•
Mar 31, 2022

NYCB Q1 2022 Earnings Report

Reported diluted EPS of $0.31 on a GAAP basis and diluted EPS of $0.32 on a non-GAAP basis.

Key Takeaways

New York Community Bancorp reported a positive start to the year with growth in loans, deposits, net income, and earnings per share. Diluted EPS increased 7% to $0.31, and non-GAAP diluted EPS were $0.32, up 10% year-over-year. Total loans grew by $1 billion, led by multi-family loans, and total deposits increased by nearly $3 billion, driven by Banking as a Service business growth.

First-quarter GAAP diluted EPS were $0.31, up 7% compared to first-quarter 2021; non-GAAP diluted EPS were $0.32, up 10% compared to first-quarter 2021.

Net income available to common stockholders on a GAAP basis totaled $147 million, up 7% compared to first quarter 2021; On a non-GAAP basis, net income available to common stockholders totaled $152 million, up 11% compared to first quarter 2021.

Total loans held for investment increased by $1.0 billion to $46.8 billion.

Total deposits increased $2.9 billion to $38.0 billion.

Total Revenue
$332M
Previous year: $318M
+4.5%
EPS
$0.96
Previous year: $0.87
+10.3%
Efficiency Ratio
38.65%
Previous year: 39.87%
-3.1%
Tier 1 Risk-Based Capital
10.55%
Previous year: 11.07%
-4.7%
Total Risk-Based Capital
12.39%
Previous year: 13.09%
-5.3%
Gross Profit
$243M
Previous year: $233M
+4.5%
Cash and Equivalents
$2.9B
Previous year: $2.72B
+6.5%
Free Cash Flow
$184M
Total Assets
$61B
Previous year: $57.7B
+5.8%

NYCB

NYCB

NYCB Revenue by Segment

Forward Guidance

This earnings release includes forward-looking statements regarding revenues, earnings, loan production, asset quality, capital levels, and acquisitions, among other matters. These statements are subject to numerous assumptions, risks, and uncertainties, which change over time.

Positive Outlook

  • Goals
  • Intentions
  • Expectations regarding revenues
  • Earnings
  • Loan production

Challenges Ahead

  • Effect of the COVID-19 pandemic
  • General economic conditions and trends
  • Conditions in the securities markets
  • Changes in interest rates
  • Changes in deposit flows