April 21 - Capital One Financial posted first-quarter results that missed Wall Street forecasts after the bank set aside a larger amount to cover potential loan losses. The company’s shares dropped 2.5% in after-hours trading, extending a year-to-date decline of 16.5%.
Provisions for credit losses - funds lenders earmark to absorb potential defaults - rose to $4.07 billion for the quarter, above the $3.77 billion analysts had anticipated based on estimates compiled by LSEG. These reserves reflect management’s view of future credit risk and are influenced by macroeconomic conditions and lending activity.
Despite robust consumer spending in the quarter, driven primarily by higher-income households and continued wage growth, bank executives warned that a prolonged period of elevated oil prices could pose downside risk to the U.S. economy.
Truist analyst Brian Foran highlighted pressure on Capital One’s profitability from a contracting net interest margin, which fell 39 basis points sequentially. Foran attributed that decline to higher levels of cash and a reduction in loans outstanding, both of which can compress the gap between interest earned on assets and interest paid on deposits.
Still, the firm generated higher net interest income year-over-year, with NII rising to $12.15 billion in the quarter from $8.00 billion a year earlier. On an adjusted basis, excluding one-time items, Capital One reported earnings of $4.42 per share for the three months ended March 31, below the Wall Street consensus of $4.55 per share.
Capital One completed the acquisition of rival Discover Financial Services in May 2025, a deal that added billions of dollars in loans to its balance sheet. The combination increases the bank’s exposure in credit-card lending, a business line noted for higher funding costs compared with many other loan types.
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Taken together, the results portray a lender that is growing interest income while simultaneously wrestling with reserve needs and margin pressures. The numbers underscore the sensitivity of credit-card heavy franchises to shifts in loan volumes, cash holdings, and broader economic risks.