Hancock Whitney’s Q4 print looks flat at $1.49 EPS, but a stealth $1.5B bond swap executed in January adds $24M to 2026 net-interest income and lifts the margin outlook to +12-15 bps—enough to push ROA above 1.50% while a fresh 5% buyback plan and 50 new bankers keep tangible book value compounding.
The headline numbers look sleepy—until you unpack the bond trade
Hancock Whitney (NASDAQ:HWC) reported fourth-quarter net income of $126M, unchanged from Q3, on revenue of $398M. The stock initially traded flat in after-hours as EPS met the street at $1.49. Management then disclosed they had sold $1.5B of low-yielding CMBS at 2.49% and reinvested the proceeds at 4.35% during the first two weeks of January. The maneuver:
- Adds $24M to annual net-interest income starting this quarter
- Lifts NIM by 7 bps on a run-rate basis
- Flows straight to EPS: +$0.23 per share or roughly 4% of 2025 earnings
Combined with $8B of CDs that reprice 54 bps lower over the next 12 months, management now guides full-year NIM expansion of 12-15 bps versus the prior flat outlook.
Balance-sheet momentum is real—mid-single-digit loan growth is bankable
Loans grew $362M sequentially, a 6% annualized clip, while deposits rose $620M (9%). Production hit $1.6B for the quarter, the third straight increase. CEO John Hairston pointed to:
- Texas Gulf Coast energy and healthcare real estate pipelines
- Equipment-finance and asset-based lending units posting record quarters
- First positive consumer HELOC growth since 2022—utilization still only 40%
Guidance: mid-single-digit loan growth in 2026, underwritten at spreads 20-25 bps above the portfolio average to offset expected yield compression from two Fed cuts.
Efficiency ratio sub-55% becomes the new floor
Operating expenses rose just 2% Q/Q despite 22 net new bankers in 2025. The full-year efficiency ratio landed at 54.8%, down 58 bps year-over-year. CFO Mike Achary expects:
- 2026 expense growth of 5-6%, including 185 bps from Sable Trust and organic hires
- Revenue lift of 4.5-5.5% in PPNR, keeping the efficiency ratio inside 54-55%
Core leverage: every 100 bps of balance-sheet growth drops the ratio ~35 bps without additional corporate overhead.
Capital allocation shifts into higher gear
The board exhausted the prior 5% repurchase authorization in December, buying back $147M at an average price of $42.12, 1.35× tangible book. A fresh 5% plan is authorized for 2026 with instructions to “distribute purchases more evenly across quarters”—code for opportunistic but price-sensitive. Tangible common equity closed at 10.05%, 66 bps above the long-term 9-9.5% target, leaving room for another $200M-plus of buybacks before hitting the guided range.
Credit: criticized loans keep sliding
Criticized commercial loans fell $14M to $535M, the fourth consecutive quarterly decline. Net charge-offs were 22 bps, inside the guided 15-25 bps range for 2026. The allowance sits at 1.43% of loans; management set a floor of 1.25-1.30%, implying $15-20M of provision release potential if current trends hold.
What could go wrong
- Rate risk: Faster-than-expected Fed easing could compress loan yields more than deposit betas fall
- CRE pay-offs: Management flagged lease-up maturities moving to permanent market as a headwind to net commercial real-estate growth
- Fee volatility: BOLI, SBIC and syndication income are lumpy; guidance assumes 4-5% core fee growth but admits specialty items are “very unpredictable”
Valuation snapshot
At $43.50, HWC trades at 1.45× tangible book and 8.9× the new 2026 EPS consensus of $4.90—below the 10-yr median of 1.7× TBV. A 15 bps NIM lift adds roughly $0.23 to EPS; every 1% incremental loan growth adds another ~$0.04. Investors are effectively getting the bond-trade upside for free while the regional bank peer group re-rates on falling rate risk.
Bottom line
Hancock Whitney used the quiet quarter to lock in a permanent 7 bps margin tailwind and doubled its banker hiring cadence. If management delivers even the low end of 2026 guidance—mid-single-digit loans, 54% efficiency and 1.50%+ ROA—the multiple gap versus high-quality peers should close quickly. The first catalyst: January’s NIM bump shows up in Q1 results; the second: a $200M buyback cushion that can be deployed on any macro-driven pullback.
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