NYSE:MTB M&T Bank Q1 2025 Earnings Report $160.09 +1.19 (+0.75%) Closing price 04/17/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$160.24 +0.15 (+0.09%) As of 04/17/2025 04:52 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast M&T Bank EPS ResultsActual EPS$3.38Consensus EPS $3.41Beat/MissMissed by -$0.03One Year Ago EPS$3.09M&T Bank Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$2.31 billionExpected Revenue$2.35 billionBeat/MissMissed by -$46.37 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AM&T Bank Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2025Date4/14/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateMonday, April 14, 2025Conference Call Time8:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by M&T Bank Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrApril 14, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Welcome to the M and T Bank First Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on a listen only mode for the and the floor will be open for your questions following the presentation. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. And I would now like to turn the conference over to Steve Windelbaugh, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Steven WendelboeSVP - Market & Investor Relations at M&T Bank00:00:46Thank you, Margo, and good morning. I'd like to thank everyone for participating in M and T's first quarter twenty twenty five earnings call, both by telephone and through the webcast. If you have not read through the earnings release we issued this morning, you may access it along with the financial tables and schedules by going to our website at mtb.com. Once there, you can click on the Investor Relations link and then on the Events and Presentations link. Closed captioning has been provided for webcast participants. Steven WendelboeSVP - Market & Investor Relations at M&T Bank00:01:17Also, before we start, I'd like to mention that today's presentation may contain forward looking information. Cautionary statements about this information are included in today's earnings release materials and in the investor presentation, as well as our SEC filings and other investor materials. The presentation also includes non GAAP measures, as identified in the earnings release and investor presentation. The appropriate reconciliations to GAAP are included in the appendix. Joining me on the call today is M and T's Senior Executive Vice President and CFO, Daryl Bybold. Steven WendelboeSVP - Market & Investor Relations at M&T Bank00:01:53Now I'd like to turn the call over to Darrell. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:01:56Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. First, I will begin with our purpose on slide three. Our purpose is to make a difference in people's lives. We are committed to serving not only our customers, but also supporting communities where we live and work, inspiring our 22,000 employees and delivering for our shareholders. In Renee's annual shareholder letter, he notes that we operate in an environment in which change is the only constant. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:02:26In these uncertain times, M and T starts from a position of strength with strong liquidity, capital levels, and capital generation. This position of strength reflects our consistent adherence to the fundamentals of liquidity management, capital allocation, and transparency. The strength of this operating model allows M and T to continue to perform through the peaks and valleys of the macroeconomic cycles and support our customers and communities in the moments that matter most. As highlighted on slide four, we continue to receive notable recognition, including 13 Greenwich Coalition Awards for our small business and middle market segments. And we were included in Fortune's most admired and most innovative company list. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:03:13Turn to slide six, which shows the results for the first quarter. Our first quarter results represent a strong start to the year with several successes to highlight. Net interest margin increased eight basis points, reflecting our efficient balance sheet and the strength of our deposit franchise. We executed $662,000,000 in share repurchases as we continue toward an 11% CET1 ratio in 2025, while also growing tangible book value per share by 2%. Fee income grew 5% since the first quarter of twenty four or 10% if you exclude last year's BLG distribution. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:03:56Asset quality continued to improve with a $516,000,000 reduction in commercial criticized balances and a $150,000,000 reduction in non accrual loans. Our net charge offs of 34 basis points were below our full year expectations of 40 basis points. Now, let's look at the specifics for the first quarter. Diluted GAAP earnings per share were $3.32 down from $3.86 from the prior quarter. Net income was $584,000,000 compared to $681,000,000 in the linked quarter. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:04:33MIT's first quarter results produced an ROA and ROCE of 1.148.36% respectively. Slide seven includes supplemental reporting of M and T's results on a net operating or tangible basis. M and T's net operating income was $594,000,000 compared to $691,000,000 in the linked quarter. Diluted net operating earnings per share were $3.38 down from $3.92 in the prior quarter. Net operating income yielded an ROTA and ROTCE of 1.2112.53%. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:05:19Next, let's look a little deeper into the underlying trends that generated our first quarter results. Please turn to slide eight. Taxable equivalent net interest income was $1,710,000,000 a decrease of $33,000,000 or 2% from linked quarter. The lower NII was primarily driven by two fewer days and lower average earning assets, partially offset by favorable deposit costs. Net interest margin was 3.66%, an increase of eight basis points from the prior quarter. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:05:54The primary drivers of the increase to margin include continued securities growth and lower wholesale, funding and time deposits, And favorable deposit pricing with interest bearing deposit costs declining 27 basis points. Turn to slide 10 to talk about average loans. Average loans and leases decreased 900,000,000.0 to $134,800,000,000 Lower CRE balances were partially offset by the growth in C and I, consumer and residential mortgage. C and I loans grew 1% to 61,000,000,000 driven by continued strength in the corporate institutional and fund banking. CRE loans declined 6% to $26,300,000,000 reflecting payoffs and paydowns and muted origination activity with increased market competition. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:06:51Residential mortgage loans were relatively unchanged at 23,200,000,000.0 Consumer loans grew 1% to $24,300,000,000 reflecting increases in recreational finance and indirect auto loans. Loan yields decreased 11 basis points to 6.06%, as lower rates on variable loans and lower non accrual interest was partially offset by fixed rate loan repricing and a smaller drag on our cash flow hedges. Turning to slide 11, our liquidity remains strong. At the end of the first quarter, investment securities and cash, including cash held at the Fed, totaled $57,900,000,000 representing 28% of total assets. Average investment securities increased $800,000,000 The yield on the investment securities increased 12 basis points to 4%, as the yield for new purchases exceeded the yield on maturing securities. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:07:53In the first quarter, we purchased $2,600,000,000 in debt securities at an average yield of 4.9%. The duration of the portfolio at the end of the quarter was three point six years and the unrealized pretax loss on the available for sale portfolio was $8,000,000 or less than one basis point CET1 drag if included in regulatory capital. Turning to slide 12. Average total deposits declined 3,400,000,000 or 2% to 161,200,000,000.0 The sequential decline included $700,000,000 decline in broker deposits, while the remainder of the decline was concentrated in commercial and business banking, partially reflecting seasonal lower balances. Average non interest bearing deposits declined $1,100,000,000 to $45,400,000,000 Excluding broker deposits, average non interest bearing deposit mix in the first quarter was relatively unchanged at 30.2%. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:08:59Interest bearing deposit costs decreased 27 basis points to 2.37. We saw favorable deposit declines across business lines. Higher level of broker and retail time deposit maturities in the quarter also contributed to the deposit cost decline. Continuing on slide 13, non interest income was $611,000,000 compared to $657,000,000 in the linked quarter. We saw continued strength across fee income categories, with increases in mortgage banking, service charges, trusts, and brokerage fee income. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:09:36Recall that the fourth quarter included an $18,000,000 net gain from the sale of non core securities and a $23,000,000 BOG distribution. Excluding these items from the prior quarter, non interest income declined by $5,000,000 sequentially. Mortgage banking revenues were $118,000,000 compared to $117,000,000 in the fourth quarter. Residential mortgage banking revenues increased $6,000,000 sequentially to $82,000,000 reflecting the partial quarter benefit from new subservicing. We expect to reach the full run rate on this subservicing in the second quarter. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:10:16Commercial mortgage banking revenues decreased $5,000,000 to $36,000,000 reflecting lower gains on the sale of commercial mortgage loans. Other revenues from operations decreased $34,000,000 to $142,000,000 mostly reflecting the fourth quarter '20 '3 million dollars VOD distribution. Turning to slide 14, we continue to execute on our expense plans. Non interest expenses were $1,420,000,000 an increase of 52,000,000 from the prior quarter. Last year's fourth quarter included $35,000,000 in notable expenses related to the redemption of certain M and T Trust preferred obligations, expenses associated with corporate real estate optimization, partially offset by pension related credit. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:11:07Salary and benefits increased 97,000,000 to $887,000,000 mostly reflecting $110,000,000 of seasonally higher compensation expense related to stock based compensation, payroll related taxes, and other employee benefit expenses. As usual, we expect those seasonal factors to decline significantly as we enter the second quarter. Other costs of operations decreased $50,000,000 to $118,000,000 primarily reflecting the previously mentioned fourth quarter notable items. The efficiency ratio was 60.5% compared to 56.8% in the linked quarter. Next, let's turn to slide 15 for credit. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:11:54Net charge offs for the quarter totaled $114,000,000 or 34 basis points, decreasing from 47 basis points in the linked quarter. Charge offs were relatively granular in the first quarter, with the five largest charges amounting to less than $30,000,000 in total, representing both C and I and CRE credits. Non accrual loans decreased $150,000,000 or 9% to $1,500,000,000 The non accrual ratio decreased 11 basis points to 1.14%, driven largely by payoffs, charge offs and upgrades out of non accrual. In the fourth quarter, we reported a provision of $130,000,000 compared to the net charge offs of 114,000,000 The allowance to loan ratio increased two basis points to 1.63%, reflecting growth in certain consumer loan portfolios, as well as a modest deterioration in the macroeconomic forecast. The increase was not related to changes in the underlying credit performance, which is mostly in line with expectations. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:13:05Please turn to slide 16. We estimate that the level of criticized loans will be 9,400,000,000 compared to $9,900,000,000 at the December. The improvement from the linked quarter was driven by $667,000,000 decline in CRE criticized balances, partially offset by $150,000,000 increase in C and I. Within C and I, the increase in criticize was concentrated in the motor vehicle and recreational finance dealers. The CRE criticize decline was primarily within multifamily, office, healthcare, construction, and was driven by payoffs, paydowns, and upgrades to past status. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:13:50Improved leasing, occupancy, and cash flows in healthcare and multifamily helped drive the improvement in the CRE criticized. Turning to slide 19 for capital. M and T's CET1 ratio at the end of the first quarter was an estimated 11.5% compared to 11.68% at the end of the fourth quarter. The decline in the CET1 ratio reflects increased capital distributions, including $662,000,000 in share repurchases, partially offset by continued strong capital generation. AOCI impact on the CET1 ratio from available for sale securities and pension related components combined would be approximately a positive six basis points if included in regulatory capital. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:14:43Now turning to slide 20 for the outlook. First, let's begin with the economic backdrop. The economic backdrop remains dynamic in light of the developments over the past several weeks. Recent economic data is mixed, with strong job gains but moderating wage growth. Our recent readings show weakening business and consumer sentiment and easing inflation. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:15:09The ultimate impact on tariffs on the broader economy remains unknown at this point. That uncertainty is reflected in recent equity market and rate volatility. We ended the first quarter well positioned for a dynamic economic environment with strong liquidity, strong capital generation, and a CET1 ratio at 11.5%. With that economic backdrop, let's review our net interest income outlook. We expect taxable equivalent net interest income to be 7,050,000,000.00 to $7,150,000,000 with net interest margin increasing through the year and averaging in the mid to high 360s. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:15:54We expect the full year average loan and lease balances to be $135,000,000,000 to $137,000,000,000 The lower loan outlook reflects lower CRE balances with elevated payoffs and paydowns and muted originations. Full year average deposit balances are expected to be 162,000,000,000 to $164,000,000,000 We remain focused on growing customer deposits at a reasonable cost, while also considering loan growth. Turning to fee income. We expect noninterest income to be at the high end of the 2,500,000,000.0 to $2,600,000,000 range. The environment remains dynamic. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:16:34However, our diversified product set should help provide relative stability from our fee income businesses. Continuing with expenses, we anticipate total non interest expense, including intangible amortization, to be 5,400,000,000 to $5,500,000,000 Our business lines remain focused on closely managing their expenses, allowing the bank to continue to target investments in projects and business opportunities that support our enterprise priorities. Regarding credit, we continue to expect net charge offs for the full year to be near 40 basis points. We also expect criticized loans to continue to decline in 2025. As it relates to capital, we expect the CET1 ratio to reach 11% in 2025, but we'll monitor the economic backdrop and adjust as needed. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:17:30The level of share repurchases will vary with RWA growth. As shown on slide 21, we remain committed to our four priorities, including growing our New England and Long Island markets, optimizing our resources through simplification, making our systems resilient and scalable, and continuing to scale and develop our risk management capabilities. To conclude on slide 22, our results underscore an optimistic investment thesis. M and T has always been a purpose driven organization with a successful business model that benefits all including shareholders. We have a long track record of credit outperforming through all economic cycles while growing within the markets we serve. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:18:17We remain focused on shareholder returns and consistent dividend growth. Finally, we are a disciplined acquirer and prudent steward of our shareholder capital. Now let's open the call up to questions before which Marco will briefly review the instructions. Operator00:18:38Thank you. Operator00:18:51We'll take our first question from Ken Houston with Autonomous Research. Please go ahead. Ken UsdinSenior Research Analyst, Large-Cap Banks at Autonomous Research00:19:00Hi, very much. Good morning, Daryl. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:19:02Hey, Daryl. Ken UsdinSenior Research Analyst, Large-Cap Banks at Autonomous Research00:19:03So one question just on the NII, you mentioned that the environment's meaningfully changed and we see a smaller balance sheet here offset by a little bit better of a NIM output. Are you noticing anything in terms of the deposit flow activity more specifically in terms of how much more mix shift you might expect and how much more you might be able to also continuing to work down that higher cost liability side? Thanks. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:19:28Yeah, Ken, we are definitely, we did lower the guidance on deposits, but I think we feel pretty comfortable that we'll probably be at the higher end of the deposit range. Still having really good growth of our businesses across the board, whether it's commercial, small business, consumer, our ICS business kind of grows as activity in the marketplace is growing. So I think we feel pretty positive on the deposit growth. And we'll use those additional deposits if we don't have loan growth to either pay off higher liabilities in the marketplace that we have on the balance sheet, cheaper funding, or we'll put it at the Fed and just have more liquidity on hand, one or the other. But we feel good about on the deposit side. Ken UsdinSenior Research Analyst, Large-Cap Banks at Autonomous Research00:20:14Okay, and second one on fees. The first quarter six eleven or so, but you're still talking about the high end of 02/2006. I noticed there, I don't believe, was there a Bayview distribution in the first quarter? Was that pushed? And can you just talk about the ramp that you get from here going forward and your confidence in getting towards that higher end on fees? Ken UsdinSenior Research Analyst, Large-Cap Banks at Autonomous Research00:20:35Thanks. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:20:36Yeah, so you're all right. Bayview, we did not get a distribution first quarter. We kind of took it out for the rest of the year. We may or may not get distribution from Bayview. They're working on some things internally. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:20:50So we will do but if you look at all of our other businesses that we're having, we're having really good growth across, you know, I would expect our fee businesses to grow from where we are in the first quarter, think significantly in the second, third and fourth quarters. We have a lot of momentum across all of our businesses. Our trust businesses are strong. If you look at ICS, you know, they're doing really well in their structured loan agency businesses and activity also bringing in deposits from activity. So that's really positive. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:21:22Our service charges are actually performing really well right now. From mortgage banking perspective, you know, if rates come down, and then who knows which way the yield curve is going to go, but we are positioned to have really good mortgage revenues both on the commercial and residential side from originations. You did see the increase in our numbers now in this quarter from additional sub servicing that could have other opportunities for growth, potentially as that kind of continues to grow. Workery services are strong. So I think net net overall, I think we're pretty positive on our fees. Ken UsdinSenior Research Analyst, Large-Cap Banks at Autonomous Research00:22:01Thanks, Daryl. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:22:02Thank you. Operator00:22:03Thank you. We'll take our next question from Ebrahim Poonawala with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director - Head of North American Banks Research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:22:09Good morning, Daryl. Operator00:22:11Good morning. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director - Head of North American Banks Research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:22:11I guess in your remarks you mentioned tariff uncertainties were reflected in the stock markets and interest rates. Just if you don't mind, talk to us about any anecdotal sort of feedback from your customers over the last week or two around tariffs? Are you seeing CapEx decisions being pulled back? Just would love any color there. And then how is that informing your outlook on C and I growth? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:22:40Yeah, all that's fair. So I think if you look at it overall, you saw the sentiment numbers were both weak on the consumer and on the business side. If you start with the consumer, from just looking at our debit card activity, our spending patterns are still pretty much intact there. So I think we're pretty consistent. We are seeing, and it could just be short lived, but in our indirect channels on the consumer side, a lot of loan volume coming in auto, marine and RV, maybe people rushing before higher prices, but that's really good volume there. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:23:20And the bottom 20% consumer has been struggling for the last several years and will continue to probably continue to struggle. Business wise, our customers actually really wanted to make a lot of investments, they want to do acquisitions, but they are just really on pause right now. I think it's just lack of confidence. They don't know what the rules of the road are right now. Things keep changing in the DC and until that settles out a little bit, I think they're gonna be on hold until they come through. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:23:53That said, we've been able to grow our C and I business, we grew nicely. If you look at it in our middle market space, we had good growth there. We had growth in fund banking, corporate institutional, our dealer commercial services grew. So we're growing really well in that space. It's really our CRE portfolio is really where the challenges are. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:24:17And that's really the portfolio that's having us shrink and lower our loan guidance for the most part. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director - Head of North American Banks Research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:24:25That's helpful. And I guess maybe the other thing on capital, you mentioned CET1 to 11% depending on RWA growth. Just give us how price sensitive you are? Mean, I think the stocks come down a fair bit relative to where you repurchased during the first quarter. Like how quickly could we see if customers remain on pause that M and T gets to 11%? Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director - Head of North American Banks Research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:24:50Yeah. And you mentioned also opportunistic buyer as regards to capital. Like, are there any deals to be done given just all the macro uncertainties right now? Thanks. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:25:00So with the volatility in the marketplace, I emphasized in the prepared remarks, we really do have strong capital and liquidity. Our capital is the real capital. Our AOCI actually is a positive six basis points, So we feel good about that. We will monitor market conditions. We still plan to start our share repurchase back on Wednesday when we come out of blackout, and we'll just monitor and if we see the economy go into a negative spin down, we might slow down or pause, but until we see that right now the trends for the most part are pretty uneventful and we're just kind of playing it as we go. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:25:48I know it's not good guidance for you, but we kind of just have to see how things play out, but we're prepared to start with share repurchases on Wednesday and just monitor economic conditions. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director - Head of North American Banks Research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:26:01Got it, thank you. Operator00:26:03We'll take our next question from Gerard Cassidy with RBC. Please go ahead. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:26:08Hi, Daryl. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:26:10Hey, Gerard, how are doing? Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:26:12Good, thank you. Can you give us some color on your insights regarding the regulatory environment? We're reading a lot about the regulators look to ease up, if you will, on some of the regulatory requirements. There's a lot of talk about the supplementary leverage ratio and the leverage ratio, but they seem to pertain to our biggest banks, the trillionaire banks. Are you seeing anything on the horizon that would be very beneficial to the regional banks like yourself from the regulatory stuff that you're hearing and seeing? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:26:54Yeah, yeah, I just wanna start with, it really doesn't matter to us who's actually in DC in the administration, Republican, Democrat, we perform and do well. You look at our people's acquisition that was done under the Biden administration. So we can do business either way. From a regulatory perspective, I would tell you, the people that are getting in the seats tend to be much more focused on having our industry help grow the economy and really have an impact positively to it. You're seeing that with acting chair in the FDIC, he actually came out this past week, he actually is pulling back on some of the RRP stuff. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:27:34We're in the first wave, so we actually had this stuff already prepared and completed and we're pulling back on that. That's a positive, but head of supervision Bowman is really looking at tailoring, I think that's a really good positive for us, I think that would be good. OCC and CFPB are also I think very positive. So I think generally there are more pro business, more trying to grow the economy. And you could see some tweaks around the tier one leverage ratio, the SLR, stress testing, Basel III, LCR, long term debt, RRP, and hopefully maybe they pull back on all our regulatory reporting. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:28:14We've produced thousands of reports to the government officials, and I'm sure we can weed out some of that information as well. But I think it's an opportunity rich environment to actually make some improvements and be more efficient. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:28:29Very good, thank you. And then as a follow-up to your comment about loan growth and how the commercial real estate portfolio is making it more challenging, can you dive into that a little further? Is it your choice to kind of continue to shrink it or is it just not your customers are paying you off and you can't grow it? What's some of the color behind the challenges within the commercial real estate portfolio? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:28:57So what we've seen in the last quarter or two is that there's a lot more active lenders in this space. So you have a lot more people providing loan capital. And if look at it, it's very competitive. So people are already being very aggressive on pricing and on structure. And at M and T, we are very disciplined in how we make loans and put things on our balance sheet, we're doing our best to support our customers and all that, but at the end of the day, we aren't gonna put loans on that aren't structured properly from that perspective. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:29:32In the first quarter, and you look at the payoffs that we received, it was a much higher amount than what we expected. About half of them were known maturities that were coming through in the first quarter, another 10% was just pulling forward maturities in later twenty five. But 40% was really pulling in maturities from '26 and beyond. And that's really where there's a lot of impact going on from that perspective. And given that that down crease, it's not all bad. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:30:04We've been able remix our portfolio. So we're actually have a lot less office exposure, which is good. We're also reducing a lot of the smaller credits, less than 5,000,000, and we're actually growing areas that we wanna grow like multifamily and industrial. So it's not all bad. I would say the pipeline is building and we feel good that it will kind of level out over the next couple quarters and start to grow. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:30:32And we'll just continue to do that. I mean, at the end of the day, we'll have a smaller balance sheet and probably just repurchase back more stock. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:30:41And Darrell, just quickly on those maturities that were being pulled forward in 'twenty five and 'twenty six that were paid off, Was that due to that competition that you referenced? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:30:52A lot of it was competition. You know, some of it was some of our REIT customers decided to prepay early and all that. It was mixed. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:31:00Okay. Good. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:31:01Okay. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:31:03Yeah. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:31:04Thank you. Operator00:31:05We'll next go to Matt O'Connor with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:31:12Good morning. You guys added a little bit to the loan loss reserves even though the loans were down and the credit metrics were better. Can you just talk about how you tweak your macro outlook to support the higher reserves? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:31:26Yeah, we did tweak it just because of what's going on in the marketplace, Matt. I think that that's correct. Our provision probably would have been close to 110 if we did not have the tweaks, but we just wanted to wait the lower, we have three scenarios, the scenario that has the downward pressure, we just increased that proportionately more so that you have higher unemployment rates and you have lower GDP rates. We didn't have it go into a recession, but we had it close just above that, it's at point 1% positive. So we were reflecting it. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:32:07Obviously, if we do go into a recession, you know, we'll probably would continue to add to the reserves appropriately as needed. But we just felt comfortable that that was the right thing to do, given everything that's going on and uncertainty in the marketplace. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:32:22Okay, that's helpful. And then separately, maybe I missed it, but what are the interest rate assumptions that you have within your net interest income guide? And then just remind us your sensitivity to rate changes on both the short and long end of the curve? Thank you. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:32:38Yeah, so our ALCO team and treasury has been working hard because rates keep changing, the curve keeps changing, so it's a very dynamic environment for sure. You know, what we have as our baseline with our forecast has four drops, the last one being in December, which isn't very significant, and we have the yield curve that we had on April 7, which is a relatively lower yield curve from that. The way I would look at it, there's a lot of puts and takes here. From a net interest margin perspective, just high level, if rates on the curve continue to flatten out, if they go down, that would be a negative for margin. As we get more deposits like Ken asked earlier, that could be good for NII, but maybe lower for margin if we deploy that in our liquidity portfolio. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:33:38For higher margin, I'd say, obviously a steeper curve would be helpful, and if we can continue to maybe start to grow our loan book again, and once CRE starts to come online, I think that would be possible and all that. So there's a lot of puts and takes there. That said, overall, I feel really good with margin trajectory, mid to high three sixties. I think overall profitability and the company is gonna be really strong, really strong capital generation. So I think we feel really good and we can weather whatever the economy gives us, I think very well. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:34:13Okay. And then just to summarize that though, like, as we think about the net interest income dollars, are you asset sensitive? Are you relatively neutral? Again, all things else being equal, but if rates are a little bit lower than you expect, has that impact the dollars? Just call it a parallel shift down to keep it simple. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:34:32Thanks. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:34:34Yeah, so our short end, we are definitely pretty neutral. It really does not impact us much one way or the other, what direction the Fed does on rates, think we're relatively good. And you saw our deposit betas, 50 plus percent, so they're reacting like we thought they would react. So all that is coming in really well. With the yield curve flattening, we still have positive roll on, so like in the consumer loan portfolio, it's probably repricing right now maybe 100 to 150 basis points more. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:35:15The rates flatten down, it's going to still reprice positive, but maybe only 50 basis points better. So we still get the benefit, it's just less of a benefit. I think the thing to really emphasize though is we have a lot of unknowns in our balance sheet, which kind of gives us the comfort, we're going to have strong margin and strong NII. We know for a fact that we have 4,000,000,000 of securities coming off at a yield of three and a half. Depending on what the yield curve looks like, it's going to reprice higher, maybe four and a half, maybe five and a half, but it's going up. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:35:47Consumer loans, I just talked about, that's going to continue to reprice higher. Strong beta, deposit beta is good. And then on the swap book, we know for a fact that our swap book is going to go up and accrete more over time, up to 30 basis points. We should be in the 370s by the end of the year and early twenty six. So all those are known and all those are gonna happen, and that's baked into our and all that. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:36:13So it gives us confidence that we're gonna perform well and then tweak it on the edges either way if we're gonna outperform or maybe be a little bit less, but net net overall earnings will be strong. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:36:26Thank you. Operator00:36:28We'll next go to Manan Gosala with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Manan GosaliaEquity Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:36:34Hi, good morning, Daryl. Just to follow-up on your point on the security side, just given that the long end of the curve has been so volatile, how are you thinking about putting on more securities here and what kind of duration would you be willing to take? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:36:53Yeah, so we are very disciplined in how we're doing this. We're in it for the long term, it's kind of how we approach it. So our strategies really haven't changed. We are investing, obviously we cleansed our portfolio last year, so all we have is government backed securities in our portfolio. Whether they're treasuries, agencies, or municipalities, we don't have any non agency stuff in the portfolio, so it's all liquid at 35,000,000,000. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:37:20We've been buying about half of our purchases are basically non convex, so we're buying treasuries and CMBS in the marketplace. Obviously, we don't have the attractive yields that you do in the CMBS, but you know you're gonna keep them over the whole maturity. And then the other half is by going into shorter CMOs and seasoned MBS. Our average duration, if you go back maybe two years ago, we were four, we're now in the 3.5 range and we stayed in the 3.5 range and feel really good about how we're positioned. It's a portfolio for liquidity and we're going to continue to use it for that if we need it. Manan GosaliaEquity Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:38:02Got it. Maybe on loan growth, or actually, the other side of the loan growth question is credit. And you've had some nice loan growth in C and I over the past few quarters. I think C and I is up 7% year on year, and that's clearly well above peers. So how are you thinking about the credit performance of that book if we get a weakening macro environment from here? Manan GosaliaEquity Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:38:27And I ask because I noticed that declines in CRE criticized were actually in line with last quarter, but then you had some offsets in the C and I side. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:38:38Yeah, our CRE portfolio has been performing really well. We've stress tested, looked at it backwards and forwards and feel really good on the trajectory of that portfolio. Now that said, we have maybe a little bit of exposure in the greater DC area, a couple hundred million, nothing significant, But things to watch out for in certain areas, but net net overall, we feel CRE is gonna perform and continue to perform very, very well from that perspective. Our C and I went up, it was really just idiosyncratic, one customer, a large credit, a couple hundred million, basically had some issues with a roll up strategy for the big trucks that you see on the road and all that. We think that's gonna play out positively as the year goes, so we don't think there's any losses there. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:39:32So net net overall, we still think that we will continue to lower our criticized throughout the year, not at the pace that we did in '24, but still at a measured pace. If things get really bad in the economy, which I don't think is gonna happen, but if they do, then we can adjust accordingly. But right now, I think we're just seeing a slowdown for the most part. Manan GosaliaEquity Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:39:55Great, thank you. Operator00:39:57And next we'll go to John Pocari with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead. John PancariSenior Managing Director & Senior Research Analyst at Evercore ISI00:40:04Good morning, Daryl. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:40:06Good morning, John. John PancariSenior Managing Director & Senior Research Analyst at Evercore ISI00:40:08Just back to the loan growth. I know you gave some good color on the commercial real estate balances that are coming down and also seeing some growth selectively in C and I. Within that average loan guidance of 135,000,000 to 137,000,000 can you talk to us maybe can you break down the incremental CRE decline that you expect and where you expect that could bottom just given what you're seeing right now? And then perhaps maybe help us with how we should think about the pace of C and I loan growth as we look out through the remainder of the year? Thanks. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:40:44Yeah, so we expect right now our CRE portfolio to bottom out on an average basis probably by the fourth quarter. We think that our pipeline is gonna start to build it's building now, and it just has to go through and basically get on the books. A lot of the new production of the pipeline is construction, so our construction loans won't actually start to fund up meaningfully for probably twelve to fifteen months from that standpoint. But CRE is, I think, going to work its way through and start to grow momentum and grow positively. For us, it's all about making sure we're serving client selection, the best customers out in the marketplace, making sure that the loans are structured really well, that helped us through some down periods, we won't lose that. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:41:37So structure is really important to us, and we will compete on price if everything else falls into place from that perspective. So we'll just see, but our C and I book portfolio, I think is gaining momentum. Consumer is going really well, and we're actually going to try to grow a little bit in residential mortgage as well to help offset it. That said, portfolio, we'll just see how it plays out overall, but we're doing everything we can, but we're going to make sure we emphasize and really put loans on our books that we know won't be issues in the next couple of years. They're gonna be good long term assets for us. Matt O'ConnorAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:42:16Okay, great. And then it sounds like it's probably not the case, but are you seeing on that loan topic, are you seeing any line utilization or line drawdowns out of precautionary concerns by borrowers given the recessionary environment? Any evidence of that at this point? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:42:36No, not really. I mean, you look at the utilization this past quarter, commercial is down about 1% and really nothing hit our screens that showed any big draws or anything from that. It's not like COVID where it was having draws every day, and you saw your capital ratios come down. It's not like that at all. There's really almost no additional activity. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:43:01Behaviors have been pretty consistent, to be honest with you, than what we went through in the last down period with COVID. Matt O'ConnorAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:43:10Right, well, that's good to hear. And then I'm sorry, just one more on deposits. It looks like you saw some pretty good end of period growth where balances were above the average, and particularly in non interest bearing. Any read into that or should we pay attention more so to the average deposit trajectory? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:43:28First quarter is always a low seasonal quarter for us. So it always drops in January, February, then starts to build back in March. You have to also remember we have a lot of escrow deposits because of our mortgage servicing businesses that we have. So we can't tend to gain through the first half of the month, and then it kind of drops off in the second half of the month. And our ICS business and trust has a lot of activity and that kind of comes and goes depending on what we have there. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:43:58And we had some ICS deposits on the balance sheet at the end of the quarter as well. But that's all good funding to have, and it helps us manage our balance sheet and helps with NII overall. Matt O'ConnorAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:44:14Okay, great. Thanks, Daryl. Operator00:44:16We'll next go to Christopher Spar with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Christopher SpahrDirector at Wells Fargo00:44:23Hi, morning. Thanks. Just a quick question. On long term debt, just what is your perspective on like with sluggish loan growth and I guess you seem to be somewhat optimistic on deposits, but like long term loan to deposit ratio and where do you see long term debt kind of settling out? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:44:44So, our long term debt, we are really focused on trying to reduce kind of broker deposits, Federal Home Loan Bank advances. I think our broker deposits are around 7 or 8,000,000,000 right now, so they're down from the peak from a year and a half ago. And if you look at Federal Home Loan Bank advances, they're only 1 or $2,000,000,000, so I think we're pretty much through that. You know, long term debt will issue as needed, depending on what our customer growth is and what our loan growth is. All that being said, so we'll access it accordingly. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:45:18I think there's some sub debt down the road in the next year or so that you might have to issue it down to get our total capital ratios where they need to be. Net net overall, we'll do long debt when it makes sense. We've had spreads come in for us versus our peers relatively well this past year or so. Obviously, with some volatility in the marketplace, spreads have gapped out, but it's consistent with everybody else in the marketplace from that point. Get deals done now, just at a higher cost and all that. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:45:52And right now, we really don't need a lot of funding. Our liquidity is really strong. Christopher SpahrDirector at Wells Fargo00:45:58Okay, thank you. And then as a follow-up on the expenses and what degree of flexibility on your guide range, like there's low hanging fruit within with some specific examples of your simplification efforts and maybe also then some potential savings on regulation. Thank you. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:46:15I would say for the last couple of years that I've been part of M and T, our businesses and leaders have done a great job controlling their expenses. This year is no exception to that. They're doing a great job for that. If we actually did get into a bad recession period where revenue was really challenged, there are things we could do to pull on expenses. But right now, I'm still thinking we're going to drive positive operating leverage for the year. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:46:42I think we still have a shot at that, still growing NII and fees, and we still have modest increase on the expense side. That said, if you look at our strategic projects, there are some strategic projects that we have to just get finished because we've been doing them for so long. So like the GL, our data centers, cyber, and our commercial CDA program, all those need to finish out. We're really close on a lot of these and should get those done. The other ones are more newer. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:47:13So if you really had to, you could slow some of that down from an expense perspective. We're also really focusing and working on how we can just deliver our products and services more efficiently in the back office. So I think you're seeing a lot of realignment, some automation and some workforce strategies potentially needed if we had to do something like that. So net net overall, I think we have flexibility on expenses, but really don't believe we have to pull the trigger now, still have a shooting for a positive operating leverage. Christopher SpahrDirector at Wells Fargo00:47:48All right, thank you. Operator00:47:51We'll next go to Peter Winter with D. A. Davidson. Please go ahead. Peter J. WinterManaging Director & Senior Research Analyst at D.A. Davidson00:47:56Thanks. Good morning. Daryl, I was just wondering, given the increase in uncertainty, are there any loan portfolios maybe you're watching a little bit more closely? Or any portfolios causing you to tighten underwriting standards a little more? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:48:12Yeah, there is a list of portfolios obviously that we are looking for and monitoring really well. If you look at it, retail trade is one, manufacturing, you look at anything from construction, wholesale trade, so all those tend to be areas that we're watching very closely. From Dodge and the USAID perspective, we have seen some stress in our government contractors. Actually, we've had two smaller credits get downgraded in those areas. And we're also monitoring our nonprofit portfolio. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:48:55Nonprofits, we've had one that get downgraded, it focused especially on immigration and all that. Areas that where funding is adjusted for and how they're reacting to it could have some impacts there. That said, none of that is really meaningful to date that we've seen, but we are monitoring all these portfolios very closely and we'll just see how the economy plays out. Peter J. WinterManaging Director & Senior Research Analyst at D.A. Davidson00:49:22Got it. Just one housekeeping on the margin, I just want to clarify, you said that the exit rate should be around $3.70 this year, is that correct? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:49:34No, I did not say that. I said that we are guiding for mid 360s to high 360s and that we have a good upward trajectory on our net interest margin. Peter J. WinterManaging Director & Senior Research Analyst at D.A. Davidson00:49:50Okay. Thanks, Joe. Operator00:49:54We'll next go to Erika Najarian with UBS. Please go ahead. Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:50:02Hi there. Yes, hi. Sorry, they just took away our physical phones and so old people like me have to figure out how to unmute more quickly. Just a few follow-up questions, Darrell. So, clearly there are near term sort of headwinds to growth. Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:50:24But as we think about everything that you described, your balance sheet to be positioned and everything that you've said about growth. It does feel like, you know, as again, as Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:50:36as a follow-up to the Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:50:37questions on the exit rate, it does feel like the NII trajectory should be upward from here if we just sort of dissect your guide and what you reported. Because you'll get the day count back in the second quarter, then it feels like we'll we'll get to the, you know, one eight. We have to get to the one eight to the for the low end of your guidance to be achieved. And if you have a smaller balance sheet that would imply a three seventy's exit NIM as well. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:51:07Yeah, I mean, talked earlier, one of the analysts was talking about what happens with what interest rate environment you have, what the yield curve is, what the Fed actions really do, and also what the size of the balance sheet is both on the loan and deposit side. There's just a lot of puts and takes out there. Is it possible we can get into three seventy's? Yes. But it's not in our base forecast right now. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:51:34We're basically just trying to balance what we see today with all the risks and uncertainty we have in the marketplace. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:51:42And Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:51:42if you give me a rate scenario, I'll give you my best estimate on what that rate scenario is from a margin perspective from that. I think your NII comment is positive and I think that NII should continue to move in an upward direction. I think that's right. Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:51:59Fair enough. We've gotten whipsawed by the curve the forward curve for And then a follow-up question, first is if you could tell us in sort of in the CECL model, what your unemployment assumption is underpinning your current reserve. And then as a follow-up somewhat related question, you are participating in the stress test this year. You did opt in. I'm wondering since the Fed had put out the their own language and their own press release indicating that changes to administrative law is requiring them to, you know, reexamine the test itself. Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:52:42Have you noticed any changes in the process yet in terms of the stress test, in terms of more transparency, more feedback? And, additionally, you know, does the if you receive a smaller or a lower stress capital buffer, does that change the way you're also thinking about capital allocation in the go forward? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:53:07Yeah, let me start with the stress testing one. We submitted our information at the March, early April, and really have not heard anything from the Fed. It's kind of a normal year from a processing perspective, at least to date, that what we've seen. We are optimistic, obviously, to opt in, we thought we would have a lower stress capital buffer. We'll see if we're correct with that. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:53:32And all that, for us, I think it just is meaningful that we can continue to drop that. Last year we were one of three banks out of 30 that were able to have a decrease, we went down two tenants, but we're still at the higher end of our stress capital buffer versus most of our peers in the industry. So we're just trying to see if our balance sheet and our basically de risking what we have is working and moving closer to the middle or maybe into the earlier top quartile or whatever of our peer group. That's really what we're trying to do there. Obviously, other constituencies can look at that and can weigh in on what impact that has. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:54:17I think long term, Erica, it may make an impact, but I don't think immediately given all the uncertainty in the marketplace, it's gonna have much of an impact of what we're trying to do from a capital perspective. We're gonna just really monitor to see if we actually go into a recession or not right now. As far as CECL goes, I would tell you that our unemployment rate averaged up now to be right around 5% approximately. So I think that's probably four tenths of a percent higher than what we were higher than that before we made the adjustment. It's obviously not a recessionary type unemployment rate, but it did move up because of the changes that we made. Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:55:04Great, thank you. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:55:06You're welcome. Operator00:55:08Thank you. And that does conclude our questions. I would like to now turn the call back over to Steve Windlebo for closing remarks. Steven WendelboeSVP - Market & Investor Relations at M&T Bank00:55:16Again, thank you all for participating today. And as always, if clarification is needed, please contact our Investor Relations department at (716) 842-5138. Thanks. Operator00:55:30Thank you. And ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude today's program. We thank you for your participation. You may disconnect at any time.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesSteven WendelboeSVP - Market & Investor RelationsDaryl BibleSenior EVP & CFOAnalystsKen UsdinSenior Research Analyst, Large-Cap Banks at Autonomous ResearchEbrahim PoonawalaManaging Director - Head of North American Banks Research at Bank of America Merrill LynchGerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital MarketsMatthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche BankManan GosaliaEquity Analyst at Morgan StanleyJohn PancariSenior Managing Director & Senior Research Analyst at Evercore ISIMatt O'ConnorAnalyst at Deutsche BankChristopher SpahrDirector at Wells FargoPeter J. WinterManaging Director & Senior Research Analyst at D.A. DavidsonErika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS GroupPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallM&T Bank Q1 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipants Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K) M&T Bank Earnings HeadlinesWhat is DA Davidson's Estimate for M&T Bank FY2026 Earnings?April 18 at 3:15 AM | americanbankingnews.comQ2 Earnings Estimate for M&T Bank Issued By DA DavidsonApril 18 at 2:07 AM | americanbankingnews.comTrump’s Secret WeaponHave you looked at the stock market recently? Millions of investors are scrambling trying to figure out what's coming next. But here's the truth… This is just the beginning. Trump has made it clear his tariffs are coming, and that the market will get worse before it gets better. Luckily, our FREE Presidential Transition Guide details exactly what will happen in the next 100 days, and how to protect your hard-earned savings during these times. Don't wait for the next crash to wipe you out. Act now.April 18, 2025 | American Alternative (Ad)M&T Bank price target lowered to $200 from $210 at Keefe BruyetteApril 16 at 11:23 AM | markets.businessinsider.comM&T Bank (MTB) Gets a Buy from Evercore ISIApril 16 at 11:23 AM | markets.businessinsider.comM&T Bank’s Earnings Call: A Mixed Financial OutlookApril 15 at 8:31 PM | tipranks.comSee More M&T Bank Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like M&T Bank? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on M&T Bank and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About M&T BankM&T Bank (NYSE:MTB) Corp. operates as a bank holding company, which engages in the provision of retail and commercial banking, trust, wealth management, and investment services. It operates through the following segments: Commercial Bank, Retail Bank, Institutional Services and Wealth Management, and All Other. The Commercial Bank segment offers a wide range of credit products and banking services to middle-market and large commercial customers, mainly within the markets served by the company. The Retail Bank segment refers to the services to consumers and small businesses through the company’s branch network and several other delivery channels such as telephone banking, internet banking, and ATMs. The Institutional Services and Wealth Management segment relates to helping high net worth individuals, institutions, and families grow, preserve, and transfer wealth. The All Other segment reflects other activities of the company that are not directly attributable to the reported segments. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Welcome to the M and T Bank First Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on a listen only mode for the and the floor will be open for your questions following the presentation. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. And I would now like to turn the conference over to Steve Windelbaugh, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Steven WendelboeSVP - Market & Investor Relations at M&T Bank00:00:46Thank you, Margo, and good morning. I'd like to thank everyone for participating in M and T's first quarter twenty twenty five earnings call, both by telephone and through the webcast. If you have not read through the earnings release we issued this morning, you may access it along with the financial tables and schedules by going to our website at mtb.com. Once there, you can click on the Investor Relations link and then on the Events and Presentations link. Closed captioning has been provided for webcast participants. Steven WendelboeSVP - Market & Investor Relations at M&T Bank00:01:17Also, before we start, I'd like to mention that today's presentation may contain forward looking information. Cautionary statements about this information are included in today's earnings release materials and in the investor presentation, as well as our SEC filings and other investor materials. The presentation also includes non GAAP measures, as identified in the earnings release and investor presentation. The appropriate reconciliations to GAAP are included in the appendix. Joining me on the call today is M and T's Senior Executive Vice President and CFO, Daryl Bybold. Steven WendelboeSVP - Market & Investor Relations at M&T Bank00:01:53Now I'd like to turn the call over to Darrell. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:01:56Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. First, I will begin with our purpose on slide three. Our purpose is to make a difference in people's lives. We are committed to serving not only our customers, but also supporting communities where we live and work, inspiring our 22,000 employees and delivering for our shareholders. In Renee's annual shareholder letter, he notes that we operate in an environment in which change is the only constant. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:02:26In these uncertain times, M and T starts from a position of strength with strong liquidity, capital levels, and capital generation. This position of strength reflects our consistent adherence to the fundamentals of liquidity management, capital allocation, and transparency. The strength of this operating model allows M and T to continue to perform through the peaks and valleys of the macroeconomic cycles and support our customers and communities in the moments that matter most. As highlighted on slide four, we continue to receive notable recognition, including 13 Greenwich Coalition Awards for our small business and middle market segments. And we were included in Fortune's most admired and most innovative company list. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:03:13Turn to slide six, which shows the results for the first quarter. Our first quarter results represent a strong start to the year with several successes to highlight. Net interest margin increased eight basis points, reflecting our efficient balance sheet and the strength of our deposit franchise. We executed $662,000,000 in share repurchases as we continue toward an 11% CET1 ratio in 2025, while also growing tangible book value per share by 2%. Fee income grew 5% since the first quarter of twenty four or 10% if you exclude last year's BLG distribution. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:03:56Asset quality continued to improve with a $516,000,000 reduction in commercial criticized balances and a $150,000,000 reduction in non accrual loans. Our net charge offs of 34 basis points were below our full year expectations of 40 basis points. Now, let's look at the specifics for the first quarter. Diluted GAAP earnings per share were $3.32 down from $3.86 from the prior quarter. Net income was $584,000,000 compared to $681,000,000 in the linked quarter. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:04:33MIT's first quarter results produced an ROA and ROCE of 1.148.36% respectively. Slide seven includes supplemental reporting of M and T's results on a net operating or tangible basis. M and T's net operating income was $594,000,000 compared to $691,000,000 in the linked quarter. Diluted net operating earnings per share were $3.38 down from $3.92 in the prior quarter. Net operating income yielded an ROTA and ROTCE of 1.2112.53%. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:05:19Next, let's look a little deeper into the underlying trends that generated our first quarter results. Please turn to slide eight. Taxable equivalent net interest income was $1,710,000,000 a decrease of $33,000,000 or 2% from linked quarter. The lower NII was primarily driven by two fewer days and lower average earning assets, partially offset by favorable deposit costs. Net interest margin was 3.66%, an increase of eight basis points from the prior quarter. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:05:54The primary drivers of the increase to margin include continued securities growth and lower wholesale, funding and time deposits, And favorable deposit pricing with interest bearing deposit costs declining 27 basis points. Turn to slide 10 to talk about average loans. Average loans and leases decreased 900,000,000.0 to $134,800,000,000 Lower CRE balances were partially offset by the growth in C and I, consumer and residential mortgage. C and I loans grew 1% to 61,000,000,000 driven by continued strength in the corporate institutional and fund banking. CRE loans declined 6% to $26,300,000,000 reflecting payoffs and paydowns and muted origination activity with increased market competition. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:06:51Residential mortgage loans were relatively unchanged at 23,200,000,000.0 Consumer loans grew 1% to $24,300,000,000 reflecting increases in recreational finance and indirect auto loans. Loan yields decreased 11 basis points to 6.06%, as lower rates on variable loans and lower non accrual interest was partially offset by fixed rate loan repricing and a smaller drag on our cash flow hedges. Turning to slide 11, our liquidity remains strong. At the end of the first quarter, investment securities and cash, including cash held at the Fed, totaled $57,900,000,000 representing 28% of total assets. Average investment securities increased $800,000,000 The yield on the investment securities increased 12 basis points to 4%, as the yield for new purchases exceeded the yield on maturing securities. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:07:53In the first quarter, we purchased $2,600,000,000 in debt securities at an average yield of 4.9%. The duration of the portfolio at the end of the quarter was three point six years and the unrealized pretax loss on the available for sale portfolio was $8,000,000 or less than one basis point CET1 drag if included in regulatory capital. Turning to slide 12. Average total deposits declined 3,400,000,000 or 2% to 161,200,000,000.0 The sequential decline included $700,000,000 decline in broker deposits, while the remainder of the decline was concentrated in commercial and business banking, partially reflecting seasonal lower balances. Average non interest bearing deposits declined $1,100,000,000 to $45,400,000,000 Excluding broker deposits, average non interest bearing deposit mix in the first quarter was relatively unchanged at 30.2%. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:08:59Interest bearing deposit costs decreased 27 basis points to 2.37. We saw favorable deposit declines across business lines. Higher level of broker and retail time deposit maturities in the quarter also contributed to the deposit cost decline. Continuing on slide 13, non interest income was $611,000,000 compared to $657,000,000 in the linked quarter. We saw continued strength across fee income categories, with increases in mortgage banking, service charges, trusts, and brokerage fee income. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:09:36Recall that the fourth quarter included an $18,000,000 net gain from the sale of non core securities and a $23,000,000 BOG distribution. Excluding these items from the prior quarter, non interest income declined by $5,000,000 sequentially. Mortgage banking revenues were $118,000,000 compared to $117,000,000 in the fourth quarter. Residential mortgage banking revenues increased $6,000,000 sequentially to $82,000,000 reflecting the partial quarter benefit from new subservicing. We expect to reach the full run rate on this subservicing in the second quarter. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:10:16Commercial mortgage banking revenues decreased $5,000,000 to $36,000,000 reflecting lower gains on the sale of commercial mortgage loans. Other revenues from operations decreased $34,000,000 to $142,000,000 mostly reflecting the fourth quarter '20 '3 million dollars VOD distribution. Turning to slide 14, we continue to execute on our expense plans. Non interest expenses were $1,420,000,000 an increase of 52,000,000 from the prior quarter. Last year's fourth quarter included $35,000,000 in notable expenses related to the redemption of certain M and T Trust preferred obligations, expenses associated with corporate real estate optimization, partially offset by pension related credit. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:11:07Salary and benefits increased 97,000,000 to $887,000,000 mostly reflecting $110,000,000 of seasonally higher compensation expense related to stock based compensation, payroll related taxes, and other employee benefit expenses. As usual, we expect those seasonal factors to decline significantly as we enter the second quarter. Other costs of operations decreased $50,000,000 to $118,000,000 primarily reflecting the previously mentioned fourth quarter notable items. The efficiency ratio was 60.5% compared to 56.8% in the linked quarter. Next, let's turn to slide 15 for credit. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:11:54Net charge offs for the quarter totaled $114,000,000 or 34 basis points, decreasing from 47 basis points in the linked quarter. Charge offs were relatively granular in the first quarter, with the five largest charges amounting to less than $30,000,000 in total, representing both C and I and CRE credits. Non accrual loans decreased $150,000,000 or 9% to $1,500,000,000 The non accrual ratio decreased 11 basis points to 1.14%, driven largely by payoffs, charge offs and upgrades out of non accrual. In the fourth quarter, we reported a provision of $130,000,000 compared to the net charge offs of 114,000,000 The allowance to loan ratio increased two basis points to 1.63%, reflecting growth in certain consumer loan portfolios, as well as a modest deterioration in the macroeconomic forecast. The increase was not related to changes in the underlying credit performance, which is mostly in line with expectations. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:13:05Please turn to slide 16. We estimate that the level of criticized loans will be 9,400,000,000 compared to $9,900,000,000 at the December. The improvement from the linked quarter was driven by $667,000,000 decline in CRE criticized balances, partially offset by $150,000,000 increase in C and I. Within C and I, the increase in criticize was concentrated in the motor vehicle and recreational finance dealers. The CRE criticize decline was primarily within multifamily, office, healthcare, construction, and was driven by payoffs, paydowns, and upgrades to past status. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:13:50Improved leasing, occupancy, and cash flows in healthcare and multifamily helped drive the improvement in the CRE criticized. Turning to slide 19 for capital. M and T's CET1 ratio at the end of the first quarter was an estimated 11.5% compared to 11.68% at the end of the fourth quarter. The decline in the CET1 ratio reflects increased capital distributions, including $662,000,000 in share repurchases, partially offset by continued strong capital generation. AOCI impact on the CET1 ratio from available for sale securities and pension related components combined would be approximately a positive six basis points if included in regulatory capital. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:14:43Now turning to slide 20 for the outlook. First, let's begin with the economic backdrop. The economic backdrop remains dynamic in light of the developments over the past several weeks. Recent economic data is mixed, with strong job gains but moderating wage growth. Our recent readings show weakening business and consumer sentiment and easing inflation. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:15:09The ultimate impact on tariffs on the broader economy remains unknown at this point. That uncertainty is reflected in recent equity market and rate volatility. We ended the first quarter well positioned for a dynamic economic environment with strong liquidity, strong capital generation, and a CET1 ratio at 11.5%. With that economic backdrop, let's review our net interest income outlook. We expect taxable equivalent net interest income to be 7,050,000,000.00 to $7,150,000,000 with net interest margin increasing through the year and averaging in the mid to high 360s. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:15:54We expect the full year average loan and lease balances to be $135,000,000,000 to $137,000,000,000 The lower loan outlook reflects lower CRE balances with elevated payoffs and paydowns and muted originations. Full year average deposit balances are expected to be 162,000,000,000 to $164,000,000,000 We remain focused on growing customer deposits at a reasonable cost, while also considering loan growth. Turning to fee income. We expect noninterest income to be at the high end of the 2,500,000,000.0 to $2,600,000,000 range. The environment remains dynamic. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:16:34However, our diversified product set should help provide relative stability from our fee income businesses. Continuing with expenses, we anticipate total non interest expense, including intangible amortization, to be 5,400,000,000 to $5,500,000,000 Our business lines remain focused on closely managing their expenses, allowing the bank to continue to target investments in projects and business opportunities that support our enterprise priorities. Regarding credit, we continue to expect net charge offs for the full year to be near 40 basis points. We also expect criticized loans to continue to decline in 2025. As it relates to capital, we expect the CET1 ratio to reach 11% in 2025, but we'll monitor the economic backdrop and adjust as needed. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:17:30The level of share repurchases will vary with RWA growth. As shown on slide 21, we remain committed to our four priorities, including growing our New England and Long Island markets, optimizing our resources through simplification, making our systems resilient and scalable, and continuing to scale and develop our risk management capabilities. To conclude on slide 22, our results underscore an optimistic investment thesis. M and T has always been a purpose driven organization with a successful business model that benefits all including shareholders. We have a long track record of credit outperforming through all economic cycles while growing within the markets we serve. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:18:17We remain focused on shareholder returns and consistent dividend growth. Finally, we are a disciplined acquirer and prudent steward of our shareholder capital. Now let's open the call up to questions before which Marco will briefly review the instructions. Operator00:18:38Thank you. Operator00:18:51We'll take our first question from Ken Houston with Autonomous Research. Please go ahead. Ken UsdinSenior Research Analyst, Large-Cap Banks at Autonomous Research00:19:00Hi, very much. Good morning, Daryl. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:19:02Hey, Daryl. Ken UsdinSenior Research Analyst, Large-Cap Banks at Autonomous Research00:19:03So one question just on the NII, you mentioned that the environment's meaningfully changed and we see a smaller balance sheet here offset by a little bit better of a NIM output. Are you noticing anything in terms of the deposit flow activity more specifically in terms of how much more mix shift you might expect and how much more you might be able to also continuing to work down that higher cost liability side? Thanks. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:19:28Yeah, Ken, we are definitely, we did lower the guidance on deposits, but I think we feel pretty comfortable that we'll probably be at the higher end of the deposit range. Still having really good growth of our businesses across the board, whether it's commercial, small business, consumer, our ICS business kind of grows as activity in the marketplace is growing. So I think we feel pretty positive on the deposit growth. And we'll use those additional deposits if we don't have loan growth to either pay off higher liabilities in the marketplace that we have on the balance sheet, cheaper funding, or we'll put it at the Fed and just have more liquidity on hand, one or the other. But we feel good about on the deposit side. Ken UsdinSenior Research Analyst, Large-Cap Banks at Autonomous Research00:20:14Okay, and second one on fees. The first quarter six eleven or so, but you're still talking about the high end of 02/2006. I noticed there, I don't believe, was there a Bayview distribution in the first quarter? Was that pushed? And can you just talk about the ramp that you get from here going forward and your confidence in getting towards that higher end on fees? Ken UsdinSenior Research Analyst, Large-Cap Banks at Autonomous Research00:20:35Thanks. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:20:36Yeah, so you're all right. Bayview, we did not get a distribution first quarter. We kind of took it out for the rest of the year. We may or may not get distribution from Bayview. They're working on some things internally. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:20:50So we will do but if you look at all of our other businesses that we're having, we're having really good growth across, you know, I would expect our fee businesses to grow from where we are in the first quarter, think significantly in the second, third and fourth quarters. We have a lot of momentum across all of our businesses. Our trust businesses are strong. If you look at ICS, you know, they're doing really well in their structured loan agency businesses and activity also bringing in deposits from activity. So that's really positive. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:21:22Our service charges are actually performing really well right now. From mortgage banking perspective, you know, if rates come down, and then who knows which way the yield curve is going to go, but we are positioned to have really good mortgage revenues both on the commercial and residential side from originations. You did see the increase in our numbers now in this quarter from additional sub servicing that could have other opportunities for growth, potentially as that kind of continues to grow. Workery services are strong. So I think net net overall, I think we're pretty positive on our fees. Ken UsdinSenior Research Analyst, Large-Cap Banks at Autonomous Research00:22:01Thanks, Daryl. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:22:02Thank you. Operator00:22:03Thank you. We'll take our next question from Ebrahim Poonawala with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director - Head of North American Banks Research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:22:09Good morning, Daryl. Operator00:22:11Good morning. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director - Head of North American Banks Research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:22:11I guess in your remarks you mentioned tariff uncertainties were reflected in the stock markets and interest rates. Just if you don't mind, talk to us about any anecdotal sort of feedback from your customers over the last week or two around tariffs? Are you seeing CapEx decisions being pulled back? Just would love any color there. And then how is that informing your outlook on C and I growth? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:22:40Yeah, all that's fair. So I think if you look at it overall, you saw the sentiment numbers were both weak on the consumer and on the business side. If you start with the consumer, from just looking at our debit card activity, our spending patterns are still pretty much intact there. So I think we're pretty consistent. We are seeing, and it could just be short lived, but in our indirect channels on the consumer side, a lot of loan volume coming in auto, marine and RV, maybe people rushing before higher prices, but that's really good volume there. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:23:20And the bottom 20% consumer has been struggling for the last several years and will continue to probably continue to struggle. Business wise, our customers actually really wanted to make a lot of investments, they want to do acquisitions, but they are just really on pause right now. I think it's just lack of confidence. They don't know what the rules of the road are right now. Things keep changing in the DC and until that settles out a little bit, I think they're gonna be on hold until they come through. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:23:53That said, we've been able to grow our C and I business, we grew nicely. If you look at it in our middle market space, we had good growth there. We had growth in fund banking, corporate institutional, our dealer commercial services grew. So we're growing really well in that space. It's really our CRE portfolio is really where the challenges are. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:24:17And that's really the portfolio that's having us shrink and lower our loan guidance for the most part. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director - Head of North American Banks Research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:24:25That's helpful. And I guess maybe the other thing on capital, you mentioned CET1 to 11% depending on RWA growth. Just give us how price sensitive you are? Mean, I think the stocks come down a fair bit relative to where you repurchased during the first quarter. Like how quickly could we see if customers remain on pause that M and T gets to 11%? Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director - Head of North American Banks Research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:24:50Yeah. And you mentioned also opportunistic buyer as regards to capital. Like, are there any deals to be done given just all the macro uncertainties right now? Thanks. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:25:00So with the volatility in the marketplace, I emphasized in the prepared remarks, we really do have strong capital and liquidity. Our capital is the real capital. Our AOCI actually is a positive six basis points, So we feel good about that. We will monitor market conditions. We still plan to start our share repurchase back on Wednesday when we come out of blackout, and we'll just monitor and if we see the economy go into a negative spin down, we might slow down or pause, but until we see that right now the trends for the most part are pretty uneventful and we're just kind of playing it as we go. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:25:48I know it's not good guidance for you, but we kind of just have to see how things play out, but we're prepared to start with share repurchases on Wednesday and just monitor economic conditions. Ebrahim PoonawalaManaging Director - Head of North American Banks Research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:26:01Got it, thank you. Operator00:26:03We'll take our next question from Gerard Cassidy with RBC. Please go ahead. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:26:08Hi, Daryl. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:26:10Hey, Gerard, how are doing? Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:26:12Good, thank you. Can you give us some color on your insights regarding the regulatory environment? We're reading a lot about the regulators look to ease up, if you will, on some of the regulatory requirements. There's a lot of talk about the supplementary leverage ratio and the leverage ratio, but they seem to pertain to our biggest banks, the trillionaire banks. Are you seeing anything on the horizon that would be very beneficial to the regional banks like yourself from the regulatory stuff that you're hearing and seeing? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:26:54Yeah, yeah, I just wanna start with, it really doesn't matter to us who's actually in DC in the administration, Republican, Democrat, we perform and do well. You look at our people's acquisition that was done under the Biden administration. So we can do business either way. From a regulatory perspective, I would tell you, the people that are getting in the seats tend to be much more focused on having our industry help grow the economy and really have an impact positively to it. You're seeing that with acting chair in the FDIC, he actually came out this past week, he actually is pulling back on some of the RRP stuff. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:27:34We're in the first wave, so we actually had this stuff already prepared and completed and we're pulling back on that. That's a positive, but head of supervision Bowman is really looking at tailoring, I think that's a really good positive for us, I think that would be good. OCC and CFPB are also I think very positive. So I think generally there are more pro business, more trying to grow the economy. And you could see some tweaks around the tier one leverage ratio, the SLR, stress testing, Basel III, LCR, long term debt, RRP, and hopefully maybe they pull back on all our regulatory reporting. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:28:14We've produced thousands of reports to the government officials, and I'm sure we can weed out some of that information as well. But I think it's an opportunity rich environment to actually make some improvements and be more efficient. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:28:29Very good, thank you. And then as a follow-up to your comment about loan growth and how the commercial real estate portfolio is making it more challenging, can you dive into that a little further? Is it your choice to kind of continue to shrink it or is it just not your customers are paying you off and you can't grow it? What's some of the color behind the challenges within the commercial real estate portfolio? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:28:57So what we've seen in the last quarter or two is that there's a lot more active lenders in this space. So you have a lot more people providing loan capital. And if look at it, it's very competitive. So people are already being very aggressive on pricing and on structure. And at M and T, we are very disciplined in how we make loans and put things on our balance sheet, we're doing our best to support our customers and all that, but at the end of the day, we aren't gonna put loans on that aren't structured properly from that perspective. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:29:32In the first quarter, and you look at the payoffs that we received, it was a much higher amount than what we expected. About half of them were known maturities that were coming through in the first quarter, another 10% was just pulling forward maturities in later twenty five. But 40% was really pulling in maturities from '26 and beyond. And that's really where there's a lot of impact going on from that perspective. And given that that down crease, it's not all bad. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:30:04We've been able remix our portfolio. So we're actually have a lot less office exposure, which is good. We're also reducing a lot of the smaller credits, less than 5,000,000, and we're actually growing areas that we wanna grow like multifamily and industrial. So it's not all bad. I would say the pipeline is building and we feel good that it will kind of level out over the next couple quarters and start to grow. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:30:32And we'll just continue to do that. I mean, at the end of the day, we'll have a smaller balance sheet and probably just repurchase back more stock. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:30:41And Darrell, just quickly on those maturities that were being pulled forward in 'twenty five and 'twenty six that were paid off, Was that due to that competition that you referenced? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:30:52A lot of it was competition. You know, some of it was some of our REIT customers decided to prepay early and all that. It was mixed. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:31:00Okay. Good. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:31:01Okay. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:31:03Yeah. Gerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:31:04Thank you. Operator00:31:05We'll next go to Matt O'Connor with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:31:12Good morning. You guys added a little bit to the loan loss reserves even though the loans were down and the credit metrics were better. Can you just talk about how you tweak your macro outlook to support the higher reserves? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:31:26Yeah, we did tweak it just because of what's going on in the marketplace, Matt. I think that that's correct. Our provision probably would have been close to 110 if we did not have the tweaks, but we just wanted to wait the lower, we have three scenarios, the scenario that has the downward pressure, we just increased that proportionately more so that you have higher unemployment rates and you have lower GDP rates. We didn't have it go into a recession, but we had it close just above that, it's at point 1% positive. So we were reflecting it. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:32:07Obviously, if we do go into a recession, you know, we'll probably would continue to add to the reserves appropriately as needed. But we just felt comfortable that that was the right thing to do, given everything that's going on and uncertainty in the marketplace. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:32:22Okay, that's helpful. And then separately, maybe I missed it, but what are the interest rate assumptions that you have within your net interest income guide? And then just remind us your sensitivity to rate changes on both the short and long end of the curve? Thank you. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:32:38Yeah, so our ALCO team and treasury has been working hard because rates keep changing, the curve keeps changing, so it's a very dynamic environment for sure. You know, what we have as our baseline with our forecast has four drops, the last one being in December, which isn't very significant, and we have the yield curve that we had on April 7, which is a relatively lower yield curve from that. The way I would look at it, there's a lot of puts and takes here. From a net interest margin perspective, just high level, if rates on the curve continue to flatten out, if they go down, that would be a negative for margin. As we get more deposits like Ken asked earlier, that could be good for NII, but maybe lower for margin if we deploy that in our liquidity portfolio. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:33:38For higher margin, I'd say, obviously a steeper curve would be helpful, and if we can continue to maybe start to grow our loan book again, and once CRE starts to come online, I think that would be possible and all that. So there's a lot of puts and takes there. That said, overall, I feel really good with margin trajectory, mid to high three sixties. I think overall profitability and the company is gonna be really strong, really strong capital generation. So I think we feel really good and we can weather whatever the economy gives us, I think very well. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:34:13Okay. And then just to summarize that though, like, as we think about the net interest income dollars, are you asset sensitive? Are you relatively neutral? Again, all things else being equal, but if rates are a little bit lower than you expect, has that impact the dollars? Just call it a parallel shift down to keep it simple. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:34:32Thanks. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:34:34Yeah, so our short end, we are definitely pretty neutral. It really does not impact us much one way or the other, what direction the Fed does on rates, think we're relatively good. And you saw our deposit betas, 50 plus percent, so they're reacting like we thought they would react. So all that is coming in really well. With the yield curve flattening, we still have positive roll on, so like in the consumer loan portfolio, it's probably repricing right now maybe 100 to 150 basis points more. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:35:15The rates flatten down, it's going to still reprice positive, but maybe only 50 basis points better. So we still get the benefit, it's just less of a benefit. I think the thing to really emphasize though is we have a lot of unknowns in our balance sheet, which kind of gives us the comfort, we're going to have strong margin and strong NII. We know for a fact that we have 4,000,000,000 of securities coming off at a yield of three and a half. Depending on what the yield curve looks like, it's going to reprice higher, maybe four and a half, maybe five and a half, but it's going up. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:35:47Consumer loans, I just talked about, that's going to continue to reprice higher. Strong beta, deposit beta is good. And then on the swap book, we know for a fact that our swap book is going to go up and accrete more over time, up to 30 basis points. We should be in the 370s by the end of the year and early twenty six. So all those are known and all those are gonna happen, and that's baked into our and all that. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:36:13So it gives us confidence that we're gonna perform well and then tweak it on the edges either way if we're gonna outperform or maybe be a little bit less, but net net overall earnings will be strong. Matthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche Bank00:36:26Thank you. Operator00:36:28We'll next go to Manan Gosala with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Manan GosaliaEquity Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:36:34Hi, good morning, Daryl. Just to follow-up on your point on the security side, just given that the long end of the curve has been so volatile, how are you thinking about putting on more securities here and what kind of duration would you be willing to take? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:36:53Yeah, so we are very disciplined in how we're doing this. We're in it for the long term, it's kind of how we approach it. So our strategies really haven't changed. We are investing, obviously we cleansed our portfolio last year, so all we have is government backed securities in our portfolio. Whether they're treasuries, agencies, or municipalities, we don't have any non agency stuff in the portfolio, so it's all liquid at 35,000,000,000. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:37:20We've been buying about half of our purchases are basically non convex, so we're buying treasuries and CMBS in the marketplace. Obviously, we don't have the attractive yields that you do in the CMBS, but you know you're gonna keep them over the whole maturity. And then the other half is by going into shorter CMOs and seasoned MBS. Our average duration, if you go back maybe two years ago, we were four, we're now in the 3.5 range and we stayed in the 3.5 range and feel really good about how we're positioned. It's a portfolio for liquidity and we're going to continue to use it for that if we need it. Manan GosaliaEquity Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:38:02Got it. Maybe on loan growth, or actually, the other side of the loan growth question is credit. And you've had some nice loan growth in C and I over the past few quarters. I think C and I is up 7% year on year, and that's clearly well above peers. So how are you thinking about the credit performance of that book if we get a weakening macro environment from here? Manan GosaliaEquity Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:38:27And I ask because I noticed that declines in CRE criticized were actually in line with last quarter, but then you had some offsets in the C and I side. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:38:38Yeah, our CRE portfolio has been performing really well. We've stress tested, looked at it backwards and forwards and feel really good on the trajectory of that portfolio. Now that said, we have maybe a little bit of exposure in the greater DC area, a couple hundred million, nothing significant, But things to watch out for in certain areas, but net net overall, we feel CRE is gonna perform and continue to perform very, very well from that perspective. Our C and I went up, it was really just idiosyncratic, one customer, a large credit, a couple hundred million, basically had some issues with a roll up strategy for the big trucks that you see on the road and all that. We think that's gonna play out positively as the year goes, so we don't think there's any losses there. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:39:32So net net overall, we still think that we will continue to lower our criticized throughout the year, not at the pace that we did in '24, but still at a measured pace. If things get really bad in the economy, which I don't think is gonna happen, but if they do, then we can adjust accordingly. But right now, I think we're just seeing a slowdown for the most part. Manan GosaliaEquity Analyst at Morgan Stanley00:39:55Great, thank you. Operator00:39:57And next we'll go to John Pocari with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead. John PancariSenior Managing Director & Senior Research Analyst at Evercore ISI00:40:04Good morning, Daryl. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:40:06Good morning, John. John PancariSenior Managing Director & Senior Research Analyst at Evercore ISI00:40:08Just back to the loan growth. I know you gave some good color on the commercial real estate balances that are coming down and also seeing some growth selectively in C and I. Within that average loan guidance of 135,000,000 to 137,000,000 can you talk to us maybe can you break down the incremental CRE decline that you expect and where you expect that could bottom just given what you're seeing right now? And then perhaps maybe help us with how we should think about the pace of C and I loan growth as we look out through the remainder of the year? Thanks. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:40:44Yeah, so we expect right now our CRE portfolio to bottom out on an average basis probably by the fourth quarter. We think that our pipeline is gonna start to build it's building now, and it just has to go through and basically get on the books. A lot of the new production of the pipeline is construction, so our construction loans won't actually start to fund up meaningfully for probably twelve to fifteen months from that standpoint. But CRE is, I think, going to work its way through and start to grow momentum and grow positively. For us, it's all about making sure we're serving client selection, the best customers out in the marketplace, making sure that the loans are structured really well, that helped us through some down periods, we won't lose that. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:41:37So structure is really important to us, and we will compete on price if everything else falls into place from that perspective. So we'll just see, but our C and I book portfolio, I think is gaining momentum. Consumer is going really well, and we're actually going to try to grow a little bit in residential mortgage as well to help offset it. That said, portfolio, we'll just see how it plays out overall, but we're doing everything we can, but we're going to make sure we emphasize and really put loans on our books that we know won't be issues in the next couple of years. They're gonna be good long term assets for us. Matt O'ConnorAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:42:16Okay, great. And then it sounds like it's probably not the case, but are you seeing on that loan topic, are you seeing any line utilization or line drawdowns out of precautionary concerns by borrowers given the recessionary environment? Any evidence of that at this point? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:42:36No, not really. I mean, you look at the utilization this past quarter, commercial is down about 1% and really nothing hit our screens that showed any big draws or anything from that. It's not like COVID where it was having draws every day, and you saw your capital ratios come down. It's not like that at all. There's really almost no additional activity. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:43:01Behaviors have been pretty consistent, to be honest with you, than what we went through in the last down period with COVID. Matt O'ConnorAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:43:10Right, well, that's good to hear. And then I'm sorry, just one more on deposits. It looks like you saw some pretty good end of period growth where balances were above the average, and particularly in non interest bearing. Any read into that or should we pay attention more so to the average deposit trajectory? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:43:28First quarter is always a low seasonal quarter for us. So it always drops in January, February, then starts to build back in March. You have to also remember we have a lot of escrow deposits because of our mortgage servicing businesses that we have. So we can't tend to gain through the first half of the month, and then it kind of drops off in the second half of the month. And our ICS business and trust has a lot of activity and that kind of comes and goes depending on what we have there. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:43:58And we had some ICS deposits on the balance sheet at the end of the quarter as well. But that's all good funding to have, and it helps us manage our balance sheet and helps with NII overall. Matt O'ConnorAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:44:14Okay, great. Thanks, Daryl. Operator00:44:16We'll next go to Christopher Spar with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Christopher SpahrDirector at Wells Fargo00:44:23Hi, morning. Thanks. Just a quick question. On long term debt, just what is your perspective on like with sluggish loan growth and I guess you seem to be somewhat optimistic on deposits, but like long term loan to deposit ratio and where do you see long term debt kind of settling out? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:44:44So, our long term debt, we are really focused on trying to reduce kind of broker deposits, Federal Home Loan Bank advances. I think our broker deposits are around 7 or 8,000,000,000 right now, so they're down from the peak from a year and a half ago. And if you look at Federal Home Loan Bank advances, they're only 1 or $2,000,000,000, so I think we're pretty much through that. You know, long term debt will issue as needed, depending on what our customer growth is and what our loan growth is. All that being said, so we'll access it accordingly. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:45:18I think there's some sub debt down the road in the next year or so that you might have to issue it down to get our total capital ratios where they need to be. Net net overall, we'll do long debt when it makes sense. We've had spreads come in for us versus our peers relatively well this past year or so. Obviously, with some volatility in the marketplace, spreads have gapped out, but it's consistent with everybody else in the marketplace from that point. Get deals done now, just at a higher cost and all that. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:45:52And right now, we really don't need a lot of funding. Our liquidity is really strong. Christopher SpahrDirector at Wells Fargo00:45:58Okay, thank you. And then as a follow-up on the expenses and what degree of flexibility on your guide range, like there's low hanging fruit within with some specific examples of your simplification efforts and maybe also then some potential savings on regulation. Thank you. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:46:15I would say for the last couple of years that I've been part of M and T, our businesses and leaders have done a great job controlling their expenses. This year is no exception to that. They're doing a great job for that. If we actually did get into a bad recession period where revenue was really challenged, there are things we could do to pull on expenses. But right now, I'm still thinking we're going to drive positive operating leverage for the year. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:46:42I think we still have a shot at that, still growing NII and fees, and we still have modest increase on the expense side. That said, if you look at our strategic projects, there are some strategic projects that we have to just get finished because we've been doing them for so long. So like the GL, our data centers, cyber, and our commercial CDA program, all those need to finish out. We're really close on a lot of these and should get those done. The other ones are more newer. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:47:13So if you really had to, you could slow some of that down from an expense perspective. We're also really focusing and working on how we can just deliver our products and services more efficiently in the back office. So I think you're seeing a lot of realignment, some automation and some workforce strategies potentially needed if we had to do something like that. So net net overall, I think we have flexibility on expenses, but really don't believe we have to pull the trigger now, still have a shooting for a positive operating leverage. Christopher SpahrDirector at Wells Fargo00:47:48All right, thank you. Operator00:47:51We'll next go to Peter Winter with D. A. Davidson. Please go ahead. Peter J. WinterManaging Director & Senior Research Analyst at D.A. Davidson00:47:56Thanks. Good morning. Daryl, I was just wondering, given the increase in uncertainty, are there any loan portfolios maybe you're watching a little bit more closely? Or any portfolios causing you to tighten underwriting standards a little more? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:48:12Yeah, there is a list of portfolios obviously that we are looking for and monitoring really well. If you look at it, retail trade is one, manufacturing, you look at anything from construction, wholesale trade, so all those tend to be areas that we're watching very closely. From Dodge and the USAID perspective, we have seen some stress in our government contractors. Actually, we've had two smaller credits get downgraded in those areas. And we're also monitoring our nonprofit portfolio. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:48:55Nonprofits, we've had one that get downgraded, it focused especially on immigration and all that. Areas that where funding is adjusted for and how they're reacting to it could have some impacts there. That said, none of that is really meaningful to date that we've seen, but we are monitoring all these portfolios very closely and we'll just see how the economy plays out. Peter J. WinterManaging Director & Senior Research Analyst at D.A. Davidson00:49:22Got it. Just one housekeeping on the margin, I just want to clarify, you said that the exit rate should be around $3.70 this year, is that correct? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:49:34No, I did not say that. I said that we are guiding for mid 360s to high 360s and that we have a good upward trajectory on our net interest margin. Peter J. WinterManaging Director & Senior Research Analyst at D.A. Davidson00:49:50Okay. Thanks, Joe. Operator00:49:54We'll next go to Erika Najarian with UBS. Please go ahead. Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:50:02Hi there. Yes, hi. Sorry, they just took away our physical phones and so old people like me have to figure out how to unmute more quickly. Just a few follow-up questions, Darrell. So, clearly there are near term sort of headwinds to growth. Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:50:24But as we think about everything that you described, your balance sheet to be positioned and everything that you've said about growth. It does feel like, you know, as again, as Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:50:36as a follow-up to the Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:50:37questions on the exit rate, it does feel like the NII trajectory should be upward from here if we just sort of dissect your guide and what you reported. Because you'll get the day count back in the second quarter, then it feels like we'll we'll get to the, you know, one eight. We have to get to the one eight to the for the low end of your guidance to be achieved. And if you have a smaller balance sheet that would imply a three seventy's exit NIM as well. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:51:07Yeah, I mean, talked earlier, one of the analysts was talking about what happens with what interest rate environment you have, what the yield curve is, what the Fed actions really do, and also what the size of the balance sheet is both on the loan and deposit side. There's just a lot of puts and takes out there. Is it possible we can get into three seventy's? Yes. But it's not in our base forecast right now. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:51:34We're basically just trying to balance what we see today with all the risks and uncertainty we have in the marketplace. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:51:42And Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:51:42if you give me a rate scenario, I'll give you my best estimate on what that rate scenario is from a margin perspective from that. I think your NII comment is positive and I think that NII should continue to move in an upward direction. I think that's right. Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:51:59Fair enough. We've gotten whipsawed by the curve the forward curve for And then a follow-up question, first is if you could tell us in sort of in the CECL model, what your unemployment assumption is underpinning your current reserve. And then as a follow-up somewhat related question, you are participating in the stress test this year. You did opt in. I'm wondering since the Fed had put out the their own language and their own press release indicating that changes to administrative law is requiring them to, you know, reexamine the test itself. Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:52:42Have you noticed any changes in the process yet in terms of the stress test, in terms of more transparency, more feedback? And, additionally, you know, does the if you receive a smaller or a lower stress capital buffer, does that change the way you're also thinking about capital allocation in the go forward? Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:53:07Yeah, let me start with the stress testing one. We submitted our information at the March, early April, and really have not heard anything from the Fed. It's kind of a normal year from a processing perspective, at least to date, that what we've seen. We are optimistic, obviously, to opt in, we thought we would have a lower stress capital buffer. We'll see if we're correct with that. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:53:32And all that, for us, I think it just is meaningful that we can continue to drop that. Last year we were one of three banks out of 30 that were able to have a decrease, we went down two tenants, but we're still at the higher end of our stress capital buffer versus most of our peers in the industry. So we're just trying to see if our balance sheet and our basically de risking what we have is working and moving closer to the middle or maybe into the earlier top quartile or whatever of our peer group. That's really what we're trying to do there. Obviously, other constituencies can look at that and can weigh in on what impact that has. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:54:17I think long term, Erica, it may make an impact, but I don't think immediately given all the uncertainty in the marketplace, it's gonna have much of an impact of what we're trying to do from a capital perspective. We're gonna just really monitor to see if we actually go into a recession or not right now. As far as CECL goes, I would tell you that our unemployment rate averaged up now to be right around 5% approximately. So I think that's probably four tenths of a percent higher than what we were higher than that before we made the adjustment. It's obviously not a recessionary type unemployment rate, but it did move up because of the changes that we made. Erika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:55:04Great, thank you. Daryl BibleSenior EVP & CFO at M&T Bank00:55:06You're welcome. Operator00:55:08Thank you. And that does conclude our questions. I would like to now turn the call back over to Steve Windlebo for closing remarks. Steven WendelboeSVP - Market & Investor Relations at M&T Bank00:55:16Again, thank you all for participating today. And as always, if clarification is needed, please contact our Investor Relations department at (716) 842-5138. Thanks. Operator00:55:30Thank you. And ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude today's program. We thank you for your participation. You may disconnect at any time.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesSteven WendelboeSVP - Market & Investor RelationsDaryl BibleSenior EVP & CFOAnalystsKen UsdinSenior Research Analyst, Large-Cap Banks at Autonomous ResearchEbrahim PoonawalaManaging Director - Head of North American Banks Research at Bank of America Merrill LynchGerard CassidyManaging Director at RBC Capital MarketsMatthew O'ConnorManaging Director at Deutsche BankManan GosaliaEquity Analyst at Morgan StanleyJohn PancariSenior Managing Director & Senior Research Analyst at Evercore ISIMatt O'ConnorAnalyst at Deutsche BankChristopher SpahrDirector at Wells FargoPeter J. WinterManaging Director & Senior Research Analyst at D.A. DavidsonErika NajarianManaging Director & Equity Research Analyst at UBS GroupPowered by