West Bancorp (WTBA) Q1 2026 Earnings Transcript
West Bancorp (WTBA) Q1 2026 Earnings Transcript
Motley Fool Transcribing, The Motley FoolFri, April 24, 2026 at 3:43 AM UTC
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Thursday, April 23, 2026 at 3 p.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS -
Chief Executive Officer — David Nelson
Chief Risk Officer — Harlee Olafson
Bank President — Brad Winterbottom
Chief Financial Officer — Jane Funk
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TAKEAWAYS -
Net Income -- $10.6 million, a 35% increase compared to $7.8 million in the prior-year quarter.
Net Interest Income -- up $3.5 million or 17% year over year.
Net Interest Margin -- Increased by 12 basis points from the prior quarter and 31 basis points from the same quarter last year.
Cost of Deposits -- Declined by 14 basis points sequentially and 40 basis points year over year.
Credit Quality -- Zero loans past due over 30 days, no OREO, no nonaccruals, and no substandard loans at quarter end.
Watch List Loans -- Down 20% from year-end, now at 1.4% of total loans, with 90% of this exposure related to the trucking sector.
Loan Portfolio -- Flat at $3 billion outstanding, with new loan production offsetting payoffs and secondary market refinancing activity.
Core Deposits -- Slightly lower than year-end due to normal seasonal cash flow changes among customers.
Dividend -- $0.25 per share declared, payable May 20 to shareholders of record as of May 6.
Noninterest Expense -- Rose by 3% year over year, with no unusual items cited for the period.
Municipal Deposit Balance -- Approximately 75% of a $243 million bond proceeds deposit remains on the balance sheet.
Asset Repricing -- $38 million in investment securities at a sub-2% rate will mature over the next 12 months, with a total of about $250 million in loans and securities expected to reprice below 4% within the year.
Loan Pipeline -- Substantial increase in volume over the last 2 months, with management citing "numerous strong relationships."
West Bancorporation (NASDAQ:WTBA) emphasized ongoing deposit growth and flat loans, with management pointing to elevated refinancing activity as the main source of loan payoff headwinds.
The company described its credit pipeline as having "increased substantially in the last 2 months," implying potential future loan growth if payoff activity moderates.
Jane Funk said, "expense management will be kind of ordinary course of business, and we're not expecting any anomalies or additional items."
Management plans to allocate maturing investment portfolio cash flows to support potential loan growth rather than securities purchases.
Harlee Olafson stated, "90% of our watch list is related to the trucking industry. The trucking industry continues to suffer through low freight, excess capacity and high price of diesel. The industry has a history of going through cyclical times. Our portfolio is well secured, and we believe the businesses in our portfolio are making good decisions to remain viable. We expect resolution of a large credit within that group before the end of the second quarter."
Recent M&A-driven market disruptions in Minnesota are creating new client acquisition opportunities, but David Nelson noted the sales cycles here will unfold "over a course of years."
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY -
OREO (Other Real Estate Owned): Bank-owned property acquired through foreclosure, not included in regular loan portfolios.
Full Conference Call Transcript
David Nelson: Thank you, Jane. Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us this afternoon. I have a few general comments and then others will provide additional detail. We had a very strong quarter and look forward to continued earnings growth. As the COVID era 5-year duration assets reprice, our margin is expected to continue to improve. Our loan balances have been flat, but we have had growth in our deposits. When loan demand increases, we will definitely find it. We have several attractive credit opportunities in our pipeline. Once again, at quarter end, March 31 of this year, our credit quality remains pristine, and we did not have a single loan past due 30 days.
West Bank continues to make investments in technology to better serve our customers and to create efficiencies in our operations. Our Board of Directors declared a $0.25 quarterly dividend with a May 20 payment date to shareholders of record as of May 6. Those are the extent of my prepared remarks, and I would now turn the call over to our Chief Risk Officer, Mr. Harlee Olafson.
Harlee Olafson: Thank you, Dave. For the quarter end March 31, '26, credit quality is very strong. As Dave mentioned, we had no past dues over 30 days, no OREO, no nonaccruals, no substandard loans. Our watch list is down 20% from year-end and is at a very low 1.4% of total loans. 90% of our watch list is related to the trucking industry. The trucking industry continues to suffer through low freight, excess capacity and high price of diesel. The industry has a history of going through cyclical times. Our portfolio is well secured, and we believe the businesses in our portfolio are making good decisions to remain viable.
We expect resolution of a large credit within that group before the end of the second quarter. Our commercial real estate portfolio continues to perform very well. We are diversified in both the type of commercial real estate we have and by location. Our stress test continues to show lower loan to values and good strong cash flow on a majority of the credit. Our commitment to strong underwriting is the foundation of our credit quality. Customer relationships with multiple sources of repayment and liquidity are sought after. Our credit pipeline consists of numerous strong relationships and the total pipeline volume has increased substantially in the last 2 months.
Our portfolio is strong because we have chosen good customers that have the financial characteristics that align with our underwriting. After all prepared remarks, I'm available for questions. I now turn it over to Brad Winterbottom, our Bank President.
Brad Winterbottom: Thanks, Harlee. For the quarter ended, our loan portfolio was flat compared to the year-end 12/31/25. At the end of the first quarter, we were at $3 billion in outstandings. We continue to experience notable loan payoffs as a result of secondary market refinancings and asset sales. The change in loan mix primarily due to reclassifications resulting from completed construction projects moving to permanent financing and commercial loan restructuring adding real estate as collateral. As we enter the second quarter, this trend will continue. However, we continue to backfill these payoffs with new opportunities at better interest rates. And we are not losing customers. Rather, they are restructuring their asset portfolios with longer-term interest rates through the secondary markets.
We still believe the new activity is mild due to economic and political issues we face, but we are still finding new and good opportunities due to our calling activities. Deposit gathering sales efforts continue to be an emphasis in the markets we serve, a very competitive market today. We remain selective in obtaining new loan opportunities, looking for relationships versus transactional or participation opportunities. We remain confident in our ability to create and maintain positive relationships with our customers and prospects that we are pursuing in this highly competitive markets we serve. That ends my comments. I would now like to turn it over to Brad Peters.
David Nelson: Thanks, Brad. Good afternoon, everyone. I'm going to provide you a brief update on our Minnesota banks. Our expansion into Minnesota began with our full-service bank in Rochester opening in 2016. We added the St. Cloud, Mankato and Owatonna markets early in 2019 with our final building being completed last year in Owatonna. Although it has been over 7 years since our expansion, we are still relatively new to the marketplace and continue to introduce West Bank to our communities. Our relationship-based model with a business banking focus has allowed us to efficiently grow while maintaining a small number of employees.
We also have strategically invested in unique facilities, offering our teams the opportunity to entertain and engage in quality conversations with our clients and prospects. The disruption in our markets due to the recent M&A activity has provided ample targets to pursue. Our disciplined calling approach has driven results. Our business banking focus and our seasoned group of bankers set us apart from the competition. We are also capturing the personal business of our business owners and key executives, along with high-value retail deposit opportunities in our communities. We expect to see continued core deposit and loan growth and are well positioned to grow our business banking market share as the economy improves. Those are the end of my comments.
I will now turn the call back over to Jane.
Jane Funk: Thanks, Brad. Just a couple of comments about the financial performance, and then we'll open it up for questions. Our net income for the quarter was $10.6 million compared to $7.8 million in the first quarter of 2025, representing a 35% increase in net income. Net interest income continues to improve through improvement in our net interest margin. Net interest income increased $3.5 million or 17% compared to first quarter of last year. Our margin has increased 12 basis points compared to the previous quarter and 31 basis points compared to the first quarter of last year.
Cost of deposits has declined 14 basis points compared to the previous quarter and 40 basis points compared to the first quarter of last year. As described earlier, credit quality remains pristine, and there was no provision for credit losses recorded this quarter. Noninterest expenses remained well controlled with a 3% increase from first quarter of last year and no unusual items to identify in this quarter. Our core deposit balances were down a little bit this quarter compared to year-end, primarily as a result of just normal fluctuations that we experienced through our customers' normal cash flow fluctuations. So a little bit of seasonality there. So that's the primary driver of the deposit fluctuations.
And we've talked about the loan portfolio already. So those are the completion of our comments, and we would open it up for questions.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] And your first question comes from the line of Brendan Nosal with Hovde Group.
Brendan Nosal: Just starting off here on funding, specifically that municipal depositor from last year that put $243 million of bond proceeds on your balance sheet. Just kind of curious where those outstanding balances sit today.
Jane Funk: Yes. There's probably 75% remaining, I think, in our deposits on the balance sheet, somewhere around 75% of that. So still a fair amount that's still sitting there.
Brendan Nosal: Okay. Okay. That's helpful. Maybe pivoting to loan growth. I appreciate all the comments that you all made in the prepared remarks. Just kind of curious, what do you think takes it to get loan demand in your markets higher and then translate that into your own near-term loan growth expectations?
Brad Winterbottom: Well, I would say that we've had a very active new business opportunity, but we've had a lot of customers, and it's going to continue into the second quarter that we have some loan payoffs, and they are coming because they're moving them to the secondary market. We still have in those customers. So we're backfilling those, and we have a very nice -- we have a very large prospect list that we're chasing with opportunities. And so that's the balance. It's pretty hard to tell you when we think that's going to stop and we're going to grow the portfolio. But we've been adding new assets to our loan portfolio.
Harlee Olafson: I think just a little bit of additional color to that is that when rates were relatively high, like over 1% higher than they are right now, new construction projects for different types of property came close to a standstill. So what has happened during that period of time is that new construction projects haven't ramped up and provided new dollars on to the loan balances, while other projects got completed and then stabilized and then the investor borrower is able to take it to nonrecourse financing or sell.
So there is a little bit of a gap area there that I think is starting to see some signs of borrowers and developers starting to fill in that gap again with new projects.
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Brendan Nosal: Okay. All right. I appreciate the color on that topic. Maybe sticking with the theme of the balance sheet. Just on capital ratio saw a nice bump this quarter as the balance sheet contracted a little bit. Just kind of curious for your thoughts on how you think about capital needs versus deployment opportunities over the course of the year.
Jane Funk: Yes. I think capital is kind of something that you're always talking about and always planning for. I think our earnings improvement in 2025 and the continuation of that earnings improvement will help us with our capital as we have a little bit of lag in loan growth. So we're just trying to manage what our expectations are for loan growth with our income and our retention of earnings. So nothing different than the way you would manage it over a normal course of business.
Brad Winterbottom: And I'd just add, when business picks up, our bankers are out busy. They are out busy talking to folks. And so when the new opportunities come, we're going to be in the front row.
Brendan Nosal: Perfect. I'm going to try and sneak one more in here before I step back. Just turning to the net interest margin, a lot of nice margin expansion this quarter. Can you just update us on the outlook for the NIM if the Fed is on hold here for the rest of the year?
Jane Funk: Yes. If the Fed rates don't change, we've still got a pretty fair amount of cash flow coming off the fixed rate portfolio that will mature in 2026 and 2027 that are at rates that are still in the 4s, some in the 3s. So we've got a fair amount of opportunity with asset repricing. We'll have about -- I think it's projected about $38 million rolling off of the investment portfolio over the next 12 months, and that's 2% or sub-2% rate that's rolling off of. So we believe if rates are steady and deposit and funding costs are steady, we've got plenty of opportunity on the asset side in repricing to improve margin.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] And your next question comes from the line of Nathan Race with Piper Sandler.
Nathan Race: Just going back to the margin discussion, Jane, I wonder if you could maybe help just kind of triangulate kind of where maybe the margin could shake out over the next few quarters, assuming the Fed on pause and just based on that repricing -- I'm sorry, the fixed rate loan repricing that you mentioned. I mean, are we talking something in like the 270 range? Or do you think that's too aggressive at this point?
Jane Funk: Well, I would say that over -- over the next 12 months, we've probably got between loans and investments that will be repricing, there's probably $250 million, somewhere around there that will be repricing. And again, those are at a blended rate, maybe below 4%. So that's where we're getting our confidence in the net interest margin improving, but I have -- we don't have a specific number or target.
Nathan Race: Got you. Okay. And then just going back to some of the balance sheet dynamics. I appreciate the cash flow coming off the bond book in terms of kind of what the yield pickup could be there. But just curious, as you're thinking about kind of hopefully some stronger loan growth coming through later this year as payoffs hopefully moderate. Is the expectation that you'll have some excess liquidity that you can fund that loan growth? Or do you think kind of deposit growth can keep up with kind of the pace of loan growth that you will -- that will hopefully develop as 2026 progresses?
Jane Funk: Yes. We'll certainly allocate investment cash flows to the loan portfolio as needed. We haven't been purchasing securities the last few years. And so a lot of the liquidity that we're building as the short-term liquidity is really for that anticipation of loan activity.
Nathan Race: Got you. Okay. Great. And then one last one. Expenses were really well managed in the quarter as they typically are with you guys. Just curious if you're still kind of budgeting for kind of similar expense growth than what we saw last year in that kind of 4% to 5% range or if there's any initiatives or any kind of de novo plans or opportunities to add some additional commercial bankers, particularly in Minnesota in light of the M&A-related disruption there that could cause some expenses to be front-loaded as you may be investing for growth?
Jane Funk: Our expectation at this time is expense management will be kind of ordinary course of business, and we're not expecting any anomalies or additional items.
David Nelson: Yes. Nate, I would always -- I mean, we're always on the lookout for opportunities in the marketplace. And we know the individuals that we would like to potentially bring on board and those conversations are ongoing, but the timing of that is not, I would say, has not been established.
Nathan Race: Got you. And Brad, if I could just sneak one more in for you. Just curious as you're on the ground there in those markets where there's that disruption going on, I mean, any sense or how long of a tail some of these opportunities could present in terms of bringing over clients or potentially some relationship managers? Is this like a 1-year process? Or do you think it's going to unfold over the next maybe 2 or 3 years?
David Nelson: I think it's several years. I mean just looking at sales cycles, all of this takes time. I think our focus now is to work to get in second place and position ourselves to win the business, and that's kind of what we've been doing all along. So I see that continuing. And I think the ramp-up, I mean, it's over a course of years.
Operator: There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back over to Jane Funk for closing remarks.
Jane Funk: All right. Thank you. We appreciate everyone's interest in our company today. Thank you for joining us, and have a good day.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.
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