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Hanmi Financial Corporation (HAFC)

Q4 2025 Earnings Call· Tue, Jan 27, 2026

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Hanmi Financial Corporation's Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Conference Call. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded for replay purposes. All participants are in a listen-only mode, and a question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone requires operator assistance, I would now like to turn the call over to Ben Brodkowitz, Investor Relations for the company. Please go ahead.

Ben Brodkowitz

Management

Thank you, Operator, and thank you all for joining us today to discuss Hanmi Financial Corporation's fourth quarter and full year 2025 results. This afternoon, Hanmi Financial Corporation issued its earnings release and supplemental slide presentation to accompany today's call. Both documents are available in the IR section of the company's website at hanmi.com. I'm here today with Bonita I. Lee, President and Chief Executive Officer of Hanmi Financial Corporation, Anthony I. Kim, Chief Banking Officer, and Romolo C. Santarosa, Chief Financial Officer. Bonita I. Lee will begin today's call with an overview, Anthony I. Kim will discuss loan and deposit activities, Romolo C. Santarosa will provide details on our financial performance, and then Bonita I. Lee will provide closing comments before we open the call up for your questions. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that today's comments may include forward-looking statements under the federal securities laws. Forward-looking statements are based on current plans, expectations, events, and financial industry trends that may affect the company's future operating results and financial position. Our actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by our forward-looking statements, which involve risks and uncertainties. A discussion of the factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements can be found in our SEC filings, including our reports on Forms 10-K and 10-Q. In particular, we direct you to the discussion of certain risk factors affecting our business contained in our earnings release, our investor presentation, and in our SEC filings. With that, I would now like to turn the call over to Bonita I. Lee. Bonita? Please go ahead.

Bonita I. Lee

Management

Thank you, Ben. Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us today to discuss our fourth quarter and full year 2025 results. Our teams delivered a solid performance in the fourth quarter, capping a strong year of growth for Hanmi Financial Corporation. We believe we executed well on our priorities and advanced key initiatives we laid out at the start of the year. Specifically, we further enhanced the diversification of our loan portfolio and achieved mid-single-digit loan growth guidance. We made investments in our banking teams, which led to a significant increase in loan production. We managed the deposit cost and generated net interest margin expansion throughout 2025. Noninterest-bearing deposits continue to represent 30% of total deposits, a tribute to the stability of our customer base. At the same time, we maintained disciplined expense management and upheld strong credit quality across the portfolio. The strength and consistency of our operational performance underscore the effectiveness of our relationship-based banking model and reinforce our confidence in the strategy we are executing. Now turning to some highlights for the fourth quarter. Net income for the fourth quarter was $21.2 million or 70¢ per diluted share, down 3.7% due to lower noninterest income. However, net interest income increased by 2.9%, and net interest margin expanded by six basis points to 3.28% from the prior quarter, reflecting a lower cost of funds and higher average loan balances. Return on average assets and return on average equity during the quarter were 1.07% and 10.14%, respectively. For the full year of 2025, net income reached $76.1 million or $2.51 per diluted share, an increase of 22%, and we generated a return on average equity of 9.3%. As previously guided, we generated loan growth of $312 million or 5%. Net interest income increased by 16.5%, and our net…

Anthony I. Kim

Management

Thank you, Bonita, and thank you all for joining us today. I'll begin by providing additional details on our loan production. Fourth quarter loan production was $375 million, down $196 million or 34% from the prior quarter, with a weighted average interest rate of 6.9% compared to 6.91% last quarter. Although production was down from the high level we saw in the third quarter, originations for the full year were consistent across categories with continued strength in C&I, residential, and SBA loans. By maintaining disciplined underwriting practices, we ensure that we engage only in opportunities that meet our conservative underwriting standards. CRE production was $126 million, down 29% from the prior quarter, and we remain pleased with the quality of our CRE portfolio. It has a weighted average loan-to-value ratio of approximately 47.4% and a weighted average debt service coverage ratio of 2.2 times. SBA loan production is consistent with the prior quarter at approximately $44 million, reflecting the positive impact of our recent team additions and the momentum we're building among small businesses across our markets. During the quarter, we sold approximately $29.9 million of SBA loans and recognized a gain of $1.8 million. C&I production was $82 million during the fourth quarter, a decrease of $129 million or 61%. While down for the quarter, we're pleased with our annual production in this strategic vertical driven by the previously mentioned investments in our C&I teams, the momentum of our USKC initiative, and our strategic efforts to further expand the portfolio. Total commitments for our commercial lines of credit remain healthy at $1.3 billion in the fourth quarter, with outstanding balances of $520 million. This resulted in a utilization rate of 40%, slightly higher compared to the prior quarter. Residential mortgage loan production was $70 million for the fourth quarter,…

Romolo C. Santarosa

Management

Thank you, Anthony. For the fourth quarter, net interest income grew 2.9% from the previous quarter to $62.9 million as the average rate on interest-bearing deposits declined 20 basis points while the average yield on loans declined by only nine basis points and the average balance of loans increased by 2.4%. Average interest-earning assets and average interest-bearing liabilities both increased by 1%. However, average yields on interest-earning assets declined six basis points while average rates on interest-bearing liabilities declined 19 basis points. Hanmi Financial Corporation reduced deposit interest rates twice during the fourth quarter after the Fed lowered the federal funds rate by 50 basis points. The average rate on interest-bearing deposits for the fourth quarter was 3.36%, and the average balance increased slightly to $4.71 billion. Fourth quarter average loans increased by 2.4% to $6.46 billion with an average rate of 5.94%. Turning to the deposit portfolio, the average rate on non-maturity savings and money market accounts decreased 40 basis points to 2.82%, while the average balance increased marginally by 0.4%. Average time deposits also increased slightly by 0.5%, and the average rate fell by just four basis points to 3.93%. However, the composition of that portfolio shifted away from time deposits over the insurance limit. The weighted average maturity of the time deposit portfolio continues to be under 12 months. Moving to net interest margin, which was up six basis points to 3.28%, again, primarily due to lower rates on interest-bearing deposits. The decrease in deposit rates benefited net interest margin by approximately 14 basis points. Changes in the average rate on borrowings and changes in the average yield on other interest-earning assets offset the benefit of falling deposit rates on net interest margin while changes in loan yields had a nil effect. Hanmi Financial Corporation's December deposit…

Bonita I. Lee

Management

Okay, Ron. Excuse me. I want to thank the entire Hanmi Financial Corporation team for their exceptional efforts over the past year. Their dedication is essential towards serving our customers and communities well. I would now like to outline some of our top priorities for 2026, which are firmly aligned with our long-term strategic vision. First, we expect to generate low to mid-single-digit loan growth with a continued emphasis on further diversifying the portfolio. Second, we are focused on growing deposits to support loan growth while maintaining a stable, well-balanced funding mix. Our efforts will continue to focus on deepening existing customer relationships, attracting new accounts, and strengthening our core deposit franchise with a particular emphasis on noninterest-bearing deposits. Third, we intend to sustain our commitment to disciplined expense management while we are investing selectively in talent and technology to support our long-term growth. We remain focused on operating efficiently, prioritizing initiatives that drive productivity, and maintaining cost discipline across the organization. Finally, we plan to prudently manage credit to maintain strong asset quality. Conservative underwriting standards, active portfolio monitoring, and robust risk analysis remain foundational to how we operate and will continue to guide our decision-making as the economic environment evolves. In summary, we believe we enter 2026 in a strong position to build on our momentum and create meaningful value for shareholders. We expect healthy loan and deposit growth, ongoing NIM expansion, disciplined expense management, and sustained credit strengths to support consistent and durable performance. We are excited about the opportunities ahead and look forward to sharing our progress with you. Thank you. We'll now open the call for your questions. Operator, please go ahead.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Star one on your telephone keypad, and a confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the queue. And our first question comes from the line of Matthew Clark with Piper Sandler. Please proceed.

Matthew Clark

Analyst

Hi, good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for the questions. To start with the hospitality credit that was downgraded to special mention. Can you just provide some color on what the situation is there and how you expect it to play out?

Bonita I. Lee

Management

Sure. So periodically, we proactively monitor all our significant size loans. And as a part of our periodic review, you know, we decided to place this particular loan in the special mention category. It is a seasoned loan with a very strong sponsor with high liquidity. However, the property is going through a property improvement plan, PIP, in anticipation of all the activities that are expected in terms of the World Cup and then also for the Olympics in the coming years. So the property is in Southern California. So we don't foresee any loss probabilities on this credit. As I said, it is a very seasoned credit. But, you know, it is due to our proactive monitoring process that we decided to place the loan in the special mention category.

Matthew Clark

Analyst

Okay. And then as it relates to your expense outlook for this year. Any thoughts around the growth there and whether or not some of these OREO costs might continue for a couple of quarters?

Romolo C. Santarosa

Management

No. With respect to OREO, again, there was a bulge particularly with respect to past due taxes. So one of the properties is anticipated to sell. The other one, that'll take a little bit longer. So I think there will be continued expense depending on how long it's going to take for the sale to close. But I think the bulge we saw is probably a bit more rearview mirror and not really indicative of the ongoing run rate.

Matthew Clark

Analyst

Okay. And then for the year, are you thinking mid-single-digit expense growth? Is that fair?

Romolo C. Santarosa

Management

I think that's fair, Matthew. You know, when we look back over the calendar year, which is always a little bit easier to perhaps measure, we had about a 4.6% increase. The year prior, it was 3.5%. I did see, of course, healthcare is going to run higher than anyone's expectation for a 3% kind of inflation. Service fees seem to run a little bit richer. So I think middle single digit's probably the right expectation over a twelve-month scenario.

Matthew Clark

Analyst

Okay. And then just on the CD repricing schedule, can you remind us what you have maturing here in the first and second quarter and the roll-off rates and new offering rates?

Anthony I. Kim

Management

Sure. It's the details on page 10 of your investor deck. So a little over $900 million CDs are rolling off in the first half at 4.01%. And then followed by another little less than $900 million maturing in the second quarter with a weighted average of 3.95%. So essentially, approximately $1.8 billion is maturing at high threes and low fours in the first half of the year. And in the fourth quarter, we were able to retain about 80% of maturing $700 million of retail CDs at around 3.66, and December retention pricing was a little less than 3.66, 3.57. So we're hoping to reprice maturing CDs in the first half of the year with anywhere between 3.5 to 3.6. And that'll benefit us to lower the deposit cost.

Matthew Clark

Analyst

Great. Sorry. Missed that. Last one for me, just on the buyback. You have a lot of capital. Why not get more aggressive on the buyback here?

Romolo C. Santarosa

Management

Again, Matthew, the Board evaluates the capital return each quarter. As you know, in the fourth quarter, relative to our previous share performance, we started to see share prices well above our tangible book. And so that was rewarding, but it also has a little bit of a minimizing effect. So we'll address that again here in 2026, and I think we'll be able to, you know, continue share repurchases. The absolute dollar amounts, I think, again, will be a facts and circumstances market condition type of idea.

Matthew Clark

Analyst

Okay. Great. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Gary Tenner with D. A. Davidson. Please proceed.

Gary Tenner

Analyst · D. A. Davidson. Please proceed.

Ron, I appreciate the color you gave on the January deposit costs. And a moment ago, there was some discussion about the repricing of the CD book. I guess I'm a little surprised that there's not been a little more pricing power in the CD book kind of in this more recent part of the cutting cycle. So just wonder if you could comment on competition within your customer base on that side of things because the pricing power on the money market side, obviously, is very strong.

Romolo C. Santarosa

Management

Yes. I'll let Anthony talk a little bit more about the market. But I also watched wholesale funding, particularly in the broker market. And notwithstanding the rate reductions that occurred in the fourth quarter, brokered money really hasn't moved much. I can still see $3.70, $3.80 for, you know, twelve months money and a little bit higher for shorter-term money. So that marketplace has not responded as you might think relative to the actions on the fed funds. And I would just also observe before turning it over to Anthony, we're still in an inverted curve on the very short end. You know, it really starts to look like a curve when you get, let's just say, two years it could move a little bit from the inside, but on the very short end, it's still very inverted. So I'll stop with that. Anthony, competition?

Anthony I. Kim

Management

Yeah. Obviously, you know, in a declining rate environment, customers wanted to lock in their funds in the CD with a higher rate. So competition is getting intense. As you can see, I mean, our CD retention rate has been around 90%, and we chose not to retain some of the CDs at irrational rates. So our CD retention rate went down to 80%. And some of our competitors are still offering high threes, low fours. So within our corridor, there are still some of the things that are actually running CD promotions above 3.85%. So, I mean, we look at our, you know, deposit relationship, you know, one at a time, and we provide the rates that warrant the relationship. But it is fairly competitive still, and it's also a little bit disruptive in the sense that, you know, some of these smaller shops are still running CD deposit campaigns.

Gary Tenner

Analyst · D. A. Davidson. Please proceed.

Okay. Thanks for that. And then just to follow-up on the question regarding the buyback. It sounds like, obviously, it's a board-level decision, and I think everybody knows you've got a lot of capital. How about the dividend? That's kind of is that a first-quarter decision in terms of thinking about a higher payout from the board perspective?

Romolo C. Santarosa

Management

Yes. Typically, that would be reviewed at least once a year, and we're at that year mark, if you will, looking not only backwards on what we've accomplished but looking forward on what we see 2026 to entail.

Gary Tenner

Analyst · D. A. Davidson. Please proceed.

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Kelly Motta with KBW. Please proceed.

Kelly Motta

Analyst · KBW. Please proceed.

Hey. Good afternoon. Thanks for the question. Let's see. Ron, maybe circling back to expenses, I appreciate the kind of mid-single-digit outlook you provided for the course of the year. Just given Q4 was a bit elevated from some discrete items that you called out, but there's also some seasonality in Q1. Can you kind of help us out with how we should be thinking about the jumping-off point from $39 million in the fourth quarter, just trying to make sure my cadence is properly aligning? Thank you.

Romolo C. Santarosa

Management

So for our business, in terms of seasonality, there are, I think, I'll say, let's say, three events that are somewhat predictable. So fourth quarter, we do have a higher spend with advertising and promotion, given the holidays and things of that sort. First quarter traditionally are the payroll tax phenomenon that we see in salaries and benefits. And then second quarter is typically where we see the annual merits. So those are the somewhat seasonal notions. So relative to your jumping-off point, I have to think about it a little bit. But while the advertising promotion ideas, those will kind of fade, I can start to see a pickup in payroll. I have to study the numbers closer to see if they offset, but I guess that would be my starting point. The little bit of mix shift we saw in the personnel complement because personnel has been roughly the same, a very rounded idea, like 600. And so we still behave in that same idea. So we saw just a little bit of that. So I think that's probably where you see the swap of the increase from advertising the benefit there, it would move up to the top. That's about it. The activity year-end, just you can call it seasonal, although I hesitate to say that, but there's usually at year-end a little bit of pickup in activities. For a host of different reasons, but there always seem to be activities that kind of creep in or crop up at the year-end mark. So I know that's not very strong, but I'd have to really ponder hard, Kelly, to figure out if you should stay on that number or start with that number. Really, I really don't know.

Kelly Motta

Analyst · KBW. Please proceed.

Okay. Fair enough. And then looking at slide six, it's nice to see the yield on new production is really held in really nicely. Wondering if that's a function of mix or, you know, if you're able to get, you know, some better, more rational spreads on loans here as rates have come down. Any commentary and color would be helpful.

Anthony I. Kim

Management

Yeah. So we remain focused on maintaining appropriate yield on the new loans. So we're being very selective in our loan originations, prioritizing our returns. So we are being selective.

Kelly Motta

Analyst · KBW. Please proceed.

Got it. That's helpful. I'll step back. Thanks so much.

Operator

Operator

As a reminder, to enter the question queue, please press 1 on your telephone keypad. And the next question will come again from the line of Matthew Clark with Piper Sandler. Please proceed.

Matthew Clark

Analyst

Hey, thanks for the follow-up. Just wanted to ask about the prepays and payoffs in the quarter and how that compared to 3Q. See the production at $375 million, but I'm just curious how the other side of the equation played out.

Bonita I. Lee

Management

So just comparing to the third quarter, payoffs were a little bit elevated. I think it's probably more meaningful to look at the whole year because there are fluctuations from quarter to quarter. But, you know, comparing 2025 to 2024, although our loan production was up 36% year over year, when we track the payoffs and paydowns and also net line utilization as well as loans sold, it is definitely higher. Just on the loan payoffs and the paydown category, just on those two items, just comparing them annually, it's 13% higher than the prior year.

Matthew Clark

Analyst

Okay. Great. Thanks again.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I'd like to turn the call back over to Bonita I. Lee for closing remarks.

Bonita I. Lee

Management

Thank you for joining our call today. We appreciate your interest in Hanmi Financial Corporation and look forward to sharing our continued progress with you throughout the year.

Operator

Operator

This does conclude today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. And we thank you for your participation. Have a good night.