Central Pacific Financial (CPF) Net Interest Margin Improvement Challenges Cautious Earnings Narratives

Central Pacific Financial Corp.

Central Pacific Financial Corp.

CPF

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Central Pacific Financial (CPF) opened 2026 with Q1 results set against a trailing 12 month record that includes US$276.9 million in revenue and basic EPS of US$2.88, with earnings up 45.1% year over year and net profit margin improving from 22.2% to 28.0%. Over the past year, revenue has moved from US$240.6 million to US$276.9 million while EPS has gone from US$1.97 to US$2.88, giving investors a clear view of how the income line has tracked alongside top line growth. With that backdrop, the latest earnings print presents a clearer margin picture that may help frame how investors assess the sustainability of this profitability.

See our full analysis for Central Pacific Financial.

With the recent results on the table, the next step is to see how these numbers line up with the dominant stories around CPF, highlighting where the prevailing narratives match the data and where they start to diverge.

NYSE:CPF Earnings & Revenue History as at Apr 2026
NYSE:CPF Earnings & Revenue History as at Apr 2026

Net interest margin and costs move together

  • Over the trailing 12 months, net interest margin sits at 3.45% with a cost to income ratio of 60.54%, compared with 3.01% and 65.1% in the earlier trailing period snapshot.
  • Analysts' consensus view highlights efficiency improvements and higher yielding loans as earnings drivers, and these figures speak to that, with
    • net interest margin in the quarterly data running between 3.07% and 3.49%, which points to a period where loan yields and funding costs have supported that story, and
    • the cost to income ratio in the quarterly data ranging from 60.36% to 65.51%, which lines up with the idea that expense discipline is an important part of how CPF is supporting margins.

Loan book steady, credit quality contained

  • Total loans in the quarterly data sit around US$5.3b across the reported periods, while non performing loans move in a relatively tight band between US$11.0 million and US$14.9 million.
  • Consensus narrative flags geographic concentration and loan growth risk, and the figures here give some context, with
    • only low single digit movements in total loans across the reported quarters, which fits the concern that core lending growth could be limited, and
    • non performing loans staying in the low to mid teen millions, which suggests credit issues are present but not spiking in the period covered by these numbers.

Valuation gap versus DCF fair value

  • At a share price of US$34.18, CPF trades on a trailing P/E of 11.7x and sits below a DCF fair value estimate of US$56.22, while also offering a 3.39% dividend yield.
  • What stands out in the consensus narrative is the tension between earnings history and pricing, with
    • five year earnings showing a 2.1% annual decline even though the latest year delivered 45.1% earnings growth and a 28.0% net profit margin, and
    • the current price sitting below the DCF fair value estimate of US$56.22 and below the peer average P/E of 12.5x, which supports the idea that recent margin strength is not fully reflected in the market while still leaving the longer term earnings trend as a key risk to watch.

If you want to see how other investors are connecting these numbers to different long term stories, it is worth reading the range of community narratives for CPF Curious how numbers become stories that shape markets? Explore Community Narratives.

Next Steps

To see how these results tie into long-term growth, risks, and valuation, check out the full range of community narratives for Central Pacific Financial on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.

Seeing both the upside and the risks in these numbers, it makes sense to move quickly and test the story against your own view by checking the 3 key rewards and 1 important warning sign.

See What Else Is Out There

While CPF's recent year showed stronger margins, the five year earnings record points to a 2.1% annual decline and questions around longer term growth.

If that longer term earnings drift worries you, it is worth checking the 52 high quality undervalued stocks to quickly spot other companies where cash flows and pricing look more aligned.

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.