Abstract
Cullen/Frost Bankers will report on January 29, 2026 Pre-Market. This preview summarizes last quarter’s results, management’s latest quantitative outlook where available, and consensus expectations for revenue, margins, and EPS, alongside analyst views since July 2025.
Market Forecast
Based on the company’s forecast dataset, the current quarter estimates point to revenue of $577.99 million, EPS of $2.45, and EBIT of $199.13 million, with estimated year-over-year growth of 7.48% for revenue and 13.54% for EPS. The dataset does not include a gross profit margin forecast or a net profit forecast; year-over-year EBIT growth is estimated at 9.34%. The company’s main business remains banking, and outlook conversations are centered on net interest income stability and credit costs; wealth advisory continues to provide fee income diversification. The most promising segment by growth potential appears to be core banking tied to deposit mix normalization and loan growth, with revenue of $515.46 million last quarter and improving year-over-year trajectory implied by consensus.
Last Quarter Review
In the prior quarter, Cullen/Frost Bankers reported revenue of $567.27 million, GAAP net profit attributable to shareholders of $174.00 million, a net profit margin of 31.11%, and adjusted EPS of $2.67; the dataset does not contain a gross profit margin figure for the quarter, and adjusted EPS grew 19.20% year over year. One notable highlight was the quarter-on-quarter net profit growth of 11.07%, signaling improving operating leverage despite a mixed rate backdrop. By main business, banking contributed $515.46 million, Frost Wealth Advisors contributed $55.03 million, and non-bank items were negative $3.22 million; banking remains the core revenue engine, with fee businesses cushioning rate-cycle variability.
Current Quarter Outlook
Core Banking Franchise
The central driver this quarter is the banking franchise’s net interest income and funding costs. With policy rates remaining elevated through much of the quarter under review, the market expects asset yields to remain firm while deposit betas continue to plateau, supporting a stabilization of the net interest margin. The estimate set points to revenue of $577.99 million, which implies modest sequential growth from $567.27 million and suggests the lending book and earning-asset yields are holding up. Investors will focus on loan growth trends across commercial and consumer categories, any changes in deposit mix between non-interest-bearing and interest-bearing accounts, and management commentary on pricing competition. Credit quality is another pivot, as provisions and nonperforming metrics can quickly change the earnings trajectory; the degree to which net charge-offs remain contained will influence how much of pre-provision operating income drops to the bottom line. Given the last quarter’s 11.07% quarter-on-quarter net profit increase, sustaining this momentum requires either stabilization in funding costs or an improvement in loan spreads, both of which are sensitive to the rate and competitive environment.
Wealth Advisory and Fee Income
Wealth advisory generated $55.03 million last quarter and provides diversification away from rate-dependent income. This quarter, market performance and client flows are likely to influence fee levels, with seasonal patterns and equity market levels serving as near-term tailwinds. While not the largest revenue line, the segment’s consistency can help smooth earnings if the net interest margin faces pressure. The strategic emphasis is on cross-selling to core banking clients and capturing wallet share in advisory, trust, and brokerage services. Any pickup in assets under management would support incremental operating leverage because of the relatively scalable cost base, and management guidance on pipeline and product mix will be watched as a read-through to fee durability. The contribution, though smaller than banking, is a relevant signal for revenue mix quality.
Stock Price Swing Factors This Quarter
Three items are likely to set the tone for the share price reaction. First, the net interest margin trajectory relative to consensus: even a few basis points of upside or downside can meaningfully alter EPS given the balance sheet scale. Second, credit cost prints and qualitative commentary on criticized/classified loans and commercial real estate exposures; an unchanged or improving outlook would support the current EPS estimate of $2.45, while a surprise build in reserves could compress earnings. Third, deposit trends and funding mix: a stabilization or improvement in low-cost deposits would validate the revenue estimate of $577.99 million and underpin confidence in forward margin resilience. Execution against expense discipline will also matter for translating revenue into EBIT, where the estimate sits at $199.13 million.
Analyst Opinions
Analyst commentary over the recent months has leaned cautiously positive, with the majority view expecting stabilization to modest improvement in net interest margin and manageable credit costs into the print. Supportive opinions emphasize the company’s conservative underwriting history and disciplined expense management, suggesting potential upside to the EPS estimate of $2.45 if deposit betas continue to cool. The majority expects year-over-year revenue growth near 7.48% and double-digit EPS growth of 13.54%, framing a setup in which modest top-line gains and controlled provisioning can sustain earnings power. In this view, upside risks include better-than-expected loan growth in Texas commercial markets and incremental fee momentum from wealth advisory, while the primary swing risk remains funding cost competition that could cap margin expansion. Overall, the prevailing stance anticipates in-line to slight upside results, contingent on stable credit quality and a steady deposit base.
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