S&T Bank Q4 2025 Earnings Call - $100M Buyback Approved Amid NIM Rebound and Controlled Credit Resets
Summary
S&T Bank closed 2025 with solid returns, a near-4% net interest margin, and a deliberate posture on growth and capital. Q4 produced $34 million of net income, $0.89 EPS, a 3.99% NIM (up 6 bps sequentially), and a 1.37% ROA, while the bank announced a new $100 million share repurchase authorization after already buying back $36.2 million in Q4. Management is leaning into commercial lending, disciplined deposit funding, and measured hiring in C&I and CRE to drive mid-single-digit loan growth in 2026, while keeping an eye on asset quality and capital flexibility.
The quarter carried a credit reset. S&T took $11 million of charges tied to previously disclosed problem credits, which pushed NPAs modestly higher to 69 bps, even as the allowance fell to 1.15% and criticized/classified loans declined by $30 million. Executives framed this as aggressive problem-loan resolution that shrinks the future charge pipeline, and they reiterated guidance for stable NIM in the mid-to-high 3.9% range, ~3% expense growth, and continued organic funding via deposit growth.
Key Takeaways
- Board approved a $100 million share repurchase authorization; company repurchased ~948k shares in Q4 for $36.2 million at an average price of $38.20.
- Q4 net income was $34 million, or $0.89 per share; full-year 2025 net income was about $135 million, $3.49 per share.
- Net interest margin improved to 3.99% in Q4, up 6 basis points sequentially, driven largely by lower cost of funds and tailwinds from maturing receive-fixed swaps and fixed loan repricing.
- Management expects NIM stability in 2026 in the mid-to-high 3.9% range, with net interest income growth coming from earning asset growth rather than margin expansion.
- Loan growth was $~100 million in Q4 (4.5% quarter-over-quarter), led by C&I (+$53 million) and CRE (+$34 million), with construction lending central to CRE growth.
- Unused commercial construction commitments rose $78 million quarter-over-quarter, and management says pipelines tightened in Q4 and will be a focus to rebuild in Q1.
- Customer deposits grew ~$60 million in Q4 (2.9%), with DDAs representing 27% of total balances; management expects to fund mid-single-digit loan growth organically through deposit gathering.
- Cost of deposits (Dec) was ~2.50% overall; CD cost was ~3.82% as of December, with management noting CD rates were stickier but are moving lower, and an estimated deposit beta around the 30% range.
- Asset-quality action in Q4 included $11 million of charge-offs (54 bps annualized) tied to previously disclosed credits (two CRE and one C&I), NPAs rose from 62 to 69 bps, and ACL fell from 1.23% to 1.15% due to specific reserve releases and CNC reductions.
- Criticized and classified (C&C) loans declined $30 million (13%) in Q4, and management highlighted a 50% reduction in C&C loans over the last three years as a key defense against future losses.
- Guidance for 2026: mid-single-digit loan growth, quarterly fee income around $13–$14 million, non-interest expense growth roughly 3% year-over-year, implying a quarterly run rate near $58 million, and an efficiency ratio expected in the mid-50s.
- Capital remains robust after Q4 buybacks; tangible common equity ratio dipped ~29 bps due to repurchases but management says ample excess capital remains even if the full $100 million program is executed.
- M&A conversations remain active across multiple geographies, but management emphasized execution of organic priorities and said the repurchase program will not impede acquisition activity.
- Management reiterated they are not deliberately trying to stay below $10 billion in assets to avoid Durbin; the potential Durbin expense if crossed is estimated at $6–$7 million and is viewed as manageable.
- Bank is deploying AI in BSA/AML/fraud detection and underwriting support like auto-spreading; executives say current AI usage already prevents fraud losses in the millions but broader cost or revenue impacts are still early stage.
Full Transcript
Conference Call Operator: Now I’d like to turn the call over to Chief Financial Officer Mark Kochvar. Please go ahead.
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for participating in today’s earnings call. Before beginning the presentation, I want to take time to refer you to our statement about forward-looking statements and risk factors. This statement provides the cautionary language required by the Securities and Exchange Commission for forward-looking statements that may be included in this presentation. A copy of the fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings release, as well as this earnings supplement slide deck, can be obtained by clicking on the materials button in the lower right section of your screen. This will open up a panel on the right where you can download these items. You can also obtain a copy of these materials by visiting our investor relations website at stbank.com. With me today are Chris McComish, S&T CEO, and Dave Antolik, S&T’s President.
I would now like to turn the program over to Chris. Chris.
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: Great. Thank you, Mark. And good afternoon, everybody. Thank you for joining us on the call. I’m going to begin my comments on page three. We certainly appreciate the analysts being here, and we look forward to your questions. Before we discuss Q4 specifically, I’d like to take a few minutes to discuss and wrap up 2025. Overall, we move forward through 2025 very well, producing strong returns, building record levels of capital with increased momentum while receiving external recognition for both our financial performance as well as our high levels of employee engagement. For the year, we produced $3.49 a share, just under $135 million of net income with a 3.9% net interest margin. Loan growth was over 4%, and customer deposit growth was just under 3%, while expenses were well controlled.
Asset quality for the full year was well managed at 18 basis points of net charge-offs, while the ACL declined 16 basis points year over year, reflecting three straight years of overall improved asset quality. None of these results would have happened without the commitment of almost 1,300 S&T employees, who are some of the most engaged and talented employees in our industry. For those that are listening on the call, we thank you for your hard work and your engagement. These numbers and results are yours. You should be very proud. Turning to the quarter, our $34 million in net income equates to $0.89 per share, down slightly from Q3. Our return metrics were again strong, highlighted by a 1.37% ROA.
Additionally, our NIM rose to 3.99%, up six basis points on a linked-quarter basis, which is the best performance we’ve seen since Q2 of 2023, as is our 1.95% PPNR, up six basis points quarter over quarter. Asset quality for the quarter was mixed due to higher charge loss associated with some NPA resolutions, while the ACL declined eight basis points due to specific reserve releases and an overall reduction in CNC assets. Dave will provide more details here in a few minutes. Moving to page four, loan growth was just under $100 million for the quarter at 4.5%, led by commercial banking with both growth in our C&I portfolio as well as our CRE line of business. Customer deposit growth was just under $60 million at 2.9%, and the quality of our deposit mix remains very strong, with DDAs representing 27% of total balances.
Before I turn it over to Dave Antolik to provide more details on the balance sheet and credit, I wanted to bring to your attention the other announcement that we made this morning, announcing our new $100 million share repurchase authorization that was approved by our board of directors yesterday. Given the robust capital levels of the company, we are fortunate to be able to have an authorization of this size available to us. Our capital levels give us the ability to repurchase shares should the market warrant it, while not in any way impeding our ability to consider other opportunities, including M&A. With that, I’ll turn it over to Dave, and I look forward to your questions.
Dave Antolik, President, S&T Bank: Thank you, Chris. As Chris mentioned, the loan growth of the quarter was driven primarily by commercial with C&I and CRE balances growing by $53 million and $34 million, respectively. C&I growth was the result of an increase in revolving balances and new customer acquisitions. Q4 was a particularly active quarter for our asset-based lending group, who onboarded several new names. Categories of C&I growth include retail, utilities, and service. CRE growth was entirely driven by construction funding in the quarter. We continue to see demand for construction facilities for multifamily, warehouse, storage, and industrial asset classes. These loans typically fund over 12-18 months, move to our permanent CRE portfolio, and frequently move on to non-recourse funding sources. Supporting growth in the coming quarters are unused commercial construction commitments, increased by $78 million quarter over quarter.
As a result of the strong funding in Q4, our pipelines reduced slightly heading into Q1, and our focus is on rebuilding. This activity is consistent with our historical experiences. Regarding loan growth guidance for 2026, we believe that mid-single digit growth is achievable while maintaining our asset quality profile. We expect loan growth to primarily come from C&I, where we’ve seen improved activity from investments we’ve made in team leadership and banker talent, along with CRE, where we’ve demonstrated a long-standing ability to develop deep customer relationships in support of growth. We are also forecasting continued consumer home equity growth that is focused on complementing our deposit franchise customers. If I can now direct your attention to slide six of the presentation, which provides additional details on our asset quality performance in Q4.
Starting with the allowance for credit losses, we recognize a reduction relative to gross loans from 1.23 to 1.15% quarter over quarter, primarily the result of two factors. First, a reduction in specific reserves related to problem loan resolution. Second, a reduction in criticized and classified loans of $30 million, or 13% in Q4. This reduction in criticized and classified loans at year-end 2025 represents our third consecutive year of successfully reducing loans in these categories, and over that period, the three-year period, we have reduced total C&C loans by 50%. It is also a reflection of our focus on asset quality as a key driver of financial performance, robust portfolio management, and an aggressive approach to problem loan resolution. As a result of aggressively addressing problem loans, we were able to fully resolve loans totaling $29 million during the quarter.
These resolutions contributed to increased charges of $11 million, or 54 basis points annualized in the quarter. In addition, we recognize new NPL formations that cause overall NPAs to increase by $6 million from 62 to 69 basis points. We have appropriately reserved for these loans and have resolution strategies in place. Although an increase relative to Q3 and the first half of 2025, this level of NPLs remains at a very manageable level. Looking forward, we anticipate full year 2026 asset quality results to perform similarly to what we saw in 2025, with a focus on reducing NPLs and maintaining the lower level of C&C loans that I discussed earlier in my comments. I’ll now turn the call over to Mark. Mark?
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: Hey, thanks, Dave. Fourth quarter net interest income improved by $1.8 million, or just under 2% compared to third quarter. That was mostly driven by the margin expansion of six basis points. The margin improvement came from an 11 basis point decrease in the cost of funds. That was offset by a modest decrease in earning asset yields of about three basis points. We have been able to successfully reduce exception rates and regular rates on non-maturity deposits as the Fed has reduced short-term rates. CD rates have been somewhat more sticky but are still coming down. We continue to expect that our more neutral interest rate risk position and pricing discipline will mitigate any rate down impact, both what has happened and what is expected in 2026. Tailwinds from our maturing receive-fixed swap portfolio, securities, and fixed loan repricing, and some limited CD repricing all contribute to these tailwinds.
As we look into 2026, we expect relative stability in the net interest margin in the mid to high 3.9% range, with net interest income growth coming from earning asset growth. Next slide. Non-interest income increased by $500,000 in fourth quarter with small improvements in our major customer fee categories. The increase in other is timing related, primarily to some letter of credit activity. Our expectations for fees in 2026 remains at approximately $13 million-$14 million per quarter. Expenses were in line in Q4, up by about $800,000 compared to the third quarter. The largest variance was in salaries and benefits. Within that, medical costs were higher and also salaries due to some hirings. Marketing was impacted by the timing of some promotions. We expect to manage our 2026 non-interest expense year over year to around 3%, which implies a quarterly run rate of approximately $58 million.
Lastly, on capital, the TCE ratio decreased by 29 basis points this quarter due to the share repurchases completed in the fourth quarter. We repurchased just over 948,000 shares at an average price of $38.20 for a total of $36.2 million. Our regulatory ratios continue to be very strong with significant excess capital. Even if we complete the $100 million repurchase program announced today, we are comfortable that we will have more than sufficient capital to position us well, both for the environment and to enable us to take advantage of inorganic or organic growth opportunities. Thanks very much. At this time, I’d like to turn the call back over to the operator to provide instructions for asking questions.
Conference Call Operator: Thank you. The floor is now open for questions. If you have any questions, please press star then the number one on your telephone keypad to raise your hand and enter the queue. If you’d like to withdraw your question at any time, please press star one again. Please hold while we poll for questions. Your first question comes from the line of Justin Crowley with Piper Sandler. Your line is open.
Hey, good afternoon, everyone.
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: Hi, Dave.
Hi. Just wanted to start on loan growth for the quarter. It didn’t really deviate from how you folks framed expectations previously, but just kind of bigger picture, curious, is there anything specific that you’d point to that’s maybe holding you back from that ramping to, say, a mid to high single-digit pace, something more along those lines maybe once discussed? Is that a function of the demand side of the equation, or is there a desired pricing component to that? What, if anything, would you speak to there?
Yeah. Justin, it’s Dave Antolik. I think that it’s not necessarily on the demand side. It’s making sure that the asset quality of the onboarded new customers meets our criteria to maintain the lower levels of C&Cs. Some of it is we’re adding to staff. We’re adding bankers. We plan on doing that throughout the year. So making sure that we have adequate coverage in all of our markets and all of our segments. There were certainly bright spots in Q4, as I think about the C&I growth and, as I mentioned, the ABL activity that’s relatively new. So there are some tailwinds to help us grow and hopefully get to a higher rate of growth in terms of our loan.
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: Justin, it’s Chris. The other thing I would add is we do think about the overall state of the economy, and things are picking up in positive, but we don’t want to be out there predicting something that’s dramatically higher than what you see from a GDP growth rate standpoint or what we believe organically is available in the markets that we serve. Dave touched on it too. Our desires to continue to grow teams and bankers in the field. Our leadership in the field knows that there are no constraints around adding more folks to the team and that we’ll continue to do that. But we’re trying to give you our best estimate based upon all of those factors.
Okay. And you mentioned in terms of, or both of you mentioned sort of the hiring efforts. And maybe it’s a mix, but how focused is that on the C&I side of things? Is that kind of the top priority in terms of looking to add new talent?
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: Yes. I would call that our number one priority in terms of moving ourselves forward and accelerating growth in the commercial space. And it’s not just C&I, Justin. It’s both CRE and C&I. We’re doing an awful lot of work in our business banking space as well to focus those teams on deposit gathering and developing new relationships. So it’s across the board. In the fight for talent, we think we have a really good story to tell, and we’ll be able to acquire and add to the teams in order to support growth.
Okay. That’s helpful, and I guess pivoting, just one on the margin. I was pleasantly surprised with the expansion you saw this quarter and looked like some nice moves lower in deposit costs. I think the last update you gave, you were referring to some of the competitive pressures on the funding side that had been maybe a little stronger than initially expected, so curious how that has been trending as we now move through the first quarter and I guess how that sort of informs the mid- to high 3.9% guide on margin here looking forward.
Yeah. I think as the Fed’s moved lower, we’ve seen the competitors a little bit slower than we anticipated, but bring rates down. So we’re working within that framework and are pretty confident that we can hold these levels on the NIM.
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: Justin, if you think about the quarter itself and when rates dropped early in Q4, I would say the competitive intensity around rates was higher than as we moved through Q4 and subsequent drop in rates. The market rates kind of went with it a little bit faster.
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: I think it was a little bit harder for people to cross, for example, four on CDs. That dip below four on CD, that short CD rate took a little bit longer than we had thought would happen. But now that we’re through that, things seem to be moving a little bit better.
Okay. And then maybe just the M&A. I know we’ve talked a lot about it, but just curious for Chris, maybe an update there where things stand, just sort of the pace of conversations you’re having, if there’s any or has been any shift in preference or bias as to what geography or geographies you might be leaning toward or where you’re seeing the most active discussions?
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: No, nothing significant. Justin knows that we’ve talked about over the past couple of months. We are in active dialogue across the geographies, and we continue to make it a priority for us. But we also want to do the things that we have most direct control over, and those are the things that we’re doing to execute every day. So still lots of interest, a lot of conversations. The reiterating is something I said earlier, this stock repurchase authorization that we have. We’re very fortunate to be able to kind of walk and chew gum at the same time that we can potentially, if the market avails itself to the repurchase authorization, that’s great. At the same time, it doesn’t inhibit us at all from an M&A standpoint.
Okay. Perfect. Great. I appreciate everything.
Okay. Thank you.
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: Thanks.
Conference Call Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Daniel Tamayo with Raymond James. Your line is open.
Thank you.
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: Hey, Danny.
Good afternoon. Yeah. Hey, guys. Maybe we start on the loan growth side, but as it relates to the funding, mid-single digits, not guiding to better than that, but it sounds like it could be a good year for loan growth. Loan to deposit ratio now over 100%, I believe. So just curious if you expect to be able to kind of fully fund that loan growth with deposits or if you’re going to be using alternative sources, just outlook on the deposit growth, if you will.
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: Yeah, sure. What we’re forecasting is our ability to fund that internally through deposit growth. We saw a really strong Q4 in terms of customer deposit growth, particularly in the consumer space. It was offset a little bit by some activity with some large commercial depositors that we consider more anomalous than anything. So I think that with the focus and the investments that we’ve made in technology, people, campaigning, we’re really focused in on driving core deposit growth, and we think we can achieve a balanced loan and deposit growth trajectory.
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: Yeah. Danny, it’s Chris. If we’re able to show you the team’s incentive plan, you would see very clearly where the importance of deposit growth and funding our asset growth through continued expansion and customer relationships. So we know in order to maximize profitable growth, the funding needs to come from the continued growth in our already strong core deposit franchise. And that’s a key focus for all of us in all lines of business.
Okay. And on the cost side, I suppose, I mean, this is kind of related to that as well as what your commentary earlier about repricing the current deposits. What do you have in terms of implied or assumed deposit betas in the margin guidance?
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: I mean, we have maybe in our plan, we have a couple more cuts sort of built in. I mean, it’s complicated because on the asset side, things are moving the other way, but on the deposit side, the betas are probably in the 30 range overall.
Okay. All right. Great. And then I guess one last one for you, Chris. You talked about the M&A, and you obviously have this buyback announcement from a capital perspective, but you’re obviously just under 10 billion, but you’ve been able to kind of flatten out the asset growth over the last few quarters. I’m modeling in, I think you talked about last quarter likely crossing 10 billion next year, but is there a way or a desire to potentially keep that under 10 billion through next year and push the Durbin hit out of here?
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: At this point, Danny, we’re not thinking that way. We believe that our Durbin hit is relatively small at $6 million-$7 million. There’s certainly some things that you could do, Mark and the team could do, but our focus right now is to continue to grow and show some reasonable growth. If we end up with 5% loan growth for the year, 6% in that range, you’re talking about $500 million worth of loan growth, and that would put us kind of meaningfully over the $10 billion, and then we’d have the good part of 2027 to work through that. So our focus is to continue to execute and recognize that that’s a potential headwind, but it’s also something that we can also celebrate because it’s been talked about for too long to stay around that level.
Understood and agreed. We’re all looking forward to not talking about that anymore.
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: Think about it, Danny. The call would be 10 minutes shorter.
I’ll scratch that off my question for. All right, guys. That’s all I have. Thanks a lot.
Thank you.
Conference Call Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Kelly Motta with KBW. The line is open.
Hi. This is Charlie Onfer, Kelly. Thanks for taking my questions, guys.
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: Sure.
Conference Call Operator: Just to hit on asset quality quickly, can you provide more color on the specific resolution of the NPAs that drove kind of the $11 million in charge-offs and whether that relates to the two CRE and one C&I credit you guys identified last quarter?
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: Yep. Yep.
Yeah. Just got that.
Yeah. They’re directly related to those previously identified and talked about credits. We were able to bring those to resolution, recognize the charge, reduce specific reserves as a result. We also had, as I mentioned, formations in the quarter that were both C&I and CRE, and we appropriately reserved for those, and we have resolution strategies in place for those credits as well. I want to reemphasize the importance of the progress we’ve made in terms of the criticized and classified reductions over the last three years. If you think about, we talk a lot about loan pipeline and where’s growth going, that CNC bucket is the pipeline for future charges and NPLs. Having reduced that by 50% over the last three years reduces the amount of problem loans coming into the funnel that could potentially lead to further deterioration or charges within our book.
So that’s why we feel good about being able to say, "Hey, look, asset quality in 2026 is not going to perform any worse than 2025." And our focus on reducing NPAs and the feeder pipeline of CNCs has taken hold and is really our focus.
Conference Call Operator: That’s helpful. Thank you. And then turning to expenses, it seems like growth is going to be expected to be strong. And you guys saw 4% expense growth this year. Is that kind of a fair run rate in the years ahead? I know you mentioned adding talent in the C&I and CRE verticals and made investments already. Just if you could speak to initiatives ahead and maybe secondly, if there’s room on the efficiency ratio or is the mid-50s a good sustainable place to operate from? Thank you.
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: Sure. I’ll start at the last one. I think mid-50s is a place to look for the efficiency ratio to be. On the expense side, we don’t think we have a lot of infrastructure built. We’ve invested a lot over the last few years on the staffing side for a lot of our support areas. So the FTE growth that we expect in this year and really for a couple of years after that will be mostly production-related. So that limits the overall increase on the salary and benefit side. So we’re working with about a 3% year-over-year expense increase. So we were pretty confident that we could hold to that going into this year.
Conference Call Operator: That’s great. Thank you. I’ll step back. Thanks for taking my questions.
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: Thank you, Charlie.
Conference Call Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Matthew Breese with Stephens. The line is open.
Hey, good afternoon.
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: Hey, Matt.
Hey, Matt. A few more questions for me. First, loan yields this quarter held up a bit better than what I was expecting. And so I’m curious what the roll-on yields are versus roll-off today, and maybe what are expectations for backbook repricing in 2026?
We’re still getting a little bit of positive on the fixed side, and we’re also getting benefit from this received swap book that we have. So that’s been helping a lot to support the lack of declines on the asset side. Although that tailwind, if you will, starts to diminish as we get farther into the year. So by the end of the fourth quarter, a lot of that will be gone. The replacement yields are not all that different on the floating side. I mean, they’re just kind of coming up and going on, but we are still picking up maybe 25 basis points on other more fixed products yet.
And do you have the maturities for fixed asset repricing or fixed loan repricing in 2026?
The dollar amounts?
Yeah.
We have what, about $1 billion or so that we have to replace every year. Some of that will be our prepayments and also amortizing loans, so kind of a mix of that.
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: It’s a mix of fixed and float.
Yeah. Got it. Okay. And then do you have the updated cost of funds either or cost of deposits either at year-end or more recently? One of the things I was looking at, CD costs just look a little elevated here at 3.86%. I’m assuming there’s quite a bit of downside as we think about rate cuts, additional rate cuts, and the maturity schedule there, what CD cost could be a year from now.
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: Yep, so they have a monthly margin from December that gets us a little bit closer. For that period, our CDs were about at a 382, and overall deposits were about a 250.
250 for interest bearing?
Yes. Yeah. That doesn’t include DDA. It’s just.
Thank you. I guess the last one for me, a lot of the questions have been exhausted, but for community banks, what are you doing or what are you using for AI tools at this point? How are you using them? And as we look ahead, whether it’s a year or five years, how do you think those tools might impact your P&L?
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: Yeah. Obviously, in some of these areas, things are early days, but in other areas, it’s work that is really important to our company. I think about in the area of BSA, AML compliance, and some of the fraud protection that occurs in our company every day relative primarily to our deposit book and anomalies that are happening within commercial and consumer deposit relationships. So all of that information that’s coming to our financial intelligence group is AI-driven, and alerts are created. And it has been a big factor in our ability to find potential fraud and make sure that we’re stopping things before they actually happen. And it’s millions of dollars of savings that we see on a quarterly and annual basis around potential things, all coming from what you would consider some sort of AI alert.
We’re also thinking about generally regulatory compliance, consumer compliance, and the ability to use AI there. Within our commercial bank, the underwriting and portfolio management infrastructure that we have has increasing levels of AI support to do things like auto spreading of financial statements. Support for what will continue to mature will be support around underwriting for originations as well as portfolio management. We’re also using it to enhance our communication. Just this month, some of the work that we’re doing in communicating to our board, we’re running through some AI tools to help us communicate more effectively. So it’s a lot of kind of some experimentation. Obviously, there’s a big level of risk management associated with it. This is our information that we have to protect, and we have to make sure that it’s not available elsewhere. So we’re working on that.
We’ve got a working group that thinks about these things, but it’ll continue to evolve, and it is a priority for us. We talked about expense growth in the year, and the commitment that we have is all FTE growth, people expense growth will come in customer-facing and revenue-producing roles. We believe that back office support, those sorts of things should be able to be held flat, and that’s kind of a forcing mechanism to make sure that we’re looking at opportunities from a technology standpoint.
How far away are we from the, you said, millions of savings? How far away are we from that actually impacting guidance and your outlook?
Oh, a long way. Again, it’s still early days. And when I’m talking about millions of savings, these are fraud alerts that are protecting our customers from potential losses that could have occurred otherwise. So as it relates to significant increases in operating expenses, we’ve got a ways to go, I think.
Yes. I’ll leave it there. Thank you very much for all that. Appreciate it.
Sure.
Conference Call Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Dave Bishop with Hovde Group. The line is open.
Yeah. Thank you. Good afternoon.
Hey.
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: Hey.
Quick question for you. Most of my questions have been asked and answered, but in terms of origination, loan production this quarter versus payoffs, just curious maybe how those compared the fourth quarter to the second and third quarters? Thanks.
Mark Kochvar, Chief Financial Officer, S&T Bank: Yeah. Fourth quarter was robust. Originations were strong in Q4. We did have elevated payoffs in Q4 that talked about the kind of the construction cycle. A lot of those loans were refinanced out of the bank in Q4. And it led to some pipeline burn that we’re actively rebuilding now and would hope to regain our momentum as we add additional bankers incrementally, add to what our experience has been over the past year or two. So we, in total, need to originate somewhere around $1.5 billion-$1.7 billion in total new loans each year to drive a 5%-7% net loan growth number.
Got it. And in terms of the targeted banker adds this year, any geographies burning a hole in your pocket more than others as you budget out this year? Thanks.
Yeah. We’re kind of agnostic relative to the geography. We know we need to add to the C&I teams. CRE, we’re pretty well healed in terms of the legacy markets. But if we can find an additional banker who can help us grow, we’re going to hire them. As Chris mentioned, the focus of the leads of both the commercial real estate and C&I groups, our ABL group, is to add additional bankers in order to further enhance customer acquisition. And hopefully, that translates into additional loan and more specifically deposit growth. So it might be treasury management officers. It could be TRE bankers. It could be C&I bankers. We’re looking to grow all facets of our commercial teams and the products that they offer.
Great. Thank you for that, Colin.
Conference Call Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Daniel Cardenas with Janney Montgomery Scott. Your line is open.
Hey. Good afternoon, guys.
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: Hey, Dan.
Hey, Dan. Just most of my questions have been asked and answered. But maybe could you provide a little bit of color as to competitive factors on the deposit side, given your goal to fund loan growth with deposits? Are the markets that you operate, are they behaving rationally right now? Or how would you kind of describe those?
Yeah. We talked a little bit about that earlier. I would say that early in Q4, as rates started coming down and that 4% number was out there when you’re talking about the CD book, there was some pressure from competitors to what I would call hold on to what I have and offer an elevated rate. We were a little surprised that folks kind of reacted as slowly as they did. And I think particularly in the month of October, maybe even into early November. But second half of the quarter, things became more rational. We don’t aggressively post and advertise aggressive rates in the market, generally speaking. We operate with what I would call a very responsive exception pricing process that kind of combines the ability for our team leaders in the field to make decisions with the proper level of oversight between Mark’s teams and Dave’s teams.
That has worked really well for us, both in the ability to attract new deposits as well as to retain things from a competitive standpoint. We feel optimistic about our ability to respond to the information that we’re getting to make decisions around. That’s a big reason why we believe we should be growing deposits, at least at the rate that we’re projecting our loan growth.
Excellent. Got it. Great. That’s all I have for right now. I’ll step back. Thanks.
Okay. Thank you, Dan.
Thank you.
Conference Call Operator: With no further questions in queue, I would like to turn the call over to Chief Executive Officer Chris McComish for closing remarks.
Chris McComish, CEO, S&T Bank: Well, listen, thanks all for being on the call with us. And we appreciate your engagement and your guidance. Be safe out there. There’s a lot of nasty weather coming in various parts of the Midwest in particular, but we look forward to a successful 2026. We’re certainly very proud of 2025, and we look forward to moving forward. So have a great rest of the day.
Conference Call Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. You may now disconnect.