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PNC Financial Profit Jumps on FirstBank Buy, Strong Loan Growth

April 15 (Reuters) - PNC Financial posted an 18% jump in first-quarter profit on Wednesday, buoyed by the acquisition of regional lender FirstBank and strong loan ​growth.

The Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based bank finalized the $4.1 billion acquisition of FirstBank ‌in January, adding $26 billion in assets and strengthening its presence in Colorado and Arizona.

Loan demand has also perked up across the industry in recent months, as a ​string of rate cuts by the U.S. Federal Reserve encourages customers ​to take on more debt.

PNC's net interest income, the difference ⁠between what a bank earns on loans and pays out on ​deposits, jumped 14% to $3.96 billion in the quarter from a year earlier, ​benefiting from the FirstBank acquisition, commercial loan growth and lower deposit costs.

Net interest margin, a key measure of how profitably a bank lends, expanded 17 basis points to ​2.95%.

Total loans surged 13% from a year earlier to $360.9 billion.

"2026 is ​off to a great start for PNC. During the first quarter, we... generated strong ‌legacy ⁠loan growth. Client activity remains robust across all our geographies," PNC CEO Bill Demchak said.

Fee income was also a bright spot, jumping 13% from a year earlier, driven by broad-based growth across businesses.

Capital markets and advisory ​revenue surged 51% to $463 ​million in ⁠the quarter, reflecting stronger dealmaking and trading.

Quarterly profit was $1.77 billion, or $4.13 per share, compared with $1.50 billion, or $3.51 per ​share, a year earlier.

Excluding FirstBank integration costs, PNC recorded ​an adjusted ⁠profit of $4.32 per share during the quarter.

Buybacks, which PNC has been ramping up, were nearly $700 million in the three months ended March 31. The bank ⁠expects ​roughly $600 million to $700 million of buybacks in ​the second quarter.

The stock has climbed roughly 6% so far this year.

Reporting by Arasu Kannagi Basil in Bengaluru; Editing by Jonathan Ananda

Source: Reuters


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