Street Calls of the Week
Huntington Bancshares (HBAN), a $22.79 billion market cap regional bank trading at an attractive P/E ratio of 11.64, reported stronger-than-expected financial results for Q3 2025, with earnings per share (EPS) of $0.41, surpassing the forecast of $0.37. This represented a 10.81% positive surprise. Revenue also exceeded expectations, reaching $2.15 billion against a forecast of $2.05 billion. The stock responded positively, rising 2.15% in pre-market trading to $15.70. According to InvestingPro, the company’s current valuation suggests it may be slightly undervalued based on their proprietary Fair Value model.
Key Takeaways
- Huntington Bancshares reported a significant EPS and revenue beat for Q3 2025.
- The company’s recent acquisition of Veritechs is expected to bolster its market position in Texas.
- Positive growth in loan and deposit balances highlights operational strength.
- Investor sentiment is buoyant, reflected in the pre-market stock price increase.
Company Performance
Huntington Bancshares demonstrated robust performance in Q3 2025, marked by a year-over-year EPS increase of 18% and revenue growth of 14%. The company’s strategic expansion into high-growth markets like Texas, North, and South Carolina positions it well against industry peers. Its focus on consumer and small business services, coupled with digital capabilities, is expected to drive further growth.
Financial Highlights
- Revenue: $2.15 billion, up 14% year-over-year
- Earnings per share: $0.41, up 18% year-over-year
- Adjusted pre-provision net revenue growth: 16%
- Tangible book value growth: 10%
- Adjusted return on tangible common equity: Above 17%
Earnings vs. Forecast
Huntington Bancshares reported an EPS of $0.41, exceeding the forecasted $0.37, resulting in a 10.81% surprise. Revenue also surpassed expectations by 4.88%, reflecting strong operational execution and strategic market initiatives.
Market Reaction
The stock price of Huntington Bancshares increased by 2.15% in pre-market trading, reaching $15.70. According to InvestingPro analysis, the stock’s RSI indicates oversold territory, potentially presenting an attractive entry point. This rise reflects investor confidence in the company’s strong financial performance and future growth prospects, as indicated by the positive earnings surprise and strategic acquisitions. InvestingPro subscribers have access to detailed technical analysis and over 30 additional premium indicators for HBAN.
Outlook & Guidance
Huntington Bancshares provided optimistic guidance for the remainder of 2025 and into 2026, with anticipated full-year loan growth of 8-9.5% and deposit growth of 5.5-7%. The company also expects net interest income growth to range between 10-11%, with mid to high single-digit loan growth projected for 2026. Supporting this positive outlook, InvestingPro data shows that seven analysts have recently revised their earnings estimates upward for the upcoming period, suggesting growing confidence in the company’s trajectory.
Executive Commentary
CEO Steve Steinour expressed confidence in the company’s positioning, stating, "We’ve never been better positioned, and we’re very confident in our ability to drive continued strong performance." CFO Zach Wasserman highlighted the strategic value of the Veritechs acquisition, describing it as a "springboard for future growth."
Risks and Challenges
- Competitive pressures in new markets like Texas and the Carolinas.
- Broader macroeconomic uncertainties that could impact growth.
- Industry-wide concerns about credit quality.
- The challenge of integrating acquisitions smoothly.
Q&A
During the earnings call, analysts focused on the company’s credit quality and deposit pricing strategy. Executives reassured stakeholders of their confidence in maintaining credit standards and emphasized aligning loan growth with core deposits.
Full transcript - Huntington Bancshares Incorporated (HBAN) Q3 2025:
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Greetings and welcome to the Huntington Bancshares Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. You may be placed into the question queue at any time by pressing star one on your telephone keypad, and we ask you to please ask one question and one follow-up, then return to the queue. If anyone should require any operator assistance, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It’s now my pleasure to turn the call over to Eric Wasserstrom, Director of Investor Relations. Eric, please go ahead.
Eric Wasserstrom, Director of Investor Relations, Huntington Bancshares: Thank you and good morning, everyone. Welcome to our Third Quarter Call. Our presenters today are Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, and Zach Wasserman, Chief Financial Officer. Brendan Lawlor, Chief Credit Officer, will join us for the Q&A. Earnings documents, which include our forward-looking statements, disclaimer, and non-GAAP information, and copies of the slides we’ll be reviewing, are available on the Investor Relations section of our website, which is www.ir.huntington.com. As a reminder, this call is being recorded, and a replay will be available starting about one hour after the close of the call. With that, let me now turn it over to Steve.
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Thanks, Eric. Good morning, everyone, and welcome. We delivered another outstanding quarter. The business is performing exceptionally well across all fronts. We have tremendous momentum, and we’re poised to accelerate from here. I’ll cover the highlights, and then Zach will take you through the details. Turning to slide five, there are three key messages that we’d like you to take away from this call. First, we continue to execute our growth strategy with excellent results. All elements of our model are contributing to this growth, and we will continue investing to generate a high level of growth into the foreseeable future. Second, we are achieving top-tier profitability and returns as an outgrowth of our revenue generation and strong positive operating leverage. Third, we are poised to further accelerate our growth in Texas. We look forward to welcoming our Veritechs colleagues and customers to Huntington next Monday.
The partnership and interim planning efforts led by Malcolm Holland and team have positioned us for a fast start, initiating the springboard we envisioned. We’re very excited for what lies ahead. Slide six illustrates the outcomes of these key messages. Our foundational organic growth strategy is to deliver our national scale capabilities and expertise through local market relationships. You can see the results of that on the top of the slide. We have massively outpaced our peers on both loan and deposit growth, the outcome of which is the phenomenal pace of our PP&R expansion. Given our rigorous adherence to our risk management principles, we have not deviated from our aggregate moderate to low risk appetite while driving this performance. Slide seven illustrates how this operational approach creates value. We drive powerful growth. This growth enables us to invest to compound our competitive advantage.
The investment results in meaningful operating leverage, and we maintain disciplined capital allocation and robust risk management to both protect our balance sheet and enable us to take advantage of moments of disruption. All of this enables us to drive long-term shareholder value, as evidenced in this quarter’s results. We grew revenue 14% year over year, adjusted PP&R 16%, and tangible book value by 10%, while generating an adjusted ROTCE above 17%. As Zach will discuss in a few moments, we are again raising our financial guidance for the year. We also have extensive experience in integrating acquisitions and in mobilizing the combined organization to execute on the cost and revenue synergies that we identify. Based on this experience, we are very confident in the seamless integration of Veritechs, which will springboard our growth in Texas. We remain extremely excited by our partnership with Veritechs.
When we close this combination on Monday, we will achieve immediate scale in Texas. By our estimate, we will become the 14th largest depository in the state and the fifth largest in Dallas, ahead of nearly all of our regional bank peers, including pro forma for recently announced transactions. We will execute on the cost synergies we’ve identified, which we expect to drive 1% improvement in our efficiency ratio and approximately 30 bps of lift to our ROTCE. Our greater opportunity is in the revenue growth synergies that we will generate as we accelerate the rollout of the full Huntington franchise into these markets. First, we will leverage Veritechs’ network to deliver the full suite of our consumer and small businesses, as well as digital capabilities. Second, are the fee-based opportunities we can offer into Veritechs’ commercial and consumer customers, including payments, wealth management, and capital markets.
Third, we will leverage our combined scale and the benefit of Veritechs’ deep local relationships to accelerate the growth of our existing commercial verticals and local middle market banking. We’re very confident in our ability to realize these synergies. Additionally, we see substantial incremental opportunities to generate revenue synergy as we further invest into our Texas franchise. We will continue to build out our branch network in Dallas, Fort Worth, and Houston, and expand our commercial banking activities across the state, amongst other actions. As I’ve said, this partnership will be a springboard for our growth in this incredibly attractive market. To summarize, we’re executing on our organic growth strategies to drive industry-leading revenue growth. We’re achieving outstanding profitability, which enables us to reinvest to compound our competitive advantage. We’re poised to springboard our growth further through the partnership with Veritechs.
All of this is driving a high level of tangible book value growth and increasing our return on tangible common equity. With that, let me turn it over to Zach to discuss the quarter’s financial results in detail. Zach?
Eric Wasserstrom, Director of Investor Relations, Huntington Bancshares: Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. Let’s begin with the highlights of our third quarter results on slide nine. Huntington delivered another outstanding quarter with earnings per common share of $0.41. On an adjusted basis, excluding the gain on sale of a portion of our corporate trust and custody business, an FDIC deposit insurance fund assessment benefit, and Veritechs’ acquisition-related expenses, EPS was $0.40, up 18% year over year. Average loan balances grew by $2.8 billion, or 2% from the prior quarter, while average deposits increased by $1.4 billion, or 1%. Reported CET1 ended the quarter at 10.6%, with adjusted CET1 at 9.2%, up 30 basis points from last year and within our target operating range. Credit performance remains strong, with net charge-offs at 22 basis points and allowance for credit losses ending the quarter at 1.86%.
On slide ten, loan growth accelerated to 9.2% year over year, led by strength in commercial lending and significant contributions from our new initiatives. During the quarter, new initiatives accounted for $1.2 billion, representing approximately 40% of total loan growth. Key drivers included our geographic expansion in Texas and North and South Carolina, as well as strong performance in our funds finance and financial institutions group commercial verticals. Of the remaining $1.6 billion in loan growth from the core, we delivered $700 million from corporate and specialty banking, $600 million from auto, $400 million from regional banking, $200 million from middle market, and $200 million from asset finance. These gains were partially offset by a $600 million reduction in distribution finance inventories that was largely seasonal and a $100 million decrease in commercial real estate.
Turning to deposits on slide 11, average balances increased by $1.4 billion, or 0.8%, and our overall cost of deposits declined by two basis points during the quarter. Our relentless focus on growing households and deepening primary bank relationships within a disciplined framework has proven a powerful lever in driving sustained deposit gathering with disciplined pricing. Our teams are performing exceptionally well as we grow our funding base, and we expect to drive funding costs lower with additional Fed cuts. On to slide 12. During the quarter, we drove approximately $40 million, or 2.7% sequential growth in net interest income. This represents almost 12% growth on a year-over-year basis. Net interest margin was 3.13% for the third quarter, up two basis points from the prior quarter.
Operating performance accelerated throughout the quarter on a number of fronts, including NIM, powering margin to outperform the expectation I shared at the mid-quarter conference due to both better-than-expected funding costs and better asset yields. Turning to slide 13, we continue to manage our hedging program to accomplish our objectives of protecting capital from a potential higher-rate environment while protecting NIM from a potential lower-rate environment. Over the last year, we’ve reduced our asset sensitivity to a near-neutral position. Moving on to slide 14. On an adjusted basis, non-interest income increased by 14%, or $75 million compared to the prior year. Our fee businesses were strong across virtually every area, but with notable performance in our key strategic areas of focus. Payments, wealth management, and capital markets collectively grew 13% year over year. Momentum remains strong across these businesses, and we expect them to continue driving fee growth going forward.
In addition, loan and deposit fees benefited powerfully from commercial loan commitments. Moving to slide 15, payments delivered 10% year-over-year growth, propelled by a 20% increase in commercial payment revenues, reflecting deeper customer relationships and expanding contributions for merchant acquiring. Moving to wealth management on slide 16, wealth fees increased by 12% year over year, with assets under management up 11% and advisory households also rising at 9%. Over the past 12 months, we’ve gathered approximately $1.7 billion in net flows as our teams continue to execute against our advice and guidance-focused strategy. Moving to slide 17, capital markets grew 21% year over year, supported by advisory, syndications, and commercial banking-related activities. In our advisory business, we continue to benefit from efforts to introduce this service to more of our middle market and large corporate customers.
The advisory backlog continues to build, and we expect sustained momentum in commercial banking production to carry over to capital markets for another strong result this quarter. Additionally, our leveraged finance and private equity platform is now fully built out and will start to more meaningfully contribute to our results going forward. Turning to slide 18, GAAP non-interest expense was $1.2 billion, modestly higher than the prior guidance due to revenue-related compensation from the robust revenue outperformance in the quarter. Our expense management remains focused on driving positive operating leverage both this year and over our long-range financial plan. As we have noted, we are executing disciplined cost efficiency programs that reduce baseline expenses and create the capacity to robustly grow investments in the business, even as we create overall positive operating leverage. On a trailing 12-month adjusted basis, we have generated 500 basis points of positive operating leverage.
Our outlook for full-year 2025 operating leverage is now more than 2.5% of efficiency ratio improvement, significantly wider than the original budget of approximately 1% coming into this year. Slide 19 recaps our capital position. We continue to increase our common equity tier one. Our capital management strategy remains focused on our top priority of funding high-return loan growth and, second, supporting our strong dividend yield. As we have noted, we intend to continue driving adjusted CET1 higher toward the midpoint of our 9% to 10% operating range. Given our progress driving adjusted CET1 higher and our projections of continued strong capital generation, we expect to have capacity to add repurchases to the mix of distribution in the coming quarters.
Our intention is to approach any share repurchase activity in a systematic manner over time, while also remaining opportunistic to overweight activity in quarters when we believe the shares are significantly undervalued. Our baseline assumption as of now is for approximately $50 million of repurchases per quarter through 2026. We will continue to optimize this amount based on the pace of loan growth and the objective of continuing a gradual upward trajectory of adjusted CET1 toward the midpoint of the range. Turning to slide 20, our disciplined approach is generating powerful returns and driving shareholder value. Over the past year, we’ve grown adjusted ROTCE by more than one percentage point through robust PP&R expansion, while simultaneously increasing our capital base. As noted, tangible book value is up 10% year over year, and we’ve returned over 45% of earnings through dividends.
Turning to slide 21, credit quality continues to perform very well, with net charge-offs of 22 basis points. Forward-looking credit metrics remain stable. The criticized asset ratio was 3.79%, while the non-performing asset ratio declined three basis points since last quarter and has been trending in a narrow range for several quarters. On to slide 22, while economic and policy uncertainty has persisted throughout the year, we continue to deliver terrific performance and are once again raising our expectations for revenue and earnings growth. The outlook I’ll share on this slide reflects both standalone Huntington and the anticipated impacts of the Veritechs close. On a standalone basis, we’re continuing to see strong loan growth and are expecting to hit the high end of our guidance range at approximately 8% for the full year. Inclusive of Veritechs, we expect to see full-year ADB growth of approximately 9% to 9.5%.
On deposits, we also see performance at the high end of our prior growth guidance at approximately 5.5%. Inclusive of Veritechs, we expect to see deposits on a full-year ADB basis growing approximately 6.5% to 7%. On a Huntington standalone basis, we are increasing our net interest income full-year guidance by two percentage points to 10% to 11% from the prior range of 8% to 9%, driven by better-than-expected loan growth and higher NIM. We are very pleased with our management of NIM in 2025 and the expansion we have driven. For the fourth quarter, we expect our standalone Huntington NIM, excluding the impact of Veritechs, to rise between one and two basis points from the Q3 level. As we’ve noted in past updates, we anticipate standalone NIM to rise again in 2026 by at least 10 basis points, driven primarily by continued benefits from fixed asset repricing.
Given our neutral asset sensitivity, our modeling would indicate we could achieve this level of NIM expansion in Fed funds scenarios ranging from zero to as many as seven cuts. We expect NIM expansion and continued strong growth in loans to drive another powerful expansion of spread revenues next year. We expect this higher NIM into 2026 and the continued strong growth in loans to drive another powerful expansion of spread revenues next year. Speaking briefly about the impact on NIM from the combination with Veritechs, we expect Veritechs will lift the Q4 reported NIM by an additional two to three basis points. Of this two to three basis points lift from the acquisition, about one basis point is from PAA accretion. We expect a similar dynamic in 2026, in which Veritechs adds two to three basis points on top of the NIM expansion we anticipate for next year.
We have laid out a schedule of the expected PAA accretion for the fourth quarter and for 2026 in the appendix to the earnings slides. We expect that we will realize approximately two-thirds of the total PAA benefit from Veritechs by the end of next year, with a much smaller amount trailing into 2027 and thereafter. Continuing with guidance on revenue drivers, on a standalone basis, we’re increasing our full-year fee income guidance to approximately 7% from our prior range of 4% to 6%. Momentum is building across the fee businesses, and we expect to carry that momentum into the fourth quarter and beyond. On a standalone basis, we expect expense growth of 6.5%, driven by volume-related drivers and higher incentive compensation.
Throughout the year, our outlook for positive operating leverage has continued to expand from approximately 100 basis points at the beginning of the year to now over 250 basis points expected as of today. This is a powerful testament to the strength of our revenue generation and performance on programs to drive efficiency in baseline expenses while we continue to invest powerfully in the business. For the fourth quarter, we expect approximately $20 million of core PP&R benefit from Veritechs, which equates to about a penny of earnings per share. We also expect to incur the majority of acquisition-related one-time expenses in the fourth quarter, with approximately $125 million to $150 million recognized at closing or shortly thereafter. On credit, we anticipate charge-offs at or below the midpoint of the range on a full-year basis.
The tax rate for the full year is expected to be between 17.5% and 18%, benefiting from some discrete items. Lastly, please note that we completed a preferred issuance in the third quarter, which will result in higher preferred dividends in the fourth quarter and subsequently. We included an updated quarterly dividend schedule in the appendix of the earnings deck. Turning to slide 23, in closing, our focus remains on driving long-term shareholder value. Our performance reflects disciplined execution, a powerful and scalable franchise, and a durable business model. Risk management is deeply embedded in our culture, and our capital and liquidity positions remain top tier. Organic growth continues to outpace peers, supporting attractive revenue and earnings growth and driving value creation. The Veritechs acquisition provides a springboard for future growth. With that, we’ll conclude our prepared remarks and move to Q&A. Thank you, Zach. We will now take questions.
We ask that, as a courtesy to your peers, each person ask only one question and one related follow-up question. If you have additional questions, please return to the queue. Thank you.
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Thank you. If you’d like to be placed in the question queue at this time, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you’d like to move your question from the queue. As a reminder, please ask one question, one follow-up, then return to the queue. Our first question today is coming from Jon Arfstrom from RBC Capital Markets. Your line is now live.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Hey, thanks. Good morning, everyone. Nice job.
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Hello.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Hey, quick question. First question is on the loan growth outlook. Can you talk a little bit more about the pipelines? Zach, you mentioned you felt like growth is still accelerating. I’m not as curious about the expansion-driven markets, but more about the core trends, what you’re seeing, and do you feel like that’s still accelerating?
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Yeah. John, this is Zach. I’ll take that. The short answer is yes. We have a lot of momentum coming into the fourth quarter. The guidance we provided implies approximately 1.5% sequential growth. That’s relative to the 2% sequential growth we just posted in the third quarter. There’s a lot of strength we see right now in pipelines and just the momentum in the business generally. In the core business, in the core of the business, we’re seeing regional banking, for example, continues to power very strong growth. Our broad commercial specialty business is performing very well. We would always expect the fourth quarter to be a quite good equipment and assets finance production quarter, just given the seasonality of that, and a number of other areas continue to perform well. We also see continued strength in consumer.
Auto is an area that has continued to grow sequentially throughout the year, and our broad other consumer lending activities continue pretty well also. Confidence is high for the fourth quarter. As I look out into next year, into 2026, we’re clearly not giving formal guidance at this moment, but our working assumption is somewhere in the mid to high single digits for year-over-year loan growth in 2026 as well.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Okay, perfect. I appreciate that. Maybe Brendan or Steve, can you talk a little bit more about what you’re seeing from a credit quality point of view? There’s obviously a lot of fear and uncertainty out there. Your numbers look very clean, but anything you’re watching more closely and curious how you feel about credit in general?
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Yeah, and we’ve had just an exceptional year in terms of credit performance, and our outlook would suggest that’s going to continue. Everything we see at this point would suggest that’s the case. You know, there have been some issues with different companies and impacting different lenders. We’ve fortunately not had any issues. I trace that back. You know, we put aggregate moderate to low risk appetites in place 15 years ago. You’ve seen our reporting on the consumer side, how tight it is. We’re essentially that tight on the commercial side as well. The policies, the front-end guidance, the active portfolio management, the other controls, the disciplines, the diversification all will help us. At some point, there’ll be a downturn, but all help us significantly. You’ve seen that in the stress tests that have been done over the years as well.
We’re optimistic about loan growth going forward, as Zach said a minute ago, and we’re confident in our ability to manage the risks.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Okay.
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: We’re not seeing anything at this point that concerns us.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Yep, that’s helpful. I appreciate it. Thank you.
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Sure.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Thank you. Next question today is coming from Ananda Salia from Morgan Stanley. Your line is now live.
Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Just as a follow-up to the last question, given the recent headlines around alleged fraud, double pledging of collateral, can you talk about the safeguards that you implement to guard against that?
Brendan Lawlor, Chief Credit Officer, Huntington Bancshares: Chairman, this is Brendan. I’ll take that. You know, as kind of tagging on to what Steve said, the aggregate moderate to low risk appetite that we’ve, that’s been sort of the foundational for us for the last 15 years where it all sort of begins. The client selection, the discipline client selection on the front end, active and rigorous portfolio management as we oversee these loans through their financial performance as well as collateral monitoring, help us to pull out any soft spots that we might see. Because of that active nature, we work with our clients well in advance of anything like the events that have happened over the last month. I feel really confident in our ability to actively manage our book.
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Ananda, we also have always had a relationship orientation. I think that helps us avoid situations like those that have recently been reported because we’re not looking to just make a loan. We’re looking for a relationship. Absent that, we tend to pass. In fact, a couple of ones that have occurred recently, we’ve passed on those.
Great. Can you talk a little bit more about the NDFI book, you know, what’s in there and how we should think about the risk around that book?
Brendan Lawlor, Chief Credit Officer, Huntington Bancshares: Chairman, I’ll take a swing at that. If you exclude out things like loans to REITs and subscription lines and to higher rated insurance companies, our NDFI portfolio exposure is approximately—it’s right around 2% of total loans. Those that Steve was talking about, those loans are really characterized through a relationship approach with a lot of diversity baked in there, and the active portfolio management that I talked about. All in all, as we look at that, we feel very good about how we’re positioned against the NDFI portfolio.
Great. Thank you.
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Thanks for that.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Thank you. As a reminder, that’s star one to be placed into question queue. Our next question is coming from Chris McGrady from KBW. Your line is now live.
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Morning, Chris.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Chris, perhaps your phone is on mute.
Yep, there we go. Sorry about that. Zach, if we think about operating leverage comments, the $250 or so, I guess, medium term, how do you see this trending given the balance of synergies and investments to become larger? Thank you.
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Yeah, it’s a great question, Chris. Let me unpack that for you. Really, really pleased with how we’ve managed operating leverage this year, rising from less than 1% in our budget to over 2.5% now, even as we continue to drive very significant investments into the business, investments growing almost 20% year on year in the business. It’s just a powerful testament to the way we’re managing expenses. As we think about the expense model going forward, the approach we’re taking is very sustainable. We’re continuing to drive a fundamental re-engineering into the cost space, taking out about 1% of baseline operating expenses every year, and then funneling that into offensive investment-related expense categories like technology development, marketing, the addition of new people to build out these businesses. That baseline model continues to be really strong, and that’s our approach for the next several years.
All things equal, when we do budgeting, we start with an assumption of at least 1% operating leverage in any given year and potentially up to 2%. As I’m thinking about next year, we’re still finalizing that budget, but that’s a pretty reasonable range for you to expect for 2026.
All right. Very helpful. Thank you. Maybe Steve, on the strategic question, right? You’ve got a lot of momentum in your business. I think you’ve got a stock that people want to own. Can you just speak to the M&A conversations that might be happening as you kind of close the Veritechs deal?
Chris, I was waiting for that one. Thank you for the question. We’ve done three combinations in 15 years. We’ve invested a lot in the last three years in the organic growth of the businesses, the Carolinas, the specialty businesses, Texas expansion, including the combination with Veritechs. We have a lot on our plate that will drive organic growth. That has been and continues to be our primary focus. We’re extraordinarily pleased and confident of what we have before us in Veritechs, excited to be closing Monday. This past Monday through Wednesday, our board was in Texas meeting with our new colleagues. Brant Standridge has gotten us into a great position for an accelerated start with Malcolm Holland and team. I think we’ve got a lot to go after. Those are the priorities. Again, we’ve had three combinations in 15 years. At some point, there’ll be something else.
Our focus is driving the organic growth of the company. I’m going to preempt the potential another question. We were not involved in Cold America. We are focused on driving organic growth for the company.
Thanks, Steve.
Thanks, Chris.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Thank you. Next question is coming from Matt O’Connor from Deutsche Bank. Your line is now live.
Hey, everyone. Good morning. This is Nate Stein on behalf of Matt O’Connor. You talked about NII increasing again next year, and you gave some specific commentary on the NIM and loan growth operating assumptions. How can we think about your operating assumptions for NII on a standalone basis relative to up 10% to 11% this year?
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Yeah, great question, Nate. Thank you. This is Zach. I’ll take that. You know, as I think about the spread revenue model, 2025 is a great example of how we’re driving it. Strong loan growth, 8% loan growth this year, and 10 basis points of NIM expansion is driving that. You know, we just posted 12% year-on-year growth in spread in the third quarter, which was, I think, about 26. I think the model is going to look similar. You just heard me say earlier to John Arfstrom’s question that I’d expect mid to high single digits in loan growth. From my prepared remarks earlier, I noted my expectation of at least 10 basis points of spread revenue expansion. That should drive a pretty strong outcome or NIM expansion. That should drive a pretty strong overall spread revenue outcome for 2026 as well.
Okay, sounds good. I won’t ask about M&A, but I guess just on the organic growth, you guys have demonstrated a lot of really good growth the past few years and then in 3Q as well. The expansion markets are really ultra competitive. Can you just talk about how you’re continuing to grow in those regions against both the national players and also the very long-standing local banks?
Sure. Nate, this is Steve. You know, we compete against all these banks. All of our markets are competitive. In the Carolinas and Texas, those are rapidly growing local economies. Texas is the eighth, soon to be the seventh largest economy in the world. You have a massive amount of economic activity there. In the Carolinas, we made that move a couple of years ago. We were in early. We have great colleagues who we’ve attracted to the company, and they’ve done a phenomenal job. We’re very, very pleased with the progress we’ve made in North and South Carolina and the build-out that’s occurring. We opened a handful of branches this year. There’ll be a couple of dozen next year and the same the following year. That will allow us to bring the full franchise, all the businesses that we operate today, into the Carolinas.
We’ve also brought some teams on in a couple of adjacent states in Atlanta and a couple of parts of Florida that are off to a fabulous start as well. The average tenure of our colleagues in terms of experience in the Carolinas is a couple of decades. These are seasoned colleagues. They’ve got great relationships. They’re well-established. They’re doing an excellent job carrying our brand forward. They’ve accelerated our profitability well beyond what we thought was possible. In the case of Texas, essentially the same thing. Our Texas teams and middle market teams we put in place in Dallas and Houston a year and a half or so ago turned profitable very, very quickly. They’re growing nicely. We’re number one SBA lender in Texas. We’ve got some specialty and corporate businesses in Texas. Now we have Veritechs. That will allow us to bring the full franchise into Texas.
These markets are competitive to be sure. In the Carolinas, we’re off to a great start. That started several years ago. We’re established. In Texas, we expect to rapidly establish ourselves because we’ve got great new colleagues joining us from Veritechs. We’re not doing a de novo build. We’re already there in scale. As I mentioned, number five share in Dallas. It’s a great position to play from. We’re very excited, as you can tell, about the opportunities before us. I’ll also come back. The core franchise is performing very well. We expect to grow in the core on a continuing basis. I’m optimistic based on the great colleagues we have here and the overall strategies of diversification and bringing our national capabilities through at a local level that we’ve got a winning set of strategies.
Combined, I’m very optimistic about organic growth well into 2026 and potentially beyond, assuming the economy holds up.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Thank you. Next question is coming from Stephen Hatzopoulos from TD Cowen. Your line is now live.
Hey, good morning, everyone. I wanted to start. Steve, you’re one of the very few regional bank CEOs which have been in the seat since the GFC. Even though you feel good about your credit book, you know as well as anybody this is an industry where a few banks can take down the rest. Your stock’s now down double digits over the past month. Steve, are you concerned that there are more credit quality issues out there lingering in the industry?
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Stephen, I suspect there are isolated issues that are in the industry. I think on the whole, the industry has de-risked since the GFC. That is part of what you’re seeing with the rapid rise in the shadow banking system or NDFI, whatever you want to call it. I think the banks are in a much better position today, particularly those that are broadly diversified. Most of us are. Certainly, we are. We’ve managed with this aggregate moderate to low risk appetite in place. You’ve seen 15 years of consumer quarterly reporting. It’s incredibly tight. I think the industry’s, you know, there’ll be some episodic moments and some one-offs, but I think the industry is in very good shape. I’m obviously aware of Jamie’s position comments this week, but I don’t see it broadly affecting the industry.
Many of those who have reported are suggesting the consumer is in relatively good shape. We certainly are. Not seeing forward indicators in terms of delinquency or other measures. Sorry for a long-winded answer. Go ahead, Steve.
All right. I appreciate that answer. If I could pivot just for a follow-up, maybe for Zach. The return on tangible equity is very impressive here. I’m looking at the 16% to 17% medium-term goal you’re calling out for 2027. Are you signaling that the return’s going to decline in that range? I don’t know if it’s the Veritechs deal. Can you just walk us through how you get from the current returns to that target?
Yeah, thanks for the question, Stephen. I appreciate you calling that out. When we set those medium-term targets, we obviously wanted to signal what we thought was the most likely case, but also to be somewhat conservative and give ourselves the chance to beat it. Really pleased that we were able to drive ROTCE up over a percentage point this year and already get above the high end of that medium-term range, which, you know, clearly you can imagine would have us take a step back and see whether we would want to adjust that range going forward. We could potentially do that. For us, the focus is really that kind of dual approach to drive value here for our shareholders. Drive tangible book value per share higher in a very powerful way. 10% growth this quarter in our investor day.
I signaled high single digits to low double digit growth for the foreseeable future of that, but also couple it with a really strong return. We’re certainly doing that now. We’ll give that target some thought as we go into next year.
Got it. Perfect. Thanks for taking my questions.
Thanks, Steve. Have a great day.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Thank you. As a reminder, that’s star one to be placed into question queue. Our next question is coming from Ken Huston from Autonomous Research. Your line is now live.
Hey, good morning, guys. This is Ben Willey on from Ken’s team. You guys talked about the deposit pricing outperformance. I guess, what’s kind of driving that? How do you expect beta to look over the next 100 basis points or so of cuts?
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Yeah, great question, Ben. I’ll take that. This is Zach. We feel just incredibly pleased with how our deposit teams are executing on both rate and volume. Frankly, they handily exceeded our plans in the third quarter on both of those fronts. The execution is extraordinarily good. If I was to show you and zoom in to the last two weeks of the quarter where the rate cut really occurred, we had a 40% beta in the last two weeks of the quarter. That 40% is what we’ve guided before over the long term. It continues to be our expectation for what we’ll see over the course of this overall downward cycle, however it ultimately manifests itself. I think your question was sort of how are we doing it? What I would tell you is it’s an incredibly sophisticated approach that our teams have of managing deposit activities.
It’s all underpinned by the fact that we have primary bank relationships. We say that a lot, but it really is foundational to the strategy. We’re winning the checking and operating accounts of our consumer and commercial customers. We’re gathering other pools of liquidity, and we’re managing the overall rate to be very efficient for us to gather marginal funding. It’s all supported by extraordinarily sophisticated analytical and operational approaches that allow us to do that at a pretty granular level. That’s the playbook. It’s working very, very well. It underlies our expectation of continuing to drive a solid volume into next year. We’ve talked a little bit about our loan growth outlook for next year, but I didn’t comment on our deposit growth outlook. That likewise is in a pretty solid position as well.
We expect to match fund loan growth as we go into next year with core deposits.
Great. Thanks for all that, caller. Just a clarification for next year, the 10 bps of NIM expansion, is that on a full-year basis, 26% over 25%? I guess is fixed rate repricing going to be the biggest driver there? Just any color on that? Thanks.
Yes is the short answer to your first question. If you unpack the drivers of NIM expansion here, the biggest and most significant kind of net driver is that fixed asset repricing. We’ve talked about this for a while. We’ve got 12 basis points of year-over-year benefit in fixed asset repricing in 2024. We estimate this year, 2025, to be around 10 basis points. Next year, we’re estimating at this point 7 basis points of additional fixed asset repricing and even frankly further into 2027 benefits. It’s really driven foundationally by the roll-off yields we’re seeing in categories like auto and equipment leases is a lot lower than our new production yield, something like 70 to 75 basis points today in terms of that difference. That’s really what drives that, and it’s quite sustainable.
We’re also generally pretty asset neutral here in terms of our asset sensitivity position, as we indicated in the prepared materials. That really helps us to buffer the various scenarios in rate. We think that roughly 10 basis points or even more in most likely scenarios is durable under a very wide range of ultimate interest rate outcomes here.
Great. Thank you.
Thank you. Appreciate it.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Thank you. Next question today is coming from Ibrahim Purnwala from Bank of America. Your line is now live.
Hey, good morning. Zach, just following up on the deposit growth, I think the question I had was, as we think about this deposit pricing competition and where you’re able to grow these deposits both from a market standpoint and price standpoint, just speak to the competitive landscape. I think where I’m going with this is, as we think about the balance sheet growth outlook from here, incrementally, is that accretive to where the net interest margin is today or dilutive? Thanks.
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Yeah, terrific question. I think the short answer is accretive. We’re seeing very strong marginal returns. I think the combination of what we’re doing with asset yields, both benefiting from fixed asset repricing, was a little mechanical, but also actively modulating where we’re producing to really optimize rate on the yield side. Couple that with driving down deposit costs is a very intentional strategy to drive marginal returns higher. We’re seeing that. We get a lot of questions, and there’s certainly a lot of interest in what’s the vector right now in the competitive environment. What I would tell you is we’re not seeing anything very significant on the whole in terms of a change. It has been competitive. It remains competitive. We have to be very, very smart in terms of how we operate.
To be honest, it’s a battle of sort of 100 different levers all at the same time. It’s incredibly sophisticated and granular. The team is just executing exceptionally well to drive both low in volume and yield, but also drive down deposit costs and really make marginal funding as efficient as possible. Tight confidence we’re going to keep that going.
Understood. One just on loan growth, sorry if you could address this. Steve, you talked about the bonus depreciation seasonally, equipment finance lending. It’s a strong quarter for Huntington. I’m just wondering, has the tax bill-related sort of stimulus flowing through where clients are now beginning to make those investments? Is that driving increased lending demand as we go into 2026?
Ibrahim, we typically have a very good fourth quarter for asset finance. The activity is firming up now and will be in line with our expectations. I don’t think this will be a record year. Part of that is because of tariffs having some impact on imported components, and then some delays that occur early in the year and just ordering that they can’t get physical delivery now in the fourth quarter. This will be a good quarter, and I think it sets up next year to be a very good year.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Thank you. We return to our question and answer session. I’d like to turn the floor back over to management for any further closing comments.
Steve Steinour, Chairman, President and CEO, Huntington Bancshares: Thank you for joining us today. In closing, our teams continue to deliver just exceptional results highlighted by our peer leading growth, our robust profit growth, and strong return on capital. We’ve never been better positioned, and we’re very confident in our ability to drive continued strong performance. Finally, as usual, I’d like to thank our nearly 20,000 Huntington colleagues who every day look out for each other, for our customers, and have driven this performance. As you heard throughout the call today, we’re really excited for our partnership with Veritechs and to welcome Malcolm and our new Veritechs colleagues this coming Monday. Thank you all for your interest in Huntington. Have a great day.
Conference Operator, Call Moderator: Thank you. That does conclude today’s teleconference webcast. You may disconnect your line at this time and have a wonderful day. We thank you for your participation today.
This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.
