Category: housing

  • MIL-OSI Security: D.C. Man Admits to 2023 Killing at Navy Yard Metro Station

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    WASHINGTON – Tyriq Williams, 31, of the District of Columbia, pleaded guilty today to second-degree murder for the 2023 shooting murder of Terry Clark, announced U.S. Attorney Edward R. Martin Jr. and Chief Pamela Smith of the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD). 

    Superior Court Judge Todd E. Edelman accepted the factual basis for the plea and scheduled sentencing for July 19, 2025. The guilty plea, which is contingent upon the Court’s approval at sentencing, called for an agreed-upon prison sentence of between 14 and 18 years, followed by a period of supervised release. 

    On January 7, 2023, the defendant and his girlfriend encountered Mr. Clark on an escalator leaving the Navy Yard Metro Station. The defendant and Mr. Clark did not know each other. After both men left the station, Williams turned around and shot Mr. Clark one time, causing his death. The defendant then went back into the station and took the train to Congress Heights Metro Station, where he took a bus to his place of employment. Williams told a friend that he needed a ride, and his friend picked the defendant up and drove him to the bus stop, where Williams got back on the same bus that he previously rode. The shooting was not captured on video, but law enforcement located the defendant on other video surveillance, including Washington Metro Area Transit Authority surveillance around the metro station and on the bus.  After an investigation, Williams was apprehended, and detectives found, pursuant to a search warrant of the defendant’s home, distinctive clothing that he wore on the night of the shooting.

    Williams has been in custody since his arrest on January 20, 2023.

    This case is being investigated by detectives and other personnel of the Metropolitan Police Department and Metro Transit Police Department. 

    This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Molly K. Smith and Jamie Carter. This case was investigated by former Assistant U.S. Attorney John Interrante. 

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: CVB Financial Corp. Reports Earnings for the First Quarter 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    First Quarter 2025

    • Net Earnings of $51.1 million, or $0.36 per share
    • Return on Average Assets of 1.37%
    • Return on Average Tangible Common Equity of 14.51%
    • Net Interest Margin of 3.31%

    ONTARIO, CA, April 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — CVB Financial Corp. (NASDAQ:CVBF) and its subsidiary, Citizens Business Bank (the “Company”), announced earnings for the quarter ended March 31, 2025.

    CVB Financial Corp. reported net income of $51.1 million for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, compared with $50.9 million for the fourth quarter of 2024 and $48.6 million for the first quarter of 2024. Diluted earnings per share were $0.36 for the first quarter, compared to $0.36 for the prior quarter and $0.35 for the same period last year.

    For the first quarter of 2025, annualized return on average equity (“ROAE”) was 9.31%, annualized return on average tangible common equity (“ROATCE”) was 14.51%, and an annualized return on average assets (“ROAA”) was 1.37%.

    David Brager, President and Chief Executive Officer of Citizens Business Bank, commented, “Citizens Business Bank’s performance in the first quarter demonstrates our continued financial strength and focus on our vision of serving the comprehensive financial needs of small to medium sized businesses and their owners. Our consistent financial performance is highlighted by our 192 consecutive quarters, or 48 years, of profitability, and our 142 consecutive quarters of paying cash dividends. I would like to thank our customers and associates for their continuing commitment and loyalty.”

    Highlights for the First Quarter of 2025

    • Pretax income was $69.5 million, up $1.5 million or 2%, from the prior quarter
    • Efficiency ratio of 46.7%
    • Net gain of $2.2 million on sale of $19.3 million of OREO assets
    • Net interest margin of 3.31%, increased by 13 basis points compared to the fourth quarter of 2024
    • Cost of funds decreased to 1.04% from 1.13% in the fourth quarter of 2024
    • Noninterest bearing deposits grew by $147 million from the end of 2024
    • Dairy and Livestock loans decreased by $168 million or 44% from the end of 2024
    • Net Recoveries of $130,000 and $2 million recapture of credit losses
    • TCE Ratio of 10.0% & CET1 Ratio of 16.5%

    INCOME STATEMENT HIGHLIGHTS

      Three Months Ended  
      March 31, 2025
      December 31, 2024
      March 31, 2024
     
      (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)  
    Net interest income $ 110,444     $ 110,418     $ 112,461    
    Recapure of (provision for) credit losses   2,000       3,000          
    Noninterest income   16,229       13,103       14,113    
    Noninterest expense   (59,144 )     (58,480 )     (59,771 )  
    Income taxes   (18,425 )     (17,183 )     (18,204 )  
    Net earnings $ 51,104     $ 50,858     $ 48,599    
    Earnings per common share:            
    Basic $ 0.37     $ 0.36     $ 0.35    
    Diluted $ 0.36     $ 0.36     $ 0.35    
                 
    NIM   3.31 %     3.18 %     3.10 %  
    ROAA   1.37 %     1.30 %     1.21 %  
    ROAE   9.31 %     9.14 %     9.31 %  
    ROATCE   14.51 %     14.31 %     15.13 %  
    Efficiency ratio   46.69 %     47.34 %     47.22 %  
                 

    Net Interest Income
    Net interest income was $110.4 million for the first quarter of 2025, essentially equal to the fourth quarter of 2024, and a $2.02 million, or 1.79%, decrease from the first quarter of 2024. Compared to the prior quarter, net interest income in the first quarter of 2025 was impacted by a 13-basis point increase in net interest margin that was offset by a $405.6 million decline in earning assets.

    The decline in net interest income of $2 million compared to the first quarter of 2024 was the net result of a $1.09 billion decline in earning assets partially offset by a 21-basis point increase in net interest margin. The decrease in earning assets was primarily due to the deleveraging strategy deployed in the second half of 2024, which resulted in the Company’s borrowings declining by $1.48 billion.

    Net Interest Margin
    Our tax equivalent net interest margin was 3.31% for the first quarter of 2025, compared to 3.18% for the fourth quarter of 2024 and 3.10% for the first quarter of 2024. The 13 basis points increase in our net interest margin compared to the fourth quarter of 2024, was the combined result of a four-basis point increase in our interest-earning assets and a nine-basis point decrease in our cost of funds, including a seven-basis point decrease in cost of deposits. The four-basis point increase in our interest-earning asset yield was primarily due to a seven-basis point increase in loan yields and a five-basis points increase in investment securities yields. We experienced an increase in yields on investments in the first quarter of 2025, as a result of the sale of lower-yielding available-for-sale (“AFS”) securities and the purchase of higher-yielding AFS securities during the fourth quarter of 2024. However, this increase in investment yields was partially offset by a decrease during the first quarter of 2025 in the positive carry on our fair value hedging instruments that pay a fixed interest rate while receiving daily SOFR.

    Net interest margin for the first quarter of 2025 increased by 21-basis points compared to the first quarter of 2024, primarily as a result of 27-basis point decrease in cost of funds from 1.31% for the first quarter of 2024 to 1.04% for the first quarter of 2025. The decrease in cost of funds was primarily due to a $1.48 billion decline in borrowings, which had an average cost of 4.76% in the first quarter of 2024. For the first quarter of 2025, the Company had average borrowings of $513 million at a cost of 4.61% and average deposits and customer repos of $12.19 billion at a cost of .87%, which compares to the first quarter of 2024 in which borrowings averaged $2 billion at a cost of 4.76% and average deposits and customer repos of $11.95 billion at a cost of .73%. The decrease in cost of funds was offset by lower interest earning asset yields that declined by 6 basis points from 4.34% in the first quarter of 2024 to 4.28% in the first quarter of 2025. The lower earning asset yields included lower loan yields, which declined from 5.30% for the first quarter of 2024 to 5.22% for the first quarter of 2025.

    Earning Assets and Deposits
    On average, earning assets decreased by $405.6 million compared to the fourth quarter of 2024 and declined by $1.09 billion when compared to the first quarter of 2024. The decline in earning assets from the fourth quarter of 2024 was primarily a $323 million decrease in funds held at the Federal Reserve, as well as a $55 million average decline in outstanding loans. Compared to the first quarter of 2024, the average balance of outstanding loans was $357 million lower, investment securities decreased by $449.0 million and the average amount of funds held at the Federal Reserve decreased by $272.0 million. Noninterest-bearing deposits declined on average by $109.7 million, or 1.54%, from the fourth quarter of 2024 and interest-bearing deposits and customer repurchase agreements declined on average by $270.9 million. Compared to the first quarter of 2024, total deposits and customer repurchase agreements increased on average by $243.9 million, or 2.04%, including an increase of $420.2 million in interest-bearing deposits and customer repurchase agreements. On average, noninterest-bearing deposits were 59.01% of total deposits during the most recent quarter, compared to 58.74% for the fourth quarter of 2024 and 61.72% for the first quarter of 2024.

        Three Months Ended  
    SELECTED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   March 31, 2024  
        (Dollars in thousands)  
    Yield on average investment securities (TE)   2.63%       2.58%       2.64%    
    Yield on average loans   5.22%       5.15%       5.30%    
    Yield on average earning assets (TE)   4.28%       4.24%       4.34%    
    Cost of deposits   0.86%       0.93%       0.74%    
    Cost of funds   1.04%       1.13%       1.31%    
    Net interest margin (TE)   3.31%       3.18%       3.10%    
                               
    Average Earning Asset Mix Avg   % of Total   Avg   % of Total   Avg   % of Total
      Total investment securities $ 4,908,718   36.21 %   $ 4,936,514   35.36 %   $ 5,357,708   36.59 %  
      Interest-earning deposits with other institutions   162,389   1.20 %     485,103   3.47 %     444,101   3.03 %  
      Loans   8,467,465   62.46 %     8,522,587   61.04 %     8,824,579   60.26 %  
      Total interest-earning assets   13,556,584         13,962,216         14,644,400      
                               


    Provision for Credit Losses

    There was a $2.0 million recapture of provision for credit losses in the first quarter of 2025, compared to a $3.0 million recapture of provision for credit losses in the fourth quarter of 2024 and no provision in the first quarter of 2024. Net recoveries for the first quarter of 2025 were $130,000 compared to net recoveries of $180,000 in the prior quarter. Allowance for credit losses represented 0.94% of gross loans at March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024.

    Noninterest Income
    Noninterest income was $16.2 million for the first quarter of 2025, compared with $13.1 million for the fourth quarter of 2024 and $14.1 million for the first quarter of 2024. During the first quarter of 2025, the Bank sold four OREO properties resulting in a gain of $2.2 million. Income from Bank Owned Life Insurance (“BOLI”) increased in the first quarter of 2025 by $445,000 from the fourth quarter of 2024 and decreased by $762,000 compared to the first quarter of 2024. Compared to the fourth quarter of 2024 and the first quarter of 2024, income from various equity investments increased by $750,000 and $450,000, respectively.

    Noninterest Expense
    Noninterest expense for the first quarter of 2025 was $59.1 million, compared to $58.5 million for the fourth quarter of 2024 and $59.8 million for the first quarter of 2024. The $664,000 quarter-over-quarter increase includes a $500,000 provision for unfunded loan commitments in the first quarter of 2025, compared to no provision or recapture of provision in the first and fourth quarter of 2024. Salaries and employee benefit costs increased $479,000, as the first quarter of each calendar year reflects higher payroll taxes than the fourth quarter of the prior year. Offsetting those quarter-over-quarter increases was a decline in legal expenses of $326,000.

    The year-over-year decrease in noninterest expense of $627,000 was impacted by the higher level of assessment expense in the first quarter of 2024, in which we had an additional accrual of $2.3 million associated with the 2023 FDIC special assessment. The decline in assessment expense was offset by increases in software expenses of $696,000 and occupancy expenses of $433,000, as well as the $500,000 recapture of provision for unfunded loan commitments in the first quarter of 2025. As a percentage of average assets, noninterest expense was 1.58% for the first quarter of 2025, compared to 1.49% for the fourth quarter of 2024 and 1.48% for the first quarter of 2024. The efficiency ratio for the first quarter of 2025 was 46.69%, compared to 47.34% for the fourth quarter of 2024 and 47.22% for the first quarter of 2024.

    Income Taxes
    Our effective tax rate for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 was 26.50%, compared with 25.25% for the fourth quarter of 2024, and 27.25% for the same period of 2024. Our estimated annual effective tax rate can vary depending upon the level of tax-advantaged income from municipal securities and BOLI, as well as available tax credits.

    BALANCE SHEET HIGHLIGHTS

    Assets
    The Company reported total assets of $15.26 billion at March 31, 2025. This represented an increase of $102.9 million, or 0.68%, from total assets of $15.15 billion at December 31, 2024. The increase in assets included a $290.3 million increase in interest-earning balances due from the Federal Reserve, offset by a $27.6 million decrease in investment securities, and a $170.9 million decrease in net loans.

    Total assets at March 31, 2025 decreased by $1.2 billion, or 7.36%, from total assets of $16.47 billion at March 31, 2024. The decrease in assets was primarily due to a decrease of $476.5 million in interest-earning balances due from the Federal Reserve, a decrease of $397.5 million in investment securities and a $402.5 million decrease in net loans.

    Investment Securities
    Total investment securities were $4.89 billion at March 31, 2025, a decrease of $27.6 million, or 0.56% from December 31, 2024, and a decrease of $397.5 million, or 7.51%, from $5.29 billion at March 31, 2024.  

    At March 31, 2025, investment securities held-to-maturity (“HTM”) totaled $2.36 billion, a decrease of $20.5 million, or 0.86% from December 31, 2024, and a decrease of $95.4 million, or 3.89%, from March 31, 2024.

    At March 31, 2025, investment securities available-for-sale (“AFS”) totaled $2.54 billion, inclusive of a pre-tax net unrealized loss of $338.4 million. AFS securities decreased by $7.0 million, or 0.28% from December 31, 2024 and decreased by $302.0 million, or 10.65%, from $2.84 billion at March 31, 2024. The pre-tax unrealized loss decreased by $58.9 million from December 31, 2024 and decreased by $97.2 million from March 31, 2024.

    Loans
    Total loans and leases, at amortized cost, of $8.36 billion at March 31, 2025 decreased by $172.8 million, or 2.02%, from December 31, 2024. The quarter-over quarter decrease in loans included decreases of $16.8 million in commercial real estate loans and $167.8 million in dairy & livestock loans, partially offset by an increase of $17.1 million in commercial and industrial loans.

    Total loans and leases, at amortized cost, decreased by $407.1 million, or 4.64%, from March 31, 2024. The $407.1 million decrease included decreases of $229.9 million in commercial real estate loans, $43.1 million in construction loans, $20.8 million in commercial and industrial loans, $99.1 million in dairy & livestock and agribusiness loans, $6.8 million in municipal lease financings, and $7.0 million in SFR mortgage loans.

    Asset Quality
    During the first quarter of 2025, we experienced credit charge-offs of $40,000 and total recoveries of $170,000, resulting in net recoveries of $130,000. The allowance for credit losses (“ACL”) totaled $78.3 million at March 31, 2025, compared to $80.1 million at December 31, 2024 and $82.8 million at March 31, 2024. At March 31, 2025, ACL as a percentage of total loans and leases outstanding was 0.94%. This compares to 0.94% and 0.94% at December 31, 2024 and March 31, 2024, respectively.

    Nonperforming loans, defined as nonaccrual loans, including modified loans on nonaccrual, plus loans 90 days past due and accruing interest, and nonperforming assets, defined as nonperforming plus OREO, are highlighted below.

    Nonperforming Assets and Delinquency Trends March 31, 2025
      December 31, 2024
      March 31, 2024
    Nonperforming loans   (Dollars in thousands)
    Commercial real estate   $ 24,379     $ 25,866     $ 10,661  
    SBA     1,024       1,529       54  
    Commercial and industrial     173       340       2,727  
    Dairy & livestock and agribusiness     60       60       60  
    SFR mortgage                 308  
    Consumer and other loans                  
    Total   $ 25,636     $ 27,795     $ 13,810  
    % of Total loans     0.31 %     0.33 %     0.16 %
    OREO            
    Commercial real estate   $ 495     $ 18,656     $  
    Commercial and industrial                 647  
    SFR mortgage           647        
    Total   $ 495     $ 19,303     $ 647  
                 
    Total nonperforming assets   $ 26,131     $ 47,098     $ 14,457  
    % of Nonperforming assets to total assets     0.17 %     0.31 %     0.09 %
                 
    Past due 30-89 days (accruing)            
    Commercial real estate   $     $     $ 19,781  
    SBA     718       88       408  
    Commercial and industrial           399       6  
    Dairy & livestock and agribusiness                  
    SFR mortgage                  
    Consumer and other loans                  
    Total   $ 718     $ 487     $ 20,195  
    % of Total loans     0.01 %     0.01 %     0.23 %
    Total nonperforming, OREO, and past due   $ 26,849     $ 47,585     $ 34,652  
                 
    Classified Loans   $ 94,169     $ 89,549     $ 103,080  
     

    The $21.0 million decrease in nonperforming assets from December 31, 2024 was primarily due to the sale of $19.3 million of OREO at a net gain of $2.2 million during the first quarter of 2025. Classified loans are loans that are graded “substandard” or worse. Classified loans increased $4.6 million quarter-over-quarter, primarily due to increases of $6.5 million in classified dairy and livestock loans.

    Deposits & Customer Repurchase Agreements
    Deposits of $12.0 billion and customer repurchase agreements of $276.2 million totaled $12.27 billion at March 31, 2025. This represented a net increase of $55.8 million compared to December 31, 2024. Total deposits and customer repurchase agreements increased $95.4 million, or .78% when compared to $12.17 billion at March 31, 2024.

    Noninterest-bearing deposits were $7.18 billion at March 31, 2025, an increase of $147.2 million, or 2.09%, when compared to $7.04 billion at December 31, 2024. Noninterest-bearing deposits increased by $71.5 million, or 1.00% when compared to $7.11 billion at March 31, 2024. At March 31, 2025, noninterest-bearing deposits were 59.92% of total deposits, compared to 58.90% at December 31, 2024 and 59.80% at
    March 31, 2024.

    Borrowings
    As of March 31, 2025, total borrowings consisted of $500 million of FHLB advances. The FHLB advances include maturities of $300 million, at an average cost of approximately 4.73%, maturing in May of 2026, and $200 million, at a cost of 4.27% maturing in May of 2027. Total borrowings decreased by $1.5 billion from March 31, 2024. The $2.0 billion of borrowings at March 31, 2024 consisted of one-year advances from the Federal Reserve’s Bank Term Funding Program, at an average cost of approximately 4.75%, all of which were redeemed before the end of 2024.

    Capital
    The Company’s total equity was $2.23 billion at March 31, 2025. This represented an overall increase of $42.1 million from total equity of $2.19 billion at December 31, 2024. Increases to equity included $51.1 million in net earnings and a $34.8 million increase in other comprehensive income that were partially offset by $27.9 million in cash dividends. During the first quarter of 2025, we repurchased, under our stock repurchase plan, 782,063 shares of common stock, at an average repurchase price of $19.55, totaling $15.3 million.   Our tangible book value per share at March 31, 2025 was $10.45.

    Our capital ratios under the revised capital framework referred to as Basel III remain well-above regulatory standards.

            CVB Financial Corp. Consolidated  
    Capital Ratios   Minimum Required Plus Capital Conservation Buffer   March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   March 31, 2024  
                       
    Tier 1 leverage capital ratio   4.0%   11.8%   11.5%   10.5%  
    Common equity Tier 1 capital ratio   7.0%   16.5%   16.2%   14.9%  
    Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio   8.5%   16.5%   16.2%   14.9%  
    Total risk-based capital ratio   10.5%   17.3%   17.1%   15.8%  
                       
    Tangible common equity ratio       10.0%   9.8%   8.3%  
                       

    CitizensTrust
    As of March 31, 2025 CitizensTrust had approximately $4.7 billion in assets under management and administration, including $3.38 billion in assets under management. Revenues were $3.4 million for the first quarter of 2025, compared to $3.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and $3.2 million for the first quarter of 2024. CitizensTrust provides trust, investment and brokerage related services, as well as financial, estate and business succession planning.

    Corporate Overview
    CVB Financial Corp. (“CVBF”) is the holding company for Citizens Business Bank. CVBF is one of the 10 largest bank holding companies headquartered in California with more than $15 billion in total assets. Citizens Business Bank is consistently recognized as one of the top performing banks in the nation and offers a wide array of banking, lending and investing services with more than 60 banking centers and three trust office locations serving California.

    Shares of CVB Financial Corp. common stock are listed on the NASDAQ under the ticker symbol “CVBF”. For investor information on CVB Financial Corp., visit our Citizens Business Bank website at www.cbbank.com and click on the “Investors” tab.

    Conference Call

    Management will hold a conference call at 7:30 a.m. PDT/10:30 a.m. EDT on Thursday, April 24, 2025, to discuss the Company’s first quarter 2025 financial results. The conference call can be accessed live by registering at: https://register-conf.media-server.com/register/BI643a97d119af4b899539fee84f093408

    The conference call will also be simultaneously webcast over the Internet; please visit our Citizens Business Bank website at www.cbbank.com and click on the “Investors” tab to access the call from the site. Please access the website 15 minutes prior to the call to download any necessary audio software. This webcast will be recorded and available for replay on the Company’s website approximately two hours after the conclusion of the conference call and will be available on the website for approximately 12 months.

    Safe Harbor
    Certain statements set forth herein constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Words such as “will likely result”, “aims”, “anticipates”, “believes”, “could”, “estimates”, “expects”, “hopes”, “intends”, “may”, “plans”, “projects”, “seeks”, “should”, “will,” “strategy”, “possibility”, and variations of these words and similar expressions help to identify these forward-looking statements, which involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or performance to differ materially from those projected. These forward-looking statements are based on management’s current expectations and beliefs concerning future developments and their potential effects on the Company including, without limitation, plans, strategies, goals and statements about the Company’s outlook regarding revenue and asset growth, financial performance and profitability, capital and liquidity levels, loan and deposit levels, growth and retention, yields and returns, loan diversification and credit management, stockholder value creation, tax rates, the impact of economic developments, the impact of monetary, fiscal and trade policies, and the impact of acquisitions we have made or may make. Such statements involve inherent risks and uncertainties, many of which are difficult to predict and are generally beyond the control of the Company, and there can be no assurance that future developments affecting the Company will be the same as those anticipated by management. The Company cautions readers that a number of important factors, in addition to those set forth below, could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in, or implied or projected by, such forward-looking statements.

    General risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the following: the strength of the United States economy in general and the strength of the local economies in which we conduct business; the effects of, and changes in, immigration, trade, tariff, monetary, and fiscal policies and laws, including interest rate policies of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; inflation/deflation, interest rate, market and monetary fluctuations; the effect of acquisitions we have made or may make, including, without limitation, the failure to obtain the necessary regulatory approvals, the failure to achieve the expected revenue growth and/or expense savings from such acquisitions, and/or the failure to effectively integrate an acquisition target and key personnel into our operations; the timely development of competitive products and services and the acceptance of these products and services by new and existing customers; the impact of changes in financial services policies, laws, and regulations, including those concerning banking, taxes, securities, and insurance, and the application thereof by regulatory agencies; the effectiveness of our risk management framework and quantitative models; changes in the level of our nonperforming assets and charge-offs; the transition away from USD LIBOR and uncertainties regarding potential alternative reference rates, including SOFR; the effect of changes in accounting policies and practices or accounting standards, as may be adopted from time-to-time by bank regulatory agencies, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, the Financial Accounting Standards Board or other accounting standards setters; possible credit related impairments or declines in the fair value of loans and securities held by us; possible impairment charges to goodwill on our balance sheet; changes in customer spending, borrowing, and savings habits; the effects of our lack of a diversified loan portfolio, including the risks of geographic and industry concentrations; periodic fluctuations in commercial or residential real estate prices or values; our ability to attract or retain deposits or to access government or private lending facilities and other sources of liquidity; the possibility that we may reduce or discontinue the payment of dividends on our common stock; changes in the financial performance and/or condition of our borrowers; changes in the competitive environment among financial and bank holding companies and other financial service providers; technological changes in banking and financial services; geopolitical conditions, including acts or threats of terrorism, actions taken by the United States or other governments in response to acts or threats of terrorism, and/or military conflicts, which could impact business and economic conditions in the United States and abroad; catastrophic events or natural disasters, including earthquakes, drought, climate change or extreme weather events that may affect our assets, communications or computer services, customers, employees or third party vendors; public health crises and pandemics, and their effects on the economic and business environments in which we operate, including on our asset credit quality, business operations, and employees, as well as the impact on general economic and financial market conditions; cybersecurity threats and fraud and the costs of defending against them, including the costs of compliance with legislation or regulations to combat fraud and cybersecurity threats; our ability to recruit and retain key executives, board members and other employees, and our ability to comply with federal and state in employment laws and regulations; ongoing or unanticipated regulatory or legal proceedings or outcomes; and our ability to manage the risks involved in the foregoing.

    Additional factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements are discussed in the Company’s 2024 Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC and available at the SEC’s Internet site (http://www.sec.gov).

    The Company does not undertake, and specifically disclaims any obligation, to update any forward-looking statements to reflect occurrences or unanticipated events or circumstances after the date of such statements, except as required by law. Any statements about future operating results, such as those concerning accretion and dilution to the Company’s earnings or shareholders, are for illustrative purposes only, are not forecasts, and actual results may differ.

    Non-GAAP Financial Measures — Certain financial information provided in this earnings release has not been prepared in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) and is presented on a non-GAAP basis. Investors and analysts should refer to the reconciliations included in this earnings release and should consider the Company’s non-GAAP measures in addition to, not as a substitute for or as superior to, measures prepared in accordance with GAAP. These measures may or may not be comparable to similarly titled measures used by other companies.

    Contact:
    David A. Brager
    President and Chief Executive Officer
    (909) 980-4030

    CVB FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
    (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in thousands)
                 
                 
        March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
    Assets            
    Cash and due from banks   $ 187,981     $ 153,875     $ 131,955  
    Interest-earning balances due from Federal Reserve     341,108       50,823       817,634  
    Total cash and cash equivalents     529,089       204,698       949,589  
    Interest-earning balances due from depository institutions     3,451       480       12,632  
    Investment securities available-for-sale     2,535,066       2,542,115       2,837,100  
    Investment securities held-to-maturity     2,359,141       2,379,668       2,454,586  
    Total investment securities     4,894,207       4,921,783       5,291,686  
    Investment in stock of Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB)     18,012       18,012       18,012  
    Loans and lease finance receivables     8,363,632       8,536,432       8,770,713  
    Allowance for credit losses     (78,252 )     (80,122 )     (82,817 )
    Net loans and lease finance receivables     8,285,380       8,456,310       8,687,896  
    Premises and equipment, net     26,772       27,543       43,448  
    Bank owned life insurance (BOLI)     318,301       316,248       310,744  
    Intangibles     8,812       9,967       13,853  
    Goodwill     765,822       765,822       765,822  
    Other assets     406,745       432,792       374,464  
    Total assets   $ 15,256,591     $ 15,153,655     $ 16,468,146  
    Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity            
    Liabilities:            
    Deposits:            
    Noninterest-bearing   $ 7,184,267     $ 7,037,096     $ 7,112,789  
    Investment checking     533,220       551,305       545,066  
    Savings and money market     3,710,612       3,786,387       3,561,512  
    Time deposits     561,822       573,593       675,554  
    Total deposits     11,989,921       11,948,381       11,894,921  
    Customer repurchase agreements     276,163       261,887       275,720  
    Other borrowings     500,000       500,000       1,995,000  
    Other liabilities     262,088       257,071       215,680  
    Total liabilities     13,028,172       12,967,339       14,381,321  
    Stockholders’ Equity            
    Stockholders’ equity     2,505,719       2,498,380       2,422,110  
    Accumulated other comprehensive loss, net of tax     (277,300 )     (312,064 )     (335,285 )
    Total stockholders’ equity     2,228,419       2,186,316       2,086,825  
    Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity   $ 15,256,591     $ 15,153,655     $ 16,468,146  
                 
    CVB FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED AVERAGE BALANCE SHEETS
    (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in thousands)
                 
                 
        Three Months Ended
        March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
    Assets            
    Cash and due from banks   $ 154,328     $ 152,966     $ 162,049  
    Interest-earning balances due from Federal Reserve     161,432       484,038       433,421  
    Total cash and cash equivalents     315,760       637,004       595,470  
    Interest-earning balances due from depository institutions     957       1,065       10,680  
    Investment securities available-for-sale     2,539,211       2,542,649       2,900,097  
    Investment securities held-to-maturity     2,369,507       2,393,865       2,457,611  
    Total investment securities     4,908,718       4,936,514       5,357,708  
    Investment in stock of FHLB     18,012       18,012       18,012  
    Loans and lease finance receivables     8,467,465       8,522,587       8,824,579  
    Allowance for credit losses     (80,113 )     (82,960 )     (85,751 )
    Net loans and lease finance receivables     8,387,352       8,439,627       8,738,828  
    Premises and equipment, net     27,408       29,959       44,380  
    Bank owned life insurance (BOLI)     316,643       316,938       309,609  
    Intangibles     9,518       10,650       14,585  
    Goodwill     765,822       765,822       765,822  
    Other assets     419,116       406,898       350,319  
    Total assets   $ 15,169,306     $ 15,562,489     $ 16,205,413  
    Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity            
    Liabilities:            
    Deposits:            
    Noninterest-bearing   $ 7,006,357     $ 7,116,050     $ 7,182,718  
    Interest-bearing     4,866,318       4,998,424       4,454,135  
    Total deposits     11,872,675       12,114,474       11,636,853  
    Customer repurchase agreements     317,322       456,145       309,272  
    Other borrowings     513,078       500,000       1,991,978  
    Other liabilities     239,283       278,314       168,442  
    Total liabilities     12,942,358       13,348,933       14,106,545  
    Stockholders’ Equity            
    Stockholders’ equity     2,523,923       2,507,060       2,432,075  
    Accumulated other comprehensive loss, net of tax     (296,975 )     (293,504 )     (333,207 )
    Total stockholders’ equity     2,226,948       2,213,556       2,098,868  
    Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity   $ 15,169,306     $ 15,562,489     $ 16,205,413  
                 
    CVB FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF EARNINGS
    (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
                 
                 
        Three Months Ended
        March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
    Interest income:            
    Loans and leases, including fees   $ 109,071     $ 110,277     $ 116,349  
    Investment securities:            
    Investment securities available-for-sale     18,734       18,041       21,446  
    Investment securities held-to-maturity     13,021       13,020       13,402  
    Total investment income     31,755       31,061       34,848  
    Dividends from FHLB stock     379       380       419  
    Interest-earning deposits with other institutions     1,797       5,881       6,073  
    Total interest income     143,002       147,599       157,689  
    Interest expense:            
    Deposits     25,322       28,317       21,366  
    Borrowings and customer repurchase agreements     6,800       8,291       23,862  
    Other     436       573        
    Total interest expense     32,558       37,181       45,228  
    Net interest income before (recapture of) provision for credit losses     110,444       110,418       112,461  
    (Recapture of) provision for credit losses     (2,000 )     (3,000 )      
    Net interest income after (recapture of) provision for credit losses     112,444       113,418       112,461  
    Noninterest income:            
    Service charges on deposit accounts     4,908       5,097       5,036  
    Trust and investment services     3,411       3,512       3,224  
    Loss on sale of AFS investment securities           (16,735 )      
    Gain on OREO, net     2,183              
    Gain on sale leaseback transactions           16,794        
    Other     5,727       4,435       5,853  
    Total noninterest income     16,229       13,103       14,113  
    Noninterest expense:           .
    Salaries and employee benefits     36,477       35,998       36,401  
    Occupancy and equipment     5,998       5,866       5,565  
    Professional services     2,081       2,646       2,255  
    Computer software expense     4,221       3,921       3,525  
    Marketing and promotion     1,988       1,757       1,630  
    Amortization of intangible assets     1,155       1,163       1,438  
    Provision for unfunded loan commitments     500              
    Other     6,724       7,129       8,957  
    Total noninterest expense     59,144       58,480       59,771  
    Earnings before income taxes     69,529       68,041       66,803  
    Income taxes     18,425       17,183       18,204  
    Net earnings   $ 51,104     $ 50,858     $ 48,599  
                 
    Basic earnings per common share   $ 0.37     $ 0.36     $ 0.35  
    Diluted earnings per common share   $ 0.36     $ 0.36     $ 0.35  
    Cash dividends declared per common share   $ 0.20     $ 0.20     $ 0.20  
                 
    CVB FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    SELECTED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
    (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
                 
        Three Months Ended
        March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
    Interest income – tax equivalent (TE)   $ 143,525     $ 148,128     $ 158,228  
    Interest expense     32,558       37,181       45,228  
    Net interest income – (TE)   $ 110,967     $ 110,947     $ 113,000  
                 
    Return on average assets, annualized     1.37 %     1.30 %     1.21 %
    Return on average equity, annualized     9.31 %     9.14 %     9.31 %
    Efficiency ratio [1]     46.69 %     47.34 %     47.22 %
    Noninterest expense to average assets, annualized     1.58 %     1.49 %     1.48 %
    Yield on average loans     5.22 %     5.15 %     5.30 %
    Yield on average earning assets (TE)     4.28 %     4.24 %     4.34 %
    Cost of deposits     0.86 %     0.93 %     0.74 %
    Cost of deposits and customer repurchase agreements     0.87 %     0.97 %     0.73 %
    Cost of funds     1.04 %     1.13 %     1.31 %
    Net interest margin (TE)     3.31 %     3.18 %     3.10 %
    [1] Noninterest expense divided by net interest income before provision for credit losses plus noninterest income.
                 
    Tangible Common Equity Ratio (TCE) [2]            
    CVB Financial Corp. Consolidated     10.04 %     9.81 %     8.33 %
    Citizens Business Bank     9.92 %     9.64 %     8.23 %
    [2] (Capital – [GW+Intangibles])/(Total Assets – [GW+Intangibles])
                 
    Weighted average shares outstanding            
    Basic     138,973,996       138,661,665       138,428,596  
    Diluted     139,294,401       139,102,524       138,603,324  
    Dividends declared   $ 27,853     $ 27,978     $ 27,886  
    Dividend payout ratio [3]     54.50 %     55.01 %     57.38 %
    [3] Dividends declared on common stock divided by net earnings.
                 
    Number of shares outstanding – (end of period)     139,089,612       139,689,686       139,641,884  
    Book value per share   $ 16.02     $ 15.65     $ 14.94  
    Tangible book value per share   $ 10.45     $ 10.10     $ 9.36  
                 
        March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
           
    Nonperforming assets:            
    Nonaccrual loans   $ 25,636     $ 27,795     $ 13,810  
    Other real estate owned (OREO), net     495       19,303       647  
    Total nonperforming assets   $ 26,131     $ 47,098     $ 14,457  
    Modified loans/performing troubled debt restructured loans (TDR) [4]   $ 11,949     $ 6,467     $ 10,765  
                 
    [4] Effective January 1, 2023, performing and nonperforming TDRs are reflected as Loan Modifications to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty.
                 
    Percentage of nonperforming assets to total loans outstanding and OREO     0.31 %     0.55 %     0.16 %
    Percentage of nonperforming assets to total assets     0.17 %     0.31 %     0.09 %
    Allowance for credit losses to nonperforming assets     299.46 %     170.12 %     572.85 %
                 
        Three Months Ended
        March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
    Allowance for credit losses:            
    Beginning balance   $ 80,122     $ 82,942     $ 86,842  
    Total charge-offs     (40 )     (64 )     (4,267 )
    Total recoveries on loans previously charged-off     170       244       242  
    Net recoveries (charge-offs)     130       180       (4,025 )
    (Recapture of) provision for credit losses     (2,000 )     (3,000 )      
    Allowance for credit losses at end of period   $ 78,252     $ 80,122     $ 82,817  
                 
    Net recoveries (charge-offs) to average loans     0.002 %     0.002 %     -0.046 %
                             
    CVB FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    SELECTED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
    (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in millions)
                                   
    Allowance for Credit Losses by Loan Type                          
                                   
        March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   March 31, 2024
        Allowance
    For Credit
    Losses
      Allowance
    as a % of
    Total Loans
    by Respective
    Loan Type
      Allowance
    For Credit
    Losses
      Allowance
    as a % of
    Total Loans
    by Respective
    Loan Type
      Allowance
    For Credit
    Losses
      Allowance
    as a % of
    Total Loans
    by Respective
    Loan Type
                                   
    Commercial real estate   $ 65.3       1.01 %   $ 66.2       1.02 %   $ 69.4       1.03 %
    Construction     0.2       1.52 %     0.3       1.94 %     1.3       2.20 %
    SBA     2.6       0.96 %     2.6       0.96 %     2.5       0.94 %
    Commercial and industrial     6.1       0.65 %     6.1       0.66 %     5.1       0.53 %
    Dairy & livestock and agribusiness     2.8       1.12 %     3.6       0.86 %     3.3       0.92 %
    Municipal lease finance receivables     0.2       0.32 %     0.2       0.31 %     0.2       0.27 %
    SFR mortgage     0.5       0.16 %     0.5       0.16 %     0.5       0.17 %
    Consumer and other loans     0.6       0.94 %     0.6       1.04 %     0.5       0.97 %
                                   
    Total   $ 78.3       0.94 %   $ 80.1       0.94 %   $ 82.8       0.94 %
                                   
    CVB FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    SELECTED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
    (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
                             
    Quarterly Common Stock Price
                             
          2025       2024       2023  
    Quarter End   High   Low   High   Low   High   Low
    March 31,   $ 21.71     $ 18.22     $ 20.45     $ 15.95     $ 25.98     $ 16.34  
    June 30,   $     $     $ 17.91     $ 15.71     $ 16.89     $ 10.66  
    September 30,   $     $     $ 20.29     $ 16.08     $ 19.66     $ 12.89  
    December 31,   $     $     $ 24.58     $ 17.20     $ 21.77     $ 14.62  
                             
    Quarterly Consolidated Statements of Earnings
                             
            Q1   Q4   Q3   Q2   Q1
              2025       2024       2024       2024       2024  
    Interest income                        
    Loans and leases, including fees       $ 109,071     $ 110,277     $ 114,929     $ 114,200     $ 116,349  
    Investment securities and other         33,931       37,322       50,823       44,872       41,340  
    Total interest income         143,002       147,599       165,752       159,072       157,689  
    Interest expense                        
    Deposits         25,322       28,317       29,821       25,979       21,366  
    Borrowings and customer repurchase agreements     6,800       8,291       22,312       22,244       23,862  
    Other         436       573                    
    Total interest expense         32,558       37,181       52,133       48,223       45,228  
    Net interest income before (recapture of)                    
    provision for credit losses         110,444       110,418       113,619       110,849       112,461  
    (Recapture of) provision for credit losses     (2,000 )     (3,000 )                  
    Net interest income after (recapture of)                    
    provision for credit losses         112,444       113,418       113,619       110,849       112,461  
                             
    Noninterest income         16,229       13,103       12,834       14,424       14,113  
    Noninterest expense         59,144       58,480       58,835       56,497       59,771  
    Earnings before income taxes         69,529       68,041       67,618       68,776       66,803  
    Income taxes         18,425       17,183       16,394       18,741       18,204  
    Net earnings       $ 51,104     $ 50,858     $ 51,224     $ 50,035     $ 48,599  
                             
    Effective tax rate         26.50 %     25.25 %     24.25 %     27.25 %     27.25 %
                             
    Basic earnings per common share       $ 0.37     $ 0.36     $ 0.37     $ 0.36     $ 0.35  
    Diluted earnings per common share     $ 0.36     $ 0.36     $ 0.37     $ 0.36     $ 0.35  
                             
    Cash dividends declared per common share   $ 0.20     $ 0.20     $ 0.20     $ 0.20     $ 0.20  
                             
    Cash dividends declared       $ 27,853     $ 27,978     $ 27,977     $ 28,018     $ 27,886  
                             
    CVB FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    SELECTED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
    (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in thousands)
                         
    Loan Portfolio by Type
        March 31,   December 31,   September 30,
      June 30,   March 31,
          2025       2024       2024       2024       2024  
                         
    Commercial real estate   $ 6,490,604     $ 6,507,452     $ 6,618,637     $ 6,664,925     $ 6,720,538  
    Construction     15,706       16,082       14,755       52,227       58,806  
    SBA     271,844       273,013       272,001       267,938       268,320  
    SBA – PPP     179       774       1,255       1,757       2,249  
    Commercial and industrial     942,301       925,178       936,489       956,184       963,120  
    Dairy & livestock and agribusiness     252,532       419,904       342,445       350,562       351,624  
    Municipal lease finance receivables     65,203       66,114       67,585       70,889       72,032  
    SFR mortgage     269,493       269,172       267,181       267,593       276,475  
    Consumer and other loans     55,770       58,743       52,217       49,771       57,549  
    Gross loans, at amortized cost     8,363,632       8,536,432       8,572,565       8,681,846       8,770,713  
    Allowance for credit losses     (78,252 )     (80,122 )     (82,942 )     (82,786 )     (82,817 )
    Net loans   $ 8,285,380     $ 8,456,310     $ 8,489,623     $ 8,599,060     $ 8,687,896  
                         
                         
                         
    Deposit Composition by Type and Customer Repurchase Agreements
                         
        March 31,   December 31,   September 30,
      June 30,   March 31,
          2025       2024       2024       2024       2024  
                         
    Noninterest-bearing   $ 7,184,267     $ 7,037,096     $ 7,136,824     $ 7,090,095     $ 7,112,789  
    Investment checking     533,220       551,305       504,028       515,930       545,066  
    Savings and money market     3,710,612       3,786,387       3,745,707       3,409,320       3,561,512  
    Time deposits     561,822       573,593       685,930       774,980       675,554  
    Total deposits     11,989,921       11,948,381       12,072,489       11,790,325       11,894,921  
                         
    Customer repurchase agreements     276,163       261,887       394,515       268,826       275,720  
    Total deposits and customer repurchase agreements   $ 12,266,084     $ 12,210,268     $ 12,467,004     $ 12,059,151     $ 12,170,641  
                         
    CVB FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    SELECTED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
    (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in thousands)
                         
    Nonperforming Assets and Delinquency Trends
        March 31,   December 31,   September 30,
      June 30,   March 31,
          2025       2024       2024       2024       2024  
    Nonperforming loans:                    
    Commercial real estate   $ 24,379     $ 25,866     $ 18,794     $ 21,908     $ 10,661  
    Construction                              
    SBA     1,024       1,529       151       337       54  
    Commercial and industrial     173       340       2,825       2,712       2,727  
    Dairy & livestock and agribusiness     60       60       143             60  
    SFR mortgage                             308  
    Consumer and other loans                              
    Total   $ 25,636     $ 27,795     $ 21,913     $ 24,957     $ 13,810  
    % of Total loans     0.31 %     0.33 %     0.26 %     0.29 %     0.16 %
                         
    Past due 30-89 days (accruing):                    
    Commercial real estate   $     $     $ 30,701     $ 43     $ 19,781  
    Construction                              
    SBA     718       88                   408  
    Commercial and industrial           399       64       103       6  
    Dairy & livestock and agribusiness                              
    SFR mortgage                              
    Consumer and other loans                              
    Total   $ 718     $ 487     $ 30,765     $ 146     $ 20,195  
    % of Total loans     0.01 %     0.01 %     0.36 %     0.00 %     0.23 %
                         
    OREO:                    
    Commercial real estate   $ 495     $ 18,656     $     $     $  
    SBA                              
    Commercial and industrial                              
    SFR mortgage           647       647       647       647  
    Total   $ 495     $ 19,303     $ 647     $ 647     $ 647  
    Total nonperforming, past due, and OREO   $ 26,849     $ 47,585     $ 53,325     $ 25,750     $ 34,652  
    % of Total loans     0.32 %     0.56 %     0.62 %     0.30 %     0.40 %
     
    CVB FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    SELECTED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
    (Unaudited)
                     
    Regulatory Capital Ratios
                     
                     
                     
            CVB Financial Corp. Consolidated
    Capital Ratios   Minimum Required Plus
    Capital Conservation Buffer
      March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
                     
    Tier 1 leverage capital ratio     4.0 %     11.8 %     11.5 %     10.5 %
    Common equity Tier 1 capital ratio     7.0 %     16.5 %     16.2 %     14.9 %
    Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio     8.5 %     16.5 %     16.2 %     14.9 %
    Total risk-based capital ratio     10.5 %     17.3 %     17.1 %     15.8 %
                     
    Tangible common equity ratio         10.0 %     9.8 %     8.3 %
                     
    Tangible Book Value Reconciliations (Non-GAAP)
                           
    The tangible book value per share is a Non-GAAP disclosure. The Company uses certain non-GAAP financial measures to provide supplemental information regarding the Company’s performance. The following is a reconciliation of tangible book value to the Company stockholders’ equity computed in accordance with GAAP, as well as a calculation of tangible book value per share as of March 31, 2025, December 31, 2024 and March 31, 2024.
     
     
        March 31,
    2025
          December 31,
    2024
          March 31,
    2024
     
        (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
                           
    Stockholders’ equity $ 2,228,419     $ 2,186,316     $ 2,086,825  
    Less: Goodwill   (765,822 )     (765,822 )     (765,822 )
    Less: Intangible assets   (8,812 )     (9,967 )     (13,853 )
    Tangible book value $ 1,453,785     $ 1,410,527     $ 1,307,150  
    Common shares issued and outstanding   139,089,612       139,689,686       139,641,884  
    Tangible book value per share $ 10.45     $ 10.10     $ 9.36  
     
    Return on Average Tangible Common Equity Reconciliations (Non-GAAP)
     
    The return on average tangible common equity is a non-GAAP disclosure. The Company uses certain non-GAAP financial measures to provide supplemental information regarding the Company’s performance. The following is a reconciliation of net income, adjusted for tax-effected amortization of intangibles, to net income computed in accordance with GAAP; a reconciliation of average tangible common equity to the Company’s average stockholders’ equity computed in accordance with GAAP; as well as a calculation of return on average tangible common equity.
                             
                             
        Three Months Ended
          March 31,       December 31,       March 31,    
          2025       2024       2024    
        (Dollars in thousands)    
                               
    Net Income   $ 51,104     $ 50,858     $ 48,599    
    Add: Amortization of intangible assets     1,155       1,163       1,438    
    Less: Tax effect of amortization of intangible assets (1)     (341 )     (344 )     (425 )  
    Tangible net income   $ 51,918     $ 51,677     $ 49,612    
                               
    Average stockholders’ equity   $ 2,226,948     $ 2,213,556     $ 2,098,868    
    Less: Average goodwill     (765,822 )     (765,822 )     (765,822 )  
    Less: Average intangible assets     (9,518 )     (10,650 )     (14,585 )  
    Average tangible common equity   $ 1,451,608     $ 1,437,084     $ 1,318,461    
                               
    Return on average equity, annualized (2)     9.31 %     9.14 %     9.31 %  
    Return on average tangible common equity, annualized (2)     14.51 %     14.31 %     15.13 %  
                               
                               
    (1) Tax effected at respective statutory rates.                          
    (2) Annualized where applicable.                          

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Global: A golden era for personalized medicine is approaching, but are we ready?

    Source: The Conversation – Canada – By Nazia Pathan, PhD, Postdoctoral Researcher, Population Health Research Institute, McMaster University

    Biobanks have become some of the most transformative tools in medical research, enabling scientists to study the relationships between genes, health and disease on an unprecedented scale (Piqsels/Siyya)

    If there’s a disease that seems to run in your family, if you’ve had a negative reaction to a drug or wondered why a standard treatment didn’t work on you, the answers may lie in your genes.

    The unique sequence of DNA that acts as a blueprint for building and maintaining your body often plays a major role in shaping your predisposition to diseases and reactions to drugs.

    Genes in the DNA make proteins, which can act as biomarkers or influence other types of biomarkers. Biomarkers are molecules in the body that help measure health conditions, such as those detected in blood or urine tests.

    Blood glucose, for example, is a biomarker for diabetes, cholesterol levels can be biomarkers for heart diseases and albumin is a protein used to assess kidney and liver functions.

    Tailoring treatments

    By understanding a patient’s unique genetic profile, biomarker readings and lifestyle information, doctors could tailor the most effective and safest treatments for that individual.

    Genetics offer the opportunity for individualized health care that can improve patient outcomes, save lives and alleviate strain on the health-care system.

    This is the promise of personalized medicine, which is already making a difference in areas such as cardiovascular diseases, cancer, mental health and rare diseases.

    The question is, are we prepared to seize this golden opportunity in Canada?

    Genetic testing and data

    Canadians are not averse to genetic testing. By 2018, a survey by Abacus Data showed around 11 per cent of Canadian adults had used direct-to-consumer genetic testing and analysis kits, and 60 per cent were open to ordering a test.

    This level of interest highlights a general acceptance of and readiness for genetic advancements in health care, which is encouraging, since we need much more reliable, population-level genetic information to make the most of this opportunity.

    Current genetic data is either scattered across relatively small, fragmented groups, which is severely limiting from a broader research perspective, or held by private companies. These companies have varying regulatory standards, raising concerns about privacy and data security, especially if a company is financially unstable or ceases to exist. This recently occurred when genetic testing company 23andMe filed for bankruptcy.




    Read more:
    With 23andMe filing for bankruptcy, what happens to consumers’ genetic data?


    The better model is publicly managed biobanks, which prioritize broad societal health over profit and offer stronger data protection through robust regulation of access, storage and usage. Strict oversight ensures the protection of individual privacy while promoting transparency.

    The potential of biobanks

    In this age of big data, biobanks have become some of the most transformative tools in medical research, enabling scientists to study the relationships between genes, health and disease on an unprecedented scale.

    This is possible because of technological advancements that allow large-scale genetic and biomarker testing, the adoption of cloud-based servers, and improvements in statistical modelling, machine learning and artificial intelligence.

    Establishing a biobank begins with collecting small amounts (five to 10 millilitres) of blood, saliva or tissue from consenting participants in the presence of health experts.

    Biobanks use next-generation sequencers to perform the genetic sequences at high speed, while the latest proteomics platforms enable measurement of thousands different biomarkers from a very small amount of blood. The resulting genetic and biomarker profiles are curated and made accessible through platforms like a national library.

    Countries such as the United Kingdom and the United States are paving the way with national efforts such as the UK Biobank and the All of Us Research Program.

    The British Biobank houses genetic and health data from more than 500,000 participants. Similarly, the U.S. program aims to enrol more than one million participants.

    Genomics in Canada

    As a genetic epidemiologist, I have had the opportunity to identify several potential genetic targets by using these treasure troves of information.

    The problem is that we don’t yet have a ready way of knowing if the results are directly applicable to the Canadian population.

    This is about to change. Genome Canada has launched the Canadian Precision Health Initiative to sequence the genomes of at least 100,000 Canadians.

    Biobanks enable scientists to study the relationships between genes, health and disease on an unprecedented scale.
    (Pixabay/Shameersrk)

    A Pan-Canadian Genome Library (PCGL) is also in the works to harmonize genetic data produced across Canada. It aims to capture, store and provide access to Canadian genomic data in a secure and ethical manner. Although this work is in the developmental phase, and the target population size remains unclear, these efforts are significant.

    These visions are closer to becoming a reality with the recent announcement of a $200 million investment in the Canadian Precision Health initiative. This is in addition to the more than $1 billion previously invested in health genomics research projects.

    These funds will support Canada’s Genomic centres, the PCGL, and enhance the translation of genomics into real-world applications, boosting the development of personalized medicine and advanced diagnostics to treat diseases.

    A potential model for the world

    Canada, with its uniquely diverse population, has a rare opportunity to lead the way in equitable, multi-ethnic genetic research that would address current biases that predominantly focus on individuals with European ancestry.

    This would ensure that everyone in Canada, including Indigenous communities, can benefit from this health-care revolution in an equitable, ethical and safe manner that balances privacy with the opportunities for groundbreaking research.

    With public trust and robust oversight, and making population-level data internationally accessible, Canada’s biobank initiative could become a model for the world in the golden era of personalized medicine.

    Nazia Pathan, PhD does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. A golden era for personalized medicine is approaching, but are we ready? – https://theconversation.com/a-golden-era-for-personalized-medicine-is-approaching-but-are-we-ready-250336

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI USA: Smith, Bipartisan Colleagues Call for E15 Waiver to Provide Fuel Price Relief

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Adrian Smith (R-NE)

    Washington, DC — Representatives Adrian Smith (R-NE), Angie Craig (D-MN), Ashley Hinson (R-IA), and Mark Pocan (D-WI) led 25 members of Congress urging the administration to lower prices at the gas pump by allowing the nationwide sale of E-15 this summer. The bipartisan letter asked President Donald Trump to extend the Reid vapor pressure (RVP) waiver to permit the sale of ethanol blends up to 15 percent from June 1 through September 15, 2025 and engage directly with requests from eight Midwestern states, including Nebraska, to maintain uniform access to ethanol blends.

    In the letter the members wrote:

    “To safeguard our energy supply, we must preserve the home-grown, affordable option higher ethanol blends provide. The administration’s efforts to unleash American energy independence is a long-term goal but can begin in the short term with preserving flexibility in our domestic energy production and supply through this emergency waiver.”  

    “Extending the nationwide sale of E15 can again bolster our nation’s energy resilience by adding billions of gallons of ethanol to the nation’s fuel supply, lowering the cost of gas for American families at a time when prices are already too high. As affirmed when you first allowed for year-round E15 in 2019, and those approved for the summers afterward, the sale of higher blends of biofuels during the summer months supports the domestic fuel supply, reduces consumer costs, and promotes American biofuels and agriculture feedstocks.”

    Read full text of the letter here.

    BACKGROUND:
    Congressman Smith first introduced a bill to approve year-round sale of E15 in 2015.

    On February 6, 2025, Smith and Rep. Angie Craig (D-MN) led nearly 30 colleagues in sending a bipartisan letter to EPA  Administrator Lee Zeldin. The letter emphasized the important role of the American biofuels industry in maximizing energy abundance and affordability while encouraging the EPA to issue timely and science-driven guidance to fulfill the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS).

    On February 13, Smith and Craig introduced the Nationwide Consumer and Fuel Retailer Choice Act to enable the year-round, nationwide sale of E15. Read more about the bipartisan, bicameral legislation here.

    On March 11, Smith led a bipartisan press conference highlighting grassroots support for eliminating restrictions on E15 sales.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Oregon State Treasury Completes Total Of $1.48 Billion In Bond Sales Despite Historic Market Instability

    Source: US State of Oregon

    ast week, the Oregon State Treasury successfully completed two major bond sales through its Buy Oregon Bonds Program, providing nearly $1.5 billion for statewide projects and programs, including affordable housing, educational facility improvements, pollution control, and agricultural grant programs.

    “Oregon bonds continue to attract strong investor demand, offering a solid investment opportunity even amid ongoing volatility in national financial markets driven by federal policy shifts and tariff-related challenges,” said Oregon State Treasurer Elizabeth Steiner, MD. “The strong performance and investor response to these offerings demonstrates Oregon’s fiscal resilience and Treasury’s thoughtful stewardship of the state’s debt.”

    Amid historic market instability not seen since the COVID-19 pandemic, Treasury’s Debt Management team worked closely with financial partners to monitor conditions and time the sales for optimal results. This diligent work, combined with the state’s strong credit ratings, contributed to the oversubscription of both sales and secured low-cost financing, saving Oregon millions of dollars.

    The first sale, a $925 million General Obligation Bond issuance, featured 3rd-party verified Sustainability Bonds and lower denomination offerings to broaden investor participation. Proceeds from this sale will fund approximately 20 projects and programs across 12 state agencies, including affordable housing, pollution control, and capital improvements to the State Capitol, K-12 schools, public universities, and other state facilities.

    The sale’s Sustainability Bonds component, totaling $301 million, will support Oregon’s Permanent Supportive Housing and Local Innovation and Fast Track Housing Programs. Kestrel, an approved verifier accredited by the Climate Bonds Initiative, awarded the accreditation following an independent external review, in which they determined the projects and associated Series B Bonds would address housing needs in Oregon, meet green building requirements, and advance Oregon’s goal of reducing statewide energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions.

    Later in the week, Treasury took advantage of another favorable market window to issue $555 million in Lottery Revenue Bonds. These proceeds will support approximately 34 projects and programs from nine (9) state agencies. Fund projects include city and community college capital improvements, such as the construction of a new ballpark for the Hillsboro Hops minor league baseball team and renovations to the Center for Native Arts And Cultures, as well as seismic improvements to transportation infrastructure and statewide programs like the agricultural irrigation modernization grants program.

    The sale also included a $250 million refunding of existing state debt component to reduce debt service costs and increase capacity for future infrastructure investments. The refunding is projected to yield approximately $11.2 million in present value savings.

    “The proceeds from these bond sales will support vital projects that improve the quality of life for Oregonians, invest in our schools, expand affordable housing, and strengthen our state’s infrastructure,” said Treasurer Steiner. “These investments reflect Oregon’s commitment to developing resilient communities and promoting the well-being of Oregonians.”

    For more information about the Buy Oregon Bonds Program and upcoming bond offerings visit: www.BuyOregonBonds.com

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: TowneBank Reports First Quarter 2025 Earnings

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SUFFOLK, Va., April 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — TowneBank (the “Company” or “Towne”) (NASDAQ: TOWN) today reported earnings for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 of $50.59 million, or $0.67 per diluted share, compared to $34.69 million, or $0.46 per diluted share, for the quarter ended March 31, 2024. Excluding certain items affecting comparability, core earnings (non-GAAP) were $50.98 million, or $0.68 per diluted share, in the current quarter compared to $36.27 million, or $0.48 per diluted share, for the quarter ended March 31, 2024.

    “Our Company had a very strong start to the year earning $0.67 per share and delivering nearly 7% annualized loan growth. Our continued focus on measured growth aligned with a deliberate strategy to maintain healthy liquidity and capital levels should position our Company well during periods of economic uncertainty. While growth could be challenged in the short run, we believe our conservative Main Street approach to relationship banking coupled with our diversified fee income businesses can serve as a pillar of strength for our members, shareholders and the communities we serve,” said G. Robert Aston, Jr., Executive Chairman.

    Highlights for First Quarter 2025:

    • Total revenues were $192.04 million, an increase of $24.94 million, or 14.93%, compared to first quarter 2024. Net interest income increased $17.26 million, driven primarily by lower deposit costs, while noninterest income increased $7.68 million.
    • Total deposits were $14.61 billion, an increase of $482.47 million, or 3.42%, compared to first quarter 2024. Total deposits increased 1.19%, or $171.25 million, in comparison to December 31, 2024, 4.81% on an annualized basis.
    • Noninterest-bearing deposits increased 2.85%, to $4.31 billion, compared to first quarter 2024 and represented 29.53% of total deposits. Compared to the linked quarter, noninterest-bearing deposits increased 1.42%.
    • Loans held for investment were $11.65 billion, an increase of $200.40 million, or 1.75%, compared to March 31, 2024, and $193.69 million, 1.69%, or 6.86% on an annualized basis, compared to December 31, 2024.
    • Annualized return on common shareholders’ equity was 9.57% compared to 6.89% in first quarter 2024. Annualized return on average tangible common shareholders’ equity (non-GAAP) was 13.21% compared to 9.98% in first quarter 2024.
    • Net interest margin was 3.14% for the quarter and tax-equivalent net interest margin (non-GAAP) was 3.17%, including purchase accounting accretion of 3 basis points, compared to the prior year quarter net interest margin of 2.72% and tax-equivalent net interest margin (non-GAAP) of 2.75%, including purchase accounting accretion of 4 basis points.
    • Compared to the linked quarter, net interest margin increased 15 basis points and spread increased 26 basis points.  
    • The effective tax rate was 13.95% in the quarter compared to 17.31% in first quarter 2024 and 13.92% in the linked quarter. The lower effective tax rate in the current quarter as compared to first quarter 2024 was primarily due to the impact on state and federal taxes from the increase in credits and losses related to tax advantaged investment properties placed in service over the past 12 months and purchase accounting adjustments for a prior partnership acquisition.   

    “We were pleased to close our partnership with Village Bank and Trust Financial Corp. on April 1, 2025 followed by our latest announcement of the signing of a definitive agreement with Old Point Financial Corporation. Both transactions are strategically important for our Company and follow our disciplined model of targeting partnerships that enhance shareholder returns with low execution risk,” stated William I. Foster III, President and Chief Executive Officer.

    Quarterly Net Interest Income:

    • Net interest income was $120.48 million compared to $103.22 million for the quarter ended March 31, 2024.
    • On an average basis, loans held for investment, with a yield of 5.38%, represented 74.15% of earning assets at March 31, 2025 compared to a yield of 5.37% and 74.54% of earning assets at March 31, 2024.
    • The cost of interest-bearing deposits was 2.69% for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, compared to 3.24% in first quarter 2024. Interest expense on deposits decreased $11.26 million, or 14.36%, from the prior year quarter driven by decreases in rate.
    • Our total cost of deposits decreased to 1.89% from 2.26% for the quarter ended March 31, 2024 due to lower interest-bearing deposit rates. The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee lowered the overnight funds rate a total of 100 basis points in the last four months of 2024.
    • Average interest-earning assets totaled $15.55 billion at March 31, 2025 compared to $15.27 billion at March 31, 2024, an increase of 1.84%. The Company anticipates approximately $760 million of cash flows from its securities portfolio to be available for reinvestment in the next 24 months.
    • Average interest-bearing liabilities totaled $10.42 billion, an increase of $212.32 million, or 2.08%, from prior year, driven by demand and money market deposit growth. Borrowings have declined between periods. There were no short term FHLB borrowings in first quarter 2025, compared to an average of $174.73 million in the prior year quarter.

    Quarterly Provision for Credit Losses:

    • The quarterly provision for credit losses was an expense of $2.42 million compared to a benefit of $0.88 million in the prior year quarter and an expense of $1.61 million in the linked quarter.
    • The allowance for credit losses on loans increased $2.21 million in first quarter 2025, compared to the linked quarter. The increase in the allowance was driven by increases in the loan portfolio combined with a continuation of our use of higher weightings of more adverse macroeconomic forecast scenarios utilized in our model.
    • Net loan charge-offs were $626 thousand in the quarter compared to $520 thousand in the prior year quarter and $382 thousand in the linked quarter.
    • The ratio of net charge-offs to average loans on an annualized basis was 0.02% in first quarter 2025, compared to 0.02% in first quarter 2024 and 0.01% in the linked quarter.
    • The allowance for credit losses on loans represented 1.08% of total loans at March 31, 2025, compared to 1.10% at March 31, 2024, and 1.08% at December 31, 2024. The allowance for credit losses on loans was 19.15 times nonperforming loans compared to 18.01 times at March 31, 2024 and 16.69 times at December 31, 2024.

    Quarterly Noninterest Income:

    • Total noninterest income was $71.57 million compared to $63.88 million in 2024, an increase of $7.68 million, or 12.02%.
    • Total net insurance commissions increased $0.89 million, or 3.47%, to $26.42 million in first quarter 2025 compared to 2024. This increase was primarily attributable to increases in property and casualty commissions, which were driven by organic growth.
    • Property management fee revenue increased 16.26%, or $2.73 million, to $19.50 million in first quarter 2025 compared to 2024. Future reservations increased compared to the prior year, primarily driven by an acquisition in 2024.
    • Residential mortgage banking income was $10.36 million compared to $10.48 million in first quarter 2024. Loan volume increased to $445.19 million in first quarter 2025 from $424.39 million in first quarter 2024. Residential purchase activity was 89.94% of production volume in the first quarter of 2025 compared to 95.66% in first quarter 2024.
    • At 3.18% gross margins on residential mortgage sales decreased 7 basis points from the linked quarter and 16 basis points from 3.34% in first quarter 2024.

    Quarterly Noninterest Expense:

    • Total noninterest expense was $130.54 million compared to $125.59 million in 2024, an increase of $4.95 million, or 3.94%.   This increase was primarily attributable to growth in salaries and employee benefits of $3.70 million.
    • Salaries and benefits expense increases were driven by annual base salary adjustments that went into effect October 2024, an increase in banking personnel, and production incentives.

    Consolidated Balance Sheet Highlights:

    • Total assets were $17.51 billion for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, a $264.99 million increase compared to $17.25 billion at December 31, 2024. Total assets increased $627.64 million, or 3.72%, from $16.88 billion at March 31, 2024.
    • Loans held for investment increased $193.69 million, or 1.69%, compared to the linked quarter and $200.40 million, or 1.75%, compared to prior year. Real estate construction and development loans declined, but were offset by growth in non owner occupied and multifamily commercial real estate. The Company continues to maintain a strong credit discipline.
    • Mortgage loans held for sale increased $17.78 million, or 11.80%, compared to prior year but decreased $31.95 million, or 15.94%, compared to the linked quarter, driven by production levels.
    • Total deposits increased $482.47 million, or 3.42%, driven by interest-bearing demand deposits, compared to prior year. In the linked quarter comparison, total deposits increased $171.25 million, or 4.81% on an annualized basis.
    • Noninterest-bearing deposits increased $119.42 million, or 2.85%, compared to prior year and $60.50 million, or 1.42%, or 5.77% on an annualized basis, compared to the linked quarter.
    • Total borrowings decreased $6.88 million, or 2.37%, compared to first quarter 2024 and $12.80 million, or 4.31%, compared to the linked quarter, due to declines in repurchase agreements and other borrowings.

    Investment Securities:

    • Total investment securities were $2.70 billion compared to $2.59 billion at December 31, 2024 and $2.54 billion at March 31, 2024. The weighted average duration of the portfolio at March 31, 2025 was 3.3 years. The carrying value of the available-for-sale debt securities portfolio included net unrealized losses of $119.25 million at March 31, 2025, compared to $155.28 million at December 31, 2024 and $170.84 million at March 31, 2024, with the changes in fair value due to the change in interest rates.

    Loans and Asset Quality:

    • Total loans held for investment were $11.65 billion at March 31, 2025, $11.46 billion at December 31, 2024, and $11.45 billion at March 31, 2024.
    • Nonperforming assets were $7.37 million, or 0.04% of total assets, compared to $7.77 million, or 0.05%, at March 31, 2024, and $7.87 million, or 0.05%, in the linked quarter end.
    • Nonperforming loans were 0.06% of period end loans at March 31, 2025, March 31, 2024, and the linked quarter end.
    • Foreclosed property consisted of $235 thousand in other real estate owned and $551 thousand in repossessed autos, for a total of $786 thousand in foreclosed property at March 31, 2025, compared to $175 thousand in other real estate owned and $605 thousand in repossessed autos, for a total of $780 thousand in foreclosed property at March 31, 2024.

    Deposits and Borrowings:

    • Total deposits were $14.61 billion compared to $14.44 billion at December 31, 2024 and $14.13 billion at March 31, 2024.
    • The ratio of period end loans held for investment to deposits was 79.77% compared to 79.37% at December 31, 2024 and 81.07% at March 31, 2024.
    • Noninterest-bearing deposits were 29.53% of total deposits at March 31, 2025 compared to 29.46% at December 31, 2024 and 29.69% at March 31, 2024. Noninterest-bearing deposits increased $119.42 million, or 2.85%, compared to March 31, 2024, and $60.50 million, or 1.42%, or 5.77% on an annualized basis, compared to the linked quarter.
    • Total borrowings were $284.10 million compared to $296.90 million at December 31, 2024 and $290.98 million at March 31, 2024.

    Capital:

    • Common equity tier 1 capital ratio of 12.75%(1).
    • Tier 1 leverage capital ratio of 10.61%(1).
    • Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of 12.87%(1).
    • Total risk-based capital ratio of 15.65% (1) .
    • Book value per common share was $29.19 compared to $28.43 at December 31, 2024 and $27.33 at March 31, 2024.
    • Tangible book value per common share (non-GAAP) was $22.36 compared to $21.55 at December 31, 2024 and $20.31 at March 31, 2024.

    (1) Preliminary.

    About TowneBank:
    Founded in 1999, TowneBank is a company built on relationships, offering a full range of banking and other financial services, with a focus of serving others and enriching lives. Dedicated to a culture of caring, Towne values all employees and members by embracing their diverse talents, perspectives, and experiences.

    Today, TowneBank operates over 55 banking offices throughout Hampton Roads and Central Virginia, as well as Northeastern and Central North Carolina – serving as a local leader in promoting the social, cultural, and economic growth in each community. Towne offers a competitive array of business and personal banking solutions, delivered with only the highest ethical standards. Experienced local bankers providing a higher level of expertise and personal attention with local decision-making are key to the TowneBank strategy. TowneBank has grown its capabilities beyond banking to provide expertise through its affiliated companies that include Towne Wealth Management, Towne Insurance Agency, Towne Benefits, TowneBank Mortgage, TowneBank Commercial Mortgage, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices RW Towne Realty, Towne 1031 Exchange, LLC, and Towne Vacations. With total assets of $17.51 billion as of March 31, 2025, TowneBank is one of the largest banks headquartered in Virginia.

    Non-GAAP Financial Measures:
    This press release contains certain financial measures determined by methods other than in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“GAAP”). Such non-GAAP financial measures include the following: fully tax-equivalent net interest margin, core operating earnings, core net income, tangible book value per common share, total risk-based capital ratio, tier one leverage ratio, tier one capital ratio, and the tangible common equity to tangible assets ratio. Management uses these non-GAAP financial measures to assess the performance of TowneBank’s core business and the strength of its capital position. Management believes that these non-GAAP financial measures provide meaningful additional information about TowneBank to assist investors in evaluating operating results, financial strength, and capitalization. The non-GAAP financial measures should be considered as additional views of the way our financial measures are affected by significant charges for credit costs and other factors. These non-GAAP financial measures should not be considered as a substitute for operating results determined in accordance with GAAP and may not be comparable to other similarly titled measures of other companies. The computations of the non-GAAP financial measures used in this presentation are referenced in a footnote or in the appendix to this presentation.

    Forward-Looking Statements:
    This press release contains certain forward-looking statements as defined by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements are not historical facts, but instead represent only the beliefs, expectations, or opinions of TowneBank and its management regarding future events, many of which, by their nature, are inherently uncertain. Forward-looking statements may be identified by the use of such words as: “believe,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan,” “estimate,” or words of similar meaning, or future or conditional terms, such as “will,” “would,” “should,” “could,” “may,” “likely,” “probably,” or “possibly.” These statements may address issues that involve significant risks, uncertainties, estimates, and assumptions made by management. Factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those contemplated by such forward-looking statements include, among others, competitive pressures in the banking industry that may increase significantly; changes in the interest rate environment that may reduce margins and/or the volumes and values of loans made or held as well as the value of other financial assets held; an unforeseen outflow of cash or deposits or an inability to access the capital markets, which could jeopardize our overall liquidity or capitalization; changes in the creditworthiness of customers and the possible impairment of the collectability of loans; insufficiency of our allowance for credit losses due to market conditions, inflation, changing interest rates or other factors; adverse developments in the financial industry generally, such as the 2023 bank failures, responsive measures to mitigate and manage such developments, related supervisory and regulatory actions and costs, and related impacts on customer and client behavior; general economic conditions, either nationally or regionally, that may be less favorable than expected, resulting in, among other things, a deterioration in credit quality and/or a reduced demand for credit or other services; geopolitical instability, including wars, conflicts, trade restrictions and tariffs, civil unrest, and terrorist attacks and the potential impact, directly or indirectly, on our business; the effects of weather-related or natural disasters, which may negatively affect our operations and/or our loan portfolio and increase our cost of conducting business; public health events (such as the COVID-19 pandemic) and governmental and societal responses to them; changes in the legislative or regulatory environment, including changes in accounting standards and tax laws, that may adversely affect our business; our ability to successfully integrate the businesses of Old Point Financial Corporation (“Old Point”), a pending merger, and Village Bank and Trust Financial Corp. (“Village”), a recently completed merger, to the extent that it may take longer or be more difficult, time-consuming, or costly to accomplish than expected, our ability to close the transaction with Old Point when expected or at all because required approvals and other conditions to closing are not received or satisfied on the proposed terms or on the anticipated schedule; deposit attrition, operating costs, customer losses, and business disruption associated with pending or recently completed acquisitions, including reputational risk and adverse effects on relationships with employees, customers or other business partners, that may be greater than expected; costs or difficulties related to the integration of the businesses we have acquired that may be greater than expected; expected growth opportunities or cost savings associated with pending or recently completed acquisitions may not be fully realized or realized within the expected time frame; the diversion of management’s attention and time from ongoing business operations and opportunities on merger related matters; cybersecurity threats or attacks, whether directed at us or at vendors or other third parties with which we interact, the implementation of new technologies, and the ability to develop and maintain reliable electronic systems; our competitors may have greater financial resources and develop products that enable them to compete more successfully; changes in business conditions; changes in the securities market; and changes in our local economy with regard to our market area, including any adverse impact of actual and proposed cuts to federal spending, including defense, security and military spending, on the Greater Hampton Roads economy. Any forward-looking statements made by us or on our behalf speak only as of the date they are made or as of the date indicated, and we do not undertake any obligation to update forward-looking statements as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. For additional information on factors that could materially influence forward-looking statements included in this report, see the “Risk Factors” in TowneBank’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 and related disclosures in other filings that have been, or will be, filed by TowneBank with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

    Media contact:
    G. Robert Aston, Jr., Executive Chairman, 757-638-6780
    William I. Foster III, President and Chief Executive Officer, 757-417-6482

    Investor contact:
    William B. Littreal, Chief Financial Officer, 757-638-6813

     
    TOWNEBANK
    Selected Financial Highlights (unaudited)
    (dollars in thousands, except per share data)
         
        Three Months Ended
        March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,
        2025       2024       2024       2024       2024  
    Income and Performance Ratios:                  
      Total revenue $ 192,044     $ 177,160     $ 174,518     $ 174,970     $ 167,102  
      Net income   50,887       41,441       43,126       43,039       35,127  
      Net income available to common shareholders   50,592       41,265       42,949       42,856       34,687  
      Net income per common share – diluted   0.67       0.55       0.57       0.57       0.46  
      Book value per common share   29.19       28.43       28.59       27.62       27.33  
      Book value per common share – tangible (non-GAAP)   22.36       21.55       21.65       20.65       20.31  
      Return on average assets   1.19 %     0.95 %     1.00 %     1.01 %     0.83 %
      Return on average assets – tangible (non-GAAP)   1.29 %     1.03 %     1.09 %     1.11 %     0.92 %
      Return on average equity   9.50 %     7.64 %     8.12 %     8.43 %     6.84 %
      Return on average equity – tangible (non-GAAP)   13.08 %     10.68 %     11.42 %     12.03 %     9.87 %
      Return on average common equity   9.57 %     7.70 %     8.18 %     8.49 %     6.89 %
      Return on average common equity – tangible (non-GAAP)   13.21 %     10.79 %     11.54 %     12.16 %     9.98 %
      Noninterest income as a percentage of total revenue   37.27 %     33.36 %     35.66 %     37.68 %     38.23 %
    Regulatory Capital Ratios (1):                  
      Common equity tier 1   12.75 %     12.77 %     12.63 %     12.43 %     12.20 %
      Tier 1   12.87 %     12.89 %     12.76 %     12.55 %     12.32 %
      Total   15.65 %     15.68 %     15.54 %     15.34 %     15.10 %
      Tier 1 leverage ratio   10.61 %     10.36 %     10.38 %     10.25 %     10.15 %
    Asset Quality:                  
      Allowance for credit losses on loans to nonperforming loans 19.15x   16.69x   18.70x   19.08x   18.01x
      Allowance for credit losses on loans to period end loans   1.08 %     1.08 %     1.08 %     1.10 %     1.10 %
      Nonperforming loans to period end loans   0.06 %     0.06 %     0.06 %     0.06 %     0.06 %
      Nonperforming assets to period end assets   0.04 %     0.05 %     0.04 %     0.04 %     0.05 %
      Net charge-offs (recoveries) to average loans (annualized)   0.02 %     0.01 %     0.02 %     %     0.02 %
      Net charge-offs (recoveries) $ 626     $ 382     $ 677     $ (19 )   $ 520  
                         
      Nonperforming loans $ 6,586     $ 7,424     $ 6,588     $ 6,582     $ 6,987  
      Foreclosed property   786       443       884       581       780  
      Total nonperforming assets $ 7,372     $ 7,867     $ 7,472     $ 7,163     $ 7,767  
      Loans past due 90 days and still accruing interest $ 15     $ 1,264     $ 510     $ 368     $ 323  
      Allowance for credit losses on loans $ 126,131     $ 123,923     $ 123,191     $ 125,552     $ 125,835  
    Mortgage Banking:                  
      Loans originated, mortgage $ 300,699     $ 385,238     $ 421,571     $ 430,398     $ 289,191  
      Loans originated, joint venture   144,495       180,188       176,612       196,583       135,197  
      Total loans originated $ 445,194     $ 565,426     $ 598,183     $ 626,981     $ 424,388  
      Number of loans originated   1,181       1,489       1,637       1,700       1,247  
      Number of originators   161       160       159       169       176  
      Purchase %   89.94 %     89.46 %     91.49 %     94.85 %     95.66 %
      Loans sold $ 475,518     $ 629,120     $ 526,998     $ 605,134     $ 410,895  
      Rate lock asset $ 1,880     $ 1,150     $ 1,548     $ 1,930     $ 1,681  
      Gross realized gain on sales and fees as a % of loans originated   3.18 %     3.25 %     3.28 %     3.28 %     3.34 %
    Other Ratios:                  
      Net interest margin   3.14 %     2.99 %     2.90 %     2.86 %     2.72 %
      Net interest margin-fully tax-equivalent (non-GAAP)   3.17 %     3.02 %     2.93 %     2.89 %     2.75 %
      Average earning assets/total average assets   90.32 %     90.57 %     90.43 %     90.36 %     90.52 %
      Average loans/average deposits   80.01 %     78.71 %     80.07 %     80.80 %     81.48 %
      Average noninterest deposits/total average deposits   29.68 %     30.14 %     30.19 %     30.06 %     30.25 %
      Period end equity/period end total assets   12.66 %     12.50 %     12.58 %     12.24 %     12.24 %
      Efficiency ratio (non-GAAP)   67.10 %     70.28 %     70.93 %     68.98 %     73.25 %
      (1) Current reporting period regulatory capital ratios are preliminary.            
    TOWNEBANK
    Selected Data (unaudited)
    (dollars in thousands)
     
    Investment Securities             % Change
      Q1   Q1   Q4   Q1 25 vs.   Q1 25 vs.
    Available-for-sale securities, at fair value   2025       2024       2024     Q1 24   Q4 24
    U.S. agency securities $ 320,190     $ 294,723     $ 293,917     8.64 %   8.94 %
    U.S. Treasury notes   78,184       27,534       28,429     183.95 %   175.01 %
    Municipal securities   439,379       447,323       439,115     (1.78 )%   0.06 %
    Trust preferred and other corporate securities   98,463       87,983       95,279     11.91 %   3.34 %
    Mortgage-backed securities issued by GSEs and GNMA   1,535,217       1,347,920       1,497,951     13.90 %   2.49 %
    Allowance for credit losses   (1,262 )     (1,382 )     (1,326 )   (8.68 )%   (4.83 )%
    Total $ 2,470,171     $ 2,204,101     $ 2,353,365     12.07 %   4.96 %
    Gross unrealized gains (losses) reflected in financial statements            
    Total gross unrealized gains $ 5,909     $ 1,868     $ 2,572     216.33 %   129.74 %
    Total gross unrealized losses   (125,156 )     (172,708 )     (157,851 )   (27.53 )%   (20.71 )%
    Net unrealized gains (losses) and other adjustments on AFS securities $ (119,247 )   $ (170,840 )   $ (155,279 )   (30.20 )%   (23.20 )%
    Held-to-maturity securities, at amortized cost                  
    U.S. agency securities $ 92,805     $ 102,042     $ 102,622     (9.05 )%   (9.57 )%
    U.S. Treasury notes   96,481       197,356       96,710     (51.11 )%   (0.24 )%
    Municipal securities   5,390       5,294       5,366     1.81 %   0.45 %
    Trust preferred corporate securities   2,107       2,159       2,121     (2.41 )%   (0.66 )%
    Mortgage-backed securities issued by GSEs   5,235       5,659       5,533     (7.49 )%   (5.39 )%
    Allowance for credit losses   (68 )     (82 )     (77 )   (17.07 )%   (11.69 )%
    Total $ 201,950     $ 312,428     $ 212,275     (35.36 )%   (4.86 )%
                       
    Total gross unrealized gains $ 176     $ 265     $ 178     (33.58 )%   (1.12 )%
    Total gross unrealized losses   (6,563 )     (14,262 )     (8,647 )   (53.98 )%   (24.10 )%
    Net unrealized gains (losses) in HTM securities $ (6,387 )   $ (13,997 )   $ (8,469 )   (54.37 )%   (24.58 )%
    Total unrealized gains (losses) on AFS and HTM securities $ (125,634 )   $ (184,837 )   $ (163,748 )   (32.03 )%   (23.28 )%
                  % Change
    Loans Held For Investment Q1   Q1   Q4   Q1 25 vs.   Q1 25 vs.
        2025       2024       2024     Q1 24   Q4 24
    Real estate – construction and development $ 1,006,086     $ 1,255,741     $ 1,082,161     (19.88 )%   (7.03 )%
    Commercial real estate – owner occupied   1,654,401       1,700,753       1,628,731     (2.73 )%   1.58 %
    Commercial real estate – non owner occupied   3,329,728       3,178,947       3,196,665     4.74 %   4.16 %
    Real estate – multifamily   841,330       595,075       801,079     41.38 %   5.02 %
    Residential 1-4 family   1,886,107       1,882,296       1,891,470     0.20 %   (0.28 )%
    HELOC   429,152       386,361       410,594     11.08 %   4.52 %
    Commercial and industrial business (C&I)   1,337,254       1,288,550       1,280,394     3.78 %   4.44 %
    Government   511,676       528,341       513,039     (3.15 )%   (0.27 )%
    Indirect   570,795       555,482       567,245     2.76 %   0.63 %
    Consumer loans and other   86,217       80,797       87,677     6.71 %   (1.67 )%
    Total $ 11,652,746     $ 11,452,343     $ 11,459,055     1.75 %   1.69 %
                       
                  % Change
    Deposits Q1   Q1   Q4   Q1 25 vs.   Q1 25 vs.
        2025       2024       2024     Q1 24   Q4 24
    Noninterest-bearing demand $ 4,313,553     $ 4,194,132     $ 4,253,053     2.85 %   1.42 %
    Interest-bearing:                  
    Demand and money market accounts   7,463,355       6,916,701       7,329,669     7.90 %   1.82 %
    Savings   312,151       326,179       311,841     (4.30 )%   0.10 %
    Certificates of deposits   2,519,489       2,689,062       2,542,735     (6.31 )%   (0.91 )%
    Total   14,608,548       14,126,074       14,437,298     3.42 %   1.19 %
    TOWNEBANK
    Average Balances, Yields and Rate Paid (unaudited)
    (dollars in thousands)
     
      Three Months Ended   Three Months Ended   Three Months Ended
      March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   March 31, 2024
          Interest   Average       Interest   Average       Interest   Average
      Average   Income/   Yield/   Average   Income/   Yield/   Average   Income/   Yield/
      Balance   Expense   Rate (1)   Balance   Expense   Rate (1)   Balance   Expense   Rate (1)
    Assets:                                  
    Loans (net of unearned income
    and deferred costs)
    $ 11,527,915     $ 153,068     5.38 %   $ 11,455,253     $ 155,710     5.41 %   $ 11,379,323     $ 151,811     5.37 %
    Taxable investment securities   2,478,048       21,301     3.44 %     2,421,253       20,722     3.42 %     2,440,652       18,716     3.07 %
    Tax-exempt investment securities   176,081       1,860     4.23 %     176,266       1,832     4.16 %     161,538       1,549     3.84 %
    Total securities   2,654,129       23,161     3.49 %     2,597,519       22,554     3.47 %     2,602,190       20,265     3.12 %
    Interest-bearing deposits   1,199,650       11,801     3.99 %     1,451,121       15,796     4.33 %     1,167,322       14,234     4.90 %
    Mortgage loans held for sale   164,358       2,653     6.46 %     209,315       3,088     5.90 %     116,868       1,716     5.87 %
    Total earning assets   15,546,052       190,683     4.97 %     15,713,208       197,148     4.99 %     15,265,703       188,026     4.95 %
    Less: allowance for loan losses   (124,265 )             (123,068 )             (127,413 )        
    Total nonearning assets   1,790,075               1,758,988               1,725,945          
    Total assets $ 17,211,862             $ 17,349,128             $ 16,864,235          
    Liabilities and Equity:                                  
    Interest-bearing deposits                                  
    Demand and money market $ 7,279,365     $ 40,606     2.26 %   $ 7,157,076     $ 43,894     2.44 %   $ 6,828,053     $ 47,985     2.83 %
    Savings   312,118       714     0.93 %     315,414       777     0.98 %     329,036       881     1.08 %
    Certificates of deposit   2,540,438       25,813     4.12 %     2,694,236       31,214     4.61 %     2,583,938       29,522     4.60 %
    Total interest-bearing deposits   10,131,921       67,133     2.69 %     10,166,726       75,885     2.97 %     9,741,027       78,388     3.24 %
    Borrowings   29,606       (300 )   (4.05 )%     36,708       (151 )   (1.61 )%     212,375       3,078     5.73 %
    Subordinated debt, net   260,070       2,304     3.54 %     257,667       2,261     3.51 %     255,878       2,236     3.50 %
    Total interest-bearing liabilities   10,421,597       69,137     2.69 %     10,461,101       77,995     2.97 %     10,209,280       83,702     3.30 %
    Demand deposits   4,276,586               4,386,911               4,224,104          
    Other noninterest-bearing liabilities   353,665               353,005               390,576          
    Total liabilities   15,051,848               15,201,017               14,823,960          
    Shareholders’ equity   2,160,014               2,148,111               2,040,275          
    Total liabilities and equity $ 17,211,862             $ 17,349,128             $ 16,864,235          
    Net interest income (tax-equivalent basis) (4)     $ 121,546             $ 119,153             $ 104,324      
    Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures                                
    Tax-equivalent basis adjustment       (1,068 )             (1,096 )             (1,106 )    
    Net interest income (GAAP)     $ 120,478             $ 118,057             $ 103,218      
                                       
    Interest rate spread (2)(4)         2.28 %           2.02 %           1.65 %
    Interest expense as a percent of average earning assets       1.80 %           1.97 %           2.21 %
    Net interest margin (tax-equivalent basis) (3)(4)       3.17 %           3.02 %           2.75 %
    Total cost of deposits         1.89 %           2.07 %           2.26 %
                                       

    (1) Yields and interest income are presented on a tax-equivalent basis using the federal statutory tax rate of 21%.
    (2) Interest spread is the average yield earned on earning assets less the average rate paid on interest-bearing liabilities. Fully tax-equivalent.
    (3) Net interest margin is net interest income expressed as a percentage of average earning assets. Fully tax-equivalent.
    (4) Non-GAAP.

    TOWNEBANK
    Consolidated Balance Sheets
    (dollars in thousands, except share data)
       
         
      March 31,   December 31,
        2025       2024  
      (unaudited)   (audited)
    ASSETS      
    Cash and due from banks $ 126,526     $ 108,750  
    Interest-bearing deposits at FRB   1,090,555       1,127,878  
    Interest-bearing deposits in financial institutions   100,249       102,847  
    Total Cash and Cash Equivalents   1,317,330       1,339,475  
    Securities available for sale, at fair value (amortized cost of $2,590,680 and $2,509,970, and allowance for credit losses of $1,262 and $1,326 at March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively)   2,470,171       2,353,365  
    Securities held to maturity, at amortized cost (fair value of $195,631 and $203,883 at March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively)   202,018       212,352  
    Less: allowance for credit losses   (68 )     (77 )
    Securities held to maturity, net of allowance for credit losses   201,950       212,275  
    Other equity securities   12,223       12,100  
    FHLB stock   12,425       12,136  
    Total Securities   2,696,769       2,589,876  
    Mortgage loans held for sale   168,510       200,460  
    Loans, net of unearned income and deferred costs   11,652,746       11,459,055  
    Less: allowance for credit losses   (126,131 )     (123,923 )
    Net Loans   11,526,615       11,335,132  
    Premises and equipment, net   373,111       368,876  
    Goodwill   457,619       457,619  
    Other intangible assets, net   57,145       60,171  
    BOLI   280,344       279,802  
    Other assets   634,437       615,479  
    TOTAL ASSETS $ 17,511,880     $ 17,246,890  
           
    LIABILITIES AND EQUITY      
    Deposits:      
    Noninterest-bearing demand $ 4,313,553     $ 4,253,053  
    Interest-bearing:      
    Demand and money market accounts   7,463,355       7,329,669  
    Savings   312,151       311,841  
    Certificates of deposit   2,519,489       2,542,735  
    Total Deposits   14,608,548       14,437,298  
    Advances from the FHLB   3,029       3,218  
    Subordinated debt, net   260,198       260,001  
    Repurchase agreements and other borrowings   20,875       33,683  
    Total Borrowings   284,102       296,902  
    Other liabilities   402,252       357,063  
    TOTAL LIABILITIES   15,294,902       15,091,263  
    Preferred stock, authorized and unissued shares – 2,000,000          
    Common stock, $1.667 par value: 150,000,000 shares authorized;      
    75,392,225 and 75,255,205 shares issued at      
    March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively   125,679       125,455  
    Capital surplus   1,123,330       1,122,147  
    Retained earnings   1,039,518       1,007,775  
    Common stock issued to deferred compensation trust, at cost:      
    1,049,002 and 1,046,121 shares at March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively   (21,969 )     (21,868 )
    Deferred compensation trust   21,969       21,868  
    Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)   (87,869 )     (116,045 )
    TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY   2,200,658       2,139,332  
    Noncontrolling interest   16,320       16,295  
    TOTAL EQUITY   2,216,978       2,155,627  
    TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY $ 17,511,880     $ 17,246,890  
    TOWNEBANK
    Consolidated Statements of Income (unaudited)
    (dollars in thousands, except per share data)
           
           
      Three Months Ended
      March 31,
        2025       2024  
    INTEREST INCOME:      
    Loans, including fees $ 152,322     $ 150,974  
    Investment securities   22,839       19,996  
    Interest-bearing deposits in financial institutions and federal funds sold   11,801       14,234  
    Mortgage loans held for sale   2,653       1,716  
    Total interest income   189,615       186,920  
    INTEREST EXPENSE:      
    Deposits   67,133       78,388  
    Advances from the FHLB   25       2,438  
    Subordinated debt, net   2,304       2,236  
    Repurchase agreements and other borrowings   (325 )     640  
    Total interest expense   69,137       83,702  
    Net interest income   120,478       103,218  
    PROVISION FOR CREDIT LOSSES   2,420       (877 )
    Net interest income after provision for credit losses   118,058       104,095  
    NONINTEREST INCOME:      
    Residential mortgage banking income, net   10,361       10,477  
    Insurance commissions and related income, net   26,424       25,539  
    Property management income, net   19,500       16,773  
    Service charges on deposit accounts   3,327       3,079  
    Credit card merchant fees, net   1,697       1,551  
    Investment commissions, net   3,075       2,343  
    BOLI   1,872       1,842  
    Gain on sale of equity investment   2,000        
    Other income   3,310       2,206  
    Net gain on investment securities         74  
    Total noninterest income   71,566       63,884  
    NONINTEREST EXPENSE:      
    Salaries and employee benefits   75,078       71,377  
    Occupancy   9,333       9,422  
    Furniture and equipment   4,621       4,478  
    Amortization – intangibles   3,026       3,246  
    Software   6,293       6,100  
    Data processing   3,835       3,916  
    Professional fees   2,653       3,180  
    Advertising and marketing   4,472       4,582  
    FDIC and other insurance   2,860       4,358  
    Acquisition related expenses   420       595  
    Other expenses   17,945       14,337  
    Total noninterest expense   130,536       125,591  
    Income before income tax expense and noncontrolling interest   59,088       42,388  
    Provision for income tax expense   8,201       7,261  
    Net income $ 50,887     $ 35,127  
    Net income attributable to noncontrolling interest   (295 )     (440 )
    Net income attributable to TowneBank $ 50,592     $ 34,687  
    Per common share information      
    Basic earnings $ 0.67     $ 0.46  
    Diluted earnings $ 0.67     $ 0.46  
    Cash dividends declared $ 0.25     $ 0.25  
    TOWNEBANK
    Consolidated Balance Sheets – Five Quarter Trend
    (dollars in thousands, except share data)
     
                       
      March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,
        2025       2024       2024       2024       2024  
      (unaudited)   (audited)   (unaudited)   (unaudited)   (unaudited)
    ASSETS                  
    Cash and due from banks $ 126,526     $ 108,750     $ 131,068     $ 140,028     $ 75,802  
    Interest-bearing deposits at FRB   1,090,555       1,127,878       1,061,596       1,062,115       926,635  
    Interest-bearing deposits in financial institutions   100,249       102,847       103,400       99,303       98,673  
    Total Cash and Cash Equivalents   1,317,330       1,339,475       1,296,064       1,301,446       1,101,110  
    Securities available for sale   2,470,171       2,353,365       2,363,176       2,250,679       2,204,101  
    Securities held to maturity   202,018       212,352       212,422       212,488       312,510  
    Less: allowance for credit losses   (68 )     (77 )     (77 )     (79 )     (82 )
    Securities held to maturity, net of allowance for credit losses   201,950       212,275       212,345       212,409       312,428  
    Other equity securities   12,223       12,100       12,681       13,566       13,661  
    FHLB stock   12,425       12,136       12,134       12,134       12,139  
    Total Securities   2,696,769       2,589,876       2,600,336       2,488,788       2,542,329  
    Mortgage loans held for sale   168,510       200,460       264,320       200,762       150,727  
    Loans, net of unearned income and deferred costs   11,652,746       11,459,055       11,412,518       11,451,747       11,452,343  
    Less: allowance for credit losses   (126,131 )     (123,923 )     (123,191 )     (125,552 )     (125,835 )
    Net Loans   11,526,615       11,335,132       11,289,327       11,326,195       11,326,508  
    Premises and equipment, net   373,111       368,876       365,764       340,348       342,569  
    Goodwill   457,619       457,619       457,619       457,619       457,619  
    Other intangible assets, net   57,145       60,171       63,265       65,460       68,758  
    BOLI   280,344       279,802       279,325       277,434       279,293  
    Other assets   634,437       615,479       572,000       610,791       615,324  
    TOTAL ASSETS $ 17,511,880     $ 17,246,890     $ 17,188,020     $ 17,068,843     $ 16,884,237  
    LIABILITIES AND EQUITY                  
    Deposits:                  
    Noninterest-bearing demand $ 4,313,553     $ 4,253,053     $ 4,267,628     $ 4,303,773     $ 4,194,132  
    Interest-bearing:                  
    Demand and money market accounts   7,463,355       7,329,669       6,990,103       6,940,086       6,916,701  
    Savings   312,151       311,841       319,970       312,881       326,179  
    Certificates of deposit   2,519,489       2,542,735       2,785,469       2,715,848       2,689,062  
    Total Deposits   14,608,548       14,437,298       14,363,170       14,272,588       14,126,074  
    Advances from the FHLB   3,029       3,218       3,405       3,591       3,775  
    Subordinated debt, net   260,198       260,001       256,444       256,227       256,011  
    Repurchase agreements and other borrowings   20,875       33,683       30,970       35,351       31,198  
    Total Borrowings   284,102       296,902       290,819       295,169       290,984  
    Other liabilities   402,252       357,063       371,316       411,770       401,307  
    TOTAL LIABILITIES   15,294,902       15,091,263       15,025,305       14,979,527       14,818,365  
                       
    Preferred stock                            
    Common stock, $1.667 par value   125,679       125,455       125,139       125,090       125,009  
    Capital surplus   1,123,330       1,122,147       1,117,279       1,115,759       1,114,038  
    Retained earnings   1,039,518       1,007,775       985,343       961,162       937,065  
    Common stock issued to deferred compensation                  
    trust, at cost   (21,969 )     (21,868 )     (22,224 )     (22,756 )     (20,915 )
    Deferred compensation trust   21,969       21,868       22,224       22,756       20,915  
    Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)   (87,869 )     (116,045 )     (81,482 )     (129,224 )     (126,586 )
    TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY   2,200,658       2,139,332       2,146,279       2,072,787       2,049,526  
    Noncontrolling interest   16,320       16,295       16,436       16,529       16,346  
    TOTAL EQUITY   2,216,978       2,155,627       2,162,715       2,089,316       2,065,872  
    TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY $ 17,511,880     $ 17,246,890     $ 17,188,020     $ 17,068,843     $ 16,884,237  
    TOWNEBANK
    Consolidated Statements of Income – Five Quarter Trend (unaudited)
    (dollars in thousands, except share data)
       
       
      Three Months Ended
      March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,
        2025       2024       2024       2024       2024  
    INTEREST INCOME:                  
    Loans, including fees $ 152,322     $ 154,933     $ 155,792     $ 154,549     $ 150,974  
    Investment securities   22,839       22,236       22,334       22,928       19,996  
    Interest-bearing deposits in financial institutions and federal funds sold   11,801       15,796       15,249       14,512       14,234  
    Mortgage loans held for sale   2,653       3,087       3,247       2,945       1,716  
    Total interest income   189,615       196,052       196,622       194,934       186,920  
    INTEREST EXPENSE:                  
    Deposits   67,133       75,885       82,128       82,023       78,388  
    Advances from the FHLB   25       26       29       942       2,438  
    Subordinated debt, net   2,304       2,261       2,237       2,236       2,236  
    Repurchase agreements and other borrowings   (325 )     (177 )     (54 )     685       640  
    Total interest expense   69,137       77,995       84,340       85,886       83,702  
    Net interest income   120,478       118,057       112,282       109,048       103,218  
    PROVISION FOR CREDIT LOSSES   2,420       1,606       (1,100 )     (177 )     (877 )
    Net interest income after provision for credit losses   118,058       116,451       113,382       109,225       104,095  
    NONINTEREST INCOME:                  
    Residential mortgage banking income, net   10,361       11,272       11,786       13,422       10,477  
    Insurance commissions and related income, net   26,424       23,265       25,727       24,031       25,539  
    Property management income, net   19,500       8,186       11,221       14,312       16,773  
    Service charges on deposit accounts   3,327       3,289       3,117       3,353       3,079  
    Credit card merchant fees, net   1,697       1,486       1,830       1,662       1,551  
    Investment commissions, net   3,075       3,195       2,835       2,580       2,343  
    BOLI   1,872       4,478       1,886       3,238       1,842  
    Other income   5,310       3,932       3,834       3,324       2,206  
    Net gain on investment securities                           74  
    Total noninterest income   71,566       59,103       62,236       65,922       63,884  
    NONINTEREST EXPENSE:                  
    Salaries and employee benefits   75,078       74,399       72,123       71,349       71,377  
    Occupancy   9,333       9,819       9,351       9,717       9,422  
    Furniture and equipment   4,621       4,850       4,657       4,634       4,478  
    Amortization – intangibles   3,026       3,095       3,130       3,298       3,246  
    Software   6,293       6,870       6,790       7,056       6,100  
    Data processing   3,835       3,788       4,701       4,606       3,916  
    Professional fees   2,653       3,446       4,720       3,788       3,180  
    Advertising and marketing   4,472       3,359       4,162       3,524       4,582  
    Other expenses   21,225       17,815       17,266       16,012       19,290  
    Total noninterest expense   130,536       127,441       126,900       123,984       125,591  
    Income before income tax expense and noncontrolling interest   59,088       48,113       48,718       51,163       42,388  
    Provision for income tax expense   8,201       6,672       5,592       8,124       7,261  
    Net income   50,887       41,441       43,126       43,039       35,127  
    Net income attributable to noncontrolling interest   (295 )     (176 )     (177 )     (183 )     (440 )
    Net income attributable to TowneBank $ 50,592     $ 41,265     $ 42,949     $ 42,856     $ 34,687  
    Per common share information                  
    Basic earnings $ 0.67     $ 0.55     $ 0.57     $ 0.57     $ 0.46  
    Diluted earnings $ 0.67     $ 0.55     $ 0.57     $ 0.57     $ 0.46  
    Basic weighted average shares outstanding   75,149,668       75,034,688       74,940,827       74,925,877       74,816,420  
    Diluted weighted average shares outstanding   75,527,713       75,309,989       75,141,661       75,037,955       74,979,501  
    Cash dividends declared $ 0.25     $ 0.25     $ 0.25     $ 0.25     $ 0.25  
    TOWNEBANK
    Banking Segment Financial Information (unaudited)
    (dollars in thousands)
     
               
      Three Months Ended   Increase/(Decrease)
      March 31,   December 31,   YTD 2025 over 2024
        2025       2024       2024     Amount   Percent
    Revenue                  
    Net interest income $ 119,584     $ 102,682     $ 117,137     $ 16,902     16.46 %
    Service charges on deposit accounts   3,327       3,079       3,289       248     8.05 %
    Credit card merchant fees   1,697       1,551       1,486       146     9.41 %
    Investment commissions, net   3,075       2,343       3,195       732     31.24 %
    Other income   6,495       3,429       6,456       3,066     89.41 %
    Subtotal   14,594       10,402       14,426       4,192     40.30 %
    Net gain/(loss) on investment securities         74             (74 )   N/M
    Total noninterest income   14,594       10,476       14,426       4,118     39.31 %
    Total revenue   134,178       113,158       131,563       21,020     18.58 %
                       
    Provision for credit losses   2,367       (976 )     1,525       3,343     (342.52 )%
                       
    Expenses                  
    Salaries and employee benefits   49,684       46,474       50,130       3,210     6.91 %
    Occupancy   6,979       7,061       7,362       (82 )   (1.16 )%
    Furniture and equipment   3,808       3,648       4,087       160     4.39 %
    Amortization of intangible assets   981       1,162       1,027       (181 )   (15.58 )%
    Software   4,022       4,054       4,548       (32 )   (0.79 )%
    Data processing   2,609       2,548       2,581       61     2.39 %
    Accounting and professional fees   2,010       2,659       2,649       (649 )   (24.41 )%
    Advertising and marketing   2,897       3,008       1,985       (111 )   (3.69 )%
    FDIC and other insurance   2,590       4,122       2,244       (1,532 )   (37.17 )%
    Acquisition related   420       147       268       273     185.71 %
    Other expenses   11,971       10,415       11,315       1,556     14.94 %
    Total expenses   87,971       85,298       88,196       2,673     3.13 %
    Income before income tax, corporate allocation and noncontrolling interest   43,840       28,836       41,842       15,004     52.03 %
    Corporate allocation   1,396       1,069       1,172       327     30.59 %
    Income before income tax provision and noncontrolling interest   45,236       29,905       43,014       15,331     51.27 %
    Provision for income tax expense   4,681       4,105       5,275       576     14.03 %
    Net income   40,555       25,800       37,739       14,755     57.19 %
    Noncontrolling interest   42       120       (63 )     (78 )   (65.00 )%
    Net income attributable to TowneBank $ 40,597     $ 25,920     $ 37,676     $ 14,677     56.62 %
                       
    Efficiency ratio (non-GAAP)   64.83 %     74.40 %     66.26 %   (9.57 )%   (12.86 )%
    TOWNEBANK
    Mortgage Segment Financial Information (unaudited)
    (dollars in thousands)
     
           
      Three Months Ended   Increase/(Decrease)
      March 31,   December 31,   YTD 2025 over 2024
        2025       2024       2024     Amount   Percent
    Revenue                  
    Residential mortgage brokerage income, net $ 10,580     $ 10,798     $ 11,580     $ (218 )   (2.02 )%
    Income (loss) from unconsolidated subsidiary   42       30       68       12     40.00 %
    Net interest and other income   1,110       768       1,661       342     44.53 %
    Total revenue   11,732       11,596       13,309       136     1.17 %
                       
    Provision for credit losses   53       99       81       (46 )   (46.46 )%
                       
    Expenses                  
    Salaries and employee benefits   7,031       6,656       6,712       375     5.63 %
    Occupancy   939       1,061       981       (122 )   (11.50 )%
    Furniture and equipment   195       178       158       17     9.55 %
    Amortization of intangible assets         144             (144 )   (100.00 )%
    Software   727       787       719       (60 )   (7.62 )%
    Data processing   163       148       194       15     10.14 %
    Accounting and professional fees   226       234       252       (8 )   (3.42 )%
    Advertising and marketing   389       382       406       7     1.83 %
    FDIC and other insurance   96       102       112       (6 )   (5.88 )%
    Acquisition related                         N/M
    Other expenses   2,461       2,222       2,652       239     10.76 %
    Total expenses   12,227       11,914       12,186       313     2.63 %
                       
    Income before income tax, corporate allocation and noncontrolling interest   (548 )     (417 )     1,042       (131 )   31.41 %
    Corporate allocation   (350 )     (348 )     (437 )     (2 )   0.57 %
    Income before income tax provision and noncontrolling interest   (898 )     (765 )     605       (133 )   17.39 %
    Provision for income tax expense   (240 )     (202 )     121       (38 )   18.81 %
    Net income   (658 )     (563 )     484       (95 )   16.87 %
    Noncontrolling interest   (117 )     (115 )     (156 )     (2 )   1.74 %
    Net income attributable to TowneBank $ (775 )   $ (678 )   $ 328     $ (97 )   14.31 %
                       
    Efficiency ratio excluding gain on equity investment (non-GAAP)   104.22 %     101.50 %     91.56 %     2.72 %   2.68 %
    TOWNEBANK
    Resort Property Management Segment Financial Information (unaudited)
    (dollars in thousands)
     
               
      Three Months Ended   Increase/(Decrease)
      March 31,   December 31,   YTD 2025 over 2024
        2025       2024       2024     Amount   Percent
    Revenue                  
    Property management fees, net $ 19,500     $ 16,773     $ 8,186     $ 2,727     16.26 %
    Net interest and other income   13       16       3       (3 )   (18.75 )%
    Total revenue   19,513       16,789       8,189       2,724     16.22 %
                       
    Expenses                  
    Salaries and employee benefits   5,448       5,532       4,796       (84 )   (1.52 )%
    Occupancy   614       508       640       106     20.87 %
    Furniture and equipment   405       416       435       (11 )   (2.64 )%
    Amortization of intangible assets   637       533       637       104     19.51 %
    Software   859       608       939       251     41.28 %
    Data processing   944       1,102       896       (158 )   (14.34 )%
    Accounting and professional fees   126       152       304       (26 )   (17.11 )%
    Advertising and marketing   892       1,038       807       (146 )   (14.07 )%
    FDIC and other insurance   67       35       70       32     91.43 %
    Acquisition related         447             (447 )   (100.00 )%
    Other expenses   2,613       942       466       1,671     177.39 %
    Total expenses   12,605       11,313       9,990       1,292     11.42 %
                       
    Income before income tax, corporate allocation and noncontrolling interest   6,908       5,476       (1,801 )     1,432     26.15 %
    Corporate allocation   (320 )                 (320 )   N/M
    Income before income tax provision and noncontrolling interest   6,588       5,476       (1,801 )     1,112     20.31 %
    Provision for income tax expense   1,629       1,358       (337 )     271     19.96 %
    Net income   4,959       4,118       (1,464 )     841     20.42 %
    Noncontrolling interest   (220 )     (445 )     43       225     (50.56 )%
    Net income attributable to TowneBank $ 4,739     $ 3,673     $ (1,421 )   $ 1,066     29.02 %
                       
    Efficiency ratio excluding gain on equity investment (non-GAAP)   61.33 %     64.21 %     114.21 %   (2.88 )%   (4.49 )%
    TOWNEBANK
    Insurance Segment Financial Information (unaudited)
    (dollars in thousands)
     
               
      Three Months Ended   Increase/(Decrease)
      March 31,   December 31,   YTD 2025 over 2024
        2025       2024       2024     Amount   Percent
    Commission and fee income                  
    Property and casualty $ 23,322     $ 20,722     $ 20,576     $ 2,600     12.55 %
    Employee benefits   4,725       4,826       4,335       (101 )   (2.09 )%
    Specialized benefit services         9       1       (9 )   (100.00 )%
    Total commissions and fees   28,047       25,557       24,912       2,490     9.74 %
                       
    Contingency and bonus revenue   3,620       4,503       2,924       (883 )   (19.61 )%
    Other income   4       11       221       (7 )   (63.64 )%
    Total revenue   31,671       30,071       28,057       1,600     5.32 %
                       
    Employee commission expense   5,050       4,512       3,958       538     11.92 %
    Revenue, net of commission expense   26,621       25,559       24,099       1,062     4.16 %
                       
    Salaries and employee benefits   12,915       12,715       12,761       200     1.57 %
    Occupancy   801       792       836       9     1.14 %
    Furniture and equipment   213       236       170       (23 )   (9.75 )%
    Amortization of intangible assets   1,408       1,407       1,431       1     0.07 %
    Software   685       651       664       34     5.22 %
    Data processing   119       118       117       1     0.85 %
    Accounting and professional fees   291       135       241       156     115.56 %
    Advertising and marketing   294       154       161       140     90.91 %
    FDIC and other insurance   107       99       108       8     8.08 %
    Acquisition related         1             (1 )   (100.00 )%
    Other expenses   900       758       580       142     18.73 %
    Total operating expenses   17,733       17,066       17,069       667     3.91 %
    Income before income tax, corporate allocation and noncontrolling interest   8,888       8,493       7,030       395     4.65 %
    Corporate allocation   (726 )     (721 )     (735 )     (5 )   0.69 %
    Income before income tax provision and noncontrolling interest   8,162       7,772       6,295       390     5.02 %
    Provision for income tax expense   2,131       2,000       1,613       131     6.55 %
    Net income   6,031       5,772       4,682       259     4.49 %
    Noncontrolling interest                         N/M
    Net income attributable to TowneBank $ 6,031     $ 5,772     $ 4,682     $ 259     4.49 %
                    0      
    Provision for income taxes   2,131       2,000       1,613       131     6.55 %
    Depreciation, amortization and interest expense   1,527       1,553       1,550       (26 )   (1.67 )%
    EBITDA (non-GAAP) $ 9,689     $ 9,325     $ 7,845     $ 364     3.90 %
                       
    Efficiency ratio (non-GAAP)   61.32 %     61.27 %     65.48 %     0.05 %   0.08 %
    TOWNEBANK
    Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures
    (dollars in thousands)
     
      Three Months Ended
      March 31,   March 31,   December 31,
        2025       2024       2024  
               
    Return on average assets (GAAP)   1.19 %     0.83 %     0.95 %
    Impact of excluding average goodwill and other
     intangibles and amortization
      0.10 %     0.09 %     0.08 %
    Return on average tangible assets (non-GAAP)   1.29 %     0.92 %     1.03 %
               
    Return on average equity (GAAP)   9.50 %     6.84 %     7.64 %
    Impact of excluding average goodwill and other
     intangibles and amortization
      3.58 %     3.03 %     3.04 %
    Return on average tangible equity (non-GAAP)   13.08 %     9.87 %     10.68 %
               
    Return on average common equity (GAAP)   9.57 %     6.89 %     7.70 %
    Impact of excluding average goodwill and other
     intangibles and amortization
      3.64 %     3.09 %     3.09 %
    Return on average tangible common equity
    (non-GAAP)
      13.21 %     9.98 %     10.79 %
               
    Book value (GAAP) $ 29.19     $ 27.33     $ 28.43  
    Impact of excluding average goodwill and other
     intangibles and amortization
      (6.83 )     (7.02 )     (6.88 )
    Tangible book value (non-GAAP) $ 22.36     $ 20.31     $ 21.55  
               
    Efficiency ratio (GAAP)   67.97 %     75.16 %     71.94 %
    Impact of exclusions (0.87 )%   (1.91 )%   (1.66 )%
    Efficiency ratio (non-GAAP)   67.10 %     73.25 %     70.28 %
               
    Average assets (GAAP) $ 17,211,862     $ 16,864,235     $ 17,349,128  
    Less: average goodwill and intangible assets   516,661       522,675       519,691  
    Average tangible assets (non-GAAP) $ 16,695,201     $ 16,341,560     $ 16,829,437  
               
    Average equity (GAAP) $ 2,160,014     $ 2,040,275     $ 2,148,111  
    Less: average goodwill and intangible assets   516,661       522,675       519,691  
    Average tangible equity (non-GAAP) $ 1,643,353     $ 1,517,600     $ 1,628,420  
               
    Average common equity (GAAP) $ 2,143,806     $ 2,024,169     $ 2,131,778  
    Less: average goodwill and intangible assets   516,661       522,675       519,691  
    Average tangible common equity (non-GAAP) $ 1,627,145     $ 1,501,494     $ 1,612,087  
               
    Net income (GAAP) $ 50,592     $ 34,687     $ 41,265  
    Amortization of intangibles, net of tax   2,391       2,564       2,445  
    Tangible net income (non-GAAP) $ 52,983     $ 37,251     $ 43,710  
               
    Total revenue (GAAP) $ 192,044     $ 167,102     $ 177,160  
    Net (gain)/loss on investment securities/equity investments   (2,000 )     (74 )     (218 )
    Total revenue for efficiency calculation (non-GAAP) $ 190,044     $ 167,028     $ 176,942  
               
    Noninterest expense (GAAP) $ 130,536     $ 125,591     $ 127,441  
    Less: amortization of intangibles   3,026       3,246       3,095  
    Noninterest expense net of amortization (non-GAAP) $ 127,510     $ 122,345     $ 124,346  
    TOWNEBANK
    Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures
    (dollars in thousands, except per share data)
                       
                       
    Reconciliation of GAAP Earnings to Operating
    Earnings Excluding Certain Items Affecting
    Comparability
    Three Months Ended
      March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,
        2025       2024       2024       2024       2024  
    Net income available to common shareholders (GAAP) $ 50,592     $ 41,265     $ 42,949     $ 42,856     $ 34,687  
                       
    Adjustments                  
    Plus: Acquisition-related expenses, net of tax   389       250       460       18       564  
    Plus: Initial provision for acquired loans, net of tax                            
    Plus: FDIC special assessment, net of tax                     (310 )     1,021  
    Less: Gain on sale of equity investments, net of noncontrolling interest         (99 )     (16 )            
    Core operating earnings, excluding certain items affecting comparability (non-GAAP) $ 50,981     $ 41,416     $ 43,393     $ 42,564     $ 36,272  
    Annualized interest impact of Series IV Notes, net of tax   42                          
    Core net income for diluted earnings (non-GAAP) $ 51,023     $ 41,416     $ 43,393     $ 42,564     $ 36,272  
                       
    Weighted average diluted shares   75,527,713       75,309,989       75,141,661       75,037,955       74,979,501  
    Diluted EPS (GAAP) $ 0.67     $ 0.55     $ 0.57     $ 0.57     $ 0.46  
    Diluted EPS, excluding certain items affecting
     comparability (non-GAAP)
    $ 0.68     $ 0.55     $ 0.58     $ 0.57     $ 0.48  
    Average assets $ 17,211,862     $ 17,349,128     $ 17,028,141     $ 16,982,482     $ 16,864,235  
    Average tangible equity $ 1,643,353     $ 1,628,420     $ 1,582,830     $ 1,520,500     $ 1,517,600  
    Average common tangible equity $ 1,627,145     $ 1,612,087     $ 1,566,455     $ 1,504,028     $ 1,501,494  
    Return on average assets, excluding certain items affecting comparability (non-GAAP)   1.20 %     0.95 %     1.01 %     1.01 %     0.87 %
    Return on average tangible equity, excluding certain items affecting comparability (non-GAAP)   13.17 %     10.72 %     11.53 %     11.95 %     10.29 %
    Return on average common tangible equity, excluding certain items affecting comparability (non-GAAP)   13.30 %     10.82 %     11.65 %     12.08 %     10.40 %
    Efficiency ratio, excluding certain items affecting comparability (non-GAAP)   66.87 %     70.12 %     70.67 %     68.96 %     72.89 %

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Attorney General Bonta Charges Operators of Peppermint Palm Placement Services for Financial Elder Abuse

    Source: US State of California

    Wednesday, April 23, 2025

    Contact: (916) 210-6000, agpressoffice@doj.ca.gov

    SACRAMENTO – California Attorney General Rob Bonta today announced the filing of felony charges against two operators of Peppermint Palm Placement Services (PPPS) for embezzling more than $350,000 from elderly victims through their placement agencies. The defendants operated over a dozen placement agencies, including PPPS, Peppermint Palm Senior Care, Porus Placements, Persimmon Placements, Red Cardinal Management Corporation, and others. They are being charged with 28 felonies, including theft from an elder, identity theft, grand theft by embezzlement, filing a false or forged document with a public office, money laundering, conspiracy, and a white-collar crime enhancement. 

    “When caregivers put illegal profit over the health and safety of those in their care, everyone loses,” said Attorney General Bonta. “At the California Department of Justice, we are dedicated to combating all forms of elder abuse and neglect. We will act swiftly to hold accountable anyone who harms or takes advantage of these at-risk members of our community.”

    The California Department of Justice received a report alleging that the operators of PPPS secured contracts with individuals seeking assistance for residential placements, charging them a placement fee equivalent to 150% of the client’s rent. Clients’ families or payees would send rent payments to PPPS with the understanding that PPPS would then forward the payment to the home operator or landlord. It is alleged that PPPS would obtain their “placement fee” and would then stop paying the rent and abruptly relocate the client to a different residence, restarting the cycle. Many of these clients struggle with mental health or substance abuse issues, and the majority are beneficiaries of Medi-Cal.  

    It is important to note that criminal charges must be proven in a court of law. Every defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty.

    The California Department of Justice’s Division of Medi-Cal Fraud and Elder Abuse (DMFEA) works to protect Californians by investigating and prosecuting those responsible for abuse, neglect, and fraud committed against elderly and dependent adults in the state, and those who perpetrate fraud on the Medi-Cal program.
     
    DMFEA receives 75 percent of its funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a grant award totaling $69,244,976 for Federal fiscal year (FY) 2025. The remaining 25 percent is funded by the State of California. FY 2025 is from October 1, 2024, through September 30, 2025.
     
    A copy of the complaint can be found here.

    # # #

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Hoeven Reviews Fargo Airport Terminal Expansion Progress

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for North Dakota John Hoeven
    04.23.25
    Hoeven Reviews Fargo Airport Terminal Expansion Progress Senator’s Visit Comes as Airport Sets New Record for Passenger Boardings; Project on Track for Completion in 2027
    FARGO, N.D. – Senator John Hoeven today toured and reviewed the construction progress of the Hector International Airport’s Terminal Expansion Project. Today’s visit comes as Hector International experienced its busiest month ever in March, with more than 56,000 boardings. Further, this was the 12th consecutive month of all-time high passenger activity at the airport, driving home the importance of building the expanded terminal.
    Accordingly, Hoeven is working as a member of the Senate Transportation, Housing and Urban Development Appropriations Committee to fulfill the federal cost share. The senator has secured nearly $40 million for the effort to date and continues working to provide another $31 million in federal funding. The project, which is expected to be completed in 2027, will include:
    A parking garage with an elevated walkway, which will open for use later this year.
    Four new boarding gates and renovations for the existing five gates.
    An expanded apron, supporting additional air traffic and ground operations.
    “The numbers make it clear – the Fargo-Moorhead region is growing fast and demand for air service continues to climb,” said Hoeven. “That’s why we are working to keep moving this needed terminal expansion at Hector International forward. The nearly $40 million in federal funding we’ve secured so far is an important part of this effort, along with support from state and local funding sources. These funds provide certainty to help keep the project on track, so this dynamic region can continue to rely on safe and efficient air service, which is vital to our economy and quality of life.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: New York Attorney and Administrative Officer Pleads Guilty to Attempted Smuggling of Firearms, Ammunition to Haiti

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    MIAMI – On April 18, 2025, Marcel Pierre Denis, 58, pled guilty to a two-count information charging him with April 2022 and October 2022 attempts to smuggle firearms from Miami to Haiti.

    In connection with the plea, Denis admitted that, in April 2022, law enforcement conducted an inspection of outbound cargo at a shipping warehouse in Miami-Dade County and discovered an AR-15-style semiautomatic rifle, a rifle magazine, and rifle ammunition in a cargo box manifested for shipment to Haiti. Denis was listed as the shipper on a shipping invoice for the box. Employees of the shipping carrier otherwise identified and recognized Denis as a frequent customer who had previously submitted cargo for shipment to Haiti. In a May 2022 interview, Denis acknowledged that he had attempted to ship the firearm and ammunition for Haiti and that he had not obtained any export permit or license for the shipment.

    In October 2022, law enforcement again conducted an inspection of outbound cargo at a shipping warehouse in Miami-Dade County. During this inspection, law enforcement encountered a cargo box manifested for shipment to Haiti that contained, among other items, a semiautomatic pistol that had been wrapped in duct tape and then concealed inside of a coffee container. Denis was again listed as the shipper on the shipping invoice for the box. Employees of the shipping carrier again identified Denis as the individual who had dropped off the cargo for shipment and filled out the shipping forms. Law enforcement conducted a trace and obtained purchase records for the pistol, which reflected that Denis had purchased the pistol from a retailer in the Southern District of Florida.

    In a November 2022 interview, Denis acknowledged his interactions with law enforcement after the April 2022 shipment, acknowledged his purchase of the pistol concealed among the October 2022 shipment, and stated that he intended to ship the firearms to an associate in Haiti for protection of a retail business.

    In connection with the plea, Denis admitted that he was aware of his need for an export license or permit to ship firearms or ammunition to Haiti, and that he was otherwise licensed to practice law and serving as an administrative hearing officer in the State of New York at the time of each shipment.

    U.S. District Judge Jose E. Martinez is presiding over the case. Denis faces a maximum term of ten years’ imprisonment as to each count. The sentencing hearing has been set for July 7, 2025. Judge Martinez will sentence Denis after a review of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors. 

    U.S. Attorney Hayden P. O’Byrne for the Southern District of Florida and Acting Special Agent in Charge José R. Figueroa of the Department of Homeland Security, Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), Miami Field Division, announced the guilty plea. 

    HSI investigated the case. Customs and Border Protection provided valuable assistance. Assistant U.S. Attorney Sterling M. Paulson is prosecuting the case.

    This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce gun violence and other violent crime, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone.  On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results.  For more information about Project Safe Neighborhoods, please visit Justice.gov/PSN.

    Related court documents and information may be found on the website of the District Court for the Southern District of Florida at www.flsd.uscourts.gov or at http://pacer.flsd.uscourts.gov, under case number 25-cr- 20139.

    ###  

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: Horizon Bancorp, Inc. Reports First Quarter 2025 Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., April 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — (NASDAQ GS: HBNC) – Horizon Bancorp, Inc. (“Horizon” or the “Company”), the parent company of Horizon Bank (the “Bank”), announced its unaudited financial results for the three months ended March 31, 2025.

    “Horizon’s first quarter earnings displayed continued positive momentum in our core financial metrics and management’s commitment to deliver long term value to its shareholders. Our results were highlighted by a sixth consecutive quarter of margin expansion, now above 3%, strong loan growth with exceptional credit metrics and a core funding base that continues to deliver value, even in an uncertain economic environment. The team also delivered a more efficient expense base entering 2025 and added optionality to our capital position through the successful sale of our mortgage warehouse business”, President and CEO, Thomas Prame stated. “We are pleased with our first quarter results and the positive momentum across our community banking model. The core franchise remains strong and our investments in expanding our local relationship banking model is paying dividends”.

    Net income for the three months ended March 31, 2025 was $23.9 million, or $0.54 per diluted share, compared to net loss of $10.9 million, or $0.25, for the fourth quarter of 2024 and compared to $14.0 million, or $0.32 per diluted share, for the first quarter of 2024.

    First Quarter 2025 Highlights

    • Net interest margin, on a fully taxable equivalent (“FTE”) basis1, expanded for the sixth consecutive quarter, to 3.04% compared with 2.97% for the three months ended December 31, 2024 and 2.50% for the three months ended March 31, 2024.
    • Total loans held for investment (“HFI”) increased 5% linked quarter annualized, with strong organic commercial loan growth of $103.3 million, or 14% annualized. This growth was partially funded by the continued strategic runoff of lowering yielding indirect auto loans of approximately $36 million.
    • Core deposits continued to be stable, with non-interest-bearing balances growing $62.5 million during the period, or 24% annualized.
    • Credit quality remained strong, with annualized net charge offs of 0.07% of average loans during the first quarter. Non-performing assets remain well within expected ranges, with no material change from the prior quarter.
    • On January 17, 2025, the Company completed the sale of its mortgage warehouse business to an unrelated third party, resulting in a pre-tax gain of $7.0 million.
    • Expenses were down $5.6 million from the fourth quarter of 2024, reflecting management’s commitment to creating a more efficient expense base in 2025.

    _________________________________
    1 Non-GAAP financial metric. See non-GAAP reconciliation included herein for the most directly comparable GAAP measure.

     
    Financial Highlights
    (Dollars in Thousands Except Share and Per Share Data and Ratios)
      Three Months Ended
      March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,
      2025   2024   2024   2024   2024
    Income statement:                  
    Net interest income $ 52,267     $ 53,127     $ 46,910     $ 45,279     $ 43,288  
    Credit loss expense   1,376       1,171       1,044       2,369       805  
    Non-interest income (loss)   16,499       (28,954 )     11,511       10,485       9,929  
    Non-interest expense   39,306       44,935       39,272       37,522       37,107  
    Income tax expense (benefit)   4,141       (11,051 )     (75 )     1,733       1,314  
    Net income (loss) $ 23,943     $ (10,882 )   $ 18,180     $ 14,140     $ 13,991  
                       
    Per share data:                  
    Basic earnings (loss) per share $ 0.55     $ (0.25 )   $ 0.42     $ 0.32     $ 0.32  
    Diluted earnings (loss) per share   0.54       (0.25 )     0.41       0.32       0.32  
    Cash dividends declared per common share   0.16       0.16       0.16       0.16       0.16  
    Book value per common share   17.72       17.46       17.27       16.62       16.49  
    Market value – High   17.76       18.76       16.57       12.74       14.44  
    Market value – Low   15.00       14.57       11.89       11.29       11.75  
    Weighted average shares outstanding – Basic   43,777,109       43,721,211       43,712,059       43,712,059       43,663,610  
    Weighted average shares outstanding – Diluted   43,954,164       43,721,211       44,112,321       43,987,187       43,874,036  
    Common shares outstanding (end of period)   43,785,932       43,722,086       43,712,059       43,712,059       43,726,380  
                       
    Key ratios:                  
    Return on average assets   1.25 %   (0.55 )%     0.92 %     0.73 %     0.72 %
    Return on average stockholders’ equity   12.44       (5.73 )     9.80       7.83       7.76  
    Total equity to total assets   10.18       9.79       9.52       9.18       9.18  
    Total loans to deposit ratio   85.21       87.75       83.92       85.70       82.78  
    Allowance for credit losses to HFI loans   1.07       1.07       1.10       1.08       1.09  
    Annualized net charge-offs of average total loans(1)   0.07       0.05       0.03       0.05       0.04  
    Efficiency ratio   57.16       185.89       67.22       67.29       69.73  
                       
    Key metrics (Non-GAAP)(2):                  
    Net FTE interest margin   3.04 %     2.97 %     2.66 %     2.64 %     2.50 %
    Return on average tangible common equity   15.79       (7.35 )     12.65       10.18       10.11  
    Tangible common equity to tangible assets   8.20       7.83       7.58       7.22       7.20  
    Tangible book value per common share $ 13.96     $ 13.68     $ 13.46     $ 12.80     $ 12.65  
                       
                       
    (1) Average total loans includes loans held for investment and held for sale.
    (2) Non-GAAP financial metrics. See non-GAAP reconciliation included herein for the most directly comparable GAAP measures.
     

    Income Statement Highlights

    Net Interest Income

    Net interest income was $52.3 million in the first quarter of 2025, compared to $53.1 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. Continued expansion of the Company’s net FTE interest margin was offset by a decline in average interest earning asset balances and two fewer days when compared with the prior quarter. Horizon’s net FTE interest margin2 was 3.04% for the first quarter of 2025, compared to 2.97% for the fourth quarter of 2024, attributable to the favorable mix shift in average interest earning assets toward higher-yielding loans and in the average funding mix toward deposit balances, in addition to continued disciplined pricing strategies on both sides of the balance sheet. Additionally, as previously noted, the fourth quarter net FTE interest margin included approximately five basis points related to interest recoveries on specific commercial loans that did not recur.

    Provision for Credit Losses

    During the first quarter of 2025, the Company recorded a provision for credit losses of $1.4 million. This compares to a provision for credit losses of $1.2 million during the fourth quarter of 2024, and $0.8 million during the first quarter of 2024. The increase in the provision for credit losses during the first quarter of 2025 when compared with the fourth quarter of 2024 was primarily attributable to increased net growth in commercial loans HFI and changes in economic factors, partially offset by the reduction of specific reserves and the reserves for unfunded commitments in the current quarter.

    For the first quarter of 2025, the allowance for credit losses included net charge-offs of $0.9 million, or an annualized 0.07% of average loans outstanding, compared to net charge-offs of $0.6 million, or an annualized 0.05% of average loans outstanding for the fourth quarter of 2024, and net charge-offs of $0.3 million, or an annualized 0.04% of average loans outstanding, in the first quarter of 2024.

    The Company’s allowance for credit losses as a percentage of period-end loans HFI was 1.07% at March 31, 2025, compared to 1.07% at December 31, 2024 and 1.09% at March 31, 2024.

    Non-Interest Income

    For the Quarter Ended March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,
    (Dollars in Thousands) 2025   2024   2024
      2024
      2024
    Non-interest Income                  
    Service charges on deposit accounts $ 3,208     $ 3,276     $ 3,320     $ 3,130     $ 3,214  
    Wire transfer fees   71       124       123       113       101  
    Interchange fees   3,241       3,353       3,511       3,826       3,109  
    Fiduciary activities   1,326       1,313       1,394       1,372       1,315  
    Loss on sale of investment securities   (407 )     (39,140 )                  
    Gain on sale of mortgage loans   1,076       1,071       1,622       896       626  
    Mortgage servicing income net of impairment   385       376       412       450       439  
    Increase in cash value of bank owned life insurance   335       335       349       318       298  
    Other income   7,264       338       780       380       827  
    Total non-interest income (loss) $ 16,499     $ (28,954 )   $ 11,511     $ 10,485     $ 9,929  
                                           

    Total non-interest income was $16.5 million in the first quarter of 2025, compared to non-interest loss of $29.0 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. The increase in non-interest income of $45.5 million is primarily due to a pre-tax loss on sale of investment securities of $39.1 million from the completion of the repositioning of $332.2 million of available-for-sale securities during the fourth quarter of 2024, compared to a loss on the sale of investment securities of $0.4 million in the first quarter of 2025. In addition, the Company completed the sale of its mortgage warehouse business to an unrelated third party in the current period, resulting in a pre-tax gain of $7.0 million.

    _________________________________
    1 Non-GAAP financial metric. See non-GAAP reconciliation included herein for the most directly comparable GAAP measure.

    Non-Interest Expense

    For the Quarter Ended March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,
    (Dollars in Thousands) 2025
      2024
      2024
      2024
      2024
    Non-interest Expense                  
    Salaries and employee benefits $ 22,414     $ 25,564     $ 21,829     $ 20,583     $ 20,268  
    Net occupancy expenses   3,702       3,431       3,207       3,192       3,546  
    Data processing   2,872       2,841       2,977       2,579       2,464  
    Professional fees   826       736       676       714       607  
    Outside services and consultants   3,265       4,470       3,677       3,058       3,359  
    Loan expense   689       1,285       1,034       1,038       719  
    FDIC insurance expense   1,288       1,193       1,204       1,315       1,320  
    Core deposit intangible amortization   816       843       844       844       872  
    Merger related expenses   305                          
    Other losses   228       371       297       515       16  
    Other expense   2,901       4,201       3,527       3,684       3,936  
    Total non-interest expense $ 39,306     $ 44,935     $ 39,272     $ 37,522     $ 37,107  
                                           

    Total non-interest expense was $39.3 million in the first quarter of 2025, compared with $44.9 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. The current period included $0.3 million of direct expenses related to the sale of the mortgage warehouse business. The decrease in non-interest expense during the first quarter of 2025 when compared with the prior period was primarily driven by a $3.2 million decrease in salaries and employee benefits expense, which is attributable to expenses incurred in the fourth quarter of 2024 related to the termination of legacy compensation and benefits programs that did not recur in the current period, and lower incentive compensation expense. Additionally, outside services and consultants expense decreased by $1.2 million, partially attributable to expense related to specific corporate initiatives in the fourth quarter of 2024 that did not recur in the current period. Other expenses decreased $1.3 million, partially attributable to a decrease in marketing expense.

    Income Taxes

    Horizon recorded a net tax expense of $4.1 million for the first quarter of 2025, representing an effective tax rate of 14.8%. Net tax expense in the fourth quarter of 2024 was impacted by the realized securities loss and the reversal of the $5.2 million tax valuation allowance.

    Balance Sheet Highlights

    Total assets decreased by $175.5 million, or 2.2%, to $7.6 billion as of March 31, 2025, from $7.8 billion as of December 31, 2024. The decrease in total assets is primarily due to the sale of the mortgage warehouse portfolio and a decrease in interest-bearing cash related to the payoff of FHLB advances and deposit outflows.

    Total investment securities decreased by $26.1 million, or 1.2%, to $2.1 billion as of March 31, 2025.

    Total loans were $4.9 billion at March 31, 2025, a decrease of $1.6 million from December 31, 2024 balances. The decrease is primarily due to the sale of the mortgage warehouse business during the quarter, which was offset by continued organic commercial loan growth.

    Total deposits increased by $165.1 million, or 2.9%, to $5.8 billion as of March 31, 2025 when compared to balances as of December 31, 2024. Time deposits increased by $155.9 million, or 14.3% during the quarter, while non-interest bearing deposits grew by $62.5 million, or 5.9%. Total borrowings decreased by $330.1 million during the quarter, to $812.2 million as of March 31, 2025, due to the pay down of FHLB advances. Balances subject to repurchase agreements declined by $2.1 million, to $87.9 million.

    Capital

    The following table presents the consolidated regulatory capital ratios of the Company for the previous three quarters, and the Company’s preliminary estimate of its consolidated regulatory capital ratios for the quarter ended March 31, 2025:

    For the Quarter Ended March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,
      2025*   2024   2024   2024
    Consolidated Capital Ratios              
    Total capital (to risk-weighted assets)   14.28 %     13.91 %     13.45 %     13.41 %
    Tier 1 capital (to risk-weighted assets)   12.35       12.00       11.63       11.59  
    Common equity tier 1 capital (to risk-weighted assets)   11.34       11.00       10.68       10.63  
    Tier 1 capital (to average assets)   9.25       8.88       9.02       9.02  
    *Preliminary estimate – may be subject to change    
         

    As of March 31, 2025, the ratio of total stockholders’ equity to total assets is 10.18%. Book value per common share was $17.72, increasing $0.26 during the first quarter of 2025.

    Tangible common equity3 totaled $611.4 million at March 31, 2025, and the ratio of tangible common equity to tangible assets1 was 8.20% at March 31, 2025, up from 7.83% at December 31, 2024. Tangible book value, which excludes intangible assets from total equity, per common share1 was $13.96, increasing $0.28 during the first quarter of 2025 behind the growth in retained earnings.

    Credit Quality

    As of March 31, 2025, total non-accrual loans increased by $3.0 million, or 12%, from December 31, 2024, to 0.59% of total loans HFI. Total non-performing assets increased $4.0 million, or 15%, to $31.4 million, compared to $27.4 million as of December 31, 2024. The ratio of non-performing assets to total assets increased to 0.41% compared to 0.35% as of December 31, 2024.

    As of March 31, 2025, net charge-offs increased by $0.2 million to $0.9 million, compared to $0.6 million as of December 31, 2024 and remain just 0.07% annualized of average loans.

    _________________________________
    1 Non-GAAP financial metric. See non-GAAP reconciliation included herein for the most directly comparable GAAP measure.

    Earnings Conference Call

    As previously announced, Horizon will host a conference call to review its first quarter financial results and operating performance.

    Participants may access the live conference call on April 24, 2025 at 7:30 a.m. CT (8:30 a.m. ET) by dialing 833-974-2379 from the United States, 866-450-4696 from Canada or 1-412-317-5772 from international locations and requesting the “Horizon Bancorp, Inc. Call.” Participants are asked to dial in approximately 10 minutes prior to the call.

    A telephone replay of the call will be available approximately one hour after the end of the conference through May 2, 2025. The replay may be accessed by dialing 877-344-7529 from the United States, 855-669-9658 from Canada or 1–412–317-0088 from other international locations, and entering the access code 6313653.

    About Horizon Bancorp, Inc.

    Horizon Bancorp, Inc. (NASDAQ GS: HBNC) is the $8 billion-asset commercial bank holding company for Horizon Bank, which serves customers across diverse and economically attractive Midwestern markets through convenient digital and virtual tools, as well as its Indiana and Michigan branches. Horizon’s retail offerings include prime residential and other secured consumer lending to in-market customers, as well as a range of personal banking and wealth management solutions. Horizon also provides a comprehensive array of in-market business banking and treasury management services, as well as equipment financing solutions for customers regionally and nationally, with commercial lending representing over half of total loans. More information on Horizon, headquartered in Northwest Indiana’s Michigan City, is available at horizonbank.com and investor.horizonbank.com.

    Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures

    Certain information set forth in this press release refers to financial measures determined by methods other than in accordance with GAAP. Specifically, we have included non-GAAP financial measures relating to net income, diluted earnings per share, pre-tax, pre-provision net income, net interest margin, tangible stockholders’ equity and tangible book value per share, efficiency ratio, the return on average assets, the return on average common equity, and return on average tangible equity. In each case, we have identified special circumstances that we consider to be non-recurring and have excluded them. We believe that this shows the impact of such events as acquisition-related purchase accounting adjustments and swap termination fees, among others we have identified in our reconciliations. Horizon believes these non-GAAP financial measures are helpful to investors and provide a greater understanding of our business and financial results without giving effect to the purchase accounting impacts and one-time costs of acquisitions and non–recurring items. These measures are not necessarily comparable to similar measures that may be presented by other companies and should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the related GAAP measure. See the tables and other information below and contained elsewhere in this press release for reconciliations of the non-GAAP information identified herein and its most comparable GAAP measures.

    Forward Looking Statements

    This press release may contain forward–looking statements regarding the financial performance, business prospects, growth and operating strategies of Horizon Bancorp, Inc. and its affiliates (collectively, “Horizon”). For these statements, Horizon claims the protection of the safe harbor for forward-looking statements contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Statements in this press release should be considered in conjunction with the other information available about Horizon, including the information in the filings we make with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”). Forward-looking statements provide current expectations or forecasts of future events and are not guarantees of future performance. The forward-looking statements are based on management’s expectations and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties. We have tried, wherever possible, to identify such statements by using words such as “anticipate,” “estimate,” “project,” “intend,” “plan,” “believe,” “will” and similar expressions in connection with any discussion of future operating or financial performance.

    Although management believes that the expectations reflected in such forward-looking statements are reasonable, actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied in such statements. Risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially include: effects on Horizon’s business resulting from new U.S. domestic or foreign governmental trade measures, including but not limited to tariffs, import and export controls, foreign exchange intervention accomplished to offset the effects of trade policy or in response to currency volatility, and other restrictions on free trade; uncertain conditions within the domestic and international macroeconomic environment, including trade policy, monetary and fiscal policy, and conditions in the investment, credit, interest rate, and derivatives markets, and their impact on Horizon and its customers; current financial conditions within the banking industry; changes in the level and volatility of interest rates, changes in spreads on earning assets and changes in interest bearing liabilities; increased interest rate sensitivity; the aggregate effects of elevated inflation levels in recent years; loss of key Horizon personnel; increases in disintermediation; potential loss of fee income, including interchange fees, as new and emerging alternative payment platforms take a greater market share of the payment systems; estimates of fair value of certain of Horizon’s assets and liabilities; changes in prepayment speeds, loan originations, credit losses, market values, collateral securing loans and other assets; changes in sources of liquidity; legislative and regulatory actions and reforms; changes in accounting policies or procedures as may be adopted and required by regulatory agencies; litigation, regulatory enforcement, and legal compliance risk and costs; rapid technological developments and changes; cyber terrorism and data security breaches; the rising costs of cybersecurity; the ability of the U.S. federal government to manage federal debt limits; climate change and social justice initiatives; the inability to realize cost savings or revenues or to effectively implement integration plans and other consequences associated with mergers, acquisitions, and divestitures; acts of terrorism, war and global conflicts, such as the Russia and Ukraine conflict and the Israel and Hamas conflict; and supply chain disruptions and delays. These and additional factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements are discussed in Horizon’s reports (such as the Annual Report on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, and Current Reports on Form 8-K) filed with the SEC and available at the SEC’s website (www.sec.gov). Undue reliance should not be placed on the forward–looking statements, which speak only as of the date hereof. Horizon does not undertake, and specifically disclaims any obligation, to publicly release the result of any revisions that may be made to update any forward-looking statement to reflect the events or circumstances after the date on which the forward–looking statement is made, or reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events, except to the extent required by law.

       
      Condensed Consolidated Statements of Income
      (Dollars in Thousands Except Per Share Data, Unaudited)
      Three Months Ended
      March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,
      2025   2024   2024   2024
      2024
    Interest Income                  
    Interest and fees on loans $ 74,457     $ 76,747     $ 75,488     $ 71,880     $ 66,954  
    Investment securities – taxable   6,039       6,814       8,133       7,986       7,362  
    Investment securities – tax-exempt   6,192       6,301       6,310       6,377       6,451  
    Other   2,487       3,488       957       738       4,497  
    Total interest income   89,175       93,350       90,888       86,981       85,264  
    Interest Expense                  
    Deposits   25,601       27,818       30,787       28,447       27,990  
    Short and long-term borrowings   9,188       10,656       11,131       11,213       11,930  
    Subordinated notes   829       829       830       829       831  
    Junior subordinated debentures issued to capital trusts   1,290       920       1,230       1,213       1,225  
    Total interest expense   36,908       40,223       43,978       41,702       41,976  
    Net Interest Income   52,267       53,127       46,910       45,279       43,288  
    Provision for loan losses   1,376       1,171       1,044       2,369       805  
    Net Interest Income after Credit Loss Expense   50,891       51,956       45,866       42,910       42,483  
    Non-interest Income                  
    Service charges on deposit accounts   3,208       3,276       3,320       3,130       3,214  
    Wire transfer fees   71       124       123       113       101  
    Interchange fees   3,241       3,353       3,511       3,826       3,109  
    Fiduciary activities   1,326       1,313       1,394       1,372       1,315  
    Loss on sale of investment securities   (407 )     (39,140 )                  
    Gain on sale of mortgage loans   1,076       1,071       1,622       896       626  
    Mortgage servicing income net of impairment   385       376       412       450       439  
    Increase in cash value of bank owned life insurance   335       335       349       318       298  
    Other income   7,264       338       780       380       827  
    Total non-interest (loss) income   16,499       (28,954 )     11,511       10,485       9,929  
    Non-interest Expense                  
    Salaries and employee benefits   22,414       25,564       21,829       20,583       20,268  
    Net occupancy expenses   3,702       3,431       3,207       3,192       3,546  
    Data processing   2,872       2,841       2,977       2,579       2,464  
    Professional fees   826       736       676       714       607  
    Outside services and consultants   3,265       4,470       3,677       3,058       3,359  
    Loan expense   689       1,285       1,034       1,038       719  
    FDIC insurance expense   1,288       1,193       1,204       1,315       1,320  
    Core deposit intangible amortization   816       843       844       844       872  
    Merger related expenses   305                          
    Other losses   228       371       297       515       16  
    Other expense   2,901       4,201       3,527       3,684       3,936  
    Total non-interest expense   39,306       44,935       39,272       37,522       37,107  
    Income (Loss) Before Income Taxes   28,084       (21,933 )     18,105       15,873       15,305  
    Income tax expense (benefit)   4,141       (11,051 )     (75 )     1,733       1,314  
    Net Income (Loss) $ 23,943     $ (10,882 )   $ 18,180     $ 14,140     $ 13,991  
    Basic Earnings (Loss) Per Share $ 0.55     $ (0.25 )   $ 0.42     $ 0.32     $ 0.32  
    Diluted Earnings (Loss) Per Share   0.54       (0.25 )     0.41       0.32       0.32  
                                           
      Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheet
      (Dollar in Thousands)
       
      Three Months Ended for the Period
      March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
    Assets                  
    Interest earning assets                  
    Federal funds sold $     $     $ 113,912     $ 34,453     $ 161,704  
    Interest-bearing deposits in banks   80,023       201,131       12,107       4,957       9,178  
    Interest earning time deposits         735       735       1,715       1,715  
    Federal Home Loan Bank stock   45,412       53,826       53,826       53,826       53,826  
    Investment securities, available for sale   231,431       233,677       541,170       527,054       535,319  
    Investment securities, held to maturity   1,843,851       1,867,690       1,888,379       1,904,281       1,925,725  
    Loans held for sale   3,253       67,597       2,069       2,440       922  
    Gross loans held for investment (HFI)   4,909,815       4,847,040       4,803,996       4,822,840       4,618,175  
    Total Interest earning assets   7,113,785       7,271,696       7,416,194       7,351,566       7,306,564  
    Non-interest earning assets                  
    Allowance for credit losses   (52,654 )     (51,980 )     (52,881 )     (52,215 )     (50,387 )
    Cash and due from banks   89,643       92,300       108,815       106,691       100,206  
    Cash value of life insurance   37,409       37,450       37,115       36,773       36,455  
    Other assets   140,672       152,635       119,026       165,656       160,593  
    Goodwill   155,211       155,211       155,211       155,211       155,211  
    Other intangible assets   9,407       10,223       11,067       11,910       12,754  
    Premises and equipment, net   93,499       93,864       93,544       93,695       94,303  
    Interest receivable   38,663       39,747       39,366       43,240       40,008  
    Total non-interest earning assets   511,850       529,450       511,263       560,961       549,143  
    Total assets $ 7,625,635     $ 7,801,146     $ 7,927,457     $ 7,912,527     $ 7,855,707  
    Liabilities                  
    Savings and money market deposits $ 3,393,371     $ 3,446,681     $ 3,420,827     $ 3,364,726     $ 3,350,673  
    Time deposits   1,245,088       1,089,153       1,220,653       1,178,389       1,136,121  
    Short and long-term borrowings   812,218       1,142,340       1,142,744       1,229,165       1,219,812  
    Repurchase agreements   87,851       89,912       122,399       128,169       139,309  
    Subordinated notes   55,772       55,738       55,703       55,668       55,634  
    Junior subordinated debentures issued to capital trusts   57,531       57,477       57,423       57,369       57,315  
    Total interest earning liabilities   5,651,831       5,881,301       6,019,749       6,013,486       5,958,864  
    Non-interest bearing deposits   1,127,324       1,064,818       1,085,535       1,087,040       1,093,076  
    Interest payable   11,441       11,137       11,400       11,240       7,853  
    Other liabilities   58,978       80,308       55,951       74,096       74,664  
    Total liabilities   6,849,574       7,037,564       7,172,635       7,185,862       7,134,457  
    Stockholders’ Equity                  
    Preferred stock                            
    Common stock                            
    Additional paid-in capital   360,522       363,761       358,453       357,673       356,599  
    Retained earnings   452,945       436,122       454,050       442,977       435,927  
    Accumulated other comprehensive loss   (37,406 )     (36,301 )     (57,681 )     (73,985 )     (71,276 )
    Total stockholders’ equity   776,061       763,582       754,822       726,665       721,250  
    Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 7,625,635     $ 7,801,146     $ 7,927,457     $ 7,912,527     $ 7,855,707  
                                           
      Loans and Deposits        
      (Dollars in Thousands)        
      March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,   % Change
      2025
      2024
      2024
      2024
      2024
      Q1’25 vs
    Q4’24
      Q1’25 vs
    Q1’24
    Loans:                          
    Commercial real estate $ 2,262,910     $ 2,202,858     $ 2,105,459     $ 2,117,772     $ 1,984,723       3 %     14 %
    Commercial & Industrial   918,541       875,297       808,600       786,788       765,043       5 %     20 %
    Total commercial   3,181,451       3,078,155       2,914,059       2,904,560       2,749,766       3 %     16 %
    Residential Real estate   801,726       802,909       801,356       797,956       782,071       %     3 %
    Mortgage warehouse               80,437       68,917       56,548       %     (100 )%
    Consumer   926,638       965,976       1,008,144       1,051,407       1,029,790       (4 )%     (10 )%
    Total loans held for investment   4,909,815       4,847,040       4,803,996       4,822,840       4,618,175       1 %     6 %
    Loans held for sale   3,253       67,597       2,069       2,440       922       (95 )%     253 %
    Total loans $ 4,913,068     $ 4,914,637     $ 4,806,065     $ 4,825,280     $ 4,619,097       %     6 %
                               
    Deposits:                          
    Interest-bearing demand deposits $ 1,713,991     $ 1,767,983     $ 1,688,998     $ 1,653,508     $ 1,613,806       (3 )%     6 %
    Savings and money market deposits   1,679,380       1,678,697       1,731,830       1,711,218       1,736,866       %     (3 )%
    Time deposits   1,245,088       1,089,153       1,220,653       1,178,389       1,136,121       14 %     10 %
    Total Interest bearing deposits   4,638,459       4,535,833       4,641,481       4,543,115       4,486,793       2 %     3 %
    Non-interest bearing deposits                          
    Non-interest bearing deposits   1,127,324       1,064,819       1,085,534       1,087,040       1,093,077       6 %     3 %
    Total deposits $ 5,765,783     $ 5,600,652     $ 5,727,015     $ 5,630,155     $ 5,579,870       3 %     3 %
                                                           
      Average Balance Sheet
      (Dollars in Thousands, Unaudited)
      Three Months Ended
      March 31, 2025 December 31, 2024 March 31, 2024
      Average
    Balance
    Interest(4)(6) Average
    Rate(4)
    Average
    Balance
    Interest(4)(6) Average
    Rate(4)
    Average
    Balance
    Interest(4)(6) Average
    Rate(4)
    Assets
    Interest earning assets                  
    Interest-bearing deposits in banks $ 223,148   $ 2,487     4.52 % $ 290,693   $ 3,488     4.77 % $ 331,083     4,497     5.46 %
    Federal Home Loan Bank stock   51,769     1,012     7.93 %   53,826     1,516     11.20 %   37,949     784     8.31 %
    Investment securities – taxable (1)   974,109     5,027     2.09 %   1,079,377     5,298     1.95 %   1,326,246     6,578     1.99 %
    Investment securities – non-taxable (1)   1,120,249     7,838     2.84 %   1,129,622     7,976     2.81 %   1,149,957     8,166     2.86 %
    Total investment securities   2,094,358     12,865     2.49 %   2,208,999     13,274     2.39 %   2,476,203     14,744     2.39 %
    Loans receivable (2) (3)   4,865,449     74,840     6.24 %   4,842,660     77,142     6.34 %   4,448,324     67,307     6.09 %
    Total interest earning assets   7,234,724     91,204     5.11 %   7,396,178     95,420     5.13 %   7,293,559     87,332     4.82 %
    Non-interest earning assets                  
    Cash and due from banks   88,624         85,776         105,795      
    Allowance for credit losses   (51,863 )       (52,697 )       (49,960 )    
    Other assets   483,765         409,332         486,652      
    Total average assets $ 7,755,250       $ 7,838,589       $ 7,836,046      
                       
    Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
    Interest bearing liabilities                  
    Interest-bearing demand deposits $ 1,750,446   $ 6,491     1.50 % $ 1,716,598   $ 6,861     1.59 % $ 1,658,709   $ 6,516     1.58 %
    Savings and money market deposits   1,674,590     8,263     2.00 %   1,701,012     9,336     2.18 %   1,664,518     9,373     2.26 %
    Time deposits   1,212,386     10,847     3.63 %   1,160,527     11,621     3.98 %   1,176,921     12,101     4.14 %
    Total interest bearing deposits   4,637,422     25,601     2.24 %   4,578,137     27,818     2.42 %   4,500,148     27,990     2.50 %
    Borrowings   971,496     8,772     3.66 %   1,130,301     10,138     3.57 %   1,200,728     10,904     3.65 %
    Repurchase agreements   88,469     416     1.91 %   91,960     518     2.24 %   138,052     1,026     2.99 %
    Subordinated notes   55,750     829     6.03 %   55,717     829     5.92 %   55,558     831     6.02 %
    Junior subordinated debentures issued to capital trusts   57,497     1,290     9.10 %   57,443     920     6.37 %   57,279     1,225     8.60 %
    Total interest bearing liabilities   5,810,634     36,908     2.58 %   5,913,558     40,223     2.71 %   5,951,765     41,976     2.84 %
    Non-interest bearing liabilities
    Demand deposits   1,085,826         1,099,574         1,077,183      
    Accrued interest payable and other liabilities   78,521         70,117         82,015      
    Stockholders’ equity   780,269         755,340         725,083      
    Total average liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 7,755,250       $ 7,838,589       $ 7,836,046      
    Net FTE interest income (non-GAAP) (5)   $ 54,296       $ 55,197       $ 45,356    
    Less FTE adjustments (4)     2,029         2,070         2,068    
    Net Interest Income   $ 52,267       $ 53,127       $ 43,288    
    Net FTE interest margin (Non-GAAP) (4)(5)       3.04 %       2.97 %       2.50 %
     
    (1) Securities balances represent daily average balances for the fair value of securities. The average rate is calculated based on the daily average balance for the amortized cost of securities.
    (2) Includes fees on loans held for sale and held for investment. The inclusion of loan fees does not have a material effect on the average interest rate.
    (3) Non-accruing loans for the purpose of the computation above are included in the daily average loan amounts outstanding. Loan totals are shown net of unearned income and deferred loan fees.
    (4) Management believes fully taxable equivalent, or FTE, interest income is useful to investors in evaluating the Company’s performance as a comparison of the returns between a tax-free investment and a taxable alternative. The Company adjusts interest income and average rates for tax-exempt loans and securities to an FTE basis utilizing a 21% tax rate.
    (5) Non-GAAP financial metric. See non-GAAP reconciliation included herein for the most directly comparable GAAP measure.
    (6) Includes dividend income on Federal Home Loan Bank stock
     
      Credit Quality        
      (Dollars in Thousands Except Ratios)        
      Quarter Ended        
      March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,   % Change
      2025   2024   2024   2024   2024   1Q25 vs
    4Q24
      1Q25 vs
    1Q24
    Non-accrual loans                          
    Commercial $ 8,172     $ 5,658     $ 6,830     $ 4,321     $ 5,493       44 %     49 %
    Residential Real estate   12,763       11,215       9,529       8,489       8,725       14 %     46 %
    Mortgage warehouse                                 %     %
    Consumer   7,875       8,919       7,208       5,453       4,835     (12 )%     63 %
    Total non-accrual loans   28,810       25,792       23,567       18,263       19,053       12 %     22 %
    90 days and greater delinquent – accruing interest   1,582       1,166       819       1,039       108       36 %     1365 %
    Total non-performing loans $ 30,392     $ 26,958     $ 24,386     $ 19,302     $ 19,161       13 %     59 %
                               
    Other real estate owned                          
    Commercial   360       407       1,158       1,111       1,124     (12 )%   (68 )%
    Residential Real estate   641                               %     %
    Mortgage warehouse                                 %     %
    Consumer   34       17       36       57       50       98 %   (32 )%
    Total other real estate owned   1,035       424       1,194       1,168       1,174       144 %   (12 )%
                               
    Total non-performing assets $ 31,427     $ 27,382     $ 25,580     $ 20,470     $ 20,335       14.8 %     55 %
                               
    Loan data:                          
    Accruing 30 to 89 days past due loans $ 19,034     $ 23,075     $ 18,087     $ 19,785     $ 15,154     (18 )%     26 %
    Substandard loans   66,714       64,535       59,775       51,221       47,469       3 %     41 %
    Net charge-offs (recoveries)                          
    Commercial $ (47 )   $ (32 )   $ (52 )   $ 57     $ (171 )   (47 )%     73 %
    Residential Real estate   (47 )     (10 )     (9 )     (4 )     (5 )   (370 )%   (840 )%
    Mortgage warehouse                                 %     %
    Consumer   963       668       439       534       488       44 %     97 %
    Total net charge-offs $ 869     $ 626     $ 378     $ 587     $ 312       39 %     179 %
                               
    Allowance for credit losses                          
    Commercial $ 32,640     $ 30,953     $ 32,854     $ 31,941     $ 30,514       5 %     7 %
    Residential Real estate   3,167       2,715       2,675       2,588       2,655       17 %     19 %
    Mortgage warehouse               862       736       659       %   (100 )%
    Consumer   16,847       18,312       16,490       16,950       16,559     (8 )%     2 %
    Total allowance for credit losses $ 52,654     $ 51,980     $ 52,881     $ 52,215     $ 50,387       1 %     4 %
                               
    Credit quality ratios                          
    Non-accrual loans to HFI loans   0.59 %     0.53 %     0.49 %     0.38 %     0.41 %        
    Non-performing assets to total assets   0.41 %     0.35 %     0.32 %     0.26 %     0.26 %        
    Annualized net charge-offs of average total loans   0.07 %     0.05 %     0.03 %     0.05 %     0.04 %        
    Allowance for credit losses to HFI loans   1.07 %     1.07 %     1.10 %     1.08 %     1.09 %        
                                                   
    Non–GAAP Reconciliation of Net Fully-Taxable Equivalent (“FTE”) Interest Margin
    (Dollars in Thousands, Unaudited)
        Three Months Ended
        March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,
        2025   2024   2024   2024   2024
    Interest income (GAAP) (A) $ 89,175     $ 93,350     $ 90,888     $ 86,981     $ 85,264  
    Taxable-equivalent adjustment:                    
    Investment securities – tax exempt (1)     1,646       1,675       1,677       1,695       1,715  
    Loan receivable (2)     383       395       340       328       353  
    Interest income (non-GAAP) (B)   91,204       95,420       92,905       89,004       87,332  
    Interest expense (GAAP) (C)   36,908       40,223       43,978       41,702       41,976  
    Net interest income (GAAP) (D) =(A) – (C) $ 52,267     $ 53,127     $ 46,910     $ 45,279     $ 43,288  
    Net FTE interest income (non-GAAP) (E) = (B) – (C) $ 54,296     $ 55,197     $ 48,927     $ 47,302     $ 45,356  
    Average interest earning assets (F)   7,234,724       7,396,178       7,330,263       7,212,788       7,293,559  
    Net FTE interest margin (non-GAAP) (G) = (E*) / (F)   3.04 %     2.97 %     2.66 %     2.64 %     2.50 %
                         
    (1) The following represents municipal securities interest income for investment securities classified as available-for-sale and held-to-maturity
    (2) The following represents municipal loan interest income for loan receivables classified as held for sale and held for investment
    *Annualized
     
    Non–GAAP Reconciliation of Return on Average Tangible Common Equity
    (Dollars in Thousands, Unaudited)
        Three Months Ended
        March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,
        2025   2024   2024   2024   2024
                         
    Net income (loss) (GAAP) (A) $ 23,943     $ (10,882 )   $ 18,180     $ 14,140     $ 13,991  
                         
    Average stockholders’ equity (B) $ 780,269     $ 755,340     $ 738,372     $ 726,332     $ 725,083  
    Average intangible assets (C)   165,138       165,973       166,819       167,659       168,519  
    Average tangible equity (Non-GAAP) (D) = (B) – (C) $ 615,131     $ 589,367     $ 571,553     $ 558,673     $ 556,564  
    Return on average tangible common equity (“ROACE”) (non-GAAP) (E) = (A*) / (D)   15.79 %   (7.35 )%     12.65 %     10.18 %     10.11 %
    *Annualized                    
                         
    Non–GAAP Reconciliation of Tangible Common Equity to Tangible Assets
    (Dollars in Thousands, Unaudited)
        Three Months Ended
        March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,
        2025   2024   2024   2024   2024
    Total stockholders’ equity (GAAP) (A) $ 776,061     $ 763,582     $ 754,822     $ 726,665     $ 721,250  
    Intangible assets (end of period) (B)   164,618       165,434       166,278       167,121       167,965  
    Total tangible common equity (non-GAAP) (C) = (A) – (B) $ 611,443     $ 598,148     $ 588,544     $ 559,544     $ 553,285  
                         
    Total assets (GAAP) (D) $ 7,625,635     $ 7,801,146     $ 7,927,457     $ 7,912,527     $ 7,855,707  
    Intangible assets (end of period) (B)   164,618       165,434       166,278       167,121       167,965  
    Total tangible assets (non-GAAP) (E) = (D) – (B) $ 7,461,017     $ 7,635,712     $ 7,761,179     $ 7,745,406     $ 7,687,742  
                         
    Tangible common equity to tangible assets (Non-GAAP) (G) = (C) / (E)   8.20 %     7.83 %     7.58 %     7.22 %     7.20 %
                                             
    Non–GAAP Reconciliation of Tangible Book Value Per Share
    (Dollars in Thousands, Unaudited)
        Three Months Ended
        March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,
        2025
      2024
      2024
      2024
      2024
    Total stockholders’ equity (GAAP) (A) $ 776,061     $ 763,582     $ 754,822     $ 726,665     $ 721,250  
    Intangible assets (end of period) (B)   164,618       165,434       166,278       167,121       167,965  
    Total tangible common equity (non-GAAP) (C) = (A) – (B) $ 611,443     $ 598,148     $ 588,544     $ 559,544     $ 553,285  
    Common shares outstanding (D)   43,785,932       43,722,086       43,712,059       43,712,059       43,726,380  
                         
    Tangible book value per common share (non-GAAP) (E) = (C) / (D) $ 13.96     $ 13.68     $ 13.46     $ 12.80     $ 12.65  
                                             
    Contact: John R. Stewart, CFA
      EVP, Chief Financial Officer
    Phone: (219) 814–5833
    Fax: (219) 874–9280
    Date: April 23, 2025

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-Evening Report: The origin story of the Anzac biscuit is largely myth – but that shouldn’t obscure the history of women during the war

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Garritt C. Van Dyk, Senior Lecturer in History, University of Waikato

    Australian Comforts Fund buffet in Longueval, France, 1916. Australian War Memorial

    The Anzac biscuit is a cultural icon, infused with mythical value, representing the connection between women on the home front and soldiers serving overseas during the first world war.

    A baked good developed to survive the trip to the trenches and lift the spirits of the troops has the seductive appeal of folklore specific to Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand.

    There is another story linked to the myth, however, about women who worked to provide necessities and small comforts to those serving in the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps.

    The Anzac biscuit myth

    Soldiers at the front had biscuits, of a sort, in their rations but these were more like 18th century “ship’s biscuit”, or hard tack, called “tile”, “wafers”, or “army biscuits”.

    Made from flour, water and dry milk, tile was nonperishable and didn’t get mouldy, but it was so hard it had to be soaked before eating to avoid cracking a tooth. Soldiers would sometimes grate the moistened biscuit and cook it with water for an improvised porridge.

    The biscuits were so tough that soldiers even used them as stationery.

    Cakes and biscuits in sealed tins were requested as donations from the public, but had to meet requirements to ensure they would not spoil by the time they arrived.

    It is unlikely Anzac biscuits made according to today’s recipe were packed in tins by mothers, wives and girlfriends and shipped overseas to soldiers. As a matter of practicality, shredded coconut included in the recipe would have probably become rancid in transit.

    Australia soldiers at Ribemont, France, opening parcels from the Australian Comforts Fund, March 1917.
    Australian War Memorial

    The idea of our modern Anzac biscuits being sent to the front line is most likely an invented tradition, created after the fact. The first thing we would recognise as our current recipe did not appear until 1927.

    But women were sending biscuits, and more, to their men on the front lines in the crucial role of providing creature comforts.

    The War Chest Cookery Book

    The Australian Comforts Fund was a national group founded in 1916 to coordinate state volunteer organisations, run mainly by women.

    The War Chest Cookery Book, published in 1917.
    Trove

    In 1917, the New South Wales branch printed the The War Chest Cookery Book. Paid advertisements on every page allowed the fund to donate all proceeds from the sale of the cookbook “to substantially augment the funds of the War Chest”.

    In this book we find the first printed recipe for a biscuit with “Anzac” in the title. The recipe bears no resemblance to today’s version, except for the name. Neither oats nor coconut were included. Instead, the recipe called for eggs, rice flour, cinnamon and mixed spice, and the baked biscuits were sandwiched together with jam and topped with icing.

    The motto of the Australian Comforts Fund, “keep the fit man fit”, differentiated their mission from the lifesaving supplies delivered by the Red Cross.

    The war chest allowed the distribution of nonessential items that included necessities like such as socks, mittens and singlets, but also comforts of home like such as pyjamas, razor blades and tobacco.

    Special shipments included morale boosters like such as Christmas hampers with plum puddings, gramophones, sporting goods, postcards and pencils.

    Women from the Australian Comforts Fund distributing packages to soldiers in Abbassieh, Egypt, during the first world war.
    State Library Victoria

    Women in the fund also ran canteens near the front serving soup, coffee, tea, and cocoa. The fund provided twelve million mugs of hot drinks between January 1917 and June 1918 alone.

    A soldier’s memoir from the winter of 1916 in the Somme recalled how the promise of the kitchen kept him going:

    We desire to acknowledge our debt to the Australian Comforts Fund. Their soup kitchen was the goal to which even the weariest man persevered during the dreadful outward journeys from the line.

    A dubious debut: not your Nan’s Anzac biscuit

    Today, Anzac biscuits baked for commercial production and sale must adhere to the Australian Department of Veteran Affairs Guidelines, established in 1994, which regulate the use of the word Anzac (and prohibit the use of the word “cookie” to describe them).

    This first iteration of Anzac biscuits would most certainly not comply with the guidelines as they “substantially deviate from the accepted recipe” which features ingredients including oats, golden syrup and coconut.

    Two other recipes in the War Chest Cookbook for rolled oat biscuits are closer, and omit eggs, but they lack the binding power of golden syrup and the characteristic crunch of desiccated coconut.

    The combination of oats and golden syrup first appears in the Melbourne newspaper The Argus on September 15 1920 when Josephine, from East Brunswick, contributed her recipe for “ANZAC Biscuits or Crispies”.

    A recipe for Anzac biscuits with “cocoanut” was not published until the late 1920s, in the Brisbane Sunday Mail on June 26 1927.

    This late introduction of the full recipe is a reminder that while biscuits got sent overseas, they were not the “official” Anzac biscuits we know today.

    A recipe for Anzac biscuits with ‘cocoanut’ was not published until the late 1920s.
    May Lawrence/Unsplash

    The story behind the biscuit

    Defining and preserving the identity of the Anzac biscuit affirms a tangible symbol of national identity. While the recipe may have been invented after the fact, a consistent standard encourages the continuity of remembrance through the uniformity of a shared tradition.

    Women packing food for the Australian Comfort Fund’s war chests.
    Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales

    The myth of domestic bakers dispatching this specific recipe to soldiers, however, should not eclipse the efforts of the Australian Comforts Fund, fundraising on a national scale, and running makeshift canteens in a war zone.

    Women weren’t just baking in their kitchens: they were organising and delivering resources at home and overseas, benefiting soldiers at the front lines.

    Garritt C. Van Dyk has received funding from the Getty Research Institute.

    ref. The origin story of the Anzac biscuit is largely myth – but that shouldn’t obscure the history of women during the war – https://theconversation.com/the-origin-story-of-the-anzac-biscuit-is-largely-myth-but-that-shouldnt-obscure-the-history-of-women-during-the-war-252039

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Tremors, seizures and paralysis: this brain disorder is more common than multiple sclerosis – but often goes undiagnosed

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Benjamin Scrivener, PhD Candidate, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau

    Kateryna Kon/Shutterstock

    Imagine suddenly losing the ability to move a limb, walk or speak. You would probably recognise this as a medical emergency and get to hospital.

    Now imagine the doctors at the hospital run some tests and then say, “Good news! All your tests were normal, clear scans, and nothing is wrong. You can go home!” Yet, you are still experiencing very real and disabling symptoms.

    Unfortunately, this is the experience of many people with functional neurological disorder. Even worse, some are blamed and reprimanded for exaggerating or faking their symptoms.

    So, what is this disorder, and why is it so challenging to recognise and treat?

    What is functional neurological disorder?

    Neurological disorders are conditions that affect how the nervous system works. The nervous system sends and receives messages between the brain and other parts of your body to regulate a wide range of functions, such as movement, speaking, vision, thinking and digestion.

    To the untrained eye, functional neurological disorder can resemble other conditions such as stroke, multiple sclerosis or epilepsy.

    But, unlike these conditions, functional neurological symptoms aren’t due to damage or a disease process affecting the nervous system. This means the disorder doesn’t appear on routine brain imaging and other tests.

    Functional symptoms are, instead, due to dysfunction in the processing of information between several brain networks. Simply put, it’s a problem of the brain’s software, not the hardware.

    What are the symptoms?

    Functional neurological disorder can produce a kaleidoscope of diverse and changing symptoms. This often adds to confusion for patients and make diagnosis more challenging.

    Symptoms may include paralysis or abnormal movements such as tremors, jerks and tics. This often leads to difficulty walking or coordinating movements.

    Sensory symptoms may involve numbness, tingling or loss of vision.

    Dissociative symptoms, such as functional seizures and blackouts, are also common.

    Some people experience cognitive symptoms including brain fog or problems finding the right words. Fatigue and chronic pain frequently coexist with these symptoms.

    These symptoms can be severe and distressing and, without treatment, can persist for years. For example, some people with functional neurological disorder cannot walk and must use a wheelchair for decades.

    Diagnosis involves identifying established diagnostic signs and ensuring no other diagnoses are missed. This process is best carried out by an experienced neurologist or neuropsychiatrist.

    Functional neurological disorder can affect movement and some people may be unable to walk.
    Fit Ztudio/Shutterstock

    How common is it?

    Functional neurological disorder is one of the most common medical conditions seen in emergency care and in outpatient neurology clinics.

    It affects around 10–22 people per 100,000 per year. This makes it more common than multiple sclerosis.

    Despite this, it is often under-recognised and misunderstood by health-care professionals. This leads to delays in diagnosis and treatment.

    This lack of awareness also contributes to the perception that it’s rare, when it’s actually common among neurological disorders.

    Who does functional neurological disorder affect?

    This condition can affect anyone, although it is more common in women and younger people. Around two thirds of patients are female, but this gender disparity reduces with age.

    Understanding of the disorder has developed significantly over the past few decades, but there’s still more to learn. Several biological, psychological, and social factors can predispose people.

    Genetics, traumatic life experiences, anxiety and depression can increase the risk. Stressful life events, illness, or physical injuries can trigger or worsen existing symptoms.

    But not everyone with the disorder has experienced significant trauma or stress.

    How is it treated?

    If left untreated, about half the people with this condition will remain the same or their symptoms will worsen. However, with the help of experienced clinicians, many people can make rapid recoveries when treatment starts early.

    There are no specific medications for functional neurological disorder but personalised rehabilitation guided by experienced clinicians is recommended.

    Some people may need a team of multidisciplinary clinicians that may include physiotherapists, occupational therapists, speech therapists, psychologists and doctors.

    People also need accurate information about their condition, because understanding and beliefs about the disorder play an important role in recovery. Accurate information helps patients to develop more realistic expectations, reduces anxiety and can empower people to be more active in their recovery.

    Treating common co-existing conditions, such as anxiety or depression, can also be helpful.

    Symptoms can include headaches and brain fog.
    PeopleImages.com – Yuri A/Shutterstock

    A dark history

    The origins of the disorder are deeply rooted in the sexist history of its pre-scientific ancestor – hysteria. The legacy of hysteria has cast a long shadow, contributing to a misogynistic bias in perception and treatment. This historical context has led to ongoing stigma, where symptoms were often labelled as psychological and not warranting treatment.

    Women with functional symptoms often face scepticism and dismissal. In some cases, significant harm occurs through stigmatisation, inadequate care and poor management. Modern medicine has attempted to address these biases by recognising functional neurological disorder as a legitimate condition.

    A lack of education for medical professionals likely contributes to stigma. Many clinicians report low confidence and knowledge about their ability to manage the disorder.

    A bright future?

    Fortunately, awareness, research and interest has grown over the past decade. Many treatment approaches are being trialled, including specialist physiotherapy, psychological therapies and non-invasive brain stimulation.

    Patient-led organisations and support networks are making headway advocating for improvements in health systems, research and education. The goal is to unite patients, their families, clinicians, and researchers to advance a new standard of care across the world.

    Benjamin Scrivener receives funding from the Health Research Council of New Zealand and is a supporting member of Functional Neurological Disorder Aotearoa.

    ref. Tremors, seizures and paralysis: this brain disorder is more common than multiple sclerosis – but often goes undiagnosed – https://theconversation.com/tremors-seizures-and-paralysis-this-brain-disorder-is-more-common-than-multiple-sclerosis-but-often-goes-undiagnosed-250501

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: When ‘equal’ does not mean ‘the same’: Liberals still do not understand their women problem

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Carol Johnson, Emerita Professor, Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Adelaide

    “Women’s” issues are once again playing a significant role in the election debate as Labor and the Liberals trade barbs over which parties’ policies will benefit women most. In the latest salvo, the opposition has announced a $90 million package to combat family and domestic violence.

    However, perversely, the Liberals’ women’s policy may be being constrained by their very concept of equality. That conception worked very effectively in the Coalition’s successful populist campaign against the Voice referendum. Peter Dutton and Jacinta Nampijinpa Price argued true equality involved treating everyone the same. They therefore claimed the Voice referendum was divisive and would give Indigenous Australians additional rights denied to non-Indigenous Australians.

    In Dutton’s view, “egalitarianism” involves “pushing back on identity politics”. This in turn means emphasising people as individuals rather than as members of social groups.

    However, that conception of equality is arguably compounding the Liberals’ “women problem”. It helps to explain the debacle of the Liberals’ original opposition to public servants working from home (WFH) and their subsequent humiliating policy backdown.

    Director of Redbridge polling, Kos Samaras, argued the WFH policy was particularly unpopular with women, and had helped drive many women previously alienated by cost of living pressures back to Labor.

    Dutton admitted the Coalition had got the policy wrong after “listening to what people have to say”. Anthony Albanese quickly accused the opposition leader of not understanding how women and men in modern families manage their lives. Labor also suggested Dutton couldn’t be trusted not to reintroduce his WFH policies if elected.

    Astonishingly, Shadow Minister for the Public Service Jane Hume stated the WFH policy had gone through “all the appropriate processes”, including apparently being taken to shadow cabinet.

    Yet, somehow those processes had not rejected a policy that would have a particularly detrimental effect on women. After all, in a highly gendered society, women still tend to carry the majority of caring responsibilities. These include looking after children, so flexible work is particularly important to them.

    Nonetheless, Hume claimed “it was not a gendered policy”. She blamed the backlash on a Labor and trade union disinformation campaign that suggested the policy would be extended to the private sector.

    The formal Liberal WFH policy had indeed been intended as a populist attack on federal public servants. However, not only do public sector conditions often influence private sector ones, but Hume had suggested it would be good if the private sector could “instil the sense of discipline that we want to instil in the public service”.

    The WFH debacle reflects a Liberal failure to recognise the specific circumstances women face in a highly gendered society. This in turn means policies can affect women differently from men. It is a direct consequence of thinking equality means treating everyone the same, thereby reducing people to abstract individuals regardless of social structures and forms of social inequality that can disadvantage particular groups.

    The lapse is particularly surprising in Hume’s case, given she officially co-signed the report into the Liberal party’s 2022 election defeat. The report emphasised that the then prime minister, Scott Morrison, “was not attuned to the concerns of women and was unresponsive to issues of importance to them.”

    As a result, deputy leader of the Liberal Party and Shadow Minister for Women Sussan Ley promised to listen to women and bring them back to the Liberal Party.

    However, both Hume and Ley also have a history of downplaying structural forms of inequality.

    As an assistant minister in the Morrison government, Hume was criticised for suggesting women’s poor superannuation position was due to financial illiteracy rather than emphasising structural issues such as low pay in female-dominated professions and career interruptions due to caring responsibilities.

    Meanwhile, Ley had discounted Labor criticisms of gender-blind Morrison government budget measures by arguing:

    what you hear from the opposition is this long, ongoing, bleak, dreary narrative about entrenched disadvantage. And, you know, it’s just so last century. I see the opportunities for women in the modern world […].

    Hume’s defence of the proposed restrictions on public service WFH was that women were also taxpayers and so had an interest in ensuring taxpayer-funded public servants were productive.

    Her comments were reminiscent of then treasurer Morrison’s notoriously gender-blind response to criticisms that his inequitable tax cuts were more likely to benefit men, because men were generally higher paid than women. Morrison totally missed the critics’ point, asserting :

    You don’t fill out pink forms and blue forms on your tax return. It doesn’t look at what your gender is […].

    More recently, Ley has been criticised for supporting the abolition of Labor’s free TAFE policy, claiming it was unfunded, hadn’t been properly evaluated: “if you don’t pay for something, you don’t value it”.

    However, the ACTU has argued the policy had particularly benefited financially stressed women and First Nations people in the outer suburbs and regions.

    Furthermore, Dutton struggled to answer when a reporter pointed out that the Liberal campaign launch had mainly focused on men, and asked what he offered modern working women. Dutton emphasised the implications of his home-buying policies for homeless women, his record of protecting women from domestic violence and that both men and women would benefit from Liberal economic policies. But he didn’t mention policies specifically designed to address gender inequality.

    By contrast, a Labor answer would have emphasised a slew of government policies specifically aimed at improving gender equality. These include addressing issues such as historically low pay in female dominated industries, especially those that reflected an undervaluing of feminised caring work. Labor’s policies recognise that women are structurally disadvantaged in the Australian economy.

    All too often, the Liberals still don’t seem to get it. Treating people the “same” doesn’t take into account that various social groups are disadvantaged in Australian society. Consequently, what are intended to be general policies can affect some social groups differently from others.

    Good policy takes such issues into account. The Liberals have not learned sufficiently from the major failings of the Morrison government, whose policies were regularly criticised for being gender-blind.

    Yet, the Liberal party once had a more nuanced conception of equality. An earlier social liberal-influenced view both acknowledged patterns of social disadvantage and believed government had an important role to play in addressing it.

    However, the party has increasingly moved away from social liberal perspectives. This is despite the efforts of more moderate Liberals, including key Liberal feminists. Now “social liberal” perspectives are more likely to be found among some of the Teal independents, many of whom would once have been at home in the Liberal Party.

    The failure to return to a more nuanced version of equality is not only contributing to Liberal policy missteps in regards to women. It is also making it harder for Dutton to differentiate himself from an electorally damaging, anti-woke, “strongman” association with US President Donald Trump.

    After all, Trump also believes equality means treating people the same. This is exactly how he justifies his attacks on “illegal” diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) policies.

    Dutton is reportedly preparing an additional policy pitch to women, as new polling confirms the Liberals’ share of the women’s vote is falling.

    However, if Dutton and Ley really want to listen to Australian women, and make a more effective Liberal appeal to women voters, they need to develop a broader understanding of equality that takes structural disadvantage into account.

    Carol Johnson has received funding from the Australian Research Council

    ref. When ‘equal’ does not mean ‘the same’: Liberals still do not understand their women problem – https://theconversation.com/when-equal-does-not-mean-the-same-liberals-still-do-not-understand-their-women-problem-254567

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: The gambling industry has women in its sights. Why aren’t policymakers paying attention?

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Simone McCarthy, Postdoctoral Research Fellow – Commercial Determinants of Health, Deakin University

    Wpadington/Shutterstock

    Whatever the code, whatever the season, Australian sports fans are bombarded with gambling ads.

    Drawing on Australians’ passion, loyalty and pride for sport, the devastating health and social consequences of gambling – including financial stress, homelessness, family violence, and mental health issues – are largely sidelined.

    Instead, ads continue to normalise gambling, encouraging punters to embrace mateship and “have a crack” on gambling apps.

    A missed opportunity

    This prolific advertising has continued despite the findings of a landmark Australian parliamentary inquiry in 2022, which made 31 recommendations to curb the tactics of the gambling industry.

    Chair of the inquiry, the late Peta Murphy MP, concluded:

    If the status quo of online gambling regulation, including but not limited to advertising, was to continue, Australians would continue to lose more – more money, more relationships, more love of sport for the game rather than the odds.

    However, instead of acting on the major findings of the report, the Australian government indefinitely shelved any meaningful advertising reforms after meeting with major sporting codes, broadcasters and the gambling industry.

    Instead, we have been left to settle for a range of soft options, including taglines at the end of ads that encourage us to: “imagine what you could be buying instead”.

    It’s hard to be convinced these calls to action are having much impact compared to the seductive tactics of the gambling industry, with gambling losses continuing to spiral during a cost-of-living crisis.




    Read more:
    The gambling industry is pulling out all the stops to prevent an ad ban, but the evidence is against it


    A new market

    While the government hesitates to act on gambling ads, the gambling industry has a new set of customers in its promotional sights: women.

    Public perception is that most forms of gambling are largely male-dominated.

    However, in Victoria, 51% of women gamble each year (compared to 56% of men), and in NSW, 48.5% of women gamble (compared to 58.7% of men).

    Women are also gambling regularly. The 2023 Victorian Population Gambling and Health study found that of those women who gamble, 22.8% do so at least once a week (compared to 29.3% of men).

    Our research shows a combination of new marketing strategies, easy-to-use technology and social activities aligned with gambling venues and products may be changing the way women (and girls) think about and participate in gambling.

    How it begins

    For some young women it is a tradition to “go down to the pokies” or the casino when they turn 18.

    Some visit these venues for other entertainment options and end up gambling. For others, gambling ads encourage them to open online accounts. As one 25-year-old woman told us:

    That’s how I started sports betting, because it was on TV. Bonus bet, sign up today. Okay, that sounds good. So that’s what got me in.

    Young women are also diversifying their gambling across multiple products, with technology making it more accessible, easier and more socially acceptable.

    This includes women betting with groups of friends, but also on their own:

    You’ll sit around and all watch the footy, but you’ll all be gambling because it’s just more accessible. It’s easy. Also, I think it’s easier for females to go and seek it out on their own too, you know, if they have the app available. It’s not like they’re going up to someone at the pub and betting.

    Parents have even told us their daughters and their friends now talk about the outcomes of sporting matches based on the odds of the game.

    A different landscape

    Gambling companies and events, including racing, are also reshaping the image of gambling, making it seem fun and glamorous.

    This includes embedding gambling into spaces and experiences that align with women’s social and lifestyle interests, such as fashion and beauty, and peer group belonging.

    In racing, gambling is embedded as part of an overall experience for women. As one 23-year-old told us:

    I went to the races with my friends. We dressed up pretty and went, and that was like a girl’s day out thing […] I bet on horses just like once, just like for fun, as part of the experience.

    New gambling products are branded to appeal to women, and betting markets are now offered on popular reality shows such as Married at First Sight, the box office numbers for the opening weekend of the new Snow White movie, who will win Eurovision, and Time’s Person of the Year.

    But it is perhaps the use of celebrities and social media influencers that may have the most appeal to women and more concerningly, girls.

    Women influencers on TikTok and Instagram promote betting as an extension of social activities.

    In our recent study one 13-year-old girl told us:

    When you recognise someone from an ad, it makes it more interesting and it makes you want to watch it more.

    Gambling companies are also sponsoring women’s sports, supporting women’s health initiatives, and even aligning with International Women’s Day.

    We’ve seen this approach before

    The gambling industry is following a well-worn playbook, one mastered by the tobacco industry: when their core market of men became saturated, Big Tobacco turned its attention to women, crafting targeted marketing strategies and novel products to engage new, long-term consumers.

    However, rather than learning the lessons from tobacco, policymakers have been slow to recognise and respond to the playbook of the gambling industry.

    If we want to disrupt the status quo and prevent harm for all Australians, we must take action against the gambling industry and its tactics, rather than the individual, as the key vector of harm.

    Dr Simone McCarthy has received funding for gambling and related research from ACT Office of Gaming and Racing Commision, the Victorian Responsible Gambling Foundation, VicHealth, Department of Social Services, and Deakin University. She is currently a member of the Editorial Board of Health Promotion International.

    Dr Hannah Pitt has received funding from the Australian Research Council. Victorian Responsible Gambling Foundation, VicHealth, NSW Office of Responsible Gambling, Department of Social Services, ACT Office of Gambling and Racing Commission, and Deakin University. She is currently a member of the Editorial Board of Health Promotion International.

    Professor Samantha Thomas has received funding for gambling and related research from the Australian Research Council, ACT Office of Gaming and Racing, Department of Social Services, VicHealth, Victorian Responsible Gambling Foundation, Healthway, NSW Office of Responsible Gambling, Deakin University. She is currently Editor in Chief for Health Promotion International an Oxford University Press journal. She receives an honorarium for this role.

    ref. The gambling industry has women in its sights. Why aren’t policymakers paying attention? – https://theconversation.com/the-gambling-industry-has-women-in-its-sights-why-arent-policymakers-paying-attention-251914

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: The billions spent on NZ’s accomodation supplement is failing to make rent affordable – so what will?

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Edward Yiu, Associate Professor, School of Business, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau

    Pixelbliss/Shutterstock

    New Zealand’s unaffordable housing market has left many low and middle-income families reliant on the accommodation supplement to cover rent and mortgage payments.

    But our new research has found the scheme, which costs the government almost NZ$5 billion a year, might not be an effective tool in addressing the country’s housing affordability crisis.

    Introduced in 1993, the accommodation supplement is a weekly, means-tested payment designed to subsidise part of a household’s rent or mortgage. The supplement is calculated independently of actual rent or mortgage payments.

    But our study looking at data from Auckland between 2019 and 2023 found accommodation supplement rental subsidies were not delivering meaningful improvements in affordability for renters. Subsidies used to support mortgage payments, however, appeared to be more effective in offering relief to low-income households wanting stable and affordable housing.

    Our results raise questions about whether the current policy of subsidising private rentals is working to address housing affordability in New Zealand.

    Renters left behind

    Our study compared the proportion of household disposable income spent on rent between households receiving the supplement versus those in the same income group who did not receive it.

    The results revealed a striking gap.

    In 2023 renters in the middle-income bracket who received the accommodation supplement were spending, on average, 35.6% of their income (including the supplement) on rent. Similar households without the subsidy spent 25.85% of their income on rent. This suggests the support is not significantly narrowing the affordability gap between subsidised and unsubsidised renters.

    This study also picked up potential signs of landlords inflating the rents for tenants receiving subsidies. This is known as “subsidy capturing”. On average, middle-income tenants receiving the accommodation supplement paid NZ$539.40 per week in rent in 2023. Non-recipients paid $502.90. That’s a 7.3% difference.

    Further research is needed to determine whether this discrepancy is due to rent inflation or differences in housing quality. But the finding aligns with international studies showing that subsidies can unintentionally drive up market rents.

    If landlords are capturing part of the subsidy by increasing rents, then the benefit meant for vulnerable tenants is being diluted.

    New Zealand’s housing market ranks as one of the least affordable in the OECD.
    ChameleonsEye/Shutterstock

    Greater promise with mortgage support

    Our data suggests mortgage support seems to level the playing field more effectively than rental assistance. The mortgage-to-income ratio for subsidised households stood at 25.55% and 29.95% in 2022 and 2023, respectively (income includes the supplement). This closely matches the 26.6% and 27.5% recorded for non-subsidised households in the same income group.

    One reason for the difference in the effectiveness of the supplement is that homeowners are typically required to contribute more upfront – a deposit – giving them a greater financial stake in their housing. This commitment may encourage better financial decisions and housing choices. It may also offer long-term benefits such as asset building and housing stability.

    Rental subsidies are essential for immediate relief, especially in emergencies or periods of transition. But our research calls into question their effectiveness in enhancing affordability. More targeted support for low-income homeowners could offer a more sustainable path forward.

    Intentions must match results

    The accommodation is undoubtedly grounded in good intentions. But considering how much of the national budget is being spent on housing-related welfare, it is essential the programmes deliver the best possible results for taxpayers.

    Measuring effectiveness is not about questioning the intent but about ensuring public resources truly achieve meaningful objectives.

    Simply increasing funding for subsidies is unlikely to solve the problem. As New Zealand confronts an ongoing housing affordability crisis, this study adds to growing evidence that policy effectiveness – not just how much is spent – is what truly matters.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. The billions spent on NZ’s accomodation supplement is failing to make rent affordable – so what will? – https://theconversation.com/the-billions-spent-on-nzs-accomodation-supplement-is-failing-to-make-rent-affordable-so-what-will-254779

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Fossil teeth show extinct giant kangaroos spent their lives close to home – and perished when the climate changed

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Christopher Laurikainen Gaete, PhD Candidate, University of Wollongong

    Chris Laurikainen Gaete

    Large kangaroos today roam long distances across the outback, often surviving droughts by moving in mobs to find new food when pickings are slim.

    But not all kangaroos have been this way. In new research published today in PLOS One, we found giant kangaroos that once lived in eastern Australia were far less mobile, making them vulnerable to changes in local environmental conditions.

    We discovered fossilised teeth of the now extinct giant kangaroo genus Protemnodon at Mount Etna Caves, north of Rockhampton, in central eastern Queensland. Analysing the teeth gave us a glimpse into the past movements of these extinct giants, hundreds of thousands of years ago.

    Our results show Protemnodon did not forage across great distances, instead living in a lush and stable rainforest utopia. However, this utopia began to decline when the climate became drier with more pronounced seasons – spelling doom for Mount Etna’s giant roos.

    Artist’s impression of Protemnodon in a lush rainforest ‘utopia’ before extinction.
    Queensland Museum & Capricorn Caves – Atuchin / Lawrence / Hocknull

    Mount Etna Caves

    The Mount Etna Caves National Park and nearby Capricorn Caves hold remarkable records of life over hundreds of thousands of years.

    Fossils accumulated in the caves because they acted like giant pitfall traps and also lairs of predators such as thylacines, Tasmanian devils, marsupial lions, owls, raptors and the now-endangered ghost bats.

    Reddish-coloured fossil deposits can be seen on the western side of Mount Etna mine, now part of Mt Etna National Park.
    Scott Hocknull

    Large parts of the region were once mined for lime and cement. One of us (Hocknull) worked closely with mine managers to safely remove and stockpile fossil deposits from now-destroyed caves for scientific research which still continues.

    As part of our study we dated fossils using an approach called uranium-series dating, and the sediment around them with a different technique called luminescence dating.

    Our results suggest the giant kangaroos lived around the caves from at least 500,000 years ago to about 280,000 years ago. After this they disappeared from the Mount Etna fossil record.

    At the time, Mount Etna hosted a rich rainforest habitat, comparable to modern day New Guinea. As the climate became drier between 280,000 and 205,000 years ago, rainforest-dwelling species including Protemnodon vanished from the area, replaced by those adapted to a dry, arid environment.

    You are what you eat

    Our study looked at how far Protemnodon travelled to find food. The general trend in mammals is that bigger creatures range farther. This trend holds for modern kangaroos, so we expected giant extinct kangaroos like Protemnodon would also have had large ranges.

    Teeth record a chemical signature of the food you eat. By looking at different isotopes of the element strontium in tooth enamel, we can study the foraging ranges of extinct animals.

    Chris Laurikainen Gaete in the lab with the laser system used to analyse Protemnodon fossil teeth.
    Chris Laurikainen Gaete

    Varying abundances of strontium isotopes reflect the chemical fingerprint of the plants an animal ate, as well as the geology and soils where the plant grew. By matching chemical signatures in the teeth to local signatures in the environment, we could estimate where these ancient animals travelled to obtain food.

    Eat local, die local

    Our results showed Protemnodon from Mount Etna didn’t travel far beyond the local limestone in which the caves and fossils were found. This is much a smaller range than we predicted range based on their body mass.

    We think the small foraging range of Protemnodon at Mount Etna was an adaptation to millions of years of stable food supply in the rainforest. They likely had little need to travel to find food.

    Protemnodon at Mount Etna probably only ranged over the orange area for food – a much smaller area than would be estimated from modern kangaroo data (solid red circle).
    Chris Laurikainen Gaete / State of Queensland (Department of Resources)

    Fossil evidence also suggests some species of Protemnodon walked on all fours rather than hopped. This would have constrained their ability to travel great distances, but is a great strategy for living in rainforests.

    One question remains to be answered: if they didn’t need to move far to find food, why did they grow so big in the first place?

    A local adaptation or a species trait?

    The extinction of Australia’s megafauna – long-vanished beasts such the “marsupial lion” Thylacoleo and the three-tonne Diprotodon – has long been debated. It has often been assumed that megafauna species responded in the same way to environmental changes wherever they lived.

    However, we may have underestimated the role of local adaptations. This particularly holds true for Protemnodon, with a recent study suggesting significant variation in diet and movement across different environments.

    Similar small foraging ranges have been suggested for Protemnodon that lived near Bingara and Wellington Caves, New South Wales. Perhaps it was common for Protemnodon populations in stable habitats across eastern Australia to be homebodies – and this may have proved their Achilles’ heel when environmental conditions changed.

    Extinction, one by one

    As a rule, creatures with a small home range have a limited ability to move elsewhere. So if the something happens to their local habitat, they may be in big trouble.

    At Mount Etna, Protemnodon thrived for hundreds of thousands of years in the stable rainforest environment. But as the environment became more arid, and resources increasingly patchy, they may have been unable to traverse the growing gaps between patches of forest or retreat elsewhere.

    One key result of our study is that Protodemnon was locally extinct at Mt Etna long before humans turned up, which rules out human influence.

    The techniques used in this study will help us to learn about how Australia’s megafauna responded to changing environments in more detail. This approach moves the Australian megafauna extinction debate away from the traditional continental catch-all hypotheses – instead we can look at local populations in specific sites, and understand the unique factors driving local extinction events.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Fossil teeth show extinct giant kangaroos spent their lives close to home – and perished when the climate changed – https://theconversation.com/fossil-teeth-show-extinct-giant-kangaroos-spent-their-lives-close-to-home-and-perished-when-the-climate-changed-250057

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI: Origin Bancorp, Inc. Reports Earnings For First Quarter 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    RUSTON, La., April 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Origin Bancorp, Inc. (NYSE: OBK) (“Origin,” “we,” “our” or the “Company”), the holding company for Origin Bank (the “Bank”), today announced net income of $22.4 million, or $0.71 diluted earnings per share (“EPS”) for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, compared to net income of $14.3 million, or $0.46 diluted earnings per share, for the quarter ended December 31, 2024. Pre-tax, pre-provision (“PTPP”)(1) earnings were $32.0 million for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, compared to $12.6 million for the linked quarter.

    “Origin reported solid results for the quarter, and I am proud of how our bankers remain responsive to our customers and communities,” said Drake Mills, chairman, president and CEO of Origin Bancorp, Inc. “During last quarter’s earnings call, we introduced Optimize Origin, which is our plan to deliver sustainable elite-level financial performance. I am pleased with the overwhelming focus and commitment our employees have on accomplishing this goal and the progress we have made since launch.”

    (1) PTPP earnings is a non-GAAP financial measure, please see the last few pages of this document for a reconciliation of this alternative financial measure to its most directly comparable GAAP measure.

             

    Optimize Origin

    • In January 2025, we announced our initiative to drive elite financial performance and enhance our award-winning culture.
    • Built on three primary pillars:
      • Productivity, Delivery & Efficiency
      • Balance Sheet Optimization
      • Culture & Employee Engagement
    • Established near term target of greater than a 1% ROAA run rate by 4Q25 and an ultimate target of top quartile ROAA.
    • Near term target is being achieved in part by branch consolidation, headcount reduction, securities optimization, capital optimization, cash/liquidity management, mortgage restructuring, as well as other opportunistic efficiency optimizations throughout the organization.
    • We believe the actions we have taken will drive earnings improvement of approximately $23.4 million annually on a pre-tax pre-provision basis.
             

    Financial Highlights

    • Net interest income was $78.5 million for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, reflecting an increase of $110,000, or 0.1%, compared to the linked quarter and is at its highest level in eight quarters.
    • Net income was $22.4 million for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, reflecting an increase of $8.1 million, or 57.0% compared to the linked quarter.
    • Our fully tax equivalent net interest margin (“NIM-FTE”) expanded 11 basis points for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, compared to the quarter ended December 31, 2024. This expansion was driven primarily by a 34 basis point reduction in rates paid on interest-bearing liabilities, offset by a 12 basis point decline in our yield earned on interest-earning assets.
    • Return on average assets (“ROAA”), annualized, was 0.93% for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, a 63.2% increase when compared to 0.57% in the linked quarter. PTPP ROAA(1), annualized, was 1.32% for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, reflecting an increase of 164.0% compared to 0.50% in the linked quarter.
    • Total loans held for investment (“LHFI”) were $7.59 billion at March 31, 2025, reflecting an increase of $11.8 million, or 0.2%, compared to December 31, 2024. Average LHFI were $7.50 billion for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, reflecting a decrease of $298.2 million, or 3.83%, compared to the quarter ended December 31, 2024.
    • Total deposits were $8.34 billion at March 31, 2025, reflecting an increase of $115.3 million, or 1.4%, compared to December 31, 2024. Deposits, excluding brokered deposits, were $8.29 billion at March 31, 2025, reflecting an increase of $145.5 million, or 1.8%, compared to December 31, 2024.

    (1) PTPP ROAA is a non-GAAP financial measure, please see the last few pages of this document for a reconciliation of this alternative financial measure to its most directly comparable GAAP measure.

    Results of Operations for the Quarter Ended March 31, 2025

    Net Interest Income and Net Interest Margin

    Net interest income for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, was $78.5 million, an increase of $110,000, or 0.1%, compared to the quarter ended December 31, 2024. The increase was primarily driven by a $7.7 million decrease in interest expense paid on interest-bearing deposits and increases of $1.4 million and $1.3 million in interest income earned on investment securities and average interest-earning balances due from banks, partially offset by a decrease of $9.9 million in interest income earned on LHFI.

    The decrease in average rates of interest-bearing deposits during the quarter ended March 31, 2025, and two fewer days in the current quarter, reduced interest expense by $5.8 million and $1.2 million, respectively, when compared to the quarter ended December 31, 2024. The average rate on interest-bearing deposits was 3.23% for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, a decrease of 38 basis points, from 3.61% for the quarter ended December 31, 2024.

    The $1.4 million increase in interest income earned on investment securities was primarily driven by the bond portfolio optimization strategy we executed during the quarter ended December 31, 2024, in which we replaced securities with a total book value of $188.2 million and a weighted average yield of 1.51% with new securities totaling $173.7 million with a weighted average yield of 5.22%.

    The $1.3 million increase in interest income earned on average interest-earning balances due from banks was primarily driven by a $149.0 million increase in average interest-earning balances due from banks which led to a $1.8 million increase in interest income, partially offset by a reduction in average yield.

    The decrease in average LHFI principal balance, the impact of two fewer calendar days and a decline in average rates during the quarter ended March 31, 2025, resulted in decreases to interest income of $5.5 million, $2.6 million and $1.8 million, respectively, when compared to the quarter ended December 31, 2024. The decrease in average LHFI principal balance was primarily driven by decreases of $170.2 million and $114.4 million in mortgage warehouse lines of credit (“MW LOC”) and average construction/land/land development loan balances. The average rate on LHFI was 6.33% for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, a decrease of 14 basis points, compared to 6.47% for the quarter ended December 31, 2024.

    The Federal Reserve Board sets various benchmark rates, including the federal funds rate, and thereby influences the general market rates of interest, including the loan and deposit rates offered by financial institutions. On September 18, 2024, the Federal Reserve reduced the federal funds target rate range by 50 basis points, to a range of 4.75% to 5.00%, marking the first rate reduction since early 2020. Subsequently, it implemented two additional reductions, with the current federal funds target range set to 4.25% to 4.50% on December 18, 2024. The Federal Reserve maintained this target range throughout the first quarter of 2025. In total, the federal funds target range has decreased 100 basis points from its recent cycle high.

    Our NIM-FTE was 3.44% for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, representing 11- and 25-basis-point increases compared to the linked quarter and the prior year same quarter, respectively. The yield earned on interest-earning assets for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, was 5.79%, a decrease of 12 and 20 basis points compared to the linked quarter and the quarter ended March 31, 2024. The average rate paid on total interest-bearing liabilities for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, was 3.30%, representing 34- and 58-basis point decreases compared to the linked quarter and the quarter ended March 31, 2024, respectively.

    Credit Quality

    The table below includes key credit quality information:

      At and For the Three Months Ended   Change   % Change
    (Dollars in thousands, unaudited) March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
      Linked
    Quarter
      Linked
    Quarter
    Past due LHFI $ 72,774     $ 42,437     $ 32,835     $ 30,337     71.5 %
    Allowance for loan credit losses (“ALCL”)   92,011       91,060       98,375       951     1.0  
    Classified loans   127,676       118,782       84,217       8,894     7.5  
    Total nonperforming LHFI   81,368       75,002       40,439       6,366     8.5  
    Provision (benefit) for credit losses   3,444       (5,398 )     3,012       8,842     N/M  
    Net charge-offs (recoveries)   2,728       (560 )     2,582       3,288     N/M  
    Credit quality ratios(1):                    
    ALCL to nonperforming LHFI   113.08 %     121.41 %     243.27 %     (8.33 )%   N/A  
    ALCL to total LHFI   1.21       1.20       1.25       0.01     N/A  
    ALCL to total LHFI, adjusted(2)   1.28       1.25       1.30       0.03     N/A  
    Classified loans to total LHFI   1.68       1.57       1.07       0.11     N/A  
    Nonperforming LHFI to LHFI   1.07       0.99       0.51       0.08     N/A  
    Net charge-offs to total average LHFI (annualized)   0.15       (0.03 )     0.13       0.18     N/A  
                                       

    ___________________________

      N/M = Not meaningful.
      N/A = Not applicable.
    (1) Please see the Loan Data schedule at the back of this document for additional information.
    (2) The ALCL to total LHFI, adjusted, is calculated by excluding the ALCL for MW LOC loans from the total LHFI ALCL in the numerator and excluding the MW LOC loans from the LHFI in the denominator. Due to their low-risk profile, MW LOC loans require a disproportionately low allocation of the ALCL.
       

    Past due loans increased $30.3 million for the current quarter compared to the linked quarter. The increase was primarily due to 11 relationships totaling $39.8 million. The increase in past due loan relationships primarily consisted of residential real estate totaling $18.0 million, commercial real estate totaling $8.3 million, commercial and industrial totaling $9.7 million and construction/land/land development totaling $3.9 million. These increases were partially offset by a $4.5 million decrease in three previously past due residential real estate relationships, one of which paid off during the current quarter.

    Nonperforming LHFI increased $6.4 million for the current quarter compared to the linked quarter, evidenced by an increase in the percentage of nonperforming LHFI to LHFI to 1.07% compared to 0.99% for the linked quarter. The increase in nonperforming loans was primarily driven by two loan relationships totaling $8.2 million at March 31, 2025, with residential real estate loans totaling $5.1 million of the increase. The increase in nonperforming loans was partially offset by one residential real estate loan relationship totaling $2.1 million that paid off during the current quarter, but was considered nonperforming at December 31, 2024.

    Classified loans increased $8.9 million to $127.7 million at March 31, 2025, compared to $118.8 million at December 31, 2024. As discussed in previous filings, our classified and nonperforming LHFI were negatively impacted beginning in the second quarter of 2024 as a result of litigation against the bank brought in response to certain questioned activity involving a former banker in our East Texas market. We continue to work toward a resolution in this matter.

    Our results included a credit loss provision expense of $3.4 million during the quarter ended March 31, 2025, which includes a $3.7 million provision for loan credit losses, compared to provision release of $5.5 million for the linked quarter. Our allowance for credit losses increased $1.0 million during the current quarter, primarily driven by the $1.4 million increase in the individually evaluated portion of the reserve as a result of the increase in nonperforming loans.

    Net charge-offs increased $3.3 million for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, when compared to the quarter ended December 31, 2024, primarily due to total charge-offs of $4.8 million in the current quarter, consisting primarily of two commercial and industrial loan relationships with charge-offs totaling $2.6 million.

    Noninterest Income

    Noninterest income for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, was $15.6 million, an increase of $15.9 million from the linked quarter, primarily driven by the $14.6 million loss on sales of securities, net, in the linked quarter and the $2.5 million increase in insurance commission and fee income in the current quarter. These increases were offset by a decrease of $1.6 million in limited partnership investment (loss) income.

    The loss on sales of securities, net, during the linked quarter was due to the execution of the bond portfolio optimization strategy security sale, with no such sale in the current quarter.

    The increase in insurance commission and fee income was primarily driven by a seasonal increase in annual contingency fee income recognized in the first quarter.

    The decrease in limited partnership investment income (loss) was due to $1.6 million in fair value adjustments on multiple limited partnership investments.

    Noninterest Expense

    Noninterest expense for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, was $62.1 million, a decrease of $3.4 million, or 5.1% from the linked quarter. The decrease was primarily driven by decreases of $3.1 million, $814,000 and $796,000 in other noninterest expense, professional services and advertising and marketing expense, respectively, that was partially offset by an increase of $1.3 million in salaries and employee benefit expense.

    The decrease in other noninterest expense was primarily due to $3.1 million in contingency expense recorded during the linked quarter. There was no such contingency reserve recorded in the current quarter.

    The $814,000 decrease in professional services was primarily due to a decrease of $668,000 in forensic accounting fees compared to the linked quarter.

    The $796,000 decrease in advertising and marketing was primarily due to a decrease in targeted marketing efforts in the current quarter compared to the prior quarter.

    The $1.3 million increase in salaries and employee benefit expense was primarily due to an Employee Retention Credit (“ERC”) of $1.7 million that was recorded in the linked quarter and related to the operations of BTH Bank, N.A., which we acquired in 2022. The ERC is a refundable tax credit for certain eligible businesses that had employees affected during the COVID-19 pandemic. This was partially offset by a decrease in incentive compensation due to the adjustment of the incentive compensation accrual during the current quarter.

    Financial Condition

    Loans

    • Total LHFI at March 31, 2025, were $7.59 billion, an increase of $11.8 million, or 0.2%, from $7.57 billion at December 31, 2024, and a decrease of $314.5 million, or 4.0%, compared to March 31, 2024.
    • The primary driver of the increase during the quarter ended March 31, 2025, compared to the linked quarter, were increases in multi-family real estate, MW LOC, residential real estate – single family and commercial and industrial loans of $64.3 million, $55.1 million, $33.1 million and $19.5 million, respectively. These increases were partially offset by decreases of $93.6 million and $65.4 million in total commercial real estate and construction/land/land development loans, respectively.

    Securities

    • Total securities at March 31, 2025 were $1.18 billion, an increase of $58.8 million, or 5.3%, from $1.12 billion at December 31, 2024, and a decrease of $30.4 million, or 2.5%, compared to March 31, 2024.
    • The increase in securities was due to purchases of $73.1 million in the current quarter. This was partially offset by maturities, scheduled principal payments and calls.
    • Accumulated other comprehensive loss, net of taxes, primarily associated with unrealized losses within the available for sale portfolio, was $90.4 million at March 31, 2025, a decrease of $15.6 million, or 14.7% , from the linked quarter.
    • The weighted average effective duration for the total securities portfolio was 4.10 years as of March 31, 2025, compared to 4.46 years as of December 31, 2024.

    Deposits

    • Total deposits at March 31, 2025, were $8.34 billion, an increase of $115.3 million, or 1.4%, compared to the linked quarter, and a decrease of $167.1 million, or 2.0%, from March 31, 2024. The increase in the current quarter compared to the linked quarter was primarily due to an increase of $278.9 million in money market deposits. The increase was partially offset by decreases of $78.0 million and $67.1 million in time deposits (excluding brokered time deposits) and interest-bearing demand deposits, respectively.
    • At March 31, 2025, noninterest-bearing deposits as a percentage of total deposits were 22.7%, compared to 23.1% and 22.2% at December 31, 2024, and March 31, 2024, respectively. Excluding brokered deposits, noninterest-bearing deposits as a percentage of total deposits were 22.8%, compared to 23.3% and 23.9% at December 31, 2024, and March 31, 2024, respectively.

    Subordinate debentures

    • Total subordinated debentures at March 31, 2025, were $89.6 million, a decrease of $70.3 million, or 44.0%, from $159.9 million at December 31, 2024, and a decrease of $71.1 million, or 44.2%, compared to March 31, 2024.
    • The decrease was due to the redemption of $70.0 million in subordinated debentures in conjunction with our Optimize Origin initiative, as forecasted in our fourth quarter 2024 investor presentation. We recognized $681,000 in original issue discount amortization related to the redemption during the current quarter. Based upon our forecast, the redemption is expected to result in approximately $2.1 million in annualized future interest expense savings.

    Conference Call

    Origin will hold a conference call to discuss its first quarter 2025 results on Thursday, April 24, 2025, at 8:00 a.m. Central Time (9:00 a.m. Eastern Time). To participate in the live conference call, please dial +1 (929) 272-1574 (U.S. Local / International 1); +1 (857) 999-3259 (U.S. Local / International 2); +1 (888) 700-7550 (U.S. Toll Free), enter Conference ID: 66134 and request to be joined into the Origin Bancorp, Inc. (OBK) call. A simultaneous audio-only webcast may be accessed via Origin’s website at www.origin.bank under the investor relations, News & Events, Events & Presentations link or directly by visiting https://dealroadshow.com/e/ORIGINQ125.

    If you are unable to participate during the live webcast, the webcast will be archived on the Investor Relations section of Origin’s website at www.origin.bank, under Investor Relations, News & Events, Events & Presentations.

    About Origin

    Origin Bancorp, Inc. is a financial holding company headquartered in Ruston, Louisiana. Origin’s wholly owned bank subsidiary, Origin Bank, was founded in 1912 in Choudrant, Louisiana. Deeply rooted in Origin’s history is a culture committed to providing personalized relationship banking to businesses, municipalities, and personal clients to enrich the lives of the people in the communities it serves. Origin provides a broad range of financial services and currently operates more than 55 locations in Dallas/Fort Worth, East Texas, Houston, North Louisiana, Mississippi, South Alabama and the Florida Panhandle. For more information, visit www.origin.bank.

    Non-GAAP Financial Measures

    Origin reports its results in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States of America (“GAAP”). However, management believes that certain supplemental non-GAAP financial measures may provide meaningful information to investors that is useful in understanding Origin’s results of operations and underlying trends in its business. However, non-GAAP financial measures are supplemental and should be viewed in addition to, and not as an alternative for, Origin’s reported results prepared in accordance with GAAP. The following are the non-GAAP measures used in this release: PTPP earnings, PTPP ROAA, tangible book value per common share, adjusted tangible book value per common share, ROATCE, and core efficiency ratio.

    Please see the last few pages of this release for reconciliations of non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable financial measures calculated in accordance with GAAP.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release contains certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include information regarding Origin Bancorp, Inc’s (“Origin”, “we”, “our” or the “Company”) future financial performance, business and growth strategies, projected plans and objectives, and any expected purchases of its outstanding common stock, and related transactions and other projections based on macroeconomic and industry trends, including changes to interest rates by the Federal Reserve and the resulting impact on Origin’s results of operations, estimated forbearance amounts and expectations regarding the Company’s liquidity, including in connection with advances obtained from the FHLB, which are all subject to change and may be inherently unreliable due to the multiple factors that impact broader economic and industry trends, and any such changes may be material. Such forward-looking statements are based on various facts and derived utilizing important assumptions and current expectations, estimates and projections about Origin and its subsidiaries, any of which may change over time and some of which may be beyond Origin’s control. Statements or statistics preceded by, followed by or that otherwise include the words “assumes,” “anticipates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “expects,” “foresees,” “intends,” “plans,” “projects,” and similar expressions or future or conditional verbs such as “could,” “may,” “might,” “should,” “will,” and “would” and variations of such terms are generally forward-looking in nature and not historical facts, although not all forward-looking statements include the foregoing words. Further, certain factors that could affect Origin’s future results and cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to: (1) the impact of current and future economic conditions generally and in the financial services industry, nationally and within Origin’s primary market areas, including the impact of tariffs, as well as the financial stress on borrowers and changes to customer and client behavior as a result of the foregoing; (2) changes in benchmark interest rates and the resulting impacts on net interest income; (3) deterioration of Origin’s asset quality; (4) factors that can impact the performance of Origin’s loan portfolio, including real estate values and liquidity in Origin’s primary market areas; (5) the financial health of Origin’s commercial borrowers and the success of construction projects that Origin finances; (6) changes in the value of collateral securing Origin’s loans; (7) the impact of generative artificial intelligence; (8) Origin’s ability to anticipate interest rate changes and manage interest rate risk; (9) the impact of heightened regulatory requirements, reduced debit interchange and overdraft income and the possibility of facing related adverse business consequences if our total assets grow in excess of $10 billion as of December 31 of any calendar year; (10) the effectiveness of Origin’s risk management framework and quantitative models; (11) Origin’s inability to receive dividends from Origin Bank and to service debt, pay dividends to Origin’s common stockholders, repurchase Origin’s shares of common stock and satisfy obligations as they become due; (12) the impact of labor pressures; (13) changes in Origin’s operation or expansion strategy or Origin’s ability to prudently manage its growth and execute its strategy; (14) changes in management personnel; (15) Origin’s ability to maintain important customer relationships, reputation or otherwise avoid liquidity risks; (16) increasing costs as Origin grows deposits; (17) operational risks associated with Origin’s business; (18) significant turbulence or a disruption in the capital or financial markets and the effect of market disruption and interest rate volatility on our investment securities; (19) increased competition in the financial services industry, particularly from regional and national institutions, as well as from fintech companies; (20) compliance with governmental and regulatory requirements and changes in laws, rules, regulations, interpretations or policies relating to financial institutions; (21) periodic changes to the extensive body of accounting rules and best practices; (22) further government intervention in the U.S. financial system; (23) a deterioration of the credit rating for U.S. long-term sovereign debt; (24) Origin’s ability to comply with applicable capital and liquidity requirements, including its ability to generate liquidity internally or raise capital on favorable terms, including continued access to the debt and equity capital markets; (25) natural disasters and other adverse weather events, pandemics, acts of terrorism, war, and other matters beyond Origin’s control; (26) developments in our mortgage banking business, including loan modifications, general demand, and the effects of judicial or regulatory requirements or guidance; (27) fraud or misconduct by internal or external actors (including Origin employees); (28) cybersecurity threats or security breaches and the cost of defending against them; (29) Origin’s ability to maintain adequate internal controls over financial and non-financial reporting; and (30) potential claims, damages, penalties, fines, costs and reputational damage resulting from pending or future litigation, regulatory proceedings and enforcement actions. For a discussion of these and other risks that may cause actual results to differ from expectations, please refer to the sections titled “Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements” and “Risk Factors” in Origin’s most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and any updates to those sections set forth in Origin’s subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and Current Reports on Form 8-K. If one or more events related to these or other risks or uncertainties materialize, or if Origin’s underlying assumptions prove to be incorrect, actual results may differ materially from what Origin anticipates. Accordingly, you should not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements. Any forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date on which it is made, and Origin does not undertake any obligation to publicly update or review any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise.

    New risks and uncertainties arise from time to time, and it is not possible for Origin to predict those events or how they may affect Origin. In addition, Origin cannot assess the impact of each factor on Origin’s business or the extent to which any factor, or combination of factors, may cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements, expressed or implied, included in this communication are expressly qualified in their entirety by this cautionary statement. This cautionary statement should also be considered in connection with any subsequent written or oral forward-looking statements that Origin or persons acting on Origin’s behalf may issue. Annualized, pro forma, adjusted, projected, and estimated numbers are used for illustrative purposes only, are not forecasts, and may not reflect actual results.

    This press release contains projected financial information with respect to Origin, including with respect to certain goals and strategic initiatives of Origin and the anticipated benefits thereof. This projected financial information constitutes forward-looking information and is for illustrative purposes only and should not be relied upon as necessarily being indicative of future results. The assumptions and estimates underlying such projected financial information are inherently uncertain and are subject to significant business, economic (including interest rate), competitive, and other risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from the results contemplated by the projected financial information contained herein and the inclusion of such projected financial information in this release should not be regarded as a representation by any person that such actions will be taken or accomplished or that the results reflected in such projected financial information with respect thereto will be achieved.

    Contact:

    Investor Relations
    Chris Reigelman
    318-497-3177
    chris@origin.bank

    Media Contact
    Ryan Kilpatrick
    318-232-7472
    rkilpatrick@origin.bank

    Origin Bancorp, Inc.
    Selected Quarterly Financial Data
    (Unaudited)
     
      Three Months Ended
      March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
                       
    Income statement and share amounts (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
    Net interest income $ 78,459     $ 78,349     $ 74,804     $ 73,890     $ 73,323  
    Provision (benefit) for credit losses   3,444       (5,398 )     4,603       5,231       3,012  
    Noninterest income   15,602       (330 )     15,989       22,465       17,255  
    Noninterest expense   62,068       65,422       62,521       64,388       58,707  
    Income before income tax expense   28,549       17,995       23,669       26,736       28,859  
    Income tax expense   6,138       3,725       5,068       5,747       6,227  
    Net income $ 22,411     $ 14,270     $ 18,601     $ 20,989     $ 22,632  
    PTPP earnings(1) $ 31,993     $ 12,597     $ 28,272     $ 31,967     $ 31,871  
    Basic earnings per common share   0.72       0.46       0.60       0.68       0.73  
    Diluted earnings per common share   0.71       0.46       0.60       0.67       0.73  
    Dividends declared per common share   0.15       0.15       0.15       0.15       0.15  
    Weighted average common shares outstanding – basic   31,205,752       31,155,486       31,130,293       31,042,527       30,981,333  
    Weighted average common shares outstanding – diluted   31,412,010       31,308,805       31,239,877       31,131,829       31,078,910  
                       
    Balance sheet data                  
    Total LHFI $ 7,585,526     $ 7,573,713     $ 7,956,790     $ 7,959,171     $ 7,900,027  
    Total LHFI excluding MW LOC   7,181,395       7,224,632       7,461,602       7,452,666       7,499,032  
    Total assets   9,750,372       9,678,702       9,965,986       9,947,182       9,892,379  
    Total deposits   8,338,412       8,223,120       8,486,568       8,510,842       8,505,464  
    Total stockholders’ equity   1,180,177       1,145,245       1,145,673       1,095,894       1,078,853  
                       
    Performance metrics and capital ratios                  
    Yield on LHFI   6.33 %     6.47 %     6.67 %     6.58 %     6.58 %
    Yield on interest-earnings assets   5.79       5.91       6.09       6.04       5.99  
    Cost of interest-bearing deposits   3.23       3.61       4.01       3.95       3.85  
    Cost of total deposits   2.52       2.79       3.14       3.08       2.99  
    NIM – fully tax equivalent (“FTE”)   3.44       3.33       3.18       3.17       3.19  
    Return on average assets (annualized) (“ROAA”)   0.93       0.57       0.74       0.84       0.92  
    PTPP ROAA (annualized)(1)   1.32       0.50       1.13       1.28       1.30  
    Return on average stockholders’ equity (annualized) (“ROAE”)   7.79       4.94       6.57       7.79       8.57  
    Book value per common share $ 37.77     $ 36.71     $ 36.76     $ 35.23     $ 34.79  
    Tangible book value per common share(1)   32.43       31.38       31.37       29.77       29.24  
    Adjusted tangible book value per common share(1)   35.33       34.78       34.39       33.86       33.27  
    Return on average tangible common equity (annualized) (“ROATCE”)(1)   9.09 %     5.78 %     7.74 %     9.25 %     10.24 %
    Efficiency ratio(2)   65.99       83.85       68.86       66.82       64.81  
    Core efficiency ratio(1)   65.33       82.79       67.48       65.55       65.24  
    Common equity tier 1 to risk-weighted assets(3)   13.57       13.32       12.46       12.15       11.97  
    Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets(3)   13.76       13.52       12.64       12.33       12.15  
    Total capital to risk-weighted assets(3)   15.81       16.44       15.45       15.16       14.98  
    Tier 1 leverage ratio(3)   11.47       11.08       10.93       10.70       10.66  
                                           

    ___________________________

    (1) PTPP earnings, PTPP ROAA, tangible book value per common share, adjusted tangible book value per common share, ROATCE, and core efficiency ratio are either non-GAAP financial measures or use a non-GAAP contributor in the formula. For a reconciliation of these alternative financial measures to their most directly comparable GAAP measures, please see the last few pages of this release.
    (2) Calculated by dividing noninterest expense by the sum of net interest income plus noninterest income.
    (3) March 31, 2025, ratios are estimated and calculated at the Company level, which is subject to the capital adequacy requirements of the Federal Reserve Board.
       
    Origin Bancorp, Inc.
    Consolidated Quarterly Statements of Income
    (Unaudited)
     
      Three Months Ended
      March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
                       
    Interest and dividend income (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
    Interest and fees on loans $ 117,075     $ 127,021     $ 133,195   $ 129,879   $ 127,186  
    Investment securities-taxable   8,076       6,651       6,536     6,606     6,849  
    Investment securities-nontaxable   968       964       905     893     910  
    Interest and dividend income on assets held in other financial institutions   6,424       5,197       3,621     4,416     3,756  
    Total interest and dividend income   132,543       139,833       144,257     141,794     138,701  
    Interest expense                  
    Interest-bearing deposits   51,779       59,511       67,051     65,469     62,842  
    FHLB advances and other borrowings   96       88       482     514     518  
    Subordinated indebtedness   2,209       1,885       1,920     1,921     2,018  
    Total interest expense   54,084       61,484       69,453     67,904     65,378  
    Net interest income   78,459       78,349       74,804     73,890     73,323  
    Provision (benefit) for credit losses   3,444       (5,398 )     4,603     5,231     3,012  
    Net interest income after provision for credit losses   75,015       83,747       70,201     68,659     70,311  
    Noninterest income                  
    Insurance commission and fee income   7,927       5,441       6,928     6,665     7,725  
    Service charges and fees   4,716       4,801       4,664     4,862     4,688  
    Other fee income   2,301       2,152       2,114     2,404     2,247  
    Mortgage banking revenue   915       1,151       1,153     1,878     2,398  
    Swap fee income   533       116       106     44     57  
    (Loss) gain on sales of securities, net         (14,617 )     221         (403 )
    Limited partnership investment (loss) income   (1,692 )     (62 )     375     68     138  
    Change in fair value of equity investments                   5,188      
    Other income   902       688       428     1,356     405  
    Total noninterest income (loss)   15,602       (330 )     15,989     22,465     17,255  
    Noninterest expense                  
    Salaries and employee benefits   37,731       36,405       38,491     38,109     35,818  
    Occupancy and equipment, net   8,544       7,913       6,298     7,009     6,645  
    Data processing   2,957       3,414       3,470     3,468     3,145  
    Office and operations   2,972       2,883       2,984     3,072     2,502  
    Intangible asset amortization   1,761       1,800       1,905     2,137     2,137  
    Regulatory assessments   1,392       1,535       1,791     1,842     1,734  
    Advertising and marketing   1,133       1,929       1,449     1,328     1,444  
    Professional services   1,250       2,064       2,012     1,303     1,231  
    Electronic banking   1,354       1,377       1,308     1,238     1,239  
    Loan-related expenses   599       431       751     1,077     905  
    Franchise tax expense   675       884       721     815     477  
    Other expenses   1,700       4,787       1,341     2,990     1,430  
    Total noninterest expense   62,068       65,422       62,521     64,388     58,707  
    Income before income tax expense   28,549       17,995       23,669     26,736     28,859  
    Income tax expense   6,138       3,725       5,068     5,747     6,227  
    Net income $ 22,411     $ 14,270     $ 18,601   $ 20,989   $ 22,632  
                                       
    Origin Bancorp, Inc.
    Consolidated Balance Sheets
    (Unaudited)
                       
    (Dollars in thousands) March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
    Assets                  
    Cash and due from banks $ 112,888     $ 132,991     $ 159,337     $ 137,615     $ 98,147  
    Interest-bearing deposits in banks   373,314       337,258       161,854       150,435       193,365  
    Total cash and cash equivalents   486,202       470,249       321,191       288,050       291,512  
    Securities:                  
    AFS   1,161,368       1,102,528       1,160,965       1,160,048       1,190,922  
    Held to maturity, net of allowance for credit losses   11,094       11,095       11,096       11,616       11,651  
    Securities carried at fair value through income   6,512       6,512       6,533       6,499       6,755  
    Total securities   1,178,974       1,120,135       1,178,594       1,178,163       1,209,328  
    Non-marketable equity securities held in other financial institutions   71,754       71,643       67,068       64,010       53,870  
    Loans held for sale   10,191       10,494       7,631       18,291       14,975  
    LHFI   7,585,526       7,573,713       7,956,790       7,959,171       7,900,027  
    Less: ALCL   92,011       91,060       95,989       100,865       98,375  
    LHFI, net of ALCL   7,493,515       7,482,653       7,860,801       7,858,306       7,801,652  
    Premises and equipment, net   123,847       126,620       126,751       121,562       120,931  
    Cash surrender value of bank-owned life insurance   41,021       40,840       40,602       40,365       40,134  
    Goodwill   128,679       128,679       128,679       128,679       128,679  
    Other intangible assets, net   38,212       37,473       39,272       41,177       43,314  
    Accrued interest receivable and other assets   177,977       189,916       195,397       208,579       187,984  
    Total assets $ 9,750,372     $ 9,678,702     $ 9,965,986     $ 9,947,182     $ 9,892,379  
    Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity                  
    Noninterest-bearing deposits $ 1,888,808     $ 1,900,651     $ 1,893,767     $ 1,866,622     $ 1,887,066  
    Interest-bearing deposits excluding brokered interest-bearing deposits, if any   5,536,636       5,301,243       5,137,940       4,984,817       4,990,632  
    Time deposits   862,968       941,000       1,023,252       1,022,589       1,030,656  
    Brokered deposits   50,000       80,226       431,609       636,814       597,110  
    Total deposits   8,338,412       8,223,120       8,486,568       8,510,842       8,505,464  
    FHLB advances and other borrowings   12,488       12,460       30,446       40,737       13,158  
    Subordinated indebtedness   89,599       159,943       159,861       159,779       160,684  
    Accrued expenses and other liabilities   129,696       137,934       143,438       139,930       134,220  
    Total liabilities   8,570,195       8,533,457       8,820,313       8,851,288       8,813,526  
    Stockholders’ equity:                  
    Common stock   156,220       155,988       155,837       155,543       155,057  
    Additional paid-in capital   538,790       537,366       535,662       532,950       530,380  
    Retained earnings   575,578       557,920       548,419       534,585       518,325  
    Accumulated other comprehensive loss   (90,411 )     (106,029 )     (94,245 )     (127,184 )     (124,909 )
    Total stockholders’ equity   1,180,177       1,145,245       1,145,673       1,095,894       1,078,853  
      Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 9,750,372     $ 9,678,702     $ 9,965,986     $ 9,947,182     $ 9,892,379  
                                           
    Origin Bancorp, Inc.
    Loan Data
    (Unaudited)
       
      At and For the Three Months Ended
      March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
                       
    LHFI (Dollars in thousands)
    Owner occupied commercial real estate $ 937,985     $ 975,947     $ 991,671     $ 959,850     $ 948,624  
    Non-owner occupied commercial real estate   1,445,864       1,501,484       1,533,093       1,563,152       1,472,164  
    Construction/land/land development   798,609       864,011       991,545       1,017,389       1,168,597  
    Residential real estate – single family   1,465,192       1,432,129       1,414,013       1,421,027       1,373,532  
    Multi-family real estate   489,765       425,460       434,317       398,202       359,765  
    Total real estate loans   5,137,415       5,199,031       5,364,639       5,359,620       5,322,682  
    Commercial and industrial   2,022,085       2,002,634       2,074,037       2,070,947       2,154,151  
    MW LOC   404,131       349,081       495,188       506,505       400,995  
    Consumer   21,895       22,967       22,926       22,099       22,199  
    Total LHFI   7,585,526       7,573,713       7,956,790       7,959,171       7,900,027  
    Less: ALCL   92,011       91,060       95,989       100,865       98,375  
    LHFI, net $ 7,493,515     $ 7,482,653     $ 7,860,801     $ 7,858,306     $ 7,801,652  
                       
    Nonperforming assets(1)                  
    Nonperforming LHFI                  
    Commercial real estate $ 5,465     $ 4,974     $ 2,776     $ 2,196     $ 4,474  
    Construction/land/land development   17,694       18,505       26,291       26,336       383  
    Residential real estate(2)   40,749       36,221       14,313       13,493       14,918  
    Commercial and industrial   17,325       15,120       20,486       33,608       20,560  
    Consumer   135       182       407       179       104  
    Total nonperforming LHFI   81,368       75,002       64,273       75,812       40,439  
    Other real estate owned/repossessed assets   1,990       3,635       6,043       6,827       3,935  
    Total nonperforming assets $ 83,358     $ 78,637     $ 70,316     $ 82,639     $ 44,374  
    Classified assets $ 129,666     $ 122,417     $ 113,529     $ 125,081     $ 88,152  
    Past due LHFI(3)   72,774       42,437       38,838       66,276       32,835  
                       
    Allowance for loan credit losses                  
    Balance at beginning of period $ 91,060     $ 95,989     $ 100,865     $ 98,375     $ 96,868  
    Provision (benefit) for loan credit losses   3,679       (5,489 )     4,644       5,436       4,089  
    Loans charged off   4,848       2,025       11,226       3,706       6,683  
    Loan recoveries   2,120       2,585       1,706       760       4,101  
    Net charge-offs (recoveries)   2,728       (560 )     9,520       2,946       2,582  
    Balance at end of period $ 92,011     $ 91,060     $ 95,989     $ 100,865     $ 98,375  
                       
    Credit quality ratios                  
    Total nonperforming assets to total assets   0.85 %     0.81 %     0.71 %     0.83 %     0.45 %
    Nonperforming LHFI to LHFI   1.07       0.99       0.81       0.95       0.51  
    Past due LHFI to LHFI   0.96       0.56       0.49       0.83       0.42  
    ALCL to nonperforming LHFI   113.08       121.41       149.35       133.05       243.27  
    ALCL to total LHFI   1.21       1.20       1.21       1.27       1.25  
    ALCL to total LHFI, adjusted(4)   1.28       1.25       1.28       1.34       1.30  
    Net charge-offs (recoveries) to total average LHFI (annualized)   0.15       (0.03 )     0.48       0.15       0.13  
                                           

    ___________________________

    (1) Nonperforming assets consist of nonperforming/nonaccrual loans and property acquired through foreclosures or repossession, as well as bank-owned property not in use and listed for sale, if any.
    (2) Includes multi-family real estate.
    (3) Past due LHFI are defined as loans 30 days or more past due.
    (4) The ALCL to total LHFI, adjusted is calculated by excluding the ALCL for MW LOC loans from the total LHFI ALCL in the numerator and excluding the MW LOC loans from the LHFI in the denominator. Due to their low-risk profile, MW LOC loans require a disproportionately low allocation of the ALCL.
       
    Origin Bancorp, Inc.
    Average Balances and Yields/Rates
    (Unaudited)
       
      Three Months Ended
      March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   March 31, 2024
      Average Balance   Yield/Rate   Average Balance   Yield/Rate   Average Balance   Yield/Rate
                           
    Assets (Dollars in thousands)
    Commercial real estate $ 2,448,099   5.82 %   $ 2,499,279   5.89 %   $ 2,438,476   5.84 %
    Construction/land/land development   821,754   6.87       936,134   6.92       1,130,355   7.25  
    Residential real estate(1)   1,909,922   5.53       1,847,399   5.50       1,739,105   5.40  
    Commercial and industrial (“C&I”)   2,004,034   7.37       2,028,290   7.68       2,121,502   7.89  
    MW LOC   289,521   7.07       459,716   7.26       306,248   7.59  
    Consumer   22,709   7.45       23,393   7.64       23,319   8.07  
    LHFI   7,496,039   6.33       7,794,211   6.47       7,759,005   6.58  
    Loans held for sale   8,590   6.18       10,981   6.81       12,906   5.86  
    Loans receivable   7,504,629   6.33       7,805,192   6.47       7,771,911   6.58  
    Investment securities-taxable   1,021,904   3.21       1,002,216   2.64       1,095,480   2.51  
    Investment securities-nontaxable   140,875   2.79       149,307   2.57       148,077   2.47  
    Non-marketable equity securities held in other financial institutions   71,669   2.35       69,070   2.78       58,455   3.77  
    Interest-earning balances due from banks   543,821   4.48       394,790   4.75       240,432   5.37  
    Total interest-earning assets   9,282,898   5.79       9,420,575   5.91       9,314,355   5.99  
    Noninterest-earning assets   525,317         557,968         546,881    
    Total assets $ 9,808,215       $ 9,978,543       $ 9,861,236    
                           
    Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity                    
    Liabilities                      
    Interest-bearing liabilities                      
    Savings and interest-bearing transaction accounts $ 5,538,710   3.14 %   $ 5,341,028   3.48 %   $ 5,009,117   3.69 %
    Time deposits   972,176   3.69       1,213,565   4.20       1,563,992   4.35  
    Total interest-bearing deposits   6,510,886   3.23       6,554,593   3.61       6,573,109   3.85  
    FHLB advances and other borrowings   14,148   2.75       12,698   2.76       42,284   4.92  
    Subordinated indebtedness   124,133   7.22       159,910   4.69       165,252   4.91  
    Total interest-bearing liabilities   6,649,167   3.30       6,727,201   3.64       6,780,645   3.88  
    Noninterest-bearing liabilities                      
    Noninterest-bearing deposits   1,837,365         1,940,689         1,866,496    
    Other liabilities   154,934         161,425         151,390    
    Total liabilities   8,641,466         8,829,315         8,798,531    
    Stockholders’ Equity   1,166,749         1,149,228         1,062,705    
    Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 9,808,215       $ 9,978,543       $ 9,861,236    
    Net interest spread     2.49 %       2.27 %       2.11 %
    NIM     3.43         3.31         3.17  
    NIM-FTE(2)     3.44         3.33         3.19  
                                 

    ___________________________

    (1) Includes multi-family real estate.
    (2) In order to present pre-tax income and resulting yields on tax-exempt investments comparable to those on taxable investments, a tax-equivalent adjustment has been computed. This adjustment also includes income tax credits received on Qualified School Construction Bonds.
       
    Origin Bancorp, Inc.
    Notable Items
    (Unaudited)
       
      At and For the Three Months Ended
      March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
      $ Impact   EPS
    Impact(1)
      $ Impact   EPS
    Impact(1)
      $ Impact   EPS
    Impact(1)
      $ Impact   EPS
    Impact(1)
      $ Impact   EPS
    Impact(1)
                                           
      (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
    Notable interest income items:                                    
    Interest income reversal on relationships impacted by questioned banker activity $     $     $     $     $     $     $ (1,206 )   $ (0.03 )   $     $  
    Notable interest expense items:                                    
    OID amortization – subordinated debenture redemption   (681 )     (0.02 )                                                
    Notable provision expense items:                                    
    Provision release (expense) related to questioned banker activity               3,212       0.08                   (3,212 )     (0.08 )            
    Provision release (expense) on relationships impacted by questioned banker activity   375       0.01                               (4,131 )     (0.11 )            
    Notable noninterest income items(2):                                
    MSR gain (impairment)                                                   410       0.01  
    (Loss) gain on sales of securities, net               (14,617 )     (0.37 )     221       0.01                   (403 )     (0.01 )
    Gain on sub-debt repurchase                                       81                    
    Positive valuation adjustment on non-marketable equity securities                                       5,188       0.13              
    Net (loss) gain on OREO properties(2)   (212 )     (0.01 )     198                         800       0.02              
    BOLI payout   208       0.01                                                  
    Notable noninterest expense items:                                
    Operating expense related to questioned banker activity   (543 )     (0.01 )     (4,069 )     (0.10 )     (848 )     (0.02 )     (1,452 )     (0.04 )            
    Operating expense related to strategic Optimize Origin initiatives   (1,615 )     (0.04 )     (1,121 )     (0.03 )                                    
    Employee Retention Credit   213       0.01       1,651       0.04                                      
    Total notable items $ (2,255 )     (0.06 )   $ (14,746 )     (0.37 )   $ (627 )     (0.02 )   $ (3,932 )     (0.10 )   $ 7        
                                                                                   

    ___________________________

    (1) The diluted EPS impact is calculated using a 21% effective tax rate. The total of the diluted EPS impact of each individual line item may not equal the calculated diluted EPS impact on the total notable items due to rounding.
    (2) The $212,000 net (loss) gain on OREO properties for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, includes a $444,000 expected insurance settlement recovery that was included in noninterest income on the face of the income statement and a $148,000 repair cost that was included in noninterest expense.
       
    Origin Bancorp, Inc.
    Non-GAAP Financial Measures
    (Unaudited)
     
      At and For the Three Months Ended
      March 31,
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
      September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
                       
      (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
    Calculation of PTPP earnings:                  
    Net income $ 22,411     $ 14,270     $ 18,601     $ 20,989     $ 22,632  
    Provision (benefit) for credit losses   3,444       (5,398 )     4,603       5,231       3,012  
    Income tax expense   6,138       3,725       5,068       5,747       6,227  
    PTPP earnings (non-GAAP) $ 31,993     $ 12,597     $ 28,272     $ 31,967     $ 31,871  
                       
    Calculation of PTPP ROAA:                  
    PTPP earnings $ 31,993     $ 12,597     $ 28,272     $ 31,967     $ 31,871  
    Divided by number of days in the quarter   90       92       92       91       91  
    Multiplied by the number of days in the year   365       366       366       366       366  
    PTPP earnings, annualized $ 129,749     $ 50,114     $ 112,473     $ 128,571     $ 128,184  
                       
    Divided by total average assets $ 9,808,215     $ 9,978,543     $ 9,985,836     $ 10,008,225     $ 9,861,236  
    ROAA (annualized) (GAAP)   0.93 %     0.57 %     0.74 %     0.84 %     0.92 %
    PTPP ROAA (annualized) (non-GAAP)   1.32       0.50       1.13       1.28       1.30  
                       
    Calculation of tangible book value per common share and adjusted tangible book value per common share:
    Total common stockholders’ equity $ 1,180,177     $ 1,145,245     $ 1,145,673     $ 1,095,894     $ 1,078,853  
    Goodwill   (128,679 )     (128,679 )     (128,679 )     (128,679 )     (128,679 )
    Other intangible assets, net   (38,212 )     (37,473 )     (39,272 )     (41,177 )     (43,314 )
    Tangible common equity   1,013,286       979,093       977,722       926,038       906,860  
    Accumulated other comprehensive loss   90,411       106,029       94,245       127,184       124,909  
    Adjusted tangible common equity   1,103,697       1,085,122       1,071,967       1,053,222       1,031,769  
    Divided by common shares outstanding at the end of the period   31,244,006       31,197,574       31,167,410       31,108,667       31,011,304  
    Book value per common share (GAAP) $ 37.77     $ 36.71     $ 36.76     $ 35.23     $ 34.79  
    Tangible book value per common share (non-GAAP)   32.43       31.38       31.37       29.77       29.24  
    Adjusted tangible book value per common share (non-GAAP)   35.33       34.78       34.39       33.86       33.27  
                       
    Calculation of ROATCE:                
    Net income $ 22,411     $ 14,270     $ 18,601     $ 20,989     $ 22,632  
    Divided by number of days in the quarter   90       92       92       91       91  
    Multiplied by number of days in the year   365       366       366       366       366  
    Annualized net income $ 90,889     $ 56,770     $ 74,000     $ 84,417     $ 91,025  
                       
    Total average common stockholders’ equity $ 1,166,749     $ 1,149,228     $ 1,125,697     $ 1,084,269     $ 1,062,705  
    Average goodwill   (128,679 )     (128,679 )     (128,679 )     (128,679 )     (128,679 )
    Average other intangible assets, net   (38,254 )     (38,646 )     (40,487 )     (42,563 )     (44,700 )
    Average tangible common equity   999,816       981,903       956,531       913,027       889,326  
                       
    ROATCE (non-GAAP)   9.09 %     5.78 %     7.74 %     9.25 %     10.24 %
    Calculation of core efficiency ratio:                  
    Total noninterest expense $ 62,068     $ 65,422     $ 62,521     $ 64,388     $ 58,707  
    Insurance and mortgage noninterest expense   (8,230 )     (8,497 )     (8,448 )     (8,402 )     (8,045 )
    Adjusted total noninterest expense   53,838       56,925       54,073       55,986       50,662  
                       
    Net interest income $ 78,459     $ 78,349     $ 74,804     $ 73,890     $ 73,323  
    Insurance and mortgage net interest income   (2,815 )     (2,666 )     (2,578 )     (2,407 )     (2,795 )
    Total noninterest income   15,602       (330 )     15,989       22,465       17,255  
    Insurance and mortgage noninterest income   (8,842 )     (6,592 )     (8,081 )     (8,543 )     (10,123 )
    Adjusted total revenue   82,404       68,761       80,134       85,405       77,660  
                       
    Efficiency ratio (GAAP)   65.99 %     83.85 %     68.86 %     66.82 %     64.81 %
    Core efficiency ratio (non-GAAP)   65.33       82.79       67.48       65.55       65.24  

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Northrim BanCorp Earns $13.3 Million, or $2.38 Per Diluted Share, in First Quarter 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska, April 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Northrim BanCorp, Inc. (NASDAQ:NRIM) (“Northrim” or the “Company”) today reported net income of $13.3 million, or $2.38 per diluted share, in the first quarter of 2025, compared to $10.9 million, or $1.95 per diluted share, in the fourth quarter of 2024, and $8.2 million, or $1.48 per diluted share, in the first quarter a year ago. The increase in first quarter 2025 profitability as compared to the first quarter a year ago was primarily the result of an increase in purchased receivable income, higher net interest income, increased mortgage banking income, and a benefit for the provision for credit losses, which were only partially offset by higher other operating expenses. Purchased receivable income increased primarily due to the Company’s acquisition of Sallyport Commercial Finance, LLC (“Sallyport or SCF”), which was completed on October 31, 2024. Sallyport and its direct and indirect subsidiaries provide services and products related to purchased receivable factoring and asset-based lending in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom.

    Dividends per share in the first quarter of 2025 increased to $0.64 per share as compared to $0.62 per share in the fourth quarter of 2024 and $0.61 per share in the first quarter of 2024.

    “Our record first quarter earnings are the result of Northrim’s focus on profitable, market share driven growth,” said Mike Huston, Northrim’s President and Chief Executive Officer. “Our strong financial performance is due to our history of investing in our people and banking infrastructure to consistently deliver ‘Superior Customer First Service’. We remain confident that our dedication to serving our customers and communities will support future growth.”

    First Quarter 2025 Highlights:

    • Net interest income in the first quarter of 2025 increased 1% to $31.3 million compared to $30.8 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and increased 18% compared to $26.4 million in the first quarter of 2024.
    • Net interest margin on a tax equivalent basis (“NIMTE”)* was 4.61% for the first quarter of 2025, up 14-basis points from the fourth quarter of 2024 and up 39-basis points from the first quarter a year ago.
    • Return on average assets (“ROAA”) was 1.76% and return on average equity (“ROAE”) was 19.70% for the first quarter of 2025. ROAA was 1.19% and ROAE was 13.84% for the first quarter of 2024.
    • Portfolio loans were $2.12 billion at March 31, 2025, down slightly from the preceding quarter and up 17% from a year ago. Portfolio loans in the first quarter of 2025 decreased from the preceding quarter primarily due to the reclassification of $100 million of consumer mortgages previously held as residential real estate loans to loans held for sale. The consumer mortgages are expected to be sold in the second quarter of 2025 to reduce the concentration of residential real estate loans and provide additional liquidity for future commercial and construction loan growth.
    • Total deposits were $2.78 billion at March 31, 2025, up 4% from the preceding quarter, and up 14% from $2.43 billion a year ago. Non-interest bearing demand deposits increased 5% from the preceding quarter and increased 4% year-over-year to $742.6 million at March 31, 2025 and represent 27% of total deposits.
    • The average cost of interest-bearing deposits was 2.01% at March 31, 2025, down from 2.15% at December 31, 2024 and 2.13% at March 31, 2024.
    • Mortgage loan originations were $121.6 million in the first quarter of 2025, down from $185.9 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and up from $101.7 million in the first quarter a year ago. Mortgage loans funded for sale were $108.5 million in the first quarter of 2025, compared to $162.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and $84.3 million in the first quarter of 2024.
    Financial Highlights Three Months Ended
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share data) March 31, 2025 December 31, 2024 September 30, 2024 June 30, 2024 March 31, 2024
    Total assets $ 3,140,960   $ 3,041,869   $ 2,963,392   $ 2,821,668   $ 2,759,560  
    Total portfolio loans $ 2,124,330   $ 2,129,263   $ 2,007,565   $ 1,875,907   $ 1,811,135  
    Total deposits $ 2,777,977   $ 2,680,189   $ 2,625,567   $ 2,463,806   $ 2,434,083  
    Total shareholders’ equity $ 279,756   $ 267,116   $ 260,050   $ 247,200   $ 239,327  
    Net income $ 13,324   $ 10,927   $ 8,825   $ 9,020   $ 8,199  
    Diluted earnings per share $ 2.38   $ 1.95   $ 1.57   $ 1.62   $ 1.48  
    Return on average assets   1.76 %   1.43 %   1.22 %   1.31 %   1.19 %
    Return on average shareholders’ equity   19.70 %   16.32 %   13.69 %   14.84 %   13.84 %
    NIM   4.55 %   4.41 %   4.29 %   4.24 %   4.16 %
    NIMTE*   4.61 %   4.47 %   4.35 %   4.30 %   4.22 %
    Efficiency ratio   64.47 %   66.96 %   66.11 %   68.78 %   68.93 %
    Total shareholders’ equity/total assets   8.91 %   8.78 %   8.78 %   8.76 %   8.67 %
    Tangible common equity/tangible assets*   7.41 %   7.23 %   8.28 %   8.24 %   8.14 %
    Book value per share $ 50.67   $ 48.41   $ 47.27   $ 44.93   $ 43.52  
    Tangible book value per share* $ 41.47   $ 39.17   $ 44.36   $ 42.03   $ 40.61  
    Dividends per share $ 0.64   $ 0.62   $ 0.62   $ 0.61   $ 0.61  
    Common stock outstanding   5,520,892     5,518,210     5,501,943     5,501,562     5,499,578  
                                   

    * References to NIMTE, tangible book value per share, and tangible common equity to tangible common assets, (both of which exclude intangible assets) represent non-GAAP financial measures. Management has presented these non-GAAP measurements in this earnings release, because it believes these measures are useful to investors. See the end of this release for reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures to GAAP financial measures.

    Alaska Economic Update
    (Note: sources for information included in this section are included on page 13.)

    The Alaska Department of Labor (“DOL”) has reported Alaska’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate in February of 2025 was 4.7% compared to the U.S. rate of 4.1%. The total number of payroll jobs in Alaska, not including uniformed military, increased 1.6% or 5,200 jobs between February of 2024 and February of 2025.

    According to the DOL, the Oil and Gas sector had the largest growth rate in new jobs of 7.5% through February 2025 compared to the prior year, up 600 direct jobs. The Construction sector added 1,000 positions for a year-over-year growth rate of 6.1% in February of 2025. The larger Health Care sector grew by 1,400 jobs for an annual growth rate of 3.4%. Transportation, Warehousing and Utilities added 1,100 jobs for a 5% growth rate. Leisure and Hospitality increased 500 jobs year-over-year through February of 2025, up 1.6%.

    The Government sector grew by 600 jobs for 0.7% growth, adding 100 Federal jobs, and 500 State positions in Alaska over the same period. Declining sectors between February 2024 and February 2025 were Manufacturing (primarily seafood processing) shrinking 500 positions (-4.4%), Financial Activities, down 100 jobs (-0.9%), and Retail lost 100 jobs (-0.3%).

    Alaska’s seasonally adjusted personal income was $56.5 billion in the fourth quarter of 2024 according to the Federal Bureau of Economic Analysis (“BEA”). This was an annualized improvement in the fourth quarter of 4.7% for Alaska, compared to the national average of 4.6%. Alaska enjoyed an annual personal income improvement of 6% in 2024 compared to the U.S. increase of 5.4%, ranking Alaska 6th best in the nation. The $650 million increase in personal income in the fourth quarter in Alaska came from a $446 million increase in net earnings from wages, $154 million growth in government transfer receipts, and a $49 million increase in investment income.

    Alaska’s Gross State Product (“GSP”) in 2024, reached $70 billion for the first time according to the BEA. Alaska’s inflation adjusted “real” GSP increased 1.5% in 2024 and 4% annualized in the fourth quarter of 2024, placing Alaska third best of all 50 states for the quarter. The average U.S. GDP growth rate was 2.8% for the year and 2.4% in the fourth quarter of 2024. Alaska’s real GSP improvement in the fourth quarter of 2024 was primarily caused by growth in the Mining, Oil & Gas; Transportation & Warehousing; and to a lesser extent the Health Care sector. Construction played a larger role in the annual state GSP performance.

    Based on data from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Alaska exported $5.2 billion in goods to foreign countries in 2023. China is the largest importer of Alaska’s products at $1.2 billion, followed by Japan at $710 million and Korea at $702 million in 2023. Fish and related maritime products accounted for the largest volume at $2.1 billion, followed by minerals and ores $1.5 billion, and primary metals at $780 million in 2023. Chief Credit Officer and Bank Economist Mark Edwards stated, “President Trump’s significant changes to international tariffs has created uncertainty in trade markets. At this time, it is unknown how each country will respond. Alaska’s natural resources are highly valued commodities throughout the world. If issues arise with one country, such as China, it is most likely that Alaska’s products will be redirected to other markets like Japan and South Korea or sold domestically in the United States. Canada is the largest long-term investor in Alaska’s mining industry. This involves significant fixed capital investments made over decades that are unlikely to shift dramatically in the short-run.”

    According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Consumer Price Index, or CPI, for the U.S. increased 2.8% between February of 2024 and February of 2025. In Alaska, the rate of increase was 2.9% for the same time period. Food and beverage; housing rents and mortgage rates; transportation; and medical care costs are the largest causes for inflation. Declining motor fuel prices, new and used car prices, and household furnishing costs have helped moderate inflationary pressures in Alaska.

    The monthly average price of Alaska North Slope (“ANS”) crude oil was $76.39 in January, $74.03 in February and $73.39 in March of 2025. The Alaska Department of Revenue (“DOR”) calculated ANS crude oil production was 461 thousand barrels per day (“bpd”) in Alaska’s fiscal year ending June 30, 2024. Through nine months of the fiscal year 2025, production has averaged slightly above the State of Alaska forecast of 467 thousand bpd. In the Spring 2025 Revenue Forecast published March 12, 2025, the DOR expects production to continue to grow to 663 thousand bpd by fiscal year 2034. This is primarily a result of new production coming on-line in and around the NPR-A region west of Prudhoe Bay. A partnership between Santos and Repsol is constructing the new Pikka oil field and ConocoPhillips is developing the new Willow oil field. There are also a number of smaller new oil fields in Alaska’s North Slope that are contributing to the State of Alaska’s production growth estimates.

    The Alaska Permanent Fund is seeded annually by the oil wealth the State continues to save each year and has grown significantly over 40 years of successful investment. As of February 28, 2025 the funds value was $81.35 billion. According to the DOR it is scheduled to contribute $3.7 billion to the Alaska General Fund in fiscal year 2025 for general government spending and to pay the annual dividend to Alaskan residents.

    According to the Alaska Multiple Listing Services, the average sales price of a single family home in Anchorage rose 6.2% in 2024 to $510,109, following a 5.2% increase in 2023. This was the seventh consecutive year of price increases.

    The average sales price for single family homes in the Matanuska Susitna Borough rose 3.8% in 2024 to $412,859, after increasing 4% in 2023. This continues a trend of average price increases for more than a decade in the region. These two markets represent where the vast majority of the residential lending activity for Northrim Bank (the”Bank”) occurs.

    The Alaska Multiple Listing Services reported a 3.4% increase in the number of units sold in Anchorage when comparing 2024 to 2023. There was virtually no change in the number of homes sold in the Matanuska Susitna Borough, with only four fewer homes sold in 2024 than in 2023 or -0.2%.

    Northrim Bank sponsors the Alaskanomics blog to provide news, analysis, and commentary on Alaska’s economy. Join the conversation at Alaskanomics.com, or for more information on the Alaska economy, visit: www.northrim.com and click on the “Business Banking” link and then click “Learn.” Information from our website is not incorporated into, and does not form, a part of this earnings release.

    Review of Income Statement

    Consolidated Income Statement

    In the first quarter of 2025, Northrim generated a ROAA of 1.76% and a ROAE of 19.70%, compared to 1.43% and 16.32%, respectively, in the fourth quarter of 2024 and 1.19% and 13.84%, respectively, in the first quarter a year ago.

    Net Interest Income/Net Interest Margin

    Net interest income increased 1% to $31.3 million in the first quarter of 2025 compared to $30.8 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and increased 18% compared to $26.4 million in the first quarter of 2024. Interest expense on deposits decreased to $9.9 million in the first quarter of 2025 compared to $10.6 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and increased compared to $9.2 million in the first quarter of 2024.

    NIMTE* was 4.61% in the first quarter of 2025 up from 4.47% in the preceding quarter and 4.22% in the first quarter a year ago. NIMTE* increased 39 basis points in the first quarter of 2025 compared to the first quarter of 2024 primarily due to a favorable change in the mix of earning-assets towards higher loan balances as a percentage of total earning-assets, slightly higher yields on those assets, and a decrease in costs on interest-bearing liabilities. The weighted average interest rate for new loans booked in the first quarter of 2025 was 7.30% compared to 7.23% in the fourth quarter of 2024 and 7.84% in the first quarter a year ago. The yield on the investment portfolio in the first quarter of 2025 increased to 2.97% from 2.84% in the fourth quarter of 2024 and 2.82% in the first quarter of 2024. “We are starting to see some benefit from lower deposit costs that benefit our net interest margin and outweigh the impact of the recent Fed rate cuts on our loan portfolio, which we could continue to see for the next couple of quarters,” said Jed Ballard, Chief Financial Officer. Northrim’s NIMTE* continues to remain above the peer average of 3.23% posted by the S&P U.S. Small Cap Bank Index with total market capitalization between $250 million and $1 billion as of December 31, 2024.

    Provision for Credit Losses

    Northrim recorded a benefit to the provision for credit losses of $1.4 million in the first quarter of 2025, which was comprised of a benefit to the provision for credit losses on loans of $1.1 million, a $322,000 benefit to the provision for credit losses on unfunded commitments, and a provision for credit losses on purchased receivables of $46,000. This compares to a provision for credit losses of $1.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2024, and provision for credit losses of $149,000 in the first quarter a year ago.

    The benefit to the provision for unfunded commitments in the first quarter of 2025 was primarily due to a decrease in estimated loss rates due to changes in mix that was only partially offset by management’s assessment of economic conditions and estimated funding rates. The decrease to the provision for credit losses on loans in the first quarter of 2025 as compared to the prior quarter and the same quarter a year ago was primarily a result of the reclassification of $100 million in mortgage loans to loans held for sale, which provided a benefit to the provision of $2.2 million in the Home Mortgage Lending segment for the first quarter of 2025. This benefit was only partially offset by a $1.5 million provision for credit losses in the Home Mortgage Lending segment due to changes in the Company’s loss rate regression models for home mortgage loans. Additionally, the Company recorded $1.7 million net benefit for credit losses in the Community Banking segment related to changes in the Company’s loss rate regression models for commercial, commercial real estate, and construction loans. These decreases in the provision were only partially offset by increases in estimated loss rates for management’s assessment of economic conditions, an increase for higher loan balances in other loan segments, and specific provisions for credit losses in the Specialty Finance segment. These items reduced the overall benefit by $1.3 million. The provision for credit losses related to the Specialty Finance segment of $666,000 in the first quarter of 2025 consisted of a $621,000 provision for credit losses on loans and a $46,000 provision for credit losses on purchased receivables and represents management’s estimate of collateral shortfalls for four loans.

    Nonperforming loans, net of government guarantees, increased during the quarter to $8.0 million at March 31, 2025, compared to $7.5 million at December 31, 2024, and $5.3 million at March 31, 2024.

    The allowance for credit losses on loans was 262% of nonperforming loans, net of government guarantees, at the end of the first quarter of 2025, compared to 292% three months earlier and 333% a year ago.

    Other Operating Income

    In addition to home mortgage lending, Northrim has interests in other businesses that complement its core community banking activities, including purchased receivables financing and wealth management. Other operating income contributed $14.2 million, or 31% of total first quarter 2025 revenues, as compared to $13.0 million, or 30% of revenues in the fourth quarter of 2024, and $7.8 million, or 23% of revenues in the first quarter of 2024. The increase in other operating income in the first quarter of 2025 as compared to the preceding quarter and the first quarter of 2024 was primarily the result of increased purchased receivable income due to the Company’s acquisition of Sallyport on October 31, 2024. The fair market value of marketable equity securities decreased $50,000 in the first quarter of 2025 compared to a decrease of $364,000 in the prior quarter and an increase of $314,000 in the first quarter of 2024. Additionally, the increase in other operating income in the first quarter of 2025 as compared to the fourth quarter of 2024 was partially offset by a decrease in mortgage banking income due to a lower volume of mortgage activity. See further discussion regarding mortgage activity contained under “Home Mortgage Lending” below.

    Other Operating Expenses

    Operating expenses were $29.3 million in the first quarter of 2025, compared to $29.4 million in the fourth quarter of 2024, and $23.6 million in the first quarter of 2024. The decrease in other operating expenses in the first quarter of 2025 compared to the fourth quarter of 2024 was primarily due to a decrease in salaries and other personnel expense, including $623,000 in lower mortgage commissions expense due to lower mortgage volume and a decrease in profit share expense. Professional fees decreased in the first quarter of 2025 compared to the fourth quarter of 2024 primarily due to one-time deal costs associated with the acquisition of Sallyport of $1.1 million recorded in the fourth quarter of 2024. These decreases were only partially offset by $600,000 in compensation expense for Sallyport acquisition payments and an increase in other operating expense for a decrease in fair value of loans held for sale of $1.2 million as a result of reclassifying the consumer mortgages discussed above. The increase in other operating expenses in the first quarter of 2025 compared to the first quarter a year ago was primarily due to an increase in salaries and other personnel expense, the increase in compensation expense for Sallyport acquisition payments, the increase in other operating expense for the decrease in fair value of loans held for sale, as well as an increase in other real estate owned, or OREO, expense due to a gain on sale recorded in the first quarter of 2024 for proceeds received related to a government guarantee on an OREO property in prior years. Total other operating expense increased $2.7 million in the Specialty Finance segment in the first quarter of 2025 compared to the first quarter of 2024 from the addition of Sallyport on October 31, 2024.

    Income Tax Provision

    In the first quarter of 2025, Northrim recorded $4.3 million in state and federal income tax expense for an effective tax rate of 24.2%, compared to $2.4 million, or 17.8% in the fourth quarter of 2024 and $2.3 million, or 21.9% in the first quarter a year ago. The increase in the tax rate in the first quarter of 2025 as compared to the fourth and first quarters of 2024 is primarily the result of a decrease in tax credits and tax exempt interest income as a percentage of pre-tax income in 2025 as compared to 2024.

    Community Banking

    Northrim is committed to meeting the needs of the diverse communities in which it operates. As a testament to that support, the Bank has branches in four regions of Alaska identified by the Federal Reserve as ‘distressed or underserved non-metropolitan middle-income geographies’.

    Net interest income in the Community Banking segment totaled $28.2 million in the first quarter of 2025, compared to $27.6 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and $24.2 million in the first quarter of 2024. Net interest income increased slightly in the first quarter of 2025 as compared to the fourth quarter of 2024 mostly due to lower interest expense on deposits and borrowings and higher interest income on loans. These increases were only partially offset by lower interest income on investments.

    Other operating expenses in the Community Banking segment totaled $18.6 million in the first quarter of 2025, down $535,000 or 3% from $19.1 million in the fourth quarter of 2024, and up $1.4 million or 8% from $17.2 million in the first quarter a year ago. The decrease in the first quarter of 2025 as compared to the prior quarter was mostly due to decreases in salaries and other personnel expense, marketing expense, and professional and outside services expense. The increase in the first quarter of 2025 as compared to the first quarter a year ago was primarily due to an increase in OREO expense due to a gain on sale recorded in the first quarter of 2024 for proceeds received related to a government guarantee on an OREO property sold in prior years, as well as increases in data processing expense, insurance expense, salaries and other personnel expense, and marketing expense.

    The following table provides highlights of the Community Banking segment of Northrim:

      Three Months Ended
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share data) March 31, 2025 December 31, 2024 September 30, 2024 June 30, 2024 March 31, 2024
    Net interest income $ 28,151   $ 27,643   $ 25,928   $ 24,318   $ 24,215  
    (Benefit) provision for credit losses   (1,768 )   771     1,492     (184 )   197  
    Other operating income   2,703     2,535     3,507     2,450     2,468  
    Other operating expense   18,581     19,116     18,723     18,068     17,178  
    Income before provision for income taxes   14,041     10,291     9,220     8,884     9,308  
    Provision for income taxes   3,253     1,474     2,133     1,786     1,966  
    Net income $ 10,788   $ 8,817   $ 7,087   $ 7,098   $ 7,342  
    Weighted average shares outstanding, diluted   5,608,102     5,597,889     5,583,055     5,558,580     5,554,930  
    Diluted earnings per share attributable to Community Banking $ 1.93   $ 1.58   $ 1.26   $ 1.27   $ 1.32  
                                   

    Home Mortgage Lending

    During the first quarter of 2025, mortgage loans funded for sale were $108.5 million, compared to $162.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2024, and $84.3 million in the first quarter of 2024.

    During the first quarter of 2025, the Bank purchased loans of $13.1 million from its subsidiary, Residential Mortgage. of which approximately half were jumbos, one-quarter were mortgages for second homes, and one-quarter were adjustable rate mortgages, with a weighted average interest rate of 6.39%, as compared to $23.4 million and 6.30% in the fourth quarter of 2024, and $17.4 million and 6.65% in the first quarter of 2024. Net interest income contributed $3.0 million to total Home Mortgage Lending revenue in the first quarter of 2025, down from $3.3 million in the prior quarter, and up from $2.2 million in the first quarter a year ago.

    The income statement impact from the reclassification of the consumer mortgages was a decrease in provision for credit losses of $2.2 million and a $1.2 million decrease in the fair value of mortgages.

    The Arizona, Colorado, and Pacific Northwest mortgage expansion markets were responsible for 20% of Residential Mortgage’s $122 million total production in the first quarter of 2025, 19% of $186 million total production in the fourth quarter of 2024, and 19% of $102 million total production in the first quarter of 2024.

    The net change in fair value of mortgage servicing rights decreased mortgage banking income by $855,000 during the first quarter of 2025 compared to an increase of $873,000 for the fourth quarter of 2024 and a decrease of $25,000 for the first quarter of 2024. Mortgage servicing revenue decreased to $2.7 million in the first quarter of 2025 from $2.8 million in the prior quarter and increased from $1.6 million in the first quarter of 2024 due to an increase in production of Alaska Housing Finance Corporation (AHFC) mortgages, which contribute to servicing revenues at origination. In the first quarter of 2025, the Company’s servicing portfolio increased $24.0 million compared to a $294.1 million increase in the fourth quarter of 2024, which included the purchase of the AHFC servicing portfolio of $235.6 million, and an increase of $15.5 million in the first quarter of 2024.

    As of March 31, 2025, Northrim serviced 6,391 loans in its $1.48 billion home-mortgage-servicing portfolio, a 2% increase compared to the $1.46 billion serviced as of the end of the fourth quarter of 2024, and a 40% increase from the $1.06 billion serviced a year ago.

    The following table provides highlights of the Home Mortgage Lending segment of Northrim:

      Three Months Ended
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share data) March 31, 2025 December 31, 2024 September 30, 2024 June 30, 2024 March 31, 2024
    Mortgage commitments $ 68,258   $ 32,299   $ 77,591   $ 88,006   $ 56,208  
               
    Mortgage loans funded for sale $ 108,499   $ 162,530   $ 209,960   $ 152,339   $ 84,324  
    Mortgage loans funded for investment   13,061     23,380     38,087     29,175     17,403  
    Total mortgage loans funded $ 121,560   $ 185,910   $ 248,047   $ 181,514   $ 101,727  
    Mortgage loan refinances to total fundings   11 %   11 %   6 %   6 %   4 %
    Mortgage loans serviced for others $ 1,484,714   $ 1,460,720   $ 1,166,585   $ 1,101,800   $ 1,060,007  
               
    Net realized gains on mortgage loans sold $ 2,740   $ 3,747   $ 5,079   $ 3,188   $ 1,980  
    Change in fair value of mortgage loan commitments, net   660     (665 )   60     391     386  
    Total production revenue   3,400     3,082     5,139     3,579     2,366  
    Mortgage servicing revenue   2,696     2,847     2,583     2,164     1,561  
    Change in fair value of mortgage servicing rights:          
    Due to changes in model inputs of assumptions1   (322 )   1,372     (566 )   239     289  
    Other2   (533 )   (499 )   (402 )   (320 )   (314 )
    Total mortgage servicing revenue, net   1,841     3,720     1,615     2,083     1,536  
    Other mortgage banking revenue   170     238     293     222     129  
    Total mortgage banking income $ 5,411   $ 7,040   $ 7,047   $ 5,884   $ 4,031  
               
    Net interest income $ 3,046   $ 3,280   $ 2,941   $ 2,775   $ 2,232  
    Provision (benefit) for credit losses   (307 )   305     571     64     (48 )
    Mortgage banking income   5,411     7,040     7,047     5,884     4,031  
    Other operating expense   7,650     7,198     7,643     6,697     6,086  
    Income (loss) before provision for income taxes   1,114     2,817     1,774     1,898     225  
    Provision (benefit) for income taxes   310     842     497     532     63  
    Net income (loss) $ 804   $ 1,975   $ 1,277   $ 1,366   $ 162  
               
    Weighted average shares outstanding, diluted   5,608,102     5,597,889     5,583,055     5,558,580     5,554,930  
    Diluted earnings per share attributable to Home Mortgage Lending $ 0.14   $ 0.35   $ 0.23   $ 0.25   $ 0.03  

    1Principally reflects changes in discount rates and prepayment speed assumptions, which are primarily affected by changes in interest rates.
    2Represents changes due to collection/realization of expected cash flows over time.

    Specialty Finance

    The Company’s Specialty Finance segment includes Northrim Funding Services and Sallyport Commercial Finance. Northrim Funding Services is a division of the Bank and has offered factoring solutions to small businesses since 2004. Sallyport is a leading provider of factoring, asset-based lending and alternative working capital solutions to small and medium sized enterprises in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom that the Company acquired on October 31, 2024 in an all cash transaction valued at approximately $53.9 million. The composition of revenues for the Specialty Finance segment are primarily purchased receivable income, but also includes interest income and other fee income.

    The acquisition of Sallyport included $1.1 million in one-time deal related costs which are reflected in other operating expenses for the fourth quarter of 2024 in the tables below. Total pre-tax income for Sallyport for the first quarter of 2025 was $1.3 million compared to $945,000 for the two months of operations in the fourth quarter of 2024, excluding transaction costs.

    Average purchased receivables and loan balances at Sallyport were $59.9 million for the first quarter of 2025, and yielded 35.8%. This included the recognition of $899,000 in fee income collected during the quarter related to two nonperforming receivables that was previously deferred and the collection of a $350,000 line termination fee. The yield excluding these items for the first quarter of 2025 was 27.4%.

    The following table provides highlights of the Specialty Finance segment of Northrim:

      Three Months Ended
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share data) March 31, 2025 December 31, 2024 September 30, 2024 June 30, 2024 March 31, 2024
    Purchased receivable income $ 6,150   $ 3,526   $ 1,033   $ 1,243   $ 1,345  
    Other operating income   (64 )   (68 )            
    Interest income   596     407     158     170     212  
    Total revenue   6,682     3,865     1,191     1,413     1,557  
    Provision for credit losses   666     125              
    Compensation expense – SCF acquisition payments   600                  
    Other operating expense   2,500     3,063     362     429     374  
    Interest expense   496     489     185     210     212  
    Total expense   4,262     3,677     547     639     586  
    Income before provision for income taxes   2,420     188     644     774     971  
    Provision for income taxes   688     53     183     218     276  
    Net income Specialty Finance segment $ 1,732   $ 135   $ 461   $ 556   $ 695  
    Weighted average shares outstanding, diluted   5,608,102     5,597,889     5,583,055     5,558,580     5,554,930  
    Diluted earnings per share attributable to Specialty Finance $ 0.31   $ 0.02   $ 0.08   $ 0.10   $ 0.13  
                                   

    Balance Sheet Review

    Northrim’s total assets were $3.14 billion at March 31, 2025, up 3% from the preceding quarter and up 14% from a year ago. Northrim’s loan-to-deposit ratio was 76% at March 31, 2025, down from 79% at December 31, 2024, and up from 74% at March 31, 2024.

    At March 31, 2025, our liquid assets, investments, and loans maturing within one year were $1.11 billion and our funds available for borrowing under our existing lines of credit were $571.7 million. Given these sources of liquidity and our expectations for customer demands for cash and for our operating cash needs, we believe our sources of liquidity to be sufficient for the foreseeable future.

    Average interest-earning assets were $2.78 billion in the first quarter of 2025, down slightly from $2.79 billion in the fourth quarter of 2024 and up 9% from $2.56 billion in the first quarter a year ago. The average yield on interest-earning assets was 6.10% in the first quarter of 2025, up slightly from 6.02% in the preceding quarter and up from 5.69% in the first quarter a year ago.

    Average investment securities decreased to $523.8 million in the first quarter of 2025, compared to $565.8 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and $670.9 million in the first quarter a year ago. The average net tax equivalent yield on the securities portfolio was 2.97% for the first quarter of 2025, up from 2.84% in the preceding quarter and up from 2.82% in the year ago quarter. The average estimated duration of the investment portfolio at March 31, 2025, was approximately 2.4 years compared to approximately 2.7 years at March 31, 2024. As of March 31, 2025, $70.0 million of available for sale securities with a weighted average yield of 2.25% are scheduled to mature in the next six months, $80.7 million with a weighted average yield of 1.16% are scheduled to mature in six months to one year, and $168.6 million with a weighted average yield of 1.67% are scheduled to mature in the following year, representing a total of $319.4 million or 11% of earning assets that are scheduled to mature in the next 24 months.

    Total unrealized losses, net of tax, on available for sale securities decreased by $2.8 million in the first quarter of 2025 resulting in total unrealized loss, net of tax, of $5.5 million compared to $8.3 million at December 31, 2024, and $17.2 million a year ago. The average maturity of the available for sale securities with the majority of the unrealized loss is 1.3 years. Total unrealized losses on held to maturity securities were $1.1 million at March 31, 2025, compared to $1.0 million at December 31, 2024, and $3.4 million a year ago.

    Average interest bearing deposits in other banks decreased to $38.0 million in the first quarter of 2025 from $72.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and decreased from $61.6 million in the first quarter of 2024, as cash was used to fund the loan growth and provide liquidity.

    Loans held for sale increased to $159.6 million at March 31, 2025, compared to $60.0 million at December 31, 2024, and $43.8 million a year ago, largely due to the reclassification of $100 million consumer mortgage loans from portfolio loans in the first quarter of 2025. Management expects to sell these loans with servicing retained which will result in an increase to mortgage servicing rights when the sale closes in the second quarter of 2025.

    Portfolio loans were $2.12 billion at March 31, 2025, consistent with the preceding quarter and up 17% from a year ago. Portfolio loans, excluding consumer mortgage loans, were $1.94 billion at March 31, 2025, up $77.4 million or 4% from the preceding quarter and up 22% from a year ago. This increase in the first quarter of 2025 was diversified throughout the loan portfolio including nonowner-occupied commercial real estate and multi-family loans increasing by $70.8 million, commercial loans increasing by $55.4 million, and commercial real estate owner-occupied loans increasing $10.4 million from the preceding quarter. These increases were partially offset by a $57.9 million decrease in construction loans. Average portfolio loans in the first quarter of 2025 were $2.17 billion, which was up 5% from the preceding quarter and up 21% from a year ago. Yields on average portfolio loans in the first quarter of 2025 decreased to 6.89% from 6.93% in the fourth quarter and increased from 6.75% in the first quarter of 2024. The decrease in the yield on portfolio loans in the first quarter of 2025 compared to the fourth quarter of 2024 is primarily due to a change in the mix of loans as construction loans decreased and commercial real estate loans increased as a percentage of the overall portfolio. The yield on new portfolio loans, excluding consumer mortgage loans, was 7.43% in the first quarter of 2025 as compared to 7.40% in the fourth quarter of 2024 and 8.39% in the first quarter of 2024.

    Northrim’s loans and credit lines are subject to approval procedures and amount limitations. These limitations apply to the borrower’s total outstanding indebtedness and commitments to us, including the indebtedness of any guarantor. Generally, Northrim is permitted to make loans to one borrower of up to 15% of the unimpaired capital and surplus of the Bank. The legal lending limit was $37.6 million at March 31, 2025. At March 31, 2025, Northrim had 23 relationships totaling $520.2 million in portfolio loans whose total direct and indirect commitments were greater than 50% of the legal lending limit.

    Alaskans continue to account for substantially all of Northrim’s deposit base. Total deposits were $2.78 billion at March 31, 2025, up 4% from $2.68 billion at December 31, 2024, and up 14% from $2.43 billion a year ago. “The increase in deposits in the first quarter of 2025 was not consistent with our customers’ normal business cycles as we normally see decreases in balances during the first quarter, however deposits from new relationships in the quarter were more than able to offset our normal seasonal deposit movement,” said Ballard. At March 31, 2025, 74% of total deposits were held in business accounts and 26% of deposit balances were held in consumer accounts. Northrim had approximately 34,000 deposit customers with an average balance of $61,000 as of March 31, 2025. Northrim had 27 customers with balances over $10 million as of March 31, 2025, which accounted for $694.7 million, or 26%, of total deposits. Demand deposits increased by 5% from the prior quarter and increased 4% from the prior year to $742.6 million at March 31, 2025. Demand deposits remained consistent at 27% of total deposits at both March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024 and were down from 29% of total deposits at March 31, 2024. Average interest-bearing deposits were up 2% to $2.00 billion with an average cost of 2.01% in the first quarter of 2025, compared to $1.95 billion and an average cost of 2.15% in the fourth quarter of 2024, and up 16% compared to $1.73 billion and an average cost of 2.13% in the first quarter of 2024. Uninsured deposits totaled $1.04 billion or 37% of total deposits as of March 31, 2025 compared to $1.08 billion or 40% of total deposits as of December 31, 2024.

    Shareholders’ equity was $279.8 million, or $50.67 book value per share, at March 31, 2025, compared to $267.1 million, or $48.41 book value per share, at December 31, 2024 and $239.3 million, or $43.52 book value per share, a year ago. Tangible book value per share* was $41.47 at March 31, 2025, compared to $39.17 at December 31, 2024, and $40.61 per share a year ago. The increase in shareholders’ equity in the first quarter of 2025 as compared to the fourth quarter of 2024 was largely the result of earnings of $13.3 million and an increase in the fair value of the available for sale securities portfolio, which increased $5.5 million, net of tax, which were only partially offset by dividends paid of $3.6 million. The Company did not repurchase any shares of common stock in the first quarter of 2025 and currently has no plans to continue to repurchase shares. Tangible common equity to tangible assets* was 7.41% as of March 31, 2025, compared to 7.23% as of December 31, 2024 and 8.14% as of March 31, 2024. Northrim continues to maintain capital levels in excess of the requirements to be categorized as “well-capitalized” with Tier 1 Capital to Risk Adjusted Assets of 9.76% at March 31, 2025, compared to 9.76% at December 31, 2024, and 11.55% at March 31, 2024.

    Asset Quality

    Northrim believes it has a consistent lending approach throughout economic cycles, which emphasizes appropriate loan-to-value ratios, adequate debt coverage ratios, and competent management.

    Nonperforming assets (“NPAs”) net of government guarantees were $12.3 million at March 31, 2025, up from $11.6 million at December 31, 2024 and $5.4 million a year ago. Of the NPAs at March 31, 2025, $4.5 million are attributable to the Community Banking segment and $7.6 million are attributable to the Specialty Finance segment.

    Net adversely classified loans were $20.4 million at March 31, 2025, as compared to $9.6 million at December 31, 2024, and $7.2 million a year ago. Adversely classified loans are loans that Northrim has classified as substandard, doubtful, and loss, net of government guarantees. The increase in adversely classified loans, net of government guarantees, at March 31, 2025 as compared to the prior quarter and prior year is mostly attributable to two commercial relationships totaling $9.4 million. Net loan recoveries were $34,000 in the first quarter of 2025, compared to net loan recoveries of $51,000 in the fourth quarter of 2024, and net loan recoveries of $42,000 in the first quarter of 2024. Additionally, Northrim had three new loan modifications to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty totaling $813,000, for a total of 14 totaling $3.8 million, net of government guarantees in the first quarter of 2025.

    Northrim had $140.7 million, or 7% of portfolio loans, in the Healthcare sector, $122.5 million, or 6% of portfolio loans, in the Tourism sector, $110.9 million, or 5% of portfolio loans, in the Accommodations sector, $91.2 million, or 4% of portfolio loans, in the Retail sector, $85.7 million, or 4% of portfolio loans, in the Aviation (non-tourism) sector, $75.5 million, or 4% of portfolio loans, in the Fishing sector, and $60.2 million, or 3% in the Restaurants and Breweries sector as of March 31, 2025.

    Northrim estimates that $106.3 million, or approximately 5% of portfolio loans, had direct exposure to the oil and gas industry in Alaska, as of March 31, 2025, and $1.5 million of these loans are adversely classified. As of March 31, 2025, Northrim has an additional $32.6 million in unfunded commitments to companies with direct exposure to the oil and gas industry in Alaska, and no unfunded commitments on adversely classified loans. Northrim defines direct exposure to the oil and gas sector as loans to borrowers that provide oilfield services and other companies that have been identified as significantly reliant upon activity in Alaska related to the oil and gas industry, such as lodging, equipment rental, transportation and other logistics services specific to this industry.

    About Northrim BanCorp

    Northrim BanCorp, Inc. is the parent company of Northrim Bank, an Alaska-based community bank with 20 branches throughout the state and differentiates itself with its detailed knowledge of Alaska’s economy and its “Customer First Service” philosophy. The Bank has two wholly-owned subsidiaries, Sallyport Commercial Finance, LLC, a specialty finance company and Residential Mortgage Holding Company, LLC, a regional home mortgage company. Pacific Wealth Advisors, LLC is an affiliated company.

    www.northrim.com

    Forward-Looking Statement
    This release may contain “forward-looking statements” as that term is defined for purposes of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. These statements are, in effect, management’s attempt to predict future events, and thus are subject to various risks and uncertainties. Readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements, which reflect management’s views only as of the date hereof. All statements, other than statements of historical fact, regarding our financial position, business strategy, management’s plans and objectives for future operations are forward-looking statements. When used in this report, the words “anticipate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “expect,” and “intend” and words or phrases of similar meaning, as they relate to Northrim and its management are intended to help identify forward-looking statements. Although we believe that management’s expectations as reflected in forward-looking statements are reasonable, we cannot assure readers that those expectations will prove to be correct. Forward-looking statements, are subject to various risks and uncertainties that may cause our actual results to differ materially and adversely from our expectations as indicated in the forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include: descriptions of Northrim’s and Sallyport’s financial condition, results of operations, asset based lending volumes, asset and credit quality trends and profitability and statements about the expected financial benefits and other effects of the acquisition of Sallyport by Northrim Bank; expected cost savings, synergies and other financial benefits from the acquisition of Sallyport by Northrim Bank might not be realized within the expected time frames and costs or difficulties relating to integration matters might be greater than expected; the ability of Northrim and Sallyport to execute their respective business plans; potential further increases in interest rates; the value of securities held in our investment portfolio; the impact of the results of government initiatives, including tariffs, on the regulatory landscape, natural resource extraction industries, and capital markets; the impact of declines in the value of commercial and residential real estate markets, high unemployment rates, inflationary pressures and slowdowns in economic growth; changes in banking regulation or actions by bank regulators; potential further increases in inflation, supply-chain constraints, and potential geopolitical instability, including the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East; financial stress on borrowers (consumers and businesses) as a result of higher rates or an uncertain economic environment; the general condition of, and changes in, the Alaska economy; our ability to maintain or expand our market share or net interest margin; the sufficiency of our allowance for credit losses and the accuracy of the assumptions or estimates used in preparing our financial statements, including those related to current expected credit losses accounting guidance; our ability to maintain asset quality; our ability to implement our marketing and growth strategies; our ability to identify and address cyber-security risks, including security breaches, “denial of service attacks,” “hacking,” and identity theft; disease outbreaks; and our ability to execute our business plan. Further, actual results may be affected by competition on price and other factors with other financial institutions; customer acceptance of new products and services; the regulatory environment in which we operate; and general trends in the local, regional and national banking industry and economy. In addition, there are risks inherent in the banking industry relating to collectability of loans and changes in interest rates. Many of these risks, as well as other risks that may have a material adverse impact on our operations and business, are identified in the “Risk Factors” section of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024, and from time to time are disclosed in our other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. However, you should be aware that these factors are not an exhaustive list, and you should not assume these are the only factors that may cause our actual results to differ from our expectations. These forward-looking statements are made only as of the date of this release, and Northrim does not undertake any obligation to release revisions to these forward-looking statements to reflect events or conditions after the date of this release.

    References:

    https://www.bea.gov/

    http://almis.labor.state.ak.us/

    http://www.tax.alaska.gov/programs/oil/prevailing/ans.aspx

    http://www.tax.state.ak.us/

    www.mba.org

    https://www.alaskarealestate.com/MLSMember/RealEstateStatistics.aspx

    https://www.akleg.gov/basis/Bill/Text/34?Hsid=HJR011C

    https://www.uschamber.com/assets/static/maps/international-trade/AK_Chamber_2024.pdf

    https://tax.alaska.gov/programs/programs/reports/RSB.aspx?Year=2025&Type=Spring

    https://www.capitaliq.spglobal.com/web/client?auth=inherit&overridecdc=1&#markets/indexFinancials

    Income Statement      
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share data) Three Months Ended
    (Unaudited) March 31, December 31, March 31,
        2025     2024     2024  
    Interest Income:      
    Interest and fees on loans $ 37,470   $ 37,059   $ 30,450  
    Interest on portfolio investments   3,675     3,844     4,520  
    Interest on deposits in banks   416     883     838  
    Total interest income   41,561     41,786     35,808  
    Interest Expense:      
    Interest expense on deposits   9,935     10,568     9,180  
    Interest expense on borrowings   329     377     181  
    Total interest expense   10,264     10,945     9,361  
    Net interest income   31,297     30,841     26,447  
           
    (Benefit) provision for credit losses   (1,409 )   1,201     149  
    Net interest income after provision for credit losses   32,706     29,640     26,298  
           
    Other Operating Income:      
    Purchased receivable income   6,150     3,526     1,345  
    Mortgage banking income   5,411     7,040     4,031  
    Bankcard fees   1,074     1,148     917  
    Service charges on deposit accounts   677     622     549  
    Unrealized gain (loss) on marketable equity securities   (50 )   (364 )   314  
    Other income   938     949     688  
    Total other operating income   14,200     13,033     7,844  
           
    Other Operating Expense:      
    Salaries and other personnel expense   17,223     18,254     15,417  
    Data processing expense   3,104     3,108     2,659  
    Occupancy expense   1,889     1,893     1,962  
    Professional and outside services   1,115     1,967     755  
    Insurance expense   1,017     894     779  
    Marketing expense   672     965     513  
    Compensation expense – SCF acquisition payments   600          
    OREO expense, net rental income and gains on sale   3     2     (391 )
    Other operating expense   3,708     2,294     1,944  
    Total other operating expense   29,331     29,377     23,638  
           
    Income before provision for income taxes   17,575     13,296     10,504  
    Provision for income taxes   4,251     2,369     2,305  
    Net income $ 13,324   $ 10,927   $ 8,199  
           
    Basic EPS $ 2.41   $ 1.99   $ 1.49  
    Diluted EPS $ 2.38   $ 1.95   $ 1.48  
    Weighted average shares outstanding, basic   5,519,998     5,509,078     5,499,578  
    Weighted average shares outstanding, diluted   5,608,102     5,597,889     5,554,930  
                       
    Balance Sheet      
    (Dollars in thousands)      
    (Unaudited) March 31, December 31, March 31,
        2025     2024     2024  
           
    Assets:      
    Cash and due from banks $ 29,671   $ 42,101   $ 30,159  
    Interest bearing deposits in other banks   35,852     20,635     50,205  
    Investment securities available for sale, at fair value   463,096     478,617     592,479  
    Investment securities held to maturity   36,750     36,750     36,750  
    Marketable equity securities, at fair value   8,669     8,719     13,467  
    Investment in Federal Home Loan Bank stock   5,342     5,331     3,236  
    Loans held for sale   159,603     59,957     43,818  
           
    Portfolio loans   2,124,330     2,129,263     1,811,135  
    Allowance for credit losses, loans   (20,922 )   (22,020 )   (17,533 )
    Net portfolio loans   2,103,408     2,107,243     1,793,602  
    Purchased receivables, net   95,489     74,078     37,698  
    Mortgage servicing rights, at fair value   26,814     26,439     20,055  
    Other real estate owned, net            
    Premises and equipment, net   37,070     37,757     40,836  
    Lease right of use asset   7,632     7,455     8,867  
    Goodwill and intangible assets   50,824     50,968     15,967  
    Other assets   80,740     85,819     72,421  
    Total assets $ 3,140,960   $ 3,041,869   $ 2,759,560  
           
    Liabilities:      
    Demand deposits $ 742,560   $ 706,225   $ 714,244  
    Interest-bearing demand   1,187,465     1,108,404     889,581  
    Savings deposits   256,650     250,900     246,902  
    Money market deposits   193,842     196,290     209,785  
    Time deposits   397,460     418,370     373,571  
    Total deposits   2,777,977     2,680,189     2,434,083  
    Other borrowings   13,136     23,045     13,569  
    Junior subordinated debentures   10,310     10,310     10,310  
    Lease liability   7,682     7,487     8,884  
    Other liabilities   52,099     53,722     53,387  
    Total liabilities   2,861,204     2,774,753     2,520,233  
           
    Shareholders’ Equity:      
    Total shareholders’ equity   279,756     267,116     239,327  
    Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity $ 3,140,960   $ 3,041,869   $ 2,759,560  
           

    Additional Financial Information
    (Dollars in thousands)
    (Unaudited)

    Composition of Portfolio Loans                        
      March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   March 31, 2024
      Balance % of total   Balance % of total   Balance % of total   Balance % of total   Balance % of total
    Commercial loans $ 573,593   27 %   $ 518,148   24 %   $ 492,414   24 %   $ 495,781   26 %   $ 475,220   26 %
    Commercial real estate:                            
    Owner occupied properties   430,442   20 %     420,060   20 %     412,827   20 %     383,832   20 %     372,507   20 %
    Nonowner occupied and multifamily properties   690,277   32 %     619,431   29 %     584,302   31 %     551,130   30 %     529,904   30 %
    Residential real estate:                            
    1-4 family properties secured by first liens   188,219   9 %     270,535   13 %     248,514   12 %     222,026   12 %     218,552   12 %
    1-4 family properties secured by junior liens & revolving secured by first liens   53,836   3 %     48,857   2 %     45,262   2 %     41,258   2 %     35,460   2 %
    1-4 family construction   34,017   2 %     39,789   2 %     39,794   2 %     29,510   2 %     27,751   2 %
    Construction loans   156,211   7 %     214,068   10 %     185,362   9 %     154,009   8 %     153,537   8 %
    Consumer loans   7,424   %     7,562   %     7,836   %     6,679   %     6,444   %
    Subtotal   2,134,019         2,138,450         2,016,311         1,884,225         1,819,375    
    Unearned loan fees, net   (9,689 )       (9,187 )       (8,746 )       (8,318 )       (8,240 )  
    Total portfolio loans $ 2,124,330       $ 2,129,263       $ 2,007,565       $ 1,875,907       $ 1,811,135    
                                 
    Composition of Deposits                        
      March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   March 31, 2024
      Balance % of total   Balance % of total   Balance % of total   Balance % of total   Balance % of total
    Demand deposits $ 742,560   27 %   $ 706,225   27 %   $ 763,595   29 %   $ 704,471   29 %   $ 714,244   29 %
    Interest-bearing demand   1,187,465   43 %     1,108,404   41 %     979,238   37 %     906,010   36 %     889,581   37 %
    Savings deposits   256,650   9 %     250,900   9 %     245,043   9 %     238,156   10 %     246,902   10 %
    Money market deposits   193,842   7 %     196,290   7 %     204,821   8 %     195,159   8 %     209,785   9 %
    Time deposits   397,460   14 %     418,370   16 %     435,870   17 %     420,010   17 %     373,571   15 %
    Total deposits $ 2,777,977       $ 2,680,189       $ 2,628,567       $ 2,463,806       $ 2,434,083    
                                                     

    Additional Financial Information
    (Dollars in thousands)
    (Unaudited)

    Asset Quality March 31,   December 31,   March 31,
        2025       2024       2024  
    Nonaccrual loans – Community Banking $ 4,274     $ 4,337     $ 4,472  
    Nonaccrual loans – Home Mortgage Lending   221       233       263  
    Nonaccrual loans – Specialty Finance   3,573       2,946       525  
    Nonaccrual loans – Total   8,068       7,516       5,260  
    Loans 90 days past due and accruing – Community Banking         17        
    Loans 90 days past due and accruing – Total         17        
    Total nonperforming loans – Community Banking   4,274       4,354       4,472  
    Total nonperforming loans – Home Mortgage Lending   221       233       263  
    Total nonperforming loans – Specialty Finance   3,573       2,946       525  
    Total nonperforming loans – Total   8,068       7,533       5,260  
    Nonperforming loans guaranteed by gov’t – Community Banking   80              
    Nonperforming loans guaranteed by gov’t – Total   80              
    Net nonperforming loans – Community Banking   4,194       4,354       4,472  
    Net nonperforming loans – Home Mortgage Lending   221       233       263  
    Net nonperforming loans – Specialty Finance   3,573       2,946       525  
    Net nonperforming loans – Total   7,988       7,533       5,260  
                 
    Repossessed assets – Community Banking   297       297        
    Repossessed assets – Total   297       297        
                 
    Nonperforming purchased receivables – Specialty Finance   4,007       3,768       183  
                 
    Net nonperforming assets – Community Banking   4,491       4,651       4,472  
    Net nonperforming assets – Home Mortgage Lending   221       233       263  
    Net nonperforming assets – Specialty Finance   7,580       6,714       708  
    Net nonperforming assets – Total $ 12,292     $ 11,598     $ 5,443  
                 
    Adversely classified loans, net of gov’t guarantees – Community Banking $ 16,592     $ 6,332     $ 6,374  
    Adversely classified loans, net of gov’t guarantees – Home Mortgage Lending   252       358       307  
    Adversely classified loans, net of gov’t guarantees – Specialty Finance   3,573       2,946       525  
    Adversely classified loans, net of gov’t guarantees – Total $ 20,417     $ 9,636     $ 7,206  
                 
    Special mention loans, net of gov’t guarantees – Community Banking $ 14,496     $ 19,769     $ 9,976  
    Special mention loans, net of gov’t guarantees – Home Mortgage Lending   637              
    Special mention loans, net of gov’t guarantees – Total $ 15,133     $ 19,769     $ 9,976  
                           
    Asset Quality, Continued March 31, December 31, March 31,
        2025     2024     2024  
    Nonperforming loans, net of government guarantees / portfolio loans   0.38 %   0.35 %   0.29 %
    Nonperforming loans, net of government guarantees / portfolio loans, net of government guarantees   0.40 %   0.38 %   0.31 %
    Nonperforming assets, net of government guarantees / total assets   0.39 %   0.38 %   0.20 %
    Nonperforming assets, net of government guarantees / total assets net of government guarantees   0.41 %   0.40 %   0.20 %
                 
    Loans 30-89 days past due and accruing, net of government guarantees / portfolio loans   0.04 %   0.11 %   0.03 %
    Loans 30-89 days past due and accruing, net of government guarantees / portfolio loans, net of government guarantees   0.04 %   0.11 %   0.04 %
                 
    Allowance for credit losses for loans / portfolio loans   0.98 %   1.03 %   0.97 %
    Allowance for credit losses for loans / portfolio loans, net of gov’t guarantees   1.06 %   1.10 %   1.03 %
    Allowance for credit losses for loans / nonperforming loans, net of government guarantees   262 %   292 %   333 %
                 
    Gross loan charge-offs for the quarter – Community Banking $ 50   $ 44   $ 25  
    Gross loan charge-offs for the quarter – Specialty Finance       105      
    Gross loan charge-offs for the quarter – Total   50     149     25  
                 
    Gross loan recoveries for the quarter – Community Banking   (84 )   (200 )   (67 )
    Gross loan recoveries for the quarter – Home Mortgage Lending            
    Gross loan recoveries for the quarter – Specialty Finance            
    Gross loan recoveries for the quarter – Total $ (84 ) $ (200 ) $ (67 )
                 
    Net loan (recoveries) charge-offs for the quarter – Community Banking $ (34 ) $ (156 ) $ (42 )
    Net loan (recoveries) charge-offs for the quarter – Specialty Finance       (105 )    
    Net loan (recoveries) charge-offs for the quarter – Total $ (34 ) $ (51 ) $ (42 )
                 
    Net loan charge-offs (recoveries) for the quarter / average loans, for the quarter   %   %   %
                 
    Allowance for credit losses for purchased receivables / purchased receivables   3.72 %   4.69 %   %
                 
    Net purchased receivable charge-offs (recoveries) for the quarter $   $   $  
                 

    Additional Financial Information
    (Dollars in thousands)
    (Unaudited)

    Average Balances, Yields, and Rates                
      Three Months Ended
      March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   March 31, 2024
        Average     Average     Average
      Average Tax Equivalent   Average Tax Equivalent   Average Tax Equivalent
      Balance Yield/Rate   Balance Yield/Rate   Balance Yield/Rate
    Assets                
    Interest bearing deposits in other banks $ 37,969   4.44 %   $ 72,212   4.72 %   $ 61,561   5.38 %
    Portfolio investments   523,753   2.97 %     565,785   2.84 %     670,937   2.82 %
    Loans held for sale   46,223   5.86 %     83,304   5.97 %     32,635   6.13 %
    Portfolio loans   2,173,425   6.89 %     2,066,216   6.93 %     1,793,425   6.75 %
    Total interest-earning assets   2,781,370   6.10 %     2,787,517   6.02 %     2,558,558   5.69 %
    Nonearning assets   293,415         251,364         201,137    
    Total assets $ 3,074,785       $ 3,038,881       $ 2,759,695    
                     
    Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity                
    Interest-bearing deposits $ 2,002,594   2.01 %   $ 1,954,495   2.15 %   $ 1,731,923   2.13 %
    Borrowings   37,081   3.55 %     29,251   3.95 %     23,944   2.95 %
    Total interest-bearing liabilities   2,039,675   2.04 %     1,983,746   2.18 %     1,755,867   2.14 %
                     
    Noninterest-bearing demand deposits   697,534         738,911         705,134    
    Other liabilities   63,348         49,815         60,407    
    Shareholders’ equity   274,228         266,409         238,287    
    Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity $ 3,074,785       $ 3,038,881       $ 2,759,695    
    Net spread   4.06 %     3.84 %     3.55 %
    NIM   4.55 %     4.41 %     4.16 %
    NIMTE*   4.61 %     4.47 %     4.22 %
    Cost of funds   1.52 %     1.59 %     1.53 %
    Average portfolio loans to average interest-earning assets   78.14 %       74.12 %       70.10 %  
    Average portfolio loans to average total deposits   80.49 %       76.71 %       73.59 %  
    Average non-interest deposits to average total deposits   25.83 %       27.43 %       28.93 %  
    Average interest-earning assets to average interest-bearing liabilities   136.36 %       140.52 %       145.71 %  
                                 

    Additional Financial Information
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share data)
    (Unaudited)

    Capital Data (At quarter end)          
      March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   March 31, 2024
    Book value per share $ 50.67     $ 48.41     $ 43.52  
    Tangible book value per share* $ 41.47     $ 39.17     $ 40.61  
    Total shareholders’ equity/total assets   8.91 %     8.78 %     8.67 %
    Tangible Common Equity/Tangible Assets*   7.41 %     7.23 %     8.14 %
    Tier 1 Capital / Risk Adjusted Assets   9.76 %     9.76 %     11.55 %
    Total Capital / Risk Adjusted Assets   10.62 %     10.94 %     12.47 %
    Tier 1 Capital / Average Assets   8.02 %     7.68 %     9.01 %
    Shares outstanding   5,520,892       5,518,210       5,499,578  
    Total unrealized loss on AFS debt securities, net of income taxes $ (5,452 )   $ (8,295 )   $ (17,205 )
    Total unrealized gain on derivatives and hedging activities, net of income taxes $ 1,097     $ 1,272     $ 1,172  
                           
    Profitability Ratios                            
      March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   March 31, 2024
    For the quarter:                            
    NIM 4.55 %   4.41 %   4.29 %   4.24 %   4.16 %
    NIMTE* 4.61 %   4.47 %   4.35 %   4.30 %   4.22 %
    Efficiency ratio 64.47 %   66.96 %   66.11 %   68.78 %   68.93 %
    Return on average assets 1.76 %   1.43 %   1.22 %   1.31 %   1.19 %
    Return on average equity 19.70 %   16.32 %   13.69 %   14.84 %   13.84 %

    *Non-GAAP Financial Measures
    (Dollars and shares in thousands, except per share data)
    (Unaudited)

    Non-GAAP financial measures have inherent limitations, are not required to be uniformly applied, and are not audited. Although we believe these non-GAAP financial measures are frequently used by stakeholders in the evaluation of the Company, they have limitations as analytical tools and should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for analysis of results as reported under GAAP.

    Net interest margin on a tax equivalent basis

    Net interest margin on a tax equivalent basis (“NIMTE”) is a non-GAAP performance measurement in which interest income on non-taxable investments and loans is presented on a tax equivalent basis using a combined federal and state statutory rate of 28.43% in both 2025 and 2024. The most comparable GAAP measure is net interest margin and the following table sets forth the reconciliation of NIMTE to net interest margin for the periods indicated.

      Three Months Ended
      March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   March 31, 2024
    Net interest income $ 31,297     $ 30,841     $ 28,842     $ 27,053     $ 26,447  
    Divided by average interest-bearing assets   2,781,370       2,787,517       2,674,291       2,568,266       2,558,558  
    Net interest margin (“NIM”)2   4.55 %     4.41 %     4.29 %     4.24 %     4.16 %
                       
    Net interest income $ 31,297     $ 30,841     $ 28,842     $ 27,053     $ 26,447  
    Plus: reduction in tax expense related to tax-exempt interest income   379       379       385       378       379  
      $ 31,676     $ 31,220     $ 29,227     $ 27,431     $ 26,826  
    Divided by average interest-bearing assets   2,781,370       2,787,517       2,674,291       2,568,266       2,558,558  
    NIMTE2   4.61 %     4.47 %     4.35 %     4.30 %     4.22 %
                                           

    2Calculated using actual days in the quarter divided by 365 for the quarters ended in 2025 and 366 for the quarters ended in 2024, respectively.

    *Non-GAAP Financial Measures
    (Dollars and shares in thousands, except per share data)
    (Unaudited)

    Tangible Book Value Per Share

    Tangible book value per share is a non-GAAP measure defined as shareholders’ equity, less intangible assets, divided by shares outstanding. The most comparable GAAP measure is book value per share and the following table sets forth the reconciliation of tangible book value per share and book value per share for the periods indicated.

      March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   March 31, 2024
                       
    Total shareholders’ equity $ 279,756     $ 267,116     $ 260,050     $ 247,200     $ 239,327  
    Divided by shares outstanding   5,521       5,518       5,502       5,502       5,500  
    Book value per share $ 50.68     $ 48.41     $ 47.26     $ 44.93     $ 43.52  
                                           
      March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   March 31, 2024
                       
    Total shareholders’ equity $ 279,756     $ 267,116     $ 260,050     $ 247,200     $ 239,327  
    Less: goodwill and intangible assets   50,824       50,968       15,967       15,967       15,967  
      $ 228,932     $ 216,148     $ 244,083     $ 231,233     $ 223,360  
    Divided by shares outstanding   5,521       5,518       5,502       5,502       5,500  
    Tangible book value per share $ 41.47     $ 39.17     $ 44.36     $ 42.03     $ 40.61  
                                           

    Tangible Common Equity to Tangible Assets

    Tangible common equity to tangible assets is a non-GAAP ratio that represents total equity less goodwill and intangible assets divided by total assets less goodwill and intangible assets. The most comparable GAAP measure of shareholders’ equity to total assets is calculated by dividing total shareholders’ equity by total assets and the following table sets forth the reconciliation of tangible common equity to tangible assets and shareholders’ equity to total assets for the periods indicated.

    Northrim BanCorp, Inc. March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   March 31, 2024
                       
    Total shareholders’ equity $ 279,756     $ 267,116     $ 260,050     $ 247,200     $ 239,327  
    Total assets   3,140,960       3,041,869       2,963,392       2,821,668       2,759,560  
    Total shareholders’ equity to total assets   8.91 %     8.78 %     8.78 %     8.76 %     8.67 %
    Northrim BanCorp, Inc. March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024   September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   March 31, 2024
    Total shareholders’ equity $ 279,756     $ 267,116     $ 260,050     $ 247,200     $ 239,327  
    Less: goodwill and other intangible assets, net   50,824       50,968       15,967       15,967       15,967  
    Tangible common shareholders’ equity $ 228,932     $ 216,148     $ 244,083     $ 231,233     $ 223,360  
                       
    Total assets $ 3,140,960     $ 3,041,869     $ 2,963,392     $ 2,821,668     $ 2,759,560  
    Less: goodwill and other intangible assets, net   50,824       50,968       15,967       15,967       15,967  
    Tangible assets $ 3,090,136     $ 2,990,901     $ 2,947,425     $ 2,805,701     $ 2,743,593  
    Tangible common equity ratio   7.41 %     7.23 %     8.28 %     8.24 %     8.14 %
                                           
    Contact:     Mike Huston, President, CEO, and COO
    (907) 261-8750
    Jed Ballard, Chief Financial Officer
    (907) 261-3539
         

    Note Transmitted on GlobeNewswire on April 23, 2025, at 12:15 pm Alaska Standard Time.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Univest Financial Corporation Reports First Quarter Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SOUDERTON, Pa., April 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Univest Financial Corporation (“Univest” or the “Corporation”) (NASDAQ: UVSP), parent company of Univest Bank and Trust Co. (the “Bank”) and its insurance, investments and equipment financing subsidiaries, announced net income for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 of $22.4 million, or $0.77 diluted earnings per share, compared to net income of $20.3 million, or $0.69 diluted earnings per share, for the quarter ended March 31, 2024.

    Dividend
    On April 23, 2025, Univest declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.22 per share to be paid on May 21, 2025 to shareholders of record as of May 7, 2025, which represents an increase of $0.01 per share, or 4.8%. Univest had last increased its dividend by $0.01 per share in May 2022.

    One-Time Items
    The financial results for the quarter included tax-free bank owned life insurance (“BOLI”) death benefits claims of $1.0 million, which represented $0.04 diluted earnings per share.

    Loans
    Gross loans and leases increased $6.5 million, or 0.1% (0.4% annualized), from December 31, 2024. Gross loans and leases increased $254.0 million, or 3.9%, from March 31, 2024, primarily due to increases in commercial, commercial real estate, residential mortgage loans and home equity loans, partially offset by decreases in construction loans and lease financings.

    Deposits, Borrowings and Liquidity
    Total deposits decreased $100.8 million, or 1.5% (6.0% annualized), from December 31, 2024, primarily due to seasonal declines in public funds deposits and decreases in commercial and consumer deposits, partially offset by an increase in brokered deposits. Total deposits increased $253.1 million, or 4.0%, from March 31, 2024, due to increases in consumer, commercial, and public funds deposits, partially offset by a decrease in brokered deposits. Noninterest-bearing deposits totaled $1.4 billion and represented 21.5% of total deposits at March 31, 2025, compared to $1.4 billion representing 20.9% of total deposits at December 31, 2024. Unprotected deposits, which excludes insured, internal, and collateralized deposit accounts, totaled $1.5 billion at March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024. This represented 21.9% of total deposits at March 31, 2025, compared to 22.0% at December 31, 2024.

    Total borrowings decreased $57.0 million, or 14.8%, from December 31, 2024, primarily due to maturities of long-term FHLB advances totaling $50.0 million. These borrowings were replaced with brokered deposits during the quarter.

    As of March 31, 2025, the Corporation and its subsidiaries reported cash and cash equivalents totaling $169.1 million and had committed borrowing capacity of $3.7 billion, of which $2.3 billion was available. The Corporation and its subsidiaries also maintained uncommitted funding sources from correspondent banks of $468.0 million at March 31, 2025. Future availability under these uncommitted funding sources is subject to the prerogatives of the granting banks and may be withdrawn at will.

    Net Interest Income and Margin
    Net interest income of $56.8 million for the first quarter of 2025 increased $5.3 million, or 10.3%, from the first quarter of 2024 and $1.3 million, or 2.4%, from the fourth quarter of 2024. The increase in net interest income for the first quarter of 2025 compared to the first quarter of 2024 was driven by higher average balances of loans and increased yields on interest earning assets, as well as a reduction in our overall cost of funds. The increase in net interest income for the first quarter of 2025 compared to the fourth quarter of 2024 was primarily driven by lower average balances of interest-bearing liabilities and related costs outpacing decreases in income from interest-earning deposits with other banks.

    Net interest margin, on a tax-equivalent basis, was 3.09% for the first quarter of 2025, compared to 2.88% for the first and fourth quarters of 2024. Excess liquidity reduced net interest margin by approximately three basis points for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 compared to approximately 14 basis points for the quarter ended December 31, 2024 and approximately three basis points for the quarter ended March 31, 2024. Excluding the impact of excess liquidity, the net interest margin, on a tax-equivalent basis, would have been 3.12% for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 compared to 3.02% for the quarter ended December 31, 2024 and 2.91% for the quarter ended March 31, 2024.

    Noninterest Income
    Noninterest income for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 was $22.4 million, a decrease of $3.2 million, or 12.4%, from the comparable period in the prior year.

    Other service fee income decreased $3.7 million, or 57.8%, for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 compared to the comparable period in the prior year, primarily due to a $3.4 million net gain from the sale of mortgage servicing rights associated with $591.1 million of serviced loans in the first quarter of 2024. Additionally, net servicing fees on sold mortgage loans decreased by $177 thousand, primarily attributable to the previously mentioned sale of mortgage servicing rights.

    Other income decreased $780 thousand, or 76.1%, for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 compared to the comparable period in the prior year, primarily due to decreases in other real estate owned income, fees on risk participation agreements for interest rate swaps and gains on sale of Small Business Administration loans.

    Net gain on mortgage banking activities decreased $292 thousand, or 31.1%, for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 compared to the comparable period in the prior year, primarily due to decreased salable volume.

    Insurance commission and fee income decreased $312 thousand, or 4.3%, for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 compared to the comparable period in the prior year, primarily due to a decrease in contingent income of $700 thousand, which was $1.6 million and $2.3 million, for the three months ended March 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively. Contingent income is largely recognized in the first quarter of the year. The decrease was partially offset by an increase of $404 thousand in revenue for commercial lines.

    BOLI income increased $1.1 million, or 132.7%, for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 compared to the comparable period in the prior year, primarily due to the previously discussed death benefits claims.

    Investment advisory commission and fee income increased $419 thousand, or 8.1%, for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 compared to the comparable period in the prior year, primarily due to new customer relationships and appreciation of assets under management and supervision.

    Service charges on deposit accounts increased $323 thousand, or 17.3%, for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 compared to the comparable period in the prior year, primarily due to an increase in treasury management income.

    Noninterest Expense
    Noninterest expense for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 was $49.3 million, a decrease of $746 thousand, or 1.5%, from the comparable period in the prior year.

    Salaries, benefits and commissions decreased $512 thousand, or 1.6%, for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 compared to the comparable period in the prior year, primarily due to an increase in compensation capitalized and a decrease in medical claims expense, partially offset by an increase in incentive compensation due to increased profitability.

    Tax Provision
    The effective income tax rate was 18.7% and 20.5% for the quarters ended March 31, 2025 and March 31, 2024, respectively. The discrete tax effect of vested equity compensation awards favorably impacted the first quarter of 2025 by 71 basis points and unfavorably impacted the first quarter of 2024 by 74 basis points. Additionally, the effective tax rate for the three months ended March 31, 2025 was favorably impacted by 76 basis points from the proceeds of BOLI death benefits. Excluding the discrete impact of vested equity compensation awards and BOLI death benefits, the effective tax rate was 20.2% for the three months ended March 31, 2025 compared to 19.8% for the three months ended March 31, 2024.

    Asset Quality and Provision for Credit Losses
    Nonperforming assets totaled $34.0 million at March 31, 2025, $33.2 million at December 31, 2024, and $40.0 million at March 31, 2024.

    Net loan and lease charge-offs were $1.7 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025 compared to $767 thousand and $1.4 million for the three months ended December 31, 2024 and March 31, 2024, respectively.

    The provision for credit losses was $2.3 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025 compared to $2.4 million and $1.4 million for the three months ended December 31, 2024 and March 31, 2024, respectively. The allowance for credit losses on loans and leases as a percentage of loans and leases held for investment was 1.28% at March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024, and 1.30% at March 31, 2024.

    Share Repurchases
    During the quarter ended March 31, 2025, the Corporation repurchased 221,760 shares of common stock at an average price of $29.22 per share. Including brokerage fees and excise tax, the average price per share was $29.54. As of March 31, 2025, 1,178,394 shares are available for repurchase under the Share Repurchase Plan.

    Conference Call
    Univest will host a conference call to discuss first quarter 2025 results on Thursday, April 24, 2025 at 9:00 a.m. EST. Participants may preregister at https://www.netroadshow.com/events/login?show=175e015e&confId=80607. The general public can access the call by dialing 1-833-470-1428; using Access Code 021974. A replay of the conference call will be available through May 1, 2025 by dialing 1-866-813-9403; using Access Code 718470.

    About Univest Financial Corporation
    Univest Financial Corporation (UVSP), including its wholly-owned subsidiary Univest Bank and Trust Co., Member FDIC, has approximately $8.0 billion in assets and $5.2 billion in assets under management and supervision through its Wealth Management lines of business at March 31, 2025. Headquartered in Souderton, Pa. and founded in 1876, the Corporation and its subsidiaries provide a full range of financial solutions for individuals, businesses, municipalities and nonprofit organizations primarily in the Mid-Atlantic Region. Univest delivers these services through a network of more than 50 offices and online at www.univest.net.  

    This press release and the reports Univest files with the Securities and Exchange Commission often contain “forward-looking statements” relating to trends or factors affecting the financial services industry and, specifically, the financial condition and results of operations, business, prospects and strategies of Univest. These forward-looking statements involve certain risks and uncertainties in that there are a number of important factors that could cause Univest’s future financial condition, results of operations, business, prospects or strategies to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. These factors include, but are not limited to: (1) competition and demand for financial services in our market area; (2) inflation and/or changes in interest rates, which may adversely impact our margins and yields, reduce the fair value of our financial instruments, reduce our loan originations and/or lead to higher operating costs and higher costs we pay to retain and attract deposits; (3) changes in asset quality, prepayment speeds, loan sale volumes, charge-offs and/or credit loss provisions; (4) fluctuations in real estate values and both residential and commercial real estate market conditions; (5) changes in liquidity, including the size and composition of our deposit portfolio and the percentage of uninsured deposits in the portfolio; (6) our ability to access cost-effective funding; (7) changes in economic conditions nationally and in our market, including potential recessionary conditions and the levels of unemployment in our market area; (8) changes in the economic assumptions or methodology used to calculate our allowance for credit losses; (9) legislative, regulatory, accounting or tax changes; (10) monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, including the policies of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; (11) the imposition of tariffs or other domestic or international governmental policies; (12) the failure to maintain current technologies and to successfully implement future information technology enhancements; (13) technological issues that may adversely affect our operations or those of our customers; (14) a failure or breach in our operational or security systems or infrastructure, including cyberattacks; (15) changes in the securities markets; (16) the current or anticipated impact of military conflict, terrorism or other geopolitical events; (17) our ability to enter into new markets successfully and capitalize on growth opportunities and/or (18) risk factors mentioned in the reports and registration statements Univest files with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

     

    (UVSP – ER)

     
    Univest Financial Corporation
    Consolidated Selected Financial Data (Unaudited)
    March 31, 2025
    (Dollars in thousands)                  
                       
    Balance Sheet (Period End) 03/31/25   12/31/24   09/30/24   06/30/24   03/31/24
    ASSETS                  
    Cash and due from banks $ 73,319     $ 75,998     $ 78,346     $ 66,808     $ 49,318  
    Interest-earning deposits with other banks   95,815       252,846       426,354       124,103       152,288  
    Cash and cash equivalents   169,134       328,844       504,700       190,911       201,606  
    Investment securities held-to-maturity   130,889       134,111       137,681       140,112       143,474  
    Investment securities available for sale, net of allowance for credit losses   364,503       357,361       354,100       342,776       350,819  
    Investments in equity securities   1,667       2,506       2,406       2,995       3,355  
    Federal Home Loan Bank, Federal Reserve Bank and other stock, at cost   35,732       38,980       40,235       37,438       37,394  
    Loans held for sale   13,150       16,653       17,131       28,176       13,188  
    Loans and leases held for investment   6,833,037       6,826,583       6,730,734       6,684,837       6,579,086  
    Less: Allowance for credit losses, loans and leases   (87,790 )     (87,091 )     (86,041 )     (85,745 )     (85,632 )
    Net loans and leases held for investment   6,745,247       6,739,492       6,644,693       6,599,092       6,493,454  
    Premises and equipment, net   47,175       46,671       47,411       48,174       48,739  
    Operating lease right-of-use assets   27,182       28,531       29,260       29,985       30,702  
    Goodwill   175,510       175,510       175,510       175,510       175,510  
    Other intangibles, net of accumulated amortization   8,061       8,309       7,158       7,701       7,473  
    Bank owned life insurance   139,482       139,351       138,744       137,823       137,896  
    Accrued interest and other assets   117,435       112,098       106,708       114,753       102,958  
    Total assets $ 7,975,167     $ 8,128,417     $ 8,205,737     $ 7,855,446     $ 7,746,568  
                       
    LIABILITIES                  
    Noninterest-bearing deposits $ 1,433,995     $ 1,414,635     $ 1,323,953     $ 1,397,308     $ 1,401,806  
    Interest-bearing deposits:   5,224,503       5,344,624       5,530,195       5,098,014       5,003,552  
    Total deposits   6,658,498       6,759,259       6,854,148       6,495,322       6,405,358  
    Short-term borrowings   4,031       11,181       8,256       11,781       4,816  
    Long-term debt   175,000       225,000       225,000       250,000       250,000  
    Subordinated notes   149,386       149,261       149,136       149,011       148,886  
    Operating lease liabilities   30,062       31,485       32,246       33,015       33,744  
    Accrued expenses and other liabilities   54,718       64,930       59,880       62,180       60,095  
    Total liabilities   7,071,695       7,241,116       7,328,666       7,001,309       6,902,899  
                       
    SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY                  
    Common stock, $5 par value: 48,000,000 shares authorized and 31,556,799 shares issued   157,784       157,784       157,784       157,784       157,784  
    Additional paid-in capital   300,634       302,829       301,262       300,166       298,914  
    Retained earnings   541,776       525,780       512,938       500,482       488,790  
    Accumulated other comprehensive loss, net of tax benefit   (37,922 )     (43,992 )     (41,623 )     (54,124 )     (54,740 )
    Treasury stock, at cost   (58,800 )     (55,100 )     (53,290 )     (50,171 )     (47,079 )
    Total shareholders’ equity   903,472       887,301       877,071       854,137       843,669  
    Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity $ 7,975,167     $ 8,128,417     $ 8,205,737     $ 7,855,446     $ 7,746,568  
                       
                       
      For the three months ended,
    Balance Sheet (Average) 03/31/25   12/31/24   06/30/24   03/31/24   12/31/23
    Assets $ 7,981,043     $ 8,163,347     $ 8,005,265     $ 7,721,540     $ 7,696,575  
    Investment securities, net of allowance for credit losses   500,078       500,748       493,334       493,140       500,983  
    Loans and leases, gross   6,856,503       6,758,649       6,730,791       6,640,536       6,577,365  
    Deposits   6,617,653       6,804,483       6,641,324       6,353,752       6,303,854  
    Shareholders’ equity   896,811       880,237       864,406       844,572       842,546  
                                           
    Univest Financial Corporation
    Consolidated Summary of Loans by Type and Asset Quality Data (Unaudited)
    March 31, 2025
    (Dollars in thousands)                  
                       
    Summary of Major Loan and Lease Categories (Period End) 03/31/25   12/31/24   09/30/24   06/30/24   03/31/24
    Commercial, financial and agricultural $ 1,034,361     $ 1,037,835     $ 1,044,043     $ 1,055,332     $ 1,014,568  
    Real estate-commercial   3,546,402       3,530,451       3,442,083       3,373,889       3,283,729  
    Real estate-construction   281,785       274,483       285,616       313,229       379,995  
    Real estate-residential secured for business purpose   536,082       536,095       530,674       532,628       524,196  
    Real estate-residential secured for personal purpose   992,767       994,972       969,562       952,665       922,412  
    Real estate-home equity secured for personal purpose   189,119       186,836       182,901       179,150       177,446  
    Loans to individuals   16,930       21,250       26,794       26,430       27,200  
    Lease financings   235,591       244,661       249,061       251,514       249,540  
    Total loans and leases held for investment, net of deferred income   6,833,037       6,826,583       6,730,734       6,684,837       6,579,086  
    Less: Allowance for credit losses, loans and leases   (87,790 )     (87,091 )     (86,041 )     (85,745 )     (85,632 )
    Net loans and leases held for investment $ 6,745,247     $ 6,739,492     $ 6,644,693     $ 6,599,092     $ 6,493,454  
                       
                       
    Asset Quality Data (Period End) 03/31/25   12/31/24   09/30/24   06/30/24   03/31/24
    Nonaccrual loans and leases, including nonaccrual loans held for sale $ 11,126     $ 12,667     $ 15,319     $ 16,200     $ 20,363  
    Accruing loans and leases 90 days or more past due   322       321       310       205       268  
    Total nonperforming loans and leases   11,448       12,988       15,629       16,405       20,631  
    Other real estate owned   22,433       20,141       20,915       20,007       19,220  
    Repossessed assets   79       76       79       149       167  
    Total nonperforming assets $ 33,960     $ 33,205     $ 36,623     $ 36,561     $ 40,018  
    Nonaccrual loans and leases / Loans and leases held for investment   0.16 %     0.19 %     0.23 %     0.24 %     0.31 %
    Nonperforming loans and leases / Loans and leases held for investment   0.17 %     0.19 %     0.23 %     0.25 %     0.31 %
    Nonperforming assets / Total assets   0.43 %     0.41 %     0.45 %     0.47 %     0.52 %
                       
    Allowance for credit losses, loans and leases $ 87,790     $ 87,091     $ 86,041     $ 85,745     $ 85,632  
    Allowance for credit losses, loans and leases / Loans and leases held for investment   1.28 %     1.28 %     1.28 %     1.28 %     1.30 %
    Allowance for credit losses, loans and leases / Nonaccrual loans and leases   789.05 %     687.54 %     561.66 %     529.29 %     420.53 %
    Allowance for credit losses, loans and leases / Nonperforming loans and leases   766.86 %     670.55 %     550.52 %     522.68 %     415.06 %
                       
                       
      For the three months ended,
      03/31/25   12/31/24   09/30/24   06/30/24   03/31/24
    Net loan and lease charge-offs $ 1,686     $ 767     $ 820     $ 809     $ 1,406  
    Net loan and lease charge-offs (annualized)/Average loans and leases   0.10 %     0.05 %     0.05 %     0.05 %     0.09 %
                       
    Univest Financial Corporation
    Consolidated Selected Financial Data (Unaudited)
    March 31, 2025
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share data)                  
      For the three months ended,
    For the period: 03/31/25   12/31/24   09/30/24   06/30/24   03/31/24
    Interest income $ 103,416   $ 107,476   $ 106,438   $ 99,832   $ 98,609
    Interest expense   46,635     52,004     53,234     48,805     47,142
    Net interest income   56,781     55,472     53,204     51,027     51,467
    Provision for credit losses   2,311     2,380     1,414     707     1,432
    Net interest income after provision for credit losses   54,470     53,092     51,790     50,320     50,035
    Noninterest income:                  
    Trust fee income   2,161     2,265     2,110     2,008     2,108
    Service charges on deposit accounts   2,194     2,192     2,037     1,982     1,871
    Investment advisory commission and fee income   5,613     5,457     5,319     5,238     5,194
    Insurance commission and fee income   6,889     4,743     5,238     5,167     7,201
    Other service fee income   2,707     3,473     1,815     3,044     6,415
    Bank owned life insurance income   1,959     1,012     921     1,086     842
    Net gain on sales of investment securities           18        
    Net gain on mortgage banking activities   647     1,320     1,296     1,710     939
    Other income   245     868     1,396     745     1,025
    Total noninterest income   22,415     21,330     20,150     20,980     25,595
    Noninterest expense:                  
    Salaries, benefits and commissions   30,826     31,518     30,702     30,187     31,338
    Net occupancy   2,853     2,751     2,723     2,679     2,872
    Equipment   1,122     1,147     1,107     1,088     1,111
    Data processing   4,364     4,146     4,154     4,161     4,495
    Professional fees   1,797     1,669     1,579     1,466     1,688
    Marketing and advertising   353     552     490     715     416
    Deposit insurance premiums   1,151     1,102     1,097     1,098     1,135
    Intangible expenses   130     155     164     188     187
    Other expense   6,732     7,618     6,536     7,126     6,832
    Total noninterest expense   49,328     50,658     48,552     48,708     50,074
    Income before taxes   27,557     23,764     23,388     22,592     25,556
    Income tax expense   5,162     4,823     4,810     4,485     5,251
    Net income $ 22,395   $ 18,941   $ 18,578   $ 18,107   $ 20,305
    Net income per share:                  
    Basic $ 0.77   $ 0.65   $ 0.64   $ 0.62   $ 0.69
    Diluted $ 0.77   $ 0.65   $ 0.63   $ 0.62   $ 0.69
    Dividends declared per share $ 0.21   $ 0.21   $ 0.21   $ 0.21   $ 0.21
    Weighted average shares outstanding   29,000,567     29,070,039     29,132,948     29,246,977     29,413,999
    Period end shares outstanding   28,962,648     29,045,877     29,081,108     29,190,640     29,337,919
                       
    Univest Financial Corporation
    Consolidated Selected Financial Data (Unaudited)
    March 31, 2025
                       
                       
                       
      For the three months ended,
    Profitability Ratios (annualized) 03/31/25   12/31/24   09/30/24   06/30/24   03/31/24
                       
    Return on average assets   1.14 %     0.92 %     0.92 %     0.94 %     1.06 %
    Return on average shareholders’ equity   10.13 %     8.56 %     8.55 %     8.62 %     9.69 %
    Return on average tangible common equity (1)(3)   12.69 %     10.79 %     10.84 %     11.01 %     12.38 %
    Net interest margin (FTE)   3.09 %     2.88 %     2.82 %     2.84 %     2.88 %
    Efficiency ratio (2)   61.6 %     65.5 %     65.7 %     67.1 %     64.6 %
                       
    Capitalization Ratios                  
                       
    Dividends declared to net income   27.2 %     32.2 %     33.0 %     33.9 %     30.5 %
    Shareholders’ equity to assets (Period End)   11.33 %     10.92 %     10.69 %     10.87 %     10.89 %
    Tangible common equity to tangible assets (1)   9.31 %     8.92 %     8.71 %     8.81 %     8.80 %
    Common equity book value per share $ 31.19     $ 30.55     $ 30.16     $ 29.26     $ 28.76  
    Tangible common equity book value per share (1) $ 25.06     $ 24.43     $ 24.05     $ 23.17     $ 22.70  
                       
    Regulatory Capital Ratios (Period End)                  
    Tier 1 leverage ratio   9.80 %     9.51 %     9.53 %     9.74 %     9.65 %
    Common equity tier 1 risk-based capital ratio   10.97 %     10.85 %     10.88 %     10.72 %     10.71 %
    Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio   10.97 %     10.85 %     10.88 %     10.72 %     10.71 %
    Total risk-based capital ratio   14.35 %     14.19 %     14.27 %     14.09 %     14.11 %
                       
    (1) Non-GAAP metric. A reconciliation of this and other non-GAAP to GAAP performance measures is included below.        
    (2) Noninterest expense to net interest income before loan loss provision plus noninterest income adjusted for tax equivalent income.    
    (3) Net income before amortization of intangibles to average tangible common equity.                
                       
    Univest Financial Corporation  
    Average Balances and Interest Rates (Unaudited)  
        For the Three Months Ended,      
    Tax Equivalent Basis March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024  
      Average Income/ Average   Average Income/ Average  
    (Dollars in thousands) Balance Expense Rate   Balance Expense Rate  
    Assets:                
    Interest-earning deposits with other banks $ 119,997   $ 1,360 4.60 % $ 402,753   $ 4,852 4.79 %
    Obligations of state and political subdivisions*   879     4 1.85     1,290     7 2.16  
    Other debt and equity securities   499,199     4,019 3.27     499,458     3,815 3.04  
    Federal Home Loan Bank, Federal Reserve Bank and other stock   37,561     687 7.42     39,407     746 7.53  
    Total interest-earning deposits, investments and other interest-earning assets   657,636     6,070 3.74     942,908     9,420 3.97  
                     
    Commercial, financial, and agricultural loans   990,860     17,020 6.97     972,840     17,492 7.15  
    Real estate—commercial and construction loans   3,704,232     52,676 5.77     3,631,142     53,163 5.82  
    Real estate—residential loans   1,729,146     21,542 5.05     1,708,795     21,249 4.95  
    Loans to individuals   19,438     393 8.20     25,803     522 8.05  
    Tax-exempt loans and leases   230,133     2,861 5.04     233,036     2,652 4.53  
    Lease financings   182,694     3,240 7.19     187,033     3,296 7.01  
    Gross loans and leases   6,856,503     97,732 5.78     6,758,649     98,374 5.79  
    Total interest-earning assets   7,514,139     103,802 5.60     7,701,557     107,794 5.57  
    Cash and due from banks   56,690           56,989        
    Allowance for credit losses, loans and leases   (87,822 )         (86,812 )      
    Premises and equipment, net   46,852           47,155        
    Operating lease right-of-use assets   27,761           28,891        
    Other assets   423,423           415,567        
    Total assets $ 7,981,043         $ 8,163,347        
                     
    Liabilities:                
    Interest-bearing checking deposits $ 1,222,012   $ 7,075 2.35 % $ 1,275,348   $ 8,504 2.65 %
    Money market savings   1,840,194     18,035 3.97     1,954,246     20,653 4.20  
    Regular savings   702,543     763 0.44     705,222     817 0.46  
    Time deposits   1,476,495     16,106 4.42     1,499,998     17,247 4.57  
    Total time and interest-bearing deposits   5,241,244     41,979 3.25     5,434,814     47,221 3.46  
                     
    Short-term borrowings   6,909     14 0.82     7,102     1 0.06  
    Long-term debt   217,500     2,361 4.40     225,000     2,501 4.42  
    Subordinated notes   149,319     2,281 6.20     149,194     2,281 6.08  
    Total borrowings   373,728     4,656 5.05     381,296     4,783 4.99  
    Total interest-bearing liabilities   5,614,972     46,635 3.37     5,816,110     52,004 3.56  
    Noninterest-bearing deposits   1,376,409           1,369,669        
    Operating lease liabilities   30,675           31,864        
    Accrued expenses and other liabilities   62,176           65,467        
    Total liabilities   7,084,232           7,283,110        
    Total interest-bearing liabilities and noninterest-bearing deposits (“Cost of Funds”)   6,991,381     2.71     7,185,779     2.88  
                     
    Shareholders’ Equity:                
    Common stock   157,784           157,784        
    Additional paid-in capital   302,653           301,895        
    Retained earnings and other equity   436,374           420,558        
    Total shareholders’ equity   896,811           880,237        
    Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity $ 7,981,043         $ 8,163,347        
    Net interest income   $ 57,167       $ 55,790    
                     
    Net interest spread     2.23       2.01  
    Effect of net interest-free funding sources     0.86       0.87  
    Net interest margin     3.09 %     2.88 %
    Ratio of average interest-earning assets to average interest-bearing liabilities   133.82 %         132.42 %      
                     
    * Obligations of states and political subdivisions are tax-exempt earning assets.          
    Notes: For rate calculation purposes, average loan and lease categories include deferred fees and costs and purchase accounting adjustments.
    Net interest income includes net deferred costs amortization of $554 thousand and $676 thousand for the three months ended March 31,
    2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.              
    Nonaccrual loans and leases have been included in the average loan and lease balances. Loans held for sale have been included  
    in the average loan balances. Tax-equivalent amounts for the three months ended March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024 have  
    been calculated using the Corporation’s federal applicable rate of 21.0%.          
                     
    Univest Financial Corporation  
    Average Balances and Interest Rates (Unaudited)  
       For the Three Months Ended March 31,    
    Tax Equivalent Basis 2025   2024  
      Average Income/ Average   Average Income/ Average  
    (Dollars in thousands) Balance Expense Rate   Balance Expense Rate  
    Assets:                
    Interest-earning deposits with other banks $ 119,997   $ 1,360 4.60 % $ 120,845   $ 1,609 5.36 %
    Obligations of state and political subdivisions*   879     4 1.85     1,951     12 2.47  
    Other debt and equity securities   499,199     4,019 3.27     499,032     3,647 2.94  
    Federal Home Loan Bank, Federal Reserve Bank and other stock   37,561     687 7.42     39,115     724 7.44  
    Total interest-earning deposits, investments and other interest-earning assets   657,636     6,070 3.74     660,943     5,992 3.65  
                     
    Commercial, financial, and agricultural loans   990,860     17,020 6.97     934,649     16,523 7.11  
    Real estate—commercial and construction loans   3,704,232     52,676 5.77     3,575,142     50,641 5.70  
    Real estate—residential loans   1,729,146     21,542 5.05     1,618,188     19,555 4.86  
    Loans to individuals   19,438     393 8.20     27,315     548 8.07  
    Tax-exempt loans and leases   230,133     2,861 5.04     232,380     2,464 4.26  
    Lease financings   182,694     3,240 7.19     189,691     3,169 6.72  
    Gross loans and leases   6,856,503     97,732 5.78     6,577,365     92,900 5.68  
    Total interest-earning assets   7,514,139     103,802 5.60     7,238,308     98,892 5.49  
    Cash and due from banks   56,690           54,870        
    Allowance for credit losses, loans and leases   (87,822 )         (86,495 )      
    Premises and equipment, net   46,852           50,592        
    Operating lease right-of-use assets   27,761           31,121        
    Other assets   423,423           408,179        
    Total assets $ 7,981,043         $ 7,696,575        
                     
    Liabilities:                
    Interest-bearing checking deposits $ 1,222,012   $ 7,075 2.35 % $ 1,180,696   $ 8,218 2.80 %
    Money market savings   1,840,194     18,035 3.97     1,705,291     19,220 4.53  
    Regular savings   702,543     763 0.44     769,926     905 0.47  
    Time deposits   1,476,495     16,106 4.42     1,238,878     13,630 4.42  
    Total time and interest-bearing deposits   5,241,244     41,979 3.25     4,894,791     41,973 3.45  
                     
    Short-term borrowings   6,909     14 0.82     10,127     5 0.20  
    Long-term debt   217,500     2,361 4.40     292,486     2,883 3.96  
    Subordinated notes   149,319     2,281 6.20     148,818     2,281 6.16  
    Total borrowings   373,728     4,656 5.05     451,431     5,169 4.61  
    Total interest-bearing liabilities   5,614,972     46,635 3.37     5,346,222     47,142 3.55  
    Noninterest-bearing deposits   1,376,409           1,409,063        
    Operating lease liabilities   30,675           34,166        
    Accrued expenses and other liabilities   62,176           64,578        
    Total liabilities   7,084,232           6,854,029        
    Total interest-bearing liabilities and noninterest-bearing deposits (“Cost of Funds”)   6,991,381     2.71     6,755,285     2.81  
                     
    Shareholders’ Equity:                
    Common stock   157,784           157,784        
    Additional paid-in capital   302,653           300,679        
    Retained earnings and other equity   436,374           384,083        
    Total shareholders’ equity   896,811           842,546        
    Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity $ 7,981,043         $ 7,696,575        
    Net interest income   $ 57,167       $ 51,750    
                     
    Net interest spread     2.23       1.94  
    Effect of net interest-free funding sources     0.86       0.94  
    Net interest margin     3.09 %     2.88 %
    Ratio of average interest-earning assets to average interest-bearing liabilities   133.82 %         135.39 %      
                     
    * Obligations of states and political subdivisions are tax-exempt earning assets.          
    Notes: For rate calculation purposes, average loan and lease categories include deferred fees and costs and purchase accounting adjustments.
    Net interest income includes net deferred costs amortization of $554 thousand and $453 thousand for the three months ended
    March 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively.
    Nonaccrual loans and leases have been included in the average loan and lease balances. Loans held for sale have been included
    in the average loan balances. Tax-equivalent amounts for the three months ended March 31, 2025 and 2024 have been
    calculated using the Corporation’s federal applicable rate of 21.0%.
                     
    Univest Financial Corporation
    Loan Portfolio Overview (Unaudited)
    March 31, 2025
             
    (Dollars in thousands)        
    Industry Description Total Outstanding Balance   % of Commercial Loan Portfolio  
    CRE – Retail $ 469,397   8.7 %
    Animal Production   394,279   7.3  
    CRE – Multi-family   360,743   6.7  
    CRE – Office   299,751   5.6  
    CRE – 1-4 Family Residential Investment   278,386   5.2  
    CRE – Industrial / Warehouse   253,136   4.7  
    Hotels & Motels (Accommodation)   207,710   3.8  
    Specialty Trade Contractors   189,427   3.5  
    Nursing and Residential Care Facilities   177,053   3.3  
    Motor Vehicle and Parts Dealers   146,911   2.7  
    Merchant Wholesalers, Durable Goods   146,037   2.7  
    Homebuilding (tract developers, remodelers)   140,612   2.6  
    Repair and Maintenance   134,183   2.5  
    Crop Production   110,882   2.1  
    CRE – Mixed-Use – Residential   109,872   2.0  
    Wood Product Manufacturing   101,606   1.9  
    Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services   95,730   1.8  
    Food Services and Drinking Places   86,916   1.6  
    Administrative and Support Services   83,145   1.5  
    Merchant Wholesalers, Nondurable Goods   83,088   1.5  
    Fabricated Metal Product Manufacturing   78,181   1.4  
    Real Estate Lenders, Secondary Market Financing   75,461   1.4  
    Religious Organizations, Advocacy Groups   65,857   1.2  
    CRE – Mixed-Use – Commercial   64,683   1.2  
    Miniwarehouse / Self-Storage   64,553   1.2  
    Personal and Laundry Services   64,508   1.2  
    Education   62,362   1.2  
    Amusement, Gambling, and Recreation Industries   61,437   1.1  
    Food Manufacturing   56,400   1.0  
    Industries with >$50 million in outstandings $ 4,462,306   82.7 %
    Industries with <$50 million in outstandings $ 936,324   17.3 %
    Total Commercial Loans $ 5,398,630   100.0 %
             
             
    Consumer Loans and Lease Financings Total Outstanding Balance      
    Real Estate-Residential Secured for Personal Purpose   992,767      
    Real Estate-Home Equity Secured for Personal Purpose   189,119      
    Loans to Individuals   16,930      
    Lease Financings   235,591      
    Total – Consumer Loans and Lease Financings $ 1,434,407      
    Total $ 6,833,037      
             
    Univest Financial Corporation
    Non-GAAP Reconciliation
    March 31, 2025
                             
     
     
    Non-GAAP to GAAP Reconciliation
    Management uses non-GAAP measures in its analysis of the Corporation’s performance. These measures should not be considered a substitute for GAAP basis measures nor should they be viewed as a substitute for operating results determined in accordance with GAAP. Management believes the presentation of the non-GAAP financial measures, which exclude the impact of the specified items, provides useful supplemental information that is essential to a proper understanding of the financial results of the Corporation. See the table below for additional information on non-GAAP measures used throughout this earnings release.
                             
            As of or for the three months ended,
    (Dollars in thousands) 03/31/25   12/31/24   09/30/24   06/30/24   03/31/24
    Net income $ 22,395     $ 18,941     $ 18,578     $ 18,107     $ 20,305  
    Amortization of intangibles, net of tax   103       122       130       149       148  
    Net income before amortization of intangibles $ 22,498     $ 19,063     $ 18,708     $ 18,256     $ 20,453  
                             
    Shareholders’ equity $ 903,472     $ 887,301     $ 877,071     $ 854,137     $ 843,669  
    Goodwill   (175,510 )     (175,510 )     (175,510 )     (175,510 )     (175,510 )
    Other intangibles (a)     (2,104 )     (2,263 )     (2,147 )     (2,157 )     (2,273 )
    Tangible common equity $ 725,858     $ 709,528     $ 699,414     $ 676,470     $ 665,886  
                             
    Total assets $ 7,975,167     $ 8,128,417     $ 8,205,737     $ 7,855,446     $ 7,746,568  
    Goodwill   (175,510 )     (175,510 )     (175,510 )     (175,510 )     (175,510 )
    Other intangibles (a)     (2,104 )     (2,263 )     (2,147 )     (2,157 )     (2,273 )
    Tangible assets $ 7,797,553     $ 7,950,644     $ 8,028,080     $ 7,677,779     $ 7,568,785  
                             
    Average shareholders’ equity $ 896,811     $ 880,237     $ 864,406     $ 844,572     $ 842,546  
    Average goodwill   (175,510 )     (175,510 )     (175,510 )     (175,510 )     (175,510 )
    Average other intangibles (a)     (2,162 )     (2,146 )     (2,086 )     (2,222 )     (2,318 )
    Average tangible common equity $ 719,139     $ 702,581     $ 686,810     $ 666,840     $ 664,718  
                             
    (a) Amount does not include mortgage servicing rights                  
                             

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Eagle Bancorp, Inc. Announces First Quarter 2025 Results and Cash Dividend

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    BETHESDA, Md., April 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Eagle Bancorp, Inc. (“Eagle”, the “Company”) (NASDAQ: EGBN), the Bethesda-based holding company for EagleBank, one of the largest community banks in the Washington D.C. area, reported its unaudited results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2025.

    Eagle reported net income of $1.7 million or $0.06 per diluted share for the first quarter 2025, compared to net income of $15.3 million or $0.50 per diluted share during the fourth quarter. Pre-provision net revenue (“PPNR”)1 in the first quarter was $28.4 million compared to $30.3 million for the prior quarter.

    The $13.6 million decrease in net income from the prior quarter is primarily due to a $14.1 million increase in provision expense, a $5.1 million decline in net interest income, and a $0.9 million increase in noninterest expenses. These factors were partially offset by a $4.1 million increase in noninterest income.

    Additionally, the Company is announcing today a cash dividend in the amount of $0.165 per share. The cash dividend will be payable on May 16, 2025 to shareholders of record on May 5, 2025.

    “In the first quarter, we began to see tangible results from our strategic focus,” said Susan G. Riel, Chair, President, and Chief Executive Officer of the Company. “We achieved solid period-end growth in our C&I portfolio, which increased by $109 million, or 4.3%, and total deposits grew by $146.2 million, or 1.6%. Both increases reflect the continued emphasis we’ve placed on these core areas of our business. We are encouraged by this early progress, and we remain focused on executing our strategy and positioning the Company to return to sustained profitability as we navigate this environment.”

    Eric R. Newell, Chief Financial Officer of the Company said, “We grew deposits across both digital and branch channels in the first quarter, though a continued shift from noninterest bearing to interest bearing accounts pressured net interest margin. Valuation risk in our office portfolio remains a concern and was the primary driver of the provision for credit losses. The credit loss reserve coverage rose to 1.63% of total loans, up 19 basis points from last quarter. Our capital position remains strong, with common equity tier one capital at 14.6% and our tangible common equity1 ratio exceeding 10%. We will continue to evaluate capital allocation decisions, in alignment with long-term franchise value and our objective of capital accretion.”

    Ms. Riel added, “I want to thank all our employees for their continued dedication and for helping to cultivate a culture grounded in respect, collaboration, and service — both within our organization and across the communities we serve.”

    First Quarter 2025 Key Elements

    • The Company announces today the declaration of a common stock dividend of $0.165 per share.
    • The ACL as a percentage of total loans was 1.63% at quarter-end; up from 1.44% at the prior quarter-end. Performing office coverage2 was 5.78% at quarter-end; as compared to 3.81% at the prior quarter-end.
    • Nonperforming assets decreased $8.5 million to $202.9 million as of March 31, 2025 and were 1.79% of total assets compared to 1.90% as of December 31, 2024. Inflows to non-performing loans in the quarter totaled $4.6 million offset by a reduction of $12.9 million. The reduction was predominantly associated with the $11.2 million nonperforming loans that were charged off during the quarter.
    • Substandard loans increased $75.2 million to $501.6 million primarily reflecting continued stress within the office loan portfolio. Special mention loans increased $28.6 million to $273.4 million at March 31, 2025 as we proactively identified credits showing signs of potential weakness. These increases reflect our conservative credit risk management approach and the ongoing impact of the uncertain operating environment in the Washington DC metro area.
    • Annualized quarterly net charge-offs for the first quarter were 0.57% compared to 0.48% for the fourth quarter 2024.
    • The net interest margin (“NIM”) decreased to 2.28% for the first quarter 2025, compared to 2.29% for the prior quarter, primarily due to an increase in the average mix of interest-bearing deposits versus noninterest bearing deposits in the first quarter versus the fourth quarter.
    • At quarter-end, the common equity ratio, tangible common equity ratio1, and common equity tier 1 capital (to risk-weighted assets) ratio were 11.00%, 11.00%, and 14.61%, respectively.
    • Total estimated insured deposits decreased at quarter-end to $6.9 billion, or 74.7% of deposits, compared to $7.0 billion, or 76.4% of deposits from the fourth quarter.
    • Total on-balance sheet liquidity and available capacity was $4.8 billion, up $244.9 million from the prior quarter.

    Income Statement

    • Net interest income was $65.6 million for the first quarter 2025, compared to $70.8 million for the prior quarter. The decrease in net interest income was primarily driven by two fewer days in the quarter, lower average interest bearing cash balances, lower rates on loans, and a higher average mix of interest bearing deposits. Both interest income and interest expense declined due to lower rates.
    • Provision for credit losses was $26.3 million for the first quarter 2025, compared to $12.1 million for the prior quarter. The increase in the provision for the quarter is attributed predominately to the replenishment of the reserve following net charge-offs of $11.2 million and an increase in the qualitative overlay. The increase in the overlay relates to updated assumptions associated with the probability of default and probability of loss associated with commercial real estate office loans. Reserve for unfunded commitments was a reversal of $0.3 million due primarily to lower unfunded commitments in our construction portfolio. This compared to a reversal for unfunded commitments in the prior quarter of $1.6 million.
    • Noninterest income was $8.2 million for the first quarter 2025, compared to $4.1 million for the prior quarter. The primary driver for the increase was an increase in income associated with a $200 million separate account BOLI transaction that was entered into in the first quarter.
    • Noninterest expense was $45.5 million for the first quarter 2025, compared to $44.5 million for the prior quarter. The increase over the comparative quarters was primarily due to increased legal, accounting, and professional fees.

    Loans and Funding

    • Total loans were $7.9 billion at March 31, 2025, up 0.1% from the prior quarter-end. The increase in total loans was driven by an increase in owner occupied commercial real estate loans from the prior quarter-end, offset by a decrease in income producing commercial real estate loans.
    • Total deposits at quarter-end were $9.3 billion, up $146.2 million, or 1.6%, from the prior quarter-end. The increase was primarily attributable to an increase in time deposit accounts. Period end deposits have increased $775.8 million when compared to prior year comparable period end of March 31, 2024.
    • Other short-term borrowings were $0.5 billion at March 31, 2025, consistent with the prior quarter-end.

    Asset Quality

    • Allowance for credit losses was 1.63% of total loans held for investment at March 31, 2025, compared to 1.44% at the prior quarter-end. Performing office coverage was 5.78% at quarter-end; as compared to 3.81% at the prior quarter-end.
    • Net charge-offs were $11.2 million for the quarter compared to $9.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2024.
    • Nonperforming assets were $202.9 million at March 31, 2025.
      • NPAs as a percentage of assets were 1.79% at March 31, 2025, compared to 1.90% at the prior quarter-end. At March 31, 2025, other real estate owned consisted of four properties with an aggregate carrying value of $2.5 million. The decrease in NPAs was predominantly associated with charge-offs as previously noted.
      • Loans 30-89 days past due were $83.0 million at March 31, 2025, compared to $26.8 million at the prior quarter-end.

    Capital

    • Total shareholders’ equity was $1.2 billion at March 31, 2025, up 1.5% from the prior quarter-end. The increase in shareholders’ equity of $18.8 million was due to an increase in valuations of available-for-sale securities.
    • Book value per share and tangible book value per share3 was $40.99 and $40.99, up 1.0% from the prior quarter-end.

    Additional financial information: The financial information that follows provides more detail on the Company’s financial performance for the three months ended March 31, 2025 as compared to the three months ended December 31, 2024 and March 31, 2024, as well as eight quarters of trend data. Persons wishing additional information should refer to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, and other reports filed with the SEC.

    About Eagle Bancorp: The Company is the holding company for EagleBank, which commenced operations in 1998. The Bank is headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland, and operates through twelve banking offices and four lending offices located in Suburban Maryland, Washington, D.C. and Northern Virginia. The Company focuses on building relationships with businesses, professionals and individuals in its marketplace, and is committed to a culture of respect, diversity, equity and inclusion in both its workplace and the communities in which it operates.

    Conference call: Eagle Bancorp will host a conference call to discuss its first quarter 2025 financial results on Thursday, April 24, 2025 at 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time.

    The listen-only webcast can be accessed at:

    Forward-looking statements: This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, including statements of goals, intentions, and expectations as to future trends, plans, events or results of Company operations and policies and regarding general economic conditions. In some cases, forward-looking statements can be identified by use of words such as “may,” “will,” “can,” “anticipates,” “believes,” “expects,” “plans,” “estimates,” “potential,” “continue,” “should,” “could,” “strive,” “feel” and similar words or phrases. These statements are based upon current and anticipated economic conditions, nationally and in the Company’s market (including reductions in the size of the federal government workforce; changes in government spending; the proposal, announcement or imposition of tariffs; volatility in interest rates and interest rate policy; inflation levels; competitive factors) and other conditions (such as the impact of bank failures or adverse developments at other banks and related negative press about the banking industry in general on investor and depositor sentiment regarding the stability and liquidity of banks), which by their nature are not susceptible to accurate forecast and are subject to significant uncertainty. Because of these uncertainties and the assumptions on which this discussion and the forward-looking statements are based, actual future operations and results in the future may differ materially from those indicated herein. For details on factors that could affect these expectations, see the risk factors and other cautionary language included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 and in other periodic and current reports filed with the SEC. Readers are cautioned against placing undue reliance on any such forward-looking statements. The Company’s past results are not necessarily indicative of future performance, and nothing contained herein is meant to or should be considered and treated as earnings guidance of future quarters’ performance projections. All information is as of the date of this press release. Any forward-looking statements made by or on behalf of the Company speak only as to the date they are made. Except to the extent required by applicable law or regulation, the Company undertakes no obligation to revise or update publicly any forward-looking statement for any reason.

     
    Eagle Bancorp, Inc.
    Consolidated Statements of Operations (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share data)
               
      Three Months Ended
      March 31,   December 31,   March 31,
      2025   2024   2024
    Interest Income          
    Interest and fees on loans $ 126,136     $ 132,943     $ 137,994  
    Interest and dividends on investment securities   11,912       12,307       12,680  
    Interest on balances with other banks and short-term investments   15,803       23,045       24,862  
    Interest on federal funds sold   27       122       66  
    Total interest income   153,878       168,417       175,602  
    Interest Expense          
    Interest on deposits   77,211       83,002       79,383  
    Interest on customer repurchase agreements   260       294       315  
    Interest on other short-term borrowings   8,733       9,530       21,206  
    Interest on long-term borrowings   2,025       4,797        
    Total interest expense   88,229       97,623       100,904  
    Net Interest Income   65,649       70,794       74,698  
    Provision for Credit Losses   26,255       12,132       35,175  
    Provision (Reversal) for Credit Losses for Unfunded Commitments   (297 )     (1,598 )     456  
    Net Interest Income After Provision for Credit Losses   39,691       60,260       39,067  
               
    Noninterest Income          
    Service charges on deposits   1,743       1,744       1,699  
    Gain on sale of loans                
    Net gain on sale of investment securities   4       4       4  
    Increase in cash surrender value of bank-owned life insurance   4,282       742       703  
    Other income   2,178       1,577       1,183  
    Total noninterest income   8,207       4,067       3,589  
    Noninterest Expense          
    Salaries and employee benefits   21,968       22,597       21,726  
    Premises and equipment expenses   3,203       2,635       3,059  
    Marketing and advertising   1,371       1,340       859  
    Data processing   3,978       3,870       3,293  
    Legal, accounting and professional fees   3,122       641       2,507  
    FDIC insurance   8,962       9,281       6,412  
    Other expenses   2,847       4,168       2,141  
    Total noninterest expense   45,451       44,532       39,997  
    Income Before Income Tax Expense   2,447       19,795       2,659  
    Income Tax Expense   772       4,505       2,997  
    Net (Loss) Income $ 1,675     $ 15,290     $ (338 )
               
    (Loss) Earnings Per Common Share          
    Basic $ 0.06     $ 0.51     $ (0.01 )
    Diluted $ 0.06     $ 0.50     $ (0.01 )
                           
     
    Eagle Bancorp, Inc.
    Consolidated Balance Sheets (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share data)
      March 31,   December 31,   March 31,
      2025   2024   2024
    Assets          
    Cash and due from banks $ 12,516     $ 11,882     $ 10,076  
    Federal funds sold   2,968       2,581       11,343  
    Interest-bearing deposits with banks and other short-term investments   661,173       619,017       696,453  
    Investment securities available-for-sale at fair value (amortized cost of $1,330,077, $1,408,935, and $1,613,659 respectively, and allowance for credit losses of $0, $22, and $17, respectively)   1,214,237       1,267,404       1,445,034  
    Investment securities held-to-maturity at amortized cost, net of allowance for credit losses of $1,275, $1,306, and $1,957 respectively (fair value of $820,530, $820,381, and $878,159 respectively)   924,473       938,647       1,000,732  
    Federal Reserve and Federal Home Loan Bank stock   51,467       51,763       54,678  
    Loans held for sale   15,251              
    Loans   7,943,306       7,934,888       7,982,702  
    Less: allowance for credit losses   (129,469 )     (114,390 )     (99,684 )
    Loans, net   7,813,837       7,820,498       7,883,018  
    Premises and equipment, net   7,079       7,694       9,504  
    Operating lease right-of-use assets   32,769       18,494       17,679  
    Deferred income taxes   84,798       91,472       87,813  
    Bank-owned life insurance   320,055       115,806       113,624  
    Goodwill and intangible assets, net   11       16       104,611  
    Other real estate owned   2,459       2,743       773  
    Other assets   174,268       181,491       177,310  
    Total Assets   11,317,361       11,129,508       11,612,648  
    Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity          
    Liabilities          
    Deposits:          
    Noninterest-bearing demand   1,607,826       1,544,403       1,835,524  
    Interest-bearing transaction   926,722       1,211,791       1,207,566  
    Savings and money market   3,558,919       3,599,221       3,235,391  
    Time deposits   3,183,801       2,775,663       2,222,958  
    Total deposits   9,277,268       9,131,078       8,501,439  
    Customer repurchase agreements   32,357       33,157       37,059  
    Other short-term borrowings   490,000       490,000       1,669,948  
    Long-term borrowings   76,181       76,108        
    Operating lease liabilities   38,484       23,815       21,611  
    Reserve for unfunded commitments   3,166       3,463       6,045  
    Other liabilities   155,014       145,826       117,133  
    Total Liabilities   10,072,470       9,903,447       10,353,235  
    Shareholders’ Equity          
    Common stock, par value $0.01 per share; shares authorized 100,000,000, shares issued and outstanding 30,368,843, 30,202,003, and 30,185,732 respectively   300       298       297  
    Additional paid-in capital   386,535       384,932       377,334  
    Retained earnings   978,995       982,304       1,047,550  
    Accumulated other comprehensive loss   (120,939 )     (141,473 )     (165,768 )
    Total Shareholders’ Equity   1,244,891       1,226,061       1,259,413  
    Total Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity $ 11,317,361     $ 11,129,508     $ 11,612,648  
                           
     
    Loan Mix and Asset Quality
    (Dollars in thousands)
               
      March 31,   December 31,   March 31,
      2025   2024   2024
      Amount %   Amount %   Amount %
    Loan Balances – Period End:                
    Commercial $ 1,178,343   15 %   $ 1,183,341   15 %   $ 1,408,767   18 %
    PPP loans   226   %     287   %   $ 467   %
    Income producing – commercial real estate   3,967,124   49 %     4,064,846   51 %   $ 4,040,655   50 %
    Owner occupied – commercial real estate   1,403,668   18 %     1,269,669   16 %   $ 1,185,582   15 %
    Real estate mortgage – residential   48,821   1 %     50,535   1 %   $ 72,087   1 %
    Construction – commercial and residential   1,210,788   15 %     1,210,763   15 %   $ 1,082,556   13 %
    Construction – C&I (owner occupied)   83,417   1 %     103,259   1 %   $ 138,379   2 %
    Home equity   50,121   1 %     51,130   1 %   $ 53,251   1 %
    Other consumer   798   %     1,058   %   $ 958   %
    Total loans $ 7,943,306   100 %   $ 7,934,888   100 %   $ 7,982,702   100 %
      Three Months Ended or As Of
      March 31,
      December 31,
      March 31,
      2025
      2024
      2024
    Asset Quality:          
    Nonperforming loans $ 200,447     $ 208,707     $ 91,491  
    Other real estate owned   2,459       2,743       773  
    Nonperforming assets $ 202,906     $ 211,450     $ 92,264  
    Net charge-offs $ 11,230     $ 9,535     $ 21,430  
    Special mention $ 273,380     $ 244,807     $ 265,348  
    Substandard $ 501,565     $ 426,366     $ 361,776  
                           
     
    Eagle Bancorp, Inc.
    Consolidated Average Balances, Interest Yields And Rates vs. Prior Quarter (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in thousands)
                           
      Three Months Ended
      March 31, 2025   December 31, 2024
      Average Balance   Interest   Average
    Yield/Rate
      Average Balance   Interest   Average
    Yield/Rate
    ASSETS                      
    Interest earning assets:                      
    Interest-bearing deposits with other banks and other short-term investments $ 1,445,054     $ 15,803   4.44 %   $ 1,948,436     $ 23,045   4.71 %
    Loans held for sale(1)   169         %             %
    Loans(1) (2)   7,933,695       126,136   6.45 %     7,971,907       132,943   6.63 %
    Investment securities available-for-sale(2)   1,321,954       6,858   2.10 %     1,417,958       7,142   2.00 %
    Investment securities held-to-maturity(2)   933,880       5,055   2.20 %     952,800       5,165   2.16 %
    Federal funds sold   5,410       27   2.02 %     12,839       122   3.78 %
    Total interest earning assets   11,640,162       153,879   5.36 %     12,303,940       168,417   5.45 %
    Total noninterest earning assets   596,585               386,014          
    Less: allowance for credit losses   (118,557 )             (114,232 )        
    Total noninterest earning assets   478,028               271,782          
    TOTAL ASSETS $ 12,118,190             $ 12,575,722          
                           
    LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY                    
    Interest bearing liabilities:                      
    Interest-bearing transaction $ 1,368,609     $ 9,908   2.94 %   $ 1,674,997     $ 13,048   3.10 %
    Savings and money market   3,682,217       32,389   3.57 %     3,648,502       35,262   3.84 %
    Time deposits   2,951,111       34,914   4.80 %     2,804,870       34,692   4.92 %
    Total interest bearing deposits   8,001,937       77,211   3.91 %     8,128,369       83,002   4.06 %
    Customer repurchase agreements   36,572       260   2.88 %     38,750       294   3.02 %
    Other short-term borrowings   682,222       8,733   5.19 %     1,003,587       12,296   4.87 %
    Long-term borrowings   76,146       2,025   10.79 %     75,939       2,031   10.64 %
    Total interest bearing liabilities   8,796,877       88,229   4.07 %     9,246,645       97,623   4.20 %
    Noninterest bearing liabilities:                      
    Noninterest bearing demand   1,881,296               1,928,094          
    Other liabilities   197,212               170,411          
    Total noninterest bearing liabilities   2,078,508               2,098,505          
    Shareholders’ equity   1,242,805               1,230,573          
    TOTAL LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY $ 12,118,190             $ 12,575,723          
    Net interest income     $ 65,650           $ 70,794    
    Net interest spread         1.29 %           1.25 %
    Net interest margin         2.28 %           2.29 %
    Cost of funds         3.35 %           3.48 %
    (1)   Loans placed on nonaccrual status are included in average balances. Net loan fees and late charges included in interest income on loans totaled $3.8 million and $4.3 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
    (2)   Interest and fees on loans and investments exclude tax equivalent adjustments.
         
     
    Eagle Bancorp, Inc.
    Consolidated Average Balances, Interest Yields And Rates vs. Year Ago Quarter (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in thousands)
                           
      Three Months Ended March 31,
      2025   2024
      Average Balance   Interest   Average
    Yield/Rate
      Average Balance   Interest   Average
    Yield/Rate
    ASSETS                      
    Interest earning assets:                      
    Interest-bearing deposits with other banks and other short-term investments $ 1,445,054     $ 15,803   4.44 %   $ 1,841,771     $ 24,862   5.43 %
    Loans held for sale(1)   169         %             %
    Loans(1) (2)   7,933,695       126,136   6.45 %     7,988,941       137,994   6.95 %
    Investment securities available-for-sale(2)   1,321,954       6,858   2.10 %     1,516,503       7,247   1.92 %
    Investment securities held-to-maturity(2)   933,880       5,055   2.20 %     1,011,231       5,433   2.16 %
    Federal funds sold   5,410       27   2.02 %     7,051       66   3.76 %
    Total interest earning assets   11,640,162       153,879   5.36 %     12,365,497       175,602   5.71 %
    Total noninterest earning assets   596,585               508,987          
    Less: allowance for credit losses   (118,557 )             (90,014 )        
    Total noninterest earning assets   478,028               418,973          
    TOTAL ASSETS $ 12,118,190             $ 12,784,470          
                           
    LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY                    
    Interest bearing liabilities:                      
    Interest-bearing transaction $ 1,368,609     $ 9,908   2.94 %   $ 1,833,493     $ 16,830   3.69 %
    Savings and money market   3,682,217       32,389   3.57 %     3,423,388       35,930   4.22 %
    Time deposits   2,951,111       34,914   4.80 %     2,187,320       26,623   4.90 %
    Total interest bearing deposits   8,001,937       77,211   3.91 %             4.29 %
    Customer repurchase agreements   36,572       260   2.88 %     36,084       315   3.51 %
    Other short-term borrowings   682,222       8,733   5.19 %     1,796,863       21,206   4.75 %
    Long-term borrowings   76,146       2,025   10.79 %             %
    Total interest bearing liabilities   8,796,877       88,229   4.07 %     9,277,148       100,904   4.37 %
    Noninterest bearing liabilities:                      
    Noninterest bearing demand   1,881,296               2,057,460          
    Other liabilities   197,212               160,206          
    Total noninterest bearing liabilities   2,078,508               2,217,666          
    Shareholders’ equity   1,242,805               1,289,656          
    TOTAL LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY $ 12,118,190             $ 12,784,470          
    Net interest income     $ 65,650           $ 74,698    
    Net interest spread         1.29 %           1.34 %
    Net interest margin         2.28 %           2.43 %
    Cost of funds         3.35 %           3.58 %
    (1)   Loans placed on nonaccrual status are included in average balances. Net loan fees and late charges included in interest income on loans totaled $3.8 million and $5.1 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively.
    (2)   Interest and fees on loans and investments exclude tax equivalent adjustments.
         
     
    Eagle Bancorp, Inc.
    Statements of Operations and Highlights Quarterly Trends (Unaudited)
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share data)
      Three Months Ended
      March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,   March 31,   December 31,   September 30,   June 30,
    Income Statements: 2025   2024   2024   2024   2024   2023   2023   2023
    Total interest income $ 153,878     $ 168,417     $ 173,813     $ 169,731     $ 175,602     $ 167,421     $ 161,149     $ 156,510  
    Total interest expense   88,229       97,623       101,970       98,378       100,904       94,429       90,430       84,699  
    Net interest income   65,649       70,794       71,843       71,353       74,698       72,992       70,719       71,811  
    Provision for credit losses   26,255       12,132       10,094       8,959       35,175       14,490       5,644       5,238  
    Provision (reversal) for credit losses for unfunded commitments   (297 )     (1,598 )     (1,593 )     608       456       (594 )     (839 )     318  
    Net interest income after provision for credit losses   39,691       60,260       63,342       61,786       39,067       59,096       65,914       66,255  
    Noninterest income before investment gain   8,203       4,063       6,948       5,329       3,585       2,891       6,342       8,593  
    Net gain on sale of investment securities   4       4       3       3       4       3       5       2  
    Total noninterest income   8,207       4,067       6,951       5,332       3,589       2,894       6,347       8,595  
    Salaries and employee benefits   21,968       22,597       21,675       21,770       21,726       18,416       21,549       21,957  
    Premises and equipment expenses   3,203       2,635       2,794       2,894       3,059       2,967       3,095       3,227  
    Marketing and advertising   1,371       1,340       1,588       1,662       859       1,071       768       884  
    Goodwill impairment                     104,168                          
    Other expenses   18,909       17,960       17,557       15,997       14,353       14,644       12,221       11,910  
    Total noninterest expense   45,451       44,532       43,614       146,491       39,997       37,098       37,633       37,978  
    (Loss) income before income tax expense   2,447       19,795       26,679       (79,373 )     2,659       24,892       34,628       36,872  
    Income tax expense   772       4,505       4,864       4,429       2,997       4,667       7,245       8,180  
    Net (loss) income   1,675       15,290       21,815       (83,802 )     (338 )     20,225       27,383       28,692  
    Per Share Data:                              
    (Loss) earnings per weighted average common share, basic $ 0.06     $ 0.51     $ 0.72     $ (2.78 )   $ (0.01 )   $ 0.68     $ 0.91     $ 0.94  
    (Loss) earnings per weighted average common share, diluted $ 0.06     $ 0.50     $ 0.72     $ (2.78 )   $ (0.01 )   $ 0.67     $ 0.91     $ 0.94  
    Weighted average common shares outstanding, basic   30,275,001       30,199,433       30,173,852       30,185,609       30,068,173       29,925,557       29,910,218       30,454,766  
    Weighted average common shares outstanding, diluted   30,404,262       30,321,644       30,241,699       30,185,609       30,068,173       29,966,962       29,944,692       30,505,468  
    Actual shares outstanding at period end   30,368,843       30,202,003       30,173,200       30,180,482       30,185,732       29,925,612       29,917,982       29,912,082  
    Book value per common share at period end $ 40.99     $ 40.60     $ 40.61     $ 38.75     $ 41.72     $ 42.58     $ 40.64     $ 40.78  
    Tangible book value per common share at period end(1) $ 40.99     $ 40.59     $ 40.61     $ 38.74     $ 38.26     $ 39.08     $ 37.12     $ 37.29  
    Dividend per common share $ 0.17     $     $ 0.17     $ 0.45     $ 0.45     $ 0.45     $ 0.45     $ 0.45  
    Performance Ratios (annualized):                              
    Return on average assets   0.06 %     0.48 %     0.70 %   (2.73 )%   (0.01 )%     0.65 %     0.91 %     0.96 %
    Return on average common equity   0.55 %     4.94 %     7.22 %   (26.67 )%   (0.11 )%     6.48 %     8.80 %     9.24 %
    Return on average tangible common equity(1)   0.55 %     4.94 %     7.22 %   (28.96 )%   (0.11 )%     7.08 %     9.61 %     10.08 %
    Net interest margin   2.28 %     2.29 %     2.37 %     2.40 %     2.43 %     2.45 %     2.43 %     2.49 %
    Efficiency ratio(1)(2)   61.50 %     59.50 %     55.40 %     191.00 %     51.10 %     48.90 %     48.83 %     47.20 %
    Other Ratios:                              
    Allowance for credit losses to total loans(3)   1.63 %     1.44 %     1.40 %     1.33 %     1.25 %     1.08 %     1.05 %     1.00 %
    Allowance for credit losses to total nonperforming loans   64.59 %     54.81 %     83.25 %     110.06 %     108.76 %     131.16 %     118.78 %     267.50 %
    Nonperforming assets to total assets   1.79 %     1.90 %     1.22 %     0.88 %     0.79 %     0.57 %     0.64 %     0.28 %
    Net charge-offs (recoveries) (annualized) to average total loans(3)   0.57 %     0.48 %     0.26 %     0.11 %     1.07 %     0.60 %     0.02 %     0.29 %
    Tier 1 capital (to average assets)   11.11 %     10.74 %     10.77 %     10.58 %     10.26 %     10.73 %     10.96 %     10.84 %
    Total capital (to risk weighted assets)   15.86 %     15.86 %     15.51 %     15.07 %     14.87 %     14.79 %     14.54 %     14.51 %
    Common equity tier 1 capital (to risk weighted assets)   14.61 %     14.63 %     14.30 %     13.92 %     13.80 %     13.90 %     13.68 %     13.55 %
    Tangible common equity ratio(1)   11.00 %     11.02 %     10.86 %     10.35 %     10.03 %     10.12 %     10.04 %     10.21 %
    Average Balances (in thousands):                              
    Total assets $ 12,118,190     $ 12,575,722     $ 12,360,899     $ 12,361,500     $ 12,784,470     $ 12,283,303     $ 11,942,905     $ 11,960,111  
    Total earning assets $ 11,640,162     $ 12,303,940     $ 12,072,891     $ 11,953,446     $ 12,365,497     $ 11,837,722     $ 11,532,186     $ 11,546,050  
    Total loans(2) $ 7,933,695     $ 7,971,907     $ 8,026,524     $ 8,003,206     $ 7,988,941     $ 7,963,074     $ 7,795,144     $ 7,790,555  
    Total deposits $ 9,883,233     $ 10,056,463     $ 9,344,414     $ 9,225,266     $ 9,501,661     $ 9,471,369     $ 8,946,641     $ 8,514,938  
    Total borrowings $ 794,940     $ 1,118,276     $ 1,654,736     $ 1,721,283     $ 1,832,947     $ 1,401,917     $ 1,646,179     $ 2,102,507  
    Total shareholders’ equity $ 1,242,805     $ 1,230,573     $ 1,201,477     $ 1,263,627     $ 1,289,656     $ 1,238,763     $ 1,235,162     $ 1,245,647  
    (1)   A reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to the nearest GAAP measure is provided in the tables that accompany this document.
    (2)   Computed by dividing noninterest expense by the sum of net interest income and noninterest income.
    (3)   Excludes loans held for sale.
         
     
    GAAP Reconciliation to Non-GAAP Financial Measures (unaudited)
    (dollars in thousands, except per share data)
               
      March 31,
      December 31,
      March 31,
      2025
      2024
      2024
    Tangible common equity          
    Common shareholders’ equity $ 1,244,891     $ 1,226,061     $ 1,259,413  
    Less: Intangible assets   (11 )     (16 )     (104,611 )
    Tangible common equity $ 1,244,880     $ 1,226,045     $ 1,154,802  
               
    Tangible common equity ratio          
    Total assets $ 11,317,361     $ 11,129,508     $ 11,612,648  
    Less: Intangible assets   (11 )     (16 )     (104,611 )
    Tangible assets $ 11,317,350     $ 11,129,492     $ 11,508,037  
               
    Tangible common equity ratio   11.00 %     11.02 %     10.03 %
               
    Per share calculations          
    Book value per common share $ 40.99     $ 40.60     $ 41.72  
    Less: Intangible book value per common share $     $ (0.01 )   $ (3.46 )
    Tangible book value per common share $ 40.99     $ 40.59     $ 38.26  
               
    Shares outstanding at period end   30,368,843       30,202,003       30,185,732  
        Three Months Ended
        March 31,
      December 31,
      March 31,
        2025
      2024
      2024
    Average tangible common equity            
    Average common shareholders’ equity   $ 1,242,805     $ 1,230,573     $ 1,289,656  
    Less: Average intangible assets     (14 )     (19 )     (104,718 )
    Average tangible common equity   $ 1,242,791     $ 1,230,554     $ 1,184,938  
                 
    Return on average tangible common equity            
    Net (loss) income   $ 1,675     $ 15,290     $ (338 )
    Return on average tangible common equity     0.55 %     4.94 %   (0.11 )%
                 
    Efficiency ratio            
    Net interest income   $ 65,649     $ 70,794     $ 74,698  
    Noninterest income     8,207       4,067       3,589  
    Operating revenue   $ 73,856     $ 74,861     $ 78,287  
    Noninterest expense   $ 45,451     $ 44,532     $ 39,997  
                 
    Efficiency ratio     61.54 %     59.49 %     51.09 %
                 
    Pre-provision net revenue            
    Net interest income   $ 65,649     $ 70,794     $ 74,698  
    Noninterest income     8,207       4,067       3,589  
    Less: Noninterest expense     (45,451 )     (44,532 )     (39,997 )
    Pre-provision net revenue   $ 28,405     $ 30,329     $ 38,290  
                             

    Tangible common equity, tangible common equity to tangible assets (the “tangible common equity ratio”), tangible book value per common share, average tangible common equity, and annualized return on average tangible common equity are non-GAAP financial measures derived from GAAP based amounts. The Company calculates the tangible common equity ratio by excluding the balance of intangible assets from common shareholders’ equity, or tangible common equity, and dividing by tangible assets. The Company calculates tangible book value per common share by dividing tangible common equity by common shares outstanding, as compared to book value per common share, which the Company calculates by dividing common shareholders’ equity by common shares outstanding. The Company calculates the annualized return on average tangible common equity ratio by dividing net income available to common shareholders by average tangible common equity, which is calculated by excluding the average balance of intangible assets from the average common shareholders’ equity. Tangible equity is a measure that is consistent with the calculation of capital for bank regulatory purposes, which excludes intangible assets from the calculation of risk based ratios, and as such tangible equity and related measures are useful for investors, regulators, management and others to evaluate capital adequacy and to compare against other financial institutions.

    The efficiency ratio is a non-GAAP measure calculated by dividing GAAP noninterest expense by the sum of GAAP net interest income and GAAP noninterest income. The efficiency ratio measures a bank’s overhead as a percentage of its revenue. The Company believes that reporting the non-GAAP efficiency ratio more closely measures its effectiveness of controlling operational activities.

    Pre-provision net revenue is a non-GAAP financial measure calculated by subtracting noninterest expenses from the sum of net interest income and noninterest income. The Company considers this information important to shareholders because it illustrates revenue excluding the impact of provisions and reversals to the allowance for credit losses on loans.

    ____________________________
    1
    A reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures and the nearest GAAP measures is provided in the GAAP Reconciliation to Non-GAAP Financial Measures tables that accompany this document.
    2 Calculated as the ACL attributable to loans collateralized by performing office properties as a percentage of total loans.
    3 A reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures and the nearest GAAP measures is provided in the GAAP Reconciliation to Non-GAAP Financial Measures tables that accompany this document.

    EAGLE BANCORP, INC.
    CONTACT:
    Eric R. Newell
    240.497.1796

    For the March 31, 2025 Earnings Presentation, click http://ml.globenewswire.com/Resource/Download/f1f31917-6800-4f81-8c02-417b49f279cc

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Greystone Housing Impact Investors LP Schedules First Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call for Wednesday, May 7, 2025 at 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    OMAHA, Neb., April 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Greystone Housing Impact Investors LP (NYSE: GHI) (the “Partnership”) announced today that it will host a conference call for investors on Wednesday, May 7, 2025 at 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time to discuss the Partnership’s First Quarter 2025 results.

    For those interested in participating in the question-and-answer session, participants may dial-in toll free at (877) 407-8813. International participants may dial-in at +1 (201) 689-8521. No pin or code number is needed.

    The call is also being webcast live in listen-only mode. The webcast can be accessed via the Partnership’s website under “Events & Presentations” or via the following link:
    https://event.choruscall.com/mediaframe/webcast.html?webcastid=a4hicNZA

    It is recommended that you join 15 minutes before the conference call begins (although you may register, dial-in or access the webcast at any time during the call).

    A recorded replay of the webcast will be made available on the Partnership’s Investor Relations website at http://www.ghiinvestors.com.

    About Greystone Housing Impact Investors LP

    Greystone Housing Impact Investors LP was formed in 1998 under the Delaware Revised Uniform Limited Partnership Act for the primary purpose of acquiring, holding, selling and otherwise dealing with a portfolio of mortgage revenue bonds which have been issued to provide construction and/or permanent financing for affordable multifamily, seniors and student housing properties. The Partnership is pursuing a business strategy of acquiring additional mortgage revenue bonds and other investments on a leveraged basis. The Partnership expects and believes the interest earned on these mortgage revenue bonds is excludable from gross income for federal income tax purposes. The Partnership seeks to achieve its investment growth strategy by investing in additional mortgage revenue bonds and other investments as permitted by its Second Amended and Restated Limited Partnership Agreement, dated December 5, 2022, taking advantage of attractive financing structures available in the securities market, and entering into interest rate risk management instruments. Greystone Housing Impact Investors LP press releases are available at www.ghiinvestors.com.

    Safe Harbor Statement

    Information contained in this press release contains “forward-looking statements,” which are based on current expectations, forecasts and assumptions that involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual outcomes and results to differ materially. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, risks involving current maturities of our financing arrangements and our ability to renew or refinance such maturities, fluctuations in short-term interest rates, collateral valuations, mortgage revenue bond investment valuations and overall economic and credit market conditions. For a further list and description of such risks, see the reports and other filings made by the Partnership with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including but not limited to, its Annual Report on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, and Current Reports on Form 8-K. Readers are urged to consider these factors carefully in evaluating the forward-looking statements. The Partnership disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

    CONTACT:
    Ken Rogozinski
    Chief Executive Officer
    402-952-1235

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Triller Group Receives Nasdaq Notification of Non-Compliance with Listing Rule 5250(c)(1)

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Palm Beach, FL, April 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Triller Group Inc. (“Triller”, “Triller Group” or “the Company”) today announced that on April 17, 2025, it received a delinquency notification letter from the Listing Qualifications Staff of the Nasdaq Stock Market LLC (“Nasdaq”) due to the Company’s non-compliance with Nasdaq Listing Rule 5250(c)(1) (the “Listing Rule”) as a result of the Company’s failure to timely file its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the period ended December 31, 2024 (the “Filing”). The Listing Rule requires listed companies to timely file all required periodic financial reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”).

    This Notice has no immediate effect on the listing of the Company’s securities on Nasdaq. However, if the Company fails to timely regain compliance with the Rule, the Company’s securities will be subject to delisting from Nasdaq.

    The Notice provides that the Company has 60 calendar days to submit to Nasdaq a plan to regain compliance with the Nasdaq Listing Rule. If Nasdaq accepts the Company’s plan, then Nasdaq may grant the Company up to 180 calendar days from the Filing’s due date, or until October 13, 2025, to regain compliance. If Nasdaq does not accept the Company’s plan, then the Company will have the opportunity to appeal that decision to a Nasdaq Hearings Panel.

    The Company is working diligently to complete its Form 10-K and expects to file its Form 10-K within the 60-day period described above, which would eliminate the need for the Company to submit a formal plan to regain compliance.

    About Triller Group Inc.

    Triller Group Inc. is a technology powerhouse with a portfolio of high-growth businesses poised to break through in the Creator Economy. Triller App is the most creator focused social platform offering discovery, monetization, and ownership. Supported by Triller Platform, it serves as a cutting-edge social media platform designed for creators, offering innovative tools for content creation, marketing, and brand partnerships. It enables creators to connect with fans, monetize their work, and build meaningful relationships with brands.

    Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship (BKFC) stages live and streaming combat sports events that are rapidly gaining popularity with fans globally. With a focus on exciting matchups and high-energy performances, BKFC has established itself as the fastest-growing combat league in the industry. TrillerTV is Triller Group’s premier live streaming platform, showcasing a diverse array of in-house and third-party sports and entertainment content. With its robust infrastructure, TrillerTV is committed to delivering high-quality live events that captivate audiences and drive subscriber growth.

    Additionally, AGBA serves as a one-stop financial supermarket, providing independent distribution of a wide range of financial products and services. By connecting consumers with essential financial solutions, AGBA enhances Triller Group’s ecosystem, making it easier for users to access the tools they need for financial success.

    Together, these diverse businesses form a unique and integrated ecosystem that positions Triller Group at the forefront of innovation in social media, live entertainment, combat sports, and financial services. For more information about our businesses, visit www.trillercorp.com and www.agba.com.

    Investor & Media Relations:

    Bethany Lai
    ir@triller.co

    Breanne Fritcher
    triller@wachsman.com

    Details:
    Company: www.trillercorp.com
    Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/company/triller
    X: @Triller_IR

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 concerning the Company and other matters. All statements contained in this press release that do not relate to matters of historical fact should be considered forward-looking statements including, without limitation, the timing and filing of the delayed Annual Report on Form 10-K and the Company’s ability to regain compliance with applicable Nasdaq rules. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terms such as “may,” “will,” “should,” “expects,” “plans,” “anticipates,” “could,” “intends,” “targets,” “projects,” “contemplates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “predicts,” “potential” or “continue” or the negative of these terms or other similar expressions. The forward-looking statements in this press release are only predictions. The Company has based these forward-looking statements largely on its current expectations and projections about future events and financial trends that it believes may affect its business, financial condition and results of operations. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other important factors that may cause our actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. You should carefully consider the risks and uncertainties that affect our business, including those described in the Company’s filings with the SEC, which can be obtained on the SEC website at www.sec.gov. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this communication. Except as required by applicable law, we do not plan to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of any new information, future events or otherwise. You are advised, however, to consult any further disclosures we make on related subjects in our public announcements and filings with the SEC.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Brag House Provides Update on Status of Form 10-K Filing and Reiterates Commitment to SEC Compliance Obligations

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, April 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Brag House Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: TBH), a pioneering media-tech platform at the intersection of gaming, college sports, and social interaction, continues to diligently work on its Form 10-K for the fiscal year-ended December 31, 2024 following the successful completion of its initial public offering in March 2025 and intends to file the 2024 Form 10-K in the coming days.

    Given the recency of our initial public offering, we needed additional time to complete certain disclosures and analyses to be included in the 2024 Form 10-K. As anticipated, we received a notice from the Nasdaq Stock Market on April 17, 2025 notifying the Company that it is not in compliance with the periodic filing requirements for continued listing set forth in Nasdaq Listing Rule 5250(c)(1) because the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 was not filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission by the required due date of April 15, 2025. The Company expects to file its 2024 Form 10-K before the date it would have to submit a compliance plan on June 16th to Nasdaq for continued listing.

    Brag House is excited to have entered the public markets and takes its SEC reporting obligations seriously. In addition to our commitment to legal compliance and good corporate governance, we continue to focus on our upcoming revenue-generating tournaments and broader business momentum.

    About Brag House
    Brag House is a leading media technology gaming platform dedicated to transforming casual college gaming into a vibrant, community-driven experience. By seamlessly merging gaming, social interaction, and cutting-edge technology, the Company provides an inclusive and engaging environment for casual gamers while enabling brands to authentically connect with the influential Gen Z demographic. The platform offers live-streaming capabilities, gamification features, and custom tournament services, fostering meaningful engagement between users and brands. For more information, please visit www.braghouse.com

    Forward-Looking Statements
    Certain statements in this announcement are forward-looking statements. Investors can identify these forward-looking statements by words or phrases such as “may,” “will,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “aim,” “estimate,” “intend,” “plan,” “believe,” “is/are likely to,” “potential,” “continue” or other similar expressions. These statements are subject to uncertainties and risks including, but not limited to, the risk factors discussed in the “Risk Factors” section of the Company’s filings with the SEC. Although the Company believes that the expectations expressed in these forward-looking statements are reasonable, it cannot assure you that such expectations will turn out to be correct, and the Company cautions investors that actual results may differ materially from the anticipated results and encourages investors to review other factors that may affect its future results discussed in the Company’s filings with the SEC, which are available for review at www.sec.gov. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise publicly any forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent occurring events or circumstances, or changes in its expectations that arise after the date hereof, except as may be required by law.

    Media Contact:
    Fatema Bhabrawala
    Director of Media Relations
    fbhabrawala@allianceadvisors.com

    Investor Relations Contact:
    Adele Carey
    VP, Investor Relations
    ir@thebraghouse.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Schatz Statement On Retirement Announcement, Extraordinary Career Of Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Hawaii Brian Schatz
    HONOLULU – U.S. Senator Brian Schatz (D-Hawai‘i) today released the following statement after U.S. Senator Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Democratic Whip, announced he would not seek re-election.
    “For more than four decades, Senator Dick Durbin has been a pillar of leadership, integrity, and unwavering dedication to the people of his home state of Illinois and the nation. A titan of the Senate, he has helped improve the lives of Americans everywhere—expanding health research, protecting children from guns and tobacco, battling against predatory lending, building a fairer justice system, and fighting to protect DREAMERs. When you board a flight and can breathe clean, smoke-free air, you can thank Dick Durbin. When we see breakthroughs in medical research at NIH that are helping save lives, you can thank Dick Durbin. The list goes on.
    “As Democratic Whip, he has played a key role in shaping some of the most significant legislation of our time and has been a fixture of the Senate floor, bringing his brilliant Lincoln-land trial attorney skills to Senate debate. Further, his leadership on the Judiciary Committee has been historic, with the confirmation of 235 judges during the Biden administration – the most diverse set of federal judges of any presidency ever.
    “I’m lucky to call Senator Durbin a mentor and friend. I know he will be running through the tape, fighting for Illinois and our nation, as always. His work and legacy will continue to shape the U.S. Senate and our country for years to come. Today, I congratulate him, Loretta, his whole family, and his staff on decades of extraordinary service.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: United Nations Alliance of Civilizations Meeting in Geneva Concludes with Key Recommendations on AI Governance and Launches HUMAN-AI-T: A Global Initiative to Integrate Humanity into Artificial Intelligence

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    United Nations Alliance of Civilizations Meeting in Geneva Concludes with Key Recommendations on AI Governance and Launches HUMAN-AI-T: A Global Initiative to Integrate Humanity into Artificial Intelligence
    UNAOC AI for #OneHumanity: Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence

    Geneva, Switzerland – April 23, 2025 –WISeKey International Holding Ltd (“WISeKey”) (SIX: WIHN, NASDAQ: WKEY), a leading global cybersecurity, blockchain, and IoT company, today announces that United Nations Alliance of Civilizations meeting in Geneva concludes with key recommendations on AI Governance and launches HUMAN-AI-T.

    Staying true to its founding motto “Many cultures, one humanity,” the United Nations Alliance of Civilizations (UNAOC), established in 2005 by then UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, continues to promote cultural diversity, interfaith dialogue, and mutual respect. Today, these foundational principles are essential to shaping the future of artificial intelligence.

    At a high-level meeting held at the United Nations Office in Geneva, UNAOC and its public and private sector partners launched HUMAN-AI-T, a transformative global initiative designed to align the evolution of artificial intelligence with universal ethical values, cultural heritage, and human dignity.

    Building on the momentum of its two previous editions, the third “AI for #OneHumanity” summit gathered a diverse group of global actors—governments, international organizations, business leaders, innovators, academics, media, and civil society—to explore pathways toward inclusive and responsible AI development in the service of the common good.

    Organized by UNAOC in collaboration with the Onuart Foundation, the two-day forum featured thematic sessions on the role of AI in intercultural dialogue, sustainable development, and collective human progress, while addressing critical issues such as cultural bias, AI governance, and equitable access.

    Notable participants from Spain included:

    • José Manuel Albares, Minister of Foreign Affairs, European Union and Cooperation of Spain;
    • Miguel Ángel Moratinos, former Foreign Minister and current High Representative of UNAOC;
    • José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, former Prime Minister of Spain and President of the Advisory Board of the Onuart Foundation.

    Key Points:

    1. Ethical AI Governance:
      Minister Albares emphasized the urgent need for ethical AI development rooted in human rights. He announced Spain’s intention to propose a national Artificial Intelligence Governance Law, aimed at ensuring AI applications respect fundamental rights and prioritize dignity, inclusion, and human-centered innovation through multilateral frameworks.
    2. Global Cooperation and Risks:
      Albares warned of the growing dangers of misinformation and the irresponsible use of autonomous military technologies. He called for greater UN involvement to ensure no one is left behind and to maintain a fair and balanced multilateral system in AI development and regulation.
    3. Moratinos’ Concerns:
      Miguel Ángel Moratinos highlighted the risk of AI deepening global inequality or undermining shared values. He stressed that AI is no longer a future issue—it is already at the heart of our communications, economies, and daily lives, and urgently requires global oversight guided by human dignity.
    4. Zapatero’s Message:
      In a video message, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero expressed optimism about AI’s potential to address humanity’s most urgent needs: peace, democracy, and the eradication of poverty. “We are at a turning point,” he said. “Artificial intelligence must be a tool for peace and social justice. It must help us end hunger, combat inequality, and strengthen democratic values. Let’s ensure that AI, like every great human creation, serves to elevate the human spirit.”

    The opening session, titled “Towards One Humanity: Human-Centered Development Supported by AI,” featured remarks by Moratinos, Dr. José Luis Bonet Ferrer (President of the Onuart Foundation), and Rima Al-Chikh (UNOG), followed by opening addresses from Minister Albares, H.E. Burak Akçapar, Permanent Representative of Türkiye, and former President Zapatero.

    A main session on ethical and equitable AI included insights from David Carmona (VP & CTO of Microsoft), Carlos Moreira (CEO of WISeKey), Francisco Hortigüela (President of Ametic), Moulaye Bouamatou (President of Banque de Mauritanie), and Julian Isla (President of Fundación29), moderated by Fernando Zallo from the Onuart Foundation.

    Other panels focused on the inclusive future of AI, with contributions from Bilel Jamoussi (ITU), Jon Hernández, Enrique Arribas, Alberto Díez, Loida Peral, Matthew Griffin, Danilo McGarry, and Yujun Pian, moderated by Julie Ladanan of UNAOC.

    The session “Artificial Intelligence: Transforming Human Identity and Behavior in the Digital Age” featured video contributions from Dr. Rafael Yuste, Director of Columbia University’s NeuroTechnology Center and President of the NeuroRights Foundation, and Jared Genser, General Counsel of the same foundation. The session was moderated by Juan Carlos Gutiérrez of the Onuart Foundation.

    A complementary session on “AI and Media in the Information Age” addressed challenges such as disinformation and hate speech, with contributions from Catherine Bokonga-Fiankan (President of the Association of UN Correspondents in Geneva), Yfat Barak-Cheney (World Jewish Congress), Eduardo Solana (University of Geneva), Axel Hörger (former CEO of UBS Germany), Lluis Vilella (CEO of K-BOX), Sixtine Crutchfield (Art Director at WiseArt), filmmaker Devy Man, and music writer Soren Sorensen (aka Dorian Gray), moderated by Nihal Saad, Director of UNAOC.

    The HUMAN-AI-T initiative was presented as a secure and globally accessible digital platform to preserve humanity’s ethical, philosophical, and cultural legacy. Inspired by the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, it will function as an ethical digital vault, housing verified content—from religious texts and philosophical works to legal codes, international treaties, and indigenous knowledge—digitally signed and protected by post-quantum cryptographic technologies to ensure long-term trust, traceability, and integrity.

    As general artificial intelligence (AGI) and quantum computing advance, HUMAN-AI-T responds to the increasing ethical risks posed by superintelligent systems by anchoring AI development in shared human values and global moral frameworks. The initiative aligns with the UN General Assembly resolution on safe and trustworthy AI, aiming to make AI a platform for inclusion, cooperation, and ethical progress.

    “At the heart of AI must be the heart of humanity,” emphasized Miguel Ángel Moratinos. “This is not just a technological issue—it is a civilizational imperative. We must develop AI to serve people, not the other way around. That requires an inclusive model centered on dignity.”

    Dr. Bonet Ferrer added: “For AI to truly contribute to human progress, we must incorporate the spirit of One Humanity into its design and governance. Technology must unite us, honor our diversity, and strengthen our shared destiny.”

    Jared Genser also highlighted: “As neurotechnologies and AI converge, we must update human rights frameworks to protect mental sovereignty. HUMAN-AI-T is an urgent ethical safeguard anchoring these tools in principles from the outset.”

    Carlos Moreira, founder and CEO of WISeKey, concluded: “We are approaching a threshold where machines may surpass human intelligence. If we do not act now, we risk losing control over the values embedded in these systems. HUMAN-AI-T is our response: to ensure that the intelligence we build remains deeply human—now and for future generations.”

    Finally, Che Fu, founder and president of the World Public Economic Organization (WPEO) and president of the East-West Cultural Exchange Promotion Agency of Sichuan, remarked: “Artificial intelligence has a unique power to build bridges between civilizations. It is a new language of humanity—one that must be shaped with ethics and cultural understanding. We must come together, East and West, to ensure this technology connects us. I warmly invite the UN Alliance of Civilizations to hold the 4th AI for #OneHumanity Conference in China on January 20, 2026, where we can continue this global dialogue and strengthen our shared commitment to a human-centered digital future.”

    The event concluded with closing reflections from H.E. Mr. Moratinos and Dr. Bonet Ferrer, marking the beginning of a new chapter in the evolution of AI—one guided not only by algorithms and code, but by consciousness, cooperation, and compassion.

    #HUMANAIT #QuantumRisks #AGI #AIForGood #OneHumanity #TrustworthyAI #EthicalAI #China2026

    About WISeKey

    WISeKey International Holding Ltd (“WISeKey”, SIX: WIHN; Nasdaq: WKEY) is a global leader in cybersecurity, digital identity, and IoT solutions platform. It operates as a Swiss-based holding company through several operational subsidiaries, each dedicated to specific aspects of its technology portfolio. The subsidiaries include (i) SEALSQ Corp (Nasdaq: LAES), which focuses on semiconductors, PKI, and post-quantum technology products, (ii) WISeKey SA which specializes in RoT and PKI solutions for secure authentication and identification in IoT, Blockchain, and AI, (iii) WISeSat AG which focuses on space technology for secure satellite communication, specifically for IoT applications, (iv) WISe.ART Corp which focuses on trusted blockchain NFTs and operates the WISe.ART marketplace for secure NFT transactions, and (v) SEALCOIN AG which focuses on decentralized physical internet with DePIN technology and house the development of the SEALCOIN platform.

    Each subsidiary contributes to WISeKey’s mission of securing the internet while focusing on their respective areas of research and expertise. Their technologies seamlessly integrate into the comprehensive WISeKey platform. WISeKey secures digital identity ecosystems for individuals and objects using Blockchain, AI, and IoT technologies. With over 1.6 billion microchips deployed across various IoT sectors, WISeKey plays a vital role in securing the Internet of Everything. The company’s semiconductors generate valuable Big Data that, when analyzed with AI, enable predictive equipment failure prevention. Trusted by the OISTE/WISeKey cryptographic Root of Trust, WISeKey provides secure authentication and identification for IoT, Blockchain, and AI applications. The WISeKey Root of Trust ensures the integrity of online transactions between objects and people. For more information on WISeKey’s strategic direction and its subsidiary companies, please visit www.wisekey.com.

    Disclaimer
    This communication expressly or implicitly contains certain forward-looking statements concerning WISeKey International Holding Ltd and its business. Such statements involve certain known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, which could cause the actual results, financial condition, performance or achievements of WISeKey International Holding Ltd to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. WISeKey International Holding Ltd is providing this communication as of this date and does not undertake to update any forward-looking statements contained herein as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

    This press release does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any securities, and it does not constitute an offering prospectus within the meaning of the Swiss Financial Services Act (“FinSA”), the FinSa’s predecessor legislation or advertising within the meaning of the FinSA. Investors must rely on their own evaluation of WISeKey and its securities, including the merits and risks involved. Nothing contained herein is, or shall be relied on as, a promise or representation as to the future performance of WISeKey.

    Press and Investor Contacts

    WISeKey International Holding Ltd
    Company Contact: Carlos Moreira
    Chairman & CEO
    Tel: +41 22 594 3000
    info@wisekey.com 
    WISeKey Investor Relations (US) 
    The Equity Group Inc.
    Lena Cati
    Tel: +1 212 836-9611
    lcati@equityny.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Becca Balint Statement on Border Patrol Raid at Vermont Farm

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Becca Balint (VT-AL)

    Brattleboro, VT – Today,  Rep. Becca Balint (VT-AL) released the following statement in response to the eight workers at a Vermont dairy farm detained on Monday. 

    “Today we learned, eight workers at Pleasant Valley Farm in Vermont were arrested. Border patrol gave no reason for the arrest. My office is closely monitoring the situation to ensure every person in this country is given the due process they deserve. 

    “Vermonters know these family farms are the lifeblood of our communities. When farm workers are living in fear that they will be snatched up, it doesn’t make us safer. It leaves us without food on our tables and real families without parents or siblings at home. The Trump administration is yet again intent on not only ripping apart families but taking our agriculture industry down with it.”

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Programme Management Officer (Deputy Chief of Regional Office), P-4, Cairo

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    Apply here

    Created in December 1999, the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) is the designated focal point in the United Nations system for the coordination of efforts to reduce disasters and to ensure synergies among the disaster reduction activities of the United Nations and regional organizations and activities in both developed and less developed countries. Led by the United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction (SRSG), UNDRR has over 160 staff located in its headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, and in regional offices. Specifically, UNDRR guides, monitors, analyses and reports on progress in the implementation of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030, supports regional and national implementation of the Framework and catalyses action and increases global awareness to reduce disaster risk working with U.N. Member States and a broad range of partners and stakeholders, including civil society, the private sector, parliamentarians and the science and technology community. 

    This position is located in the UNDRR Regional Office for Arab States in Cairo. The incumbent serves as the Deputy Chief of the Regional Office and reports directly to the Chief.

    Within delegated authority, the incumbent will be responsible for the following duties: 

    • Serves as Deputy to the Chief of the Regional Office for the Arab States (ROAS). Under the supervision of the Chief of Office, actively contributes to the formulation and implementation of the work plan for the Regional Office in line with the UNDRR Strategic Framework and Work Programme. Undertakes, upon delegation from the Chief of Office, programmatic/administrative tasks necessary for the functioning of the Regional office, including preparation of work plans and budgets, recruitment and promoting capacity development of staff, evaluation of staff performance (PAS) through regular dialogue and feedback, and monitoring and reporting on budget/programme performance in the context of results-based management. Ensures that the outputs produced by teams under his/her supervision meet high-quality standards; that reports are clear, objective and based on comprehensive data; and that they comply with relevant organizational mandates. 
    • Contributes to UNDRR’s global resource mobilization efforts by mobilizing resources from the region. Actively promotes a positive team culture across the Regional Office recognizing innovation, agility, learning, accountability and transparency. 
    • Supports the Chief of the Regional Office in the coordination and implementation of UN Plan of Action on Disaster Risk Reduction for Resilience in the region. Ensures the integration of risk reduction policies and programmes through cooperation with the relevant regional coordination mechanisms, Resident Coordinator system and UN Country Team. Identifies, builds and enhances strategic partnerships for national, sub regional and regional cooperation with Governments, regional organizations, the private sector, civil society, parliamentarians, and science and technology community at large to mobilize support for sound and coherent action related to disaster risk reduction, and to ensure meaningful involvement and participation of those stakeholders in the development and implementation of effective disaster risk reduction policies, frameworks and programmes. Represents the Chief of Regional Office and UNDRR senior leadership in relevant meetings on disaster risk reduction in the region. Provides programmatic/substantive expertise on an issue and holds programmatic/substantive and organizational discussions with representatives of other institutions. 
    • Under the supervision of the Chief of Office, takes the lead in coordinating the preparations for the Regional Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction; develops and implements an action plan; coordinates internal preparations and co-ordinates a core team of colleagues responsible for their respective areas of work; directs preparation and review of relevant documents and reports; identifies priorities, problems and issues to be addressed and proposes corrective actions; liaises with relevant parties; identifies and initiates follow-up actions. Ensures engagement of relevant external stakeholders as part of the preparatory process; ensures continuous dialogue with the country hosting the Regional Platform; takes the lead in preparing the host country agreement; establishes the budget requirements for the Regional Platform and contributes to mobilization of resources for the Regional Platform; coordinates with relevant intergovernmental organizations in the region as well as UN partners and other stakeholders. Develops a follow-up action plan following each Regional Platform and monitors its implementation and works in collaboration with the Senior Programme Officer in charge of the Global Platform to ensure connectivity and coherence between the Regional Platform and ensures effective lessons learned from each Regional and Global Platform inform future Regional Platforms and their preparatory and follow-up processes. 
    • Supports the development of local, national and regional strategies in line with the Sendai Framework; strengthen policy and advocacy in support of risk informed development and ensure review and analysis of trends for the implementation of national policies and strategies are undertaken. In this regard, liaises with the Senior Programme Officer located in Bonn responsible for coordinating policy guidance on disaster risk reduction and contributes information and analysis on regional needs and priority areas of interests related to policy guidance and contributes to the development of global policy guidance from a regional perspective. Under the supervision of the Chief of Office, coordinates the implementation of ROAS Disaster Risk Reduction financing and de-risking initiatives, including on resilient infrastructure, in the region and at national level, working in cooperation with HQ colleagues and external partners. 
    • Under the supervision of the Chief of Office, contributes to effective planning and monitoring at the regional and global levels, ensure effective interface with HQ and other regions, and propose proactively new solutions and approaches. Integrate UN 2.0 approaches (data, digital, innovation, behavioural science, foresight and culture change) into the programme and operations priorities of the Regional Office. Collaborate with colleagues across offices to identify data analytics needs and support data-driven projects. Communicate and interpret data analysis findings and insights in a clear and understandable manner. Identify and define opportunities for data-driven decision-making. 
    • Acts as Officer in Charge for the role of the Chief of Office, when needed.

    Professionalism: Demonstrated knowledge of data life cycle including data collection, data wrangling, analysis, visualization, deployment, monitoring, and reporting. Knowledge and understanding of theories, concepts and approaches relevant to disaster risk reduction, climate change adaptation, or other related specialized field. Ability to identify issues, analyze and participate in the resolution of issues/problems. Ability to conduct data collection using various methods. Conceptual analytical and evaluative skills to conduct independent research and analysis, including familiarity with and experience in the use of various research sources, including electronic sources on the internet, intranet and other databases. Ability to apply judgment in the context of assignments given, plan own work and manage conflicting priorities. Shows pride in work and in achievements. Demonstrates professional competence and mastery of subject matter. Is conscientious and efficient in meeting commitments, observing deadlines and achieving results. Is motivated by professional rather than personal concerns. Shows persistence when faced with difficult problems or challenges; remains calm in stressful situations. Takes responsibility for incorporating gender perspectives and ensuring the equal participation of women and men in all areas of work. 

    Planning and organizing: Develops clear goals that are consistent with agreed strategies. Identifies priority activities and assignments; adjusts priorities as required. Allocates appropriate amount of time and resources for completing work. Foresees risks and allows for contingencies when planning. Monitors and adjusts plans and actions as necessary. Uses time efficiently. 

    Technological awareness: Keeps abreast of available technology. Understands applicability and limitations of technology to the work of the office. Actively seeks to apply technology to appropriate tasks. Shows willingness to learn new technology. 

    Judgement/decision making: Identifies the key issues in a complex situation, and comes to the heart of the problem quickly. Gathers relevant information before making a decision. Considers positive and negative impacts of decisions prior to making them. Takes decisions with an eye to the impact on others and on the Organization. Proposes a course of action or makes a recommendation based on all available information. Checks assumptions against facts. Determines that the actions proposed will satisfy the expressed and underlying needs for the decision. Makes tough decisions when necessary.

    An advanced university degree (Master’s degree or equivalent degree) in business administration, management, economics or a related field is required. A first-level degree (Bachelor’s degree or equivalent) in combination with two additional years of qualifying experience may be accepted in lieu of the advanced degree.

    Not available.

    A minimum of seven years of progressively responsible experience in project or programme management, administration or related area is required. 

    Experience in building strategic alliances, partnerships and resource mobilization is required. 

    Work experience in an international organization such as the United Nations or similar is required. 

    Experience in disaster risk reduction is required. 

    Experience of sustainable finance initiatives, environmental, social and governance (ESG) criteria in banking, lending and investment practices as well as compliance and regulatory regime is desirable.

    Experience advocating with governments and other stakeholders on critical issues is desirable. 

    Two years of demonstrated skills in data storytelling and data visualization tools such as Tableau, Power BI, Qlik, and R is desirable.

    English and French are the working languages of the United Nations Secretariat. For this position, fluency in English and Arabic is required. Knowledge of French is desirable. Knowledge of another UN official languages is desirable.

    Evaluation of qualified candidates may include an assessment exercise which may be followed by competency-based interview.

    Special Notice

    At the United Nations, the paramount consideration in the recruitment and employment of staff is the necessity of securing the highest standards of efficiency, competence and integrity, with due regard to geographic diversity. All employment decisions are made on the basis of qualifications and organizational needs. The United Nations is committed to creating a diverse and inclusive environment of mutual respect. The United Nations recruits and employs staff regardless of gender identity, sexual orientation, race, religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds or disabilities. Reasonable accommodation for applicants with disabilities may be provided to support participation in the recruitment process when requested and indicated in the application. The United Nations Secretariat is committed to achieving 50/50 gender balance and geographical diversity in its staff. Female candidates are strongly encouraged to apply for this position. In line with the overall United Nations policy, the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction encourages a positive workplace culture which embraces inclusivity and leverages diversity within its workforce. Measures are applied to enable all staff members to contribute equally and fully to the work and development of the organization, including flexible working arrangements, family-friendly policies and standards of conduct. Individual contractors and consultants who have worked within the UN Secretariat in the last six months, irrespective of the administering entity, are ineligible to apply for professional and higher, temporary or fixed-term positions and their applications will not be considered. Pursuant to section 7.11 of ST/AI/2012/2/Rev.1, candidates recruited through the young professionals programme who have not served for a minimum of two years in the position of their initial assignment are not eligible to apply to this position.

    United Nations Considerations

    According to article 101, paragraph 3, of the Charter of the United Nations, the paramount consideration in the employment of the staff is the necessity of securing the highest standards of efficiency, competence, and integrity. Candidates will not be considered for employment with the United Nations if they have committed violations of international human rights law, violations of international humanitarian law, sexual exploitation, sexual abuse, or sexual harassment, or if there are reasonable grounds to believe that they have been involved in the commission of any of these acts. The term “sexual exploitation” means any actual or attempted abuse of a position of vulnerability, differential power, or trust, for sexual purposes, including, but not limited to, profiting monetarily, socially or politically from the sexual exploitation of another. The term “sexual abuse” means the actual or threatened physical intrusion of a sexual nature, whether by force or under unequal or coercive conditions. The term “sexual harassment” means any unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature that might reasonably be expected or be perceived to cause offence or humiliation, when such conduct interferes with work, is made a condition of employment or creates an intimidating, hostile or offensive work environment, and when the gravity of the conduct warrants the termination of the perpetrator’s working relationship. Candidates who have committed crimes other than minor traffic offences may not be considered for employment. Due regard will be paid to the importance of recruiting the staff on as wide a geographical basis as possible. The United Nations places no restrictions on the eligibility of men and women to participate in any capacity and under conditions of equality in its principal and subsidiary organs. The United Nations Secretariat is a non-smoking environment. Reasonable accommodation may be provided to applicants with disabilities upon request, to support their participation in the recruitment process. By accepting a letter of appointment, staff members are subject to the authority of the Secretary-General, who may assign them to any of the activities or offices of the United Nations in accordance with staff regulation 1.2 (c). Further, staff members in the Professional and higher category up to and including the D-2 level and the Field Service category are normally required to move periodically to discharge functions in different duty stations under conditions established in ST/AI/2023/3 on Mobility, as may be amended or revised. This condition of service applies to all position specific job openings and does not apply to temporary positions. Applicants are urged to carefully follow all instructions available in the online recruitment platform, inspira, and to refer to the Applicant Guide by clicking on “Manuals” in the “Help” tile of the inspira account-holder homepage. The evaluation of applicants will be conducted on the basis of the information submitted in the application according to the evaluation criteria of the job opening and the applicable internal legislations of the United Nations including the Charter of the United Nations, resolutions of the General Assembly, the Staff Regulations and Rules, administrative issuances and guidelines. Applicants must provide complete and accurate information pertaining to their personal profile and qualifications according to the instructions provided in inspira to be considered for the current job opening. No amendment, addition, deletion, revision or modification shall be made to applications that have been submitted. Candidates under serious consideration for selection will be subject to reference checks to verify the information provided in the application. Job openings advertised on the Careers Portal will be removed at 11:59 p.m. (New York time) on the deadline date.

    No Fee

    THE UNITED NATIONS DOES NOT CHARGE A FEE AT ANY STAGE OF THE RECRUITMENT PROCESS (APPLICATION, INTERVIEW MEETING, PROCESSING, OR TRAINING). THE UNITED NATIONS DOES NOT CONCERN ITSELF WITH INFORMATION ON APPLICANTS’ BANK ACCOUNTS.

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    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: REPORT on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2023, Section VII – Committee of the Regions – A10-0046/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    2. MOTION FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT RESOLUTION

    with observations forming an integral part of the decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2023, Section VII – Committee of the Regions

    (2024/2026(DEC))

    The European Parliament,

     having regard to its decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2023, Section VII – Committee of the Regions,

     having regard to Rule 102 of and Annex V to its Rules of Procedure,

     having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control (A10-0046/2025),

    A. whereas in the context of the discharge procedure, the discharge authority wishes to stress the particular importance of further strengthening the democratic legitimacy of the Union institutions by improving transparency and accountability, and implementing the concept of performance-based budgeting and good governance of human resources;

    B. whereas the Committee of the Regions (the ‘Committee’) is a political assembly of 329 members elected in the regions, cities, villages and municipalities of the 27 Member States of the Union, operating as a consultative body for the Union institutions, with the mission of contributing to the Union policy shaping and decision making process from the point of view of the local and regional authorities, and at the same time contributing to make the Union more effective and closer to the citizens;

    C. whereas the consultation of the Committee by the Commission or the Council is mandatory in certain cases, while the Committee may also adopt opinions on its own initiative and enjoys a wide area for referral, as set out in the Treaties, allowing it to be consulted by Parliament;

    D. whereas the Committee’s activities are defined on the basis of its overall political strategy as set out in its resolution of 2 July 2020 on its priorities for 2020-2025[7], and whereas the Committee adopted three political priorities for the 2020-2025 mandate, accompanied by three communication campaigns: Bringing Europe closer to people, Building resilient regional and local communities, and Promoting cohesion as a fundamental value of the EU;

    E. whereas the local and regional administrations account for one third of public spending, half of public investment and one fourth of tax revenues and, in many Member States, hold competencies in key areas such as education, economic development and cohesion, environment, social protection, health and services of general interest, hence the coordination of local, regional, national and European levels increases the legitimacy of the legislation, improves ownership and pursues more effectively the benefit of citizens;

    F. whereas the Committee pursues its political goal to strengthen its involvement in the entire Union political and legislative cycle while making more tangible the connection with Union citizens using the Committee’s members as powerful multipliers in their communities and in their national associations of local and regional authorities;

    G. whereas the Committee identified eleven key priority areas to make its action more strategic and impactful in 2023: (1) Follow-up to the Conference on the Future of Europe, Active Subsidiarity and Better Regulation; (2) Ukraine and Enlargement; (3) Energy and climate crisis; (4) Environment; (5) Cohesion Policy – Ramping up Cohesion policy implementation and shaping its future for the post-2027 period; (6) Multi-annual Financial Framework; (7) Economic governance for a fair and sustainable Europe; (8) European Year of Skills 2023; (9) Partnership for Regional Innovation and the promotion of territorial missions; (10) Civil protection; (11) Food security;

    H. whereas Regulation (EU) 2021/1060[8], governing Union cohesion policy and funding between 2021 and 2027, that entered into force in July 2021, encompasses references to the partnership and multilevel governance principle, supported by the Committee and Parliament and entailing the involvement of regions and their local and regional authorities; strongly supports the strengthening of Union investments linked to regional and local resilience in the next Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF);

    I. whereas the over 400 national and regional programmes in place for the delivery of Union cohesion policy in the 2021-2027 programming period will make available around EUR 380 billion, under different funds, to tackle the economic, social and environmental challenges that Union regions, cities, villages and municipalities are facing;

    J. whereas, on 19 February 2021, Regulation (EU) 2021/241[9], establishing the Union’s Recovery and Resilience Facility, entered into force, providing the legal basis for distributing funds and loans of up to EUR 672,5 billion (in 2018 prices) to the Member States between 2021 and 2026 and also aiming to support economic, social and territorial cohesion and to address disparities between the regions of the Union;

    K. whereas, as a Union institution within the meaning of the Financial Regulation, the Committee is required to adopt its own annual accounts, prepared in accordance with the accounting rules adopted by the Commission’s accounting officer (European Union Accounting Rules) and based on the International Public Sector Accounting Standards, which are ultimately consolidated into those of the Union;

    1. Notes that the budget of the Committee falls under MFF Heading 7 ‘European public administration’ (‘Heading 7’), which amounted to a total of EUR 12,3 billion, i.e., 6,4 % of Union budget spending, in 2023; notes that, in 2023, the budget of the Committee represented 0,95 % of MFF Heading 7 appropriations;

    2. Notes that the Court of Auditors (the ‘Court’), in its annual report (the ‘Court’s report’) for the financial year 2023, examined a sample of 70 transactions under Heading 7, of which 21 (30 %) contained errors; further notes that for five of those errors, which were quantified by the Court, the Court estimated a level of error below the materiality threshold;

    3. Notes from the Court’s report its observation that administrative expenditure comprises expenditure on human resources including pensions, which in 2023 accounted for about 70 % of the total administrative expenditure, and expenditure on buildings, equipment, energy, communications and information technology; welcomes the Court’s renewed opinion that, overall, administrative spending is low risk;

    4. Notes with regret from the Court’s report its opinion regarding a transaction made by the Committee in 2023, whereby the 10-year duration of a building maintenance contract was not sufficiently justified;

    Budgetary and financial management

    5. Notes from the Committee’s annual activity report for 2023  that the final adopted budget of the Committee was EUR 116 675 392 in 2023, including the Amending Budget 4/2023 (salary and energy related), representing an increase of EUR 6 698 534 (i.e., +6,10 %) compared to 2022; notes with satisfaction that the rate of the Committee’s budget implementation of current year commitment appropriations increased from 99,20 % in 2022 to 99,9 % in 2023, and the current year payment appropriations execution rate increased from 88 % in 2022 to 91,20 % in 2023; welcomes further an increase in the execution rate of C8 appropriations from 81,60 % in 2022 to 85 % in 2023; considers that these high execution rates are on the one hand a sign of good budgetary and financial management by the Committee, on the account of strengthened budget execution monitoring, timely budget forecasting and reallocation of resources to address unforeseen events, but on the other hand could also be a sign that the Committee needs additional resources; calls on the Commission and the budgetary authority to take this into account in the framework of the budgetary procedure;

    6. Notes that in the course of 2023, the Committee implemented 31 transfers for a total of EUR 2,84 million, of which 25 internal transfers for a total of EUR 0,98 million and six external transfers for a total of EUR 1,86 million, of which approximately EUR 0,8 million transferred to budget lines covering contracts impacted by high inflation/indexation; notes that impact of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine continued to create budgetary pressure for the Committee in 2023; notes in this context that the Committee was most affected by the high inflation rate, directly or indirectly, in areas such as travel costs (missions), energy, rents and lease of buildings, maintenance contracts, construction projects and paper and offset plates;

    7. Notes an increase by approximately 20 % of payments made for the members of the Committee, from EUR 6 573 307 in 2022 to EUR 7 955 968 in 2023, with payments made for travel expenses (8 119 payments), travel allowances (4 449 payments), meeting allowances for in-person participation (7 845 payments) and remote participation (152 payments);

    8. Notes that the mission’s budget (current year appropriations) remained stable, with EUR 420 833 in 2023 (compared to EUR 419 657 in 2022) and execution rate of approximately 80 % in 2023 (similar to 2022); notes that, despite an increase in the average cost of accommodation and travel costs, the Committee’s missions budget remained stable due to a reduction of 13 % in the number of missions carried out in 2023 compared to 2022; welcomes that the allowance for the Committee’s Presidency (President and First Vice-President) for travel and meeting expenses, financed from the general budget for members’ expenses, decreased from EUR 71 810 to EUR 62 268, representing a 13 % reduction between 2022 and 2023; encourages the Committee to further rationalize and reduce expenditure in this area, ensuring optimal allocation of resources in line with the principles of sound financial management;

    9. Observes with concern an increase in the current year appropriations for interpreting services of approximately 19 %, from EUR 3,494 million in 2022 to EUR 4,167 million in 2022; asks the Committee to explain the reasons for that increase, given the fact that at the same time the Committee has reported savings in connection with the use of remote interpretation in 2023;

    10. Notes that until 23 July 2023, the flat-rate remote meeting allowance paid by the Committee to its members, their alternates, as well as to rapporteurs’ experts and speakers invited to attend remote or hybrid meetings was EUR 200; notes further that on that date, new rules on the matter entered into force setting the flat-rate remote meeting allowance at 50 % of the regular meeting allowance, with the latter being EUR 359 and the former EUR 179,50; notes in this context a significant decrease in the total amount paid for remote meeting allowances from EUR 1 742 000 in 2021 and EUR 489 600 in 2022 to EUR 32 632 in 2023, while the overall expenditure linked to budget line 1004 (‘Travel and subsistence allowances, attendance at meetings and associated expenditure’) has increased considerably from approximately EUR 6,6 million in 2022 to approximately EUR 8 million in 2023, mainly due to a strong return to in-person meetings in 2023 and the increase in the travel related prices in the aftermath of the Covid-19 pandemic;

    11. Expresses concern over the significant increase in travel and meeting allowances paid to Committee members, rising from EUR 6,6 million in 2022 to EUR 8 million in 2023; calls on the Committee to adopt a clear cost-efficiency strategy for travel expenditures, including greater use of remote participation and hybrid meetings to reduce unnecessary costs and emissions while maintaining political engagement;

    12. Regrets that the average time for payment increased from 17,87 days in 2022 to 21,88 days in 2023; understands nevertheless that that increase is the result of the fact that in 2023 the Committee processed and paid a record number of invoices, i.e., 5 723 compared to 4 260 in 2022; notes in this context that the share of commercial invoices received electronically by the Committee has increased from 68 % in 2022 to 76 % in 2023 and continued to increase in 2024;

    Internal management, performance and internal control

    13. Acknowledges that the Committee plays a fundamental role in contributing to the Union’s policy development and decision-making processes by representing the interests of local and regional authorities within the Union; notes that for 2023, as part of its annual operational plan, the reporting of the performance of the Committee was based on 25 objectives, the achievement of which was assessed through 80 quantitative indicators, whereas the targets of the majority of those indicators (approximately 75 %) was achieved with a level of 90 % or more;

    14. Recalls that the Committee contributes to the Union policy and decision making process from the perspective of the regional and local authorities within the Union and provides a framework to enhance cooperation between the local, regional, national and European levels and to bring Europe closer to its citizens; regrets that budget limitations have impaired the Committee’s ability to fully deliver on its objective of bringing citizens closer to the Union, limiting the Committee’s added value;

    15. Considering the important role of the Committee in increasing the democratic legitimacy of Union legislation by providing an active coordination of regional and local authorities, supports the Committee in its effort to provide more territorial impact assessments (TIA), also in line with the Conference on the Future of Europe final report and recommendations;

    16. Commends the Committee for its political achievements in its key priority areas in 2023; notes that the Committee pursues its mission through opinions, which refer to legislative proposals made by the Commission (referrals), own-initiative opinions, which call on the Union institutions to take action, and through resolutions, which highlight the Committee’s positions on specific topics; notes that, in 2023, the Committee adopted 53 opinions and 6 resolutions, a decrease from 55 opinions and 8 resolutions adopted in 2022 despite the increase in appropriations and staff; encourages the Committee to continue to work on the performance improvement as well as effectiveness improvement; welcomes the Committee’s efforts to introduce reformative and innovative solutions, streamline the administration and avoid overlapping roles with other bodies;

    17. Appreciates that in 2023 the Committee continued implementing measures to modernise its administration and enhance cost-effectiveness in the context of the ‘Going for IMPact’ programme; notes in this context the progress made with regard to digitalisation and workflow optimisation, the modernisation of the Committee’s planning and reporting instruments, the creation of a central meeting service, and the enhancement of cooperation with other institutions or bodies (e.g., the European Economic and Social Committee (‘EESC’), Commission, Parliament, Office for Infrastructure and Logistics), among others; commends the Committee for having implemented almost 90 % of the simplification projects launched in 2021, in the areas of administrative processes, written procedures and (internal) legal documents;

    18. Notes with satisfaction from the Committee’s replies to the questionnaire submitted by the Parliament’s Committee on Budgetary Control for the 2023 budgetary discharge (the ‘Questionnaire’) that, thanks to the ‘Going for IMPact’ programme, the Committee has managed in 2023 to align its objectives to the available resources which were under pressure as a result of the inflationary effects of the war in Ukraine; commends in particular the progress made by the Committee in implementing ‘Project Convergence’ (a SharePoint-based tool for planning, reporting, risk assessment, and business continuity) and the new business continuity policy;

    19. Acknowledges the impact of the Committee’s work, in particular its opinions, some which were reflected in resolutions, positions, proposals, reports, reviews, conclusions or trilogues of the Commission, Parliament or the Council in 2023; invites the Committee to continue on the path of providing useful and relevant input, such as data from the ground and analysis, to Union institutions and other beneficiaries of Union policies; welcomes the Committee’s strengthened involvement along the whole political and legislative cycle of the Union through cooperation agreements and action plans with the Commission, Parliament and the European Investment Bank; considers that members of the Committee and of the EESC should be invited to relevant parliamentary meetings on matters within their remit; notes that, in 2023, Committee members also met the Council and Permanent Representations and participated in the events organised by the Council’s Presidency, in order to ensure that the Committee’s positions are reflected in the Union’s legislation; congratulates the Committee for strengthening its involvement in legislative trilogues, notably by being granted access, for the first time, to trilogue documents in 2023;

    20. Calls on the Committee to ensure stronger involvement of regional and local governments in Union decision-making by creating structured consultation mechanisms with regional and local authorities, including parliaments, municipalities, and local civil society organizations before issuing opinions; urges the Committee to advocate for a mandatory consultation process on legislative matters that significantly impact regional development and cohesion policy;

    21. Notes with regard to its new internal control framework, that the Committee implemented a new methodology on ex post controls as of 2023, aiming to simplify and align the approach to the practice of the other Union institutions, with the ex post controls now being centralised instead of the prior decentralised practice; notes that, in 2023, ex post controls focused on the basic salary and the time worked, with 55 files having been verified, and that the statistical estimate of the error affecting the reference population was 0 %; notes further that in 2023 the Committee renewed its compliance and effectiveness exercise to assess the extent of the Committee’s compliance with certain internal control standards and the effectiveness of their implementation; commends the Committee for reporting an improvement in this matter compared to the results of the 2022 exercise; encourages the Committee to continue its efforts to further step up the level of compliance and the degree of effectiveness of the internal control measures in place; notes with satisfaction, as regards the new sensitive posts policy, that in 2023 the Committee ran a screening exercise to identify the level of risk of each post and, thus, the sensitivity level thereof, as well as the necessary measures to mitigate those risks;

    22. Notes that the Committee launched in 2023 two new audits: one on the compliance of various functions (e.g., risk management, planning, control system) with the relevant data protection legislation and another one on the performance of the IT organisation in Joint Services (the Committee and the EESC’s new joint Directorate for Innovation and IT); notes that for each of those audits: 11 recommendations were issued and seven recommendations were considered very important; notes further that following the audit on management of the vacant posts launched in 2022, 10 recommendations were issued, three of which were very important; calls on the Committee to implement all pending recommendations as soon as possible and keep the discharge authority informed of progress in this matter;

    Human resources, equality and staff well-being

    23. Notes that, at the end of 2023, the Committee had a total of 559 members of staff (seconded national experts, interim, intra muros and trainees not included), compared to 533 in 2022; notes that 74 contract agents, compared to 56 contract agents in 2022 and 96 temporary agents, compared to 89 temporary agents in 2022, were employed by the Committee at the end of 2023, out of which 21 contract agents had an open-ended contract, 53 contract agents had a time-limited contract, 53 temporary agents were on permanent posts with time-limited contract, 50 temporary agents had an open-ended contract and 3 temporary agents held a temporary position (in two cases with an indefinite contract and, in the case of the Secretary-General, for a fixed duration of five years); notes, in addition, that the Committee employed 5 interim agents and 12 external members of staff working on-site, excluding external service providers in the fields of logistics and IT; hopes that the increase in staff has its reasonable justification; notes that in 2023 the occupation rate of the posts in the establishment plan was 98 % (an increase from 96 % in 2022) and the turnover rate was 6,6 % (a decrease from 10,80 % in 2022), respectively;

    24. Observes an increased reliance of the Committee on contract agents and temporary agents (representing up to 26 % of the Committee’s staff); notes from the Questionnaire that said reliance is due in particular to the absence of EPSO reserve lists for generalist administrator profiles since 2018; is worried that the Committee’s long-term stability and business continuity are threatened by the absence of attractiveness of the time-limited contracts offered; underlines the importance of permanent staff in maintaining skills, continuity and productive working environment; notes that the Committee organised an internal competition for generalists across five grades (AST/SC1, AST1, AST3, AD5, and AD7) in 2024; supports the Committee in its endeavours to respond to those challenges; asks the Committee to report to the discharge authority on such competitions organised in 2024;

    25. Notes that, at the end of 2023, the Committee employed 56,9 % women and 43,1 % men; regrets that the Committee has not yet achieved gender parity in leadership positions, but acknowledges the significant progress made under the Committee’s five-year diversity and inclusion strategy and action plan for 2022-2026, including a marked increase in the proportion of women in senior management positions from 37,5 % in 2022 to 44,4 % in 2023; recommends measures to enhance inclusivity in vacancy notices and to encourage greater female participation in senior and middle management roles, including through gender balance targets, balanced representation on selection boards, targeted training opportunities for female staff aspiring to managerial positions, and the promotion of more flexible working arrangements; encourages the Committee to continue its efforts for achieving gender balance and requires, in this context, Member States to nominate both a male and a female candidate for appointments for Committee membership to improve representation at all levels;

    26. Notes that, as a result of a pilot project on a hybrid working regime and a staff satisfaction survey launched in 2022, the Committee adopted on 1 January 2024 a decision which provides for a hybrid working regime and a personalised weekly working schedule for each staff, as well as the possibility to work from home for up to 60 % of staff’s working time (except for staff categories incompatible with telework) and work from outside the city of employment for up to 15 days per year; recognises that these measures aim to enhance work-life balance while maintaining operational efficiency and staff satisfaction;

    27. Notes with satisfaction that the Committee’s hybrid working regime has had a positive impact with regard to short-term sick leave, whereas: – the number of staff without sick leave increased from 71 (or 12 % of all staff) in 2018 to 211 (or 36 % of all staff) in 2023; – the number of staff on sick leave for less than seven days decreased from 257 (or 46 % of all staff) in 2018 to 201 (or 35 % of all staff) in 2023 and; – the number of staff on sick leave for a duration between 7,5 and 21 days decreased from 140 (or 25 % of all staff) in 2018 to 92 (or 16 % of all staff) in 2023; invites the Committee to monitor the impact of the new working regime and keep this topic in upcoming staff satisfaction surveys; notes with satisfaction that 90,25 % (82 % in the case of managers) of those that responded to the staff survey of December 2022 indicated their satisfaction with the flexible arrangements;

    28. Notes with concern that 18 cases of burnout were reported in the Committee in 2023, representing an increase from 16 cases in 2022; underlines the significant social and professional impact of burnout on staff well-being and performance; notes further that the Committee managed to reintegrate 16 members of staff in 2023 after long-term absence as a result of burnout, thanks to a personalised follow-up of long-term sickness leave; welcomes the preventive actions taken by the Committee to reduce psychosocial risks and burnout; appreciates in this regard the proactive approach of the medical service and the awareness-raising conferences, trainings and courses organised by the Committee; stresses, however, the need for further strengthening of efforts to address the root causes of burnout and to foster a healthier work environment;

    29. Notes that in 2023 the Committee continued to raise awareness of the measures put in place to prevent and combat harassment in the workplace, in accordance with its Decision of 26 April 2021 on protecting dignity at work, managing conflict and combatting harassment, notably through dedicated guidance, internal communication and the organisation of several information sessions for staff and managers; welcomes in particular the organisation of five training sessions on ‘Preventing psychological and sexual harassment’ and ‘Respect and Dignity for a high-performing team’ in 2023 and recommends continuity of this initiative; further notes with satisfaction that no new, ongoing, or closed cases concerning sexual harassment were reported during the year;

    30. Commends the Committee for its actions taken in 2023 in connection with the integration of persons with disabilities, such as making accessible the Committee’s buildings to persons with reduced mobility and ensuring that all job vacancies are accessible to candidates with disabilities;

    31. Notes that, in 2023, the Committee was employing staff representing all Union nationalities (and one staff member of Ukrainian nationality), with some of them being overrepresented (e.g., Belgium); welcomes the additional efforts of the Committee aiming at balancing the geographical distribution among staff by targeting a wider audience through the publication on its website and social media of calls for expression of interest for contract and temporary staff; regrets the persistent lack of geographical balance within the Committee’s staff, with certain nationalities remaining overrepresented in comparison to others; encourages the Committee to intensify its efforts to achieve a more balanced geographical distribution, particularly at the management level; asks the Committee to keep the discharge authority informed of the outcome of this type of action;

    32. Welcomes the participation of the Committee’s Traineeships Office, for the second consecutive time, in the session titled ‘Opportunities for young Roma’ in April 2023; commends the initiative to present the Committee’s traineeships scheme to young and motivated Roma and non-Roma participants, reflecting a strong commitment to promoting inclusivity, diversity, and equal opportunities; encourages the continuation and expansion of such initiatives to further engage underrepresented communities and foster a more inclusive European workforce;

    33. Welcomes the progress made with regard to gender balance in management, with an increase of the percentage of women both in middle management positions (from 29,7 % in 2022 to 32,5 % in 2023) and in senior management positions (from 37,5 % in 2022 to 44,4 % in 2023);

    Ethical framework and transparency

    34. Welcomes the work done by the Committees in 2023 to consolidate ethical rules and practices into a single ethical legal framework (Decision n⁰ 157/2023) covering disciplinary procedure, dignity at work, conflict management, combatting harassment, outside activities and whistleblowing among others; notes that that work culminated with a decision (n⁰ 157/2023) which was the outcome of comprehensive consultations with different stakeholders, as well as a follow-up to an internal survey on staff ethics awareness and the implementation of an internal audit recommendation on that topic; commends the Committee for continuing to offer training courses on ethics, integrity and respect and dignity at work to different groups of staff ranging from newcomers, managers and staff overall in 2023;

    35. Notes that the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) processed two cases in 2023: one case on alleged outside gainful activities of a Committee member and another case on allegations of recidivism on unauthorised external activities by a staff member; notes that in the former case no OLAF investigation was opened on the grounds of lack of proportionality between the resources needed to conduct an investigation and the expected results, while the Committee considered that there were no conflicts of interest on the grounds that Committee members do not receive any remuneration from the Union, nor are they required to declare their professional activities, for which they may be paid for local or regional mandates that those members may have; notes with regard to the latter case that OLAF opened an investigation which was concluded with two recommendations, which the Committee implemented by opening a disciplinary procedure against the staff member concerned and by recovering gains in connection with that person’s unauthorised outside activities; recalls that the case closed in 2022 on allegations of financial wrongdoings, harassment and mismanagement in a Committee-EESC joint service, gave rise to a conflict-management exercise involving the persons concerned and to a five-point action plan; notes with satisfaction from the Committee’s follow-up report to Parliament’s discharge decision covering the Committee’s budget implementation year 2022 that that action plan was fully implemented by the end of 2023;

    36. Recalls that the Committee adopted Regulation n⁰ 6/2023 of 4 July 2023 laying down transparency measures that focus on office-holding members and rapporteurs; commends in this context the Committee for having formally joined the EU Transparency Register on 1 January 2024;

    37. Urges the Committee to enhance the detection and prevention of conflicts of interest by introducing a mandatory cooling-off period for outgoing members before they can engage in lobbying or advisory roles involving Union institutions; calls for the proactive publication of all recusal decisions taken by Committee members due to conflicts of interest;

    38. Welcomes the Committee’s renewed efforts in the area of detection and prevention of conflicts of interest in 2023; notes that thanks to its Decision n⁰157/2023, the Committee defined the concept of conflicts of interest and has put in place a mechanism to detect and prevent it whereby staff are required to declare whether they might have a conflict of interest (potential or possible), by filling in a form at various key moments of their career or professional activities; notes with satisfaction from the Questionnaire that the annual information regarding the occupation activities of former senior officials is published in a transparent way on the Committee’s website; notes that the Committee did not detect any situations of conflicts of interest which would have required follow-up by the administration in 2023;

    39. Notes that no cases of whistleblowing were reported to the Committee in 2023, except for information received from OLAF about a whistleblowing case against a staff member of the Committee, which was eventually dismissed by OLAF; notes that the Committee did not adopt any new measures concerning whistleblowing in 2023 and continued to rely on the measures in place since 2015 and to promote them through ethics training and awareness raising; supports regular mandatory ethic trainings both for staff as well as for management level;

    40. Notes that the Committee has had in place a range of anti-fraud measures and actions applicable to its members and its staff which are implemented by different services; observes that no anti-fraud strategy was in place in 2023 despite Parliament’s requests in previous discharge resolutions; notes with satisfaction, following Parliament’s recommendation, and as indicated in the Questionnaire, the Committee’s commitment to further strengthen the existing anti-fraud measures by adopting an anti-fraud strategy in 2025; encourages the Committee to facilitate regular and compulsory anti-fraud trainings as part of the strategy; asks the Committee to keep the discharge authority informed on this matter;

    Digitalisation, cybersecurity and data protection

    41. Notes that the combined IT budget of the Committee and the EESC was EUR 12,7 million in 2023, compared to EUR 11,712 million in 2022, i.e., an increase of 8,40 %, whereas EUR 350 000 of that budget was paid for cybersecurity in 2023;

    42. Welcomes the Committee’s new ‘Digital Strategy 2024-2026’ adopted at the end of 2023; commends in this context the Committee for its digitalisation progress made in 2023 in different areas such as the administrative processes (including staff selection), procurement and interpretation, among others; calls on the Committee to accelerate digital transformation efforts by ensuring the full implementation of electronic workflows, e-signatures, and digital case management tools by 2026, reducing paper-based processes in line with sustainability commitments, shifting towards a more paperless administration;

     

    43. Notes with satisfaction that 90 % of the projects for simplification through digitalisation under the ‘Going for impact’ initiative were fully implemented by the end of 2023; notes in addition that further efficiencies were tapped due to an IT project to define the best tool for the electronic management of form-based workflows with, as a result, many of the Committee’s processes having begun to be simplified and digitalised through Microsoft 365 tools; notes with satisfaction that the Committee uses procurement modules such as e-Tendering, e-Notices, e-Submission, MyWorkplace, as well as the qualified electronic signature, for the signature of contracts, introduced in 2023; welcomes the adoption by the Committee of internal guidelines on use of artificial intelligence laying the ground for possible future solutions and encourages introduction of regular mandatory trainings on safe use of artificial intelligence;

    44. Notes further that the European Data Protection Supervisor (‘EDPS’) did not conduct any investigation or enquiry into the processing of personal data by the Committee in 2023; notes that in 2023 the EDPS launched a general questionnaire on the designation and position of the data protection officer (DPO), which was answered by the Committee’s DPO;

    45. Notes that the Committee did not encounter any cyber-attacks in 2023, other than certain denial of service attacks against the Committee’s externally hosted website; notes from the Questionnaire of the Committee’s tools and strategies for real-time threat monitoring and identifying vulnerabilities in the Committee’s systems; commends the Committee for adhering to standards in matters related to cybersecurity-related risk assessments, as well as for having put in place a system based on incident response plans, recovery measures and lessons learned; notes with satisfaction that the Committee and the EESC adopted the NIST Cybersecurity Framework with focus, in 2023, on the principles: ‘protect’ and ‘detect’; encourages the Committee to raise the cybersecurity awareness of their members and staff, to carry out regular risk assessments of its IT infrastructure and to ensure regular audits and tests of its cyber defences;

    Buildings

    46. Notes that the Committee’s budget (current year appropriations) in 2023 was EUR 18,594 million (compared to EUR 18,930 million in 2022) with a payment execution rate of 93,70 % (compared to 82,60 % in 2022); notes with satisfaction that, as result of exchanging the B68 and TRE74 buildings for the VMA building in 2022, savings were achieved due to lower costs of renting the entire VMA in 2023;

    47. Notes that renovation works of the VMA (third to ninth floor) continued in 2023; notes further a low payment execution rate with regard to the C8 appropriations (carried over from 2022 to 2023), i.e., 18,90 %, used for the fitting-out of the VMA premises; understands the Committee’s explanation for that low rate whereas the contractor was not able to finish parts of the renovation works in the VMA buildings; reiterates its call to the Committee to provide the discharge authority with an update on the return on investment in relation to the smart technologies installed in the VMA;

    48. Welcomes the commitment of the Committee and the EESC to apply systematically the ‘design for all’ principle to their infrastructure, ensuring accessibility of their building by design; notes that the Committees took a range of different measures to ensure accessibility of their buildings to people with various kinds of disabilities (wheelchair users, blind and visually impaired people, deaf persons, elderly people with muscular or vascular problems);

    Environment and sustainability

    49. Notes that the Committee continued to implement a variety of green practices in 2023, such as the use of innovative energy-efficient building installations, the purchase of 100 % green electricity, the replacement of paperless workflows with digital signatures, the application of environmental criteria in all tender procedures (with customised green criteria for calls for tender above EUR 60 000), a focus on waste reduction and increase in the recycling rate, the implementation of measures for a more sustainable travel by staff, including financial contributions by the Committee to its staff’s public transport costs, the use of full remote interpretation for statutory meetings, and other energy saving measures; notes with satisfaction from the Questionnaire a reduction of carbon emissions linked to the Committee’s administration’s activities by 18 % compared to 2019;

    50. Notes with satisfaction from the questionnaire that, thanks to its energy saving measures, the Committee’s energy consumption was reduced by an estimated 3,4 % in 2023 compared to 2022, corresponding to a financial gain of EUR 64 240; congratulates the Committees for having exceeded the EMAS objectives for 2021-2025 in all areas (electricity, gas, water, waste, waste sorting, paper for office use, CO2 emissions);

    Interinstitutional cooperation

    51. Welcomes the budgetary and administrative savings achieved through interinstitutional cooperation, and in particular the close cooperation established at administrative level with the EESC, with which the Committee shares premises and joint services in the areas of translation, infrastructure, logistics and IT, with 470 members of staff and approximately EUR 60 million (excluding salary related expenditures) pooled together by both institutions in 2023; notes with satisfaction that the Committee further extended its cooperation with the EESC by exploiting additional synergies through joint medical services and joint central data protection register and processing operations based on the Joint Controllership Arrangement signed by the Committee and the EESC in 2023; reiterates its call on the Committee to pursue and expand that cooperation in other areas with a view to avoiding duplication and further rationalising the operating costs of services available in the premises shared by the Committee and the EESC; invites the Committee and the EESC to explore the possibility of setting up a single administration for their joint services, keeping separate directorates or units for the services dealing with matters related to their specific and independent mandates; encourages the Committee and the EESC to continue their efforts to develop further cooperation and synergies;

    52. Welcomes the Committee’s search for synergies by purchasing services from other institutions through service-level agreements and by participating in interinstitutional coordination bodies and interinstitutional procurement procedures; welcomes the efficiency gains, with regard to the communication for the 2024 European elections, reported by the Committee in the Questionnaire; notes that those gains were possible because the Committee signed with Parliament a Memorandum of Understanding in February 2024 and a new Cooperation Agreement (CP) in May 2024; notes further that the CP also covered cooperation at political and administrative level between the two institutions;

    53. Calls on the Committee to deepen its cooperation with Parliament and the Commission by establishing a structured annual dialogue between Committee representatives and Union legislators on key legislative files affecting regional development, climate policy, and social cohesion; urges the Committee to explore joint initiatives with Parliament’s Committees on Regional Development (REGI) and on the Environment, Climate and Food Safety (ENVI) to promote sustainable regional investments;

    54. Notes that the Committee cooperates with the Commission (for an annual fee) for the handling of HR matters and the use of various IT platforms for financial management and HR; notes further that the Committee holds its plenary sessions in the premises of Parliament and the Commission to compensate for the lack of capacity in its own conference rooms and buys interpreting services from those two institutions; 

    55. Welcomes the reviewing in 2023 of the Cooperation Agreement of the Committee with Parliament in view of its final signature in 2024; supports the cooperation of the Committee with several parliamentary committees, intergroups and directorates-general of Parliament and convene to considers vital that members of the Committee and EESC be regularly and systematically invited to relevant parliamentary exchanges, including committee meetings, on issues they are dealing with;

    Communication

    56. Notes that the Committee’s communication activities focus on relationship with press, organisation of events and digital content and social media with a total budget (current year appropriations) of approximately EUR 2,8 million in 2023; regrets a very low payment execution rate in those areas (ranging from 24,70 % to 48,20 %); notes nevertheless a high execution rate with regard to C8 appropriations (carried over from 2022 to 2023) of between 98 % and 100 %; calls on the Committee to take measures for improving its budgetary planning with regard to communication related budgetary items;

    57. Notes with satisfaction the Committee’s achievements in promoting Union policies and programs at local and regional level, improving the outreach of its consultative works and enhancing its visibility and impact; notes that the Committee’s communication strategy seeks to strengthen its institutional and political profile as the voice of the Union’s regions, cities, villages, and municipalities, while showcasing the essential contributions of its members in connecting Union policies with citizens and fostering engagement at the local and regional level; notes in this context the Committee’s communication actions in 2023 in areas such as: – cohesion (e.g., the ‘Promoting cohesion as a fundamental value of the Union’s campaign in the framework of the EURegionsWeek with more than 8 000 participants); – climate change (e.g., the ‘Building resilient and innovative local communities’ campaign); – democracy (e.g., the ‘A new chapter for EU democracy’ campaign with 1 400 registrations for participation at the 14th EuropCom conference); – rural development (the ‘2023 LEADER European Congress’ conference) in 2023; commends the Committee for the increase in the number of persons registered in the Network of Regional and Local EU Councillors (from 2 307 in 2022 to 3 000 in 2023) and the number of participants in the Young Elected Politicians programme (from 775 in 2022 to 836 in 2023);

    58. Welcomes the Committee’s efforts to increase outreach to regional governments and local communities, including the expansion of the Network of Regional and Local EU Councillors and the Young Elected Politicians program; calls on the Committee to allocate additional resources to support regional capacity-building programs that empower local governments to better implement Union policies;

    59. Notes the Committee’s success with regard to media outreach as shown by the overall metrics for 2023, such as: 13 210 media mentions, 129 % increase on web visitors and 11 % increase on followers; notes that in terms of digital engagement, the Committee fell short of achieving its target for 2023; notes that, at the end of 2023, the Committee had 200 000 followers on its social media channels, i.e., 15 % more than in 2022 of which 57 603 followers (+5 %) on X (ex-Twitter), 61 170 (+5 %) on Facebook, 68 613 (+31 %) on LinkedIn and 15 392 (+47 %) on Instagram;

    60. Notes with satisfaction from the Questionnaire the Committee’s initiatives to raise awareness about the specific measures of the Digital Services Act and the Digital Markets Acts, as well as cybersecurity and online safety; acknowledges the Committee’s role in advancing the Union’s path to a digital future; commends in this context the Committee for organising in 2023 the Digital Masterclass series, for both staff and external audiences.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: REPORT on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budget of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office for the financial year 2023 – A10-0051/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    2. PROPOSAL FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DECISION

    on the closure of the accounts of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office for the financial year 2023

    (2024/2029(DEC))

    The European Parliament,

     having regard to the final annual accounts of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office for the financial year 2023,

     having regard to the Court of Auditors’ annual report on EU agencies for the financial year 2023, together with the agencies’ replies[7],

     having regard to the statement of assurance[8] as to the reliability of the accounts and the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions provided by the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2023, pursuant to Article 287 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,

     having regard to the Council’s recommendation of 17 February 2025 on discharge to be given to the European Public Prosecutor’s Office in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2023 (05754/2025 – C10-0023/2025),

     having regard to Article 319 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,

     having regard to Regulation (EU, Euratom) 2018/1046 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 18 July 2018 on the financial rules applicable to the general budget of the Union, amending Regulations (EU) No 1296/2013, (EU) No 1301/2013, (EU) No 1303/2013, (EU) No 1304/2013, (EU) No 1309/2013, (EU) No 1316/2013, (EU) No 223/2014, (EU) No 283/2014, and Decision No 541/2014/EU and repealing Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012[9], and in particular Article 70 thereof,

     having regard to Regulation (EU, Euratom) 2024/2509 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 September 2024 on the financial rules applicable to the general budget of the Union[10], and in particular Articles 70 thereof,

     having regard to Council Regulation (EU) 2017/1939 of 12 October 2017 implementing enhanced cooperation on the establishment of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (‘the EPPO’)[11], and in particular Article 94 thereof,

     having regard to Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2019/715 of 18 December 2018 on the framework financial regulation for the bodies set up under the TFEU and Euratom Treaty and referred to in Article 70 of Regulation (EU, Euratom) 2018/1046 of the European Parliament and of the Council[12], and in particular Article 105 thereof,

     having regard to Rule 102 of and Annex V to its Rules of Procedure,

     having regard the opinion of the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs,

     having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control (A10-0051/2025),

    1. Approves the closure of the accounts of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office for the financial year 2023;

    2. Instructs its President to forward this decision to the Administrative Director of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office, the European Council, the Council, the Commission and the Court of Auditors, and to arrange for its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union (L series).

     

    3. MOTION FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT RESOLUTION

    with observations forming an integral part of the decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budget of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office for the financial year 2023

    (2024/2029(DEC))

    The European Parliament,

     having regard to its decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budget of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office for the financial year 2023,

     having regard to Rule 102 of and Annex V to its Rules of Procedure,

     having regard to the opinion of the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs,

     having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control (A10-0051/2025),

    A. whereas the EPPO is the independent public prosecution office of the Union, responsible for investigating and prosecuting crimes against the financial interests of the Union, for significantly enhancing the Union’s capacity to safeguard taxpayer funds, and for bringing to judgment the perpetrators of, and accomplices to, criminal offences provided for in Directive (EU) 2017/1371[13] and indicated by Regulation (EU) 2017/1939[14];

    B. whereas the competence of the EPPO encompasses several types of fraud, and includes cross-border VAT fraud with a total damage of at least EUR 10 million, money laundering, corruption, organised crime and other offences for which the EPPO performs prosecutorial functions before the competent courts of the participating Member States;

    C. whereas the EPPO is one of the component of the Union’s anti-fraud architecture and, as such, its actions are coordinated with and complementary to those of the other components of the architecture, to achieve streamlined, efficient coordination that enhances the overall effectiveness of the architecture;

    D. whereas the EPPO intervenes when national authorities could investigate and prosecute crimes but where the prerogatives of national authorities stop at the borders of their country, and other organisations like Eurojust, OLAF and Europol do not have the necessary powers to carry out the relevant criminal investigations and prosecutions;

    E. whereas the procedural acts of the EPPO are subject to judicial review by the national courts and the Court of Justice of the European Union (the ‘Court of Justice’) has, by way of preliminary rulings or judicial reviews of those acts, residual power to ensure a consistent application of Union law;

    F. whereas the EPPO is composed of a central level, with its headquarters in Luxembourg, consisting of the European Chief Prosecutor, 22 European Prosecutors (one per participating Member State), the Administrative Director, and a decentralised, national- level consisting of the European delegated prosecutors (EDPs) in the 22 participating Member States;

    G. whereas at the central level the European Chief Prosecutor and the 22 European Prosecutors compose the College of the EPPO (the ‘College’) and supervise the investigations and prosecutions carried out by the EDPs at the national level, who operate with complete independence from their national authorities;

    H. whereas, under Article 93 of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939, the EPPO Administrative Director, acting as the authorising officer of the EPPO, is to implement its budget under its own responsibility and within the limits authorised in the budget and shall send each year to the budgetary authority all information relevant to the findings of any evaluation procedures;

    I. whereas, in accordance with Article 50(2) of the EPPO’s Financial Rules, the Accounting Officer of the Commission is also to act as Accounting Officer of the EPPO and is responsible for the preparation of the annual accounts, which are consolidated with those of the Union;

    J. whereas, under the current framework, the final annual accounts are scrutinised by the Court of Auditors (the ‘Court’) and it is with the Council to recommend and to the European Parliament to decide whether to grant discharge to EPPO’s Administrative Director in respect of the implementation of the budget for a given financial year;

    K. whereas the scrutiny over the management of the EPPO resources and related expenditure cannot ignore the examination of operational activities, their consequences and impact and the methods of their execution;

    L. whereas the EPPO has been operating autonomously in the implementation of its budget only since 24 June 2021 and it has started its operational activities, necessitating continuous evaluation to ensure resources align with operational effectiveness, on 1 June 2021, which is also the dies a quo for the five-year term indicated in Article 119 of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939 upon reaching which the Commission will have to submit to the European Parliament and to the Council and to national parliaments an evaluation report on the implementation and impact of such Regulation, and on the effectiveness and efficiency of the EPPO and its working practices, together with its conclusions;

    M. whereas, in accordance with Article 119(2) of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939, the Commission is to submit legislative proposals to the European Parliament and to the Council if it concludes that it is necessary to have additional or more detailed rules on the setting up of the EPPO, its functions or the procedure applicable to its activities, including its cross-border investigations;

    1. Welcomes the positive opinion of the Court on the reliability of the EPPO’s accounts for the year ended 31 December 2023 and on the legality and regularity of the underlying revenue and payments;

    2. Recalls the Parliament’s strong support for the establishment of the EPPO; acknowledges the EPPO as an independent Union body; stresses the EPPO’s important role in the protection of the Union’s financial interests and as an essential component of the Union’s anti-fraud architecture and of a wider Union system based on integrity, accountability, transparency and the sound financial management of resources; commends the EPPO for its work in investigating, prosecuting, and ensuring justice for crimes affecting the Union budget, such as fraud, corruption, and cross-border VAT fraud;

    3. Notes that it is possible to compare only the two most recent budgetary and operational performances of the EPPO, for the period 2022 to 2023, following the EPPO’s financial autonomy in June 2021; observes that, in that context, the budgetary increases related to the EPPO’s activities remain very difficult to estimate because of the EPPO’s recent establishment, the unique characteristics of the EPPO and its main activities, the unpredictable level of fraud detection, the wide variety of its cases, its lack of discretion with regard to pursuing prosecutions coupled with its reliance on the resources and procedural constraints of national judicial systems, the lack of a fixed correlation between the number and the costs of investigations, and the magnitude of the Union’s financial interests that are to be protected; also observes that it is difficult to estimate the expenditure for the caseload related to the Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF) because of its unprecedented manner of implementation and high volume of resources;

    Budgetary and financial management

    4. Notes that the overall final budget allocated to the EPPO for 2023 was EUR 65,9 million, substantially increased (by 14,7 %) from the EUR 51,2 million that was allocated in 2022, while the 2021 budget (EUR 26,2 million) related to a period prior to the EPPO’s financial autonomy; observes that the EPPO’s budget includes the reinforcement, granted by the budgetary authority at the request of the EPPO in June 2023, by EUR 500 000 (the request also included human resources related to the essential enhancement of the EPPO’s security capacity, leading to the grant of eight additional establishment plan posts); appreciates that no budget was returned in 2023, compared to 10 % (EUR 5,9 million) of the initial budget in 2022 and 21 % (EUR 9,5 million) in 2021; re-iterates the need for the EPPO to be provided with sufficient resources to adequately fulfil its mandate;

    5. Welcomes the increasing level of budget implementation, which was 99,6 % in 2023 (compared to 98,1 % in 2022 and 97,4 % in 2021); appreciates that the overall execution rate for payments progressed in 2023 reaching 85,3 % (compared to 76,6 % and 71 % in 2022 and 2021) and the average payment time decreased to 17 days compared to 23,8 in 2022 and 21,0 in 2021); observes that the electronic invoicing module (e-invoicing) was rolled out in June 2023 and it will contribute to further reducing administrative burdens, time-to-payment and the overall processing costs; encourages a further refinement of operational processes to maximise efficiency;

    6. Understands that, because the budget endowment requests were only partially met, the EPPO focused its financial resources on the intake of additional EDPs, which has an impact on the EPPO’s capacity to lead the increasing number of investigations and prosecutions, on the need to improve the security standing of the organisation and on the maintenance of its case-management System (CMS), which could have negatively affected the management of cross-border investigations; underlines the importance of additional funding and strengthening its staffing to enable the EPPO to effectively combat organised crime, protect the Union’s financial interests, and uphold the rule of law, which are key Union priorities; calls for a dedicated increase in funding within the next Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) to ensure it can continue to meet its objectives and obligations;

    7. Is aware that, following the achievement of its financial autonomy, in June 2021, the EPPO prioritised the operational expenditure related to investigation, prosecution and security measures, and that this has resulted in limiting the non-operational expenditure to essential level support services; remarks that, in this context, a total of EUR 28 312 075 was allocated on operational expenditure lines (Title 3), representing 43 % of the EPPO’s final budget 2023 (compared to EUR 21 047 346, which was 41 % in 2022); observes that the main cost drivers for these activities were the EDPs’ remuneration (51 % of the operational activities compared to 42% in 2022), followed by operational ICT activities like maintenance and development of the EPPO’s CMS (19 % compared to 28 % in 2022), and the linguistic services (translation and interpretation related activities) (14 %, the same as in 2022);

    8. Notes that the remuneration of the EDPs reached EUR 14,5 (compared to EUR 8,7 million in 2022), which represents the main operational expenditure because of the increased number of EDPs in place over 2023; welcomes the accession of Poland and Sweden to the EPPO, which was announced in 2024; notes that it did not affect the 2023 expenditure and concerns the 2024 budget only marginally, due to the late and gradual intake of two European Prosecutors and a number of EDPs; understands that a more solid cost estimation will not be possible until 2025; welcomes the inclusion in the programme of the objective of the new Irish Government to join the EPPO; calls on the Hungarian government, as the sole remaining Member State that has not yet joined the EPPO, despite the absence of any legal or constitutional impediment, to join the EPPO without further delay;

    9. Observes that costs for missions and operational meetings increased further in 2023 (mission costs were EUR 1 175 000 in 2023 and EUR 980 000 in 2022; operational meeting in 2023 were EUR 659 752 compared to EUR 170 000 in 2022), in line with the increasing level of intensity of investigations;

    10. Is aware that the costs for translation services are expected to further increase, in line with the EPPO’s increasing caseload, and recognises the need for additional resources for translation; welcomes both the internal guidance developed on the use of translation services, with a view to reinforcing control over costs and including the recommendation to use machine translation services whenever possible, and the use of national service providers of the limit allowed by the current Regulation to address the problem; observes, in that regard, that while Article 107 of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939 provides for translation services required for the administrative functioning of the EPPO at the central level to be provided by the Union’s Translation Centre for the Bodies of the European Union, it also provides for different handling of operational and urgent matters and empowers EDPs to decide on the arrangements for translations for the purpose of investigations in accordance with applicable national law;

    11. Notes that in 2023 the EPPO signed 234 specific contracts under existing framework contracts, for a total of more than EUR 11 million, with a significant increase in the use of EPPO framework contracts (82 specific contracts for a value of more than EUR 6,5 million) due, to a great extent, to the use of the EPPO’s framework contract for the Provision of Services in the Field of Information Systems; observes that only one contract, concerning the EPPO’s CMS, was awarded via a negotiated procedure without prior publication of a contract notice for reasons of extreme urgency;

    12. Observes that carry-over of appropriations from the previous exercise in 2022 amounted to EUR 10 969 680 (24,4 % of the EPPO’s 2022 final budget), of which 84,8 % was consumed (EUR 9 307 392) and 15,2 % was cancelled (compared to 21,4 % in 2022) and notes that forecasts indicate another carry-over in 2024, pending completion of the deliverables, for payment appropriations (the carry-over from 2023 to 2024 amounted to EUR 9 392 989); understands that partial cancellation is a consequence of the progressive establishment of the EPPO’s administrative practices following the financial autonomy it achieved in 2021; notes that carry-over appropriations cancelled for approved budgets of 2022 and 2023 could be neither used with existing or new contracts nor synchronised with the principle of annuality, while the planning of the corresponding expenses, mainly related to translation, meetings, missions and external contractors, could not be accurate due to a lack of any historical data and figures and the rapid evolving of the organisation; appreciates that the continuous strengthening of the EPPO’s administrative capacity is progressively addressing those issues and that, while a fully estimation cannot be made in advance because of the nature of the EPPO’s operational activity, the expected level of cancelled appropriations will diminish in 2024;

    13. Notes that in 2023 two budget transfers were adopted by the European Chief Prosecutor, on a proposal drawn up by the Administrative Director, and that they were notified to the College for information, for a total transferred between titles of EUR 1,2 million;

    14. Acknowledges the need for adequate budget flexibility, to address unexpected operational needs such as, in 2023, the war in Ukraine, inflationary pressures, or other global challenges and understands that the EPPO made use of its Financial Rules by timely reallocation of appropriations via budget amendments (one in June and one in November) and via budget transfers (one in September and one in December);

    15. Reiterates its observation on the obsolete 2017 Legislative Financial Statement which is deemed to be no longer fit-for-purpose due to a significantly underestimated workload; recalls its previous resolution, underlining that the absence of a mid-term budgetary review obliges the EPPO to wait until the very end of the budgetary adoption process to have clarity on what resource level it can implement in the subsequent year, and it limits the EPPO’s capacity to anticipate budget implementation preparatory activities as well as the options that should be made available to achieve maximum flexibility in the development of an organisational infrastructure for a project as innovative as the EPPO; notes that this, in particular, affects the early launch of recruitment, delaying the progress towards full occupancy among others and the overall absorption capacity of the EPPO;

    16. Maintains that the budgetary and human resources allocated to the EPPO are expected to be adequate to allow the efficient and successful carrying out of its mandate and the normal handling of the related administrative procedures; reiterates its call on the Commission to review the EPPO budgetary framework in close cooperation with the EPPO to find adequate ways to support it in its work; calls on the Commission to allocate additional resources, justified by the growing number of complex cases, and emphasises that these should not be dependent on the revision of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939 or of the EPPO mandate, but rather on the importance of the fight against organised crime and the protection of the Union’s financial interests in the next MFF;

    17. Emphasises that the activities of the EPPO contribute to the protection of the Union’s financial interests and are also expected to recover amounts from the Union’s budget that were not used for its intended purpose due to criminal activities; believes that the amounts resulting from seizing and confiscating measures adopted by the EDPs in the Member States could, after the deduction of costs incurred by the Member States’ authorities to implement those measures, flow back into the Union Budget in accordance with Article 38 of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939; considers that the potential revenue resulting from seizing and confiscating measures should be accounted for in the Union Budget as non-assigned revenue; calls on the Commission to make the necessary arrangements with the relevant national authorities to allow those amounts to enter into the Union Budget;

    18. Acknowledges that the EPPO clearly contributes to European added value in terms of coordination and cooperation with the Member States in investigating and prosecuting crimes against the financial interests of the Union and that the EPPO has been achieving the goals set out in Regulation (EU) 2017/1939 in that regard; expects Member States to comply with legal obligations and to report all relevant cases to the EPPO; notes with concern that in several instances Member States have been declaring criminal offences affecting the financial interests of the Union as national cases, which are within the competence of the EPPO; notes that questions of competence between the national authorities and the EDPs have come up in several cases across several countries; is aware that, according to Article 25(6) of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939, cases of disagreement about the EPPO’s competences are to be decided by the same national judicial authority who is responsible for determining the competent body for prosecution at national level; regrets that in many participating Member States the procedures in force and the national authorities entrusted with the decisions on such cases regarding conflicts of competence are not set in compliance with Regulation (EU) 2017/1939, stresses that in cases of conflicts of competence between the EPPO and a national prosecution authority, the national authority competent to decide on the attribution of competence could come to a conclusion without requesting a preliminary ruling of the Court of Justice and could, instead adopt a decision that is binding on the EPPO and points out that this is against the spirit of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939, which provides that, in accordance with Article 267 TFEU, the Court of Justice has jurisdiction to give a preliminary ruling on the interpretation of the provision on conflicts of competence between the EPPO and national authorities; believes that the current situation lacks legal clarity; encourages all Member States to work more closely with the EPPO; emphasises that the competence of the EPPO is clearly outlined in Article 22(1) and (2), and in Article 23 of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939, and that all Member States are to comply with that Regulation; notes that when Member States have doubts about the competence of the EPPO in a particular case, there is the possibility of submitting a preliminary question to the Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling pursuant to Article 267 TFEU and Article 42(2), point (c), of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939 ; urges the Commission, where there is a breach of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939, to submit the case to the Court of Justice; notes with concern that the question of competence can cause a halt to the investigation; is concerned about potential loss of evidence when cases are paused; calls on the Commission to collect information regarding cases regarding conflicts of competence for the evaluation report that will be submitted in 2026;

    19. Reiterates that Article 91(6) of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939 is to be implemented properly and underlines that the peculiar characteristics of prosecution and investigation expenditure, including the exceptional cases of the EPPO’s operational expenditure governed by that provision, have to be taken into account; understands that, in 2023, a first financing agreement was signed in the framework of a pilot for the reimbursement of claims made under Article 91(6) of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939, to cover exceptionally costly investigation measures carried out at national level on behalf of the EPPO; appreciates that the corresponding payment was audited by the Court during the 2023 audit and was deemed legal and regular;

    Internal management, performance and internal control

    20. Welcomes that, during 2023, the College met 22 times and adopted 73 decisions, among which are the anti-fraud strategy 2023-2025, the anti-harassment policy for staff and for members of the College or the EDPs;

    21. Acknowledges that the EPPO continued its efforts to set in place a system to monitor efficiency gains and cost savings, and notes that in 2023 it launched a review of the budget and activities’ strategic and operational planning and monitoring processes and of the recruitment processes, to make gains in speed and acquired competences; points out that, overall, the internal control systems in force are effective;

    22. Notes that, to further develop the EPPO’s assurance framework, the internal auditor of the EPPO for non-operational matters (IAS) initiated, in 2023, a limited review of the EPPO’s building blocks of assurance; believes that this engagement, scheduled to be finalised during the course of 2024, will provide recommendations to build a stronger capacity for the Authorising Officer to issue a credible declaration of assurance;

    23. Welcomes the benchmarking exercise carried out by the Internal Audit Capability (IAC) by comparing the deployed human resources of the EPPO with a set of other Union entities and national prosecution offices, against a standardised set of pillars which includes administrative support and operational activities; observes that, in 2023, the IAC tested the internal oversight environment and ran the first internal audit as an analysis of the working environment and internal controls of the EPPO’s decentralised office in Sofia, Bulgaria;

    24. Reiterates its view that the IAS and the IAC should coordinate their actions with a view to advising and assisting the EPPO in the establishment of its main core processes and the achievement of its objectives;

    25. Notes that the EPPO has developed its own purchase capacity, resulting from its own specifically run procurement processes launched in 2023, and manages its own specific contracts and order forms with regard to the implementation of existing framework contracts that were signed in 2023; observes that the EPPO continues, in parallel, to operate its purchase capacity through service level agreements with other Union institutions, bodies, offices and agencies, and by joining inter-institutional contracts with various market operators;

    26. Is aware that in 2023 the Administrative Director established the minimum standards (assessment criteria) for each of the 17 internal control principles based on the COSO 2013 Control-Integrated Framework and established by the EPPO Internal Control Framework (ICF) as building blocks of the EPPO internal control system; observes that out of 72 compliance criteria, 51 are observed as fulfilled, 20 have some elements in place but further development is desirable and only in the case of one criterion has no significant implementation has been noted; appreciates that, since its adoption by the College on March 2021, 71 % of the adopted ICF assessment have been successfully implemented whereas additional effort needs to be made for the full implementation of the remaining 29 %;

    27. Welcomes that, on 1 March 2023, an updated version of the EPPO Anti-fraud Strategy 2023- 2025 was adopted setting the objectives to counter fraud at all levels of the organisation in connection with a dedicated action plan which is part of the EPPO internal control environment and is monitored on a regular basis; appreciates the annual review of the Anti-Fraud Strategy action plan by the EPPO Internal Control Officer, reporting the results of that review to the Administrative Director;

    28. Is aware that, in line with the EPPO’s financial rules, the EPPO ensures an adequate level of financial transactions and procurement procedures via ex post controls on financial transactions (payments, commitments and recovery orders) and on procurement procedures for the period 1 January to 31 December 2023;

    29. Observes the increase in crime reports submitted to the EPPO (4 187 in 2023 compared to 3 318 in 2022 and 2 832 in 2021) and, as a result, the increase in open investigations (1 371 in 2023 compared to 865 in 2022 and 567 in 2021) and in the estimation of damage (EUR 19,27 billion in 2023 compared to 14,1 billion in 2022 and 5,4 billion in 2021); remarks that reports from private parties (2 494, which is 29 % more than in 2022) and from national authorities (1 562, which is 24 % more than in 2022) represent the biggest share of operational input received, while regrets that reports from other Union institutions, bodies, offices and agencies remained very low (108), suggesting that no significant improvement in terms of detection and reporting was achieved from their side; notes that the number of indictments (139 in 2023 compared to 87 in 2022 and 5 in 2021) together with the freezing orders obtained by the EPPO (EUR 1,5 billion compared to EUR 359,1 million in 2022 and EUR 147 million in 2021) are indicative of the growing performance level of the EPPO;

    30. Notes that, compared with 2022, the caseload of the EPPO almost doubled in 2023, reaching up to 1 927 active investigations; commends the fruitful activities of the EPPO in 2023, which included 139 indictments, 339 VAT-related cases and over 200 investigations on the implementation of NextGenerationEU; further notes that the EPPO started to bring more perpetrators of Union fraud to justice in front of national courts;

    31. Notes that, in 2023, 48 cases concluded with a court conviction (compared to 20 cases in 2022) and that EUR 60 million was the amount confiscated (compared to EUR 2 million in 2021); underlines the importance of a systematic reporting on the follow-up to these cases in terms of the financial measures adopted (confiscation and recovery) to get a clearer understanding of the impact of the EPPO’s actions; welcomes the actions undertaken by the EPPO and the Commission to streamline their communications and make them adequate in relation to the needs of possible administrative procedures for the adoption of measures to restore the Union’s budget affected by financial crimes; reiterates its call on the Commission to assist the EPPO in monitoring and follow-up activities, in such a way that the EPPO’s limited resources are not diverted from their investigative and prosecutorial tasks; encourages the EPPO, where possible and appropriate, to engage in better cooperation with other components of the Union’s anti-fraud architecture, such as Eurojust and Europol, or using – via OLAF- the Anti-Fraud Coordination Services established in the Member States to monitor the results of its investigations;

    32. Underlines the essential role of asset recovery in the creation of a credible deterrent to organised crime; welcomes the EPPO’s participation in international networks to advance its asset recovery operations further; stresses the need for the Commission to invite the EPPO to participate in the newly created cooperation network on asset recovery and confiscation; notes that the timely and effective investigation and prosecution of fraud-related crimes can generate significant savings for the budget of the Union and the budgets of the Member States;

    33. Is concerned about the increasing number of EPPO investigations regarding the implementation of Recovery and Resilience Plans (RRPs) (there were 233 investigations at the end of 2023, compared to 15 investigations at the end of 2022) and their relevant estimated financial damage (EUR 1,86 billion); is particularly concerned that, despite the high number of investigations, there is currently no obligation on Member States to report RRF cases to the Commission through the Irregularity Management System (IMS); recalls the obligation to report all the cases of fraud affecting RRF to the EPPO and stresses that such cases are also relevant for EDES-related measures; stresses that the EPPO’s workload, initially underestimated, has significantly increased and is expected to continue growing particularly due to the rising number of RRF-related cases and that relevant analyses suggest a possible exponential grow in the number of cases of fraud, corruption, double funding and conflicts of interest in the coming years; calls on the EPPO to systematically analyse and identify fraud patterns in Member States where multiple RRF cases have been detected, and to communicate these patterns to Member States, the Commission and the Recovery and Resilience Task Force, with the objective of enhancing preventative measures to mitigate the risk of fraud; calls on the EPPO, the Commission and OLAF to cooperate closely with the aim of minimising, as much as possible, the impact of such fraudulent misbehaviours on the Union’s budget and safeguarding the achievements of the RRF’s goals; recalls the call on the Commission to provide adequate guidance to the EPPO on how to support and foster the adoption of the remedial measures which follow the EPPO’s independent investigation and prosecution of fraud affecting the RRF and to keep the budgetary authority informed regarding the available options;

    34. Understands that the EPPO reacted to Parliament’s call for a better monitoring system and enhanced follow-up of investigations and prosecutions by launching a project on digital statistical tools which would allow better use of the data that it processes, and the development of a strategic analysis capacity to identify the patterns of fraud; shares the EPPO’s view that the success of those efforts are directly linked to the available resources and calls on the Commission to take these activities and the related costs into consideration for the future proposals on Regulation (EU) 2017/1939 and on budgetary endowments;

    35. Appreciates the EPPO’s efforts in the setting up key performance indicators (KPIs) for both operational and administrative activities with specific targets due to its peculiar business model; maintains its remark on the need for operational activities to include reference to the amounts seized, confiscated and eventually recovered to the Union’s budget, the safeguard of which is ultimately the raison d’être of the Union’s anti-fraud architecture of which the EPPO is an important component; understands that monitoring and follow-up action, including reporting on the recovery results, are not in the EPPO’s remit and require resources and specific prerogatives that are not part of the EPPO’s mission; asks the Commission to support the EPPO in identifying indicators linked to the achievement of that essential task, stressing that a better monitoring system, and more data of good granularity and aggregated in cluster per typology of misconduct, sector of interest or geographical area, could allow making more tangible the impact of the EPPO’s investigations and allow the identification of patterns of fraud;

    Human resources, equality and staff well-being

    36. Observes the upward trend in the number of staff, increasing from 58 in 2020, to 122 in 2021, 217 by the end of 2022 and 238 by the end of 2023; is aware that, for 2023, the EPPO requested from the budgetary authority the suppression of 20 contract agent posts and the creation of 20 temporary agent posts, which was granted and implemented by the EPPO in the same year, resulting in the total number of staff remaining unchanged (248, out of with 171 TAs, 48 CAs and 29 SNEs), with a different allocation of posts (191 TAs, 28 CAs and 29 SNEs); points out, however, that following certain security weaknesses identified, the EPPO requested in May 2023 an amending budget and additional posts to enhance the physical, information and cyber security at central and decentralised levels and that out of 21 security posts identified, only eight posts (1 AD 9, 4 AD 6 and 3 AST 3) were granted in November 2023 for further security implementations which was finalised in 2024;

    37. Points out that, in 2023, the occupancy rate at the central office was 92,97 %, of which 238 were members of staff compared to 256 budgeted posts; notes that out of 140 posts for the EDPs, 130 were on the post at the end of 2023 and another 10 started at the beginning of 2024, reaching 100 % of occupancy rate; observes that the EPPO reinforced its capacity to run timely and transparent recruitment procedures by concluding 24 selection procedures in 2023, on-boarding 45 statutory staff members and 8 new European Prosecutors while 35 new EDPs were appointed;

    38. Notes that, by December 2023, staff turnover (TAs and CAs) was at 4,62 %[15], recording a total of 11 resignations throughout the year, mainly justified by leaving to another institution (four cases) and for more senior positions offered in other Union institutions (seven cases); observes that the main underlying cause for this turnover is the specificity of the Luxembourg labour market, which has a very limited talent pool and small offer of specialised skills;

    39. Acknowledges the Commission’s efforts to satisfy the EPPO’s requests for additional posts; believes that the workload perspectives indicates that further resources are needed, especially considering the backlog and additional RRF-related cases and far-reaching VAT fraud and also considering that the administrative and central support functions are expected to grow, in line with the larger operational population; points out the risk of underestimating needs and capacities; remarks that the cost of interim staff and external service providers working intra-muros in 2023 reached EUR 4 235 242; encourages the Commission and the EPPO to find a sustainable long-term solution which allows for continuity, preserves confidentiality and retains built-in competences; appreciates that the EPPO’s additional operational needs are exhaustively integrated in the EPPO Single Programming Document 2024-2026 and in EPPO budget requests;

    40. Notes with concern that the Luxembourg labour market is very competitive, that the financial conditions offered by the Union administration are not attractive compared to the local market (subject to diverse salary indexations throughout the year), and do not take due account of the high cost of living in Luxembourg, which has become even more difficult because of the inflation rate and the increased cost of housing; notes that the EPPO cannot offer a career path for its members of staff to become Union Officials and that its posts are therefore even less attractive than those in the four other Union institutions operating from Luxembourg; emphasises that this results either in a very limited number of applications for vacant posts or in the rejection by the selected candidates of the employment offer once received, due to the high cost of living; calls on the EPPO and the Commission to implement measures that enhance the EPPO’s attractiveness for highly skilled professionals with international experience, such as the housing allowance for lower-grade staff approved by the budgetary authority for 2025, as recommended by the High-Level Interinstitutional Group; notes the overrepresentation of certain nationalities among staff;

    41.  Notes that, at the end of 2023, geographical and gender balance was adequately pursued overall across the 238 members of staff (with 137 men and 101 women); maintains that the nationality breakdown of the EPPO population is constantly monitored by those hiring new members of staff, in seeking to ensure balance, especially, in light of the uneven distribution of applicants, and with Italy (34), Romania (33), Greece (26) and Belgium (24) being more represented across the 26 different nationalities; encourages the EPPO to adopt proactive measures to ensure a balanced representation of nationalities among its staff, reflecting the diversity of the participating Member States; expresses concerns over the gender distribution among senior management positions (four men to one woman) and calls for this issue to be addressed in the framework of the overall diversity strategy; calls for the publication of an annual report, disaggregated by gender, nationality, and employment category, including concrete measures to close gaps in recruitment and career advancement and to monitor and address imbalances;

    42. Is aware that the decision to implement a strategy on Diversity and Inclusion was made in 2023, with the development of the strategy to be executed in the course of 2024; encourages the EPPO to progress with its adoption and to periodically launch surveys among its staff, by promoting peer-review with other components of the Union’s anti-fraud architecture, such as Eurojust, OLAF and Europol; understands that the EPPO’s policy on Diversity & Inclusion will be based on the EU Agencies Network Charter on Diversity & Inclusion, adopted in March 2023, and believes that it will in general encourage diversity to make the workplace more attractive to candidates with specific needs; reiterates its request to the EPPO to adopt its Charter on Diversity and Inclusion without delay, in light of the increase in staff during 2023;

    43. Remarks that, including TAs, CAs, SNEs and EDPs, 341 out of 396 staff (compared to 275 out of 332 in 2022) were deployed in investigative activities by the end of 2023 (that is 86,10 % compared to 82,83 % in 2022 and 86 % in 2021) while 55 members of staff (compared to 57 in 2022) were engaged in administrative support and control functions;

    44. Welcomes the appointment of 8 new European Prosecutors and 35 new EDP’s to the EPPO in 2023; reiterates that the EPPO can fulfil its role only if it enjoys full judicial independence, which flows from a merit-based and objective appointment procedure; encourages Member States to contribute to the full independence of the EPPO in that regard;

    45. Maintains that the appointment of EDPs is a shared responsibility of the EPPO and the Member States; stresses that the appointment procedure must always comply with Article 17 of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939 and the principle of national procedural autonomy;

    46. Underlines the need for greater career development opportunities for EDPs to attract and retain experienced professionals; calls for improved employment conditions, including a clear career progression path and the standardisation of social security and pension arrangements across participating Member States, ensuring that national salary discrepancies do not deter qualified candidates from applying;

    47. Appreciates that, in the course of 2023 and beginning 2024, the number of EDPs reached the initially foreseen number of 140; welcomes the decision to align the remuneration of EDPs with that of EU Officials of equivalent level of responsibility, rather than 80 % of the salary of EU Officials, as originally provided for; takes the view that this decision increases the attractiveness of the EDP’s function, paving the way to the recruitment of more experienced national prosecutors whose national salary was higher than the remuneration offered by the EPPO, and in the meantime reduces the administrative burden on the EPPO for the implementation of Article 16(1) of the Conditions of Employment of the EDPs, which provides that, in the case of total net remuneration lower than the national salary, a top-up amount is provided to ensure that the remuneration matches the previous level;

    48. Underlines that the selection process for European Prosecutors and EDPs is not managed autonomously by the EPPO, because European Prosecutors are nominated by the Member States and then appointed by the European Council, whereas EDPs are nominated by the Member States and appointed by the College; maintains that the application of qualified candidates to the EDP positions could increase and the process could become more selective by adopting a clear career perspective and more favourable administrative discipline on social security and health insurance coverage; reiterates that the creation of a specific status for EDPs would be consistent with the nature of their judicial function and contribute on making those posts more appealing; calls on the Commission to propose adequate solutions in the event of amending Regulation (EU) 2017/1939;

    49. Understands that each Member State is obliged (under Article 96(6) of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939) to put in place arrangements of legislative or administrative nature to maintain the affiliation and coverage of the EDPs, including any contributions to the relevant national social security, pension and insurance schemes, but a number of Member States have not yet fully complied with this obligation; therefore calls on the Commission to propose an effective solution to the social security and health insurance coverage gap of the EDPs at the revision of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939;

    50. Notes that five complaints about the appointment of EDPs were introduced before the Court of Justice until 2023, of which three were closed (either dismissed or withdrawn) and one was dismissed, but an appeal is currently pending before the Court of Justice, and the last action for annulment of the decision of the College rejecting the nomination as EDP of a person nominated by a Member State was admitted in July 2024 on the grounds of a lack of sufficient reasoning in the College’s decision and an analysis is on-going on the manner in which the annulment is to be implemented; observes that there are no new complaints before the General Court concerning appointments to the EPPO;

    51. Notes that the EPPO’s learning and development strategy was launched in 2023, aiming to promote a culture of continuous learning and facilitate the continuous assessment and adaptation of the staff’s evolving learning needs, together with the pilot learning needs analysis;

    52. Notes, as regards measures and policies in place to safeguard the physical and mental well-being of staff, that in 2023 all measures were subject to revision and consultation by all involved stakeholders (the staff committee, members of staff in general, and management), seeking to find a balance between expectations and reality of the EPPO as a growing and rapidly changing organisation; observes that there the EPPO operates a flexitime scheme and a work-from-home standard scheme, which provides for one day of telework per week as a basis and a maximum of three days per week, plus extensions accepted in light of serious health or family constraints; remarks that current framework also includes 10 days’ work from outside the place of employment in a given year, to be used without link to other days of leave; believes that the EPPO’s current working conditions allow staff to take advantage of digital solutions by integrating a good level of autonomy in the management of working patterns, facilitating the conciliation of private and work life and promoting team morale and spirit; welcomes the on-going development of a policy on well-being which shall contain a section on well-being for staff benefiting from telework;

    53. Highlights that, as suggested by Parliament, in the second semester of 2023 an open consultation on flexible working arrangements took place, and the decisions adopted in 2021 and 2022 underwent an ex post revision; notes that in consideration of the input of all stakeholders, on December 2023 the Administrative Director incorporated updates to the provisions; notes that changes included the enlargement of the notion of ‘place of telework’ (from 2 to 2,5 hours’ time/distance radius around the EPPO’s central office), and the introduction of hybrid working arrangements for interim agency staff; observes that no further change was adopted by College decisions, taking into account that the Administrative Director decisions had already enacted the conclusions of the staff consultations;

    54. Notes that, following Parliament’s calls, a staff satisfaction (engagement) survey is planned in the first quarter of 2025; understands that the EPPO’s staff committee has also run a staff priorities survey, and encourages a more intensive dialogue to enhance the work-life conditions;

    55. Welcomes that no case of burnout or harassment have been reported and that the number of long-term sick leave is very limited; welcomes the EPPO’s awareness of its duty to ensure promotion and preservation of health and wellbeing across staff, as well as the monitoring practices to earn such understanding which take into account untaken annual leave, the carry-over of annual leave and absences, the number of staff on long-term sick leave and the length of the absences; recalls the importance of establishing a clear and structured procedure for reporting cases of harassment by the European Chief Prosecutor and by the European Prosecutors, as well as its divulgation to all the staff;

    56. Observes that, in early 2023, the EPPO’s central office carried out a traineeship pilot and the EPPO legal service sector hosted two trainees followed by two more in March and September 2023 for remunerated, in-person, five-month traineeships; notes that, based on the positive conclusions of the pilot, a traineeship policy was drafted and has been approved in 2024, followed by a first cycle of effective trainees the same year; welcomes the initiative to launch an experimental relationship-building with the local university and if successful, calls for its expansion to additional universities across the EU, which could offer interesting perspectives to further develop the early talent programmes for diversity; stresses that the high cost of living in Luxembourg poses a considerable obstacle for potential trainees; emphasizes that traineeships should be remunerated in compliance with the European Parliament’s resolution of 14 June 2023 with recommendations to the Commission on quality traineeships in the Union (2020/2005(INL), which calls for all internships in the Union to be paid;

    57. Welcomes the intense activity of the staff committee, the final adoption of its internal rules of procedure, the launch of the first staff committee open day, the launch of the first EPPO-wide staff survey, the participation of its representatives in the selection procedures, the retroactive revision of all general implementing provisions adopted by the EPPO before the establishment of the staff committee, the submission of input on internal reorganisation, working time and hybrid working, implementing rules and the improvement of working conditions;

    58. Understands that the EPPO is progressing towards the finalisation of a business continuity plan, which is included in the Union’s administration management standards, and urges the EPPO to adopt it without further delay;

    Ethical framework and transparency

    59. Understands that the EPPO’s ethical framework is being gradually built up; observes that the core values of that ethical framework are clearly set out in codes of conduct, which outline the standards of behaviour expected of employees at all levels; also observes that the ethical framework depends on the EPPO’s code of good administrative behaviour, its anti-fraud strategy and a training programme on ethics, which encompasses harassment, whistleblowing, the prevention of conflicts of interest and other ethical issues; regrets that members of staff of the EPPO are not required to attend that training programme, which would ensure a consistent understanding and application of the EPPO’s codes of conduct; calls on the EPPO to remedy the situation;

    60. Notes the EPPO’s engagement in awareness-raising actions among staff about ethical framework and related matters; encourages the EPPO to make mandatory the attendance of such sessions by European Prosecutors and EDPs at their taking over of duties; believes that internal dialogue needs to be intensified;

    61. Notes that no effective cases of conflict of interest were detected in 2023; is aware that dedicated conflict of interest declaration forms have been established and conflict of interest rules are in force for the members of College, the EDPs, the members of staff of the operational units, and other sensitive posts; welcomes the ongoing development of a structured conflict of interest policy and calls on the EPPO to finalise its adoption; calls for the implementation of a mandatory annual refreshment of an ethics and integrity training course for all EPPO personnel;

    62. Urges the EPPO to enhance its internal integrity framework by mandating public disclosure of all financial interests and external activities of senior officials, including members of the College; calls for a periodic audit of these disclosures to identify and mitigate potential risks of undue influence;

    63. Understands that the EPPO seeks to prevent revolving doors in particular by endorsing the strict application of the provisions of the Staff Regulations, which are set out in all contracts of the EPPO, including ad hoc exit forms that indicate the obligations that apply after termination of engagement; welcomes in this regard the adoption, in 2023, of the Guidelines for the EPPO Staff on Outside Activities and Assignments, which apply to activities that are not considered to relate to hobbies of leisure activities outside the remit of the EPPO;

    64. Calls for the introduction of a more robust revolving door policy, including an extended cooling-off period of at least two years for senior EPPO officials before they can engage in private-sector employment related to EPPO investigations; requests that the EPPO conducts an annual review of compliance with these post-employment restrictions;

    65. Calls the EPPO to adopt a dedicated whistleblowing and anti-retaliation procedure to integrate the implementing rules to the Staff Regulations adopted by the College (College Decision 2021/077 laying down guidelines on whistleblowing applicable within the EPPO) and to accompany Article 45.12 of the EPPO Financial Rules (establishing the actions to be undertaken in the circumstances) in order to ensure a safe and protected workplace; welcomes the initiative of intensifying internal communication on the first network of confidential counsellors and on the anti-harassment provisions and to all National European Delegated Prosecutors’ Assistants (NEDPAs) on whistleblowing mechanism for breaches against the EPPO mandate;

    Digitalisation, Cybersecurity and data protection

    66. Deplores the situation of the EPPO in the area of its IT autonomy, which is adversely affected by the decision of the Commission’s Directorate-General for Digital Services (‘DG Digital Services’, formerly DIGIT) to discontinue the provision of digital workplace services; points out that EPPO IT autonomy requires additional human and financial resources which so far have not been granted because of the limitation imposed by the overall available budgetary resources in the concerned lines; regrets that, on grounds of the risks to its operational activities, the EPPO had to establish its own digital service capacity to accommodate the additional human resources that it was granted in light of the participation of Poland and Sweden;

    67. Notes that the EPPO’s initial approach was to prioritise resources on the setting and working of essential digital services linked to its operational activities, such as its case-management system, while acknowledging that the EPPO’s digital services, which, at least in part, diverge from those of the Commission, would have needed, in the mid-term, a tailored approach; observes that the interruption of service by the Commission occurs in the crucial phase of the consolidation of the EPPO’s establishment;

    68. Understands that, in 2023, the EPPO’s IT, Security and Corporate Services unit continued the implementation of two major programmes: the IT Autonomy Programme, to offer a complete catalogue of administrative IT services fully managed internally, and the EPPO’s CMS programme, to further develop the digitalisation of the organisation in its core business area; acknowledges that in 2023 the EPPO continued to prepare to gradually transition from a digital workplace provided by DG Digital Services  to an EPPO-owned and operated solution; is aware that the resources needed to implement this change, although were included in the EPPO’s budget request for 2023, were not granted by the budgetary authority; notes that following DG Digital Service’s announcement, the EPPO started negotiation to seek a solution which has not yet been achieved;

    69. Appreciates that Commission has temporarily extended the provision of IT services until June 2025 but maintains that the outsourcing of those services is a suboptimal solution in the current situation; understands that not only security and confidentiality-related arguments, but also purely financial aspects, suggest to reconsider the decision, because the outsourcing would appear much more costly than the in-house solution, and the adoption of the latter, after DG Digital Services cease providing their services, would be managed by the EPPO; stresses that, to implement the preferable in-house solution, the complex administrative aspects, the EPPO lack of experience and the de-centralised configuration of the EPPO with EDPs and NEDPAs in several locations across the Union, will require a more relevant budget and a lengthy transition period;

    70. Reiterates its call on DG Digital Services to not interrupt its support to the EPPO until such a time as the EPPO has its own reliable IT system; deems it to be essential to avoid loss of data and to keep the EPPO fully operational in the transition between IT services providers; maintains that clear communication and operational coordination on the transition is to be ensured involving the highest decision-making levels of the Commission and the EPPO; asks the Commission and the EPPO to agree upon a gradual passage of competences for a smooth and continuous transition in the period after the extension, which could be extended beyond June 2025;

    71. Observes that EPPO’s requests for permanent additional posts to fill the gap stemming from the discontinuation of DG Digital Services were refused, in January 2023, when EPPO requested 45 establishment plan, and at the end of February 2024, when a request for an amending budget 2024 for EUR 2,98 million and 37 established plan posts was also rejected; notes that the solution of recruiting intra-muros contractors could be a part of an interim solution to address DG Digital Service’s discontinuation, but while that approach would offer immediate operational continuity, it should not be conceived as a definitive solution for the EPPO, taking into account the extremely sensitive nature of its activities and the need to ensure continuity and reliability of its digital services, as well as the highest level of security of its IT infrastructure, systems and equipment; shares the view that the rejection of the EPPO’s budgetary requests is indicative of differences in the assessment of the problem, which has an adverse impact on the EPPO’s operational activities and represents a potential reputational risk for the Union in the case it results in weakening the EPPO’s operational capacity;

    72. Understands that each EDP has to use any national and the EPPO’s CMS, which are different data bases governed by different access rights; believes that this situation increases the daily complexity in the data management; is also aware that to make it possible the processing and exchange of information between the central services of the EDPs and the EPPO, all the casefiles need to be digitalised by the EDPs using national digital tools and in compliance with national law; appreciates, in this regard, the formal creation of the NEDPA status in the official organisation chart which allows granting access to NEDPAs (staff of the national office) directly to the EPPO’s CMS, like that unburdening the EDPs of administrative tasks and creating the basis for more accuracy and consistency of case data between the two case-management systems; takes the view that the way towards integration between the EPPO’s CMS and national case-management systems would be facilitated by appropriate revision of regulation and that these steps would increase the effectiveness of EPPO investigations; notes, however, that such integration could be primarily a matter of compatible technological solutions used in the different Member States and linked to the actual level of digitalisation of judiciary proceedings in those Member States; observes that the burden of the inherent costs is currently shared, with the national budget covering the costs of the equipment needed for interaction with the national case-management systems, and the EPPO budget covering hardware and the setting of a digital working environment that is secured to the same standard as EPPO central office staff and which is considered part of the operational communication costs provided for by Regulation (EU) 2017/1939;

    73. Understands that interoperability is material to achieving efficient data exchange and cooperation and that in order to adopt minimum common data exchange agreements and the implementation of judicial interoperability tools, an e-CODEX EPPO Use Case Project, initiated in 2023, involved several workshops with the e-CODEX Consortium to align on technical and functional requirements; regrets that, after several workshops with e-CODEX Consortium, the project was paused to allow the transition to the new e-CODEX programme manager, eu-LISA, and due to lack of EPPO resources with expertise in this area; calls on the Commission to act as a facilitator for further progressing in the project and to factor also those actions in the EPPO’s budgetary needs estimate;

    74. Is aware of the increased threat to the EPPO’s IT structural integrity stemming from the aggressiveness of organised crime, combatted by the EPPO, and resulting in the need to step up physical and digital security; notes that in 2023 the EPPO focused on enhancing its security governance; appreciates the EPPO decision to create a dedicated unit to address cyber and physical security; observes that the EPPO prepared a framework including new processes, roles and responsibilities and policies to increase the security of the digital systems used for the handling of operational and administrative data; understands that several risk assessments were carried out to assess the security framework of the digital systems which suggested the implementation of additional technical and governance measures to enhance the EPPO’s security environment; remarks that the policy framework was improved in the circumstance, with a security strategy and global information security policy proposed in 2023 and formally approved and adopted in 2024;

    75. Observes that the EPPO completed, in 2023, the set-up of security contact points in all participating Member States to enhance cooperation on security matters for staff and EPPO offices located in those Member States; welcomes the service level agreement is in place with CERT-EU that provides support and monitoring for specific services for incident response-related matters; underlines that the deployed system to assess risk and to report incidents is well structured and training is provided effectively; appreciates the external assessment performed for physical security whose findings translated in a roadmap for improvement by the host country;

    76. Praises the significant progress made in 2023 towards the implementation of a backup data centre and the deployment of an associated disaster recovery scenario; appreciates, in that regard, the EPPO’s development of its own case-management ecosystem the components of which are all hosted in the EPPO data centre and managed by the EPPO’s staff, guaranteeing the EPPO control, retention and ownership of systems and data processed;

    77. Acknowledges the EPPO’s need for up-to-date equipment and IT systems to deal with increasingly complicated crimes frequently involving digital elements and digital methodologies; stresses as well the urgency of developing a strong cybersecurity framework, given the growing risks posed by highly tech-savvy criminal networks and potential foreign interferences, through cyberattacks; supports the EPPO in its request for resources to be allocated to protecting its cybersecurity and calls for the swift implementation of a robust cybersecurity strategy to safeguard EPPO’s operations and data integrity;

    78. Stresses that the nature of the EPPO’s activities entails the need for specific oversight and dedicated attention to the protection of personal data; takes the view that the EPPO and the EDPS should engage in continuous dialogue to ensure the usability of the data for the investigation and prosecution and, at the same time, ensure respect for the protection of personal data; understands that the requirements relating to data protection handling stems from Regulation (EU) 2017/1939 and from Regulation (EU) 2018/1725[16] and that those requirements are complemented and implemented by College decisions, adopted after consulting the EDPS; appreciates the decision to provide mandatory training for all members of staff, including dedicated data protection training essential to the access to the EPPO’s CMS;

    Buildings and security

    79. Observes that, thanks to the lease agreement by which Luxembourg authorities provide the building currently hosting the EPPO’s headquarters (the TOB building) on a rent-free basis, the costs are limited to a service charge fee of EUR 716 724 per year; notes that, in 2023, EUR 248 103 was paid to the same Luxembourg authorities for security installations in the two additional floors (9 and 10) delivered to the EPPO in Q1 2023;

    80. Welcomes, having regard to physical security, the allocation – with amending budget 2023 and the budget 2024 – of the resources needed to have a proportionate capacity to deliver enhanced security services (21 additional posts to enhance its security capability) and the EPPO’s efforts towards the continuous improvement and efficiency alignment of the physical security processes; maintains the proper functioning of the EPPO implies that prosecutors and staff have to be protected to be able to pursue their mission to its full extent, without threats, influence or pressure;

    Environment and sustainability

    81. Believes that the Luxembourg authorities providing the EPPO’s headquarters should consider their sustainability and energetic performance; calls on the EPPO to engage in discussions with the Luxembourg authorities to explore specific actions for improving the environmental footprint of its premises, including the installation of renewable energy sources such as solar panels, the introduction of CO2 offsetting measures and implementation of the Eco-Management and Audit Scheme to evaluate, report, enhance organisations’ environmental performance and to save energy; calls on the Commission to facilitate dialogue between the EPPO and the local host authorities to ensure the optimal use of resources and the alignment of EPPO’s operations with the Union’s sustainability;

    82. Notes that the EPPO’s central office is integrated in the Luxembourg network of free public transport making it easily reachable through low environmental impact means, at no cost for staff and visitors and that the central office underground car park provides a dedicated zone for bike parking; understands that exchanges are ongoing concerning the installation of charging stations for e-vehicles in the same underground car park;

    Interinstitutional cooperation

    83. Maintains that the EPPO’s role as a major operational component of the Union’s anti-fraud architecture can be effectively pursued only with intense cooperation with and support from its partners and stakeholders; reiterates that the EPPO can fulfil its role only if it enjoys full judicial independence; encourages Member States to contribute to the full independence of the EPPO in that regard and encourages the EPPO to continue its communication and coordination efforts with the several partners whose action has been designed to be reciprocal and complementary;

    84. Welcomes the initiatives launched by OLAF and the EPPO to intensify and streamline their operational cooperation and share knowledge amongst the involved actors; appreciates the first international conference allowing exchange of views between EPPO prosecutors and OLAF investigators, hosted by Parliament in 2024; emphasises that the revision of the regulatory frameworks of OLAF and EPPO provides the opportunity to reconsider many aspects of their working together in the light of the experiences earned in those first years of EPPO operational activity, having specific regard to the opening of complementary OLAF investigations and administrative investigations in support of the EPPO, as well as OLAF’s increased role in detecting and reporting fraud to the EPPO in support of the recovery of the damage to the Union budget; believes that the dialogue and cooperation within the antifraud architecture could be made more effective by the setting of a regular inter-institutional forum with a view to optimising the efficiency and efficacy of the available resources in action;

    85. Welcomes the initiatives launched by OLAF and the EPPO to intensify operational dialogue and improve coordination; underlines the importance of full and effective data-sharing between the EPPO, OLAF, Eurojust, and Europol to ensure seamless cooperation in the fight against cross-border fraud; calls for the establishment of a joint working group to oversee data integration and case management efficiency among these bodies;

    86. Encourages continued and enhanced cooperation between the EPPO and OLAF, in line with their respective regulations, and the obligation on OLAF to report, without undue delay, suspicions of criminal contact to the EPPO, in order to enable it to tackle fraud, corruption and financial crime affecting the Union’s financial interests; supports the further development of joint initiatives, information sharing and coordinated actions between the EPPO and OLAF, as such cooperation is vital in strengthening the protection of the Union’s financial interests and the Union’s fight against financial crime and to ensuring the effective and efficient use of Union resources.

    87. Commends the close cooperation in 2023 between the EPPO and the Court of Auditors, resulting in the timely transmission of information on suspicions of criminal offences falling within the EPPO’s competences;

    88. Expects that the working group established with the Commission, and the meetings on the implementation of the Commission-EPPO Working Arrangement, will ensure that EPPO notifications for the purpose of administrative recovery, as provided for by Article 103(2), point (c), of Regulation (EU) 2017/1939 will duly and effectively enable the Commission to maximise recovery to the Union budget, while complying with the confidentiality and proper conduct of the investigative actions; stresses that, in this specific regard, no feedback has been yet provided by either party, preventing the legislators from earning a comprehensive understanding of the underlying issues, including the specific amounts recovered annually by the Commission from Member States in cases of damage to the Union budget; highlights that the recovery of funds by national authorities remains under the Commission’s responsibility, as mentioned in the Mission Letter to the Commissioner for Budget, Anti-Fraud and Public Administration, while the EPPO does not hold a mandate to follow up on the recovery process; calls on the Member States to strengthen cooperation and inform both the Commission and the EPPO of final confiscations; urges a revision of the relevant Regulations to clarify the EPPO’s role in the recovery process; and urges the EPPO and the Commission to adopt an agreed upon form of reporting to Parliament; understands that this could require appropriate development of the EPPO’s CMS, and asks the Commission to prioritise the allocation of resources to the EPPO to meet that need;

    89. Welcomes the strengthened cooperation with Europol; observes that the ODIN (Operational Digital Infrastructure Network) programme would enable the full exploitation of the amount of data collected by the EPPO in its investigations (more than 1000 terabytes and growing); notes that, in that framework, the EPPO has identified possible crimes outside its competences, including organised crime, drug trafficking, illicit cigarette production, investment fraud, illegal gambling and prostitution (non-PIF offences), and others which have resulted in the transmission of several files as key evidence to ongoing national investigations and that 28 new cases have been initiated by national prosecution offices to further investigate those non-PIF offences, which are outside the EPPO’s remit; understands that for this and other analyses, however, cooperation with Europol suffers from limitations stemming from national procedural criminal law and accessibility of the EPPO data owned; underlines that the EPPO’s existing competence to investigate organised crime and money laundering linked to fraud affecting the Union’s financial interests should be supported through adequate resources and efficient cooperation with Europol; considers that while cooperation with Europol needs to be even further enhanced, it cannot fully substitute the development of the EPPO’s internal analytical platform, which remains vital to a fast interpretation of the data collected during its investigations and the setting of operational strategies in cross-border cases requiring access to the EPPO’s entire CMS; recalls that, in its upcoming evaluation report, the Commission should carefully analyse to which categories of crimes the EPPO’s mandate needs to be extended, in order to take full advantage of its potential; welcomes the EPPO’s call for enhanced cooperation with Union institutions;

    90. Is concerned about the increasing number of cases concerning the RRF; appreciates the timely information provided to the Commission and to the relevant Parliament Committees on this matter; believes that the large number of active cases involving RRF funds justifies an intensification of the exchanges held with, in particular, the Recovery and Resilience Task Force, with the aim of identifying possible oversight or control gaps or fraud patterns and to allow the Commission to keep up to date its performance monitoring mechanisms and to enforce the reduction and recovery measures recently designed; reiterates that RRF funds are Union and not national funds and are under the jurisdiction of the EPPO and encourages the Commission and other Union’s bodies and authorities to increase the detection efforts and report to the EPPO every relevant situation;

    91. Welcomes that the EPPO signed Working Arrangement with Parliament in November 2024, establishing clear modalities of cooperation for the purpose of protecting the Union’s financial interests;

    92. Notes that, in 2023, the EPPO continued to rely on inter-institutional contracts and bilateral agreements (SLAs) to purchase goods and services at a lower cost; observes that, at the end of 2023, the EPPO had 80 active membership in inter-institutional framework contracts and 22 service-level agreement or other bilateral agreements with other Union’s entities with the aim of maximising budgetary savings from the contractual instruments in place, in line with the principles of sound financial management;

    93. Strongly welcomes the participation of Poland and Sweden in the EPPO; is aware that this will have an impact on the EPPO’s budgetary needs, and supports the EPPO’s request which aims to equip the EPPO with the necessary resources to take advantage of the participation of Poland and Sweden to its operational activities; notes that while Ireland and Denmark continue to exercise their opt-out from the EPPO under Protocols No 21 and 22 TFEU, Hungary is the sole remaining Member State that has not yet joined the EPPO; calls on the Hungarian government to join the EPPO without further delay; recalls the collection of 680 000 signatures in favour of joining the EPPO, underscoring a strong societal demand for enhanced legal safeguards against fraud and corruption affecting the Union’s financial interests;

    94. Observes that, in 2023, no major improvement towards participation into the EPPO has occurred with the Irish authorities; reminds that their refusal to cooperate with the EPPO in executing several requests for mutual legal assistance sent by the EDPs had resulted in the EPPO reporting the situation to the Commission in accordance with Regulation (EU, Euratom) 2020/2092[17]; appreciated the following decision of the Irish authorities to amend their domestic legislation providing the legal framework for mutual legal assistance to the EPPO and underlines that from 1 November 2023 it provides mutual legal assistance to the EPPO based on this unilateral recognition; notes that no exchanges occurred with the Irish inter-agency working group established to examine Ireland’s potential future participation in the EPPO; urges the Commission, the EPPO and the Irish authorities to engage in a constructive dialogue to find an effective way of cooperation;

    95. Maintains that any lack of cooperation with the EPPO by any of the Member States, whether they are participating in the enhanced cooperation that established the EPPO, creates niches of immunity and privilege that make the defence of the financial interests of the Union uneven and inefficient at best; reiterates its call on the Commission and the Member States concerned to make any possible effort to integrate the current scenario with the few but still very important missing components, promoting the extension of the participation in the EPPO by the other still non-participating Member States in such a way that strengthens the effectiveness of the protection of the Union and national budgets; calls on the Commission to closely monitor Member States’ level of cooperation with the EPPO and urges the Commission to initiate infringement proceedings against any Member State that systematically obstructs EPPO-led investigations; takes the view that membership of the EPPO should be a precondition for receiving Union funds;

    96. Condemns the recently reported systematic espionage organized by the Hungarian government against OLAF staff during an investigative mission into the potential misuse of Union funds by ELIOS, a company linked to the Hungarian Prime Minister’s son-in-law; emphasizes that OLAF and the EPPO, as cornerstone institutions of the Union’s anti-fraud architecture, are regrettably exposed to such threats not only from third countries but also within EU Member States; stresses that such actions gravely undermine the rule of law and the integrity of Union institutions; calls for the swift establishment of robust protection measures to safeguard Union’s institutional staff on mission in Member States and to prevent such unacceptable violations in the future;

    Communication

    97. Observes that the EPPO engages in continuous efforts to enhance internal and external communication; appreciates the actions carried out via social network platforms and encourages the EPPO to maintain its proactive and transparent approach;

    98. Believes that explanations about the EPPO’s interventions and operations and about their background, when reported in the media and posted on social networks, would contribute to reinforcing the reputation of the institutions amongst citizens and raise awareness in taxpayers about the complexity of the protection of the Union’s financial interests;

    99. Maintains that proper and accurate communication from the EPPO would also increase the involvement of civil society and increase submission of potential investigative input; understands that the EPPO asks to have the reporting option included in every standard presentation for external audiences or at conferences and seminars, when possible and appropriate; notes that, in 2023, the EPPO’s corporate website underwent a complete redesign, with the primary focus on enhancing accessibility and user-friendliness, and that the option to report a crime is now prominently displayed at the top of every webpage together with a banner highlighting this feature in the homepage;

    100. Observes that the level of the EPPO’s resources that are devoted to communication are limited, and that, in view of the need to establish the EPPO’s digital autonomy, management of the EPPO website will have to be brought in-house, requiring additional resources, after DG Digital Services cease providing that service; underlines that the increasing volume and the sensitivity of EPPO investigations calls for attention in exchanges with the media, journalists, citizens and academia; reiterates its call on the EPPO to clearly strike the best possible balance between transparency and public interest on the one hand and confidentiality and proper conduct of the investigation on the other, and to ensure the neutrality of its communications about its activities;

    101. Recalls the importance of transparency in the EPPO’s interactions with external actors; calls for the establishment of a mandatory public register of all meetings between EPPO officials and representatives of third parties, including lobbyists and national government representatives, in order to prevent undue influence and reinforce public trust in the EPPO’s independence;

    Effect of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine

    102. Believes that the working arrangements with the Ukrainian competent authorities could effectively enhance the level of protection of the Union’s financial interests following the relevant commitments undertaken to support Ukraine and its population; is aware that transmission of evidence has occurred in execution of mutual legal assistance requests and welcomes the perspective of activating a joint task force with the Ukrainian authorities to coordinate investigations; reminds the Commission and other Union institutions bodies, offices and agencies of the importance of detection and timely submission of investigative input to the EPPO.

     

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: REPORT on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2023, Section V – Court of Auditors – A10-0047/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    2. MOTION FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT RESOLUTION

    with observations forming an integral part of the decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2023, Section V – Court of Auditors

    (2024/2023(DEC))

    The European Parliament,

     having regard to its decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2023, Section V – Court of Auditors,

     having regard to Rule 102 of and Annex V to its Rules of Procedure,

     having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control (A10-0047/2025),

    A. whereas in the context of the discharge procedure, the discharge authority wishes to stress the particular importance of further strengthening the democratic legitimacy of Union institutions by improving transparency and accountability and by implementing the concept of performance-based budgeting and good governance of human resources;

    B. whereas the Court of Auditors (the ‘Court’) is the Union’s external auditor, entrusted, by way of independent, professional and impactful audit work, with assessing the economy, effectiveness, efficiency, legality and regularity of Union action to improve accountability, transparency and financial management, thereby enhancing citizens’ trust and responding effectively to current and future challenges facing the Union;

    C. whereas, without prejudice to Articles 287 and 319 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), each year since the close of the 1987 financial year, the Court has had its revenue and expenditure accounts audited by an independent external auditor and, since the report on the 1992 financial year, the external auditor’s reports have been published in the Official Journal of the European Union;

    D. whereas management accountability to the budgetary authorities is provided via the annual activity report of the Secretary-General of the Court, the purpose of which, according to Article 74(9) of the Financial Regulation, is to provide information about the use made of resources, including systems, and about the efficiency and effectiveness of the Court’s internal control systems;

    E. whereas, by performing its tasks in a transparent and independent way, the Court contributes to democratic oversight, public debate and the sound financial management of the Union;

    F. whereas the Court has taken the position that, in order to assess the governance, accountability and transparency of the Union and the quality and reliability of the information and data reported on the implementation of Union policies, the best solution would be for the Court to be mandated to audit all Union institutions, bodies, offices and agencies set up by or under the Treaties and all the intergovernmental structures of key relevance to the functioning of the Union; whereas Parliament strongly supports the Court and would welcome initiatives that would strengthen the ability of the Court to deliver on its mandate;

    1. Notes that the budget of the Court falls under MFF heading 7, ‘European public administration’, which amounted to EUR 12,3 billion in 2023 (representing 6,4 % of the total Union budget); notes that the Court’s budget of approximately EUR 0,2 billion represents approximately 1,5 % of the total administrative expenditure of the Union and less than 0,1 % of total Union spending;

    2. Notes that the Court, in its annual report for the 2023 financial year examined a sample of 70 transactions under Administration, 10 more than were examined in 2022; further notes that the Court reported that administrative expenditure comprises expenditure on human resources, including expenditure on pensions, which in 2023 accounted for about 70 % of the total administrative expenditure, and expenditure on buildings, equipment, energy, communications and information technology, and that its work over many years indicates that, overall, that spending is low risk;

    3. Welcome the continuous increase in the number of transactions audited by the Court under the heading Administration; take note of an audit planned on the Union civil service, but recalls the importance of having a more in-depth investigation into the administrative expenditure and repeats its call to include in its work comprehensive data on all institutions in order to provide a coherent basis for a consistent discharge procedure;

    4. Notes that 21 (30 %) of the 70 transactions contained errors but that the Court, based on the 5 errors which were quantified, estimates the level of error to be below the materiality threshold;

    5. Notes that the financial statements of the Court are audited by an independent external auditor in order to ensure the same principles of transparency, accountability and independence as the Court applies to its auditees;

    Budgetary and financial management

    6. Notes that the overall budget of the Court for 2023 amounted to EUR 175 059 922, equivalent to an increase of 7,97 % from EUR 162 141 175 in 2022; notes that the increase was primarily due to salary adjustments and nine new temporary posts related to NextGenerationEU; notes that for 2023 88,5 % of appropriations were for its Members and staff, while 11,5 % were for buildings, equipment and miscellaneous expenditure;

    7. Notes that the implementation rate for commitments and payments was high, though slightly lower than in 2022; observes that the utilisation rate for appropriations stood at 97,92 %, and payments represented 94,45 % of total commitments, compared to 98,12 % and 95,26 %, respectively, in 2022;

    8. Notes that Russia’s illegal and unjustified war of aggression against Ukraine in various ways created budgetary pressures for the Court, including through rising inflation and salary adjustments, strongly increasing electricity and heating costs;

    9. Highlights that the budgetary execution for 2023 was impacted by two factors, which explain the slightly lower rate than in 2022:

    1. the higher-than-budgeted level of inflation and the resulting price indexations affecting new and existing contracts, which triggered additional budgetary needs to cover non-salary expenditure and, in particular, the energy and IT budget lines; those increases in appropriations were eventually made possible mainly as a result of an underutilisation of some appropriations in Chapter 10 (Members of the Institutions), in Chapter 12 (Officials and temporary staff) and in Title 2 on budget lines such as Publications, Limited consultations, studies and surveys and Interpretation costs;

    2. the higher turnover of contract staff and SNEs (some SNE contracts were not extended and a few SNEs passed an internal competition for temporary staff), delays and difficulties in recruitment procedures as for any European bodies located in Luxembourg;

    10. Notes that, in the course of 2023, the Court carried out 36 budgetary transfers totalling EUR 5 676 379, which were aimed at ensuring that the Court’s various departments operated smoothly and that any related needs were met;

    11. Notes that, in 2023, the Court purchased goods and services totalling EUR 23 426 750,05 (EUR 5 512 853 in 2022 and EUR 15 215 515 in 2021), of which purchases from local suppliers amounted to EUR 21 453 665,05 (EUR 4 848 701 in 2022 and EUR 10 144 812 in 2021);

    12. Notes with satisfaction that the external auditor declared that the resources allocated had been used for their intended purpose and that the control procedures put in place by the authorising officers provided for the necessary guarantees to ensure that financial operations were in compliance with the applicable rules and regulations;

    13. Welcomes that the overall mission budget of the Court (Members and staff) initially set at EUR 2 722 500 has declined by 4,4 % to EUR 2 602 500 given changes in the Court’s working methods following the pandemic;

    14. Calls on the Court to conduct a comprehensive review of travel and meeting allowances, ensuring that expenditures are cost-effective, justified, and environmentally sustainable, including an increased reliance on hybrid meetings to reduce unnecessary spending and carbon emissions;

    Internal management, performance and internal control

    15. Welcomes the fact that, in 2023, the Court significantly increased its on-the-spot visits compared to the previous three years, when COVID-related travel and public health restrictions were still partly in place; notes that the Court spent a total of 4 897 days in Member States and outside the Union compared to 2 984 days in 2022, 1 156 days in 2021, 1 190 days in 2020 and 3 605 days in 2019;

    16. Notes that, in the course of 2023, the Court presented 2 annual reports, 4 specific annual reports, 29 special reports, 4 opinions and 6 reviews, totalling 45 items;

    17. Notes that of the 29 strategic measures of the Court’s 2021-2025 strategy, 1 has been cancelled and the other 28 fully implemented;

    18. Appreciates that the Court measures the implementation of its recommendations based on the follow-up carried out by its auditors; notes that, in 2023, the Court analysed the recommendations addressed to the Commission and other institutions in its 2019 reports; appreciates that the analysis showed that of the recommendations that have been followed up, 100 % of the 15 recommendations made in the Court’s 2019 annual report and 85 % of the 208 recommendations in the Court’s 2019 special reports had been implemented either in full or in some or most respects;

    19. Welcomes the readiness of the Court to respond to Parliament’s request to focus its audit work on the most pressing challenges, as well as to improve cooperation with Parliament’s CCC; stresses that the Court should have full access to fraud risk assessment tools, including Commission and Member State databases regarding fraud cases related to Union funding, to enhance early warning systems against fraudulent activities; regrets deeply that the Court’s access to FENIX, the new reporting tool on the Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF), remains an open issue due to the fact the Commission only grants the Court access to some of the FENIX modules, and the information contained therein is not updated in a timely manner; urges the Commission to grant the Court full and immediate access to all FENIX modules without delay; notes that the Commission’s Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs has endeavoured to grant the Court access to FENIX files within 2 weeks of approving a payment request; is alarmed, however, that in practice, that deadline is not being met in many cases and that delays of up to 2,5 months have been encountered in some instances, significantly slowing down the delivery of Court findings; recalls that the Commissioner for Budget in the CONT meeting on 10 October 2024 openly stated that the Court has a full mandate on the RRF which indicates the need for a speedy improvement of the Court’s access to all tools to deliver on its mandate;

    20. Calls on the Court to expand its audit scope to include European Investment Bank (EIB) operations financed with the EIB’s own funds, given the EIB’s growing role in EU economic,financial, and industrial policy; urges the Commission and Member States to grant ECA the legal mandate required for this expansion;

    21. Commends the timely and pertinent special reports on the implementation of the RRF, which enable the discharge authority to effectively exercise its prerogatives and provide recommendations to the Commission for enhancing the functioning of this instrument; urges the Court to strengthen its role in combating fraud in the Union budget by identifying weaknesses, engaging in anti-fraud discussions, intensifying audits, cooperating with fraud detection bodies, and providing relevant feedback to the discharge authority;

    22.  Notes that the Court, at the end of 2023, had 969 members of staff; notes that in 2023, women constitute 53 % of the staff and men 47 %, unchanged from the previous year, 2022; regrets that women represent only 30 % of senior management, a significant decline from 36,4 % in 2022; highlights that the overall proportion of women in management positions has decreased in 2023; calls on the Court to continue its efforts to promote gender balance for the middle and senior management;

    Human resources, equality and staff well-being

    23. Is alarmed that the recruitment process required additional effort, as around 50 % of candidates turned down the job offers from the Court, in part due to the limited attractiveness of Luxembourg as a place of employment and the high cost of living; notes, however, that the big audit firms present in Luxembourg are also facing challenges and are now turning to Asian markets to recruit auditors; stresses that such an approach cannot be applied by the Court due to security and eligibility concerns; acknowledges the Court’s efforts and encourages it to collaborate with other Luxembourg-based institutions within the High Level Interinstitutional Group to enhance Luxembourg’s appeal to prospective staff through identified measures, such as higher relocation allowances, housing allowances to mitigate high rental costs for lower-grade staff and reasonably priced temporary housing for short stays to make employment in Luxembourg more attractive;

    24. Recalls the Treaty on the European Union, that the EU and its institutions, shall promote solidarity and equality between women and men;

    25. Shares the Court’s concern that, in general, the audit profession is facing recruitment issues due to a lack of interest in audit and control jobs among young workers; calls for proactive solutions and immediate systematic inter-institutional cooperation to address this issue;

    26. Shares the Court’s observations that EPSO competitions do not always achieve the objective of attracting and selecting relevant profiles of candidates from the private sector; highlights the several issues with EPSO competitions, for example technical problems with remote testing leading to the cancellation of one competition and putting all others on hold; acknowledges the concerns related to the recruitment and the selection procedures of new staff; encourages the Court to continue its effort to address this situation in order to safeguard the continuity of the Court’s activity; notes with appreciation that the Court has engaged in cooperation with EPSO in order to organise audit competitions at regular intervals; suggests possible cooperation with other relevant Union bodies in order to optimise hiring processes;

    27. Appreciates the fact that the Court has organised flexible and varied selection procedures as provided for in the Staff Regulations and the Conditions of Employment of Other Servants of the European Union and has put in place procedures to retain talented staff;

    28. Notes the teleworking regime (up to 10 days per month) offered by the Court in order to mitigate the recruitment challenges; welcomes the measures taken by the Court in 2023 in order to ensure the physical and mental well-being of staff;

    29. Notes that the vacancy rate in December 2023 was 2,27 % and the staff turnover rate (number of staff leaving as a proportion of all staff) was 6,6 %;

    30. Appreciates the Court’s effort to keep the vacancy rate low in 2023; however, fully shares the concern about the lack of geographical balance among new recruits, making the Court’s staff as a whole even less geographically representative; notes that, according to the Court, there is a risk that within the space of five years several Nordic Member States will not be covered by the audit given a potential absence of auditors from those Member States;

    31. Welcomes the fact that the Court took various steps to tackle the issue of geographical balance, such as increasing publicity for the Court’s competition and vacancy notices in significantly underrepresented Member States, cooperating with Members of the Court to disseminate its notices and reaching out to potential candidates by attending career fairs in certain Member States; encourages further steps being taken into consideration, such as early engagement strategies, attracting young talent from the countries with low representation; notes with a certain regret that there is still some way to go to reach gender balance in middle and senior management;

    32. Welcomes the fact that, at the end of 2023, all 29 additional posts required for the RRF audit of EUR 723,8 billion were filled; however, underscores that the materiality, complexity, large amounts and rapid disbursements from the RRF continue to pose challenges and that not all aspects of the RRF can be covered with the resources available, which allow the Court to assess the satisfactory fulfilment of milestones and targets and therefore the legality and regularity of RRF payments, but they are not sufficient to systematically cover compliance of RRF expenditure with Union and national laws; highlights the importance of ensuring that the Court is consistently provided with adequate staffing levels to fulfil both its mandate and additional responsibilities stemming from new financing instruments such as the RRF; commends the efforts done by the Court to carry out its duties regarding the RRF so far despite the lack of availability of fully adequate resources;

    33. Is aware that the Court has no role in the selection process for Members under Article 286(2) TFEU; points out, however, that there is still an important gender imbalance among the Members of the Court, with only 10 women out of 27 members; regrets that 12 Member States have never nominated a woman to the Court; calls on the Court to evaluate its overall composition and provide this analysis to the Council and the Member States, in order to ensure that gender balance is appropriately considered in future nomination processes; reiterates its call for Member States to propose candidates of different genders, aiming for a more balanced and representative composition of the Court;

    34. Regrets that over the years the Council repeatedly proceeds to nominate members of the Court despite those nominees being rejected by Parliament; underlines that Parliament should have a binding role in assessing the suitability of candidates for the Court;

    35. Expresses regret that the Council has repeatedly nominated members of the Court despite their rejection by Parliament; emphasizes that Parliament should hold a binding role in evaluating the suitability of candidates for the Court;

    36. Notes that, in 2023, the average absence due to illness was 10 days per staff member, compared to 12,2 days in 2022; notes furthermore that, in 2023, 4 staff members (compared to 8 in 2022) were absent due to prolonged illness, defined as lasting more than 200 days in a year;

    37. Notes with concern that 7 cases of burnout were reported in 2023, reflecting the same troubling number as in 2022; welcomes the fact that the Court took several steps to reduce the risk of burnout by introducing a full wellbeing programme, offering a resilience training, publishing and implementing guidelines on returning to work after long-term sick leave, continuing to offer mental health first aid, and providing financial support to staff by covering the cost of 10 sessions with a psychologist of their choice;

    38. Notes with appreciation that in 2023 the Court again exceeded the professional training target of five days of non-language training per years for auditors (6.7 days), in line with the International Federation of Accountants’ recommendations; notes in particular the training of the Court’s staff on the NGEU and the RRF;

    39. Welcomes the adoption of a new policy in December 2022 to ensure a respectful and harassment-free workplace, focusing on prevention, awareness-raising, and early detection; highlights measures such as a presentation to all staff in January 2023 to enhance understanding of the policy, the rollout of a harmonized reporting form, and the publication of the first aggregated annual report on policy implementation;

    40. Welcomes the Court’s Diversity and Inclusion Action Plan 2021-2025; notes with satisfaction the organisation of the third Disabilities Awareness Week and interinstitutional initiatives to foster inclusivity; emphasizes the ECA’s efforts, including its survey on workplace accessibility, participation in the Ombudsman Award for Good Administration, and the external audit on building accessibility in compliance with Luxembourg’s 2023 accessibility legislation;

    41. Emphasises the critical role of the Court as the Union’s independent external auditor and guardian of its finances, which requires the Court to uphold the highest standards of integrity, professionalism, and accountability, serving as a model institution to inspire confidence and credibility; recalls that, in accordance with Article 285 TFEU, the members of the Court must exercise complete independence and adhere to the highest ethical principles, demonstrating integrity, objectivity, professional conduct, dignity, commitment, and loyalty;

    Ethical framework and transparency

    42. Welcomes the fact that the internal rules on reporting serious irregularities (whistleblowing) were updated in order to make them clearer and more detailed and to provide more information to staff; notes that there were no whistleblowing cases at the Court in 2023; notes furthermore that, in 2023, the Court also launched the process of updating the Court’s rules on conducting administrative investigations and disciplinary procedures, which was finalised in early 2024;

    43. Notes that, in 2023, the Court organised 3 training events specifically dedicated to ethics, which attracted 60 participants; takes into account the fact that the Court’s ethics-related courses were open to all staff, including managers, and that the standard courses are compulsory for newcomers and cover public ethics and the Court’s anti-harassment policy; regrets that the ethics-related courses were not compulsory to all staff on a regular basis;

    44. Appreciates the fact that the Court has organised 6 training courses on fraud, including fraud in procurement, VAT fraud, and fraud in relation to the RRF; welcomes the fact that, in June 2023, the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) provided training on interviewing in cases of suspected fraud and corruption; notes that, in November 2023, the Court joined the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO) and OLAF in organising a 2-day course on public procurement fraud in the Union;

    45. Is concerned by media’s report that an EPPO investigation on misuse of funds by the former President of the Court is currently blocked by the decision of the Court not to lift his immunity; requests the Court to fully cooperate with EPPO on any investigations they may activate and to report on the reasons for the decision not to lift the immunity;

    46. Calls on the Court to ensure that all Members and senior staff publish their financial interests, gifts, and hospitality declarations in a public online database, in line with best practices in EU transparency rules;

    47. Regrets that the Court has failed to fully cooperate with EPPO by refusing to lift the immunity of its former President and by denying EPPO access to conduct a search within its premises in relation to a probe into possible wrongdoing, which could be considered an interference with the proper conduct of an investigation, according to the EPPO; recalls that, as the Union’s external auditor, the Court is bound by the principles of accountability, integrity, and transparency, as well as the principle of mutual sincere cooperation between EU’s institutions; calls on the Court to ensure that immunity is not invoked to hinder legitimate judicial proceedings and to take all necessary measures to ensure full compliance with interinstitutional cooperation in the prevention and investigation of fraud;

    48. Notes with concern that, according to media reports, the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO) has requested the lifting of immunity of several ECA staff members in 2023 and that, to date, the Court has refused to grant this request; stresses that while immunity serves to protect the independence of EU institutions, it should not be misused to shield individuals from legitimate judicial scrutiny; considers that requests for the lifting of immunity should only be refused in exceptional circumstances; calls on the Court to provide a detailed justification to the discharge authority for its decision in this case, outlining the specific legal and procedural concerns that led to the refusal, if any; further urges the Court to maintain a high level of transparency and accountability in its cooperation with EPPO and other EU bodies responsible for combating fraud and misconduct;

    49. Notes that, in 2023, neither OLAF nor the European Ombudsman initiated any investigations involving the Court;

    50. Welcomes that, in 2024, the Court, jointly with the Court of Justice, invited the Commission to participate in an interinstitutional dialogue with a view to agreeing on common rules regarding the use of official cars, which is in line with the remark included in Parliament’s resolutions of 11 April 2022 on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budgets of the Court of Auditors and of the Court of Justice; emphasises the call on all Union institutions to agree on a single system to be applied horizontally, which would reduce confusion and increase transparency and efficiency in the use of public money; notes that a working group will be created in the framework of the interinstitutional Preparatory Committee for Matters relating to the Staff Regulations; appreciates the Court’s readiness to align the rules with the applicable rules of the Commission, but reiterates the criticism already expressed on previous discharge resolutions on the new decision from 2022 concerning members’ travel, missions and use of drivers and cars, which is against the general principle that the use of the car fleet outside of the strict performance of the duties of the members of the Court should not take place under any circumstance;

    51. Notes that, in 2023, the Court’s Internal Audit Service (IAS) made 16 audit recommendations with regard to ethics, the transparency portal, conflicts of interest for staff, the Ethics Committee and Members of the Court; notes that out of 16 recommendations, 5 recommendations were completed by 30 July 2024, 8 recommendations will be completed by the end of 2024, and the completion of 3 recommendations has been delayed;

    52. Welcomes the extension of scope of information published on Members’ mission, but recalls Parliament’s request to provide information about missions for the whole mandate of the Members; welcomes the revision of the Code of Conduct of members which forbid Members from holding any honorary position in political organisation, implementing Parliament’s request for Members not to have formalised political links; takes note that conclusions of the internal audit report on ethics was to be communicated to the EP President and the Chair of the Budgetary Control Committee in the third quarter of 2024, and invites the Court to share this with the Committee of Budgetary Control in its entirety; invites the Court to publish refusal decisions in cases where Members or staff declare conflicts of interest, ensuring greater transparency in the audit process;

    53. Notes that all the Members of the Court have their primary residence in Luxembourg, as required by Article 10 of the Code of Conduct for the Members and former Members of the Court of Auditors;

    54. Welcomes the fact that the Court has revised the policy on public access to documents, reflecting the evolution of European case law, and simplified the procedure for dealing with requests to access documents and with confirmatory requests; recalls the fact that application of the Scandinavian principle of public access to official records in the Union was a prerequisite for some Member States to join the Union and underlines the fact that non-delivery would be detrimental to the reputation of the Union as a community based on the rule of law;

    55. Regrets that an annual list of contracts above Directive threshold (>EUR 140 000 for services/supplies; >EUR 5 382 000 for works) concluded in 2023 is not available on the website of the Court; calls on the Court to publish that list as a separate document without undue delay and ensure user-friendly access to it;

    56. Appreciates and awaits with eagerness the Court’s consolidation of all internal anti-fraud strategy rules into one joint document;

    57. Continues to reject the rationale of the Court for its decision not to join the Transparency Register, as it does not have a vested interest in influencing decision making, beyond providing facts and objective feedback about Union programmes; notes that all of the Court’s reports are publicly available and subject to a rigorous clearing procedure with the auditees; reiterate its strong call for the Court to join the EU Transparency Register in order to adhere to basic principles of transparency while at the same time not creating any obstacles to the full independence of the Court;

    58. Strongly encourages the Court to reconsider its position regarding the EU Transparency Register, established by the interinstitutional agreement of 20 May 2021 between the European Parliament, the Council of the European Union, and the European Commission on a mandatory transparency register1a;

    59. Welcomes the significant progress made in 2023 towards establishing the Document Management Ecosystem (DOME), namely the delivery and implementation by means of concrete document approval processes of both the new electronic signature and the core approval module for PASS (Process to Approve, Sign and Send documents); encourages the Court to further pursue its objectives of digitalizing the review and approval workflows and improving their efficiency;

    60. Notes that the Court continued being actively involved in the Emerging technology group of the Interinstitutional Committee for Digital Transformation; notes that the DATA Team (Data and Technology for Audit), established in 2021, continued working on the implementation of the development plan for better use of technology in support of the Court’s audit objectives; notes in particular the preparation of an analysis of AI opportunities and challenges for the Court and for its audit work; recalls the importance of improving the digitalisation of the audit work; welcomes all the efforts in this direction that the Court continues to make, whereas digitalisation combined with the increased number of on-the-spot visits, can define a system of efficient and accurate audit work;

    Digitalisation, cybersecurity and data protection

    61. Commends the Court for good progress in implementing its 2022-2024 cybersecurity plan over the past two years; notes that seven of the high-priority tasks have been completed, six are underway and one is on hold; notes that two of the medium-priority tasks have been completed, four are ongoing and three have not yet been started;

    62. Appreciates the fact that the following tasks are among those completed:

    1. the deployment of an EDR solution on the endpoints and adoption of a cloud-based XDR solution that correlates the telemetry sent by the EDR agents with threat intelligence data from varied sources to detect indicators of compromise;

    2. a revamp of the architecture and configuration of the SIEM platform, which has improved the system‘s performance and reliability, coupled with additional sources of logs that have been added to enhance the security monitoring of the IT environment;

    3. the replacement of the VPN appliances for remote access with a zero-trust cloud-based SASE service, which reduces the attack surface and allows granular remote access to applications;

    4. the reinforcement of the protection against email threats by enabling new features on email security filters that allow improved detection of both spam and malicious attachments;

    5. the execution of pen tests of Court departments exposed to the internet;

    6. the deployment of a software tool to protect the confidentiality of sensitive information transmitted in file shares;

    63. Urges the Court to develop a cybersecurity audit framework for EU institutions and agencies, ensuring harmonized security standards and resilience measures against cyber threats;

    64. Notes with appreciation that the Court conducts at least three simulated phishing exercises per year to raise users’ awareness of that cyber threat; notes furthermore that the Court conducts a comprehensive cybersecurity risk assessment every three years; Suggests to the Court to organise on a regular basis compulsory training for al staff on cyber threat including good practices for a safe use of AI;

    65. Notes with relief that there was no trace of data exfiltration or lateral movement of the intruder to other Court IT systems during the July 2023 cyber-incident, during which one of the perimeter security gateways was compromised by the exploitation of a software vulnerability; notes that the software vulnerability had been disclosed by the vendor just two days before the incident;

    66. Commends the work of the Cybersecurity Service for the Union institutions, bodies, offices and agencies (CERT-EU), which notified the Court of the incident, helped to investigate its scope and performed the forensic analysis; notes that, in the aftermath of the incident, the Court has restored a clean backup of the system and applied the software update that remediated the vulnerabilities exploited by the attacker; notes furthermore that in the following weeks the Court gradually applied a few additional preventive measures recommended by CERT-EU to the appliances to ensure that any possible undetected trace of the malware was eradicated;

    67. Notes with appreciation that the Court reviewed and updated its Cybersecurity Incident Response Plan in 2023 and created a form for recording such incidents in the IT service management tool; highlights the fact that the form took account of the lessons learned from the July 2023 incident in that it was geared towards collecting all information that could be useful in handling a cybersecurity incident;

    Buildings

    68. Notes that, in 2023, the work to upgrade the technical installations on all floors of the K2 building and optimise the use of its common spaces was completed; notes that the Court has committed EUR 6 445 635,82 from a total budget of EUR 6 902 185,54; commends the Court for not exceeding the estimated budget; calls on other Union institutions to follow the exemplary budgetary management of the Court;

    69. Appreciates that, in February 2023, the results of an accessibility audit of all Court buildings to meet the needs of people with reduced mobility or other disabilities conducted by an external consultant were delivered; notes that the audit covered all three buildings, the common spaces, car parks and other spaces; is aware that the actions proposed are being reviewed and would normally be the subject of a specific project, but that their implementation will depend largely on budget availability;

    Environment and sustainability

    70. Notes that, in 2023, the Court invested a lot of its environmental impact reduction effort in energy-saving measures such as the replacement of traditional light bulbs with LEDs, the reduction of the number of hours of ventilation and the overhaul of certain technical systems in its buildings; notes furthermore that the Court introduced special energy-saving measures in the summer of 2023, which reduced electricity consumption by 12 % compared to the summer of 2022, generating savings of EUR 26 976;

    71. Notes that, in 2023, the Court signed an agreement with the Luxembourgish authorities to establish a mobility plan; looks forward to updates about that initiative;

    Interinstitutional cooperation

    72. Highlights the fact that, in 2023, the Court’s auditors spent 1 370 days at Union institutions, bodies, offices and agencies and at various international organisations and private audit firms, compared to 945 days in 2022;

    73. Calls for the formalization of an annual interinstitutional dialogue between the ECA, European Parliament, Council, and Commission on budgetary control, ensuring systematic follow-up on audit findings and improved oversight of EU expenditure;

    74. Recalls once again that effective cooperation between the Court and the Commission will remain limited unless the Commission adopts the Court’s methodology for assessing error rates, which is based on an independent and comprehensive evaluation of all rule breaches, in contrast to the Commission’s focus on recoverable errors;

    75. Welcomes the fact that the Court cooperates closely with both OLAF and the EPPO, including by organising workshops and awareness-raising events and by exchanging knowledge and experience; furthermore notes that the Court, in 2023, forwarded 20 cases of suspected fraud to OLAF and 17 such cases to the EPPO; emphasizes its position that all suspicions of fraud should be promptly referred to OLAF and EPPO for thorough investigation;

    76. Calls on the Court to establish a structured fraud-detection collaboration mechanism with OLAF and EPPO, including real-time data-sharing agreements and a joint audit approach for high-risk EU funding areas;

    77. Is convinced that a single integrated IT system for data-mining and risk scoring could be a valuable source of data, which would allow the Court, OLAF and the EPPO to strengthen their audit and control efforts; stresses that unlimited access should be provided to such a system and the data contained therein, that no unjustified restrictions should be placed on that access and that the exploration and use of further digital tools and emerging technologies should immediately be allowed as part of the Court’s audits;

    78. Regrets that, despite improved access to European Investment Bank (EIB) documents and information, the Court lacks a mandate to audit operations financed with the EIB’s own funds; calls for that mandate to be granted to the Court, given the EIB’s mission to pursue Union objectives and its growing role in the Union’s economic and political landscape, which extends beyond utilising the Union budget to guarantee its operations; highlights Special Report 05/2023 of the Court entitled ‘The EU’s financial landscape – a patchwork construction requiring further simplification and accountability’ in which the Court stated that a public audit mandate should be established for all types of financing for Union policies;

    79. Notes that, in 2023, the Court presented 29 special reports, 1 review and 1 opinion to 22 different Council committees and working parties; further notes that the same year Court representatives participated in 23 meetings focused on the discharge of the Union budget for the 2021 and 2022 financial years;

    80. Notes with appreciation that the Members and management of the Court demonstrated active engagement in 2023, presenting their work at 120 meetings with national governments and governmental bodies across 25 Member States, the majority of which involved ministers or ministries of finance; further notes that in the same year, Members and staff of the Court presented their work at 91 meetings with national or regional parliaments in 19 Member States, primarily through committees focused on budgetary, financial, audit or EU affairs; urges the Court to intensify its engagement with the governments of countries where error rates are highest, fostering greater dialogue and collaboration in order to address those issues effectively;

    Communication

    81. Notes that, in 2023, the budget allocated for the Court’s communication and promotional activities amounted to EUR 225 000 with a utilisation rate of 81,13 % (EUR 182 549,84); notes that most of the budget was spent on both media monitoring services (EUR 81 650) and press actions (EUR 12 348), followed by expenditure on stakeholder relations, which mainly comprised the cost of a policy intelligence platform (EUR 57 891), communication activities (EUR 28 002,88), social media (EUR 1 486,52) and publications (EUR 1 171,44);

    82. Strongly supports the Court’s growing media strategy, which resulted in a record of more than 22 000 online press articles related to its audit reports, other publications or the Court in general, thus confirming the upward trend in coverage observed over the recent years (2022: 20 000; 2021: 18 000); highlights the fact that nearly 54 000 posts on social media shows the continuation of an organic growth, with numbers for 2022 being an outlier (2022: 110 000; 2021: 49 000);

    83. Welcomes the fact that, in 2023, the Court issued 45 press releases in 24 Union languages, as well as various information notes, media advisories and ready-to-use audio-statements in certain languages; notes furthermore that the Court held 21 online press briefings and 6 additional country-specific press briefings for the annual report; highlights the fact that, altogether, the Court’s briefings have attracted 590 journalists, most representing major national media outlets in the Member States;

    84. Notes with appreciation that, in 2023, the Court launched a new website, receiving over one and half million visits, with around 700 000 unique visitors, which represents an increase of more than 14 % compared to 2022; welcomes the fact that, by the end of 2023, the Court’s three main social media accounts (X (ex-Twitter), LinkedIn and Facebook) had attracted over 48 000 followers, up from 45 000 in 2022 and 39 000 in 2021;

    85. Highly appreciates that the Court assesses the likely impact and usefulness of its work, as perceived by the readers of its reports at Parliament, the Council, the Commission, Union agencies, Member States’ permanent representations, Member States’ agencies and SAIs, NGOs, academia, the media and other parties; in that regard, notes that, since 2018, the Court has carried out anonymised electronic surveys to ask its readers to provide qualitative feedback on selected reports and make general suggestions for its work; stresses that, in 2023, 85 % of around 1 060 respondents considered the Court’s reports useful for their work, and 78 % felt that they had an impact.

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