
Eastern Bank (EBC)
We’re wary of Eastern Bank. Its underwhelming returns on capital show it struggled to generate meaningful profits for shareholders.― StockStory Analyst Team
1. News
2. Summary
Why We Think Eastern Bank Will Underperform
Founded in 1818 as one of America's oldest mutual banks before converting to a public company in 2020, Eastern Bankshares (NASDAQ:EBC) operates as a bank holding company providing commercial and retail banking services primarily in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island.
- Loan losses and capital returns have eroded its tangible book value per share this cycle as its tangible book value per share declined by 4.5% annually over the last five years
- Capital generation will likely be weak over the next 12 months as Wall Street expects flat tangible book value per share
- The good news is that its demand for the next 12 months is expected to accelerate above its five-year trend as Wall Street forecasts robust net interest income growth of 25.9%


Eastern Bank doesn’t meet our quality standards. You should search for better opportunities.
Why There Are Better Opportunities Than Eastern Bank
High Quality
Investable
Underperform
Why There Are Better Opportunities Than Eastern Bank
At $19.43 per share, Eastern Bank trades at 1x forward P/B. This multiple is cheaper than most banking peers, but we think this is justified.
Our advice is to pay up for elite businesses whose advantages are tailwinds to earnings growth. Don’t get sucked into lower-quality businesses just because they seem like bargains. These mediocre businesses often never achieve a higher multiple as hoped, a phenomenon known as a “value trap”.
3. Eastern Bank (EBC) Research Report: Q4 CY2025 Update
Regional banking company Eastern Bankshares (NASDAQ:EBC) met Wall Streets revenue expectations in Q4 CY2025, with sales up 28.3% year on year to $283.5 million. Its non-GAAP profit of $0.44 per share was 6.9% above analysts’ consensus estimates.
Eastern Bank (EBC) Q4 CY2025 Highlights:
- Net Interest Income: $237.4 million vs analyst estimates of $237.7 million (32.5% year-on-year growth, in line)
- Net Interest Margin: 3.6% vs analyst estimates of 3.5% (8.2 basis point beat)
- Revenue: $283.5 million vs analyst estimates of $284.2 million (28.3% year-on-year growth, in line)
- Efficiency Ratio: 66.8% vs analyst estimates of 55.3% (1,152.3 basis point miss)
- Adjusted EPS: $0.44 vs analyst estimates of $0.41 (6.9% beat)
- Tangible Book Value per Share: $12.90 vs analyst estimates of $12.51 (1.3% year-on-year growth, 3.2% beat)
- Market Capitalization: $4.57 billion
Company Overview
Founded in 1818 as one of America's oldest mutual banks before converting to a public company in 2020, Eastern Bankshares (NASDAQ:EBC) operates as a bank holding company providing commercial and retail banking services primarily in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island.
Eastern Bank serves as the primary operating subsidiary of Eastern Bankshares, offering a comprehensive suite of financial products to both businesses and individuals. For commercial clients, the bank provides various lending options including commercial real estate loans, construction financing, and specialized asset-based lending. Its business banking division caters specifically to smaller enterprises with loans under $1 million, including SBA-guaranteed loans where Eastern holds preferred lender status.
On the consumer side, Eastern offers traditional banking products such as checking and savings accounts, certificates of deposit, residential mortgages, and home equity lines of credit. The bank participates in the IntraFi Network, allowing customers to access FDIC insurance protection on deposits exceeding standard thresholds.
Through its wealth management division, Eastern provides investment management, financial planning, and trust services to individuals, businesses, and non-profit organizations. A client might engage Eastern's wealth management team to develop a retirement strategy, manage a family trust, or administer an estate.
Eastern generates revenue primarily through interest income on loans and investments, as well as fees from deposit accounts, wealth management services, and other banking activities. The bank's operations are concentrated in the greater Boston area, extending throughout eastern and central Massachusetts, southern New Hampshire, and northern Rhode Island. As a bank with over $10 billion in assets, Eastern is subject to direct supervision by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in addition to state and federal banking regulators.
4. Regional Banks
Regional banks, financial institutions operating within specific geographic areas, serve as intermediaries between local depositors and borrowers. They benefit from rising interest rates that improve net interest margins (the difference between loan yields and deposit costs), digital transformation reducing operational expenses, and local economic growth driving loan demand. However, these banks face headwinds from fintech competition, deposit outflows to higher-yielding alternatives, credit deterioration (increasing loan defaults) during economic slowdowns, and regulatory compliance costs. Recent concerns about regional bank stability following high-profile failures and significant commercial real estate exposure present additional challenges.
Eastern Bankshares competes with other regional banks operating in New England, including Berkshire Hills Bancorp (NYSE:BHLB), Brookline Bancorp (NASDAQ:BRKL), and People's United Financial (now part of M&T Bank, NYSE:MTB), as well as larger national banks like Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) and JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) that have significant presence in the region.
5. Sales Growth
Two primary revenue streams drive bank earnings. While net interest income, which is earned by charging higher rates on loans than paid on deposits, forms the foundation, fee-based services across banking, credit, wealth management, and trading operations provide additional income. Over the last five years, Eastern Bank grew its revenue at a decent 11.8% compounded annual growth rate. Its growth was slightly above the average banking company and shows its offerings resonate with customers.

Long-term growth is the most important, but within financials, a half-decade historical view may miss recent interest rate changes and market returns. Eastern Bank’s annualized revenue growth of 24% over the last two years is above its five-year trend, suggesting its demand recently accelerated.
Note: Quarters not shown were determined to be outliers, impacted by outsized investment gains/losses that are not indicative of the recurring fundamentals of the business.
This quarter, Eastern Bank’s year-on-year revenue growth of 28.3% was excellent, and its $283.5 million of revenue was in line with Wall Street’s estimates.
Net interest income made up 79.3% of the company’s total revenue during the last five years, meaning lending operations are Eastern Bank’s largest source of revenue.

Our experience and research show the market cares primarily about a bank’s net interest income growth as non-interest income is considered a lower-quality and non-recurring revenue source.
6. Efficiency Ratio
Topline growth alone doesn't tell the complete story - the profitability of that growth shapes actual earnings impact. Banks track this dynamic through efficiency ratios, which compare non-interest expenses such as personnel, rent, IT, and marketing costs to total revenue streams.
Investors focus on efficiency ratio changes rather than absolute levels, understanding that expense structures vary by revenue mix. Counterintuitively, lower efficiency ratios indicate better performance since they represent lower costs relative to revenue.
Over the last five years, Eastern Bank’s efficiency ratio has swelled by 13.4 percentage points, going from 64.7% to 56%. Said differently, the company’s expenses have grown at a slower rate than revenue, which typically signals prudent management.

In Q4, Eastern Bank’s efficiency ratio was 66.8%, falling short of analysts’ expectations by 1,152.3 basis points (100 basis points = 1 percentage point).
For the next 12 months, Wall Street expects Eastern Bank to rein in some of its expenses as it anticipates an efficiency ratio of 52.6%.
7. Earnings Per Share
We track the long-term change in earnings per share (EPS) for the same reason as long-term revenue growth. Compared to revenue, however, EPS highlights whether a company’s growth is profitable.
Eastern Bank’s EPS grew at an astounding 22% compounded annual growth rate over the last five years, higher than its 11.8% annualized revenue growth. However, we take this with a grain of salt because its efficiency ratio didn’t improve and it didn’t repurchase its shares, meaning the delta came from factors we consider non-core or less sustainable over the long term.

Like with revenue, we analyze EPS over a shorter period to see if we are missing a change in the business.
For Eastern Bank, its two-year annual EPS growth of 20.2% was lower than its five-year trend. We still think its growth was good and hope it can accelerate in the future.
In Q4, Eastern Bank reported adjusted EPS of $0.44, up from $0.34 in the same quarter last year. This print beat analysts’ estimates by 6.9%. Over the next 12 months, Wall Street expects Eastern Bank’s full-year EPS of $1.56 to grow 23.3%.
8. Tangible Book Value Per Share (TBVPS)
Banks operate as balance sheet businesses, with profits generated through borrowing and lending activities. Valuations reflect this reality, emphasizing balance sheet strength and long-term book value compounding ability.
This is why we consider tangible book value per share (TBVPS) the most important metric to track for banks. TBVPS represents the real, liquid net worth per share of a bank, excluding intangible assets that have debatable value upon liquidation. Traditional metrics like EPS are helpful but face distortion from M&A activity and loan loss accounting rules.
Eastern Bank’s TBVPS declined at a 6.2% annual clip over the last five years. The trend unfortunately shows few signs of slowing as TBVPS also declined by 6.5% annually two-year basis, falling from $14.76 to $12.90 per share.

Over the next 12 months, Consensus estimates call for Eastern Bank’s TBVPS to grow by 7.4% to $13.86, lousy growth rate.
9. Balance Sheet Assessment
Leverage is core to a financial firm’s business model (loans funded by deposits). To ensure economic stability and avoid a repeat of the 2008 GFC, regulators require certain levels of capital and liquidity, focusing on the Tier 1 capital ratio.
Tier 1 capital is the highest-quality capital that a firm holds, consisting primarily of common stock and retained earnings, but also physical gold. It serves as the primary cushion against losses and is the first line of defense in times of financial distress.
This capital is divided by risk-weighted assets to derive the Tier 1 capital ratio. Risk-weighted means that cash and US treasury securities are assigned little risk while unsecured consumer loans and equity investments get much higher risk weights, for example.
New regulation after the 2008 financial crisis requires that all firms must maintain a Tier 1 capital ratio greater than 4.5%. On top of this, there are additional buffers based on scale, risk profile, and other regulatory classifications, so that at the end of the day, firms generally must maintain a 7-10% ratio at minimum.
Over the last two years, Eastern Bank has averaged a Tier 1 capital ratio of 15.6%, which is considered safe and well capitalized in the event that macro or market conditions suddenly deteriorate.
10. Return on Equity
Return on equity (ROE) reveals the profit generated per dollar of shareholder equity, which represents a key source of bank funding. Banks maintaining elevated ROE levels tend to accelerate wealth creation for shareholders via earnings retention, buybacks, and distributions.
Over the last five years, Eastern Bank has averaged an ROE of 3%, uninspiring for a company operating in a sector where the average shakes out around 7.5%.

11. Key Takeaways from Eastern Bank’s Q4 Results
We enjoyed seeing Eastern Bank beat analysts’ tangible book value per share expectations this quarter. We were also glad its EPS outperformed Wall Street’s estimates. On the other hand, its revenue was in line. Overall, this print had some key positives. The stock remained flat at $20.37 immediately following the results.
12. Is Now The Time To Buy Eastern Bank?
Updated: January 23, 2026 at 11:41 PM EST
When considering an investment in Eastern Bank, investors should account for its valuation and business qualities as well as what’s happened in the latest quarter.
Eastern Bank isn’t a terrible business, but it doesn’t pass our bar. Although its revenue growth was good over the last five years and is expected to accelerate over the next 12 months, its TBVPS has declined over the last five years. And while the company’s estimated net interest income growth for the next 12 months is great, the downside is its estimated sales for the next 12 months are weak.
Eastern Bank’s P/B ratio based on the next 12 months is 1x. This valuation multiple is fair, but we don’t have much faith in the company. We're fairly confident there are better investments elsewhere.
Wall Street analysts have a consensus one-year price target of $22.75 on the company (compared to the current share price of $19.43).
Although the price target is bullish, readers should exercise caution because analysts tend to be overly optimistic. The firms they work for, often big banks, have relationships with companies that extend into fundraising, M&A advisory, and other rewarding business lines. As a result, they typically hesitate to say bad things for fear they will lose out. We at StockStory do not suffer from such conflicts of interest, so we’ll always tell it like it is.






