Camden National (CAC) Net Interest Margin Gains Test Bullish Efficiency Narratives
Camden National Corporation CAC | 0.00 |
Camden National (CAC) has put fresh numbers on the table for Q1 2026, coming off Q4 2025 revenue of US$65.1 million and basic EPS of US$1.34, backed by trailing 12 month revenue of US$233.5 million and EPS of US$3.86. Over recent quarters the company has seen revenue move from US$44.8 million in Q3 2024 to US$55.4 million in Q2 2025 and then to US$65.1 million in Q4 2025. Over the same period, quarterly EPS has shifted from US$0.90 to US$0.83 and then to US$1.25 before reaching US$1.34. This sets up the latest release as a check on how sustainable those earnings and margins really look.
See our full analysis for Camden National.With the headline figures on the board, the next step is to see how they stack up against the key narratives around growth, risks, and profitability that many investors follow.
Efficiency Ratios Show Clear Progress
- Over the trailing 12 months, Camden National reports a net interest margin of 3.17% and a cost to income ratio of 54.46%, compared with earlier quarterly readings in 2025 of 3.04% to 3.16% for margin and 52.47% to 58.72% for cost to income. This gives a fuller picture of how revenue is converting into profit.
- Analysts' consensus view links these efficiency gains to acquisition and digital banking efforts. Yet the slightly lower trailing net profit margin of 27.9% versus 29.9% the prior year shows that, while cost control and asset yields look supportive, overall profitability has not moved in a straight line.
- Consensus commentary points to acquisition driven expansion and technology upgrades as helping fee income and younger client growth. This lines up with margins holding above 27% even as cost to income sits in the mid 50s.
- At the same time, the margin step down from 29.9% to 27.9% means those efficiency gains are not fully offsetting other pressures. Long term holders may want to watch this in the context of the more bullish efficiency narrative.
Asset Quality And Loan Book Signals
- Total loans were around US$4.9b at the end of Q4 2025, with non performing loans reported between US$4.8 million and US$18.2 million across recent quarters. This highlights that credit quality has moved around rather than staying at one level.
- Bears in the consensus style risk discussion focus on concentrated commercial lending and a past syndicated C&I loan default, and the non performing loan figures between US$4.8 million and US$18.2 million give some numerical context to those concerns.
- Critics highlight that reliance on commercial lending, especially in a limited geographic footprint, can leave the bank exposed if credit conditions change. The variation in non performing loans across quarters is one area they point to.
- On the other hand, commentary referencing generally healthy asset quality and low delinquencies suggests that, despite those non performing loan swings, credit metrics have remained manageable so far. This softens the more bearish take.
Valuation Gap Versus Slower Multi Year Earnings
- The shares trade at US$50.64, about 33.1% below a DCF fair value of roughly US$75.74. The trailing P/E of 13.2x sits above the US Banks industry average of 11.5x and the peer average of 12x, and the analyst price target of US$51.75 is only slightly above the current price.
- What stands out against the bullish case of a 33.1% DCF discount and a 3.32% dividend yield is that earnings have declined about 7.5% per year over five years, even though the last year shows 23% earnings growth. The long term earnings trend still leans toward the cautious side.
- Bulls often point to the DCF fair value of US$75.74 and the 3.32% yield as reasons the stock looks attractive at around US$50.64, especially given recent earnings growth and a 27.9% net margin.
- Bears counter that a multi year 7.5% annual earnings decline and a P/E premium to industry and peers mean the market is already paying up for those positives. This helps explain why the analyst target of US$51.75 only sits slightly above the current price.
For a deeper breakdown of how optimists see revenue, margin, and valuation playing out from here, check out the fuller bull case for Camden National 🐂 Camden National Bull Case
If you want to see how the more cautious investors frame risks around earnings trends, credit quality, and pricing, the detailed bear case on Camden National sets out that argument 🐻 Camden National Bear Case
Next Steps
To see how these results tie into long-term growth, risks, and valuation, check out the full range of community narratives for Camden National on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.
With both risks and rewards in play, the picture is not one sided. Move quickly, review the key numbers, and weigh up the 2 key rewards and 1 important warning sign.
See What Else Is Out There
Camden National combines a P/E premium and a net margin that has eased from 29.9% to 27.9% with multi year earnings declining about 7.5% annually.
If you want income ideas where the payout is the central focus rather than mixed earnings trends and valuation tensions, check out the 14 dividend fortresses today.
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
