Sharymar Yepez
Analyst · Raymond James
Thank you, Carlos, and good morning, everyone. Let's turn to Slide 4, where you will see the highlights of our balance sheet. Total assets were $9.8 billion as of the end of the fourth quarter, a decrease from $10.4 billion as of the end of the third quarter. The decrease was primarily driven by the reduction of wholesale funding through the use of our excess liquidity and sale of investments as well as reduction of higher cost deposits. Cash and cash equivalents decreased $160.7 million to $470.2 million compared to $630.9 million in the third quarter. Total investments were $2.1 billion, down from $2.3 billion in the third quarter. Total gross loans decreased by $244.6 million to $6.7 billion from $6.9 billion in the third quarter as a result of higher prepayments and repayments compared to the loan production in the quarter as we focused on credit quality improvement efforts. On the deposit side, total deposits decreased by $514 million to $7.8 billion compared to $8.3 billion in the third quarter, although as a result of our efforts to reduce higher cost deposits and broker deposits. Broker deposits continued to decrease from $550.2 million in the third quarter to $435.7 million as of the fourth quarter. As Jeff mentioned, we decreased FHLB advances by repaying $119.7 million in long-term advances as we continue to execute on prudent asset liability management and use excess liquidity at hand to optimize our balance sheet. Our assets under management increased $87.2 million to $3.3 billion, primarily driven by higher market valuations and net new assets. As we've shared in past calls, we continue to see this as an area of opportunity for us to grow fee income going forward. Let's turn to Slide 5. Looking at the income statement, you will see that diluted income per share for the fourth quarter was $0.07 compared to $0.35 in the third quarter. Net interest income was $90.2 million, down $4 million from $94.2 million in 3Q '25, primarily driven by a smaller balance sheet size, the timing of repricing of assets versus liabilities after the interest rate cuts and lower impact versus prior quarter due to collection efforts over previously classified loans. The net interest margin decreased to 3.78% from 3.92% in the third quarter. Provision for credit losses was $3.5 million, down $11.1 million from $14.6 million in the third quarter. Noninterest income was $22 million, up from $17.3 million in the third quarter, driven by the gain on sale and leaseback of 2 of our banking centers, higher gains from available-for-sale securities sold and lower derivative losses. Core noninterest income, excluding non-core items, was $16.7 million. Noninterest expense was $106.8 million, up $28.9 million from the third quarter, primarily due to valuation expenses on loans held for sale, contract termination costs, staff separation costs, impairment charges on an investment carried at cost and intangible assets related to the mortgage company's wind down. Excluding non-core items, core noninterest expense was $77.6 million. You can also see that ROA and ROE this quarter were 0.10% and 1.12% compared to 0.57% and 6.21%, respectively, and our efficiency ratio was 95.19% compared to 69.84%. These ratios were primarily impacted by the decrease in net income and the increase in expenses this quarter. Turning on to Slide 6, you can see our non-GAAP metrics. Pre-provision net revenue was $5.4 million compared to $33.6 million in 3Q '25. Excluding non-core items in noninterest income and expense, core PPNR was $29.3 million compared to $35.8 million in 3Q '25. The decrease in core PPNR was primarily driven by higher non-core expenses in the fourth quarter, which were partially offset by higher non-core income items in the same period. A reconciliation of core PPNR and the impact on key ratios is shown in Appendix 1 included in this presentation. We had the following non-core items during the fourth quarter. Noninterest income of $5.3 million, which included a $3.3 million gain on the sale and leaseback of the 2 banking centers located in South Florida, non-core noninterest expenses of $29.2 million, which included $14.9 million in losses on loans held for sale, which includes $13.8 million related to a year-end valuation allowance on loans classified for sale carried at the lower of cost or fair value, $7.5 million in contract termination costs as part of our restructuring costs aimed at improving the company's cost structure. These initiatives include terminating certain rights and benefits associated with existing advertising contracts and a third-party loan origination agreement under a white label program, $3.8 million in separation costs, primarily in connection with the leadership transition in the fourth quarter; $2.5 million in impairment charge on an investment carried at cost and $500,000 in an intangible asset impairment related to the downsizing of Amerant Mortgage. Adjusting for these non-core items, our core efficiency ratio was 72.58%, core ROA was 0.84% and core ROE was 8.98%. Turning to Slide 7, which shows the quarter-over-quarter comparison of some of our capital ratios. Our CET1 was 11.8% compared to 11.54% last quarter, mainly driven by lower risk-weighted assets and from net income during the quarter, while partially offset by $13 million in share repurchases and $3.7 million in shareholder dividends. We paid our quarterly cash dividend of $0.09 per share of common stock on November 28, 2025, and our Board of Directors just approved a quarterly dividend of $0.09 per share payable on February 27 of this year. During the fourth quarter, we also repurchased 737,334 shares at a weighted average price of $17.63 per share compared to tangible book value of $22.56 as of December 31, 2025. This represented 78% of tangible book value. Turning now to Slide 8, where we show our well-diversified deposit mix along with the composition of our loan portfolio. Total deposits for the quarter were $7.8 billion, down $514 million or 6.2% compared to $8.3 billion in the previous quarter. We had decreases in every category as we reduced higher cost deposits, but had a slight increase in customer CDs. Total loans, on the other hand, were $6.7 billion, a decrease of $244.6 million or 3.5%, compared to $6.9 billion, primarily due to decreases in CRE and owner-occupied loans. Next, on Slide 9, you will see additional information related to net interest income and net interest margin. This quarter, we continued to reprice our interest-bearing deposits to maintain a healthy NIM and saw the cumulative beta at 0.4% since the rates down period started. Moving on to asset quality. As you can see on Slide 11, nonperforming assets increased to $187 million or 1.9% of total assets compared to $140 million or 1.3% of total assets in the prior quarter. The increase in nonperforming assets is the result of rigorous efforts by portfolio management, credit administration and credit review, complemented by an independent third-party firm brought in to ensure timely reviews of updated financial information and risk rating, including the identification of any possible deteriorated conditions to allow us to be more proactive in expediting resolution. As disclosed before year-end, these reviews covered approximately $5.3 billion or 85% of the commercial loan portfolio through covenant testing, annual reviews or limited financial reviews. The remaining portfolio not covered by the reviews consists primarily of small balance loans that are evaluated through payment performance, recent originations in 2025 and loans secured with cash or investments as collateral. We will continue our scheduled review process throughout 2026, and we prioritize efforts on proactive credit quality and portfolio management measures. Now moving into criticized loans. On the next 3 slides, we provide details for nonperforming classified and special mention loan movements during the quarter. In the first slide, we show the composition of our nonperforming loans at the end of the fourth quarter. We have included details of the sufficiency of collateral coverage and the type of individual evaluation performed over them. During 4Q '25, downgrades into nonperforming loans were primarily in the commercial Florida portfolio and certain other loans that have tangible collateral. You will also see the results of efforts to exit these credits via paydowns, payoffs and loan sales with balances declining now in January to $155 million as a result of this work. In the next slide, we have included similar information as it relates to the classified portfolio. During 4Q '25, downgrades into classified loans were primarily driven by CRE loans in Florida and Texas, commercial Florida loans and certain other loans that have tangible collateral. In this slide, you will also see the results of the efforts to reduce the loan balances in this bucket by now in January 2026 when 4 loan sales closed totaling $66 million. We continue to work on the exit of the remaining $15 million credit, which is expected to occur during the first quarter of 2026. Classified loans net of held-for-sale loans closed at $274 million. In the next slide, we cover special mention loans and the characteristics as it relates to collateral coverage. During 4Q 2025, downgrades to special mention were driven by one CRE Texas loan and one CRE relationship with collateral diversified in different geographies. Overall, this composition reflects a disciplined approach to credit monitoring, valuation and resolution as we continue to proactively manage risk across the portfolio. Now moving on to Slide 15. Here, we show the drivers of the provision recorded this quarter and impact to the allowance for credit losses. The provision for credit losses was $3.5 million in the fourth quarter and was comprised of $7.9 million in additional reserves for charge-offs, $800,000 in net change in specific reserve allocations, offset by releases of $3.6 million due to credit quality and macroeconomic factors, $2.3 million due to the reduction in loan balances. In addition, we recorded $700,000 for unfunded loan commitments. During the fourth quarter of 2025, gross charge-offs totaled $29.5 million related to 5 commercial loans totaling $22.3 million, indirect consumer loans totaling $1.5 million, 1 CRE loan totaling $900,000 and multiple commercial loans totaling $4.8 million. These charge-offs were offset by $11.1 million due to recoveries, mainly the recovery of $8 million that we had previously disclosed in the 3Q '25 10-Q. Lastly, the allowance for credit losses coverage ratio was down to 1.20% from 1.37% last quarter, primarily due to charge-offs of specific reserves. Excluding specific reserves, the coverage ratio decreased slightly from 1.23% to 1.20%. In Slide 16, we provide the following regarding financial expectations. In the short term for 1Q '26, we are projecting loan balances at similar levels as of 4Q '25 as exits of credits would offset loan production. However, growth for the year is estimated between 7% to 9% with the higher end driven by funding of existing lines. Our projected deposit growth is expected to match loan growth. We continue to focus on improving the ratio of noninterest bearing to total deposits and the overall cost of funds. Net interest margin is projected to be in the 3.65% to 3.70% range. We are projecting expenses of approximately $70 million to $71 million in the first half of 2026, progressively reducing to $67 million to $68 million at the end of the year. We intend to continue executing on prudent capital management, balancing between retaining capital for growth and buybacks and dividends to enhance returns. And with that, I pass it back to Carlos for additional comments and closing remarks.