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Texas-based bank holding company Veritex Holdings (NASDAQGM:VBTX) met Wall Street’s revenue expectations in Q1 CY2025, with sales up 4.2% year on year to $110.2 million. Its non-GAAP profit of $0.54 per share was 5.2% above analysts’ consensus estimates.
Is now the time to buy VBTX? Find out in our full research report (it’s free).
Veritex Holdings’ first quarter results were well received by the market, as the company delivered revenue growth and exceeded Wall Street’s non-GAAP profit expectations. Management attributed the quarter’s performance to disciplined deposit remixing, tighter expense control, and continued balance sheet strength. CEO Malcolm Holland emphasized initiatives to reduce high-cost funding and increase lower-cost relationship deposits, while also highlighting stable credit metrics and rising tangible book value. Chief Financial Officer Terry Earley noted, “Fee income continues to build momentum across every category. Increased attention to expenses is showing encouraging results, and loan production has increased meaningfully.”
Looking forward, management is focused on maintaining net interest margin (NIM) stability through ongoing deposit repricing efforts and further investments in commercial banking talent, even as loan growth remains muted. The company expects loan production to translate into growth in 2026, while remaining cautious about payoff trends and broader economic uncertainties. Earley cautioned that, although expense discipline remains a priority, some increase is expected due to strategic hiring. Will Holford, Chief Operating Officer, pointed to growing momentum in government-guaranteed lending and fee income, stating, “You don’t see it all yet, but you can feel the momentum. We’re not hanging on one area. Every single area is contributing.”
Management attributed first quarter results to deposit portfolio remixing, cost reductions, and stable credit, while acknowledging continued headwinds from elevated loan payoffs and muted loan growth.
Veritex’s outlook centers on navigating muted loan growth, maintaining NIM stability, and growing fee income through government-guaranteed lending and C&I expansion.
In the coming quarters, our team will be watching (1) whether loan growth materializes as the current pipeline is funded and payoffs moderate, (2) the pace of deposit cost declines as CDs reprice and remixing efforts continue, and (3) further growth in fee income, particularly from SBA and government-guaranteed lending. Progress on credit resolution and expense management will also be key signposts.
Veritex Holdings currently trades at $24.30, up from $22.09 just before the earnings. In the wake of this quarter, is it a buy or sell? Find out in our full research report (it’s free).
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