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MainStreet Bancshares, Inc. (MNSB)

NASDAQ·Financial Services·Banks - Regional

$24.81

+1.74%

Mkt Cap $164.78M

Q1 2026 Earnings Call

MainStreet Bancshares, Inc. (MNSB) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript & Results

Reported Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Results

Earnings reported

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Revenue

$9.62B

Estimate

$9.70B

Surprise

-0.80%

YoY +8.70%

EPS

$2.46

Estimate

$2.50

Surprise

-1.70%

YoY +12.40%

Share Price Reaction

Same-Day

-1.60%

1-Week

-3.80%

Prior Close

$184.21

Transcript

Jeff Dick:

Good afternoon, and thank you for joining our first quarter 2026 earnings webcast. My name is Jeff Dick. I am the Chairman and CEO of MainStreet Bancshares, Inc. and MainStreet Bank. With me today is our Chief Financial Officer, Alex Vari; and our Chief Lending Officer, Tom Floyd. Chris Marinac, Director of Research for Brean Capital, will join us at the end of the call today with his questions. [Operator Instructions] This is a private chat that won't be visible to anyone else on the call. We will address your questions at the end of the presentation. If we miss your question during the discussion, please reach out after the webcast. I'd like to take a moment to point to our safe harbor page that describes the context of forward-looking statements that we may make today. Please also note that we may use certain non-GAAP measures, which are identified as such within the presentation materials. The D.C. metropolitan area is much more than host to the federal government. With our major universities, tourism, data centers, world-class medical facilities and resident Fortune 500 companies, it continues to be a great place to do business. By the numbers, the median household income is up $10,000 year-on-year and is at $135,000. The average home listing price is $831,000 and the median days on market went from 29 days to 30 days, still a seller's market. Federal Reserve economic data from December 2025 indicates that we have 684,000 government employees in the D.C. metropolitan area. Our market remains vibrant, and we continue to see opportunities. We are, of course, tuned into local, national and global geopolitical activities. And when things happen, we determine the potential impact to our market and to our business strategy. Over the past 2 years, we've been hovering around that $2.2 billion total asset mark. We focused on smart balance sheet management, which has involved efforts to replace higher cost funding. We've made progress on that front, but we recognize that as a community business bank in the Washington, D.C. market, our ongoing funding costs may very well remain a little higher than our peers across the country. We opened our doors in May 2004 as a Virginia-chartered community bank. We've been rooted in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan community now for over 22 years. We often talk about having a branch-light strategy. It's worth a moment to frame how we got here. Many of you on the call today will remember that the check clearing for the 21st Century Act, also known as the Check 21 Act, gave us the ability to deposit a digital substitute check. That law was signed in October of 2003 and became effective 1 year later, which was shortly after we opened. We were purposeful with our put our bank in your office approach, but this was new and unfamiliar technology. Customer acquisition was a slog. Each customer that we acquired was both new to us and new to using this technology. The most common response we heard during those days was, well, we'll bank with you once you have a branch closer by. We solved this by strategically covering our market area with a small number of branches, as you can see from the inset on Slide 6. Today, we still host more customers on our remote deposit capture solution than any bank our size in the country served by our core processor. We recently expanded our footprint to Middleburg, Virginia, our seventh branch opened in early February, and the grand opening was held on April 8 with a good crowd of Middleburg business folk present. The team has been doing a phenomenal job building our market presence in the Middleburg community, having already accumulated over $100 million of low-cost core deposits. Slide 8 shows that MNSB is a small-cap stock that trades on the NASDAQ Capital Markets Exchange and is listed on the Russell 2000 Index. As of quarter end, we traded at 87% of tangible book value. During today's presentation, you'll see directional consistency on our net interest margin, expense control and earnings. Asset quality remains strong, and we are well capitalized. At this point, I will turn the presentation over to our CFO, Alex Vari. Richard Vari: Thank you, Jeff. On Slide 9, we summarize our financial performance over the last 5 quarters. The first quarter of 2026 was defined by execution. We increased earnings per share to $0.48 by combining disciplined share repurchases with a 5% increase in net interest income after credit provision. Our net interest margin improved to 3.47%, while our return on average assets and return on tangible common equity stand at 0.76% and 7.58%, respectively. It is important to note that these results include a nonrecurring $685,000 loss on an other real estate owned disposition. We continue to be focused on becoming more efficient and have positioned ourselves for earnings growth in future quarters. Page 10 highlights our intentional management of our loan-to-deposit ratio to maximize our net interest income. Liquidity remains a fortress with abundant funding sources. Our secured available line increased $76 million to $663 million during the first quarter. Our liquidity facilities now cover over 42% of our entire deposit portfolio. Moving to Slide 11. You will see our net interest margin has expanded. The core portfolio is resilient with the core net interest margin increasing to 3.54%. Over the last 4 quarters, we've recognized onetime events that appear in our reported net interest margin. So we thought it was important to show the net interest margin without these nonrecurring transactions. In Q2 2025, we recovered $1.3 million in interest from a nonperforming asset. And in each of the last 3 quarters, we reversed interest on a small handful of loans we are working through. In fact, the average reported net interest margin across the last 5 quarters is 3.50%, which trends closely to the core net interest margin. You can refer to our presentation of non-GAAP ratios at the back of the slide deck for additional details. Our credit culture is built on pricing for risk appropriately, which is evident in our resilient risk-adjusted yields. This calculated risk model allows us to absorb normalized credit fluctuations while still delivering margin expansion. On Slide 12, you will see we've effectively neutralized the interest rate risk on the balance sheet. This provides us the ability to maintain margin stability regardless of the rate cycle. You might be thinking, well, how can that be? So I'd like to share a little bit more detail on how we've achieved that. Over 1/3 of our loan portfolio is variable or will reprice in the next 6 months, giving us quick asset sensitivity if rates increase. And given that we are already operating in a highly competitive deposit pricing environment, we anticipate a lower deposit beta in response to any further rate hikes. You will see we are also positioned well for sharp decreases in rates. With 87% of our time deposits scheduled to reprice ratably over the next 12 months, we maintain the liability sensitivity that allows us to capture funding relief quickly. And when coupled with our aggressive repricing strategy for variable deposits and robust floors across the loan portfolio, we are well positioned for margin expansion should the rate environment sharply soften instead. It's important to remember that this is just one tool that gives us insight into earnings over the near term. Turning to Slide 13, you'll see a deposit mix that is a direct reflection of our disciplined business customer-focused strategy. Over the last 5 quarters, we have both grown our deposit base while simultaneously lowering the overall cost by 64 basis points. Our progress is not just tied to the Fed's rate decisions. In the past 12 months, the FOMC lowered rates by 75 basis points. However, we have increased our interest-bearing deposits to 42% of the portfolio, while the yield on these deposits dropped 79 basis points. We have been aggressively repricing our deposits as demonstrated by our 67% funding beta for this rate reduction cycle. With the Fed forecast shifting to a flat rate outlook, we still have opportunities to lower funding costs through reprice maturing CDs, as I mentioned on the previous slide. However, we do expect the pace of impact to slow from previous quarters given the highly competitive market we serve and uncertain economic conditions. Generally, as we've seen the yield curve start to steepen, we see opportunities for net interest margin expansion through our deposit optimization efforts on the short end, coupled with loan repricing and new loan growth, which tends to be on the 5-year part of the curve. Slide 14 lays out our estimated expense run rate for the remainder of the year. The company has been diligent with expense control throughout the first quarter and expect to maintain that momentum. Our loan growth expectations are 3% to 5% for 2026. On Slide 15, we demonstrate how our share repurchase program has positively impacted our existing shareholders. Over the last 2 quarters, we repurchased over 482,000 shares, resulting in $0.30 per share accretion. The Board will consider future buyback programs when appropriate. At this point, I'll turn the presentation over to Tom Floyd, our Chief Lending Officer, to discuss our loan portfolio and loan performance. Tom Floyd: Thank you, Alex. As we recap the first quarter of 2026, I'm proud of our team's unwavering commitment to being a consistent and reliable financial partner. That dedication is reflected in our first quarter results where we saw a continuation in loan growth in desirable categories. Perhaps most notably, we maintained our credit discipline, finishing the quarter with net charge-offs at $259,000. Over the next few minutes, I'm excited to delve into the details of our portfolio composition and trends that drove these results. Slide 16 highlights our portfolio diversification, where we continue to see growth in our owner-occupied commercial real estate concentration. This was a theme of our 2025 year, so we're glad to see this continue into 2026 as our energy remains focused on the strategic growth of owner-occupied commercial real estate, which we've grown by roughly $80 million over the last year. As of the end of the first quarter, our portfolio composition consists of 30% nonowner-occupied commercial real estate, 25% owner-occupied commercial real estate, 16% in construction, 13% in multifamily, 11% in residential real estate and 5% in commercial and industrial. Additionally, it's worth noting that nearly all of our construction portfolio has an interest reserve held at the bank. Slide 17 shows our trend in average new loan size remaining low as we have grown. This highlights that in the current environment, we're sticking to smaller-sized opportunities within our market, which is full of diverse opportunities of all types and sizes. Moving to Slide 18, you will see the trend in our stress test estimates over the past 5 quarters. While the estimated worst-case stress loss has increased this quarter to $69.5 million, I want to draw your attention to the strength of our balance sheet. Even under these heightened hypothetical scenarios, our pre- and post- stress test capital ratios remain very strong with a post-stress common equity Tier 1 ratio of 11%, well above the 7% threshold of well capitalized. It's important to contextualize this model against reality. While our stress testing remains conservative and rigorous, our actual net charge-offs have remained extremely low. This, coupled with our positive track record for navigating problem loans, gives us continued optimism about our future performance. To remind you of our rigorous methodology, we utilize loan level testing for all construction and investor commercial real estate. For other categories, we apply the worst ever historical loss rates to current balances, and we mark investments to market and bank-owned life insurance to the liquidation value. This comprehensive approach confirms that despite hypothetical pressures, our actual credit performance remains excellent with low charge-offs and our capital base remains solid, both pre and post stress test. In Slide 19, you will see our classified loans at 3.09% of gross loans, nonaccruals at 2.88% and other real estate owned at 0.06%. While we monitor these closely, the most important takeaway is our history of execution. We've broken out our nonaccrual loans there on the slide, and you can see that most of the nonaccruals are attributable to only 2 relationships. Our low net charge-offs demonstrate that even when loans move to nonaccrual, our team is highly effective at protecting principal. We remain diligent in our loan workout efforts and are confident in our ability to drive favorable outcomes for these specific credits. Slide 20 is a lens into our government contracting portfolio. And here, I'm thrilled to announce the appointment of Morgan Higgins to our bank Board. Morgan is formerly an Executive Director at JPMorgan Chase, where she successfully stood up a government contracting lending practice in Northern Virginia. Currently, Morgan is a partner of Blue Delta Capital Partners, a minority investor venture capital firm focused exclusively on the U.S. federal government market. We've already started experiencing the positive impact of her involvement, and I'm excited about the momentum we're building in this space. Currently, our portfolio has 30 asset-based lines of credit in place where all advances are supported by a borrowing base of billed receivables. As you can see, these 30 lines have balances of $8.8 million outstanding with total commitments of $71.7 million, which equates to a 12% utilization rate. Over the average line's lifetime, this is relatively consistent. Our entire government contracting book only has $1.1 million in outstanding term debt. These loans are amortizing rapidly with an average remaining term of 21 months. The highlight here is the average deposit relationships attributable to this portfolio is $104 million. The portfolio's very strong deposit to credit relationship provides a significant funding advantage with deposits averaging roughly 10x the outstanding credit. In summary, we're pleased to deliver a quarter of consistent disciplined performance marked by continuing growth in owner-occupied real estate and a strategic Board appointment. We have a well-maintained and diversified loan book actively managed across all categories. Crucially, our robust stress testing demonstrates that we remain strongly capitalized even in a worst-case scenario, and our classified and nonperforming assets are at manageable levels, supported by a proven historical track record of timely successful resolutions. We remain confident that our disciplined relationship-focused approach positions us to deliver consistent performance and long-term value for our shareholders and the communities we serve. That wraps it up for our loan presentation. Back to you, Jeff. Jeff Dick: Thank you, Tom. As you heard, the lenders have been busy working on new relationships, especially in the owner-occupied space. The team is also working with field precision on each loan requiring resolution to minimize the possibility of a downside. We've also shared good news about the directional consistency of our net interest margin, expense control and earnings. We'll address questions that are submitted through the portal after we hear from Chris Marinac, Director of Research at Brean Capital. Chris, good afternoon. Chris, are you with us? We may be having a slight technical difficulty with this new solution. Bear with us, please, for 1 minute. [Technical Difficulty] Yes, we got you. Thank you, Chris. Christopher Marinac: Great. Sorry, a couple of settings there. So I wanted to ask about customer behavior just in terms of if folks are more cautious or more optimistic and just kind of how that may or may not impact your new business pipeline in the next few quarters. Jeff Dick: Yes, that's a great question. I think I'll turn that over first to Tom Floyd on the loan side. Tom Floyd: Yes. Great question. I think that, generally speaking, in the real estate space, people are optimistic because they're able to take advantage of certain circumstances for expansion that they feel good about going forward. I think overall, our pipeline is still seeing lots of good opportunities, both that are related to some of the activity that comes along with some of the things that are happening at the national level in the government contracting space. But in real estate, I think we're continuing to see good opportunities. I think people -- it's hard to say if -- yes, I think we're definitely seeing a good amount of opportunities in the pipeline. Jeff Dick: And I think it's probably fair to say also that some of those opportunities might be coming at the risk of others who have struggled. And so from a pricing standpoint in the commercial real estate space, everybody loves a good deal. And so we're seeing a little bit of that as well. But mostly, everything stands on its own, and we haven't seen any real changes certainly in the quality of the folks that we're looking at for new opportunities. On the deposit side, it seems like we've been making a bit more of an inroad. And I don't know if it's a general change in where people are putting their money again, but it's -- the business bankers have been keeping busy. And so yes, we're not seeing anything that would lead us to believe things are slowing down any more than they perhaps already had. Christopher Marinac: Okay. Would the ability to get new accounts on the deposit side possibly accelerate if some of the external kind of distractions or uncertainty, I feel like that may benefit your marketplace more than others. Jeff Dick: Yes, I think so. And in the meantime, there's always that flight to quality and FDIC insured deposits are still seen as a very strong quality mark. So yes, I think as international certainly arena settles down, if and when it settles down, yes, we should see some more opportunities, I think, for deposit growth there, too. Christopher Marinac: Okay. And then the net interest margin still seems like it has some potential positive change as some nonaccrued interest shifts. Can you just talk about the puts and takes on that and perhaps just any new visibility on margin outside of that recapture of problem loans? Richard Vari: Yes. Yes, great question. As I mentioned in the slide deck, we are seeing good opportunities, both on the deposit side to continue lower funding costs. We have a set of time deposits that are repricing. And as the short end has come down, we're going to see funding relief there. And on the loan side, again, as the yield curve kind of steepens, we're going to be able to deploy those at a nice margin spread as our loans tend to fall around the 5-year. I think another thing to point out, we recently announced the appointment of a new Chief Banking Officer, who's really experienced in our market. And he's really bringing a lot of great ideas to the table to increase not only the wallet share of our existing customers, but really expand this result [indiscernible]. Christopher Marinac: And then I guess one follow-up for me. It just has to do with expenses. Do you have any efficiency goals, not just next quarter, but just kind of in the big picture of kind of where you would like to see the organization? Is this quarter a step in that direction? Richard Vari: Yes, absolutely. And if you go back to 2023, one of our best years that we've ever had, we are seeing efficiency ratios in the low 50s percent. And that's our target. That's where we're trying to get to. This quarter, we saw expense reduction, and so we saw our increases in efficiency going lower. And we're going to continue that momentum. And our target is to get back to those 2023 levels. Jeff Dick: Yes, which is somewhere between that 53% and 55%. We think it's absolutely doable. But one of the difficulties right now, if we do put a loan on nonaccrual, it generally means reversing 90 days of interest, which can be hurtful for the current quarter, which we saw a little bit of this quarter. But we can -- once we get to the bottom of that, being able to go forward, I think we'll see some good improvements in our efficiency ratio, and that's really a great focus. Christopher Marinac: Got you. Okay. And then last question for me just goes back to your new hire and the sort of expertise that she brings in the gov con area. Will that part of your business be a lot different as we look a year or 18 months from now? Just curious kind of big picture, how that will be impacted. Jeff Dick: So we're definitely focused on that. I'll turn the question over to Tom in just a second. But yes, from the Board level, we think bringing somebody in with Morgan's background and experience is going to help us to really get a better line of sight into some of the government contractors she -- Blue Delta and what she does as a minority equity investor, everybody wants to have time with that group, and there's other groups in that space as well. But -- so we -- our hope is to try to bring people together to host some events and things where she's speaking and really look at the opportunities. Having said that, the conversion rate on government contract borrowers is -- it's a little bit more of an effort. But Tom, I'll turn it over to you. Tom Floyd: Sure. A lot -- everyone in our market says that they want to be in the space, but I think I'm really excited about how we're approaching it because we're bringing someone on that is a known quantity in the space. And from a number of different perspectives, Morgan can help us with opening doors to new customers and prospects and also just making sure that from an internal perspective, we're doing everything we can to be as competitive as possible in the marketplace. And we are seeing some progress already with actual results. And so I think in terms of what we're going to look like in a few years, I do expect some meaningful growth out of where we stand currently. It's certainly a very strong funding source for us. I think it will remain to be a strong funding source because of the nature of the business. But I do think that overall, we expect to see growth on the lending and deposit side. Jeff Dick: Thank you. As always, Chris, it's great to hear from you. We do have just a couple of questions that came in through the chat. One is as a follow-on to Chris' question, is the bank actively working with the developments along the Route 50 corridor out to Middleburg, Tom? Tom Floyd: Our acquisition and development financing is mainly infill, which is closer in inside the Beltway and just outside the Beltway. We do have some exposure to some people that have data center plans. But in those data center opportunities, a lot of them are like covered land plays where there's an industrial component that still makes sense and there's some industrial current uses that are happening where there's future potential for data center development. So it's not fully dependent on that. But going out that way, there's certainly a lot of growth in development. But for us, we're mainly focused a little bit closer into the Beltway. Jeff Dick: Great. Yes, it's safer. I think it's always been -- when we look back to the Great Recession in 2007, prices of land and property inside the Beltway dropped 7%, while in Southern Virginia, you further out, it was 31%. So we've always focused trying to be close in as possible. The other question is a little bit harder to answer right now because we are in a blackout period, but does the bank intend to maintain an aggressive buyback so long as the stock price is below tangible book value. And so I don't think that you'll see any change in trends of what you've seen in the past, but I don't know that we can really speak to that anymore. Alex? Richard Vari: Yes. I'd just say we were very pleased with our current buyback plan, and the Board is always looking at ways to expand capital in ways that make sense for shareholders. So that won't change, and that will continue. Jeff Dick: So I think that's a safe answer to that question. And as looking at the website right now, there's no other questions in the queue. So I want to thank everybody that participated in the webcast today. We're optimistic with what we're seeing. And like Alex kind of referenced a little bit earlier, 2023 was a banner year for us. Our objective is to get back to that level and then some. But we're working diligently to make that happen. So if you find you have any questions once the call is done, please always feel free to reach out. We're happy to talk with you one-on-one and look forward to that opportunity. Thank you, everyone, and have a great rest [Audio Gap]

AI Summary

First 500 words from the call

Jeff Dick: Good afternoon, and thank you for joining our first quarter 2026 earnings webcast. My name is Jeff Dick. I am the Chairman and CEO of MainStreet Bancshares, Inc. and MainStreet Bank. With me today is our Chief Financial Officer, Alex Vari; and our Chief Lending Officer, Tom Floyd. Chris Marinac, Director of Research for Brean Capital, will join us at the end of the call today with his questions. [Operator Instructions] This is a private chat that won't be visible to anyone else on the call. We will address your questions at the end of the presentation. If

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