Univest Financial Corporation Q4 2025 Earnings Call - Record EPS, loan rebound and buybacks planned
Summary
Univest closed 2025 on a solid note, reporting Q4 net income of $22.7 million, or $0.79 per share, and a record full-year EPS of $3.13. After a year of elevated prepayments that crimped growth, loans rebounded in Q4, rising $129.3 million, while asset quality improved as a $13.9 million non-accrual commercial relationship paid off and non-performing metrics declined.
Management is steering a cautious, capital-conscious 2026. They expect modest loan growth of 2% to 3%, NII growth of 4% to 6% assuming two 25 basis point Fed cuts, and a provision range of $11 million to $13 million. At the same time the bank is accelerating buybacks, targeting $10 million to $12 million per quarter, while flagging seasonally elevated liquidity, deposit competition, and ongoing efforts to shift mix toward lower-cost operating accounts.
Key Takeaways
- Q4 net income $22.7 million, EPS $0.79, and record full-year EPS of $3.13 for 2025.
- Loans grew $129.3 million in Q4 (7.6% annualized); full-year 2025 loan growth was $88.2 million or 1.3%.
- Early-2025 elevated payoffs and paydowns eased in Q4, enabling the loan rebound.
- A $13.9 million non-accrual commercial loan relationship was paid off in Q4, with a $449,000 recovery; related residential property remains in OREO at $1.4 million.
- Reported NIM declined to 3.10% in Q4, down 7 basis points sequentially due to excess liquidity; core NIM excluding excess liquidity rose to 3.37%, up 4 basis points.
- Deposits fell $130.8 million in Q4, driven by a $198.8 million decline in public funds, partially offset by an $84 million increase in consumer balances; full-year deposits grew $328.1 million or 4.9%.
- Q4 provision for credit losses was $3.1 million; coverage ratio held at 1.28% at year-end; net charge-offs were $1.1 million (7 bps annualized).
- 2026 provision guidance is $11 million to $13 million, reflecting normalized credit activity and the bank’s economic forecast.
- 2025 net interest income totaled $240.2 million. For 2026 management expects loan growth of ~2% to 3% and NII growth of ~4% to 6%, assuming two 25 bp rate cuts and modest NIM expansion.
- Non-interest income (ex-BOLI death benefits) was $85.7 million in 2025, and management expects 2026 non-interest income to rise about 5% to 7%.
- Non-interest expense was $203 million in 2025; 2026 expense growth is forecast at 3% to 5%. Q4 included roughly $1.3 million of higher variable comp accruals.
- Share repurchases accelerated: ~400,000 shares repurchased in Q4 at an average $32.17, 1.1 million repurchased in 2025 at $30.75 average. Board approved an additional 2.0 million shares; 2.3 million remain available. Management targets $10 million to $12 million of repurchases per quarter in 2026, subject to regulatory capital constraints.
- Buyback activity will be toggled versus balance sheet growth, with the stated goal of avoiding meaningful expansion of regulatory capital ratios.
- Management sees only modest sensitivity of NII to Fed moves due to ALM neutrality, but flagged seasonality and excess liquidity as drivers of reported quarterly NIM volatility.
- Deposit competition has picked up. Univest is focusing on CD retention and shifting mix toward operating accounts via commercial outreach, small business, title company, labor union, and law firm initiatives.
- Ag lending is concentrated in small family farms, largely real-estate secured, underwritten conservatively by a long-tenured, locally experienced team based mainly in Central Pennsylvania.
- Asset quality trends improved in Q4: non-accrual loans to total loans declined 20 basis points to 0.2%, and non-performing assets to total assets fell 16 basis points to 0.45%.
Full Transcript
Gabrielle, Call Coordinator, Univest Financial Corporation: Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining the Univest Financial Corporation fourth quarter 2025 earnings call. My name is Gabrielle, and I will be coordinating your call today. During the presentation, you can register a question by pressing Star, followed by one on your telephone keypad. If you change your mind, please press Star, followed by two on your telephone keypad. I will now hand over to your host, Jeff Schweitzer, President, Chairman, and CEO of Univest Financial Corporation. Please go ahead.
Jeff Schweitzer, President, Chairman, and CEO, Univest Financial Corporation: Thank you, Gabrielle, and good morning, and thank you to all of our listeners for joining us. Joining me on the call this morning is Mike Keim, our Chief Operating Officer and President of Univest Bank and Trust, and Brian Richardson, our Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone of the forward-looking statements disclaimer. Please be advised that during the course of this conference call, management may make forward-looking statements that express management’s intentions, beliefs, or expectations within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Univest’s actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by these forward-looking statements. I will refer you to the forward-looking cautionary statements in our earnings release and in our SEC filings. Hopefully, everyone had a chance to review our earnings release from yesterday. If not, it can be found on our website at univest.net under the Investor Relations tab.
We had a strong fourth quarter, reporting net income of $22.7 million or $0.79 per share, which was a 21.5% increase compared to earnings per share in Q4 of 2024, resulting in record earnings per share for Univest for the year of $3.13. While loan production remained solid throughout 2025, we were impacted in the first three quarters by early payoffs and paydowns. These pressures eased back to more normal levels in the fourth quarter, and as a result, we had solid loan growth during the fourth quarter as loan outstandings grew by $129.3 million. During the quarter, loans totaling $13.9 million related to a non-accrual commercial loan relationship were paid off, and a $449,000 recovery was recognized.
This relationship had been placed on non-accrual during the second quarter of 2025. As of December 31, 2025, a residential property related to this relationship remains in other real estate owned, with a carrying value of $1.4 million. As a result of this payoff, our non-accrual loans to total loans declined 20 basis points to 0.2%, and our non-performing assets to total assets declined 16 basis points during the quarter to 0.45%. Before I pass it over to Brian, I would like to thank the entire Univest family for the great work they do every day and for their continued efforts serving our customers, communities, and each other. I’ll now turn it over to Brian for further discussion on our results.
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer, Univest Financial Corporation: Thank you, Jeff, and I would also like to thank everyone for joining us today. We were very pleased to carry the momentum from the first three quarters into the fourth quarter and finish the year strong. I would now like to touch on five items from the earnings release. First, during the quarter, we saw slight compression in our reported NIM due to increased excess liquidity resulting from our seasonal public fund build during the third quarter. Reported NIM of 3.10% decreased 7 basis points compared to 3.17% in the third quarter, while core NIM, which excludes excess liquidity, increased 4 basis points from the third quarter to 3.37%. As it relates to our loan and deposit activity, loans grew by $129.3 million during the quarter, or 7.6% annualized.
For the full year of 2025, loans grew by $88.2 million, or 1.3%. During the quarter, deposits decreased by $130.8 million, which was primarily driven by a $198.8 million decrease in public funds, partially offset by an $84 million increase in consumer balances. For the full year of 2025, total deposits grew by $328.1 million, or 4.9%. Third, during the quarter, we recorded a provision for credit losses of $3.1 million. Our coverage ratio was 1.28% at December 31st, which was consistent with September 30th. Net charge-offs for the quarter totaled $1.1 million, or seven basis points annualized.
Fourth, non-interest expense increased $2.1 million, or 4.1% compared to the fourth quarter of 2024. For the full year of 2025, expenses increased by $5 million, or 2.5%. Lastly, during the fourth quarter, the corporation repurchased approximately 400,000 shares of common stock at an average cost of $32.17 per share, including brokerage fees and excise taxes. During 2025, we repurchased 1.1 million shares at an average cost of $30.75. This represents 3.9% of shares that were outstanding as of December 31, 2024. On December 10, 2025, we were pleased to announce that the board of directors of the corporation approved the repurchase of an additional 2 million shares.
As of December 31, 2025, 2.3 million shares are available for repurchase under the share repurchase plan. As it relates to 2026, we are targeting repurchases of $10 million-$12 million per quarter. I believe the remainder of the earnings release was straightforward, and I would now like to focus on five items as it relates to 2026 guidance. First, for 2025, net interest income totaled $240.2 million. For 2026, we expect loan growth of approximately 2%-3% and modest NIM expansion, resulting in net interest income growth of approximately 4%-6%. This assumes a relatively stable environment with two 25 basis point rate decreases in 2026.
However, modest Fed actions are not expected to have a material impact on our NII due to our overall ALM neutrality. Second, the provision for credit losses will continue to be driven by changes in economic forecast and the credit performance of the portfolio. At this time, we expect the provision for 2026 to be in the range of $11 million-$13 million. Third, 2025 non-interest income totaled $85.7 million when excluding $2.1 million of BOLI death benefits. For 2026, we expect non-interest income growth of approximately 5%-7% off the $85.7 million base. Fourth, we reported non-interest expense of $203 million for 2025. For 2026, we expect growth of approximately 3%-5%.
Lastly, as it relates to income taxes, we expect our effective tax rate to be in the range of 20%-21% based off current statutory rates. That concludes my prepared remarks. We will be happy to answer any questions. Gabrielle, would you please begin the question and answer session?
Gabrielle, Call Coordinator, Univest Financial Corporation: Thank you very much, Brian. To ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad now. If you change your mind, please press star followed by two. When preparing to ask your question, please ensure your device is unmuted locally. Our first question is from Tim Switzer from KBW. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Tim Switzer, Analyst, KBW: Hey, good morning, guys. Hope you’re all doing well.
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer, Univest Financial Corporation: Morning, Tim.
Mike Keim, Chief Operating Officer and President of Univest Bank and Trust, Univest Financial Corporation: Morning, Tim.
Tim Switzer, Analyst, KBW: First question I have, thanks for all the color on the outlook here. But near term, what’s kind of the seasonality for deposits in Q1? You mentioned the elevated funds at the end of the quarter. You know, how should that move over, you know, I guess, Q1 and Q2? And then, you know, the follow-on to that is, like, what’s the impact to excess cash? And, you know, I think you still probably have more than what’s going to flow out. Like, are there any plans right now to deploy some of that excess cash you have?
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer, Univest Financial Corporation: Hi, Tim, this is Brian. I’ll start out with that one. As it relates to public funds outflow, we expect $100 million-$150 million per quarter in the first and second quarter to flow out. And then you couple that with loan growth that you’d expect during that point in time. So it won’t be fully deployed, say, as by the time we get to the end of the second quarter, but a significant portion of the excess liquidity at the end of the period will be deployed over that time period.
Tim Switzer, Analyst, KBW: Gotcha. Okay, that’s great. You know, how should we think about the NIM trajectory over the course of the year? If we only get, say, one more rate cut, like, where do you think we’re sitting at the end of the year compared to where we are now?
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer, Univest Financial Corporation: Compared to where we are as of the fourth quarter, I’d expect it to be relatively in line to slightly up, if you look over that full, full year time horizon. Now, of course, just because the expansion that we saw from the first quarters of 2025, you expect overall expansion on a full year basis in 2026 compared to 2025, but expect it to be flat to slightly up as we look through the quarters in 2026.
Tim Switzer, Analyst, KBW: Got you. Okay.
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer, Univest Financial Corporation: On a core basis, of course, you have volatility, volatility that comes in on a reported basis due to excess liquidity and the seasonality of that excess liquidity.
Tim Switzer, Analyst, KBW: Okay. Okay. What are you guys seeing in terms of deposit competition? There’s been some talk over. I mean, kind of started last quarter, but it’s picking up this quarter, of increasing competition, pricing getting a lot more difficult, even with the recent Fed rate cuts. You know, what are you guys seeing in your markets? What, what’s been the customer reaction on your end, and, you know, what’s your ability to keep lowering deposit costs?
Mike Keim, Chief Operating Officer and President of Univest Bank and Trust, Univest Financial Corporation: So competition remains and has been, and to your point, in some regards, has increased slightly. From our customer perspective, we actually, we make sure we’re in the range, is what I would tell you is the better answer. Where we’ve been really successful, and we had a lot of success last year, is in CD retention. So we’re not at the top of the market, but we’re close enough that our customers continue to stay with us and move forward with us. And so that’s how we manage it. There is a continued mix that we go through. You know, you talked about, you know, our municipal deposits that, you know, and Brian had some dialogue on just now. Those are a little bit more price sensitive.
At the same time, we have an initiative to go on and get more operating accounts, so we’re trying to change that mix. So we’re working across the board. We need to be competitive. We just don’t need to be at the top price to continue to grow our deposit price or book, excuse me.
Tim Switzer, Analyst, KBW: Gotcha. Okay. And the last question I have is, can you review your ag farmland portfolio and, like, which products are in there? You know, like, how granular is it? You know, what kind of underwriting and credit performance look like? And just with all the noise right now, like, are there any areas of concern right now?
Mike Keim, Chief Operating Officer and President of Univest Bank and Trust, Univest Financial Corporation: ... So our ag book is not an agribusiness book. It is smaller family farms that diversify across, they could be in dairy, crops, livestock, et cetera. Almost all instances were secured by the real estate in conjunction with what else they might be doing. The average loan size is on the smaller range. And these, you know, the team that we have operating in Central Pennsylvania, which is the vast majority of our ag loans, and not entirely all of them, but close to it, has been doing this for a number of years. Our leader of the ag business is actually a farmer himself. So we have a lot of long-standing understanding and history. We have a conservative underwriting approach, and most importantly, beyond that, we have a very diversified business that underlies all these ag loans.
Gabrielle, Call Coordinator, Univest Financial Corporation: Thank you, Tim, for your question.
Mike Keim, Chief Operating Officer and President of Univest Bank and Trust, Univest Financial Corporation: Sorry about- Tim, do you have anything else?
Gabrielle, Call Coordinator, Univest Financial Corporation: I think Tim will have to dial back in to ask their follow-up questions. Our next question is from Tyler Cacciatori from Stephens. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Tyler Cacciatori, Analyst, Stephens: Hey, good morning. This is Tyler. I’m from Stephens.
Mike Keim, Chief Operating Officer and President of Univest Bank and Trust, Univest Financial Corporation: Morning, Tyler.
Tyler Cacciatori, Analyst, Stephens: My first question is just on the margin, and appreciate the color there. You know, we’ve just been hearing some discussions around spread compression, and I’m wondering if you guys have been seeing any of that. And then I would love to hear some more about incremental loan yields.
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer, Univest Financial Corporation: Good morning, this is Brian again. As we look at kind of new loan rates for the quarter, we definitely saw some compression on the commercial side, well, kind of down on an absolute basis, moving in line with the Fed action, so down, call it 40-50 basis points. So we haven’t seen true spread compression, just overall new offering rate compression based on the, the interest rate environment. But things certainly remain competitive out there, and that holds true.
Tyler Cacciatori, Analyst, Stephens: Great, thanks. Then my next question is just on the loan growth going into next year. Heard you on the 2026 guide. Just curious on what you guys are seeing as it relates to payoff and prepayment activity and kind of what you guys are expecting moving into 2026.
Mike Keim, Chief Operating Officer and President of Univest Bank and Trust, Univest Financial Corporation: So as Jeff referenced in his opening comments, you know, the first three quarters of 2025, we saw elevated prepayment activity. That began to slow in the fourth quarter, which obviously helped for our net loan growth in the quarter. We’re anticipating more of a fourth quarter-like prepayment environment going forward. And when you look at our loan growth, the commercial book will grow, and there’s an offset on the mortgage side, where we’ve historically, or the last couple of years, have put up a lot of on-balance sheet construction of perm one-time close loans, which are running off, and we’re going more on the agency-directed product for that.
When you look at our loan growth, you’re gonna see much more heavily oriented towards the commercial side and comparative to the last couple of years, with actually a decline on the residential mortgage side.
Tyler Cacciatori, Analyst, Stephens: Great, thanks. And then if I could just squeeze one more in on the expense side. It’s a bit higher than what we’re expecting this quarter, which I assume a lot of that to be fourth quarter seasonality stuff. If you could just talk about a good starting point for, for the first quarter. And, yeah, I heard you on the, the 3 to 5 expense growth, but maybe just, maybe just touch on, where we’re starting at.
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer, Univest Financial Corporation: Yeah, so as we looked at, kind of the incentive accruals and the like, you have variable comp in the fourth quarter, which was a hit, that was an increase quarter-over-quarter by roughly $1.3 million. So when you kind of back that out, as a starting point, I’d expect us to kind of be relatively down slightly from where we were in the fourth quarter.
Tyler Cacciatori, Analyst, Stephens: Great, very helpful. That’ll be it for me.
Mike Keim, Chief Operating Officer and President of Univest Bank and Trust, Univest Financial Corporation: Thanks, Tyler.
Gabrielle, Call Coordinator, Univest Financial Corporation: Thank you, Tyler. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypads. Our next question is from Manuel Navas, from Piper Sandler. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Manuel Navas, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Hey, good morning. Can I ask a broader picture question on is your buyback pace at all tied into movements in your balance sheet? And, like, if loan growth slows down, could that increase? Could you just talk to that kind of buyback acceleration?
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer, Univest Financial Corporation: ... Sure, Manuel, this is Brian. We look to really what the limiter there or the guide on that is, we’re looking to not grow regulatory capital meaningfully from a ratio perspective. So it is a combination of earnings and balance sheet growth are the two things that play in, that’ll drive us to toggle our repurchase activity up or down as a result of that. But really, with the end goal being to not have expansion of our regulatory capital ratios.
Manuel Navas, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Okay, appreciate that. And the provision that kind of stepped up in this quarter is kind of the right pace going forward, even if loan growth settles down a little bit. Can you just talk about that provision level that you have expected for next year versus the fourth quarter?
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer, Univest Financial Corporation: Yeah. So I mean, if you looked at it from a growth perspective with the guide we provided there, you’d expect for that to not generate as much provision on a run rate basis as to what we saw. But we, we did have, seven basis points of annualized charge-offs in the quarter. So as you look for that to just be something a little bit more normalized in that 12-13 basis point range, coupled with our growth, that’s how we would get to the provision guide for the year.
Manuel Navas, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Okay. I appreciate that. And then, deposit initiatives are key. Can you talk about the deposit pipeline and how those initiatives are progressing? And this is kind of for the commercial outreach. Just kind of talk about that. Talk about that in a little bit more detail, please.
Mike Keim, Chief Operating Officer and President of Univest Bank and Trust, Univest Financial Corporation: Sure. You know, as you referenced, we continue to make good progress there. Let’s start from the top here. We continue to work with our commercial lending team, with every deal that we do and how we go out and seek even deposit-only customers. We continue to move forward with our small business initiative, which is more deposit-oriented than loan-oriented, so driving forward to capture deposits from small businesses that sits and operate in our footprint. And then we have specific programs that are more tailored. We have a title company initiative that continues to gain momentum. We have a labor union initiative that, we started two years ago and continues to gain momentum. And we’re about to launch, in a more formal way, an initiative to interact with law firms, across the board.
We did some tests in our newer markets in Western Pennsylvania and Maryland with regard to money market campaigns and seeing to an earlier question here, what is the sensitivity to the rate that we need to provide to grow and drive new acquisition of customers? So we continue to work across the board on all those initiatives. And then lastly, I talked about this a little bit before, with regard to our municipal banking, our municipal deposits, government banking, continue to look to take that number of deposits. One, try and get a little bit more consistent, so there’s not as much peak and valley during the quarters throughout the year.
And then, two, continue to try and incrementally increase the amount of operating accounts that we have, which will effectively lower our cost of funds and improve our NIM as we move forward.
Manuel Navas, Analyst, Piper Sandler: That was really helpful. Thank you for the commentary.
Mike Keim, Chief Operating Officer and President of Univest Bank and Trust, Univest Financial Corporation: You’re welcome.
Gabrielle, Call Coordinator, Univest Financial Corporation: Thank you, Manuel. As a final reminder, to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. We currently have no further questions, so I will hand back to Jeff for closing remarks.
Brian Richardson, Chief Financial Officer, Univest Financial Corporation: Thank you, Gabrielle, and thank you, everybody, for joining us this morning on our call. You know, we’re excited about our results for 2025 and the record earnings that we had from an earnings per share perspective and the momentum that carries us into 2026. We look forward toward another successful year and talking to everybody at the end of Q1. Have a great day.
Gabrielle, Call Coordinator, Univest Financial Corporation: Thank you. This concludes today’s Univest Financial Corporation fourth quarter 2025 earnings call. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.