South Plains Financial Q4 2025 Earnings Call - BOH deal to accelerate loans to mid-to-high single-digit growth while NIM faces modest compression risk
Summary
South Plains closed 2025 with steady core performance and a strategic, near-term growth lever in the announced acquisition of Bank of Houston. Management delivered solid full-year metrics, including a 17.8% increase in diluted EPS for 2025, 33 basis points of NIM expansion during the year, and tangible book value of $29.05. The BOH deal, expected to close early Q2 2026, provides immediate Houston scale with roughly $633 million of loans and $629 million of deposits and is modeled to be about 11% accretive to earnings in 2027 with a tangible book earnback under three years.
That said, the tone was pragmatic. Management expects loan growth to accelerate to mid-to-high single digits in 2026 driven by organic hiring and the BOH acquisition, but they also warned that margin expansion is unlikely and modest NIM compression is possible. Deposit costs are already moving down, but BOH’s higher-cost jumbo CDs, roughly 30% of its deposits, present both a challenge and an opportunity to lower funding costs over time. Credit metrics remain constructive, with the indirect auto book small and high quality, but provisions ticked up late in the quarter because most loan funding occurred in late December.
Key Takeaways
- Full-year 2025 diluted EPS rose 17.8%, showing meaningful earnings leverage over the year.
- Net interest margin was 4.00% in Q4 2025, down slightly from 4.05% in Q3; management expects limited upside and possible modest compression going forward.
- Loans held for investment increased $91 million sequentially to $3.14 billion, led by multifamily property loans, direct energy loans, and other commercial loans.
- Management guided to mid-to-high single-digit loan growth in 2026, driven by a mix of organic hiring and the Bank of Houston acquisition.
- South Plains entered a definitive agreement to acquire BOH Holdings / Bank of Houston; BOH had roughly $772 million in assets, $633 million in loans, and $629 million in deposits as of 9/30/25.
- The BOH acquisition is expected to close early in Q2 2026, be approximately 11% accretive to earnings in 2027, and deliver a tangible book value earnback under three years.
- BOH’s deposit base includes jumbo CDs that are about 30% of its deposits, representing near-term funding cost pressure and a target for repricing and cost reduction post-close.
- Deposits were $3.87 billion at quarter-end, essentially flat q/q, with non-interest-bearing deposits at 26.4% of total; cost of deposits declined 9 basis points to 2.01% sequentially.
- Provision for credit losses rose to $1.8 million in Q4 from $0.5 million in Q3, largely due to strong loan growth and late December fundings.
- Credit quality signals remain constructive: indirect auto loans totaled $241 million, 94% originated in super-prime or prime, now 87.7% remain super-prime or prime, 30+ day delinquencies were 19 basis points, and Q4 net charge-offs for consumer autos were $382,000.
- Tangible common equity to tangible assets was 10.61% at quarter-end, and tangible book value per share rose to $29.05 from $28.14 q/q, supporting continued dividends and buybacks.
- The board authorized a $0.17 quarterly dividend, the company’s 27th consecutive quarterly dividend, and a buyback program remains in place.
- Non-interest income was $10.9 million in Q4, about 20% of bank revenues, with mortgage banking revenues down seasonally; management aims to grow fee income over time but has not baked material revenue synergies from BOH into current modeling.
- Non-interest expense was steady at $33 million in Q4; professional services rose by about $1.1 million, including roughly $500,000 of acquisition-related legal and professional fees, and some consulting tied to technology and integration projects.
- Key technology priorities for 2026 include an Abrigo conversion to improve credit workflows and loan operations; some consulting costs are expected to be one-time or capitalizable and will decline once projects complete.
- Deposit beta to rate cuts is running in the low to mid 30s percent so far, management estimates it may be modestly higher when accounting for public funds’ repricing lags.
- Payoffs were lighter in Q4, helping net growth, but management expects some multifamily payoffs in Q1 2026 as borrowers seek long-term fixed-rate refinancing, and they have factored this into guidance.
- New loan originations in Q4 were being booked at mid to high sixes in yield, management cited new loan yields roughly in the 6.5% to 6.75% range.
- Management remains selective on M&A, preferring like-sized, culturally aligned franchises similar to BOH, and said balance sheet optimization and cross-sell revenue upside will be pursued but are not yet quantified in consensus models.
Full Transcript
Conference Operator: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the South Plains Financial fourth quarter 2025 earnings conference call. During today’s presentation, all parties will be in a listen-only mode. Following the presentation, the conference will be open for questions with instructions to follow at that time, and as a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Steve Crockett, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer of South Plains Financial. Please go ahead.
Steve Crockett, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, South Plains Financial: Thank you, Operator, and good afternoon, everyone. We appreciate you joining our earnings conference call. The related earnings press release and earnings slide deck presentation issued earlier today are available on the news and events section of our website, spfi.bank. Please refer to slide two of the presentation for our safe harbor statements regarding forward-looking statements. All comments, express or implied, made during today’s call are made only as of today’s date and are subject to those safe harbor statements in the presentation and earnings release. In addition, please refer to slide two of the presentation for our disclaimer regarding the use of non-GAAP financial measures. The reconciliation of these measures to the most comparable GAAP financial measures can be found in our presentation and earnings release. I’m joined here today by Curtis Griffith, our Chairman and CEO, Cory Newsom, our President, and Brent Bates, City Bank’s Chief Credit Officer.
Curtis, let me hand it over to you.
Curtis Griffith, Chairman and CEO, South Plains Financial: Thank you, Steve, and good afternoon. I’m very pleased with the results that we delivered over the past quarter and the full-year, and would like to thank our employees for their hard work and commitment to City Bank and our customers. Their efforts are the key to our success, and they demonstrate every day the culture that we have developed over many years. At South Plains, our core purpose is to use the power of relationships to help people succeed and live better. I believe that we’re here to help enhance lives by creating a great place to work, help people achieve their goals, and invest generously in our communities, because there is nothing more rewarding than helping people succeed and live better. This also helps us to attract the best employees, develop deep relationships with our customers, and ultimately deliver strong financial results for our shareholders.
This can be seen by our achievements for the full-year of 2025, as outlined on slide 4 of our presentation, where we delivered a 17.8% increase in diluted earnings per share, loan growth in line with our guidance, 33 basis points of NIM expansion, as our NIM was 4% for the fourth quarter, tangible book value per share growth of more than 14% to $29.05. As previously announced, we entered into a definitive agreement to acquire BOH Holdings and its banking subsidiary, Bank of Houston. While I am very proud of our results, I’m even more excited with the opportunities that I see ahead as we continue to execute our strategy to enhance our earnings. It is focused on expanding our lending team across our high-growth Texas markets, as well as pursuing accretive M&A opportunities.
Through the past year, we made great strides on both initiatives, highlighted by our definitive agreement announcement in December to acquire Bank of Houston. As highlighted on slide five, we believe Bank of Houston will complement our existing Houston team and bring both meaningful scale and deeply entrenched customer relationships to South Plains in one of the fastest-growing metropolitan markets in the country. More importantly, the Bank of Houston team, led by Jim Stein, holds similar values to those that we hold dear at South Plains: deep customer relationships, disciplined credit standards, and a genuine focus on employees and communities. As we have consistently said on these calls, finding an acquisition partner with similar culture and values is a necessary factor to a successful merger, and I believe we’ve found that in Bank of Houston.
I’m looking forward to partnering with Jim, who will continue to lead his team once the merger is consummated, while also joining the boards of both South Plains and City Bank. Jim will provide important continuity and leadership depth as we work to further scale our presence in the Houston market. Looking deeper into the Houston market, our existing team has worked hard to build a strong presence in Houston, as our loan portfolio has grown at a 34% compound annual rate over the last five years. By bringing BOH into the South Plains family, we are projected to have more than $1 billion in loans in the Houston region, which is significant to us.
Importantly, both institutions share a focus on commercial real estate lending, a segment where Bank of Houston has built a high-quality portfolio and where Bank of Houston and City Bank’s credit culture and underwriting discipline are closely aligned. We believe the merger is a good strategic fit, with low execution risk and a platform that enables us to both deepen and expand our customer relationships. Financially, this merger is also compelling, as we expect it to be approximately 11% accretive to our earnings in 2027, with an attractive tangible book value earnback of less than three years. We believe that BOH is a highly efficient, profitable company that has demonstrated consistent performance and that the transactions structured to provide that we are very much aligned.
I look forward to officially welcoming the Bank of Houston team when the merger is completed, which we expect to occur early in the second quarter of 2026. While we expect BOH to be a tailwind to our growth, I’m also very encouraged with the progress we’ve made in recruiting talented lenders to South Plains as we continue to benefit from the dislocation that is occurring across our markets from the mergers that have taken place over the last two years, which Cory will touch on. Taken together, we expect our loan growth to accelerate to a mid to high single-digit growth rate in 2026, which should also drive a nice acceleration to the earning power of South Plains. To conclude, we believe we are in a strong capital position that will allow us to benefit from the many opportunities that we have in front of us.
Given our capital position, we remain focused on growing City Bank while also returning a steady stream of income to our shareholders through our quarterly dividend and keeping a share buyback program in place. Last week, our board of directors authorized a $0.17 per share quarterly dividend, which will be our 27th consecutive dividend. Now, let me turn the call over to Cory.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Thank you, Curtis, and hello, everyone. Starting on slide six, our loans held for investment increased by $91 million to $3.14 billion in the fourth quarter as compared to the linked quarter. The increase was primarily due to organic loan growth in multifamily property loans, direct energy loans, and other commercial loans. I would note that our average loan balances were down slightly in the fourth quarter because the majority of our loan growth came on later in December, which should provide a lift to our net interest income in the first quarter. Our yield on loans was 6.79% in the fourth quarter as compared to 6.92% in the linked quarter. It’s important to point out that our loan yield was boosted by eight basis points in the third quarter due to $640,000 in interest and fees related to resolution of credit workouts.
Additionally, our loan yield was also boosted by 23 basis points in the second quarter due to $1.7 million interest recovery from the full repayment of a loan that had been on non-accrual. Excluding these one-time gains, our yield on loans was 6.84% in the third quarter and 6.76% in the second quarter, representing a relatively steady loan yield over the last nine months. While we have not yet experienced a material impact to our loan yields from the series of FOMC 25 basis point reductions in their target interest rate in September through December, we do expect our loan yields to moderate in the quarters ahead. That said, we remain optimistic that we can continue to reprice our deposits and manage our margin as market rates decline.
Accelerating our loan growth has been our number one strategic priority over the last year as we focus on expanding our lending platform. We’ve been selectively recruiting experienced lenders to City Bank across our growth markets while also benefiting from the dislocation created by our competitors’ acquisitions. We ended the year having completed about 50% of our expected hiring, occurring across our Dallas, Houston, and Midland markets. We expect our new lenders will bring the high-quality, long-term customer relationships that they have built in their successful careers to South Plains, which we expect will drive an acceleration to our loan growth to the mid to high single-digit range in 2026.
In fact, we are already seeing an acceleration given the strong loan growth that we delivered in the fourth quarter, as well as a nice pickup in our major metropolitan markets of Dallas, Houston, and El Paso, where loans increased by $15 million or 5.8% annualized to $1.03 billion, as outlined on slide eight. Given our thoughtful expansion in these markets, we expect loan activity to continue to improve and are also excited to close our pending merger with BOH, which will increase our scale in the high-growth Houston market. That said, we do still expect some headwinds in the first quarter of 2026 from several expected payoffs in our multifamily property portfolio.
Turning to Bank of Houston, they had approximately $772 million in assets, $633 million in loans, and $629 million in deposits as of September 30, 2025, which will provide us with a substantially expanded platform in the Houston market. Importantly, Houston’s Harris County was the number one fastest-growing county in the U.S. in 2024, while also being the top relocation destination. The economy is dynamic, and we should see our commercial and private banking relationships expand across the Houston market. More importantly, we took time to get to know BOH’s management team, employees, and their culture. I personally spent time getting to know Jim Stein, and I really appreciated his philosophy for running Bank of Houston and quickly came to realize that our cultures were very similar.
I could see that our banks would work well together and that our teams were like-minded, which should minimize potential disruption and risk from the acquisition and its integration. I’m even more confident of that today. At South Plains, we’ve built a great business in Houston with a strong team, and BOH should nicely complement our growth strategy and provide important scale in a terrific market. Skipping to slide 11, our indirect auto loan portfolio totaled $241 million at the end of the fourth quarter, which is relatively unchanged as compared to $239 million at the end of the linked quarter.
As we discussed on our third quarter call, we have been carefully managing this portfolio with a focus on maintaining its credit quality over the last two years, which has resulted in a decline in loan balances of $55 million since the third quarter of 2023, when the portfolio was $296 million. Over this time period, we have seen competitors become more aggressive at the higher end of the credit spectrum while volumes have declined. More recently, we’ve tightened our loan-to-value requirements to further ensure that we are proactively managing this portfolio in the current economic environment as well as any potential challenges to come. It’s also important to highlight that this consumer portfolio comes primarily through auto dealers who are in our markets. To further improve the transparency on this portfolio, given some of the challenges in the sector, we have updated our indirect auto disclosure.
What you can see is that 94% of our current indirect auto portfolio was originated in the super prime or prime categories, with an additional 5% originated in the near prime categories. This allows for normal credit deterioration to occur over time, with the majority of the portfolio remaining super prime and prime. In fact, from the origination to the end of the fourth quarter of 2025, we have experienced only modest deterioration, with the portfolio now 87.7% super prime or prime, with 5.6% near prime. The strong credit profiles of our consumer borrowers can further be seen in the credit metrics of this portfolio as our 30+ days past due loans, which total approximately $464,000, improved another 5 basis points to 19 basis points in the fourth quarter.
We continue to believe that our past due status is the best early indicator to any potential signs of credit stress in this portfolio and believe our tightened credit standards will further protect City Bank and the credit profile of our indirect auto portfolio as we look forward. Additionally, our net charge-offs for all consumer autos were approximately $382,000 for the quarter as compared to $160,000 in the third quarter. Turning to slide 12, we generated $10.9 million of non-interest income in the fourth quarter, which was relatively flat as compared to $11.2 million in the linked quarter. The modest decline from the third quarter was primarily due to a $185,000 decrease in mortgage banking revenues, mainly due to the typical seasonal decline in mortgage volumes through the fourth quarter, as can be seen on slide 13.
Overall, we are pleased with how our mortgage business is performing in this low transaction and interest rate environment and believe we are well-positioned for eventual upturn in volumes. For the fourth quarter, non-interest income was 20% of bank revenues, essentially flat with the linked quarter. Continuing to grow, our non-interest income remains a focus of our team. I would now like to turn the call over to Steve.
Steve Crockett, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, South Plains Financial: Thanks, Cory. For the fourth quarter, diluted earnings per share were $0.90 compared to $0.96 from the linked quarter. This decrease was primarily a result of a larger provision for credit losses as we experienced strong loan growth in the quarter, though the majority of those new loans funded later in December, coupled with the one-time interest income items in the linked quarter. Starting on slide 15, net interest income was $43 million for the fourth quarter, in line with the third quarter’s result. Our net interest margin, calculated on a tax-equivalent basis, was 4% in the fourth quarter as compared to 4.05% in the linked quarter. As I already mentioned, we had loan interest and fee items related to credit workouts that positively impacted our NIM in both the third quarter and the second quarter of 2025.
The third quarter impact was 6 basis points or $640,000, while the second quarter impact was 17 basis points or $1.7 million. Excluding these one-time items in both periods, we delivered steady NIM expansion over the course of the past year, though that expansion slowed in the fourth quarter to just 1 basis point. As outlined on slide 16, deposits held steady from the linked quarter at $3.87 billion at the end of the fourth quarter, while we experienced strong growth over the full-year, with deposits rising $253 million or 7% from year-end 2024. Non-interest-bearing deposits modestly decreased by $26 million in the fourth quarter, which led to a slight decline in our non-interest-bearing deposits to total deposits ratio to 26.4% as compared to the linked quarter.
Importantly, we grew our non-interest-bearing deposits by $88 million for the full-year of 2025, which drove a slight increase in our non-interest-bearing deposits to total deposits ratio as compared to year-end 2024. Our cost of deposits decreased by 9 basis points to 2.01% compared to the linked quarter as we have been repricing our deposit base lower following the FOMC’s series of 25 basis point reductions in September through December. Looking forward, we expect a modest decline in our cost of funds in the first quarter given the Fed’s most recent cut in December. Turning to slide 18, our ratio of allowance for credit losses to total loans held for investment was 1.44% at December 31, 2025, relatively stable from the end of the prior quarter. We recorded a $1.8 million provision for credit losses in the fourth quarter compared to $500,000 in the linked quarter.
As I previously mentioned, the increase in provision was largely attributable to the strong loan growth that we delivered in the fourth quarter. Skipping ahead to slide 20, our non-interest expense was $33 million in the fourth quarter, unchanged from the linked quarter. During the quarter, we had an increase of $1.1 million in professional service expenses related primarily to approximately $500,000 in acquisition-related expenses, in addition to consulting on technology projects and other initiatives, which were largely offset by a decrease of $1 million in personnel expense. Looking to the first quarter, I would expect non-interest expense to trend modestly higher. Moving to slide 22, we will remain well-capitalized with tangible common equity to tangible assets of 10.61% at the end of the fourth quarter, an increase of 36 basis points from the end of the third quarter.
Tangible book value per share increased to $29.05 as of December 31, 2025, compared to $28.14 as of September 30, 2025. The increase was primarily driven by $12.7 million of net income after dividends paid and by an increase in accumulated other comprehensive income of $3.4 million. This concludes our prepared remarks. I will now turn the call back to the operator to open the line for any questions. Operator?
Conference Operator: Thank 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. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Our first question comes from Woody Lay with KBW. You may proceed with your question.
Woody Lay, Analyst, KBW: Hey, good afternoon, guys.
Curtis Griffith, Chairman and CEO, South Plains Financial: Hey, Woody.
Woody Lay, Analyst, KBW: Wanted to start on the NIM outlook. I know if you adjust for some of those workout fees, NIM was relatively stable quarter-over-quarter. As you think about the strong growth you expect in 2026, do you think the NIM can remain relatively stable, or is that higher growth going to come on at lower spreads and could drive the NIM down a little bit?
Steve Crockett, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, South Plains Financial: Yeah, I’ll start, Woody. This is Steve. I mean, NIM outlook, I mean, you’re exactly right. We want to have the loan growth, and that should be helpful to us. We just know there’s a lot of factors that go into it, and I hate to say that we can expand it from where we’re at. I mean, there’s still some loans repricing up from floors, but there’s some of the loans that were done fairly recently that, or not recently, but in the last year or two that have come down with some of the Fed movement. So a lot of moving pieces. We’re going to do our best to keep NIM in a similar place to where it is today, but I mean, just given how much loan growth we can put on and any additional deposits we may bring on, it’ll be a little tough.
There’s just a lot of competition still out there and trying to match what, or at least compete with what they’re doing on the deposit side. Some of them are not coming down quite as fast on some of those funds. So all that being said, again, I don’t know that expansion is where we’ll be. Try to keep it where it is, but I mean, you could see a little bit of compression.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Woody, there’s definitely going to be some exposure to some compression. We’ve got to see if we can be as good at managing the cost of deposits as we have been. But we’d be a little bit naive not to think that we have some pressures there.
Woody Lay, Analyst, KBW: Yeah. And then how do you think about the deposit growth during the year? Because I know that you’re expecting strong growth, and then also with the pending BOH acquisitions, they’ve got jumbo CDs at around 30% of deposits. So it would feel like you could flex your legacy markets a little bit on the deposit side. So how are you thinking about deposit growth throughout the year?
Curtis Griffith, Chairman and CEO, South Plains Financial: Woody, this is Curtis. Yeah, you’re hitting on the point there. I do think and realize BOH has actually got pretty good NIM themselves right now, but we do believe that over time we can reduce their deposit cost, or effectively the deposit cost of their deposit base as we kind of bring them into our structure. That could kind of offset some of the other NIM pressures, but the big question is how fast can we do it?
Woody Lay, Analyst, KBW: Got it. And then just last for me, shifting to M&A, you put in the release that you’re open to additional deals that look similar to BOH. So would your preference be to add more scale in Houston? Are you looking all over the footprint? And just would you be comfortable announcing a deal with BOH pending, or do you kind of need to see that deal close and get through integration first?
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Woody, this is Cory. I think the first thing is, look, we’re not out trying to be a serial acquirer, and we’re trying to be very thoughtful about what we’re doing. And so for us to BOH is a perfect example. I mean, we did a lot of study of BOH before we ever really started trying to reach out and figure out if there was something that really worked there. And that’s the way we’re approaching all of looking at all of these things. We’re not just dialing up so that everybody gets a phone call from us just to see what’s happening. We’re trying to be very thoughtful and very methodical. Would we be afraid of something being announced in there?
No, we wouldn’t be afraid, but I mean, we’re pretty thoughtful, and I think it’s taken us this long since we’ve did the last one that I think we’ve proven that we’re not somebody that’s just going to shoot from the hip. So I mean, Houston’s a great market. We have no problem in the Houston market. Are we tied completely to only looking there? Absolutely not. It has to make sense.
Woody Lay, Analyst, KBW: All right. Well, I appreciate the insight. Thanks for taking my questions.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Thanks, Woody.
Curtis Griffith, Chairman and CEO, South Plains Financial: Thanks, Woody.
Conference Operator: The next question comes from Brett Rabatin with Hovde Group. You may proceed with your question.
Brett Rabatin, Analyst, Hovde Group: Hey, guys. Good afternoon.
Curtis Griffith, Chairman and CEO, South Plains Financial: Hey, Brett.
Brett Rabatin, Analyst, Hovde Group: Wanted to talk a little bit about payoffs, which has been a topic that has slowed loan growth the past two quarters. It didn’t seem like it did at all in the fourth quarter, and so I was just curious if there were really no payoffs in the fourth quarter. And then just the expectations, it sounds like you might have some in the first quarter. How are you guys thinking about net versus growth for 2026 with this mid-single-digit growth expectations?
Brent Bates, Chief Credit Officer, City Bank: This is Brent. I’ll kind of start by addressing your question on the payoffs. Yeah, you’re right. The fourth quarter was lighter on early payments than the prior three quarters. And that did help the net growth number. We do think there are a few more that timing is uncertain, but we think they’re going to seek long-term fixed-rate financing. And so we’ve factored that into our estimates for what we’re hoping for on growth side. But it’s hard to predict them all, but we’ve got a pretty good handle on the ones we think will ultimately seek long-term fixed-rate.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Brett, but I want to make one comment. This is Cory. I mean, we went through a period where we had some exits that we wanted to make. We’re kind of past that. I mean, we’re going to have the normal. I mean, given with between payoffs and fundings that are going to come along, there’s nothing that just like the ones we talked about that will be coming in the first quarter, there’s nothing about those that are unexpected, and they’re kind of just following their life cycle of where they should be. I mean, we think that we’ve kind of got past the ones where we felt like that we needed to do a separation from.
Brett Rabatin, Analyst, Hovde Group: Okay. And then I appreciate the additional like I was talking about, not really focused on your indirect auto book. I kind of felt like it was pretty high quality, but the additional color kind of made me curious about one topic in particular, the migration from origination to the small, pretty small piece, less than 4%, but the deep subprime credit of $9.2 million. How are you guys monitoring that? How do you see it going from wherever it was, super prime or prime, to that level? Are you seeing customers that may have lost a job, or how did they get to the deep subprime? And then if they’re not past due, what is it? Because their balances are higher, or what’s driven them to be a deep subprime credit?
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: You go first, Brent.
Brent Bates, Chief Credit Officer, City Bank: Yeah, this is Brent. What we found in our studies, because we did study kind of some of the details, and oftentimes it might have been a missed payment, might have been even some small medical collection that really drove their score down. I don’t think we’re kind of surprised student lending didn’t have anything to do with it from what we saw. But definitely, I mean, there’s a part of that portfolio that their credit score increased, and there’s a part of that portfolio that their credit score declined. And it’s pretty marked on both sides. So not too big of a surprise given everything you read about the consumer right now, and there being a little bit of a catch to trends.
Overall, we feel really good about that quality and feel good about our strategy of going into that higher credit score much heavier than probably most that are in this business into that higher credit score bucket to begin with. It’s kind of proven itself out. The way I see it, the past due ratio is a pretty good indicator of the quality we’ve got in that portfolio, so.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Brett, here’s what we really hope to glean out of this because we did give you extra color. We’ve kind of sat around and talked about the fact that we kind of gave probably more color than we would normally do or probably normally should do. Here’s what we really hope that you looked at and saw in there is it’s still in incredibly good condition. I mean, it ends up being such a non-event for our portfolio and the amount of exposure that you really can shake it all the way down to. We were really excited to put these numbers out there just so you could see how stable it really, really is.
Brett Rabatin, Analyst, Hovde Group: Okay. That’s helpful. Yeah. I haven’t really been worried about that piece of the book, but the color kind of made me curious about a few topics on it. So appreciate the color on that.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: We talked about that because we were a little concerned. I mean, it’s like it feels I mean, it’s still so small in the whole scheme of things. Yeah.
Brett Rabatin, Analyst, Hovde Group: Yeah. Last question for me. Just, I was hoping for. I’ve had some other banks talk about getting maybe more aggressive with hiring some mortgage lenders. Mortgage banking’s 20% of revenue, which has been fairly consistent. How do you, and I know there’s a rate component to this answer in terms of what happens from here, but are you guys doing anything different in mortgage? Do you want to develop that further in the coming quarters? And just any thoughts on fee income drivers, if not mortgage in 2026? Thanks.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Yeah, I would tell you there’s no question. We’re trying to hire producers right now because it’s all about the volume that’s there. We’ve been very thoughtful in trying to make sure that we don’t put out that we put this thing into a negative position. We’ve been trying to just tread water till it picks back up. Trying to find good producers is probably what we’re most focused on right now. We’ve kept our infrastructure in place, and we like that. But yeah, we’re still trying to hire some producers.
Brett Rabatin, Analyst, Hovde Group: Okay. Great. Appreciate all the color. Thank you.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Okay. Thanks, Brett.
Curtis Griffith, Chairman and CEO, South Plains Financial: Thanks, Brett.
Conference Operator: The next question comes from Joe Yanchunis with Raymond James. You may proceed with your question.
Joe Yanchunis, Analyst, Raymond James: Good afternoon.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Hey, Joe.
Curtis Griffith, Chairman and CEO, South Plains Financial: Joe.
Joe Yanchunis, Analyst, Raymond James: So I was hoping to start with the Bank of Houston. How much revenue upside do you see beyond the announced cost savings, particularly from cross-selling or balance sheet optimization?
Brent Bates, Chief Credit Officer, City Bank: Yeah, that’s a good question, Joe. I’ll start and then let anybody else pick up. I mean, we like where they’re at. I mean, we do believe that there’s some additional products that we can help bring to them. I don’t know that at this point there’s anything we would love to try to quantify as to whether it’s our wealth management area, which would include trust services. I mean, we’re going to push for those things, but as far as any of the modeling we did, that’s not necessarily built into any of our numbers, but we will certainly try to push for bringing those type products to them.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Yeah. I think, look, Bank of Houston’s a great bank, and we know that they’ve done a really good job up to this point. We do have a little bit more skill than they do, and so I think we’ll be able to leverage some of the stuff that we have to help them. Quite frankly, I think Treasury is going to be one of the biggest ones that we’ll be able to help them with. They’ve done a good job of figuring out how to fund in that bank, and it’s based on the theory that we’ve said about everything else we do. I mean, they’ve built strong relationships just like we try to do and go leverage them. We think that we can help them even more with what we have. But there’s definitely some opportunities there, and we will try to take advantage of those.
Joe Yanchunis, Analyst, Raymond James: I appreciate it. I certainly understand revenue synergy is not being baked into the model, just trying to see or kind of get a sense for how much leverage there is within fee income from expanding to the starter presence in Houston. Aside from the upcoming integration, are there any other technology investment priorities for 2026 you guys are looking at?
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: I would probably go a little bit. I mean, we’re always doing something on technology, trying to make sure that we stay pretty relevant in that area. But I think one of the things that we’re really trying to make sure of is that we’ve got an Abrigo conversion that’s coming up so that we can implement some better workflows and do some stuff on the credit side for the loan operations. But we’re also focused on trying to make sure that we continue to enhance the credit side of the bank to make sure that we’re prepared to bring on a bank that, I mean, their average loan size is probably a little smaller than ours. If you look at what they’re doing, we’ve got to be smart.
I mean, you hear about all these different acquisitions that come along, and they kind of don’t pan out like everybody thinks. Well, you’ve got to make sure that you’re putting as much effort into embracing what they’re doing so that we don’t go screw up what they’ve already built. And we have done a lot of that. And if you go back to your other question about the different synergies and stuff that we can bring to the table, you really don’t know until you start getting in there and meeting the quality of the talent and everything that they have. I mean, we’re quite impressed with what we’re seeing. And we see opportunities that make us very pleased with the decision that we made to go into an acquisition with these guys. I mean, he’s built a good team, and there’s quite a bit of talent right there.
We think if you take some of the stuff that we have to offer and with the team that they have in place, I think that we can work quite well together.
Joe Yanchunis, Analyst, Raymond James: That was very helpful. I just have a couple of ticky-tacky modeling questions here. Kind of starting off to piggyback off Woody’s question on the NIM, do you have a sense for what new loan yields were in the fourth quarter?
Steve Crockett, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, South Plains Financial: I mean, Brent, I’ll let you look that up. I mean, I think they’re by and large have been in the mid-sixes.
Brent Bates, Chief Credit Officer, City Bank: That’s what I was going to say.
Steve Crockett, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, South Plains Financial: Maybe a little bit higher, but mostly in the mid-sixes.
Brent Bates, Chief Credit Officer, City Bank: 6.5, 6.75.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: I mean, we kind of had to build in some of that stuff to try to make sure that people seeing some of the rates coming down so that we could stay competitive. But I think we’ve done a pretty good job at locking some of that stuff in.
Joe Yanchunis, Analyst, Raymond James: No, absolutely. High sixes is pretty good.
And then lastly for me, I was hoping you could kind of disaggregate the $500,000 that you guys called out in acquisition-related expenses and then what you spent on consulting. Is there any way to break that down to get more of a core number?
Brent Bates, Chief Credit Officer, City Bank: I don’t know. As far as the $500,000? I’m sorry.
Joe Yanchunis, Analyst, Raymond James: Correct. Correct.
Brent Bates, Chief Credit Officer, City Bank: Yeah. I mean, the $500,000 being the acquisition expenses, that’s going to be in legal and professional services. And then really the bulk of the remaining is going to be in a lot of it’s still in the professional services line item as we’ve got consultants going with us through some of the projects Cory was talking about. That’s going to be several hundred thousand dollars that’s in that line item.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Definitely things once we get through this year, we’ll have a bit more expense. I mean, those will go away.
Brent Bates, Chief Credit Officer, City Bank: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Once those projects are done, I mean, we may have a little bit, we’ll have some amortization expense coming on from some of the items that are capitalized, but the consulting expenses will go away.
Joe Yanchunis, Analyst, Raymond James: Okay. Perfect. Well, thank you for taking my questions.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Thanks, Joe.
Curtis Griffith, Chairman and CEO, South Plains Financial: Thanks, Joe.
Conference Operator: Before we move on to the next question, as a reminder, 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 queue. Our next question comes from Stephen Scouten with Piper Sandler. You may proceed with your question.
Stephen Scouten, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Hey, good afternoon, guys. I’m curious from an expense perspective. I think, Steve, I think I heard you say maybe expect expenses to be up a little bit, modestly higher in the first quarter from the fourth quarter. But how do you think about full-year expense build and what sort of additional new hire activities kind of built into those expectations?
Brent Bates, Chief Credit Officer, City Bank: Yeah. I mean, full-year, well, let’s back up for 2025. I mean, non-interest expense, we did overall kept it pretty flat right around $33 million a quarter. I mean, we’ve got just normal salary adjustments that will kick in. We’ve still got a little bit of the hiring initiatives Cory talked about as far as looking for some mortgage lenders, but also loan producers on the commercial side as well. So really just as far as the commercial lender side, kind of back to what the initial outlook was for that, we’re about halfway through what we had originally planned. So there’s still several folks we’ve got added in for that.
We do have, again, some of these technology projects we think we’ll be getting toward the end of some of that additional expense, but we will see some of the capitalization of a few of these projects that’ll start kicking in as we get a little bit later on, maybe halfway through the year.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: We were pretty thoughtful about the approach that we were taking on the hires that we were doing. Got about halfway through that. We’ll continue on with that. I anticipate seeing another one or two in the first quarter. I think we’ll kind of finish up the year like where we thought we would be. So that’s about nine new lenders that we would over the two-year period. That’s what we thought we would do. And I think you couple that with the production team that we’ve got with BOH coming on here in the early part of the second quarter, I think those will blend nicely together. But expense-wise, keep in mind what we’ve always said is, I mean, we’re chasing a six-month or sooner break-even point on any of the lenders that we’re trying to hire.
Stephen Scouten, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Yeah. No, for sure. And the expense management, to Steve’s point, year-over-year was really good. That’s helpful. Thank you. And then from a deposit beta perspective, if my math is right, it looks like total deposit betas for the hikes we’ve seen, I mean, for the cuts we’ve seen, sorry, so far have been around the 30% range. Is that kind of the right way to think about deposit betas moving forward, or could that be more difficult just as deposit costs on an absolute basis move to the lower end?
Brent Bates, Chief Credit Officer, City Bank: It’s probably a tad higher. We’ve got a number of the public funds that don’t reprice until the first day of the month. So that lags a little bit. So I mean, it’s probably closer to 35, maybe not 40. But I mean, we’re focused on monitoring that and keeping it kind of consistent with those levels. If there’s certain places we can do a little more, we will. If not, we don’t want to see a runoff on deposits in any area. So we’re just trying to be mindful of what else we’re seeing out there. But that’s a close beta, but maybe just a little bit low from what we actually would see.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Steve, just keep in mind is what we’ve always said that we do is, I mean, we still do exception-based pricing. We do it on both sides of the balance sheet, which tells you we’re not afraid to make the cuts that we need to make, but we may have some adjustments that come back in there around a little bit of that. But we’re pretty focused on trying to make sure we keep these costs down so that we can protect our NIM as much as we possibly can.
Stephen Scouten, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Great. And then maybe just last thing for me, the loan growth guide is encouraging up there, mid to high single digits. What gives you confidence kind of in that degree of ramp kind of from what has been the net growth over the last couple of years? Is it BOH? Is it the new hires? Is it just better customer demand, a combination of all the above? Kind of any color you can give to that would be great.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Yeah. I think it’s all of it. I mean, if you look at where BOH has been, I mean, let’s be very realistic. I mean, the likelihood that we would even get an opportunity to have done something with BOH, if they had tons of liquidity, I mean, he has talent in place. I mean, we were able to—that’s one of the things we’re able to bring to the table to help them augment their liquidity to some extent so that they don’t have as much of a cap that they’re having to deal with. But you look at the hires we’ve done. I mean, the organic growth is what we’re as focused on our organic growth. Acquisition is nice, but we love the organic growth.
We love the team that we have in place and the team that we’ve assembled and the relationships that they’ve been able to build. One of the things we’ve been very upfront about is we’ve got a couple of projects, and one of them is making sure that we keep the approval processes and everything working like it should so that we continue to scale this company in a good but safe manner. And a lot of that is making sure that, I mean, we’re timely, that we’re responsive, and that we can actually meet the needs that our customers actually have and the stuff that these lenders are trying to bring to the table. It is not just through an acquisition. It is definitely with some of the organic opportunities that I think we have on our own plate.
Stephen Scouten, Analyst, Piper Sandler: That’s great. Thanks for all your color. Congrats on a great end to 2025 there.
Cory Newsom, President, South Plains Financial: Thanks, Stephen.
Brent Bates, Chief Credit Officer, City Bank: Thanks, Stephen.
Conference Operator: This now concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the call back over to Curtis Griffith for closing comments.
Curtis Griffith, Chairman and CEO, South Plains Financial: Thank you, operator. Thanks to everybody that participated in today’s call. Concluding, we delivered some pretty strong results over the past year while positioning South Plains for accelerating the growth in the year ahead. We’ve recruited outstanding lenders across our markets, and we believe they’re going to bring new relationships to City Bank. We also entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Bank of Houston, which will provide important scale in the fast-growing Houston MSA. We’ve laid the foundation to be a larger community bank, which includes making necessary investments in technology, systems, and processes to grow efficiently. We’ve accomplished much, but we’re not standing still. We continue to look for other attractive franchises.
We believe we have the capacity to acquire maybe another bank of a similar size range, but we will also selectively recruit high-quality lenders in our market and, as Cory just said, really push for organic growth. I’m very excited for what lies ahead for our employees, our customers, and our shareholders. Thank you again for your time today.
Conference Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your participation. This concludes today’s conference. Please disconnect your lines and have a wonderful day.