Huntington Bancshares Inc.
HBANBusiness Model
ticker: HBAN step: 01 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research
Huntington Bancshares Incorporated (HBAN) — Business Overview
Business Description
Huntington Bancshares is a $285 billion regional bank holding company headquartered in Columbus, Ohio, operating through its principal subsidiary The Huntington National Bank. The bank serves consumers, small and middle-market businesses, corporations, and municipalities across 21 states with 1,000+ branches. Following the 2025 acquisitions of Veritex Community Bank (Texas) and Cadence Bank (Southeast/Texas), Huntington is now a top-10 U.S. regional bank with national market relevance.
Revenue Model
Revenue is split between net interest income (NII) — spread earned on loans and investments vs. deposit costs — and non-interest income (fees). NII represents ~70% of total revenue; fees (~30%) come from payments, wealth management, capital markets, service charges, and mortgage. The Veritex and Cadence acquisitions added scale in high-growth Texas and Southeast markets, expanding the loan and deposit base meaningfully.
Products & Services
- Consumer banking (checking, savings, mortgages, auto loans, credit cards)
- Business banking and middle-market commercial lending
- Corporate and institutional banking
- Capital markets and treasury management
- Wealth management and private banking
- Payments and digital banking
Customer Base & Go-to-Market
Primary markets are Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Pennsylvania, and Kentucky (legacy), expanding into Texas (Veritex) and the Southeast (Cadence). Customer base spans retail consumers, SMBs, and commercial borrowers. No single customer dominates. Geographic expansion targets high-growth Sun Belt markets where demographics and business formation rates exceed the Midwest legacy footprint.
Competitive Position
Huntington competes with large national banks (JPMorgan, Bank of America) for commercial clients, and with community banks for retail and SMB. Its differentiated positioning is "Fair Play Banking" — customer-friendly policies like 24-hour grace periods and small-dollar emergency credit — which has driven above-peer deposit retention. The Veritex and Cadence acquisitions create a top-10 regional bank franchise with enhanced scale to invest in technology and fee businesses.
Key Facts
- Founded: 1866
- Headquarters: Columbus, Ohio
- Employees: ~20,000
- Exchange: NASDAQ
- Sector / Industry: Financials / Regional Banks
- Market Cap: ~$21–24B
Financial Snapshot
ticker: HBAN step: 04 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research
Huntington Bancshares Incorporated (HBAN) — Financial Snapshot
Income Statement Summary
| Metric | FY2022 | FY2023 | FY2024 | YoY |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Revenue (net) | $7.29B | $7.40B | $7.44B | +0.5% |
| Net Income | $2.24B | $1.95B | $1.94B | -0.6% |
| EPS (diluted) | $1.45 | $1.24 | $1.22 | -1.6% |
Revenue has been relatively stable 2022–2024 despite higher funding costs compressing NII. Net income and EPS declined as deposit repricing costs rose in the higher-rate environment. FY2025 saw a transformational step-up from the Veritex and Cadence acquisitions: ~11% revenue growth, ~$10B of organic loan growth.
Cash Flow & Balance Sheet (FY2024)
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Total Assets | ~$200B (FY2024) / $285B (FY2025 post-acquisitions) |
| Total Loans | ~$120B (FY2024) |
| Total Deposits | ~$155B (FY2024) |
| CET1 Ratio | ~10.4% |
| Dividend Yield | ~3.8% |
Post-acquisition balance sheet ($285B total assets) reflects the 2025 Veritex + Cadence deals. CET1 remains well-capitalized. Management committed to $550M buyback in 2026 + $1.2B in 2027, targeting ~5% share count reduction by end-2027.
Key Ratios (approximate)
- P/E (FY2025): ~10x | P/TBV: ~1.2x | Dividend Yield: ~3.8%
- FY2025 GAAP EPS: $1.39 | ROTCE (FY2025): ~15.7%
- NIM (2026 guidance): high 3.20% range (improving through 2026-2027)
Growth Profile
Huntington was a steady-but-slow grower in 2022–2024 as the higher-rate environment compressed net interest margins. FY2025 was transformational — Veritex and Cadence acquisitions added Texas and Southeast scale, driving ~11% revenue growth and double-digit EPS growth. The acquisition strategy shifts Huntington from a Midwest-concentrated bank to a national regional with exposure to faster-growing Sun Belt markets.
Forward Estimates
- FY2026 NII growth: 10–13% (standalone basis); NIM trending to high 3.20% range
- FY2026 Fee revenue growth: +31–33% (capital markets, payments, wealth driving upside)
- FY2026 EPS: ~$1.50–$1.60 (consensus)
- $3B buyback authorization over 2026–2027 provides EPS accretion
Recent Catalysts
ticker: HBAN step: 12 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research
Huntington Bancshares Incorporated (HBAN) — Investment Catalysts & Risks
Bull Case Drivers
Veritex + Cadence Acquisitions Create a Top-10 Regional Bank in High-Growth Markets — The 2025 acquisitions of Veritex (Texas commercial) and Cadence Bank (Southeast/Texas) expanded Huntington from a Midwest-concentrated bank to a 21-state franchise with strong positioning in the fastest-growing U.S. markets. Texas and the Southeast have significantly higher business formation rates, population growth, and commercial real estate activity than Huntington's legacy Midwest core. Q1 2026 saw interest income jump 19% following the Cadence close, and management guides 10–13% NII growth and double-digit EPS growth for 2026 as synergies ramp. Combined with organic loan growth of ~$10B in 2025, the acquisition platform is executing ahead of skeptical expectations.
Fee Revenue Surge Offsets NII Pressure — Diversification Story Strengthens — Despite NIM compression, Huntington raised its 2026 fee revenue growth guidance by 4 percentage points to 31–33%, driven by strong pipelines in payments, wealth management, and capital markets. This diversification — accelerated by the acquired fee businesses from Veritex and Cadence — reduces the bank's traditional over-dependence on interest rate spreads. A $3B buyback authorization (2026–2027) targeting ~5% share reduction adds further EPS support. At under 10x forward earnings and a ~3.8% dividend yield, the risk-reward is attractive if the fee revenue guidance proves accurate.
Capital Return Acceleration at Discounted Valuation — HBAN trades at ~1.2x tangible book value — a significant discount to the sector leader JPMorgan (~2.3x TBV) and even to regional bank peers. Management's $550M buyback in 2026 and $1.2B in 2027 at these levels is highly accretive to book value per share. With a ROTCE of ~15.7% in FY2025 (improving toward 17%+ as synergies are realized), the bank is generating excess capital above its organic growth needs — creating a self-funding buyback engine that compounds EPS growth even without further acquisitions.
Bear Case Risks
Commercial Real Estate and Credit Quality From Acquisitions — The Veritex acquisition added meaningful Texas commercial real estate exposure, and Huntington's criticized asset ratio rose to 4.2% shortly after the Veritex close due to the acquired CRE book. Management stated this remained "within historical norms," but a Texas commercial real estate downturn — particularly in office or retail — could generate unexpected credit losses that erode integration synergies. Management signaled being "a little more measured" on future CRE construction exposure, an implicit acknowledgment that the acquired portfolio carries above-average risk.
NIM Compression and Rate Sensitivity — NIM guidance for 2026 was revised down to the high 3.20% range (from mid-3.30% guidance), with 5bps attributable to higher Fed cash balances and 2-3bps to deposit cost dynamics. If the Fed cuts rates more aggressively than expected, Huntington's asset-sensitive balance sheet will see NII decline. The bank is more rate-sensitive than large diversified peers — a sharper rate cut cycle could compress NIM below the 3.20% guidance floor and pressure EPS toward the low end of forecasts. The "macro growth will likely be lower than originally forecasted" management commentary signals they see downside risk to loan demand.
Integration Execution Risk Across Three Geographies — Integrating two mid-size bank acquisitions (Veritex and Cadence) simultaneously while maintaining organic growth in legacy markets is operationally complex. Technology system migrations, retention of key relationship managers, and cultural integration across Ohio/Texas/Southeast are risk factors that take 2–3 years to fully resolve. A single large loan loss or talent departure in a newly acquired market can disproportionately damage investor confidence in the acquisition thesis during the critical first year.
Upcoming Events
- Q2 2026 Earnings (July 2026): First full-quarter read of both Veritex + Cadence combined — critical test of synergy timeline and NII/fee guidance
- FY2026 Capital Return: $550M buyback execution — pace will signal management's capital confidence
- CRE Credit Cycle: Texas commercial real estate conditions in 2H 2026 are a key credit quality monitor
Analyst Sentiment
Bullish: 17 Buy, 4 Hold, 1 Sell from covering analysts, with a median price target of ~$21 implying ~38% upside from depressed levels. The bull case centers on the Sun Belt expansion thesis and fee revenue diversification; the bear case centers on NIM pressure and CRE credit. At under 10x forward earnings and a 3.8% yield, the market is pricing in significant execution risk that bulls argue is overstated.
Research Date
Generated: 2026-05-12
Full Research Available
This primer covers steps 1–3 of 21. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, returns on capital, institutional/insider activity, and an investment memo.