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    CAPITOL FEDERAL FINANCIAL, INC.® REPORTS SECOND QUARTER FISCAL YEAR 2026 RESULTS

    4/29/26 9:00:00 AM ET
    $CFFN
    Savings Institutions
    Finance
    Get the next $CFFN alert in real time by email

    TOPEKA, Kan., April 29, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Capitol Federal Financial, Inc.® (NASDAQ:CFFN) (the "Company," "we" or "our"), the parent company of Capitol Federal Savings Bank (the "Bank"), announced preliminary results today for the quarter ended March 31, 2026.  For best viewing results, please view this release in Portable Document Format (PDF) on our website, https://ir.capfed.com.  Additionally, our quarterly investor presentation can also be found on our website at https://ir.capfed.com/events-and-presentations/default.aspx.

    CFFN Logo (PRNewsfoto/Capitol Federal Financial, Inc.)

    The Company ended the current quarter with total assets of $9.83 billion, stockholders' equity of $1.03 billion and net income of $20.1 million.  The continued growth in assets and strong earnings performance are the direct result of disciplined execution of our strategic banking initiatives by the Board and management.  This marked our seventh consecutive quarter of net interest income growth and net interest margin expansion.  Net interest income increased $949 thousand to $52.3 million, and our net interest margin increased five basis points to 2.24% due primarily to a reduction in borrowings.  Our commitment to share repurchases continued with the purchase of $22.4 million in shares between January 1, 2026 and April 22, 2026.  The Company paid a special dividend in January as a result of its improved financial performance in fiscal year 2025, further enhancing stockholder value.

    Executing on our strategic initiatives during the current quarter enabled growth in our commercial loan portfolio of $39.1 million and in our commercial deposit portfolio of $20.4 million, bringing the totals to $2.32 billion and $548.1 million, respectively.  We continue to grow our commercial loan portfolio primarily by redeploying funds received from the repayment of correspondent loans.  We expect that growth in the commercial deposit base will further lower our cost of funds due to the nature of commercial deposits.

    John B. Dicus, Chairman and CEO, stated, "As we progress through the fiscal year, we are seeing clear benefits from delivering the same high‑quality consumer experience while continuing to scale our commercial capabilities. Our technology and product investments are resonating with commercial clients today, with expanded enhancements for trust and wealth customers arriving this summer.

    "Our strategic initiatives have improved our financial results and strengthened our capital position. This has directly benefited our stockholders by enabling the payment of dividends, including a special dividend paid in January 2026 in addition to quarterly dividends, and repurchases of our stock. We expect that these repurchases will continue as market opportunities present themselves."

    Highlights for the current quarter include:

    • net income of $20.1 million;
    • net interest margin was 2.24%, an increase of five basis points from 2.19% for the quarter ended December 31, 2025 (the "prior quarter");
    • basic and diluted earnings per share of $0.16;
    • an efficiency ratio of 52.45%, an improvement from 53.66% the prior quarter;
    • an operating expense ratio of 1.24%, unchanged from the prior quarter;
    • paid dividends of $15.9 million, or $0.125 per share, including a $0.040 per share special dividend; and
    • repurchased 2,155,481 shares of common stock at an average price of $7.16 per share.

    Balance sheet highlights include:

    • total assets of $9.83 billion at March 31, 2026;
    • tangible book value per share of $7.96 at March 31, 2026;
    • commercial loan growth of $201.8 million, or 19.1% annualized, since September 30, 2025;
    • commercial deposit growth of $39.9 million, or 15.7% annualized, since September 30, 2025;
    • distributed $53.0 million from the Bank to the Company during the six months ended March 31, 2026; and
    • on April 28, 2026, the Company announced a cash dividend of $0.085 per share, payable on May 15, 2026 to stockholders of record as of the close of business on May 1, 2026.

    Strategic Banking Initiatives

    Our strategic banking initiatives keep us focused on the progression towards becoming a full-service consumer and commercial bank.  These initiatives have resulted in investments in technology, allowing us to launch new services and products.  Our seasoned and well-connected commercial bankers and trust and wealth advisors deliver access to new customer groups.  Our treasury management product suite enables us to deliver first-in-class service to new and existing customers.  Our marketing and business development efforts continue to increase, deepen and broaden our customer relationships.  The focus on our strategic banking initiatives continues to bear fruit and we expect that progress to continue.

    Strategic Actions.  The long-term success of our transition to a full-service consumer and commercial bank is predicated on strengthening relationships with consumer and commercial customers.  Management and the Board are utilizing committed resources to implement our strategic objectives, as well as enhancing internal monitoring of performance metrics intended to ensure we are on the right path.  Through our experienced relationship managers, we deliver customized solutions using advanced digital platforms and sophisticated cash management tools.  We are leveraging our centralized organizational structure to respond quickly to our customers' needs and desires.

    Commercial Lending.  Commercial loans continue to grow as a percentage of our total loan portfolio, comprising 29% of the portfolio at March 31, 2026, compared to 28% and 26% at December 31, 2025 and September 30, 2025, respectively.  Our disciplined underwriting, ongoing credit administration and monitoring of concentration levels by collateral type, geographic location and borrowing relationship allow us to maintain strong credit quality.  Commercial lending utilizes loan pricing and profitability software that provides insights on lending opportunities based on the full customer banking relationship and market intelligence regarding competitor pricing.  This enhances our ability to profitably compete with other financial institutions both inside and outside our market areas.

    Treasury Management.  The Bank offers a competitive suite of treasury management products to commercial customers who are supported by an experienced team of treasury management officers.  This team is focused on the deposit and cash management needs of commercial customers and growing this line of business through the acquisition of new customers located in our local market areas, as well as those we lend to outside those areas.  During the current fiscal year, a team of business development officers have been tasked with growing the deposit base within the small business customer segment and providing product lines specifically designed for these customers.  Our treasury management officers and business development officers often create depository relationships with new customers independent of a lending relationship.  We expect that this will be a focus area for our sales teams as the Bank continues to diversify funding sources and seeks to increase fee revenue tied to depository accounts.  During the third quarter of fiscal year 2026, the Bank expects to introduce digital onboarding for small business customers using industry-leading risk management and screening tools, which will replace many manual verification tasks.  We are evaluating additional technology in order to capture a larger share of this business with even more products and services.  Within calendar year 2026, we expect to implement new technology for lockbox services and integrated accounts receivables.  The Bank implemented new purchase cards and corporate cards in March 2026.  Revenue stream projections have not yet been determined as customer acceptance rates are still being evaluated. 

    Digital Banking.  We are advancing towards a seamless digital banking experience for all customers, enhancing the Bank's ability to attract and retain deposits and lower the cost to service our customers.  This strategy includes a new deposit account onboarding platform and digital banking enhancements for debit cardholders, which will allow customers to begin using their card immediately online and in digital wallets without waiting for the delivery of a physical card.  During the current quarter, the Bank successfully ran live pilots for this technology and published the mobile app to the app store.  We are preparing for general release to our customers in the third quarter of fiscal year 2026.  The Bank is taking advantage of fintech plug-in technologies that we expect will integrate into our digital banking experience for consumers, small businesses, and commercial customers.

    Wealth Management.  We have continued to implement enhanced private wealth management products and services, which is a new line of business for the Bank.  Trust and financial advisory services are undergoing a transformational upgrade that we expect will lead to improved client and advisor experience, lowered overhead cost, and increased revenue.  We are adding experienced advisors to our staff to meet the growing client demand in all the markets we serve.

    We continue to expand our extensive suite of private banking products and services and grow our client base in this area. We believe that deliberate and meaningful growth in this line of business will be a gateway to driving revenue growth from off-balance sheet assets and bridge the gap between high-net-worth depository customers, small business owners and key commercial customers and create additional corporate trustee opportunities for the Bank.

    Stockholder Value.  Delivering long-term sustainable stockholder value continues to be our North Star while maintaining a strong capital position.  As part of our historically robust and disciplined approach to capital management, we continue to generate returns to stockholders through dividend payments and share repurchases.  At March 31, 2026, Capitol Federal Financial, Inc., at the holding company level, had $10.7 million in cash on deposit at the Bank.  The Bank anticipates moving at least $25.0 million to the holding company during the quarter-ending June 30, 2026, to fund the payment of dividends and share repurchases.  Total dividends paid during the second quarter of fiscal year 2026 were $15.9 million, or $0.125 per share.  During the six months ended March 31, 2026, the Company paid dividends of $26.9 million, or $0.210 per share and repurchased 4,532,114 shares for $31.7 million.  Subsequent to March 31, 2026, the Company repurchased 927,964 shares for $7.0 million through April 22, 2026.  Since completing our second-step conversion in December 2010 through March 31, 2026, we have returned $2.06 billion to stockholders through $1.59 billion in cash dividends and $471.6 million in share repurchases.  For the remainder of fiscal year 2026, it is the intention of the Board of Directors to continue the regular quarterly cash dividend of $0.085 per share and to seek further opportunities for value-enhancing share repurchases.

    Comparison of Operating Results for the Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 and December 31, 2025 

    For the quarter ended March 31, 2026, the Company recognized net income of $20.1 million, or $0.16 per share, compared to net income of $20.3 million, or $0.16 per share, for the quarter ended December 31, 2025.  The slight decrease in net income was due primarily to a higher provision for credit losses, partially offset by higher net interest income and lower non-interest expense.  The net interest margin increased five basis points, from 2.19% for the prior quarter to 2.24% for the current quarter due to a decrease in the amount of borrowings outstanding during the quarter.

    Interest and Dividend Income

    The following table presents the components of interest and dividend income for the time periods presented, along with the change measured in dollars and percent. 



    For the Three Months Ended











    March 31,



    December 31,



    Change Expressed in:



    2026



    2025



    Dollars



    Percent



    (Dollars in thousands)





    INTEREST AND DIVIDEND INCOME:









    Loans receivable

    $         89,323



    $         89,792



    $         (469)



    (0.5 %)

    Mortgage-backed securities ("MBS")

    10,853



    11,341



    (488)



    (4.3)

    Cash and cash equivalents

    2,474



    2,773



    (299)



    (10.8)

    Federal Home Loan Bank Topeka ("FHLB") stock

    1,858



    2,032



    (174)



    (8.6)

    Investment securities

    52



    51



    1



    2.0

    Total interest and dividend income

    $       104,560



    $       105,989



    $      (1,429)



    (1.3)

    The decrease in interest income on loans receivable was mainly related to the commercial loan portfolio, largely due to two fewer calendar days during the current quarter, along with lower deferred fee recognition in the current quarter related to commercial loan payoff activity.  The average balance of the commercial loan portfolio increased during the current quarter which partially offset the impact of the items noted above.  The decrease in interest income on MBS was due to a decrease in the average balance of the portfolio compared to the prior quarter as not all of the portfolio repayments were reinvested back into the portfolio.  The decrease in interest income on cash and cash equivalents was due primarily to a decrease in the weighted average yield compared to the prior quarter.  The decrease in dividend income on FHLB stock was due primarily to a reduction in the Bank's balance of FHLB stock following the payoff of $200.0 million of maturing FHLB borrowings and repayments on amortizing FHLB borrowings, which reduced the Bank's required FHLB stock holdings.

    Interest Expense

    The following table presents the components of interest expense for the time periods presented, along with the change measured in dollars and percent. 



    For the Three Months Ended











    March 31,



    December 31,



    Change Expressed in:



    2026



    2025



    Dollars



    Percent



    (Dollars in thousands)





    INTEREST EXPENSE:













    Deposits

    $         36,299



    $         37,500



    $      (1,201)



    (3.2 %)

    Borrowings

    15,995



    17,172



    (1,177)



    (6.9)

    Total interest expense

    $         52,294



    $         54,672



    $      (2,378)



    (4.3)

    The decrease in interest expense on deposits between periods was due primarily to a decrease in the cost of retail certificates of deposit and money market accounts compared to the prior quarter.  The reduction in the cost of retail certificates of deposit was due to existing higher rate certificates of deposit renewing at lower rates and the decrease in the rate on money market accounts was due to management lowering the rates on some money market tiers during the current quarter.  Interest expense on borrowings was lower compared to the prior quarter due to a decrease in the average balance, attributable mainly to FHLB borrowings that matured between periods and were not replaced.  Deposit growth, along with cash flows from the securities portfolio, were used to repay these borrowings.

    Provision for Credit Losses

    The Company recorded a provision for credit losses of $2.4 million during the current quarter compared to a provision for credit losses of $1.1 million for the prior quarter.  The provision for credit losses in the current quarter was comprised of a $2.1 million increase in the allowance for credit losses ("ACL") for loans and a $308 thousand increase in the reserve for off-balance sheet credit exposures.  The provision for credit losses in the current quarter was due primarily to establishing a $4.0 million specific valuation allowance related to a nonaccrual commercial lending relationship, partially offset by an increase in projected prepayment speeds for certain commercial loan categories and improvement between quarters in some of the commercial-related forecasted economic indices applied in the ACL model. 

    Non-Interest Income

    The following table presents the components of non-interest income for the time periods presented, along with the change measured in dollars and percent.



    For the Three Months Ended











    March 31,



    December 31,



    Change Expressed in:



    2026



    2025



    Dollars



    Percent



    (Dollars in thousands)





    NON-INTEREST INCOME:













    Deposit service fees

    $          2,690



    $          2,872



    $        (182)



    (6.3 %)

    Income from bank-owned life insurance ("BOLI")

    1,151



    965



    186



    19.3

    Insurance commissions

    512



    789



    (277)



    (35.1)

    Other non-interest income

    1,106



    853



    253



    29.7

    Total non-interest income

    $          5,459



    $          5,479



    $          (20)



    (0.4)

    Income from BOLI was higher in the current quarter due primarily to the purchase of $45.0 million in BOLI policies during the current quarter.  Insurance commissions were lower compared to the prior quarter due primarily to the receipt of commissions that were lower than accruals, along with insurance industry changes that continued to reduce income on certain lines of business.  The increase in other non-interest income was due mainly to prepayment fees related to commercial loan payoffs during the current quarter.

    Non-Interest Expense

    The following table presents the components of non-interest expense for the time periods presented, along with the change measured in dollars and percent. 



    For the Three Months Ended











    March 31,



    December 31,



    Change Expressed in:



    2026



    2025



    Dollars



    Percent



    (Dollars in thousands)





    NON-INTEREST EXPENSE:













    Salaries and employee benefits

    $         15,828



    $         15,747



    $           81



    0.5 %

    Information technology and related expense

    5,425



    5,134



    291



    5.7

    Occupancy, net

    3,265



    3,450



    (185)



    (5.4)

    Professional and other services

    1,579



    1,789



    (210)



    (11.7)

    Federal insurance premium

    1,110



    1,111



    (1)



    (0.1)

    Advertising and promotional

    645



    1,056



    (411)



    (38.9)

    Deposit and loan transaction costs

    768



    716



    52



    7.3

    Office supplies and related expense

    511



    481



    30



    6.2

    Other non-interest expense

    1,143



    992



    151



    15.2

    Total non-interest expense

    $         30,274



    $         30,476



    $        (202)



    (0.7)

    The decrease in professional and other services was due primarily to nonrecurring services in the prior quarter.  The decrease in advertising and promotional expense was due primarily to the timing of marketing campaigns compared to the prior quarter.

    The Company's efficiency ratio was 52.45% for the current quarter compared to 53.66% for the prior quarter.  The efficiency ratio is a measure of a financial institution's total non-interest expense as a percentage of the sum of net interest income (pre-provision for credit losses) and non-interest income.  A lower value generally indicates that it is costing the financial institution less money to generate revenue.  The Company's operating expense ratio (annualized) for the current quarter was 1.24%, unchanged from the prior quarter.  The operating expense ratio is a measure of a financial institution's total non-interest expense as a percentage of average assets, providing insight into how efficiently the Company is managing its expenses in relation to its assets and does not take into consideration changes in interest rates.

    Income Tax Expense

    The following table presents pretax income, income tax expense, and net income for the time periods presented, along with the change measured in dollars and percent and the effective tax rate.



    For the Three Months Ended











    March 31,



    December 31,



    Change Expressed in:



    2026



    2025



    Dollars



    Percent



    (Dollars in thousands)





    Income before income tax expense

    $      25,079



    $      25,214



    $        (135)



    (0.5 %)

    Income tax expense

    4,931



    4,910



    21



    0.4

    Net income

    $      20,148



    $      20,304



    $        (156)



    (0.8)

















    Effective tax rate

    19.7 %



    19.5 %









    Comparison of Operating Results for the Six Months Ended March 31, 2026 and 2025

    The Company recognized net income of $40.5 million, or $0.32 per share, for the current year period, compared to net income of $30.8 million, or $0.24 per share, for the prior year period.  The increase in net income was due mainly to higher net interest income, partially offset by higher non-interest expense and a higher provision for credit losses.  The net interest margin increased 33 basis points, from 1.89% for the prior year period to 2.22% for the current year period.  The increase was due mainly to growth in the higher yielding commercial loan portfolio.  The net interest margin benefits associated with the reduction in the cost of deposits, largely related to a decrease in rates on the retail certificate of deposit portfolio, was more than offset by an increase in the average balance of the deposit portfolio, mainly due to growth in the high yield savings account.

    Interest and Dividend Income

    The following table presents the components of interest and dividend income for the time periods presented, along with the change measured in dollars and percent.



    For the Six Months Ended











    March 31,



    Change Expressed in:



    2026



    2025



    Dollars



    Percent



    (Dollars in thousands)





    INTEREST AND DIVIDEND INCOME:













    Loans receivable

    $      179,115



    $      162,261



    $      16,854



    10.4 %

    MBS

    22,194



    22,288



    (94)



    (0.4)

    Cash and cash equivalents

    5,247



    4,600



    647



    14.1

    FHLB stock

    3,890



    4,637



    (747)



    (16.1)

    Investment securities

    103



    2,011



    (1,908)



    (94.9)

    Total interest and dividend income

    $      210,549



    $      195,797



    $      14,752



    7.5

    The increase in interest income on loans receivable was due primarily to growth in the commercial loan portfolio, as cash flows from the one-to four-family loan portfolio continued to be redirected into the higher yielding commercial loan portfolio.  Interest income on cash and cash equivalents increased due to an increase in the average balance compared to the prior year period, partially offset by a decrease in the weighted average yield.  The increase in the average balance was driven primarily by carrying more cash during the current year period to support anticipated commercial loan activities and operational needs.  The decrease in FHLB stock dividend income was due primarily to a reduction in the balance of FHLB stock due to paying off maturing FHLB borrowings between periods and repayments on amortizing FHLB borrowings, which reduced the Bank's required FHLB stock holdings.  The decrease in interest income on investment securities was due primarily to a lower average balance, due mainly to securities that were called or matured between periods and were not replaced in their entirety. 

    Interest Expense

    The following table presents the components of interest expense for the time periods presented, along with the change measured in dollars and percent.



    For the Six Months Ended











    March 31,



    Change Expressed in:



    2026



    2025



    Dollars



    Percent



    (Dollars in thousands)





    INTEREST EXPENSE:













    Deposits

    $        73,799



    $        73,198



    $          601



    0.8 %

    Borrowings

    33,167



    36,529



    (3,362)



    (9.2)

    Total interest expense

    $      106,966



    $      109,727



    $      (2,761)



    (2.5)

    Interest expense on deposits was higher during the current year period due primarily to growth in the Bank's high yield savings account offering, partially offset by a decrease in the cost of retail certificates of deposit.  The decrease in interest expense on borrowings was due to a decrease in the average balance, which was partially offset by a higher weighted average interest rate.  The decrease in the average balance of borrowings was due mainly to FHLB borrowings that matured between periods and were not renewed, along with continued repayments on amortizing FHLB advances.  Cash flows from the deposit portfolio were used, in part, to pay off maturing FHLB borrowings and repay amortizing FHLB advances.  The increase in the weighted average interest rate was due primarily to FHLB borrowings that matured and were renewed between periods to market interest rates higher than the overall portfolio rate, along with paying off lower rate advances that matured between periods, which increased the overall interest rate of the remaining FHLB advances.

    Provision for Credit Losses

    The Company recorded a provision for credit losses of $3.5 million during the current year period compared to a provision for credit losses of $677 thousand for the prior year period.  The provision for credit losses in the current year period was due primarily to establishing a $4.0 million specific valuation allowance related to a nonaccrual commercial lending relationship, along with commercial loan/commitment growth, partially offset by improvement between periods in some of the commercial-related forecasted economic indices applied in the ACL model.

    Non-Interest Income

    The following table presents the components of non-interest income for the time periods presented, along with the change measured in dollars and percent.



    For the Six Months Ended











    March 31,



    Change Expressed in:



    2026



    2025



    Dollars



    Percent



    (Dollars in thousands)





    NON-INTEREST INCOME:













    Deposit service fees

    $         5,562



    $         5,303



    $          259



    4.9 %

    Income from BOLI

    2,116



    1,295



    821



    63.4

    Insurance commissions

    1,301



    1,703



    (402)



    (23.6)

    Other non-interest income

    1,959



    1,345



    614



    45.7

    Total non-interest income

    $       10,938



    $         9,646



    $       1,292



    13.4

    Income from BOLI was higher in the current year period due mainly to a change in rates and an increase in the crediting rate as a result of updates to certain policies that were executed in the second half of the prior fiscal year, along with $45.0 million in new BOLI policies being purchased during the current year period.  Insurance commissions were lower compared to the prior year period due primarily to contingent commissions, specifically, contingent commissions received versus accrued in the current year compared to the prior year, along with a reduction in income in the current year period related to personal lines of business caused by some carriers imposing underwriting restrictions in our market areas.  Recently, several carriers began to ease their restrictions in our market areas, which should improve our income opportunities.  Other non-interest income was higher in the current year period due mainly to higher commercial loan fee activity.

    Non-Interest Expense 

    The following table presents the components of non-interest expense for the time periods presented, along with the change measured in dollars and percent.



    For the Six Months Ended











    March 31,



    Change Expressed in:



    2026



    2025



    Dollars



    Percent



    (Dollars in thousands)





    NON-INTEREST EXPENSE:













    Salaries and employee benefits

    $       31,575



    $       29,170



    $       2,405



    8.2 %

    Information technology and related expense

    10,559



    9,474



    1,085



    11.5

    Occupancy, net

    6,715



    6,835



    (120)



    (1.8)

    Professional and other services

    3,368



    2,582



    786



    30.4

    Federal insurance premium

    2,221



    2,133



    88



    4.1

    Advertising and promotional

    1,701



    1,582



    119



    7.5

    Deposit and loan transaction costs

    1,484



    1,470



    14



    1.0

    Office supplies and related expense

    992



    836



    156



    18.7

    Other non-interest expense

    2,135



    2,606



    (471)



    (18.1)

    Total non-interest expense

    $       60,750



    $       56,688



    $       4,062



    7.2

    The increase in salaries and employee benefits was mainly attributable to an increase in full-time equivalent employees between periods, as well as merit increases and salary adjustments to remain market competitive.  The increase in information technology and related expense was due mainly to an increase in software licensing expense related to new agreements and applications.  The increase in professional and other services was due primarily to an increase in new relationships with outside service providers and additional services provided by current providers, of which approximately $325 thousand is not expected to recur in future periods.  The decrease in other non-interest expense was due mainly to higher customer fraud losses in the prior year period.

    The Company's efficiency ratio was 53.05% for the current year period compared to 59.23% for the prior year period.  The improvement in the efficiency ratio was due primarily to higher net interest income compared to the prior year period, partially offset by higher non-interest expense.  The Company's operating expense ratio (annualized) for the current year period was 1.24% compared to 1.18% for the prior year period.  The operating expense ratio was higher in the current year period due mainly to higher non-interest expense, partially offset by higher average assets compared to the prior year period.

    Income Tax Expense

    The following table presents pretax income, income tax expense, and net income for the time periods presented, along with the change measured in dollars and percent and effective tax rate.



    For the Six Months Ended











    March 31,



    Change Expressed in:



    2026



    2025



    Dollars



    Percent



    (Dollars in thousands)





    Income before income tax expense

    $     50,293



    $     38,351



    $      11,942



    31.1 %

    Income tax expense

    9,841



    7,521



    2,320



    30.8

    Net income

    $     40,452



    $     30,830



    $        9,622



    31.2

















    Effective tax rate

    19.6 %



    19.6 %









    Income tax expense was higher in the current year period due to higher pretax income.

    Financial Condition as of March 31, 2026

    The following table summarizes the Company's financial condition at the dates indicated.











    Annualized







    Annualized



    March 31,



    December 31,



    Percent



    September 30,



    Percent



    2026



    2025



    Change



    2025



    Change



    (Dollars and shares in thousands)

    Total assets

    $   9,829,080



    $   9,778,400



    2.1 %



    $   9,778,701



    1.0 %

    Available-for-sale ("AFS") securities

    809,566



    829,704



    (9.7)



    867,216



    (13.3)

    Loans receivable, net

    8,114,205



    8,176,736



    (3.1)



    8,111,961



    0.1

    Deposits

    6,924,491



    6,758,632



    9.8



    6,591,448



    10.1

    Borrowings

    1,707,055



    1,829,914



    (26.9)



    1,950,770



    (25.0)

    Stockholders' equity

    1,025,726



    1,041,320



    (6.0)



    1,047,677



    (4.2)

    Equity to total assets at end of period

    10.4 %



    10.6 %







    10.7 %





    Tangible book value per share

    $           7.96



    $           7.95



    0.5



    $           7.85



    2.8

    Average number of basic and diluted

       shares outstanding

    126,631



    128,953



    (7.2)



    129,874



    (5.0)

    The loan portfolio decreased $62.5 million during the current quarter as the one- to four-family loan portfolio decreased $98.2 million from the prior quarter-end, partially offset by commercial loan growth of $39.1 million, or a 1.7% increase, mainly in the commercial real estate portfolio.  The Bank expects to fund approximately $60.0 million of undisbursed amounts on existing commercial real estate and commercial construction loans and approximately $84.4 million of commercial real estate and commercial construction commitments during the June 30, 2026 quarter.  The near-term outlook for net commercial loan balances is growth of approximately 6% for the quarter ending June 30, 2026, with overall net commercial loan growth of approximately 20% for the fiscal year.  Total loans receivable, net is anticipated to increase by approximately 1% for the current fiscal year.  It is expected that repayments from our one- to four-family loan portfolio will continue to be directed toward supporting commercial loan growth, aligning with our ongoing commitment to expand commercial banking services.  Maintaining strong credit quality remains a top priority as we expand our commercial loan portfolio.  The weighted average debt service coverage ratio ("DSCR") for commercial loan originations during the current quarter was 1.86x and the weighted average loan-to-value ("LTV") for commercial real estate and construction loans originated was 63%.  The weighted average DSCR and LTV for our commercial real estate and construction loan portfolios was 1.76x and 63%, respectively, at March 31, 2026.

    Deposits increased $165.9 million during the current quarter due mainly to an increase in the Bank's retail non-maturity deposits.  Borrowings decreased $122.9 million from December 31, 2025, due to the maturity of $100.0 million in borrowings that were not replaced, along with principal repayments made on the Bank's amortizing FHLB advances.  Cash flows from the deposit portfolio were primarily used to pay down the borrowings during the current quarter.  Management estimates that the Bank had $4.35 billion in liquidity available at March 31, 2026, based on the Bank's blanket collateral agreement with FHLB, available brokered and public unit deposit capacity, unencumbered securities, and cash and cash equivalent balances.

    The loan portfolio increased $2.2 million from September 30, 2025, which was attributable to a $201.8 million increase in commercial loans, offset by a $196.8 million decrease in one- to four-family loans, as the Bank continued to redirect cash flows from the one- to four-family loan portfolio to the commercial loan portfolio.  The growth in the commercial loan portfolio was primarily in commercial real estate loans.  The weighted average DSCR for commercial loan originations/participations during the six months ended March 31, 2026 was 2.35x and the weighted average LTV for commercial real estate and construction loan originations/participations was 70%.

    Deposits increased $333.0 million from September 30, 2025, due mainly to an increase in non-maturity deposits.  Management continues to focus on growing commercial relationships and deposits.  During the six months ended March 31, 2026, commercial non-interest-bearing deposits increased $36.1 million, or 18.9%.  Borrowings decreased $243.7 million during the current year period due primarily to the maturity of $200.0 million of borrowings that were not replaced, along with principal repayments made on the Bank's amortizing FHLB advances. 

    The following table summarizes loan originations and participations, deposit activity, and borrowing activity, along with certain related weighted average rates, during the periods indicated.  The borrowings presented in the table have original contractual terms of one year or longer.  The new borrowings during the periods presented related to the prepayment of existing borrowings to lower rates.



    For the Three Months Ended



    For the Six Months Ended



    March 31, 2026



    March 31, 2026



    Amount



    Rate



    Amount



    Rate



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Loan originations and participations













    One- to four-family and consumer:















    Originated

    $          75,458



    6.20 %



    $         171,246



    6.19 %

















    Commercial:















    Originated

    123,828



    6.45



    404,909



    6.47

    Participations

    —



    —



    83,520



    6.37



    $         199,286



    6.35



    $         659,675



    6.38

















    Deposit activity















    Retail non-maturity deposits

    $         134,826







    $         297,076





    Commercial non-maturity deposits

    15,389







    34,522





    Retail/Commercial certificates of deposit

    59,252







    49,021





















    Borrowing activity















    Maturities and repayments

    (496,168)



    3.80



    (667,336)



    3.43

    New borrowings

    375,000



    3.81



    425,000



    3.79

    Stockholders' Equity

    Stockholders' equity totaled $1.03 billion at March 31, 2026, a decrease of $22.0 million from September 30, 2025.  Consistent with our goal to operate a sound and profitable financial organization that delivers long-term stockholder value, we actively seek to maintain a well-capitalized status for the Bank in accordance with regulatory standards.  As of March 31, 2026, all of the Bank's capital ratios exceeded the well-capitalized requirements, and the Bank exceeded internal policy thresholds for sensitivity to changes in interest rates.  As of March 31, 2026, the Bank's community bank leverage ratio was 9.5%.

    During the six months ended March 31, 2026, the Company repurchased 4,532,114 shares of common stock at an average price of $7.00 per share, or $31.7 million in total.  Subsequent to March 31, 2026 through April 22, 2026, the Company repurchased 927,964 shares of common stock at an average price of $7.54 per share, or $7.0 million in total, bringing total share repurchases during fiscal year 2026 through April 22, 2026 to 5,460,078 shares for $38.7 million.  The Company intends to opportunistically repurchase stock from time to time depending upon market conditions, available liquidity and other factors.  Although our existing repurchase plan has no expiration date, we are required to annually seek the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City's ("FRB") non-objection for the buyback amount.  The FRB's current non-objection for the Company to repurchase up to $75 million of stock expires in February 2027.  As of April 22, 2026, the Company had $32.4 million remaining authorized under its existing stock repurchase plan.

    During the six months ended March 31, 2026, the Company paid cash dividends totaling $26.9 million, or $0.210 per share, which consisted of a $0.040 per share special cash dividend and two regular quarterly cash dividends of $0.085 each, totaling $0.170 per share.  On April 28, 2026, the Company announced a regular quarterly cash dividend of $0.085 per share, or approximately $10.6 million, payable on May 15, 2026 to stockholders of record as of the close of business on May 1, 2026.  The special cash dividend paid in January 2026, in addition to the Company's history of regular quarterly dividends and opportunistic share repurchases, demonstrates the Company's multi-channel focus on delivering stockholder value through disciplined capital allocation which balances investments in the future of the Company with incremental opportunities to return capital to stockholders.  For the remainder of fiscal year 2026, it is the intention of the Company's Board of Directors to pay out a regular quarterly cash dividend of $0.085 per share, totaling $0.34 per share for the year.  Dividend payments depend upon a number of factors, including the Company's financial condition and results of operations, regulatory capital compliance, regulatory limitations on the Bank's ability to make capital distributions to the Company, the Bank's current tax earnings and accumulated earnings and profits, and the amount of cash at the holding company level.

    The Board of Directors continues to evaluate various alternatives for capital allocation to enhance stockholder value, including the repurchase of stock, the payment of additional cash dividends, or retaining earnings to support future growth.  Since our second-step conversion in December 2010 through March 31, 2026, we have returned $2.06 billion in capital to stockholders through dividends totaling $1.59 billion and stock repurchases totaling $471.6 million.  This is supported by our holistic approach to managing the balance sheet through continuous modeling of the Bank's performance, risk management, our commitment to credit quality and periodic stress testing.

    At March 31, 2026, Capitol Federal Financial, Inc., at the holding company level, had $10.7 million in cash on deposit at the Bank.  During the six months ended March 31, 2026, the Bank distributed $53.0 million from the Bank to the Company.  It is the intention of the Bank to move at least $25.0 million of cash from the Bank to the holding company during the June 2026 quarter.  The Bank is expected to remain in a positive tax accumulated earnings and profit balance during fiscal year 2026.  Earnings distributions from the Bank to the Company will be limited to the extent necessary to prevent the Bank from re-entering a negative accumulated earnings and profit position and having to pay the pre-1988 bad debt recapture tax on earnings moved from the Bank to the Company.

    The following table presents a reconciliation of total to net shares outstanding as of March 31, 2026.  As of April 22, 2026, total shares outstanding were 126,760,727.

    Total shares outstanding

    127,688,691

    Less unallocated Employee Stock Ownership Plan ("ESOP") shares and unvested restricted stock

    (2,543,533)

    Net shares outstanding

    125,145,158

    Capitol Federal Financial, Inc. is the holding company for the Bank.  As of March 31, 2026, the Bank had 46 branch locations in Kansas and Missouri and is one of the largest residential lenders in the State of Kansas.  News and other information about the Company can be found at the Bank's website, http://www.capfed.com.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    Except for the historical information contained in this press release, the matters discussed herein may be deemed to be "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.  These forward-looking statements include statements about our beliefs, plans, objectives, goals, expectations, anticipations, estimates and intentions.  The words "may," "could," "should," "would," "will," "believe," "anticipate," "estimate," "expect," "intend," "plan," and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements.  Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, including: changes in policies or the application or interpretation of laws and regulations by regulatory agencies and tax authorities; other governmental initiatives affecting the financial services industry; changes in accounting principles, policies or guidelines; fluctuations in interest rates and the effects of inflation or a potential recession, whether caused by Federal Reserve action or otherwise; changes to existing trade policies that could affect economic activity or specific industry sectors; the impact of bank failures or adverse developments at other banks and related negative press about the banking industry in general on investor or depositor sentiment; demand for loans in the Company's market areas; the future earnings and capital levels of the Bank and the impact of potential pre-1988 bad debt recapture, which could affect the ability of the Company to pay dividends in accordance with its dividend policies; competition; and other risks detailed from time to time in documents filed or furnished by the Company with the Securities and Exchange Commission.  Actual results may differ materially from those currently expected.  These forward-looking statements represent the Company's judgment as of the date of this release.  The Company disclaims, however, any intent or obligation to update these forward-looking statements.

    SUPPLEMENTAL FINANCIAL INFORMATION

    CAPITOL FEDERAL FINANCIAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY

    CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS (Unaudited)

    (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)

     



    March 31,



    December 31,



    September 30,



    2026



    2025



    2025

    ASSETS:











    Cash and cash equivalents (includes interest-earning deposits of $314,655,

      $210,223 and $229,566)

    $     330,925



    $      232,634



    $      252,443

    AFS securities, at estimated fair value (amortized cost of $795,659, $809,099 and

      $847,369)

    809,566



    829,704



    867,216

    Loans receivable, net (ACL of $26,599, $24,572 and $24,039)

    8,114,205



    8,176,736



    8,111,961

    FHLB stock, at cost

    79,420



    85,060



    90,662

    Premises and equipment, net

    88,413



    88,753



    89,314

    Income taxes receivable, net

    927



    —



    220

    Deferred federal income tax assets, net

    22,789



    22,744



    23,826

    Other assets

    382,835



    342,769



    343,059

    TOTAL ASSETS

    $   9,829,080



    $    9,778,400



    $    9,778,701













    LIABILITIES:











    Deposits

    $   6,924,491



    $    6,758,632



    $    6,591,448

    Borrowings

    1,707,055



    1,829,914



    1,950,770

    Advances by borrowers

    57,528



    28,523



    65,416

    Income taxes payable, net

    —



    237



    —

    Deferred state income tax liabilities, net

    2,591



    2,228



    2,056

    Other liabilities

    111,689



    117,546



    121,334

    Total liabilities

    8,803,354



    8,737,080



    8,731,024













    STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY:











    Preferred stock, $0.01 par value; 100,000,000 shares authorized, no shares issued

      or outstanding

    —



    —



    —

    Common stock, $0.01 par value; 1,400,000,000 shares authorized, 127,688,691,

      129,836,672 and 132,204,305 shares issued and outstanding as of March 31,

      2026, December 31, 2025, and September 30, 2025, respectively

    1,277



    1,298



    1,322

    Additional paid-in capital

    1,110,648



    1,126,227



    1,142,711

    Unearned compensation, ESOP

    (23,954)



    (24,367)



    (24,780)

    Accumulated deficit

    (73,805)



    (78,044)



    (87,331)

    Accumulated other comprehensive income ("AOCI"), net of tax

    11,560



    16,206



    15,755

    Total stockholders' equity

    1,025,726



    1,041,320



    1,047,677

    TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

    $   9,829,080



    $    9,778,400



    $    9,778,701













    See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.











     

    CAPITOL FEDERAL FINANCIAL, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY

    CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME (Unaudited)

    (Dollars in thousands)

     



    For the Three Months Ended



    For the Six Months Ended



    March 31,



    December 31,



    March 31,



    2026



    2025



    2026



    2025

    INTEREST AND DIVIDEND INCOME:















    Loans receivable

    $          89,323



    $          89,792



    $         179,115



    $         162,261

    MBS

    10,853



    11,341



    22,194



    22,288

    Cash and cash equivalents

    2,474



    2,773



    5,247



    4,600

    FHLB stock

    1,858



    2,032



    3,890



    4,637

    Investment securities

    52



    51



    103



    2,011

    Total interest and dividend income

    104,560



    105,989



    210,549



    195,797

















    INTEREST EXPENSE:















    Deposits

    36,299



    37,500



    73,799



    73,198

    Borrowings

    15,995



    17,172



    33,167



    36,529

    Total interest expense

    52,294



    54,672



    106,966



    109,727

















    NET INTEREST INCOME

    52,266



    51,317



    103,583



    86,070

















    PROVISION FOR CREDIT LOSSES

    2,372



    1,106



    3,478



    677

    NET INTEREST INCOME AFTER















    PROVISION FOR CREDIT LOSSES

    49,894



    50,211



    100,105



    85,393

















    NON-INTEREST INCOME:















    Deposit service fees

    2,690



    2,872



    5,562



    5,303

    Income from BOLI

    1,151



    965



    2,116



    1,295

    Insurance commissions

    512



    789



    1,301



    1,703

    Other non-interest income

    1,106



    853



    1,959



    1,345

    Total non-interest income

    5,459



    5,479



    10,938



    9,646

















    NON-INTEREST EXPENSE:















    Salaries and employee benefits

    15,828



    15,747



    31,575



    29,170

    Information technology and related expense

    5,425



    5,134



    10,559



    9,474

    Occupancy, net

    3,265



    3,450



    6,715



    6,835

    Professional and other services

    1,579



    1,789



    3,368



    2,582

    Federal insurance premium

    1,110



    1,111



    2,221



    2,133

    Advertising and promotional

    645



    1,056



    1,701



    1,582

    Deposit and loan transaction costs

    768



    716



    1,484



    1,470

    Office supplies and related expense

    511



    481



    992



    836

    Other non-interest expense

    1,143



    992



    2,135



    2,606

    Total non-interest expense

    30,274



    30,476



    60,750



    56,688

    INCOME BEFORE INCOME TAX EXPENSE

    25,079



    25,214



    50,293



    38,351

    INCOME TAX EXPENSE

    4,931



    4,910



    9,841



    7,521

    NET INCOME

    $          20,148



    $          20,304



    $          40,452



    $          30,830

    Average Balance Sheets. The following tables present the average balances of our assets, liabilities, and stockholders' equity, and the related annualized weighted average yields and rates on our interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities for the periods indicated, as well as selected performance ratios and other information for the periods shown.  Weighted average yields are derived by dividing annualized income by the average balance of the related assets, and weighted average rates are derived by dividing annualized expense by the average balance of the related liabilities, for the periods shown.  Average outstanding balances are derived from average daily balances.  All amounts are presented on a fully taxable basis for the periods presented.  The weighted average yields and rates include amortization of fees, costs, premiums and discounts, which are considered adjustments to yields/rates. 



    For the Three Months Ended



    March 31, 2026



    December 31, 2025



    Average



    Interest 







    Average



    Interest 







    Outstanding



    Earned/



    Yield/



    Outstanding



    Earned/



    Yield/



    Amount



    Paid



    Rate



    Amount



    Paid



    Rate



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Assets:























    Interest-earning assets:























    One- to four-family loans:























    Originated

    $     3,697,174



    $   36,229



    3.92 %



    $     3,748,022



    $   36,490



    3.89 %

    Purchased

    2,061,101



    17,055



    3.31



    2,113,076



    17,469



    3.31

    Total one- to four-family loans

    5,758,275



    53,284



    3.70



    5,861,098



    53,959



    3.68

    Commercial loans:























    Commercial real estate

    1,896,666



    27,150



    5.73



    1,776,342



    26,456



    5.83

    Commercial and industrial

    224,311



    3,791



    6.76



    215,211



    3,868



    7.03

    Commercial construction

    176,061



    3,001



    6.82



    198,300



    3,316



    6.54

    Total commercial loans

    2,297,038



    33,942



    5.91



    2,189,853



    33,640



    6.01

    Consumer loans

    114,986



    2,097



    7.39



    114,588



    2,193



    7.59

    Total loans receivable(1)

    8,170,299



    89,323



    4.37



    8,165,539



    89,792



    4.36

    MBS(2)

    789,899



    10,853



    5.50



    826,320



    11,341



    5.49

    Investment securities(2)

    4,000



    52



    5.13



    4,000



    51



    5.13

    FHLB stock

    82,855



    1,858



    9.10



    88,223



    2,032



    9.14

    Cash and cash equivalents

    271,032



    2,474



    3.65



    274,154



    2,773



    3.96

    Total interest-earning assets

    9,318,085



    104,560



    4.49



    9,358,236



    105,989



    4.49

    Other non-interest-earning assets

    486,394











    468,876









    Total assets

    $     9,804,479











    $     9,827,112

































    Liabilities and stockholders' equity:























    Interest-bearing liabilities:























    Checking

    $        905,915



    542



    0.24



    $        881,139



    503



    0.23

    High yield savings

    587,450



    5,262



    3.63



    507,126



    4,970



    3.89

    Other savings

    428,633



    78



    0.07



    422,933



    79



    0.07

    Money market

    1,232,468



    3,578



    1.18



    1,241,106



    3,925



    1.25

    Retail certificates

    2,842,406



    25,342



    3.62



    2,823,991



    26,213



    3.68

    Commercial certificates

    64,107



    557



    3.52



    61,917



    555



    3.56

    Wholesale certificates

    95,699



    940



    3.98



    124,247



    1,255



    4.01

    Total deposits

    6,156,678



    36,299



    2.39



    6,062,459



    37,500



    2.45

    Borrowings

    1,782,567



    15,995



    3.64



    1,911,552



    17,172



    3.56

    Total interest-bearing liabilities

    7,939,245



    52,294



    2.67



    7,974,011



    54,672



    2.72

    Non-interest-bearing deposits

    647,305











    609,471









    Other non-interest-bearing liabilities

    176,382











    192,207









    Stockholders' equity

    1,041,547











    1,051,423









    Total liabilities and stockholders' equity

    $     9,804,479











    $     9,827,112

































    Net interest income(3)





    $   52,266











    $   51,317





    Net interest-earning assets

    $     1,378,840











    $     1,384,225









    Net interest margin(4)









    2.24











    2.19

    Ratio of interest-earning assets to interest-bearing liabilities



      1.17x











      1.17x

























    Selected performance ratios:























    Return on average assets (annualized)(5)







    0.82 %











    0.83 %

    Return on average equity (annualized)(6)







    7.74











    7.72

    Average equity to average assets









    10.62











    10.70

    Operating expense ratio (annualized)(7)







    1.24











    1.24

    Efficiency ratio(8)









    52.45











    53.66





    For the Six Months Ended



    March 31, 2026



    March 31, 2025



    Average



    Interest 







    Average



    Interest 







    Outstanding



    Earned/



    Yield/



    Outstanding



    Earned/



    Yield/



    Amount



    Paid



    Rate



    Amount



    Paid



    Rate



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Assets:























    Interest-earning assets:























    One- to four-family loans:























    Originated

    $     3,722,877



    $   72,719



    3.91 %



    $     3,902,526



    $   72,686



    3.73 %

    Purchased

    2,087,375



    34,524



    3.31



    2,313,303



    37,816



    3.27

    Total one- to four-family loans

    5,810,252



    107,243



    3.69



    6,215,829



    110,502



    3.56

    Commercial loans:























    Commercial real estate

    1,835,843



    53,606



    5.78



    1,319,992



    37,440



    5.61

    Commercial and industrial

    219,711



    7,659



    6.89



    131,764



    4,403



    6.61

    Commercial construction

    187,302



    6,317



    6.67



    174,574



    5,504



    6.24

    Total commercial loans

    2,242,856



    67,582



    5.96



    1,626,330



    47,347



    5.76

    Consumer loans

    114,785



    4,290



    7.49



    110,396



    4,412



    8.01

    Total loans receivable(1)

    8,167,893



    179,115



    4.37



    7,952,555



    162,261



    4.07

    MBS(2)

    808,309



    22,194



    5.49



    795,969



    22,288



    5.60

    Investment securities(2)

    4,000



    103



    5.13



    74,507



    2,011



    5.40

    FHLB stock

    85,569



    3,890



    9.12



    98,696



    4,637



    9.42

    Cash and cash equivalents

    272,610



    5,247



    3.81



    200,895



    4,600



    4.53

    Total interest-earning assets

    9,338,381



    210,549



    4.49



    9,122,622



    195,797



    4.28

    Other non-interest-earning assets

    477,539











    458,858









    Total assets

    $     9,815,920











    $     9,581,480

































    Liabilities and stockholders' equity:























    Interest-bearing liabilities:























    Checking

    $        893,391



    1,045



    0.23



    $        872,404



    1,016



    0.23

    High yield savings

    546,847



    10,232



    3.75



    176,304



    3,657



    4.16

    Other savings

    425,752



    156



    0.07



    442,122



    177



    0.08

    Money market

    1,236,834



    7,504



    1.22



    1,242,744



    7,906



    1.28

    Retail certificates

    2,833,097



    51,555



    3.65



    2,800,744



    57,736



    4.13

    Commercial certificates

    63,000



    1,112



    3.54



    57,227



    1,208



    4.23

    Wholesale certificates

    110,130



    2,195



    4.00



    67,886



    1,498



    4.42

    Total deposits

    6,109,051



    73,799



    2.42



    5,659,431



    73,198



    2.59

    Borrowings

    1,847,768



    33,167



    3.60



    2,161,309



    36,529



    3.39

    Total interest-bearing liabilities

    7,956,819



    106,966



    2.70



    7,820,740



    109,727



    2.81

    Non-interest-bearing deposits

    628,180











    548,010









    Other non-interest-bearing liabilities

    184,382











    180,034









    Stockholders' equity

    1,046,539











    1,032,696









    Total liabilities and stockholders' equity

    $     9,815,920











    $     9,581,480

































    Net interest income(3)





    $  103,583











    $   86,070





    Net interest-earning assets

    $     1,381,562











    $     1,301,882









    Net interest margin(4)









    2.22











    1.89

    Ratio of interest-earning assets to interest-bearing liabilities



      1.17x











      1.17x

























    Selected performance ratios:























    Return on average assets (annualized)(5)







    0.82 %











    0.64 %

    Return on average equity (annualized)(6)







    7.73











    5.97

    Average equity to average assets









    10.66











    10.78

    Operating expense ratio(7)







    1.24











    1.18

    Efficiency ratio(8)









    53.05











    59.23

    (1)

    Balances are adjusted for unearned loan fees and deferred costs.  Loans that are 90 or more days delinquent are included in the loans receivable average balance with a yield of zero percent.

    (2)

    AFS security yields are based upon amortized cost which is adjusted for premiums and discounts.

    (3)

    Net interest income represents the difference between interest income earned on interest-earning assets and interest paid on interest-bearing liabilities.  Net interest income depends on the average balance of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities, and the interest rates earned or paid on them.

    (4)

    Net interest margin represents annualized net interest income as a percentage of average interest-earning assets.  Management believes the net interest margin is important to investors as it is a profitability measure for financial institutions.

    (5)

    Return on average assets represents annualized net income as a percentage of total average assets.  Management believes that the return on average assets is important to investors as it shows the Company's profitability in relation to the Company's average assets.

    (6)

    Return on average equity represents annualized net income as a percentage of total average equity.  Management believes that the return on average equity is important to investors as it shows the Company's profitability in relation to the Company's average equity.

    (7)

    The operating expense ratio represents annualized non-interest expense as a percentage of average assets.  Management believes the operating expense ratio is important to investors as it provides insight into how efficiently the Company is managing its expenses in relation to its assets.  It is a financial measurement ratio that does not take into consideration changes in interest rates.

    (8)

    The efficiency ratio represents non-interest expense as a percentage of the sum of net interest income (pre-provision for credit losses) and non-interest income.  Management believes the efficiency ratio is important to investors as it is a measure of a financial institution's cost to generate income.  A lower value generally indicates that it is costing the financial institution less money to generate revenue, related to its net interest margin and non-interest income.

    Loan Portfolio

    The following table presents information related to the composition of our loan portfolio in terms of dollar amounts, weighted average rates, and percentage of total as of the dates indicated.



    March 31, 2026



    December 31, 2025



    September 30, 2025











    % of











    % of











    % of



    Amount



    Rate



    Total



    Amount



    Rate



    Total



    Amount



    Rate



    Total



    (Dollars in thousands)

    One- to four-family:



































    Originated

    $ 3,676,252



    3.84 %



    45.2 %



    $ 3,725,622



    3.82 %



    45.4 %



    $ 3,774,134



    3.78 %



    46.4 %

    Purchased

    2,015,434



    3.50



    24.7



    2,065,179



    3.50



    25.2



    2,114,447



    3.49



    26.0

    Construction

    16,123



    6.15



    0.2



    15,228



    6.14



    0.2



    16,054



    6.17



    0.2

    Total

    5,707,809



    3.73



    70.1



    5,806,029



    3.71



    70.8



    5,904,635



    3.68



    72.6

    Commercial:



































    Commercial real estate

    1,896,313



    5.80



    23.3



    1,874,506



    5.74



    22.9



    1,709,990



    5.82



    21.0

    Commercial and industrial

    232,182



    6.76



    2.9



    219,909



    6.74



    2.7



    210,119



    6.92



    2.6

    Commercial construction

    189,251



    6.73



    2.3



    184,227



    6.83



    2.2



    195,886



    6.42



    2.4

    Total

    2,317,746



    5.97



    28.5



    2,278,642



    5.93



    27.8



    2,115,995



    5.98



    26.0

    Consumer loans:



































    Home equity

    106,414



    7.55



    1.3



    107,490



    7.76



    1.3



    104,809



    8.15



    1.3

    Other

    7,327



    5.71



    0.1



    7,814



    5.56



    0.1



    8,436



    5.55



    0.1

    Total

    113,741



    7.43



    1.4



    115,304



    7.61



    1.4



    113,245



    7.96



    1.4

    Total loans receivable

    8,139,296



    4.42



    100.0 %



    8,199,975



    4.38



    100.0 %



    8,133,875



    4.34



    100.0 %





































    Less:



































    ACL

    26,599











    24,572











    24,039









    Deferred loan fees/discounts

    30,087











    31,125











    31,268









    Premiums/deferred costs

    (31,595)











    (32,458)











    (33,393)









    Total loans receivable, net

    $ 8,114,205











    $ 8,176,736











    $ 8,111,961









    Loan Activity: The following table summarizes activity in the loan portfolio, along with weighted average rates where applicable, for the periods indicated, excluding changes in ACL, deferred loan fees/discounts, and premiums/deferred costs.  Loans that were paid off as a result of refinances are included in repayments.  Loan endorsements are not included in the activity in the following table because a new loan is not generated at the time of the endorsement.  The endorsed balance and rate are included in the ending loan portfolio balance and rate.  Commercial loan renewals are not included in the activity presented in the following table unless new funds are disbursed at the time of renewal.  The renewal balance and rate are included in the ending loan portfolio balance and rate.



    For the Three Months Ended



    For the Six Months Ended



    March 31, 2026



    December 31, 2025



    March 31, 2026



    March 31, 2025



    Amount



    Rate



    Amount



    Rate



    Amount



    Rate



    Amount



    Rate



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Beginning balance

    $  8,199,975



    4.38 %



    $  8,133,875



    4.34 %



    $  8,133,875



    4.34 %



    $  7,923,251



    4.02 %

    Originated and refinanced

    199,286



    6.35



    376,869



    6.40



    576,155



    6.39



    387,721



    6.79

    Participations

    —



    —



    83,520



    6.37



    83,520



    6.37



    69,790



    7.21

    Change in undisbursed loan funds

    17,995







    (44,036)







    (26,041)







    71





    Repayments

    (277,923)







    (349,905)







    (627,857)







    (486,106)





    Principal (charge-offs)/recoveries, net

    (37)







    (119)







    (156)







    (107)





    Other

    —







    (229)







    (200)







    —





    Ending balance

    $  8,139,296



    4.42



    $  8,199,975



    4.38



    $  8,139,296



    4.42



    $  7,894,620



    4.10 %

    One- to Four-Family Loans: The following table presents, for our portfolio of one- to four-family loans, the amount, percent of total, weighted average rate, weighted average credit score, weighted average LTV ratio, and average balance per loan as of March 31, 2026.  Credit scores were updated in September 2025 from a nationally recognized consumer rating agency.  The LTV ratios were based on the current loan balance and either the lesser of the purchase price or original appraisal, or the most recent Bank appraisal, if available.  In most cases, the most recent appraisal was obtained at the time of origination.







    % of







    Credit







    Average



    Amount



    Total



    Rate



    Score



    LTV



    Balance



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Originated

    $  3,676,252



    64.4 %



    3.84 %



    770



    57 %



    $     171

    Purchased

    2,015,434



    35.3



    3.50



    768



    59



    375

    Construction

    16,123



    0.3



    6.15



    776



    45



    375



    5,707,809



    100.0 %



    3.73



    769



    58



    212

    The following table presents origination and refinance activity for our one- to four-family loan portfolio, excluding endorsement activity, along with the weighted average rate, weighted average LTV and weighted average credit score for the time periods indicated.  As of March 31, 2026, the Bank had one- to four-family loan and refinance commitments totaling $37.5 million at a weighted average rate of 5.89%.

    For the Three Months Ended



    For the Six Months Ended

    March 31, 2026



    March 31, 2026













    Credit















    Credit

    Amount



    Rate



    LTV



    Score



    Amount



    Rate



    LTV



    Score

    (Dollars in thousands)

    $    59,207



    5.86 %



    73 %



    767



    $   141,594



    5.86 %



    73 %



    765

    Commercial Loans: The tables below summarize commercial loan origination and participation activity for the time periods presented, along with weighted average LTV and weighted average DSCR.  For commercial real estate and commercial construction loans, the LTV is calculated using the gross loan amount (comprised of unpaid principal and undisbursed amounts) and the collateral value at the time of origination.  For existing real estate, the "as is" value is used.  If the property is to be constructed, the "as completed" value of the collateral is utilized.  The DSCR is calculated based on historical borrower performance, or projected borrower performance for newly formed entities with no performance history. 



    For the Three Months Ended March 31, 2026



    Originated



    Participation



    Total



    Weighted



    Weighted



    Amount



    Rate



    Amount



    Rate



    Amount



    Rate



    LTV



    DSCR



    (Dollars in thousands)









    Commercial real estate

    $     63,696



    6.31 %



    $          —



    — %



    $     63,696



    6.31 %



    57 %



         2.12x

    Commercial and industrial

    18,330



    6.74



    —



    —



    18,330



    6.74



    N/A   



    2.24

    Commercial construction

    41,802



    6.53



    —



    —



    41,802



    6.53



    72



    1.30



    $   123,828



    6.45



    $         —



    —



    $   123,828



    6.45



    63



    1.86



































    For the Six Months Ended March 31, 2026



    Originated



    Participation



    Total



    Weighted



    Weighted



    Amount



    Rate



    Amount



    Rate



    Amount



    Rate



    LTV



    DSCR



    (Dollars in thousands)









    Commercial real estate

    $   238,926



    6.31 %



    $    32,510



    6.25 %



    $   271,436



    6.30 %



    68 %



         2.62x

    Commercial and industrial

    52,435



    6.64



    —



    —



    52,435



    6.64



    N/A   



    4.27

    Commercial construction

    113,548



    6.73



    51,010



    6.45



    164,558



    6.64



    72



    1.29



    $   404,909



    6.47



    $    83,520



    6.37



    $   488,429



    6.45



    70



    2.35

    The following table presents commercial loan disbursements, excluding lines of credit, during the periods indicated.



    For the Three Months Ended



    For the Six Months Ended



    March 31, 2026



    December 31, 2025



    March 31, 2026



    March 31, 2025



    Amount



    Rate



    Amount



    Rate



    Amount



    Rate



    Amount



    Rate



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Commercial real estate

    $      65,228



    6.33 %



    $    207,243



    6.32 %



    $    272,471



    6.33 %



    $    179,930



    6.61 %

    Commercial and industrial

    4,147



    6.45



    27,585



    6.97



    31,732



    6.90



    16,843



    7.36

    Commercial construction

    38,075



    6.76



    70,004



    6.65



    108,079



    6.69



    87,101



    6.31



    $    107,450



    6.49



    $    304,832



    6.46



    $    412,282



    6.47



    $    283,874



    6.57

    The following table presents the Bank's commercial real estate and commercial construction loans by type of primary collateral as of the dates indicated.  Management anticipates fully funding the majority of the undisbursed amounts, as most are not cancellable by the Bank.



















    December 31,



    March 31, 2026



    2025







    Unpaid



    Undisbursed



    Gross Loan



    Gross Loan



    Count



    Principal



    Amount



    Amount



    Amount







    (Dollars in thousands)

    Hotel

    33



    $    629,684



    $     65,606



    $    695,290



    $       683,919

    Senior housing

    53



    539,801



    21,105



    560,906



    552,609

    Multi-family

    31



    301,385



    125,974



    427,359



    412,232

    Retail building

    121



    278,561



    82,416



    360,977



    402,982

    Office building

    75



    100,484



    3,657



    104,141



    93,123

    One- to four-family property

    288



    75,322



    5,763



    81,085



    65,781

    Warehouse/manufacturing

    53



    65,239



    565



    65,804



    64,768

    Land

    24



    39,334



    413



    39,747



    34,601

    Single use building

    25



    32,578



    137



    32,715



    33,083

    Other

    28



    23,176



    551



    23,727



    25,716



    731



    $  2,085,564



    $    306,187



    $  2,391,751



    $    2,368,814





















    Weighted average rate





    5.89 %



    6.59 %



    5.98 %



    5.95 %

    The following table summarizes the unpaid principal balance of non-owner occupied and owner occupied loans within the Bank's commercial real estate loan portfolio, aggregated by primary collateral, along with weighted LTV and weighted DSCR, as of March 31, 2026.



    Non-owner Occupied



    Owner Occupied







    Unpaid



    Weighted



    Weighted







    Unpaid



    Weighted



    Weighted



    Count



    Principal



    LTV



    DSCR



    Count



    Principal



    LTV



    DSCR



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Hotel

    26



    $     592,841



    55 %



         1.34x



    –



    $           —



    — %



           —x

    Senior housing

    51



    509,475



    73



    1.76



    –



    —



    —



    —

    Retail building

    40



    169,503



    61



    1.89



    68



    68,793



    53



    2.03

    Office building

    21



    59,416



    65



    1.54



    51



    34,721



    62



    7.79

    Warehouse/manufacturing

    16



    21,780



    58



    3.96



    33



    24,871



    63



    1.47

    Single use building

    7



    3,230



    51



    2.82



    17



    29,295



    63



    1.67

    Other

    7



    5,817



    64



    1.42



    10



    7,469



    48



    2.16



    168



    $  1,362,062



    63



    1.62



    179



    $     165,149



    58



    3.10

    The following table outlines management's funding expectations for the Bank's commercial real estate and commercial construction undisbursed amounts and commitments outstanding as of March 31, 2026.  Due to the nature of a revolving line of credit, management is unable to project funding expectations for those balances, so those amounts are presented separately. 



    Projected Disbursements for the Quarters Ending











    June 30,

    2026



    September 30,

    2026



    December 31,

    2026



    Thereafter



    Revolving

    Lines of 

    Credit



    Total



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Undisbursed amounts

    $       59,964



    $      60,109



    $      52,182



    $    126,112



    $        7,820



    $    306,187

    Commitments

    84,384



    13,011



    15,128



    75,905



    2,350



    190,778



    $     144,348



    $      73,120



    $      67,310



    $    202,017



    $      10,170



    $    496,965

























    Weighted average rate

    6.26 %



    6.66 %



    6.62 %



    6.67 %



    6.75 %



    6.54 %

    The following table summarizes the Bank's commercial real estate and commercial construction loans by the state in which the collateral is located, as of the dates indicated.



















    December 31,



    March 31, 2026



    2025







    Unpaid



    Undisbursed



    Gross Loan



    Gross Loan



    Count



    Principal



    Amount



    Amount



    Amount







    (Dollars in thousands)

    Kansas

    525



    $     861,080



    $     101,727



    $     962,807



    $       910,709

    Missouri

    116



    312,308



    38,942



    351,250



    352,221

    Texas

    17



    198,306



    46,105



    244,411



    301,349

    Arizona

    7



    133,940



    19,371



    153,311



    153,337

    California

    7



    97,773



    25,870



    123,643



    110,532

    New York

    3



    112,201



    —



    112,201



    109,482

    Colorado

    13



    61,931



    20,837



    82,768



    83,944

    Tennessee

    3



    39,213



    12,212



    51,425



    51,611

    Washington

    2



    50,966



    —



    50,966



    51,200

    Other

    38



    217,846



    41,123



    258,969



    244,429



    731



    $  2,085,564



    $     306,187



    $  2,391,751



    $     2,368,814

    The following table presents the Bank's commercial real estate and commercial construction loans by unpaid principal balance, aggregated by type of primary collateral and state, along with weighted average LTV and weighted average DSCR as of March 31, 2026.  The LTV is calculated using the gross loan amount (composed of unpaid principal and undisbursed amounts) as of March 31, 2026 and the most current collateral value available, which is most often the value at origination/purchase.  The DSCR is calculated at the time of origination and is updated at the time of subsequent loan renewals, financial reviews (for applicable loans and lending relationships), and any other time management is aware of changes that may impact the DSCR.  The DSCR presented in the table below is based on the DSCR at the time of origination unless an updated DSCR has been calculated or the loan has reached the end of its stabilization period.  In general, commercial borrowers with total loans of $2.5 million or more are reviewed at least annually to monitor financial performance.



    Kansas



    Missouri



    Texas



    New York



    Arizona



    California



    Other



    Total



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Hotel

    $  41,302



    $  22,289



    $ 140,681



    $ 109,084



    $ 111,026



    $  93,637



    $ 111,665



    $  629,684

    Senior housing

    327,078



    141,066



    —



    —



    —



    —



    71,657



    539,801

    Multi-family

    204,547



    56,658



    20,000



    —



    —



    —



    20,180



    301,385

    Retail building

    99,809



    40,564



    37,178



    —



    20,162



    —



    80,848



    278,561

    Office building

    62,523



    7,336



    447



    3,117



    131



    —



    26,930



    100,484

    One- to four-family property

    56,016



    4,148



    —



    —



    2,248



    1,620



    11,290



    75,322

    Warehouse/manufacturing

    40,753



    17,818



    —



    —



    —



    —



    6,668



    65,239

    Land

    7,258



    78



    —



    —



    —



    —



    31,998



    39,334

    Single use building

    11,635



    18,054



    —



    —



    373



    2,516



    —



    32,578

    Other

    10,159



    4,297



    —



    —



    —



    —



    8,720



    23,176



    $ 861,080



    $ 312,308



    $ 198,306



    $ 112,201



    $ 133,940



    $  97,773



    $ 369,956



    $ 2,085,564

































    Weighted LTV

    66 %



    66 %



    59 %



    47 %



    55 %



    51 %



    66 %



    63 %

    Weighted DSCR

    2.15x



    1.55x



    1.21x



    1.56x



    1.49x



    1.47x



    1.59x



    1.76x

    The following table presents the unpaid principal balance of the Bank's commercial real estate and commercial construction loans aggregated by type of primary collateral, along with weighted average rate, LTV, and DSCR as of March 31, 2026.







    Unpaid



    Weighted



    Weighted



    Weighted



    Count



    Principal



    Rate



    LTV



    DSCR



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Hotel

    33



    $     629,684



    6.21 %



    55 %



         1.36x

    Senior housing

    53



    539,801



    5.19



    73



    1.73

    Multi-family

    31



    301,385



    6.06



    64



    1.29

    Retail building

    121



    278,561



    5.85



    61



    1.87

    Office building

    75



    100,484



    6.41



    65



    3.68

    One- to four-family property

    288



    75,322



    6.10



    58



    2.69

    Warehouse/manufacturing

    53



    65,239



    6.39



    65



    2.31

    Land

    24



    39,334



    6.27



    68



    3.89

    Single use building

    25



    32,578



    6.26



    61



    1.78

    Other

    28



    23,176



    6.21



    54



    2.08



    731



    $  2,085,564



    5.89



    63



    1.76

    The following table presents the Bank's commercial construction loans, including unpaid principal and undisbursed amounts, along with outstanding commercial construction loan commitments as of March 31, 2026, aggregated by type of primary collateral, along with weighted average rate, LTV, and DSCR.  The DSCR presented in the table below is based on projected stabilized cash flows and the contractual loan payments when the project stabilizes.







    Unpaid



    Undisbursed



    Gross Loan



    Commitment



    Total



    Weighted



    Count



    Principal



    Amount



    Amount



    Amount



    Amount



    Rate



    LTV



    DSCR







    (Dollars in thousands)













    Multi-family

    10



    $ 63,675



    $   125,948



    $ 189,623



    $   100,540



    $ 290,163



    6.61 %



    61 %



    1.19x

    Retail building

    10



    39,324



    60,623



    99,947



    —



    99,947



    6.64



    75



    1.34

    Hotel

    7



    36,844



    57,382



    94,226



    —



    94,226



    7.10



    70



    1.47

    Senior housing

    2



    30,327



    17,197



    47,524



    —



    47,524



    6.38



    78



    1.32

    Warehouse/manufacturing

    1



    9,360



    —



    9,360



    —



    9,360



    7.25



    80



    1.56

    Office building

    3



    6,347



    765



    7,112



    —



    7,112



    7.09



    75



    1.20

    Single use building

    1



    —



    —



    —



    6,112



    6,112



    7.00



    62



    1.22

    One- to four-family property

    8



    3,374



    487



    3,861



    —



    3,861



    7.08



    73



    2.07

    Other

    1



    —



    —



    —



    7,294



    7,294



    6.21



    54



    1.21



    43



    $ 189,251



    $   262,402



    $ 451,653



    $   113,946



    $ 565,599



    6.70



    67



    1.28





































    Weighted average rate





    6.73 %



    6.62 %



    6.67 %



    6.83 %



    6.70 %













    Weighted LTV





    70 %



    68 %



    69 %



    60 %



    67 %













    Weighted DSCR





    1.37x



    1.27x



    1.31x



    1.18x



    1.28x













    The following table presents the Bank's commercial real estate and construction loans, including unpaid principal and undisbursed amounts, along with outstanding loan commitments as of March 31, 2026, categorized by aggregate gross loan and commitment amount, along with average loan amount, and weighted average rate, LTV, and DSCR.  For amounts over $60.0 million, there was $151.8 million for loans related to hotels in Arizona and California, $143.1 million for loans related to multi-family properties in Kansas, and $69.6 million related to a loan secured by a senior housing facility in Kansas.  The largest loan included in the table below was $86.0 million, which was fully disbursed as of March 31, 2026, and is collateralized by a hotel in Arizona.  Included in the >$20 to $30 million category are five loans with DSCRs below 1.15x.  Of those five loans, four of the loans, for $99.3 million, are with three of our largest borrowing groups.  We have over 20 years of experience with these borrowing groups and the guarantors have expertise in the operation of the properties securing the loans.  All of these loans were current as of March 31, 2026 and are being actively monitored by management.  The weighted average LTV for these four loans was 68% as of March 31, 2026.  The fifth loan, for $24.3 million, was on nonaccrual and classified as substandard as of March 31, 2026.  A specific valuation allowance was established related to this loan as of March 31, 2026.  See additional discussion regarding the specific valuation allowance in the "Asset Quality" section below.







    Gross Loan























    and Commitment



    Average



    Weighted



    Weighted



    Weighted



    Count



    Amounts



    Amount



    Rate



    LTV



    DSCR



    (Dollars in thousands)













    Greater than $60 million

    5



    $           364,483



    $     72,897



    6.10 %



    60 %



         1.50x

    >$50 to $60 million

    3



    163,457



    54,486



    5.59



    61



    1.45

    >$40 to $50 million

    3



    147,162



    49,054



    6.29



    62



    1.45

    >$30 to $40 million

    11



    380,026



    34,548



    5.81



    65



    1.29

    >$20 to $30 million

    17



    406,550



    23,915



    6.30



    68



    1.14

    >$10 to $20 million

    30



    416,429



    13,881



    6.35



    68



    1.56

    >$5 to $10 million

    43



    303,393



    7,056



    5.89



    67



    2.56

    $1 to $5 million

    124



    286,171



    2,308



    5.37



    61



    2.29

    Less than $1 million

    513



    114,858



    224



    6.33



    53



    3.17



    749



    $        2,582,529



    3,448



    6.01



    64



    1.70

    The following table summarizes the Bank's commercial and industrial loans by loan purpose as of the dates indicated, along with DSCR weighted by gross loan amount at March 31, 2026.  The Bank had four commercial and industrial loan commitments totaling $36.6 million, with a weighted average rate of 6.83%, at March 31, 2026.  Management anticipates growth in the commercial and industrial loan portfolio as the Bank advances its strategy to grow all aspects of commercial banking.  However, given the inherent characteristics of these loans, balances will likely fluctuate over time. 























    December 31,



    March 31, 2026



    2025







    Unpaid



    Undisbursed



    Gross Loan



    Weighted



    Gross Loan



    Count



    Principal



    Amount



    Amount



    DSCR



    Amount







    (Dollars in thousands)

    Working capital

    188



    $  108,915



    $     48,465



    $    157,380



         4.69x



    $        156,577

    Purchase/refinance business assets

    51



    53,937



    265



    54,202



    1.63



    49,892

    Finance/lease vehicle

    61



    25,761



    7,084



    32,845



    1.79



    34,473

    Purchase equipment

    158



    29,571



    —



    29,571



    2.25



    27,666

    Other

    18



    13,998



    1,283



    15,281



    1.17



    16,815



    476



    $  232,182



    $     57,097



    $    289,279



    3.35



    $        285,423

























    Weighted average rate





    6.76 %



    6.68 %



    6.74 %







    6.75 %

    The following table summarizes the Bank's commercial and industrial loans by the state in which the borrower is located, as of March 31, 2026.  



    Unpaid



    Undisbursed



    Gross Loan



    Principal



    Amount



    Amount



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Kansas

    $         172,271



    $          55,192



    $         227,463

    Arizona

    11,798



    —



    11,798

    Missouri

    10,722



    690



    11,412

    Ohio

    9,785



    215



    10,000

    Utah

    8,325



    —



    8,325

    Other

    19,281



    1,000



    20,281



    $         232,182



    $          57,097



    $         289,279

    The following table presents the Bank's commercial and industrial loan portfolio, including unpaid principal and undisbursed amounts, along with outstanding loan commitments as of March 31, 2026, categorized by aggregate gross loan and commitment amounts, along with average loan amount, and weighted average DSCR.  The largest loan included in the table below was a working capital loan with a gross balance of $36.0 million, of which $11.8 million remained undisbursed as of March 31, 2026.  This loan is part of the Bank's largest commercial and industrial lending relationship, which had a total gross loan balance of $84.7 million, representing 29% of the gross commercial and industrial loan portfolio at March 31, 2026.  The borrower is located in Kansas and, as of March 31, 2026, also maintained an additional working capital loan with a gross loan balance greater than $15 million, for a total of two loans with a gross loan amount greater than $15 million.  Also included in the gross loan and commitment amounts greater than $15 million as of March 31, 2026 was a loan commitment to a borrower located in Georgia for the purchase and refinancing of business assets.







    Gross Loan















    and Commitment



    Average



    Weighted



    Count



    Amounts



    Amount



    DSCR



    (Dollars in thousands)





    Greater than $15 million

    3



    $             89,718



    $      29,906



      1.59x

    >$10 to $15 million

    3



    34,719



    11,573



    2.37

    >$5 to $10 million

    11



    82,882



    7,535



    1.35

    >$1 to $5 million

    28



    55,686



    1,989



    9.56

    >$500 thousand to $1 million

    36



    27,044



    751



    4.13

    Less than $500 thousand

    399



    35,795



    90



    3.66



    480



    $           325,844



    679



    3.41

    Asset Quality 

    The following tables present loans 30 to 89 days delinquent, non-performing loans, and other real estate owned ("OREO") as of the dates indicated.  The amounts in the table represent the unpaid principal balance of the loans less related charge-offs, if any.  Of the loans 30 to 89 days delinquent at March 31, 2026, approximately 60% were 59 days or less delinquent.  Nonaccrual loans are loans that are 90 or more days delinquent or in foreclosure and other loans required to be reported as nonaccrual pursuant to the Bank's internal policies, even if the loans are current.  Non-performing assets include nonaccrual loans and OREO. 



    Loans Delinquent for 30 to 89 Days at:



    March 31,



    December 31,



    September 30,



    June 30,



    March 31,



    2026



    2025



    2025



    2025



    2025



    Count



    Amount



    Count



    Amount



    Count



    Amount



    Count



    Amount



    Count



    Amount



    (Dollars in thousands)

    One- to four-family:







































    Originated

    65



    $     6,624



    83



    $     9,351



    68



    $     7,338



    77



    $     9,617



    73



    $     8,072

    Purchased

    10



    2,366



    21



    5,767



    13



    3,221



    15



    2,958



    12



    3,107

    Commercial:







































    Commercial real estate

    7



    1,554



    6



    2,584



    7



    1,236



    6



    1,654



    5



    2,472

    Commercial and industrial

    8



    771



    5



    1,039



    1



    32



    8



    1,166



    2



    348

    Consumer

    22



    570



    29



    635



    22



    520



    27



    634



    24



    441



    112



    $   11,885



    144



    $   19,376



    111



    $   12,347



    133



    $   16,029



    116



    $   14,440









































    Loans 30 to 89 days delinquent



































    to total loans receivable, net

    0.15 %







    0.24 %







    0.15 %







    0.20 %







    0.18 %





    Nonaccrual Loans and OREO at:



    March 31,



    December 31,



    September 30,



    June 30,



    March 31,



    2026



    2025



    2025



    2025



    2025



    Count



    Amount



    Count



    Amount



    Count



    Amount



    Count



    Amount



    Count



    Amount



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Loans 90 or More Days Delinquent or in Foreclosure:

































    One- to four-family:







































    Originated

    31



    $    4,130



    29



    $    3,223



    29



    $    2,754



    23



    $    2,168



    30



    $    2,814

    Purchased

    15



    5,606



    6



    1,469



    6



    1,524



    6



    1,875



    10



    2,585

    Commercial:







































    Commercial real estate

    12



    2,634



    12



    3,358



    11



    3,123



    12



    3,387



    11



    3,315

    Commercial and industrial

    4



    999



    2



    199



    2



    210



    5



    412



    4



    376

    Consumer

    9



    72



    14



    218



    10



    94



    12



    176



    19



    473



    71



    13,441



    63



    8,467



    58



    7,705



    58



    8,018



    74



    9,563









































    Loans 90 or more days delinquent or in foreclosure

































     as a percentage of total loans





    0.17 %







    0.10 %







    0.09 %







    0.10 %







    0.12 %









































    Nonaccrual loans less than 90 Days Delinquent:(1)

































    Commercial:







































    Commercial real estate

    6



    $   41,057



    4



    $   40,338



    3



    $   40,249



    3



    $   40,338



    5



    $    1,128

    Commercial and industrial

    7



    410



    1



    77



    2



    109



    1



    97



    2



    142



    13



    41,467



    5



    40,415



    5



    40,358



    4



    40,435



    7



    1,270

    Total nonaccrual loans

    84



    54,908



    68



    48,882



    63



    48,063



    62



    48,453



    81



    10,833









































    Nonaccrual loans as a percentage of total loans



    0.68 %







    0.60 %







    0.59 %







    0.60 %







    0.14 %









































    OREO:







































    One- to four-family:







































    Originated(2)

    —



    $          —



    2



    $        291



    1



    $          62



    1



    $          92



    —



    $        —

    Consumer

    1



    135



    1



    135



    1



    135



    —



    —



    —



    —



    1



    135



    3



    426



    2



    197



    1



    92



    —



    —

    Total non-performing assets

    85



    $   55,043



    71



    $   49,308



    65



    $   48,260



    63



    $   48,545



    81



    $   10,833









































    Non-performing assets as a percentage

































      of total assets

    0.56 %







    0.50 %







    0.49 %







    0.50 %







    0.11 %

    (1)

    Includes loans required to be reported as nonaccrual pursuant to internal policies even if the loans are current.

    (2)

    Real estate-related consumer loans where we also hold the first mortgage are included in the one- to four-family category as the underlying collateral is one- to four-family property.

    The following table presents the amortized cost of loans classified as special mention or substandard at the dates presented.  The decrease in commercial real estate special mention loans at March 31, 2026 compared to September 30, 2025 was due mainly to a hotel participation loan being upgraded to pass due to an improvement in the hotel's financial results.  The majority of the substandard commercial real estate loan balance for the periods presented in the table below relates to one borrowing relationship.  During the current quarter, an updated appraisal was received related to the collateral securing the lending relationship.  The updated appraisal was lower than the appraisal received approximately a year ago and as a result, a $4.0 million specific valuation allowance was recorded as of March 31, 2026 related to this lending relationship.  The loans associated with this lending relationship were on nonaccrual at the dates presented in the table below.



    March 31, 2026



    December 31, 2025



    September 30, 2025



    Special Mention



    Substandard



    Special Mention



    Substandard



    Special Mention



    Substandard



    (Dollars in thousands)

    One- to four-family

    $       12,498



    $       24,023



    $       14,236



    $       21,611



    $       13,055



    $       20,616

    Commercial:























    Commercial real estate

    22,352



    45,773



    22,448



    45,801



    59,993



    45,550

    Commercial and industrial

    364



    1,414



    579



    277



    399



    473

    Consumer

    166



    213



    $            106



    365



    326



    322



    $       35,380



    $       71,423



    $       37,369



    $       68,054



    $       73,773



    $       66,961

    Allowance for Credit Losses: The Bank utilizes a discounted cash flow model for estimating expected credit losses for pooled loans and loan commitments.  Expected credit losses are determined by calculating projected future loss rates, which are dependent upon forecasted economic indices, and applying qualitative factors when deemed appropriate by management.  At March 31, 2026, management applied qualitative factors to account for large dollar commercial real estate loan concentrations and potential risk of loss in market value for newer one- to four-family loans.  These qualitative factors were applied to account for credit risks not fully reflected in the discounted cash flow model.

    The Company's commercial real estate loans generally have low LTVs and strong DSCRs, which serve as indicators that losses in the commercial real estate loan portfolio might be unlikely; however, because there is uncertainty surrounding the nature, timing, and amount of expected losses, management believes that in the event of a realized loss within the large dollar commercial real estate loan pool, the magnitude of such a loss could be significant.  The large dollar commercial real estate loan concentration qualitative factor addresses the risks associated with large dollar relationships.  As part of its analysis, management considered external data, including historical commercial real estate price index trending information, from a variety of sources to help determine the amount of this qualitative factor.

    For one- to four-family loans, management believes there is a risk of loss in market value in an economic downturn related to, in particular, newer originations where property values have not experienced price appreciation, as compared to more seasoned loans in our portfolio, and applied a qualitative factor to account for this risk.  To determine the appropriate amount of the one- to four-family loan qualitative factor as of March 31, 2026, management considered external historical home price index trending information, along with historical loan loss experience, and portfolio balance trending, the one-to four-family loan portfolio composition with regard to loan size, and management's knowledge of the Bank's loan portfolio and the one- to four-family lending industry. 

    The distribution of our ACL and the ratio of ACL to loans receivable, by loan type, at the dates indicated is summarized below.  The increase in the ACL to loans receivable ratio as of March 31, 2026, compared to December 31, 2025, was due primarily to establishing a $4.0 million specific valuation related to a commercial real estate lending relationship discussed above.  Based on management's evaluation of the credit risk within the Bank's commercial loan portfolio, taking into consideration DSCRs and LTVs, management believes the Bank's ACL ratio for commercial loans is appropriate for the credit risk.  See additional discussion regarding the Bank's commercial loan DSCRs and LTVs in the "Loan Portfolio - Commercial Loans" section above.



    Distribution of ACL



    Ratio of ACL to Loans Receivable



    March 31,



    December 31,



    September 30,



    March 31,



    December 31,



    September 30,



    2026



    2025



    2025



    2026



    2025



    2025



    (Dollars in thousands)

    One- to four-family

    $          2,663



    $          2,842



    $          3,046



    0.05 %



    0.05 %



    0.05 %

    Commercial:























    Commercial real estate

    18,973



    16,825



    15,809



    1.00



    0.90



    0.92

    Commercial and industrial

    2,046



    1,826



    2,499



    0.88



    0.83



    1.19

    Commercial construction

    2,716



    2,871



    2,468



    1.44



    1.56



    1.26

    Total

    23,735



    21,522



    20,776



    1.02



    0.94



    0.98

    Consumer

    201



    208



    217



    0.18



    0.18



    0.19

    Total 

    $        26,599



    $        24,572



    $        24,039



    0.33



    0.30



    0.30

    Historically, the Bank has maintained very low delinquency ratios and net charge-off rates.  Over the past two years, the Bank's highest ratio of commercial loans 90 days or more delinquent to total commercial loans at a quarter end was 0.22%.  The highest such ratio for one- to four-family originated and correspondent loans, combined, was 0.17%.  During the 10-year period ended March 31, 2026, the Bank recognized $904 thousand of total net charge-offs.  As of March 31, 2026, the ACL balance was $26.6 million and the reserve for off-balance sheet credit exposures totaled $6.3 million, which management believes is adequate for the credit risk characteristics in our loan portfolio.

    The following table presents ACL activity and related ratios at the dates and for the periods indicated. 



    For the Three

    Months Ended



    At or For the Six

    Months Ended



    March 31, 2026



    March 31, 2026



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Balance at beginning of period

    $           24,572



    $           24,039

    Charge-offs:







    One- to four-family

    (12)



    (12)

    Commercial

    —



    (102)

    Consumer

    (29)



    (50)

    Total charge-offs

    (41)



    (164)

    Recoveries:







    One- to four-family

    1



    1

    Commercial

    —



    2

    Consumer

    3



    5

    Total recoveries

    4



    8

    Net (charge-offs) recoveries

    (37)



    (156)

    Provision for credit losses

    2,064



    2,716

    Balance at end of period

    $           26,599



    $           26,599









    Ratio of net charge-offs during the period







    to average loans outstanding during the period

    — %



    — %

    Ratio of net charge-offs (recoveries) during the







    period to average non-performing assets

    0.07



    0.30

    ACL to non-performing loans at end of period

    48.44



    48.44

    ACL to loans receivable at end of period

    0.33



    0.33

    ACL to net charge-offs (annualized)

    179x



    85x

    Securities Portfolio

    The following table presents the distribution of our securities portfolio, at amortized cost, at March 31, 2026.  Overall, fixed-rate securities comprised 91% of our securities portfolio at March 31, 2026.  The weighted average life ("WAL") is the estimated remaining maturity (in years) after three-month historical prepayment speeds and projected call option assumptions have been applied. 



    Amount



    Yield



    WAL



    (Dollars in thousands)

    MBS

    $       791,659



    5.44 %



    4.0

    Corporate bonds

    4,000



    5.12



    6.1



    $       795,659



    5.44



    4.0

    The following table summarizes the activity in our securities portfolio for the periods presented.  The weighted average yields for the beginning and ending balances are as of the first and last days of the periods presented and are generally derived from recent prepayment activity on the securities in the portfolio.  The beginning and ending WALs are the estimated remaining principal repayment terms (in years) after the most recent three-month historical prepayment speeds and projected call option assumptions have been applied.



    For the Three Months Ended



    For the Six Months Ended



    March 31, 2026



    March 31, 2026



    Amount



    Yield



    WAL



    Amount



    Yield



    WAL



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Beginning balance - carrying value

    $     829,704



    5.48 %



    4.1



    $     867,216



    5.45 %



    4.8

    Maturities and repayments

    (35,342)











    (76,298)









    Net amortization of (premiums)/discounts

    861











    1,699









    Purchases

    21,041



    4.34



    6.3



    22,889



    4.53



    6.0

    Change in valuation on AFS securities

    (6,698)











    (5,940)









    Ending balance - carrying value

    $     809,566



    5.44



    4.0



    $     809,566



    5.44



    4.0

    Deposit Portfolio

    The following table presents the amount, weighted average rate, and percent of total for the components of our deposit portfolio at the dates presented.  The decrease in the deposit portfolio rate as of March 31, 2026 compared to December 31, 2025 was due primarily to an increase in retail checking accounts, a reduction in the rate on retail money market accounts, and a decrease in the retail certificate of deposit portfolio rate.  The decrease in the deposit portfolio rate as of March 31, 2026 compared to September 30, 2025 was due mainly to a decrease in the rate paid on retail certificates of deposit and retail money market accounts, along with an increase in the balance of retail checking accounts and commercial non-interest bearing checking account.



    March 31, 2026



    December 31, 2025



    September 30, 2025











    % of











    % of











    % of



    Amount



    Rate



     Total



    Amount



    Rate



     Total



    Amount



    Rate



     Total



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Non-interest-bearing checking

    $    674,415



    — %



    9.7 %



    $    641,201



    — %



    9.5 %



    $    601,371



    — %



    9.1 %

    Interest-bearing checking

    935,193



    0.24



    13.5



    907,684



    0.23



    13.4



    859,256



    0.21



    13.0

    High yield savings

    630,923



    3.59



    9.1



    557,559



    3.70



    8.3



    460,712



    3.88



    7.0

    Other savings

    438,144



    0.07



    6.4



    424,280



    0.07



    6.3



    423,942



    0.07



    6.5

    Money market

    1,231,691



    1.12



    17.8



    1,229,427



    1.19



    18.2



    1,233,487



    1.29



    18.7

    Certificates of deposit

    3,014,125



    3.60



    43.5



    2,998,481



    3.65



    44.3



    3,012,680



    3.74



    45.7



    $ 6,924,491



    2.13



    100.0 %



    $ 6,758,632



    2.18



    100.0 %



    $ 6,591,448



    2.26



    100.0 %

    The following table presents the amount, weighted average rate, and percent of total for the components of our deposit portfolio, split between retail non-maturity deposits, commercial non-maturity deposits, and certificates of deposit at the dates presented. 



    March 31, 2026



    December 31, 2025



    September 30, 2025











    % of











    % of











    % of



    Amount



    Rate



     Total



    Amount



    Rate



     Total



    Amount



    Rate



     Total



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Retail non-maturity deposits:



































       Non-interest-bearing checking

    $   446,629



    — %



    6.4 %



    $   431,397



    — %



    6.4 %



    $   409,722



    — %



    6.2 %

       Interest-bearing checking

    857,351



    0.08



    12.4



    823,946



    0.08



    12.2



    790,783



    0.08



    12.0

       High yield savings

    630,923



    3.59



    9.1



    557,559



    3.70



    8.3



    460,712



    3.88



    7.0

       Other savings

    434,042



    0.07



    6.3



    420,756



    0.07



    6.2



    420,330



    0.07



    6.4

       Money market

    1,060,519



    0.96



    15.3



    1,060,980



    1.03



    15.7



    1,050,841



    1.07



    15.9

          Total

    3,429,464



    0.99



    49.5



    3,294,638



    0.99



    48.8



    3,132,388



    0.96



    47.5

    Commercial non-maturity deposits:



































       Non-interest-bearing checking

    227,786



    —



    3.3



    209,804



    —



    3.1



    191,649



    —



    2.9

       Interest-bearing checking

    77,842



    2.04



    1.1



    83,738



    1.73



    1.2



    68,473



    1.72



    1.0

       Savings

    4,102



    0.05



    0.1



    3,524



    0.05



    0.1



    3,612



    0.05



    0.1

       Money market

    171,172



    2.11



    2.5



    168,447



    2.18



    2.5



    182,646



    2.52



    2.8

          Total

    480,902



    1.08



    7.0



    465,513



    1.10



    6.9



    446,380



    1.29



    6.8

    Certificates of deposit:



































       Retail certificates of deposit

    2,872,653



    3.60



    41.4



    2,818,392



    3.63



    41.7



    2,828,982



    3.73



    43.0

       Commercial certificates of deposit

    67,169



    3.52



    1.0



    62,178



    3.55



    0.9



    61,819



    3.64



    0.9

       Public unit certificates of deposit

    74,303



    3.96



    1.1



    117,911



    4.02



    1.7



    121,879



    4.06



    1.8

          Total

    3,014,125



    3.60



    43.5



    2,998,481



    3.65



    44.3



    3,012,680



    3.74



    45.7







































    $ 6,924,491



    2.13



    100.0 %



    $ 6,758,632



    2.18



    100.0 %



    $ 6,591,448



    2.26



    100.0 %

    The following table presents the amount, weighted average rate, and percent of total for total retail deposits, commercial deposits, and public unit certificates of deposit at the dates noted.



    March 31, 2026



    December 31, 2025



    September 30, 2025











    % of











    % of











    % of



    Amount



    Rate



     Total



    Amount



    Rate



     Total



    Amount



    Rate



     Total



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Total retail deposits

    $ 6,302,117



    2.18 %



    90.9 %



    $ 6,113,030



    2.21 %



    90.5 %



    $ 5,961,370



    2.28 %



    90.5 %

    Total commercial deposits

    548,071



    1.38



    8.0



    527,691



    1.39



    7.8



    508,199



    1.58



    7.7

    Public unit certificates of deposit

    74,303



    3.96



    1.1



    117,911



    4.02



    1.7



    121,879



    4.06



    1.8



    $ 6,924,491



    2.13



    100.0 %



    $ 6,758,632



    2.18



    100.0 %



    $ 6,591,448



    2.26



    100.0 %

    As of March 31, 2026, approximately $779.2 million (or approximately 11%) of the Bank's Call Report deposit balance was uninsured, of which approximately $645.8 million (or approximately 9% of the Bank's Call Report deposit balance) related to commercial and retail deposit accounts, with the remainder mainly comprised of fully collateralized public unit deposits and intercompany accounts.  The uninsured amounts are estimates based on the methodologies and assumptions used for the Bank's regulatory reporting requirements.

    Borrowings

    The following table presents the maturity of term borrowings, which consist of FHLB advances, along with associated weighted average contractual and effective rates as of March 31, 2026.  Amortizing FHLB advances are presented based on their maturity dates versus their quarterly scheduled repayment dates.

    Maturity by





    Contractual



    Effective

    Fiscal Year

    Amount



    Rate



    Rate(1)



    (Dollars in thousands)

    2026

    $      175,000



    2.89 %



    2.89 %

    2027

    362,500



    2.59



    2.73

    2028

    856,148



    4.00



    4.00

    2029

    240,000



    4.00



    4.14

    2030

    75,000



    4.20



    4.20



    $   1,708,648



    3.59



    3.65

    (1)

    The effective rate includes the impact of the interest rate swap and the amortization of deferred prepayment penalties resulting from FHLB advances previously prepaid.

    The following table presents borrowing activity for the periods shown.  The borrowings presented in the table have original contractual terms of one year or longer or are tied to the interest rate swap which has an original contractual term longer than one year.  Line of credit borrowings and finance leases are excluded from the table.  The effective rate is shown as a weighted average and includes the impact of the interest rate swap and the amortization of deferred prepayment penalties resulting from FHLB advances previously prepaid.  The weighted average maturity ("WAM") is the remaining weighted average contractual term in years.  The beginning and ending WAMs represent the remaining maturity as of the first and last days of the period presented. 



    For the Three Months Ended



    For the Six Months Ended



    March 31, 2026



    March 31, 2026







    Effective











    Effective







    Amount



    Rate



    WAM



    Amount



    Rate



    WAM



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Beginning balance

    $ 1,829,816



    3.65 %



    1.4



    $ 1,950,984



    3.54 %



    1.5

    Maturities and repayments

    (496,168)



    3.80







    (667,336)



    3.43





    New FHLB borrowings

    375,000



    3.81



    2.4



    425,000



    3.79



    2.3

    Ending balance

    $ 1,708,648



    3.65



    1.6



    $ 1,708,648



    3.65



    1.6

    During the current quarter, the Bank prepaid $375.0 million of fixed-rate advances with a weighted average effective rate of 4.36% and a WAM of 0.9 years and replaced them with $375.0 million of fixed-rate advances with a weighted average effective rate of 3.81% and a WAM of 2.4 years.  This transaction resulted in prepayment fees of $2.1 million, which will be recognized in interest expense over the life of the new FHLB advances.  During the quarter ended December 31, 2025, the Bank prepaid a $50.0 million fixed-rate advance with a weighted average effective rate of 4.03% and a WAM of 0.5 years and replaced it with a $50.0 million fixed-rate advance with a weighted average effective rate of 3.64% and a WAM of 2.0 years.  This transaction resulted in prepayment fees of $11 thousand, which will be recognized in interest expense over the life of the new FHLB advance.  These prepayment activities are reflected in the table above.  Management will continue to monitor opportunities for wholesale funding and may pay down FHLB advances in future periods.  The Bank may also renew certain fixed-rate advances in the future using adjustable-rate advances in order to better match the repricing characteristics of its increasing commercial loan portfolio.

    Maturities of Interest-Bearing Liabilities

    The following table presents the maturity and weighted average repricing rate, which is also the weighted average effective rate, of certificates of deposit, split between retail/commercial and public unit amounts, and non-amortizing FHLB advances for the next four quarters as of March 31, 2026.



    June 30,



    September 30,



    December 31,



    March 31,







    2026



    2026



    2026



    2027



    Total



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Retail/Commercial Certificates:

















    Amount

    $     638,250



    $     626,018



    $     675,294



    $     295,325



    $   2,234,887

    Repricing Rate

    3.78 %



    3.64 %



    3.57 %



    3.40 %



    3.63 %

    Public Unit Certificates:



















    Amount

    $        8,001



    $       17,379



    $       18,673



    $       19,000



    $       63,053

    Repricing Rate

    4.24 %



    3.95 %



    3.63 %



    4.14 %



    3.95 %

    Term Borrowings:



















    Amount

    $      50,000



    $     125,000



    $              —



    $     100,000



    $     275,000

    Repricing Rate

    0.98 %



    3.66 %



    —



    1.24 %



    2.29 %

    Total



















    Amount

    $     696,251



    $     768,397



    $     693,967



    $     414,325



    $   2,572,940

    Repricing Rate

    3.59 %



    3.65 %



    3.57 %



    2.91 %



    3.49 %

    The following table sets forth the WAM information for our certificates of deposit, in years, as of March 31, 2026. 

    Retail certificates of deposit

    0.7

    Commercial certificates of deposit

    0.5

    Public unit certificates of deposit

    0.7

    Total certificates of deposit

    0.7

    Average Rates and Lives 

    At March 31, 2026, the gap between the amounts of the Bank's interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities projected to mature or reprice within one year was $(792.4) million, or (8.1%) of total assets, compared to $(1.23) billion, or (12.6%) of total assets, at December 31, 2025.  The change in the one-year gap amount was due to both a decrease in the amount of projected interest-bearing liability cash flows coming due in one year as well as to a net increase in the amount of interest-earning assets for the same time period.  The decrease in liability cash flows was primarily related to the Bank's wholesale borrowings portfolio as $375.0 million of fixed-rate FHLB advances were prepaid during the current quarter, which extended the weighted average remaining terms, and the Bank also repaid a $100.0 million advance that matured during the current quarter.  The net increase in projected asset cash flows was due to increases in the balance of cash and commercial loans projected to mature or reprice within one year.

    The amount of interest-bearing liabilities expected to reprice in a given period is not typically significantly impacted by changes in interest rates because the Bank's borrowings and certificate of deposit portfolios have contractual maturities and generally cannot be terminated early without a prepayment penalty.  If interest rates were to increase 200 basis points, as of March 31, 2026, the Bank's one-year gap would have been projected to be $(1.01) billion, or (10.3)% of total assets.  If interest rates were to decrease 200 basis points, as of March 31, 2026, the Bank's one-year gap would have been projected to be $(354.9) million, or (3.6)% of total assets.  The changes in the gap amounts compared to when there is no change in rates was due to changes in the anticipated net cash flows primarily as a result of projected prepayments on mortgage-related assets in each rate environment.  In higher rate environments, prepayments on mortgage-related assets are projected to be lower, and in lower rate environments, prepayments are projected to be higher.

    The following table presents the weighted average yields/rates and WALs (in years), after applying prepayment, call assumptions, and decay rates for our interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities as of March 31, 2026.  Yields presented for interest-earning assets include the amortization of fees, costs, premiums and discounts, which are considered adjustments to the yield.  The interest rate presented for term borrowings is the effective rate, which includes the impact of the interest rate swap and the amortization of deferred prepayment penalties resulting from FHLB advances previously prepaid.  The WAL presented for term borrowings includes the effect of the interest rate swap. 



    Amount



    Yield/Rate



    WAL



    % of Category



    % of Total



    (Dollars in thousands)

    Securities

    $       809,566



    5.44 %



    3.2







    8.6 %

    Loans receivable:



















    Fixed-rate one- to four-family

    4,808,748



    3.54



    6.6



    59.1 %



    51.4

    Fixed-rate commercial

    895,911



    5.86



    1.5



    11.0



    9.6

    All other fixed-rate loans

    29,868



    7.43



    6.9



    0.4



    0.3

    Total fixed-rate loans

    5,734,527



    3.92



    5.8



    70.5



    61.3

    Adjustable-rate one- to four-family

    882,938



    4.57



    4.2



    10.8



    9.4

    Adjustable-rate commercial

    1,421,835



    5.90



    2.6



    17.5



    15.2

    All other adjustable-rate loans

    99,996



    7.18



    3.4



    1.2



    1.1

    Total adjustable-rate loans

    2,404,769



    5.46



    3.2



    29.5



    25.7

    Total loans receivable

    8,139,296



    4.38



    5.0



    100.0 %



    87.0

    FHLB stock

    79,420



    9.21



    1.6







    0.9

    Cash and cash equivalents

    330,925



    3.47



    —







    3.5

    Total interest-earning assets

    $     9,359,207



    4.48



    4.6







    100.0 %





















    Non-maturity deposits

    $     3,235,951



    1.21



    4.6



    51.7 %



    40.7 %

    Retail certificates of deposit

    2,872,653



    3.60



    0.7



    46.0



    36.1

    Commercial certificates of deposit

    67,169



    3.52



    0.5



    1.1



    0.8

    Public unit certificates of deposit

    74,303



    3.96



    0.7



    1.2



    0.9

    Total interest-bearing deposits

    6,250,076



    2.36



    2.7



    100.0 %



    78.5

    Term borrowings

    1,709,827



    3.64



    1.6







    21.5

    Total interest-bearing liabilities

    $     7,959,903



    2.64



    2.5







    100.0 %

     

    Cision View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/capitol-federal-financial-inc-reports-second-quarter-fiscal-year-2026-results-302756466.html

    SOURCE Capitol Federal Financial, Inc.

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    SC 13G/A - Capitol Federal Financial, Inc. (0001490906) (Subject)

    11/12/24 1:26:57 PM ET
    $CFFN
    Savings Institutions
    Finance

    Amendment: SEC Form SC 13G/A filed by Capitol Federal Financial Inc.

    SC 13G/A - Capitol Federal Financial, Inc. (0001490906) (Subject)

    11/4/24 12:34:42 PM ET
    $CFFN
    Savings Institutions
    Finance