Truist Financial's Q4 Earnings Beat as NII & Fee Income Rise, Stock Up

In This Article:

Shares of Truist Financial TFC rose 2.9% in the pre-market trading session on better-than-expected results. The company’s fourth-quarter 2024 adjusted earnings of 91 cents per share surpassed the Zacks Consensus Estimate of 87 cents. The figure also jumped 12.3% year over year.

Stay up-to-date with all quarterly releases: See Zacks Earnings Calendar.

Results benefited from higher net interest income (NII) and non-interest income. Further, lower provisions and higher average deposit balances acted as tailwinds. On the other hand, lower average loan balances and higher adjusted non-interest expenses were undermining factors.

Results in the reported quarter excluded certain notable items. After considering those, net income available to common shareholders (GAAP basis) was $1.22 billion against a loss of $5.17 billion in the prior-year quarter. Our estimate for net income was $1.15 billion.

Adjusted earnings for 2024 were $3.69 per share, which beat the Zacks Consensus Estimate by a penny. Net income available to common shareholders (GAAP basis) was $4.47 billion against a net loss of $1.45 billion in the previous year.

TFC’s Revenues Rise, Expenses Fall

Total quarterly revenues of $5.06 billion grew 3.6% year over year. The top line beat the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $5 billion.

For 2024, revenues were $13.28 billion, down 33.7% year over year. The top line lagged the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $19.87 billion.

Tax-equivalent NII increased 1.8% to $3.64 billion. The rise was driven by balance sheet repositioning undertaken in the second quarter. Our estimate for NII (FTE) was $3.61 billion.

Net interest margin (NIM) grew 12 basis points (bps) to 3.07%. We had projected the metric to be 3.05%.

Non-interest income was $1.47 billion, up 7.9%. The increase was driven by higher investment banking and trading income, mortgage banking income, service charges on deposits and other income. We had expected this metric to be $1.40 billion.

Non-interest expenses were $3.04 billion, down 68.2%. Excluding certain non-recurring items, adjusted non-interest expenses rose 7.6% to $3.03 billion. The decline was mainly attributable to higher personnel expenses and professional fees and outside processing expense. Our estimate for adjusted non-interest expenses was $2.91 billion.

The adjusted efficiency ratio was 57.7%, up from 55% in the prior-year quarter. A rise in the efficiency ratio indicates a decline in profitability.

As of Dec. 31, 2024, total average deposits were $390 billion, up 1.5% on a sequential basis. Average loans and leases held for investment of $303.1 billion declined marginally.