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Northpointe Bancshares, Inc. (NPB) reported its third-quarter earnings for 2025, showcasing a solid performance driven by significant loan growth and a stable interest rate environment. The company achieved earnings of $20.1 million, or $0.57 per diluted share. The stock, however, saw a slight decline of 1.19%, closing at $16.85, as investors digested the earnings details. According to InvestingPro analysis, the bank, currently valued at $497.49 million, has demonstrated strong momentum with a 29% price return over the past six months, though current trading levels suggest the stock is slightly overvalued relative to its Fair Value.
Key Takeaways
- Northpointe reported a net interest margin of 2.47%.
- The Mortgage Purchase Program (MPP) ended the quarter with $3.4 billion in balances.
- The company increased its deposit base to $4.8 billion.
- Refinance activity surged to 50% of the volume in September.
Company Performance
Northpointe Bancshares demonstrated robust growth in its loan portfolio, particularly through its Mortgage Purchase Program, which saw a $473 million increase in balances from the previous quarter. The company also reported a tangible book value per share increase of 15.8% annualized, reflecting its strong operational performance. The banking sector’s stable interest rate environment has supported Northpointe’s growth, with expectations of a further decrease in mortgage rates by 30-40 basis points.
Financial Highlights
- Revenue: Not specified in the call summary.
- Earnings per share: $0.57 for Q3 2025.
- Return on Assets: 1.34%
- Return on Average Tangible Common Equity: 15.41%
- Net Interest Margin: 2.47%
Outlook & Guidance
Looking ahead, Northpointe expects its MPP balances to increase by $50-$100 million by the end of 2025. The company projects its AIO loan balances to reach between $740 million and $760 million. For 2026, Northpointe anticipates MPP balances to grow to $4.1-$4.3 billion and AIO loan balances to range from $900 million to $1 billion. Additionally, the company is preparing for potential interest rate cuts, with expectations of four 25 basis point reductions. Analyst consensus appears optimistic about the company’s growth trajectory, with price targets ranging from $19.25 to $21.00, suggesting potential upside from current levels.
Executive Commentary
Chairman and CEO Chuck Williams emphasized the company’s strategic focus, stating, "We remain nimble and opportunistic, focusing on delivering strong growth and long-term shareholder value." President Kevin Comps reassured investors about the company’s credit quality, noting, "We are not seeing any systemic credit quality or borrower issues in any of our portfolios."
Risks and Challenges
- Potential interest rate fluctuations could impact net interest margins.
- Market competition in the mortgage sector may affect loan origination volumes.
- Economic uncertainties could influence borrower credit quality and demand for loans.
Northpointe Bancshares remains optimistic about its future prospects, leveraging its strong market position and strategic initiatives to drive growth and shareholder value. For a comprehensive analysis of Northpointe’s financial health, growth prospects, and detailed valuation metrics, access the full Pro Research Report available exclusively on InvestingPro, offering expert insights across 1,400+ top US stocks.
Full transcript - Northpointe Bancshares Inc (NPB) Q3 2025:
Conference Operator: Greetings. Welcome to Northpointe Bancshares, Inc.’s third quarter 2025 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. Please note this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to Brad Howes, CFO. Thank you. You may begin.
Brad Howes, Chief Financial Officer, Northpointe Bancshares, Inc.: Thank you. Good morning, and welcome to Northpointe’s third quarter 2025 earnings call. My name is Brad Howes, and I am the Chief Financial Officer. With me today are Chuck Williams, our Chairman and CEO, and Kevin Comps, our President. Additional earnings materials, including the presentation slides that we will refer to on today’s call, are available on Northpointe’s investor relations website, ir.northpointe.com. As a reminder, during today’s call, we may make forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks and uncertainties and are intended to be covered by the safe harbor provisions of Federal Securities Law. For a list of factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from expectations, please refer to the disclosures contained within our SEC filings. We will also reference non-GAAP financial measures and encourage you to review the non-GAAP reconciliations provided in both our earnings release and presentation slides.
The agenda for today’s call will include prepared remarks, followed by a question and answer session, and then closing remarks. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Chuck.
Chuck Williams, Chairman and CEO, Northpointe Bancshares, Inc.: Thank you, Brad. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining. Before I begin, I’d like to thank our Northpointe team for their incredible dedication and for their unwavering commitment to our clients and customers. The momentum that we have built across our business lines drove strong financial performance in the third quarter. That was highlighted by another quarter of very robust growth in our Mortgage Purchase Program, or MPP channel, which is our distinctive alternative to the traditional mortgage warehouse lending model. We also experienced solid performance in our residential lending channel, including increased mortgage lock and application activity, and a 23% annualized growth in our all-in-one loan portfolio. On the funding side, we benefited from a new core custodial deposit relationship that we announced to you at the last earnings call.
That drove approximately a $300 million increase in interest-bearing demand deposits from the prior quarter, helping to bolster our core deposits. We continue to explore new opportunities to grow our non-brokered deposit base. This remains one of the bank’s most important strategic priorities. Before I turn the call over to Kevin and Brad to dive into the details, I’d like to take a moment and share some highlights of our financial and operating performance. On slide four, we lay out our performance for the third quarter of 2025. For the quarter, we earned $20.1 million or $0.57 per diluted share. As you can see, we had very strong performance ratios in the third quarter, highlighted by a 1.34% return on assets and a 15.41% return on average tangible common equity. Let me start with an update on MPP.
We saw another quarter of exceptional performance in the MPP business, ending the quarter at $3.4 billion in balances. This represents a balance growth of $473 million from the prior quarter and a remarkable $1.7 billion from the third quarter of last year. We funded $9.8 billion in loans through the channel in the third quarter, which is the highest quarterly level ever for Northpointe. Overall, we remain very pleased with the success and growth trajectory of the MPP business. I’m excited to report that through the first nine months of the year, we’ve already achieved our targeted full-year growth for 2025 that we outlined during the IPO. Importantly, we still have a robust pipeline, which positions us nicely for continued success for the remainder of 2025 and into 2026.
With the success of the program I just outlined, we have now begun to utilize participations in the MPP program with partner financial institutions. We used this strategy in the past, helping to manage our balance sheet within our existing capital framework while optimizing our revenue streams. We currently have 12 participants in the program today, and we’re looking to expand and add additional partner financial institutions going forward. Brad will provide additional guidance on the 2026 MPP growth, including participations during his remarks. Our first main home equity loan business, which are tied seamlessly to demand sweep account, experienced strong growth as well. For the quarter, these loans increased by $38.8 million, which is an annualized growth rate of 23%. Residential mortgage application and interest rate lock commitments both increased during the third quarter.
This was largely attributable to the success of our mortgage-originating professionals, including the new lenders that we have added over the past year. We also saw a nice pickup in refinance activity in September, which Kevin will discuss further. Our brand and reputation in the mortgage space allow us to continue to attract and retain the highest quality talent and to invest in Northpointe’s future. This quarter, we continue to add new mortgage-originating professionals to help us continue our growth in that business as well. Regardless of what happens with rates going forward, we will continue to take our share of the industry mortgage business, and we are well positioned to quickly capitalize on mortgage volume should rates continue to decrease. Asset quality has been a hot topic in this quarter in the banking sector.
Let me emphasize that virtually all of our lending programs are backed by one to four family residential real estate, which is geographically dispersed throughout the United States. Our credit quality and risk management practices remain strong. Kevin will discuss more on this topic in his remarks. Our tangible book value increased by $0.56 per share over the prior quarter. When you add back the impact of dividends paid, our tangible book value per share increased by 15.8% annualized. I’d like to turn the call over now to Kevin to talk about our business lines.
Kevin Comps, President, Northpointe Bancshares, Inc.: Thanks, Chuck. Good morning, everyone. On slide five, we highlight our MPP business, which is our version of mortgage warehouse lending. We utilize our proprietary state-of-the-art technology stack to offer a purchase program to mortgage bankers nationwide. As Chuck highlighted, we experienced tremendous success in that business, carrying the strong momentum we’ve built from the third quarter. Period-ending balances increased by $473.2 million or 65% annualized, and average balances increased by over $400 million from the prior quarter. Let me break that down, this quarter’s growth, a bit further. First, we increased facility size for six existing clients, which totaled $225 million in additional capacity. Second, there were nine new clients brought in, which totaled $345 million in additional capacity. Third, the overall utilization of our existing clients remains strong. During the third quarter, we had average MPP participations of $8.7 million.
As we’ve reiterated on prior calls, participations remain an important component of our overall strategy, allowing us to manage the balance sheet and expand that interest margin while driving higher fee income. We continue to generate very strong returns on the MPP business, with average yields of 7.10% during the quarter. If you include fees, these yields increased to 7.30%. These are both up from the prior quarter levels of 7.07% and 7.23%, respectively. About 40% of the MPP portfolio reprices immediately, and the remainder reprices on the 15th of each month. The 25 basis point Fed Funds rate decrease took place on September 17th, so we will not see the complete impact on yields until the fourth quarter. Now turning to retail banking on slide six, I’d like to highlight the results of the three main businesses within that segment.
Starting with residential lending, which includes both our traditional retail and our consumer direct channels, we continue to perform well and take our share of industry volume. We closed $636.6 million in mortgages during the third quarter, which is down slightly from $665.5 million in the prior quarter. Mortgage rate lock commitments and applications both increased from the prior quarter, bolstered by an increase in refinance volume in September. During the third quarter, we sold $547.9 million, which represents approximately 86% of the total loans closed in the quarter, in line with prior quarters. Of that salable production, 82% was in our traditional retail channel and 18% was in consumer direct. We sold approximately 79% of the salable mortgages service released in the third quarter, which is consistent with the second quarter.
Additionally, 72% of our overall production was purchased business in the third quarter, which is flat from the second quarter level. With the decrease in mortgage rates that occurred during the third quarter of 2025, we saw an increase in overall refinance activity in that period. That increase came towards the later end of the quarter, with September monthly refinance activity closer to 50% of the overall volume. For the quarter, we earned $21.0 million in net gain on sale of loans. That amount includes fair value increases on the health reinvestment loan portfolio and the lender risk account, as well as gains or losses on portfolio loan sales. If you exclude those items, net gain on sale of loans was flat to the prior quarter level, which Brad will cover in more detail.
We continue to look for opportunities to create additional efficiencies using technology and hire new talented lenders within the channel. In the third quarter, we continued to hire new mortgage professionals to help us continue to grow, bringing our total to 129 at quarter end. In the middle of slide six, we highlight our digital deposit banking channel, where we feature a direct-to-customer platform and competitive product suite. Our funding strategy and deposit franchise are much different than those of a typical community bank, and we believe our strategy is quite simple but very effective. We ended the third quarter with $4.8 billion in total deposits, up from $4.5 billion in the second quarter. The breakout of these deposits is detailed in the appendix on slide 12.
The majority of our deposit growth compared to the prior quarter was from the new custodial deposit relationship we onboarded during the third quarter. This drove a $306.9 million increase in interest-bearing demand deposits from the prior quarter. Custodial deposit balances remain a critical piece of our overall funding strategy and a key benefit of the servicing business. As Chuck mentioned, we will continue to explore additional sources of non-brokered deposits. We also saw a $34.3 million increase in non-interest-bearing demand deposits, which helped offset some of the runoff in the other deposit balances. On the right side of slide six, we highlighted our specialty mortgage servicing channel, where we focus on servicing first lien home equity lines tied seamlessly to demand deposit sweep accounts, including what we commonly refer to as AIO loans.
We’ve continued to realize the savings from our strategy to private-label outsource the non-specialized mortgage servicing to a scaled sub-servicer, while at the same time expanding the amount of loans we service and increasing loan servicing fees. Excluding a $910,000 negative adjustment on the change in fair value of the MSR, we earned $2.0 million in loan servicing fees for Q3, which is up from $1.8 million in the prior quarter. Including loans we outsource to a sub-servicer, we service 14,200 loans for others, with a total UPV of $4.5 billion as of the end of the third quarter. Turning lastly to asset quality on slide seven, this remains one of the largest risks for any bank and one we continue to monitor very closely, especially in light of what we are seeing reported from other banks this quarter.
Let me start by saying we are not seeing any systemic credit quality or borrower issues in any of our portfolios. We had net charge-offs of $977,000 in the third quarter, which is up from $488,000 in the prior quarter. That represents an annualized net charge-off ratio to average loans of 7 basis points, which is still very strong and well below historical long-term averages. The charge-offs we took in the third quarter, similar to prior quarters, came from isolated occurrences. There were two larger mortgage charge-offs this quarter, totaling close to $500,000. Both of those charge-offs stemmed from unique circumstances. In the vast majority of instances where we are dealing with a non-performing loan, there is sufficient collateral to cover the unpaid principal balance, which usually leads to little or no loss.
Outside of the higher level of charge-offs, our overall level of delinquent loans decreased and our asset quality metrics improved from the prior quarter. Let me provide some additional details on this. First, total delinquent loans, including both loans past the 31 to 89 days and non-performing loans, decreased by $4.6 million from the second quarter level. Second, we have a very sophisticated and granular CISL process. We spend a great deal of time analyzing the various risks. Our allowance for credit losses was $12.3 million for the third quarter of 2025, which reflects our disciplined underwriting, diligent risk controls, and low levels of loss history. Third, at September 30, 2025, MPP represented 54% of all loans, and we’ve continued to experience pristine credit quality in that portfolio.
Fourth, virtually all our loan portfolio is backed by residential real estate, which typically carries much lower average loss rates than other asset classes. Fifth, our residential mortgage portfolio is also high quality, seasoned, and geographically diverse. At September 30, 2025, our average FICO was 747, and our average LTV, when you factor in mortgage insurance, was 72%. Now I’d like to turn the call over to Brad to cover the financials.
Brad Howes, Chief Financial Officer, Northpointe Bancshares, Inc.: Thanks, Kevin. One important note, as I go through today’s slide presentation, I will be incorporating the remaining quarter of 2025 and full-year 2026 guidance into my commentary. I’ll begin on slide eight. As a reminder, our non-GAAP reconciliation on slide 14 provides details of the calculations and a reconciliation to the comparable GAAP measure for all our non-GAAP metrics. Net interest income increased by $3.8 million over the prior quarter. This reflected the growth in average balances, along with a 3 basis point improvement in net interest margin from the prior quarter. Our yield on interest-earning assets benefited from the continued improvement in the mix of loans within the held for investment portfolio, up 2 basis points from the prior quarter. We continue to experience strong growth in Mortgage Purchase Program and all-in-one loans, both of which carry higher average yields than the remainder of the loan portfolio.
Our cost of funds was flat from the prior quarter. The slight decrease in our cost of interest-bearing deposits was offset by a slight increase in the cost of borrowings for the quarter. I’d expect to see more of an impact from the 25 basis point Fed Funds rate decrease in the fourth quarter, which happened on September 17th. Our net interest margin was 2.47% for the third quarter. I’d expect us to stay in the 2.45% to 2.55% range for the full-year 2025, but at the lower end of the range. For the full-year 2026, I’m expecting the same 2.45% to 2.55% range, but that we would come in towards the higher end of that range. My guidance assumes continued improvement in the mix of loans within the held for investment portfolio, as well as four 25 basis point Fed Funds rate cuts in 2026, one per quarter.
Average interest-earning assets increased by $465.6 million from the prior quarter, given the strong growth in Mortgage Purchase Program and all-in-one balances, partially offset by continued runoff in the residential mortgage portfolio and lower average balances of loans held for sale. Mortgage Purchase Program balances ended the third quarter at $3.36 billion. As we have almost achieved our full-year 2025 guidance, I am forecasting period-ending balances to increase another $50 to $100 million by year-end. Any additional growth above that, we would utilize participations for. For 2026, I’d expect our Mortgage Purchase Program loan balances to increase to between $4.1 and $4.3 billion by year-end. I’m also expecting an additional $300 to $500 million on average will be participated out throughout 2026. I am increasing the all-in-one (AIO) loan balance guidance based on the strong growth in 2025.
I’d expect period-ending loan balances of between $740 million and $760 million by year-end 2025, increasing to between $900 million and $1.0 billion by year-end 2026. Excluding Mortgage Purchase Program (MPP) and AIO loans, I’d expect the rest of the loan portfolio to continue to decrease, ending 2025 between $2.2 billion and $2.3 billion, and then decreasing to between $1.9 billion and $2.1 billion by year-end 2026. Kevin provided additional details on the higher level of net charge-offs this quarter. We had total provisions for credit losses and unfunded commitments of $828,000 in the third quarter of 2025, which is up from $583,000 in the prior quarter. We continue to experience a relatively low level of charge-offs relative to long-term historical averages. I’d expect that trend to continue with any additional provisions being driven by loan growth, credit migration trends, and changes in the economic forecast.
For the remaining quarter of 2025 and each quarter in 2026, I’d expect net charge-offs to be somewhere in the range of the prior two quarters. Non-interest income increased by $1.6 million from the prior quarter, which was driven primarily by higher gain-on-sale loans. On the top of slide 13, we break out three fair value assets and their associated quarterly increases or decreases. These assets tend to move up or down with interest rates and are not part of my revenue guidance each quarter. Net gain on the sale of loans was $21.0 million for the third quarter and includes the capitalization of new MSRs, changes in fair value of loans, gains or losses on the sale of portfolio loans, and gain on the sale of loans.
On the bottom of slide 13 and in our earnings release tables, we have added a new chart which helps further detail the components of our net gain on loan sale item. As you can see, third quarter net gain on the sale of loans included the $2.2 million increase in the fair value of loans held for investment and lender risk account with the Federal Home Loan Bank. It also included $1.2 million gain from the sale of non-AIO home equity loans disclosed last quarter. Excluding these items, net gain on the sale of loans would have been $17.5 million, which is flat to the second quarter level on a comparable basis. For 2025, I am forecasting total saleable mortgage originations of $2.1 billion to $2.3 billion, with all-in margins of 2.75% to 3.25% on those mortgage originations. No change to my prior estimates.
We’ve been closer to the top end of the range for the margin guidance in 2025, which should continue. For 2026, I am forecasting total saleable mortgage originations of $2.2 to $2.4 billion, with all-in margins of 2.75% to 3.25% on those mortgage originations. That estimate does not assume any significant decrease in mortgage rates, nor does it include any changes in the current level of mortgage originators. I expect that gain-on-sale margins will shift to the middle or lower end of the range of the margin guidance, given the recent pricing pressures from other lenders in both agency and non-QM space. I expect MPP fees to continue to increase from their current run rate and come in between $5 and $6 million for the full year 2025.
For 2026, I expect MPP fees to increase to between $9 and $11 million for the full year, based on the expected participation balances and the continued growth in loans funded. Loan servicing fees were $1.1 million for the third quarter of 2025 and included a fair value decrease of $910,000 on the MSR asset. Excluding the fair value decrease, loan servicing fees were $2 million for the quarter. I expect that quarterly run rate to increase slightly in the fourth quarter of 2025 and then increase to between $9 and $11 million for the full year of 2026. Non-interest expense was up $2.6 million from the prior quarter, driven primarily by higher salaries and benefits and higher FDIC premiums. Salaries and benefits expense was up $2.1 million over the prior quarter, mostly in bonus and incentive comp.
That line includes expenses related to our legacy stock appreciation rights plan, which is driven by increases or decreases in the stock price. In the third quarter, we had an expense of $935,000 from the increase in stock price relative to the second quarter level. The remainder of the higher bonus and incentive compensation expense was attributable to the improvement in business activity over the same period. For the fourth quarter of 2025, I expect total non-interest expense to be similar to the level in the third quarter of 2025. For the full year of 2026, I expect total non-interest expense to be in the range of $140 to $144 million. Turning to the balance sheet on slide nine, total assets increased to $6.8 billion for the third quarter of 2025.
This was driven primarily by the increase in MPP and all-in-one (AIO) loans, partially offset by runoff from the remainder of the loan portfolio. Kevin provided details on our funding and deposits this quarter. Our wholesale funding ratio was 67.6% at September 30, 2025, down from the prior quarter level due to the new core custodial deposit relationship. Looking forward, we’d expect to continue to fund MPP loan growth through a combination of brokered CDs, retail deposits, and other sources of non-brokered deposits where possible. Lastly, on slide 10, we outline our regulatory capital ratios, which are estimates pending completion of regulatory reports. Our capital levels remain strong both at the bank and the consolidated entity level. We currently have $77 million in Series A perpetual preferred stock, which resets to a floating rate in December 2025. We anticipate calling that preferred stock prior to year-end.
If called, our goal would be to replace a significant portion of that preferred stock with subordinated debt. We believe this strategy would optimize our capital stack, allowing us to continue our forecasted growth path while realizing significant annual cost savings and being accretive to earnings per share. We currently have $3.2 million of unamortized deal issuance costs, which we would expense in the fourth quarter of 2025 if we call the Series A preferred stock. With that, we’re happy to take questions. Sherri, can you please open the line for Q&A?
Conference Operator: Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, 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 would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Once again, it is star one. Our first question is from Chris Binlove with Piper Sandler. Please proceed.
Thank you. Good morning. Just drilling a little bit deeper on the NIM trajectory, I heard you on the guide for 2025 and 2026 to 2.45% to 2.55% level, low end and then high end. When you look near term and into the beginning of 2026, can you talk a little bit about how you’d expect the NIM to trend off of the 2.47% level in three quarters, just as you think about a big picture, given the repricing dynamics and then expected Fed rate cuts?
Brad Howes, Chief Financial Officer, Northpointe Bancshares, Inc.: Sure. Based on what we’ve seen, I kind of outlined the September rate cut. We’re still looking at the impact of that, which we’ll see in the fourth quarter. I’ll reiterate, we are mostly asset neutral, as most of our assets and liabilities reprice within 30 days. There is a little bit of a negative effect in the short term from, I would say, a 25 basis point rate cut, but it’s nothing significant. My guidance is we look from the margin from today out into 2026. I think we’ll see continued improvement in the mix based on the fact that loans in our legacy portfolio or our first mortgages have lower average yields between 4% and 5%. As those roll off, we replace them with loans that are yielding today 7% or so in MPP or AIO.
We have a continued improvement in the mix that will trend out throughout the course of 2026. We see kind of small improvements to get us to the average of 245 to 255, but sort of at the top end of the range. When we see the rate cuts, there’s always a lag on MPP loans as those don’t reprice predominantly until the 15th. We are able to pick up a little bit of benefit from margin on that. I think those are kind of the puts and takes into the guidance in 2026.
Great. Thanks, I appreciate the color there. With the recent move in mortgage rates, can you just discuss what you’re seeing in the residential lending channel with volumes and what you might expect to see in the all-in-one (AIO) loan product if mortgage rates continue to come down, how those volumes could trend with that product all floating rate and the rate sensitivities there?
Sure. I can start with how the lower rates are impacting our refinance production. In September, we saw almost a 67% increase in closed refinance volume versus the prior month alone. September locks were 50% refi, which is more than double the prior month level. Specifically on AIO, the rate environment can affect AIO production, but the right borrowers, as we’ve talked about previously, as far as who that product is really geared towards, will still be drawn towards that product regardless of a small decrease in the rate environment.
Chris, if I could just add something on the 2026 forecast. When I gave you the saleable mortgage origination volume and the balance sheet growth, those were all predicated on four short-term rate decreases. That mortgage rates don’t come down very significantly. I think 30 to 40 basis points, which would be consistent with any of the industry expectations as we sit today.
Sounds good. I appreciate you taking my questions.
Conference Operator: As a reminder, just star one on your telephone keypad if you would like to ask a question. Our next question is from Damon Del Monte with KBW. Please proceed.
Hey, good morning, guys. Hope you’re all doing well today. First question on the servicing portfolio. It looks like the UPV on loans serviced for others was up around $500 million this quarter. Any color on what drove the increase?
Brad Howes, Chief Financial Officer, Northpointe Bancshares, Inc.: Yeah, we continue to ramp up our sub-servicing of the all-in-one (AIO) loan-like products for various end investors. We actually have added some additional new end investors with similar products over the last quarter. We continue to ramp up that product specifically. We continue to retain some of our MSRs as we sell our own production into the market. We’ll slowly continue to build that, as Brad Howes mentioned in his forecast.
Got it. With regards to the outlook for deposit growth and adding more custodial accounts, obviously a very sizable one came on in the third quarter. Do you think future relationships that you add would be of similar size, or is this kind of a larger one that was out there and they’ll be on a much smaller scale going forward?
Yeah, Damon, that was probably an outsized one to start with, but we definitely continue to look for additional sources of non-brokered funding, both with custodial and non-custodial sources of non-brokered funds.
Okay, great. Lastly, on the expense guide, Brad, could you just go over your commentary on that? I didn’t quite get all that.
Sure. For the last quarter, for the fourth quarter of this year, I’d expect our expense guidance to be similar to the third quarter level for total non-interest expense. For 2026, my guidance is $140 to $144 million for the full year. The key drivers are going to be, I’d say, higher mortgage volume. You’re going to have higher variable comp on that business with the increase that we projected in saleable mortgage originations and AIO growth. We have improvement in business activity, which drives higher bonus and incentive comp. We always have a cost of living adjustment, which occurs March, April, from annual merits. We have just continued to build out and strengthen our team and continue to develop our status as a public company and making sure our risk management practices are solid.
Got it. Okay. Great. That’s all that I had for now. Thanks.
Conference Operator: This will conclude our question and answer session. I would like to turn the floor back over to Chuck Williams for closing remarks.
Chuck Williams, Chairman and CEO, Northpointe Bancshares, Inc.: I want to thank everybody for joining today’s call. Our results this quarter demonstrate the momentum we’ve gained as we continue to execute on our strategic plan. We remain nimble and opportunistic, focusing on delivering strong growth and long-term shareholder value while remaining diligent in our overall risk management. We appreciate all the trust and support from Northpointe, and with that, everyone have a great day.
Thanks again.
Conference Operator: Thank you. This will conclude today’s conference. You may disconnect at this time. Thank you for your participation.
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