Wintrust Financial Corporation
WTFCBusiness Overview
source: coverage-next-full | ticker: WTFC | step: "01" | created: 2026-05-29
Step 01 — Business Overview
Company Summary
Wintrust Financial Corporation is the largest Chicago-headquartered independent bank holding company and one of the top 50 bank holding companies in the United States by total assets ($71.1B as of FY2025). Founded in 1991 by Edward J. Wehmer and a small team of banking veterans, Wintrust was built from the ground up on a deliberately differentiated model: rather than creating a single large bank, the company established a federation of locally-branded community bank charters across Chicagoland, each preserving a distinct community identity while sharing a common operational and capital infrastructure.
The Multi-Charter Community Banking Model
Wintrust's most distinctive structural feature is its portfolio of 15+ separately chartered community bank subsidiaries, each operating under its own local brand name (e.g., North Shore Community Bancorp, Hinsdale Bank & Trust, Wheaton Bank & Trust, Beverly Bank & Trust, State Bank of the Lakes). This model was designed to win business from two customer groups simultaneously:
- Local businesses and professionals who value knowing their banker personally and dealing with local decision-makers — not loan committees in a distant city center.
- Customers fleeing mega-bank consolidation who want a community-bank feel with the product breadth and technology of a larger institution.
The model allows Wintrust to expand by acquiring existing community banks and rebranding them under its umbrella, maintaining local management while plugging into the parent's shared service infrastructure (treasury, compliance, technology, credit). This approach has fueled 30 years of organic and acquisitive growth.
Business Segments
Community Banking (largest segment, ~80% of revenues)
- 200+ full-service banking locations across Chicagoland, southern Wisconsin, NW Indiana, and Michigan (post-Macatawa 2024)
- Products: commercial and industrial loans, CRE loans, construction lending, consumer banking, SBA lending, local government banking, nonprofit/institutional banking
- Condo association banking is a niche: WTFC is a dominant provider of banking services to Chicago-area condominium associations
- Franchise lending: hospitality and franchise business loans
Specialty Finance (differentiating segment, ~15-20% of loan book)
Insurance Premium Finance — The crown jewel of WTFC's specialty franchise. Wintrust is one of the two largest insurance premium finance companies in the United States, operating under the FIRST Insurance Funding brand. Insurance premium finance is a niche product that loans businesses the funds to pay annual commercial insurance premiums upfront, with the insured repaying in monthly installments. Key characteristics:
- Very short duration (9–12 months typical)
- Self-liquidating (borrower's insurance policy is collateral)
- Low credit losses historically — uncollected premiums result in policy cancellation; insurer returns unearned premium to lender
- National business — not geographically constrained to Chicago
- Grows with rising commercial insurance premiums
Mortgage Warehouse Lending — Short-term facilities to mortgage originators (non-bank lenders) pending loan sale into secondary market. Mortgage warehouse is rate-sensitive and volume-sensitive to housing markets.
Life Finance (WTFC Life Finance) — Specialty lending against life insurance policies (life settlement-type collateral).
Wealth Management
- Wintrust Private Trust Company, N.A. — full-service trust services
- Wintrust Investments, LLC — brokerage, retirement accounts
- Great Lakes Advisors, LLC — institutional investment management
- Chicago Deferred Exchange Company — 1031 exchange facilitator
- Combined AUM/AUA: ~$45B+
- Revenue: non-interest fees; generally sticky recurring income
Mortgage Banking
- Originate-and-sell residential mortgage model
- Revenue from gain-on-sale and servicing fees
- Volume sensitive to interest rate environment
Geographic Footprint
| Market | Status | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Chicagoland (6-county metro) | Core | Dominant local presence; 15 bank brands |
| Southern Wisconsin | Established | Adjacent to Chicago suburbs |
| NW Indiana | Established | Gary-Hammond-Valparaiso corridor |
| Michigan (Grand Rapids) | New (2024) | Macatawa acquisition; 26 branches |
Leadership
| Executive | Role | Background |
|---|---|---|
| Timothy S. Crane | President & CEO (since May 2023) | ~30-year WTFC veteran; deep internal operator |
| David L. Stoehr | CFO / EVP | Long-tenured; operational finance depth |
| Edward J. Wehmer | Founder, Chairman Emeritus | Founded WTFC in 1991; stepped back from CEO (2023) and board (2025) |
The CEO transition from founder Wehmer to Crane (2023) was notable for its seamlessness — Crane was a known internal successor with three decades of institutional knowledge. Wehmer remains connected as Senior Advisor/Founder, providing continuity while allowing the next generation of management to lead.
Scale Milestones
| Year | Total Assets | Milestone |
|---|---|---|
| 2000 | ~$4B | Early growth through community bank acquisitions |
| 2010 | ~$17B | Post-financial-crisis expansion (FDIC-assisted deals) |
| 2015 | ~$22B | Organic growth + specialty finance expansion |
| 2020 | ~$44B | COVID-era deposit surge + PPP loans |
| 2023 | ~$56B | Crossed $50B threshold (enhanced regulatory scrutiny) |
| 2024 | ~$65B | Macatawa acquisition closes (August 2024) |
| 2025 | ~$71B | Record assets, record earnings |
Investment Thesis in One Paragraph
Wintrust is a 30-year compounding machine in Chicago-area banking — a federation of community banks with proprietary insurance premium finance and wealth management engines bolted on. The stock typically trades at 1.5–2.0x tangible book value, a modest premium for a franchise delivering 15–19% ROTCE with consistent double-digit EPS growth. The core risks are interest rate sensitivity (NIM compression in rate-cut environments), Chicago CRE office exposure ($1.7B, 3.1% of loans), and execution on the Macatawa integration. Bulls see a durable Chicago franchise with a national premium finance business that grows with insurance pricing cycles; bears see a geographically concentrated bank with elevated CRE exposure at a premium valuation.
Financial Snapshot
source: coverage-next-full | ticker: WTFC | step: "04" | created: 2026-05-29
Step 04 — Financial Snapshot (FY2021–FY2025)
Income Statement Summary
| Metric | FY2021 | FY2022 | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 | 4Y CAGR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Interest Income ($M) | $1,125 | $1,495 | $1,838 | $1,963 | $2,224 | +18.6% |
| Non-Interest Income ($M) | $586 | $461 | $434 | $488 | $502 | -3.8% |
| Total Revenue ($M) | $1,770 | $1,878 | $2,158 | $2,350 | $2,630 | +10.4% |
| Provision for Credit Losses ($M) | ($59) | $79 | $114 | $101 | $96 | NM |
| Non-Interest Expense ($M) | $1,133 | $1,177 | $1,313 | $1,403 | $1,512 | +7.5% |
| Pre-Tax Income ($M) | $638 | $701 | $845 | $947 | $1,118 | +15.1% |
| Net Income ($M) | $438 | $482 | $595 | $667 | $774 | +15.3% |
| EPS Diluted | $7.58 | $8.02 | $9.58 | $10.31 | $11.40 | +10.7% |
| Profit Margin | 26.3% | 27.1% | 28.9% | 29.6% | 31.3% | +500 bps |
Earnings Per Share Growth Trend
| Year | EPS Diluted | YoY Growth |
|---|---|---|
| FY2021 | $7.58 | — |
| FY2022 | $8.02 | +5.8% |
| FY2023 | $9.58 | +19.5% |
| FY2024 | $10.31 | +7.6% |
| FY2025 | $11.40 | +10.6% |
| FY2026E | ~$13.03 | +14.3% (consensus) |
4-Year EPS CAGR (FY2021→FY2025): +10.7% — driven by loan growth, NIM expansion, and modest operating leverage.
Balance Sheet Summary
| Metric | FY2021 | FY2022 | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 | 4Y CAGR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Assets ($M) | $50,142 | $52,950 | $56,260 | $64,880 | $71,142 | +9.1% |
| Gross Loans ($M) | $34,789 | $39,197 | $42,132 | $48,055 | $53,105 | +11.2% |
| Total Deposits ($M) | $42,096 | $42,903 | $45,397 | $52,512 | $57,717 | +8.2% |
| Shareholders' Equity ($M) | $4,499 | $4,797 | $5,400 | $6,344 | $7,259 | +12.7% |
| Shares Outstanding (M) | 57.1 | 60.8 | 61.2 | 66.5 | 67.0 | +4.1% |
| Book Value Per Share | $77.85 | $79.83 | $86.97 | $98.06 | $106.91 | +8.2% |
| Tangible Book Value/Share | $66.02 | $68.58 | $76.02 | $83.86 | $93.72 | +9.1% |
TBV/Share growth of +9.1% CAGR over four years — strong for a community bank; driven by consistent retained earnings and modest dilution from M&A.
Key Profitability Ratios
| Ratio | FY2021 | FY2022 | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Interest Margin | ~2.65% | ~3.20% | 3.68% | 3.53% | 3.54% |
| Efficiency Ratio | ~64% | ~63% | ~61% | ~60% | ~57.5% |
| Return on Assets (ROA) | ~0.87% | ~0.91% | ~1.06% | ~1.03% | ~1.09% |
| Return on Equity (ROE) | ~9.7% | ~10.0% | ~11.0% | ~10.5% | ~10.7% |
| Return on Tangible Common Equity (ROTCE) | ~12.4% | ~13.4% | ~15.1% | ~14.8% | ~16.4% |
| ACL / Gross Loans | N/A | N/A | 1.01% | 0.91% | 0.87% |
NIM FY2021–FY2022 estimated from NII / avg earning assets; ROTCE calculated from net income / avg tangible equity. Efficiency ratio = Non-Interest Expense / (NII + NIR).
Efficiency Ratio Analysis
| Year | Non-Int Expense | NII + NIR | Efficiency Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|
| FY2021 | $1,133M | $1,770M* | ~64.0% |
| FY2022 | $1,177M | $1,878M* | ~62.7% |
| FY2023 | $1,313M | $2,158M | ~60.8% |
| FY2024 | $1,403M | $2,350M | ~59.7% |
| FY2025 | $1,512M | $2,630M | ~57.5% |
Efficiency ratio improving structurally — from 64% in FY2021 toward ~57% in FY2025 — reflects operating leverage as revenue grows faster than expenses. This is a genuine quality signal, not just margin accounting.
Capital Adequacy
| Metric | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 | Q1 2026 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CET1 Ratio (estimated) | ~11.1% | ~11.2% | ~11.0% | ~11.0% |
| Equity / Assets | 9.6% | 9.8% | 10.2% | N/A |
| Tangible Common Equity Ratio | ~8.6% | ~8.8% | ~9.2% | ~9.3% |
| Allowance / Gross Loans | 1.01% | 0.91% | 0.87% | ~0.87% |
WTFC is "well-capitalized" under regulatory definitions across all periods. CET1 ~11% provides buffer above the 4.5% regulatory minimum and 7.0% target (with capital conservation buffer), though it is below the 13–15% maintained by the largest US banks.
Per-Share Value Creation Summary
| Metric | FY2021 | FY2025 | 4Y Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| EPS Diluted | $7.58 | $11.40 | +50.4% |
| TBV/Share | $66.02 | $93.72 | +41.9% |
| Dividend/Share | ~$1.48 | $2.20 | +48.6% |
| Stock Price (YE approx) | ~$90 | ~$148 | +64.4% |
Value creation has been broad-based: EPS growth, TBV accumulation, and dividend growth all compounded at 8–11% per year, slightly outpacing share count dilution from M&A issuance.
Summary Assessment
Wintrust's financial profile over FY2021–FY2025 is that of a high-quality regional bank executing consistently:
- Revenue growth driven by loan book expansion + NIM expansion from rate cycle
- Improving profitability margins (efficiency ratio declining, ROTCE rising toward 16–17%)
- Conservative credit discipline (ACL/loans declining from 1.01% to 0.87% as quality improves)
- Steady TBV/share compounding (~9% CAGR) — the bank is genuinely growing its intrinsic value
- Moderate dilution (~4% share count CAGR) from Macatawa all-stock deal (Aug 2024) — notable but not destructive
The FY2025 result of $774M net income / $11.40 EPS / $93.72 TBV/share marks a step-change higher from the pre-Macatawa baseline. The run rate heading into FY2026 supports analyst consensus of ~$13 EPS.
Deeper Financial Analysis
The fundamental tier adds 9 additional research dimensions for $WTFC.