Univest Financial (UVSP) Net Interest Margin Strengthens Bullish Narratives In Q1 2026 Earnings

Univest Financial Corporation +1.11%

Univest Financial Corporation

UVSP

38.15

+1.11%

Univest Financial (UVSP) has just posted its Q1 2026 scorecard, and the backdrop is a year where trailing 12 month revenue sat at about US$314.3 million, with Basic EPS of US$3.16 and net income of US$90.8 million, alongside a 19.5% earnings lift over the prior year. Over recent quarters, revenue has moved from US$293.1 million to US$314.3 million on a trailing basis, while quarterly EPS ranged from US$0.64 to US$0.89 across 2024 and 2025. This gives investors a richer history for judging how today’s results fit into the story. With net profit margins over the last 12 months at 28.9%, the latest release lands in the context of a business where profitability has recently pushed higher and now becomes the starting point for reassessing the risk and reward trade off.

See our full analysis for Univest Financial.

With the headline numbers on the table, the next step is to see how this earnings print lines up against the prevailing narratives around Univest’s quality, growth profile, and staying power.

NasdaqGS:UVSP Earnings & Revenue History as at Apr 2026
NasdaqGS:UVSP Earnings & Revenue History as at Apr 2026

3.14% net interest margin anchors recent profitability

  • Over the last 12 months, Univest’s net interest margin sat at 3.14%, compared with 2.86% at the end of 2024 and quarterly prints between 2.82% and 3.2% across 2024 and 2025. This helps explain how a 28.9% net profit margin was achieved on US$314.3 million of trailing revenue.
  • Consensus narrative talks about higher net interest income supporting growth, and the margin data partly backs that up but also shows limits:
    • Recent quarterly margins between 3.09% and 3.2% suggest the 3.14% trailing figure is consistent with what has been reported. This supports the idea that interest income has been a key earnings driver rather than a one off spike.
    • At the same time, management guidance in the consensus view calls out moderating net interest income growth and slower spread expansion. The current margin level could be harder to improve further if competition for loans and deposits keeps funding costs higher.

Loan book near US$6.9b with contained non performing balances

  • Total loans ended the latest trailing period at US$6.9b, while non performing loans were US$13.8 million, down from US$28.2 million in mid 2025 and US$15.6 million in late 2024. This points to problem loans remaining a small piece of the overall book by size.
  • Bears in the consensus narrative focus on credit risk and loan growth constraints, and the reported figures both support and challenge that concern:
    • The risk section highlights a US$7.3 million credit loss tied to a suspected fraud case plus guidance for loan growth of only 1% to 3%. This fits the idea that credit events and early payoffs can cap revenue and net interest income even when new originations look healthy.
    • On the other hand, trailing non performing loans sitting at US$13.8 million versus the much larger US$6.9b loan book indicates that, based on what is reported, problem exposures are not dominating the portfolio. This softens the most negative version of the bearish credit story.

P/E of 11.6x and 2.35% yield frame valuation debate

  • At a share price of US$37.51, Univest trades on a trailing P/E of 11.6x, close to the US banks industry at 11.7x and slightly above peer average at 11.4x. Investors also received a 2.35% trailing dividend yield, and a DCF fair value of US$59.40 sits well above the current price.
  • Consensus narrative suggests the stock is roughly fairly priced around the analyst target of US$36.33, and the current numbers show why opinions can split:
    • The 19.5% year over year earnings lift to US$90.8 million and 28.9% net margin support the idea that recent performance lines up with analysts’ expectations. A price near the US$36.33 target and a P/E close to the industry average can look consistent with that view.
    • The data also show earnings falling about 2% per year over five years and a trailing price that is about 36.9% below the DCF fair value of US$59.40. This gives investors reasons to question whether the consensus is too cautious or whether the DCF estimate is too optimistic based on past trends.

Next Steps

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

Mixed messages in the data or a clear story taking shape; either way, it helps to study the details yourself and decide where you stand before the market prices in the next chapter, starting with the 2 key rewards and 1 important warning sign

See What Else Is Out There

While Univest’s recent earnings and margins look solid, the combination of modest loan growth guidance, credit loss events, and valuation debate highlights some risk around consistency.

If you want ideas that put more emphasis on financial resilience and steadier profiles, check out the 74 resilient stocks with low risk scores to quickly spot alternatives that may better match that priority.

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.