John Stern
Analyst · Piper Sandler
Thank you, Gunjan, and good morning, everyone. First quarter results showcased another quarter of strong business momentum and ongoing execution against our medium-term financial targets. If you turn to Slide 8, I'll start with some highlights, followed by a discussion of trends for the first quarter. We reported earnings per common share of $1.18 and generated $7.3 billion of net revenue, representing 4.7% growth year-over-year. Improved revenue trends reflect strong loan growth in areas like C&I and credit cards, along continued momentum in fee-generating businesses like capital markets, investment services and payments. Average total assets increased 0.7% linked quarter to $688 billion, reflecting steady client activity across the franchise. For the first quarter, ending assets were $701 billion. As a reminder, the Category II transition requires 4 quarters of average assets to be $700 billion or more. As expected, credit quality metrics remain stable, underscoring the resilience of our clients in an uncertain operating environment. As of March 31, our tangible book value per common share increased more than 15% on a year-over-year basis. Slide 9 provides our key performance metrics. We continue to operate comfortably within our medium-term targets for profitability and efficiency. Disciplined balance sheet management and strong returns drove a return on tangible common equity of 17%, while return on average assets was 1.15% this quarter. Net interest margin was flat linked quarter at 2.77% as core loan growth and stable deposit pricing were offset by elevated mortgage prepayments and somewhat tighter credit spreads. Turning to Slide 10. Over the last 2 years, we have increased our tangible common equity 31%, while continuing to deliver high-teens returns on tangible common equity given steady and improving earnings growth. The sequential step down this quarter reflects normal seasonality, along with the impact of continued AOCI burn-down, rather than any change in the underlying earnings or profitability trajectory. As we look ahead, we remain confident in our ability to deliver high-teens returns on tangible common equity. Slide 11 provides a balance sheet summary. Total average deposits were relatively flat on a linked-quarter basis, as record consumer deposits were offset by typical seasonality in our wholesale and investment services businesses, improving our deposit mix. Our percentage of noninterest-bearing to total average deposits remained stable at approximately 16%. Average loans totaled $394 billion, up 3.8% from the prior year or 5.3% when adjusting for loan sales in the second quarter of 2025. The growth was broad based and centered around credit card, commercial and commercial real estate. The ending balance on our investment securities portfolio as of March 31 was $174 billion. Turning to Slide 12. Net interest income on a fully taxable equivalent basis totaled $4.3 billion, an increase of 4.1% on a year-over-year basis, driven by a robust loan growth, funding optimization and ongoing benefits from fixed asset repricing. Slide 13 highlights fee revenue trends within noninterest income. Total fee income increased 6.9% on a year-over-year basis, supported by nearly 30% growth in capital markets, nearly 10% for trust and institutional fees and ongoing momentum across our payments business. As a reminder, our capital markets business is focused on fixed income, foreign exchange and derivatives, including our commodities business. Our pending BTIG acquisition adds equity and investment banking capabilities in the future. During the quarter, we also made updates to a select number of fee categories to better align our disclosure with how we manage the businesses. Prior results were restated for these classification changes, with no effect on total fee revenue. Turning to Slide 14. Noninterest expense totaled approximately $4.3 billion, up 0.8% linked quarter. On a year-over-year basis, ongoing productivity and continued expense discipline helped us fund strong investments in technology and marketing. Slide 15 highlights our ability to effectively manage our expense base while driving top line growth. Disciplined expense management has become foundational to how we operate, showcased by our seventh consecutive quarter of positive operating leverage. Looking ahead, we see opportunities to build on our strong operating leverage story, supported in part by the ongoing deployment of AI and other automation tools to improve efficiency. Slide 16 highlights our credit quality performance. Our ratio of nonperforming assets to loans and other real estate was 0.38% as of March 31, an improvement of 3 basis points from the previous quarter, and 7 basis points from a year ago. The first quarter net charge-off ratio was 0.56%, increasing 2 basis points sequentially, driven by the seasonal nature of credit cards, while our allowance for credit losses of nearly $8 billion represented 2.0% of period-end loans. On Slide 17, we're providing a closer look at our business credit exposure within the nondepositary financial institution loan portfolio given the increased attention on this segment. Business credit intermediaries represent approximately 3% of total ending loans, and these exposures are well structured. Our risk framework includes meaningful over-collateralization, clearly defined industry concentration limits and first-lien collateral. Importantly, this reflects U.S. Bank's long-standing approach to risk management and underpins our comfort with both business credit and the broader NDFI portfolio. Turning to Slide 18. As of March 31, our common equity Tier 1 capital ratio was 10.8%, or 9.3% including AOCI. On Slide 19, we wanted to provide some initial thoughts following the updated Basel III proposals. We're encouraged by the initial proposals and expect to see meaningful RWA relief under both methodologies, particularly in areas like mortgage and investment-grade corporate lending, providing additional flexibility to support clients through disciplined balance sheet usage. While we await final outcomes around key elements such as the AOCI phase-in and the effective date of the new rules, the framework as proposed supports our return to historical capital deployment ranges under both scenarios. On Slide 20, we provide a comparison of our first quarter results to our previous guidance. For the first quarter, net interest income, fee revenue and noninterest expense all exceeded our previous guidance. I'll now provide forward-looking guidance for the second quarter and the full year 2026. Starting with the second quarter 2026 guidance. Net interest income growth on a fully taxable equivalent basis is expected to be in the range of 6% to 7% compared to the second quarter of 2025. Total fee revenue growth is expected to be in the range of 6% to 7% compared to the second quarter of 2025. We expect total noninterest expense growth of 3% to 4% compared to the second quarter of 2025. I'll now provide full year 2026 guidance, which is consistent with our previous guidance. We expect total net revenue growth to be in the range of 4% to 6% compared to the prior year. We expect to deliver positive operating leverage of 200 basis points or more for the full year. And our guidance excludes the impact of the pending BTIG acquisition, which is expected to contribute approximately $200 million of fee revenue per quarter, with an anticipated close date in the back half of the second quarter. The impact of the Amazon small-business card and the NFL partnership are fully contemplated in our guidance. Turning to Slide 21. First quarter results represent another consecutive quarter of operating within all of our medium-term targets. While we are pleased with our continued momentum, our focus remains on delivering consistent, sustainable and industry-leading returns over time. And we have a high degree of confidence in our ability to strengthen our performance and build on these results. Let me now hand it back to Gunjan for closing remarks.