--- title: "Columbia Banking System Charts Post-Merger Profit Path" type: "News" locale: "zh-HK" url: "https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/273568445.md" description: "Columbia Banking System (COLB) held its Q4 earnings call, highlighting strong operating momentum and successful integration of Pacific Premier. Despite near-term headwinds, management expects profitability and efficiency to improve through 2026. The acquisition enhances the bank's footprint and product offerings, with significant growth in operating revenue and profitability. Q4 GAAP EPS rose to $0.72, with a net interest margin of 4.06%. The bank is on track with cost savings from the integration, and its capital position remains strong, increasing its dividend and repurchasing shares." datetime: "2026-01-24T00:02:27.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/273568445.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/273568445.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/273568445.md) --- > 支持的語言: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/273568445.md) | [English](https://longbridge.com/en/news/273568445.md) # Columbia Banking System Charts Post-Merger Profit Path Columbia Banking System ((COLB)) has held its Q4 earnings call. Read on for the main highlights of the call. ### Claim 50% Off TipRanks Premium - Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions - Stay ahead of the market with the latest news and analysis and maximize your portfolio's potential Columbia Banking System Earnings Call Signals Momentum Despite Near-Term Headwinds Management struck a confident and constructive tone on Columbia Banking System’s latest earnings call, underscoring strong operating momentum, successful integration of Pacific Premier, and robust capital returns, even as they cautioned that some fourth-quarter tailwinds will not recur in the near term. The overarching message was that while Q1 will show some modest pressure on net interest income and earning assets, the bank expects margins, profitability, and efficiency to improve steadily through 2026 as integration synergies and balance sheet optimization take hold. ## Strategic Pacific Premier Acquisition Reshapes Western Franchise Columbia capped 2025 by closing its acquisition of Pacific Premier, a transformational deal that significantly expands the bank’s Western U.S. footprint and vaults it into a top‑10 deposit market share position in Southern California. Beyond scale, the transaction adds specialized fee and trust capabilities, including custodial trust services and an API-based marketplace platform that should deepen relationships with commercial clients and fintech partners. Management framed the acquisition as both a geographic and product expansion that strengthens the franchise’s competitive position in high-growth markets, with further upside as integration and cross-sell opportunities mature. ## Operating Revenue and Profitability Accelerate Underlying performance in the fourth quarter was notably strong. Operating pre-provision net revenue (PPNR) rose 27% sequentially, while operating net income increased 19% quarter over quarter. For the full year 2025, operating results grew 23% versus 2024, highlighting the positive impact of scale, pricing discipline, and fee growth. Management emphasized that this step-up in operating earnings power reflects both organic traction and the early benefits of the Pacific Premier deal, positioning the company for further profitability gains as additional synergies are realized. ## EPS and Returns Move Into Top-Tier Territory Earnings per share and return metrics showed marked improvement, signaling a more efficient and profitable franchise. Columbia reported fourth-quarter GAAP EPS of $0.72 and operating EPS of $0.82, up 6% and 15% year over year, respectively. Return on average assets exceeded 1.4%, while return on tangible common equity topped 17% in the quarter—levels that place the bank solidly in top-tier regional bank territory. Management highlighted these metrics as evidence that the combination of revenue growth, cost discipline, and capital deployment is translating into strong shareholder returns. ## Net Interest Margin Expands Above 4% Net interest margin (NIM) was a standout in the quarter, expanding to 4.06%, up from 3.84% in Q3 and well above the 3.64% full-year 2024 average. The 22-basis-point sequential increase was driven by improved funding performance, active earning asset optimization, and some non-recurring items that contributed roughly 11 basis points. Management highlighted better core deposit performance and asset mix management as key drivers, while acknowledging that some of the Q4 margin strength won’t repeat, leading to a modest dip in Q1 before NIM trends higher again later in 2026. ## Noninterest Income Surges With Fee Businesses Scaling Fee income provided a meaningful boost to overall revenue. Fourth-quarter noninterest income came in at $90 million on a GAAP basis and $88 million on an operating basis. Operating noninterest income rose by $16 million sequentially, with about $13 million of that tied to the additional two months of Pacific Premier contribution. The bank saw record or near-record levels in swap and syndication banking revenue, underscoring the growing importance of capital markets and advisory businesses within its commercial banking model. Management indicated that expanded fee capabilities from Pacific Premier are already enhancing revenue diversification. ## Cost Savings and Expense Discipline On Track Columbia continued to execute on its cost-savings agenda tied to the Pacific Premier integration. By year-end, the bank had realized $63 million of annualized deal-related cost savings, roughly 50% of the $127 million target. Operating noninterest expense stood at $373 million in the quarter, or $331 million excluding core deposit intangible (CDI) amortization—near the low end of prior guidance of $330–$340 million. Management reiterated that further efficiency gains are expected as remaining integration initiatives are completed, even as some investments and timing effects will keep certain cost lines elevated in the near term. ## Robust Capital and Active Capital Return Strategy The bank’s capital position remains a clear strength and a key part of the equity story. Columbia increased its quarterly dividend to $0.37, up from $0.36, and repurchased 3.7 million shares at an average price of $27.07 during the quarter. Regulatory capital ratios are solid, with CET1 at 11.8% and total risk-based capital at 13.6%. Tangible book value per share rose to $19.11, up 3% quarter over quarter and 11% year over year. Management estimates more than $600 million of excess capital, supported by a $600 million share repurchase authorization, positioning the company to continue returning capital while funding organic growth. ## Loan Growth and Deposit Gathering Remain Healthy Despite some balance sheet runoff, underlying origination and deposit-gathering trends remain robust. New loan originations totaled $1.4 billion in the fourth quarter, up 23% year over year, while full-year originations increased 22%. On the funding side, Columbia ran targeted deposit campaigns throughout 2025, adding $473 million in low-cost deposits late in the year and a total of $1.3 billion from three campaigns over 2025. Management highlighted these results as evidence of strong customer demand and the franchise’s ability to compete effectively for quality lending and deposit relationships. ## Quarterly Balance Sheet Contraction Masks Core Momentum The reported balance sheet shrank modestly in the quarter, reflecting both strategic actions and seasonal factors. Gross loans fell to $47.8 billion from $48.5 billion, a roughly 1.4% sequential decline, while total deposits declined to $54.2 billion from $55.8 billion, down about 2.9%. Management attributed the loan decline to transactional portfolio runoff and paydowns in commercial real estate (CRE) construction and development, while deposit outflows were influenced by normal seasonal patterns and an intentional reduction of over $650 million in brokered and public deposits. The message to investors: short-term contraction is largely by design and not indicative of weakening core demand. ## Transactional and CRE Runoff Limits Near-Term Loan Growth Columbia’s transactional loan book and CRE construction portfolio continue to run off, tempering headline loan growth even as new originations remain strong. The quarterly loan decline included roughly $300 million in transactional portfolio runoff, with additional declines concentrated in CRE construction and development balances. Management noted that about $4 billion of transactional loans are set to reprice or mature over the next 24 months, which will weigh on net loan growth in the near term. However, they expect core commercial lending to gradually offset this runoff, resulting in relatively flat overall loan balances for the year. ## Fourth-Quarter Margin Boost Includes Non-Repeatable Items A portion of Columbia’s impressive Q4 margin performance was driven by non-recurring factors that investors should adjust for when modeling 2026. Net interest income benefited from $12 million of acquired time deposit premium amortization and a $5 million accelerated loan repayment, together adding roughly 11 basis points to NIM for the quarter. Management made clear that the time deposit premium was fully amortized by year-end and will not contribute to results in 2026, which is a key driver of the expected NIM step down in Q1 before margins resume their upward trajectory. ## Credit Migration and Reserve Position Remain Manageable Credit quality remains broadly stable, though there was some migration within risk categories. Special mention loans declined, while substandard loans increased by a similar magnitude, representing an approximate $130 million shift from one category to the other. Management framed this as a reclassification rather than a sign of deteriorating portfolio-level risk. The allowance for credit losses stood at 1.02% of loans, increasing to 1.32% when including the remaining credit discount on acquired loans, which they view as a comfortable buffer against potential losses amid a still-benign credit environment. ## Deal Synergies Still Building The integration of Pacific Premier is only partially reflected in current numbers, leaving further upside ahead. Columbia has realized about half of its $127 million target in annualized deal-related cost savings, with $63 million captured by year-end. Management expects full realization of these savings by the end of the second quarter of 2026. They cautioned that some integration-related investments and timing effects, including roughly $40 million per quarter of CDI amortization, will keep reported expenses elevated in the near term. Nevertheless, the long-term view is that the fully integrated bank will operate with a significantly lower efficiency ratio and enhanced earnings power. ## Near-Term NII Pressure and Earning Asset Headwinds The company prepared investors for a softer first quarter on the net interest income front. With the loss of Q4’s non-recurring CD premium benefit and some modest contraction in earning assets, management expects Q1 net interest margin to slip to 3.90–3.95%. Earning assets are forecast to be around $60.5–$61.0 billion, down from $61.3 billion at year-end, and net interest income is expected to dip just below $600 million in Q1 before recovering in Q2. While this guidance indicates near-term pressure, management stressed that the underlying trend remains positive as funding costs stabilize and asset yields continue to reprice higher. ## Surgical Loan Sale Cleans Up Acquired Portfolio Columbia also took a proactive step in tidying up its acquired loan book. The bank sold $45 million of Pacific Premier loans that were risk-rated special mention, describing the transaction as a targeted cleanup to remove non-core or higher-risk credits from the portfolio. Management does not anticipate a wave of similar bulk sales going forward and noted that the impact on goodwill was small, around $1 million. The move underscores a conservative stance on credit risk and balance sheet quality as the integration progresses. ## Guidance: NIM Recovery, Flat Loans, and Elevated Capital Returns Looking ahead, management laid out a roadmap that balances cautious near-term expectations with a constructive medium-term outlook. For Q1, net interest margin is guided to 3.90%–3.95%, reflecting the roll-off of roughly 11 basis points of CD premium benefit, with earning assets of $60.5–$61.0 billion and net interest income just below $600 million. From Q2 onward, the bank expects NIM to improve each quarter and to move back above 4% in the second or third quarter. Total loans are expected to be roughly flat for 2026 as transactional balances amortize and core commercial lending offsets the runoff. Deposits are forecast to see modest seasonal contraction into April before rebounding, with the loan-to-deposit ratio expected to operate comfortably in the low-90s (versus about 88% at year-end). On expenses, operating noninterest expense (excluding CDI) is guided to roughly $335–$345 million in both Q1 and Q2, with CDI amortization at about $40 million per quarter and a full-year operating expense run-rate near $1.5 billion. The company aims to exit the year with sub-$370 million in all-in quarterly expenses and roughly $330 million excluding CDI. Columbia plans to ramp up share repurchases to $150–$200 million per quarter in 2026 under its remaining $600 million authorization while maintaining the current dividend and preserving more than $600 million in excess capital. Management pointed to year-end metrics—CET1 of 11.8%, total risk-based capital of 13.6%, tangible book value of $19.11, ROAA above 1.4%, and ROTCE above 17%—as the baseline from which further improvement is expected. In summary, Columbia Banking System’s earnings call painted a picture of a bank in transition but firmly on the front foot. The successful integration of Pacific Premier, strong underlying earnings growth, improving returns, and a robust capital return plan are balanced against near-term headwinds from transactional loan runoff, seasonal deposits, and the fading of Q4 one-time benefits. For investors, the story is one of short-term noise but a clear path to higher margins, better efficiency, and sustained shareholder returns as the combined franchise matures through 2026. ### 相關股票 - [Columbia Banking (COLB.US)](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/quote/COLB.US.md) - [Invesco KBW Bank (KBWB.US)](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/quote/KBWB.US.md) - [SPDR S&P Bank Etf (KBE.US)](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/quote/KBE.US.md) - [SPDR S&P Region Bank (KRE.US)](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/quote/KRE.US.md) ## 相關資訊與研究 - [Columbia Banking System Announces Date of First Quarter 2026 Earnings Release and Conference Call | COLB Stock News](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281184825.md) - [North Reef Capital Management LP Makes New Investment in Columbia Banking System, Inc. $COLB](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/279441215.md) - [Unity Bancorp (UNTY) Projected to Post Earnings on Friday](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281606031.md) - [M&T Bank authorizes $5B share buyback program](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281073436.md) - [UNISYNC Announces Voting Results of AGM](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281263422.md)