- Key insight: M&T Chief Financial Officer Daryl Bible said the bank’s credit quality is the best it’s been in two decades.
- Why it matters: Reduced provision expenses combined with increased net interest income powered an 11.5% year-over-year jump in the fourth-quarter profits.
- Expert quote: “We’re not going to force anything. [An acquisition] will happen at some point down the road.”— CFO Daryl Bible on the bank’s M&A outlook
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Net income of $759 million was up 11.5% from the same period a year earlier. On a per-share basis, the $213.5 billion-asset bank earned $4.67 for the three months ending Dec. 31. The consensus forecast from Zacks Investment Service had predicted earnings per share of $4.44.
“We are performing at a very high level,” Chief Financial Officer Daryl Bible said on a conference call with analysts.
For all of 2025,
Nonaccrual loans declined steeply during the fourth quarter. They totaled $1.25 billion at Dec. 31, down 26% from a year earlier. Similarly, the level of criticized commercial-and-industrial and commercial real estate loans dropped to $7.3 billion from $9.9 billion a year earlier.
Of the $185 million in fourth-quarter net charge-offs, about $100 million went to resolving three previously identified problem credits, according to Bible.
“When I look at our asset quality, it’s probably the best it’s been in the past couple decades,” Bible said on the conference call. “We are in really strong condition.”
Indeed, at 0.90%,
“Overall, a better-than-expected fourth quarter, thanks largely to lower-than-expected credit costs,” Scott Siefers, an analyst who covers
The company reported a $125 million provision for credit losses for the quarter ending Dec. 31, level with its third-quarter provision and down from the $140 million provision reported a year ago.
Steven Alexopoulos, an analyst who covers
For the three months ending Dec. 31,
Fee income growth outpaced the increase in noninterest expenses, which ticked up 1% from the Dec. 31, 2024, level to $1.38 billion. As a result,
During the call with analysts,
But in the near term, continued growth will likely remain organic, Bible said on the call.
“We want scale and density in the market we serve,” he said. “We’re not aware of anybody who wants to sell in those markets. … We’re not going to force anything. [An acquisition] will happen at some point down the road.”
For now,
“First and foremost, pay a great, strong dividend, and we’re going to buy back a ton of stock,” Bible said.
Looking ahead to 2026,
“Our company is, I think, doing well on all cylinders right now,” Bible said.