Northfield Bancorp (NFBK) Net Interest Margin Rise Tests Bullish Earnings Narratives
Northfield Bancorp, Inc. NFBK | 0.00 |
Northfield Bancorp (NFBK) opened 2026 with Q1 revenue of about US$40.1 million and basic EPS of roughly US$0.30, setting a clear marker after a choppy run through 2025. Over the past year, revenue has moved from US$32.2 million in Q1 2025 to US$40.1 million in Q1 2026, while quarterly EPS shifted from about US$0.19 to roughly US$0.30. This gives investors a clean snapshot of how the top line and per share profit have tracked together. With those numbers on the table and margins still a key swing factor after last year’s one off loss, this latest print gives investors fresh evidence to weigh the earnings growth story against recent profitability pressure.
See our full analysis for Northfield Bancorp.With the headline results set, the next step is to see how these margins and growth trends line up with the prevailing narratives around Northfield Bancorp, and where the numbers start to push back against those stories.
Net interest margin edges up to 2.76%
- Northfield Bancorp reported a Q1 2026 net interest margin of 2.76%, compared with 2.54% in Q3 2025 and 2.57% in Q2 2025, while trailing 12 month net interest margin at Q4 2025 was 2.55%.
- For a bullish view, what stands out is that this higher margin in Q1 2026 sits alongside quarterly net income of US$11.8 million, after trailing 12 month net income had been only US$4.8 million. This raises questions for bulls about how much of the recent improvement is driven by underlying spread versus the rebound from last year’s one off loss.
- Supporters of a stronger future earnings path can point to the move from a 2.1% net interest margin in Q4 2024 on a trailing basis to 2.55% by Q4 2025, together with revenue over the trailing 12 months rising from US$127.0 million at Q4 2024 to US$154.8 million at Q1 2026.
- At the same time, the very large one off loss of US$42.7 million that pulled trailing net margin down to 3.1% from 24.6% a year earlier indicates that part of the recent step up in quarterly profit reflects the absence of that charge. Bullish investors may want to separate that effect from any underlying margin improvement.
Asset quality: non performing loans at US$21.4 million
- Non performing loans were US$21.4 million at Q1 2026 compared with US$16.1 million at Q4 2025 and US$14.1 million at Q2 2025, while total loans over the same points moved between US$3,807.9 million and US$3,920.6 million.
- Critics taking a more bearish angle often focus on credit risk for regional banks, and the movement in these figures feeds into that view, because non performing loans are higher than at several points in 2025 even as total loans have eased back from US$4,022.2 million in Q4 2024 to US$3,807.9 million in Q1 2026.
- Bears point out that the large one off loss of US$42.7 million in the last 12 months coincides with this pattern in non performing loans, and trailing 12 month net income of US$4.8 million at Q1 2026 is far below the US$29.9 million level a year earlier.
- That combination feeds into concerns about how much earnings capacity is available to absorb any further credit costs, especially when the stock already carries an elevated P/E of 123x against industry averages around 11x.
High valuation versus earnings and dividend coverage
- The stock trades at about US$14.03 compared with a stated DCF fair value of roughly US$3.67. The P/E of 123x sits far above peer and US banks industry averages of around 11x, and the dividend yield of 3.71% is flagged as not clearly covered by current earnings.
- For a bearish narrative, what is striking is how these valuation and payout metrics intersect with the recent profit record, in particular trailing 12 month net margin of 3.1% versus 24.6% a year earlier and trailing basic EPS of roughly US$0.12 at Q1 2026. Together, these figures challenge the idea that the current share price and dividend level are comfortably supported by recent fundamentals.
- Skeptics highlight that the share price of US$14.03 sits well above both the DCF fair value reference of US$3.67 and an analyst price target of US$14.50, while trailing 12 month revenue of US$154.8 million is paired with only US$4.8 million of net income.
- The same investors also note that dividend coverage looks thin when the dividend yield is 3.71% and earnings over the last 12 months already reflect the impact of the US$42.7 million one off loss, which leaves limited room if profitability stays closer to the recent 3.1% net margin than to the prior 24.6% level.
Next Steps
Don't just look at this quarter; the real story is in the long-term trend. We've done an in-depth analysis on Northfield Bancorp's growth and its valuation to see if today's price is a bargain. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio now so you don't miss the next big move.
Given the mix of confidence and concern running through these numbers, it makes sense to look under the hood yourself and not just rely on headlines. Take a closer look at the data, weigh the trade off between potential upside and the issues investors are watching, and then ground your own decision in the full picture of 1 key reward and 3 important warning signs.
See What Else Is Out There
Northfield Bancorp combines a P/E of 123x, thin dividend coverage, modest trailing net income and rising non performing loans, which raises clear questions about risk and value support.
If those pressure points concern you, shift your attention to companies screened for stronger financial footing and steadier earnings using the solid balance sheet and fundamentals stocks screener (46 results).
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.
