Annette van de Solis
Analyst · BTG
Thank you, Jorge, and good morning, everyone. Let me start with the net income and returns for the year. As Jorge mentioned, 2025 was a record year for the bank. We delivered net income of $227 million and an adjusted return on equity of 15.8%, reflecting another year of strong and consistent profitability. These results were driven by sustained commercial portfolio growth, solid revenue generation across both net interest and fee income, disciplined cost management, well-contained credit costs and a strong capital position that continues to support expansion. Importantly, 2025 also shows that Bladex is becoming structurally less rate sensitive. Over the past year, the Federal Reserve implemented 75 basis points of rate cuts. Despite that, we increased net income year-over-year, maintained stable return on assets and kept margin above our target range. This reflects 2 structural improvements in our model, a more diversified revenue base with record noninterest income and a more balanced funding mix with growing deposit balances. Full year net income grew more than 10% year-over-year, demonstrating our ability to perform in a declining rate environment. In the fourth quarter, we generated $56 million in net income, one of the strongest quarters in our history, supported by robust top line generation across both interest and fee income. Moving to returns. Full year adjusted ROE was 15.8% compared to 16.2% in 2024, and fourth quarter adjusted ROE was 14.2% compared to 15.1% in the third quarter. While both comparisons show a moderate decline, it is important to frame this correctly. Returns on assets remained stable in both cases, confirming that underlying operating performance and asset profitability were unchanged. The moderation in ROE was driven primarily by the impact of the [ 175 ] basis points of rate cuts since late 2024 and the higher capital base following the AT1 issuance. In other words, the core earning power of the balance sheet remains intact even as rate decline. Looking ahead to 2026 as we expect 2 additional rate cuts, returns will continue to be influenced by rate environment. However, as we deploy the balance sheet capacity created by the AT1 issuance and move forward towards our target capitalization levels, we expect that continued commercial portfolio growth, further improvement in funding mix and increasing contribution from free base income will support profitability and returns over time. With that context on profitability and returns, let me now walk you through the evolution of our credit portfolio. At year-end, our total credit portfolio reached $12.6 billion, representing 12% year-over-year growth. This was driven by loan growth of roughly $800 million or 10% year-over-year, while contingent business grew 21% versus 2024. Importantly, this growth was achieved with that compromising sector or geographic diversification and was supported by a 9% expansion in our client base. This outcome reflects a planned growth strategy, aligned with prudent capital management and our focus on preserving margin and maintaining strong risk discipline. During the first half of the year, growth were primarily driven by off-balance sheet capital-light activity, particularly in letter of credits and commitments. This allow us to support client activity while preserving balance sheet flexibility in a highly liquid and competitive market. In the second half of the year, loan growth became more pronounced as we began to selectively deploy balance sheet capacity. This was especially visible in the fourth quarter following the AT1 when the loan balances increased by 5% quarter-on-quarter, driven mainly by longer-tenor transactions with attractive risk-adjusted returns. As a result, medium-term loan balances increased by more than $750 million in 2025, while short-term balances remain broadly stable. This mix is reflective of our business model. Short-term loans provide flexibility and active risk management while medium-term transactions allow us to lock in returns where pricing and structure justifies the use of capital. As shown in the chart, the commercial portfolio remains well diversified with a duration of approximately 15 months and about 67% of exposures maturing within the next 12 months, supporting an agile business model. Geographically, growth during 2025 was driven mainly by Guatemala, Argentina and Colombia, with the Dominican Republic contributing in the fourth quarter. From a sector perspective, growth was well diversified across corporate clients, while exposure to financial institutions remain a stable and meaningful component of the portfolio. Overall, this evolution reflects disciplined execution, a capital-aware approach to growth and a prudent risk management. As we move into 2026, the bank is well positioned to continue expanding the loan book without altering its credit risk profile, deploying capital selectively and in line with our return thresholds to support sustainable and resilient profitability. Before turning to asset quality, a brief update on liquidity and the investment portfolio. At year-end, the investment portfolio totaled $1.4 billion, representing a 19% increase year-over-year, in line with balance sheet growth and our liquidity objectives. The portfolio is managed with a conservative risk framework with approximately 91% investment-grade exposure and a composition largely outside Latin America, supporting credit diversification and our liquidity contingency planning. By design, the portfolio remains short in duration and is held through our New York agency with their securities are eligible for use as collateral at the Feral Reserve Bank of New York discount window. Total liquidity closed the quarter at $1.9 billion, representing about 15% of total assets within our target range. As of December 31, approximately 91% of liquidity was placed with the Feral Reserve, reinforcing our conservative liquidity management approach. Overall, our liquidity position remains strong and prudently managed. With that, let me now turn to asset quality. Asset quality remains very strong and stable. As of the fourth quarter, Stage 1 exposures represented 98.2% of total credit portfolio, up from 97.2% in the third quarter, reflecting the high-quality profile of the book. Stage 2 exposures declined to 1.5% from 2.6% in the prior quarter, representing a decrease of roughly $128 million, driven mainly by improvement in credit quality with exposures migrating back to Stage 1, scheduled repayments and maturities and the migration of a single exposure of approximately $20 million to Stage 3. As mentioned in the prior call, Stage 2 provisions this year were largely driven by a single client exposure added in the third quarter from the petrochemical sector. This exposure represents just under 1% of the total credit portfolio and is split roughly 50-50 between trade acceptances and uncommitted bilateral facilities, all with a short remaining tenor. This was an isolated situation, and we continue to see no sign of systemic risk in the portfolio. During the fourth quarter, the client made a scheduled payment, further supporting our Credit assessment. At the same time, we increased coverage as part of our ongoing credit oversight. This explains the increase in Stage 2 provisions even as overall Stage 2 balances decline. Stage 3 exposures remain very limited, representing just 0.3% of total credit portfolio at quarter end. The increase reflects the reclassification of the small exposure that had been in Stage 2 since 2024. Importantly, this exposure was already closely monitored and well provisioned while in Stage 2, so its migration to Stage 3 did not require a material increase in provisions. Exposure represents less than 0.2% of total portfolio and relates to a client in the upstream gas sector. From a reserve perspective, coverage remains very strong. Total allowance for credit losses stood at $107 million at year-end, representing 276% of impaired credits, underscoring the discipline of our provisioning approach and providing a solid buffer against potential credit deterioration. In addition, during the fourth quarter, we recorded $0.6 million in recoveries related to a loan previously written off, reflecting the continued effectiveness of our recovery processes. Overall, while provisions increased modestly due to this single client, they were partially offset by recoveries and upgrades in other exposures that migrated back to Stage 1. The portfolio continues to demonstrate strong credit quality and disciplined forward-looking provisioning. Let me now turn to funding. Throughout 2025, our funding strategy remains centered on supporting balance sheet growth while strengthening funding stability and optimizing our cost of funds. Deposits continue to be the foundation of our liability structure, representing 62% of total funding at year-end despite the usual seasonality we see in the fourth quarter. This funding structure has allowed us to grow the balance sheet with lower reliance on wholesale markets, reinforcing funding resilience and supporting a more efficient cost structure as volumes expanded. From a composition perspective, Class A shareholders remain a structural anchor, representing 35% of total deposits at year-end. Deposits from financial institutions increased steadily during the year, reaching 27%, while corporate deposits remain a stable component of the mix, representing roughly 24% of deposits in the fourth quarter. This growth was accompanied by a broader and more diversified depositor base with the number of depositors increasing by approximately 10% during last year, further strengthening the resilience and the granularity of our funding profile. From a product perspective, the bank's deposit offering remains primarily investment oriented, including demand deposits, time deposits and Yankee CDs. Within this structure, Yankee CDs represented 23% of total deposits at year-end, with about 13% distributed through brokers, contributing to a more diversified and longer tenor financial liabilities. Beyond deposits, we maintain ample access to corresponding bank's credit lines, preserving flexibility to support loan portfolio growth as capital deployments accelerate. During 2025, we executed 2 important transactions that expanded our funding capabilities and investor reach. We completed a Costa Rica and [indiscernible] issuance under our Panamanian program, the first foreign currency bond ever issued in the Panamanian market, which enabled us to begin offering local currency financing to our Costa Rican clients. We also executed a 3-year global syndicated loan with first-time participation from several Middle Eastern banks, raising $150 million and further diversifying our funding sources. Looking ahead, while the pace of deposit growth is expected to normalize, we expect deposit balances to continue increasing in 2026, preserving deposits as our core funding source. At the same time, we are advancing in initiatives aimed at attracting more stable transactional balances, which should support a gradual improvement in our cost of funds over time, with initial contributions beginning in 2026. Now let me briefly turn to capital. Following the AT1 issuance completed in September, its full impact is now reflected in our capital ratio and returns, moderating ROE in the fourth quarter ahead of full deployment. Capital deployment has already begun through new medium-term transactions, reducing our Basel III Tier 1 ratio from 18.1% to 17.4%, still with ample headroom as we continue deploying capital to support portfolio expansion. From a regulatory perspective, our capital position remains very strong. Our Panama regulatory capital adequacy ratio stood at 15.5%, well above the required minimum. Given our fourth quarter performance, the Board approved an increase in the quarterly cash dividend to $0.6875 per share, up from $0.625, representing a 46% payout of fourth quarter earnings. We believe this level appropriately balances returning capital to shareholders, maintaining strong capitalization and preserving financial flexibility to support growth while safeguarding our investment-grade profile. Overall, Bladex enters 2026 with strong capital buffers, a solid transaction pipeline and the flexibility to support balance sheet growth while maintaining prudent capital management and full regulatory compliance. Let me now turn to net interest income and margins. During 2025, we delivered another year of growth in net interest income and maintain margin resilience despite a more challenging rate environment. Since late 2024, policy rates have declined by 175 basis points and the yield curve remain inverted in 2025, creating a less supportive environment for spread generation. At the same time, we experienced the rollover of fixed rate funding raised during the low rate period of 2020, which was replaced this year at higher rates, adding pressure to interest spreads. Active balance sheet management allow us to absorb these headwinds gradually over roughly a 12-month horizon. Strong deposit growth improve our funding mix and supported a more efficient cost of funds. In addition, we maintained disciplined loan pricing and efficient yet prudent liquidity levels. As a result of these combined actions, the fourth quarter delivered the strongest margin of the year with a NIM of 2.39%. For the full year, net interest income increased by 5% year-over-year, and we closed 2025 with a net interest margin of 2.36%, above our guidance of 2.30%. Net interest spread declined modestly to 1.67% compared to 1.75% in the prior year, reflecting the rate environment and funding repricing dynamics. Looking ahead to 2026, while additional rate cuts are expected, we believe that continued deposit growth, disciplined pricing and active funding and liquidity management will allow us to keep margins broadly in line with our guidance. Let me now turn to fees and noninterest income. For the full year, noninterest income reached $68.4 million, reflecting strong execution and continued progress in diversifying our revenue base. As a result, fees and other noninterest income represented close to 19% of total revenues, up from 15% last year, reinforcing the growing structural contribution of fee-based income. In the fourth quarter, noninterest income totaled $8 million. Excluding the extraordinary fee associated with the Staatsolie transaction earlier in the year, quarterly performance remained above our historical run rate with contributions across all major fee lines. The largest component on noninterest income continues to come from fees and commissions linked to our core trade finance and structuring activities, which generated $59 million in 2025, mainly driven by letter of credits and guarantees steady growth throughout the year, generating $31.8 million. Loan structuring and distribution was another important contributor, executing 13 transactions across 11 countries with total transaction volume of approximately $5 billion. Bladex underwrote about 30% of that volume and retained roughly 24% on balance sheet, generating $17.7 million in upfront structuring and syndication fees. As our participation in medium-term structured transaction continues to expand, credit commitment have become an increasingly stable and recurring source of fees, contributing $11.6 million during the year. Secondary market loan activity was an important complementary source of income as well, generating $2.6 million as we proactively manage capital and optimize client credit lines. While activity may normalize following the capital raise, we continue to see selective opportunities in 2026, where pricing and balance sheet optimization justifies execution. In derivatives, income remains modest for strategically important, totaling $1.1 million in 2025. Our focus remains on building the commercial pipeline and deepening client engagement. These early transactions are positioning us to scale derivative-related income meaningfully once the treasury platform is fully deployed in the second half of 2026. Overall, fees and noninterest income performance in 2025 reflects stronger diversification, disciplined execution and growing momentum across trade finance, restructuring, commitment and treasury-related activities. As our platforms mature and client penetration deepness, we expect fee income to play a progressively larger and more stable role in the bank's earnings profile. Let me now turn to operating expenses and efficiency. Total operating expenses for 2025 reached $90.6 million, representing a 13% increase year-over-year. This increase reflects investments to support the bank's strategic priorities, particularly in technology, digital capabilities and business initiatives, including its associated operating cost and depreciation. Personnel expenses also increased, reflecting selective headcount growth aligned with the strengthening of our execution capacity. These investments are directly linked to higher business volumes and long-term strategic execution, and we expect revenue growth to absorb incremental expenses over time. In the fourth quarter, operating expenses totaled $27.4 million, up 20% year-over-year and 28% quarter-on-quarter. This increase primarily reflects seasonal year-end effects, including higher accruals and variable compensation adjustments aligned with the full year performance as well as the continued implementation of key initiatives. As a result, the fourth quarter efficiency ratio was temporarily elevated. However, for the full year, the efficiency ratio closed at 26.7%, broadly in line with 26.5% in 2024, demonstrating our ability to absorb strategic investment while maintaining cost discipline. Looking ahead to 2026, we expect expenses to normalize toward a more consistent quarterly run rate. Cost disciplines will remain a core management priority. We will continue to invest selectively in a strategic initiative and capabilities while carefully managing our talent base to support the next phase of execution. This balanced approach is designed to preserve operating leverage and maintain efficiency ratios around 28%. Overall, 2025 reflects disciplined execution across growth, profitability capital and cost management, positioning the bank to continue delivering sustainable returns as we move into 2026. With that, let me now turn the call back to Jorge and thank you very much.