GBank Financial Holdings Inc. (GBFH)
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May 1, 2026, 4:00 PM EDT - Market closed
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Earnings Call: Q1 2026

Apr 29, 2026

Olivia Caley
SVP Financial Reporting Director, GBank Financial Holdings

Hello, and welcome to the GBank Financial Holdings Inc. Q1 2026 earnings call. We ask that you please hold all questions until the completion of the formal remarks, at which time you'll be given instructions for the question and answer session. Also, as a reminder, this conference is being recorded today. If you have any objections, please disconnect at this time. We appreciate you joining our earnings conference call. With me here today are Ed Nigro, Executive Chairman and CEO, Todd Nigro, Executive Vice-Chairman, and Olivia Caley, SVP, Financial Reporting Director. Jeff Whitaker is on medical leave. The related Q1 earnings press release was filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission today and is available on the news and media section of our website, gbankfinancialholdings.com.

Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that any forward-looking statements are subject to risk uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated future results. Please see our safe harbor statements in our earnings press release. All comments expressed or implied made during today's call are subject to those safe harbor statements. Any forward-looking statements made during this call are made only as of today's date, and we do not undertake any duty to update such forward-looking statements except as required by law. Additionally, during today's call, we may discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures which we believe are useful in evaluating our performance. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable GAAP financial measures can also be found in our earnings release. I'd now like to pass it over to Ed Nigro, Chairman and CEO.

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

Thank you. It is with great regret that we issue our earnings release today with a $0.22 per share charge-off for third-party credit card fraud. Fraud that was contained in a retail card program that was launched last year that we canceled. This program was in typical to the GBank gaming credit card program. We were in the business of issuing a transactional card, not a retail card to pay merchandise that built credit balances. Beyond the pursuit of retail cardholders, the two direct mailings totaling 900,000 to pre-qualified recipients exposed the bank to various types of creative and illicit fraud. This type of fraud was new and subjected an entire industry to AI-generated bot fraud. Fortunately, the new system we developed and launched on November 17th of last year is very robust. It's state-of-the-art, and we've seen no additional substantive fraud issues prospectively.

New fraud is being well contained. I am disappointed to have to even discuss this, but as a shareholder like you, I wanted to explain the issue and identify the solutions. We've attached an exhibit to the earnings release that details the credit card enhancements. I would like to address our core banking operations, including our gaming fintech developments, which are extensive. I believe that it's imperative that this fraud event does not mask the continued remarkable growth and accomplishments of GBank. First, loan originations. Our loan originations exceeded $208 million for the first quarter of 2026, a 56% increase when compared to the first quarter of 2025, and a 65% increase when compared to the fourth quarter of 2025.

SBA originations totaled $190 million, an impressive feat given the lingering effects of the government shutdown of the fourth quarter. For the first time in GBank history, we've exceeded $1 billion in on-balance sheet loans. Including our off-balance sheet loans, our total assets under management were $2.5 billion as of March 31st, 2026. Of course, when we talk about loans, we also talk about our Allowance for Credit Loss provision expense, which this time was $2.3 million for the quarter, comprised of $860,000 related to loan growth and $1.4 million increase in specific reserves on non-performing loans and updated collateral balances of existing NPAs.

The balance of at-risk non-performing loans increased from $12.5 million in December 31st, 2025 to $13.2 million as of March 31st, 2026. Our net interest margin. The bank experienced a lower net interest income and some net interest margin compression when we compared to our fourth quarter of 2025. The 50 basis point decrease in market rates enacted in the fourth quarter impacted our loan portfolio, effective January 1st, 2026, as approximately 65% of our loan portfolio reprices quarterly. That's approximately $686 million. Our funding costs, on the other hand, remain stubbornly high as deposit market prices lag Federal Reserve actions, and we did not adjust our deposit pricing in the first quarter to remain competitive, although we are currently implementing several measures to lower deposit costs.

Additionally, interest income was affected by the sale of $52 million in investment securities we sold during the fourth quarter. We redeployed $44 million in the first quarter. However, these investments were spread throughout the quarter. The full interest impact of these purchases will be reflected in the second quarter. The bank-only net interest margin of 4.02% is still amongst the highest of our peers. Now I would like to discuss our SBA operations. Our efforts in the fourth quarter of last year to restructure our gain on sale pricing has resulted in gain on sale margin of 4.79% for the first quarter, exceeding our budget expectations of 4%. The bank sold $79 million of government-guaranteed loans during the first quarter, generating a net gain on sale of $3.8 million.

Loans held for sale were $74 million as of March 31st, 2026, and to date, April sales volumes are exceeding expectations as we've sold $39.5 million in loan balances month to date at a gain on sale of $2 million. The earnings power of our core bank remains resilient and strong. As we continue our fintech operations, I again wish to discuss credit card. Because we faced restrictions by several of the major sportsbooks on our credit card acceptance, these restrictions resulted in a decrease of spending from our lower-limit customer base for the quarter. However, we still grew our quarter by 10 million in transactions over the previous quarter.

This was accomplished with a new gaming credit card program targeting our high-demand, high-limit customer base, creating a secured card account system at the bank, enabling these preferred customers to move larger sums of funds frequently with limited credit risk to GBank. We expect this steady performance of our credit card, especially with these high-limit players, to continue throughout the year and subsequent growth commencing with the advent of Bold Bets and Bankroll adoption. ACH. We had discussed ACH processing, and now we are live with our own ACH processing of our credit card, which gives us in-depth viewing of immediate cash transactions and enables us to track our customers much more efficiently. We shall also grow as an ODFI, the originating depository financial institution, as we have a pipeline of customers for ACH processing. This becomes even more important as we grow Bold Bets and Bankroll.

ACH is a principal form of payments. Additional prepaid card program. We're announcing that GBank is launching a new Visa prepaid debit card. Actually, it's our third prepaid card we're issuing, so issuing prepaid cards is not a new event for GBank. This particular card, however, is designed for our gaming app customers, designed to create access for them to all wagering platforms, including sports apps that limit credit cards. We've developed unique funding processes for this prepaid card, and these funding processes will enable ease of payments to our high-profile customers while providing a new source of non-interest deposits for the bank. Lastly, technology, and I will probably understate our technology efforts, but we are growing technology capabilities significantly. Our chief technology officer and his team are developing our in-house platforms, which include our own AI. Her name is Gigi. She's gonna be very smart.

She's gonna know every policy, procedure, application, regulation that affects GBank, and she's gonna provide invaluable guidance for productivity of our operations and help us plan, organize, direct, and protect GBank. I'm really looking forward to knowing her better, and I think our operations staff are enthusiastic about Gigi. Well, this concludes my comments on our operations. Now, Todd, our Vice-Chairman, shall discuss Bold Bets and our new venture Bankroll.

Todd A. Nigro
Executive Vice-Chairman, GBank Financial Holdings

Thank you, Ed. As mentioned in the 8-K, Bold Bets launched version two of its app this month. V2, now available for download on both Android and Apple devices, has been under development for the past six months and was created to onboard multiple gaming operators and maximize payments and rewards functionality while staying in compliance with all gaming and banking regulatory frameworks. The approval by the Nevada Gaming Control Board's technology division will allow for faster licensure in other states as the Nevada Gaming Control Board is considered the gold standard of national and international gaming regulatory bodies. Distill Taverns submitted and received GCB approval to utilize the V2 Bold Bets wallet technology provided that GBank is its sponsor bank. Again, we expect other states' regulatory bodies to acknowledge the bank's role in ensuring player funds are protected while using the platform, resulting in shortened timelines to launch.

We believe the significance of successfully creating banking and financial technology that simultaneously satisfies gaming and banking regulatory requirements is an important achievement and places Bold Bets and GBank in a unique position with proprietary scalable solutions. Bold Bets combines both payments and loyalty solutions that provide the necessary components for player adoption and engagement, which are the ultimate indicators of success. Also mentioned in the 8-K, Bold Bets and BCS have signed a binding term sheet establishing Bankroll. Bankroll focuses on the digital wallet or payments layer of the Bold Bets technology platform. It specifically allows for other gaming payments providers who may be directly or indirectly in competition with Bold Bets to quickly and efficiently access the BCS and GBank proprietary systems and provide the state-of-the-art payment solution to their gaming clients.

In our view, this product increases the total addressable market to include casino management systems and other third-party cage and credit payments providers. Bold Bets becomes an example of the possibilities of integrating this platform into their own systems. Both Bold Bets and Bankroll have active and developing pipelines with ongoing negotiations across gaming and payments operators. We look forward to sharing further updates as these discussions mature.

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

Thank you, Todd. Now we'll go to our question and answer period.

Operator

Thank you. At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please click on the Raise Hand button, which can be found on the black bar at the bottom of your screen. When it is your turn, you'll receive a message on your screen from the host allowing you to talk, and then you'll hear your name called. Please accept, unmute your audio, and ask your question. We'll wait 1 moment to allow for the queue to form. We'll take our first question from Timothy Coffey with Brean Capital. Please unmute your line and ask your question.

Timothy Coffey
Analyst, Brean Capital

Great. Thanks, Ed. Hey, Todd. Yeah, if we could kind of start with the fraud prevention efforts. You put the slide in there, can you kind of walk through what you've done to, you know, you know, prevent these issues from reoccurring?

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

Yes. Tim, thank you. Let me open that exhibit, if you will. If you go to the 8-K, I had an exhibit A right after our financials. It says GBank Financial Holdings exhibit A, and it said credit card application and monitoring enhancements. What occurred, Tim, was that these were bot attacks that went undetected and were embedded in our system. With our new system that was launched in November, it had protected us against these attacks, but the old system, the legacy system, which many in the industry suffered from, did not. Now, these bot efforts were embedded in our retail credit card system. These were not with our gamers. What they did, they acted very human, very small placement of credit in the beginning, card testing.

Spending was spread out over a three- and four-month period with small incremental spends, but yet they built it up to obviously their card limits in the long run. These were embedded mostly, and we traced them back with the new monitoring system we put in place, which was an adjunct to the card application system. We even have, as you see in that exhibit, behavioral analytics. This new system can even tell, it even tracks the mouse when it's filling out an application and can tell you whether it was a human or a robot. We have so many different verifications of identification now, it's next to impossible, at least we believe so, to create the kind of IDs the bots did.

When they were so insidious that they were, over 600 accounts that were small spends, but spent that time gradually spending over four or five months. These started to manifest themselves in February and March in our receivables. That's where with our new systems, we went in and did all of these analytics on them and, actually tracked all 10,000 accounts and extricated all the bot accounts. Excuse me. Tim, it took a bit of time to do it, and it really was manifested, and we started to generate the real numbers in the early April. At first it looked like it might be around a million and a half USD, and it kept growing until we finally had purged our entire system.

We believe that we have identified, extricated, closed, and eliminated all of these bot frauds. Since the new system was put in place, our new applications, of course, we don't have this mass direct mail piece that says, "You're pre-qualified, just fill this in," which was a very ill-advised marketing campaign. We're not targeting credit card users, retail credit card users. We never were to target them. It was canceled, as you remember, when I notified everyone in the fourth quarter.

Having said that, the extensiveness of our new application and the extensiveness of our algorithms, we're preparing even ourselves to identify behavioral patterns that have enabled us to identify, eliminate, and move forward. As I was saying, our new system, we've had 11 bot attacks in that new system since we put it in, with tens of thousands of applications, and none have gotten through. Several have gotten through, but they've been eliminated at the very first spin by our analytics. We feel good about where we are with it, and we also know that our gaming customers, and with our secured card program, which has the customer advancing their own funds. Before I get into that, I wanted to just stay with the fraud part.

We've identified it, we believe, and in our monitoring now, we're seeing no additional frauds in our account system. We ran a very stringent test now for all new cards launched since December, and we've had very limited, very minimal fraud exposure. Did I answer your question, Tim?

Timothy Coffey
Analyst, Brean Capital

Well, yes, absolutely, completely. My follow-up question on that would be, do you anticipate any residual expenses in the next quarter related to this?

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

No. I think that we're back to our, what we call our normal operations, and our residual expenses are really being defined in managing the system right now, managing our interchange. We're growing the card slowly. The card's not going to, and I think I mentioned it before, grow as fast as we had anticipated until the launches of our slot programs, Bold Bets and Bankroll begin because then the card is going to accelerate again, we believe. Because the use of credit cards in bricks-and-mortar casinos is second nature. It's used extensively, unlike the big four sports books. At the same time, we have a unique position with some of our high-limit customers that we think will maintain the steady pace of our credit card, which we're doing.

We did $109 million in transactions this last quarter, and off in April we're already off to about $40 million in the first month of transactions. It's staying steady, but I don't expect any extraordinary expenses.

Timothy Coffey
Analyst, Brean Capital

Okay. Great. The other item from this quarter was on the specific reserve. Recognizing what you know, you did kind of call out, three different loans in the line about the specific reserve. I was wondering if you could give a little more color. Was it just three loans, or, you know, what additional color can you provide on that?

Olivia Caley
SVP Financial Reporting Director, GBank Financial Holdings

On the reserve, was it just three loans? Is it?

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

No, no. It wasn't just three loans. Well, those were the total number of loans. Our NPAs, our risk NPAs went from $12.6 million in the fourth quarter to $13.2 million in the first quarter. That's our at-risk portion.

Timothy Coffey
Analyst, Brean Capital

Yeah.

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

Now, the NPA, the $2.2 million was divided mostly amongst new generations. Remember I reported, we reported $208 million in new loan originations in the first quarter. That's huge. It's really interesting when we look at that $208 million, because we had to reserve against the retained portion, and we retained about $85 million of that $208 million. That's where the reserve went up and the growth. In the non-performing side, there were two key areas. Yes, there were three loans, I believe, but there were also an increase in the reserve for the existing NPA portfolio where some of the valuations had to be adjusted while we're in the process of liquidating those assets.

Timothy Coffey
Analyst, Brean Capital

Okay. Okay. That makes sense.

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

Yeah. Okay. Thanks, Tim. I hope I answered that one.

Timothy Coffey
Analyst, Brean Capital

Yeah, you did. My other question is on the time deposits. What percentage of those or dollar amount reprice in the second quarter?

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

I don't have the exact dollar amount, because we're looking at the terminations of many of the, you know, dates of the certificates of deposits that we have that are gonna be repricing. Let me talk about NIM for a minute. We had the perfect storm on NIM, which shouldn't have happened the way it did. Unfortunately, it did. Yes, it was some with the repricing of our existing deposits, but that price, that cost stayed relatively flat. We're adjusting those prices now, and we're adjusting in all of the deposit prices, and we feel that there's going to be some obvious benefit there. The other aspect of it was, Tim, we sold $52 million in our investment portfolio in the fourth quarter.

We repositioned $44 million of that, mostly in the month of February and March. The last disposition of that, we just purchased $10 million in new investments in April. We lost about $300,000 in net interest income from the disposition of the investment portfolio. With the 50 basis points, that hit us by a tune of about $580,000. I think that those factors, and the factors that all this loans that we created came on mostly in the month of March, we didn't get the benefit of the interest income from these loans. We're very confident you're gonna see this net interest margin recover nicely, and you're gonna see our net interest income expand in the second quarter.

Timothy Coffey
Analyst, Brean Capital

Okay. Great. Those are my questions. I'll step back. Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Matthew Adner with Jones. Please unmute your line and ask your question.

Matthew Adner
Analyst, Jones

Hey, good afternoon, guys. Thanks for taking the question. You know, in the release it says, you know, you guys expect gaming accounts to grow towards year-end. Was that a little bit what you were alluding to in terms of, you know, Bold Bets V2 coming out? You guys are live in the Distill Taverns. Bankroll's gonna increase. Does that kinda coincide with what you're expecting on the credit card front in terms of transactions and scaling that up? I know I kinda loaded two questions there into one, but, you know, what's your expectation there in terms of growth?

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

I'll answer the credit card side, and I'll have Todd answer the Bold Bets and Bankroll side. Yes, the credit card they use to load the Bold Bets app and the Bankroll app will be accepted. Obviously, there are apps, but also the clients, the bricks and mortar clients and the operators of these casinos, credit cards are a mainstay of their business. That's why we expect the credit card to grow. I'm just gonna throw in one little addition there, is our prepaid card. We've announced that we're gonna launch our prepaid card probably in the third quarter, that prepaid card is gonna be a sister card to our credit card so that all our players can load any sports app they want with their prepaid card.

We're also developing some very proprietary ways of loading that prepaid card, which is not being done today. It's going to be very, very interesting, and we think we're gonna have a very big audience for it. That too is gonna create deposit growth as well. Todd, you wanna talk to the growth towards the third or fourth quarter of this year of Bold Bets and Bankroll?

Todd A. Nigro
Executive Vice-Chairman, GBank Financial Holdings

Yes. Given that V2 is now approved and, launched at, My Distill Taverns, that's gonna progress, over the next couple of months into a more active launch and more, you know, adoption and usability for the patrons at Distill. What's gonna really start to move the needle as we reach the second part of the year would be the Terrible's gaming launch, which we're turning our attention to now because V2 was always the version of the app that was going to be launched by Terrible's. We are, actively now that we have our approvals in integration mode with them and expect that we'll be busier launching them in the second half of the year than we will be launching, Distill's, you know, in the next couple of months.

That'll start to make a meaningful difference in the activity.

Matthew Adner
Analyst, Jones

Got it. That's helpful. I appreciate that color.

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

I think there's another important thing that we wanted to mention. I mentioned it in the release, but there's something really, really important about the apps that exist right now. The first is that you can go on Apple App Store or the Android App Store and download and get the Bold Bets app. It is now on the app stores. Of course, the only client for the Bold Bets apps right now is Distill. The other interesting thing about this app, and why GBank is in love with it, is that it is now multi-casino operational. Meaning on the same app you can have Distill Taverns, and then right next to it you could punch the button for Terrible's. The next client we put it on can be on the same app.

You as a player, if you put an account with each one of those, you have one app, and you can go from one casino next door to the next casino and play their slots. That is the real breakthrough of this app. It's gonna be universal across all CMSs, and it's going to be usable all on one app by one customer. Most importantly, it's the availability on the Android phones and Apple phones is quite remarkable. Todd has, I know, many negotiations going on for users of these apps.

Matthew Adner
Analyst, Jones

Got it. Yeah. That leads into my next question. You know, it seems like you guys have a pretty ripe pipeline there. That hasn't changed quarter-over-quarter, has it?

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

Todd, do you wanna take that?

Todd A. Nigro
Executive Vice-Chairman, GBank Financial Holdings

Sure. Yeah. No, it hasn't. It's still very active. With the addition of Bankroll, there is many potential customers in the Bankroll pipeline right now as there are in Bold Bets.

Matthew Adner
Analyst, Jones

Got it.

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

You see, let me just explain one thing about Bankroll, and Todd can correct me. From the Bank's standpoint and BCS's standpoint, Bankroll is a joint venture 50/50 between BCS and Bankroll. Remember, GBFH owns 32.99% of BCS. What this joint venture does is it takes that Bankroll, that Bold Bets app, but it disconnects the CMS and has this amazing payment system that can be used across enormous clients to use it with whatever, attach whatever CMS they want or whatever payments process they want. This is what's quite remarkable, and this is what's drawing a very great deal of attention because of the way the app performs and the way the payments perform. The thing to remember, and why we're enthusiastic about it, is that everyone who signs up for this app, the money goes to GBank.

It is creating a great deal of interest. I happen to know because I also run the other half of Bankroll. Bankroll is a joint venture, Todd and I are the two managers of it.

Matthew Adner
Analyst, Jones

Got it. That's helpful. Then one last one from me. Apologies if I missed this earlier, the gain on sale, you know, you mentioned strong start already to April with about $2 million there. You know, should we kind of expect 4.8, 4.79% to be the new normal, or is that gonna kinda normalize back down to, you know, your long-term goal of 4%?

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

What has happened is that our goal was 4%, but we quickly exceeded that because the spreads, as interest rates came down a bit, spreads increased. As spreads increased, our tax gain on sale increases. We actually hit over 5% in the month of April. We expect it to be higher than our projections by, you know, at least 0.75% to almost a 1%. We also had pent-up demand. I have the numbers here. I think in the month of April, we sold $39.8 million of SBA loans, with a GAAP gain so far of $2 million. Now remember, we created $208,000 in new loans in one quarter. Some banks our size, that would be a year's growth.

Now granted, we sell off a portion of those. We'll sell off about $100 million of those. $38 million were new pari passu loans, and that's the unguaranteed additional portion over and above the limit of SBA lending. Half the loan's SBA and half of it isn't. We retain that. On balance sheet, we grew $38 million, but that's the loan in the first quarter. We think, you know, we're on track in April and with what we're producing already to have another $200 million quarter in loan growth. Our machine is really working, and we're really able to generate some very strong interest income.

That's why I feel very confident that our interest income is going to continue to grow and we'll reach normal, we'll get back to some of our normal performance percentages, you know, in the 4.1%-4.3% area.

Matthew Adner
Analyst, Jones

Got it. That's helpful.

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

Yeah.

Matthew Adner
Analyst, Jones

Thank you for the question.

Operator

As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please click on the Raise Hand button, which can be found on the black bar at the bottom of your screen. We will pause just one moment to allow for any additional questions.

Edward M. Nigro
Executive Chairman and CEO, GBank Financial Holdings

Well, if there are no additional questions, I think I will conclude the meeting, and I just want to say these numbers for this quarter are not nice to look at. The fraud attack is a hiccup, not a heart attack, and we're through it's behind us, and we're really excited about our future, not only in our gaming payment side and our technology side, but we have a very strong core bank. I keep reminding everybody, we just reached $1 billion in on-balance sheet loans now. $1 billion in loans. We also have $1.1 billion in off-balance sheet loans we manage. That's the guaranteed portion. Our SBA portfolio or our loan portfolio is rather really at $2.2 billion, $2.1 billion.

We are, I believe, a very high-performing bank, and we will not disappoint you in the future. Thank you for believing us. Thank you for believing in us. We really enjoy having you as partners, every one of you.

Operator

Thank you for joining the GBank Financial Holdings Inc. Q1 2026 earnings call. You may now disconnect.

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