First Financial Bancorp Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Call - Record fees and acquisitions offset margin pressure
Summary
First Financial closed 2025 with a headline quarter, led by record fee income and the earnings lift from two bank acquisitions. Adjusted EPS was $0.80 in Q4, adjusted ROA 1.52% and adjusted ROTCE 20.3%, as non-interest income hit an all-time quarterly high and offset modest NIM compression. The company guided to continued organic loan growth, stable credit metrics, and near-4% margin levels, while warning that cost savings from Westfield and BankFinancial will show up later in 2026 as integrations complete.
That upbeat picture comes with caveats. Two recent acquisitions drove most of the balance sheet changes, temporarily pressured tangible book value and capital ratios, and will push a short-term rise in securities and reported expenses. Credit looks benign for now, but a few individual loans lifted NPAs and net charge-offs ticked higher in Q4. Management is betting on fee businesses, targeted hiring in new markets, and a cautious redeployment of acquired liquidity to sustain earnings momentum.
Key Takeaways
- Q4 adjusted EPS $0.80, adjusted net income $77.7 million, adjusted return on assets 1.52% and adjusted return on tangible common equity 20.3%.
- Net interest margin remained resilient at 3.98% in Q4, down 4 basis points sequentially, helped by a 15 basis point decline in funding costs that largely offset a 19 basis point drop in asset yields.
- Record adjusted fee income in Q4 of $77.3 million, driven by wealth management, foreign exchange (Bankburn), leasing (Summit), and mortgage; full-year adjusted non-interest income rose 16% to $280 million.
- Acquisitions materially changed the balance sheet: Westfield added ~$1.6 billion of loans and ~$1.2 billion of deposits in Q4, BankFinancial closed after quarter end and will add ~ $1.2 billion of balances in Chicago.
- Management forecasts 6% to 8% organic loan growth for 2026 from legacy operations, with Q1 organic loan growth expected to be low single digits annualized, excluding BankFinancial.
- Purchase accounting accretion was about 4 basis points from Westfield in Q4, and combined deal accretion for the quarter is roughly 5 to 6 basis points going forward; overall NIM guidance for Q1 is 3.94% to 3.99% assuming a 25 basis point Fed cut in March.
- Credit metrics stable but watchful: ACL coverage at 1.39% of loans, provision expense $10.1 million in Q4, NPAs rose slightly to 0.48% of assets, and net charge-offs annualized were 27 basis points in Q4 (25 basis points for the year).
- Costs and integration timing: Q1 non-interest expense guidance $156 million to $158 million includes roughly $11 million Westfield and $10 million BankFinancial impacts; modeled cost savings expected to materialize later in 2026 after conversions and a conversion plus 90 day runout.
- Capital and returns: tangible book value $15.74, tangible common equity ratio 7.79%, tangible value per share up 11% year over year to $15.74 despite acquisition drag; company returned 40% of earnings via common dividend in the period.
- Liquidity and securities: BankFinancial adds a near-term liquidity influx, which may temporarily inflate the securities portfolio to roughly 20% of assets or about $5 billion, with management intending to redeploy into loans as originations and paydowns normalize.
- Fee income outlook: Company expects Q1 fee income of $71 million to $73 million (includes $14-$16 million FX and $19-$21 million leasing), with back-half 2026 fee income cycling into a $75 million to $80 million quarterly run rate as seasonality fades and teams ramp.
- Leasing growth is moderating as the portfolio seasons, moving from prior double digit growth to high single digits, and the mix has shifted toward finance leases versus operating leases which compresses some fee growth.
- Margin sensitivity to short rates is high, management says NIM trajectory is primarily driven by short end moves; absent cuts, margin should hold roughly flat at a higher level than with the Fed cuts modeled.
- Three problem loans drove the uptick in NPAs in Q4, indicating localized, rather than broad, credit stress; classified assets declined to 1.11% of assets.
- Capital markets moves: the bank issued $300 million of subordinated debt in Q4, 10-year term at 6.38%, bolstering long-term capital but adding fixed funding cost.
Full Transcript
Jale, Conference Operator: Thank you for standing by. My name is Jale, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the First Financial Bancorp Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, simply press star one again. I would now like to turn the conference over to Scott Crawley, Corporate Controller. You may begin.
Scott Crawley, Corporate Controller, First Financial Bancorp: Thanks, Jale. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us on today’s conference call to discuss First Financial Bancorp’s fourth quarter and full-year financial results. Participating on today’s call will be Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer; Jamie Anderson, Chief Financial Officer; and Bill Harrod, Chief Credit Officer. Both the press release we issued yesterday and the accompanying slide presentation are available on our website at www.bankinfirst.com under the Investor Relations section. We’ll make reference to the slides contained in the accompanying presentation during today’s call. Additionally, please refer to the forward-looking statements disclosure contained in the Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings release, as well as our SEC filings, for a full discussion of the company’s risk factors. The information we provide today is accurate as of December 31, 2025, and we will not be updating any forward-looking statements to reflect facts or circumstances after this call.
I’ll now turn it over to Archie Brown.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Thanks, Scott. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us on today’s call. Yesterday afternoon, we announced our fourth quarter and full-year financial results. I’m very pleased with our record earnings performance for the quarter. Adjusted earnings per share were $0.80, leading to an adjusted return on assets of 1.52% and an adjusted return on tangible common equity of 20.3%. The net interest margin, which declined slightly from the third quarter, has proven resilient as reduction in funding costs negated most of the impact of short-term rate reductions by the Federal Reserve. Balance sheet trends were solid for the quarter, with loan growth of 4% on an annualized basis, total average deposits increasing by approximately 7% on an annualized basis, excluding the impact from the Westfield acquisition. I’m especially pleased with our robust non-interest income for the quarter.
Total adjusted fee income was $77 million and increased 5% compared to the linked quarter. Wealth management and foreign exchange income both increased by double-digit percentages, while leasing and mortgage income also remained strong. While adjusted non-interest expenses increased by 6% from the linked quarter, most of the increase was driven by the Westfield acquisition. Asset quality was relatively stable for the quarter, and provision expense was in line with our expectations at $10.1 million. Non-performing assets increased slightly to 0.48% of assets, and classified assets declined slightly to 1.11% of assets. Three loans drove the increase in NPAs, while net charge-offs were 27 basis points, which was within our range of expectations. Turning to the full year, 2025 was another great year for First Financial. On an adjusted basis, our net income was $281 million or $2.92 per share.
Adjusted return on assets was 1.49%, and adjusted return on tangible common equity was 19.3%. We were pleased with the performance of the net interest margin for the full year. While the margin did decline year-over-year from 4.05% to 3.98%, we were able to offset most of the impact of short-term rate decreases through the diligent management of deposit costs. Adjusted non-interest income increased by 16% to a record $280 million, led by growth in wealth management, foreign exchange, and mortgage income. The result was record revenue for the company of almost $922 million, an 8% increase over 2024. Similar to the fourth quarter, asset quality was relatively stable for the year. Provision expense declined 21% from 2024. Net charge-offs as a percent of average loans declined 5 basis points to 25 basis points, and our ACL coverage increased by 6 basis points to 1.39%.
Capital levels remained strong during 2025. While the acquisition of Westfield negatively impacted our capital, our strong earnings drove increases to tangible value per share of 11% from $14.15 to $15.74. I’ll now turn the call over to Jamie to discuss these results in more detail, and after Jamie talks, I’ll wrap up with some additional forward-looking commentary and closing remarks.
Scott Crawley, Corporate Controller, First Financial Bancorp: Thank you, Archie, and good morning, everyone. Slides 4, 5, and 6 provide a summary of our most recent financial results. The fourth quarter was another outstanding quarter, highlighted by record earnings, a strong net interest margin, organic growth in both loans and deposits, and the acquisition of Westfield Bank. Our net interest margin remains very strong at 3.98%. Funding costs declined 15 basis points from the linked quarter, while asset yields decreased 19 basis points. Loan balances decreased $1.7 billion, including $1.6 billion acquired in the Westfield transaction. Organic growth was $131 million, or 4% on an annualized basis, and was driven by Summit and C&I. Total deposit balances increased $2 billion, including $1.8 billion acquired in the Westfield transaction. Organic growth was $264 million, with increases in the majority of our deposit types.
We maintained 21% of our total balances in non-interest-bearing accounts and remained focused on growing lower-cost deposit balances. Additionally, we issued $300 million of subordinated debt during the fourth quarter. These notes have a 10-year maturity and carry a 6.38% interest rate. Turning to the income statement, adjusted fourth quarter fee income was a record, led by leasing, foreign exchange, and wealth management. Non-interest expenses increased from the linked quarter due primarily to the impact of the Westfield acquisition. Our ACL coverage remained relatively unchanged during the quarter at 1.39% of total loans, despite a large increase in the ACL balance. Most of that balance change was due to the Westfield acquisition. In addition, we recorded $10.1 million of provision expense during the period, which was driven primarily by net charge-offs and loan growth.
Asset quality trends were relatively stable, as net charge-offs increased 9 basis points from the third quarter, and classified assets, as a percentage of total assets, declined 7 basis points. Net charge-offs were 27 basis points on an annualized basis, while NPAs, as a percentage of assets, were 48 basis points. From a capital standpoint, our ratios are in excess of both internal and regulatory targets. Tangible book value was $15.74, while our tangible common equity ratio was 7.79%. Slide 7 reconciles our GAAP earnings to adjusted earnings, highlighting items that we believe are important to understanding our quarterly performance. Adjusted net income was $77.7 million, or $0.80 per share, for the quarter. Non-interest income was adjusted for $12.6 million of losses on the sales of investment securities, while non-interest expense adjustments were primarily related to acquisition activity.
As depicted on Slide 8, these adjusted earnings equate to a return on average assets of 1.52%, a return on average tangible common equity of 20%, and a pre-tax pre-provision ROA of 2.14%. Turning to Slides 9 and 10, net interest margin decreased 4 basis points from the linked quarter to 3.98%. Asset yields declined 19 basis points compared to the prior quarter. Total deposit costs declined 15 basis points, partially offsetting the impact of lower asset yields. Slide 12 illustrates our current loan mix and balance changes compared to the linked quarter. Loan balances increased $1.7 billion during the period. As you can see on the right, $1.6 billion was a result of the Westfield transaction. Absent the impact from the acquisition, organic loan growth was $131 million, or 4% on an annualized basis. Organic growth was driven by C&I and Summit.
Slide 14 shows our deposit mix, as well as a progression of average deposits from the linked quarter. In total, average deposit balances increased $1.4 billion, including a $1.2 billion impact from the Westfield transaction. Organic growth during the quarter included increases in the majority of our product types, while some were seasonal in nature. Slide 16 highlights our non-interest income. Total adjusted fee income increased to $77.3 million, which was the highest quarter in the history of the company. Bankburn and Summit both had strong results. Wealth had a record quarter, while mortgage and deposit service charge income also increased from third quarter levels. Non-interest expense for the quarter is outlined on Slide 17. Core expenses increased $8.6 million during the period. This was driven by the impact from the Westfield acquisition.
Turning now to Slides 18 and 19, our ACL model resulted in a total allowance, which includes both funded and unfunded reserves of $207 million. This includes $26 million of initial allowance on the Westfield portfolio. We recorded $10.1 million of total provision expense during the period. At December 31, the ACL was 1.39% of total loans, which was up slightly from the linked quarter. Provision expense was primarily driven by net charge-offs and loan growth. Additionally, our NPAs to total assets increased slightly to 48 basis points, while classified asset balances as a percentage of total assets decreased to 1.11%. Finally, as shown on Slides 20 and 21, capital ratios remain in excess of regulatory minimums and internal targets. During the fourth quarter, tangible book value and the TCE ratio were negatively impacted by the Westfield acquisition.
Tangible book value was $15.74, and the TCE ratio was 7.79% at the end of the period. Our total shareholder return remained strong, with 40% of our earnings returned to shareholders during the period through the common dividend. We maintain our commitment to providing an attractive return to our shareholders and will evaluate capital actions that support that commitment. I’ll now turn it back over to Archie for some comments on our outlook. Archie?
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Thank you, Jamie. Before we conclude our prepared remarks, I want to comment on our outlook for the first quarter, which can be found on Slide 22. Excluding the impact from BankFinancial, we expect payoff pressure to ease in the coming quarter, resulting in a low single-digit organic loan growth on an annualized basis during the first quarter. For the full year, as originations ramp up, we expect loan growth to be in the 6%-8% range. We expect core deposit balances to decline modestly in the near term due to seasonal outflows of public funds. Our net interest margin remains among the highest in the peer group, and we expect it to be in a range of between 3.94% and 3.99% over the next quarter, assuming a 25 basis point rate cut in March.
We expect first quarter credit costs to approximate fourth quarter levels and ACL coverage to remain stable as a percentage of loans. We expect fee income to be between $71-$73 million, which includes $14-$16 million for foreign exchange and $19-$21 million for leasing business revenue. This range includes the impact from both Westfield and BankFinancial. Non-interest expense is expected to be between $156-$158 million and reflect our continued focus on expense management. This range includes the impact from both Westfield and BankFinancial, which should approximate $11 million and $10 million, respectively. While we remain confident that we will realize our modeled cost savings, we expect those savings to materialize later in 2026 once both banks have been fully integrated. To conclude, we’re very proud of our overall performance in 2025.
In addition to outstanding financial results, we successfully launched our Western Michigan banking office in Grand Rapids and acquired two banking companies, which strengthened our core funding and provides us with a platform for growth in two of the largest metropolitan markets in the Midwest. We received our second consecutive outstanding CRA rating, demonstrating our commitment to creating opportunities for lower-income communities and our footprint, and we were one of only 70 companies worldwide to be recognized by Gallup as an exceptional workplace. Finally, I want to recognize and thank our associates for their hard work and commitment. It’s due to their efforts that First Financial consistently delivers industry-leading performance. With that, we’ll now open up the call for questions.
Jale, Conference Operator: Thank you. The floor is now open for questions. If you have dialed in and would like to ask a question, please press Star 1 on your telephone keypad to raise your hand and join the queue. If you would like to withdraw your question, simply press Star 1 again. If you are called upon to ask a question and are listening via loudspeaker on your device, please pick up your handset and ensure that your phone is not on mute when asking your question. Your first question comes from the line of Daniel Tamayo of Raymond James. Your line is open.
Daniel Tamayo, Analyst, Raymond James: Thank you. Good morning, Archie. Good morning, Jamie.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Good day.
Daniel Tamayo, Analyst, Raymond James: Maybe starting on the fee income guidance, I mean, the fourth quarter was a good quarter. The guidance was a little bit below where I was looking for. Within that, FX looks like it’s going to be down, and then leasing over the last couple of quarters has trended down. So just curious if you can kind of walk us through where you’re seeing the path for the rest of the year in those two line items, and then more broadly, the fee income path for the rest of the year? Thanks.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Sure, Danny. As you said, the fourth quarter was a great quarter all around, and FX certainly shined. I think they had their best quarter ever. There’s a little bit of seasonality in Q1, and they have added quite a bit of talent where some non-solicits will burn off after the first quarter, which I think is going to create more opportunity for them as they go forward. With that, I’ll have Jamie maybe talk about fees. He could talk about FX or go beyond that and maybe fees more broadly for the year.
Jamie Anderson, Chief Financial Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah, Danny. So for the fourth quarter, obviously, you saw we had a record quarter, huge revenue quarter for Bankburn on the foreign exchange side. And we do see some seasonality to that business in terms of the revenue coming in. The fourth quarter, the back half of the year is typically large, and so we do see that coming down in the first quarter, but then ramping up as the year moves on. And some of these a couple of these teams that we’ve brought on over the past year, again, Archie mentioned the non-solicit starts to wear off on those, and we start to see some impact from those teams. And then it’s just, I would say, the big difference is just the overall seasonality from the fourth quarter to the first quarter across really all the lines.
And so as you look out into the back half of 2026 or even the second, third, fourth quarter, you start to get into that $75 million-$80 million range of fee income as the year moves on.
Daniel Tamayo, Analyst, Raymond James: Okay. All right. That’s helpful. So I mean, I guess the FX business, you would expect growth year over year for that business as we look for kind of overall 2026 and then leasing. Is that business slowing the growth rates, or are they slowing, you think?
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. On FX, we do expect, as Jamie said, Danny, for it to keep growing. If you look at it, we acquired it in 2019. I think their compound annual growth rate is probably close to 14% or 15% a year over that time, and they’re still going to grow probably low double-digit over the next few years. So we think foreign exchange will continue to grow and capital markets overall at nice clips. In the case of Summit, I mean, their origination numbers were up last year. They’ll be up some more this year. It’s sometimes more of a question of what the mix is. And they probably have been doing more finance leases and a little bit less operating leases as a percent of the mix. That’s probably why you’re seeing that number maybe a little bit on the flatter side.
Jamie Anderson, Chief Financial Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. And Dan, it’s Jamie. So I think we were seeing growth on the leasing side in past years in that 10%-15% range, and I would say it’s more high single digits. We’re starting that portfolio is starting to become seasoned. We acquired that company four or five years ago. The leases generally have terms in that range. And so you’re starting to see you’re starting to see things kind of turn at this point in that portfolio.
Daniel Tamayo, Analyst, Raymond James: Okay. That’s helpful. I appreciate it. And then maybe one bigger picture here for you, Archie, just on the plan for growth in Grand Rapids. You mentioned that in your commentary and in the release. Just curious what you have in place there and what you’re planning to do in terms of investments there.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: We brought a team over. It was not all at once, but we brought a team over throughout most of the first quarter last year, and they’ve ramped up nicely. I mean, they’re not quite at, but close to $100 million in commitments on the loan side. I think $20-$30 million range in deposits. We’ve added some other banking team members on the wealth side, in particular private banking. We’re looking to have a full banking office up there this year, add in some mortgage as well. So we’re going to keep building it out. And we think we don’t have anything yet, Danny, but we think there’s more opportunities in Michigan, especially with some of the larger M&A that’s going on with some of the banks. We think that’s going to potentially create some opportunity for us to do some add-on in that market over the year.
We think it’s close to a home run in terms of investment that we could make.
Daniel Tamayo, Analyst, Raymond James: Great. All right. Well, I will step back. Thanks for the call, guys. Appreciate it.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yep. Thanks, Danny.
Jale, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Brendan Nosal of Hovde Group. Your line is open.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Hey. Good morning, Archie. Good morning, Jamie. Hope you guys are doing well.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Hey, Brendan. Morning.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Good morning. Good morning. Maybe just to circle back to the loan growth outlook, I think you guys said 6%-8% growth for the full year. Just want to confirm that that’s on an organic basis and not including BankFinancial, which closed earlier this quarter.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. I think that’s right, Brendan. Maybe a little more commentary on loans overall. We had an incredible origination quarter in Q4. It was our best quarter by a lot in 2025. I think it was 36% over the linked quarter in terms of fundings. But what we also saw in Q4 was a record level of payoff activity. I think it was up 56% over Q3 last year and by far our largest quarter of payoffs. And so Q1 tends to be a little bit of a lower point from an origination, just more seasonality, and then it ramps up. Pipelines look healthy, as probably more than even last year, look healthy. And we think originations will certainly come in strong as the year goes on. And we think payoffs, while they won’t hit a low point in Q1, but they’re going to come down from where they were.
So we think we’ll eke out a little bit of growth in Q1, and then it’ll ramp up. But we are projecting out 6%-8% for the year, and that would be the legacy bank.
Jamie Anderson, Chief Financial Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. Yeah. So that would exclude any of the acquired balances.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Okay. Perfect. Perfect. Maybe turning to the margin outlook for the first quarter, that $394-$399. Can you break out the estimated purchase accounting accretion number with BankFinancial coming in and a full quarter of Westfield? PA is wrapping 4 basis points this quarter. What does that look like in the guide for 1Q?
Jamie Anderson, Chief Financial Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. So the four basis points for Westfield should pretty much hold. We don’t see a big impact in terms of purchase accounting from the BankFinancial deal for a couple of reasons. For one, they didn’t have a lot of loans to begin with. And we are selling a big chunk of the multifamily portfolio like we announced with the deal. So they have about $700 million in loan balances that we acquired. We’re selling about $450 million. And so really, they’re going to have $200 million-$250 million of loan balances that carry over. So you can imagine the purchase accounting isn’t going to be significant for that. So if you look at Westfield, it was four basis points in the fourth quarter. And we had them for two months.
You can kind of look at like a 5 or 6 basis points purchase accounting impact from the deals.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Okay. Okay. That’s really helpful. One more from me, just staying on the topic of margin. Outside of short-term rate cuts, just kind of walk us through the major driver of margin over the course of 2026. If there’s no more cuts, is there a natural drift in the margin one way or the other, or is it really just dependent on what the short end does?
Jamie Anderson, Chief Financial Officer, First Financial Bancorp: I would say it’s really dependent on what the short end does for us. Now, if we do not get any cuts, what we will see I mean, our margin we’re showing for 2026 is staying relatively level. We do get some impact now from the rate cuts. We are forecasting in our forecast, we have rate cuts in 2 rate cuts, 1 in March, 1 in June. Our margin for the year goes down slightly, kind of in the low 390s, 390-395. So there is some impact if we have those rate cuts. If we don’t, it essentially stays flat at just a higher level.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Fantastic. I really appreciate the color and the commentary.
Jamie Anderson, Chief Financial Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Welcome. Thanks, Brendan.
Jale, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Terry McEvoy of Stephens. Your line is open.
Terry McEvoy, Analyst, Stephens: Hi. Good morning, guys.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Hey, Terry. Terry.
Terry McEvoy, Analyst, Stephens: Hey.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Yeah. It really feels like a Friday morning, not a Thursday morning. You kind of threw me off this quarter. I’m going to be honest with you.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: I’ll run that for today.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Sounds like I’ll run that by the boss.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: You can take tomorrow, yeah.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Thanks. Just a question. The quarterly expenses, the $156-$158, where does that trend through the fourth quarter once you achieve the cost savings? I’m just trying to get a better sense for the quarterly trajectory.
Jamie Anderson, Chief Financial Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. So, Terry, it’s Jamie. So we have a couple of things going on there that kind of go, I would say, in opposite directions. So for the two deals for Westfield, we have the major conversion, major event happen in March. So we’ll start to realize much more of the cost savings for that deal after that. We’ve already achieved some of that, but not the big not the big amount that you typically get. And then in June, we have the conversion for BankFinancial. And so that’ll come a quarter later. And again, we’ll start to see cost savings off of that. However, like we were mentioning, I think it was I think it was Danny’s question about fees.
What we then see in the back half of the year is a pickup in foreign exchange revenue, which then ramps up commissions and whatnot related to that, the variable comp related to not only Bankburn, but also a few of our other fee businesses. So that partially offsets some of the cost savings that we will get, but obviously, then we have the revenue on the other side. So when we look out kind of in the back half of the year, we’re kind of in the low 150 range, $150 million on the expense side.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. I think, Jamie, we’re kind of looking at it like conversion plus 90 days. So you say convert Westfield in March. By June, pretty much all the expenses run out that we’re going to get out of that integration. And then BankFinancial happens in June, conversion. And then three months later, we’ve got some employees that are contracted to stay with us 90 days after. So once we get the 90 days after conversion, that’s when all the expenses burn out.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Perfect. Great color there. And then maybe as my follow-up, what are the plans in Chicago, the $1.2 billion that comes from BankFinancial? It’s a massive market. And what’s the strategy to grow? Is it de novo, hiring bankers, or is that an M&A market for you potentially?
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. Terry, this is Archie again. It’s a little yeah, we’ll focus on what we control, which is we’re going to do organically. And we have a commercial banking team in the market that we had already put in prior a year and a half ago or two years prior to the BankFinancial closing. We’ll be adding to that team a little bit. We’ll be adding wealth bankers in the market, wealth private banking in the market. They did not do mortgage banking. We’ll be adding mortgage bankers in the market. And then we’re going to retool what they’re doing in their retail centers. They really weren’t originating lending in the retail centers. So we’re training and retooling that so we can originate. We’re a pretty strong HELOC lender. So we’re going to ramp that up.
So a little bit of organic and then adding a little bit of talent in some spots where we need it. There’s a couple of folks that they had doing kind of smaller CRE that we’ve retained. They had a leasing team doing a few things on the leasing side that kind of filled in some holes that we had, and we’re bringing them over. We think there’ll be some expansion of that business as a result. A little bit of both. As far as M&A in Chicago, we do think there’s opportunity for add-on there. And if the right thing happens, maybe so, but that’s not really our focus at the moment.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Perfect. Thanks for taking my questions.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Sure. Thank you.
Jale, Conference Operator: And again, if you would like to ask a question, press star and then number one on your telephone keypad. Your next question comes from line of David Konrad of KBW. Your line is open.
David Konrad, Analyst, KBW: Yeah. Hey, good morning, everyone.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Hey, David.
David Konrad, Analyst, KBW: Just a follow-up question on the expenses. Excuse me. Just wondering how the efficiency ratio will trend through the year. It feels like it’s going to be like very low 50s based on your commentary.
Jamie Anderson, Chief Financial Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. Yeah. David, this is Jamie. You sound sick. I’m sorry about that.
David Konrad, Analyst, KBW: I’m trying to be brave.
Jamie Anderson, Chief Financial Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. You are doing great. You got a good front. Yeah. So in the back half of the year on the back half of the year when the again, that’ll be kind of when we start to realize what I would call full cost savings for the two deals when you look out. It’s not quite low 50s. It’s kind of in that mid-50 range, 55-56 range. A couple of things that kind of nuance with our efficiency ratio. One of those is the impact from Summit and the equipment leasing side, the way you account for operating leases. And it’s a pretty good size chunk of our fee income and also on the expense side. So you get the rental payment in. The rental payment goes into fee income, and then you depreciate the asset on an operating lease.
That kind of isolated efficiency ratio for that business there is about in the mid- to high 60s. So that skews our efficiency ratio a little bit, maybe by a couple hundred basis points. Absent that, it would be kind of in that what you’re talking about, that 52-53 range.
David Konrad, Analyst, KBW: Got it. Okay. Then trust, really strong quarter there. How much did Westfield add, and what are you looking for for the first quarter?
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. David, Westfield didn’t have wealth. They have a private banking team. That’s more on the banking side. So we’re actually adding, and we already hired one wealth advisor in the market. We’re adding a second one here soon to try to grow kind of the wealth management assets in Northeast Ohio. But they didn’t have any when we acquired them. But they did have a great quarter. And it was a combination of just continuing to bring in new assets and growing overall assets under management. And then we do have our M&A, a small M&A advisory unit in that group. And that group had a strong Q4, which added to their number.
David Konrad, Analyst, KBW: Got it. Thank you.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yep.
Jale, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Brian Foran of Truist Securities. Your line is open.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Hey, good morning.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Morning, Brian.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Brian. Just going back to the loan growth commentary, two things I wanted to check. So one, would you expect total earning assets to kind of generally follow loan growth this year, or is there anything we need to be mindful of as we’re kind of penciling in cash and securities?
Jamie Anderson, Chief Financial Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. So yeah, Brian. So this is Jamie. So when you look at it, we are getting a big influx of liquidity, cash in on the BankFinancial deal. So what we will do is put that money to work, kind of mindful of cash flow off of the securities portfolio. So the securities portfolio might get a little bit bloated for us in terms of size. We typically like to keep the securities portfolio somewhere around 20% of assets. So you’ll see that peak maybe around $5 billion. So a little bit higher than what we would historically run on a percentage basis. Because at that point, we’ll be around $22 billion and change in assets. So what we will do then as loan growth kind of ebbs and flows, we will bring the securities portfolio down.
And really, if you kind of want to look at kind of maybe a rule of thumb for that, it would be loan growth, and about half of that would come off of the securities portfolio. So we will bring that down. Yeah.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: And then just on the timing of loan growth improving, I guess, was it more tied to getting through elevated paydowns in the C&I queue, or is it more tied to getting through the conversions and we should see the strengthening more in the back half of the year? Maybe you could just revisit the catalyst for the step up and the best guess of when we would start seeing it.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yeah. Brian, it’s probably a couple of things. One, there is just a lower typically a little bit lower origination order in Q1 for us than you would see as the year ramps up. A little bit of seasonality, I guess, is what I’m saying. Summit, for example, our leasing group tends to have a really strong back half. And the early part of the year tends to be a little bit lower than the back half, although we think they’ll do a little bit more this year. But some seasonality is a piece of this. We think the Westfield team, for example, Northeast Ohio is already running strong. So we’ll be ramping up more resources in FTE in the BankFinancial markets. And that will, in the back part of the year, also add more assets, earning assets in or loans.
Seasonality combined with bringing on some more people in the Chicago market over the year.
Brendan Nosal, Analyst, Hovde Group: Perfect. Thank you so much.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Yep.
Jale, Conference Operator: With no further questions, that concludes our Q&A session. I’ll now turn the conference back over to Archie Brown for closing remarks.
Archie Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, First Financial Bancorp: Thank you, Jale. I want to thank everybody for joining us today. We are really pleased with the year and the quarter. Look forward to another great year in 2026, and look forward to talking to you again next quarter. Have a great day.
Jale, Conference Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. You may now disconnect.