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:37:13I wouldn't say that we're managing to attain a tangible common equity ratio. I'd say what we're thinking about really is, one, across all the changes that are being proposed, we think they're positive. We'll continue to manage to a total CET1 ratio within that 9.25%-9.75% range. We think it's appropriate. We'll manage through that through time as we get finalization of the rules. With respect to the proposed RWA changes themselves, we have to think about not just the regulatory implications, but other constituents as well and how they think about RWA and the capital that's needed on our balance sheet. Again, we think all of this is positive to what we can do to capital through time. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:37:58Our caution will be, one, tied to finalization of the rules and two, just to make sure that we understand where each of the other constituents land as well when it comes to these proposed changes. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director at Bank of America00:38:08Got it. Dana, all the best and I'm sure we'll stay in touch. Take care. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:38:12Appreciate it. Thank you. Operator00:38:15Our next question comes from the line of Dave Rochester with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please proceed with your question. Dave RochesterManaging Director at Cantor Fitzgerald00:38:22Hey, good morning, guys. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:38:23Good morning. Dave RochesterManaging Director at Cantor Fitzgerald00:38:23Just want to go back to the credit discussion. I'm trying to figure out how you're thinking about the trajectory of the problem loan buckets from here. Just given all the work that you've already done, are you expecting to see more meaningful moves lower in NPAs and criticized assets as we get to the back half of the year? If you could just update us on your progress in the transportation book, that'd be great. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:38:45Yeah, we should continue to see some improvement in credit quality and NPAs could come down a little further. I would say if you look back over time, NPAs have averaged closer to 1%, I think. I wouldn't expect them to come down too much further than 71 basis points. Maybe we get into the 60s, but I don't see a lot of movement beyond that. I would tell you that we think credit is pretty well normalized in our book, given the composition of our portfolio today and we feel good about our ability to deliver on the 40-50 basis points of charge-offs, as we indicated. With respect to transportation, we're still working through a couple of credits there, but generally speaking, I think we have identified and resolved most of the exposure. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:39:39We provided some slides in the deck. I can't recall which slide it is exactly on transportation. Twenty four. Give you a little insight into our exposure there. I think what you'd see is, one, we've had a fairly significant reduction in the size of the outstanding's or the commitments representing about 1.2% of total loans. NPLs have come down to about $51 million. Again, when you just look at our reserve against that portfolio, we think it's appropriately reserved for any losses that we might experience. Dave RochesterManaging Director at Cantor Fitzgerald00:40:21You're in the latter innings on that one. It sounds like. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:40:23Yes, we are. Dave RochesterManaging Director at Cantor Fitzgerald00:40:26Great. Just back on the securities repositioning you did, just given today's rates, is there any more you could do there? Anything that's left on the table that you could potentially source at some point in the future? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:40:40Yeah, I'd say it's small. There's not much right now. What we'll continue to look at is securities as they get closer to maturity. That creates an opportunity, but we'll need to see where rates are to see if it makes sense to do. As you've seen from us in the past, we're very mindful of thinking about it through returns, payback period. Really strong payback period on this trade we did at two years. We're disciplined when it comes to using capital in this way. Dave RochesterManaging Director at Cantor Fitzgerald00:41:07Great. Thanks, guys. Anil, welcome. Dana, it's been great working with you. Good luck and enjoy. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:41:13Thanks. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:41:14Thank you. Operator00:41:16Our next question comes from the line of Erika Najarian with UBS. Please proceed with your question. Erika NajarianManaging Director at UBS00:41:23Hi, good morning. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:41:25Morning. Erika NajarianManaging Director at UBS00:41:25Anil, just a two-parter for you on CET1. First, given your risk profile, what was the consideration or what are your considerations in terms of the SA, which you showed us versus ERBA? You mentioned other constituents. A few of your peers have talked about the ratings agencies and perhaps because of the benefit to RWA, particularly for the regional banks, that there might be a tendency for the ratings agencies to look at un-risk weighted assets or sort of un-risk weighted capital measures. Just wanted your comments on those two topics. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:42:10Sure. You really hit the second point. That is the other constituency that we need to be mindful of. As you alluded to, some use direct regulatory risk-weighted assets in their approach. We will need to see how they think about this. We'll clearly work with them to share our thoughts on that. You really hit the second piece there. On the first piece, just to walk you through our preliminary view of the two approaches. We communicated our 100 basis point expected impact under the standardized approach. We've looked at the ERBA approach. In particular, as you know, the two primary benefits that we would get through that approach are the incremental beneficial risk weights on investment-grade credits that we've talked a fair amount about today. That's meaningful. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:42:54Also other retail exposures where you could get an incremental lift in terms of risk-weighted assets. The counter to that for us is the operational loss add on. Our current calculation of that for us actually overwhelms the benefits from the other two. It's something we'll have to continually assess. We're fortunate that as proposed, you kind of have an evergreen option to opt in, which is beneficial. For us right now, the operational loss component overwhelms the benefits, in particular from investment-grade credits and retail exposures as currently proposed. Erika NajarianManaging Director at UBS00:43:30Got it. Tom, I'll follow up with you a little bit on capital during our catch up call. The second question I wanted to pose is maybe just directly asking, you mentioned that deposit costs are a big factor in terms of your net interest income outlook. Again, you must be very flattered that a lot of your peers, both money center and regional, are coming into the markets that you've long dominated. If the Fed doesn't cut, what is sort of the trajectory for deposit costs at Regions? In other words, will you be able to keep deposit costs flat if the Fed isn't cutting this year? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:44:12Yeah. We will. I talked about the 1.69% exit rate. We think that will continue into the second quarter and it will decline modestly. Total deposit costs will decline modestly from there. Again, we think the competitive pressures, banks are kind of performing as we'd expect in terms of how they're managing deposit costs and we expect that to continue into the future. Erika NajarianManaging Director at UBS00:44:38Great. Thank you. Operator00:44:42Our next question comes from the line of Chris McGratty with KBW. Please proceed with your question. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:44:49Good morning, Chris. Chris McGrattyManaging Director at KBW00:44:50Good morning. In the quarter, you talked about living in the high end of the 16%-18% return on tangible common equity range for the next three years. You were slightly above that last year. I think the Street's got you a little bit over 18%. Is the outlook that those comments were made, now that we have some clarity on regulatory, how much does the numerator versus denominator play in maintaining that level of profitability? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:45:17Yeah. Looking forward, there's a couple of things to think about. One is, let's talk about the proposed capital changes first. If those go in as proposed and if the other constituents don't meaningfully impact how we think about capital, that in and of itself is a tailwind to returns to the extent we choose to buy back shares from that. That would prop up returns overall. Look, the reason we frame up our guide of 16%-18% is really because, as we've said before, we need to be top quartile when it comes to overall returns. We don't need to be number one. We need to make sure we make all the right investments into our business. We believe that we can continue to do that. We did it this quarter in terms of the growth that we saw. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:46:01When we do that, we're going to continue to grow income and so returns will be increased from that as well. The point of us making that statement is we want to reiterate that we are well-positioned to grow. We do not feel like we have to be number one in our peer group. We're committed to invest capital as long as we get a good return out of it. That's really why we positioned it the way we have. We'll continue to monitor the peer landscape. Back to my earlier point, everyone's going to benefit to some degree from these capital proposals. Others are taking actions where they think they may be able to raise returns. We'll continue to reassess what the right levels are for us through time. Our goal is to remain top quartile amongst our peer set. Chris McGrattyManaging Director at KBW00:46:43That's a great color. Thank you. My follow-up would be just more capital beyond buybacks. You've been clear about inorganic not being a focus today. I guess maybe remind us where you are with some of the projects internally as you fast-forward to the back half of the year. Is that something where you may have to consider to be more flexible with inorganic growth if the right opportunity came about? Thanks. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:47:03We'll deliver the loan system conversion the end of May. We've got a fairly significant improvement in our digital offering to particularly small businesses that will be delivered over the course of the summer and then begin piloting our deposit system conversion in the third quarter. That project continues to progress on track. We feel really good about it. That will position us, we believe, to do a number of things focusing on how do we continue to improve our business and improve the customer and banker experience once we get that work done. Those are important areas of focus for us. In terms of what it means for inorganic growth, we're going to stay focused on executing our plan. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:47:51We believe our plan will allow us to deliver top quartile results for our shareholders, consistent with the same good execution that we've experienced over the last five, six, seven years and that'll be our focus going forward. Chris McGrattyManaging Director at KBW00:48:10Thank you. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:48:11Yep, thank you. Operator00:48:14Our final question comes from the line of David Chiaverini with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:48:22Good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Follow-up on deposit costs. There's been some discussion about how cash optimization by customers in an AI world could pressure deposits at banks that have a lower cost of deposits relative to peers. Can you talk about your view on this and how Regions plans to protect its market share? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:48:43Sure. No, it's a great question and the what could happen from AI is kind of proliferating several parts of the economy. When we think about the impact on deposits, we kind of start with the nature of our customer base. Our customer base average deposit's about $5,200. When we think about the ability for customers to move money around, what our customers are really using their account for is for ease of payments. We have to stay focused on making sure we're providing them the most efficient way to make payments across their daily lives. A much lower percentage of our customer base is really yield seeking. That, in my opinion, will be the first place where you will see the use of AI allow people to move funds around. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:49:29I'd also say it's pretty easy to move funds around today. It doesn't take too much effort to move cash in and out of accounts to get a higher yield. I'm sure AI can do it marginally quicker, but I'd also say I think today it's pretty efficient as well. Yeah, I think it's something that could play out. I think it'll play out more severely for those customers that have larger balances seeking yield. We see them do it today. As of right now, for our customers, we need to make sure we're giving them all the payment capabilities they need to be done efficiently. We'll continue to monitor this space, but that's kind of how we're thinking about it right now. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:50:04Very helpful. Thanks for that. Shifting over to the hiring pipeline, how does that look given the M&A that's occurring in your footprint? John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:50:13It's good. We have hiring plans in our commercial banking business, in our wealth banking business, in our branches and we're moving along, having accomplished more than two-thirds of the hiring that we'd hoped to do as part of our plans, part of our three-year plan. We feel really good about the quality of the bankers that we're hiring and the opportunities that we have associated with that. Takes a little while for those bankers to begin to generate new business once they get settled in. We'd expect to see the impact of some of that hiring in the latter part of this year and into 2027, which is, again, another tailwind for growth, we believe. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:50:51Yeah, I'd just say even for our existing banker population, our platform is really delivering them the opportunity to grow their business. We're seeing a really nice decline year-over-year in attrition, even among our existing bankers. For us, we view that as a great vote of confidence that they have the platform they want to be able to deliver to their customers. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:51:09Thank you and all the best, Dana. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:51:12Thank you. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:51:14Okay. Thank you very much. Well, I appreciate everybody's participation. Once again, congratulations to Dana. We appreciate her leadership and commitment, connectivity with all of you in the investment community. We will miss her, but we're confident Tom's going to do a great job. Thank you and have a great weekend. Operator00:51:33This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAnil ChadhaCFODana NolanHead of Investor RelationsJohn TurnerChairman, President and CEOAnalystsChris McGrattyManaging Director at KBWDave RochesterManaging Director at Cantor FitzgeraldDavid ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at JefferiesEbrahim PoonawalaManaging Director at Bank of AmericaErika NajarianManaging Director at UBSGerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital MarketsJohn PancariSenior Managing Director at Evercore ISIKen UsdinManaging Director at Autonomous ResearchManan GosaliaEquity Research Analyst at Morgan StanleyMatthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche BankRyan NashManaging Director at Goldman SachsScott SiefersManaging Director at Piper SandlerPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Regions Financial Earnings HeadlinesA Look At Regions Financial (RF) Valuation After Recent Steady Share Price Performance2 hours ago | finance.yahoo.comRegions Financial (NYSE:RF) vs. City (NASDAQ:CHCO) Financial SurveyMay 24 at 2:18 AM | americanbankingnews.comThe SpaceX filing is public. The window is closing.SpaceX just filed its S-1. The IPO is confirmed for June 12 - $75 billion, ticker SPCX, potentially the largest in history. The 21-bank syndicate has already locked up shares, so retail investors won't get access. But the S-1 exposed one publicly traded company Musk cannot operate without - and it's still cheap. Dylan Jovine is releasing the ticker free before June 12 changes the price.May 24 at 1:00 AM | Behind the Markets (Ad)Regions Financial Corporation (NYSE:RF) Receives Average Recommendation of "Hold" from BrokeragesMay 18, 2026 | americanbankingnews.comRegions Financial outlines growth strategy to institutional investorsMay 14, 2026 | theglobeandmail.comRegions Financial and FirstSun Capital Bancorp shares are falling, what you need to knowMay 12, 2026 | msn.comSee More Regions Financial Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Regions Financial? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Regions Financial and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Regions FinancialRegions Financial (NYSE:RF) (NYSE: RF) is a U.S. bank holding company headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama, that provides a broad range of banking and financial services. Its primary banking subsidiary, Regions Bank, serves retail and commercial customers through a combination of branch and ATM networks, digital channels and relationship-based delivery. The company offers deposit accounts, consumer and commercial loans, mortgage origination and servicing, and payment and treasury services. In addition to core banking, Regions offers wealth management, trust and brokerage services, insurance solutions, and capital markets capabilities to corporate and institutional clients. Commercial offerings include working capital and asset-based lending, commercial real estate financing, and specialized industry banking, while consumer offerings encompass mortgages, home equity products, auto lending and digital banking tools designed for online and mobile access. Regions operates primarily across the southern and midwestern United States, targeting metropolitan and regional markets with a focus on community banking and commercial relationships. The company has expanded through a combination of organic growth and strategic acquisitions to build a diversified franchise that serves individuals, small and mid-sized businesses, and larger corporations. It maintains an integrated delivery model combining local decision-making with centralized capabilities. Regions emphasizes customer service, local market knowledge and a full-service product set to support clients’ financial needs. The company also invests in technology and digital platforms to enhance accessibility and operational efficiency while supporting community development and client-focused relationship banking across its footprint.View Regions Financial 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 Was Decker’s Double Beat a Bullish Signal—Or Mere HOKA’s-Pocus?Workday Validates AI Flywheel: Stock Price Recovery BeginsOverextended, e.l.f. Beauty Is Primed to Rebound in Back HalfDeere Beats Q2 Estimates, But Ag Weakness Weighs on OutlookNVIDIA Price Pullback? Don’t Count on It, Business Is AcceleratingMeta Platforms 10% Layoff Raises a Bigger Question About AI SpendingBiogen Stock Slides After Trial Miss, But Analysts Stay Bullish Upcoming Earnings AutoZone (5/26/2026)Marvell Technology (5/27/2026)PDD (5/27/2026)Synopsys (5/27/2026)Bank Of Montreal (5/27/2026)Bank of Nova Scotia (5/27/2026)Salesforce (5/27/2026)Snowflake (5/27/2026)Autodesk (5/28/2026)Costco Wholesale (5/28/2026) 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. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In Email Me a Login Link or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning and welcome to the Regions Financial Corporation's quarterly earnings call. My name is Chris and I'll be your operator for today's call. I would like to remind everyone that all participant phone lines have been placed on listen-only. At the end of the call, there will be a question and answer session. If you wish to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. I will now turn the call over to Dana Nolan to begin. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:00:30Thank you, Chris. Welcome to Regions' first quarter 2026 earnings call. John and Anil will provide high-level commentary regarding our results. Earnings documents, which include our forward-looking statement disclaimer and non-GAAP reconciliations, are available in the Investor Relations section of our website. These disclosures cover our presentation materials, today's prepared remarks and Q&A. I will now turn the call over to John. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:00:58Thank you, Dana and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining our call today. Before we turn to the quarter, I want to take a moment and personally thank Dana for her service and leadership. After a nearly 40-year career at Regions, she's made the decision to retire. Dana's been a steady and trusted voice for our company and an important link between our leadership team and the investment community. Her deep understanding of our business, paired with her clear and straightforward communication style, helped strengthen our credibility with investors and earn widespread respect across the industry. We're incredibly grateful for Dana's leadership and the standard she set and we wish her nothing but the very best going forward. Turning to our financial results, this morning, we reported strong first-quarter earnings of $539 million, or $0.62 per share. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:01:54This represents an 11% and 15% increase, respectively, versus adjusted prior year results. Adjusted pre-tax, pre-provision income was $805 million, up 4% year-over-year and we generated a return on tangible common equity of 18%. The momentum we saw at the end of last year-end carried into the first quarter. We grew loans and deposits on both an average and ending basis and our credit metrics continue to improve as we resolve our portfolios of interest. Conversations with customers suggest that despite recent volatility, sentiment remains generally optimistic. Businesses are continuing to manage their balance sheets and income statements prudently with strong liquidity and solid capital positions. On the consumer side, fundamentals remain relatively sound. Aggregate balance and spending trends for Regions customers are stable to modestly positive. The labor markets are not showing signs of material weakness. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:03:00We are seeing some pressure among lower-income customers, but larger income tax refunds compared to last year have helped offset a portion of that impact. Importantly, our consumer loan portfolio continues to be primarily prime to super prime. We continue to make good progress on our core transformation, including investments in artificial intelligence. We're on track to deploy our commercial lending system and small business digital origination platform this summer and system testing on the core deposit system is also underway. We expect to launch a pilot in the third quarter and begin conversion in 2027. At the same time, we remain focused on near-term drivers of growth. Our strategic growth hiring initiative is on track and we continue to make targeted investments in products and services across all three of our lines of business. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:03:56There's a lot of internal energy and excitement around our technology enablement initiatives and we're motivated to continue building on that momentum. I'll just conclude by saying that we're pleased with our first quarter results and are excited about the opportunities that lie ahead. With that, I'll hand it over to Anil to walk through the quarter in more detail. Anil? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:04:18Thank you, John. Let's start with the balance sheet. Ending loans grew 2%, while average loans increased approximately 1%. Growth was driven by broad-based C&I lending, including power and utilities, manufacturing, healthcare and asset-based lending. Roughly half of this quarter's growth came from higher loan utilization, with the balance driven by new loans, approximately 80% of which were to existing clients. Almost two-thirds of the growth was investment-grade credits, with the majority of the remaining growth near investment grade, so very high quality. While the macroeconomic outlook remains volatile, we experienced strong loan growth in the latter half of the quarter. As John noted earlier, client sentiment remains broadly positive, loan pipelines and commitments remain strong and overall lending activity remains at a good pace. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:05:07An area that has not been a meaningful growth driver over the past year is NBFI-related lending. These loans reflect long-standing client relationships with predominantly investment-grade credits, with nearly half of balances associated with our long-standing REIT business. Private credit exposure remains limited. Less than 2% of total loans, largely investment grade, well enhanced and existing client pay-downs exceed withdrawals during the quarter. With respect to our full-year growth expectations, we continue to expect full-year average loans to be at low single digits versus 2025. Turning to deposits. Average balances increased modestly, while ending balances increased approximately 1%, reflecting normal seasonal patterns associated with tax refunds and payments. Balances grew while total deposit costs continued to decline, supported by our strong deposit franchise and focus on customer acquisition and retention. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:06:01Through deliberate product management, we continue to see a shift from CDs into money market accounts across both our consumer and wealth businesses. Let's end the comment on balances. Our non-interest-bearing deposit mix remained in the low 30% range, consistent with our target and reflective of the operational nature of our deposit base. As a result, we continue to expect 2026 average deposits to be up low single digits versus the prior year. Let's shift to net interest income. As expected, net interest income was lower linked-quarter, driven primarily by two fewer days in the quarter and the absence of non-recurring items that benefited the fourth quarter. The net interest margin of 3.67% continues to evidence Regions' profitability advantage. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:06:46That said, margin came in below expectations for the quarter, reflecting tighter asset spreads as a result of market conditions, pay downs of higher yielding loans and remixing into higher quality credits. The core balance sheet performed well during the quarter and provides a solid foundation for net interest income growth over the remainder of the year. Our neutral interest rate positioning once again performed as designed in the quarter, with minimal impact to net interest income from the Fed's fourth quarter interest rate cuts. During the first quarter, interest-bearing deposit costs declined 13 basis points. The following cycle, interest-bearing deposit beta stands at 35% and we remain confident in a mid-thirties beta with the potential to outperform over time. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:07:33Net interest income also continued to benefit from fixed rate asset turnover with elevated long-term rates supporting pricing on term loans and securities. At current rate levels, we would expect balance sheet repricing to support margin expansion over multiple years. Finally, recent loan growth acceleration positions us well for future interest income growth. Subsequent to quarter end, higher interest rates created an opportunity to sell approximately $900 million of shorter duration securities that no longer support our balance sheet management objectives at a $40 million loss, repositioning those into longer duration product types. The transaction is also well aligned with our overall capital deployment priorities, carrying a short, approximately two-year payback period and enhancing overall security yields. In the second quarter, we expect a strong rebound with approximately 2% net interest income growth, followed by additional expansion in subsequent quarters. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:08:32Fixed rate asset turnover, seasonal average deposit inflows, accelerating loan growth and continued discipline in funding costs will drive net interest income growth in a stable Fed Funds environment. For full year 2026, we reiterate our net interest income expectation of between 2.5% and 4% growth and for the net interest margin to exit the year in the low 3.70s. Now let's turn to fee revenue performance for the quarter. Adjusted non-interest revenue declined 2% on a linked-quarter basis as seasonally lower card and ATM fees and a decline in other non-interest income were partially offset by higher capital markets revenue. Capital markets income increased 5% during the quarter, driven by improvements in commercial swap, loan syndication and securities underwriting activity, partially offset by lower real estate capital markets and M&A fees. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:09:26Despite ongoing headwinds associated with market volatility and elevated interest rates, we continue to expect capital markets' quarterly revenue to increase within our $90 million-$105 million range, trending near the lower end of the range in the second quarter and moving higher thereafter. Wealth management remains a good story for us, supported primarily by continued sales momentum, with revenue up 9% year-over-year and we expect this business to continue to be a steady contributor to fee revenue growth. Card and ATM fees declined 5% from the prior quarter, reflecting typical seasonal patterns. We expect this line item to follow normal patterns, peaking next quarter and moderating throughout the second half of the year. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:10:09Other non-interest income declined 29%, driven primarily by commercial lease sales activity with $6 million of gains recognized in the fourth quarter and $7 million of losses recognized in the current quarter. Service charges remained stable during the quarter as record treasury management fees offset seasonally lower consumer revenue. Overall, treasury management grew 6% on a linked-quarter basis, including strong growth in core payments revenue. We continue to invest in talent and innovation within the treasury management space with a focus on embedded payments and digital client experiences. We expect this business to remain a source of growth within overall service charges. For full year 2026, we continue to expect adjusted non-interest income to grow between 3%-5% versus 2025. Let's move on to non-interest expense. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:11:02While we continue to make meaningful investments across the franchise to support long-term growth, we remain focused on maintaining a disciplined approach to expense management. Adjusted non-interest expense declined 4% linked quarter, reflecting broad-based improvement across most expense categories. Salaries and benefits remained relatively stable as lower incentives and declines in market value adjustments for employee benefits liabilities offset the seasonal increases associated with payroll taxes, 401(k) match and merit. For full year 2026, we expect adjusted non-interest expense to be up between 1.5% and 3.5% and we expect to deliver full year adjusted positive operating leverage. Annualized net charge-offs as a percentage of average loans decreased 5 basis points to 54 basis points, reflecting continued progress on resolutions within previously identified portfolios of interest, which were reserved for in prior periods. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:12:01Business services criticized and total non-performing loans remained relatively stable during the quarter as risk rating upgrades continued to outpace downgrades. The resulting NPL ratio declined 2 basis points to 71 basis points and the business services criticized ratio declined 16 basis points to 5.15%. Allowance increases tied to loan growth and greater macroeconomic uncertainty were more than offset by meaningful progress in resolving loans within previously identified portfolios of interest, sustained risk rating upgrades exceeding downgrades and continued improvement in the business services criticized and total non-performing loan ratios. As a result, the allowance for credit losses declined $39 million. Strengthening asset quality across portfolios, combined with high-quality loan growth, drove an 8-basis-point reduction in the allowance ratio to 1.68%, while coverage of non-performing loans remained solid at 238%. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:13:03We expect full-year 2026 net charge-offs to be between 40 and 50 basis points. Let's turn to capital and liquidity. We ended the quarter with an estimated common equity Tier 1 ratio of 10.7%, while executing $401 million in share repurchases and paying $227 million in common dividends. We are encouraged by the proposed changes to the regulatory capital framework, which would revise the definition of capital to include AOCI and implement broad updates to risk-weighted asset calculations under the standardized approach. Including AOCI reduces our reported CET1 ratio to an estimated 9.4%. However, based on our preliminary assessment, the proposed changes are also expected to result in an estimated 10% reduction in risk-weighted assets, contributing to an approximate 100 basis point increase in capital. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:14:00Taken together, the proposed changes are expected to result in a fully implemented Basel III common equity Tier 1 ratio of approximately 10.4% on a pro forma basis. Importantly, our capital priorities remain unchanged. Once finalized, we expect to continue managing our fully implemented Basel III common equity Tier 1 ratio around the midpoint of our established 9.25%-9.75% operating range. Finally, liquidity remains stable and robust with ample capacity to support future growth. As John indicated, we are pleased with our quarterly performance, particularly given the evolving market dynamics and believe we remain well positioned to continue delivering consistent, sustainable long-term performance for our shareholders. This covers our prepared remarks. We will now move to the Q&A portion of the call. Operator00:14:53Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. Please hold while we compile the Q&A roster. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Ryan Nash with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:15:25Morning, Ryan. Ryan NashManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:15:25Good morning, everyone. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:15:26Morning. Ryan NashManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:15:26Hey, good morning, everyone and welcome to the call, Anil. It was good to see that you reiterated the guidance across the board despite a slightly softer start. I wanted to focus on revenues, whether it's NII or fees, given 1Q along with some of the 2Q commentary. Can you maybe just give us a sense of how you're tracking relative to your ranges and what is your confidence in terms of reaching the middle or the upper part of the NII range and what do we need to see that happen? I have a follow-up. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:15:57First of all, we're very confident in hitting the ranges. Let me start with net interest income. I think, importantly, exiting the quarter with the strong loan growth that we saw, $2.3 billion point-to-point, is really a great tailwind for us heading into the second quarter. Our deposit performance, the growth that we saw during the quarter, was also really strong. Our ability to continue to bring down deposit costs. We exited the quarter on an interest-bearing deposit cost of 1.69%. That's another good tailwind for us. As we've talked about before, we still have fixed asset turnover that will benefit us over the course of the remainder of the year. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:16:33All those things coming together is really what gives us the confidence in terms of what we expect to see for NII, both in the second quarter and going forward through the year. I'd say loan trends still look good. We're confident that what we're seeing will continue to persist. With respect to non-interest revenue, a couple of things there. First, cyclically, the first quarter is typically low for some of the consumer fee items, consumer service charges, card and ATM fees. Those tend to be lower in the first quarter. We expect that to rebound in the second quarter, so that'll be a nice tailwind. We've talked about capital markets and gave our guide for the second quarter and for the rest of the year. Then Treasury Management wealth just continue to be good growth stories for us. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:17:20We continue to expect to see growth there. It's great to see another record quarter out of Treasury Management. Wealth Management up 9% year-over-year. All these things are really pulling in the right direction. What we're seeing right now really gives us confidence that we'll operate within the range that we've given. Ryan NashManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:17:37Thanks, Anil. Then I have a follow-up and a comment. First on my follow-up, you noted that you still expect to manage to the midpoint of your range on capital, but I think you noted that it creates meaningful flexibility. Just given the coming changes, maybe just talk about the potential to manage towards the low end or even below, given that these changes are coming and maybe expand on the flexibility comment. What else could we see for leveraging the capital? That's my question. Then my comment. Dana, I just want to say thank you for all the help over the years and enjoy taking care of your grandchild and doing some traveling. Thank you. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:18:15Thank you, Ryan. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:18:16Yeah. Great question, Ryan. We don't want to get too far ahead of the proposed rule. As we indicated, based on the proposal, when you include AOCI and then the expected benefit and risk-weighted assets, we expect to be around 10.4%. The timing of each component, the phase-in schedule, things of that nature will matter a lot and so we're not going to get ahead of that. We're going to continue to manage capital the way you've seen us. Our capital distribution priorities are unchanged. We'll monitor these proposals and once finalized, it'll be our plan to continue to manage capital within that range. That is unchanged. We don't want to get too far ahead of this. We're fortunate. We generate enough capital to do everything we want to do today to grow the business. We don't have to distribute capital ahead of this. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:19:04We'll take our time. When we get final rules, our distribution priorities are unchanged and we still believe our targets are where we should be. Ryan NashManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:19:13Got it. Well, I figured I'd try. Thank you. Operator00:19:18Our next question comes from the line of Scott Siefers with Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your question. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:19:24Morning, Scott. Scott SiefersManaging Director at Piper Sandler00:19:25Morning, guys. Thanks. Hey. Thanks for taking the question. Maybe Anil, I was hoping you could sort of address in a little more detail the moving parts in the margin outlook for the remainder of the year. I think you touched on combination of the tighter asset spreads and loan remixing as factors in the first quarter. Maybe just going forward, how much will those need to find relief, or is there simply enough balance sheet repricing opportunity going forward that you can absorb continued pressure from those dynamics that hit the first quarter but still see both the margin and NII in this? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:19:58Sure. First of all, managing deposit costs is still the primary mechanism that we have to continue to meet our margin objectives for the year. It's already alluded to where we exited the quarter from an interest-bearing deposit cost. The opportunity there is still going to be a meaningful driver in terms of where we go over the balance of the year. Talked about the fixed asset repricing opportunities that we have, about $9 billion looking forward. That'll be helpful. We did see, as we alluded to, some investment-grade credit draws late in the quarter. We like that credit. It's lower credit risk, great returns. But we also saw good kind of middle market growth throughout the first part of the quarter. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:20:40We expect to see that over the course of the year and that's going to benefit the margin as well as we look forward. Deposit growth is going to continue to grow. I already mentioned we had good growth this quarter. We're going to see seasonal uptick in the second quarter. All those factors coming together really are going to be positive in terms of where our margin goes from here over the course of the year. Scott SiefersManaging Director at Piper Sandler00:21:00Terrific. Okay. Thank you. John, your commentary on customer sentiment sounded pretty good. I think, Anil, you mentioned that about half the first quarter loan growth came from higher line utilization. Maybe a thought on where are utilization rates versus, say, 90 days ago. Where would you hope to see those advance to as the year unfolds? John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:21:22Yeah. Utilization rates are up for about 200 basis points, I guess, across both the corporate banking markets or customer base and our middle-market customers. We'd expect to see a little more activity as the year goes along. It's based upon the constructive feedback we're getting from customers. I will say that we observe liquidity. Customer liquidity is up, at least in Regions, by about 7% year-over-year. Customers are still creating additional liquidity. At the same time, we are seeing borrowing activity, which is positive. Scott SiefersManaging Director at Piper Sandler00:22:00Okay. All right. Perfect. Thank you. Just final, Dana, same thing. Thanks for all the help. Best wishes. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:22:07Thank you. Operator00:22:10Our next question comes to the line of John Pancari with Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your question. John PancariSenior Managing Director at Evercore ISI00:22:17Morning. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:22:18Morning, John. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:22:18Morning. John PancariSenior Managing Director at Evercore ISI00:22:19On the deposit backdrop, I know you had indicated some pretty good deposit dynamics, but I want to see if you can elaborate on the competitive backdrop that you're seeing in the Southeast. You've had a number of banks flag seemingly intensifying competitive pressures on the deposit front from not only some incumbents, but some newer entrants to the markets. What are you seeing in terms of deposit pricing dynamics? Has that been impacting your expectation at all underlying the margin? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:22:53Sure, John. Yeah. We've been in a highly competitive deposit backdrop, I'd say for north of a year. The one thing I'd say that's been consistent is we are seeing banks and we are as well, offering promotional offers in certain key markets where everyone is looking to grow customers. What I'll also say is banks are also being prudent in terms of how they think about the back book of their deposit base to manage that in the context of their overall deposit costs. The strategies are very similar to what we've seen over the past year. We've adopted an approach that we think is appropriate where we can continue to grow new customers, especially in these high-growth markets. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:23:34Also take advantage of our back book to price that in a way that's able to manage our deposit cost where we think it should be over time. We're seeing the same thing among our peers. We think that dynamic will continue to hold. As loans continue to grow, I'm optimistic in terms of what we're seeing in the capital markets, the debt capital markets where banks are accessing liquidity there. From what I see now, the way banks are managing their deposit base and other funding sources, I think will continue as we all have opportunities to grow loans from here. John PancariSenior Managing Director at Evercore ISI00:24:08Great. All right. Thank you. On the margin, I know you cited the pressure from tighter asset spreads. If you could give us a little more color there. On where spreads stand, what loan types are you seeing that compression? Is that competitive pressures? You also mentioned the pay-down of some higher-yielding loans. If you can just give us a little more color on that and is there any incremental actions you expect on the portfolio reshaping? Thank you. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:24:36Yeah. Really on the tighter spreads, it's primarily in larger C&I where we saw line utilization late in the quarter. That's a primary area. We also saw just earlier in the quarter, broadly across the balance sheet in terms of tighter mortgage spreads for some of the action the government's taking, as well as refi, too, that we saw earlier in the first quarter. Primarily where we're seeing the tighter spreads is in IG within the C&I space. John PancariSenior Managing Director at Evercore ISI00:25:03Got it. Okay and in the portfolio reshaping efforts, anything incremental that you expect on that front? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:25:09I think all that's proceeding just as planned and as we alluded to last quarter, a lot of that is behind us. We'll continue going down that path as we have. John PancariSenior Managing Director at Evercore ISI00:25:19Got it. Thank you very much, Anil and best of luck to you in retirement. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:25:24Thank you, John. Operator00:25:26Our next question comes from the line of Manan Gosalia with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:25:33Morning. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:25:34Morning. Manan GosaliaEquity Research Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:25:34Hi, good morning. Anil, you spoke about line draws. It sounds like it's good fundamental demand coming through. Just wanted to see if you've seen any defensive line draws and any reason that utilization rates may flatten or even decline from here. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:25:54Yeah. The line draws that we saw were predominantly late in the quarter when there's volatility in the capital markets, so that's really where we saw most of that come in. I wouldn't call it defensive in nature. I would just say given where the capital markets were, as we saw uncertainty in the market, customers drew on bank lines. I'd expect that to abate through time as capital markets reopen, but nothing defensive in terms of what we're seeing. Manan GosaliaEquity Research Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:26:20Got it. Maybe on the capital markets side, I guess you're expecting that trends to the lower end given volatility and rates. Most of your comments in the environment have been fairly constructive. I guess what market conditions would move you back towards the $100 million-plus range on capital markets revenues? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:26:39Well, the primary business that's impacted is our real estate capital markets business and it's been soft now for four or five quarters based on just the rate environment. As longer term rates come down, we would see, we believe, a benefit in real estate capital markets business, which would be important and that would more than offset any impacts on other parts of the business. Manan GosaliaEquity Research Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:27:04Got it. Great. Thank you. Dana, all the very best. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:27:07Thank you, Manan. Operator00:27:11Our next question comes from the line of Gerard Cassidy with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:27:17Hey, John. Hi, Anil. Anil, in talking about the loan loss reserve, I think you pointed out that the increases were tied to loan growth, but also the macro uncertainty out there. If the conflict in the Middle East takes a decided turn for the better, the straits opened up today, as you probably saw the headlines, what would that do for the second or third quarter allowance? Does that start to reduce the allowance as that macro risk drops meaningfully and kind of surprises all of us that it's maybe going to be resolved sooner than expected? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:27:56Yeah. If you look on the waterfall that we included in the appendix, we attributed about $17 million of growth quarter-over-quarter to macro uncertainty. That's primarily what we're seeing in the Middle East. To the extent that gets resolved and the other kind of second-order effects resolve in a positive to neutral way, we could see a modest release in the allowance of that. I wouldn't say it's overly material, but we did feel appropriate to put up a little bit in terms of macroeconomic uncertainty. That's the part of the allowance that I'd point you to. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:28:25Very good. Then to follow up on the commercial loan conversation that you guys have presented, you're not really big NBFI lenders as a regional bank. You're down at the bottom of kind of the group, which lowers the risk, of course. I guess why haven't you maybe pursued it as aggressively as some of your peers in terms of the different categories of NBFI lending? What do you guys see there that makes you maybe a little more cautious? John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:28:58I think we just generally are more cautious, Gerard, as we think about our lending activities. They're principally based on relationships that are established within our footprint. We have some businesses where we have specialized capabilities and we actually do lend out of footprint. This would be an area where we're getting our feet wet, learning a little more about it. Today, we have relationships with about just in excess of 25 funds and those funds are fairly broadly distributed in terms of the businesses, the sectors that they're lending into. Total exposure, I think, is just above $3 billion to those funds within private credit, about $1.8 billion. So we're just in exposure, I mean, in outstanding's. I think we're just trying to learn to understand, can we build relationships? Can we gain deposits? John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:29:54Can we participate in capital markets activity? Because that's fundamental to how we want to operate our business. If we can't do that, then it's just not an appropriate allocation of capital for us. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:30:05Very good. Dana, hopefully you have tons of fun in retirement. Thank you. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:30:10Thank you, Gerard. Operator00:30:13Our next question comes from the line of Ken Usdin with Autonomous Research. Please proceed with your question. Ken UsdinManaging Director at Autonomous Research00:30:23Hey, good morning, all. First quarter credit quality was exactly as expected, taking care of that already expected stuff. Then your outlook for the year looks good and there was good stability in the NPAs and some of the other metrics. Just, are you kind of through that piece of taking care of some of that legacy stuff and just your general line of sight on some of those other portfolios that you've mentioned in the past? Thanks. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:30:56Yeah, I would say, Ken, we previously identified office, multifamily, transportation and communications as portfolios where we have some credits we're working through or working out. We have generally seen most of that activity has been completed, but we still have a few credits of some size that we're working on. While we are indicating that we expect charge-offs over the course of the year to be between 40-50 basis points, the timing of which we get back within that range is still not entirely clear. We think credit quality is continuing to improve as indicated, reflected in our metrics, non-performing loans down to 71 basis points, criticized loans continuing to decline. Charge-offs should follow as they're a trailing indicator of improving credit quality. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:31:54I'd just add, as all that happens, our 1.68% allowance ratio should approximate down to the 1.62% that we disclose our kind of day one. That assumes we resolve the credits that John mentioned and that assumes that the macroeconomic uncertainty gets resolved in a positive way. The timing of which that happens, we'll see. That's where we think we'll end up based on the composition of our loan portfolio. Ken UsdinManaging Director at Autonomous Research00:32:19Understood. Okay, the second thing on, Anil, you're starting right off of the bat following David on the hedging and securities portfolio repositioning activity. Is that at all any adjustment to that higher for longer? Or is this more just kind of normal course of moving some stuff further out to later time periods? Just wondering if it's just like normal course of any adjustments you're making because of the environment. Thanks. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:32:45No, it's just normal course. As securities shorten, they don't accomplish our balance sheet management objectives as they once did. We'll extend duration on the new securities that we purchase. Just an extension of what you've seen us do before. Ken UsdinManaging Director at Autonomous Research00:33:00All right, great. Thanks a lot. Operator00:33:05Our next question comes from the line of Matthew O'Connor with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:33:11Good morning. I just wanted to follow up on the fees. I guess some of these categories, if we look year-over-year, the growth was a little bit less than I would've thought. Like the consumer service charges flat, corporate up a little bit, card flat. Maybe just talk about kind of some of those dynamics and maybe give some guidance for card in 2Q. Just kind of thinking about those categories maybe more medium term. Thanks. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:33:39Yes, I'd say in terms of medium-term guidance, they are cyclically lower in the first quarter. They tend to peak in the second quarter and then kind of hold flat from there. From a year-over-year comparison standpoint, we do have some kind of one-off items if you just look quarter-over-quarter, in particular, in terms of how we treated certain expenses associated with some of those programs. There are some one-time changes that if you just look year over year would mute the growth. In terms of path from here, we expect to peak next quarter and then hold at that level throughout the rest of the year. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:34:15That would be for the card and ATM fees, right? For the peak quarter? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:34:19Consumer, yes. The consumer service charges portion. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:34:24Okay. All right. Thank you. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:34:27Sure. Operator00:34:30Our next question comes from the line of Ebrahim Poonawala with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:34:37Morning. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director at Bank of America00:34:38Hey. Morning, John. Morning, Anil. I guess first question, just around listening to your sort of messaging on the drawdowns towards the end of the quarter due to market volatility. Does that create a risk of payoffs? I'm just wondering if some of the macro subsides markets are less volatile, do you see customers paying off and that credit then moves off balance sheet? Secondly, as we think about just capital markets, obviously it's a little more real estate biased, in your case. Without getting any rate cuts for the year, do you think just CRE lending real estate capital markets can still have a good year? John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:35:24Maybe I'll answer the second question first. Yes, we continue to lean into that opportunity. We have actually a fairly significant portion of our portfolio that's maturing toward the back end of the year. There'll be some opportunities within that portfolio to help customers with permanent placement of those obligations. Additionally, we see other opportunities with customers who have debt in other places that they'll need to refinance. I think the real estate capital markets business can still have a good year even if we don't get a lot of improvement in rate. If we do, it gets materially better, we think. With respect to line utilization, about half of the increase in line utilization was attributable to our larger corporate customers. The other half to our middle market customers who are continuing to invest in their businesses and grow. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:36:20While there is some risk that we'll see some paydowns amongst those larger corporate customers, we expect the middle market customers again, to continue to borrow as they invest in their businesses. Pipelines are up for the year fairly significantly. We also expect new originations to overcome any paydowns that we might experience in the corporate space. All in all, we feel really good about our ability to deliver the loan growth that we've guided to. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director at Bank of America00:36:53Got it. Just maybe, Anil, for you or both of you, as we think about the declining RWA density on the back of the capital proposals, how sensitive are you to managing to a certain level of tangible common equity ratio? Just any thoughts there? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:37:13I wouldn't say that we're managing to attain a tangible common equity ratio. I'd say what we're thinking about really is, one, across all the changes that are being proposed, we think they're positive. We'll continue to manage to a total CET1 ratio within that 9.25%-9.75% range. We think it's appropriate. We'll manage through that through time as we get finalization of the rules. With respect to the proposed RWA changes themselves, we have to think about not just the regulatory implications, but other constituents as well and how they think about RWA and the capital that's needed on our balance sheet. Again, we think all of this is positive to what we can do to capital through time. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:37:58Our caution will be, one, tied to finalization of the rules and two, just to make sure that we understand where each of the other constituents land as well when it comes to these proposed changes. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director at Bank of America00:38:08Got it. Dana, all the best and I'm sure we'll stay in touch. Take care. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:38:12Appreciate it. Thank you. Operator00:38:15Our next question comes from the line of Dave Rochester with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please proceed with your question. Dave RochesterManaging Director at Cantor Fitzgerald00:38:22Hey, good morning, guys. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:38:23Good morning. Dave RochesterManaging Director at Cantor Fitzgerald00:38:23Just want to go back to the credit discussion. I'm trying to figure out how you're thinking about the trajectory of the problem loan buckets from here. Just given all the work that you've already done, are you expecting to see more meaningful moves lower in NPAs and criticized assets as we get to the back half of the year? If you could just update us on your progress in the transportation book, that'd be great. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:38:45Yeah, we should continue to see some improvement in credit quality and NPAs could come down a little further. I would say if you look back over time, NPAs have averaged closer to 1%, I think. I wouldn't expect them to come down too much further than 71 basis points. Maybe we get into the 60s, but I don't see a lot of movement beyond that. I would tell you that we think credit is pretty well normalized in our book, given the composition of our portfolio today and we feel good about our ability to deliver on the 40-50 basis points of charge-offs, as we indicated. With respect to transportation, we're still working through a couple of credits there, but generally speaking, I think we have identified and resolved most of the exposure. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:39:39We provided some slides in the deck. I can't recall which slide it is exactly on transportation. Twenty four. Give you a little insight into our exposure there. I think what you'd see is, one, we've had a fairly significant reduction in the size of the outstanding's or the commitments representing about 1.2% of total loans. NPLs have come down to about $51 million. Again, when you just look at our reserve against that portfolio, we think it's appropriately reserved for any losses that we might experience. Dave RochesterManaging Director at Cantor Fitzgerald00:40:21You're in the latter innings on that one. It sounds like. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:40:23Yes, we are. Dave RochesterManaging Director at Cantor Fitzgerald00:40:26Great. Just back on the securities repositioning you did, just given today's rates, is there any more you could do there? Anything that's left on the table that you could potentially source at some point in the future? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:40:40Yeah, I'd say it's small. There's not much right now. What we'll continue to look at is securities as they get closer to maturity. That creates an opportunity, but we'll need to see where rates are to see if it makes sense to do. As you've seen from us in the past, we're very mindful of thinking about it through returns, payback period. Really strong payback period on this trade we did at two years. We're disciplined when it comes to using capital in this way. Dave RochesterManaging Director at Cantor Fitzgerald00:41:07Great. Thanks, guys. Anil, welcome. Dana, it's been great working with you. Good luck and enjoy. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:41:13Thanks. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:41:14Thank you. Operator00:41:16Our next question comes from the line of Erika Najarian with UBS. Please proceed with your question. Erika NajarianManaging Director at UBS00:41:23Hi, good morning. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:41:25Morning. Erika NajarianManaging Director at UBS00:41:25Anil, just a two-parter for you on CET1. First, given your risk profile, what was the consideration or what are your considerations in terms of the SA, which you showed us versus ERBA? You mentioned other constituents. A few of your peers have talked about the ratings agencies and perhaps because of the benefit to RWA, particularly for the regional banks, that there might be a tendency for the ratings agencies to look at un-risk weighted assets or sort of un-risk weighted capital measures. Just wanted your comments on those two topics. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:42:10Sure. You really hit the second point. That is the other constituency that we need to be mindful of. As you alluded to, some use direct regulatory risk-weighted assets in their approach. We will need to see how they think about this. We'll clearly work with them to share our thoughts on that. You really hit the second piece there. On the first piece, just to walk you through our preliminary view of the two approaches. We communicated our 100 basis point expected impact under the standardized approach. We've looked at the ERBA approach. In particular, as you know, the two primary benefits that we would get through that approach are the incremental beneficial risk weights on investment-grade credits that we've talked a fair amount about today. That's meaningful. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:42:54Also other retail exposures where you could get an incremental lift in terms of risk-weighted assets. The counter to that for us is the operational loss add on. Our current calculation of that for us actually overwhelms the benefits from the other two. It's something we'll have to continually assess. We're fortunate that as proposed, you kind of have an evergreen option to opt in, which is beneficial. For us right now, the operational loss component overwhelms the benefits, in particular from investment-grade credits and retail exposures as currently proposed. Erika NajarianManaging Director at UBS00:43:30Got it. Tom, I'll follow up with you a little bit on capital during our catch up call. The second question I wanted to pose is maybe just directly asking, you mentioned that deposit costs are a big factor in terms of your net interest income outlook. Again, you must be very flattered that a lot of your peers, both money center and regional, are coming into the markets that you've long dominated. If the Fed doesn't cut, what is sort of the trajectory for deposit costs at Regions? In other words, will you be able to keep deposit costs flat if the Fed isn't cutting this year? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:44:12Yeah. We will. I talked about the 1.69% exit rate. We think that will continue into the second quarter and it will decline modestly. Total deposit costs will decline modestly from there. Again, we think the competitive pressures, banks are kind of performing as we'd expect in terms of how they're managing deposit costs and we expect that to continue into the future. Erika NajarianManaging Director at UBS00:44:38Great. Thank you. Operator00:44:42Our next question comes from the line of Chris McGratty with KBW. Please proceed with your question. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:44:49Good morning, Chris. Chris McGrattyManaging Director at KBW00:44:50Good morning. In the quarter, you talked about living in the high end of the 16%-18% return on tangible common equity range for the next three years. You were slightly above that last year. I think the Street's got you a little bit over 18%. Is the outlook that those comments were made, now that we have some clarity on regulatory, how much does the numerator versus denominator play in maintaining that level of profitability? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:45:17Yeah. Looking forward, there's a couple of things to think about. One is, let's talk about the proposed capital changes first. If those go in as proposed and if the other constituents don't meaningfully impact how we think about capital, that in and of itself is a tailwind to returns to the extent we choose to buy back shares from that. That would prop up returns overall. Look, the reason we frame up our guide of 16%-18% is really because, as we've said before, we need to be top quartile when it comes to overall returns. We don't need to be number one. We need to make sure we make all the right investments into our business. We believe that we can continue to do that. We did it this quarter in terms of the growth that we saw. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:46:01When we do that, we're going to continue to grow income and so returns will be increased from that as well. The point of us making that statement is we want to reiterate that we are well-positioned to grow. We do not feel like we have to be number one in our peer group. We're committed to invest capital as long as we get a good return out of it. That's really why we positioned it the way we have. We'll continue to monitor the peer landscape. Back to my earlier point, everyone's going to benefit to some degree from these capital proposals. Others are taking actions where they think they may be able to raise returns. We'll continue to reassess what the right levels are for us through time. Our goal is to remain top quartile amongst our peer set. Chris McGrattyManaging Director at KBW00:46:43That's a great color. Thank you. My follow-up would be just more capital beyond buybacks. You've been clear about inorganic not being a focus today. I guess maybe remind us where you are with some of the projects internally as you fast-forward to the back half of the year. Is that something where you may have to consider to be more flexible with inorganic growth if the right opportunity came about? Thanks. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:47:03We'll deliver the loan system conversion the end of May. We've got a fairly significant improvement in our digital offering to particularly small businesses that will be delivered over the course of the summer and then begin piloting our deposit system conversion in the third quarter. That project continues to progress on track. We feel really good about it. That will position us, we believe, to do a number of things focusing on how do we continue to improve our business and improve the customer and banker experience once we get that work done. Those are important areas of focus for us. In terms of what it means for inorganic growth, we're going to stay focused on executing our plan. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:47:51We believe our plan will allow us to deliver top quartile results for our shareholders, consistent with the same good execution that we've experienced over the last five, six, seven years and that'll be our focus going forward. Chris McGrattyManaging Director at KBW00:48:10Thank you. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:48:11Yep, thank you. Operator00:48:14Our final question comes from the line of David Chiaverini with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:48:22Good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Follow-up on deposit costs. There's been some discussion about how cash optimization by customers in an AI world could pressure deposits at banks that have a lower cost of deposits relative to peers. Can you talk about your view on this and how Regions plans to protect its market share? Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:48:43Sure. No, it's a great question and the what could happen from AI is kind of proliferating several parts of the economy. When we think about the impact on deposits, we kind of start with the nature of our customer base. Our customer base average deposit's about $5,200. When we think about the ability for customers to move money around, what our customers are really using their account for is for ease of payments. We have to stay focused on making sure we're providing them the most efficient way to make payments across their daily lives. A much lower percentage of our customer base is really yield seeking. That, in my opinion, will be the first place where you will see the use of AI allow people to move funds around. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:49:29I'd also say it's pretty easy to move funds around today. It doesn't take too much effort to move cash in and out of accounts to get a higher yield. I'm sure AI can do it marginally quicker, but I'd also say I think today it's pretty efficient as well. Yeah, I think it's something that could play out. I think it'll play out more severely for those customers that have larger balances seeking yield. We see them do it today. As of right now, for our customers, we need to make sure we're giving them all the payment capabilities they need to be done efficiently. We'll continue to monitor this space, but that's kind of how we're thinking about it right now. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:50:04Very helpful. Thanks for that. Shifting over to the hiring pipeline, how does that look given the M&A that's occurring in your footprint? John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:50:13It's good. We have hiring plans in our commercial banking business, in our wealth banking business, in our branches and we're moving along, having accomplished more than two-thirds of the hiring that we'd hoped to do as part of our plans, part of our three-year plan. We feel really good about the quality of the bankers that we're hiring and the opportunities that we have associated with that. Takes a little while for those bankers to begin to generate new business once they get settled in. We'd expect to see the impact of some of that hiring in the latter part of this year and into 2027, which is, again, another tailwind for growth, we believe. Anil ChadhaCFO at Regions Financial00:50:51Yeah, I'd just say even for our existing banker population, our platform is really delivering them the opportunity to grow their business. We're seeing a really nice decline year-over-year in attrition, even among our existing bankers. For us, we view that as a great vote of confidence that they have the platform they want to be able to deliver to their customers. David ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at Jefferies00:51:09Thank you and all the best, Dana. Dana NolanHead of Investor Relations at Regions Financial00:51:12Thank you. John TurnerChairman, President and CEO at Regions Financial00:51:14Okay. Thank you very much. Well, I appreciate everybody's participation. Once again, congratulations to Dana. We appreciate her leadership and commitment, connectivity with all of you in the investment community. We will miss her, but we're confident Tom's going to do a great job. Thank you and have a great weekend. Operator00:51:33This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAnil ChadhaCFODana NolanHead of Investor RelationsJohn TurnerChairman, President and CEOAnalystsChris McGrattyManaging Director at KBWDave RochesterManaging Director at Cantor FitzgeraldDavid ChiaveriniEquity Research Analyst at JefferiesEbrahim PoonawalaManaging Director at Bank of AmericaErika NajarianManaging Director at UBSGerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital MarketsJohn PancariSenior Managing Director at Evercore ISIKen UsdinManaging Director at Autonomous ResearchManan GosaliaEquity Research Analyst at Morgan StanleyMatthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche BankRyan NashManaging Director at Goldman SachsScott SiefersManaging Director at Piper SandlerPowered by