BFF Bank S.p.A. (BIT:BFF)
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May 15, 2026, 5:35 PM CET
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Earnings Call: Q1 2026

May 11, 2026

Operator

Please note this event is being recorded. I would like to turn the conference over to Caterina Della Mora, Head of Investor Relations, and Giuseppe Sica, Group CEO. Please go ahead.

Caterina Della Mora
Head of Investor Relations, Strategy and M&A, BFF Bank

Good afternoon, and thank you for joining BFF first quarter 2026 financial results call. We will start with a presentation by our CEO, Giuseppe Sica, followed by Q&A. To ensure that we can take everyone's questions, we kindly ask you to limit yourself to three questions. Let me hand over now to Giuseppe Sica.

Giuseppe Sica
Group CEO, BFF Bank

Thank you, Caterina, and thank you everyone for joining this call. Before we dive into the presentation, some of you may have already noticed that we have introduced some new formats and slides. This allows us to better illustrate the diversified nature of our group and to focus on the key drivers of our performance. You can still find for this quarter all the other details in the appendix. Today, we are announcing what are good results in what remains a complex environment. Our profitability improved with adjusted net income significantly up year-on-year. This result is underpinned by the performance of our payments and security services business, as well as factoring and lending, where we are focused on the profitability of our volumes. As a result, we now meet CET1 and also our total capital ratio requirements.

This is a significant although expected change compared to what we have announced at our full year results. We continue to review options for our business model, given the recent changes in portfolio classification and the need to address calendar provisioning. We are focusing on maximizing value for all stakeholders. These actions will form part of our new strategic plan, which we will unveil in the second part of the year. Before going into numbers, let me remind you that while our full year results reflect the regulatory measure received by the Bank of Italy at the end of March, the Bank of Italy inspection is still ongoing. Let us now look at our key financial metrics on slide 3. ROE stayed well above 20%, with all divisions contributing strongly to these results.

Net income of EUR 43 million is up 24% year-on-year. The unadjusted net income is higher at around EUR 50 million. Let me remind you of our net income target for 2026 of EUR 115 million-EUR 140 million that we published on the 13th of April. Our net profit in Q1 has been achieved thanks to a revenue increase of around 20%. As I said, our focus remains on profitability. Factoring and lending loans are down year-on-year, but as you will see, profitability is up. Transaction services deposit is only slightly down, mainly due to 1 client which remains with us, but has adjusted its liquidity needs. Our extremely strong loan-to-deposit ratio has remained stable at 76%, and repos are down. Finally, our CET1 is at 1.1% compared to full year numbers.

Moving to the next slide. I won't spend much time on this one, but let me stress that we have achieved this 24% increase in net profit in a rather complex quarter. Importantly, we have achieved this mainly through an increase in revenues. Costs are up as we continue to invest, as are provisions, and we are taking a more conservative approach. On slide 5, as you can see, all business divisions contribute to profitability, with Payments and Securities Services generating EUR 14 million in PBT, up 25% year-on-year. As I have previously mentioned, the earnings potential for these two divisions would be materially higher if we invested liquidity in Italian government bonds. In this case, these two divisions would have achieved 31 million EUR in PBT in the first quarter.

Again, let me remind you that we are the leader in both Payments and Securities Services in Italy, in the niches where we operate. These activities have virtually zero RWA absorption. In Payments, we intermediate more than 130 banks and payment institutions. In Securities Services, and specifically in the pension funds niche, we have an estimated market share above 50%. Factoring PBT is up on improved margins. The PBT for the corporate center rose to EUR 10.7 million, thanks to lower rates in our HTC portfolio. Moving now to slide 6. I've already mentioned our diversified sources of profit. On this slide, you can see that BFF is also diversified in terms of net revenues. More than 60% of the net revenues in the first quarter were generated by activities outside of core factoring.

Again, the contribution from Payments and Securities Services would have been EUR 16.5 million higher if liquidity had been invested in Italian government bonds. Slide seven is also a key slide. Our net interest income is diversified. The HTC portfolio contribution is going up and will go up materially as our fixed rate portfolio at 0.6% yield will explain. Importantly, the net spread of our factoring and lending has gone up from 3.6% to 4.2%, as we have been very disciplined on the price at which we buy invoices. We have reduced rescheduling and reduced the cost of funding. You will find usual details in the appendix. Let's move to slide eight to look at the net fee and commission income.

This is another point that positively demonstrates BFF's diversified business model and the growth across our business divisions. In Securities Services, this was driven by strong commercial activity in the first quarter. In Payments, we won new clients and are looking at a healthy pipeline. Finally, in Factoring and Lending, we are seeing growth in the servicing of third-party portfolios. Looking at costs on slide 9. We continue to focus on cost discipline with investments in the businesses focused on our transformation. This includes higher HR costs as we hire talent to support change. In Payments, rising expenses reflect higher volumes. Taking this into account, we still maintained our cost-income ratio at 42%, significantly down year on year. Slide 10 is focused on our commercial performance, which is reflective of our actions. Securities Services deposits have grown compared to year ends.

This also confirms our strong liquidity position, which I will show in more detail shortly. Payments. The reduction in deposits is largely driven by a single counterparty that remains a client, as I mentioned in introduction. We have also onboarded a new client, and we'll continue to do so in the second quarter. In Factoring and Lending, I already mentioned that we are focusing on the quality of volumes and improving collections. This combination led to a small reduction in loans, which will continue over the next few quarters as we communicated on the 30th of April. Moving now to slide 11. Realized gains on our variable rate portfolio are at around EUR 60 million, which corresponds to around 1 percentage point Common Equity Tier 1 and is not included in our capital projections.

On the other hand, we still have a 2.5% negative end headwinds on a EUR 1 billion fixed-rate portfolio. We expect, therefore, an around EUR 25 million increase in PBT as these mature. Moving to our customer loan portfolio on slide 12. Our activities are diversified both in terms of type and geography. Factoring accounts for around half the total loan book and is spread across 6 countries in Europe. I would like to highlight that we see further room for diversification with growth potential in activities outside of PA Factoring, always in areas with low credit risk. Looking at our impaired loans ratio on slide 13. Let me make a few comments. We have a net impaired loans of 73%, with 96% of the impaired loans represented by the Public Administration, and therefore with limited credit risk.

Post-year-end actions, our coverage of non-performing loans has increased to 80%. Importantly, we have reduced the portfolio of Italian negative court rulings by 14% in effectively 2 months, including using the option of retrocessions. Slide 14 shows the quality of our origination and collections. Let me highlight the quality of what we buy. We have collected 91% of all invoices we acquired in 2025. The outstandings are largely from the fourth quarter, in line with our around 180 days DSO. This slide is important because it shows how we can manage capital. For instance, in first quarter, we have collected around EUR 1 billion of past due exposure, or EUR 1.5 billion RWA reduction, corresponding to a Common Equity Tier 1 generation of almost 3 percentage points. Slide 15 shows how disciplined we have been in managing liquidity.

Cost of funding, including the cost of bonds, is down as is the spread versus IBOR. Excluding bonds, we would be funding ourselves below IBOR. Repos are down. Both LCR and NSFR have improved. Our RWA absorption is very high, and this is a key driver of the strategic review currently underway. On slide 16, thanks to capital generation in the first quarter, both CET1 and TCR at 11% and 13.4% respectively are above SREP. The figures are presented including the net profit for the first quarter, which will be formally added following the approval of the annual report at the AGM on the 16th of June. Organic capital generation for the quarter was around 100 basis points or around EUR 60 million. On the key takeaways. A quick summary of the set of results before we move to the Q&A.

Our first quarter results show that BFF is a diversified business with all divisions contributing to profitability. We maintain our net income target for 2026 of EUR 115 million-EUR 140 million that we published on the 13th of April. We are focused on improving profitability in factoring and lending, and we are seeing positive results. We meet our CET1 and also our total capital ratio requirements. While Bank of Italy inspection is still ongoing, we are working on our strategic options to optimize the business model for the future to the benefit of all stakeholders, and we present the new strategy in the second half of the year.

Thank you for your attention, and let me now open to Q&A.

Operator

Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. The first question comes from Manuela Meroni of Intesa Sanpaolo.

Manuela Meroni
Equity Analyst, Intesa Sanpaolo

Good afternoon, thank you for taking my questions. The first one is on the contagion portfolio. Could you please share with us the amount of your contagion portfolio? What is the portion that where you are going to apply the calendar provisioning starting from the third quarter of this year and the portion where you have to apply the calendar provisioning starting from the first quarter 2028? The second question is on the possible strategic options and the securitization that you are studying. I'm wondering if you can share with us the main characteristic of these securitizations in terms of size, tranching, and impact on the P&L, both one-off or recurring, and what are the possible strategic options that you have in mind.

The third question is on the coupon of the AT1. I just want to know if you can confirm the payment of the coupon. Thank you.

Giuseppe Sica
Group CEO, BFF Bank

Thank you, Manuela. I'll try to address the questions to the best of my possibilities. On the contagion portfolio, as you have seen also from the appendix, we have removed the split. The reason for us to remove the split is that after the portfolio reclassification, of course, the number would be higher, and it would also include a significant amount of LPI, which stay on our balance for longer. That's the one area where the securitization would be focused. The contagion portfolio, according to the old definition, continues to go down in line or frankly, a bit better than previous quarter. That's the part where the calendar provisioning would be applied in 2026.

What is important is to confirm what we said, what we wrote on our press release on the 13th of April, that we expect to respect capital ratios, including the impact of our calendar provisioning for 2026. On the securitization, I would prefer to give more detail as we have more details, particularly with reference to price. Let me be clear that we are not doing this transaction focusing on the P&L impact. We are doing this transaction focusing on the capital impact, and in particular, compared to pre-reclassification effected on the 13th of April. The securitization would also include a significant component of LPI, which would go in calendar in 2028 due to the classification. Therefore, you would also see material impact on the capital impact expected for that for that year.

On the coupon of the AT1, formally, as I said on the call, the ratios cannot include the earnings for the quarter, which will be included after approval from the AGM, in which case, the MDA would allow the payment of the AT1 coupon. Let me remind the date, however, will be announced towards the end of July. We have, therefore, a few months before we get there.

Operator

The next question is from Tommaso Nieddu , Kepler Cheuvreux.

Tommaso Nieddu
Equity Research Analyst, Kepler Cheuvreux

Hello, thank you for taking my questions. I have just a couple. The first one on the results actually. Q1 results looks I would say optically strong if you compare with the full year guidance you provided. In particular Factoring profit before taxes increased slightly despite the volumes and the book decline. My question is the message that BFF can actually generate a stable profitability on a smaller but more profitable portfolio? Again, on the volume decline, however, I would have expected to see decline in Italy especially, but I see down double-digit also Spain and Greece. Can you maybe give us more color by country on the volume? Thank you.

Giuseppe Sica
Group CEO, BFF Bank

Thank you, Tomaso. On the profitability, we have, and that's why I repeated a couple of times during my call, we have reiterated the target for the full year. The reason why you can't simply multiply by 4 is that, as we wrote on the 13th of April, we are going to manage loans down. Could BFF provide a stable and interesting level of profitability without being capital constrained? Yes, it could, and this is what we have to work on by looking at the strategic options. Which I would say are really focused on reducing the impact of the calendar and reducing the RWA density.

On the, on the volumes, I think I said probably from my first or second call that the focus would be on profitability and collections rather than increasing volumes, at least for this phase, and this is what we have been trying to do. Certainly Spain and Greece could have done better. I think particularly Spain performed below our expectations. The reality is that payment times have been good in Spain. Spain remains, for us, a very important market because we have a very good track record of LPI collection. Despite lower volumes, actually the profitability of the country remains very important for us.

Operator

The next question is from Giovanni Razzoli, Deutsche Bank.

Giovanni Razzoli
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Good afternoon to everybody. I have 3 questions. There are 2 clarifications. Firstly, if I look at slide number 30, so when you provide the details of your divisional database, I've seen that you had, in the quarter, EUR 11 million of gain on trading and also some profits from disposal of assets at amortized cost in the region of EUR 11 million each. Can you please clarify what are the transactions that you implemented here, what assets that you sold, and whether shall we consider those items as non-recurring going forward? The second question is on slide number 27. I've seen that you have reported here EUR 1 billion of collection on the portfolio.

I don't know whether that is the typo, as there is I should interpret this as a quarter-on-quarter in collection. I mean, you have collected EUR 1 billion on the past due from the beginning of the year up to March of 2026, so in 3 months. Whether this understanding is correctly because the agenda is a little bit confusing here. Shall I compare this with the EUR 384 million that you reported last year in the same period of time, same slide? I ask you this because I think that you had a quite nice decrease in the stock of past due here in 1 quarter, so I want to understand whether this is a like-for-like trend or not.

The third question is on the deposit from payment business. You mentioned it was down around EUR 700 million quarter-on-quarter. You had decrease in the business from one client, which has basically remains a client, but has reduced the cash with you. I'm quite surprised, to be fair, with this trend because I would have considered the payment business as one of the stickier part of your funding base. If you can please elaborate on this trend.

You mentioned that in the second quarter you have acquired a new client in the payment business, if I'm not mistaken. What is the balance between the loss of EUR 700 million of funding from this client and the potential positive impact of funding from this other new client? Thank you.

Giuseppe Sica
Group CEO, BFF Bank

Thank you. Thank you, Johnny. I start with the easier question, which is, Yes, it's from, on slide 27, it's from December to March 2026. We have collected EUR 1.1 billion of past due, which is EUR 1.6 billion of risk-weighted assets, which would be at 13%, EUR 180 million-EUR 190 million on the capital. Is it like for like? The methodology for calculation is the same. The base of past due is much higher because effectively all of our portfolio is now in past due. Not all of it, but most of our factoring portfolio is in past due.

Giovanni Razzoli
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Sorry, Giuseppe, you mean that, I mean, given the very strong reclassification that you had at year-end, with the previous approach, part of that wouldn't have been fall into the past due category. This is what you mean, no?

Giuseppe Sica
Group CEO, BFF Bank

Yes. Yes.

Giovanni Razzoli
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Thank you.

Giuseppe Sica
Group CEO, BFF Bank

Yes. Exactly. On the gains, losses, I have to look at the various ways that you are discussing. I think it's all recurring in my mind. We have realized EUR 6.9 million gain, which would be around EUR 4 million post-tax on HTC. We can do more during the year. It's consistent with our held to collect policy. That's the only part where, you know, one can judge whether it's recurring or not. It's perfectly in line with previous years' average.

Giovanni Razzoli
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Sorry. that, sorry. My bad. There was EUR 10 million of provision, reversal of provisions, if I see below.

Giuseppe Sica
Group CEO, BFF Bank

Okay. Yes. Okay. That now that's clear. It's, it's a minus, you know, it's a minus and plus that compensate each other. The net impact on P&L is not relevant, effectively. We have reclassified provision for charges to provision for credit, for credit. That's what has happened. It's not relevant to the final P&L. On the clients, that was, obviously, given the amount, was a very large client, which was leaving part of its excess liquidity with us and has decided not to do so. The rest, I agree with you, is very stable because it's driven by the intermediation. The balance sheet.

The clients that we have, we'll make probably some announcement towards the end of the month of some important and visible client that we are arranging in payment, will not compensate the liquidity we lost from this single one.

Giovanni Razzoli
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from Davide Giuliano of Equita.

Davide Giuliano
Equity Research Analyst, Equita SIM

Hi, good evening. Thank you for taking my questions. I have three. The first one on the evolution of deposits in the Payments and Securities Services division we commented on first Q. My question was a little bit more about today. If you look at the two division combined, how would the situation look today rather than at the end of first Q? The second one on Factoring and Lending division, can you comment on why we are still seeing negative over recoveries this quarter despite the model changes implemented at the end of last year? It seems that the impact continues to come from rescheduling. Is there a risk of further model revisions going forward?

The third one, it's just a clarification on loss provision, which are relatively high, at least compared to my expectation. Can you provide some color on the drivers behind this provision and what we should expect in the coming quarters? If you can give us more precise guidance on cost of risk for 2026, just to double-check is the reclassification you were mentioning before to the previous question. Thank you.

Giuseppe Sica
Group CEO, BFF Bank

Marisa, on the liquidity, you heard me talking about our strong liquidity. I don't want to provide more up-to-date information, which will come with the first half, but that should be an answer, I think. On the Factoring and Lending, you know, listen, for me, what is very important is the very strong increase in the spread, which we are showing now for the first time. You can see the increase which has gone there. The reschedulings, if you look at the change year-over-year, have gone down significantly. I would say I feel that that is a good result. On the cost of risk, I don't know why you say it's particularly high. We have 6.4 basis points on slide 13.

You have a footnote explaining the EUR 10 million that Giovanni was asking a few moments ago. I don't think it's particularly high. In fact, I think in terms of basis points could be higher in the next few quarters. We've been disciplined in reducing Let me say, this cost of risk also includes the impact on negative sentences, by the way. This is for the first time this year. We've been very disciplined in the retrocessions. We have to see how good we are in those in the next few quarters.

Davide Giuliano
Equity Research Analyst, Equita SIM

Thank you.

Operator

As a reminder, if you have a question, please press star then 1. Again, if you have a question, please press star then 1. This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Giuseppe Sica for any closing remarks.

Giuseppe Sica
Group CEO, BFF Bank

I thank everybody for joining the call. It was a bit shorter than the previous one, and we look forward to speaking again when we will present our first half results. Thank you.

Operator

The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.

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